Everett Daily Herald, October 05, 2014

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THE GENETIC DILEMMA

By Jerry Cornfield Herald Writer

A leading UW researcher says all women should get a DNA test to screen for breast cancer; critics say the results still offer no easy answers Herald Writer

EVERETT — isty Latta’s mother was 28 years old when she died from breast and ovarian cancer. “All the women on my mom’s side of the family have died of cancer,” she said. “My little sister and I are the only ones alive.” About five years ago, following the birth of her son, Javen, Latta’s sister told her about a test that would determine if she had a mutation in a gene called BRCA1. It greatly increases the risk of developing breast and ovarian cancer. Latta tested positive. Her sister did not. With her family history of cancer, Latta thought she had only one choice to avoid repeating it: having a double mastectomy and total hysterectomy. “I just wanted to live and be there for my son,” she said. Last month, Mary-Claire King, a renowned University of Washington geneticist who discovered the BRCA1 gene’s ties to breast cancer, said the time has passed when genetic testing is only provided to women like Latta with a strong family history of breast cancer.

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Instead, King said, starting at about age 30, all women should be tested for the gene, as well as BRCA2, another gene linked to breast cancer. King was recently awarded one of the nation’s most prestigious awards in medical science — a special achievement award from New York City’s Lasker Foundation. She used Mary-Claire her time in the national King spotlight to promote an idea that was controversial nearly from the moment she announced it. Many women don’t know they have the BRCA gene mutation until after they’ve been diagnosed with breast or ovarian cancer, King wrote in the Journal of the American Medical Association. That’s because family members haven’t had similar diagnoses. Identifying women with the genetic defect only after she develops cancer “is a failure of cancer prevention,” she said. Women with the BRCA1 mutation have a 60 percent risk of developing breast or ovarian cancer by age 60 and an 83 percent risk by age 80, she wrote. Testing could

identify up to 415,000 women in the U.S. for whom breast and ovarian cancer is highly likely and potentially preventable, King said. The widespread genetic testing advocated by King would involve millions of women. If it happens, it would be the first time genetic testing is used in the U.S. with such a large group of people, said Dr. Kathleen Leppig, a Group Health geneticist. Joy Varady, who runs the genetic risk assessment program at Providence Regional Cancer Partnership in Everett, said widespread testing for the BRCA1 and 2 genes would be “wonderful preventative medicine.” The costs of treating one ovarian cancer patient can hit more than $200,000, she said. Testing could give women the chance to decide whether they want to take steps to avoid breast and ovarian cancer. “We’re missing so many people,” Varady said.

From the headlines The topic of genetic testing leapt from the pages of staid medical journals to the cover of “Us” magazine last year courtesy of Angelina Jolie. See DILEMMA, Page A4

About the BRCA test ■ What is the BRCA test? Genetic testing can detect if a family history of breast cancer is due to an inherited gene mutation or defect. ■ Do you need it? The test generally is recommended for people with a family history of cancer, such as a parent or sibling diagnosed with breast cancer when they were 45 or younger. Recently, a University of Washington geneticist suggested that all women should be tested, starting about age 30, to help them try to prevent breast and ovarian cancers. ■ How much does it cost? It depends on your insurance. Some companies are expanding the groups of people that can be tested and be covered through their health insurance. If you pay for the test out-ofpocket, the cost depends on the manufacturer. ■ How is the test done? With a blood or saliva sample. Sources: Susan G. Komen; Providence Regional Cancer Partnership

Think Pink: A Herald special section n Patient resources — from a shop that sells bras, but offers much more, Page 3 n It takes a medical care team to fight cancer, Page 6 n Talking to children about cancer, Page 9 n Angelina Jolie’s tough decision after DNA screening, Page 13 n Area events raise money for research, Page 14 n Nourishing the body during treatment, Page 16 n Surviving is far more likely today, Page 20

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OLYMPIA — Washington State University is ready to pour a permanent foundation in Everett if the governor and state lawmakers will provide the taxpayer dollars to do so. WSU is seeking $61 million to construct a multi-story building across from Everett Community College to serve as the future home of the WSU-managed University Center of North Puget Sound. And Washington State is asking for $4.5 million to launch additional degree programs at the center, including software engineering, sustainable food systems and aviation maintenance. The requests went to Gov. Jay Inslee last month who will consider including them in his 2015-17 budget proposal due out in December. WSU also will need lawmakers’ support next year. The requests involve separate budgets that the governor will propose. Money for the building would come from the capital construction budget, which is funded through the sale of bonds. The academic programs would be paid for out of the operating budget. That’s the same pot of dollars lawmakers must rely on to fully fund public schools as ordered by the Supreme Court in the McCleary case. If successful, the two initiatives would pave the way for the Pullman-based research university to expand and fortify its presence in the city. “It’s exciting,” said Bob Drewel, interim chancellor for WSU operations. “It’s clear evidence of the commitment of the university.” Washington State University is a recent higher ed arrival to Everett. In 2012, it started offering classes for a mechanical engineering degree through the University Center, a collaboration of public and private colleges based on the campus of Everett Community College. This fall WSU launched bachelor’s degree programs in electrical engineering, See WSU, Page A4

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By Sharon Salyer

The university is asking for state funding for permanent building on the EvCC campus.

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A2 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Lincoln photo was a lucky find A 14-year-old budding historian discovered the photograph in papers at a presidential museum.

Then I opened up the folded sheet of plain stationery and there lay a faded brown photograph.

Associated Press

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t’s one of the most famous Abraham Lincoln photographs, largely because no one knew the picture of the dead president lying in an open coffin existed for nearly a century until a 14-year-old boy found it. On Tuesday, Ronald Rietveld — the boy who made the discovery and is now a retired historian — will donate his original notes about the picture to the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield. The photo marks one of the last chapters of a story that began in April 1865, just days after Lincoln was assassinated in Washington. On a stop in New York City, one of a number of places Lincoln’s remains were displayed while being taken by train to Springfield for burial, a photographer was allowed to take a picture of the president in an open coffin. Lincoln’s secretary of war, Edwin M. Stanton, apparently heard about the photograph and ordered it and all prints and negatives destroyed. All were, except for one sent to Stanton. Rietveld enters the story in the early 1950s when, as a teenager fascinated with Lincoln, he attended the dedication of a collection of Lincoln-related items at

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the University of Iowa. Harry Pratt, the state historian of Illinois and a Lincoln scholar, was so impressed with Rietveld that he invited him to Springfield to see the 16th president’s home and tomb. Pratt also let Rietveld look through papers of John Nicolay and John Hay, who were White House secretaries when Lincoln was president. Hay’s daughter donated the papers to the Illinois State Historical Library in 1943. Rietveld came upon an

envelope sent to Nicolay in 1887 by Stanton’s son, who explained that he’d found some of his father’s papers and thought Nicolay might want them. “Then I opened up the folded sheet of plain stationery and there lay a faded brown photograph,” Rietveld wrote in an article that appeared in Abraham Lincoln Online. At first he didn’t believe what he was seeing. “My first reaction was, ‘This can’t be’ because I knew Lincoln photography well enough to know there

LOTTO: Saturday’s drawing was for $4.1 million. Saturday’s numbers: 1-4-20-24-29-33. The next drawing is Monday for $4.2 million. DAILY GAME: Saturday’s numbers: 1-1-5. KENO: Saturday’s numbers: 3-7-8-9-18-22-24-28-3133-35-37-42-55-57-66-67-70-74-80.

HIT 5: Saturday’s drawing was for $100,000. Saturday’s numbers: 17-21-22-27-32. The next drawing is Monday for $120,000. MATCH 4: Saturday’s numbers: 2-7-12-13. POWERBALL: Saturday’s drawing was for $60 million. Saturday’s numbers: 13-18-24-25-33, Powerball 31. The next drawing is Wednesday. MEGA MILLIONS: Friday’s drawing was for $120 million. Friday’s numbers: 3-20-34-58-67, Megaball 6. The next drawing is Tuesday for $136 million.

— Ronald Rietveld, retired historian

This image provided by the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum shows the photograph of Abraham Lincoln lying in an open coffin.

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were no photographs of Lincoln in the coffin, there were no such pictures, period,” Rietveld, now 77, said Saturday. Pratt told Rietveld to keep quiet about the photo until he could determine its authenticity. Rietveld boarded a bus with his secret and returned home to Iowa where he didn’t say a word to anyone, including his mother. On the morning of Sept. 14, 1952, his mother shook him awake and told him that his grandfather had just called with news that a picture of Lincoln was all over the front page of the Des Moines newspaper, with Rietveld’s name front and center. “She wanted to know what I had done wrong,” said Rietveld, chuckling at the memory. “I told her I didn’t do anything wrong, I’d found the photograph during the summer in Springfield. The (Associated Press) had put my name all over the country.”

Tyrant ‘Baby Doc’ dies in Haiti at 63 Los Angeles Times Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier, a former dictator of Haiti whose brutal regime triggered a popular uprising that freed the country from one-family rule but resolved none of its issues of poverty and underdevelopment, has died. Duvalier died Saturday of a heart attack at the age of 63 in Port-au-Prince, the capital, President Michel Martelly said. Duvalier was sent into exile in 1986, ending a murderous family dynasty for which Haiti was little more than a personal plantation. The family did little to end Haiti’s status as the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere while pocketing aid money and any income from the exports of sugar and other raw materials. “Baby Doc,” at the tender age of 19, succeeded his father, Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier. The younger Duvalier

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spent his exile on the French Riviera. With little advance warning, he returned to Haiti in 2011 as the country was recovering from an earthquake a year earlier that killed a quarter-million people and destroyed the few institutions it had. Many thought Duvalier was coming home to launch a new political career. But even then, he was ill; he seemed addled as he sat in a courtroom that attempted to bring human rights charges against him. The trial never progressed, nor did a political comeback. His return from exile was a circuslike event for a desperate country looking for some kind of leadership. Thousands of Haitians lined the roads and followed every movement of his caravan as it went from his luxury hotel in the hills above the capital to the courthouse. Prosecutors questioned him about killings and other human rights abuses perpetrated by his regime. “I’ve come to help,” was one of the rare quotes attributed to the former dictator upon his return. But many victims of the Duvalier regimes quickly came to the front, remembering the torture and executions carried out by government goons known as the Tonton Macoute. History, and ill health, defeated Duvalier’s attempt at redemption.

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NEWS ANALYSIS

Obama faces midterms While Republican opposition is fierce, Dems’ support is tepid By Dan Balz The Washington Post

It has become commonplace to describe the midterm political contests as the Seinfeld election — a campaign about nothing. In fact, that’s not correct. This is an election that is still very much about how people view President Barack Obama. Two years after winning reelection, Obama is a muted force on the campaign trail — to the extent that he is even on the campaign trail. He is limited in where he can travel, constrained in how he speaks about what has been one of the biggest issues of his presidency — the economy — and struggling to ignite the passions of the Democratic base in a year when turnout is so critical. Doug Rivers, a Stanford University professor and one of the pioneers of Internet-based polling, offered a succinct description of this campaign year at a conference hosted by the Hoover Institution last week. “There is no overriding issue other than that Republicans don’t like Obama and Democrats are lukewarm about Obama,” he said.

Fresh analysis The Gallup organization produced a fresh analysis Friday that underscores that point. Many more registered voters see this election as a way to register disapproval of the president as those who say they want to use their vote to offer a sign of support. What Gallup called the “Obama factor” is every bit as big as it was in 2010 and split almost identically pro and con. In the latest numbers, 32 percent of registered voters said their choice of candidate in November would be a way to send a message of opposition to the president, while 20 percent said it would be a way to send a message of support. The remainder said their choice of candidates would not be a way to send any message about the president. The 12-point difference is comparable to what it was four years ago, when Republicans made historic gains in the House. In 2010, 30 percent of registered voters said they would send a message of opposition to Obama, and 22 percent said they would vote to send a message of support for the president.

Republican passion The Gallup numbers also reinforce what Rivers said about the passions of Republicans and tepidness of Democrats. Among Republicans, 58 percent said they would be sending a message of opposition to the president, while just 38 percent of Democrats said they would use the election to send a message of support for Obama. That

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said fellow Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., is “not quite ready” to become president, but Graham hinted that he might be. In an interview with the conservative Weekly Standard, Graham dissed his Senate colleague and dipped his toe into what could be a crowded 2016 Republican presidential pool. Graham said he could envision entering the presidential race if no other Republican candidates address the national security and

Search finds more victims of volcano TOKYO — Rescuers on Saturday retrieved four more bodies near the summit of a Japanese volcano that erupted last weekend, raising the death toll to 51, authorities said. More than 900 rescue workers resumed searching the slopes after rain had halted their activity the previous day, Nagano prefecture officials said. The four bodies were near the ash-covered summit area of the about 10,000-foot Mount Ontake in central Japan. Many hikers had been resting or having lunch in the summit area when the surprise eruption threw out large rocks, ash and fumes a week ago.

Switzerland: Jumper dies

President Barack Obama discusses the economy in Princeton, Indiana, on Friday.

It’s also indisputable that millions of Americans don’t yet feel enough of the benefits of a growing economy. — President Obama, speaking at Northwestern University

Democratic number is lower by 7 percentage points than it was in 2010. Gallup began asking this question in 1998. In that midterm election and in 2002, there were more registered voters who said they would send a message of support for the sitting president than opposition — Bill Clinton in 1998 and George W. Bush in 2002. In both cases, the president’s party actually gained seats in midterm elections, defying historical trends.

Numbers like Bush Today, Obama looks more like Bush of 2006, when Democrats took back the House: The numbers for Obama are almost identical overall, and the breakdowns by party are as well. There is ample evidence of the box in which Obama and the Democrats find themselves, including the latest statistics on the economy. On Friday, the Labor Department said that the unemployment rate had fallen to 5.9 percent, the first time since the economic collapse of 2008 that the jobless rate was below 6 percent. In his weekly Saturday morning address, Obama

noted that businesses have added more than 10 million jobs over the past 55 months, marking the longest period of uninterrupted privatesector job growth in history. The economy is on a pace, he said, to create more jobs this year than in any year since the heady days of the tech-fueled boom of the 1990s. All of that should cheer Democrats who head into the final month of the midterm election on the defensive. Headlines in The Washington Post and The New York Times offered a different interpretation of the seeming good news. “Economy could hurt Democrats in elections,” The Post’s Web headline read Saturday morning. The subhead on the online Times story said: “A surprisingly rosy jobs report appeared to be too little, too late for Democrats in struggling midterm campaigns.”

Economic anxiety There are many reasons why. One is that any good news over the past six years has been set against a backdrop of economic anxiety that makes it almost impossible for the president to trumpet the gains without having to acknowledge that many Americans don’t feel those gains have touched them. Labor-force participation has fallen. Many of the new jobs don’t pay well. Income gains since 2008 have been concentrated in the upper percentiles. Overall wage growth, which has ticked up recently, still has been mostly stagnant for two decades. Obama must be as constrained in how he talks about the economy as he is in where he can go and talk about it, as evidenced by what he said in a speech at Northwestern University on Thursday: “It is indisputable that our economy is stronger today than when I took office,” he said. “By every economic measure, we are better off now than we were

EVAN VUCCI / ASSOCIATED PRESS

when I took office. At the same time, it’s also indisputable that millions of Americans don’t yet feel enough of the benefits of a growing economy where it matters most — and that’s in their own lives.”

On the defensive So even at a moment of good news, Obama is on the defensive. His approval ratings have remained low for a sitting president in a midterm election. His economic approval ratings have not improved. Democrats may try to run from him, but it may do little good. So far this fall, Obama hasn’t done any public campaigning with Democratic candidates. He continues to raise money for his party and for candidates, but he’s not doing much else, at least yet. When he went to Chicago, he attended a closed fundraiser for embattled Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn but did not campaign with him. A White House official said the fundraiser was added after the non-campaign trip to Northwestern University had been scheduled. Public campaigning with candidates will come later, as early voting begins and intensive get-out-the-vote operations kick in. In some states, Obama still may be able to energize the base of his party, but he lacks the potency of two years ago. Regardless of where he chooses to appear, he will be ever-present in campaigns everywhere. Even he knows that. On Thursday, after laying out the economic choices, he put it this way: “Now, I am not on the ballot this fall ... but make no mistake, these policies are on the ballot — every single one of them.” That comment may have rattled nervous Democrats looking to keep their distance from the president, but it is the reality they know they must live with for the next four weeks. That’s why this midterm is not about nothing.

Sen. Graham floats presidential bid McClatchy Newspapers

AROUND THE WORLD

foreign affairs concerns that he and fellow hawkish Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., are raising. Both have been consistent critics of President Barack Obama’s handling of Syria, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Russia and whether or not to shutter Guantanamo Bay. “If I get through my general election,” said Graham, who is running for a third term this fall, “if nobody steps up in the presidential mix, if nobody’s out there talking ... I may just jump in to make these arguments.” It’s the immigration issue

that prompted Graham to take a shot at Rubio. Both men were members of a so-called “Gang of Eight,” a bipartisan group of lawmakers who crafted an immigration bill that included a pathway to citizenship for the nation’s estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants. The legislation passed the Senate but stalled in the House of Representatives. As House members and conservative groups, such as the Heritage Foundation, railed against the bill, Rubio withdrew his support. That was too much for Graham.

“He’s a good guy, but after doing immigration with him, we don’t need another young guy not quite ready,” Graham said. “He’s no Obama by any means, but he’s so afraid of the right, and I’ve let that go.” By floating his name, Graham joins a long list of Republican potentials that besides Rubio includes former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Ted Cruz of Texas.

An American BASE jumper has died in the Swiss Alps after misjudging his launch, hitting a cliff and falling hundreds of yards into a gorge. Police in the western canton of Vaud said the man, 44, died Friday afternoon jumping from the 9,514-foot Sex Rouge peak in the Les Diablerets range near Lake Geneva. An official said the man was from Dallas. The American was reportedly an experienced base jumper who was using a wing suit to start the jump.

Thailand: King is ailing King Bhumibol Adulyadej, 86, was admitted to a Bangkok hospital and was being treated for a fever that doctors believe was caused by an infection, the palace said Saturday. The king arrived at Siriraj Hospital Friday night from his seaside palace 120 miles southwest of Bangkok. The palace said when he arrived he had high fever, an increased heart rate and a blood test showed he had an infection. It said the king would undergo tests to determine the cause of the infection.

Pakistan: Smoke in cabin Smoke inside the cabin of a Dubaibound Emirates Airbus 320 about to take off from Karachi airport forced an emergency evacuation of passengers from the aircraft Saturday, a civil aviation spokesman said. He said the plane came to a halt on the tarmac after smoke started coming out of the cabin. The source of the smoke was not known. The aircraft had just pushed back from the gate and all 82 passengers onboard and the crew scrambled out of the Airbus 320 by jumping down an emergency chute. Everyone got out safely.

ACROSS THE U.S. Wyoming: Export of coal State coal production increased in the first half of 2014 compared to last year, but coal exports continued a decline that started in 2012. The U.S. Energy Information Administration reports the state produced more than 187 million tons of coal in the first half of this year compared to about 183 million tons in the first half of 2013. But total exports were down 16 percent to 52.3 million tons from the first half of 2013 to the first half of 2014. Increases in coal production in Indonesia and Australia, have hurt the competitiveness of U.S. coal.

California: 737 incident A pair of tires blew out on an Aeromexico Boeing 737 as it was getting ready to take off from the Los Angeles airport early Saturday, prompting the pilot to stop the plane on the runway. There were no injuries reported among the 129 passengers and six crew members on board Aeromexico Flight 18, in an incident a passenger described as calm, if nerve-wracking. She said she and other passengers smelled something burning and that police and firefighters surrounded the plane. There was no fire, and travelers were safely evacuated and taken by bus back to the terminal where they could board other flights bound for Mexico City, officials said.

Colorado: Lion is killed Wildlife officials said a bow hunter who had just killed an elk in Routt County also killed a mountain lion because he felt threatened. Parks and Wildlife officials decided not to cite the hunter because his story was believable. The hunter contacted officials about the kill. The incident occurred Sept. 27 on private land. A Parks and Wildlife manager said the hunter had shot the elk and was waiting for it to fall when he looked over his shoulder and saw the mountain lion crouching and then approaching. The hunter shot the lion with an arrow. From Herald news services


A4 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Women don’t benefit from practices that ‘protect’ them from information about their own health. — Marie-Claire King in JAMA article

Dilemma: Knowledge may be useful, or difficult From Page A1

Jolie wrote a first-person account in the New York Times of being diagnosed with a BRCA1 gene defect, a family history of cancer, and opting for a double mastectomy. The news went viral. The fact that an Academy Award-winning actress would publicly disclose such a bold step made her an instant icon in the battle against breast cancer. Genetic testing came to the forefront as a practical way to determine which women are most at risk for breast and ovarian cancer before they’re diagnosed. “Mary-Claire King identified that 50 percent of the women with BRCA mutations don’t have a compelling family history,” said Leppig, the Group Health geneticist. Yet family history has been a key factor in deciding who to do genetic testing on, she said. Genetic testing has started in Israel, where 1 in 40 women of Ashkenazi Jewish heritage has a risk of a BRCA1 or 2 mutation, Leppig said. “This is new territory for medicine and genetics,” she said. “In cancer, the most important issue is early detection.” Insurance often will cover the costs of tests for women with a family history of these types of cancer. Without insurance, the out-of-pocket costs vary by manufacturer — in one case $1,500 if you pay half up front. In another, it’s $3,636, and can be paid in interest-free installments. Prices are expected to fall, Varady said. Yet some scientists and physicians question whether testing millions of American women is money well spent. Donald Berry, a biostatician for the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas, said about 1 in 400 women have the BRCA mutations. If genetic testing were widened to the millions of women called for by King, even if the cost of the test drops to about $500, “we’re talking about $25 billion,” he said. “It’s a lot of money that would have benefits,” Berry said. “The question is, are there other ways to spend the money that might have equal or greater benefits?” Only one in 10 breast cancer patients has a genetic mutation, he said. “There’s no question (genetic testing) would save some lives,” he said. But it also would create problems common to other types of cancer screenings, such as false positives, patient anxiety and the possibility of additional procedures, Berry said. “I have the greatest respect for Mary-Claire King,” he said. “She’s an amazing scientist.” But Berry said he doubts whether the general public will take her suggestion seriously. “It’s just too uncertain as to its benefits,” he said. “Too costly. There will be negative

DAN BATES / THE HERALD

Misty Latta sits with her son, Javen, 5, after school in the play area at Whittier Elementary in Everett recently. Through testing, Latta learned that she carries a gene that puts her at high risk for breast and ovarian cancer.

side effects, not the least of which is overdiagnosis and overtreatment.”

Conflicting opinions Just seven months after Jolie’s disclosure, an influential panel of health care experts decided to take a hard look at genetic testing. They evaluated whether routine testing for women without a family history of breast and ovarian cancer made sense. Their verdict: A big thumbs down. The benefits for these women are “few to none,” according to the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. Dr. Steve Martinez, a surgical oncologist at Providence Regional Cancer Partnership, said that 55 to 65 percent of women who have the BRCA1 mutation will develop breast cancer — about 45 percent will not. “You’d be identifying these gene mutations in a lot of women,” he said. “You say knowledge is power, but what will they do with the options?” There’s steps other than mastectomies that women at higher risk for breast cancer can take, such as using MRIs for mammography screenings, said Providence’s Varady. Or taking a chemotherapy pill that can reduce the risk of developing breast cancer by about half, she said. Unfortunately, there’s not a good way to screen people for ovarian cancer. If such a test existed, “that would probably be better than this genetic test,” Martinez said. Prevention and choice are two of the reasons King feels so strongly about having all women genetically tested for the BRCA1 and 2 defects. Women don’t benefit by practices that “protect” them from information regarding their own health, she wrote in the JAMA article. Breast and ovarian cancer caused by these gene defects disproportionately affect young women. Lives lost to these mutations have both economic and social costs, King said. These losses are avoidable with technology that’s now available, she added. Martinez said he would never discount King’s assertion on the

LATTA FAMILY PHOTO

A family photo shows Latta’s mother, Kathy Emery, reading to her (then 9, at right) and her younger sister, Mindy (then 7).

need for widespread genetic screening for BRCA mutations. “There may well be a time when she’s absolutely right,” he said. “What I disagree with is that we should start doing it now. I don’t think we have enough information.” Even women who opt to have mastectomies and hysterectomies in hopes of eliminating their cancer risk have no absolute guarantees, Martinez said. A percentage of women will get cancer of the abdominal lining, similar to ovarian cancer, he said. And even with a mastectomy, not all the breast tissue is removed. “It does decrease the risk of cancer dramatically,” he said. “There’s still a chance of subsequent cancer.” Genetic tests don’t always provide clear answers. They can find variations in genes, but it’s currently impossible to know if they’re harmful or harmless. At some point in the future, science may discover “which mutations are truly the ones we need to worry about,” Martinez said.

History dictates decision After learning she was positive for the BRCA1 gene, it didn’t take Misty Latta long to decide what to do. Latta said she thought about

what it was like to lose her mother when she was just 9 years old and her sister was 7. “I looked at myself as a child without a mother and what it had done to me, how it affected my life,” she said. “I knew right away I had to do what was necessary to stay alive.” About two months after the birth of her son, she opted for the double mastectomy and hysterectomy. Her son, Javen, turns 6 next month. “I wanted him to have a mother,” she said. “A child needs both parents.” She and her Caroline family still struggle Brown with not being able to have another child. “Our son wants a brother or sister,” she said. “He gets tearyeyed and we all cry together.” Caroline Brown, of Marysville, another woman with a strong family cancer history, decided to undergo genetic testing in 2011. Her mother had died of ovarian cancer. And Brown, a longtime health and wellbeing director at the Marysville YMCA, had just been diagnosed with triple negative breast cancer, one of the most aggressive and deadly types of the disease.

Brown wanted to be tested for BRCA 1 and 2 genes, and added an additional level of analysis. “That was two-and-a-half years ago and it was cash out of pocket,” said her daughter, Rachel Michaels. The tests cost about $6,000. They waited 10 days for the results. Michaels remembers thinking: “With grandmother with ovarian cancer and mom with triple negative breast cancer, we totally have this gene.” Michaels began thinking about what steps she would take if her mother tested positive, and settled on having a double mastectomy and removal of her ovaries. “All that changed with one test,” she said. The test results were negative, a shock to Michaels and her mom. A genetic counselor told Michaels that since her mom was negative, she didn’t need to be tested. Yet Michaels didn’t feel a sense of relief. “I feel like there’s nothing I can do other than go in and get my mammograms,” she said. Her mother, Caroline Brown, died in November 2012 at age 60, just 15 months after being diagnosed. Michaels said her mom’s BRCA negative test was almost more scary than if she had tested positive. “There are a lot of other genes out there that they’re not able to test for yet,” she said. In fact, researchers at the University of Cambridge recently discovered mutations in another gene, PALB2, which have been linked to breast cancer. “We can’t stop at BRCA 1 and 2,” Michaels said. “There’s more genetic tests that need to be done.” The price of such tests are small compared to the costs of cancer treatments, she said. A single chemotherapy treatment for her mom was $22,000. Total out-of-pocket medical costs totaled $40,000. “If there is anything out there to help give information to you about your genetic code, then it’s worth it, period,” Michaels said. “The alternative is not knowing.” Sharon Salyer: 425-339-3486; salyer@heraldnet.com.

WSU: Upper-division classes will include aviation management From Page A1

communications and hospitality-business management. For years, Everett Community College managed the consortium, which includes the University of Washington, Western Washington and Central Washington universities. On July 1, the community college transferred control

State >> Washington University’s full budget

request can be read at http:// tinyurl.com/of9akqz to WSU. Conversations for the new University Center building began in 2012. Last year, WSU received $10 million in state funding to design the facility, planned for a chunk of land that is now part of the parking lot at the College

Plaza shopping center, near the corner of North Broadway and Tower Street. The four-story, 95,000-square-foot structure is projected to open with 12 classrooms and 10 laboratories. It will have a small space for a café and another area set aside for public gatherings. If work begins next year, it could be finished by mid2017. When it opens, the

Cougar flag will be flying outside, along with those of the partner universities, Drewel said. In the meantime, Washington State University is continuing to pitch for funding to add academic programs that either it or other center partners can provide. The budget request seeks money to offer upper division classes in software engineering, sustainable

food systems and data analytics starting in January 2016. And WSU is requesting money to enable Central Washington University to offer upper-division classes in aviation management and aviation maintenance management beginning in the fall of 2015. Central now offers these classes at its main campus in Ellensburg. “WSU approached us

and asked us to think about expanding our program to be at Everett and it made sense,” said Ann Anderson, director of community and government relations for the university. Everett Community College already provides a pipeline of students with prerequisites and certifications needed, she said. Jerry Cornfield: 360-3528623; jcornfield@heraldnet. com.


The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014

China, Russia test U.S. limits The Washington Post

a Navy Poseidon P-8 patrol aircraft, performing a “barrel roll” at close range and bringing its wingtip within 20 feet of the U.S. plane. That incident occurred in international airspace about 135 miles east of China’s Hainan Island. At the time, Pentagon officials protested publicly and released photos of the near-miss, which they cited as evidence of rash and irresponsible behavior on the part of the Chinese pilot. They said the same Chinese military unit had conducted three other risky intercepts of U.S. aircraft earlier in the year. Carlisle was more measured in his assessment, saying that there has always been “an ebb and flow” in the number of Chinese intercepts and that he didn’t think China’s military leadership was looking to provoke a conflict. “I personally don’t think it needs to get too much hype,” said Carlisle, who will leave his post in the Pacific this month to take a new assignment as chief of the Air Force’s Air Combat Command at Joint Base Langley-Eustis in Hampton, Virginia. But he acknowledged that “the opportunity for something to go wrong” will likely increase as China’s military gathers strength and moves farther afield. To prevent such incidents, the Pentagon has tried to enhance communications channels and expand formal ties with the People’s Liberation Army in recent years. Although U.S. officials said progress has been made, they added that they didn’t expect to solve the issue overnight. “I am disappointed. Am I surprised? I’m not necessarily surprised,” Adm. Samuel Locklear, the chief of the U.S. Pacific Command, said at a Sept. 25 news briefing at the Pentagon, when asked about the close

A recent spate of dangerous midair encounters between American military aircraft and Chinese and Russian planes over the Pacific Ocean are the result of increasingly assertive strategies by both U.S. adversaries to project power far beyond their borders, according to the top U.S. Air Force commander in the region. Air Force Gen. Herbert “Hawk” Carlisle, the head of U.S. Pacific Air Forces, said China’s naval and air forces in particular are “very much continuing to push” and becoming more active in international waters and airspace in Asia. “They still talk about the century of humiliation in the last century. They still talk about this as the rise of China,” Carlisle said. “They still talk about this as their great nation. And they want to continue to demonstrate that.” Carlisle said U.S. and Chinese forces are frequently encountering each other in parts of the East China and South China seas where they rarely came into contact in the past. Since commissioning its first aircraft carrier two years ago, China’s navy has conducted more exercises farther away from its shores and is closely patrolling areas in disputed waters where Chinese companies are drilling for oil. Those movements have prompted the U.S. military in turn to deploy its ships and reconnaissance aircraft to keep a close watch. China’s military usually responds by conducting intercepts of U.S. aircraft as the two sides jockey for position, Carlisle said. “All of that makes their tension go up a little bit,” he added. U.S. officials said one such encounter got out of hand in August, when a Chinese J-11 fighter jet flashed past

calls. He added that the “vast majority” of interactions between U.S. and Chinese military aircraft and ships resulted in no problems. “It’s those outliers that concern us.” While the Pentagon has long expected an increase in Chinese military activity in the Pacific, it has also had to confront a resurgent Russia, which is conducting more long-range reconnaissance and bomber missions in the region and even approaching U.S. territory. On Sept. 17, U.S. fighter jets intercepted a half-dozen Russian military planes — two fighter jets, two longrange bombers and two refueling tankers — as they were flying in international airspace near the coast of Alaska. U.S. officials said they have also seen an increase in Russian bombers flying near Guam, the U.S. territory in the Pacific. Carlisle attributed the Russian flights to a strategy by President Vladimir Putin “to reassert Russia into what he thinks its rightful place in the international order is, and part of that is continuing to push into the Pacific.” He described the Russian maneuvers “a little harder to figure out” in comparison to Chinese military actions, which he called “more rational.” Russia has also become more active in airspace between its Pacific border and Japan, prompting a sharp rise in Japanese intercepts of Russian military aircraft over the past year. In turn, Russia hasn’t hesitated to challenge U.S. reconnaissance flights near its territory. In April, a Russian Su-27 fighter jet flew within 100 feet of a U.S. Air Force RC-135U aircraft that was operating in international airspace over the Sea of Okhotsk, prompting complaints from the Pentagon.

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with unhealthy products,” the study concludes. WASHINGTON — The health food Indeed, more than 75 percent movement might have taken over of of all items found in the vendpublic school lunches, but it hasn’t ing machines containing food were trickled down enough to alter the candy, chips, and cookies, accordcontents of the country’s vending ing to CSPI’s findings. Almost a machines. third were candy (just over a third if A new analysis of nearly 1,000 one chooses to include “fruit gumvending machines on state and local mies” in the category); another 28 government-owned properties by percent were potato chips; and 16 the Center for Science in the Public percent were cookies and other Interest found that food dispensers at baked goods. public parks, court houses, city and And more than half of all the items town halls, libraries, public hospitals, sold in vending machines containing state university campuses, and high- beverages were sodas — 56 percent, way rest stops around the nation are to be exact. Another 20 percent are filled with, well, junk. sports drinks, like Gatorade, fruit “Vending machines on state and drinks, which are not to be confused local property are stocked primarily with juices, and energy drinks, like Hybrid template_8

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Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Anti-retirement plan: Work 9-to-5 past 65 The Washington Post WASHINGTON — Paul Hyman doesn’t much care for golf or beach resorts. He doesn’t have a boat and isn’t any good at painting. Hyman, 74, isn’t into many of the things the friends his age say they like doing in retirement. The things that are important to him — social connections, friends, new challenges — he gets at work. So the partner at Hyman, Phelps & McNamara, a food and drug law firm based in Washington, said he isn’t retiring, at least not for now. “Most of my contemporaries in law school, or a lot of them, have retired,” says Hyman, who helped launch the firm nearly 35 years ago. “A lot of them were sort of happy to stop doing what they were doing. I kind of like what I’m doing.” Hyman is among a growing group of people working full time beyond age 65, generally considered full retirement age. As of August, about 60 percent of workers 65 and older had full-time jobs, up from about 55 percent in 2006, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Over that time, the share of workers with part-time jobs fell to 41 percent from about 44 percent. Economists say it’s only natural that people are working longer because they’re living longer. Today, one in four people who reach age 65 will live past 90, according to the Social Security Administration. One in 10 will live past 95. With such longevity, financial advisers say, people need to be more creative about finding new income in retirement — which more often makes a job a regular part of the plan. “The old idea of

retirement of moving somewhere sunny and playing a lot of golf, that’s a 50-year-old idea,” says Andy Sieg, head of Global Wealth & Retirement Solutions for Bank of America Merrill Lynch, which is releasing a series of reports on how the views of retirement are changing. “People are screaming out for a new proposition. They want to stay engaged and be in the workplace.” Forty-seven percent of today’s retirees say they have either worked or plan to work in retirement, according to a survey by Merrill Lynch and Age Wave, a research group. And people aren’t just staying at their jobs for the money, the study found. Sixty-two percent of retirees said their top reason for working in retirement was to stay mentally active, double the 31 percent who said they worked mostly for the money. Not that the money isn’t a strong motivator. A survey released by the Federal Reserve in August found that 31 percent of Americans have no money saved for retirement and are not receiving a pension. That included 19 percent of people ages 55 to 64. How did they plan to make up for that shortfall? About 25 percent of those surveyed said they would work as long as possible. Today’s workers also have greater financial incentives to keep working than previous generations did, says Richard Johnson, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute. Fewer workers are earning pensions. And working longer can help people sock away more savings — which more people are relying on for retirement income. Those who delay collecting Social Security see their annual

benefits grow by 8 percent for every year beyond their full retirement age, until they reach 70. Paul Brown, a 67-yearold security guard in Baltimore, said that because he’s in good health, he plans to keep working and to put off Social Security until 70. The money he makes is enough to cover his food, housing and transportation. And Brown, who worked for nearly three decades as a painter for a federal agency before transitioning to security, said the bigger Social Security benefit will be a nice supplement to the income he is expecting from his pension. He also likes the daily routine. While many of the retired people who live with him in the senior home spend a lot of time indoors, he likes walking 15 minutes to work in the afternoons to a nearby building, where he keeps watch at night with another guard. “When I was a kid, I thought I would grow up and retire and play all day again,” he said. “But it doesn’t work that way.” Even though he works 40 hours a week, he said, he still has plenty of time to see his cousins, go to church and volunteer at a local food bank. Retirement, he expects, will involve more of the same, with more time free for volunteering. Another factor making it easier to work longer: the rise in education. People with office jobs or other positions that aren’t physically demanding can work longer than people in bluecollar jobs that are harder to keep up with age. Nearly 32 percent of people 25 and older had completed at least four years of college in 2013, up from about 18 percent in 1983, according

MICHAEL WILLIAMSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Paul Hyman, a 74-year-old Washington lawyer, is among a growing group of people working full time beyond age 65.

to Census Bureau data. In 1940, just under 5 percent of people 25 and older had completed that much schooling. Job flexibility helps. John Lowe, an energy law professor at Southern Methodist University’s Dedman School of Law in Dallas, said his flexible schedule is one of the main reasons he works full time at 73. Between summer breaks and winter holidays, he can teach abroad and take extended trips with his family. The job also allows for longer breaks. On sabbatical for the fall semester, Lowe first spent a few months over the summer in Maine, where he spent afternoons sailing on his 36-foot boat. He is now in Thailand teaching a short course in petroleum law. When that’s over, he’ll travel with his wife and daughter. In the spring, Lowe will return to his full-time job on campus, where he will teach two courses and guide students conducting research projects. “It’s not a hard job,” he

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said. “The culture of university is such that elderly people are respected and given a lot of support — and it’s fun.” Of course, some people who intend to keep working are forced to retire early when their health changes. According to another Merrill Lynch and Age Wave survey, 86 percent of people over 65 say they have chronic conditions, including heart disease, diabetes, cancer and arthritis. Thirty-seven percent of respondents said they had to retire early because of a health reason. For workers still in good health, especially those who like their work and are in well-paying jobs, there is little reason to stop. “There’s a big opportunity cost to retiring,” said Sara Rix, an analyst with the AARP Public Policy Institute who studies labor trends for older workers. “If they retire they lose a lot of money.” Hyman, who started his law career with the Food and Drug Administration, is one of two founding partners still at the firm. (The

other, who fellow partners used to call “the kid” because he is several years younger, is in his 60s.) One passed away, and another retired to Florida, where he takes pictures of birds and plays golf. Hyman said he normally gets to the office about 9:30 a.m. and leaves most days by 7 p.m. While he doesn’t spend his days in court anymore, he still talks frequently with clients, consulting them and other lawyers at the firm about the language that should be used on ads and product labels — a part of the job he really enjoys. Between the money he has saved in his 401(k) and other outside investments that have done well, Hyman said he could retire today if he needed to. Retiring will lead to a pay cut, but because his house and cars are paid off, he thinks he’ll be able to cover his expenses just fine. In the meantime, he’ll keep saving. When Hyman and his fellow partners entered their 50s, they instituted a mandatory retirement policy under which the firm’s lawyers over the age of 70 would need to be approved each year by the board. Hyman has been cleared three times without issue. “Now, it won’t last forever,” he said one recent afternoon. “Something will happen.” “One of two things — one will be physical and the other will be mental,” he said, adding that an emotional change may make him feel ready for something new. “Something may set me off.” For now, that day seems far away. Maybe it’s in his genes, he says. After all, his father, who was on a tax appeals board in Atlantic City, didn’t retire until he was 84.

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A8

Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Secret Service: Delicate dance of guards, guarded By Kathleen Hennessey and Christi Parsons Chicago Tribune

WASHINGTON — In July, President Barack Obama stood on an outdoor stage before a crowd of 2,000 people at Los Angeles Trade Technical College. The president had just begun a new campaignstyle speech when a man in the crowd, standing less than 50 feet away, interrupted with loud cries. “Antichrist!” the man yelled. “You’ll be destroyed!” As the Secret Service moved in, Obama cracked a joke from the podium to keep things light. He had seen the man before, he said: “He needs to update his material.” Less than an hour later, however, off stage and surrounded again by security and staff members, the president was no longer laughing.

“That man would kill me” “That man would kill me,” he told them flatly. The moment, retold by a person with direct knowledge of the remark who asked not to be identified, was even more remarkable for its rarity. Aides say that the president seldom discusses

potential threats. His comment about the man, and its implications about the effectiveness of his bodyguards, offers a glimpse of the complex, intense relationship every president and his family have with the protectors who constantly surround them. Proximity and dependence inevitably breed a personal, almost familial relationship with Secret Service agents, former protectees note, and one that relies, above all, on trust. That trust was cracked in recent weeks as a string of security breaches revealed surprising lapses in protocol and in candor at the Secret Service. Last week, as the president accepted agency head Julia Pierson’s resignation, White House officials suggested the breaking point was not that a man had jumped a fence and entered the White House last month, but that Pierson had withheld from Obama another breach: an armed security contractor had managed to ride in an elevator with the president. Chosen to replace Pierson was a former head of the president’s security detail, Joe Clancy, who had earned the family’s confidence, one official said. That appears to be key as the White House and Secret Service reset

their relationship. First lady Michelle Obama made it clear that she “intensely supported” Clancy, the official said, in a rare acknowledgment of the first lady inserting her opinion into official business. Despite the signs of private frustration, the president and his aides have publicly defended the defenders. Obama has spoken only once about the Secret Service since the White House intrusion, saying last week that he was “grateful for all the sacrifices they make on my behalf and on my family’s behalf.” White House spokesman Josh Earnest treaded lightly all week, expressing no alarm about the president’s safety, even as reporters pressed to see signs of outrage.

Adjusting to security Obama and his family had to adjust to the ubiquity of men and women in dark suits and earpieces earlier and more quickly than many other politicians. He first received protection in May 2007, less than three years removed from his low-key life as an Illinois state senator and amid of a rush of concern for the safety of a man drawing large crowds as potentially

the first African-American president. After Obama was elected, the Secret Service noted a surge in threats against him. Conversations about his safety became commonplace. Within a few months, the threats “came down to a level consistent with his predecessors, and they’ve stayed that way,” Secret Service spokesman Ed Donovan said. Aides say that the president seems largely at ease with his safety. Over time, the first family settled into a comfortable relationship with the agents who follow them, former aides and a former officer said. In the hallway of a hotel one day during the campaign, Sasha Obama, then about 7, was spotted calling for the attention of her favorite agent. She confidently tumbled into a handstand as the agent caught her feet, according to two Obama staffers who watched. After the dismount, she skipped away, while the agent turned to the staffers and grinned. “Babysitter with a gun,” he said. In his early days in the White House, it was those seasoned agents, many of them veterans of the George W. Bush White House, to whom Obama looked for guidance. Obama once stopped in front of one of the formal rooms, hesitated, and then asked a Secret Service officer nearby if he was allowed to enter.

“Yes, sir,” said the officer. “You can go wherever you want.” The opposite holds true outside the White House, and Obama and the first lady have sometimes chafed under the weight of the protection.

“Really nice prison” Michelle Obama has joked that the White House is a “really nice prison.” Obama spoke fondly of what he recalls as his last “walk unencumbered,” when his new agents agreed to hang back while he strolled briefly along the river in Austin, Texas, during the 2008 campaign. “I have wistful memories of that walk,” he told an audience this summer. For first children, agents can be another trial of growing up, Anthony said. Lynda Bird Johnson Robb, daughter of Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson, has often noted how uncomfortable dating was. Patti Davis openly resented her detail, suspecting, correctly, that her mother, Nancy Reagan, was using agents to find out whom Davis was seeing. Agents often work with protectees for years, said Mickey Nelson, a former director of protective details for the president and vice president. But they take care to keep an arm’s-length relationship. They are advised not to initiate conversation. When updates are necessary, agents are told to keep them brief and to the point — for example, offering a

vision

quick notification of a traffic delay when driving. “There shouldn’t be idle conversation,” Nelson said. “It should all be on a professional level.” Agents try to blend in and avoid fraternizing with the people they guard, one former aide said. A White House adviser describes it as an “intimate dance.” The agent knows private details about the protectee’s life — who calls, who cries, who yells — but is charged with remaining discreet.

Professional detachment “There’s a closeness — but with the professional detachment,” former Vice President Walter Mondale said. Mondale, who notes that he was not regularly threatened, remembers the few times he was told of concerns. He was instructed to allow his agents to stay close as he walked through a crowd. They are trying to prevent a gunman from getting a clear shot, they told him. “You’ve got to admire people who do that,” he said. Still, Mondale and other protectees expressed shock at the lapses that have emerged in recent weeks and note that it will take time before the image of the agency is restored. As for Obama’s wish to roam more freely, that will only be achieved when he’s out of office — although still under the watchful eye of agents. Presidents are assigned a detail for life.

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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014

A9

U.S. hostage’s family asks Islamic State for mercy The Washington Post The parents of an American aid worker taken hostage by the Islamic State released a video Saturday pleading with their son’s captors to show mercy and free the young man. Peter Kassig’s family said he was in the region doing humanitarian work when he disappeared a year ago near the city of Raqqah in eastern Syria. “We implore those who are holding you to show mercy and use their power to let you go,” said Kassig’s mother, Paula, holding a picture of their 26-year-old son. The Islamic State revealed for the first time in a separate video Friday that it was holding Kassig, a former U.S. Army Ranger who served in Iraq in 2007.

COURTESY KASSIG FAMILY

Peter Kassig stands in front of a truck filled with supplies for Syrian refugees.

In the same video, a militant dubbed “Jihadi John,” beheaded a British hostage named Alan Henning, a taxi driver from Manchester. The militant then

threatened to kill Kassig, a Muslim convert, because of U.S. bombing of Islamic State targets in Syria. Henning was the fourth Western hostage the

Islamic State has executed, deaths portrayed in a series of gruesome videos that the group began distributing in August. British Prime Minister

David Cameron called Henning’s death “absolutely abhorrent. It is senseless. It is completely unforgivable.” He called the Islamic State “repulsive and “barbaric.” In three earlier videos, the same militant appears to have decapitated American journalists Steven Sotloff and James Foley as well as British aid worker David Haines. The group is also holding British journalist John Cantlie and an American woman who traveled to Syria for humanitarian purposes. Kassig’s family, speaking from their home in Indianapolis, said the United States’ decision to attack the Islamic State is beyond their control. “We asked our government to change its

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actions, but like our son, we have no more control over the U.S. government than you have over the break of dawn,” Ed Kassig said. “We implore his captors to show mercy and use their power to let our son go.” A former hostage, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Kassig had been abused by his captors like other Westerners held by the Islamic State. Kassig is a native of Indiana who founded Special Emergency Response and Assistance, an aid group helping Syrians fleeing the civil war in their country. Beginning in 2012, Kassig delivered food and medical supplies and provided medical care to wounded civilians inside Syria, the family said.


A10

Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Hospital: Dallas Ebola patient critical Associated Press DALLAS — After hospital officials Saturday said the condition of the lone Ebola patient diagnosed in the U.S. has worsened, the woman he came to Texas to visit said she is praying for his recovery. Louise Troh said that she was not aware until a reporter told her that Thomas Eric Duncan’s condition had been deemed critical and that she had not spoken with him Saturday. “I pray in Jesus’ name that it will be all right,” Troh said from the home where she and three others are being isolated. Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas didn’t provide any further details

or respond to questions about Duncan’s health Saturday. The hospital has previously said Duncan, who was being kept in isolation, was in serious but stable condition. Duncan traveled from disease-ravaged Liberia to Dallas last month before he began showing symptoms of the disease that has killed some 3,400 people in West Africa. Health officials said Saturday that they are still monitoring about 50 people who may have had contact with Duncan for signs of the deadly disease. Among those are nine people who are believed to be at a higher risk. Thus far none have shown symptoms.

Included in the group being monitored are people who later rode in the ambulance that took Duncan to the hospital last Sunday, said Dr. Tom Frieden, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Duncan was staying with Troh at a Dallas apartment when he became ill. On Friday, a hazardous-materials crew hauled out items from the apartment in industrial barrels for permanent disposal. That same day, Troh, originally from Liberia, and three others — her 13-yearold son, Duncan’s distant relative and a family friend — were moved to a private residence where they are being carefully monitored. The city had trouble

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A hazardous material cleaner removes a barrel Friday from the apartment in Dallas where Thomas Eric Duncan, the Ebola patient who traveled from Liberia to Dallas, stayed last week.

finding a place to take them until a volunteer offered the private residence. The first Ebola diagnosis in the U.S. has raised concerns about whether the disease could spread in the U.S. Federal health officials say they are confident they can control it. Frieden said that they’ve already gotten “well over” 100 inquiries on suspicious cases in recent months, with an uptick coming after the Dallas patient was diagnosed. Federal officials have said tests have been done on about 15 and all but one — Duncan — were false alarms. Most of the cases don’t involve travel to West Africa, “but we’d rather have a wider net cast,” said Frieden. That way “we’re more likely to find someone promptly if they did actually have exposure and they do actually have symptoms,” he said.

The virus that causes Ebola is not airborne and can only be spread through direct contact with the bodily fluids — blood, sweat, vomit, feces, urine, saliva or semen — of an infected person who is showing symptoms. Duncan arrived in Dallas on Sept. 20 and fell ill a few days later. After an initial visit to the emergency room at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, he was sent home. He returned to the hospital two days later, last Sunday, and has been kept in isolation ever since. The hospital’s explanation about what they knew about his travel history has changed in the time since his diagnosis was revealed on Tuesday. Federal health officials have advised hospitals to take a travel history for patients with any Ebolalike symptoms. When Duncan’s diagnosis was first disclosed,

the hospital said it wasn’t till he came back Sunday that they discovered he had been in West Africa. The hospital later acknowledged that Duncan had told a nurse his travel history on his first visit but said the information hadn’t been fully communicated to the whole team. On Thursday, the hospital elaborated by saying that a flaw in the electronic health records systems led to separate physician and nursing workflows and that the doctor hadn’t had access to Duncan’s travel history. But the hospital issued a statement late Friday saying that the doctor who initially treated Duncan did have access to his travel history after all. Hospital spokesman Wendell Watson said Saturday he could provide no further details, saying, “We’re still looking into the entire chain of events.”

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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014

A11

Pope calls for open debate on family issues By Nicole Winfield Associated Press

He will start a revolution almost by accident. — Miriam Duignan, Wijngaards Institute

ALESSANDRA TARANTINO / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pope Francis greets Cardinal Pietro Parolin as he leaves a vigil in the Vatican on Saturday.

pastoral level. Church reform groups said such honest responses were reason to hope that under Francis, a meeting of bishops might yield some change if only for the fact that Francis has asked bishops to honestly speak their minds. “If all Francis manages to do is encourage bishops to speak out and to say what they really think, then he will start a revolution almost by accident,”

said Miriam Duignan of the Wijngaards Institute for Catholic Research, a progressive British think tank. She insisted that most bishops don’t really want to preach that artificial contraception is morally indefensible or that homosexual acts are “intrinsically disordered,” as church teaching holds. “Whether it starts with priestly celibacy or attitudes toward homosexuality or birth control:

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VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis says he is looking for a “sincere, open and fraternal” debate about divisive family issues that opens Sunday with progressives hoping for change and conservatives intent on keeping the status quo. Francis made a cameo appearance Saturday at a twilight prayer vigil in St. Peter’s Square on the eve of a two-week meeting of bishops aimed at making the church’s teaching on sex, marriage, divorce and homosexuality relevant to today’s Catholics. Francis said he wanted the bishops to listen — really listen to what the people of God are saying — and then engage in a “sincere, open and fraternal” debate that will respond to the “epochal changes” that families are living through today. Francis set the stage for a wide-ranging debate when he decided last year to send a 39-point questionnaire to bishops’ conferences around the world, seeking input from ordinary Catholics about their acceptance of church teaching on a host of issues related to Catholic family life. The surveys confirmed that the vast majority of Catholics ignored and rejected church teaching on sex and contraception. The responses also said the church must develop a pastoral plan to minister to gays in civil unions and to children being raised in such families, making the synod the first time the Vatican is addressing homosexuality on a

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Once you admit that your teaching was flawed, that it was based on flimsy premises and that you were wrong, we can start the conversation,” she said. While conservative groups say there is indeed

a risk that the synod will result in merely sowing confusion over church teaching about sex and marriage, prelates participating in the synod are intent on reinforcing doctrine, not changing it. “The synod is not meeting to create some new teaching in the church or to break with that tradition,” the hard-line American Cardinal Raymond Burke told reporters this week. Rather, he said, the meeting is designed to “hold true to it ... underline it’s important for our present time, and I hope that’s what’s going to happen.”


A12

Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

With huge area mapped, 777 hunt to resume By Kristen Gelineau Associated Press

SYDNEY — After a fourmonth hiatus, the hunt for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 is about to resume in a desolate stretch of the Indian Ocean, with searchers lowering new equipment deep beneath the waves in a bid to finally solve one of the world’s most perplexing aviation mysteries. The GO Phoenix, the first of three ships that will spend up to a year hunting for the wreckage far off Australia’s west coast, is expected to arrive in the search zone Sunday, though weather could delay its progress. Crews will use sonar, video cameras and jet fuel sensors to scour the water for any trace of the Boeing 777, which disappeared March 8 during a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people on board. The search has been on hold for months so crews could map the seabed in the search zone, about 1,100 miles west of Australia. The 23,000-square mile search area lies along what is known as the “seventh arc” — a stretch of ocean where investigators believe the aircraft ran out of fuel and crashed, based largely on an analysis of transmissions between the plane and a satellite. Given that the hunt has already been peppered with false alarms — from underwater signals wrongly thought to be from the plane’s black boxes to possible debris fields that turned out to be trash — officials are keen to temper expectations. “We’re cautiously optimistic; cautious because of all the technical and other challenges we’ve got, but optimistic because we’re confident in the analysis,”

AUSTRALIAN TRANSPORT SAFETY BUREAU

This map shows the huge area to be searched for the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, a Boeing 777.

said Martin Dolan, chief commissioner of the Australian Transport Safety Bureau, the agency leading the search. “But it’s just a very big area that we’re looking at.” That area was largely unknown to scientists before the mapping process began in May. Two ships have been surveying the seabed using on-board multibeam sonar devices, similar to a fish-finder. The equipment sends out a series of signals that determine the shape and hardness of the terrain below, allowing officials to create three-dimensional maps of the seabed. Those maps are considered crucial to the search effort because the seafloor is riddled with deep crevasses, mountains and volcanoes, which could prove disastrous to the pricey, delicate

search equipment that will be towed just 330 feet above the seabed. Two of the search ships will be using underwater search vessels worth around $1.5 million each. “You can imagine if you’re towing a device close to the seafloor, you want to know if you’re about to run into a mountain,” said Stuart Minchin, chief of the environmental geoscience division at Geoscience Australia, which has been analyzing the mapping data. The terrain isn’t the only challenge. The area is prone to brutal weather, and is so remote that it takes vessels up to six days to get there from Australia. Water depths are also tricky: They range from 2,000 feet to 4 miles. That’s about the deepest the sonar equipment can go, Dolan said.

“In all sorts of ways we’re operating towards the limits of the technology that is available,” Dolan said. With the mapping nearly complete, the GO Phoenix, provided by Malaysia’s government, will begin hunting in an area considered the likeliest crash site, based on an analysis of satellite data gleaned from the plane’s jet engine transmitter and a series of unanswered phone calls officials on the ground made to the plane. The other two vessels, the Equator and Discovery, provided by Dutch contractor Fugro, are expected to join the hunt later this month. Malaysia and Australia are each contributing around $60 million to fund the search. The ships will use towfish, underwater vessels

equipped with sonar that create images of the ocean floor. The towfish, which transmit data in real time, are dragged slowly through the water by thick cables up to 6 miles long. If something of interest is spotted on the sonar, the towfish will be hauled up and fitted with a video camera, then lowered back down. The towfish are also equipped with sensors that can detect the presence of jet fuel, although that would likely be a longshot. David Gallo, who helped lead the search for Air France Flight 447 after it crashed in the Atlantic Ocean in 2009, said that even if the fuel tanks had survived the impact, strong currents in the search area probably would have dispersed any leaking fuel by now. Still, he said, it’s worth a try.

“In some of the steep rugged areas any kind of additional information would be useful to help peer into the dark shadows,” said Gallo, an oceanographer with the U.S.-based Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts. There will be between 25 and 35 people on each ship, and crews will likely work around the clock. The ships can stay at the search site for up to 30 days before they must head back to shore to refuel and resupply. “The most efficient way is to keep going,” Dolan said. “But you have to be careful with the well-being of your crews, to be sure you’re not pushing them too hard.” The work will be painstaking. The ships can move no faster than 7 mph while towing the sonar equipment. If a vessel needs to change direction, the crew must first pull the towfish up enough that it won’t fall to the seafloor during the turn — a process that takes hours. “None of this happens very quickly,” Dolan said. Irene Burrows, whose son Rodney Burrows was on board Flight 370 with his wife, Mary, believes the plane will be found. Not knowing her son’s fate has made moving forward a near impossibility. “We’re in limbo,” she said. “It will be good to know where it is — I think that’s what is important to all the family.” Search officials are acutely aware of the sentiment. “We’re doing this primarily because there are families of 239 people who deserve an answer,” Dolan said. “We will give it every possible effort and we think our efforts will be really good — but there’s no guarantee of success.”

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Local SECTION B

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THE DAILY HERALD

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Whisper campaign Some are suggesting Jenny Durkan, who stepped down last week as U.S. attorney for western Washington, could be a successor to Attorney General Eric Holder. B3 SUNDAY, 10.05.2014

Investigation finished in fatal crash Police are recommending charges against a male passenger in the accident on Mukilteo Boulevard that killed Paul Linari, 21. By Rikki King Herald Writer

EVERETT — A drunken latenight ride in a souped-up Jeep along Mukilteo Boulevard in March left one young man dead and another facing criminal charges.

Everett police recently completed their investigation. They determined that the man who died, Paul S. Linari, 21, had been the driver, records show. Linari and his girlfriend, also 21, were thrown from his Jeep when it collided with a van and then struck a guardrail about

10:15 p.m. March 13. Another passenger in the Jeep, a man who was 20 at the time, reportedly ran from the scene, hid in Linari’s house and lied to officers when they showed up. Detectives now have recommended the man be charged with making false statements to police, a misdemeanor. City prosecutors are reviewing the case. The Herald recently obtained through a public records request the documents describing detectives’ findings. Since the crash,

police had declined to release additional details until they wrapped up their investigation. The records show that officers found a confusing, rainy scene on a curvy stretch of the road near Forest Park. Investigators believe the speeding Jeep was westbound when it sideswiped an eastbound van and hit a guardrail. Linari was thrown into the roadway. Passersby attempted CPR, but the 2011 Kamiak High School graduate died at the scene.

Where sausage is the star

The female passenger was taken to the hospital. She told officers that she and the others had met up at Linari’s house and wanted to test-drive some new equipment on his Jeep. Police believe all three young people had been drinking, and toxicology tests showed Linari’s blood-alcohol content at .14, above the legal limit. Beer bottles and cans were found at the crash scene, in the See CRASH, Page B2

Forde associate found dead

The body of Oin Oakstar was found under the 41st Street overpass in Everett. By Noah Haglund and Scott North Herald Writers

IAN TERRY / THE HERALD

Alaura Dowell (right), 1, chomps on her corn dog along with her brother Mason, 4, and her parents, Josh and Amanda, on Saturday at the 38th annual Everett Sausage Festival.

Sausages topped with sauerkraut wait to be served up at the Teacher’s Sausage Booth on Saturday. The three-day Everett Sausage Festival winds up today at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church grounds from noon to 7 p.m. with food, bingo, a carnival, musical performances and a grand raffle.

Left: Mikala Schmidt (left) holds her daughter, Elle, 3, while Christa Pugh holds Ryzon Moore on a slide Saturday.

EVERETT — A former associate of convicted doublemurderer and border-watch activist Shawna Forde has been found dead under an I-5 overpass in Everett. Oin Oakstar had testified against Forde during her trial in Pima County, Arizona, for the May 2009 shooting deaths of a 9-year-old girl and her father. Forde was convicted and sentenced to death in 2011. Oakstar’s identity was released Saturday by the Snohomish County Medical Examiner’s Office. The 43-year-old Arizona man was found Wednesday under the 41st Street overpass near I-5. Death investigators are waiting on further tests to determine the cause. “We can’t conclude anything until they finish up that investigation,” Everett Police Officer Aaron Snell said. “That doesn’t mean that it’s suspicious.” It wasn’t clear what had brought the southern Arizona native to the Pacific Northwest. Forde’s bizarre string of violence started in Everett with her then-husband’s shooting just before Christmas 2008, and continued in the Arizona border town of Arivaca. On May 30, 2009, she was involved in a home-invasion robbery that ended in the deaths of Raul Flores, his daughter, Brisenia, 9, and the near-fatal shooting of the girl’s mother. The woman fought off the intruders in a gun battle. A jury decided Forde deserved a death sentence after hearing testimony that she planned the robbery as part of a scheme to fund her dreams of running a group that would use violence to target drug traffickers and See DEAD, Page B2

Decorated POW brought WWII history to life S JULIE MUHLSTEIN

ixteen years ago, Lloyd Oczkewicz welcomed a visitor to his Everett home. He opened a small leather-bound book. In tiny handwriting on yellowed pages were words he scrawled in 1945 at Stalag IX-A, a prisoner of war camp in Germany. There is no forgetting the World War II veteran, nor the

details Oczkewicz shared that day in 1998 when I was honored to meet him. In the prison camp where he spent three months, Oczkewicz secretly kept a diary in the little black book. Decades later, his entries would be transcribed onto typed pages. Prisoners at the camp outside Ziegenhain subsisted on

little more than a cup of watery soup and a slice of black bread each day. His weight dropped from 165 to 125 Lloyd pounds. In the Oczkewicz diary, he wrote about meager rations and brutally cold German barracks.

Mostly, he wrote about home. “I love to lay in my bunk and think of my future life with my dear Maggie, the best wife a man could have, and Davie (his first child), and God willing, in time, sisters and brothers for Davie,” he wrote in the diary. “I love to daydream of the day when I can See MUHLSTEIN, Page B2


B2

Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Muhlstein: Battlefield valor won him Silver, Bronze Stars From Page B1

be out of the Army and be just plain Mr. again.” Oczkewicz — he was nicknamed “Oskey” — died Sept. 22, surrounded by his close family and friends. He was 94. Born at home in Everett on Nov. 12, 1919, he graduated from Everett High School in 1937. Before going to war, he had married Marguerite “Maggie” Larsen in 1942. They were married 46 years and had four children. She died in 1989. After the war, he worked at the Robinson Manufacturing mill in Everett. “He was just a wonderful dad,” said Judy Rettenmier, one of Oczkewicz’s daughters. He also is survived by his second wife, Fran, son Dave Oczkewicz, daughter Janet McNiven, sister Rita Hooper, six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Another son, Gary,

Crash From Page B1

Jeep and at the house a few blocks away, records show. The van driver told police she had swerved to avoid a head-on collision after the Jeep crossed the center line. A police dog tracked the man who ran from the scene to Linari’s house. The

preceded him in death. Rettenmier said her father rarely talked about war or captivity during her childhood. “The first I knew anything, I was looking through my mom’s old yearbook and out fell these telegrams, ‘We are happy to inform you that your husband is MIA,’” said Rettenmier, who was puzzled by the find. Her mother told her that missing-in-action messages had been good news, compared with word that someone had been killed. In his later years, Oczkewicz brought history to life by sharing his wartime experiences with school groups. After his first wife died, he began reconnecting with veterans of the U.S. Army’s 42nd Rainbow Division. He served in Europe with the division’s 242nd Infantry Regiment. He was 25 when he was

captured. It was January 1945, and his company was involved in the battle of Hatten near the French town of Haguenau. Oczkewicz remembered being overrun and surrounded by German forces, even as he directed artillery fire on the advancing enemy. He was hunkered down in a pillbox on the Maginot Line, a line of fortifications the French had built along its border with Germany after World War I. His company endured a night of mortar fire, but had lost contact with their command post. They awaited U.S. help that never came. “This was the worst feeling of my life, up to that time, when I realized we had to give up,” the young soldier wrote in his diary. He showed me a list of fellow soldiers who hadn’t made it, with “KIA” beside

man reportedly told police he’d heard about the crash but was not involved. The Jeep’s removable doors were leaning against the garage. The man eventually admitted to police that he had been in the Jeep. He was arrested and taken to the hospital for a blood draw in part because police weren’t sure at the time which of the young men had been driving. The man submitted a written statement to police,

who determined his story was false. He then submitted a second statement. The young woman did not submit a written statement despite detectives’ requests. Police also talked to a neighbor who had surveillance video showing the Jeep driving through his lawn not long before the crash. “There is no evidence to identify anybody but Paul Linari as the Jeep’s driver,”

PHOTO COURTESY RETTENMIER FAMILY

Lloyd Oczkewicz (center) poses with his daughter, Judy Rettenmier, and grandson, Casey Rettenmier during a 2005 trip to France. Judy Rettenmier said this photo was taken at the bunker — now decorated as a soccer ball — where Oczkewicz was captured by the Germans during World War II.

so many names. “A lot got killed,” he said the day we met. He was awarded the Silver Star and Bronze Star medals for his battlefield actions. In 2005, with his daughter, Judy, and her son, Casey Rettenmier,

detectives wrote in their report. In addition, the report says, the other man’s deception “significantly hindered and delayed” the investigation. Linari was born and raised in Everett, according to his obituary. He was described as an enthusiastic and genuine young man who loved lacrosse, outdoor sports and bonfires. Rikki King: 425-339-3449; rking@heraldnet.com.

Oczkewicz returned to France for a two-week trip. They found the bunker where he had been captured and took pictures of the site, which has since been painted as a soccer ball. He and his wife, Fran, previously made the trip

Dead From Page B1

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in 1998, which was the first time he had been in Europe since World War II. Long after he graduated from Everett High, Casey Rettenmier, now 34, returned to the school with his grandfather, who spoke about World War II to a history class. With his grandfather, he also attended Rainbow Division veterans events. “A lot of them have passed on now,” said Casey Rettenmier, who has many photographs and recordings his grandfather made during the European trip. There is no forgetting what Oczkewicz said when I met him 16 years ago: “We had a duty.” Judy Rettenmier treasures the picture taken with her father and son at the now peaceful place where he was captured. “Without him surviving, none of us would be sitting there,” she said.

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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014

B3

U.S. attorney exits amid Holder replacement rumors Associated Press

SEATTLE — Jenny Durkan’s office put away a lot of criminals — terrorists, cartel operatives, killers — during her five-year tenure as Seattle’s top federal prosecutor. Montez Cornelius isn’t one of them. A former Navy medic who served three tours in Iraq, Cornelius caught a break after he was charged with defrauding the government by lying about the distance he traveled to Veterans Administration appointments. Instead of being sent to prison, he entered a program Durkan pressed to create, one of the nation’s first federal drug courts. He received addiction counseling, complied with court requirements and graduated without a conviction. “It is a life-saving program,” said Cornelius, who is now working on a master’s degree. “I had never heard of prosecutors and judges having any kind of heart for people going through the system.” Durkan’s decision to ask U.S. District Court Judge Ricardo S. Martinez to establish the program exemplifies the sort of initiative she exhibited as U.S. attorney — a record that has some suggesting she could replace outgoing Attorney General Eric Holder. “I made my voice clear to the White House,” said former Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire, who tapped Durkan as her personal lawyer years ago. “She is the perfect person to be named attorney general. She has provided significant leadership in the Department of Justice. We are well into the president’s second term, and we need someone who can get in and hit the ground running,” Gregoire said. Durkan’s chances are unknown, but Gregoire planned to make the case again when she met with Vice President Joe Biden on Thursday. Durkan’s name has also been pushed by national gay rights groups eager to see the appointment of the first openly gay Cabinet member. “That my name is being mentioned at all is

obviously an honor and a privilege, but what it’s a real testament to is the work of this office,” Durkan said in an interview before stepping down last week. “We are not only aligned with what I think the department’s priorities have been, we’ve led the way in a lot of ways.” Among them: civil rights, including efforts to reform the Seattle Police Department. Before becoming U.S. attorney, Durkan served on police oversight panels and was concerned about what she considered recurring problems. Following an officer’s fatal shooting of a Native American woodcarver in 2010 and other questionable uses of force against minorities, the DOJ launched an investigation, finding officers were too quick to be physical, especially in low-level situations. Durkan and the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division pushed the city into a settlement that overhauled the police department’s training, procedures and record-keeping, all aimed at reducing unnecessary uses of force, curbing biased policing and improving citizens’ trust. Under the agreement, all officers are to be trained to better handle those suffering from mental illness or substance abuse. “I don’t think you can compare the scope of a Ferguson or New Orleans to Seattle,” she said. “But I think the underlying issues we saw simmering here, we were quick to address them. The way we did the investigation, the way we invited the city into the process, and the speed with which we did it is really the new model for the Department of Justice.” Durkan was known as a formidable litigator before being picked in the first wave of President Barack Obama’s U.S. attorney appointments. She was on the team that successfully represented the state Democratic Party when Republicans challenged the results of the 2004 election, which Gregoire won after two recounts. She delivered her closing argument just days after her father — powerful state senator and lobbyist Martin

4 injured in I-5 crash Herald staff MARYSVILLE — A high-speed rollover crash temporarily closed I-5 in both directions early Saturday morning, but left no serious injuries, the Washington State Patrol reported. It happened around 1 a.m., as a man in his early 20s was driving south in a mid-1990s BMW, troopers said. He lost control, overcorrected and hit the median barrier near milepost 198, on the south end of Marysville. Riding in the car were two other men and a woman, all in their late teens to early 20s, troopers said. All four occupants were listed in good condition Saturday afternoon at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett. Troopers said they were investigating the driver for two counts of vehicular assault.

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Durkan Sr. — passed away. After being confirmed, Durkan was named to a select group of U.S. attorneys advising Holder and chaired the DOJ’s cybercrime subcommittee. She made the prosecution of digital crimes a priority and testified before Congress on cybercrime threats, which she considers “the single biggest issue looming on the horizon.” She helped shape the department in other ways, too. She and other U.S. attorneys pushed for the FBI to begin recording interviews of suspects, a change that took effect in May. Working at DOJ satisfied what she described as her bone-deep belief in the justice system: “I can’t think of any other job that every day you get up and that’s your job: to do the right thing.” It’s a philosophy that prompted her to call a

reporter and suggest a story when automatic federal spending cuts were devastating public defenders — the lawyers who represent poor people accused of federal crimes — around the country. Among her biggest challenges, she said, were hiring freezes that pushed the vacancy rate in her office near 20 percent. She said she tried to keep morale up by focusing on targeted initiatives that would make a difference. Two long-running investigations under Durkan ended without criminal charges: one into Washington Mutual’s collapse, the largest bank failure in the nation’s history, and the other into an explosion at an oil refinery in Anacortes that killed seven workers. The evidence in neither met the bar for prosecution, she said.

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U.S Attorney Jenny Durkan displays in her Seattle office a Native American canoe paddle presented to her by members of the Tulalip Tribes.

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B4 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

OBITUARIES AND MEMORIALS

Brian Kenneth Joy

John Dickson was born on April 16, 1918 in Kane, Wyo., to William H. Dickson and Edna S. Despain. He married Helen Baird from Cowley in 1940. They moved to Tacoma, Wash. at the star t of WWII where he wor ked in the shipyards. After the war, he worked in logging and road building while in Enumclaw, Wash. In 1960 he moved his family to Arlington, Wash. where he continued to work in road construction and for Summit Timber until retiring. John passed away Monday, September 29, 2014 at age 96 in the home that they built in ‘68. He is sur vived by wife, Helen, of 74 year s; son, Lynn (Sharon) Dickson of Arlington, Wash., son, John B. (Delores) Dickson of Gilbert, Ariz.; daughter, Doris (Knude) Swensen of Dickinson, N.D., daughter, V i v i a n ( D av i d ) W r i g h t o f Arlington; son, Roy (Karen) Dickson of Orem, Utah; 31 grandchildren, 107 greatgrandchildren (with two more on the way), five great-greatgrandchildren; and brother, Robert Jared (Mary) Dickson of Arlington. His funeral will be Saturday, October 11, 2014 at 1 p.m. in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (on the corner of SR 530 and Arlington Hts. Rd., Arlington, WA 98223). The viewing will be on Friday, October 10th, 6:30-8:30 p . m . a t We l l e r F u n e r a l Home, 327 N. MacLeod Ave., Arlington, WA 98223.

Brian Kenneth Joy passed away suddenly September 25, 2014 at his home in Mukilteo, Wash. Brian was born on April 26, 1958 in Sacramento, Calif. to Lyle and Diane Joy. He leaves behind his loving wife of 30 years, Renee, and their son, Kyle. Also his mother, Diane Joy; brother, D av i d ( J u l i e ) J oy ; s i s t e r, Eileen Swarthout; brother-inl aw, R i c h a r d ( C a r o l e ) Lamoureux; and many n i e c e s , n e p h ew s , a u n t s , uncles and cousins who were very dear to him. He is preceded in death by his father, Lyle Joy; in-laws, Richard and Joanne Lamoureux; and his cousin, Janeen Wells. Brian retired from Boeing after 32 years and recently had been working at Cabelas. Ser vices will be held on October 11, 2014 at 1:00 p.m. at Purdy & Walters at Floral Hills, 409 Filbert Rd, Lynnwood, WA 98036.

To Place an In Memoriam or Obituary, please call

Michael John Cook Michael was born on June 9, 1945 in Aberdeen, Wash. He passed away peacefully on August 25, 2014 at PEMC after more than a year of respiratory problems and bouts of pneumonia following esophageal cancer surgery in 2013. A memorial service will be held to celebrate his life at 1:00 p.m. on October 9, 2 0 1 4 a t O u r S a v i o u r ’s Lutheran Church, 27201 99th Ave. NW, Stanwood, WA

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Aug. 29th, 1941-Oct. 1, 2014 Joyce Margaret Graham, 73, passed away We d n e s d a y, O c t o b e r 1 , 2014 She was born August 29, 1941 in Tacoma, Wash, and was adopted by the late Jeffries and Violet Hamilton, growing to adulthood in Longview, Wash. Joyce spent many years as a hair stylist, retiring 10 years ago to her home on Camano Island, Wash. Joyce and her husband We s e n j o y e d n u m e r o u s cruises to Alaska and the Mexican Riviera, both favorite destinations. Yeararound “camping” in their motorhome brought them often to beautiful locations in Washington and Oregon, where they shared precious moments together and with family and friends. Joyce was a Mentor Mom to dozens of young mothers of preschoolers, meeting at the Camano Chapel weekly to help grow their walk in life and to encourage their spirituality as well. She is deeply loved by her church family. Surviving family include her soul mate and husband of 14 years to Wes Graham; her three sons Jeffries, Mark, Michael, and two d a u g h t e r s , We n d y a n d Nicole. She is also survived by three sister s, Marian Hancock, Linda Fish, and Peg Ferguson; four brothers Mike Lee, Jeff Lee, Paul Lee, and Steve Lee. Joyce was the proud grandmother of eleven grandchildren and four great grandchildren. Joyce had many passions that ranged from her crafts (quilting, card making, sewing, and knitting), lounging on the deck with D a i s y, o r l y i n g i n b e d watching TV while eating ice cream out of the carton with kids and Daisy piling on. She touched many hearts; her legacy of right-living will c a r r y f o r wa r d i n l i t e r a l l y hundreds of hearts. Her services will be conducted by Pastor Kris Kramer on Tuesday, October 7, 2014 at 2 p.m. at Camano Chapel, 867 S. West Camano Drive, Camano Island, WA, followed by viewing , with refreshments served in the East Room. Testimonials will be welcome. Arrangements under the direction of Gilber tson Funeral Home, Stanwood, Wash.

Alta Mae (Bowe) (Leslie) Stansell

Bob was born on September 29, 1926 in S p o k a n e , Wa s h i n g t o n t o Claude and Rose McCarthy. He passed away in his sleep September 25, 2014 with family at his side after a long and couragous battle with cancer. He attended Everett High School then in 1944 he enlisted and served in the US Navy aboard the flagship USS Ker shaw during the Pacific campaign of WWII. He was a proud patriot of the “Greatest Generation” who felt privileged, but humbled to serve his country. After the war in 1947, Bob mar ried his sweethear t Esther Stenvik and had two children, Donna and Ron. He worked at Simpson Paper Company and Weyerhaeuser Paper Mill before retiring. Bob and his wife Esther dosi-doed with the Happy Hopper s Square Dancing club for over 50 years and enjoyed traveling, camping, waterskiing, and fishing with family and friends. He was preceded in death b y h i s m o t h e r, R o s e ; brothers, John, Claude; his sister, Mary and grandson, Karl. Bob leaves his loving wife, Esther, of 67 years; his two children, Donna (Ingo) and Ron (Diana); his grandchildren Lynn (Chris), Jenine (Doug) Rick, Chris, Karl’s widow Stacey; and his great grandchildren, Savanna,.... Kalysta, Justin, Destiny Alex and Jaelyn. Bob was a wise, kind, and l ov i n g m a n w i t h a g r e a t sense of humor. He took pride in everything that he did and was highly respected by all who knew him. His strength and courage left a legacy that will live on in all of us for generations to come. He was our hero. In lieu of flowers please make donations in his name to the American Cancer S o c i e t y, H o s p i c e o r a ny charity of your choice. His Memorial service and celebration of his life will be held at 11:00 a.m. on October 10, 2014 at Purdy & Walters with Cassidy in Everett. Reception following.

Alta Mae (Bowe) Stansell left this world September 30, 2014 sur rounded by family members after a short illness. Born in Buffalo, Nor th D a ko t a , i n 1 9 3 0 a t t h e height of the Great Depression, she was raised a farmer’s daughter in the hard years of droughts and World War II. She traveled to the east coast where she met our father, Daniel C. Leslie, in 1951. In 1964 she packed up the boys and, as a single mother, moved to Wa s h i n g t o n s t a t e . S h e became a hair stylist and s u p p o r t e d h e r f a m i l y by operating several beauty salons in the Edmonds area. In the early 70’s she moved to Marysville, then to Everett in 2006. Alta Mae is survived by her five sons, Scott Leslie (wife Linda) of San Diego, Daniel Leslie (wife Karen) of Everett, Steven Leslie (wife Rena) of Everett, Michael Leslie (wife Salli) of Mukilteo and Kevin Leslie (wife Maureen) of Denver. She leaves six grandchildren and seven great grandchildren. She is also survived by her s i s t e r, B e t t y R o w e o f Sequim; her brothers, Jim Bowe of Utah, Dale Bowe of Idaho and Donald Bowe of New Mexico. She was preceded in death by her late husbands, Daniel Leslie and Frank Stansell; her parents, Emmett and Dorothy Bowe; her brother, Glenn Bowe of Indiana and sister, Mary Ellen Schlagel of North Dakota. Alta Mae loved reading historical books and biographies and watching her Mariners and Seahawks. There would always be discussions about people, h i s t o r y a n d l a s t n i g h t ’s game when we visited her. Alta Mae spent the last year of her life at the Genesis Everett Healthcare C e n t e r. T h e r e s h e w a s surrounded by many nurses, aides, housekeeping, kitchen staff and other residents that became friends. Many of them called her Mom and would joke a r o u n d w i t h h e r. T h e y tolerated her sometimes or ner y bouts. Our family w o u l d v e r y m u c h l i ke t o thank them for the great care and interaction they provided. A ceremony celebrating Alta Mae’s life will be held a t 2 : 0 0 p . m . S a t u r d a y, October 11, 2014 at her son Michael’s home. Friends are welcome to join her family with good cheer, stories and remembrances of her life.

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Michael Kirchberg of Mar ysville, Wash. passed away peacefully on September 16, 2014. Mike was born to Edward and Barbara (Mattson) Kirchberg on September 23, 1947 in Everett, Wash. He was raised in Everett and graduated from Everett High in 1965. Mike served four years in the US Navy, with multiple tours on the ground in Vietnam as a cook for the troops. Mike retired from the US Postal Service in 2008 after 20 years as a letter carrier. Mike enjoyed many outdoor activities including Steelhead Fishing, Golf and his yearly Elk Hunting Trip to the Colockum with the Earnhear ts, brother, Mark, brother-in-law, Don Close, and many Colockum Friends. He also loved Coke, chocolate, Crown Royal and Rock-n-Roll! Mike was preceded in death by his parents, Edward and Barbara K i r c h b e r g ; g r a n d m o t h e r, Ingrid Anderson; and brother, Mark Kirchberg. Mike will be deeply missed by his wife, Judie Kirchberg; a n d s o n , S h aw n ( M a r i e ) Abernathy; and grandson, Matthew of Bolder Creek, Calif.; son, Eddie (Alicia) Abernathy; granddaughter, Cassaundra of Las Vegas, Nev.; stepdaughter, Wendy (John) Hodgins; grandsons, Jake, Ben and Reid of Stanwood, Wash.; his best friend, Br yce Earnhear t of Marysville; and many other family and friends. Mike’s family would like to express our deep appreciation and thanks to the Hospice staff that helped keep Mike comfor table during his struggle with Early Onset Dementia. In honor of Mike’s wishes there will be no service held. Remember him in your hearts as the strong, kind, quiet, and gentle man he was. Rest in Peace Michael!

Steven Jesse Martin Steven Jesse Mar tin age 63, of Granite Falls, Wash. passed away peacefully on September 30, 2014. Arrangements are being cared for under the direction of Evergreen Funeral Home & Cemetery. www.evergreen-fh.com.

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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 B5

OBITUARIES AND MEMORIALS

Helen Louise King

Aug. 13, 1926 - Sept. 12, 2014 Helen King went to be with h e r L o r d a n d S av i o r o n September 12, 2014 at 8:45 a.m. at the age of 88. She passed away in her own home of almost 70 years. She was surrounded by her loving family after a long b a t t l e w i t h A l z h e i m e r ’s / Dementia. Helen was a beloved wife, mother, grandmother and friend. She leaves behind her husband, Clyde Donald K i n g ; h e r s i s t e r, W i l m a Howard of San Angelo, Texas; three children and spouses of Everett, Wash., Jerr y King (Kathy), Karen Hannah (Rober t), Debra Nicholas (Bob); eight grandchildren and 13 great grandchildren. H e l e n wa s p r e c e d e d i n death by her mother, Ethel Crowley in 1985, her father, Sam Crowley in 1990; brother, Delbert Crowley in 2 0 0 4 , b r o t h e r, H o w a r d Crowley in 2009 and sister Kathryn Hargis in 2013. Helen was born on August 13, 1926 in Yale, Oklahoma to Sam and Ethel Elizabeth Crowley. She was the fourth of five children. She graduated from Pampa High School in Pampa, Texas. She met and fell in love with her husband to be who was stationed in her home town of Pampa. Helen and Clyde Don were married on January 6, 1945 in Kansas City, Kansas. After the war was over he brought her to his home town of Everett, Washington to start a home and family where they lived in the same location for almost 70 years. She wor ked as secretar y at Fa i r m o n t E l e m e n t a r y f o r almost 10 years (19571966). After her children were grown, she worked at the Snohomish County A u d i t o r ’s o f f i c e d u r i n g elections. Helen loved God and her family above all else. She was dedicated to her church and especially involved with missionaries. She had a zest for life and a deep love for all people around her. S h e h a d m a ny i n t e r e s t s including: reading her Bible, cooking, sewing, crocheting, doll collecting, bowling, traveling, working with and attending her church. Helen left a legacy of love to all who knew her. She will truly be missed and all who knew her are richly blessed for having her in their life. A gathering to celebrate her life is planned in November at the Berean Bible Church, Shoreline, WA. In lieu of flowers, donations may be given, in honor of Helen King to the missionary fund at Berean Bible Church, Shoreline, WA.

Janis A. Conklin-Stavig

Janis A. Conklin-Stavig, 76, passed away at home in Anacor tes, Washington on September 23, 2014 with family and friends close by, following an inspiring and courageous three year battle with ovarian cancer. Born Janis A. Boettcher, in Hood River, Ore., she grew up with her twin sister Jean and their older sister Doris on a farm in Carlton. After graduating from Car ltonYamhill H.S. in 1956, Jan immediately moved to Portland, got a day job, and attended night classes at the Por tland Ar t Museum School, studying fine ar t. She then studied commercial ar t at the Adver tising Ar t School in Portland. During this time, she worked for Blue Cross of Oregon as head artist in their art-publication department. In 1963, Jan married Dick Conklin, a rancher from Cove, Ore. and became a ranch wife. Together they raised three kids, kept horses and over 200 head of cattle, and farmed over 400 acres. Jan drove combine, hayed, rounded up cattle on horseback, and sometimes nursed halffrozen, early-born orphaned calves back to health in her utility room. She also taught ar t in Cove schools and pursued her career as an independent artist. In 1982, Dick suddenly p a s s e d away f r o m h e a r t failure. Jan was immersed in managing the ranch while still working as an ar tist, raising the kids, and helping put the girls through college. During this time, Jan moved across the valley to LaGrande in 1984. Being a “west-side” girl at heart, Jan fell in love with and moved to Anacortes in 1989 and got involved in the local art scene. In 2000, Jan met Charles “Chuck” Stavig at the Edison Eye art gallery and they were married two years later. Jan and Charlie designed and helped build a new home in 2010. This was a totally new venture for her, and one she truly loved. Jan was predeceased by her sister Doris. J a n i s s u r v i v e d by h e r husband, Charlie, and his sons, Bradford, Brenton, and Crane; her sister, Jean and her husband, Pete Etchamendy, of Cove; her son, Tim Conklin, of Anacortes, and his children, S h e l by, D u s t i n , a n d Ty e ; daughter, Lezlie and her husband James Massey, of Anacortes, and their sons, Nikolaus and Tristan; and daughter, Heather Theny of Claix, France, and her daughters, Emma and Lucy. Jan especially wished to express her gratitude to Dr. Theodore Kim for his care and concern and the wonderful and caring staff at the Merle Cancer Care Center at Island Hospital in Anacortes; where she wished any memorial gifts to be sent in her name. There will be a Celebration of Life for Jan on Saturday, October 25, 2014 at 3:00 p.m., at the Croatian Cultural Center, 5th and R Avenue in Anacortes. Arrangements are in the care of Evans Funeral Chapel and Crematory, Inc., Anacor tes, Wash. and the Lori Jo Gogal San Juan Islands. To share Sept. 21, 1958-Sept. 29, 2014 memories of Jan, please Passed away peacefully at s i g n t h e o n l i n e g u e s t a t h o m e . L o r i wa s b o r n i n r e g i s t e r Everett, Wash. the second www.evanschapel.com. oldest of 4 children. S h e i s s u r v i v e d by h e r loving husband Fred; her children, Della, Alicia, Adeline Schrag Marqui and John; 12 Schwartz Unruh g r a n d c h i l d r e n ; m o t h e r, May 9, 1910-September 17, 2014 Donna Moen; sister, Joni; b r o t h e r, J e f f ; n i e c e s , Adeline was born May 9, nephews and many loving 1910 near Ritzville, Wash. aunts and uncles. She died on September 17, She was preceded in death 2014, with her family by her by her father, Glen Granroth; side in Monroe, Wash. brother, John Granroth. A memorial ser vice is Her celebration of life will be p l a n n e d f o r O c t o b e r 1 1 , held on October 18, 2014 at 2014, 11 a.m. at Monroe 1 p.m. Community Chapel, 14365 Frylands Blvd., Monroe, WA.

Sallie Marguerite Fingarson, nee Jurich

Theodore “Ted” Torve

Maria Provvidenza Truglio

Janice Marie Schumann

April 20, 1931-Sept. 22, 2014

May 16, 1931-July 27, 2014

Nov. 23, 1919-Sept.18, 2014

Sept. 20, 1940-Oct. 7, 2013

Sallie was born in Tacoma on April 20, 1931 and passed away unexpectedly on September 22, 2014. She graduated from Ballard High School in 1949. Shortly after graduation, she began her career with the p h o n e c o m p a n y, ( t h e n Pacific NW Bell) retiring with over 40 years of service. Fr o m a n e a r l y a g e h e r passion was sports. In her teen years she spent many days at the old Sicks Stadium attending Seattle Rainier baseball games. Later she had season tickets for the Seattle Sonics and the original Seattle Sounders. She also b e c a m e a s e a s o n t i c ke t holder for the Seattle Seahawks from their inaugural season to the present. She attended the last home game against the Broncos on September 21st. She was a “true” Seahawks fan throughout the years – g o o d a n d b a d . Wa t c h i n g them win super bowl XLVIII was an amazing experience, and she also couldn’t wait to see “What’s next”. Family was very important to Sallie. She loved family get-togethers to celebrate big events, small events and everything in between. She made a point of staying in touch with her children, grandchildren, greatgrandchildren, sisters, cousins and friends. She had a gift for always making the people around her feel special. She blessed the lives of those for tunate enough to know her through her kindness, generosity and her wonderful sense of humor. She could always be counted on to do whatever was needed. She will be greatly missed. The world is a sadder place without Sallie in it. She was preceded in death by her mother, Elsie Vitalich; f a t h e r, J o s e p h J u r i c h ; b r o t h e r, J o e J u r i c h ; a n d former husband and good friend, Eugene Fingarson. She leaves behind her son, Ly l e F i n g a r s o n ( J a n e ) o f Reno, Nev.; and daughter Nola Fingarson of Everett, Wash.; sisters, Sue GarvinWa r r e n o f O h i o , J o y c e Sorenson of Kirkland, Marla Kelly (Dick) of Poulsbo, Julie Pappe (John) of Bothell, Marcia Jones of Sacramento, Calif., and Angie Bosch (Jim) of Seattle; grandchildren, Sean Pogue (Heather) of Anchorage, Ala., Kristen Dominguez of B i l l i n g s , M o n t . a n d Ky l e DuBoise of Reno, Nev.; as well as six great grandchildren. Sallie requested no formal service be held. She wanted to be remembered with a prayer. She also stated that anyone who wanted to have a mass said for her soul was encouraged to do so. She suggested any donations be made to Children’s Hospital or to any charity dear to the giver’s heart.

Theodore Tor ve died on July 27, 2014 in San Diego, Calif. after a long illness. Ted was born in Everett, Wash., May 16, 1931 to Norwegian immigrants Olaf and Bergliot Torve. After graduation from Everett High School he served in the Navy in the Korean War. Upon discharge, he attended Everett Community College and University of Washington, graduating with a degree in law. He began practice for the State of Washington as: • Assistant AG in Highways Division from 1960 to 1969. The interstate system was just starting to be built. Ted represented the State in proper ty acquisition cases for I-5, I-90, and other state highways. • Division Chief for Natural Resources Division and Chief Counsel to the commissioner of Public Lands from 1969 to 1985. Ted advised and represented the Commissioner of Public Lands and the Department of Natural Resources on forest practices, environmental, and proper ty management issues. • Division Chief for Transportation and Public Construction Division 1985 to 1996 and Chief Counsel to Washington State Department of Transportation. Ted continued to work in TPC Division until retirement in 1998, representing WSDOT in property and environmental cases. As a Division Chief, Ted was a leader and a valued mentor to the many attorneys who worked with him over the years. No matter what he had going on, Ted never minded if someone interrupted him to talk about an issue or a case. Ted gave new attorneys the support that they needed, but he let them wor k independently and develop their own work styles and relationships. He was a role model that has had a lasting influence on the attorneys with whom he worked. He was passionate about his work, had a great sense of humor and was loved and respected by all. H e wa s m a r r i e d f o r 2 0 years to the love of his life, Jan Tor ve. He is also survived by his sister, Marion Soule and brother-in-law Don Soule, in Kentucky. He as two sons, Steven in Hawaii and Scott in Seattle; and four daughters, Leslie and Megan Torve residing in Olympia, Kristie McMoran, Sedro Woolley, and Alyssa McMoran, La Jolla, Calif. He also leaves six grandchildren, one great-grandchild, and several nieces and nephews. Donations in his honor may be made to the Mitochondrial Research Fund #3970, UC San Diego Health Sciences Development, 9500 Gilman Drive #0853, LaJolla, CA 92093.

Maria Provvidenza Truglio, 94, of Stanwood, died, Thur sday, September 18, 2014. She was born November 23, 1919 in Castelvetrano, Sicily, Italy, the daughter of the late Guisseppi and Antonina (Brazzamano) Russotto. Maria married Stefano Truglio on April 1, 1944. He preceded her in death on February 12, 2004. She is survived by a son, J o s e p h Tr u g l i o a n d w i f e Suzie; three grandchildren, Ted Truglio and wife Sarah, Jennifer Patrick and husband Shad and Hilary Storey and husband Ryan; six greatgrandchildren, Jack, Ellie, Cole, Hudson, Alexie and Charlie. A celebration of Maria’s life will be held at 3:30 p.m., Saturday, October 11, 2014 at Life Celebrations by Wa s h e l l i , 1 8 2 2 4 1 0 3 r d Avenue NE, Bothell, WA. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Maria’s name to the Zonta Club of Everett Foundation, P.O. Box 5204, Everett, WA 98206.

In loving memory, to a wife, m o t h e r, s i s t e r, a u n t , g r a n d m o t h e r, g r e a t grandmother and best friend to so many. A year ago we had to say goodbye, but not one second goes by without you crossing the mind of one of us that was touched by your kindness and charm. Nothing could ever prepare us for a loss like this, our hearts are still broken. Even though you aren’t physically present, you are still ver y much in our lives.

Beverly Morgan Helen G. BeestonDenison Helen G. Beeston-Denison, 89 of Everett passed away on September 25, 2014. Private Family Ser vices were held at Evergreen Funeral Home and Cemetery. A Memorial ser vice is being planned for early November.

Kenneth Charles Sweet

Feb. 5, 1947- Sept. 23, 2014 Ke n n e t h S we e t p a s s e d away suddenly on September 23, 2014. Ser vices to be held at a date to be determined.

Beverly was born on September 2, 1940 and passed away September 25, 2014. She is preceded in her death by her husband, Bob and daughter, Crystal. S h e i s s u r v i v e d by h e r children, Debra, Bill and Wade. She leaves behind two brothers and one sister along with numerous grandchildren and greatgrandchildren. She also leaves behind many other family members and dear friends. There will be a service held on October 11, 2014 at 1:00 at the Assembly of God Church in Darrington with a gathering at the Community Center. In lieu of flowers please donate to the Bluegrass Assoc. or to the Funeral Dinners.

Until We Meet Again Those special memories of you will always bring a smile, if only we could have you back for just a little while. We could talk again, just like we u s e d t o , y o u a l way s meant so much, and always w i l l . T h e f a c t y o u ’r e n o longer here will always cause us pain, but you’re forever in our hearts. Until we meet again. Love from all of us!

Edwin A. Rinne

June 17, 1919-Sept. 22, 2014

Wilbur A. “Bill” Hammer

Nov. 13, 1918-Sept. 27, 2014 Wilbur A. “Bill” Hammer, of Bellingham, Wash., passed away Saturday, September 27, 2014 in Bellingham surrounded by his family. Bill was 95, born November 13, 1918 in Odell, Oregon to Blanche (Adams) and Raymond Hammer. A visitation will be held at Westford Funeral Home on Thursday, Oct. 9, 2014 from 4-7 p.m. and Friday, October 10, 2014 from 1-3 p.m. Graveside ser vices will be held at 3:30 p.m. on Friday, October 10, 2014 at Greenacres Memorial Park with a Celebration of Bill’s life to follow at 5 p.m., at Spring Creek Bible Church, 567 E. Kellogg Rd., Bellingham. Memorials in Bill’s name may be made to The Lighthouse Mission, 910 Holly Street, 98225, the Whatcom County Pregnancy Clinic, 1310 N. State Street, 98225 or Gideons Inter national, Bellingham Camp, BOX 30093, 98228. View Bill’s complete obituary and share memories with t h e f a m i l y a t www.westfordfuneralhome.c om.

In Loving Memory Larry L. Bruns

July 15, 1947-Oct. 5, 2009

Five years ago today, thats when you want away We are never far apart. You live forever within my heart. Your loving twin, Linda

Edwin A. Rinne, aka Fast Eddie, passed away at home s u r r o u n d e d by f a m i l y o n September 22, 2014. He was born June 17, 1919 in Everett, Wash. to parents John A. and Ella Rinne after emigrating from Finland. Ed lived in Everett most of his life and was proud of his heritage as he traveled the world as a merchant marine. Ed became a journeyman millwright and raised three sons. He is survived by his sons, Patrick (Pru) Rinne, Michael Rinne and Daniel (Mar y) Rinne; as well as two very special step children, Jack Johnson and JoAnn Mason; as well as many grand and great-grandchildren. At his request there will be no service.

JoAnn “Jody” Pattis J o A n n “ J o d y ” Pa t t i s o f Lynnwood, Wash. a native Idahoan, passed away peacefully in her home on September 24, 2014, at 83, after a long struggle with Alzheimer’s. Jody was deeply devoted to her husband of 62 years, Bill, and her two children, Steve and Maria who predeceased her. S h e i s s u r v i v e d by h e r daughter, Paloma; and her four grandchildren: Nicolette, Ashley, Derek and Kristina. On the day of her passing, Jody was blessed to have seen a 4-D ultrasound photo of her first great-grandchild in utero. Jody will be dearly missed and warmly remembered as a k i n d , a n d l ov i n g w i f e , mother and grandmother, who exhibited quiet strength and the utmost grace. An informal celebration of Jody’s life will be held at the f a m i l y h o m e o n S u n d ay, October 12, 2014 from 11 to 1 p.m. Children brought immense joy into Jody’s life, so in lieu of flower s please send donations to: Child Haven, 316 Broadway, Seattle, WA 98122.

Obituaries continued on Page B6


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Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

OBITUARIES AND MEMORIALS Obituaries continued from Page B5

THE ALASKA DISPATCH NEWS

Palmer Sather

Dec. 30, 1920-Sept. 23, 2014

Lisa Lynn Brunkhorst Nov. 4, 1983-Sept. 6, 2014

Lisa Br unkhor st, 30, of Arlington died September 6, 2014 after falling ill to Meningitis, with family at her side. Lisa will be lovingly remembered as a daughter, wife and mother. Lisa was born on November 4, 1983 in Tacoma. Lisa graduated from Auburn-Riverside High School in 2002 and received a B a c h e l o r ’s d e g r e e i n Education from Central Washington University. She worked in Education at multiple school districts as a substitute teacher and was an instructor at numerous Sylvan Learning Centers before becoming Director of Education. Lisa carried her twin daughter s through a full term pregnancy, amazingly both over 8 lbs. at bir th. Lisa became a stay at home Mom dedicating her life to raising her children with healthy bodies and minds. Lisa is sur vived by her daughters, Ella and Madison (4); husband, Tyler (30); mother and father, Karen and Dennis Karnes; sister, Lori Kar nes; mother and father-in-law, Sondra and Jim Brunkhorst; sister and b r o t h e r - i n - l aw, C a r l y a n d Austin Brunkhorst; aunt and uncle, Shar lene and Ken Morgan; grandmother and g r a n d f a t h e r, G l a d y s a n d Edward Braun; cousins, Kristen and Kyle Morgan. Donations can be made to “The Ella and Madison Fund” on GiveForward.com to aid Lisa’s family with her final expenses and savings account for her girls.

Rodney “Rod” Lee Barber III April 16, 1955-Sept. 23, 2014

It is with deep sadness the family announces the p a s s i n g o f t h e i r f a t h e r, grandfather and brother. Rodney passed away unexpectedly in Fallon, Nev., following a visit with his daughter and her family. He is sur vived by his children, Rodney Lee Barber IV and Casey Woods (Lucas); his grandchildren, Rodney Lee Barber V, Austin Woods, Lylli Woods, Cody Woods and Lucy Woods; his sister, Rhonda Barber Berry (Doug); his nieces, nephews and cousins. He touched many lives and will be greatly missed by his family and friends. The memorial will be announced at a later date, updates and information will be posted in a public group on facebook named “In memor y of Rodney Lee Barber III”. https://www.facebook.com/ groups/640858362697502

Palmer Sather, a lifetime resident of Stanwood, Wa s h . , p a s s e d a w a y a t home surrounded by family and friends at the age of 93 on September 23, 2014. Palmer left a legacy as a f a r m e r, t u r n e d d r i v e - i n r e s t a u r a n t o w n e r, t o a visionary developer. He came into this world via midwife, born December 30, 1920 to Ole and Dor thea Sather. He grew up on the family homestead just outside of the town of Stanwood joining his brother Otto and half brother Martin. Palmer and his brother Otto expanded the family farm by buying two neighboring properties. Palmer ser ved as salutatorian at his graduation at Lincoln High School in Stanwood in 1940. Out on his own, he first worked as a petroleum truck driver in Ellensburg, WA where he eventually met and courted Trudy Schnebly. They married in 1950 and moved back to Stanwood to run the chicken and cattle farm and they raised four daughters. Together, Palmer and Trudy opened the Farmette Drive-In in 1964. Careful research we n t i n t o t h e f o o d t h ey served. Their hamburgers, a favorite among their loyal customers, were made from the freshest ingredients and the meat was from beef cattle raised on their farm. After a successful run, they sold the business in 1972. Pa l m e r n e x t t u r n e d h i s hand to selling real estate, with the idea of developing the Sather family property. He joined forces with Mayer Baron and later Sol Baron to turn 55 acres of land into an ever growing commercial development. Palmer said he used to enjoy standing out on his front porch and watch the development grow over the years. Turning the family homestead into a commercial success and thus seeing Stanwood grow gave him great satisfaction. Ser ving the Stanwood community was also high on Palmer’s list. He is a longtime member of Kiwanis, ser ving as president from 1972-1973 and as secretary of the organization for 15 years. True to his Norwegian roots, Palmer was a member of the Sons of Norway Lodge in Stanwood and he traveled to Norway on a few excursions to visit his many Norwegian cousins and learn more about his Norwegian heritage. His family and friends will long remember Palmer for his remarkable gentle spirit, strong work ethic and his ever positive outlook on life. Palmer is survived by his four children, Donna (Tom), Paula, Pamela and Lisa; his brother Otto (Betty); and his granddaughter Beth (Jesse). His wife, Trudy, preceded him in death in 2011. A celebration of Palmer’s life is planned for 11:00 a . m . a t O u r S a v i o r ’s Lutheran Church in S t a n w o o d o n S a t u r d a y, October 11, 2014. A special thank you goes to Palmer’s dedicated caregiver of the past three year s, K a t h y P e e b l e r, a n d h e r team, Lori Wenrick, Amanda Halverson and Teri Beck. Remembrances may be made in Palmer’s name to Providence Hospice of Snohomish County 2731 Wetmore Ave. #500, Everett, WA 98201. Arrangements under the direction of Gilber tson Funeral Home, Stanwood.

Crystal (Morgan) Tungel

May 21, 1964- July 26, 2014 There will be a service on October 11 at 1:00 at the Assembly of God Church in Darrington with a reception to follow at the Community Center.

Robert Arthur Johnston Robert “Bob” Arthur Johnston passed away peacefully on September 28, 2014. He was born to Chris and Helen Johnston on April 4, 1923 in Sacramento, California. Bob graduated in 1941 from Lincoln High School in Seattle, Wash. and after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, he joined the U.S. Navy and served across the Pacific as an Electrician’s Mate, 25th Naval Construction Brigade (CBs). After the war ended, he was honorably discharged, married Irene Lahti and moved to A b e r d e e n , Wa s h i n g t o n where he was employed as an electrical lineman. They moved to Burien, Washington in 1947 and became interested in raising mink. Seeking a rural area, they moved to Alderwood Manor where a mink ranching community was already growing. Bob was a lifelong IBEW member (65-year member recognition in 2011) and served as the IBEW Seattle Local 77’s business manager in the 1960s. In 1970, Bob married Gloria Vanderberg. During this marriage, Bob lived in Everett, Washington. In 2007, Bob married June (Rober ts) King, his ver y loving and devoted wife who will miss him greatly. He enjoyed his last years gardening at their home in Snohomish, Washington. Robert is survived by his wife, June Johnston; son, Jeffer y (Linda) Johnston, daughters, Jolynn (Bob) M c C o r t a n d J u d y ( Pe t e r ) Bangs; granddaughter, Julie Johnston, grandson, Jeremy (June) Johnston and two great-grandsons, Jayo and J o s e y ; a n d m a ny l o v i n g stepchildren and stepgrandchildren. At his request, there will be no service. In lieu of flowers please make a donation to your favorite charity.

Ardis “Ardie” N. Martinez

May 14, 1935-Sept. 29, 2014 Ardie passed away peacefully at home on September 29, 2014 with family and her beloved Pomeranian “Angel” at her side. Ardie was born May 14, 1935 in Maddock, N.D. to Maurice and Lydia Hakanson. She was an Everett resident for the past 55 years. Ardie is sur vived by her husband, Mar ty Mar tinez; and her children, Nor ma (Joe) Rife, Wayne (Karen) M i n e r, V i c k i e ( M a r k ) N y s e t h e r, S h e r r y ( K e n ) Carman, Nancy (Jeff) S c h m i d t , To n y ( L i s a ) Mar tinez, Ana Nunamaker; nineteen grandchildren and thirteen great grandchildren. S h e wa s p r o c e e d e d i n death by her parents; and siblings, Howard, Bud, Roger, Marilyn and Lilyann; and her stepson David Martinez. Ardie was our rock; loving us unconditionally. She was beautiful, vibrant and friendly to all. She will be sorely missed and in our hearts forever. A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in her name to Hospice of Snohomish County.

Rita F. Bonk

Rita F. Bonk, 63, passed September 17, 2014 after struggle with kidney disease and brain aneur ysm on December 31, 2013. Born in Ellensburg, Wash. to Elmer (Jim) Lewis & Della (Fern) Lewis (deceased). Sur vived by husband, Michael Bonk; daughters, Heidi Renee of Seattle and Jozetta Salts of Arlington; bother Lynn Lewis of Snohomish; sister, Rene Mcker vey of Granite Falls. Also father, Jim Lewis of Snohomish; son-in-law, John Bonk of Mill Creek; and eight grandchildren. Service will be held at LDS church at 8522 131st Ave. S E , S n o h o m i s h , WA o n Richard “Dick” October 11, 2014 at 1 p.m. Nicholson I n l i e u o f f l o we r s , s e n d cards/donations to: PO Box On September 21, 2014, 1 4 9 1 , S n o h o m i s h , W A we tragically lost a beloved 98291. partner, father, grandfather, friend, and square dancer. Richard “Dick” Nicholson, Sofus P. Eckrem, born April 3, 1940, was a lifetime Seattle area Major, USAF, (Ret.) resident and member of the graduating class of 1958 at S o f u s E c k r e m p a s s e d Edmonds High School. Dick away quietly on September da nced his way int o our 18, 2014 at the age of 93. hearts while building lifetime Husband to Jeanne (72 f r i e n d s h i p s , e v e n t u a l l y years); father to son, Jack; meeting his par tner Anita and daughters, Mar ty and N e e d h a m , w h o m h e Mary Ann. He was a retired frequently referred to as his M e t e o r o l o g i s t U S A F a n d “ l ov e .” H i s p a s s i n g wa s retired Teacher of Advanced sudden, heartbreaking, and Math and Computer s, at leaves us yearning for just Cascade H.S., Everett. He one more dance. was a loving husband, father He is survived by Anita, his and grandfather and a good s o n , R i c k N i c h o l s o n , a n man. extended family of five daughters; 11 grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. Harold Dibble Please join us for a June 25, 1923-Oct. 2, 2014 celebration of life remembering Dick at the Harold Dibble passed away MountLake Terrace Senior Center at Ballinger Par k, on October 2, 2014 from old 2 3 0 0 0 L a k e v i e w D r i v e , age. Harold was a longtime M o u n t l a k e Te r r a c e , WA resident of Arlington , Wash. 9 8 0 4 3 o n O c t o b e r 1 2 , He is survived by daughter, Dana Beer (Tim) of Missouri, 2014, at 2 p.m. In lieu of flowers please step-son, Raymond Baker make donations in Dick’s (Cindi); as well as several name to the the MountLake nieces and nephews. Per Harold’s wishes there Terrace Senior Center attn: is no service. Mike (425)672-2407.

“Yellow” by Nathan Sawaya is one piece in the Anchorage Museum’s “Brick by Brick” exhibit, in Anchorage, Alaska. “Brick by Brick” is an exhibit of artwork created or inspired by Lego toys.

Legos unlimited: Exhibit explores the possibilities By Mike Dunham Alaska Dispatch News

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — In 1961, the first plastic Legos appeared on toy store shelves in America, and they have bedeviled vacuum cleaners and enchanted children ever since. Over the past half-century, the little multicolored interlocking bricklets have attracted the attention of grown-ups, both those who find themselves drawn to playing with them and professionals who have explored ways to use them in their work, like designers, architects and artists. The Anchorage Museum on Friday opened “Brick by Brick,” a celebration of Legos employed in art, industry and amusement. It runs through Jan. 11. “Brick by Brick” is not a traveling show; it has been organized by the museum. Museum director Julie Decker — who admits to playing with her son’s Legos — said the genesis of the exhibit came about when she heard that architects working on the new Alaska State Museum in Juneau were using Legos to develop a model of the proposed building, now under construction. “It triggered the idea that Legos have become a good tool for designers and scientists,” Decker said. “They’re used to do everything from plan(ning) buildings to test(ing) out artificial organs.” The fact that notable artists were using the toys also caught her attention. “I had noticed that, as we look at new materials, Lego has become something so ubiquitous, so ready to go, that it’s become an artistic medium,” she said. “Part of the idea for the exhibit is that sometimes materials or products become so much a part of our popular culture that people start to look for new uses for them. Artists are good at that,” she noted. Cameras, for instance, evolved from documentary tools to a genre of fine art; hardware and secondhand shops supplied the goods for the school of found art and assemblages. Nathan Sawaya is one of the artists who has made an international reputation with his work in Legos: portraits of famous people, landmarks (Mount Rushmore), animals, food, cityscapes and life-size humanoids. “Brick by Brick” will include his one-man show, “The Art of the Brick,” as an “exhibit within an exhibit,” Decker said. “Nathan is one of the official Lego artists,” she said. The company has contracts with such people that allow for special licensing, supplies and support. Another notable Legoist featured in the Anchorage show is Mike Stimpson, who bills himself as a “toy photographer.” A lot of his concoctions use Star Wars characters in unexpected poses — a Stormtrooper opening a stack of valentines, for instance. But he may be best known for

Lego has become something so ubiquitous, so ready to go, that it’s become an artistic medium. — Julie Decker, director, the Anchorage Museum

recreating famous photographs using the bricks and the accessory parts, heads and limbs. The memorable shot of a sailor kissing a girl in Times Square at the end of World War II and the lone protester standing in front of a row of tanks in Tiananmen Square come to mind. “When you first look at Mike’s photos, it seems lighthearted,” Decker said. “But when you look again, you see more. He’s brought back those historic photos for a whole new audience. People are going back to find out what he was reproducing.” As befits a homegrown show, a number of the pieces in “Brick by Brick” are by Alaskans, chosen by a juried selection process. These will be shown on a rotating basis, two weeks at a time, during the run of the exhibit. Rio Shemet of Homer will have a scale model of the Titanic; the 12-yearold spent seven months on the project. Ty Keltner of Juneau — six-time award winner in Seattle’s massive BrickCon Lego Convention — will have several “builds” in the show; a press release describes one of them as “a whimsical sea turtle with a village on its back.” More true-to-life are the many pieces contributed by Jeff Jones of Anchorage, who has contributed scale models of Alaska stuff like the museum, Alaska Railroad trains and the ConocoPhillips Building. Jones is an employee of ConocoPhillips, the corporate sponsor of “Brick by Brick.” “Jeff is prolific,” Decker said. “He’s assembled almost every kit of Legos and does a lot of his own.” He’s not alone. According to Decker, Alaska ranks high in the number of Lego clubs in the state. That’s one of the curious factoids that emerge as part of the show. Others of interest: ■ “Lego” is formed from the Danish “leg godt,” meaning “play well. ■ The company was started by a carpenter in 1932 and recently became the largest toy manufacturer in the world. ■ There are 915 million ways to combine six Lego bricks. ■ There are enough of the bricks for every person on Earth to have 80.


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SUNDAY, 10.05.2014

The newspaper is dead.

THINKSTOCK.COM

Long live the new newspaper By Paul Steinle

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ince 2010, my wife, Sara Brown, and I have been periodically traveling across North America — all 48 contiguous U.S. states and nine Canadian provinces — to discover what’s happening to community newspapers. After driving more than 43,000 miles, and interviewing executives at 59 newspapers, we have a clearer vision of the dynamic changes underway in the newspaper industry and of the motivations of the people who work in it. Folks have been trying to write an obituary for newspapers for quite a while. In 1991, when I was beginning to teach journalism, a veteran advertising professor told me: Forget about preparing kids for newspapers. Newspapers are not going to be around much longer, he said. In 2009, Sara and I discussed what we might do after I retired from Southern Oregon University. I had 29 years experience in broadcast news and wire services and 19 years teaching journalism; Sara had worked with newspapers for more than 25 years. We daydreamed about a trip around the U.S. Then it occurred to us: We could devise a mission to make the trip more meaningful. We would visit one newspaper in each state, and look behind that headlines that predicted newspaper annihilation and discover how these news organizations were actually doing. So we documented our findings at www.WhoNeedsNewspapers.org. We discovered the classic,

As one editor in Oklahoma told us, many newspapers are ‘the glue’ that holds a community together. three-dimensional newspaper — delivered once a day with text, photos and graphics — was dead. A shiny, new business model — the transformational newspaper — had superseded it. Since about 1995, when the Internet blossomed, newspapers have been adapting to become high-tech newsand-information companies. At widely varying rates, they have become: Internet-leveraged, interactive, multimedia, multiplatform, news-andinformation companies, operating 24-hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week, utilizing both print and digital channels. Leading transformational newspapers have been reshaping the industry. They have added video reporting and video advertising (a new revenue source). Many are using the Internet’s interactivity to gather richer feedback from their communities. A few use feedback data to guide their news coverage and fine-tune their target advertising. More are devising transactional revenue streams. And some are erecting local mini-websites to assemble special interest and regionspecific audiences for niche advertisers. The news delivery world has been fractionalized. Those old newspapers are hopping

aboard the latest news media platforms — the Internet, smart phones and social media — to deliver reporting 24/7. The other fact we discovered was more a reaffirmation than a revelation: Highly motivated, community-oriented professional journalists are the linchpin of newspapers and vital to their communities. Several weeks into our journey, we began asking each person we interviewed a final question: “Please tell us — in the form of an anecdote — about a time in your career when the power and purpose of journalism became clear to you. What happened and what did you learn?” The anecdotes were spontaneous, sincere and revealing. Wendy Warren, former vice prescient and editor at Philly. com (later, editorial manager, digital for NBCWashington. com), told us about Jill Porter, a columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News. Porter had discovered a scam in which an elderly female patient lost the ownership of her home while she was in the hospital. After the story was published, local laws were changed to protect vulnerable citizens from such scams. “It was a wonderful moment for this woman, who, I know, nobody else would listen to,”

said Warren. “Nobody, but The (Philadelphia) Daily News.” In Montana, Nick Ehli, managing editor, The Bozeman Daily Chronicle, explained what happened when he wrote about a six-man football team formed after community’s leaders converted a beet field to a gridiron in Custer, Montana. “I went down to (Custer to) watch a game after this story had run,” he said. “This elderly woman came up and said, ‘You’re the man who wrote the story, right?’” “‘I’ve only seen my husband cry on a couple of occasions in his entire life,’ she told him. ‘But he cried when he read that story.’” In Kansas, Dolph Simons Jr., 83, chairman and editor of The Lawrence Journal-World remembered a historic day when the value of newspapers crystallized for him. “I was out at my grandfather’s house on Dec. 7, 1941 — Sunday,” he said. “I heard about Pearl Harbor and dad said, ‘We’re gonna’ put out an extra!’” Simons’ father had preceded him as editor of the Lawrence newspaper. There was no scheduled Sunday newspaper, but they published one that Sunday. “I always wanted to be in the newspaper business,” Simons said. “I just can’t imagine any other business that would be more interesting. … and you want to leave your community better than when you found it.” “I’ll be dead one of these days pretty quick,” said Simons, “but I would like to figure out: How in the hell do we come up with a plan to take advantage of the opportunities

Extra, extra! Paul Steinle and Sara Brown will talk about their book, “Practicing Journalism: The Power and Purpose of the Fourth Estate,” at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Edmonds Public Library, Plaza Room, 650 Main St., Edmonds.

to keep newspapers alive? I think we have this responsibility,” he said, “to try to inform the public.” We collected these journalism epiphanies in “Practicing Journalism: The Power and Purpose of the Fourth Estate,” (Marion Street Press, Portland, Ore., 2014). They tell a story of journalists who gather the news and deliver it. They inform readers about how their communities are doing and what their destinies may be. As one editor in Oklahoma told us, many newspapers are “the glue” that holds a community together. The transformational newspaper business model is still being tweaked, but the role these journalists serve is vital, palpable and worth sustaining. Paul Steinle, a journalist for 29 years and a journalism teacher since 1991, is former president of UPI and Financial News Network and TV news director at KING-TV in Seattle. He is currently an adjunct professor teaching journalism at Quinnipiac University. Sara Brown is a human resource professional, management trainer, columnist and educator in the newspaper business.

Cities can take steps to protect bees, agriculture By Megan Dunn

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ast Monday, the city of Seattle unanimously passed a resolution prohibiting the use of neonicotinoid (or ‘neonic’) pesticides on city-owned property. City departments worked to create the resolution and will seek to use only pollinator-friendly methods of weed and pest control. How does a ban on

pesticides in Seattle have a positive impact on bees? And, what does this mean for Everett and Snohomish County? I testified in support of the ban as a representative of Northwest Center for Alternatives to Pesticides (NCAP). NCAP is a non-profit organization dedicated to protecting communities and the environment from harm caused by pesticides. Our programs are

focused on advancing sustainable agriculture through practice and policy, reducing pesticide use in urban environments, and securing better safeguards for wildlife and waterways most affected by pesticide pollution. After recent neonic bans, we worked in Eugene, Oregon, to promote alternatives and Spokane to encourage planting beefriendly habitat.

Our nation’s food and farming system relies upon honeybees for continued prosperity. Of the food we eat, 1 in 3 bites is depends on pollination by honeybees. In Washington, the production value of crops pollinated by honeybees is approximately $2.1 billion. North America’s native bees rely on local food and nesting habitat in residential and

agricultural areas to survive. Native bees are particularly important to the pollination of specialty crops, such as blueberries, grapes, cherries, apples, and cranberries. Native bees are also important pollinators of flowers and gardens in urban and rural areas. Unfortunately, bee populations are declining at See BEES, Page B9


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Editorial Board Josh O’Connor, Publisher Jon Bauer, Editorial Page Editor Neal Pattison, Executive Editor

SUNDAY, 10.05.2014

IN OUR VIEW | 21st District Senate race

Opt for governance, not gridlock In the coming legislative session, our state Senate could again be a place where compromises go to die. Its gridlock this year crushed the hopes of businesses, commuters and most local jurisdictions by stifling action on a state transportation package. And if roads, transit and gas taxes were not divisive enough, this next Legislature will be under a court order and public pressure to meet the $2 billion-plus challenge of fully funding basic K-12 education. The standoff between the Majority Coalition (mostly Republicans) and Senate Democrats stems from unyielding, partisan ideas about of government. And the choice facing

21st District voters in the current Senate race reflects that divide all too keenly. Interestingly, both Marko Liias and Dan Matthews seem inclined to describe themselves as problem solvers who want to achieve results through cooperation. Matthews backs up his commitment to public service by pointing to his combat duty with the Air Force and time on the Shoreline School Board. Unfortunately, on big issues such as education and transportation, he hews to hardened G.O.P. positions: Most problems are laid at the feet of over-compensated union employees, poorly managed public agencies and unnecessary government

oversight. Simply banish these things and the state will miraculously recover its fiscal vigor. These are easy arguments to sell to the party faithful but do little to get the job done in Olympia. Liias has been carving out a full-time career for himself in public life. After six years in the House, he was appointed in January to a seat vacated by Sen. Paull Shin, which allows him to run as the incumbent. After supporting Jennifer Gregerson in her campaign for Mukilteo mayor, he was named to her transition team and soon after (as luck would have it) landed a job as the city’s policy analyst.

He blithely proposes revenue enhancements unlikely to appeal to conservatives (or many moderates): a revenuepositive property levy swap and a state health-insurance revamp he believes would free up millions of dollars. But don’t ask him to consider scrutinizing the management shortcomings of the Department of Transportation. In the 21st District, if you’re a Republican or a Democrat, pick your poison. The Herald would nudge the profoundly undecided voter toward Liias, only because Matthews’ election would serve to beef up the Senate Majority Coalition. That bloc has chosen too often to obstruct rather than govern.

of China and those courts are controlled by the government. This IPO and its aftermarket is a speculation more than a temptation and best left to the pros with deep pockets.

who has legal possession of the firearm. Not a bad idea in my opinion.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR ■■GUN INITIATIVES

It will only effect the law-abiding Once again an initiative that will affect the lives of many honorable citizens is being brought forth and boldly advertised by a few wealthy individuals. Why? As a favor to give more power to those who already have too much? It is certainly not to eliminate crime because it will not stop the unlawful element from obtaining firearms. The only population affected will primarily be the law abiding citizenry. We feel compelled to write because we cannot stand by and watch another very important vote be “bought” by those who wish to manage every aspect of the lives of the people who purchased a lot of the products that made them rich. The outcome most likely will be determined by the few who are rich and desire control over the rest of us who are not. We have read both Initiatives 591 and 594. I-591 only exists to counter I-594. The cost of putting I-591 forth is obviously supported by those who believe I-594 is unnecessary, will cost money the state does not have, is virtually impossible to enforce, could make criminals out of heretofore law-abiding citizens and finally, will not stop criminals from using firearms to commit crimes. Having read the initiatives and thought deeply about the reason for I-594, we, among others, are convinced that it is purely a product of a few extremely wealthy individuals or groups that have no idea of the damage the passage of I-594 will have on the law-abiding citizens of Washington. Illegal acquisition and use of firearms is and remains illegal. It is ludicrous to believe that more laws on firearms will stop criminals from acquiring them. Couldn’t their money be put to better use? We can think of a few. Ron and Nancy Killian Everett

■■ALIBABA

It’s not ‘stock’ as we think of it The Associated Press article “Alibaba risk: China’s rise leaves out investors” relies on the premise that prior performance of Chinese stock is primarily the basis upon which to judge future profitability chances of the Alibaba IPO. The more challenging aspect to this offering is to understand that China has restricted foreign ownership of segments of their economy, e-commerce being

Have your say Feel strongly about something? 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: E-mail: letters@heraldnet.com Mail: Letters section The Herald P.O. Box 930 Everett, WA 98206 Have a question about letters? Call Carol MacPherson at 425-339-3472.

one. To circumvent this, Chinese companies set up what amounts to front companies in the Cayman Islands, or elsewhere, which are said to control the Chinese entity. The Cayman entity facilitates foreign ownership through a variable interest entity, through which they issue shares. The so-called “stock” in this IPO offering is not stock as we usually think of it because it represents no ownership rights such as voting your interest, equity rights or interest in the assets of the business. The VIE only promises the owner a share of profits. This is not to say that the promise of VIE rights should not be considered, as some issued previously have been profitable. The business itself is quite promising, however, pressing foreign investors rights is an issue of its own and becomes the risky part of this consideration. It is necessary to understand that the Alibaba IPO comes with the blessing of the current Communist government of China. The powers that be can change the way they view VIEs at will. It goes without saying that to press a case against abuse of a VIE contract would have to go through the courts

Paul Friedrich Camano Island

■■I-594

It clearly allows for exemptions Regarding the letter “Law makes felons of everyone.” I must call the author out on being either misinformed or dishonest. The writer asserts that “simply allowing the other to try out your firearm will make you and whomever receives it a felon.” That is just false. As I-594 is written, the very type of “transfer” as he put it, has its own section which states that the loaning of a firearm to a family member within a licensed firing range is allowed. This provision is clearly stated in Section 3.4(a-g). This exemption also cover firearms training and self-defense classes. I went to the site the writer suggested and read their pages at length. The site if full of misinformation that can easily be rebuked simply by reading the text of the resolution. In fact, I would go so far as to say that the creators on this site are flat out lying to the public in order to promote their own agenda. It uses fear mongering and deception to rope in unsuspecting victims to disseminate its lies. A tactic that I am not surprised to see here as the top five contributors consist of the National Rifle Association of America and no others (check the site if you don’t believe it.) It appears that the entirety of this site is paid for by the NRA. Not exactly a group I would call honest. As for I-594 just being about gun registration. Well, isn’t that the point of the proposal? The idea is to ensure that all non-exempt transfers of firearms are legal and to know

Robert Ray Granite Falls

■■CLIMATE CHANGE

Why is science so easily dismissed? Regarding the Friday letter on climate change: “Definitely not settled science”: Cigarettes don’t cause lung cancer. We know that, right? A bunch of tobacco executives said it to Congress, so it’s true, despite all the science to the contrary. Same with that global warming thing, right? Yet another letter writer (haven’t we gotten to the legal limit?) tells us it’s a liberal plot, and even quotes a scientist who claims there’s no need for proof. Brilliant. Score another for Fox “news” and those who consider their profits more important than your grandkids’ lives. That “we don’t need no stinkin’ proof” thing has been beaten to death by deniers, like they discovered a horse with his hand in the cookie jar out of the barn. If you want to understand the reality of the quote, and how science works, read this: http://tinyurl.com/mzockkk. But be warned: it takes some thought, which isn’t exactly the Foxolimbeckian thing. Clearly, our political system is being bought and paid for by a couple of billionaires whose living (how much more money do they need?) depends on continued pollution; and, clearly, right-wing radio and TV is deeply in the bag for them. What’s not so clear — clear as the skies of Beijing — is how they’ve so easily convinced the masses to believe up is down, night is day. How easily they’ve gotten so many people to vote against their own futures, fueled by righteous anger at … something. Sid Schwab Everett

Secure it, but don’t close off White House

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ASHINGTON — Put a taller fence around the White House complex and lock the doors. Then get rid of the dry rot in the Secret Service bureaucracy, restore staffing to reasonable levels, adopt the latest technology and develop new protocols to replace the ones that didn’t work. But don’t use the recent shocking lapses in presidential security as an excuse to further separate Americans from the symbols of their government. Actually, EUGENE ROBINSON “shocking” is an understatement. I still can’t get my mind around the fact a man could climb over the White House fence, run across the North Lawn, barge through the main entrance and make it all the way down the hallway to the ceremonial East Room before being stopped. Minutes earlier, fortunately, President Obama and his family had departed the premises by helicopter. Prosecutors identified the man as Omar Gonzalez, 42, and officials say he was tackled by an off-duty agent who happened to be nearby and noticed the commotion. According to reports by The Washington Post’s Carol D. Leonnig five rings of security should have kept the man from reaching the front door. Each failed. This debacle alone should be enough to trigger a shakeup in the Secret Service. But we also know, thanks to Leonnig’s reporting, that the agency botched its investigation of a 2011 shooting incident, failing to realize that bullets fired from outside the grounds actually struck the mansion until days later when a housekeeper noticed broken glass. And just weeks ago in Atlanta, agents allowed a security guard with a gun and a criminal record to ride an elevator with Obama. Former Secret Service Director Julia Pierson was less than forthcoming about all of these potential disasters when she testified Tuesday on Capitol Hill. She tried the old Nixon-era “modified limited hangout” strategy with a panel of sternfaced lawmakers, whose outrage was a rare show of bipartisan consensus, and her resignation a day later was inevitable. That’s a first step. Pierson’s successor is Joseph Clancy, a respected Secret Service veteran who agreed to come out of retirement, on an interim basis, to right the ship. Let me offer some advice. Begin with the obvious: This case showed the world that the White House is vulnerable. Think of all the people who might want to harm the president of the United States or deface a building that symbolizes our democracy. Imagine what might have happened if there had been a half-dozen intruders coming over the fence simultaneously. The wrought-iron fence in front of the White House is only 7 feet, 6 inches high. It should be replaced with a new fence around the whole complex that is considerably higher. There’s no need for concertina wire or anything like that. The new barrier could easily be designed to deny would-be climbers the footholds and handholds necessary to make it over. But it should be an elegant, black, wroughtiron fence with enough space between the bars to retain a feeling of access and openness — the sense that this is, truly, the people’s house. Setting up pedestrian checkpoints to cordon off the whole area would be a tragic and needless surrender. Also, and it seems ridiculous to have to say this, the front door of the White House should be locked. At all times. Even if all the locking and unlocking is inconvenient for those who live and work there. According to the Secret Service manual, the door should have been locked as soon as someone got over the fence. But this is hardly the only failing of protocol. A dog trained to knock down and hold an intruder was not released because the handler feared the dog might attack Secret Service agents who were running around the grounds. Either the plan is dumb or agents are not properly trained to carry it out. Funding for the agency has been so neglected by the Obama administration that Republicans — Republicans! — insisted on adding money to the budget. The off-duty hero who tackled the intruder had no idea whether he was carrying a vial of anthrax or sarin gas. The agent just did the job he is sworn to do. Unlike his bosses. Eugene Robinson’s email address is eugenerobinson@washpost.com.


The Daily Herald

Sunday, 10.05.2014 B9

THE LIGHTER SIDE OF THE NEWS

Roomy iPhone pants not quite haute couture I t’s that time of year to offer to hold the football for someone so they can kick it ... and then pull it away at the last minute. Ha ha. Let’s go all Lucy Van Pelt on the headlines. ■■“9 great apps for reading on your commute”: Just to clarify, because you know it’s necessary, they mean while riding public transportation or in your carpool, not while driving. ■■“This ingenious moped cooler puts your party on wheels”: Wow, a three-wheeled motorized bike with a cooler for a seat. That is ingenious. Watch out, Mars, here we come. ■■“iPants? These are built for the iPhone 6 Plus”: To prevent the bending that can happen when a phone is kept in one’s pocket, these pants have a

CAROL MACPHERSON hidden holster for a phone, so sits on one’s thigh. Ingenious. The iFanny Pack can’t be far behind. ■■“Got an iPhone 6 Plus? This shirt was made for you”: Not only with big pockets for your big phone, but with earbuds in the collar! Your iOutfit is complete! And with so many big pockets, you can always keep

a sandwich on hand for when you get hungry riding around on your moped cooler. ■■“ ‘Wide stance’ defense costs Idaho’s ex-Sen. Larry Craig $242,000”: The court rejected his newest argument that his big-pocketed pants were responsible for his self-described “wide stance,” which was misinterpreted as an invitation in a bathroom stall of Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport... ■■“Donald Trump swipes at ‘Black-ish’ ”: The Donald tweeted, “How is ABC Television allowed to have a show entitled ‘Blackish’? Can you imagine the furor of a show, ‘Whiteish’! Racism at highest level?” Hmm. Well, no actually. But how very Trumpish of him to say.

■■“Putting caffeine into underwear doesn’t help you to lose weight ”: The writer begins her article, “It sounds so ridiculous that it’s amazing that millions of people actually thought it might work." Guess she hasn't been covering weight loss scams very long. They all sound ridiculous. “Take this pill — for people with serious weight problems only — and don't change your diet or increase your activity, and the pill will magically melt away the fat, and only pure body fat. ” And the scammers always make money off wishful thinking, which is why they do it. So, sadly, it's not amazing people fell for it, but rather predictable. Like falling for the pulling-away-the-football trick every time.

QUOTABLE

OTHER VIEWS

Children in need

“I will guarantee you that there’s nothing else like this at the community college or technical college level in the state.”

— Dan Minzel, head of Everett Community College’s welding and fabrication departments, on the school’s new, $3.75 million Advanced Manufacturing Training & Education Center.

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“Citizens should not assume that these encryption devices will necessarily prevent government from intercepting communications. If history is any guide, the government will find a way to penetrate these devices.”

— Jonathan Turley, a constitutional-law professor at The George Washington University Law School, on the new smartphones with encryption devices.

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“The fact that wages remain stuck despite 48 successive months of job gains suggests that employers’ bargaining power remains exceptionally strong.”

— Gary Burtless, an economist at the Brookings Institution, on why American workers’ paychecks aren’t growing.

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“We’ve seen over the last few years, bringing new airplanes to the market is difficult. It’s been difficult for us. It’s been difficult for Airbus. And it’s been really difficult for some of these new entrants. What we do is a challenge.”

— Randy Tinseth, Boeing executive.

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Bees From Page B7

record-breaking rates across the U.S., harming our agriculture, gardens and economy. Scientific evidence increasingly points to pesticides as a key catalyst driving the die-offs of bees, in combination with disease, poor nutrition and other factors. Neonicotinoids— a class of neurotoxic pesticides that kill insects by blocking nerve impulses—are particularly harmful to bees and other pollinators because they move systemically throughout the plant to the pollen or nectar and can persist in the soil for several years. Despite this, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has not taken decisive action to protect pollinators from neonicotinoids. By contrast,

■■“Study: Your pet’s food may not contain the meat it says it does”: Again, sadly true. Because pet food is “regulated” like diet scams are. It pretty much takes cases of death or injury to garner regulatory attention. ■■“21 awesomely well-designed products we’re dying to own”: This from the staff at Wired magazine. Dying to own? Really? Even if their advertisers are desperate to sell them, it still doesn't qualify as a life or death situation, thank goodness. Well, back to work on my custom-design SansabeltLandline-Phone Pantsuit, with accompanying caffeine-free underwear. Carol MacPherson: 425-3393472; cmacpherson@heraldnet. com

Why economic inequality is not a bigger political issue

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f critics of income inequality are wondering why the growing gap between rich and poor hasn’t been a more potent political issue in the upcoming elections, a new study offers some answers: Americans grossly underestimate this inequality. That’s one of the key findings of a survey showing the gap between CEO and average worker pay in America is more than 10 times larger than the typical American perceives. Harvard University and Chulalongkorn University researchers analyzed data from 40 countries about perceptions of pay gaps between rich and poor. In every country, respondents underestimated the size of the gap between CEO and average worker pay. In the United States, they found the median American respondent estimated the ratio of CEO to worker income is about 30-to-1. In reality, the gap is more than 350-to-1. The study also found the median American respondent said the ideal pay gap is about 7-to-1 — a lower ideal than respondents in many industrialized countries. Additionally, no major industrialized country has anywhere close to a 7-to-1 pay gap. That ratio is more than seven times lower than the actual gap in social democratic countries like Denmark and Sweden. One of the researchers said Americans’ inaccurate beliefs about the pay gap may be the reason economic inequality hasn’t become more of a political issue.

in December, the European Union instituted a two-year moratorium on the use of neonicotinoids, citing concerns about potential harms to bees. With beekeepers reporting unprecedented losses over the last few years, the need for action is increasingly urgent. Seattle City Council took up the charge and responded with what the council is referring to as a ‘modest step’ by prohibiting the use of neonic pesticides and urging businesses not to sell plants treated by these harmful chemicals. Additionally, the resolution asks the EPA to suspend the registration of neonic pesticides and asks the U.S. House to pass the Save the American Pollinators Act (there is no corresponding bill in the Senate). Even more important is the message this step sends: You don’t need pesticides to have a world-class city. Seattle is acknowledging the impact of

DAVID SIROTA “The lack of awareness of the gap in CEO to unskilled worker pay — which in the U.S. people estimate to be 30-to-1 but is in fact 350-to-1 — likely reduces citizens’ desire to take action to decrease that gap,” Harvard’s Michael Norton said. Early in the 2014 election cycle, Democrats seemed poised to make economic inequality a central focus of their campaigns, following the high-profile election victories of economic populists like Sen. Elizabeth Warren and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio. But as the Washington Post reported, internal Democratic Party polling “found that talking about income inequality does not register strongly with the American public and risks accusations of class warfare.” The Pew Research Center found while a large majority of Americans acknowledge the growing gap between rich and poor and see it as a problem, there is little public consensus on the cause of — or proper counter to — that trend. That lack of consensus, coupled with a lack

harmful pesticides on our wildlife, water and public health. As council member Mike O’Brien stated, pesticides are not fully tested for safety, and people and wildlife have become the guinea pigs. In the case of neonics, bees are exposing their toxic side effects and we should use precaution. Some ask, if they don’t use neonics won’t they use something more harmful? But, neonics are used prophylactically, before an indication of insect problems and are thought to be overused. We need to stress precaution when it comes to public, economic and environmental health and that’s why NCAP supported this historic resolution. There are simple steps anyone can do to protect pollinators. First, avoid pesticide products and plants containing neonicotinoids with the highest toxicity to bees. Active ingredients to avoid:

of understanding of the enormity of the pay gap, has complicated Democrats’ efforts to make inequality a rallying point. Democratic pollster Geoff Garin told the Washington Post another obstacle is the belief that inequality has no concrete ramifications for voters’ daily lives. “It doesn’t have a personal immediacy and there are lot of other things that speak to income inequality that are much more immediate and much more tangible and much more real to people,” he said. Recent news events, however, suggest that economic inequality does, indeed, have very tangible consequences. Strife between police and protestors in Ferguson, Missouri, spotlights economic inequality’s potential connection to criminal justice. Similarly, Standard & Poor’s released reports showing the widening gap between rich and poor threatens America’s overall economic growth and exacerbates state budget crises. A National Bureau of Economic Research study finds that America’s higher rate of infant mortality than Europe “is driven almost exclusively by excess inequality in the United States.” Despite all this, economic inequality remains a peripheral political issue. Why? Based on the data, it is not because the problem is insignificant — it is more likely because Americans’ misperceive just how unequal their country has become. Email ds@davidsirota.com

imidacloprid, clothianidin, dinotefuran and thiamethoxam. Second, grow a variety of neonicotinoid-free flowering plants throughout the growing season to provide bees with a constant food source. Third, contact your representative and ask them to support the Saving America’s Pollinators Act, HR 2692. More information is available at www. pesticide.org. Finally, ask your city or county council to follow Seattle’s lead and take steps to protect pollinators. There is nothing to stop Everett and other cities from taking the same step as Seattle. Your city can be a safer place to live and work for people and bees. Megan Dunn works in Everett as the Healthy People and Communities program director for the Northwest Center for Alternatives to Pesticides. She has worked with the Everett Parks Department to reduce pesticide use at city parks.

The following editorial appeared in Friday’s Washington Post: Before there was an Affordable Care Act, the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) helped plug one of the many coverage holes in the nation’s health insurance system. At an annual cost of $13 billion, most of which comes from Congress and the rest from state governments, CHIP covers some 8 million children in families too well-off to qualify for Medicaid but too poor to afford private insurance. The uninsured rate for minors has fallen from 14 percent before the law’s enactment in 1997 to 7 percent today. In theory, there is no more need for a program like CHIP now that the new health-care law is in effect, with its interlocking system of guaranteed issue and subsidized policies available to the entire under-65 population via Medicaid, employer-paid insurance or reformed individual health insurance exchanges. In practice, while most CHIP beneficiaries may indeed obtain new sources of coverage, CHIP must keep going for a time, lest children lose coverage during the transition. For that reason, the ACA kept federal CHIP matching funds flowing to states through fiscal 2015. It also required states to maintain their eligibility rules through fiscal 2019. Obviously, this time line created a potential unfunded mandate for the states for those four years. That wouldn’t be a problem if all, or nearly all, former CHIP beneficiaries could find the same coverage elsewhere. Alas, implementation quirks in the health-care law make that doubtful. The Internal Revenue Service defined eligibility for subsidies on the exchanges in such a way as to exclude families with many children who are currently served by CHIP or are still uninsured. The American Action Forum, a conservative think tank, estimates that this “family glitch” could affect more than 2.2 million children if funding for CHIP isn’t extended past 2015. Even families that get subsidized coverage through the exchange may find that benefits for their children will be narrower and cost more out-of-pocket than does CHIP, according to an analysis by the Wakely Consulting Group. One of CHIP’s authors, Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV, D-W.Va., has proposed extending the program’s federal funding through 2019, while beefing up the benefits package. This would address the risk of an unfunded mandate as well as that of costlier, skimpier benefits confronting CHIP beneficiaries. There are just two problems: finding billions of dollars to pay for the plan, and guaranteeing that Congress uses the time that money buys to fix CHIP-related glitches. Otherwise, Congress will be back in the same predicament come 2020 — when both the new cash and the requirement that states maintain CHIP expire. Plainly, funds have to be found to avoid short-term harm to children who depend on CHIP. Equally clearly, the funding must come with a plan to rightsize CHIP for a world in which comprehensive reform largely supersedes it.


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Sports SECTION C

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THE DAILY HERALD

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WWW.HERALDNET.COM/SPORTS

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Upsetting times College Football’s top 25 undergoes a major shakeup Saturday with several ranked teams losing: No. 3 Alabama, No. 4 Oklahoma, No. 6 Texas A&M, No. 8 UCLA, No. 16 USC and No. 17 Wisconsin, C7

SUNDAY, 10.05.2014

Silvertips lose again in overtime Portland wins first game, beats Everett 3-2 By Nick Patterson Herald Writer

EVERETT — The Everett Silvertips and the rest of the Western Hockey League were having a field day at the expense of the Portland Winterhawks.

Portland, the four-time defending Western Conference champion, was in uncharted territory, dropping its first six games to start the season. Everett, which ate its share of Portland’s dust the past four years, was the author of two of those defeats. Questions were beginning to mount about whether the Winterhawks’ reign was over. But Portland’s losing streak

wasn’t going to last forever, and the Tips ended up being the victims. Alex Schoenborn scored in overtime as Portland won its first game of the season, knocking off Everett 3-2 Saturday night at Xfinity Arena. The loss was Everett second overtime home defeat in two nights. “That builds confidence,” said first-year Portland coach Jamie

Kompon, who also picked up his first win behind a WHL bench. “The attitude has been great, everyone’s been upbeat, they knew it was just a matter of time before it came. I’m just glad it came sooner rather than later.” Chase De Leo and Tyson Predinchuk also scored for Portland (1-5-0-1), while Brendan Burke earned the win in goal with 26 saves.

Nikita Scherbak and Remi Laurencelle scored for Everett (3-0-2-0), which fell to undefeated Kelowna 5-4 in overtime the previous night. For Scherbak it was his third goal in two games since joining the Tips earlier this week. Carter Hart finished with 28 saves in net for Everett. See SILVERTIPS, Page C2

Seahawks chose the right path Seattle’s success and Washington’s woe since 2012 is a tale of two quarterbacks.

R

ELAINE THOMPSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Seattle Seahawks’ Heath Farwell (right) leans down as he helps his son Beau, 1, try on his helmet as other son Brock, 3, stands nearby after practice July 29. A serious double groin injury likely has ended Farwell’s playing career, but rather than release him with an injury settlement, Seahawks coach Pete Carroll moved to make Farwell an assistant coach.

Taking care of their own In a move unheard of in the NFL, the Seattle Seahawks make a unique offer to Heath Farwell so the injured veteran linebacker can stay with the team By Gregg Bell The News Tribune

RENTON — Heath Farwell figured he was done. Done with playing for the Seahawks. Done with playing in the NFL. Just done, ready to go home to Newport Beach, Calif., where he keeps a beach house with his wife Julie and their two young sons, Brock (3) and Beau (1). That’s because on Aug. 22 during an exhibition against Chicago, the 32-year-old backup linebacker and Seattle’s 2013 special-teams captain raced back into the south end zone of CenturyLink Field to defend a long pass. He leaped for the ball — then heard a pop. He felt searing pain in both his upper legs and collapsed to the turf. He had torn both his groin muscles, bilateral core-muscle tears. His 2014 season and likely his 10-year career were over. The injury is considered not only career-ending but one that threatens one’s quality of life after football. The usual custom in the NFL is for a team to pay a player with such a long-term injury

MATT YORK / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Seattle linebacker Heath Farwell (55) celebrates after the Seahawks defeated the Denver Broncos 43-8 in the Super Bowl on Feb. 2.

and no future a lump-sum payment — an injury settlement, as defined by the league’s collective bargaining agreement. The team waives him as injured, immediately making him a free agent able to sign to play for any other team should he eventually return to health. Another alternative, the injured-reserve list, is usually for younger players who, unlike Farwell, are under contract with a team beyond the current year. For those who have

INSIDE: Sounders, C2

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Golf, C3

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a long-term plan with the club. Farwell is 32. He’s been in the league a decade. Both his groin muscles were shredded. He has no immediate playing future. “I’m literally still walking,” he said, a month after his injury and surgery. “I mean, I can only do push-ups off my knees right now. That shows you where my rehab’s at.” So no, there are no long-term plans for him as a Seahawk. Or for him on any other team.

Auto Racing, C3

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Yet the Seahawks kept him. At Farwell’s lowest point, depressed over his career likely ending, coach Pete Carroll walked up to him in the Virginia Mason Athletic Center and asked: “You want to stay and help lead these guys? You had said before you were interested in coaching. This would be a great opportunity to do, to learn.” Carroll and general manager John Schneider then placed Farwell on injured reserve. That allows Farwell to continue to draw his weekly, in-season salary of $73,529 — 1/17th of his veteran pay of $1.25 million. An injury settlement would have given him a fraction of that in a one-time or limitedterm payment. He continues to have daily access to the team’s state-of-the-art training facilities and medical staff, assets he would not have had with a settlement. For the players, it’s impressive. It’s compassionate. And in a league where health and contracts are not guaranteed, it’s unheard of. See FARWELL, Page C8

NFL, C4-5

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Baseball, C6

ENTON — The last time the Seattle Seahawks traveled to our nation’s capital, it was for a playoff matchup between two teams with seemingly bright futures. Both Washington and Seattle entered that 2012 wild card game as teams on the rise, and more importantly in a quarterbackdriven league, as teams that both appeared to have found franchise signal callers in the draft earlier that year. With Robert Griffin III leading Washington and Russell Wilson running the Seahawks’ offense, it was easy back then to assume we were watching the beginning of the NFC’s version of the New England-Indianapolis rivalry that featured nearly annual AFC playoff games between Tom Brady’s Patriots and JOHN BOYLE Peyton Manning’s Colts. Heading into that wild card game, Seattle had an 11-5 record, while NFC East champion Washington was 10-6. The Seahawks won in dramatic comeback fashion, and since that day, the two franchises, and their quarterbacks, have traveled dramatically different paths. Since the end of the 2012 regular season, playoffs included, the Seahawks are 20-5 and have earned a Lombardi Trophy. In that same time, Washington has gone 4-17. Wilson, meanwhile, only continues to improve, is a two-time Pro Bowl player, and after the overtime win over Denver, has people debating if he might be better than the No. 1 pick in 2012, Andrew Luck. Griffin, the player taken one pick after Luck, has gone from can’t-miss super star, the 2012 rookie of the year, to a player whose future is very much in doubt. He played through an injured knee late in his rookie season, tore his ACL in that loss to Seattle and then was rushed back for the start of the 2013 season when he clearly wasn’t himself. After a sub-par second season, followed by a serious ankle injury to open the 2014 campaign, plenty around Washington are wondering if he is even the longterm answer at quarterback, or if Kirk Cousins is the better bet. So what happened? How did two teams seemingly on such similar trajectories end up in such different places heading into Monday night’s game in Washington? While there are plenty of factors in play, it’s impossible not to start with the quarterbacks, both in terms of how they have played, and also how they were acquired. See BOYLE, Page C4

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Weather, C10


C2

Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Sounders wary of struggling Colorado By Don Ruiz The News Tribune

The Seattle Sounders are about to play a team that seems in freefall. Yes, again. Last weekend it was Chivas USA, whose troubles continued with a 4-2 loss at Seattle. On Sunday, the Sounders visit the Colorado Rapids, who are winless over their past 10 games. Eight of those have been losses, and three have come by three goals or more. “It’s a little bit similar to Chivas, but different,” Seattle coach Sigi Schmid said. “… I know they’ve gotten blown out in a couple of games, but one was just a bad game in goal, and the other game it just sort of collapsed on them. But if you watch in most of their games, they’re in the game for 70-75 minutes for sure, and often longer than that. They’re a very competitive team. … They lost lots of defenders in the back for a while, but (Shane) O’Neill is back. So I think their depth is deeper than it was a

season with road and home matches against the Galaxy. “We’ve got to win — just like any other game,” defender DeAndre Yedlin said. “It’s crucial these last four games, especially for the Supporters Shield race. TONIGHT’S GAME So we have the same mindset Seattle at Colorado, noon we’ve had this whole year: just to TV: Joetv (cable) Radio: KIRO (97.3 FM) win.” The Sounders have done that month ago.” more often than any other team The Rapids remain within in Major League Soccer. And slim mathematical striking another win would establish distance of the fifth and final a franchise record. But espeplayoff spot in the Western Con- cially in recent weeks they have ference. However, those hopes been forced to depend on offenwould end with anything but a sive weapons such as Obafemi win over the Sounders. Seattle Martins and Clint Dempsey to already is assured of a return compensate for a defense that to the playoffs but remains in has been stretched and scored a neck-and-neck race with Los upon. Angeles for the Supporters Seattle also has surrenShield and top seeding in the dered a franchise-high 46 goals, Western Conference. including nine over the last This may be Schmid’s last three games. Even last weekchance to talk up a struggling end against Chivas — the opponent, as schedule might lowest-scoring team in MLS — present nothing but playoff the Sounders fell behind twice. teams from here. Vancouver “I think maybe sometimes visits Seattle on Friday before we get out of shape,” central the Sounders end their regular defender Chad Marshall said.

“We’re so focused on being offensive and scoring goals that maybe we leave ourselves a little susceptible in the back. We’ve talked about it. We know it’s a problem that needs to be sorted out, and hopefully we can do that for this weekend.” Seattle hasn’t held an opponent scoreless since August — a 1-0 home win over the Rapids. However, Schmid’s greatest ally is his fight against overconfidence may be the memory of what happened last time his team visited Colorado. Sunday marks the exact oneyear anniversary of a 5-1 loss at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, which at the time stood as the worst defeat in club history. The onslaught began in the opening seconds, with Colorado’s Dillon Powers scoring the second-quickest goal in league history. “We still think to last year when we got smacked there in Colorado,” Sounders captain Brad Evans said before the previous meeting. “… That was a bit of a wake-up call.”

CALENDAR

Silvertips From Page C1

“We were better tonight than last night,” Everett coach Kevin Constantine said. “We got a point last night against Kelowna, which is good in that they’re a good team. But we just gave up more than we feel we should in terms of shots and scoring chances. Tonight I thought we competed harder. “I think Portland is playing a little better with (Oliver) Bjorkstrand and other guys back. They’re probably starting to get used to the new coach, and they’re competing very hard right now because of pride and where they’re at in the standings,” Constantine added. “Portland played well tonight.” Portland’s slow start was due in part to missing players as star forwards Bjorkstrand and Nicolas Petan were at NHL training camps, while key defensemen Blake Heinrich and Josh Hanson were injured. But those players have started filtering back. Hanson was in the lineup for the first time this

VE A S

rule to try and create more offense, and more offense got created in that situation because our D got tired. Tired bodies and minds make mistakes, and we made some mistakes that were just due purely to fatigue because we couldn’t get a change during the shift. Hockey wanted more offense in the four-on-four and tonight they got it. Unfortunately, it was for them and not us.” Portland broke the ice 11 minutes, 49 seconds into the game. De Leo planted himself in front of goal, and when Layne Viveiros slid the puck goalward, De Leo made a fantastic backto-goal deflection to put the pick into the top corner, giving the Winterhawks a 1-0 lead. Everett tied it on the power play 3:10 into the second period. Scherbak received the puck in the right circle, made a quick move toward goal and fired a shot past Burke to knot it at 1-1 with his third goal in two games since joining the Tips. The Winterhawks took over the period after that. Predinchuk restored Portland’s lead at 6:21, sniping a shot past Hart after the Tips were long shifted, and the Winterhawks could have run away with it, but Hart stopped two breakaways and Portland twice drew iron. Then the Tips tied it against the run of play at 16:42. Logan Aasman’s shot was saved up into the air, and Laurencelle took a baseball swing and batted the puck in, tying it at 2-2. There were few scoring chances in the the third period, though one moment late in the period saw the puck get behind Hart but stay out, and the game went to overtime for the second straight night.

Slap shots Before the game the Tips reassigned winger Addison Runey. The 17-year-old from Frisco, Texas, found himself squeezed for playing time following the arrival of Nikita Scherbak. Runey will join the Amarillo Bulls of the North American Hockey League. The move leaves Everett with 24 players on the roster — 14 forwards, eight defensmen and two goaltenders. … Petan remains at camp with the NHL’s Winnipeg Jets. The Winterhawks were also without key defenseman Blake Heinrich because of an upper-body injury.

SHOP KLEIN TO SavE!

Colorado Noon JOETV Next game: Portland 7:35 p.m., Fri., Oct. 10

Next game: at California 3 p.m., Sat., Oct. 11

Next game: at Stanford 6 p.m., Fri., Oct. 10 Home

Portland Everett

1 0

1 2

0 0

1 0

— —

3 2

First Period—1, Portland, De Leo 4 (Viveiros, Bjorkstrand), 11:49. Penalties—none. Second Period—2, Everett, Scherbak 3 (Leedahl, Davis), 3:10 (pp). 3, Portland, Predinchuk 2 (Viveiros, Smith), 6:21. 4, Everett, Laurencelle 2 (Aasman), 16:42. Penalties—Smith, Portland (interference), 2:57; Laurencelle, Everett (holding), 10:28. Third Period—no goals. Penalties—none. Overtime—5, Portland, Schoenborn 1 (Koules), 2:40. Penalties—none. Shots on goal—Portland 12-8-8-3—31. Everett 11-10-7-0—28. Power-play opportunities—Portland 0 of 1. Everett 1 of 1. Goalies—Portland, Burke 1-2-0-1 (28 shots, 26 saves). Everett, Hart 1-0-1-0 (31 shots, 28 saves). A—4,715.

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season on Saturday and Bjorkstrand played against Everett for the first time. The Winterhawks nearly stopped their skid Friday before falling in a shootout at home against Seattle. But Portland managed to get over the top Saturday. “We played a real solid team game, especially coming off a game we played last night at home against Seattle,” Kompon said. “We brought the same kind of intensity and effort and we finally got rewarded.” The game-winning goal came in large part because of an offseason rule change. This season teams change ends for overtime, meaning they have the longer distance to get back to their benches to make line changes. As a result, Everett’s players were stuck in a long shift as Portland harried the Tips defense into turnovers. Those turnovers led to several scoring chances in close. Hart denied the first three, but Schoenborn was eventually able to bank the puck off Hart and into the net to send the Winterhawks into a celebration that was far more spirited than the typical regular season postgame handshakes. “That is an example of why they changed the rule,” Constantine said. “They changed the

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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014

C3

Kyle Busch out to overcome Kansas Speedway demons By Dave Skretta Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Nearly all who rolled into Kansas Speedway this weekend still in contention for the Sprint Cup championship should feel good about their chances. Brad Keselowski won at the track a few years ago. Matt Kenseth has two victories in the last five races there. Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon and Kevin Harvick — Sunday’s pole sitter — have all won at the fast, mile-and-a-half oval that kicks off the latest round of the Chase. Even Kasey Kahne, who barely squeezed into the 12-driver field for the contender round of NASCAR’s postseason, posted back-to-back top-five finishes at Kansas. “I feel like we have a shot,” Kahne said. “We’ve had really fast cars, but things haven’t gone our

way the last few races, but I think our cars have been pretty quick.” Yep, optimism abounds up and down pit road at Kansas. Until you get to Kyle Busch. If there’s anybody who should feel a bit nervous about the threerace stretch that will pare the field to eight, it’s the Joe Gibbs Racing driver. He’s crashed out of the Chase race the last two years at Kansas, and three of the last four races there overall. Each time, he had arrived with high hopes. Each time, he left in frustration. “We’ll see how this time goes,” said Busch, who nearly backed his Nationwide car into the wall during practice Friday. “There have been some times where we felt like we should have been faster some places this year and haven’t quite been, so no reason to think that Kansas being one of our worst tracks we can’t go there

Hollywood 400 at Kansas Speedway

Time: 11 a.m. TV: ESPN Radio: KRKO (1380 AM)

and try to run well.” Kansas hasn’t always been Busch’s personal house of horrors. He’s raced well at the track in the Truck Series and the Nationwide Series, and even this week he has been strong in practice. He’ll roll off Sunday from the seventh starting position. But when Busch hops into his Sprint Cup car, everything goes haywire. The wall seems to jump out and bite him, chewing up a big chunk of his title hopes along the way. Or some other misfortune hits, such as getting busted for speeding on pit road.

Even when he’s managed to get to the checkered flag, Busch usually isn’t close to the front. His best finish at Kansas is just seventh, and that was in 2006. His average the past four races is 30th, and that result Sunday would put him in plenty of trouble with stops at Charlotte and the crapshoot known as Talladega looming. Ryan Newman might be the only Chase contender who can come close to rivaling Busch’s bad luck at Kansas. He hasn’t finished in the top 10 in his last seven starts. Yet asked what his expectation is this weekend, Newman’s reply was easy: “Win.” “It sounds simple,” he said, “and we’ve tried so hard for the first 29 races, whatever it’s been. But in the end, it’s just going out there and doing the best you possibly can.”

There is a premium on doing that under NASCAR’s new Chase format. The winner guarantee himself a spot in the eliminator round, and also takes the pressure off the next couple of weeks. That no small thing considering the high-speed potholes that can pop up at Talladega, where the slightest bobble at the restrictor-plate track can wipe away half of the field — and a slew of championship contenders. That’s why the last race in the current three-race portion of the Chase is the one that fills most drivers — not named Kyle Busch — with the greatest amount of dread. “If you have two solid weeks here, a crash at Talladega might not hurt you so bad, especially if all the guys you’re racing wreck as well,” said six-time champion Jimmie Johnson, who starts 32nd on Sunday after spinning out

Watson takes responsibility for Ryder Cup loss Lewis, Hedwall share By Doug Ferguson Associated Press

Tom Watson took the blame Saturday for his communication with his players in another American loss at the Ryder Cup, and the 65-year-old captain said he called Phil Mickelson earlier this week to clear the air. “I regret that my words may have made the players feel that I didn’t appreciate their commitment and dedication to winning the Ryder Cup,” Watson said in a statement issued through the PGA of America. “My intentions throughout my term as captain were both to inspire and to be honest.” Mickelson indirectly called out Watson in an awkward press conference after Europe’s 161⁄2-111⁄2 victory, the eighth out of the last 10 times it has won the cup. Mickelson said the

Americans have strayed from a winning formula they had under Paul Azinger in 2008. Watson was sitting in the middle of his 12 players and said he had a different philosophy. The statement was issued one day after an ESPN report citing four unidentified people who were in the U.S. team room on the night before the final round. Those people said Watson blamed the players for their performance in foursomes — Europe went unbeaten in both sessions to build a 10-6 lead going into singles — and scoffed at a gift from the players by saying it was meaningless if they didn’t win. The gift was a replica of the Ryder Cup the players had signed. The report also said Watson denigrated some of the European players,

and only praised the play of U.S. rookies Jordan Spieth and Patrick Reed. Watson was the oldest captain in Ryder Cup history. He was the last U.S. captain in 1993 to win the Ryder Cup away from home. “The guys gave everything. They played their hearts out,” Watson said in his statement. “I was proud to get to know each and every one of them.” Mickelson was playing his 10th Ryder Cup — no American has played more times — and said the U.S. team was not involved in any decision. He heaped praise on Azinger for his “pods” system that got the players involved when they won at Valhalla in 2008. Watson dismissed that during the press conference, saying winning the Ryder Cup was not about pods and that it simply took 12 players to win.

The ESPN report said Mickelson was the last to speak during the team meeting, kept his back turned at Watson and tried to rally the players. Europe won key matches early and clinched the cup with four matches still on the course. Watson said he had a “candid conversation” with Mickelson this week “and it ended with a better understanding of each other’s perspectives.” “Phil’s heart and intentions for our team’s success have always been in the right place,” Watson said. “Phil is a great player, has great passion and I admire what he’s done for golf.” Watson said the loss at Gleneagles fell to him. “I was their captain,” he said. “In hindsight, whatever mistakes that were made were mine. And I take full responsibility for them.”

lead at Reignwood Classic Associated Press BEIJING — Stacy Lewis recovered from a slow start with four birdies on the back nine Saturday to take a share of the lead with Sweden’s Caroline Hedwall heading into the final round of the LPGA Reignwood Classic. The top-ranked Lewis started the day with a twostroke lead over fellow American Brittany Lang, but fell back with three bogeys through the 11th hole. She then made three straight birdies from No. 13 before closing with a birdie on the 18th to regain a share of the lead with a 72. “I made some bad swings early,” Lewis said. “Probably the swing I made on 13, on the par 3, I don’t know what it was, but things just kind of seemed to click after that. You know, just kind of found

some confidence in my golf swing from there, and then making the putts too, which was nice.” Hedwall made five birdies on the back nine to shoot a 5-under 68. She will be aiming for her first career LPGA title on Sunday, while Lewis will be trying to win her fourth this year. “I put myself in the position a few times but just haven’t won yet,” the Swede said. “When I go out there tomorrow I’m trying to just be patient and be relaxed about it though, because you can’t force anything when you’re playing golf.” Hedwall and Lewis were at 13-under 206 at Pine Valley Golf Club. Lewis said another title would also help put distance over her closest rivals in the race for LPGA player of the year.

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NFL C4

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WWW.HERALDNET.COM

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SUNDAY, 10.05.2014

Titans may give ex-Husky Boyle Sankey more opportunities From Page C1

By Nate Ulrich Akron Beacon Journal

BEREA, Ohio - The planets might be aligning for Wadsworth, Ohio, native and Tennessee Titans rookie running back Bishop Sankey to have a breakout game against his hometown team. Coach Ken Whisenhunt has made it clear Sankey will likely be used early and often when the Titans (1-3) host the Browns (1-2) Sunday at LP Field. “It’s definitely something to be excited about,� said Sankey, who played his high school football at Gonzaga Prep in Spokane. “I’ve just been trying to hone in on the details of footwork and trying to gain the coaches’ trust. The main thing is just focusing on the little things and trying to get everything corrected, so when they put me out there, I’ll know they won’t have any second-guessing, any doubts in their head that I’ll be able to get the job done.� The Titans drafted Sankey, a University of Washington product, in the second round (No. 54 overall) of this year’s NFL Draft. He’s listed as the No. 2 running back on the depth chart, behind starter Shonn Greene, but the pecking order might be in flux. “He has done a nice job the last couple of weeks doing the things we asked him to do as far as details of his assignment,� Whisenhunt said of Sankey during a conference call. “He has therefore earned more opportunities, so he’s playing well for us.� The 5-foot-10, 209-pound Sankey, the first running back drafted this year, worried Whisenhunt with his footwork earlier this season, though he has improved. “We’ve had some issues where it’s close on the exchanges because he’s been too wide or he hasn’t done the proper footwork — you know, some of the little details — because he’s more worried about protection or vision of the hole,� Whisenhunt said. “You have to make sure you’re really focused on executing those little things exactly right because when you’re taking the ball from the quarterback, you can’t afford to

DARRON CUMMINGS / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Titans running back Bishop Sankey has 24 carries for 123 yards (5.1 avg.).

have it on the ground. “That was the point we were trying to make with Bishop as far as making sure that didn’t happen. He’s worked on that. He’s done better in the games the last few weeks, so credit to him. Just like any player on our football team, when they start showing some good things and doing it the right way, they’re going to get opportunities.� Through four games, Sankey has 24 carries, nine fewer attempts than Greene, for 123 yards (5.1 average) and one touchdown to go along with three catches for 32 yards. “I really think I’m doing well when I’m out there, moving the chains, being productive, everything with pass protection,� Sankey said. “One area I want to improve on or take that next step is to have more explosive plays, more explosive runs. I feel like those will come as long as I keep working.� The Titans have the NFL’s 17thranked rushing attack (119.5 yards per game). The Browns are ranked 29th in run defense (153.7 yards allowed per game), and they know Sankey will be a key to the matchup. “We definitely liked him heading into the draft,� Browns coach Mike Pettine said. “I don’t recall where we had him ranked in relation to the other guys, but he’s a very complete back, a guy that

has good vision, can run away from you, but still has that ability to make you miss. He’s pretty good in the pass game as well, and you can just see him getting better. “It hasn’t been a lot of time, but you can see his role is going to increase. It’s difficult for us to prepare for because they really throw four backs at you whether it’s Dexter McCluster, Shonn Greene, Sankey, Leon Washington. Sankey is a guy that was highly regarded coming out, and he’s certainly living up to it.� ProFootballFocus.com has Sankey ranked eighth out of 54 running backs in the NFL. McCluster is tied for 19th, and Greene is tied for 33rd. Washington is unranked. “Sankey has shown a lot of good things,� Browns defensive end Desmond Bryant said. “I wouldn’t be surprised if they try to get him out there more. We haven’t been playing run defense very well. They might try to use him to exploit that. They all come to the table with different strengths. He’s kind of more of the balanced guy of the group. I think he’s good getting to the edge. He can run between the tackles and still make guys miss at the second level. In the passing game, I think he can do some great things as well. He’s definitely a good back. We’ve got to be prepared for him for sure.�

While the Seahawks made multiple attempts at finding the right quarterback under Pete Carroll and John Schneider, they never mortgaged the future to find that player. First they gave up a third-round pick to acquire Charlie Whitehurst, who couldn’t come close to unseating incumbent Matt Hasselbeck. Then the Seahawks signed Tarvaris Jackson, who was solid, though not great in 2011. After that it was signing Matt Flynn to fairly lucrative, though far from crippling contract in March of 2012. A month later, despite signing the player everyone assumed was their starter, the Seahawks took Wilson in the third round of the draft, a move that worked out better than anyone, Schneider and Carroll included, could have realistically envisioned. Washington, meanwhile, saw Griffin as a once-in-a-generation talent (OK, maybe twice in a generation since Luck was in that same draft) and made a very aggressive move to get him. It gave up the sixth pick of that draft, first rounders in 2013 and 2014, and a 2012 secondround pick to acquire the No. 2 pick. By the end of the 2012 season, that looked to be a steep but necessary price to pay for a star quarterback. Two years later, however, as Washington struggles to compete with a roster that surely could use some of those traded-away picks, the trade looks like a disaster, and will continue to unless Griffin can eventually come back and be the player he was in 2012. And while it’s easy to secondguess Washington now for that trade, what isn’t up for debate is that the Seahawks demonstrated a piece of what has made them the NFL’s best franchise in the way they acquired Wilson. Despite inheriting a team with no long-term solution at quarterback, Carroll and Schneider refused to force the issue. Instead they tried a few different options while building a young, deep and talented roster by not only hanging onto their draft picks, but by frequently trading back to add

more picks — picks that they turned into players like Kam Chancellor, Richard Sherman and Bobby Wagner, all cornerstones of Seattle’s defense who were drafted with selections acquired by moving back. “I just like it in general,� Schneider said prior to the 2014 draft when asked about his propensity for trading back. “Is that OK to say? I’m not giving anything way, am I?� “Say you have eight guys in the fifth round that you really like, is it really worth losing two of those eight guys to go up and get one player? Is that one player worth two of those guys? ... The temptation is to go get guys instead of going back and acquiring more picks,� It’s a temptation that Schneider and Carroll have been able to avoid, even when it came to Wilson, a player Schneider really wanted to get in 2012. The Seahawks could have just taken Wilson in the second round that year and not had go through the stress of waiting for pick No. 75 to roll around, but Schneider trusted his draft board and believed they could take Wagner in the second round and still get Wilson later. “Quite honestly I prayed about it a bunch,� Schneider said at Super Bowl media day when asked about that wait to pick Wilson. “We try not to panic in our room. We listen to Reggae music and we don’t have the TVs on. When we have the TVs on, we have the volume turned down. We try to keep a very calm atmosphere where if we need to have discussions, we can talk about it. When he started coming closer to us, there was a group of quarterbacks taken higher and then there was a second group that was going to start going in there. I didn’t know if he was going to be the first one or not, but I knew we weren’t going to go by him again.� The Seahawks could have missed out on Wilson because of their patience, but instead they not only got the steal of the draft in Round 3, they also landed a player who would become one of the NFL’s top middle linebacker with a pick that could have been Wilson had they panicked and pulled the trigger early. Those kinds of decisions, ones that net an extra star-caliber player on Day 2 of See SEAHAWKS, Page C5

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NFL C5

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THE DAILY HERALD

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WWW.HERALDNET.COM

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SUNDAY, 10.05.2014

COMMENTARY

Broncos vs. Cards, which West is best? By Paul Klee The Gazette

DENVER — So, Peyton Manning, how about that AFC West? “I think our division is the toughest division in football,” the Broncos quarterback said before a Week 2 game against Kansas City. “I thought it was last year as well.” Gas can, meet match. What about the big, bad NFC West? Guess we’ll find out soon enough. While the Broncos would rather get the NFL schedule-makers in a padded room, fans of hard-hitting football should mail the league a Hallmark card. Denver’s schedule looks like a survival hunt from Hunger Games 3 (R, violence). “I believe, over the years, we (the NFC West) have definitely gained a persona of being very physical, very tough, wanting to play smash-mouth football,” Cardinals cornerback Patrick Peterson told The Gazette. “Obviously I believe all four teams in the NFC West predicate their teams off defenses. You want to play tough defense. You want to play smash-mouth defense.” Hey, that’s what the Broncos want, too. Sunday, NFC West-leading Arizona is the next opportunity for Denver to prove it can hang with the meanest division in football. The Cardinals don’t have the Super Bowl pedigree of the Seattle Seahawks. But over the past 12 regular-season games, no team has more wins than Arizona’s 10. Its defense hasn’t allowed more than 17 points in three games this season. Denver hasn’t scored fewer than 17 points in 35 regular-season games with Manning at quarterback. The only time Manning’s offense failed to reach 17 points was, yes, against the NFC West (Seattle 43, Denver 8). Two weeks ago at Seattle, the Broncos lost an overtime game but proved a point. Denver learned it can play hard ball against a division that smashed its ego in the Super Bowl. Denver delivered as many bruising tackles as the world champs did. In the same offseason the Broncos were writing handsome paychecks to toughen their defense, the NFL scheduled four games against the NFC West as a litmus test. Not only will we learn the burning question that hovers over Mile High — are these Broncos tough enough to win a Super Bowl? — we’ll learn the answer to this one: Which is the best division in football? Manning said it’s the AFC West. The Super Bowl result said it’s the NFC West. Last season said the NFC West had the Super Bowl champs, while the AFC West had more playoff teams (3 to 2). The head-to-head matchups this season (NFC West 2, AFC West 1) says it’s too early to tell. The three matchups between the AFC West and NFC West have been decided by an average of 5.3 points. Like an athletic director lobbying for his conference in the college football playoff, the Broncos suggested the AFC West deserves more respect. “Everybody talks about their division, and rightfully so, but our division isn’t bad, either,” coach John Fox said. The bye week allows football players to heal their bruises. It is particularly helpful after a game against the NFC West. “We feel great,” Broncos cornerback Chris Harris Jr. said. It also allows NFL writers to watch a full day of football. After watching 12 hours of games and memorizing the words to every Peyton Manning commercial, here is one observation: The balance of power has shifted to the AFC. While Seattle remains king of the NFL until proven otherwise, the Broncos, Bengals, Chargers and Ravens offer more depth at the top than what the NFC has shown through four weeks. By pairing the AFC West against the NFC West, the NFL made certain none of their teams will have an easy road to the playoffs. The five toughest schedules in the NFL are from the western divisions (Oakland, Denver, St. Louis, San Diego, San Francisco). “It kind of gives you a measuring stick for your football team,” Peterson said. “Playing against Denver now, a year removed from the Super Bowl last year, is going to be a great measuring stick.” The Broncos measured their progress against the NFC West’s Seahawks. The Cardinals are measuring theirs against the AFC West’s Broncos. What’s the best division in football? Go West. After the bruising game in Seattle, a pair of Broncos defenders compared big hits like 8-year-olds compare Christmas toys. “Remember that one?” Aqib Talib shouted. “He was like.” T.J. Ward replied, reminiscing a certain tackle. The Broncos are embracing the bash. The NFL schedule-makers forced them to.

The Redskins’ Alfred Morris (46) has rushed for 316 yards, fifth in the NFL, in the first four games of the season.

EVAN VUCCI / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Morris ready to run

Redskins may rely more on running game against Seahawks By Liz Clarke The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Head coach Jay Gruden’s offense has veered from one extreme to the other in the Washington Redskins’ turbulent start to the season — piling up yardage and points at a furious clip in the Week 2 rout of Jacksonville, only to implode in a fit of turnovers and penalties in the Week 4 debacle against the New York Giants. What consistency the unit has mustered has come from the running game, led by third-year running back Alfred Morris, whose 316 rushing yards place him fifth in the NFL this season. As the 1-3 Redskins attempt to dig out from the cellar of the NFC East, Gruden said Friday that the balance between the run and pass is under constant review. And he hinted it may be time to lean on the running game more. “The first thing you look at is, ‘Are we getting Alfred the ball enough? Are we consistent with our approach as far as our mentality of running the ball enough?’” said Gruden, a former college and pro quarterback. “Usually when you lose, that’s the first thing you say we should have done: stuck with the run longer.” Last Thursday’s 45-14 pummeling by the Giants didn’t lend itself to pounding the ball after Washington fell behind 14-0 early in the second quarter. His team trailing by three scores at halftime, Gruden doubled-down on backup quarterback Kirk Cousins, who had thrown for 427 yards in the previous week’s 37-34 loss at Philadelphia. This time the result was a turnover-fest, with Cousins intercepted four times in the second half. Morris finished with 12 carries for 63 yards, with one touchdown. It added to some telling statistics about

Seahawks From Page C4

the draft, played out year after year, are the ones that can make the difference between a Super Bowl title and a losing season. As a coach, Carroll wants to acquire the best players he can to compete for playing time and roster spots, but he has full trust that Schneider knows what he’s doing, even if that means waiting longer than is comfortable to pick a potential impact player. “(Schneider) kind of has a sense for what’s going to happen and what we can expect, and he’s been really good about that,” Carroll said. “When we get to that time, I’m not as tense as he was (waiting to draft Wilson). We had set the plan in motion, we knew what we were doing. He was pretty uptight about it at the time, but he was right, he was dead on. It’s just a matter of talking through it and gauging the draft and the people that are coming up and who’s available. There are a variety of variables that decide that, but basically when it comes down to it, you go from your gut and I trust John to have a great sense for that.” And it’s not that the Seahawks

the link between Morris’s workload and the Redskins results. The 5-foot-10, 224-pound Morris, built like a fireplug and just as sturdy, has started all 36 games at running back since being chosen in the sixth round of the 2012 NFL draft. In games in which he rushes 14 times or fewer, Washington is 0-9. In games in which he carries 15-19 times, Washington is 3-8. And in games in which he gets 20 or more carries, Washington is 11-5. Much of Morris’ opportunities, of course, are dictated by the score and circumstance. Even when a game is reasonably in hand, striking the right balance between running plays and pass plays is tricky, Gruden said. It’s particularly so when you’re starting a young quarterback and trying to avoid third-and-long situations. “It’s a fine line, because you try to force the run in there and all the sudden you leave Kirk with third down and 8 or thirdand-7,” Gruden said. Washington’s third-down efficiency ranked 26th in the NFL. “You have to have a good balance and make sure on first downs you’re getting positive gains,” Gruden added. “If you can get second-and-4 or second-and-5, you can really run the ball and do some things, because third-and-4 is a heck of lot easier than third and long. “When it’s all said and done, I think the one thing that we should be good at every week is running the ball. And make sure we stick with it.” Monday’s game against Seattle, which is allowing opponents just 72.3 yards per game, is a tough place to start. Seattle head coach Pete Carroll said this week that shutting down Washington’s running game would be his defense’s top

always will trade back just for the sake of trading back. While they haven’t made a massive move up in the first round like Washington did to acquire RGIII, the Seahawks have stayed put when they knew they had to act in order to get the player they wanted. Most notably, in their first draft together, Schneider and Carroll were ready to move back from the No. 14 pick to acquire more draft ammunition, but when Earl Thomas was still sitting there, they jumped at the chance to take him. And yes, it’s safe to say that decision worked out pretty well. That trust in the draft board, whether it means moving back to add picks that can help strengthen the roster, or sitting tight when the right player is there, is a big reason the Seahawks are defending champions who are well positioned to succeed this year and beyond, while Washington’s aggression in 2012 has contributed to a dramatic slide. It’s too soon to declare that trade a failure — Griffin is still young and plenty talented enough to bounce back and have a bright career — but heading into Monday rematch of that playoff game, it’s hard to argue that Seattle’s philosophy of draft weekend patience has paid big dividends. Herald Columnist John Boyle: jboyle@heraldnet.com

priority. “They’ve got a very well-grooved running game,” Carroll said of the Redskins. “Alfred Morris is a terrific player. They know it, and they go to him. And we’ve got to stop that first.” Morris has powerful memories of the last time the teams met, in the wildcard playoff game that ended the Redskins’ 2012 season. Washington bolted to a 14-0 lead in the first quarter only to be shut down and sent packing, 24-14. Morris carried 16 times for 80 yards. “They’ve got a great defense, honestly, and play with such confidence,” Morris said of Seattle. “They’re really good with their hands. Even if their defensive linemen are blocked, they’re good at getting their hands in the passing window or sticking their hands out and swiping at the ball. So we have to make sure we do a better job of ball security, make sure we run that much harder through those arm tackles.” At 25, Morris said he feels he has a broader understanding of defenses than he did during his sensational rookie season, when he worried only about finding holes and hitting them as hard as he could. He set a Redskins season rushing record that year, with 1,613 yards and 13 touchdowns. Today, he said, he feels physically stronger, having learned the benefits of proper hydration and the painful deep-tissue massages after games, and more savvy. While other Redskins welcomed the 11-day break that preceded Monday’s showdown with the Super Bowl champions, Morris said he’s champing at the bit. “We’ve been showing flashes of what we can do. Just flashes,” Morris said of Washington’s offense. “If we can put a whole game together, we should come out with a ‘W.’ But we have to show up.”

NFL | Notebook

Griffin makes cameo appearance Associated Press ASHBURN, Va. — Robert Griffin III’s recovery is progressing enough for him to make a cameo appearance at practice. The Washington Redskins quarterback joined his teammates for stretching Saturday, but he left once the players split up to begin their drills. Nevertheless, it was his first time he has been at a practice when reporters were present since he dislocated his left ankle in the season opener. He was wearing cleats instead of a walking boot. There’s still no timetable for Griffin’s return, but he isn’t expected back for several weeks at the earliest. Coach Jay Gruden would only say that Griffin is “making progress.” Gruden also said cornerback Tracy Porter has been ruled out for Monday night’s game against the Seattle Seahawks. Porter aggravated a right hamstring injury last week.

Cowboys put Claiborne on IR IRVING, Texas — Dallas Cowboys cornerback Morris Claiborne was put on injured reserve Saturday, four days after season-ending knee surgery.

Jaguars waive tight end Shuler JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The Jacksonville Jaguars have activated receiver Ace Sanders to the 53-man roster and waived tight end Mickey Shuler.

Giants waive linebacker Fox EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The New York Giants have waived rookie linebacker Dan Fox and signed cornerback Chandler Fenner from their practice squad.


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SUNDAY, 10.05.2014

All AL games televised by TBS

All NL games televised by FS1 or MLBN

Baltimore vs. Detroit

Washington vs. San Francisco

(*if necessary)

Game 1: Baltimore 12, Detroit 3 Game 2: Baltimore 7, Detroit 6

(*if necessary)

Game 1: S.F. 3, Washington 2 Game 2: S.F. 2, Washington 1 (18)

(Baltimore leads best-of-five series 2-0)

Sunday: Baltimore (Gonzalez 10-9) at Detroit (Price 15-12), 12:45 p.m. *Monday: Baltimore at Detroit, TBD *Wednesday: Detroit at Balt., TBD

(San Fran. leads best-of-five series 2-0)

Monday: Washington (Fister 16-6) at San Francisco (Bumgarner 18-10) (FS1 or MLBN), 12:07 or 2:07 p.m. *Tuesday: Wash. at San Fran., TBD *Thursday: San Fran. at Wash., TBD

Kansas City vs. L.A. Angels (*if necessary)

L.A. Dodgers vs. St. Louis

Game 1: Kansas City 3, L.A. 2 (11) Game 2: Kansas City 4, L.A. 1 (11)

(*if necessary)

(Kansas City leads best-of-five series 2-0)

Sunday: L.A. (Wilson 13-10) at Kansas City (Shields 14-8), 4:37 p.m. *Monday: L.A. at Kansas City, TBD *Wednesday: Kan. City at L.A., TBD

The Mariners may have interest in signing free-agent right-hand hitter Michael Cuddyer.

Giants beat Nats 2-1 in 18

Mariners’ offseason should be anything but dull

By Howard Fendrich Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Brandon Belt, Yusmeiro Petit and the rest of the San Francisco Giants did what they do so well in October: They never give in, never give up, and win. Simple as that. No matter what it takes — or how long. Even 18 innings. On and on and on the Giants and Nationals played Saturday, from afternoon until just past midnight, when Belt’s homer off Tanner Roark leading off the 18th lifted San Francisco to its 10th consecutive postseason victory, edging Washington 2-1 for a 2-0 lead in their NL Division Series. “That’s how we do it. On paper, it might not be the flashiest thing, compared to a lot of teams. But I like this group against anybody in baseball,” said Tim Hudson, who started for the Giants and went 71⁄3 innings, leaving hours before the game ended. “Who’d have thought we’d have came here and won the first two? Everybody in America probably didn’t think we had a shot. But everybody in this locker room knew that we did.” The teams tied the mark for most innings in a postseason game and set a time record at 6 hours, 23 minutes. They combined to use 17 pitchers and 24 position players. “After a while,” Giants rookie Joe Panik said, “every inning just kind of ran into the next.” Said Craig Stammen, one of eight relievers used by the Nationals after starter Jordan Zimmerman was yanked while ahead 1-0 with two outs in the ninth after walking Panik: “The two worst things in baseball are boredom and frustration, and we were battling both of those tonight.” Somehow, Washington was shut out for 15 innings after Anthony Rendon’s RBI single in the third. The Giants can close out the bestof-five NLDS at home Monday in Game 3, with Madison Bumgarner — who tossed a shutout against Pittsburgh in the wild-card game — facing Doug Fister. “I’m sure it’s going to be a quiet flight,” said Zimmermann, who threw a no-hitter in the regularseason finale, then allowed only three singles Saturday. Could be quite a sudden end to 2014 for the Nationals, who won the NL East and led the league with 96 wins. But after a pair of one-run losses, they’re looking as if they’re the latest team that can’t figure out how to get past San Francisco. Down to their final out Saturday, the Giants tied it in the ninth on Pablo Sandoval’s RBI double off Drew Storen — the closer who blew a two-out ninth-inning lead in Game 5 of the 2012 NLDS against St. Louis. Petit entered in the 12th and threw six scoreless innings, allowing one hit and striking out seven, to earn the win. “I was trying to get as much as I could out of him,” manager Bruce Bochy said.

DAVID ZALUBOWSKI / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Very interesting

By Bob Dutton The News Tribune

SEATTLE — It’s been a week now since the Seattle Mariners fell one game short in their bid to end what is now a 13-year postseason drought. The offseason promises to be interesting. General manager Jack Zduriencik is on record as saying payroll will increase, which club president Kevin Mather subsequently confirmed, and identifies the need to add a run-production bat (or two) as the top priority. “We will explore every opportunity out there,” Zduriencik said. “I think we’ll be reasonably aggressive in trying to do something to try to add an offensive piece or two.” When Zduriencik says “reasonably aggressive,” he means “try like the blazes.” Let’s face it: The emphasis on acquiring run-production pop is hardly surprising. The Mariners executed a 16-game improvement this season, in finishing 87-75, because they led the American League in earned-run average and fielding percentage. They were 11th among the league’s 15 clubs in scoring. Manager Lloyd McClendon contends the Mariners need “at least two (new) bats” to present a lineup that matches other contenders in possessing four weapons from the third-throughsixth spots in the lineup. Currently, the Mariners have two: All-Stars Robinson Cano and Kyle Seager, whom McClendon would prefer to bat third and fifth in the lineup. The club’s overriding goal — which Zduriencik sought to address in July by reacquiring switch-hitter Kendrys Morales — is to obtain an impact righthanded bat to place between Cano and Seager. The secondary priority is to acquire another legitimate threat — again, preferably a right-handed hitter — to bat sixth behind Seager. “I think one thing that’s really interesting about our club,” McClendon said, “is we’re built for the playoffs. Now, we’ve got to get ourselves to the point where we’re built for the regular season. “I don’t think there was a team in baseball that wanted to face the Seattle Mariners in the playoffs because our pitching is so good. But offensively, we’ve got to get better because you’ve got to be good over 162 games. “We’ve still got our work cut out a little bit.” Zduriencik points to the roster’s current makeup in confirming the obvious: the desired additions would fit best at first base, right field or designated hitter. Fine. Who’s available? The list of pending free agents seemingly offers a perfect fit in Victor Martinez, a former catcher who now serves primarily as a DH for the Detroit Tigers with some occasional

time at first base. McClendon knows Martinez, 35, from their time together in Detroit, where McClendon served eight years as a coach prior to becoming the Mariners’ manager. That connection is probably sufficient to get Martinez to listen to the Mariners’ pitch, but he figures to draw attention from several clubs. There’s also no reason to believe the Tigers won’t make every effort to keep him. Two other players are already linked to the Mariners: Kansas City DH Billy Butler, a longtime Zduriencik target, and Colorado outfielder/first baseman Michael Cuddyer. Butler, 28, figures to be a free agent because the Royals aren’t expected to pick up his $12.5 million option. He seems a reasonable fit because the Mariners are one of the few clubs willing to accommodate a true DH. While Butler’s production dipped the last two seasons, that could make him a buy-low opportunity. Scouts say his bat speed hasn’t slowed, and many suggest he just needs a change of scenery. Cuddyer, 35, is possibly more intriguing, although he is coming off a season in which he played just 49 games because of hamstring and shoulder injuries. (He did bat .332 in those 49 games with 10 homers and 31 RBI.) For years at Minnesota, Cuddyer was the right-handed batter who occupied the lineup slot between two lefty-hitting stars: Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau ... i.e., the role he would fill between Cano and Seager. Cuddyer can also play right field and first base. If those possibilities fall through, Zduriencik believes the Mariners are now reasonably well stocked at some positions to swing a trade for an impact bat without creating a major hole as a consequence. Possible partners include the Dodgers and Pirates, who each have a surplus of outfielders and have indicated a desire to shed some of the payroll associated with those overloads. The Mariners were linked in trade rumors with both clubs prior to the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline, when they instead acquired Austin Jackson from Detroit and Chris Denorfia from San Diego. The key in any major acquisition, whether by signing a free agent or executing a trade, will likely hinge on the size of the Mariners’ promised hike in payroll. Unlike recent years, the Mariners don’t have any major salaries coming off the books, and they are also looking at sizable arbitration increases for Seager and Jackson. Further, the Mariners are exploring a long-term extension for Seager, who made just $540,100 this season in his final year before gaining arbitration eligibility. Club officials also show interest in an extension for

right-hander Hisashi Iwakuma in addition to picking up his $7 million option for 2015. Those items figure to goose what, in 2014, was a $106.7 million payroll even before club officials debate the cost of making impact additions. But the Mariners, at least at this point, are talking (and acting, rivals say) like a club committed to underwriting the cost of an improved roster. Further, everything suggests there should be additional money available to pursue those coveted additions. The heightened revenue streams from the new TV deals, which took effect this season, are now kicking in. That’s estimated at adding $25 million each year to each club, through 2021, over the contracts in place through 2013. (In short, that increase alone pays Cano’s massive salary.) The cash infusion from the national TV deals is, of course, a tide that raises all boats, but the Mariners have other increased revenue streams that separate them from other clubs. The April 2013 move to acquire controlling interest in Root Sports is expected to generate, according to Forbes magazine, an average of $103 million each year in rights fees through 2030. If so, that’s a jump of $58 million a year. Industry reports contend the Mariners received about $45 million a year in local TV rights fees before they bought controlling interest in Root Sports. Club officials tend to dispute these numbers, which are industry estimates, but it’s hard to see how the Mariners won’t have significantly more money available than just a year or two ago. Now add this: The Mariners, in their turnaround season, just boosted attendance by 17 percent over 2013. That pushed them past two million for the first time since 2010 and led all clubs in percentage increase. That not only means a significant jump in revenue over the just-completed season; such attendance spikes historically generate greater season-ticket sales for the following season. The overlay for all of this is what happened a week ago: The Mariners missed postseason by one game. “We’ve been trying to get to this point for the last five years,” Zduriencik said. “Trying to build it and get a group of players who are going to be with you. Trying to get young kids to mature. “I think where (we’re) at is (we) know how close (we) were. Were we disappointed at the end? We were very disappointed. Were we satisfied with some things? Sure. “But I can tell you if anybody thinks we walked away saying, ‘Hey, we accomplished something.’ No. I guarantee you, the wind was out of (our) sails when (we) walked out of there (after the season’s final game).” Yep ... it promises to be an interesting offseason.

Game 1: St. Louis 10, Los Angeles 9 Game 2: Los Angeles 3, St. louis 2 (Best-of-five series tied 1-1)

Monday: Los Angeles (Ryu 14-7) at St. Louis (Lackey 3-3) (FS1 or MLBN), 6:07 or 6:37 p.m. Tuesday: L.A. at St. Louis, TBD *Thursday: St. Louis at L.A., TBD

Kemp’s HR lifts Dodgers over Cards By Beth Harris Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Matt Kemp yanked the Dodgers from the depths of despair with one swing. Kemp hit a go-ahead home run leading off the eighth inning, lifting Los Angeles to a 3-2 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday night and evening their NL Division Series at a game apiece. Kemp practically skipped down the first base line, appearing to coax the ball fair as it sailed inside the foul pole and landed in the lower left field seats while the crowd of 54,599 erupted in cheers. Bubbles percolated into the hot night air from a machine in the dugout that the Dodgers turn on to celebrate homers. No one looked happier greeting Kemp in the dugout than a once-distraught J.P. Howell, who had served up a tying, two-run homer to Matt Carpenter in the top of the inning after relieving Zack Greinke. Kemp hugged Howell, who pointed skyward in relief, after connecting against Pat Neshek for his fifth hit in the bestof-five series. Game 3 is Monday night in St. Louis, with John Lackey starting for the Cardinals against HyunJin Ryu of the Dodgers. Brandon League got his first career postseason win with a scoreless inning of relief. Kenley Jansen retired the side in the ninth to earn the save. Greinke pitched two-hit ball over seven scoreless innings a night after ace Clayton Kershaw gave up Carpenter’s go-ahead three-run double in the seventh that helped the Cardinals win 10-9. Greinke belatedly took the mound in the eighth after his teammates had already taken their positions. Manager Don Mattingly came out to get him, and Greinke left to a standing ovation. Howell took over and promptly gave up a single to pinch-hitter Oscar Tavares before Carpenter tied it at 2. Greinke struck out seven, walked two and didn’t allow a runner past second base. He didn’t give up a hit until the fifth, when Kolten Wong doubled down the right-field line before Greinke struck out the next two batters to end the inning. Greinke was pretty nifty at the plate, too. He went 2 for 3 for his first career postseason multihit game, and even slid headfirst into third on Dee Gordon’s single in the fifth that eluded Wong’s dive at second base. Cardinals starter Lance Lynn gave up two runs and seven hits in six innings, struck out eight and walked two. The Dodgers took a 2-0 lead in the third. Gordon’s groundout to second base scored A.J. Ellis, who doubled leading off for his fifth hit of the series. Adrian Gonzalez’s two-out RBI single made it 2-0, with Greinke scoring from second.


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Cougars go late

PAC-12 STANDINGS

North Oregon Oregon State California Stanford Washington State Washington South Arizona Arizona State USC UCLA Utah Colorado

Conf. All W-L W-L 1-1 4-1 1-1 4-1 1-1 3-1 1-1 3-2 1-1 2-3 0-1 4-1 Conf. All W-L W-L 2-0 5-0 2-1 4-1 2-1 3-2 1-1 4-1 1-1 4-1 0-3 2-4

Washington State was leading California 52-48 in the 4th quarter on Saturday when The Herald went to press. Find the story online at www.heraldnet.com/ sports

Saturday’s results Notre Dame 17, Stanford 14 Oregon St. 36, Colorado 31 Arizona St. 38, USC 34 Utah 30, UCLA 28 Cal at Washington St., late

Sun Devils shock USC on final play Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Jaelen Strong caught a 46-yard touchdown pass from Mike Bercovici as time expired, and Arizona State scored three TDs in the final 3:53 to shock No. 16 Southern California 38-34 on Saturday night. Bercovici capped his 510-yard, five-touchdown passing performance with his third scoring pass to Strong, who slipped in front of USC’s Hayes Pullard at the goal line and pulled in the Hail Mary throw. Arizona State’s bench stormed the field to celebrate the first win at the Coliseum since 1999 for the Sun Devils (4-1, 2-1 Pac-12). Cody Kessler passed for 273 yards for the Trojans (3-2, 2-1), who led 34-25 with 3 minutes to play. USC recovered two onside kicks and got a 53-yard TD run by Buck Allen in the final minutes, but the Trojans’ pass defense still couldn’t stop Bercovici in his second start. Kessler scrambled for an 8-yard TD in the fourth quarter, and Allen rushed for 143 yards and two TDs for the Trojans, who appeared to be on the way to an impressive win. USC’s defense held the Pac12’s best rushing offense to 31 yards, a whopping 231 below its average. But the Trojans, who hadn’t allowed a passing touchdown all season, couldn’t do a thing about Bercovici with the game on the line.

Notre Dame 17, Stanford 14 SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Everett Golson threw a 23-yard touchdown pass to Ben Koyack in the corner of the end zone with 61 seconds to go as No. 9 Notre Dame overcame two turnovers and two bungled snaps on field goal attempts on a cold, rainy Saturday to beat No. 14 Stanford.

Oregon St. 36, Colorado 31 BOULDER, Colo. — Terron Ward ran for 102 yards and two touchdowns, including a 10-yard score with 5:09 remaining, and Oregon State’s defense turned away Colorado’s lastgasp drive as the Beavers hung on to beat the Buffaloes.

Utah 30, UCLA 28 PASADENA, Calif. — Andy Phillips made a 29-yard field goal with 34 seconds to play as Utah upset No. 8 UCLA on the road. UCLA kicker Ka’imi Fairbairn had a chance to win the game as time expired, but missed a 50-yard field goal to end the game.

BRUCE NEWMAN / AP PHOTO/OXFORD EAGLE

Mississippi quarterback Bo Wallace (14) is carried off the field by fans following a 23-17 win over No. 3 Alabama in Oxford, Miss., Saturday. Wallace threw for 251 yards and three touchdowns in the win.

Rebels stun Tide

No.11 Mississippi St. rallies to beat No. 3 Alabama 23-17 Associated Press OXFORD, Miss. — Brushing aside a carnival-like atmosphere and Alabama’s potent defense, Mississippi quarterback Bo Wallace bounced around in the pocket and threw one perfect pass after another, willing the Rebels downfield in the fourth quarter. Two touchdown passes and one stunning comeback later, No. 11 Mississippi had a 23-17 victory over No. 3 Alabama on Saturday and asserted itself as a true contender in the Southeastern Conference Western Division. “We worked hard for this moment,” said Ole Miss receiver Laquon Treadwell, who caught a touchdown pass. “And as (the final seconds) happened, I thought ‘This isn’t the end of it all. It’s just the beginning.”’ Wallace threw for 251 yards and three touchdowns, including a go-ahead 10-yarder to Jaylen Walton with 2:54 remaining. It capped a methodical, nearly flawless fourth quarter for the Rebels (5-0, 2-0 SEC), who have won five games to start the season for the first time since 1962 and ended a 10-game losing streak against the Tide. When it was over, drinks flew into the air and students rushed

This isn’t the end of it all. It’s just the beginning. — Laquon Treadwell Ole Miss wide receiver after his team shocked No. 3 Alabama in an SEC showdown.

the field in disbelief, celebrating what may be the biggest win for Ole Miss in a generation. It also capped a stunning day for the Magnolia State — No. 12 Mississippi State beat No. 6 Texas A&M 48-31 earlier Saturday in Starkville. The Rebels trailed 17-10 midway through the fourth quarter, with a brutally efficient Alabama offense controlling the tempo. But Ole Miss pulled even on Wallace’s 34-yard touchdown pass to Vince Sanders with 5:29 remaining. On the ensuing kickoff, Alabama’s Christion Jones fumbled and Ole Miss’ Kalio Moore recovered, giving the Rebels great field position at the Alabama 31. Channing Ward forced the fumble. A few plays later, Wallace found Walton in the end zone for the lead.

Alabama (4-1, 1-1) still had a chance to win, driving the field quickly in the final minutes, but Senquez Golson intercepted a pass from Blake Sims in the end zone with 37 seconds remaining. Golson’s interception was an acrobatic catch in the back of the end zone after the long heave by Sims. He was originally ruled out of bounds, but replays showed he cradled the pass with his left hand and landed just inside the end zone. “The feeling is indescribable right now,” Golson said. After the call was confirmed by the officials, a euphoric stadium erupted. Students hung from the goal posts after the game and eventually pulled one down, carrying it across the field in jubilation. Wallace completed 18-of-31 passes, saving his best for last. The confident — sometimes even brash — senior has often had a gunslinger’s reputation in the past, mixing great passes with inexplicable interceptions. But he kept mistakes to the minimum Saturday, coolly leading the Rebels when they needed him most. “He made some big-time plays,” Ole Miss coach Hugh Freeze said. “He just played so solid. On that last touchdown, that ball was right where it needed to be for us.”

No. 12 Miss. St. overwhelms No. 6 Texas A&M Associated Press STARKVILLE, Miss. — Dak Prescott threw two touchdown passes, added three Tebowstyle TD runs, and No. 12 Mississippi State overwhelmed No. 6 Texas A&M 48-31 on Saturday as a new contender emerged in the SEC West. The Bulldogs (5-0, 2-0 Southeastern Conference) jumped out to a 28-7 lead in the first half and never let Kenny Hill and the high-scoring Aggies (5-1, 2-1) get close enough to threaten the lead — or quiet the Bulldogs fans and their clanging cowbells at Davis Wade

Stadium. Hill threw for 365 yards and four touchdowns, but was picked off three times by linebacker Richie Brown, who matched a school record. Prescott first plowed into the end zone for two short TDs and pretty much sealed the deal for the Bulldogs with an 11-yard quarterback draw to make it 48-17 in the fourth quarter. The junior finished 19 for 25 for 264 yards and ran for 77 yards. Prescott entered this season as a fringe Heisman Trophy candidate, but is way more than that now. He wears the same No. 15 Tim Tebow did at Florida, runs

the same offense and plays for the same coach — Mississippi State head coach Dan Mullen, who was offensive coordinator for the Gators. And he’s putting up Tebow-like numbers. Mississippi State has only won the SEC West once since the league broke into divisions in 1992. The Bulldogs have spent far more time near the bottom of the division than the top, but Mullen has an experienced and talented team around a spectacular quarterback. The Bulldogs showed beating LSU for the first time in 15 years a couple weeks ago was no fluke.

4th-ranked Sooners fall to TCU Associated Press FORT WORTH, Texas — Gary Patterson and No. 25 TCU finally have a big attention-grabbing victory in the Big 12 Conference The former BCS-busting Horned Frogs sent quite a message in their third Big 12 opener, getting Paul Dawson’s 41-yard interception return for a touchdown and a big fourth-down stop in the fourth quarter Saturday in a 37-33 victory over No. 4 Oklahoma. “It basically gives us confidence,” dual-threat quarterback Trevone Boykin said. “Knowing that we can play with guys like OU, because a lot of Big 12 championships have went through there.” TCU (4-0, 1-0) has won its first four games for fifth time in the last seven years under Patterson, but didn’t have a win of this magnitude it its first two Big 12 seasons. TCU provided a jolt but maybe not a fatal blow to Oklahoma’s standing for the new four-team College Football Playoff. The Sooners (4-1, 1-1) weren’t the only highly ranked team with a loss to start October, with No. 2 Oregon, No. 3 Alabama and No. 6 Texas A&M also losing. “This isn’t the defining moment of our season. There’s a lot of football left,” Sooners quarterback Trevor Knight. “Who knows what’s down the road. It’s early in the season, a one-loss team can still make it.”

NORTHWEST | Roundup

Eastern holds off Idaho State 56-53 Associated Press CHENEY, Wash. — Vernon Adams threw for four touchdowns and ran for two more as Eastern Washington (5-1, 2-0 Big Sky) held off Idaho State 56-53 on Saturday. Adams hit Cooper Kupp with a 35-yard strike with 7:19 to play, setting the Big Sky Conference record with his 99th career scoring pass, passing Cameron Higgins of Weber State (98), while also surpassing 10,000 yards of total offense.

Azusa Pacific 27, CWU 20 ELLENSBURG — Lake Stevens High School alum Jake Nelson threw a school record 87-yard touchdown pass to Kent McKinney Jr., but Central Washington (2-3, 1-1 GNAC) couldn’t overcome an early deficit and lost to Azusa Pacific.

TOP 25 | How teams ranked in the Associated Press poll fared this week ... 1. FLORIDA ST. (5-0)

6. TEXAS A&M (5-1)

11. MISSISSIPPI (5-0)

16. USC (3-2)

21. OKLAHOMA ST. (4-1)

Beat Wake Forest 43-3. Next: at Syracuse, Saturday.

Lost to No. 12 Mississippi State 48-31. Next: vs. No. 11 Mississippi, Saturday.

Beat No. 3 Alabama 23-17. Next: at No. 6 Texas A&M, Saturday.

Lost to Arizona State 38-34. Next: at Arizona, Saturday.

Beat Iowa State 37-20. Next: at Kansas, Saturday.

2. OREGON (4-1)

7. BAYLOR (5-0)

12. MISSISSIPPI ST. (5-0)

17. WISCONSIN (3-2)

22. EAST CAROLINA (4-1)

Lost to Arizona 31-24, Thursday. Next: at No. 8 UCLA, Saturday.

Beat Texas 28-7. Next: vs. No. 25 TCU, Saturday.

Beat No. 6 Texas A&M 48-31. Next: vs. No. 5 Auburn, Saturday.

Lost to Northwestern 20-14. Next: vs. Illinois, Saturday.

Beat SMU 45-24. Next: at South Florida, Saturday.

3. ALABAMA (4-1)

8. UCLA (4-1)

13. GEORGIA (4-1)

18. NEBRASKA (5-1)

23. KANSAS ST. (4-1)

Lost to No. 11 Mississippi 23-17. Next: at Arkansas, Saturday.

Lost to Utah 30-28. Next: vs. No. 2 Oregon, Saturday.

Beat Vanderbilt 44-17. Next: at No. 24 Missouri, Saturday.

Lost to No. 10 Michigan State 27-22. Next: at Northwestern, Saturday, Oct. 18.

Beat Texas Tech 45-13. Next: at No. 4 Oklahoma, Sat., Oct. 18.

4. OKLAHOMA (4-1)

9. NOTRE DAME (5-0)

14. STANFORD (3-2)

19. BYU (4-1)

24. MISSOURI (3-1)

Lost to No. 25 TCU 37-33. Next: vs. Texas at Dallas, Saturday.

Beat No. 14 Stanford 17-14. Next: vs. North Carolina, Saturday.

Lost to No. 9 Notre Dame 17-14. Next: vs. Washington State, Friday.

Lost to Utah State 35-20, Friday. Next: at UCF, Thursday.

Did not play. Next: vs. No. 13 Georgia, Saturday.

5. AUBURN (5-0)

10. MICHIGAN ST. (4-1)

15. LSU (4-2)

20. OHIO ST. (4-1)

25. TCU (4-0)

Beat No. 15 LSU 41-7. Next: at No. 12 Mississippi St., Saturday.

Beat No. 19 Nebraska 27-22. Next: at Purdue, Saturday.

Lost to No. 5 Auburn 41-7. Next: at Florida, Saturday.

Beat Maryland 52-24. Next: vs. Rutgers, Saturday, Oct. 18.

Beat No. 4 Oklahoma 37-33. Next: at No. 7 Baylor, Saturday.


C8

Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Monroe places 5th at Bearcat Invite Herald staff MONROE — The Monroe volleyball team finished the highest of any Wesco participant at the Bearcat Invitational Saturday at Monroe High School, placing fifth out of 12 teams. “Many coaches use tournaments as an opportunity to work on things and put players in different situations, it’s not nessecarily like league matches,” Monroe head coach April Munoz said. “I’m really pleased because I used almost a different lineup every

single match, they rose to the challenge it was great.” The Bearcats rebounded from a 2-0 loss to Kennedy Catholic in the opening round of tournament play with back-to-back 2-0 victories over Wesco opponents Edmonds-Woodway and Lake Stevens. All matches were played best-of-three. In the fifth/sixth place match against Lake Stevens, the Bearcats took the first set 25-19 before losing a back-and-forth thriller 35-33 in the second set. The Bearcats battled to a 15-11 win in the third set to earn the victory.

On Thursday, Lake Stevens defeated Monroe 3-1 in a Wesco 4A league game. “It was awesome because in the second set it was back and forth, neither team could score more than one point at a time,” Munoz said. “... We were excited to pull out the win after losing to them the other night.” Shorecrest and Edmonds-Woodway tied for seventh and Mountlake Terrace finished 10th to round out the Wesco finishers. Bellarmine Prep (Tacoma) finished first.

Cascade—42. Jackson Wagner 16:57, 47. Alex Reyes 17:01, 59. Luca Strand 17:08, 86. Joel Henry 17:33, 113. Evan Hurt 17:55. Edmonds-Woodway—1. Miller Haller 15:28, 41. Grady Okeson 16:56, 50. Sam McCloughan 17:03, 57. Benjamin Yang 17:07, 124. Armon Tenaw 18:07. Everett—56. Jordan Erickson 17:05, 99. Edmund Havenar 17:44, 115. Donovan Barnhart 17:57, 116. Isaac O’Connell 17:58, 123. Cooper James 18:03. Glacier Peak—14. Garren Arnold 16:17, 24. Sawyer Carter 16:35, 26. Nick Springer 16:37, 32. Isaac Ripley 16:46, 39. Chris Bianchini 16:55. Jackson—3. Aaron Roe 15:42, 13. Matthew Watkins 16:16, 21. Jack Thompson 16:33, 55. Nathaniel Ramos 17:04, 63. Brandon Yee 17:13. Kamiak—11. Cullen McEachern 16:13, 45. Skyler Bradford 17:00, 60. Roger Klaaskate 17:09, 64. Bo Gould 17:13, 110. Hobb Kimmerling 17:54. Lynnwood—87. Tyler McArthur 17:34, 98. Leul Wolde 17:44, 126. Noah Johann 18:09, 153. Brayam Juarez-Ramirez 18:41, 156. Mahad Hufane 18:50. Marysville Getchell—46. Cameron Wagstaff 17:01, 67. Garrett Westover 17:15, 74. Thomas Lindgren 17:19, 108. Channing Frolich 17:51, 111. Connor Stickles 17:54. Marysville Pilchuck—52. Chris Moen 17:03, 119. Josh Bevan 18:01, 166. Michael Dufour 19:16, 168. David Adams 19:17, 174. Ryan Daurie 19:41. Monroe—85.Alan Perez 17:31, 101. Ozcar Mills 17:44, 114. Josh Blevins 17:56, 150. Gannon Goering 18:39, 158. Jon Robinson 19:02. Stanwood—88. Nate McCaughan 17:34, 92. West Weinert 17:38, 140. Wood Kris 18:21, 162. Garrett Larson 19:10, 175. Nick Uhrich 19:45. Girls team scores—1.Issaquah 55, 2. Glacier Peak 102, 9. Jackson 264, 10. Arlington 305, 11. Kamiak 317, 15. Monroe 383, 16. Lynnwood 396 18. Everett 452, 22. Marysville Getchell 602. Arlington—42. Cassidy Rude 20:28, 50. Marie Gaudin 20:36, 59. Shanelle Shirey 20:58, 62. Emma Janousek 21:03, 92. Katie Taylor 22:00. Everett—28.Sophia Maggio 20:03, 57. Drew Williams 20:49, 119. Lauren Fifield 22:58, 122. Caroline Overstreet 23:01, 126. Danielle Scanes 23:07. Glacier Peak—4. Heidi Smith 18:41, 12. Katherine Dittmann 19:41, Natalie Church 19:45, 31. Erin Boyle 20:10, 40. Maiti Hunter 20:24.

Jackson—3. Brooke Kingma 18:31, 17. Cole Gross 19:46, 51. Emily Hylland 20:37, 90. Winter Baugmgartner 21:49, 103. Micaela Frick 22:09. Kamiak—24. Tiffany Roe 20:00, 26. Nicole Vijgen 20:01, 53. Tiana Roe 20:39, 87. Katie Smith 21:46, 127. Donella Lalas 23:14. Lynnwood—6. Mikayla Pivec 18:49, 48. Brooke Schroeder 20:36, 85. Alexa Schroeder 21:39, 125. Jessica Mitchell 23:05, 132. megan Blue 23:50. Monroe—41. Sydnee Hanson 20:25, 65. Payton Stringer 21:09, 72. Kielee Kinghorn 21:26, 81. Savannah Hastings 21:33, 124. Sarah Miller 23:05, 134. Emily Defreece 26:15. Marysville Getchell—75. Taylor Roscoe 21:27, 118. Kristen Gray 22:56, 131. Nicole Buell 23:50, 138. Daisy Rubish 26:32, 140. Victoria Willey 26:58.

PREPS | Scoreboard BOYS SOCCER PCC 4, Grace Academy 0 At Kirkland Lacrosse Center Goals—Matthew Moisant (PCC) 2, Cole Butaud (PCC), Grace Academy own goal. Assists—Matthew Morris (PCC) 2. Goalkeepers—Grace Academy: Isaiah VanDam. Providence Classical Christian: Paul Johnson. Records—Grace Academy 7-3-0 overall. Providence Classical Christian 8-0-1.

CROSS COUNTRY Sunfair Invitational At Franklin Park 3 mile (freshman 2 mile) Boys Freshman—Grant Van Valkenburg 11:29.18, Ben Benson 11:33.77, Emmett Klaiber 12:28.85, Justin Young 12:35.24, Caleb Klingsheim 12:36.92. Sophomore—Ian Fay 17:23.04, Cameron Hammontree 17:35.05, Gunnar Schultz 18:08.01, Chase Bolin 18:51.50, Graydon Lehto 20:32.45. Junior—Isaac Harper 17:30.92, Vincent Dams 18:18.65, Lars Candland 20:27.90, Daniel Gutmann 20:30.55, Peyton Lantis 21:08.10. Girls Freshman—Kate Vergillo 13:59.46, Paige Lucas 14:20.17, Alicia Krivanek 14:29.79. Sophomore—Madi Shinn 21:09.22, Courtney Tobin 22:42.62, Nicole Hagens 23:07.86, Lily Krueger 23:22.95, Greta Klaiber 24:30.29. Junior—Ruby Farias 21:47.82, Kiana Ward 22:26.53, Noelle Viger 25:19.62, Brennah Houlihan 25:54.16.

Twilight Invite At Cedarcrest G.C. 5K Boys team scores—1. Eastlake 92, 2. Glacier Peak 135, 4. Jackson 155, 6. Arlington 179, 8. Edmonds-Woodway 273, 10. Kamiak 290, 13. Cascade 347, 15. Marysville Getchell 406, 20. Everett 509, 22. Monroe 608, 23. Lynnwood 620, 25. Stanwood 657, 26. Marysville Pilchuck 679. Arlington—9. Nathan Beamer 15:59, 18. Peiter Andrews 16:29, 36. Matthew Taylor 16:50, 40. Michael Barene 16:55, 76. Jacob Fankhauser 17:22.

Farwell From page C1

“Yeah, that’s something I’ve never heard of a team doing,” Farwell said before Seattle’s bye week ended Sunday night. “It’s pretty cool that they care about me that much, that they want me to be around here. It means a lot to me, it really does. “I’ve been in this league for 10 years. I’ve talked to many guys, been around this league for a long time. And I’ve never heard of a team doing this for a player. “They’ve been unbelievable to me.” This is the kind of behind-the-scenes move that creates long-term loyalty and dedication within the franchise. Each veteran sees what the Seahawks are doing for Farwell and realizes he, too, is one injury away from possibly losing his livelihood — and from being as appreciative of such as gesture as Farwell is right now. “I was so down, so negative,” said Farwell, who has played in 42 games for the Seahawks during 21⁄2 seasons. “Then Coach Carroll offered this, and it was so positive. There are great positives coming out of it, in the long run.” For Carroll the idea was simple. “We didn’t want to lose him. We like him being around here,” Seattle’s fifth-year coach said. “I think he could add his spirit and what he brings to the game could be shared with younger players and it could be very effective.” Carroll’s been treating Farwell in a special way since he arrived from Minnesota as a free agent in the middle of the 2011 season. “When he first came here we talked about him being a coach someday,” Carrol said. “So at the time I told him, ‘Ok, I going to talk to you a little differently than other guys. I’m going to drop stuff on you as we go through it and give you some insights and things as we’re going

along.’ So it started kind of down that road, and it’s been in my mind that this could happen. “I think he’s a natural. He loves the game. ... He’s really a smart football player, savvy guy, has really worked hard to understand the game from a player’s perspective. Now, he offers younger guys that perspective, as well as what we can instill in him as he’s moving along. He’ll be a great coach.” To hear Carroll tell it, Farwell already is. Carroll has noticed the rapid improvement on special teams of DeShawn Shead, Derrick Coleman, Mike Morgan and rookies Brock Coyle and Kevin Pierre-Louis. He credits that to Farwell coaching them from a uniquely fresh players’ perspective. After all, until a month ago Farwell had the jobs they are doing. “I do think that having Heath around is a part of transferring the importance of special teams onto these young guys and how they can approach it and the outlook that it takes to be an effective special-teams guy,” Carroll said. “Heath lives that. He’s been able to convey that to some guys and with these new opportunities. “This early in the season, they’re already playing better than some of the young guys that will play because they’re not making mistakes and they’re really heady and he’s been a factor there. So we’ve gotten really good play and the transition from the guys that we’ve lost.” Farwell acknowledges the likelihood his playing career is over. “Yeah,” he said. “I haven’t explored where I’m at as far as my playing career, but this is definitely the direction I’m headed. It’s just a matter of, is this the beginning stages of my coaching career? “I’m learning it’s a lot harder to coach it than you anticipate. I know the cliché is, you can be a great player but a great player is only as good as his best coaches. I get it. I’m learning to communicate it,

FOOTBALL Tulalip Her. 49, Crescent 0 At Quil Ceda Stadium Crescent Tulalip Heritage

0 0 43 6

— 0 — 49

*Game was called in the second quarter Tulalip—Robert Miles Jr. 11 run (run failed) Tulalip—Miles 32 pass from Ayrik Miranda (Miles pass from Miranda) Tulalip—Miles 23 pass from Miranda (Jesse Louie pass from Miranda) Tulalip—Willy Enick 1 run (Miles pass from Miranda) Tulalip—Louie 39 pass from Miranda (kick failed) Tulalip—Miles 38 run (Miranda kick) Tulalip—Donpae Jones 45 run (kick blocked) Records—Crescent 1-1 league, 1-1 overall. Tulalip Heritage 1-0, 3-1.

GIRLS SOCCER Lake Wash. 3, Mtlk. Terrace 0 At Lake Washington H.S. Goals—Taylor Sekyra (LW), Alexis Koester (LW), Emily Bunnell (LW). Assists—Gracie Sturdevant (LW), Koester (LW). Goalkeepers— Mountlake Terrace: Not reported. Lake Washington: Mikaela Powers. Records—Mountlake Terrace 3-3-2 overall. Lake Washington 3-3-0.

because I understand the game. But communicating it is a whole ’nother deal.” Farwell did explore the possibility of taking an injury settlement from Seattle and playing for another team later this season. Last month, he went to Philadelphia to the Vincera Core Physicians group to see Dr. William Meyers, a renowned expert in core-muscle injuries. Teammates Malcolm Smith and Zach Miller have seen Meyers there. Meyers found 50 percent tearing in one groin and 25 percent in the other. The surgeon tore the muscle, folded it and re-sewed it — then told Farwell he couldn’t play until perhaps December. That essentially ended his thoughts of playing in 2014 — and set him up to jump-start his coaching career. “Yeah, we could have done a settlement. But I didn’t know where I’d be at physically. And I wanted to be a part of this team. That was the key,” Farwell said. “And Coach Carroll and his staff wanted me to be a part of it, too. They said they wanted me around here. And if you do a settlement, you can’t be around here. That was part of it to. “I didn’t have a desire to go somewhere else,” he said. “So I’m just kind of helping out wherever I can, special teams, sitting in linebacker meetings. It’s been great just being around these guys. This team is special. “Obviously, I’d rather be playing, rather help this team that way. But if I can’t be doing that, then this is the next best thing.” So if that leaping play last month against the Bears was his last one in the NFL, he’s content. He’s still contributing to the Super Bowl champions, in the potential start of a new career. “If it is over, I’m proud of what I’ve done,” he said. “I’ve played 10 years. I’ve been to a Pro Bowl. Won a Super Bowl. If I’m done, I’m done. “Right now, I’m just focused on helping these guys win.”

AUTO RACING Hollywood Casino 400 Lineup After Friday qualifying; race today At Kansas Speedway Kansas City, Kan. Lap length: 1.5 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 197.621 mph. 2. (55) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 196.307. 3. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 196.15. 4. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 196.05. 5. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 196.05. 6. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 196.021. 7. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 195.972. 8. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 195.702. 9. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 195.518. 10. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 195.362. 11. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 194.974. 12. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 194.721. 13. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 195.27. 14. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 195.164. 15. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 195.08. 16. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 195.059. 17. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 195.016. 18. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 194.918. 19. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 194.868. 20. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 194.833. 21. (51) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 194.679. 22. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 194.609. 23. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 194.259. 24. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 194.021. 25. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 193.736. 26. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 193.653. 27. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 193.611. 28. (95) Michael McDowell, Ford, 192.678. 29. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 192.096. 30. (36) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 191.993. 31. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 191.198. 32. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 191.123. 33. (23) Alex Bowman, Toyota, 190.988. 34. (98) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 190.84. 35. (40) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 190.799. 36. (7) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 190.725. 37. (34) David Ragan, Ford, Owner Points. 38. (83) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, Owner Points. 39. (26) Cole Whitt, Toyota, Owner Points. 40. (33) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 41. (37) Mike Bliss, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 42. (32) Joey Gase, Ford, Owner Points. 43. (66) Mike Wallace, Toyota, Owner Points.

Kansas Lottery 300 NASCAR Nationwide Saturday At Kansas Speedway Kansas City, Kan. Lap length: 1.5 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (6) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 200 laps, 136 rating, 0 points, $75,075. 2. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 200, 122.1, 0, $61,900. 3. (2) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 200, 129.1, 0, $53,925. 4. (8) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 200, 110.2, 0, $34,825. 5. (1) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 200, 109.1, 40, $43,450. 6. (13) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 200, 101.1, 0, $26,200. 7. (7) Elliott Sadler, Toyota, 200, 106.9, 38, $30,550. 8. (11) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 200, 91.5, 36, $31,550. 9. (5) Brian Scott, Chevrolet, 200, 99.2, 36, $28,810. 10. (12) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 200, 92.7, 34, $28,800. 11. (15) Dylan Kwasniewski, Chevrolet, 199, 83.5, 33, $26,975. 12. (14) Ryan Reed, Ford, 199, 76.4, 32, $26,425. 13. (10) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 199, 90.7, 32, $25,875. 14. (21) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 199, 72.3, 30, $25,365. 15. (23) David Starr, Toyota, 199, 69.1, 29, $25,480. 16. (27) Matt DiBenedetto, Chevrolet, 198, 51.6, 28, $24,695. 17. (25) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 197, 61.7, 27, $24,410. 18. (22) J.J. Yeley, Dodge, 197, 56.7, 26, $24,150. 19. (28) Eric McClure, Toyota, 195, 46.9, 25, $23,940. 20. (18) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 195, 75.5, 24, $24,430. 21. (16) James Buescher, Toyota, 194, 69, 23, $23,820. 22. (24) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 192, 70.8, 22, $24,505. 23. (32) Derrike Cope, Chevrolet, 192, 40.8, 21, $23,370. 24. (39) Jennifer Jo Cobb, Chevrolet, 188, 37.3, 0, $23,260. 25. (17) Dakoda Armstrong, Ford, 185, 60.7, 19, $23,625. 26. (26) Corey LaJoie, Ford, 181, 55, 0, $23,015. 27. (36) Jamie Dick, Chevrolet, accident, 152, 45.3, 17, $22,905. 28. (3) Chris Buescher, Ford, 149, 97, 17, $23,785. 29. (31) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Chevrolet, accident, 93, 53.9, 15, $22,635. 30. (9) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, accident, 90, 71.8, 0, $16,825. 31. (20) John Wes Townley, Toyota, accident, 73, 61.1, 0, $16,370. 32. (37) Joey Gase, Chevrolet, accident, 71, 38.1, 12, $22,260. 33. (40) Martin Roy, Chevrolet, engine, 62, 40.2, 11, $16,145. 34. (19) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, engine, 61, 59.7, 10, $22,034. 35. (35) Carl Long, Chevrolet, vibration, 35, 33.7, 9, $15,897. 36. (29) Blake Koch, Toyota, vibration, 34, 34.7, 8, $14,445. 37. (30) Kevin Swindell, Dodge, electrical, 13, 37.7, 7, $20,325. 38. (33) Mike Harmon, Dodge, accident, 12, 32, 6, $20,265. 39. (38) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, electrical, 8, 31.8, 0, $19,940. 40. (34) Milka Duno, Toyota, accident, 3, 30.3, 4, $13,830. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 120.576 mph. Time of Race: 2 hours, 29 minutes, 17 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.767 seconds. Caution Flags: 9 for 42 laps. Lead Changes: 16 among 10 drivers. Lap Leaders: T.Dillon 1-6; C.Buescher 7-17; K.Harvick 18-23; J.Townley 24-27; C.Buescher 28-36; R.Blaney 37-46; B.Gaughan 47-48; R.Blaney 49; B.Gaughan 50-54; R.Blaney 55-75; B.Scott 76-79; M.Kenseth 80-87; E.Sadler 88124; K.Busch 125-137; R.Blaney 138; K.Harvick 139-179; K.Busch 180-200. Top 10 in Points: 1. C.Elliott, 1,068; 2. R.Smith, 1,030; 3. T.Dillon, 1,028; 4. B.Scott, 1,011; 5. E.Sadler, 1,008; 6. T.Bayne, 971; 7. C.Buescher, 874; 8. B.Gaughan, 846; 9. R.Reed, 791; 10. J.Buescher, 779.

Japanese Grand Prix After Saturday qualifying; race today At Suzuka International Suzuka, Japan Lap length: 3.608 miles Third Session 1. Nico Rosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 1 minute, 32.506 seconds. 2. Lewis Hamilton, England, Mercedes, 1:32.703. 3. Valtteri Bottas, Finland, Williams, 1:33.128. 4. Felipe Massa, Brazil, Williams, 1:33.527. 5. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari, 1:33.740. 6. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, Red Bull, 1:34.075. 7. Kevin Magnussen, Denmark, McLaren, 1:34.242. 8. Jenson Button, England, McLaren, 1:34.317. 9. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bull, 1:34.432. 10. Kimi Raikkonen, Finland, Ferrari, 1:34.548. Eliminated after second session 11. Sergio Perez, Mexico, Force India, 1:35.089. 12. Daniil Kvyat, Russia, Toro Rosso, 1:35.092. 13. Nico Hulkenberg, Germany, Force India, 1:35.099. 14. Adrian Sutil, Germany, Sauber, 1:35.364. 15. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber, 1:35.681. Eliminated after first session 16. Romain Grosjean, France, Lotus, 1:35.984. 17. Marcus Ericsson, Sweden, Caterham, 1:36.813. 18. Jules Bianchi, France, Marussia, 1:36.943. 19. Kamui Kobayashi, Japan, Caterham, 1:37.015. 20. Max Chilton, England, Marussia, 1:37.481. 21. Jean-Eric Vergne, France, Toro Rosso, 1:34.984. 22. Pastor Maldonado, Venezuela, Lotus, 1:35.917.

NHRA Nationals After Saturday qualifying; final eliminations today At Maple Grove Raceway Mohnton, Pa. TOP FUEL — 1. Tony Schumacher, 3.733 seconds, 327.51 mph vs. 16. Bob Vandergriff, 7.358, 179.64; 2. Brittany Force, 3.737, 329.50 vs. 15. Terry McMillen, 3.977, 318.39; 3. J.R. Todd, 3.738, 325.77 vs. 14. Dom Lagana, 3.847, 315.86; 4. Doug Kalitta, 3.747, 326.95 vs. 13. Clay Millican, 3.835, 316.15; 5. Antron Brown, 3.762, 323.50 vs. 12. Khalid alBalooshi, 3.834, 316.82; 6. Spencer Massey, 3.767, 327.90 vs. 11. Leah Pritchett, 3.821, 316.52; 7. Shawn Langdon, 3.773, 325.77 vs. 10. Richie Crampton, 3.814, 317.49; 8. Steve Torrence, 3.786, 324.83 vs. 9. Larry Dixon, 3.788, 325.30. FUNNY CAR — 1. Cruz Pedregon, Toyota Camry, 3.991, 319.52 vs. 16. John Bojec, 5.029, 270.92; 2. John Force, Ford Mustang, 3.997, 323.97 vs. 15. Bob Tasca III, Mustang, 4.568, 246.21; 3. Matt Hagan, Dodge Charger, 4.008, 321.50 vs. 14. Tony Pedregon, Camry, 4.171, 293.98; 4. Courtney Force, Mustang, 4.008, 320.36 vs. 13. Jeff Arend, Charger, 4.093, 310.55; 5. Robert Hight, Mustang, 4.009, 320.13 vs. 12. Tim Wilkerson, Mustang, 4.090, 314.46; 6. Jack Beckman, Charger, 4.017, 316.97 vs. 11. Chad Head, Camry, 4.088, 309.34; 7. Del Worsham, Camry, 4.046, 316.15 vs. 10. Alexis DeJoria, Camry, 4.087, 307.02; 8. Ron Capps, Charger, 4.063, 320.20 vs. 9. Tommy Johnson Jr., Charger, 4.065, 316.01. Did Not Qualify: 17. Mike Smith, 5.142, 228.07; 18. Jeff Diehl, 5.377, 302.14. PRO STOCK — 1. Erica Enders-Stevens, Chevy Camaro, 6.465, 213.16 vs. 16. Frank Gugliotta, Ford Mustang, 6.599, 208.68; 2. Shane Gray, Camaro, 6.484, 212.33 vs. 15. Kenny Delco, Chevy Cobalt, 6.597, 208.59; 3. Jason Line, Camaro, 6.500, 213.23 vs. 14. John Gaydosh Jr, Pontiac GXP, 6.579, 210.14; 4. Allen Johnson, Dodge Dart, 6.505, 212.79 vs. 13. Larry Morgan, Mustang, 6.575, 209.95; 5. Vincent Nobile, Camaro, 6.505, 212.46 vs. 12. Dave Connolly, Camaro, 6.552, 210.93; 6. Richie Stevens, Camaro, 6.506, 212.26 vs. 11. Rodger Brogdon, Camaro, 6.540, 211.53; 7. Jeg Coughlin, Dart, 6.525, 211.93 vs. 10. Greg Anderson, Camaro, 6.539, 212.49; 8. Jonathan Gray, Camaro, 6.528, 211.56 vs. 9. V. Gaines, Dodge Avenger, 6.531, 211.66. Did Not Qualify: 17. Travis Mazza, 6.677, 207.30; 18. Val Smeland, broke.

BASEBALL MLB Playoffs DIVISION SERIES (Best-of-5) x-if necessary American League All AL games televised by TBS Baltimore 2, Detroit 0 Thursday: Baltimore 12, Detroit 3 Friday: Baltimore 7, Detroit 6 Today: Baltimore (Gonzalez 10-9) at Detroit (Price 15-12), 12:45 p.m. x-Monday: Baltimore at Detroit (Porcello

15-13), TBD x-Wednesday: Detroit at Baltimore, TBD Kansas City 2, Los Angeles 0 Thursday: Kansas City 3, Los Angeles 2, 11 innings Friday: Kansas City 4, Los Angeles 1, 11 innings Today: Los Angeles (Wilson 13-10) at Kansas City (Shields 14-8), 4:37 p.m. x-Monday: Los Angeles at Kansas City, TBD x-Wednesday: Kansas City at Los Angeles, TBD National League San Francisco 2, Washington 0 Friday: San Francisco 3, Washington 2 Saturday: San Francisco 2, Washington 1, 18 innings Monday: Washington (Fister 16-6) at San Francisco (Bumgarner 18-10) (FS1 or MLBN), 12:07 or 2:07 p.m. x-Tuesday: Washington at San Francisco (FS1), 5:37 or 6:07 p.m. x-Thursday: San Francisco at Washington (FS1), 2:07 or 5:37 p.m. St. Louis 1, Los Angeles 1 Friday: St. Louis 10, Los Angeles 9 Saturday: Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 2 Monday: Los Angeles (Ryu 14-7) at St. Louis (Lackey 3-3) (FS1 or MLBN), 6:07 or 6:37 p.m. Tuesday: Los Angeles (Haren 13-11) at St. Louis (Miller 10-9) (FS1), 2:07 or 5:37 p.m. x-Thursday: St. Louis at Los Angeles (FS1), 5:37 or 6:07 p.m.

Giants 2, Nationals 1 (18) San Francisco Washington ab r h bi ab r h bi 7 0 0 0 GBlanc cf 6 0 0 0 Span cf Panik 2b 6 1 0 0 Rendon 3b 7 0 4 1 Posey c 6 0 3 0 Werth rf 8 0 1 0 Sandovl 3b 7 0 1 1 LaRoch 1b 7 0 0 0 Pence rf 7 0 2 0 Dsmnd ss 6 0 1 0 Belt 1b 7 1 1 1 Harper lf 7 0 0 0 BCrwfr ss 6 0 0 0 WRams c 7 0 1 0 Ishikaw lf 4 0 1 0 ACarer 2b 4 1 1 0 Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 Thrntn p 0 0 0 0 SCasill p 0 0 0 0 Barrett p 0 0 0 0 Susac ph 1 0 0 0 Blevins p 0 0 0 0 Y.Petit p 1 0 0 0 Schrhlt ph 0 0 0 0 GBrwn ph 1 0 0 0 Stmmn p 0 0 0 0 Strckln p 0 0 0 0 Frndsn ph 1 0 0 0 THudsn p 1 0 0 0 RSorin p 0 0 0 0 Machi p 0 0 0 0 Roark p 1 0 0 0 J.Lopez p 0 0 0 0 Zmrmn p 3 0 0 0 MDuffy ph 1 0 0 0 Storen p 0 0 0 0 Romo p 0 0 0 0 Clipprd p 0 0 0 0 J.Perez lf 3 0 0 0 Zmrmn ph 1 0 1 0 Espns pr-2b 3 0 0 0 Totals 57 2 8 2 Totals 62 1 9 1 San Francisco 000 000 001 000 000 001—2 Washington 001 000 000 000 000 000—1 DP—San Francisco 1, Washington 1. LOB— San Francisco 7, Washington 11. 2B—Sandoval (1), Pence (1), A.Cabrera (1). HR—Belt (1). SB— Rendon (1), Desmond (1). CS—Pence (1). S—G. Blanco, T.Hudson. IP H R ER BB SO San Francisco T.Hudson 71⁄3 7 1 1 0 8 1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Machi 1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 J.Lopez Romo 1 0 0 0 0 1 Affeldt 1 1 0 0 0 1 S.Casilla 1 0 0 0 0 1 6 1 0 0 3 7 Y.Petit W,1-0 Strickland S,1-1 1 0 0 0 1 1 Washington Zimmermann 82⁄3 3 1 1 1 6 1 ⁄3 2 0 0 0 0 Storen BS,1-1 Clippard 1 0 0 0 1 2 Thornton 1 0 0 0 2 1 Barrett 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Blevins Stammen 3 1 0 0 0 1 R.Soriano 1 0 0 0 0 1 Roark L,0-1 2 1 1 1 0 3 Barrett pitched to 1 batter in the 12th. T—6:23. A—44,035 (41,408).

Dodgers 3, Cardinals 2 St. Louis Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi MCrpnt 3b 3 1 2 2 DGordn 2b 4 0 1 1 Jay cf 3 0 1 0 Puig cf 4 0 0 0 Hollidy lf 4 0 0 0 AdGnzl 1b 4 0 1 1 MAdms 1b 2 0 0 0 Kemp rf 4 1 2 1 JhPerlt ss 4 0 0 0 HRmrz ss 2 0 1 0 YMolin c 4 0 0 0 Rojas ss 1 0 0 0 Wong 2b 4 0 1 0 Crwfrd lf 4 0 0 0 Grichk rf 4 0 0 0 Uribe 3b 4 0 0 0 Lynn p 2 0 0 0 A.Ellis c 3 1 1 0 Gonzals p 0 0 0 0 Greink p 3 1 2 0 Tavers ph 1 1 1 0 Howell p 0 0 0 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0 League p 0 0 0 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 2 5 2 Totals 33 3 8 3 St. Louis Los Angeles

000 000 020—2 002 000 01x—3

E—Neshek (1). DP—Los Angeles 1. LOB— St. Louis 6, Los Angeles 8. 2B—M.Carpenter (2), Wong (1), A.Ellis (1). HR—M.Carpenter (2), Kemp (1). St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO Lynn 6 7 2 2 2 8 Gonzales 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 1 0 1 Neshek L,0-1 Los Angeles Greinke 7 2 0 0 2 7 Howell BS,1-1 0 3 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 League W,1-0 Jansen S,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 2 Howell pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. HBP—by Greinke (Jay). WP—Greinke. T—3:27. A—54,599 (56,000).

FOOTBALL National Football League NFC West W L T Pct PF PA 3 0 0 1.000 66 45 Arizona 2 1 0 .667 83 66 Seattle San Francisco 2 2 0 .500 88 89 1 2 0 .333 56 85 St. Louis East W L T Pct PF PA 3 1 0 .750 122 104 Philadelphia 3 1 0 .750 115 86 Dallas N.Y. Giants 2 2 0 .500 103 91 Washington 1 3 0 .250 95 109 South W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 2 2 0 .500 131 113 Carolina 2 2 0 .500 73 96 New Orleans 1 3 0 .250 95 110 .250 72 119 Tampa Bay 1 3 0 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 3 1 0 .750 85 62 Green Bay 3 2 0 .600 134 106 2 2 0 .500 92 100 Chicago Minnesota 2 3 0 .400 101 126 AFC West W L T Pct PF PA San Diego 3 1 0 .750 102 63 Denver 2 1 0 .667 75 67 .500 102 79 Kansas City 2 2 0 Oakland 0 4 0 .000 51 103 East W L T Pct PF PA 2 2 0 .500 79 75 Buffalo 2 2 0 .500 96 97 Miami New England 2 2 0 .500 80 90 N.Y. Jets 1 3 0 .250 79 96 South W L T Pct PF PA 3 1 0 .750 87 67 Houston Indianapolis 2 2 0 .500 136 95 Tennessee 1 3 0 .250 60 110 Jacksonville 0 4 0 .000 58 152 North W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 3 0 0 1.000 80 33 Baltimore 3 1 0 .750 103 60 Pittsburgh 2 2 0 .500 97 99 Cleveland 1 2 0 .333 74 77 Today’s games Cleveland at Tennessee, 10 a.m. Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 10 a.m. Houston at Dallas, 10 a.m. Chicago at Carolina, 10 a.m. St. Louis at Philadelphia, 10 a.m. Atlanta at N.Y. Giants, 10 a.m. Buffalo at Detroit, 10 a.m. Baltimore at Indianapolis, 10 a.m. Pittsburgh at Jacksonville, 10 a.m. Arizona at Denver, 1:05 p.m. Kansas City at San Francisco, 1:25 p.m. N.Y. Jets at San Diego, 1:25 p.m. Cincinnati at New England, 5:30 p.m. Open: Miami, Oakland Monday’s game Seattle at Washington, 5:30 p.m.

College scores FAR WEST Air Force 30, Navy 21 Arizona St. 38, Southern Cal 34 Colorado St. 42, Tulsa 17 E. Washington 56, Idaho St. 53 Georgia Southern 36, New Mexico St. 28 N. Colorado 24, N. Arizona 17 Oregon St. 36, Colorado 31 Portland St. 23, UC Davis 14 San Jose St. 33, UNLV 10 SOUTHWEST Arkansas St. 28, Louisiana-Monroe 14 Baylor 28, Texas 7 Cent. Arkansas 49, Stephen F. Austin 39 Lamar 24, Abilene Christian 21 New Mexico 21, UTSA 9 Oklahoma St. 37, Iowa St. 20 Rice 28, Hawaii 14 TCU 37, Oklahoma 33 Texas Southern 20, MVSU 16 Texas St. 35, Idaho 30 MIDWEST Akron 31, E. Michigan 6 Bowling Green 36, Buffalo 35 Cent. Michigan 28, Ohio 10 Illinois St. 45, S. Dakota St. 10 Incarnate Word 31, Houston Baptist 8 Indiana 49, North Texas 24 Indiana St. 20, N. Iowa 19 Kansas St. 45, Texas Tech 13 Marist 35, Valparaiso 7 Memphis 41, Cincinnati 14

Miami (Ohio) 42, UMass 41 Montana 18, North Dakota 15 N. Dakota St. 17, W. Illinois 10 N. Illinois 17, Kent St. 14 Northwestern 20, Wisconsin 14 Notre Dame 17, Stanford 14 Purdue 38, Illinois 27 S. Illinois 41, South Dakota 10 SE Missouri 28, Tennessee St. 21 Toledo 20, W. Michigan 19, OT Youngstown St. 14, Missouri St. 7 SOUTH Auburn 41, LSU 7 Bethune-Cookman 27, Delaware St. 7 Butler 49, Stetson 41 Campbell 31, Morehead St. 24 Chattanooga 55, VMI 7 Clemson 41, NC State 0 Coastal Carolina 37, Furman 31, 2OT Dayton 54, Davidson 48, 5OT E. Kentucky 31, Austin Peay 0 East Carolina 45, SMU 24 Florida 10, Tennessee 9 Florida St. 43, Wake Forest 3 Gardner-Webb 27, Charlotte 24 Georgia 44, Vanderbilt 17 Georgia Tech 28, Miami 17 Grambling St. 38, Alabama A&M 28 Jacksonville 29, Drake 14 Jacksonville St. 38, UT-Martin 14 Kentucky 45, South Carolina 38 Louisiana Tech 55, UTEP 3 Louisiana-Lafayette 34, Georgia St. 31 Marshall 56, Old Dominion 14 McNeese St. 45, Nicholls St. 3 Middle Tennessee 37, Southern Miss. 31 Mississippi 23, Alabama 17 Mississippi St. 48, Texas A&M 31 Morgan St. 24, Florida A&M 9 NC Central 27, Howard 22 New Hampshire 48, Elon 14 Norfolk St. 14, Savannah St. 7 Ohio St. 52, Maryland 24 Prairie View 48, Jackson St. 30 Presbyterian 19, W. Carolina 14 Richmond 46, Liberty 39, 2OT SC State 13, NC A&T 0 SE Louisiana 30, Northwestern St. 22 Samford 21, Mercer 18 South Alabama 47, Appalachian St. 21 Southern U. 51, Ark.-Pine Bluff 36 Tennessee Tech 30, Murray St. 27, OT UAB 42, W. Kentucky 39 Virginia 24, Pittsburgh 19 Virginia Tech 34, North Carolina 17 Wofford 17, The Citadel 13 EAST Army 33, Ball St. 24 Brown 20, Rhode Island 13 Bryant 34, Bucknell 15 Colgate 20, Holy Cross 17 Dartmouth 31, Penn 13 Duquesne 39, West Liberty 13 Harvard 34, Georgetown 3 James Madison 31, Albany (NY) 28 Monmouth (NJ) 51, Robert Morris 20 Princeton 38, Columbia 6 Rutgers 26, Michigan 24 Sacred Heart 10, Delaware 7 Stony Brook 14, Towson 3 Villanova 41, Maine 20 Wagner 26, Alderson-Broaddus 0 West Virginia 33, Kansas 14 Yale 51, Cornell 13

GOLF LPGA Reignwood Classic Saturday At Pine Valley Golf Club Beijing Purse: $2.1 million Yardage: 6,585; Par: 73 Third Round a-amateur Caroline Hedwall 67-71-68—206 Stacy Lewis 66-68-72—206 Mirim Lee 70-68-70—208 Brittany Lang 70-66-72—208 69-72-68—209 Inbee Park Caroline Masson 70-68-71—209 Sun Young Yoo 68-73-69—210 Suzann Pettersen 74-66-70—210 Ilhee Lee 69-70-71—210 69-69-72—210 Belen Mozo Mi Jung Hur 73-71-67—211 Yuting Shi 74-69-68—211 Chella Choi 71-70-70—211 Haeji Kang 69-72-70—211 So Yeon Ryu 72-69-70—211

HOCKEY NHL Preseason Saturday’s games Detroit 4, Boston 3, SO Colorado 3, Los Angeles 2, SO Ottawa 4, Montreal 2 New Jersey 3, N.Y. Rangers 0 Tampa Bay 4, Florida 1 Columbus 3, Nashville 2 Minnesota 5, St. Louis 4, OT Winnipeg 4, Calgary 1 Anaheim 2, San Jose 1, OT Vancouver 3, Edmonton 2

Western Hockey League WESTERN CONFERENCE U.S. DIVISION GP W L OTL SOL GF GA Pt 5 3 0 2 0 18 13 8 6 3 3 0 0 18 16 6 4 2 1 1 0 10 12 5 5 2 3 0 0 13 14 4 7 1 5 0 1 18 32 3 B.C. DIVISION GP W L OTL SOL GF GA Pt Kelowna 6 6 0 0 0 39 18 12 Kamloops 7 4 2 1 0 25 23 9 Vancouver 5 3 2 0 0 22 19 6 Prince George 6 3 3 0 0 21 30 6 Victoria 6 1 4 1 0 14 27 3 EASTERN CONFERENCE CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OTL SOL GF GA Pt Medicine Hat 7 6 1 0 0 30 11 12 Calgary 6 3 2 0 1 23 19 7 Edmonton 5 3 2 0 0 14 10 6 Red Deer 5 2 3 0 0 15 17 4 Kootenay 5 2 3 0 0 14 21 4 Lethbridge 5 1 3 0 1 11 23 3 EAST DIVISION GP W L OTL SOL GF GA Pt Brandon 6 5 0 1 0 31 13 11 Swift Current 8 4 4 0 0 25 25 8 Moose Jaw 7 3 3 0 1 20 22 7 Regina 5 3 2 0 0 19 16 6 Prince Albert 5 3 2 0 0 16 15 6 Saskatoon 5 0 5 0 0 9 29 0 Note: a team winning in overtime or shootout is credited with two points and a victory in the W column; the team losing in overtime or shootout receives one point which is registered in the OTL or SOL columns. Saturday’s games Brandon 7, Red Deer 1 Moose Jaw 5, Tri-City 0 Calgary 6, Kootenay 4 Regina 5, Prince Albert 2 Medicine Hat 5, Kamloops 1 Swift Current 2, Victoria 1 (OT) Kelowna 6, Seattle 4 Prince George 6, Spokane 2 Portland 3, Everett 2 (OT) Today’s games Kamloops at Edmonton Red Deer at Regina Prince George at Vancouver

Everett Tri-City Spokane Seattle Portland

SOCCER Major League Soccer WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA 17 5 9 60 66 31 x-Los Angeles x-Seattle 18 9 3 57 57 46 Real Salt Lake 13 7 10 49 50 38 FC Dallas 14 11 6 48 52 42 Vancouver 10 8 13 43 40 40 Portland 10 9 12 42 56 52 Colorado 8 14 8 32 41 54 San Jose 6 13 11 29 35 44 Chivas USA 6 18 6 24 25 58 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA x-D.C. 15 9 7 52 46 34 New England 15 13 3 48 46 43 Sporting Kansas City 13 11 7 46 45 37 New York 11 9 11 44 49 46 Columbus 11 10 10 43 44 38 Toronto FC 11 12 7 40 42 48 Philadelphia 9 10 12 39 46 45 Houston 10 14 6 36 35 51 Chicago 5 8 17 32 38 46 Montreal 6 18 6 24 34 54 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. x- clinched playoff berth Saturday’s games New York 1, Houston 0 Vancouver 2, FC Dallas 0 New England 2, Columbus 1 Los Angeles 3, Toronto FC 0 Portland 2, San Jose 1 Today’s games Seattle FC at Colorado, 9 a.m. Montreal at Chicago, 2 p.m. Real Salt Lake at Chivas USA, 4 p.m.

LINE FAVORITE at Carolina at Tennessee at Philadelphia at N.Y. Giants at New Orleans at Dallas at Detroit at Indianapolis Pittsburgh at Denver at San Francisco at San Diego Cincinnati Seattle

NFL LINE UNDERDOG Today 2½ Chicago 1½ Cleveland 6½ St. Louis 4 Atlanta 10½ Tampa Bay 6 Houston 7 Buffalo 3½ Baltimore 6 at Jacksonville 7½ Arizona 5½ Kansas City 6½ N.Y. Jets 1 at New England Monday 7 at Washington


The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 C9

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Enjoys Mariners, Cooking

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Vin #DW024747 Stk #P1976

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2013 Toyota RAV4

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2011 Mazda Speed3

2014 Mazda6

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2011 Nissan Rogue

2013 Mazda5

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2007 BMW 3 Series 335i

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2008 Buick Enclave

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2010 Mazda CX7

Vin #CL251519 Stk #7113A

2013 Mazda3

2012 VW Jetta

17,646*

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C10

Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

TODAY

Western WA Northwest Weather

68°54°

Partial sunshine today. Partly cloudy tonight; a shower in spots on the Olympic Peninsula.

Bellingham 69/54

Partly cloudy

TOMORROW

68°56° A.M. fog, p.m. clearing

TUESDAY

Mountains

Oak Harbor 65/54

Arlington Eastern WA 71/53 Granite Partly sunny and pleasFalls ant today. A moonlit sky Marysvile 72/52 tonight. Mostly sunny 69/57 and very warm tomorrow. Langley EVERETT Lake Stevens Tuesday: pleasant with a 68/54 67/54 72/52 full day of sunshine. Mukilteo Snohomish Gold Bar 67/55 73/53 74/54 Lynnwood Mill Creek Index Monroe Sultan 70/54 73/52 70/54 73/53 74/54 Kirkland Redmond 72/55 73/56 Seattle Bellevue 72/57 73/56

65°55° 63°52° Partly sunny

THURSDAY

63°53° Sun and areas of high clouds

Mount Vernon 71/53

Stanwood 69/53

Partly sunny

WEDNESDAY

Partly sunny today. Free-air freezing level 14,500 feet. A moonlit sky tonight. Times of sun and clouds tomorrow.

Port Orchard 73/55

Everett High Low High Low

Auburn 73/53

Almanac

Time

2:20 a.m. 8:41 a.m. 3:26 p.m. 9:32 p.m.

Feet

9.2 1.2 11.0 2.8

Puget Sound

Wind west 6-12 knots today. Seas 1-2 feet. Visibility clear. Wind west 7-14 knots tonight. Seas 1-2 feet. Partly cloudy.

Port Townsend High Low High Low

Time

1:31 a.m. 7:38 a.m. 3:00 p.m. 8:35 p.m.

Everett

Arlington

Whidbey Island

Air Quality Index

Pollen Index

Sun and Moon

Yesterday’s offender ....... Particulates

Today

Sunrise today ....................... Sunset tonight ..................... Moonrise today ................... Moonset today .....................

through 5 p.m. yesterday High/low ..................................... 69/56 Normal high/low ....................... 61/48 Records (1970/1916) ................. 77/24 Barometric pressure (noon) ... 30.21 S 24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.01” Month to date ............................. 0.01” Normal month to date ............... 0.24” Year to date ............................... 24.37” Normal year to date ................. 21.63”

Good: 0-50; Moderate: 51-100, Unhealthy (for sensitive groups): 101-150; Unhealthy: 151-200; Very unhealthy: 201300; Hazardous: 301-500 WA Dept. of Environmental Quality

More Information Road Reports:

www.wsdot.wa.gov

Avalanche Reports:

www.nwac.noaa.gov

Burn Ban Information: Puget Sound: 1-800-595-4341 Website: www.pscleanair.org Forecasts and graphics, except the KIRO 5-day forecast, provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

through 5 p.m. yesterday High/low ..................................... 70/52 Normal high/low ....................... 61/48 Records (2014/2012) ................. 70/30 Barometric pressure (noon) ... 30.22 S 24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.00” Month to date ............................. 0.01” Normal month to date ............... 0.44” Year to date ............................... 39.24” Normal year to date ................. 30.33”

World Weather City

Today Hi/Lo/W Amsterdam 61/48/c Athens 72/61/t Baghdad 99/69/s Bangkok 92/76/t Beijing 69/49/s Berlin 63/49/pc Buenos Aires 66/57/r Cairo 85/67/s Dublin 58/48/sh Hong Kong 89/76/pc Jerusalem 75/56/s Johannesburg 73/49/s London 60/49/c

Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W 62/53/c 74/65/t 100/68/s 86/75/t 68/50/s 64/49/pc 71/55/pc 87/69/s 56/40/sh 89/75/pc 78/58/s 78/53/s 58/48/r

Feet 6.8 0.8 8.3 2.9

through 5 p.m. yesterday High/low ..................................... 64/53 Normal high/low ....................... 60/45 Records (1980/1977) ................. 73/33 Barometric pressure (noon) ... 30.21 F 24 hours ending 5 p.m. .............. Trace Month to date ............................ Trace Normal month to date ............... 0.18” Year to date ............................... 15.16” Normal year to date ................. 12.89”

Full Oct 8

Source: NAB

Washington Bellingham Colville Ellensburg Forks Friday Harbor Moses Lake Ocean Shores Olympia Port Angeles Pullman Spokane Seattle Tacoma Walla Walla Wenatchee Yakima Idaho Boise Coeur d’Alene Sun Valley Oregon Astoria Bend Eugene Klamath Falls Medford Portland

City

Last Oct 15

New Oct 23

7:13 a.m. 6:40 p.m. 5:10 p.m. 3:42 a.m.

First Oct 30

Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Madrid 78/53/c 76/54/pc Manila 88/76/t 88/77/t Mexico City 72/53/t 71/54/t Moscow 42/34/r 44/31/c Paris 61/46/c 63/55/sh Rio de Janeiro 73/63/pc 75/64/c Riyadh 99/72/s 100/73/s Rome 76/57/s 75/57/pc Singapore 85/77/t 87/79/t Stockholm 57/43/pc 51/42/pc Sydney 86/62/s 83/68/s Tokyo 67/65/r 78/63/r Toronto 54/46/pc 60/48/sh

City

Vancouver

66/53

Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 69/54/pc 78/46/pc 82/51/pc 71/54/pc 66/53/pc 78/48/pc 64/58/pc 75/51/pc 66/53/pc 75/45/pc 74/49/pc 72/57/pc 74/51/pc 80/56/pc 79/54/pc 81/48/pc 77/51/s 73/46/pc 70/44/s

79/51/s 74/50/s 74/44/s

73/56/pc 81/47/s 81/51/s 82/38/s 89/49/s 81/57/pc

71/53/pc 81/45/s 80/52/s 82/39/s 88/49/s 78/57/pc

Today Hi/Lo/W Albany 61/38/s Albuquerque 79/50/s Amarillo 78/49/s Anchorage 43/33/c Atlanta 69/54/s Atlantic City 62/52/s Austin 87/67/s Baltimore 60/43/s Baton Rouge 80/61/s Billings 69/47/pc Birmingham 73/56/s Boise 77/51/s Boston 63/46/s Buffalo 55/44/t Burlington, VT 60/41/pc Charleston, SC 71/50/s Charleston, WV 59/47/pc Charlotte 65/47/s Cheyenne 66/41/s Chicago 55/42/c Cincinnati 59/47/pc Cleveland 54/44/pc Columbus, OH 59/47/pc Dallas 86/65/s Denver 72/45/s Des Moines 62/46/pc Detroit 54/44/c El Paso 86/56/s Evansville 68/49/pc Fairbanks 34/24/sn Fargo 53/36/pc Fort Myers 81/62/s Fresno 97/63/s Grand Rapids 53/44/c Greensboro 62/47/s Hartford 63/40/s Honolulu 88/71/s Houston 85/67/s Indianapolis 58/44/pc

Bellingham

Kelowna 69/43

Calgary 64/44 Everett Port Angeles 68/54 66/53 66/54/c Medicine Hat Seattle 65/42 78/48/pc 72/57 Spokane Libby Tacoma 82/52/s 72/43 74/49 74/51 69/50/c Yakima Coeur d’Alene 81/48 65/50/c Portland 73/46 81/57 Great Falls Walla Walla 80/50/s Newport Lewiston Missoula 67/46 80/56 64/55/pc 72/56 77/49 71/42 Salem 75/53/pc 81/54 Helena Pendleton 66/53/c 70/45 80/52 77/50/s Eugene Bend 81/51 Butte 75/51/s 81/47 67/37 Ontario 72/58/pc 79/46 Medford 74/53/pc Boise 89/49 83/59/s 77/51 Klamath Falls 80/55/s Eureka 82/38 Idaho Falls Twin Falls 84/49/s 70/50 69/38 75/51

National Weather

Tacoma 74/51

Tides

City

Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W 66/52/s 81/50/s 82/49/s 41/30/s 77/59/s 72/61/pc 89/68/pc 71/54/pc 84/65/s 75/48/pc 80/61/s 79/51/s 66/56/s 62/51/sh 64/52/s 77/58/s 68/52/pc 74/55/s 72/48/s 60/48/sh 66/48/t 63/48/sh 65/48/sh 89/69/t 78/47/s 65/51/c 61/47/sh 85/59/s 70/51/c 29/14/c 58/42/sh 84/69/s 97/63/s 57/46/sh 73/55/s 67/55/s 89/72/s 82/70/pc 64/47/c

69/54

Redding 99/56

Roseburg Salem Montana Butte Great Falls Missoula Alaska Anchorage

85/53/pc 81/54/s

84/53/s 79/54/pc

67/37/pc 67/46/pc 71/42/pc

70/42/s 73/47/pc 73/46/s

43/33/c

41/30/s

Today Hi/Lo/W Jackson, MS 79/59/s Kansas City 68/47/s Knoxville 65/52/s Las Vegas 92/66/s Little Rock 82/59/s Los Angeles 92/66/s Louisville 66/52/pc Lubbock 81/52/s Memphis 79/59/s Miami 85/70/pc Milwaukee 54/40/c Minneapolis 52/36/pc Mobile 75/58/s Montgomery 75/53/s Newark 62/47/s New Orleans 80/66/s New York City 60/50/s Norfolk 63/51/s Oakland 80/56/s Oklahoma City 86/56/s Omaha 66/47/r Orlando 77/58/s Palm Springs 104/73/s Philadelphia 61/48/s Phoenix 94/69/s Pittsburgh 53/42/pc Portland, ME 63/39/pc Portland, OR 81/57/pc Providence 63/42/s

Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W 84/64/s 70/53/c 72/56/pc 92/65/s 79/62/t 89/64/s 69/54/c 84/53/s 78/64/t 86/74/pc 58/46/c 57/41/c 81/64/s 83/60/s 70/59/s 84/70/s 68/60/s 73/60/s 77/55/s 87/60/t 69/53/c 81/65/s 103/72/s 71/59/pc 93/69/s 63/50/sh 62/50/s 78/57/pc 67/56/s

City

Barrow 28/22/c Fairbanks 34/24/sn Juneau 52/43/r British Columbia Chilliwack 74/57/pc Kelowna 69/43/pc Vancouver 66/53/pc Victoria 66/52/pc City

Today Hi/Lo/W Raleigh 64/46/s Rapid City 64/43/c Reno 83/44/s Richmond 66/47/s Sacramento 95/58/s St. Louis 70/51/pc St. Petersburg 76/62/s Salt Lake City 71/50/s San Antonio 89/72/s San Diego 83/66/s San Francisco 82/60/s San Jose 90/58/s Stockton 95/56/s Syracuse 59/41/pc Tallahassee 74/49/s Tampa 78/58/s Tempe 95/67/s Topeka 73/48/s Tucson 93/63/s Tulsa 82/53/s Washington, DC 63/50/s Wichita 80/52/s Winston-Salem 61/46/s Yuma 99/71/s

67/54/c 69/48/pc 64/53/c 64/51/c Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W 74/55/s 70/46/pc 85/46/s 75/57/pc 94/56/s 68/54/c 81/69/s 75/51/s 91/73/pc 82/66/s 78/59/s 85/56/s 94/56/s 65/50/sh 79/54/s 81/67/s 93/67/s 75/52/c 90/66/s 81/60/t 75/60/pc 82/54/pc 72/55/s 98/74/s

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

National Extremes (for the 48 contiguous states) High: Fillmore, CA .......................... 107 Low: Tioga, ND ................................. 19

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

T U L A L I PCA SI N O. COM 1140835

28/21/sn 29/14/c 46/38/r


The Good Life section D

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The Daily Herald

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www.heraldnet.com/living

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Sunday, 10.05.2014

Genna Martin / The Herald

Dressed as Maleficent, Taylor Davis works at Value Village as a costume consultant to help customers find the perfect costume.

Frightfully thrifty

You don’t have to sell your soul to get a great Halloween costume By Andrea Brown

S

Herald Writer

care or seduce? Laughs or looks? Getting the right Halloween costume takes brains and brawn. Furs, swords, wigs, lace, sparkle, gore. Bring it on. Hot this year for kids are “Frozen,” “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” and “X-Men” characters. Good luck finding an Elsa costume. For adults, inspirations come from “Game of Thrones,” social media and the classics. Halloween lands on a Friday this year, so you can party all night and not worry about still looking like a member of the “Walking Dead” the next day at work. About half of American adults plan to don a costume according to a Halloween survey released by Value Village. The thrift store has its own line of new costumes from sexy kitties to zombie bananas in addition to secondhand getups and pieces. Goodwill stores also stock a vast selection of new and used costumes.

Value Village takes Halloween so seriously that for two months some workers take on the role of costume consultants. Taylor Davis, 21, is a cashier the other 10 months of the year. “I don’t wear much makeup, and typically just wear jeans and a T-shirt,” she said. “But then August hits and my Halloween box comes out.” Every day, she’s dressed to kill, scare or amuse as she works the costume aisles of the Everett store on Evergreen Way. “You have to keep the creativity flowing,” said Davis, dressed as her version of the iconic villain Maleficent. “I piece it, make it my own.” Tell her what you want to be and she’ll take it from there. She’s like an interior decorator and your body’s the room. Packaged costumes are a start. The devil is in the accessories. “There is so much you can do with it,” she said. Don’t have a costume consultant? According to the Value Village survey, more than 60 percent of social media users who dress up report their social networks will impact their costume choices. Some want to wear

inside: Rick Steves, 3

Elysian, which is hosting its 10th annual Great Pumpkin Beer Festival on Sunday, has since developed three other pumpkin beers: The Great Pumpkin, an imperial pumpkin ale, Dark O’ The Moon pumpkin stout, and Punkuccino, a coffee pumpkin ale. I still love the original though. I purchased a six pack the other day, took it home, cracked the top, poured it and took a sip. As good as I remembered. — Aaron Swaney, Herald Writer

|

Crossword, 4

Costume Catwalk Value Village stores feature free “Halloween Costume Catwalk” fashion shows at 3 p.m. every Thursday in October. Costume consultants will showcase costume looks and offer Halloween shopping tips. what their Facebook friends are wearing. Others wouldn’t dare. It’s not only humans that become fairies, sheriffs and Miley Cyrus. Many people dress their pets and some coordinate costumes with their animal pals.

Yeah, Davis can help you with that, too. On a recent day at the Everett Value Village, Crissi Parry tried to keep her sons contained in the cart as she See Thrifty, Page D2

A pair of DIY apps at home this season

Elysian’s Night Owl: a bottle of autumn When I pour a pint of Elysian Brewing’s Night Owl Pumpkin Ale it brings back a flood of memories. It pours an orangish hue, exactly how a pumpkin ale should look ... like fall. The smell and taste of pumpkin and spices rekindles memories of sitting around with friends and enjoying a pint on the ever-darkening nights of October. Night Owl was the first pumpkin beer I ever enjoyed. It was still very early in my beer explorations and I was taken aback at how interesting it was. Since then there’s been a deluge of pumpkin beers — many better than the Night Owl. It’s gotten so out of hand there is now a pumpkin beer backlash, with many people sick of the annual orange crush.

Genna Martin / The Herald

Crissi Parry, of Everett, shops for Halloween costumes with her sons, Liam, 4, (right) and Jack, 2, recently.

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Sprucing up your house for fall is BrightNest: If you’re feeling overwhelmed by the prospect of a challenging enough — you should at least let technology do some of the work. big fall cleanup, BrightNest (free for iOS and Android) Sun Seeker: As the is a good way keep days get shorter, Sun track of everything. Seeker (iOS $8.99, It works like a giant Android $6.99) can virtual to-do list: ensure that your rooms Input information are set up to make the about your home’s most of the limited sunsize, structure and light. Used indoors, the climate, and the app app will help you find will compile a scheda room’s sun exposure ule of regular tasks. so you can arrange Sun Seeker It includes a section furniture accordingly. The Sun Seeker app helps The program has a map you figure out room light. of articles and do-ityourself projects. feature that will show you — Sarah Kaplan, the sun’s position in relation to your The Washington Post home at each hour of the day.

Horoscope, 4

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Dear Abby, 5

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Outdoors, 6


D2 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Rule followers don’t make history (and other lessons learned at the ball pit)

H

ave you ever heard the saying “Good girls go to heaven. Bad girls go everywhere?” I thought of that recently on the way home from IKEA. My sweet little 5-year-old had an unfortunate experience at Småland, the free play area for children. To be clear, it was not the IKEA workers’ fault. What I think happened is that my daughter misunderstood the rules. She thought she was only allowed in the ball pit. A consummate rule follower, my daughter stayed in the ball pit for the entire 45 minutes, even while the other children had fun moving to different play areas. What’s worse, the bathroom was in the other room, so by the time I picked her up she was ready to burst. “I was so lonely, Mommy,” she told me. “And you weren’t even allowed to cry!” I don’t think that was true either, but I told her she should feel very proud of herself for being so brave. My daughter is a people pleaser, which usually makes her easy to parent. But in this case, being well behaved caused her distress. My son by contrast, is a strong-willed iconoclast. It’s made for some interesting conversations with authority figures over the years. On the long drive home from IKEA I tried to picture what a 5-year-old version of my son would have done in a similar situation. Chucked balls at the kid next to him until they paged me? Argued his way into the room with the crayons? When I picked him up from fourth grade that afternoon I asked him. “I don’t know what I would have done in

Jennifer barDsley i BraKe FOr MOMS kindergarten but when I was two or three I would have bit the IKEA woman and made them call you.” Since this was a purely hypothetical situation, I felt a bit proud. My son knows how to advocate for himself — one way or another. I want my daughter to be able to speak up too. I know there are probably a lot of parents reading the paper this morning who have challenging kids to parent. Maybe your teenager just yelled at you for waking her up at 10 a.m., or your 6-year-old complained that you made pancakes wrong. These are the types of kids we worry about. But maybe we should really be worried about the child who quietly ate your fat pancakes when he actually wanted cereal, or the teenager who didn’t complain when you woke her up even though she was exhausted because she was up until 2 a.m. completing her school project a week early. Everyone always judges the kid who bites. It’s easy to disparage the child who is too loud. Rule followers can be a lot easier to parent. But rule followers don’t make history unless we teach them to complain. Otherwise, they’ll be stuck in the ball pit forever. Jennifer Bardsley is an Edmonds mom of two.

Dressed as Iron Man, Value Village employee Travis Ness greets Chris Parry, Jack and Liam.

Thrifty: It takes a Value Village From Page D1

rolled by the superhero section. Employee Travis Ness, dressed as Iron Man, came to her rescue by flashing his light-up chest arc reactor. A family costume theme

is a ritual for Parry, her sons and her husband, who would never dress up by choice. “Last year, we were a whole family of pirates,” Parry said. “We came here and bought everything. For $30, we dressed five

Book CaLeNDar “Practicing Journalism”: Paul Steinle and Sara Brown, authors of “Practicing Journalism: the Power and Purpose of the Fourth estate,” will speak at 7 p.m. Oct. 7 in the Plaza room of edmonds library, 650 Main St. the event is sponsored by Sno-isle libraries, the everett Daily herald and the edmonds Bookshop. “Practicing Journalism” is about the varied reasons that journalists remain dedicated to reporting news, even as the media and newspapers in particular are under siege. Kip fulbeck: the artist, author, filmmaker and spoken word performer presents “What are you? the Changing Face of america” at 12:30 p.m. Oct. 8 in the Black Box theatre on campus, 20000 68th ave. W. he has been featured on Cnn, MtV, the today Show, and PBS and has performed and exhibited in over 20 countries and throughout the U.S. Fulbeck’s work explores intersections of identity, media, race, sex and politics.

f

WORKSHOPS:

Sunday, Oct 5, 12, 19 & 26 12:00 PM to 3:00 PM Sandra Swanson. Quilting demonstration. Tuesday, October 14 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM Amanda Smith. Beading demonstration.

Jennifer Pharr Davis: the author and hiker talks about her new book “Called again,” at 6 p.m. Oct. 8 at the Darrington library. the book recounts her record-setting

COMMUNITY EVENTS:

Children’s Reading Time Saturday, Oct. 11, 18 & 25 • 1:30 PM to 2:00 PM Appraisal Fair with Brill Lee Saturday, October 18 • 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM Reserve your appraisal time: 360-716-2657 or mjtopash@hibulbculturalcenter.org.

46-day hike of the appalachian trail, during which she averaged nearly 47 miles per day. Davis has hiked more than 12,000 miles on six continents. the author of five books, she was named one of 10 adventurers of the Year by national Geographic in 2012. Books will be available for purchase and signing. all programs are free and open to the public. stacey r. Campbell, Martha brockenbrough, Karen finneyfrock and Kevin emerson: Discussion and book signing set for 7 p.m. Oct. 9 at the Mill Creek branch of University Book Store, 15311 Main St., Mill Creek. the four authors of the young adult books “Whisper,” “Devine intervention,” “Starbird Murphy and the World Outside” and “exile” appear at this free event. John l. Wright: the Woodway poet plans to read from his fourth collection of poems at 7 p.m. Oct. 16 at the edmonds Bookshop, 111 Fifth ave. S., edmonds.

To submit news for the Herald’s book calendar, contact reporter Gale Fiege: 425-339-3427; gfiege@heraldnet.com. Twitter: @galefiege.

people. The year before we did ‘Star Wars.’” Superheroes is a possibility this year, especially if her sons get their way. “I like to have it hammered by about two weeks ahead of time,” she said. If you like the thrill of

By Heather Schroering Chicago Tribune

She’s more in-the-know than you, more fashion-forward than you and she’s no taller than half a Heidi Klum (with heels, of course). Her name is Quinoa, and she’s Tiffany Beveridge’s imaginary well-dressed daughter. Consider Quinoa’s avant-garde snacks: Why eat applesauce when you could have jicama slaw with green apples and elderberries? Or her choreographed play dates — what’s a croquet match without falling down laughing about how ridiculously good-looking you are? It all might make you feel inferior, but she’ll teach you her ways in “How to Quinoa: Life Lessons From My Imaginary Well-Dressed Daughter” (Running Press). With lists, infographics and photos of sophisticated little girls, Quinoa and her friends (Chevron, Kale and

You can keep the cultural fires burning... VOLUNTEER TODAY!

Fall Program October 11 - 2pm & 7pm

Find us on Facebook & Twitter!

EVERETT PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

For tickets visit or call www.olympicballet.com 425-774-7570

Presents the First Annual

RAISE THE ROOF

for Habitat for Humanity! Special Guest Speaker BREAKFAST

JOHN CURLEY

Tuesday, Oct. 14 7am-8:30am

Excerpts from

Former host of the KING 5 TV’s Evening Magazine, and currently host of a weekday morning radio show on KIRO

La Bayadere with OBT Orchestra

Lynnwood Convention Center

Tickets on sale now at: www.habitatsnohomish.org/raise-the-roof-breakfast or call our office at 425-258-6289. Ad space donated by The Herald

1140787

$35 Per Person

Plated breakfast included.

plus

Rossini Overture & others

1143224

1137484

360.716.2600

info@hibulbculturalcenter.org 6410 23rd Avenue NE, Tulalip, WA 98271 Visit us online for more event dates.

waiting until the last minute, no problem. “We’ll be dressing people up until 10 p.m. on Halloween night,” Davis said. Andrea Brown: 425339-3443; abrown@ heraldnet.com. Twitter: @ reporterbrown.

Pinterest hit now a book lampooning hipster ‘culture’

Fees for all events are the cost of admission.

HibulbCulturalCenter.org

Genna Martin / the heralD

facebook.com/OlympicBalletTheatre 1142951

Aioli) cover everything, from choosing a trendy nickname to increasing your friendship drama and finding your “own path to designer happiness.” The book is based on the author’s popular Pinterest board, “My Imaginary WellDressed Toddler Daughter,” which began as a fantasy land for Beveridge — who has only sons — to pin cute girls’ clothing. It has evolved into a tongue-in-cheek reflection of obsessions with hipster culture, trendy food and of-the-moment fashion that many take so seriously. “Quinoa is this fun, innocent social lens, to look at these things we think are so important and how we adopt them to show how superior and in-the-know we are,” said Beveridge, who lives in Pennsylvania. “We love it and we hate it — that’s our (social) currency — but we all love to be that person who’s, like, ‘Hey, look what I found.’”


The Daily Herald

Playful Padua a mix of the old and young I ’m in Padua — just half an hour from Venice, but a world away — and I really like this town. Padua’s museums and churches hold their own in Italy’s artistic big league; its hotels are reasonably priced and the city doesn’t feel touristy. Nicknamed “The Brain of Veneto,” Padua (“Padova” in Italian) is home to a prestigious university (founded in 1222) that hosted Galileo, Copernicus, Dante and Petrarch. Pilgrims know Padua as the home of the Basilica of St. Anthony, where the reverent assemble to touch his tomb and ogle his remarkably intact lower jaw and tongue. And lovers of early-Renaissance art come here to make a pilgrimage of their own: to gaze at the remarkable 14th-century frescoes by Giotto in the Scrovegni Chapel. When I come here, I like to ramble around Padua’s old town center. It’s a colonnaded, time-travel experience through some of Italy’s most inviting squares, perfect for lingering over an “aperitivo.” But it’s not old-time stodgy — this university town has 60,000 students and a wonderfully youthful vibe. No wonder Galileo called his 18 years on the faculty in Padua the best of his life. All over town, young people — apparently without a lot of private space in their apartments — hang out and kiss and cuddle in public spaces. These students seemed very comfortable literally under the medieval tomb of one of their city’s historic fathers. Since the students can graduate whenever they defend their thesis, I’ve never been here without little graduation parties erupting on the street all day long. Graduates are given a green laurel wreath. Then formal group photos are taken. It’s a sweet, multigenerational

Rick sTeves

if you visit sleeping: Hotel Belludi 37 is a slick, stylish place near the Basilica of St. Anthony, renting 16 modern rooms shoehorned into an old building (moderate, www.belludi37.it). the family-run Hotel Majestic toscanelli rents 34 charming, old-fashioned rooms in the city center (splurge, www.toscanelli.com). eating: Osteria dei Fabbri offers a good mix of quality and price, serving traditional venetian and Paduan dishes (via dei Fabbri 13, tel. 049-650336). casa del Pellegrino Ristorante caters to St. Anthony pilgrims with simple, hearty meals, served in a cheery dining room just north of the basilica (via cesarotti 21, tel. 049-876-0715). Getting around: the town is walkable, but you can also access Padua’s best sights from its tram line (www.apsholding.it). For tourist information: www.turismopadova.it.

scene with family love and pride busting out all over. Then, grandma goes home and the craziness takes over. Sober clothing is replaced by raunchy wear as gangs of friends gather around the new grad in the street in front of the university, and the roast begins. A giant butcher-paper poster with a generally obscene

Rick SteveS

Padua’s 60,000 students give a youthful vibe to the Italian city’s Renaissance squares.

caricature of the student — and a litany of “This Is Your Life” photos and stories — is presented to the new grad who, with various embarrassing pranks being pulled, reads the funny statement out loud. The poster is then taped to the university wall for all to see (and allowed to stay there for 24 hours). During the roast, the friends sing a catchy but crude local university anthem, reminding their newly esteemed friend to keep his or her feet on the ground. Once I hear this song (which starts like an Olympic games fanfare and finishes like a German cartoon: oom-pah-pah, oom-pah-pah) and see all the good-natured fun, I just can’t stop singing it. Eventually I stop humming this profane ditty to

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‘The Holy Land’ Rick Steves’ one-hour special, “the Holy Land: israelis and Palestinians today,” airs on kctS/9 on Sunday night at 7 p.m. Steves said his goal in the production is to give fellow citizens a better context in understanding the tension in the region. He visits not only popular tourist destinations in israel but also controversial settlements, Palestinian refugee camps and the West Banks’ biggest cities. You can watch the show’s preview and find more details at www.ricksteves. com/holy-land.

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seek out Padua’s two main sights — the Basilica of St. Anthony and the Scrovegni Chapel. Friar Anthony of Padua — patron saint of travelers, amputees, donkeys, pregnant women, barren women, flight attendants, and pig farmers — is buried in the basilica. Construction of this impressive Romanesque/Gothic church (with its Byzantine-style domes) started immediately after Anthony’s death in 1231. As a mark of his universal appeal and importance in the medieval Church, he was sainted within a year of his death. Speedy. And for nearly 800 years, his remains and this glorious

church have attracted pilgrims to Padua. Gaze past the crowds and through the incense haze to Donatello’s glorious crucifix rising from the altar, and realize that this is one of the most important pilgrimage sites in Christendom. In the Chapel of the Reliquaries you’ll see the basilica’s most prized relic — Anthony’s tongue. When Anthony’s remains were exhumed 32 years after his death, his body had decayed to dust, but his tongue was found miraculously unspoiled and red in color. How appropriate for the great preacher who, full of the Spirit, couldn’t stop talking about God. On the opposite side of town is the glorious, renovated Scrovegni Chapel. It’s wallpapered with Giotto’s beautifully preserved cycle of nearly 40 frescoes depicting the lives of Jesus and Mary. Painted by Giotto and his assistants from 1303 to 1305 — and considered by many to be the first piece of “modern” art — this work makes it clear: Europe was breaking out of the Middle Ages. A sign of the Renaissance to come, Giotto placed real people in real scenes, expressing real human emotions. These frescoes were radical for their 3-D nature, lively colors, light sources, emotion and humanism. Because it’s so fragile, you must make reservations in advance to see the chapel. It’s wise to reserve at least two days in advance and easiest to do online at www.cappelladegliscrovegni.it. From its student vibe to its early-Renaissance masterpieces, Padua is a great place to get chummy with the winds of the past — and connect with the pleasures of the moment.

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D4 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

So you’re enjoying your money? So freaking what Dear Carolyn: This seems like such a minor issue, but it’s starting to really bother me. My friends and I are at an age when the people who’ve made it are really making it, and when the people who haven’t made it really haven’t. We’re fortunate to be in the first group. Through hard work and a little luck, we’ve hit a lot of our goals and are cruising right along. Now we can finally start to really enjoy our money and do things we’ve always wanted to do. Meanwhile, some of our friends are experiencing chronic unemployment or underemployment, or are encumbered with illness or other mishap, and are barely making ends meet. I want to share my

CAROLYN HAX TELL ME ABOUT IT enthusiasm about an upcoming trip or other major purchase, but I don’t want to seem like I’m rubbing their faces in it. Another friend, similarly well off, manages to mention his income at every get-together and I don’t want to be THAT person. Where’s the line between being happy about what I’m doing and

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rubbing it in? This seemed a lot easier when we were all in our 20s — even though we were doing well then too, the difference didn’t seem so stark. — Lucky in Life Problems become easier to solve when you figure out what you’re trying to accomplish, so let’s find your goal in sharing “enthusiasm about ... a major purchase.” Um. “Bask in the glory of me”? You try phrasing it without snark — it’s harder than it looks. Playing it as straight as possible, let’s call your goal, “Tell people how happy I am and why.” (As opposed to just being happy, which involves no phrasing or audience-management.)

Is that a worthy aim, one you’d want friends to pursue with you? How about if they’re flush and you’re broke (more on which in a moment)? Or would you prefer they had goals such as: be compassionate, be funny, be interesting, be supportive, be a good listener, be flexible, be inclusive? Or just, be good company? Be forgiving, too, is a good one when you need it, though it’s on us not to need it too often. Of course your friends care about you, so when they ask you what’s new, sure, share that you’re moving next month or off to Spain tomorrow, with an emphasis on experiences, not acquisitions (buying a bimmer is the latter, no matter what

I

hope you had a chance to enjoy the lunar eclipse earlier this year in the early hours of April 15. I dubbed it the great income tax day lunar cover-up. Unfortunately I missed it since I was too under the weather and needed my sleep. If you missed the April show you have another chance. We have a real treat in 2014, two total lunar eclipses in one year. Like April’s lunar cover up, you’ll need to set a trusty alarm clock to watch the ruddy lunar cover up in the early morning hours of Wednesday, Oct. 8. The moon will begin slipping into Earth’s ruddy shadow at 2:15 a.m. and will stay there until 5:34 a.m. Lunar eclipses occur when the moon, in its orbit around the Earth, passes through the Earth’s shadow opposite the sun, known also as the umbra shadow. This can only happen during a full moon, when our planet lies in a line between the sun and moon. However, this doesn’t occur every time there’s a full moon because the moon’s orbit around the Earth is tilted by five degrees to the Earth’s orbit around the sun. Most of the time the full moon misses the Earth’s shadow as it orbits our world. It either passes above or below it. Not this time though, as the moon forges right into the umbra shadow on Wednesday morning. Right around 2:15 a.m. you’ll start to see the upper left side of the moon’s disk begin to darken, and by 3 a.m. you’ll really see a big bite being taken out of the moon. You can’t help but notice that the shadow has a circular edge to it as

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___ Watts, English hymnist who wrote “Joy to the World” Uncontested basketball attempts Swarms Rockefeller Center statue Go after Irons, say Encourage Like a good-size estate, maybe “Wait, you can’t possibly think. . . . ” Writer painted by Velázquez Pre-Bill Hillary Historic figure with a reputation at stake? Shelfmate of Bartlett’s, maybe Onion relative Go cheek-tocheek with Lingo Good source of iron? Exxon Valdez, e.g. Warm way to welcome someone Millennials, informally Unflinching Be profligate, say Radio host John Throat problem Team of oxen “Say what?” Brother Not now Stats for Aaron and Gehrig Deeds

118 Goddess of marriage 119 Common slogan for a music radio station 123 Kind of cavity 124 Vatican City vis-à-vis Rome 125 “CSI: Miami” actress 126 Take in some views? 127 Some farms 128 Unpredictable one

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DOWN 1 Pool stroke 2 Put on ___ 3 Gaza group 4 Biblical brother 5 Corkscrewshaped pasta 6 George Orwell and George Eliot 7 Parsons of “The Big Bang Theory” 8 Taiwanese computer giant 9 Flowing glacial feature 10 Mandible’s counterpart 11 Not the main rte. 12 The natural in “The Natural” 13 Build 14 Sparkly topper 15 Relative of a canary 16 “Don’t be ashamed” 17 Vincent van Gogh’s brother 18 G 19 Pub order 24 Haggle 29 Hard to grasp

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3:55 a.m.

5:34 a.m. The Moon exits Earth’s umbra shadow and the exclipse ends

From 3:25 a.m. to 4:24 a.m. the Moon will be totally eclipsed

2:15 a.m. The Moon enters Earth’s umbra shadow and the exclipse begins

Umbra shadow

it creeps across the lunar surface. Ancient Greek scientists saw this circular shadow of the Earth as proof the Earth was round. Now they were really ahead of their time. From 3:25 a.m. until 4:24 a.m. the moon will be totally eclipsed but will still be visible. It could take on a bright orange hue or it might be bloody red. No one can predict what hue the eclipsed moon will take. Only the shadow knows — the Earth’s umbra shadow that is. The umbra shadow opposite the sun is not totally dark because some of the sun’s light manages to get through our Earth’s atmospheric shell, as you can see in the diagram. The sunlight that does get through is bent and strained as it

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TOTAL LUNAR ECLIPSE WEDNESDAY MORNING (OCT. 8)

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the dealer tells you). And emphasis on others, since actually caring for friends above purchases inoculates you nicely against THAT-ness. When you’re excited about something, OK, be joyful; if you can’t be human then you can’t be friends. Feigned nonchalance is tantamount to rubbing it in anyway. But unless you’re a gifted storyteller (as measured by the rapt attention of people not angling to be named in your will), your travels and success stories are fascinating to precisely one population: the people who participate in them. If that. Otherwise you’re bragging.

Second chance to see lunar eclipse this year

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Happy Birthday: Size up your situation and look at your options before you make a move. This is not the year to make a hasty decision. Bide your time and look for a unique and innovative way to reach your goals without having to compromise your integrity or your criteria. Your numbers are 2, 14, 21, 25, 37, 41, 49. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Fill up your day with errands you’ve been putting off. Opportunities will arise, bringing about a positive change. Share knowledge and you will pick up valuable information. ★★★ TAURUS (April 20-May 20): As long as you stick to the truth and keep complaints simple, solutions will be offered and promises put in place. A proactive approach will help you put stress behind you. ★★★★ GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Make self-improvements without breaking the bank. Look for simple but effective changes you can make to update your look or to make skills and attributes more appealing. ★★★ CANCER (June 21-July 22): Come to a decision before someone puts pressure on you. Don’t ignore the signs or complaints being made. It’s best to be upfront and take care of business. ★★★ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Look at a challenge as a chance to show off. Give your all, and you will leave an unforgettable impression. Turn on your charm and you will encourage a romantic encounter with someone special. ★★★★★ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Research will be your ticket to advancement. Network and attend industry events that will allow you to display your skills and knowledge. ★★★ LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Get out and do things that bring you joy to avoid a domestic situation that is likely to leave you facing uncertainty. Focus on exploring your options. ★★★ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Implement changes that allow the freedom to explore your creative skills, and you will feel more excited about turning something you enjoy into a prosperous venture. ★★★★★ SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Think about your next move. What you’ve done in the past, coupled with your current position, will make your next move easy if you just follow through with your plans. ★★ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Back away from a situation that is causing you stress. Focus on what you have to offer and start putting your ideas and plans on paper. ★★★ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Review your personal investments, legal matters and health concerns, and you will find workable solutions. A stronger vow to someone you think is special will bring you closer together. ★★★ PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Don’t get frazzled because someone opposes your ideas or challenges you. Concentrate on doing what you do best and presenting the options you have to offer. ★★★

STARWATCH | Mike Lynch

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Bygone potentate 9 Ottoman inns 16 Web starter 20 Kind of steroid 21 Small thing to burn 22 “Fancy meeting you here!” 23 1975 Tonynominated play about an extended affair 25 Spanish province 26 Rehnquist’s successor on the high bench 27 New home loan deal, in short 28 Exclaimed 30 “Guardians of the Galaxy” title characters, informally 31 Org. implementing the Protect America Act 33 Audacity 35 Chief justice during the Civil War 36 Relationships 37 Skateboard jump 39 Private parts 43 Clear-minded 46 The Crossroads of the West 51 Fields 53 Early-millennium year 54 Undermine 55 Prop on “The Bachelor” 56 What a bachelor might do

HOROSCOPE

“Ditto” Valley girl’s filler Reagan’s challenge to Gorbachev Architect Saarinen Langston Hughes poem with the lines “They send me to eat in the kitchen / When company comes” Earliest-born member of the Cartoon Hall of Fame “___ Mine, All Mine” (1920s tune) Goldman’s banking partner “___ of One’s Own” (Woolf essay) Intro to science? ___ Leslie, three-time W.N.B.A. M.V.P. Get by Driver’s lic., e.g. Like overtime periods vis-à-vis regulation play Prefix with -scope Bit of seaweed Cav or Mav Brand with a red arrow through its logo Synagogue instrument Middlin’ Some smug comments Bum It has almost 4,000 miles of coastline Lustrous black

comes through our atmosphere. All of the blue and yellow components of the sun’s light are scattered away leaving just the reddish part of the sun’s light that bathes the eclipsed moon. The shade of the red light reaching the moon depends on the combined atmospheric conditions of where the sunlight passes through on its way to the moon. That makes it impossible to know exactly what shade of red or orange the eclipsed moon will take on, but it’s also part of the fun of a total lunar eclipse. No matter how red the moon gets, you can count on the main street media to dub it as a “blood moon” because of their need to overhype. No matter what shade of red the moon takes on it will be beautiful and perfectly safe to look at.

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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 D5

TODAY IN HISTORY Today is Sunday, Oct. 5, the 278th day of 2014. There are 87 days left in the year. Today’s highlight: On Oct. 5, 1984, the space shuttle Challenger blasted off from the Kennedy Space Center on an 8-day mission; members of the crew included Kathryn D. Sullivan, who became the first American woman to walk in space, and Marc Garneau, the first Canadian astronaut. On this date: In 1829, the 21st president of the United States, Chester Alan Arthur, was born in North Fairfield, Vermont. In 1864, French film pioneer Louis Lumiere was born in Besancon. In 1921, the World Series was carried on radio for the first time as Newark, New Jersey, station WJZ (later WABC) relayed a telephoned play-byplay account of the first game from the Polo Grounds. (Al-

though the New York Yankees won the opener, 3-0, the New York Giants won the series, 5 games to 3.) In 1931, Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Herndon completed the first nonstop flight across the Pacific Ocean, arriving in Washington state some 41 hours after leaving Japan. In 1947, President Harry S. Truman delivered the first televised White House address as he spoke on the world food crisis. In 1953, Earl Warren was sworn in as the 14th chief justice of the United States, succeeding Fred M. Vinson. In 1969, the British TV comedy program “Monty Python’s Flying Circus” made its debut on BBC 1. In 1970, British trade commissioner James Richard Cross was kidnapped in Canada by militant Quebec separatists; he was released the

following December. In 1988, Democrat Lloyd Bentsen lambasted Republican Dan Quayle during their vice-presidential debate, telling Quayle, “Senator, you’re no Jack Kennedy.” In 1989, a jury in Charlotte, North Carolina, convicted former PTL evangelist Jim Bakker of using his television show to defraud followers. (Although initially sentenced to 45 years in prison, Bakker was freed in December 1994 after serving 4 1/2 years.) The Dalai Lama, the spiritual and temporal leader of Tibet, was named winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. Today’s birthdays: Actress Glynis Johns is 91. Comedian Bill Dana is 90. Actor Peter Brown is 79. College Football Hall of Fame coach Barry Switzer is 77. Rhythm-and-blues singer Arlene Smith (The Chantels) is 73. Singer-musician Steve

Miller is 71. Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin, D-Md., is 71. Rock singer Brian Johnson (AC/ DC) is 67. Actress Karen Allen is 63. Writer-producerdirector Clive Barker is 62. Rock musician David Bryson (Counting Crows) is 60. Rock singer and famine-relief organizer Bob Geldof is 60. Designer Maya Lin is 55. Actor Daniel Baldwin is 54. Rock singer-musician Dave Dederer is 50. Hockey Hall of Famer Mario Lemieux is 49. Actor Guy Pearce is 47. Actress Josie Bissett is 44. Singer-actress Heather Headley is 40. Poprock singer Colin Meloy (The Decemberists) is 40. Rock musician Brian Mashburn (Save Ferris) is 39. Thought for today: “The usefulness of a meeting is in inverse proportion to the attendance.” — Lane Kirkland, American labor leader (1922-1999). Associated Press

SEEMS LIKE YESTERDAY

SUDOKU

50 years ago (1964) Specialist Fifth Class Jeanette M. Kraft, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin J. Kraft, 7807 Highland Drive, reversed the Army travel pitch to see the world when she re-enlisted to be assigned here. Although she had been abroad, she preferred being in Everett. Incorporation of a new city — east of Mountlake Terrace and south of Lynnwood — was asked in a petition filed today with the county auditor. Formation of the city of Brier was asked. The proposed city would cover about three square miles and have a population of approximately 2,325.

Solution to last Sunday’s puzzle.

25 years ago (1989) Carolyn Sanden was named the new Marysville city administrator. Sanden, currently administrator for the city of Lake Stevens, would begin her new job on Dec. 1, working closely with outgoing city administrator John Garner. Garner, in the position for the past six years, was leaving to pursue private business opportunities. JR’s Home Furnishings at 602 2nd St. in Snohomish was quitting business. They had regrouped and re-priced every item to sell. This included sofas, dinettes, lamps, recliners, big-screen TVs, VCRs and stereo systems. By Jack O’Donnell from Herald archives at the Everett Public Library.

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EARTHWEEK A Diary Of The Planet | By Steve Newman Warming extremes New reports have found evidence for the first time that some extreme weather can be attributed to man-made global warming. Experts have long maintained that no single event, like a drought, heat wave or storm, could be linked to climate change. But a growing number now say their thinking has changed, thanks to better computer models. The Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society released on Sept. 29 looks at 22 studies on 2013 climate extremes. While scientists say they could not find a global warming link to events such as an early South Dakota blizzard, freak storms in Germany and a cold British spring, other weather extremes had clear fingerprints of climate change. By running multiple global climate models, five independent studies found that decades of burning fossil fuels have made heat waves like those that baked eastern Asia, Australia and New Zealand in 2013 far more likely. A Stanford study found greenhouse gas emissions now make rain-blocking ridges of high pressure three times more likely to bring drought to California.

Deforestation halt Five leading palm oil producers announced they will stop expanding their plantations through deforestation—a move hailed by environmental groups. The five join other corporations, including Cargill, that had already agreed to stop. Palm oil is used in cooking and various products. It’s among the consumer items that create the greatest ecological damage. Deforestation has endangered a third of all mammals in Indonesia, including orangutans. It’s estimated that the record deforestation accounts for 85 percent of Indonesia’s contribution to global warming. Palm oil deforestation in Malaysia ranks a close second.

Deadly eruption At least 47 people perished around the summit of Japan’s Mount Ontake volcano when the mountain erupted without warning during a busy hiking weekend.

3.6 3.8

Kammuri

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Phanfone

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Dozens of others sustained injuries in the disaster, including people who were hit by flying stones and inhaled hot, poisonous fumes. But many of the hikers survived by taking refuge in mountaintop shelters. Volcanologists say the disaster was not caused by rising magma, but was instead due to what’s called a phreatic eruption, in which steam is the main force. Ground water within the volcano boiled and built up pressure until it exploded as water vapor, launching ash and hot stones high into the air. Such a blast often occurs without warning.

Earthquakes At least eight people were killed when a 4.9 magnitude quake wrecked homes and other buildings in Peru’s southern village of Misca, near the popular Andean tourist destination of Cuzco. • Earth movements were also felt in western Bolivia, the northern Netherlands, western Montana, north-central Oklahoma and the Sierra Nevada range in central California.

Tropical cyclones Typhoon Phanfone formed north of Guam, then threatened Japan’s eastern Honshu Island late in the week. Tropical Storm Kammuri passed over the same region days earlier.

Dear Abby: I recently had an interesting conversation with a friend after a funeral. It was about cremation versus burial, and I’d be interested in your thoughts and those of your readers. We noted that cremation has become more common, and guessed that one of the main reasons might be funeral and plot costs. After thinking about it, we thought there might be other considerations propelling people toward the practice of cremation. In modern society, individuals and families seem less tied to one area, and also, larger communities make it more difficult to make trips to cemeteries. Any insight on this trend? — Plotting And Planning In Arizona Dear Plotting And Planning: Cremation is nothing new. It has been practiced since ancient times — 5,000 years ago and possibly even longer than that. The early Romans did it, but with the rise of Christianity it fell out of favor. (It is accepted by the Christian religion today.) Buddhists, Hindus and Sikhs commonly cremate their deceased. However, it is opposed by traditional Jewish culture, which believes our bodies belong to God and we are not supposed to actively destroy God’s property, and by the Muslim religion. You and your friend have covered the major considerations that make people choose cremation instead of burial. I would only add that in the past, I have heard from readers who could not bear to part with the remains of their loved one, and who have kept the ashes in their home. Others would like to have their

-93° Vostok, Antarctica

Biodiversity destruction Loss of habitats, hunting, fishing and climate change killed off more than half of the world’s wildlife populations between 1970 and 2010, according to a new report by the World Wildlife Fund. The group’s Living Planet Report 2014 also cautioned that stress from manmade exploitation of the environment is now 50 percent greater than nature can withstand. It points to wholesale felling of the world’s forests, groundwater pumping, nitrogen pollution from fertilizers and greenhouse gas emissions as some of the main perils facing the planet. The worst wildlife decline was found among freshwater species, which plunged by 76 percent during the 40-year period. Wildlife on land and in the oceans dropped by 39 percent.

Ringing condemnation The iconic cowbells ringing around the necks of Swiss cows could become a thing of the past following a study that finds the bells destroy bovine hearing and affect feeding habits. Researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich found the bells create a noise level of 100 to 113 decibels—basically equivalent to that of a chainsaw and far in excess of safety standards. Agricultural scientist Julia Johns told Schweiz am Sonntag that thousands of Swiss cows may have been made deaf by the bells.

DEAR ABBY own ashes co-mingled with their loved one’s at the appropriate time and placed in a columbarium. However, if readers have anything they would like to add, I’ll share some of their input with you. Dear Abby: I’m 75 and my daughter just turned 50. We both have nice figures and are stylish. On a number of occasions over the years, when my daughter and I are together, people have commented that we look like sisters. I usually smile and say thanks, and my daughter just smiles. Recently, she asked me, “Does that mean I look old?” Turning 50 may have made her a little more age-conscious. She looks great for any age, and I would like your suggestion for a good reply that will boost her self-confidence. — Georgia In Texas Dear Georgia: Tell your daughter that people may say you look like sisters because you strongly resemble each other. Many mothers and daughters do. They may also be trying to pay YOU a compliment, implying that you look much younger than your years. I’m sure it’s not meant to imply that your daughter looks old. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. Universal Uclick

MOVIE TIMES Alderwood, 425-776-3535

Dolphin Tale 2 (PG) 12:10-12:502:40-3:40-5:10-7:00-7:30-9:4010:10 The Giver (PG-13) 1:00-3:50-7:10 Hector and the Search for Happiness (R) 12:20-3:10-6:50-9:30 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) 12:30-3:20-6:40 Left Behind (PG-13) 12:00-2:30-5:007:40-10:20 Let’s Be Cops (R) 9:50 The Song (PG-13) 12:40-3:30-6:309:20 Tusk (R) 10:00

Alderwood Mall, 800-3263264

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Rachel

A modern revival for practice of cremation

Annabelle (R) 10:30-11:30-1:00-2:003:30-4:30-6:00-7:00-7:40-8:309:30-11:00 The Boxtrolls (PG) 11:50-1:50-3:004:40-5:30-7:10-8:10-10:45 The Boxtrolls 3D (PG) 10:20-9:40 The Equalizer (R) 11:40-2:40-5:408:50-10:00 The Equalizer: The IMAX Experience (R) 10:10-1:20-4:20-7:30-10:50 Gone Girl (R) 10:00-11:20-12:401:30-2:40-4:00-5:00-6:00-7:208:20-9:20-10:40 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) 10:20-12:20-3:20-6:50-9:50 The Maze Runner (PG-13) 10:0511:10-12:50-2:10-3:40-4:50-6:207:40-9:10-10:30 My Old Lady (PG-13) 10:00-2:45 No Good Deed (PG-13) 12:30-5:20 The Skeleton Twins (R) 1:10-3:506:20-8:40-11:05 This Is Where I Leave You (R) 11:552:30-5:15-8:00-10:40 A Walk Among the Tombstones (R) 11:00-1:40-5:10-7:50-10:55

Cinebarre Mountlake Terrace, 425-672-7501 Annabelle (R) 1:15-4:20-7:45-10:00 The Boxtrolls (PG) 4:15-7:35 The Boxtrolls 3D (PG) 12:45-9:50 The Equalizer (R) 12:30-3:45-7:1510:15 Gone Girl (R) 12:15-3:30-7:30-10:40 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) 1:10-4:00-7:10-9:55 The Maze Runner (PG-13) 12:403:50-7:40-10:20 This Is Where I Leave You (R) 1:004:10-7:05-9:45 A Walk Among the Tombstones (R) 12:50-3:40-7:00-9:40

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Everett Stadium, 425-3533505

Annabelle (R) 12:30-1:10-2:20-3:104:50-5:40-7:20-8:10-10:00-10:40 The Boxtrolls (PG) 2:00-7:15-9:40 The Boxtrolls 3D (PG) 11:55-4:30 Dolphin Tale 2 (PG) 12:15-3:00-6:008:50 The Equalizer (R) 12:00-12:40-3:204:00-6:30-7:10-9:45-10:10 The Giver (PG-13) 12:10

Gone Girl (R) 12:20-12:50-3:40-4:106:20-7:00-9:10-9:50 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) 12:35-3:30-7:30-10:20 Left Behind (PG-13) 1:20-4:05-6:509:30 Let’s Be Cops (R) 5:10-10:25 Lucy (R) 2:40-7:50 The Maze Runner (PG-13) 1:30-3:504:40-6:40-7:40-9:55-10:30 No Good Deed (PG-13) 3:55-10:15 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) 1:40-4:20-6:55-9:25 This Is Where I Leave You (R) 1:053:45-6:45-9:20 A Walk Among the Tombstones (R) 1:00-6:10

Galaxy Monroe, 360-863-0909 Annabelle (R) 12:20-12:20-12:502:40-2:40-3:10-5:00-5:00-5:307:20-7:20-7:50-9:50-9:50-10:20 The Boxtrolls (PG) 12:35-2:50-5:107:30-10:10 Dolphin Tale 2 (PG) 12:05-2:30-5:057:40-10:15 The Equalizer (R) 12:40-1:00-3:303:50-6:45-7:10-9:35-10:00 Gone Girl (R) 12:00-12:30-3:05-3:356:10-6:40-9:15-9:45 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) 12:25-3:40-6:50-10:05 The Maze Runner (PG-13) 12:1512:55-2:45-3:45-5:25-7:05-8:159:55 This Is Where I Leave You (R) 12:102:35-5:00-7:25-9:50

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Annabelle (R) 1:00-4:20-6:50-7:409:30-10:20 The Boxtrolls (PG) 3:50-6:30 The Boxtrolls 3D (PG) 12:20-9:00 Dolphin Tale 2 (PG) 1:05-3:40-7:15 The Equalizer (R) 1:10-4:10-7:3010:40 Gone Girl (R) 12:00-3:15-6:40-10:00 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) 12:10-3:10-6:10-9:10 If I Stay (PG-13) 1:20-4:00 Left Behind (PG-13) 12:30-3:457:00-9:40 Let’s Be Cops (R) 2:00-5:00-8:0010:30 The Maze Runner (PG-13) 12:501:30-3:30-4:30-6:20-7:20-9:2010:10 No Good Deed (PG-13) 9:50 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) 12:40-3:20-7:00-9:40 This Is Where I Leave You (R) 1:404:40-7:10-9:45 A Walk Among the Tombstones (R) 1:50-4:50-7:50-10:35

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Great Outdoors D6

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THE DAILY HERALD

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WWW.HERALDNET.COM

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SUNDAY, 10.05.2014

Violet Cortinarius

Unknown species

An Amanita muscaria, also known as Fly Agaric, grows along the Goat Lake Trail off of the Mountain Loop Highway. Thanks to Lorraine Olivas-Romey of the Snohomish County Mycological Society for assistance identifying these mushrooms.

A forest rainbow Hike the Goat Lake Trail for plenty of fall color

Bear’s Head

Conifer boletus

M

ushrooms are under rated. I recently went for a hike/trail run on the Goat Lake Trail. I was repeatedly brought from a run to a dead stop by the color and variety of mushrooms along the trail — red, orange and even a deep, rich purple. If you haven’t been out hiking in the fall, you’re missing out. Fall is a fabulous time to hike around here, and I strongly suggest the Goat Lake Trail. It’s somewhat long, at 10.4 miles, but it’s an easy 10.4 miles and it feels like less. The elevation gain is only 1,400 feet, making it not particularly steep, except in a few places. Goat Lake is a popular trail, but on a recent Monday, I had the whole place to myself. The trail is off the Mountain Loop Highway, a little more than 4 miles after Barlow Pass. It begins on old roadbed and soon splits. To the left, the route follows the old roadbed. To the right, the trail stays near a creek and

is narrower and slightly rougher. The routes are separate for roughly twothirds of the distance to the lake before rejoining. You can take either route and come back on the other, for a loop of sorts. (The lower route is the one with the best mushrooms.) I prefer to head up and left at the junction, leaving the lower path for the return trip. The route is gentle, heading through mostly alders with some evergreen trees. Two people can easily walk side by side here, making the route great for chatting with a friend. Or, if you like, it’s an easy trail run. When the two trails merge again, the route soon gets steeper and rougher. Follow along until you hear the sounds of waterfalls and see a huge rootball. If you head right, you’ll get a nice view of the falls after climbing over a few logs. After admiring the falls, ignore the confusing way trails. Instead, head back the way you came and continue on the main trail from the big rootball.

After some more climbing you’ll soon come to the lake. Be sure to check out the waterfall at the lake’s outlet. When I was there, the water was lower than I’ve seen it and the falls were prettier than ever — the low flow exposed the black step-like rocks. Continue past a rather large backcountry camping area (with very rustic toilets) to the lake. If you’re brave, jump in. Either way, pause and enjoy some lunch while admiring the view. Colors were starting to show up along the trail and at the lake. They should be even better by now. When you head back, you have a choice to make at the junction. Right takes you on the gentle, alder-lined path. Left takes you on a steeper course with countless mushrooms. Really, they’re just mind-blowing. If for some reason you only want to take one of the two options, take the lower path. It’s mostly easy going, but leave yourself time. It’s impossible to not be stopped by luridly colored mushrooms.

Photos and story by Jessi Loerch

Chicken of the Woods

To get there From Granite Falls, follow the Mountain Loop Highway to Barlow Pass, where the pavement ends. Go 3.5 miles farther, then turn right at the signed junction. The trailhead is less than a mile ahead, at the end of the road.

MORE HIKES Pratt Lake Trail: This trail, just off of I-90, offers vibrant fall colors and good mushroom habitat. If you go all the way to the lake, it’s 11 miles. But you don’t need go that far to enjoy the colors. There are several options for side trips as well. Read more and get directions at www.heraldnet.com/ prattlake. Even more: For more suggestions for fall hikes, see this story at www.heraldnet.com/ explorenw.

◆ Herald Writer

Incredible book celebrates memory of extinct birds P eriodically I rummage through my new-book box. I find books that I forgot were there, books that are better inside than the covers predict, books that delight and educate, books that touch me through photographs, and only occasionally a book that disappoints. This time the gem is “Ghosts of Gone Birds: Resurrecting Lost Species through Art” (Bloomsbury). Chris Aldhous invited contemporary artists (including writers and a sound artist) to select an extinct species and put their creativity to work. The result was four exhibitions and this incredible book. Aldhous describes the group as a “creative army for conservation.” Other books about extinct species have gone before but “Ghosts” leads the way for a collective magic that evokes sadness and hope, smiles and a sense of

SHARON WOOTTON loss but also gratitude for all birds, future and past, that can inspire and soothe us. “Ghosts” could have been a 265-page funeral. Instead it is a book of spirit of birds that are gone. The artists deliver page after page of the unexpected. Once this book is in your hands, you’ll never let it go. Also in the book box: “The Homing Instinct: Meaning & Mystery in Animal Migration” (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt). Tens of millions of

birds and other animals are on the move this fall, heading south or north, flying, walking, slithering, swimming, hitching a ride and, if they are human, migrating on wheels or in planes. The author of “Life Everlasting,” Bernd Heinrich, again turns his curiosity into answers. Migration is more than magnetic lines, sheer instinct or visual imprinting, it’s also a matter of home and its creation and defense, reproduction and offspring-raising. “Harry the Woodpecker’s Search for a Home” (Orange Spot Publishing). Joy and Craig Johnson’s illustrated story focuses on a pair of woodpeckers creating a nest cavity only to discover that their tree is part of a clearing for houses. Follow Harry and Harriet as they rise to the challenge. Dawn Publications has always been a favorite of mine for young children’s books. The story stays

true to form with “On Kiki’s Reef,” “The Swamp Where Gator Hides,” and “Where do the Animals go When It Rains?” They are beautifully illustrated, concise, educational and usually have teaching tips for the adults doing the reading. “A Field Guide to Edible Fruits and Berries of the Pacific Northwest” (Harbour Publishing) is the right size to toss into your day pack or glove compartment, an on-demand colorful accordion-fold guide to the difference between berries. There’s also information related to berry-preparation. “Encounters in Avalanche Country: A History of Survival in the Mountain West, 1820-1920” (University of Washington). Fur trappers, prospectors, railroad workers and train riders, pioneers, miners and skiing mailmen had something in common:

avalanches. Diana Di Stefano traces the challenges, survival skills and community responses to the disasters. She also covers a lawsuit against the Great Northern Railway Company that arose from the 1910 Wellington avalanche near Stevens Pass that killed 96 people. “Turning Down the Sound: Travel Escapes in Washington’s Small Towns” (Oregon State University Press). Forget Seattle and Bellingham, Tacoma and Spokane. Let Foster Church guide you this fall to small towns such as Concrete, Conconully, Prosser, Odessa and Quincy. Each four- to six-page “chapter” offers directions, the basics, and the local idiosyncrasies that set the towns apart from their more populated brethren. Columnist Sharon Wootton can be reached at 360-468-3964 or www.songandword.com.


Moneywise SECTION E

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SUNDAY, 10.05.2014

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WWW.HERALDNET.COM/BUSINESS

THE DAILY HERALD

Sometimes, it’s just impossible to resist fighting back

DOLLARS & SENSE Dave Ramsey

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Don’t follow asset theory D THINKSTOCK.COM

Thwart the scammers

I

take pleasure in making the life of a scammer more difficult. When I get calls offering me a too-good-to-be true mortgage refinance or vacation club membership, I listen. I then ask questions, making them think they’ve got a fish on the hook. And then I let them know that I know they’re trying to scam me. You should always be careful when engaging a caller you don’t know. Do not give out any personal information. But we hear so many stories about people being hoodwinked that I was delighted to get a number of responses from readers who, like me, can’t resist fighting back. The latest swindle catching a lot of people is the tech phone scam in which someone pretends to be from Microsoft or some other computer company and coaxes people to let them take over their machines to fix a bogus virus problem. Mary Lewis from St. Johns, Florida, has become adept at combatting the con artists. She writes: “I gasp and very theatrically exclaim, ‘Oh, no! Let me go check my computer! I’ll be right back!’ I sit the phone down in front of the TV and let them listen to Judge Judy or whatever happens to be on television at that time. Occasionally, I pick up the phone just to listen,

MICHELLE SINGLETARY and they would be patiently waiting for me to return, thinking they had a ‘live one.’ After about a half hour or so, I’d quietly hang up.” At other times Lewis says she takes a clicker used for obedience training of her dog and puts it up to the phone and sternly says, “Operator, this is the call I want you to trace.” She then clicks the device repeatedly as part of the ruse that an operator is tracing the call. “I actually had a lot of perverse fun with those guys. I’m not a very aggressive person by nature, but these people bring out the worst in me.” But let’s say you don’t have the nerve to toy with a scammer. Here’s what you should do when you get unsolicited calls: ■■Have a blanket hang-up policy. You are not being rude. You are protecting yourself. The scammers’ minions are schooled in how to hook you.

They have a script. Don’t give them the opportunity to break down your wall of skepticism. If the person is calling from what you think is a legitimate business or charity, let them know you will independently find a number for them and call back. Then hang up. ■■Become paranoid about caller ID. I received an electronic call from a company I do business with saying they had a message for me and to I verify I was their customer I needed to provide the last four digits of my Social Security number. The caller ID displayed the name of the company. But no way was I going punch in the numbers. I hung up and called the company myself to make sure the call was legitimate. The Better Business Bureau says scammers use phone spoofing technology to trick people into answering. They know that folks increasingly don’t pick up when they see an unfamiliar number. And because the technology exists that allows scammers to display any number or organization name on your screen, you can’t really trust caller ID. ■■Don’t try to outsmart them. Perry B. Alers from Clinton, Maryland, has been getting the tech scam calls too. He’s got a theory on why they fool so many people. “A phone scam is much

more dangerous because one has to think on one’s feet.” Swindlers know how to build up your confidence in them. Christina A. Murray of Fort Myers, Florida, believed the tech pitch and allowed a scammer to take over her computer. “I was doubtful, but when they assured me that Microsoft had contacted them concerning many ‘error reports,’ I allowed them to work by remote,” she wrote. But when the caller told her she needed to load $150 in cash onto a prepaid debit card, she realized she was being conned. “I told them they were scamming me and to get off of my computer,” said Murray, 70. Too late. “When I refused to give them money, they hacked my computer and it cost nearly $200 to get it repaired,” she said. “Although it is embarrassing to admit that I was taken advantage of, telling my story may educate others who too are elderly and vulnerable.” Lewis, who feels confident enough to mess with the con artists, said it’s folks like Murray she’s thinking about. “I figured the longer I kept them on the phone, the fewer calls they could make to people who might fall for their scam.” (c) 2014, Washington Post Writers Group

What to watch for during open enrollment By Pamela Yip The Dallas Morning News

It’s almost time for open enrollment season to begin, as employers unveil next year’s health care options to workers. For most of us, there won’t be major changes. But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t do our homework before choosing a plan. “In general, most employers are not making broad changes to their plans for this year coming up,” said Craig Rosenberg, practice leader of Health and Welfare Benefits Administration at consulting firm Aon Hewitt. However, many will see subtle changes. And if your company hasn’t yet introduced a consumer-driven health plan, you could be in for a surprise. “Consumer-driven health plans have been around over a decade now, but a lot of workers haven’t been exposed to one,”

said Paul Fronstin, director of the Health Research and Education Program at the Employee Benefit Research Institute. “They may be offered it for the first time.” Consumer-driven plans typically combine high-deductible health insurance with a taxadvantaged savings account that can be used to pay qualifying health care expenses. According to Aon Hewitt’s 2014 Health Care survey, consumer-driven health plans are the second most popular plan choice offered by employers. At some companies, such a health plan is the only option. Here are some other changes to watch for:

Health care costs rise Employees will continue to bear more of the cost burden through higher premiums, deductibles and added fees to cover the spouse.

“The trend that we’re seeing here overall is that employers are increasingly subsidizing coverage,” Rosenberg said. “They’re starting to cut back on how much they’re subsidizing the portion of coverage that relates to dependents.” Fronstin said workers will likely have to pay extra to cover their spouse or partner on the employee’s health policy. “Most employers haven’t introduced them (spousal surcharges), so a lot of workers are going to see them for the first time,” he said. The survey looked at more than 1,230 employers covering more than 10 million employees. If your spouse has health care coverage available through their employer, it might be good to study your options. Look at factors, such as the deductible, whether your doctors are in the network and what you will pay for prescriptions.

Wellness plans on the rise Among other trends is an employer-sponsored wellness program. Employers are placing greater emphasis on health and wellness programs that encourage employees to take a more active role in managing their health. Also, a small but growing number of employers are offering health insurance to employees through their own private health exchanges. The exchanges are similar to the public marketplaces created by the federal Affordable Care Act. Whatever insurance options you’re offered, look at your family’s health needs and get the coverage that best meets them. Treat this as the big purchasing decision that it is. There are few things more important than your health.

ear Dave, Can you explain the “asset allocation” theory when it comes to investing? Matthew Dear Matthew, The asset allocation theory is one touted by lots of people in the financial community. It’s also a theory with which I disagree. In short, the asset allocation theory means that you invest aggressively while you’re young. Then as you get older, you move toward less aggressive funds. If you follow this theory to the letter, you’re left pretty much with money markets and bonds by the time you’re 65. The reason I don’t believe in this theory is simple. It doesn’t work. If you live to age 65 and are in good health, there’s a high statistical likelihood that you’ll make it to 95. The average age of death for males in this country is now 76, but that includes infant mortality and teenage deaths. So, a healthy 65-year-old man in America can look at having another quarter century on earth. If you move your money to bonds and money markets at age 65, inflation is going to kick your tail. Your money will grow slower than it will devalue, and you’ll have little purchasing power. I advise investing in good, growth stock mutual funds that have strong track records of at least five to 10 years. Spread your money across four types of funds: growth, growth and income, aggressive growth and international. These groups provide diversification across risk. —Dave Dear Dave, My husband makes about $35,000 a year before taxes, and we have one child. We’ve also got a mortgage and $60,000 in student loan debt. About a year ago, my husband started work on a master’s degree, because he thinks he wants to teach when he retires. He quit school after the baby was born, because he didn’t think we could afford it any longer. I think he should finish the degree. Otherwise, he’s just throwing away the $10,000 we’ve already got invested in the program. What do you think? Amanda Dear Amanda, You guys need to clean up the mess you’ve made before he goes after his master’s degree. You might be able to justify it if the degree immediately raised his income, but you two can’t afford to make investments in vague educational goals right now. I’m not sure the money has been wasted. The classes he has already taken are complete and on record, so why can’t he finish the degree somewhere down the road? You guys have done a poor job of planning, and now you need to climb out of a big hole first. The point is not the $10,000, Amanda. The point is that you’re barely making ends meet. You’ve already got a house payment and $60,000 in student loan debt hanging over your heads, not to mention the added expense of a baby in the house. The last thing you need is to go even deeper into debt for something he won’t even use until retirement. —Dave Follow Dave Ramsey on Twitter at @DaveRamsey and on the web at daveramsey.com.

INSIDE: Wall Street Journal, 10 things college admissions offices won’t tell you, 9


E2 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Everett, WA

THE SWINOMISH TRIBAL COMMUNITY

is recruiting for a full time Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist 40 hours a week. The Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist is primarily responsible to provide couples and family Therapy, participate in tribal events, and develop and provide Positive Indian Parenting Classes, specifically for the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community.

CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSOCIATE

$41,318 to $55,311 annually & 1 3 YKVJ HWNN DGPGĆ‚VU RCEMCIG The Woodinville Water District is looking vÂœĂ€ > …ˆ}Â…Â?Ăž ¾Õ>Â?ˆwi` >˜` …ˆ}Â…Â?Ăž Â“ÂœĂŒÂˆĂ›>ĂŒi` ˆ˜`ÂˆĂ›Âˆ`Ă•>Â? ĂŒÂœ ÂŤiĂ€vÂœĂ€Â“ > Ă›>Ă€ÂˆiĂŒĂž Âœv VĂ•ĂƒĂŒÂœÂ“iÀ‡ ÂœĂ€ÂˆiÂ˜ĂŒi` >VĂŒÂˆĂ›ÂˆĂŒÂˆiĂƒĂ† ÂŤĂ€ÂˆÂ“>Ă€ÂˆÂ?Ăž ÂŤĂ€ÂœĂ›Âˆ`ˆ˜} vĂ€ÂœÂ˜ĂŒ Â?ˆ˜i representation of the District responding to VĂ•ĂƒĂŒÂœÂ“iĂ€ ÂˆÂ˜ÂľĂ•ÂˆĂ€ÂˆiĂƒ œ˜ ĂŒÂ…i ÂŤÂ…ÂœÂ˜i >˜` VĂ•ĂƒĂŒÂœÂ“iĂ€Ăƒ visiting the District. The individual also needs ĂŒÂœ Li ÂŤĂ€ÂœwVˆiÂ˜ĂŒ ˆ˜ - "vwVi ÂŤĂ€Âœ`Ă•VĂŒĂƒ° /Â…i vĂ•Â?Â? *ÂœĂƒÂˆĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ Ć‚Â˜Â˜ÂœĂ•Â˜Vi“iÂ˜ĂŒ ĂœÂˆĂŒÂ… `ÂˆĂ€iVĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜Ăƒ œ˜ Â…ÂœĂœ ĂŒÂœ >ÂŤÂŤÂ?Ăž V>˜ Li vÂœĂ•Â˜` LĂž VÂ?ˆVŽˆ˜} ĂŒÂ…i i“Â?ÂœĂžÂ“iÂ˜ĂŒ ĂŒ>L œ˜ ĂŒÂ…i ÂˆĂƒĂŒĂ€ÂˆVĂŒ ĂœiL ĂƒÂˆĂŒi >ĂŒ ĂœĂœĂœ°ĂœÂœÂœ`ÂˆÂ˜Ă›ÂˆÂ?Â?iĂœ>ĂŒiĂ€°Vœ“ ÂœĂ€ LĂž VÂœÂ˜ĂŒ>VĂŒÂˆÂ˜} Âœi ÂœĂ€Ă›>ĂŒÂ… >ĂŒ {Ă“x‡{nLJ{ÂŁĂ“ä° Â?ÂœĂƒÂˆÂ˜} >ĂŒi "VĂŒÂœLiĂ€ ™] Ă“ä£{° 1140979

Request an application and job announcement by calling (360)466-7353 or (360)466-3163 E-mail gcerrillo@swinomish.nsn.us Must be at least 21 years of age, have a valid driver’s license and clean driving record. Must pass pre-employment drug screen, physical and criminal background check.

1135521

Send cover letter, resume and application to Swinomish Tribal Community, Human resources, 11404 Moorage Way, La Conner WA, 98257

We Deliver our Children, Safe, On-Time, and Ready to Learn Everyday If you are interested in becoming a School Bus Driver please apply in person

Swinomish Indian Tribal Community

Durham School Services, 1304 80th St. SW | Everett, WA 98203

425-258-9251

1145298

Earn Extra Cash!

WORK AT THE

Customer Service Representative –Circulation Call Center

We are seeking qualified candidates for various positions.

The Daily Herald, a division of Sound Publishing, Inc., has a 2 Part-Time (24-26 hr/wk) CSR positions available:

• ARNP • Chemical Dependency Adult Counselor • Clinicians I, II or III • Courier/Communications Technician • Human Resources Generalist • Mental Health Technician III • Nursing Supervisors • Peer Counselors • Psychiatric Technicians • Psychiatrists • Quality Manager • RNs

1st Position: Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday 5:00 AM – 12:00 PM, Saturday 7:00 AM – 12:00 PM 2nd Position: Tuesday, 6:00 AM -12:00 PM, Wednesday 5:00 AM -11:00 AM, Thursday 6:00 AM -11:00 AM, Friday & Saturday 7:00 AM -12:00 PM. The primary function of this position is to act as a company advocate, promoting positive public relations and company image while ensuring Customer Service standards are met when providing support to Carriers, internal staff members, and Subscribers within an active call center environment for the Daily Herald and Sound Publishing. Qualified candidates must possess strong customer service, problem-solving, organizational, and multi-tasking skills; excellent phone, data entry, verbal and written communication skills Must possess a strong working knowledge of Excel & Word programs and the ability to type 45 wpm. Sound Publishing offers competitive salaries and benefits including 401K, paid holidays, vacation and sick time.

1143543

It’s easy!

Selling subscriptions to The Daily Herald at special events, trade shows, fairs and festivals, retail and grocery stores!

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

Visit our website at

www.compasshealth.org/join-our-team to learn more about our open positions. Send rĂŠsume and cover letter to resume@compassh.org

To Apply: Send resume w/cover letter to: hreast@ soundpublishing.com ATTN: CSR. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employee (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. Visit our website to learn more about us! www.soundpublishing.com

with your outgoing, competitive and enthusiastic personality!

EOE

1145413

1145096

1015296

Q

Call Dannie 425-297-3291

SPECIAL OFFER! Open House Feature Ad

Call For Details!

To advertise, call 425.339.3020 | Mon-Fri - 8AM-5PM | 24/7 www.Heraldnet.com/Homes

Only

50

$

OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 1-4 Wow! Free List of over 8 King County Homes. $79,420 to $277,200 Many with Low Down Payment FHA Financing. 206-650-3908; 425766-7370; R E A LT Y WEST 800-599-7741 www.realtywest.com

Arlington

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GORGEOUS 4bd, 2ba, on 3/4 acre on Fobes Hill w/sweeping valley views. Completely remd’l w/ classic touches left intact. Private yet close to DT Snohomish. MLS 655716. $369,950. Call Michael DeLaney 425-422-1721

Lake Stevens

Lake Stevens

$265,950 3 Bed / 2.5 Ba 1,574 SF ad #699659 360-659-6800

$314,950 4 Bed / 2.5 Ba 2,152 SF ad#676493

425-348-9200 $488,000 4 Bed / 2.5 Ba 3,119 SF ad #692402 360-659-6800

20 Acres in West Texas $15,900 $0 Down ONLY $99/mo Special Offer, Save $2000! No Qualifying - Owner Financing. Great Property, Great Deal!

800-343-9444

Let ALPHA STEELBUILDINGS build a shelter for you. Covers for RV’s, Cars, trucks, toys, Heavy Equipment, etc. Alpha can handle all the headaches of permitting. A l p h a c a n t a ke away your troubles and give SACRIFICE $29,950 you your dream building! 24’ MASTER SUITE Call 1-800-854-4410. 2 4 ’ L i v. R m . w / wo o d stove; Mdr n dlx kit w/ eating area + din. rm. 18’ fmly rm., cvrd deck mstr ste has pvt ba, walk-in shower & closet. util rm. w/d incl. vinyl windows, light & bright interior, 2 stge sheds, pvt bkyrd. r.v. prkig. 5mins to shop Marysville Senior Park & I-5; HRI 800-241-7800 1,100 sf, 2 Br., 2 ba with many upgrades, handic a p r a m p, n e w h e a t pump/furnace, backyard patio with garden area, covered parking, shed, C a s h fo r L o t s, P l a t s & low lot rent $525 incl. Houses. Robinett & AsW/S/G, near shopping, soc Inc. 425-252-2500 bus. $27,500. Others Available. Newspaper We Specialize. advertising is still Call Randy one of the most 425-327-9015 effective ways to Preview Properties LMS, Inc. market your home. Contact Us Today!

425-339-3020

homes@heraldnet.com

$220,000 303 Hemming Way Granite Falls 1,655 asf, 4 bdrm, 2.5 bth home, 4th bedroom can be used as a bonus room, open living room with gas fireplace, dining and kitchen area, interior freshly painted, low maintenance fenced yard, 2 car gar, city limits of Granite Falls, close to schools, parks and local services. For information, terms and conditions of sale or to receive a bid package, contact Cherie Hutchins, Snohomish County Facilities Management at Cherie.hutchins@snoco.org or call 425-388-3400.

1144509


The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 E3

Please Call For Monthly Specials! To advertise, call 425.339.3074 | Mon-Fri - 8AM-5PM | 24/7 www.Heraldnet.com/Jobs

TECHNICIAN NEEDED Are you looking for a long-term employment with a company that cares? If you are we are looking for you! Hyundai of Everett is s e e k i n g a n ex p e r i enced automotive technician. Must have • a c l e a n d r i v i n g record. • be able to pass a drug test. • have own tools. • have 1 yr exp in a dealership setting. Hiring 3 lube technicians and 1 main line tech. Competitive pay plan, training, benefits, and 401k. Please contact Devin Micallef for an interview at 425-258-9100. 7800 Evergreen Way, Everett, WA 98203

INSTRUCTIONAL ASS I S TA N T fo r NWESD’s Snohomish Discovery program in Arlington. For info visit www.nwesd.org or call 360-299-4057. INTERPRETER (SPANISH) Snohomish County Head Start/Early Head Start, Provide interpretive services in Spanish between staff and clients in 1:1, small and large group settings. Provide translation services assisting clients w/ forms and documents. $20-25/hr, DOQ. Contract posit i o n . www.edcc.edu/birthtofive

(jobs). EOE

M E N TA L H E A LT H SUPPORT SPECIALI S T fo r N W E S D ’s Eastside Summit program in Snohomish. For info visit www.nwesd.org or call 360-299-4057.

AVON - Earn extra income with a new career! Sell from home, work, online. $15 startup. For infor mation, call: 877751-0285 (PNDC)

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

FOR NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION Whidbey Island, Washington Education/Experience · Bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution of post-secondary education involving major study in public administration, business administration, social or behavioral science, or allied field. · Five years of administrative or supervisory experience at a budget or policy making level, including at least three years of experience as an administrator in a vocational rehabilitation or closely related facility. · Master’s degree in one of the appropriate fields may be substituted for two years of required administrative or supervisory experience. · Professional oral and written communication skills. · Ability to relate to a wide variety of individuals and groups. · Experience/knowledge of service contracts and agreements. · Pass background check and credit check. · Salary DOE Requirements to apply · Cover letter that includes availability. · Resume’ · At least two letters of recommendation or points of contact for references. Applications must be post-marked no later than November 30, 2014. Mail to: Job Opportunity P.O. Box 943 Oak Harbor, WA 8277 We are an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Buildings and Grounds Service Worker 1 Responsible for grounds maintenance and janitorial services at District office and maintenance buildings and at other District facilities. Works under direction of lead worke r a n d s u p e r v i s o r. Valid WA Driver’s License and acceptable record. $18.06 to 24.21 per hour DOE, full benefits. Experience in maintenance and landscaping desired. Application instructions and job description are available a t w w w. a w w d . c o m . Application packet due by 5:00 PM on Monday, October 20.

Change Lives. Foster Parent. Individuals or couples, renters & homeowners who love kids & want to help their community. Full time or part time. Financial compensation. 425-349-8480 Driver Suburban Propane, a nationwide provider of propane & related services has the following opening in the Lake Stevens, WA area: DELIVERY DRIVER Qual incl a HS Diploma or equiv. Class A or B CDL w/Hazmat, tanker, air breaks endorsements, clean driving record. Strong team player w/excellent cust service skills, propane gas delivery experience preferred, flexible schedule w/after hours callouts, heavy lifting required.

FOOD SERVICES OF B e t h a ny a t Pa c i f i c, AMERICA IN skilled nursing facility EVERETT, WA i s h i r i n g S e r v i c e is looking for a full time o r i e n t e d , P r o f e s s i o n a l Social worker for our Medicare unit. Delivery Drivers. We provide an excellent compensation package, F u l l t i m e - Tu e s d ay including hourly wages through Saturday. up to $24.37 and full medical, dental and pen- BA in social work or sion plans. If you are a related field required. Class A CDL driver, with strong people skills and E x p e r i e n c e i n l o n g enjoy building relation- term care preferred. ships, apply online at w w w . f s a f o o d . c o m a n d Please send resume & s e l e c t p o s i t i o n 2 0 1 4 - cover letter to Susan 3 0 5 2 , D e l i v e r y D r i v e r - Elias, Social Services Everett location. We D i r e c t o r : S u s a n e are an EEO/AA Employ- @BethanyNW.org er and consider applicants without regard to Private care needed for race, color, religion, sex, 1 person in his own hm. national origin, disability, Auto req’d.206-697-1401 or veteran status.

We’re Hiring! House Cleaners Earn $300 to $500 Per Week Hiring Full Time!! In Everett & Marysville Working with adults with disabilities. Please be flexible and eager to work. $10.50 per hour & KILLER benefits! EOE 1614 Broadway, Everett 888-328-3339 for info or employmentopps@servalt.net H o u s e C l e a n e r s, F T, $300 hiring bonus! Work as part of a team! No exp req’d. No nights or weekends, pd training, pd vacation, car and cleaning materials provided, $10.50 to star t w/valid WDL. Apply online, www.maids.com/2 or 12811 8th Ave. W. Ste. C201, Everett, WA. No phone calls.

Housekeeper/Yard work Wanted Every Other Suburban offers a com- Friday, Sultan area, Call petitive salary w/incen- Alice at 360-793-0029 tive potential and comprehensive benefits HOUSING MANAGEincluding 401K and tuiMENT SPECIALIST tion reimbursement. For Everett Housing Auadd’l info or to apply, thority - FT 6 yrs pd wk please visit our website at: www.suburbanpro- exp in property mgmt pane.jobs. Click Career or subs. hsng, sub 4 O p p o r t u n i t i e s a n d yrs of 2nd educate for search for job opening work; exp in high volume, paperwork BeneID 8688. fits. $3501 per mth. As part of our hiring pro- D o w n l o a d a p p a t c e s s D OT p hy s i c a l s , www.evha.org, email background checks and HR@evha.org or call p r e - e m p l oy m e n t d r u g (425) 303-1192. Clost e s t s a r e p e r fo r m e d . e s 1 0 / 1 7 / 1 4 B a c k Suburban Propane is ground check req. proud to be an Equal E. O. E. Opportunity, Affirmative MECHANIC-HEAVY Action Employer of FeEQUIPMENT males, Minorities, Individuals with Disabilities Everett company is hirand Protected Veterans i n g fo r ex p e r i e n c e d , in accordance with all qualified mechanic. Repair & maintenance of applicable laws. excavators, loaders, soil screens, grinders, crushFISH PROCESSING onboard vessels in Alas- ers. Steady year-round k a . Fa s t p a c e d , l o n g work. Competitive wage hours, heavy lifting. Ap- and benefit pkg. To apply in person Mondays ply email your resume to at 2:00pm @ 4315 11th hr@pacifictopsoils.com or fax to 425-514-3499 Ave NW, Seattle. See our website at oharacorporation.com

FT Staff Pharmacist Needed on beautiful Whidbey Island. Benefits & great schedule. Island Drug-Clinton Send resume to rphapp@islanddrug.com

Temporary Water / Service Worker 1 Responsible for helping the District with its water meter replacement program by replacing meters. The temporary job assignment is expected to last for approximately six months. Valid WA Driver’s License and acceptable record. $20.69 to 27.73 per hour, full benefits. Experience in utility maintenance and operations a plus. Application instructions and job description are a v a i l a b l e a t www.awwd.com. Application packet due by 5:00 PM on Monday, October 20. The YWCA Seattle | King | Snohomish seeks a Navigator to assist and triage families and individuals who are currently experiencing or are at imminent risk of homelessness in the South Snohomish County region. The Navigator conducts coordinated e n t r y, v u l n e r a b i l i t y, and self-sufficiency assessments and helps clients develop action plans. The role of the Navigator is to accept referrals of families with immediate and/ complex housing needs. Full-time, 40 hrs/wk. Rate $16.35/hr. Respond to sperry@ywcaworks.org D e t a i l s @ www.ywcaworks.org.

• • • • • • • •

Paid Training Paid Vacation Monday-Friday Daytime Hours Must have WSDL Insured Vehicle People skills Good Work Ethic

Clean & Simple Cleaning 425-673-4733 18908 Hwy 99, Ste. E Lynnwood, WA 98036

Skagit Valley Casino Resort is currently seeking an analytical and detailo r i e n t e d Direct Mar keting & Database Assistant to assist in the implementation and maintenance of the Marketing Department’s direct marketing mail programs, enter tainment, adver tising and demographic reports. Please visit http://www.theskagit.com/Employment.aspx for full job description and to apply.

SALES - Wor k from home as an Independent Contractor and be your own Boss! Commission Only Based Program. Self-Starter, Motivated, Experience in Advertising Sales a plus. Send Resumes to cecel i a @ c n p a . c o m o r fa x 916-288-6022. No We are seeking self-mo- p h o n e c a l l s p l e a s e ! t i va t e d i n d i v i d u a l s t o (PNDC) star t their career with Auto-Chlor System! In this position you’ll spend 90% of your day in the field ser vicing equipment, selling, and grow- Carpenter/Framer, needing relationships with our ed north of Everett, must food service customers. have DL & vehicle. Call We provide extensive 253-802-3675 training for you to be successful. Auto-Chlor System offers a strong compensation program of $55-60K/year with an PT Direct Care Staff outstanding comprehensive benefits program! For Group Home, & supported living $10.50 hr. Please visit our careers 425-483-1141 page located at: www.jobs.autochlor.net

Driver - Taxi, Snohomish County ** BUSY !!!** Earn up to $250 + cash daily 425-742-9944

Harbor Wholesale Foods is seeking to fill 2 positions: Route Driver - FT based out of Everett. Use company vehicle to deliver grocery products on a scheduled route. Pay base plus “piece, cube, stop, miles”. Must have valid Class A CDL w/current Medical Cert c a r d . Dr iver Assistant FT based out of Mount Vernon. Supports route driver in delivering grocery products on a scheduled route. Opportunity for growth. Will train to obtain CDL. Need valid DL w/ good MVR record. Both positions are TuesFri, return daily. Harbor has full line of benefits including medical, dental, vision, life insurance, 401k retirement plan and more. Organization and customer ser vice is a must. Applicants will be required to pass a preemployment drug test. http://www.harborwholesale.com/about-harbor/careers/

C a r e g i ve r n e e d e d f o r fe m a l e w i t h p hy s i c a l disabilities in Edmonds. Physical strength a plus! var ied shifts, $14/hr. Valid DL a must, NS. 425-879-8807

CNA’s Needed! Caregivers needed all shifts and weekends! Live in & Hourly.

(206)440-5500

Arlington:

2 bd Home

Lynnwood:

2 bd Townhouse

Snohomish: 4 bd Home

Bellevue:

2 bd Condo

Commercial Space: Evergreen Way

The Rental Connection Inc

rentalconnectioninc.com

425-339-6200 MacPhersonspm.com LYNNWOOD: 3 bd 2 ba... $1800 5 bd 3 ba... $2995 ARLINGTON: 4 bd 2.5 ba.. $1895 EVERETT: 3bd..$1780 MARYSVILLE: 4 bd 3 ba... $1675 MUKILTEO:3bd$1795 206-546-9328 www.macphersonspm.com

Affordable 1 & 2 bd Senior Apts Beautiful VIEWS of our ponds. Elevator, Social Rm, Fireplace, Pets Welcome (Income restrictions apply) Rosecreek Apts 844-894-5416 Arlington

(425)239-8068

ARLINGTON We s l e y Po i n t e A p t s 1 & 2 bdrm apts. Spacious, affordable family housing. Close to shops, on site maint. & laundr y. Disabled of any age are welcome. U S DA - R D I n c o m e Limit Restrictions apply. Availability - Wait L i s t O n l y . WWW.GRES.COM for photos. 360-435-9241

BRAND NEW 1, 2 & 3 BR Apts Hurry! Only a few left! 1-855-671-6162 Marysville quilcedacreekliving.com Everett, 1714 Colby, 1bd in “classic manor house.” Walk-in closets + storage, quiet bldg, pets nego, NS, $650, heat incl. 425-252-3683

EVERETT Waterfront 1 Bd, Newly Remodeled, Nice Neighborhood, Q u i e t B u i l d i n g , N P, $ 6 4 5 / m o 425-882-3635 or 206-595-8139

PILCHUCK RIDGE APARTMENTS 226 6th Street Snohomish, Wa. 98290 Phone: (360-568-1434 TDD: 1-800-735-2900 USDA Rural Development is an Equal Opportunity Lender, Provider and Employer. Complaints of discrimination should be sent to: USDA Director, Office of Civil Rights, Washington D.C. 20250-9410 Professionally Managed by Guardian Management LLC, an equal opportunity provider

LAKE STEVENS 2 story duplx apt. Clean, quiet, affordable. Lrg 3 bdrm/1.5 bth. W/D. W/S paid. Near Schools. $900/mo. $900/dep. Call 425-263-0443

Rock n Roll on in to Forest Park Estates 1 & 2 bds $715 - $845/mo Quiet Close to Shopping/ Bus. Walk to Prk. Pets Welcome. Forest Park Estates Family owned & operated 425-252-1772 STANWOOD- 2 bd, Top Floor Apt 12’x12’ Storage rm inc, g/s/w, 1-Undercover Pa r k i n g . C l o s e t o Schools, Bus, Shopping; $995/mo + $1000 dep. NS/NP 360-929-0727

Everett: Room for rent in cozy hm, w/d, cable, util incl. $475, $200 dep. Call 425-879-6952 LAKE STEVENS: Wa n t ed senior male/female to share house with male senior. (425)478-7693. MARYSVILLE: Room for rent in lg home. $525 mo.+ $250 sec dpt. 1/4 util; 505-379-2864

BRAND NEW!

Spacious 1, 2, and 3 Bedroom Apartment Homes • Business Center • Sparkling Pool and Spa • Three Playgrounds • Recreation Pavillion • Fitness Center • Nearby Attractions Include Restaurants, Tulalip Hotel and Casino, Seattle Premium Outlets Mall and more. • Freeway and Park & Ride Access • BBQ & Picnic Areas

Class A Office Suites Marysville State Ave 2nd floor 475 sf $1463 to $1588/mo. includes NNN. 5th & Delta First floor 417 SF, 730 SF, 1147 SF $1.10 per SF month 475 SF 2nd floor .95 SF per month. Gary Wright at Coldwell Banker Bain 425 348 8901

Must have late model 4 axle tractor with wet kit and be legal to cross Canadian border. Must have propane experience, preferable in Puget Sound region. Good driving record, hazmat endorsement, TWIC card and must complete all required training. Compensation will be on a percentage basis.

Please forward inquires to dcford@gibsons.com or mwyman@gibsons.com

1142298

Customer Service Representative - Circulation Call Center The Daily Herald, a division of Sound Publishing, Inc., has a Part-Time (24-26 hr/wk) CSR position available for the following shift: Tuesday, 6:00 AM -12:00 PM, Wednesday 5:00 AM -11:00 AM, Thursday 6:00 AM-11:00 AM, Friday & Saturday 7:00 AM -12:00 PM. The primary function of this position is to act as a company advocate, promoting positive public relations and company image while ensuring Customer Service standards are met when providing support to Carriers, internal staff members, and Subscribers within an active call center environment for the Daily Herald and Sound Publishing. Qualified candidates must possess strong customer service, problem-solving, organizational, and multi-tasking skills; excellent phone, data entry, verbal and written communication skills Must possess a strong working knowledge of Excel & Word programs and the ability to type 45 wpm. Sound Publishing offers competitive salaries and benefits including 401K, paid holidays, vacation and sick time. To A p p l y : S e n d r e s u m e w / c ove r l e t t e r t o : hreast@soundpublishing.com ATTN: CSR. Sound Publishing, Inc. is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. Visit our website: www.soundpublishing.com to find out more about us!

7 DAYS!

30 DAYS!

10 Lines + Photo

10 Lines + Photo

195

Only $

AFFORDABLE

SENIOR

RN looking to share lrg 6 bd hm in Snohomish. Can take elderly. No bus line near. Bk grd ck, Dep req’d 425-923-0638

Bothell: 50+ Park. Share private trailer. All necesEverett- Nice r m, near sities provided. $600/mo Dntwn, Kit, Laund, Cbl, +1st/ last 425-949-7212 TV, Utils $495/mo, 760-637-4915

for propane transport, primarily in Western Washington, and Southwest British Columbia! Income well above the norm.

95

HOUSING 55+ * select apartments

• • • • •

1 & 2 bedroom homes Washer/Dryer Controlled Access Community Room We Pay W/S/G Elevator

VINTAGE

at Everett 1001 East Marine View Dr. Everett, WA 98201

866-328-4003

www.VintageAtEverettApts.com

• • • •

Beauty Salon Fun Social Activities Theater Room Pets Welcome* (restrictions apply)

Income Restrictions Apply

Holly Village Senior Living

9615 Holly Drive Everett, WA 98204

(425) 355-0646

www.hollyvillageapts.com

Spacious, Affordable Senior Living!

Quilceda Creek Apartment Homes

• Designer Interiors • Washer/Dryer in every home • Microwave • Dishwashers • Garbage Disposals • Cable Ready • Wall to Wall Call for Carpeting Availability! • Pet Friendly

Call & Schedule Your Tour Today!

360-653-1717

Now Taking Applications for 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments for adults 55 yrs & older. 947855

Everett:

1 & 2 bd Apt

$595/mo + Utilities Like New, Quiet, Creek & Private Trail Nearby. No Pets/Smoking Deposit: $595. Background check.

Marysville Senior Living Live Life on Your Terms. Up-Scale 1 bd apts for adults 55 years of age or older. Windsor Square Independent Living Apts 360-653-1717 windsorliving.com

Independant Living Apartments

9912 48th Dr. NE Marysville

Managed by Guardian Management, LLC. Lease security deposit and references are required.

12115 State Ave./Smokey Point Blvd. • Marysville, WA 98271

www.quilcedacreekliving.com

1126443

ARLINGTON 1 Bedroom Apt

Caregiver seeking work. cert’d in WA as HCA. I have exp and dedicated, detailed employee. Call anytime (425)258-4929

GIBSON ENERGY IS EXPANDING and seeking OWNER OPERATORS

Only $

To advertise, call 425-339-3076 | Mon-Fri - 8AM-5PM | 24/7 www.Heraldnet.com/Homes

P T D r ’s A s s i s t a n t f o r patient care & general duties in Mill Creek Eye Clinic. Work w/ close knit people oriented team. No exp nec, will train. Salary DOE. EOE. Call Laurie 425-745-5650

1056194

Wine Bar & Shop For Sale, Established Turnkey business in scenic La Conner. Located on water, outdoor seating, interior tasting/retail area & casual dining. Owner retiring, but willing to stay & train new owners. $40,000 Possible owner terms. 253-561-3270


E4 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

1 SAT 12 - 4 PM

2 SUN 1-4 PM

$249,950

3 SAT 12-3 PM

4

SUN 1-4 PM

$285,000

$399,000

$469,950

5

6

SUN 1-4 PM

SUN 1-4 PM

$515,000

$285,000

18001 Champions Drive

19711 36th St. SE

7218 Yew Street

1555 Mukilteo Lane

23022 14th St NE

11792 Wilmington Way

WOW!! Superb, Updated Townhouse & Largest Townhome model available. Located on Champions Drive in desirable Gleneagle neighborhood. Numerous updating & improvements w/open design. MASTER SUITE on main floor. Fenced back yard with entertainment patio. MLS#680655.

4 Br., 2.5 ba. Beautiful newer home on near ly 1.5 pr ivate acres. Front porch, elegant living and dining, granite counters, stainless steel appliances, family room, master suite, all bedrooms spacious, 3 car garage. MLS#641782.

180 DEGREE PANORAMIC MOUNTAIN & VALLEY VIEW Located in much sought after Sylvan Crest, this 3 bdrm 2.25 bth home w/rec rm and lg formal dining is a rare find! Enjoy hot air balloons, the river and ever changing scenery from your own home, daily! Call Tracy Vargas 253-222-1211

Front row view rambler in Mukilteo! Come and see for yourself where you could be living. Walking distance to beach, restaurants and all Old Town has to offer! MLS#700056.

Beautifully maintained newer home on 1 acre! View of Mt Pilchuck, backs to greenbelt, quiet cul-de-sac. 4 bdrm, 2.5 bth, granite kit w/dining area, LR w/cozy wood stove, master suite w/walk-in closet. MLS#688717. Call Kelly Wedin 425-330-0148

Harbour Pointe Golf Course views! This simply beautiful, well-appointed home, sited on the 4th Fairway, is well maintained & freshly painted. 3 bdrms up, 1 den down, 9 ft. c e i l i n g s o n m a i n f l o o r. MLS#701004.

9

10 SAT 1-4 PM

1016 Grant Place

8427 42nd Dr Ne

Open Concept Floor Plan in this Spacious Mid Entry Kendall Park Home, Boasts Four Bedrooms & Three Full Baths. This Well Appointed Home is Move in Ready, A l l A p p l i a n c e s S t ay. A F u l l y Fenced Back Yard & Smart Locat i o n M a ke T h i s H o m e a R e a l Touchdown! MLS#669929.

This beautiful Marysville home is nearly 1,900 sq. ft. w/ 4 bed, & 2.5 bath! Large kitchen w/ lots of cabinet, counter space, & large pantry! Tile back splash in kitchen & bthrms. Master suite w/vaulted ceilings, large walk in clst & attached bath! MLS#682411

Arlington

Call Bob Penny 360-631-1946

Everett

Snohomish

Call Yungmi Marra 206-669-2395

Mukilteo

Call Sandy Morton 425-210-1252

Mukilteo

Snohomish

Call Tina Chun 206-718-0658

NEW HORIZON REALTY, LLC

7 SAT 1-4 PM

Smokey Point

Camano Island

1

172nd St.

4th St.

$323,950

16531 2nd Park SE

Bothell

Marysville 10

Arlington

11

Built Green 3 bdrm, 3.5 bath in a beautiful Paddington style townhome. Located in highly desirable Abbey Rd. near Millcreek Town Center. Lovely hickor y hardwood floors & 9’ ceilings extend throughout the main floor. Va l l e y v i e w s t h r o u g h o u t . MLS#692871.

Granite Falls

Call Paul Blackburn 360-941-7757

Lake Stevens

SUN 11-2 PM $289,000

$240,000

Snohomish

Spike Wahl 425-231-8828

Marysville

Call Jeff Latham 425-243-9118

5 11 SAT 1-4 PM

Whidbey Island

2

4

3

Mukilteo

Snohomish

2 $330,000

4724 75th Pl NE

6

Marysville

9

Mill Creek Lynnwood

7

Monroe

AWESOME HOME IN MARYSVILLE! 4 bedrms, 2.5 baths just under 2,000 sq ft! Beautiful granite wrapped fireplace! Beautiful kitchen w/granite slab counter tops and backsplash. Beautifully landscaped, sparkling koi pond and waterfall that’s lit from within! MLS#698175

Call Jeff Latham 425-243-9118

Edmonds Mountlake Terrace

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Items Over

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9/30. Inventory & fixture on sale now, 905 1st St Snohomish, 11-5, W-Sun

SILVANA VINTAGE & ART Oct 1st-5th Vendor Discounts New Spaces/Items 1401 Pioneer Hwy (Downtown) Silvana I-5 exit #208, 2mi. W 360-652-5590 BACKROOM !!! GRAND OPENING

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DID YOU KNOW Newspaper-generated content is so valuable it’s taken and repeated, condensed, broadcast, tweeted, discussed, posted, copied, edited, and emailed countless times throughout the day by others? Discover the Pow e r o f N ew s p a p e r Adver tising in SIX STATES with just one phone call. For free Pacific Northwest Newspaper Association Network brochures call 916-288CEMETERY PLOTS 6011 or email ceceFloral Hills Cemeter y, lia@cnpa.com (PNDC) Filber t Road, 4 plots, side-by-side, serene location. $22,000 all 4, D i r e c t T V 2 Ye a r S a v ings Event! Over 140 $12,000 two plots. channels only $29.99 a (425)231-2473 month. Only DirecTV For Sale: 2 Cemetery gives you 2 YEARS of Plots-2-Unassigned savings and a FREE GeSpaces in Floral Hills nie upgrade! Call 1-800Cemetery, Lynnwood, 259-5140. (PNDC) WA, Evergreen Garden section, $1000/ea. DISH TV Retailer. Star t425-322-5211 or ing at $19.99/month (for 425-241-0273 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1800-308-1563 (PNDC) Mukilteo: Be Well Massage Therapy. 12th Man Special! Find out How to WIN 3 - 1hr massages! (reg. $255. Offer expires, 10/31/14) Call or book online. 425-381-3866 BeWellMassage.net

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Everett Recycling New Drive on Scale Metal Buyers & Auto Wreckers 425-374-5634 (1 blk E of I-5. Pacific & Chestnut) FREE Heavy wire fencing and chicken wire. Multi House Stereo w/ 2 speakers. 360-652-9167 FREE House Paint, in galllon cans. S. Everett. 425.478.8247 FREE Variety of Pieces! of Glass & Plexi-glass. Also 8 7.5� Glass blocks. 425.478.8247

LIFT PWR RECLINER LAZY BOY “LUXURY� $ 4 7 5 o b o. M a s s a g e , M i s c Fr e n c h F u r n , X l g heat, green upholstery. Lthr Ottman, $195; New Like new! 360-659-8702. Disney Pr incess Bed, $295. (425)318-0833

‘95 8’ Camper, short bd truck, everything works, always kept inside $3K 425-308-5930

Are you in BIG trouble with the IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & FREE Complete Alumi- resolve tax debt FAST. n u m Fr a m e T h e r m a l Seen on CNN. A BBB. Window w/Screen You C a l l 1 - 8 0 0 - 9 8 9 - 1 2 7 8 . (PNDC) (PNDC) haul! 360-658-7794

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Vacant membership at Po r t S u s a n C a m p i n g Club. Lot #20 Hemlock. $3000 covers fees. 360654-7520 Vermont Casting Wood Burning Stove Excelent Condition $700 360.904.4023 VOLVO SI OUTDRIVE never used. $2150; 360-387-5415

Vintage Clothes, 1 9 6 0 ’s & e a r l i e r. J e a n s , TShirts, Old toys. Estate Services. 206-948-6061 WE WANT TO BUY A Simmons Sleeper Sofa Please call 360-691-2532

OPEN HOUSE & Vendor Fair Wed, Oct 22nd 3 - 7pm Althea’s Footwear Solutions 425-303-0108 1932 Broadway, Ev We moved! 222.Altheas.net

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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 E5

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Publication Date: October 5, 2014 • Call the planner assigned to the project. • Review project file at Snohomish County Planning and Development Services (PDS) 2nd Floor Customer Service Center. • *NEW * Permit Center and Record Center Hours are o 8:00 a.m. to Noon & 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Mon, Tues, Wed and Fri o 10:00 a.m. to Noon & 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Thurs o Please call ahead to be certain the project file is available. o Please Note: submittals of projects are now taken by appointment only

Free to Good Home: 3-Young Parakeets, w/ cage & food. Get along great! Owner allergic! 425.257.9449

Au s t r a l i a n s h e p h e r d / Border Collie, 2 liters. D. O. B 7 / 0 1 / 1 4 & 7/08/14. Cute, healthy, farm-raised & smart. 1st shots & wormed. Ready Cute Chihuahua pups 10 for good homes, $300ea wks old. Purebred, not 360-629-4418 registered.  1st shots. 4 y r s o l d , gr e a t d o g , $300. 425-366-0604 needs a home without small children, ver y FOUND Female friendly with adults and Chihuahua in Marysville. bigger kids, adoption fee Call to describe so we of $150. 425-367-9623. can reunite you. 360 651-2090 7 Pitbull Puppies ready for their forever homes. GREAT DANE Puppies, Mom and dad on site, Dewclaws rem,shots & No papers. $350 dewormed. $600 M, 425.319.5430 $700 F 425-293-7507 KITTENS: 8WKS OLD, 2F, 1M, $50. (425)772-8149

WHELPING BOX beautiful 5’x5’ in solid wood w/ puppy rails. $300 obo. Delivery? 360-659-8702

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

FREE: 2 H o l l a n d L o p rabbits, chocolate doe and buck, for pets only. 425-337-5860

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Yo r k i e s, T i ny, c u t i e s, raised in home, well socialized, Parent on site, shots, wormed, free vet check, 1 yr replacement on inside things, pets only $850. Males. Call 360-722-1974, no texts Recycle your old furniture Call us today 425.339.3100

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FREE Boer Goat Buck To Good Home! Call after 5pm on weekdays or on weekends. 360-435-0835

18

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

NOTICE OF APPLICATION File Name: Melvin and Jane Earp File Number: 14-112645-ACUP Project Description: Administrative Conditional Use permit to place a single wide mobile home on site for use as a temporary dwelling. Location: 9821 – 54th Place NE Lake Stevens, WA Tax Account #: 005907-000-072-01 Applicant: Melvin and Jane Earp Date of application/Completeness Date: September 25, 2014 Approvals required: Administrative Conditional Use Permit and mobile home permit Comment Period: Submit written comments on or before October 27, 2014. Project Manager: Jennifer Lenz 425-388-3311, ext. 2823 Project Manager e-mail: Jennifer.Lenz@snoco.org EDH592584

LEGAL NOTICE

Westie Pups, S h o t s , wormed, free vet check, socialized, 1yr replacement on inside things, Mini Australian Shep- smaller size. M $1000, herd pups, Great family F $1200, 360-722-1974 dogs. 1st shots and Recycle your old furniture wormed. Health guaranCall us today 425.339.3100 tee. $500. 360-445-3109

To Advertise call 425.339.3100

Purebred Border Collie puppies, 7 wks old. 3 males & 2 females available. Wormed and first shots, great with kids. Darrell (425)3271428

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

Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, Beautiful Blenheim (tan & white) puppies, 1M, 2F, 7 wks. Vet check & 1st shots. Family raised. Wonderful lap dogs. Ready 10/1. $1,000+. 206-235-0348 CHI/PUG Mix Pups, 3F, 3M, 2 cycles of warming, first shots. Ready 9/26; $375; 360-435-2333

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

Yorkshire Terrier puppies. Male $1000, Female $1200. Small! Shots etc, 206-910-3599

NOTICE OF APPLICATION HARWOOD STUDIO VOICE AND PIANO cred. BA/MA Music 425-246-2850

Au s t r a l i a n S h e p h e r d blk/wht/brn 9506 131st Ave NE Lake Stevens choker collar, w/ dog tag microchip 425-478-8985

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If you or a loved one suffered a stroke, heart attack or died after using testosterone supplements you may be entitled to monetary damages. Call 866-520-3904! (PNDC)

LOST CAT, long haired, white w/gray tips & blue eyes, Isabelle was last on 51st Dr SE, Evt/Mill Creek area. 15 yrs old & needs med. Please call PREGNANT? CONSID757-748-0291 ERING ADOPTION? Call us first. Living expenses, housing, medical, and continued support afterwards. Choose adoptive family of your choice. Call 24/7. 855*****ADOPTION:***** 970-2106 (PNDC) Nurturing Family awaits 1st baby. Reduce Your Past Tax Unconditional LOVE, Bill by as much as 75 International Travel, Percent. Stop Levies, LiFinancial Security. ens and Wage GarnishExpenses paid. ments. Call The Tax DR Emanuela Now to see if you Qualify ***1-800-775-4013*** 1-800-791-2099. (PNDC)

THANK YOU ST. JUDE, Lynn

File Name: Laterra Estates File Number: 14-112675-PSD, 14-112675-SPA, and 14-112675-REZO Project Description: Preliminary Subdivision for 19 lots on 3.4 acres utilizing lot size averaging; subject to environmental review and Urban Residential Design Standards. The project includes a proposed rezone from R-8,400 to R-7,200. Location: 15618 Larch Way, Lynnwood Tax Account Number: 003737-002-004-02, 003737-002-004-03, and 003737-002-004-00 Applicant: Wyndham Homes, LLC Date of application/Completeness Date: September 26, 2014 Approvals required: Preliminary Subdivision, Rezone, Urban Residential Design Standards, Environmental Review, and Associated Construction Approvals Concurrency: This project will be evaluated to determine if there is enough capacity on county roads to accommodate the project’s traffic impacts, and a concurrency determination will be made. Notice of the concurrency determination will be provided in the notice of project decision. The notice of decision will be provided to all parties of record for the project. Comment Period: Submit written comments on or before October 27, 2014. Project Manager: Stacey Abbott, 425-388-3311, ext. 2637. Project Manager e-mail: stacey.abbott@co.snohomish.wa.us EDH592597

Found Money mid Aug. at Bartell sidewalk in Edmonds 425-771-0273 to identify.

TO THE GENTLEMAN who bought the Stereo system at the garage FOUND Money outside s a l e i n E v e r e t t o n of Claire’s in Edmonds. 425-771-0273 to identify. 9/20/14. I found the remote! 425-259-6593 FOUND Money outside Washington Federal Bank in Edmonds 425-771-0273 to identify FOUND: Bike on 3rd Ave S. & Walnut, Edmonds 425-771-0273 to identify Found Dog!! Chihuahua, female in Marysville. Call to describe so we can reunite you. 360- 651-2090 FOUND: Gray & White American Short-hair, M, Cat, huge cheeks, very friendly, missing owner, found on Machias Ridge 425-334-1698

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NOTICE OF DETERMINATION OF NONSIGNIFICANCE File Name: Won Young Ham File Number: 13-115741-SHOR, 13-115742-LDA, 13-115744-FZ & 13-115745-AB Description of Proposal: Shoreline Management Substantial Development application and associated deveopment permits for approximately 1,700 cubic yards fil material for construction of a livestock sanctuary and 7,200 square-foot pole barn for hay storage. Proposed work also includes removal of a ecology block wall and installation of an underground electrial service line to the pole barn. Location: 6107 Rivershore Rd., Snohomish, WA Tax Account Number: 280504-004-005-00, 280504-004-021-00, 280504-004-022-00 Applicant: Won Young Ham Date of application/Completeness date: October 13, 2010 Approvals required: Shoreline Management Substantial Development, Land Disturbing Activity, Flood Hazard, and Accessory Building permits. Lead Agency: Snohomish County Planning & Development Services Threshold Determination: The lead agency for this proposal has determined that it does not have a probable, significant adverse impact on the environment. An environmental impact statement (EIS) is NOT required under RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c). This decision was made after review by Snohomish County of a completed environmental checklist and other information on file with this agency and such information is adopted herein by reference. This information is available for public review upon request. The lead agency has determined that the requirements for environmental analysis, protection, and mitigation measures have been adequately addressed in the development regulations and comprehensive plan adopted under chapter 36.70A RCW, and in other applicable local, state, or federal laws or rules, as provided by RCW 43.21C.240 and WAC 197-11-158. Our agency will not require any additional mitigation measures under SEPA. This Determination of Nonsignificance (DNS) is issued after under WAC 197-355. This DNS is subject to a 14 day comment period. Written comments may be submitted to the lead agency at the address below. Comments must be received by October 20, 2014. APPEALS: Pursuant to SCC 30.61.300(10) this DNS may be appealed pursuant to the State Shorelines Hearing Board together with the appeal of the underlying Shoreline Permit. Appeal of this DNS is not allowed as a separate appeal, but must be combined with the appeal of the underlying shoreline permit and filed with the time period specified for the appeal of the shoreline permit. Appeal of a shoreline permit shall be filed with the state pollution control hearings board pursuant to RCW 90.58.180. Project Manager: Frank Scherf, 425-388-3311, ext. 2725 Project Manager e-mail: Frank.Scherf@co.snohomish.wa.us EDH592604 1148035

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PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE EDMONDS CITY COUNCIL NOTICE OF FILING OF PRELIMINARY 2015 BUDGET & PUBLIC HEARINGS Notice is hereby given that the Preliminary 2015 Budget for the City of Edmonds will be filed with the City Clerk on October 7, 2014. The City Clerk’s Office will furnish a copy for viewing of the 2015 Preliminary Budget to any taxpayer who comes to City Hall to request it. The Edmonds City Council will receive the Preliminary 2015 Budget at its Council Meeting on October 7, 2014 starting at 7:00 p.m. A PUBLIC HEARING to consider citizens’ comments regarding the proposed 2015 Budget will be held on Tuesday, October 21, 2014. A second PUBLIC HEARING on the proposed 2015 Budget will be held on Monday, November 3, 2014. A PUBLIC HEARING on the proposed 2015 proper ty tax levies will be held on Tuesday, November 18, 2014. The Public Hearings for the Budget and Revenue Sources are outlined as follows: • Tuesday, October 21, 2014 Public Hearing on the 2015 Proposed City Budget • Monday, November 3, 2014 Public Hearing on the 2015 Proposed City Budget • Tuesday, November 18, 2014 Public Hearing on the 2015 Proposed Revenue Sources, including the Property Tax Levy The 2015 Budget is scheduled for adoption at the Council Meeting of November 3, 2014. The 2015 property tax levies are scheduled for adoption at the Council Meeting of November 18, 2014. All hearings will be held in the Council Chamber of Edmonds Public Safety Complex, 250 5th Avenue N., Edmonds, Washington. Council meetings are scheduled to start at 7:00 p.m. All interested persons are encouraged to attend and provide oral and written comments at any of the hearings. Additional information may be obtained from: Scott James, Finance Director 121 5th Avenue North Edmonds, WA 98020 (425) 775-7743 Scott M. Passey, MMC Edmonds City Clerk Parking and meeting rooms are accessible for persons with disabilities. Contact the City Clerk at (425) 775-2525 with 24 hours advance notice for special accommodations. Posted: September 26, 2014 Published: September 28; October 5, 2014. EDH589863

DETERMINATION OF NONSIGNIFICANCE (DNS) Project title: Interstate 5 Silver Lake Southbound RV Dump Station Rehabilitation Milepost (MP) 188 XL4520 Description of proposal: This proposal demolishes and replaces three existing RV dump stations and a single potable water station with three new staggered dump stations and three potable water stations providing a better approach for larger RV’s to access and exit the facilities. Vehicle merging angles and sight lines would also be improved for RVs entering the freeway on-ramp. The existing single lane roadway exiting the truck/RV parking area would be widened by 12 feet to provide a second lane for RVs waiting to use the dump stations, plus provide a clear path for thru vehicles to pass by. Additional work includes; extending the existing drain field, adding a 3-foot tall retaining wall, adding stormwater treatment facilities and signing. Proponent: Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) Location of proposal, including street address, if any: The project is located at the existing Silver Lake Rest Area off of I-5 at approximately MP 188 within the city limits of Everett within Township 28 North, Range 5 East, Section 19. Lead Agency: Washington State Department of Transportation The lead agency for this proposal has determined that it does not have a significant adverse impact on the environment. An Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) is not required under RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c). This decision was made after review of the completed Environmental Checklist and other information on file with the lead agency. This information is available to the public on request. This DNS is issues under WAC 197-11-340(2); the lead agency will not act on this proposal for 14 days from the date of issuance. Comments must be submitted by October 10, 2014. Responsible Official: Terry Drochak Position/Title: Regional Environmental Programs Manager Address: P.O. Box 330310, Seattle, WA 98133-9710 Phone: (206) 440-4548 Published: September 27, 28, 29, 30; October 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 2014. EDH590159

ABANDONED VEHICLE AUCTION R & R STAR TOWING, INC. 20610 48th Ave. W. Lynnwood, WA 98036 (425) 778-9557 Thursday, October 9, 2014 Preview 9 am Auction 11 am Chancellor’s Auctioneering CASH ONLY ‘01 Chev Malibu (K) 910ZFF ‘97 Nissan 2SX 116SHN ‘00 Ford Explorer 893ZFK ‘97 Nissan Maxima (K) AJX9031 ‘83 Ford Bronco AQN1494 Boat & Trailer Blue/W ‘94 Nissan Quest AKA4579 ‘95 Dodge Stratus ADV3788 (K) = Has Keys All vehicles are sold As I s, W h e r e I s a n d a r e subject to release to owners prior to auction. Vehicles must be picked up by 5 pm, Friday, 10/10/2014 NO EXCEPTIONS!! EDH592122 Published: October 5, 2014.

Abandoned Vehicle Auction a t M a r y ’s Tow i n g , 1 3 3 0 3 Hwy 99, Everett, Sunday, October 12, 2014. Preview @ 8am, Auction @ 10am. View list of vehicles @ marystowing.com or pickup f l y e r a t M a r y ’s To w i n g , 13303 Hwy 99, Everett EDH591948 Published: October 5, 2014.

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30 yr fixed

15 yr fixed

5 yr ARM

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1141909

Program

LENDERS, TO HAVE YOUR RATES APPEAR IN THIS FEATURE CALL BANKRATE.COM @ 800-509-4636 MORTGAGE RATES & INFORMATION ARE AVAILABLE ON THE INTERNET @ http://heraldnet.interest.com Legend: The rate and annual percentage rate (APR) are effective as of 9/30/14. Š 2014 Bankrate, Inc. http://www.interest.com. The APR may increase after consummation and may vary. Payments do not include amounts for taxes and insurance. The fees set forth for each advertisement above may be charged to open the plan (A) Mortgage Banker, (B) Mortgage Broker, (C) Bank, (D) S & L, (E) Credit Union, (BA) indicates Licensed Mortgage Banker, NYS Banking Dept., (BR) indicates Registered Mortgage Broker, NYS Banking Dept., (loans arranged through third parties). “Call for Ratesâ€? means actual rates were not available at press time. All rates are quoted on a minimum FICO score of 740. Conventional loans are based on loan amounts of $165,000. Jumbo loans are based on loan amounts of $435,000. Points quoted include discount and/or origination. Lock Days: 30-60. Annual percentage rates (APRs) are based on fully indexed rates for adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs). The APR on your specific loan may differ from the sample used. Fees reflect charges relative to the APR. If your down payment is less than 20% of the home’s value, you will be subject to private mortgage insurance, or PMI. Bankrate, Inc. does not guarantee the accuracy of the information appearing above or the availability of rates and fees in this table. All rates, fees and other information are subject to change without notice. Bankrate, Inc. does not own any financial institutions. Some or all of the companies appearing in this table pay a fee to appear in this table. If you are seeking a mortgage in excess of $417,000, recent legislation may enable lenders in certain locations to provide rates that are different from those shown in the table above. Sample Repayment Terms – ex. 360 monthly payments of $5.29 per $1,000 borrowed ex. 180 monthly payments of $7.56 per $1,000 borrowed. We recommend that you contact your lender directly to determine what rates may be available to you. TO APPEAR IN THIS TABLE, CALL 800-509-4636. TO REPORT ANY INACCURACIES, CALL 888-509-4636. s HTTP HERALDNET INTEREST COM

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425-339-3100


E6 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

SPECIAL OFFER! 30 Days, 4 Lines + Photo

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2006 BMW 3-Series xi Stk 350550A $17,000

2009 Ford Escape Hybrid Stk 31412A $14,885 Rodland Toyota 1-888-705-0417 rodlandtoyota.com

2008 Montana 36’ $31,995

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2008 Acura RDX AWD, NAV, roof, 1 owner. Stk 27768TD $14,988.

Stk 19757A $11,975 Hyundai of Everett 425-258-2885 hyundaiofeverett.com

2013 Kia Soul 17K, auto, factorty warranty, gas saver. Stk 27815TB SALE $16,888

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2002 Olds Bravada Stk T350504B $5,999

2004 Mini Cooper Stk 20433C $9,500 2008 LEXUS IS Stk P15945 $23,999

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‘04 Pontiac Grand Prix White 4-door. New brakes & battery. 110K miles. Runs Great. Needs some minor repairs. $3800. Call 360-568-9257

2006 Buick Lucerne CXL Stk 350172A $11,999

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royrobinson.com 1-866-662-1718 2007 Acura MDX Loaded. Super Clean. Stk# 13291p $15,994

2012 Ford Focus Wagon VIN CL251519 Stk 7113A $14,888 Mazda of Everett 1-888-871-8777

2008 Honda CR-V Great Car. Safe and fun to drive. Stk# 30916A $14,991

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2007 Acura TSX FAST. THIS IS THE ONE! Stk# 13391P $12,991

1997 Cadillac Seville STS Stk 34342903A $4,999

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2008 Chev Equinox LT Crossover special Stk 4217A $12,988 Magic Nissan 888-740-2932

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KLEIN HONDA 2006 MAZDA MX5 SE VIN 60101717 Stk P1991 $19,508 2012 Honda Accord Low miles, great MPGs. Stk# 13222Q $14,991

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2010 Mazda CX7 VIN A0324841 Stk 7350A. $15,883.

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2003 GMC Sonoma Stk 19880A $6,916

2008 Audi TT Roaster Auto, power top, low 65K, sharp. Stk 27829TD $19,588.

2001 Chev Impala Base Stk 341893A $3,798

2011 Honda Civic Stk 30653A $15,885 Rodland Toyota 1-888-705-0417 rodlandtoyota.com

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2007 Chrysler 300 SRT8 Fun and fast car. Loaded. Stk# 30828A $22,791

2013 MAZDA 2 TOURING VIN D0158583 Stk P2066. $14,268.

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2008 Kawasaki Versys Stk T15969A $3,899

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Cheve SB 283 and 350 $300ea; Racing engine $8000 OBO; Gauges MPH, RPM, Fuel level $70set; Misc items. Matt 425-623-0414

46TH ANNUAL Monroe Swap Meet, October 11th & 12th, Evergreen S t a t e Fa i r G r o u n d s , M o n r o e Wa . Ve n d o r s $40 per stall per weekend. Car Corral, $40 per stall per weekend. Free A d m i s s i o n . S a t u r d ay 8am - 5pm. Sunday 8am - 3pm. Autos, Motorcycles, Tractors, Stationery Engines, Parts, Antiques & Collectibles. www.aarcbellingham.com

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2009 Audi TT 2.0T Stk 350698A $26,000

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2011 Honda CRV VIN BC028625 Stk 7462A. $19,646. Mazda of Everett 1-888-871-8777

KLEIN HONDA

2000 Chrysler Intrepid Great buy! Commuter car. Stk# 13284q $4,991 USED CAR CENTER

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2013 MAZDA 3 VIN D1711707 Stk P1992 $17,343 Mazda of Everett 1-888-871-8777

2006 HYUNDAI TIBURON Stk 744A $7,750 Hyundai of Everett 425-258-2885 hyundaiofeverett.com

2007 Mercedes C-230 SPT. Immaculate. Stk VP0479B $14,988 Magic Nissan 888-740-2932

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2014 Nissan Murano Crasscab Convertible. Stk P0536 $34,888 Magic Nissan 888-740-2932

2002 Mercedes-Benz CLK- Class Stk 342823B $3,499

2012 Honda Civic VIN 05365536 Stk 7142A. $15,949. Mazda of Everett 1-888-871-8777 H O N DA : 1 9 9 5 C i v i c . Good commuter, r uns good, lots of new parts. $1,600. (425)931-1964.

2006 Mercedes-Benz C-Class Stk 20048B $12,995 2008 Hyundai Santa Fe Limited, great clean vehicle. Stk# 13356P $13,991

2011 Subaru Outback Pre-Winter Special Stk 4358A $24,988 Magic Nissan 888-740-2932

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2013 Toyota Prius Stk #35849J $21,908

2002 Honda Civic Stk 20096A $7,500 Hyundai of Everett 425-258-2885 hyundaiofeverett.com

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1998 Toyota Camry XLE Drives Great Stk 3920A $5,888 Magic Nissan 888-740-2932 2011 Nissan Murano AWD, cargo space. Stk#13409p $19,849

2013 TOYOTA RAV4 VIN DW024747 Stk P1976. $25,763. Mazda of Everett 1-888-871-8777

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2002 Toyota Avalon Leather, low mi., great condition. Stk 27691TJ SALE $6,788 2006 Toyota Solara Convertible Wow! Look at the price! Stk# 13408P $14,444

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2006 Nissan Murano Stk 19435A $12,250

2011 Toyota Prius Pkg #4, solar roof, leather, NAV, 2.9% APR up to 60 mos., OAC. Certified. Stk 27717PD SALE $23,988

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2012 Nissan 370Z VIN CM561580 Stk P1996 $28,7882 Mazda of Everett 1-888-871-8777

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2003 Mercedes Benz E-Class Stk 341500A $12,999

‘03 Dodge Neon, Drives great! Older car w/some body damage to left fender. Bought used, had for 8 yrs w/ minimal issues. Very dependable car. Owner is also selli n g a ‘ 0 1 C a m r y fo r $4,400. (425)239-8827

2011 Nissan Rogue VIN BW285826 Stk 7700B. $18,323

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2007 BMW 3 SERIES 335i VIN 7PX47135 Stk S2006 CALL FOR PRICE

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2006 Chev Aveo LS Stk 3342431B $5,399

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2011 Nissan Juke SV Navi & Moonroof. Stk P0540. $17,288 Magic Nissan 888-740-2932

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2013 Hyundai Elantra Limited VIN DH153212 Stk P7324A $16,898

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2009 Nissan Altima Hybrid Rare Find. Stk T1747A $14,988 Magic Nissan 888-740-2932

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2010 Toyota Yaris 2.9% APR up to 60 mos. OAC Certified, Auto, gas saver Stk 27722PD Sale $10,988

2011 Toyota Camry Stk #35825J $18,923

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2010 Toyota Scion Auto, roof, low 41K. Stk 27816TC $14,988.

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2006 Lance 830 Camper Short Box $15,995

2006 Mitsubishi Galant GTS Wow! Hurry in! Stk 4434A. $8,999. Magic Nissan 888-740-2932

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2012 Lance 992 $26,995

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2008 Toyota Camry Stk 31284A $10,550

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2012 Ford Focus Great vehicle, clean. Stk# 13347P $13,991

2011 Honda Civic Save on gas, automatic. Stk# 31129a $5,991

2007 Pontiac G6 Stk 30920A1 $9,253

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2007 Montana 30’ $26,995

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2007 Toyota Prius Hybrid Over 40 mpg Stk 4230A $9,988 Magic Nissan 888-740-2932

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2009 Mini Cooper VIN 9TF96028 Stk#7706A $17,646

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2006 Sunnybrook 31’ $26,300

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2008 Buick Enclave VIN 8J115660 Stk 7301A. $17,644.

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Looking for a Car? Classifieds have the largest selection in Snohomish County


The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 E7


E8 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald


The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 E9


E10 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

SPECIAL OFFER! To advertise, call 425.339.3100 | Mon-Fri - 8AM-5PM | 24/7 www.Heraldnet.com/Autos

KLEIN HONDA

KLEIN HONDA

OVER

150

2012 VW JETTA VIN CM366508 Stk P2044. $16,988.

2005 Volvo C3 Fun. Cargo Space. Stk# 13370P $14,991

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USED CAR CENTER

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2008 Dodge Ram Best Price in Town Stk 4056A. $17,988. Magic Nissan 888-740-2932 MagicNissanofEverett.com

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2009 Toyota Tacoma Access cab, 2.9% APR up to 60 mos. OAC. Certified, canopy, auto, low 46K Stk 27613PD SALE $20,988

2004 Chev Trailblazer Cargo Space. 4WD. Stk# 13404BL $7,999 USED CAR CENTER

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ROY ROBINSON

Only

30 Days, 4 Lines + Photo

32

$

OVER

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‘98 GMC Jimmy, 1 Owner, only 36,200 mi, new tires (4), tow pckg, white exterior, gray multi-interior, Great cond, luggage rack, r unning boards, Must see to appreciate. $5000. Call for appt. to see. 206.300.7061 or text to same.

2007 Ford Freestar Van Low mi., new tires, 8 passenger. Stk 27766TD SALE $7,488

ROY ROBINSON 1999 Mustang Cobra SVT, 144K mi, well cared for, never raced, Black, 360.794.5925 11k

2004 VW Jetta Stk 19619A $8,000

$TOP CASH$

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2011 VW Jetta Stk 19702A $12,975 Hyundai of Everett 425-258-2885 hyundaiofeverett.com

2013 Ram 1500 Tradesman-Express Stk T342376A $20,799

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OVER

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2007 Jeep Patriot Stk 29992D $8,897

2010 Toyota FJ 4x4, 6 speed, tow, all terrian pkg, new tires, tow. Stk 27682PD SALE $21,488

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2001 Honda Odyssey Van, 7 passenger, power seat, alloys, quad seats, runs great Stk 27695TC $3,988

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2010 Mitsubishi Lancer Sharp!! Low miles. Stk# 13340P $14,991

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OVER

150

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OVER 2002 Ford F-150 Stk B20094A $10,308 Hyundai of Everett 425-258-2885 hyundaiofeverett.com

150

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2003 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer Stk 3774A $7,488 Magic Nissan 888-740-2932

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2004 Dodge Durango SLT “Winter Special” Stk 4359A $6,995 Magic Nissan 888-740-2932

2003 Town & County, g r e y, r u n s g r e a t $5,000/OBO. (425)3285112

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2003 Jeep Liberty Stk 20193A $10,500

2012 Toyota Tundra Stk #31232A $27,641

150

2010 Volvo V-50 Stk #31449A $17,649

2003 Chev S-10 Blazer LS Stk T342687A $6,999

HYUNDAI OF EVERETT

1994 Ford F-150 Stk 6807A $4,995 ‘85 CHEVY Work Van, runs great, new tires, roof rack, good body, $1500 425-773-5906

2010 Toyota Tacoma 2WD 2.9% APR up to 60 mos. OAC certified, low 26K, auto, pristine condition. Stk 27691TD. SALE $16,488

2011 GMC Sierra Low 28K mi., tow, great work truck. Stk 27698PD $19,988

2011 Nissan Pathfinder SV All WD and Certified. Stk 4432A. $25,888 Magic Nissan 888-740-2932 MagicNissanofEverett.com

Getting a new car? Recycle your old car! Place

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a classified with us today!

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425.339.3100

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HARRIS MITSUBISHI & CREDIT CENTER www.harrismitsubishinw.com 877-270-6241 Additional Discounts for Boeing Employees & Families*

FALL KICKOFF SALE 31

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MSRP.............................$20,445 Sale Price .......................$19,499 Mitsubishi Factory Rebate $1,000 Military Rebate ....................$500 Mitsubishi Loyalty Rebate ...$500

17,499

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Not Hybrid

40

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2015 Mirage MSRP.............................$13,800 Sale Price .......................$13,499 Mitsubishi Factory Rebate ..$750 Mitsubishi Loyalty Rebate ...$250 Military Rebate ....................$500

7 Airbags, Air, Power Locks & Windows, Keyless Entry

Lease for

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Pictures are for illustration purposes only. Does not include tax, title, and license. A dealer document service fee of up to $150 may be added to the sale price or capitalized cost. Subject to prior sales. Expires 10/06/14*See dealer.** According to Mitsubishi Motors Sales Records for 2014 YTD. Military discount restrictions apply MPG based on EPA estimates. Subject to credit approval. $4500 Tax credit consult your tax advisor.

1145420


October 05, 2014

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Sunday, October 05, 2014 The Daily Herald Sunday, October 05, 2014 The Daily Herald

BY JACQUELINE CUTLER BY JACQUELINE CUTLER

‘The Flash’ zooms onto The CW

Grant Grant Gustin Gustin

Celebrating 10

Barry Allen was always heroic but it took a freak accident to turn him into a Barry Allen wasCW’s always“The heroic but it took a freak accident to 7. turn him into a superhero in The Flash” premiering Tuesday, Oct. superhero in The CW’s “The Flash” premiering Tuesday, Oct. 7. Barry (Grant Gustin, “Glee”) is an unlikely superhero: sweet, skinny and scientific. Barry (Grant unlikely skinny and scientific. His altruism wasGustin, evident“Glee”) even asisa an child when superhero: he stood upsweet, to bullies taunting others. His altruism was evident even as a child when he stood up to bullies taunting others. When Barry was 11, a freak electric storm exploded in his living room, and killed his When Barry was 11,convicted a freak electric exploded in his living room, andhiskilled his mom. His dad was of her storm murder, but Barry always maintained father’s mom. His dad was convicted of her murder, but Barry always maintained his father’s innocence. innocence. The father of Barry’s best friend, Detective Joe West (Jesse L. Martin, “Law & The father best friend, Detective West (Jesse Martin, “Law & Order”), tookofinBarry’s the orphan, and remains his Joe surrogate father.L.As an adult, Barry Order”), took in the orphan, and remains his surrogate father. As an adult, Barry works for Central City Police Department in forensics. He continues to be a sweet works for loves Central City Police Department in forensics. He continues to be a sweet guy, who science. guy, who loves science. Struck by lightning during a cataclysmic storm, he’s left comatose. When he comes by lightning duringhea cataclysmic he’s left comatose. he comes to Struck he’s delighted to discover has six-packstorm, abs. Later, he realizes the When incredible speed. to He he’sisdelighted to discover he has six-pack abs. Later, he realizes the incredible speed. The Flash. He The devotes Flash. fun scenes to Barry discovering his speed. He crashes until he Theispilot The to pilot devotes scenes to Barry discovering his speed. He crashes until he learns harness his fun special power. learns to harness his special power. Gustin had not read the comics growing up, though he’s since learned much about Gustin theascomics up, though since learned much about this world.had Henot seesread Barry a very growing full character, who ishe’s “optimistic and full of hope,” this world. He sees Barry as a very full character, who is “optimistic and full of hope,” Gustin says. “Barry has a dark past.” Gustin has a dark Barrysays. grew“Barry up respecting Joe,past.” and harboring a crush on his best friend, Joe’s Barry grew respecting Joe, and his best friend, Joe’s daughter, Iris up (Candice Patton). Theyharboring continue atocrush haveon a loving friendship. daughter, Iris (Candice Patton). They continue to have a loving friendship. Tom Cavanagh (“Ed”) plays scientific genius Harrison Wells who has a particle Tom Cavanagh (“Ed”) playsonscientific genius Harrison Wellsatwho particleto accelerator and likely designs world domination. For now, least,has heaappears accelerator and likely designs on world domination. For now, at least, he appears to be helping The Flash realize his powers. beBeing helping The Flash realize his powers. the fastest man alive takes some work. As a lifelong dancer, Gustin was in Beingbut theneeded fastest to man alive some work. As a lifelong dancer, Gustin was in shape, train fortakes the role. shape, but needed to train for the role. “I worked with a track and field trainer,” Gustin says. “He showed me how to be “I worked with a track and field trainer,” Gustin says. “He showed me how to be more efficient.” more efficient.” The Flash, he says, “is less equipped than most superheroes and less reluctant to The Flash, heHe’s says,always “is lessbeen equipped thantomost superheroes and less reluctant to do become a hero. invisible people, even at work. All he wants to become a hero. He’s always been invisible to people, even at work. All he wants to do is help people. He’s a police scientist in CSI and he will continue to be.” is help people. He’s a police scientist in CSI and he will continue to be.” Central City needs all the help they can get. The Flash is not the only metaCentral all thealtered help they canareget. The Flash is not the only human, asCity theseneeds genetically folks known. A bank robber in themetapilot causes human, as these genetically altered folks are known. A bank robber in the pilot causes cyclones, showcasing terrific special effects. cyclones, showcasing terrific the special Based on the DC comics, piloteffects. cleverly lays out alliances and gives viewers, even Based on the DC comics, the pilot cleverly lays out alliances and viewers, even those who can’t cite the character’s history, a solid understanding of gives this world. those who can’t cite the character’s history, a solid understanding of this world. “If you don’t know the mythology, that’s OK,” Gustin says, “because we are starting “If you don’t telling know the mythology, that’s OK,” Gustin says, “because we are starting from the story from the very beginning.” from the story telling from the very beginning.”

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BY GEORGE DICKIE BY DAN LADD Questions: 1) When was the first National Hockey League game played? 2) What teams constitute “the original six”? 3) In what year was the first Stanley Cup awarded?

A penalty cost Brad Keselowski a shot at NASCAR’s Chase for the Championship in 2013, which would’ve given him a chance to defend his 2012 Sprint Cup Championship. As he gets behind the wheel for the Bank of America 500, which airs Saturday, Oct. 11, ABC, his hopes for a second Cup title remain high. Keselowski’s consistency in 2014 has kept him at or near the top of the points standings. A win at Richmond, Va., his fourth of the season, put him over the top by just a few points as the Challenger Round of the Chase began in early September. As long as he’s close to the top coming into Saturday’s race at Charlotte Motor Speedway his chances will be as good as anyone’s. Racing fans can look for Keselowksi’s No.2 Team Penske Ford to run, whenever possible, with teammate and close friend Joey Lagano, who was also one of NASCAR’s top drivers in the Cup standings. Keselowksi is the defending Bank of America champion and Charlotte is the second race in the Contender round of the Chase, which began with 16 drivers and is now down to 12. After Talladega next week, only eight drivers will remain in contention for the Chase. If Keselowksi can maintain his top 10 finishes, or even find Victory Lane again during the Chase, the odds of him being one of four drivers left standing when the season wraps up a month from now in Miami will be excellent.

4) Who was Lord Stanley? 5) What team has won the most NHL championships? 6) Six franchises have folded in NHL history. Name them (as they were known in their final year of operation). 7) In its biggest year of expansion, 1967, the NHL added six teams. Name them. 8) Who is the NHL’s all-time leading goal scorer? 9) What goaltender is the all-time leader in wins? 10) What NHL Hall-of-Famer’s playing career spanned five decades?

Answers: 10) Gordie Howe (1946-80) 9) Martin Brodeur, with 688 (through the 2013-2014 season) over 21 seasons 8) Wayne Gretzky, with 894 over 20 seasons 7) California Seals, Los Angeles Kings, Minnesota North Stars, Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins, St. Louis Blues 6) Brooklyn Americans, Cleveland Barons, Hamilton Tigers, Montreal Maroons, St. Louis Eagles, Philadelphia Quakers 5) The Montreal Canadiens, with 23 4) The Earl of Preston and Governor General of Canada, who, in 1892, purchased the first Stanley Cup, known then as the Dominion Hockey Challenge Cup 3) 1893, when the Montreal Amateur Athletic Association club won the championship of the Amateur Hockey Association of Canada 2) Boston Bruins, Chicago Blackhawks, Detroit Red Wings, Montreal Canadiens, New York Rangers, Toronto Maple Leafs 1) Dec. 19, 1917

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InFocus “Sports Jeopardy!” www.crackle.com/c/sportsjeopardy Emmy-winning broadcaster Dan Patrick makes his game show-hosting debut in this half-hour production that, as the title suggests, is a sportsthemed version of the original Alex Trebek-hosted series currently running in syndication. Along with the requisite trivia questions — asked, presumably, in the form of answers — the new show features interactive components, including a 99-cent smartphone app that allows viewers to follow along with the show.

“Making a Scene With James Franco,” on.aol.com/show/making-ascene The Oscar-nominated actor’s love of cinema is reflected in this new 10-episode series in which he, Scott Haze (“Child of God”) and Ahna O’Reilly (“The Help”) reimagine classic scenes from iconic movies to comedic effect. Among the films getting the treatment are “The Godfather,” “Titanic,” “Grease,” “The Shining” and a cross between “Reservoir Dogs” and “Dirty Dancing.” “Sequestered,” www.crackle.com/c/sequestered Patrick Warburton, Summer Glau and Jesse Bradford star in this clever murder

FIRST RACE: 2008 Dickies 500 (Texas) CAR: Ford CAREER WINS: 14 TOP 10 FINISHES: 72 CAREER POLES: 7

mystery that follows a jury sequestered in a hotel room as it deliberates a high-profile murder-kidnapping case. The online streaming service Crackle rolled out the first six episodes of the first season in August, with the last six due next week. “Cleaners,” www.crackle.com/c/cleaners In case you missed it, Season 2 of this highly stylized spy thriller starring Emmanuelle Chriqui, Emily Osment and Gina Gershon premiered in August, with the new season finding contract killers Veronica and Roxie (Chriqui, Osment) on a small Caribbean island about to cash in on a $57 million job but find they cannot outrun their past.

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Sunday, October 05, 2014 The Daily Herald

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Medi Sub-D Paid Gaither Patsy State/Union Fareed Zakaria Reliable Sources State/Union Fareed Zakaria CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Paid Hair Paid Body Com Sex Drive (8:21) (’08) ›› Josh Zuckerman. Clueless (10:53) (PG-13, ’95) ››› Project X (12:54) (R, ’12) ›› (CC) Bubble Boy › Washington Repub. News Washington This Week (S) Washington This Week (S) Washington This Week (S) Washington This Repub. News Insan David Paid Sexy Osteen Touch Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Mickey Mickey Pirates Doc Doc Sofia Jessie Austin Austin LivI Didn’t Austin Girl Girl Girl ANT ANT ANT Austin Austin SomeBeverly Hills Ninja (’97) › Chris King Ralph (PG, ’91) ›› John Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World Mars Attacks! (PG-13, ’96) ›› Jack Nichol- Remember the Titans (1:50) Something Farley. (CC) Goodman. (S) (CC) (9:40) (’03) ››› Russell Crowe. son. iTV. (S) (CC) (’00) ››› (CC) thing SportsCenter (N) Sunday NFL Countdown (N) (Live) (CC) Countdown NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: Hollywood Casino 400. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) Football Show SportsCenter (N) Fantasy Football Now (N) (Live) City Slam (CC) Women’s Basketball NHRA Drag Racing World/Poker Cooker Mass Teen Wolf (PG, ’85) ›› Teen Wolf Too (PG, ’87) › Stick It (’06) ›› Jeff Bridges. The Parent Trap (PG, ’98) ››› Lindsay Lohan. Blackball Ernest Scared Stupid (6:25) (PG, Street Fighter (’94) ›› JeanThe Good Mother (9:45) (R, ’88) ›› Diane The Longest Yard (PG-13, ’05) ›› Adam The Muse (PG-13, ’99) ›› Albert Outrageous Fortune ›› ’91) ›› (S) Claude Van Damme. Keaton. (S) (CC) Sandler. Premiere. (S) Brooks. (S) (3:15) ››› FOX and Friends Maria Bartiromo MediaBuzz (N) News House News HQ Fox News Sun. Jour. News Carol House MediaBuzz Fox News Sun. bareM Sub-D Rachael Ray’s Con Heart Pioneer Trisha’s Con Giada Brunch Guy’s Pioneer Farm The Kitchen Halloween Wars Halloween Wars Paid Medi Buffy, Slayer Mother Mother Mother Mother This Means War (PG-13, ’12) ›, Chris Pine Mission: Impossible -- Ghost Protocol (’11) ››› Trans Orchestra Wives (’42) ›› Sweet and Lowdown (7:40) (NR, Do You Love Me? (’46) ››› I Don’t Care Girl (10:40) (’53) ›› Marley & Me (PG, ’08) ››› Owen Wilson, Jennifer Soul Surfer (PG, ’11) ›› AnnaGeorge Montgomery. ’44) ›› (CC) Maureen O’Hara. Mitzi Gaynor. Aniston, Eric Dane. (CC) Sophia Robb. (CC) Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden How to Fall in Love (’12) (CC) The Lost Valentine (NR, ’11) ›› Honeymoon Wag the Scooby-Doo (PG, ’02) ›› Fred- REAL Sports Bryant Rise of the Guardians (PG, ’12) Jack the Giant Slayer (10:45) (PG-13, ’13) Real Time With Bill The 50 Year Argument (1:45) (NR, ’14) ››› Emperors Dog die Prinze Jr. (S) Gumbel ›› (S) (CC) ›› Nicholas Hoult. (S) Maher (CC) (S) (CC) BIS WEN Urban Oasis Buying Buying Buying Property Bro Love It or List It Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper (CC) Paid Paid Slave Catchers, Slave Resisters Nazi America: A Secret History (S) Street Gangs: A Secret History (S) Crime Wave: Mayhem Jesse James Grill-Pro BISSELL In Touch W/Charles Amazing Jeremiah Joel Skincare Unsolved Mysteries Zoe Gone (NR, ’14) Jean Louisa Kelly, An- Glass House: The Good Mother (R, ’06) › Sole Custody (’14) Stanley Osteen (CC) drea Bowen. (CC) Angie Harmon. (CC) Julie Benz. Summer Moulin Rouge (6:20) (PG-13, ’01) ››› Ni- Tomorrow Never Dies (PG-13, ’97) ››› 47 Ronin (PG-13, ’13) ›› Keanu Reeves, Top Gun (PG, ’86) ››› Tom Cruise, Kelly The Knick (S) (CC) Great cole Kidman. (S) (CC) Pierce Brosnan. (S) (CC) Hiroyuki Sanada. (S) (CC) McGillis. (S) (CC) Gatsby Up W/Steve Melissa Harris-Perry (N) Weekends With Alex Witt (N) Meet the Press MSNBC Live (N) Why Planes Why Planes Breaking Point Guy Guy Guy Guy Girl Girl Girl Girl Girl Happy Awk Awk Faking Faking The Devil Wears Prada (’06) ››› Legally English Premier League Soccer English Premier League Soccer Goal Premier League Formula One Racing Japanese Grand Prix. F1 Ex Formula Motorsports George George Sanjay Bread Power Spong Spong Spong Spong Spong Turtles Spong Barbie Spong Parents Parents Henry Henry Nicky Nicky Total Paid Paid Paid My My My My Snapped (S) Snapped (S) Snapped Snapped Snapped Snapped Paid Paid Sport Paid Buy Lad Quest 10 Min Health Paid Best Ladder Women’s College Volleyball MLS: Sounders at Rapids Glena (5) Dawn Rider (6:25) (’12) Donald Inside the NFL (S) Sahara (PG-13, ’05) ›› Matthew McCoDead Poets Society (11:05) (PG, ’89) ››› Alex Cross (1:15) (PG-13, ’12) › Tyler Perry, Homeland “Geron(’13) Sutherland. (CC) (CC) naughey. (S) (CC) Robin Williams. (S) (CC) Matthew Fox. (S) (CC) tion” (S) (CC) Paid 21 DAY TCop Focus Body Clean! Off Engine Truck Muscle Bar Rescue (S) Bar Rescue (S) Bar Rescue (S) Bar Rescue (S) Con Con About As Good as It Gets (6:35) (PG-13, ’97) ››› Jack Nich- Ronin (R, ’98) ›› Robert De Niro, Jean The Chair (11:10) Survivor’s Saving Mr. Banks (12:45) (PG-13, ’13) ››› Emma Survivor’s About Last olson, Helen Hunt. (S) (CC) Reno. iTV. (S) (CC) “Picture’s Up” Thompson, Tom Hanks. iTV. (S) (CC) Last H20 21 DAY Wil Paid Total Paid The Cursed (’10) Costas Mandylor. Stephen King’s Rose Red (CC) Stephen King’s Rose Red (CC) Rose Red Married Married Friends Friends Friends Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle ›› To Be Announced MLB MLB Baseball Baltimore Orioles at Detroit Tigers. (N) (Live) Green for Danger Scarface (PG, ’32) ››› Paul Muni, Ann Cool Hand Luke (GP, ’67) ››› Paul Newman, George Five Came Back (’39) ››› Jungle Book (NR, ’42) ››› Sabu, Joseph Knights of the Round (5:15) (’46) Dvorak. (CC) Kennedy, J.D. Cannon. (CC) Chester Morris. Calleia, John Qualen. (CC) Table Tummy 21 DAY Paid Program (S) (CC) 21 Day Bor Bor Bor Bor Bor Bor Bor Bor Say Say Say Say Say Say Up Close Donovan’s Echo (6:45) (PG-13, ’11) Bruce Elizabethtown (8:20) (PG-13, ’05) ›› OrThe Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 Waking the Dead (R, ’00) ›› Dark Skies (2:15) (PG-13, ’13) ›› Keri RusGreenwood. (S) (CC) lando Bloom. (S) (CC) (’12) ›› Kristen Stewart. Billy Crudup. (S) (CC) sell, Dakota Goyo. (S) (CC) Law & Order “HarLaw & Order “Trade Law & Order “Loco Law & Order “D-Girl” Law & Order “Turn- Law & Order “Show- Law & Order “NulGhost Rider (PG-13, ’07) ›› Nicolas Cage, Spider-Man (3:15) vest” (S) This” (S) Parentis” (CC) (DVS) around” time” lification” (S) Eva Mendes. (CC) (DVS) (’02) ››› Leg Tenkai Poké Teen Teen Clar Clar Gum Gum Teen Teen Steven Steven Steven Clar Clar Gum Gum Teen Teen Paid Medi 21 Day Body Medi Focus Paid Paid Most Shocking Most Shocking Most Shocking Most Shocking Most Shocking Jokers Jokers 3’s Co. 3’s Co. Fam Fam Fam Fam Fam Fam Fam Fam Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby House (S) (CC) Paid Jere P. Chris Osteen Bee Movie (PG, ’07) ›› The Game Plan (PG, ’07) ›› The Back-up Plan (’10) › Jennifer Lopez. VH1 Plus Music VH1 Plus Music Top 20 Count. Top 20 Count. Sat. Night Live Sat. Night Live Napoleon Dynamite (’04) ››› Two Weeks Notice (’02) ››


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Canada’s Smartest Cars 2 (’11) ›› Voices of Owen Wilson. Heartland (N) (S) Canada’s Smartest Janet King (S) (CC) The National (N) (CC) News fifth est. KOMO 4 News Sunday KOMO 4 World News KOMO 4 News Sunday Once Upon a Time (S) (CC) Once Upon a Time “White Resurrection “Echoes” (N) Revenge (10:01) “Disclo- KOMO 4 Castle 4:00pm (N) (CC) News 6:00pm (N) (CC) Out” (N) (CC) (S) (CC) sure” (N) (CC) News (11:35) Football Night in America (N) (S Live) NFL Football (5:20) Cincinnati Bengals at New England Patriots. (N) (S Live) (CC) 5th Quarter KING 5 News (N) Dateline NBC (S) (CC) KING 5 News The 206 (CC) (N) (11:35) NFL Football Pets.TV (CC) KIRO 7 Eyewitness News Evening KIRO News 60 Minutes (N) (S) (CC) Madam Secretary “The The Good Wife “Dear God” CSI: Crime Scene Investi- KIRO News KIRO News at 5PM (N) News Operative” (N) (N) (CC) gation (N) (S) Grown Ups (3:30) (’10) › News News Hour (5:59) (N) Mulaney Burgers Madam Secretary (N) The Good Wife (N) Simpsons Fam. Guy News Block The Canyon War A little- Doc Martin “The Tameness NewsHour Moyers & Rick Steves-Holy Land, Masterpiece Classic (S) Masterpiece Mystery! Hathaway’s first Great Estates Scotland Roadtrip Naknown war. of a Wolf” Wk Company Israelis (CC) case as an inspector. Inveraray Castle. tion (N) Liquidator Liquidator Mantracker Mod Fam Mod Fam GetS Saw Dogs Broke Girl Brooklyn Pckg Deal Pckg Deal Revenge (10:01) (N) Murdoch Mysteries Glee Jake and Bree beThe Middle Raising Hope Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Blue Bloods “Smack AtBlue Bloods Jamie witThe Closer “Make Over” Seinfeld (S) Seinfeld (S) King of King of come closer. (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) tack” (S) (CC) nesses a crime. (S) (CC) (CC) (CC) Queens Queens Streets of S.F. The Rockford Files Hawaii Five-0 (CC) Black Sheep Columbo On a cruise, auto exec kills lover. Man From U.N.C.L.E. Mission: Impossible Who’s the What Went Two and Half Two and Half Two and Half Two and Half The SimpBob’s Burg- The SimpBrooklyn Family Guy Mulaney Q13 FOX Q It Up Q13 FOX TMZ (N) (S) Boss? (S) Men Men Men Men sons (S) ers sons (N) Nine-Nine (N) “Pilot” (S) News Sports (S) News at (CC) Ladders GR View Traveler Paid Prog. Extra (N) (S) (CC) Backroad Raw Trav. Operation Condor (’91) ›› Jackie Chan. News Hiring McCarver Backroad Lead Way Blessed J. Osteen K. Shook Copeland Creflo D. The Ten Commandments Bless Praise the Lord (CC) Raymond Raymond How I Met How I Met Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang News Q Sports Friends Friends Anger Anger Invicta Watches Invicta Watches Around the House ElectronicConnection ElectronicConnection Tiffany Style Tiffany Style The Best of ShopHQ The Omni Health Revolution-Amen Healing ADD With Dr. Daniel Amen, MD Trans-Siberian Trans-Siberian Use Your Brain to Change Your Age Football Sports FirstStory Steele CTV News (N) (CC) Saving Hope (S) Once Upon a Time Resurrection (N) (CC) CSI: Crime Scene News News Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Cold Case (S) (CC) GoodFellas (3) (’90) ›››› Robert De Niro. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck Wahlburgr Wahlburgr Duck D. Duck D. Déjà Vu (2:30) (PG-13, ’06) Breaking Bad “ConfesBreaking Bad (6:10) “Rabid Breaking Bad Breaking Bad (7:20) Breaking Bad “OzymanBreaking Bad (9:40) “Granite State” A Breaking Bad Walter ››› (CC) sions” (CC) Dog” (CC) (7:15) “To’hajiilee” (CC) dias” (CC) conclusion closes in. makes arrangements. North Woods Law (S) North Woods Law (S) North Woods Law (S) North Woods North Woods Law (S) North Woods Law (N) Republic Republic North Woods Law (S) Are We There Yet? (PG, ’05) ›› Ice Cube, Nia Long. (CC) The Cookout (PG-13, ’04) › Ja Rule. (CC) What’s Love Got to Do With It (R, ’93) ››› Angela Bassett. (CC) Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ The Real Housewives of New Jersey (N) Housewives/NJ Happens Jersey Greed On Money 60 Minutes on CNBC 60 Minutes on CNBC American Greed American Greed Car Car Car Car Wolfgang Paid Prog. CNN Special Report Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd. This Is Life Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd. This Is Life CNNI Simulcast Bubble Boy (2:55) › South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Hot Tub Time Machine (6:58) (R, ’10) ››› Hot Tub Time Machine (9:15) (’10) ››› John Cusack. Tosh.0 Washington This Q & A (S) House of Commons Road to White House Q & A (S) House of Commons Road to White House Washington This Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Tethered (N) (S) (CC) Last Frontier Austin Austin Austin Austin Jessie (S) Jessie (S) Dog Jessie (S) Austin Liv-Mad. I Didn’t Girl Meets Jessie (S) Dog ANT Farm ANT Farm Something to Talk About (3:45) (’95) ›› Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (5:40) (PG-13, Alien (R, ’79) ›››› Tom Skerritt, Sigourney Weaver, Remember the Titans (PG, ’00) ››› Denzel WashingJulia Roberts. (CC) ’03) ››› Russell Crowe. iTV. (S) (CC) John Hurt. iTV. (S) (CC) ton, Will Patton. iTV. (S) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) Who’s In? World/Poker World/Poker SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (CC) World/Poker NHRA Drag Racing NHRA Nationals. From Reading, Pa. (CC) NHRA Drag Racing ESPN FC (N) Baseball NASCAR Racing Bedtime Stories (’08) ›› Adam Sandler. The Sandlot (PG, ’93) ›› Tom Guiry. Matilda (PG, ’96) ››› Mara Wilson. Hop (’11) ›› Voices of James Marsden. Outrageous Fortune (3:15) Bad News Bears (PG-13, ’05) ›› Billy Bob Thornton, The Longest Yard (PG-13, ’05) ›› Adam Sandler, Chris Four Brothers (R, ’05) ›› Mark Wahlberg, Tyrese Gib- Hard Target (10:50) (R, ’93) ›› (S) (CC) (’87) ››› (CC) Greg Kinnear. Premiere. (S) (CC) Rock, Burt Reynolds. (S) (CC) son, André Benjamin. (S) (CC) FOX Report (N) Huckabee FOX News Special Stossel Huckabee FOX News Special Stossel Fox News Sunday Halloween Wars Halloween Wars Food Truck Race Guy’s Games Guy’s Games Halloween Wars Cutthroat Kitchen (N) Cutthroat Kitchen Transformers: Dark of the Moon (3:30) (’11) ›› Shia LaBeouf. Battleship (PG-13, ’12) ›› Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgrd. The Strain The Strain (11:06) Soul Surfer FXM PresCast Away (PG-13, ’00) ››› Tom Hanks. A courier company execu- FXM PresCast Away (PG-13, ’00) ››› Tom Hanks. A courier company execu- FXM PresBirthday Girl (R, ’01) ›› (2:30) ents tive is marooned on a remote island. ents tive is marooned on a remote island. ents Nicole Kidman. Honeymoon for One Accidentally in Love (’10) Jennie Garth. Chance at Romance (’13) Erin Krakow. (CC) How to Fall in Love (’12) Eric Mabius. (CC) Gold Girls Gold Girls The Emperor’s Club (3:30) (PG-13, ’02) Big Momma’s House (PG-13, ’00) ›› Ride Along (7:15) (PG-13, ’14) ›› Ice Cube, Kevin Hart, Boardwalk Empire “King of True Detective “Who Goes Last Week Boardwalk ›› Kevin Kline. (S) Martin Lawrence. (S) John Leguizamo. (S) (CC) Norway” (N) There” (S) (CC) To. Em. Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper (CC) Hawaii Hawaii Beach Beach Beach Beach Hunters Hunt Intl Jesse James Fort Knox: Secrets Revealed (S) (CC) Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Sole Custody (3) (NR, ’14) Run for Your Life (’14) Amy Smart, Aislyn Watson, Ge- Killers (PG-13, ’10) › Ashton Kutcher, Katherine Heigl, Witches of East End “Box Witches of East End Killers (11:02) (’10) › AshJulie Benz. (CC) nea Charpentier. (CC) Tom Selleck. (CC) to the Future” (10:01) (CC) ton Kutcher. (CC) The Great Gatsby (3:30) (PG-13, ’13) ›› Leonardo The Wolverine (PG-13, ’13) ›› Hugh Jackman, HiThe Hangover Part III (8:15) (R, ’13) ›› Bradley Coo- 47 Ronin (PG-13, ’13) ›› Keanu Reeves, Hiroyuki DiCaprio, Tobey Maguire. (S) (CC) royuki Sanada. (S) (CC) per, Ed Helms. (S) (CC) Sanada, Tadanobu Asano. (S) (CC) Planes Crash Why Planes Crash Lockup Orange Lockup Lockup Wabash Lockup Lockup Wabash Meet the Press (CC) Legally Blonde (3:40) (PG-13, ’01) ›› (S) Clueless (5:50) (’95) ››› Alicia Silverstone. The Devil Wears Prada (’06) ››› Meryl Streep. Faking It Faking It Awkward. FLW Outdoors (N) Hunter Hunting Outd’r Huntin’ Tractor Match of the Day Sports Report English Premier League Soccer (Taped) (S) Report Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Henry Nicky Thunder Haunted Instant Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends Snapped Snapped Snapped Snapped (Part 1 of 2) Snapped (Part 2 of 2) Snapped (N) (CC) Snapped: Killer Snapped Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Mariners High School Football Glacier Peak at Bellevue. World Poker World Poker College Football Homeland “A Red Wheel Homeland Carrie and Homeland Brody embarks Homeland “Big Man in Homeland “The Star” (S) Homeland “The Drone Queen; Trylon and Perisphere” Homeland (S) (CC) Barrow” (CC) Brody reunite. (CC) on a mission. Tehran” (S) (CC) (CC) Carrie makes a critical decision. Bar Rescue (S) Bar Rescue (S) Bar Rescue (S) Bar Rescue (S) Bar Rescue (S) Bar Rescue (S) Catch a Contractor Bar Rescue (S) About Last Night (3:30) Survivor’s Saving Mr. Banks (8:05) (PG-13, ’13) ››› Emma Survivor’s Remorse (10:15) Survivor’s About Last Resident Evil: Apocalypse (5:15) (R, ’04) ›› Milla Jo- Survivor’s (’14) ››› (CC) vovich, Sienna Guillory. (S) (CC) Remorse Remorse Thompson, Tom Hanks. iTV. (S) (CC) (iTV) (S) (CC) Remorse Night S. King’s Rose Red The Reaping (R, ’07) › Hilary Swank. House of Bones (NR, ’09) Shutter (’08) › Joshua Jackson. Z Nation MLB MLB Baseball Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim at TBA. (N) (Live) MLB To Be Announced Men in Black II (PG-13, ’02) ›› Knights of the Round Table The Red Shoes (NR, ’48) ›››› Moira Shearer. A ballerina loves an Cameraman: The Life & Work of Jack The Blot (NR, ’21) ››› Philip Hubbard, Margaret Mc- A River Called Titas (NR, (3) (’53) ›› impresario and her art. (CC) Cardiff (NR, ’10) ››› Wade, Claire Windsor. ’73) Premiere. Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Long Island Medium Medium Medium Medium Long Is Angels Angels Medium Long Is Elizabethtown (PG-13, ’05) ›› Orlando Bloom, Kirsten The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 (6:05) (PG- The Kings of Summer (R, ’13) ›› Nick Snake Eyes (9:35) (R, ’98) › Nicolas The Baytown Outlaws Dunst. (S) (CC) 13, ’12) ›› Kristen Stewart. (S) Robinson. Premiere. (S) Cage, Gary Sinise. (S) (CC) (11:15) (’12) ›› Spider-Man (3:15) (PG-13, ’02) ››› To- Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (5:45) (PG-13, ’10) ›› Jake Gyl- National Treasure: Book of Secrets (PG, ’07) ›› Nicolas Cage, Jon National Treasure: Book of Secrets bey Maguire. (CC) lenhaal, Gemma Arterton. (CC) (DVS) Voight, Harvey Keitel. (CC) (DVS) (10:31) (PG, ’07) ›› Marmaduke (’10) › Voices of Owen Wilson. Teen Clarence Gumball Uncle King/Hill King/Hill Burgers Burgers Rick Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Pickles Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers truTV Top Funniest truTV Top Funniest truTV Top Funniest truTV Top Funniest truTV Top Funniest World’s Dumbest... FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Raymond Raymond Friends Friends King King King King Cleveland Raymond Little Fockers (’10) › Robert De Niro. Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam 2 Weeks Couples Therapy (S) T.I.-Tiny T.I.-Tiny T.I.-Tiny Atlanta Exes (S) Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop New Jack City (’91) ››› Wesley Snipes.


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Sunday, October 05, 2014 The Daily Herald

MON-FRI DAYTIME Broadcast

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Dear Brigitte (NR, ’65) ››› (CC) Big Mommas: Like Father FXM Pelham 123 White Witch Doctor (5:45) Treasure-Condr The Blue Max (9:15) (’66) ››› George Peppard. The Taking of Pelham 123 (R) ›› FXM Red Tails (’12) ›› (CC) On Sunny Side Freckles (7:15) (’60) ›› Wee Willie Winkie (8:45) ››› Rebecca-Farm Big Miracle (PG, ’12) ››› (CC) Alvin-Chipwrecked FXM Freckles (5:49) Wee Willie Winkie (7:15) ››› Rebecca-Farm Bobbikins (10:25) ›› Alvin-Chipwrecked FXM Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Golden Golden Golden Golden Home & Family Home & Family Little House Little House


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Greedy (’94) ›› Michael J. Fox. Runaway Bride (’99) ›› (CC) Red 2 (’13) ›› Bruce Willis. (CC) The Dukes of Hazzard Les Misérables (1:45) (PG-13, ’12) ››› (S) We A Simple Wish (6:25) ›› Fast & Furious 6 (’13) ›› (CC) Sleeping With the Fishes (10:15) The Case Against 8 (’14) ››› R.I.P.D. (’13) › (CC) Monster Off Air Garfield: Tail Charlie and the Chocolate Factory One Fine Day (PG, ’96) ›› (S) Cheaper by the Dozen 2 The Truth About Cats & Dogs (’96) Crimi The Out List (S) Cinderella Man (7:45) (PG-13, ’05) ››› (S) Dracula Big Momma’s House ›› Ride Along (12:15) (’14) ›› (CC) Leap Year (’10) › (CC) Lone Tristan & Isolde (’06) ›› (CC) Without Limits (8:15) (’98) ››› Supernova (10:15) (’00) › Duma (11:45) (PG, ’05) ››› (S) Monster-in-Law (’05) ›› Dracula Fast 6 Paid Varied Programs Hunters Hunt Varied Programs Engineering Evil Clash of Gods Clash of Gods Clash of Gods Clash of Gods Clash of Gods Clash of Gods Clash of Gods Clash of Gods Clash of Gods Paid Paid Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Paid Larry MysteryQuest MysteryQuest MysteryQuest MysteryQuest MysteryQuest MysteryQuest MysteryQuest MysteryQuest Amer. 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Admission (’13) ›› (CC) Hyde Park on Hudson (6:15) ›› F/X (7:50) (’86) ››› (CC) The Incredible Burt Wonderstone Fight Club (R, ’99) ››› Brad Pitt. (S) (CC) The World’s End (1:50) Devil Halloween H2O Scary Movie (7:45) ››› Gravity (9:15) (’13) ››› (CC) The Place Beyond the Pines ››› For a Good Time, Call... Next of Kin (2:40) ›› The Omen (5:25) (’06) ›› Grandma’s Boy (7:20) › The Sentinel (PG-13, ’06) ›› (S) The Great Gatsby (10:50) (’13) ›› Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (1:15) (’05) ››› Just My Luck (5:45) › Admission (’13) ›› Tina Fey. (CC) Blue Streak (9:20) (’99) › The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (’12) ›› (CC) Fight Club (1:50) (R, ’99) ››› (S) Daily Rundown José Díaz-Balart NewsNation Andrea Mitchell Ronan Farrow The Reid Report The Cycle Alex Wagner The Ed Show PoliticsNation The Dan Patrick Show Sports talk radio. (N) (S Live) Rally America Ra Formula King English Premier League Soccer NASCAR Pro Football Talk (N) The Dan Patrick Show Sports talk radio. 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Nail’d It House “Family” House (S) (CC) My My My My My My My Top Model Top Model Top Model Top Model What Paid Paid Paid Lad Cooker Paid The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) Paid Paid The Dan Patrick Show (N) Paid Paid Paid Wolf Paid Paid The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) Top Cooker The Dan Patrick Show (N) Paid Paid Paid Lad Paid Quest The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) Paid Best The Dan Patrick Show (N) Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) Paid Blower The Dan Patrick Show (N) Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) Paid Paid The Dan Patrick Show (N) As Cool The Big Empty (’03) ›› Rolling Stones: Sweet The Cold Light of Day › Dangerous Minds (11:45) (’95) ›› Quiz Show (PG-13, ’94) ››› (S) Big Homeward Bound Danger Zone (7:45) (’96) ›› (CC) Geraldine Ferraro Double Jeopardy ››› Small Town Saturday Night (12:45) A Case of You (2:25) ›› Legendary (5:30) (’10) › Deep Impact (PG-13, ’98) ›› (S) Dead Poets Society (9:45) (’89) ››› (CC) Scent of a Woman (’92) ››› Al Pacino. The Ghost Writer (2:45) Sellebr Will (’11) Damian Lewis. Swing Kids (8:15) (’93) ›› (CC) Legendary (10:15) (’10) › (CC) Save the Date (12:15) (’12) ›› Around June (’08) (CC) Danger Save Last Dnc Sahara (PG-13, ’05) ›› (S) (CC) Snow Falling on Cedars (9:15) (’99) ›› David Beckham Unknown Election (R, ’99) ››› (S) (CC) Sahara (2:50) Paid Paid Rifles Paid Paid Focus Police Videos Police Videos Police Videos Police Video G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (’09) › Channing Tatum. Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Police Videos Police Videos Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Jail (S) Cops Cops Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Bar Rescue (S) Meet the Parents (’00) ›››, Ben Stiller Meet the Fockers (’04) ›› Robert De Niro. Meet-Parents Paid Paid Paid Rifles Paid Paid Gangland (CC) Gangland (CC) Gangland (CC) Gangland (CC) Gangland (CC) Gangland (CC) Cops Cops As Good as It Dr. Dolittle 2 (’01) ›› Saving Mr. Banks (’13) ››› (CC) Stuart Little 2 (10:40) (’02) Parkland (’13) ›› (CC) The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones ›› Star Oz the Great and Powerful (6:40) (’13) ›› Monsters University (8:55) Pooh’s Heffalump Movie Bounce (11:55) (’00) ››› A Birder’s Guide to Everything Survi Captain Phillips The Mask of Zorro (7:05) (’98) ››› (CC) A.C.O.D. (9:25) (’13) ›› Ronin (10:55) (R, ’98) ›› iTV. 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Dante’s Peak (1:05) (’97) ›› (CC) Hannah Montana Smallville Charmed Charmed Supernatural Supernatural Supernatural Bones Bones Bones Bones Ben 10 Tenkai Poké Teen Teen Gum Gum Looney Tunes Tom & Jerry Tom/ Teen Teen Gum Gum Varied Programs Total Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid World Dumbest World Dumbest Varied Programs Burn Notice (CC) Burn Notice (CC) The Back-up Plan (PG-13, ’10) › NCIS: LA NCIS: LA NCIS: LA NCIS “Twilight” NCIS “Kill Ari” NCIS “Kill Ari” White Collar White Collar Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order House “Half-Wit” House (S) (CC) Drive Angry (R, ’11) ›› NCIS (S) (CC) NCIS (S) (CC) NCIS (S) (CC) NCIS (S) (CC) NCIS “Jet Lag” NCIS (S) (CC) Juno (’07) ››› Ellen Page. CSI: Cri. Scene CSI: Cri. Scene CSI: Cri. Scene CSI: Cri. Scene CSI: Cri. Scene CSI: Cri. Scene CSI: Cri. Scene CSI: Cri. Scene Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order


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Sunday, October 05, 2014 The Daily Herald

Food truck foodies ‘Face Off’ on Food Network Viewers who tuned into last week’s premiere of Food Network’s Thursday competition series “Food Truck Face Off ” were treated to an intense battle between teams of culinary entrepreneurs vying for what could be a career-changing prize, a customized food truck. Host Jesse Palmer, on the other hand, was treated to, well, dinner. “I ate very well this offseason doing the show,” says Palmer, a former pro quarterback whose day job is as a college football analyst for ESPN. “I actually wasn’t allowed to eat any of the food on camera, but off camera I was literally wolfing it and inhaling it down. ... A lot of the food was just delicious. It was great.” Each of the 13 first-season episodes of “Food Truck Face Off ” is a two-tiered competition that took place in various cities across the U.S. and Canada. In the first, four teams present their unique food-truck concepts to a panel of judges that includes TV personality Steak Shapiro, restaurateur Alpana Singh and rotating guest judges. From there, two teams are selected to go head-to-head in an intense two-day competition. The team that earns the most in that time span will win the use of a customized food truck for one year. Some competitors were professionals with culinary training, others home amateurs. And the fare, Palmer indicates, was all over the map, ranging from American and Mexican to Caribbean and Asian, pleasing vegan and meat lovers’ palates. “It would have been very hard to be a judge on a lot of these different episodes,” Palmer says. “It was probably a lot tougher than even the judges had anticipated. They did a phenomenal job casting the show and they found some unbelievable cooks with some real culinary skills from all around the United States and Canada to compete on this show. “So hosting it was the easy part, I can say that,” he says. “Being a judge would have been very, very difficult.” And among the competitors, winning the one-year lease on a customized truck was no small deal, Palmer explains. “There was a lot of emotion that came through on the show,” he says, “way more so than I had anticipated going in and doing it. There were some very heavy moments; there were some amazingly light-hearted moments. But I think getting to share that with these people – they were just very real. “Some of the challenges these teams had to go through were ... very mentally and emotionally strenuous and challenging as well. These teams, especially the ones that won, they really earned it and they put everything on the line. “And I think for me, that was probably the most rewarding thing just as a host sitting back and watching, because it was an incredible competition. It was very well thought out. It was very, very challenging, and I really felt like the teams that won, it’s just really something that’s really going to change their lives.”

marin-ating ...

in TV theme songs

Time to broach two of my favorite topics: television theme songs and uncultured young people. Odds are, if you mention the phrase “Khrushchev’s due at Idlewild” to anyone under the age of 40, they will have no clue what you are talking about. (And, yes, for my purposes, anyone under the age of 40 is a “young people.”) By now, they have long since forgotten the high school history class where they learned Nikita Khrushchev was the Russian president during the Cuban missile crisis back in the early ‘60s. I’ll bet my more “mature” readers instantly recognized the penultimate line from one of the best TV theme songs of all time, “Car 54 Where Are You?” (“There’s a holdup in The Bronx, Brooklyn’s broken out in fights. There’s a traffic jam in Harlem that’s backed up to Jackson Heights. There’s a scout troop short a child ... .”)

Jesse Palmer

BY GEORGE DICKIE

BY MIKE MARIN

Theme songs from the ‘60s and ‘70s were so much more memorable than those of today. If anyone can think of any themes from this century that are half as catchy and popular as “Gilligan’s Island” or “The Beverly Hillbillies,” please let me know. And, forgive me in advance for getting this next one stuck in your head, but can you spy a boy and his dad walking down to the fishing hole without starting to whistle the theme from “The Andy Griffith Show”? Not as well-known, but my favorite theme song ever was “Best Friend” from “The Courtship of Eddie’s Father” starring the late (great) Bill Bixby. That song, by the hugely underappreciated Harry Nilsson, fit perfectly with the charm of that show. (“People let me tell you ‘bout my best friend. He’s a warm-hearted person who’ll love me ‘til the end.”) Oh, in case it has been driving you crazy, Idlewild was the original name of Kennedy Airport in New York.

Bob Denver


The Daily Herald

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Sunday, October 05, 2014 The Daily Herald

MONDAY EVENING Broadcast 2

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CBC Coronat’n Murdoch Mysteries Murdoch Mysteries Strange Empire (CC) The National (N) (CC) News Mercer KOMO 4 News 6:00pm Wheel of Jeopardy! Dancing With the Stars (N Same-day Tape) (S) (CC) Castle (10:01) “Montreal” KOMO 4 Jimmy Kim(N) (CC) Fortune (N) (CC) (N) (S) (CC) News mel Nightly News KING 5 News KING 5 News Evening (N) The Voice “The Blind Auditions, Part 5” The blind audi- The Blacklist “Dr. James KING 5 News Tonight (N) (N) (CC) tions continue. (N) (S) (CC) Covington” (S) (N) Show KIRO News KIRO News KIRO News Evening EntertainThe Insider Big Bang Big Bang Scorpion “A Cyclone” (N) NCIS: Los Angeles (9:59) KIRO News Letterman News ment Ton. (N) (S) Theory Theory (S) (CC) (N) (CC) (DVS) News News News Hour (5:59) (N) Ent ET NCIS: Los Angeles Sleepy Hollow (N) (S) The Blacklist (N) (CC) News Hour Final (N) World News Nightly Busi- PBS NewsHour (N) (S) Joe Bonamassa: Tour de Force - Live in Tommy Emmanuel and Friends: Live John Sebastian Presents: Folk Rewind (My Music) Artness (CC) London (S) (CC) From the Balboa Theatre ists of the 1950s and ’60s. (CC) CityLine (CC) Murdoch Mysteries Mod Fam Mod Fam Broke Girl Mom (CC) Scorpion (N) (S) (CC) Broke Girl Two Men EP Daily Reviews King of King of Family Feud Family Feud Mike & Molly Mike & Molly The Originals “Rebirth” Supernatural (N) (S) (CC) Seinfeld (S) Seinfeld (S) Raising Hope Hot in CleveQueens Queens (N) (CC) (CC) (CC) (S) (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) land Emergency! CHiPs M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Griffith Griffith Heroes Gilligan Newhart Newhart Cheers P. Mason Q It Up Q13 FOX Name Game Modern Big Bang Big Bang Gotham A vigilante targets Sleepy Hollow “Root of All Q13 FOX News at 10 (N) Q13 FOX Modern Sports News at 5 Family (S) Theory Theory the corrupt. Evil” (N) (S) (CC) News at Family (S) NFL Football (5:15) Seattle Seahawks at Washington Redskins. (N) (Live) Quarter KING 5 News at 9 (N) KING 5 News at 10 The Dr. Oz Show (S) Trinity K. Shook Franklin Duplantis Love’s Abiding Joy (’06) ›› Praise J. Osteen P. Stone Jerry Dir Creflo D. Kroeze DonHow I Met How I Met Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Simpsons Simpsons Two Men Two Men Q13 FOX News at 9 Friends Friends Anger Anger Gold Night Out Gold Night Out Tiffany Style Tiffany Style Rodial Luxury Rodial Luxury The Best of ShopHQ Wild Kratt Wild Kratt Travel Islands Masterpiece Classic Masterpiece Mystery! (S) (CC) Sherlock Holmes Steves NOVA (S) (CC) (DVS) CTV News at Five (N) CTV News (N) (CC) etalk (N) Big Bang Gotham (N) (S) Forever (N) (S) (CC) Castle (10:01) (N) (S) News News Flashpoint “Terror” Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Blue Bloods (S) (CC) Blue Bloods (S) (CC) CBC News KOMO 4 World News News KING 5 News (N) (CC)

The First 48 (S) (CC) The First 48 (S) (CC) The First 48 (S) (CC) The First 48 (S) (CC) The First 48 Challenging cases recalled. (S) Dead Again (10:01) The First 48 (11:02) School of Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life (PG-13, ’03) ›› Angelina The Walking Dead “Days Gone Bye” Rick The Walking Dead Trapped The Walking Dead “Tell It The Walking Dead “Vatos” The Walking Rock Jolie, Gerard Butler, Ciarán Hinds. emerges from a coma. by walkers. to the Frogs” (CC) Dead Gator Boys (S) (CC) To Be Announced Gator Boys (S) (CC) Rattlesnake North Woods Gator Boys (S) (CC) Prince Prince 106 & Park (N) (CC) The Real (N) (S) (CC) Menace II Society (R, ’93) ››› Tyrin Turner. (CC) Cradle 2 the Grave (R, ’03) ›› Jet Li, DMX. (CC) Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ TBA TBA Manzo’d Manzo’d Happens Jersey Coca-Cola Shark Tank (S) (CC) Shark Tank (S) (CC) The Profit The Profit Restaurant Startup Restaurant Startup Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Erin Burnett OutFront Anderson Cooper 360 (N) (CC) CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper CNNI Simulcast CNNI Simulcast CNNI Simulcast Key Key Futurama Futurama Colbert Daily South Pk Tosh.0 Futurama Futurama South Pk South Pk South Park (CC) Daily Colbert Capitol Hill Hearings Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Capitol Hill Hearings Fast N’ Loud (S) (CC) Fast N’ Loud (S) (CC) Fast N’ Loud (S) (CC) Fast N’ Loud (S) (CC) Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud: Demo Highway to Sell (N) Fast N’ Loud: Demo Good Good Good Good Austin Austin Jessie (S) Austin Girl vs. Monster (’12) ›› (S) Jessie (S) Wolfblood Jessie (S) Vampire Vampire The Profes- Alien (4:20) (R, ’79) ›››› Tom Skerritt, Sigourney Final Destination (6:20) (R, ’00) ›› Gone in Sixty Seconds (PG-13, ’00) › Nicolas Cage, Big Trouble in Little China (PG-13, ’86) Underworld sional Weaver, John Hurt. iTV. (S) (CC) Devon Sawa. iTV. (S) (CC) Angelina Jolie. (S) (CC) ›› Kurt Russell. (S) Monday Night NFL Football (5:15) Seattle Seahawks at Washington Redskins. (Live) SportsCenter (8:20) (N) (CC) NFL PrimeTime (CC) SportsCenter (N) Around Pardon World of X Games World/Poker World/Poker Football Final Baseball Tonight (N) SportsCenter (N) E:60 (N) Boy... Boy... Matilda (PG, ’96) ››› Mara Wilson. Hop (’11) ›› Voices of James Marsden. Ella Enchanted (’04) ›› Anne Hathaway. The 700 Club (CC) The Magdalene Sisters (3) Veronica Guerin (R, ’03) ›› Cate In the Name of the Father (6:45) (R, ’93) ››› Daniel Day-Lewis, Pete The Color of Money (R, ’86) ››› Paul Newman, Tom Breaking the Waves (R, (’02) ››› Blanchett. (S) (CC) Postlethwaite. (S) (CC) Cruise. (S) (CC) ’96) ››› (S) Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File Hannity Greta Van Susteren Contessa Contessa Pioneer Farm Diners Diners Guy’s Games Rewrap. Rewrap. My. Din My. Din Restaurant: Im. Restaurant: Im. How I Met Two Men Two Men The Twilight Saga: Eclipse (’10) ›› Kristen Stewart. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 (’11) ›› Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Big Mommas FXM PresWhat Happens in Vegas (PG-13, ’08) › Cameron Diaz, What Happens in Vegas (PG-13, ’08) › Cameron Diaz, Post Grad (PG-13, ’09) ›› Alexis Bledel, Zach Gilford, Post Grad (’09) ›› Alexis ents Ashton Kutcher. (CC) Ashton Kutcher. (CC) Rodrigo Santoro. (CC) Bledel. (CC) Little House/Prairie The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) Middle Middle Middle Middle Gold Girls Gold Girls Les MiThe East (PG-13, ’13) ››› Brit Marling, Alexander Last Week Red 2 (’13) ›› Bruce Willis. Retired operatives return Hunted: War Against Gays Bill Maher: Live From D.C. Boardwalk Empire “King of sérables Skarsgrd, Ellen Page. (S) (CC) To. to retrieve a lethal device. (CC) (S) (CC) Norway” (S) Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (N) Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It (CC) The Dark Ages Charlemagne. (S) (CC) Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Wife Swap (S) (CC) Wife Swap (S) (CC) Accused at 17 (NR, ’09) ››› Cynthia Gibb, Nicole Gale Stalked at 17 (NR, ’12) Taylor Spreitler, Chuck HitGuilty at 17 (’14) Erin Sanders. A teen lies to support a Anderson. (CC) tinger, Jamie Luner. (CC) friend’s claim of sexual assault. Admission The Ringer (4:20) (PG-13, ’05) ›› Johnny The Heat (R, ’13) ›› Sandra Bullock, Melissa McCar- The Knick “Working Late a Transporter 2 (PG-13, ’05) ›› Jason Sta- Oblivion (PG-13, ’13) ›› Tom Cruise, (2:30) Knoxville. (S) (CC) thy, Demián Bichir. (S) (CC) Lot” (S) (CC) tham. (S) (CC) Olga Kurylenko. (S) (CC) Hardball Matthews All In With Chris Rachel Maddow The Last Word All In With Chris Rachel Maddow The Last Word Hardball Matthews Are You the One? (S) Are You the One? (S) Are You the One? (S) Are You the One? (S) Are You the One? (S) Teen Mom 2 (N) (S) Are You the One? (S) Are You Are You Onward Notre Formula One Racing Japanese Grand Prix. Blazers Premier League Premier Blazers English Premier League Soccer (Taped) (S) Premier Parents Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Henry iCarly (S) Thunder Max Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends What a Girl Wants (3) (’03) › What a Girl Wants (5:40) (PG, ’03) › Amanda Bynes, Colin Firth. Magic Mike (8:20) (R, ’12) ››› Channing Tatum. Magic Mike (10:55) Seahawks College Football Iowa State at Oklahoma State. High School Football Glacier Peak at Bellevue. MLS: Sounders at Rapids The Big Empty (3:45) (R, ’03) ›› Jon Cocaine Cowboys (5:25) (R, ’06) ››› Drug lords invade 1980s MiHomeland “The Drone Queen; Trylon and Perisphere” Homeland “The Drone Queen; Trylon and Perisphere” Favreau. (S) (CC) ami. (S) (CC) Carrie makes a critical decision. Carrie makes a critical decision. Transporter 3 (PG-13, ’08) ›› Jason Statham. (S) The Expendables (NR, ’10) ›› Sylvester Stallone. (S) The Expendables (NR, ’10) ›› Sylvester Stallone. (S) Transport I Spy (3:55) (PG-13, ’02) ›› Eddie Mur- Monsters University (5:35) (G, ’13) ››› Voices of Billy Dr. Dolittle 2 (7:25) (PG, ’01) ›› Eddie Welcome to Mooseport (PG-13, ’04) ›› Gene HackA Birder’s Guide to Everyphy. (S) (CC) Crystal. (S) (CC) Murphy. iTV. (S) (CC) man. iTV Premiere. (S) (CC) thing (10:55) Psychosis (3) (R) ›› House of Bones (NR, ’09) Shutter (PG-13, ’08) › Joshua Jackson. Dead Still (NR, ’14) Ben Browder. Premiere. My Soul to Take › Friends Friends MLB MLB Baseball (N) (Live) MLB Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan (CC) In Name Only (3) (NR, ’39) The Cartoons of Winsor McCay 100th Anniversary of Bray Productions Animation From Van The Adventures of Prince Achmed (9:15) Gulliver’s Travels (NR, ’39) ››› Voices ››› (CC) (6:45) Beuren Studios (NR, ’25) ›› of Lanny Ross. Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Little People, World Breaking Amish (CC) Breaking Amish (CC) Breaking Amish (CC) Breaking Amish (CC) The Boys (3) Gucci: The Director (NR, ’13) ››› (S) The Impossible (PG-13, ’12) ››› Naomi Watts, Ewan Don’t Be a Menace to South Central What’s the Worst That Could Happen? Nature Calls (11:10) (R, ››› (CC) McGregor. (S) (CC) While Drinking (’01) › (CC) ’12) › (S) (CC) Castle “Recoil” (S) (CC) Castle “Reality Star Castle A kidnapping plot is Castle A relationship Castle “Disciple” (S) (CC) Castle (9:01) (S) (CC) Major Crimes (10:02) “Per- Law & Order (11:03) “Posi(DVS) Struck” (CC) (DVS) revealed. therapist is murdered. (DVS) (DVS) sonal Day” (CC) tive” (CC) (DVS) Total Dra. Gumball Gumball Teen Teen Clarence Gumball Regular King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland American Rick Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Tow Tow Tow Tow Most Shocking Most Shocking Most Shocking Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Hillbillies Hillbillies FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Soul Man The Exes Cleveland Friends Friends King King King King Raymond Raymond NCIS “Mind Games” NCIS “Silver War” (S) NCIS “Switch” (CC) NCIS (S) (CC) WWE Monday Night RAW (N Same-day Tape) (S) (CC) Faster (11:05) (R) ›› Behind the Music (S) Behind the Music (S) Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop T.I.-Tiny T.I.-Tiny Love & Hip Hop T.I.-Tiny T.I.-Tiny


The Daily Herald

TUESDAY EVENING

Sports Movies Broadcast 2

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Murdoch Mysteries Mercer 22 Min Honourable Woman Wheel of Jeopardy! Selfie (N) (S) Manhattan Marvel’s Agents of Fortune (N) (CC) Lov S.H.I.E.L.D. (N) (CC) KING 5 News Evening (N) The Voice “The Best of the Blind Auditions” A recap of (N) (CC) the blind auditions. (N) (S) (CC) EntertainThe Insider NCIS Ducky and Bishop go NCIS: New Orleans “Breakment Ton. (N) (S) to London. ing Brig” (N) Ent ET NCIS “So It Goes” NCIS: New Orleans Food ForR. Steves’ Finding Your Roots-Henry Makers “Women in Holward (N) Europe Louis Gates lywood” (N) (CC) Mod Fam Mod Fam Utopia (N) (S) (CC) New Girl Mindy Mike & Molly Mike & Molly The Flash “City of Heroes” Supernatural (9:03) (CC) (CC) (S) (CC) “Black” (S) (CC) M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Griffith Griffith Heroes Gilligan Big Bang Big Bang Utopia The pioneers con- New Girl Mindy ProjTheory Theory tinue their work. “Micro” ect Inside Ed. Access H. Dr. Phil (S) (CC) KING 5 News at 9 (N) Praise the Lord (N) (Live) (CC) Clement Blessed Simpsons Simpsons Two Men Two Men Q13 FOX News at 9 Diamond Gala Rodial Luxury Madi, Handbags Penguins: Spy NOVA (S) (CC) (DVS) Globe Trekker (S) etalk (N) Big Bang The Flash (S) (CC) S.H.I.E.L.D. Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (S) Criminal Minds (S)

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The National (N) (CC) Forever Memories torment Henry. (N) (S) Chicago Fire “Just Drive the Truck” (N) Person of Interest (10:01) “Wingman” Chicago Fire (N) (S) Frontline Arson conviction. (N) (S) Broke Girl Two Men Seinfeld Seinfeld (S) (10:02) (S) (CC) Taxi (CC) Taxi (CC) Q13 FOX News at 10 (N) (CC) KING 5 News at 10 ACLJ Creflo D. Friends Friends Madi, Handbags Red... Red... Person of Interest (S) Criminal Minds (S)

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News Hour Final (N) SciTech Now The Mind of a Chef EP Daily Reviews Raising Hope Hot in Cleve(CC) land Cheers PerryMsn Q13 FOX Modern News at Family (S) The Dr. Oz Show (S) Acts, God Reading Anger Anger The Best of ShopHQ Antiques Roadshow News News The Listener (N) (S)

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The First 48 (S) (CC) Dead Again (S) (CC) Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Donnie Brasco (R, ’97) ››› Al Pacino, Johnny Depp. A mob lackey unknowingly The Walking Dead “Blood- The Walking Dead “Save The Walking Dead “Chero- 4th and Loud (N) 4th and Loud (11:02) takes an FBI agent under his wing. (CC) letting” (CC) the Last One” kee Rose” Gator Boys (S) (CC) Frozen Planet (CC) Frozen Planet (CC) Wild Russia (S) (CC) Wild Russia (S) (CC) Madagascar (S) (CC) Wild Russia (S) (CC) Prince Prince 106 & Park (N) (CC) The Real (N) (S) (CC) Husbands White Chicks (PG-13, ’04) ›› Shawn Wayans. (CC) Husbands- Ho. Husbands- Ho. Manzo’d Manzo’d Below Deck Below Deck Below Deck Below Deck Below Deck (N) The People’s Couch Happens Below The Profit Shark Tank (S) (CC) Shark Tank (S) (CC) The Profit Shark Tank (S) (CC) Shark Tank (S) (CC) The Profit Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Erin Burnett OutFront Anderson Cooper CNN Special Report CNN Tonight (N) Anderson Cooper CNN Special Report CNNI Simulcast CNNI Simulcast Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Colbert Daily South Pk Tosh.0 Chappelle Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 (N) Brickle. Daily Colbert Capitol Hill Hearings Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Capitol Hill Hearings Last Frontier Yukon Men (S) (CC) Yukon Men (S) (CC) Yukon Men (S) (CC) Yukon Men Yukon Men (N) (CC) Rebels: Deep Freeze Yukon Men (S) (CC) Jessie (S) Jessie (S) Jessie (S) Jessie (S) Girl Meets Girl Meets Jessie (S) Austin My Babysitter’s a Vampire ›› Star Wars Rebels Wolfblood Vampire Vampire High School At Any Price (R, ’12) ››› Dennis Quaid, Zac Efron, Driving Miss Daisy (6:20) (’89) ›››› Herbie: Fully Loaded (G, ’05) ›› Lindsay High School High (9:45) (PG-13, ’96) ›› Robin Hood: Men in Tights Kim Dickens. iTV. (S) (CC) Morgan Freeman. (CC) Lohan. iTV. (S) (CC) Jon Lovitz. iTV. (S) (11:15) ›› SportsCenter (3) (N) E:60 (N) 30 for 30 (N) SportsCenter (7:43) (N) (CC) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) NFL Live (N) (CC) NFL Rank World/Poker World/Poker 30 for 30 (N) Baseball Tonight (N) NFL Live (CC) NFL Rank 30 for 30 Boy... Boy... Boy... Boy... Boy... Ella Enchanted (’04) ›› Anne Hathaway. Miss Congeniality (PG-13, ’00) ›› Sandra Bullock. The 700 Club (CC) Mad Hot Ballroom (3:10) Three Men and a Baby (’87) ››› Tom Three Men and a Little Lady (6:45) (PG, ’90) ›› Tom The Producers (PG-13, ’05) ›› Nathan Lane, Matthew Bully (10:45) (R, ’01) ››› Brad Renfro, (’05) ››› (CC) Selleck. (CC) Selleck, Ted Danson. (S) (CC) Broderick. (S) (CC) Rachel Miner. (S) (CC) Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File Hannity Greta Van Susteren Contessa Contessa Pioneer Trisha’s Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Two Men Two Men Mike Mike Mike Mike Snow White and the Huntsman (PG-13, ’12) ›› Kristen Stewart. Sons of Anarchy Anarchy Pelham 123 FXM PresTakers (’10) ›› Matt Dillon. Skilled thieves plan the FXM PresTakers (’10) ›› Matt Dillon. Skilled thieves plan the FXM PresRed Tails (PG-13, ’12) ›› Cuba Gooding Jr., Terrence ents biggest heist of their careers. (CC) ents biggest heist of their careers. (CC) ents Howard, Nate Parker. (CC) Little House/Prairie The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) Middle Middle Middle Middle Gold Girls Gold Girls Monster-in-Law (3:45) (PG-13, ’05) ›› Real Time With Bill Maher State of Play Parenting in Fight Game The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (PG-13, ’13) ››› Ian McKel- Dracula Boardwalk Empire “King of Jennifer Lopez. (S) (S) (CC) youth sports. len, Martin Freeman. (S) (CC) Untold Norway” (S) Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Jennie Jennie Hunters Hunt Intl Flip or Flip or Modern Marvels (CC) Modern Marvels (CC) Modern Marvels (CC) Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Top Gear (N) (S) (CC) Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Top Gear (11:03) (S) Celebrity Wife Swap (S) Celebrity Wife Swap (S) Dance Moms “45 Second Dance Moms (Part 1 of Dance Moms: Abby’s Stu- Dance Moms (Season Fi- Kim of Queens (N) (CC) Kim of Queens (11:01) (CC) (CC) (CC) Solos” (CC) 2) (CC) dio Rescue (N) nale) (N) (CC) The Devil’s Advocate (3:40) (R, ’97) ›› Keanu Reeves, Girl, Interrupted (6:05) (R, ’99) ›› Winona Ryder, An- The Legend of Hercules (8:15) (PG-13, ’14) › Kellan The Knick “Working Late a The Hobbit: An UnexpectAl Pacino. (S) (CC) gelina Jolie, Clea DuVall. (S) (CC) Lutz, Scott Adkins. (S) (CC) Lot” (S) (CC) ed Journey ›› Hardball Matthews All In With Chris Rachel Maddow The Last Word All In With Chris Rachel Maddow The Last Word Hardball Matthews Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out Girl Code Girl Code Girl Code Are You the One? (S) Happy Faking It Awkward. Awkward. Faking It Happy Awkward. NHL Top NHL Top NHL Season Preview NHL Top NHL Top NHL Top NHL Top NHL Season Preview English Premier League Soccer (Taped) (S) Premier League Parents Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Nicky iCarly (S) Thunder Max Nick Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends Bad Girls Bad Girls Club Magic Mike (R, ’12) ››› Channing Tatum. BGC: Redemption Nail’d It “Nail Pride” Nail’d It “Nail Pride” BGC: Redemption UEFA Champions League Soccer Skiing Sports Unlimited Planet X Planet X Auto Racing College Football David Bowie: Five Years Double Jeopardy (R, ’99) ››› Tommy Lee Jones, Ash- Homeland “The Drone Queen; Trylon and Perisphere” Inside the NFL (N) (S) (CC) 60 Minutes Sports (N) (S) Inside the NFL (S) (CC) (S) (CC) ley Judd, Bruce Greenwood. (S) Carrie makes a critical decision. (CC) Ink Master (S) (CC) Ink Master (S) (CC) Ink Master (S) (CC) Ink Master (S) (CC) Ink Master (S) (CC) Ink Master (S) (CC) Ink Master (N) (CC) Tat; Mi Tat; Mi Welcome to Mooseport (3:55) (PG-13, ’04) ›› Gene Unbreakable (5:50) (PG-13, ’00) ›› Bounce (7:40) (PG-13, ’00) ››› Gwyneth Paltrow, Ben Survivor’s Ronin (10:05) (R, ’98) ›› Robert De Niro, Jean Reno. Hackman. iTV. (S) (CC) Bruce Willis. (S) (CC) Affleck. iTV. (S) (CC) Remorse iTV. (S) (CC) Face Off (CC) Face Off Face Off Face Off Face Off Face Off (N) Town Town Face Off Friends Friends Friends Friends Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (CC) A Kiss Before Dying (3:15) In the Cool of the Day (NR, ’63) ›› Jane Network (6:45) (R, ’76) ›››› Faye Dunaway. A TV station will air Far From the Madding Crowd (GP, ’67) ›››› Julie Christie, Peter Finch. A 19th(NR, ’56) ››› Fonda. (CC) almost anything for big ratings. century British farm girl has three choices in love. Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids-Count 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids Preaching Alabama 19 Kids 19 Kids Hannah Broadway Idiot: Green Day on Broadway Silver Linings Playbook (5:55) (R, ’12) ››› Bradley Sinister (R, ’12) ›› Ethan Hawke, Vincent D’Onofrio, City of God (R, ’02) ››› Matheus Nachtergaele. PreMontana (’13) ›› (CC) Cooper. (S) (CC) James Ransone. (S) (CC) miere. (Subtitled) (S) (CC) Supernatural (S) (CC) Supernatural (S) (CC) Supernatural (S) (CC) Supernatural (S) (CC) Rizzoli & Isles Jane’s father Rizzoli & Isles (9:01) “Food Rizzoli & Isles (10:02) (CC) CSI: NY (11:03) “Identity returns. (CC) for Thought” Crisis” (CC) Total Dra. Gumball Gumball Teen Teen Clarence Gumball Regular King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Most Shocking Most Shocking Most Shocking Most Shocking Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Carbon Carbon Tow Tow Hillbillies Hillbillies FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Soul Man The Exes Cleveland Friends Friends The King of Queens King King King Raymond Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Love & Hip Hop Booty Call (R, ’97) ›› Jamie Foxx. (S) T.I.-Tiny T.I.-Tiny Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop Malibu’s Most Wanted (PG-13, ’03) ›› (S)


14

Sunday, October 05, 2014 The Daily Herald

WEDNESDAY EVENING Broadcast 2

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Judge Judy Judge Judy (CC) (N) Young & Restless Masterpiece Classic (S) (CC) FamFeud FamFeud Hot Bench Hot Bench (N) (N) Adam-12 Adam-12 Q13 FOX News at 4 (3:58) (N) (S) (CC) The Dr. Oz Show (S) Graham Classic Raymond Raymond Mark Cuban Arthur Martha The Dr. Oz Show (S) Rookie Blue (S) (CC)

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CBC Coronat’n KOMO 4 News 6:00pm (N) (CC) Nightly News KING 5 News (N) KIRO News KIRO News KIRO News Evening News News News News Hour (5:59) (N) World News Nightly Busi- PBS NewsHour (N) (S) ness (CC) CityLine (CC) Murdoch Mysteries King of King of Family Feud Family Feud Queens Queens (N) (CC) Emergency! “Crash” CHiPs “High Flyer” Q13 FOX News at 5 (N) Name Game Modern (CC) Family (S) Rachael Ray (N) (CC) Extra (N) OK! TV Trinity Turning Prince By Faith How I Met How I Met Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Elume Jewelry Madi, Handbags Wild Kratt Wild Kratt Food Food CTV News at Five (N) CTV News (N) (CC) Rookie Blue (S) (CC) Cold Case “Wings”

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Dragons’ Den (CC) The Middle The Gold(N) (S) bergs (N) The Mysteries of Laura (N) (S) (CC) Survivor “Actions vs. Accusations” (N) (CC) Survivor (N) (S) (CC) Penguins: Spy in the Huddle, A Nature Mod Fam Mod Fam Hell’s Kitchen (N) Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Arrow Oliver and Roy take (CC) (CC) on the Count. M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Griffith Griffith Big Bang Big Bang Hell’s Kitchen “13 Chefs Theory Theory Compete” (N) Inside Ed. Access H. Dr. Phil (S) (CC) Praise the Lord (N) (Live) (CC) Simpsons Simpsons Two Men Two Men Madi, Handbags Mark Cuban Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow etalk (N) Big Bang Arrow “The Calm” Cold Case (S) (CC) Cold Case (S) (CC) Murdoch Mysteries Wheel of Jeopardy! Fortune (N) (CC) KING 5 News Evening (N) (N) (CC) EntertainThe Insider ment Ton. (N) (S) Ent ET Easy Yoga for Arthritis

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Republic of Doyle (S) Modern blackish Family (N) (9:31) (N) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (N) (S) Criminal Minds “Burn” (N) (S) Chicago PD (N) (S) NOVA Malaysian Airlines jet disappears. Mod Fam blackish The Flash “City of Heroes” (S) (CC) Heroes Gilligan Red Band Society (N) (S) (CC) (DVS) KING 5 News at 9 (N) Good Duplantis Q13 FOX News at 9 Cook’s Cast Iron Lark Rise-Candleford Criminal Minds (N) Cold Case (S) (CC)

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The National (N) (CC) Nashville Rayna sets a wedding date. (N) Chicago PD “The Weigh Station” (N) Stalker (N) (S) (CC)

News KOMO 4 News KING 5 News (N) KIRO News

Stalker (N) (S) (CC) NOVA Treating and curing Ebola victims. Broke Girl Two Men Seinfeld (S) Seinfeld (S) (CC) (CC) F Troop F Troop Q13 FOX News at 10 (N) (CC) KING 5 News at 10 Harvest Creflo D. Friends Friends Around the Kitchen Call the Midwife (CC) Law & Order: SVU Cold Case (S) (CC)

News Hour Final (N) Chasing Churchill: My Grandfather EP Daily Reviews Raising Hope Hot in Cleve(CC) land Cheers PerryMsn Q13 FOX Modern News at Family (S) The Dr. Oz Show (S) Praise the Lord Anger Anger The Best of ShopHQ Last Tango in Halifax News News Cold Case “Jackals”

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Mercer Jimmy Kimmel Tonight Show Letterman

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The First 48 (S) (CC) The First 48 (S) (CC) Storage Storage Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck Duck Wahlburgr Epic Ink Duck D. Duck D. Van Helsing (PG-13, ’04) ›› Hugh Jackman, Kate Beckinsale. A monster-hunter The Walking Dead (CC) The Walking Dead “NeThe Walking Dead (9:04) The Walking Dead (10:04) The Walking Dead (11:04) battles creatures in Transylvania. (CC) braska” (CC) “Triggerfinger” (CC) (CC) Dirty Jobs (S) (CC) Dirty Jobs (S) (CC) Dirty Jobs (S) (CC) Dirty Jobs (S) (CC) Dirty Jobs (S) (CC) Dirty Jobs (S) (CC) Gator Boys (N) (CC) Dirty Jobs (S) (CC) Prince Prince 106 & Park (N) (CC) The Real (N) (S) (CC) Johnson Family Vacation (PG-13, ’04) ›› (CC) Like Mike (PG, ’02) ›› Lil’ Bow Wow. (CC) The People’s Couch Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Top Chef Duels Happens Top Chef American Greed Shark Tank (S) (CC) Shark Tank (S) (CC) The Filthy The Filthy Shark Tank (S) (CC) Shark Tank (S) (CC) The Filthy The Filthy Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Erin Burnett OutFront Anderson Cooper Somebody’s CNN Tonight (N) Anderson Cooper Somebody’s CNNI Simulcast CNNI Simulcast South Pk South Pk Futurama Futurama Colbert Daily South Pk Tosh.0 Key South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Key Daily Colbert Capitol Hill Hearings Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Capitol Hill Hearings Dual Survival (S) (CC) Dual Survival (S) (CC) Dual Survival (S) (CC) Dual Survival (S) (CC) Dude--Screwed Dude--Screwed Dude--Screwed Dude--Screwed I Didn’t I Didn’t I Didn’t I Didn’t Dog Dog Jessie (S) Austin The Little Vampire (’00) ›› Mickey Wolfblood Jessie (S) Vampire Vampire Raw Deal (’86) ›› Arnold Schwarzenegger. Ex-FBI In the Line of Fire (5:50) (R, ’93) ››› Clint Eastwood, My Cousin Vinny (R, ’92) ››› Joe Pesci, Marisa ToAlien (R, ’79) ›››› Tom Skerritt, Sigourney Weaver, agent wipes out Chicago mob. (CC) John Malkovich. iTV. (S) (CC) mei, Ralph Macchio. iTV. (S) (CC) John Hurt. iTV. (S) (CC) Heritage Mon 2014 CrossFit Games 2014 CrossFit Games 2014 CrossFit Games SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) NFL Live (N) (CC) Boxing Sam Soliman vs. Jermain Taylor. (N) Karate Baseball Tonight (N) NFL Live (CC) World/Poker Boy... Boy... Boy... Boy... Boy... Miss Congeniality (PG-13, ’00) ›› Sandra Bullock. Zookeeper (PG, ’11) › Kevin James. The 700 Club (CC) Amélie (2:55) (’01) ››› Gosford Park (R, ’01) ››› Eileen Atkins, Alan Bates. A murder oc- Billy Bathgate (R, ’91) ››› Dustin Hoffman, Nicole Medicine Man (PG-13, ’92) ›› Sean Connery, Lorraine No Way Audrey Tautou. curs at a hunting party in England. (S) (CC) Kidman, Loren Dean. (S) (CC) Bracco, José Wilker. (S) (CC) Home ›› Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File Hannity Greta Van Susteren Contessa Contessa Pioneer Southern Diners Diners Beat Flay Beat Flay Chopped (N) Cutthroat Kitchen (N) Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Anger Two Men Two Men Mike Mike Mike Mike Men in Black 3 (PG-13, ’12) ›› Will Smith. Premiere. American Horror Story Horror Red Tails (2:30) (PG-13, XXX (PG-13, ’02) ›› Danny Trejo, Vin Diesel. A spy tries to stop an XXX (PG-13, ’02) ›› Danny Trejo, Vin Diesel. A spy tries to stop an Big Miracle (PG, ’12) ››› John Krasinski, Drew Bar’12) ›› (CC) anarchist with weapons. (CC) anarchist with weapons. (CC) rymore, Kristen Bell. (CC) Little House/Prairie The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) Middle Middle Middle Middle Gold Girls Gold Girls The 50 Year Argument (NR, ’14) ››› The Man in the Iron Mask (5:45) (PG-13, ’98) ›› Leonardo DiCaprio, Boardwalk Empire “King of The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (PG, ’13) ›› Ben Real Time With Bill Maher (S) (CC) Jeremy Irons. (S) (CC) Norway” (S) Stiller, Kristen Wiig. (S) (CC) (S) (CC) Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Buying and Selling Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) Celebrity Wife Swap (S) Celebrity Wife Swap (S) Celebrity Wife Swap (S) Celebrity Wife Swap (S) The Brittany Murphy Story (NR, ’14) Amanda Fuller, Girlfriend Intervention Girlfriend Intervention (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) Sherilyn Fenn. (CC) (N) (CC) (11:01) (CC) Next of Kin Changeling (R, ’08) ››› Angelina Jolie. A woman insists that anThe Counselor (R, ’13) ›› Michael Fassbender, Pené- The Knick “Working Late a Gravity (PG-13, ’13) ››› Sandra BullEve’s Secret (2:40) other boy has replaced her son. (S) (CC) lope Cruz. (S) (CC) Lot” (S) (CC) ock. (S) (CC) (’14) Hardball Matthews All In With Chris Rachel Maddow The Last Word All In With Chris Rachel Maddow The Last Word Hardball Matthews Catfish: The TV Awkward. Faking It Faking It Happy Teen Mom 2 (S) Teen Mom 2 (S) Teen Mom 2 (S) Teen Mom 2 (N) Girl Code Girl Code NHL Live NHL Hockey Philadelphia Flyers at Boston Bruins. (N) NHL Hockey San Jose Sharks at Los Angeles Kings. NHL NFL Turning Point NFL Turning Point Parents Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Henry iCarly (S) Thunder Max Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends Preachers of L.A. Preachers of L.A. Preachers of L.A. Fat Albert (’04) ›› Kenan Thompson. Preachers of L.A. Preachers of L.A. (N) Preachers of L.A. Auto Racing Snowboarding Seahawks Fame Bensinger MLS: Earthquakes at Timbers Mariners Seahawks Seahawks MLS: Earthquakes at The Ghost Writer (2:45) Deep Impact (PG-13, ’98) ›› Robert Duvall, Tea Leoni, Alex Cross (7:15) (’12) › Tyler Perry. A serial killer Homeland “The Drone Queen; Trylon and Perisphere” Inside the NFL (S) (CC) (’10) ››› (CC) Elijah Wood. (S) (CC) pushes Cross to the edge. (CC) Carrie makes a critical decision. Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) iMPACT Wrestling (N) (S) (CC) Ink Master (S) (CC) Independence Day (3:15) (PG-13, ’96) A.C.O.D. (8:35) (R, ’13) ›› Adam Scott. Survivor’s White House Down (10:45) (’13) ›› Captain Phillips (5:40) (’13) ››› Tom Hanks. Somali pirates storm a Survivor’s U.S. containership and take hostages. Remorse iTV. (S) (CC) Remorse Channing Tatum. (CC) ››› Will Smith. (S) Ghost Hunters (CC) Ghost Hunters (CC) Ghost Hunters (CC) Ghost Hunters (CC) Ghost Hunters (CC) Ghost Hunters (CC) Ghost Hunters (CC) Ghost Hunters (CC) Friends Friends MLB MLB Baseball (N) (Live) MLB Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan (CC) Daredevil Drivers (3:45) Angels in the Outfield (NR, ’51) ››› Paul Douglas, Bye Bye Birdie (G, ’63) ››› Dick Van Dyke, Janet Holiday Affair (NR, ’49) ››› Robert My Sister Eileen (10:45) (NR, ’55) ›› (NR, ’38) › Janet Leigh. (CC) (DVS) Leigh, Ann-Margret. (CC) Mitchum. (CC) Janet Leigh. (CC) Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Extreme Extreme 911 911 Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme 911 911 Extreme Extreme Fatal Instinct Sunset Strip (4:40) (’12) Hollywood’s Sunset Boulevard Step Up Revolution (6:20) (PG-13, ’12) Dick (PG-13, ’99) ››› Kirsten Dunst. Prozac Nation (9:35) (R, ’01) ›› Chris- Take This Waltz (11:10) (3) is famous for its night life. (CC) ›› Ryan Guzman. (S) Premiere. (S) (CC) tina Ricci. Premiere. (S) (’11) ››› Bones “The Body and the Bones A dancer’s skull is Transformers (PG-13, ’07) ››› Shia LaBeouf, Tyrese Gibson, Josh Duhamel. Two Legends Sonya and Aiden Legends (10:01) “Identity” Legends (11:02) “WilderBounty” (CC) discovered. races of robots wage war on Earth. (CC) (DVS) are kidnapped. (CC) ness of Mirrors” Total Dra. Gumball Gumball Teen Teen Clarence Gumball Regular King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Hillbillies Hillbillies FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Soul Man The Exes Cleveland Friends Friends The King of Queens King King King Raymond NCIS “Borderland” NCIS “Patriot Down” NCIS (S) (CC) NCIS (S) (CC) NCIS “Alibi” (S) NCIS “Gut Check” NCIS “Devil’s Triad” NCIS “Identity Crisis” The Greatest... (S) The Greatest... (S) Malibu’s Most Wanted (PG-13, ’03) ›› (S) Couples Therapy (S) Couples Therapy (N) N. Carter Couples Therapy (S) N. Carter


The Daily Herald

THURSDAY EVENING

Sports Movies Broadcast 2

CBUT

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Dragons’ Den (CC) KOMO 4 News 4:00pm (N) (CC) KING 5 News (N) (CC) News

NFL Kickoff

Young & Restless Masterpiece Classic (S) (CC) FamFeud FamFeud Hot Bench Hot Bench (N) (N) Adam-12 Adam-12 Q13 FOX News at 4 (3:58) (N) (S) (CC) The Dr. Oz Show (S) Good Potters Raymond Raymond Daniel’s Kitchen Arthur Martha The Dr. Oz Show (S) Rookie Blue (S) (CC)

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Sunday, October 05, 2014 15

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CBC News KOMO 4 World News News KING 5 News (N) (CC)

CBC Coronat’n Murdoch Mysteries The Nature of Things KOMO 4 News 6:00pm Wheel of Jeopardy! Grey’s Anatomy “Got to Be (N) (CC) Fortune (N) (CC) Real” (N) (CC) Nightly News KING 5 News KING 5 News Evening (N) The Biggest Loser “Side(N) (N) (CC) lined” (N) (CC) NFL Kickoff NFL Football (5:25) Indianapolis Colts at Houston Texans. (N) (Live) KIRO 7 Post Game Show (CC) (8:15) (N) (CC) News News News Hour (5:59) (N) Ent ET Bones (N) (CC) (DVS) World News Nightly Busi- PBS NewsHour (N) (S) IN Close (N) SciTech Now Foyle’s War “Among the ness (CC) (N) Few” (CC) CityLine (CC) Murdoch Mysteries Mod Fam Mod Fam Bachelor King of King of Family Feud Family Feud Mike & Molly Mike & Molly The Vampire Diaries “YelQueens Queens (N) (CC) (CC) (CC) low Ledbetter” Emergency! CHiPs “The Grudge” M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Griffith Griffith Q13 FOX News at 5 (N) Name Game Modern Big Bang Big Bang Bones A conservative ra(CC) Family (S) Theory Theory dio host’s murder. Rachael Ray (N) (CC) Extra (N) OK! TV Inside Ed. Access H. Dr. Phil (S) (CC) Trinity J. Osteen Prince Hillsong Praise the Lord (N) (Live) (CC) How I Met How I Met Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Simpsons Simpsons Two Men Two Men Daniel’s Kitchen Waggoner Choc Cook’s Cast Iron Around the Kitchen Wild Kratt Wild Kratt Penguins: Spy NOVA (S) (CC) (DVS) Cool Spaces! (CC) CTV News at Five (N) CTV News (N) (CC) etalk (N) Big Bang Grey’s Anatomy (N) Rookie Blue “Stung” Blue Bloods (S) (CC) Blue Bloods (S) (CC) Blue Bloods (S) (CC)

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Doc Zone (CC) (DVS) The National (N) (CC) News Mercer Scandal “Inside the Bub- How to Get Away With KOMO 4 Jimmy Kimble” (N) (S) (CC) Murder (N) (CC) News mel Bad Judge A to Z (N) Parenthood “The Waiting KING 5 News Tonight (N) (S) (CC) Room” (N) (N) Show KIRO News: Special Edition Steve Raible’s Scouting KIRO News Letterman (N) (CC) Report (CC) Gracepoint (N) (S) Parenthood (N) (S) News Hour Final (N) Midsomer Murders (N) Midsomer Scott & Bailey (10:40) (S) Moone Boy (CC) Murders (CC) (CC) Scandal (N) (S) (CC) Broke Girl Two Men EP Daily Reviews Reign A powerful lord Seinfeld (S) Seinfeld (S) Raising Hope Hot in Clevetests loyalties. (N) (S) (CC) (CC) (CC) land Heroes Gilligan Kotter Kotter Cheers PerryMsn Gracepoint (N) (S) (CC) Q13 FOX News at 10 (N) Q13 FOX Modern (DVS) (CC) News at Family (S) KING 5 News at 9 (N) KING 5 News at 10 The Dr. Oz Show (S) Holy Land Marriage Call2All Creflo D. Bless Miles Q13 FOX News at 9 Friends Friends Anger Anger Cozelle Linens Practical Ideas The Best of ShopHQ Cool Spaces! (CC) Cool Spaces! (CC) Cool Spaces! (CC) Saving Hope (N) (S) Away-Murder News News Blue Bloods (S) (CC) Blue Bloods (S) (CC) Blue Bloods (S) (CC)

The First 48 (S) (CC) The First 48 (S) (CC) Dead Again (S) (CC) The First 48 (S) (CC) The First 48 (S) (CC) The First 48 (N) (CC) Dead Again (10:01) Dead Again (11:02) Bad ComEagle Eye (PG-13, ’08) ›› Shia LaBeouf. Two strangers become The Walking Dead “Seed” The Walking Dead “Sick” The Walking Dead “Walk The Walking Dead (10:04) The Walking Dead (11:04) pany (2) pawns of a mysterious woman. (CC) (CC) (CC) With Me” (CC) “Killer Within” (CC) Gator Boys (S) (CC) To Be Announced Monsters Inside Me Raised Wild (N) (S) (CC) Monsters Inside Me Raised Wild (S) (CC) Prince Prince 106 & Park (N) (CC) The Real (N) (S) (CC) I’m in Love With a Church Girl (PG, ’13) › Jeff “Ja Rule” Atkins. Husbands- Ho. Husbands Husbands Below Below Deck Below Deck Below Deck Manzo’d Manzo’d TBA Housewives/NJ To Be Announced Happens TBA American Greed Shark Tank (S) (CC) Shark Tank (S) (CC) American Greed American Greed American Greed American Greed Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Erin Burnett OutFront Anderson Cooper Anthony Bourd. CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper Anthony Bourd. CNNI Simulcast CNNI Simulcast Sunny Futurama Futurama Futurama Colbert Daily South Pk Tosh.0 Chappelle Sunny Sunny Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Daily Colbert Capitol Hill Hearings Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Capitol Hill Hearings Airplane Repo (CC) Airplane Repo (CC) Highway to Sell (CC) Highway to Sell (CC) Highway to Sell (CC) Fast N’ Loud (S) (CC) Fast N’ Loud (S) (CC) Fast N’ Loud (S) (CC) Dog Dog Dog Dog Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. Jessie (S) Austin Nightmare-Christmas Jessie (S) Wolfblood Jessie (S) Vampire Vampire LeagueThis Is the End (4:40) (R, ’13) ››› James Franco, Jo- Beverly Hills Ninja (PG-13, ’97) › Chris Navy SEALS (R, ’90) ›› Charlie Sheen, Michael Biehn. The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (PG-13, ’03) Gentle. nah Hill. iTV. (S) (CC) Farley. iTV. (S) (CC) (S) (CC) ›› Sean Connery. iTV. (S) Football College Football BYU at Central Florida. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) NASCAR Racing Heritage Mon Soccer Nation Baseball Tonight (N) Shorts E:60 E:60 (N) Boy... Boy... Boy... Boy... Boy... Zookeeper (PG, ’11) › Kevin James. The Proposal (PG-13, ’09) ›› Sandra Bullock. The 700 Club (CC) Sliding Doors (PG-13, ’98) ›› Gwyneth Green Card (6:45) (PG-13, ’90) ›› Gérard Depardieu, Promised Land (8:35) (R, ’87) ›› Jason Gedrick, Kiefer Frances (R, ’82) ›› Jessica Lange, Kim Mr. Jealousy (3:15) (’97) ›› Eric Stoltz. Paltrow. (S) (CC) Andie MacDowell. (S) (CC) Sutherland. (S) (CC) Stanley. (S) (CC) Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File Hannity Greta Van Susteren Contessa Contessa Pioneer Trisha’s Chopped Chopped Food Truck Face Off Chopped Beat Flay Beat Flay Diners Diners Anger Anger Two Men Two Men Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike The Hangover Part II (R, ’11) ›› Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (PG, ’09) ›› Voices of Kung Fu Panda (PG, ’08) ››› Voices of Jack Black, Kung Fu Panda (PG, ’08) ››› Voices of Jack Black, Stealing Harvard (PG-13, ’02) › Jason Lee, Tom Green, Ray Romano. (CC) Angelina Jolie. (CC) Angelina Jolie. (CC) Leslie Mann. (CC) Little House/Prairie The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) Middle Middle Middle Middle Gold Girls Gold Girls Mike Tyson: Undisputed Truth (S) (CC) Last Week Jack the Giant Slayer (PG-13, ’13) ›› Nicholas Hoult, Ride Along (PG-13, ’14) ›› Ice Cube, Dracula Boardwalk Empire “King of Cathouse: Frisky BusiTo. Eleanor Tomlinson. (S) (CC) Kevin Hart. (S) (CC) Untold Norway” (S) Cat Call ness Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Hunters Hunt Intl Fixer Upper (CC) Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn To Be Announced Wife Swap (S) (CC) Wife Swap (S) (CC) Wife Swap (S) (CC) Project Runway “Muse on Project Runway “The High- Project Runway (N) (CC) Project Runway (10:31) (CC) the Street” est Bidder” (CC) The Wolverine (PG-13, ’13) ›› Hugh Jackman, HiCon Air (6:15) (R, ’97) ›› Nicolas Cage. Vicious con- A Good Day to Die Hard (8:15) (R, ’13) ›› Bruce Willis, Now You See Me (PG-13, ’13) ›› Jesse Eisenberg, royuki Sanada. (S) (CC) victs hijack their flight. (S) (CC) Jai Courtney. (S) (CC) Mark Ruffalo. (S) (CC) Hardball Matthews All In With Chris Rachel Maddow The Last Word All In With Chris Rachel Maddow The Last Word Hardball Matthews Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Snack-Off Ridic. Ridic. Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More NHL Hockey Colorado Avalanche at Minnesota Wild. (N) NHL Auto Racing NASCAR NASCAR NASCAR The Grid Parents Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Nicky iCarly (S) Thunder Max Instant See Dad Full H’se Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends Fat Albert (PG, ’04) ›› Kenan Thompson. Stomp the Yard: Homecoming (PG-13, ’10) Baby Boy (R, ’01) ››› Tyrese Gibson, A.J. Johnson. Baby Boy (R, ’01) ››› High School Football Glacier Peak at Bellevue. High School Football Redmond at Bothell. (N) (Live) Fight Sports MMA Champ. Kickboxing Dangerous Minds (3:45) (R, ’95) ›› Mi- Save the Last Dance (PG-13, ’01) ››› Julia Stiles, Soul Plane (R, ’04) ›› Kevin Hart, Tom Homeland “The Drone Queen; Trylon and Perisphere” Penn & Monster chelle Pfeiffer. (S) (CC) Sean Patrick Thomas. (S) (CC) Arnold. (S) (CC) Carrie makes a critical decision. Teller (’03) ››› Meet the Parents (3) (’00) ››› Meet the Fockers (PG-13, ’04) ›› Robert De Niro. (S) Couples Retreat (PG-13, ’09) ›› Vince Vaughn, Jon Favreau. (S) Couples Retreat ›› About Last Survivor’s Basic (5:05) (R, ’03) ›› John Travolta, Connie Nielsen, Sin City (6:50) (R, ’05) ››› Jessica Alba, Devon Aoki, About Last Night (R, ’14) ››› Kevin American Hustle (10:45) (R, ’13) ››› Night Remorse Samuel L. Jackson. (S) (CC) Alexis Bledel. (S) (CC) Hart. iTV. (S) (CC) Christian Bale. iTV. (S) Tasmanian Devils (3) Mothman (NR, ’10) › Jewel Staite. Spartacus: Ven. Spartacus: Ven. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (9:10) (’74) The Uninvited (11:10) Friends Friends Friends Friends Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (CC) The Locket (3:30) (NR, ’46) Portrait of Jennie (NR, ’48) ››› Jennifer The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (6:45) (NR, ’47) ››› Gene Pandora and the Flying Dutchman (8:45) (NR, ’51) ›› James Mason, A Guy Named Joe (NR, ›› (CC) Jones. (CC) Tierney, Rex Harrison. (CC) Ava Gardner, Nigel Patrick. (CC) ’43) ›› Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Breaking Amish (CC) Breaking Amish (CC) Breaking Amish (CC) Breaking Amish (N) Breaking Amish (CC) Spy Hard (3:30) (’96) ›› The Horse Whisperer (’98) ››› Robert Redford, Sam Neill. A cowboy helps an Ironclad (R, ’11) ››› James Purefoy, Paul Giamatti, Snake Eyes (10:05) (’98) › Nicolas Cage. U.S. official is Leslie Nielsen. injured girl and her traumatized horse. (CC) Kate Mara. Premiere. (S) (CC) killed at an Atlantic City fight. Castle “Hunt” Castle tries Castle “Scared to Death” Castle “The Wild Rover” Castle “Limelight” (S) (CC) Castle “Under Fire” (S) Castle (9:01) “Deep Cover” Castle (10:02) “Dressed to On the Menu (11:03) to find Alexis. (S) (CC) (DVS) (CC) (DVS) (CC) (DVS) (CC) (DVS) Kill” (S) “Chili’s” (CC) Total Dra. Gumball Gumball Teen Teen Clarence Gumball Regular King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland American Fam. Guy Jesus Fam. Guy Most Shocking Most Shocking truTV Top Funniest truTV Top Funniest Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers On the Menu (11:01) Hillbillies Hillbillies FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Soul Man The Exes Cleveland Friends Friends The King of Queens King King King Raymond CSI: Crime Scene Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop Couples Therapy (S) Saturday Night Live (S) (CC) She’s Out of My League (R, ’10) ›› (S)


16

Sunday, October 05, 2014 The Daily Herald

FRIDAY EVENING Broadcast 2

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Dragons’ Den (CC) KOMO 4 News 4:00pm (N) (CC) KING 5 News (N) (CC)

Judge Judy Judge Judy (CC) (N) Young & Restless Masterpiece Classic (S) (CC) FamFeud FamFeud Hot Bench Hot Bench (N) (N) Adam-12 Adam-12 Q13 FOX News at 4 (3:58) (N) (S) (CC) The Dr. Oz Show (S) Super Potters Raymond Raymond Emani Cosmetics Martha Martha The Dr. Oz Show (S) Cold Case (S) (CC)

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CBC News KOMO 4 World News News KING 5 News (N) (CC)

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CBC Coronat’n KOMO 4 News 6:00pm (N) (CC) Nightly News KING 5 News (N) KIRO News KIRO News KIRO News Evening News News News News Hour (5:59) (N) World News Nightly Busi- PBS NewsHour (N) (S) ness (CC) CityLine (CC) Murdoch Mysteries King of King of Family Feud Family Feud Queens Queens (CC) (CC) Emergency! “Kids” CHiPs “The Sheik” Q13 FOX News at 5 (N) Name Game Modern (CC) Family (S) Rachael Ray (S) (CC) Extra (N) OK! TV Trinity H Lindsey Harvest P. Stone How I Met How I Met Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Car. Fashions Countess Collection Wild Kratt Wild Kratt Dropping McL’ghlin CTV News at Five (N) CTV News (N) (CC) Cold Case (CC) Cold Case (CC)

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Murdoch Mysteries Wheel of Jeopardy! Fortune (N) (CC) KING 5 News Evening (N) (N) (CC) EntertainThe Insider ment Ton. (N) (S) Ent ET Washington Charlie Rose Week Mod Fam Mod Fam Mike & Molly Mike & Molly (CC) (CC) M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Big Bang Big Bang Theory Theory Inside Ed. Access H. Praise the Lord (CC) Simpsons Simpsons WDNY Fashions (N) Moyers Northwest etalk (N) Big Bang Blue Bloods (S) (CC)

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Market Mercer Last Man Cristela Standing (8:31) (CC) Bad Judge A to Z (S) (S) (CC) The Amazing Race (N) (S) (CC) Bad A to Z (N) Father Brown “The Wrong Shape” (N) (S) Utopia (N) (S) (CC) Whose Line Whose Line Is It? Is It? Griffith Griffith Utopia The pioneers continue their work. Dr. Phil (S) (CC) Two Men Two Men Marc Bouwer Sherlock Holmes The Amazing Race Blue Bloods (S) (CC)

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Strange Empire (CC) The National (N) (CC) Shark Tank Affordable 20/20 (10:01) (N) (S) (CC) wedding cakes. Dateline NBC (N) (S) (CC)

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News KOMO 4 News KING 5 News (N) KIRO News

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Hawaii Five-0 “Kanalu Blue Bloods An officer is Hope Loa” (N) (S) outed. (N) (CC) Hawaii Five-0 (N) (S) Security Security News Hour Final (N) DCI Banks (8:55) The murder of a para- Live From Lincoln Center “The Nance lyzed woman. (S) (CC) Starring Nathan Lane” (N) Pckg Deal Middle Broke Girl Two Men EP Daily Reviews America’s Next Top Model Seinfeld (S) Seinfeld (S) Raising Hope Hot in Cleve(N) (S) (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) land Heroes Gilligan Odd Cple. Odd Cple. Cheers PerryMsn Gotham A vigilante targets Q13 FOX News at 10 (N) Most Modern the corrupt. (CC) Wanted Family (S) KING 5 News at 9 (N) KING 5 News at 10 The Dr. Oz Show (S) F.K. Price Spirit English Creflo D. Praise the Lord News Wanted Friends Friends Anger Anger Kate and Mallory Fashion Must Haves The Best of ShopHQ Inspector Morse (CC) Victoria’s Emp. Secrets of the Tower Shark Tank (N) (S) Blue Bloods (N) (CC) News News Blue Bloods (S) (CC) Rookie Blue (S) (CC) Rookie Blue (S) (CC)

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The First 48 (S) (CC) The First 48 (S) (CC) Dead Again (S) (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (9:01) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) The Core (2) (’03) ›› Cliffhanger (R, ’93) ››› Sylvester Stallone, John Lith- The Walking Dead “Made The Walking Dead (8:04) The Walking Dead (9:04) The Walking Dead (10:08) The Walking Dead (11:10) Aaron Eckhart. gow, Michael Rooker. (CC) to Suffer” (CC) “Home” (CC) (CC) “Clear” (CC) To Be Announced Tanked: Unfiltered Tanked (S) (CC) Tanked (N) (S) (CC) Tanked (S) (CC) Prince Prince 106 & Park (N) (CC) The Real (N) (S) (CC) Set It Off (R, ’96) ››› Jada Pinkett, Queen Latifah. (CC) Scandal (S) (CC) Husbands- Ho. Orange County (3) Scary Movie 2 (R, ’01) › Shawn Wayans. Office Space (R, ’99) ›› Ron Livingston. American Pie 2 (R, ’01) ›› Jason Biggs. American Pie 2 ›› Supermarkets Shark Tank (S) (CC) The Profit The Profit The Profit The Filthy The Filthy Marijuana USA Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Erin Burnett OutFront Anderson Cooper This Is Life Spotlight Unguard Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd. Spotlight Unguard Anthony Bourd. Work. Futurama Futurama Futurama Colbert Daily South Pk Tosh.0 Key Key Key Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 South Pk South Pk Capitol Hill Hearings Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (S) Capitol Hill Hearings Bering Sea Gold (CC) Bering Sea Gold (CC) Bering Sea Gold (CC) Bering Sea Gold (CC) Bering Sea Gold Bering Sea Gold (N) Airplane Repo (10:02) Bering Sea Gold (CC) Nightmare-Christmas Star Wars Rebels Girl Meets Jessie (S) Jessie (S) Jessie (S) Girl Meets Jessie (N) Gravity Ultimate I Didn’t Liv-Mad. Vampire Vampire The Aviator (3:20) (PG-13, ’04) ››› Leonardo DiHoneymoon in Vegas (6:15) (PG-13, ’92) ››› James Something’s Gotta Give (PG-13, ’03) ››› Jack Nichol- 50 First Dates (10:10) (PG-13, ’04) ›› Adam Sandler, Caprio, Cate Blanchett. (S) (CC) Caan. iTV. (S) (CC) son, Diane Keaton. iTV. (S) (CC) Drew Barrymore. (S) (CC) Soccer: International Friendly College Football Washington State at Stanford. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) NASCAR NASCAR Racing Nationwide Series: October Charlotte Race. (N) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) NFL Live (N) (CC) Nation SportCtr Boy... Boy... Boy... The Proposal (PG-13, ’09) ›› Sandra Bullock. The Hunger Games (’12) ››› Jennifer Lawrence. The 700 Club (CC) In the Name of the Father Hard Target (R, ’93) ›› Jean-Claude Van Hustle & Flow (6:45) (R, ’05) ››› Terrence Howard, The Longest Yard (8:45) (PG-13, ’05) ›› Adam Four Brothers (10:40) (R, ’05) ›› Mark (2:45) ››› Damme. (S) (CC) Anthony Anderson. (S) (CC) Sandler, Chris Rock. (S) (CC) Wahlberg. (S) (CC) Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File Hannity Greta Van Susteren Halloween Wars Halloween Wars Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Two Men Two Men Real Steel (PG-13, ’11) ›› Hugh Jackman, Evangeline Lilly. Rise of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13, ’11) ››› James Franco. Rise of Apes Puss in Boots (PG, ’11) ››› Voices of FXM PresPuss in Boots (PG, ’11) ››› Voices of FXM PresLittle Man (PG-13, ’06) ›› Shawn Wayans, Marlon Little Man (PG-13, ’06) ›› Shawn Wayans, Marlon Antonio Banderas. ents Antonio Banderas. ents Wayans, Kerry Washington. (CC) Wayans, Kerry Washington. (CC) Little House/Prairie The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) The Waltons (CC) Middle Middle Middle Middle Gold Girls Gold Girls Fast & Furious 6 (3:30) (PG-13, ’13) ›› Life of Pi (5:45) (PG, ’12) ››› Suraj Sharma, Irrfan Khan, Tabu. (S) Riddick (R, ’13) ›› Vin Diesel, Karl Urban, Jordi Mollà. Real Time With Bill Maher Bill Maher: Live From D.C. Vin Diesel. (S) (CC) (CC) (S) (CC) (S) (CC) (S) (CC) Property Property Property Property Property Property Love It or List It, Too Love It or List It, Too Love It or List It, Too Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl The Kennedy Assassination: 24 Hours After American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) American Pickers (S) Wife Swap (S) (CC) Wife Swap (S) (CC) Celebrity Wife Swap (S) Celebrity Wife Swap (S) Dirty Teacher (NR, ’13) Josie Davis, Cameron Deane The Secret Sex Life of a Single Mom (NR, ’14) Ashley (CC) (CC) Stewart, Kelcie Stranahan. (CC) Jones, Alex Carter. (CC) 47 Ronin (4:15) (PG-13, ’13) ›› Keanu Reeves, HiTransporter 2 (6:15) (PG-13, ’05) ›› The Best Man Holiday (7:45) (’13) ›› Morris Chestnut. Longtime The Knick “The Golden The Knick “The Golden royuki Sanada. (S) (CC) Jason Statham. (S) (CC) friends reunite over the Christmas holidays. Lotus” (N) (S) Lotus” (CC) Hardball Matthews All In With Chris Rachel Maddow Lockup Lockup Lockup Lockup Lockup Awkward. Faking It Are You the One? (S) Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out Scary Movie 2 (’01) › Shawn Wayans. Scary Movie 3 (NR, ’03) ›› Anna Faris. (S) Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More NFL Turning Point MLS: Whitecaps FC at Sounders Formula One Racing Auto Racing Parents Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Henry iCarly (S) Thunder Max Turtles Turtles Full H’se Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends What a Girl Wants (3:30) (PG, ’03) › What a Girl Wants (PG, ’03) › Amanda Bynes. Guess Who (PG-13, ’05) ›› Bernie Mac. Guess Who (PG-13, ’05) ›› Women’s College Soccer College Field Hockey High School Football Redmond at Bothell. Seahawks Football Sahara (2:50) (PG-13, ’05) The Rolling Stones: Sweet Summer Sun The Last Exorcism Part II (PG-13, ’13) › Genesis: Sum of the Parts (N) (S) (CC) Hostel (R, ’06) ›› Jay Hernandez, Derek Homeland (11:05) (S) (CC) ›› (S) (CC) Hyde Park 2013 (4:55) Ashley Bell. (S) (CC) Richardson. (S) (CC) Cops (CC) Jail (CC) Cops (CC) Jail (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Bellator MMA Live (N) (S Live) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) The Incred- As Good as It Gets (4:40) (PG-13, ’97) ››› Jack Nicholson, Helen After Earth (7:15) (PG-13, ’13) › Jaden Smith, Will A Single Shot (R, ’13) ›› Sam Rockwell, William H. Survivor’s Shanghai ibles Hunt, Greg Kinnear. (S) (CC) Smith. iTV. (S) (CC) Macy. iTV Premiere. (S) (CC) Remorse Noon (’00) The Uninvited (’09) ›› Elizabeth Banks. Haven Haven (Part 1 of 2) WWE SmackDown! (S) (CC) Z Nation (N) Town Town Friends MLB MLB Baseball American League Championship Series, Game 1: Teams TBA. MLB Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Evan Almighty ›› Illegal (3:30) (’55) ›› Ed- Khartoum (NR, ’66) ››› Charlton Heston, Laurence Something of Value (7:15) (NR, ’57) ››› Rock HudThe Battle of Algiers (9:15) (NR, ’66) ››› Jean Martin. The 1954 to Zulu Dawn ›› ward G. Robinson. Olivier, Richard Johnson. (CC) son, Dana Wynter. (CC) ’62 Algerian fight for independence. Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes to the Dress Borrowed Borrowed Say Yes to the Dress Hannah Dark Skies (4:20) (PG-13, ’13) ›› Keri Crash (R, ’04) ››› Sandra Bullock, Don Cheadle, Matt Silver Linings Playbook (R, ’12) ››› Bradley Cooper, Lincoln (10:05) (PG-13, ’12) ››› Daniel Day-Lewis, Montana Russell. (S) (CC) Dillon. (S) (CC) Jennifer Lawrence. (S) (CC) Sally Field. (S) (CC) Castle “The Lives of Oth- Castle “The Fast and the Castle “The Squab and the On the Menu “Chili’s” (CC) On the Menu “Denny’s” Catch Me if You Can (9:01) (PG-13, ’02) ››› Leonardo DiCaprio. A teenage scam ers” (CC) (DVS) Furriest” (S) Quail” (S) (N) (CC) artist poses as a pilot, surgeon and lawyer. Total Dra. Gumball Gumball Teen Teen Clarence Gumball Regular King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Hillbillies Hillbillies FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Raymond Raymond Raymond Friends Friends King The King of Queens King King Raymond Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Saturday Night Live (S) (CC) Saturday Night Live Saturday Night Live Saturday Night Live Couples Therapy (S) T.I.-Tiny T.I.-Tiny T.I.-Tiny T.I.-Tiny


The Daily Herald

SATURDAY DAYTIME

Sports Movies Broadcast 2

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Our Vancouver Absolutely Doc Zone (S) College Football Oklahoma vs. Texas. From the Cotton Bowl Stadium in Dallas, Texas. (N) (Live) News Gardening Tree Fu Gymnastics Tom College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) Fish’n Fishing Dinosaur Wild Wild Kratts Kratts Canadi Wild Things B. Barr Exped. Exped. Wild Wild Travel Travel Mystery Mystery Earth 2050 Animal Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Science Astrob Chica House Home. Lassie Goliath Ishine Inspir. Coolest State Butt Paid WDNY Fashions Countess Coll Sew Sew It Sewing Quilting Marilyn Denis Chil etalk Paid Paid Paid P. Chris Sesame Street Quon B. Barr

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Boat TV Driving Noon News Hour Simp Simp Simp Anonymous (’11) ›› John Sebastian Presents: Folk Rewind (My KCTS 9 Cooks: On the Side Viewers’ side dish recipes. Music) (S) (CC) Shopping Chan. Liquida Liquida Top Model Liquida Bolly. Mod Hockey Rock-Park RelucPaid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Arthritis Paid Prog. Top Paid Prog. Paid Prog. tantly Pain? Cooker Fishing Paid The Big Valley Gunsmoke (CC) Bonanza Rawhide Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Pregame College Football Oregon at UCLA. From the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. (N) (S Live) Old Home Hazel House Garden Garden Paid Paid Paid Paid Tails Veggie Heroes-Bible Cam News For Pete’s Sake! (NR, ’66) › Paid Cooker Paid Paid WWD WWD Old Dogs (’09) › John Travolta. Kate and Mallory Fashion Must One World Fash One World Fash Marc Bouwer Fit Quilting Quilt Motor Rough Woods. Old House Steves Chef Written The So SportsCentre (S) Gas Gas Junk Raiders (S) Cash Cash Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI

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Paid Paid Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Dead Again (CC) Face/Off (R, ’97) ››› John Travolta. (S) (CC) Hell on Wheels “Re- The Rifle- The Rifle- The Rifle- The Rifle- The Rifle- The Rifle- Cliffhanger (R, ’93) ››› Sylvester Stallone, The Walking Dead The Walking Dead The Walking Dead The Walking Dead turn to Hell” man man man man man man John Lithgow. (CC) (CC) “Home” (CC) “Clear” Big Cat Big Cat Cats 101 (CC) Cats 101 (CC) My Cat Hell My Cat Hell My Cat Hell My Cat Hell My Cat Hell My Cat Hell My Cat Hell BET Inspiration Prince Prince Prince Prince Hus Hus Hus Hus Hus Hus Hus Hus Husbands- Ho. Set It Off ››› Couch TBA Tamra--Wedding Housewives/Atl. NeNe--Wedding NeNe--Wedding Couch Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Paid Paid Cook Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Medi Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Smerconish (N) CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield (N) News Tomor CNN Newsroom (N) Gupta CNN Newsroom Smerconish Havoc Paid Paid Paid Com Your Highness (8:21) (NR, ’11) › The Comebacks (10:23) (’07) › Idiocracy (12:24) (R, ’06) ›› (CC) South South South Washington Washington This Week (S) Washington This Week (S) Washington This Week (S) Washington This Week (S) Wash Com Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Fast N’ Loud: Fast N’ Loud (S) Fast N’ Loud (S) Fast N’ Loud (S) Highway to Sell Highway to Sell Dual Survival (S) Mickey Mickey Wil. Doc Pirates Sofia Girl Girl Girl Girl Jessie Jessie Ulti Dog Dog I Didn’t I Didn’t I Didn’t Austin Austin The Legend of Zorro (6:05) (PG, ’05) ›› Antonio Ban- 50 First Dates (8:20) (’04) ›› Iron Man 3 (10:05) (PG-13, ’13) ››› Robert Downey Murder at 1600 (12:20) (’97) ›› Eraser (2:15) (R, ’96) ›› Arnold Schwarderas, Rufus Sewell. (S) (CC) Adam Sandler. (CC) Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow. (S) (CC) Wesley Snipes. zenegger. iTV. (S) (CC) College GameDay (N) (Live) (CC) College Football Florida State at Syracuse. (N) (Live) Football Scoreboard ESPN Goal Line (N) (Live) College Football SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) College Football Illinois at Wisconsin. (N) (Live) Score College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Score Paid Paid Inkheart (’09) ›› Brendan Fraser. The Mummy (’99) ››› Brendan Fraser. The Mummy Returns (’01) ›› Brendan Fraser. The Goonies (’85) ››› The Joy Luck Club Bad News Bears (PG-13, ’05) ›› Billy Bob Billy Bathgate (R, ’91) ››› Dustin HoffSecrets & Lies (R, ’96) ››› Timothy Spall, Brenda Marvin’s Room (’96) ››› Meryl Three Men and a (4:30) ››› Thornton. (S) (CC) man, Loren Dean. (S) (CC) Blethyn, Phyllis Logan. (S) (CC) Streep. (CC) Baby (3:15) FOX & Friends Bulls Cavuto Forbes Cash In News HQ News HQ Jour. America’s News HQ Carol News The Five News HQ Wild Paid Sand. Barbe Be.Best Farm Pioneer Pioneer Trisha’s The Kitchen (N) Halloween Wars Re Beat Restaurant: Im. Diners Diners Paid Paid Ellen Buffy, Slayer Anger Anger Two Two Two Two The Sitter (R, ’11) › Jonah Hill. That’s My Boy (R, ’12) › Adam Sandler. 13 Rue Madeleine (5:45) (’46) The Forbidden Street (7:25) (NR, The House on Telegraph Hill Pickup on South Street (10:35) Max Payne (PG-13, ’08) › Mark Wahlberg, Underworld: Awakening (’12) FXM Pres. Mila Kunis. (CC) ››› James Cagney. ’49) ›› (CC) (NR, ’51) ›› (CC) (NR, ’53) ››› ›› Kate Beckinsale. Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Golden Golden Golden Golden Nearlyweds (’13), Naomi Judd (CC) Second Chances (’13) (CC) Perfect on Paper Alexander (4:10) (R, Josh Gro- Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (PG, ’05) The 50 Year Argument (9:45) (NR, ’14) ››› The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (PG, ’13) Red 2 (PG-13, ’13) ›› Bruce Willis, John Mi’04) ›› (S) ban ››› Johnny Depp. (S) (S) (CC) ›› Ben Stiller. (S) (CC) Malkovich. (S) (CC) sérables Paid Paid Bath Bath Bath Bath Bath Bath Love It or List It Love It or List It Love It or List It Love It or List It Property Bro Property Bro Paid Paid WWII in HD (CC) WWII in HD (CC) WWII in HD (CC) WWII in HD (CC) WWII in HD (CC) Hitler’s Family Hi-Tech Hitler (S) WW2 From Space (S) (CC) Good Tur- Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Getting Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Unsolved Mysteries Social Nightmare (NR, ’13) Daryl Hannah, Taken for Ransom (NR, ’13) Teri Polo, Tia key More (CC) Kirsten Prout. (CC) Carrere. (CC) Before Sunset (6:10) (’04) ››› Oblivion (7:35) (PG-13, ’13) ›› Tom Cruise. Mama (9:45) (PG-13, ’13) ›› Jessica Chas- The Heat (R, ’13) ›› Sandra Bullock, Me- Grudge Match (PG-13, ’13) ›› Robert De CatEthan Hawke. (CC) (S) (CC) tain. (S) (CC) lissa McCarthy. (S) (CC) Niro. (S) (CC) woman Up W/Steve Melissa Harris-Perry (N) Weekends With Alex Witt (N) MSNBC Live (N) Caught Camera Caught Camera Caught Camera Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Are You One Awk Awk Awk Happy Happy Faking Faking Faking Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More Auto Racing GP2 Series. Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More College Football William & Mary at New Hampshire. (N) George George Parents Parents Parents Spong Spong Spong Spong Sanjay Bread Rab Power Spong Fred 2: Night Spong Boy Who Cried Paid Paid Paid Paid My My My My Nail’d It Preachers L.A. Preachers L.A. When Harry Met Sally... (R) ›››› Sleepless In Paid Paid Brain Paid Timbers Paid College Football Cincinnati at Miami. (N) (Live) College Football Boston College at North Carolina State. (N) Last Exr 2 The Big Empty (6:25) (R, ’03) ›› Inside the NFL (S) 60 Minutes Sports The Ghost Writer (PG-13, ’10) ››› Pierce The Cold Light of Day (12:10) Genesis: Sum of the Parts (1:45) Dead Poets Society Jon Favreau. (S) (CC) (S) (CC) Brosnan. (S) (CC) (PG-13, ’12) › (S) (S) (CC) (3:15) ››› Turkey Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Auction Auction Auction Auction Auction Thrift Auction Auction Thrift Auction Cops Cops Cops Cops As Good as It Gets (5:20) (PG-13, The Incredibles (7:40) (’04) ››› Voices of The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones (9:40) (PG-13, After Earth (11:55) (’13) › Jaden Shanghai Noon (1:40) (PG-13, ’00) ››› Survivor’s ’97) ››› (S) Craig T. Nelson. (CC) ’13) ›› Lily Collins. (S) (CC) Smith. (CC) Jackie Chan. (S) (CC) Cook Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Town Town Scare Ghost Voyage (NR, ’08) Ghost Town (’09) › Jessica Rose. Chernobyl Diaries (’12) › House House House House King King King King King Friends College Road Trip (’08) › MLB MLB Baseball Adventures of Huck Carson on The People vs. Dr. Kildare (’41) The Curse of the Mummy’s A Big Hand for the Little Lady The Westerner (12:15) (NR, ’40) ››› Gary Cheyenne Autumn (2:15) (NR, ’64) ››› Finn TCM ›› Lew Ayres. Tomb (NR, ’64) ›› (NR, ’66) ››› Cooper. (CC) Richard Widmark. (CC) Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Walt Disney Wld Disney Parks: Disney Hotels Disney Cruise Toddler-Tiara Toddler-Tiara Toddler-Tiara Dummy (5:55) (R, ’03) ›› Some Girl(s) (NR, ’13) Adam Dick (PG-13, ’99) ››› Kirsten The Kings of Summer (10:35) (R, The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 Quartet (2:05) (’12) ››› Mag- What’sAdrien Brody. (S) (CC) Brody. (S) (CC) Dunst. (S) (CC) ’13) ›› (S) (12:10) (PG-13, ’12) ›› (S) gie Smith. (CC) Worst Law & Order “Shad- Law & Order “Merg- Law & Order Law & Order “Ritual” Law & Order (S) (CC) Catch Me if You Can (PG-13, ’02) ››› Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom The Da Vinci Code (PG-13, ’06) ›› Tom ow” (S) er” (S) “Burned” (S) (S) (DVS) Hanks. (CC) (DVS) Hanks. (CC) (DVS) Leg Tenkai Teen Leg Poké Clar Clar Gum Gum Teen Teen Scooby-Doo! Curse of Lake Clar Gum Gum Teen Teen Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Most Shocking Most Shocking Most Shocking Most Shocking Most Shocking Pawn Pawn Nanny Nanny Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby Fam Law Order: CI Paid Paid Paid Paid NCIS “Phoenix” NCIS (CC) (DVS) NCIS “Canary” NCIS (CC) (DVS) NCIS (CC) (DVS) NCIS “Revenge” NCIS (CC) (DVS) VH1 Plus Music VH1 Plus Music VH1 Plus Music Top 20 Count. Top 20 Count. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (’82) ››› Star Trek III: The Search for Spock ›››


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Sunday, October 05, 2014 The Daily Herald

SATURDAY EVENING Broadcast 2

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NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins at Toronto Maple Leafs. (N) (CC) NHL Hockey Edmonton Oilers at Vancouver Canucks. Countdown NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: Bank of America 500. From Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C. (N) (Live) Pac-12 To(CC) night Biz Kid$ (S) Teen Kids KING 5 News (N) Evening (CC) KING 5 News Laura McK- Northwest The Mysteries of Laura (CC) News (N) (N) enzie Backroad (S) (CC) All In W/ Sports Stars KIRO News KIRO News Evening KIRO News Raible’s The Insider News Special Sound StartLaila Ali News Scouting (N) (S) ups Anonymous (2:30) (’11) ›› News News Hour (5:59) (N) 16x9 (N) (CC) To Be Announced KCTS 9 Cooks: On the Finding Your Roots-Henry NewsHour IN Close John Sebastian Presents: Folk Rewind (My Music) ArtSide (1) Louis Gates Wk ists of the 1950s and ’60s. (CC) NHL Hockey Montreal Canadiens at Philadelphia Flyers. (N) (Live) Bachelor Pckg Deal Liquidator Glee The club learns how The Middle Raising Hope The Office The Office Mike & Molly Mike & Molly White Collar “Free Fall” to twerk. (CC) (CC) (CC) (S) (CC) (S) (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) Wanted... Wanted... Rifleman Rifleman Superman Superman Batman Batman Wonder Woman (CC) College Extra College Football Teams TBA. (N) (S Live) Seahawks What Went Sat. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. McCarver Paid Prog. Made in Hollywood Access Hollywood Republic of Doyle (S) Precious Memories In Touch Hour Of Power Graham Classic Island of Grace (NR, ’09) Around the World in 80 Days (PG, ’04) ›› Bones (S) (CC) Bones (S) (CC) Celebrity Celebrity Kate and Mallory One World Fashions One World Fashions Fashion Day Finale Fashion Day Finale Simply Cook Kitchen Cooking Antiques Roadshow Red Red Red Red Marilyn Denis The So etalk (CC) CTV News (N) (CC) W5 (N) (S) (CC) (DVS) Big Bang Anger Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Criminal Minds (CC) The Walking Dead (CC)

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Republic of Doyle (S) KOMO 4 Castle News (11:35) (S) KING 5 News Saturday (N) Night Live KIRO News To Be Announced NCIS (S) (CC) (DVS) Crime Stories (CC) News SNL Joe Bonamassa: Tour de Force - Live in John Sebastian Presents: Folk Rewind London (S) (CC) (My Music) (S) (CC) Family Seed (CC) Wild Things Murdoch Mysteries The Closer “Dead Man’s The Good Wife “ThreeBand in Se- Engagement Hand” (CC) some” (CC) attle Star Trek (S) (CC) The Uninvited (NR, ’44) ››› Ray Milland. Modern Modern Q13 FOX Seahawks Animation Domination Family (S) Family (S) News Sat. High-Def (S) (CC) Law & Order: SVU News Inside Ed. Access Hollywood In the Blink of an Eye (NR, ’09) Not a Fan Gods At News Seahawks The Pinkertons (N) SAF3 “Faces” (CC) Invicta Watches Invicta Watches The Best of ShopHQ Red Red Red Red Dr. Who Dr. Who Mike Cleveland Saving Hope (S) News News Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI HNIC After Hours News Wheel of Jeopardy! Town Hall Meeting-Gun Fortune (S) (CC) Control Law & Order: Special Vic- Saturday Night Live (S) tims Unit (S) (CC) To Be Announced 48 Hours (N) (S) (CC)

Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (S) Criminal Minds (S) Criminal Minds (S) Criminal Minds (S) Criminal Minds (S) Criminal Minds (S) The Walking Dead “Prey” The Walking Dead “This The Walking Dead (CC) The Walking Dead (8:04) The Walking Dead (9:03) The Walking Dead (10:03) The Walking Dead (11:03) (CC) Sorrowful Life” (CC) “Infected” (CC) “Isolation” “Indifference” My Cat From Hell (S) My Cat From Hell (S) My Cat From Hell (S) My Cat From Hell (S) My Cat From Hell (S) Pit Bulls-Parole Pit Bulls-Parole Animal Cops Set It Off (3) (R, ’96) ››› (CC) Menace II Society (R, ’93) ››› Tyrin Turner. (CC) Paid in Full (R, ’02) ›› Wood Harris. (CC) Menace II Society (R, ’93) ››› Million Dollar LA Manzo’d Manzo’d Serendipity (PG-13, ’01) ›› John Cusack. Burlesque (PG-13, ’10) ›› Cher, Christina Aguilera. Burlesque (’10) ›› Cher. The Filthy The Filthy Marijuana USA Suze Orman Show Ultimate Factories Ultimate Factories Suze Orman Show American Greed Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Newsr’m Spotlight Anthony Bourd. Somebody’s This Is Life Anthony Bourd. Somebody’s This Is Life Anthony Bourd. Without a Paddle (3:55) (PG-13, ’04) ›› Super Troopers (5:56) (R, ’01) ›› Observe and Report (’09) ›› Seth Rogen. Zack and Miri Make a Porno (R, ’08) ›› Washington This Week (S) Washington This Week (S) Washington This Week (S) Washington This Week (S) Dual Survival (S) (CC) Dual Survival (S) (CC) Dual Survival (S) (CC) Naked and Afraid (S) Naked and Afraid (S) Naked and Afraid (S) Naked and Afraid (S) Naked and Afraid (S) Austin Dog Dog Dog Girl Meets Girl Meets Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. Girl Meets Austin I Didn’t Liv-Mad. Lab Rats Mighty Girl Meets Girl Meets Coyote Ugly (4:15) (PG-13, ’00) › Piper Perabo, Adam Gone in Sixty Seconds (PG-13, ’00) › Nicolas Cage, Iron Man 3 (PG-13, ’13) ››› Robert Downey Jr., Eraser (10:15) (R, ’96) ›› Arnold Schwarzenegger, Garcia, Maria Bello. (S) (CC) Angelina Jolie. (S) (CC) Gwyneth Paltrow. (S) (CC) James Caan. iTV. (S) (CC) College Football (3) Teams TBA. (N) (Live) College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) College Football Penn State at Michigan. (N) (Live) (CC) Score College Football USC at Arizona. (N) (Live) (CC) Football Final Baseball The Goonies (2:30) The Blind Side (PG-13, ’09) ››› Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw. The Hunger Games (PG-13, ’12) ››› Jennifer Lawrence. The Blind Side ››› Three Men and a Baby Outrageous Fortune (R, ’87) ››› Shel- Beaches (6:45) (PG-13, ’88) ›› Bette Midler. Two women from dif- The Muse (PG-13, ’99) ›› Albert Brooks. Jet Lag (10:40) (R, ’02) ›› Juliette (3:15) ››› ley Long. (S) (CC) ferent worlds, best friends for life. (S) (S) (CC) Binoche. (Subtitled) (S) (CC) FOX Report (N) Huckabee (N) Justice With Jeanine Geraldo at Large (N) Red Eye Justice With Jeanine Geraldo at Large (S) Red Eye Guy’s Games Cutthroat Kitchen Chopped Diners Diners Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen 21 Jump Street (R, ’12) ››› Jonah Hill, Channing Tatum. Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike The Strain Halloween: Resurrection (R, ’02) › Jamie Lee Curtis, Halloween: Resurrection (R, ’02) › Jamie Lee Curtis, Underworld: Awakening (R, ’12) ›› Kate FXM PresMax Payne (PG-13, ’08) › Mark Wahlberg. A cop hunts Brad Loree. Premiere. (CC) Brad Loree, Busta Rhymes. (CC) Beckinsale. (CC) ents those who killed his family. Perfect on Paper (3) Just Desserts (’04) ››› Lauren Holly. (CC) The Sweeter Side of Life (NR, ’13) (CC) Recipe for Love (’14) Danielle Panabaker. Gold Girls Gold Girls Les Misérables (3:30) (PG-13, ’12) ››› Hugh Jackman, R.I.P.D. (6:15) (PG-13, ’13) › Jeff Bridges. A slain cop Rush (R, ’13) ››› Chris Hemsworth, Daniel Brühl, Boardwalk Empire (10:10) Rush (11:10) (R, ’13) ››› Russell Crowe. (S) (CC) joins a team of spirit lawmen. (S) Olivia Wilde. Premiere. (S) (CC) (S) (CC) (S) (CC) Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl The Nazi Gospels (S) (CC) The World Wars A global war is ignited. The World Wars (S) (Part 2 of 3) (CC) The World Wars (S) (Part 3 of 3) (CC) Gone Missing (NR, ’13) Daphne Zuniga, Gage Golightly, Killing Daddy (NR, ’14) Elizabeth Gillies, Cynthia Ste- A Warden’s Ransom (NR, ’14) Diane Neal, Jodelle Fer- Presumed Dead in Paradise (NR, ’14) Malese Jow, Lauren Bowles. (CC) venson, William R. Moses. (CC) land. Premiere. (CC) Olivia d’Abo. (CC) Catwoman (3:30) (PG-13, ’04) › Halle The Hangover Part III (5:25) (R, ’13) ›› 2 Guns (7:10) (R, ’13) ›› Denzel Washington, Mark The Knick “The Golden The Best Man Holiday (R, ’13) ›› Morris Chestnut, Berry. (S) (CC) Bradley Cooper. (S) Wahlberg, Paula Patton. (S) (CC) Lotus” (CC) Taye Diggs, Regina Hall. (S) (CC) Caught on Camera Caught on Camera Lockup Lockup Lockup Lockup Lockup Lockup Girl Code Girl Code Girl Code Guy Code Guy Code Guy Code Little Man (’06) ›› Shawn Wayans. Friday After Next (9:10) (R, ’02) › Ice Cube. (S) Think Post NFL Turning Point WSOF World Series of Fighting 14 (N) (S Live) NFL Turning Point Formula One Racing NFL Turning Point NASCAR Boy Cried Sponge. Hathaways iCarly (S) Sam & Sponge. Sponge. The Thundermans (S) Henry Nicky Prince Prince Friends Friends Sleepless in Seattle (3) ››› Raising Helen (PG-13, ’04) ›› Kate Hudson. No Strings Attached (R, ’11) ›› Natalie Portman. No Strings Attached (’11) ›› College Football Montana State at UC Davis. (N) (Live) High School Football Tahoma at Kent Meridian. College Football Dead Poets Society (3:15) (PG, ’89) ››› Fruitvale Station (R, ’13) ››› Michael B. Homeland “The Drone Queen; Trylon and Perisphere” Delivery Man (PG-13, ’13) ›› Vince Homeland (10:45) Carrie makes a critical Robin Williams. (S) Jordan. (S) (CC) Carrie makes a critical decision. Vaughn. Premiere. (S) (CC) decision. (S) (CC) Cops (CC) Jail (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (N) Cops (CC) Auction Thrift Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) Cops (CC) A Single Shot (4:10) (R, ’13) ›› Sam Rockwell, William Survivor’s What’s the Worst That Could Happen? (6:45) (’01) › Survivor’s Survivor’s Survivor’s The Chair “Moving On” Survivor’s Survivor’s H. Macy. iTV. (S) (CC) Remorse Martin Lawrence. (CC) Remorse Remorse Remorse (iTV) (N) (S) (CC) Remorse Remorse Chernobyl Halloween II (R, ’09) › Malcolm McDowell. Freddy vs. Jason (’03) ›› Robert Englund. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (’03) ›› Hostel Part II (R) ›› Baseball MLB Friends Friends Evan Almighty (PG, ’07) ›› Steve Carell. Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang On the Menu (CC) Cheyenne Autumn (2:15) Stella Dallas (NR, ’37) ››› Barbara Stanwyck, John Cass Timberlane (NR, ’47) ››› Spencer Tracy, Lana Kitty Foyle (9:15) (NR, ’40) ››› Ginger Rogers, Dennis Blacula (11:15) (’72) ›› (NR, ’64) ››› Boles, Anne Shirley. (CC) Turner, Zachary Scott. (CC) Morgan. (CC) (DVS) William Marshall. Toddlers & Tiaras (S) Toddlers & Tiaras (S) Toddlers & Tiaras (S) 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids Untold Stories of ER 911 911 Sex Sent Me to the What’s the Worst That Could Happen? The Kings of Summer (5:25) (R, ’13) ›› The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 (PG-13, ’12) Byzantium (R, ’12) ››› Gemma Arterton, Saoirse Apartment 1303 (’12) Mis(3:45) (’01) › (CC) Nick Robinson. (S) (CC) ›› Kristen Stewart. (S) (CC) Ronan, Jonny Lee Miller. (S) (CC) cha Barton. (CC) The Da Vinci Code (2) (PG- 2012 (PG-13, ’09) ›› John Cusack, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Amanda Peet. A global cata- War of the Worlds (PG-13, ’05) ››› Tom Cruise. A man and his chil- Contagion (10:31) (PG-13, ’11) ››› 13, ’06) ›› clysm nearly wipes out humanity. (CC) (DVS) dren try to survive an alien invasion. Marion Cotillard. Teen Adventure Adventure Scooby Wallace & Gromit: Curse of Were-Rabbit King/Hill King/Hill American American Boon Boon Fam. Guy Attack Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Friends Friends The Exes King King King King Raymond NCIS (S) (CC) (DVS) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Saturday Night Live Saturday Night Live Saturday Night Live Saturday Night Live 50/50 (’11) ››› Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Pulp Fiction (’94) ›››› John Travolta.


Sunday, October 05, 2014 19 Sunday, October 05, 2014 19 4) Pines 5) Shady Susan Sullivan 5) Susan Sullivan

The Daily Herald The Daily Herald BY JOHN CROOK BY JOHN CROOK

Ladies night night Ladies

Nixon) 3) Annie Potts, although her 3) Annie Potts, although character’s boyfriend washer character’s boyfriend was played by Richard Gilliland, played by Jean Richard Gilliland, cast mate Smart’s cast mate Jean husband. Dixie Smart’s Carter husband. Carter (Mrs. Hal Dixie Holbrook) and (Mrs. Holbrook) and Delta Hal Burke (Mrs. Gerald Delta Burkewere (Mrs.paired Gerald McRaney) with McRaney) were paired with their real spouses their real spouses 4) Shady Pines

Questions: Questions: 1) Former “Desperate Housewives” star Teri Hatcher once did

1) Shack 2) Radio Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia 2) Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon)

Answers: Answers: 1) Radio Shack

Teri Hatcher Teri Hatcher

commercials with ex-football star Howie Long for what electronics 1) Former “Desperate Housewives” star Teri Hatcher once did chain? commercials with ex-football star Howie Long for what electronics chain? 2) On “Sex and the City,” which of the main quartet worked as an attorney? 2) On “Sex and the City,” which of the main quartet worked as an attorney? 3) The real-life husbands of three of the four original “Designing Women” femalehusbands stars hadofrecurring roles on original the show. Who was the 3) The real-life three of the four “Designing exception? Women” female stars had recurring roles on the show. Who was the exception? 4) On “The Golden Girls,” Sophia had lived in what nursing home before moving in with daughter Dorothy? 4) On “The Golden Girls,” Sophia had lived in what nursing home before moving with daughter Dorothy? 5) What future in “Dharma & Greg” cast member played waitress Lois Adams the ABC sitcom&“It’s a Living”? 5) Whatinfuture “Dharma Greg” cast member played waitress Lois Adams in the ABC sitcom “It’s a Living”?

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Sunday, October 05, 2014 The Daily Herald

MOVIES ON TV Sunday

About Last Night (2014) ››› Kevin Hart. (R) (1:45) STARZ 3:30 p.m., 11:25 p.m. Alien (1979) ›››› Tom Skerritt. A merciless horror stalks the crew of a deep-space freighter. (R) (2:00) ENC 8 p.m., 4:05 a.m. As Good as It Gets (1997) ››› Jack Nicholson. (PG-13) (2:25) STARZ 6:35 a.m., 4:35 a.m. The Blot (1921) ››› Philip Hubbard. (NR) (2:00) TCM 9 p.m. Cameraman: The Life & Work of Jack Cardiff (2010) ››› Jack Cardiff. (NR) (1:30) TCM 7:30 p.m. Cast Away (2000) ››› Tom Hanks. (PG-13) (2:45) FXM 5 p.m., 8 p.m. Clerks (1994) ››› Brian O’Halloran. (R) (1:35) FLIX 12:30 a.m. Clueless (1995) ››› Alicia Silverstone. (PG-13) (2:01) COM 10:53 a.m.MTV 5:50 p.m. Cool Hand Luke (1967) ›››‡ Paul Newman. (GP) (2:30) TCM 9 a.m. Dead Poets Society (1989) ›››‡ Robin Williams. (PG) (2:10) SHOW 11:05 a.m. Déjà Vu (2006) ››› Denzel Washington. (PG-13) (2:30) AMC 2:30 p.m. The Devil Wears Prada (2006) ››› Meryl Streep. (PG-13) (2:40) MTV 1 p.m., 8 p.m. Do You Love Me? (1946) ››› Maureen O’Hara. (NR) (1:40) FXM 9 a.m. The 50 Year Argument (2014) ››› (NR) (1:45) HBO 1:45 p.m. Five Came Back (1939) ››› Chester Morris. (NR) (1:30) TCM 11:30 a.m. GoodFellas (1990) ›››› Robert De Niro. An Irish-Italian hood joins the 1950s New York Mafia. (R) (3:00) A&E 3 p.m. The Green Mile (1999) ›››‡ Tom Hanks. (R) (3:00) A&E 12 p.m. Higher Learning (1995) ››› Omar Epps. (R) (2:30) VH1 2:30 a.m. Hot Tub Time Machine (2010) ››› John Cusack. (R) (2:17) COM 6:58 p.m., 9:15 p.m. Jungle Book (1942) ››› Sabu. (NR) (2:00) TCM 1 p.m. Lost in Translation (2003) ›››‡ Bill Murray. (R) (1:45) HBO 4:15 a.m. Marley & Me (2008) ››› Owen Wilson. (PG) (2:16) FXM 12 p.m. Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003) ›››‡ Russell Crowe. (PG-13) (2:20) ENC 9:40 a.m., 5:40 p.m. Matilda (1996) ››› Mara Wilson. (PG) (2:00) FAM 8 p.m. Men of Honor (2000) ››› Robert De Niro. (R) (2:15) HBO 2 a.m. Miami Rhapsody (1995) ››› Sarah Jessica Parker. (PG-13) (1:35) TMC 5:55 a.m. Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol (2011) ››› Tom Cruise. (PG13) (3:00) FX 12:30 p.m. Moulin Rouge (2001) ››› Nicole Kidman. (PG-13) (2:10) MAX 6:20 a.m. Napoleon Dynamite (2004) ››› Jon Heder. (PG) (2:00) VH1 12 p.m. New Jack City (1991) ››› Wesley Snipes. (R) (2:30) VH1 10 p.m.

Outrageous Fortune (1987) ››› Shelley Long. (R) (1:45) FLIX 3:15 p.m. The Parent Trap (1998) ››› Lindsay Lohan. (PG) (3:00) FAM 1 p.m. Pigskin Parade (1936) ››› Stuart Erwin. (NR) (1:35) FXM 3 a.m. The Red Shoes (1948) ›››› Moira Shearer. A ballerina loves an impresario and her art. (NR) (2:30) TCM 5 p.m. Remember the Titans (2000) ››› Denzel Washington. (PG) (1:55) ENC 1:50 p.m., 10 p.m. Saving Mr. Banks (2013) ››› Emma Thompson. (PG-13) (2:10) STARZ 12:45 p.m., 8:05 p.m. Scarface (1932) ›››‡ Paul Muni. (PG) (2:00) TCM 7 a.m. Spider-Man (2002) ››› Tobey Maguire. (PG-13) (2:30) TNT 3:15 p.m., 1:02 a.m. Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) ››› Pierce Brosnan. (PG-13) (2:00) MAX 8:30 a.m. Top Gun (1986) ››› Tom Cruise. (PG) (2:00) MAX 12:30 p.m.

The Boys (1998) ››› David Wenham. (R) (1:30) TMC 3 p.m. Breaking the Waves (1996) ››› Emily Watson. (R) (2:40) FLIX 11 p.m. Cocaine Cowboys (2006) ››› (R) (2:35) SHOW 5:25 p.m. The Color of Money (1986) ››› Paul Newman. (R) (2:00) FLIX 9 p.m. Déjà Vu (2006) ››› Denzel Washington. (PG-13) (2:30) AMC 11:30 a.m. Dog Pound (2010) ››› Adam Butcher. (NR) (1:40) TMC 12:30 a.m. The East (2013) ››› Brit Marling. (PG-13) (2:00) HBO 4:30 p.m. Finder’s Fee (2001) ››› Erik Palladino. (R) (1:40) FLIX 6:45 a.m., 1:40 a.m. The First Wives Club (1996) ››› Goldie Hawn. (PG) (1:45) MAX 7 a.m. Gucci: The Director (2013) ››› (NR) (1:30) TMC 4:30 p.m.

The Magdalene Sisters (2002) ››› Geraldine McEwan. (R) (2:00) FLIX 3 p.m. Magic Mike (2012) ››› Channing Tatum. (R) (2:35) OXY 8:20 p.m., 10:55 p.m. Mata Hari (1931) ››› Greta Garbo. (NR) (1:30) TCM 3 a.m. Matilda (1996) ››› Mara Wilson. (PG) (2:00) FAM 5 p.m. Menace II Society (1993) ››› Tyrin Turner. (R) (2:30) BET 7 p.m. Les Misérables (2012) ›››‡ Hugh Jackman. (PG-13) (2:45) HBO 1:45 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Smith (1941) ››› Carole Lombard. (NR) (2:00) TCM 11:30 a.m. Monsters University (2013) ››› Voices of Billy Crystal. (G) (1:50) STARZ 5:35 p.m. Nothing Sacred (1937) ›››‡ Carole Lombard. (NR) (1:30) TCM 1:30 p.m. The Phantom Tollbooth (1969) ››› Voices of Butch Patrick. (G) (1:30) TCM 1:30 a.m.

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Unhung Hero (2013) ››› (NR) (1:30) TMC 3:05 a.m. What’s Love Got to Do With It (1993) ››› Angela Bassett. (R) (3:00) BET 9 p.m. A Yank in the RAF (1941) ››› Tyrone Power. (NR) (1:40) FXM 4:35 a.m.

Monday

Accused at 17 (2009) ››› Cynthia Gibb. (NR) (2:00) LIFE 6 p.m. Alien (1979) ›››› Tom Skerritt. A merciless horror stalks the crew of a deep-space freighter. (R) (2:00) ENC 4:20 p.m. The Associate (1996) ››› Whoopi Goldberg. (PG-13) (2:00) FLIX 3:30 a.m. The Aviator (2004) ›››‡ Leonardo DiCaprio. (PG-13) (2:55) ENC 9:35 a.m. The Black Hole (1979) ››› Maximilian Schell. (PG) (1:40) FLIX 1:20 p.m. Bowfinger (1999) ››› Steve Martin. (PG-13) (1:40) MAX 1:30 a.m.

Gulliver’s Travels (1939) ››› Voices of Lanny Ross. (NR) (1:30) TCM 10:30 p.m. Higher Learning (1995) ››› Omar Epps. (R) (2:30) VH1 1 p.m. Hold That Co-ed (1938) ››› John Barrymore. (NR) (1:30) FXM 3 a.m. I Wake Up Screaming (1941) ››› Betty Grable. (NR) (1:25) FXM 6:15 a.m. The Impossible (2012) ››› Naomi Watts. (PG-13) (2:00) TMC 9:30 a.m., 6 p.m. In Name Only (1939) ››› Carole Lombard. (NR) (2:00) TCM 3 p.m. In the Name of the Father (1993) ›››‡ Daniel Day-Lewis. (R) (2:15) FLIX 6:45 p.m. The Inheritors (1998) ››› Simon Schwarz. (R) (1:35) TMC 4 a.m. Jerry and Tom (1998) ››› Joe Mantegna. (R) (1:40) FLIX 5:30 a.m. The Letter (1940) ›››‡ Bette Davis. (NR) (1:45) TCM 4:30 a.m. Made for Each Other (1939) ›››‡ Carole Lombard. (NR) (2:00) TCM 7:30 a.m.

The Professional (1994) ››› Jean Reno. (R) (1:50) ENC 2:30 p.m., 3 a.m. Quiz Show (1994) ›››‡ John Turturro. (PG-13) (2:15) SHOW 1:30 p.m. Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic (2013) ››› Chevy Chase. (NR) (1:30) SHOW 1:30 a.m. Risky Business (1983) ››› Tom Cruise. (R) (2:00) KWPX 11 a.m. Saving Mr. Banks (2013) ››› Emma Thompson. (PG-13) (2:10) STARZ 8:30 a.m. The School of Rock (2003) ››› Jack Black. (PG-13) (2:30) AMC 2 p.m., 3 a.m. Starship Troopers (1997) ››› Casper Van Dien. (R) (2:15) STARZ 4:25 a.m. Stuart Little 2 (2002) ››› Geena Davis. (PG) (1:20) STARZ 10:40 a.m. Sweet Rosie O’Grady (1943) ››› Betty Grable. (NR) (1:20) FXM 7:40 a.m.

To Be or Not to Be (1942) ›››‡ Carole Lombard. (NR) (2:00) TCM 9:30 a.m. The Truman Show (1998) ›››‡ Jim Carrey. (PG) (1:45) SHOW 4:30 a.m. Zathura: A Space Adventure (2005) ››› Josh Hutcherson. (PG) (1:45) ENC 6:05 a.m.

Tuesday

At Any Price (2012) ››› Dennis Quaid. (R) (1:50) ENC 4:30 p.m. Bounce (2000) ››› Gwyneth Paltrow. (PG-13) (1:50) STARZ 11:55 a.m., 7:40 p.m. Bully (2001) ››› Brad Renfro. (R) (1:55) FLIX 10:45 p.m. Captain Phillips (2013) ›››‡ Tom Hanks. (PG-13) (2:15) STARZ 4:50 a.m. The Case Against 8 (2014) ››› (NR) (2:00) HBO 12 p.m. City of God (2002) ›››‡ Matheus Nachtergaele. (R) (2:10) TMC 10 p.m. The D.I. (1957) ››› Jack Webb. (NR) (2:00) TCM 5 a.m. Dan in Real Life (2007) ››› Steve Carell. (PG-13) (2:00) TBS 9 a.m. Dear Brigitte (1965) ››› James Stewart. (NR) (2:00) FXM 10 a.m. Donnie Brasco (1997) ›››‡ Al Pacino. (R) (3:00) AMC 4 p.m., 3 a.m. Double Jeopardy (1999) ››› Tommy Lee Jones. (R) (1:45) SHOW 11 a.m., 5 p.m. Driving Miss Daisy (1989) ›››› Morgan Freeman. Atlanta widow and chauffeur reflect changes from 1948 to 1973. (PG) (1:40) ENC 8 a.m., 6:20 p.m. Far From the Madding Crowd (1967) ›››› Julie Christie. A 19th-century British farm girl has three choices in love. (GP) (3:15) TCM 9 p.m. Fight Club (1999) ›››‡ Brad Pitt. (R) (2:20) MAX 11:30 a.m. F/X (1986) ››› Bryan Brown. (R) (1:55) MAX 7:50 a.m. The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (2013) ››› Ian McKellen. (PG-13) (2:45) HBO 8 p.m., 2:40 a.m. Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey (1993) ››› Voices of Don Ameche. (G) (1:30) SHOW 6:15 a.m. Independence Day (1996) ››› Will Smith. (PG-13) (2:25) STARZ 12:40 a.m. A Kiss Before Dying (1956) ››› Robert Wagner. (NR) (1:45) TCM 3:15 p.m. The Last Big Thing (1996) ››› Dan Zukovic. (R) (1:45) TMC 7:15 a.m. Mad Hot Ballroom (2005) ››› (PG) (1:50) FLIX 3:10 p.m. Magic Mike (2012) ››› Channing Tatum. (R) (2:30) OXY 5:30 p.m., 12 a.m. The Maltese Falcon (1941) ›››› Humphrey Bogart. Detective Sam Spade searches for a jewel-encrusted statue. (NR) (1:45) TCM 6:15 a.m. Marvin’s Room (1996) ››› Meryl Streep. (PG-13) (1:50) FLIX 7:10 a.m. Menace II Society (1993) ››› Tyrin Turner. (R) (2:30) BET 1:30 p.m.

Monster (2003) ›››‡ Charlize Theron. (R) (2:00) SHOW 3 a.m. Monsters University (2013) ››› Voices of Billy Crystal. (G) (1:45) STARZ 8:55 a.m. Network (1976) ›››› Faye Dunaway. A TV station will air almost anything for big ratings. (R) (2:15) TCM 6:45 p.m. Ocean’s Eleven (1960) ››› Frank Sinatra. (NR) (2:10) ENC 4:50 a.m. People Will Talk (1951) ›››‡ Cary Grant. (NR) (2:00) FXM 6 a.m. The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012) ››› Logan Lerman. (PG13) (1:45) TMC 1:15 p.m. Sarafina! (1992) ››› Leleti Khumalo. (PG-13) (1:40) FLIX 5:50 a.m. Silver Linings Playbook (2012) ›››‡ Bradley Cooper. (R) (2:05) TMC 11:10 a.m., 5:55 p.m. Strangers on a Train (1951) ›››› Robert Walker. Two men plot two murders. (PG) (1:45) TCM 1:30 p.m. Sunday, Bloody Sunday (1971) ›››‡ Glenda Jackson. (R) (2:00) TCM 12:15 a.m. Three Men and a Baby (1987) ››› Tom Selleck. (PG) (1:45) FLIX 5 p.m. Untamed Heart (1993) ››› Christian Slater. (PG-13) (1:45) ENC 1:15 p.m. The World’s End (2013) ››› Simon Pegg. (R) (1:50) MAX 1:50 p.m. Yellow Sky (1948) ››› Gregory Peck. (NR) (1:40) FXM 4:05 a.m.

Wednesday

About Last Night (2014) ››› Kevin Hart. (R) (1:45) STARZ 1:35 a.m. Akeelah and the Bee (2006) ››› Laurence Fishburne. (PG) (2:00) KWPX 11 a.m. Alien (1979) ›››› Tom Skerritt. A merciless horror stalks the crew of a deep-space freighter. (R) (2:00) ENC 2 p.m., 10 p.m. Amélie (2001) ››› Audrey Tautou. (R) (2:05) FLIX 2:55 p.m. Angels in the Outfield (1951) ››› Paul Douglas. (NR) (2:00) TCM 5 p.m. Big Miracle (2012) ››› John Krasinski. (PG) (1:51) FXM 10 p.m. Billy Bathgate (1991) ››› Dustin Hoffman. (R) (2:00) FLIX 7:30 p.m. Biutiful (2010) ››› Javier Bardem. (R) (2:30) TMC 2:30 a.m. Blue Car (2002) ››› David Strathairn. (R) (1:30) TMC 1:30 p.m. The Blue Max (1966) ››› George Peppard. (NR) (2:45) FXM 9:15 a.m., 12 a.m. Bye Bye Birdie (1963) ››› Dick Van Dyke. (G) (2:00) TCM 7 p.m. Captain Phillips (2013) ›››‡ Tom Hanks. (PG-13) (2:20) STARZ 5:40 p.m. Changeling (2008) ››› Angelina Jolie. (R) (2:30) MAX 4:30 p.m. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) ››› Johnny Depp. (PG) (2:00) HBO 8:30 a.m. Criminal (2004) ››› John C. Reilly. (R) (1:30) HBO 5:15 a.m. Dead Poets Society (1989) ›››‡ Robin Williams. (PG) (2:15) SHOW 9:45 a.m. Dick (1999) ››› Kirsten Dunst. (PG-13) (1:35) TMC 8 p.m.


The Daily Herald

The 50 Year Argument (2014) ››› (NR) (1:45) HBO 4 p.m., 12:35 a.m. The Game (1997) ››› Michael Douglas. (R) (2:10) MAX 3:15 a.m. Gravity (2013) ›››‡ Sandra Bullock. (PG-13) (1:35) MAX 9:15 a.m., 10 p.m. Holiday Affair (1949) ››› Robert Mitchum. (NR) (1:45) TCM 9 p.m. I Can Get It for You Wholesale (1951) ››› Susan Hayward. (NR) (1:40) FXM 3 a.m. In the Line of Fire (1993) ››› Clint Eastwood. (R) (2:10) ENC 5:50 p.m. Independence Day (1996) ››› Will Smith. (PG-13) (2:25) STARZ 3:15 p.m. The Last Time I Saw Archie (1961) ››› Robert Mitchum. (NR) (1:45) TCM 8:45 a.m. The Mask of Zorro (1998) ››› Antonio Banderas. (PG-13) (2:20) STARZ 7:05 a.m. Midnight in Paris (2011) ›››‡ Owen Wilson. (PG-13) (1:35) ENC 7 a.m. My Cousin Vinny (1992) ›››‡ Joe Pesci. (R) (2:05) ENC 10:15 a.m., 8 p.m. Passion Fish (1992) ››› Mary McDonnell. (R) (2:20) TMC 8 a.m. Phantom of the Megaplex (2000) ››› Taylor Handley. (1:40) DSY 1:40 a.m. The Place Beyond the Pines (2012) ››› Ryan Gosling. (R) (2:25) MAX 10:50 a.m. Primal Fear (1996) ››› Richard Gere. (R) (2:15) ENC 3:30 a.m. The Savages (2007) ›››‡ Laura Linney. (R) (2:00) HBO 3:15 a.m. Scary Movie (2000) ››› Shawn Wayans. (R) (1:30) MAX 7:45 a.m. Scent of a Woman (1992) ›››‡ Al Pacino. (R) (2:45) SHOW 12 p.m. Secrets & Lies (1996) ››› Timothy Spall. (R) (2:30) FLIX 7:30 a.m. Sin City (2005) ››› Jessica Alba. (R) (2:10) STARZ 3:20 a.m. Take This Waltz (2011) ››› Michelle Williams. (R) (2:00) TMC 11:10 p.m. Transformers (2007) ››› Shia LaBeouf. (PG-13) (3:00) TNT 6 p.m. The Truth About Cats & Dogs (1996) ››› Uma Thurman. (PG-13) (1:45) HBO 2:15 p.m.

Thursday

About Last Night (2014) ››› Kevin Hart. (R) (1:45) STARZ 2:45 p.m., 9 p.m. American Hustle (2013) ›››‡ Christian Bale. (R) (2:25) STARZ 12:20 p.m., 10:45 p.m. Baby Boy (2001) ››› Tyrese Gibson. (R) (2:30) OXY 8 p.m., 10:30 p.m. Big Miracle (2012) ››› John Krasinski. (PG) (1:51) FXM 12 p.m. Cinderella Man (2005) ›››‡ Russell Crowe. (PG-13) (2:30) HBO 7:45 a.m. Dark Horse (2011) ››› Justin Bartha. (NR) (1:30) TMC 8:30 a.m. Dead Calm (1989) ››› Sam Neill. (R) (2:00) KWPX 11 a.m.

The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947) ›››‡ Gene Tierney. (NR) (2:00) TCM 6:45 p.m. Good Morning, Miss Dove (1955) ››› Jennifer Jones. (NR) (1:49) FXM 4 a.m. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005) ››› Daniel Radcliffe. (PG13) (2:45) MAX 1:15 p.m. Hideous Kinky (1998) ››› Kate Winslet. (R) (1:40) FLIX 1:35 p.m. The Horse Whisperer (1998) ›››‡ Robert Redford. (PG-13) (3:00) TMC 5 p.m. How to Kill Your Neighbor’s Dog (2000) ››› Kenneth Branagh. (R) (1:50) FLIX 5:15 a.m. Ironclad (2011) ›››‡ James Purefoy. (R) (2:05) TMC 8 p.m. Juno (2007) ›››‡ Ellen Page. (PG13) (2:00) USA 6 a.m. Kung Fu Panda (2008) ››› Voices of Jack Black. (PG) (1:48) FXM 6 p.m., 8 p.m. Manhunter (1986) ››› William L. Petersen. (R) (2:05) SHOW 3 a.m. Meet the Parents (2000) ››› Robert De Niro. (PG-13) (2:30) SPIKE 10 a.m., 3 p.m. Monster (2003) ›››‡ Charlize Theron. (R) (2:00) SHOW 11:30 p.m. Murder, My Sweet (1944) ›››‡ Dick Powell. (NR) (1:45) TCM 10:30 a.m. The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) ›››› Voices of Danny Elfman. Animated. Halloweentown’s leader aims to kidnap Santa. (PG) (1:25) DSY 8 p.m. Portrait of Jennie (1948) ›››‡ Jennifer Jones. (NR) (1:45) TCM 5 p.m. Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1938) ››› Shirley Temple. (G) (1:30) FXM 10:30 a.m. Save the Last Dance (2001) ››› Julia Stiles. (PG-13) (2:00) SHOW 5:30 p.m., 5:05 a.m. Schultze Gets the Blues (2003) ››› Horst Krause. (PG) (2:00) FLIX 10 a.m. Sin City (2005) ››› Jessica Alba. (R) (2:10) STARZ 6:50 p.m. Stakeout (1987) ››› Richard Dreyfuss. (R) (2:30) VH1 12:30 a.m. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) ›››‡ Marilyn Burns. (R) (2:00) SYFY 9:10 p.m. This Is the End (2013) ››› James Franco. (R) (1:50) ENC 4:40 p.m., 1:20 a.m. Wee Willie Winkie (1937) ››› Shirley Temple. (PG) (1:45) FXM 8:45 a.m.

Friday The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1960) ››› Tony Randall. (NR) (2:00) TCM 5:15 a.m. Analyze This (1999) ››› Robert De Niro. (R) (2:00) BRAVO 11 a.m. As Good as It Gets (1997) ››› Jack Nicholson. (PG-13) (2:20) STARZ 4:40 p.m., 5:20 a.m. The Associate (1996) ››› Whoopi Goldberg. (PG-13) (1:55) FLIX 7:05 a.m., 2:30 a.m. The Aviator (2004) ›››‡ Leonardo DiCaprio. (PG-13) (2:55) ENC 3:20 p.m.

The Battle of Algiers (1966) ›››‡ Jean Martin. (NR) (2:15) TCM 9:15 p.m. Blue Jasmine (2013) ››› Alec Baldwin. (PG-13) (1:45) STARZ 8:15 a.m. Boys’ Night Out (1962) ››› Kim Novak. (NR) (2:00) TCM 3:15 a.m. Bully (2001) ››› Brad Renfro. (R) (2:00) FLIX 12:30 a.m. Crash (2004) ›››‡ Sandra Bullock. (R) (2:00) TMC 6 p.m. Duma (2005) ››› Alexander Michaletos. (PG) (1:45) HBO 11:45 a.m. Election (1999) ››› Matthew Broderick. (R) (1:50) SHOW 1 p.m. Fight Club (1999) ›››‡ Brad Pitt. (R) (2:25) MAX 1:50 p.m. Fish Tank (2009) ››› Michael Fassbender. (NR) (2:05) TMC 2:30 a.m. Good Morning, Miss Dove (1955) ››› Jennifer Jones. (NR) (1:50) FXM 12 a.m. Honeymoon in Vegas (1992) ››› James Caan. (PG-13) (1:40) ENC 8:20 a.m., 6:15 p.m.

Puss in Boots (2011) ››› Voices of Antonio Banderas. (PG) (1:44) FXM 4 p.m., 6 p.m. Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1938) ››› Shirley Temple. (G) (1:25) FXM 9 a.m. Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011) ››› James Franco. (PG-13) (3:00) FX 8 p.m., 11 p.m. Scary Movie (2000) ››› Shawn Wayans. (R) (1:30) MAX 4:40 a.m. Scent of a Woman (1992) ›››‡ Al Pacino. (R) (2:40) SHOW 1:05 a.m. Shanghai Noon (2000) ››› Jackie Chan. (PG-13) (1:55) STARZ 11:35 p.m. Silver Linings Playbook (2012) ›››‡ Bradley Cooper. (R) (2:05) TMC 8:30 a.m., 8 p.m. Something of Value (1957) ››› Rock Hudson. (NR) (2:00) TCM 7:15 p.m. Something’s Gotta Give (2003) ››› Jack Nicholson. (PG-13) (2:10) ENC 10 a.m., 8 p.m., 3:55 a.m. Stakeout (1987) ››› Richard Dreyfuss. (R) (2:30) VH1 11 a.m.

The Blind Side (2009) ›››‡ Sandra Bullock. (PG-13) (3:00) FAM 5 p.m., 11 p.m. Byzantium (2012) ››› Gemma Arterton. (R) (2:00) TMC 9 p.m., 12:30 a.m. Cass Timberlane (1947) ››› Spencer Tracy. (NR) (2:15) TCM 7 p.m. Catch Me if You Can (2002) ››› Leonardo DiCaprio. (PG-13) (3:00) TNT 11 a.m. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) ››› Johnny Depp. (PG) (2:00) HBO 7:30 a.m. Contagion (2011) ››› Marion Cotillard. (PG-13) (2:30) TNT 10:31 p.m. Dead Poets Society (1989) ›››‡ Robin Williams. (PG) (2:15) SHOW 3:15 p.m. Deliverance (1972) ›››› Jon Voight. An Appalachian canoe trip turns bad for four businessmen. (R) (1:55) MAX 3:50 a.m. Dick (1999) ››› Kirsten Dunst. (PG-13) (1:35) TMC 9 a.m. Face/Off (1997) ››› John Travolta. (R) (3:00) A&E 1 p.m.

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MOVIES ON TV

The Hunger Games (2012) ››› Jennifer Lawrence. (PG-13) (3:00) FAM 8 p.m. Hustle & Flow (2005) ››› Terrence Howard. (R) (2:00) FLIX 6:45 p.m. In the Name of the Father (1993) ›››‡ Daniel Day-Lewis. (R) (2:15) FLIX 2:45 p.m. The Incredibles (2004) ›››‡ Voices of Craig T. Nelson. (PG) (2:00) STARZ 2:40 p.m. The Joy Luck Club (1993) ›››‡ Rosalind Chao. (R) (2:30) FLIX 4:30 a.m. Khartoum (1966) ››› Charlton Heston. (NR) (2:15) TCM 5 p.m. Life of Pi (2012) ›››‡ Suraj Sharma. (PG) (2:15) HBO 5:45 p.m. Lincoln (2012) ›››‡ Daniel DayLewis. (PG-13) (2:30) TMC 10:35 a.m., 10:05 p.m. Mystic River (2003) ›››‡ Sean Penn. (R) (3:00) KWPX 11 a.m. The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) ›››› Voices of Danny Elfman. Animated. Halloweentown’s leader aims to kidnap Santa. (PG) (1:25) DSY 3:35 p.m.

1717 Rockefeller Ave. • Everett, WA 98201 425.339.3300 www.leisurecare.com/washingtonoakes The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) ›››‡ Marilyn Burns. (R) (2:00) SYFY 2 a.m. 13 Rue Madeleine (1946) ›››‡ James Cagney. (NR) (1:40) FXM 5:45 a.m. Tin Cup (1996) ››› Kevin Costner. (R) (2:20) ENC 1:35 a.m. Twitches (2005) ››› Tia Mowry. (1:35) DSY 2:30 a.m. Wee Willie Winkie (1937) ››› Shirley Temple. (PG) (1:45) FXM 7:15 a.m. Without Limits (1998) ››› Billy Crudup. (PG-13) (2:00) HBO 8:15 a.m.

Saturday

American Hustle (2013) ›››‡ Christian Bale. (R) (2:20) STARZ 2:40 a.m. Before Sunset (2004) ››› Ethan Hawke. (R) (1:25) MAX 6:10 a.m. A Big Hand for the Little Lady (1966) ››› Henry Fonda. (NR) (1:45) TCM 10:30 a.m. Billy Bathgate (1991) ››› Dustin Hoffman. (R) (2:00) FLIX 9 a.m.

50/50 (2011) ››› Joseph GordonLevitt. (R) (2:00) VH1 8 p.m. The 50 Year Argument (2014) ››› (NR) (1:45) HBO 9:45 a.m. Fruitvale Station (2013) ›››‡ Michael B. Jordan. (R) (1:30) SHOW 5:30 p.m. The Ghost Writer (2010) ››› Pierce Brosnan. (PG-13) (2:10) SHOW 10 a.m. The Goonies (1985) ››› Sean Astin. (PG) (2:30) FAM 2:30 p.m. Hangover Square (1945) ››› Laird Cregar. (NR) (1:20) FXM 5 a.m. The Hunger Games (2012) ››› Jennifer Lawrence. (PG-13) (3:00) FAM 8 p.m. The Incredibles (2004) ›››‡ Voices of Craig T. Nelson. (PG) (2:00) STARZ 7:40 a.m. Iron Man 3 (2013) ››› Robert Downey Jr. (PG-13) (2:15) ENC 10:05 a.m., 8 p.m., 3:30 a.m. Just Desserts (2004) ››› Lauren Holly. (2:00) HALL 5 p.m. Kitty Foyle (1940) ››› Ginger Rogers. (NR) (2:00) TCM 9:15 p.m.

Sunday, October 05, 2014 21 La Bamba (1987) ››› Lou Diamond Phillips. (PG-13) (2:00) KONG 12 a.m. Lloyd’s of London (1936) ›››‡ Tyrone Power. (NR) (2:00) FXM 3 a.m. Mad Hot Ballroom (2005) ››› (PG) (2:00) FLIX 5 a.m. Marvin’s Room (1996) ››› Meryl Streep. (PG-13) (1:45) FLIX 1:30 p.m., 1:50 a.m. Menace II Society (1993) ››› Tyrin Turner. (R) (2:30) BET 5:30 p.m., 10:30 p.m. Les Misérables (2012) ›››‡ Hugh Jackman. (PG-13) (2:45) HBO 3:30 p.m. Monster (2003) ›››‡ Charlize Theron. (R) (2:00) SHOW 1:45 a.m. The Mummy (1999) ››› Brendan Fraser. (PG-13) (2:30) FAM 9 a.m. An Old Fashioned Thanksgiving (2008) ››› Jacqueline Bisset. (2:30) CIVT 12:05 a.m. Outrageous Fortune (1987) ››› Shelley Long. (R) (1:45) FLIX 5 p.m. Pickup on South Street (1953) ›››‡ Richard Widmark. (NR) (1:25) FXM 10:35 a.m., 12 a.m. Pulp Fiction (1994) ›››› John Travolta. Criminals cross paths in three interlocked tales of mayhem. (R) (3:30) VH1 10 p.m. Quartet (2012) ››› Maggie Smith. (PG-13) (1:40) TMC 2:05 p.m. Rush (2013) ››› Chris Hemsworth. (R) (2:10) HBO 8 p.m., 11:10 p.m. Secrets & Lies (1996) ››› Timothy Spall. (R) (2:30) FLIX 11 a.m. Set It Off (1996) ››› Jada Pinkett. (R) (2:30) BET 3 p.m. Shanghai Noon (2000) ››› Jackie Chan. (PG-13) (1:55) STARZ 1:40 p.m. Sleepless in Seattle (1993) ›››‡ Tom Hanks. (PG) (2:30) OXY 3 p.m. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982) ››› William Shatner. (PG) (2:30) VH1 11 a.m., 3:30 a.m. Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984) ››› William Shatner. (PG) (2:30) VH1 1:30 p.m. Stella Dallas (1937) ››› Barbara Stanwyck. (NR) (2:00) TCM 5 p.m. Team America: World Police (2004) ››› Voices of Trey Parker. (R) (2:15) COM 2:19 a.m. Three Men and a Baby (1987) ››› Tom Selleck. (PG) (1:45) FLIX 3:15 p.m. 21 Jump Street (2012) ››› Jonah Hill. (R) (3:00) FX 4 p.m. The Uninvited (1944) ›››‡ Ray Milland. (NR) (2:00) KVOS 10 p.m. Up in the Air (2009) ›››‡ George Clooney. (R) (1:55) HBO 3:55 a.m. Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005) ›››‡ Voices of Peter Sallis. (G) (2:00) TOON 6 p.m. War of the Worlds (2005) ››› Tom Cruise. (PG-13) (2:31) TNT 8 p.m. The Westerner (1940) ›››‡ Gary Cooper. (NR) (2:00) TCM 12:15 p.m. When Harry Met Sally... (1989) ›››› Billy Crystal. Two romantically bruised New Yorkers become close friends. (R) (2:00) OXY 1 p.m., 1 a.m.


22

Sunday, October 05, 2014 The Daily Herald Cristela Alonzo

BY JAY BOBBIN

‘Cristela’ bursts onto sitcom scene

It’s hard to resist a force of nature. ABC executives found that upon meeting Cristela Alonzo, a stand-up comic whose buoyant personality put her on the fast track to becoming a series star. The result is the semiautobiographical “Cristela,” premiering Friday, Oct. 10 ... and casting her as a law-school student who works several jobs to pay her tuition while sharing too-crowded quarters with several relatives. The brightest spot in her life is the unpaid internship that a lawyer (Sam McMurray) gives her at his firm. “Everything that happens, I always believe it happens for a reason,” Alonzo says of landing her own sitcom, “so for me, I expected that whatever the outcome was, that was the outcome it was supposed to be. I don’t try to put any expectation on this show except (that) I want the show to portray me as me. “The name of the show is ‘Cristela.’ The character in the show is very much who I am in person, and I just want to show people the real me because when you try to pretend that you’re someone else, people can tell.” The San Juan, Texas-raised Alonzo appeared on such programs as NBC’s “Last Comic Standing” and TBS’ “Conan” while making her name on the comedy-club and college circuits. “My mom raised us,” she notes. “She was a single mom, and actually for the first eight years of my life, my family, we were squatters in an abandoned diner. Watching TV was my escape from having that childhood.” In a very real sense, it also inspired Alonzo in her own life and with her new character. The fictional Cristela’s mother (played by Terri Hoyos), sister (Maria Canals-Barrera) and brother-in-law (Carlos Ponce) are skeptical about her achieving her personal and professional dreams. “I always knew I had to go out and do it,” Alonzo reflects of becoming a comedian, “because I loved it so much that it would bother me if I didn't try and live with the regret of not trying my entire life. And that’s why I’m here right now, because every time an obstacle came up that scared the hell out of me, I still went forward because I knew that there was a chance that I could attain that goal. “My mom and I didn’t speak for a long while when I left home to pursue this,” adds Alonzo, ”because she couldn’t understand it. Unfortunately, she passed away before she ever saw any of this ... but even now, I feel like she’s helped me get to this point. And I would like to think she’s very proud of what I’ve accomplished.”

Emeril Lagasse of “On the Menu” on TNT “I don’t really watch a lot of television. I watch the news and I’m a big sports guy. And other than that, I can’t tell you that I have a favorite, like, show.” Analeigh Tipton of “Manhattan Love Story” on ABC “ ‘Veep,’ ‘Arrested Development,’ ‘Cosmos’ and ‘30 Rock.’ And ‘The Love Boat.’ I own the whole series on DVD. I do.”

Jake McDorman of “Manhattan Love Story” on ABC “ ‘Game of Thrones,’ ‘House of Cards,’ ‘Breaking Bad’ – I did a two-week binge on it. ‘The Colbert Report,’ ‘Eastbound & Down,’ ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm,’ ‘The Daily Show With Jon Stewart,’ ‘South Park,’ ‘The Office’ – both the BBC and U.S. versions.”

Kate Walsh of “Bad Judge” on NBC “ ‘American Ninja Warrior.’ I am obsessed. It is the best of reality TV combined with watching a live sporting event.”


The Daily Herald

Sunday, October 05, 2014 23

BY SARAH HUGGINS @ZAP2IT.COM

‘New Girl’ Season 4:

Hannah Simone teases Cece and Schmidt’s bright future

So far we know there is some serious dating going on in “New Girl” Season 4. With Nick and Jess newly single, who better to assist in the pickup action than their single friends? This season brings viewers back to Season 1 in a lot of ways, because the entire group is single and ready to mingle. So look forward to a lot of dating related hijinks. That means fans shouldn’t lose hope for Cece and Schmidt (Max Greenfield). Hannah Simone tells sZap2it this is a perfect time for a happily-ever-after for the couple. “There’s always hope. I love the dynamic of Schmidt and Cece together. There have been ups and downs, growing pains and people getting scared of commitment. Now in Season 4, we’re both single. He’s coming off of a slutty summer while she’s broken up with her boyfriend, and they still have this great chemistry and connection,” she says. When asked whether it’s Cece and Schmidt, not Jess and Nick, who is the couple everyone is rooting for, Simone remains optimistic. She says, “I don’t know what is going to happen this season, but I feel like [Cece & Schmidt] are in a really good place that if something were to [happen], we’d all be so on board with them.” Season 4 also brings about some career changes, such as Winston embracing his new power status. Lamorne Morris tells Zap2it he hopes his character really gets into his new position as an officer of the law. “I want to kick doors in. I want to solve crimes. I really want to go after the drug dealers of the world and just put guns to people’s heads and do some ‘New York Undercover’ stuff,” the actor jokes. Morris says after mostly lusting after his cat last season, things are looking up in the love department for Winston in Season 4. “There’s a woman crazy after Winston, that he knows and has known about for some time,” Morris reveals. Morris also wants fans to know that if they see him at a bar they shouldn’t be afraid to challenge him to a game of “True American.” He reveals he has a reputation of playing in the past. “I met this girl out and she was beautiful, so I went and played ‘True American’ with her and a bunch of people. It was fantastic,” he says. Simone jokes about putting a tracking device on her co-star for his safety and argues the game is impossible. “There’s no way to play ‘True American.’ There’s no rules,” she says. “If you get drunk and act like a maniac, you’re basically playing ‘True American’.”

ADAM

Guru of the week!

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-As an undergraduate at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, Adam began a food journal to document the standout food establishments he encountered.

• Adam earned a master’s degree in Fine Arts from Yale University’s School of Drama and traveled the United States, acting in many regional theaters. • He began hosting “Man v Food’’ for the Travel Channel, which quickly became their highest rated show. • With “Man v Food Nation,’’ Adam not only hosted but coexecutive produced the series. • Adam was also an executive producer on his series “Adam Richman’s Best Sandwich in America.’’ • He also hosted “Adam Richman’s Fandemonium’’ on Travel Channel.

• Adam will host NBC’s new food competition show, “Food Fighters.’’ • His first book, America the Edible, hit stands on November 9, 2010. • He is working on his first cookbook. • Adam is a regular contributor for the “Today Show,’’ board member of the Armed Services Foundation and popular lecturer on the college circuit. • In 2009 and 2010 he won the CableFax award for Best Host. • Aside from TV, Adam has acted in numerous theater productions in NY and a variety of TV shows. • Born: May 16, 1974 in Brooklyn, NY.

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Comics Herald THE DAILY

WWW.HERALDNET.COM

|

SUNDAY, 10.05.14





THINK PINK

Saving lives Citrine Health shop offers women much more than bras, Page 3

Getting strong Nourishing the body during treatment, Page 16

2014 BREAST CANCER AWARENESS SPECIAL SECTION


2 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

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think pink

The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 3

How an art walk saved a woman’s life Citrine Health store sells bras, yes, but offers more for women during and after cancer fight By Andrea Brown Herald Writer

One thing led to another. First, Linda Barth was laid off from her job at Boeing. So, she went to the community college for retraining and decided to take an oil painting class. Then she went on the Everett Art Walk. Citrine Health women’s wellness center was one of the stops on the map. “I walked in the door and said, ‘What do you guys do here?’” Barth said. “They said, ‘We do mammograms and pap smears for people who don’t have insurance.’” Barth, 61, of Stanwood, hadn’t had a mammogram in about 20 years, so she figured it was time. The mammogram led to a breast ultrasound then a biopsy. Three days before Christmas in 2010, she got the cancer verdict. “I was dead-on-the-floor shocked,” she said. “I’d been the healthiest person on earth ever.” The tumor was Stage I. “The doctor said, ‘It’s big enough to see and find. Small enough to remove. You couldn’t have had a mammogram at a better time,’” Barth said. She had a lumpectomy, surgery in which only the tumor and some surrounding tissue were removed. After surgery, she had seven weeks of radiation and continues to take a breast cancer treatment drug. “It’s really funny about having cancer,” Barth said. “People don’t talk to you about it. The last thing they want to ask you is, ‘Which one is it?’ or ‘How much boobage is left?’” Only her bra fitter knows for sure. See Page 4

Linda Barth is a breast cancer survivor and a customer of the Bra Shop in the Citrine Health center in Everett.

DAN BATES / THE HERALD


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4 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

From Page 3

“You can’t get any closer to anybody than your bra fitter,” Barth said. She goes to The Bra Shop at Citrine Health, a nonprofit that also houses a women’s wellness center and a gift shop. Citrine opened The Bra Shop after moving to a new location in downtown Everett in June. The Bra Shop has a boutique look and feel to it. “We really needed it to look inviting and modern and upscale,” Citrine director Kerri Mallams said. “We want people to want to come here.” There are bras for all women, she said. “It’s not only for women who have had breast cancer. We have bras for everybody, for all body sizes and shapes and also bras for women who are post-mastectomy.” The shop saved the day for some women in a wedding party staying at the hotel across the

street, who discovered at the last minute their bras didn’t fit right with their dresses. The shop has bras that are lacy, sexy, sporty, big and small. Walk-ins are welcome. “It’s good to make an appointment,” Mallams said. “It takes about an hour, a lot of times longer.” The display area is bright and airy. By contrast, the private fitting room, where women are measured, is intimate with mood lighting. “It’s a relaxed environment,” Mallams said. “You want to be comfortable taking your shirt off.” It’s more than crunching numbers. “We take basic measurements and ask what needs are,” bra fitter Angie Fair said. “It is important to get a good fit so their natural breast and breast prosthetic are held correctly. Otherwise it might be hard to match their natural breast if they

The Bra Shop The Bra Shop is in the Citrine Health building at 2940 W. Marine View Drive, Everett. The Bra Shop serves all women who need bras, especially low-income women with Medicaid/DSHS health insurance. In partnership with the Washington Breast, Cervical and Colon Health Program, the breast health program connects women to free or low-cost preventative health care services. Underinsured and uninsured women can receive yearly health exams that include cervical screening and mammograms throughout Island, San Juan, Skagit, Snohomish, Pierce and Whatcom counties. For more about the program, call 425259-9899 or 888-651-8931. The building houses a women’s wellness center with fitness classes, massage rooms, yoga and facials. There is a gift and art shop.

See Page 5

DAN BATES / THE HERALD

At the Bra Shop in the Citrine Health Building in Everett, manager Angie Fair works among racks filled with bras and mannequins everywhere.

Hours are 7 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday; and 8 a.m. to noon Saturday. There will be a grand opening from 4 to 7 p.m. Oct. 15. Breast

cancer survivors are invited to cut the ribbon at 5:30 p.m. To participate in the ribbon cutting call Debbie Rowe, 425-259-9899. For more information go to www. citrinehealth.org.

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think pink From Page 4

are wearing the wrong bra size. Especially after having surgeries, they might have lost or gained weight. They might have been wearing the wrong size of bra all their lives anyway. Women often wear the wrong size of bra. It becomes really important to get a good fit so their natural breast and breast prosthesis are held correctly.” The shop stocks hundreds of gently used breast prosthetics, or forms, which fit into pocketed bras. “There are a lot of different shapes and sizes with a lot of variety in the technology,” Fair said. “A lot of times they build up heat, so they use cooling gel technology or climate-controlled backs.” Retail can be $350 or more per prosthetic. Insurance carriers

The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 5

differ on what is covered. “If women are able to make a donation for prosthetics and bras, that’s wonderful,” Fair said. “But if not, that is OK, too.” Every woman is different. As a lumpectomy patient, Barth said she maintained part of her breast. “I didn’t have enough taken off for reconstruction. A bra makes it look like they’re supposed to. You want to be proportioned.” She tried on at least 20 different bras before choosing a shiny red bra. It fit more than her shape. She volunteers as late night radio deejay on Everett public radio station KSER (90.7 FM), using the name “The Lady in Red.” Andrea Brown: 425-339-3443; abrown@heraldnet.com. Twitter: @reporterbrown. DAN BATES / THE HERALD

At the Bra Shop in the Citrine Health center in Everett, breast forms come in a variety of sytles, including some that are exceptionally natural.

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think pink

6 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

With partners in her corner

An alliance of medical care helped Lake Stevens woman fight cancer Debra Smith For The Herald

Mary Kay Jurovcik was sure it wasn’t breast cancer. At age 33, the Lake Stevens woman was young and healthy. And there was no history of cancer in her family. She was so sure that she felt nonchalant going in for her mammogram. When a mysterious lump in her breast was biopsied and it was time for her doctor to tell her the results, she went to the appointment alone. The diagnosis was shocking. “I am a healthy weight. I eat well. I exercise. I breast fed two kids. As far as things you can do to control for breast cancer, I’ve done them,” she said. “Cancer doesn’t care. Sometimes it’s just going to happen.” Nearly two years later, she is cancer free. She’s written about her experience online at www. boldsurvivor.com. She credits a collaboration between local health care providers for her recovery. The collaboration is called Providence Regional Cancer Partnership. It was founded in 2007 and it brings together professionals from Providence, the Everett Clinic, Western Washington Medical Group and Northwest Washington Radiology Oncology Associates. What’s perhaps uncommon is this partnership brings together competing medical organizations. Financially, it might not always be in the best interests of these organizations to work together. But they do so for the sake of the patients. “Once I met the team working with me there was no turning back.” Jurovcik said. “I didn’t want to go anywhere else. It’s 15 minutes from my house. The

“One of the best things about the partnership is all the medical staff discuss all the cases.” — Mary Kay Jurovcik

PHOTO COURTESY OF ANNETTE COLOMBINI

Mary Kay Jurovcik was surprised by a breast cancer diagnosis at 33. She credits her survival with an alliance of medical businesses, the Providence Regional Cancer Partnership.

care is absolutely top notch.” The program operates in a facility next to Providence’s main hospital on Colby Avenue in Everett. The building is a light-filled space with rooftop garden and comfy furniture. Even the artwork is selected for

its healing effects. Soon after a patient is diagnosed, a team of doctors and specialists meets to discuss a personal treatment plan. Under one roof patients can access a bevy of services, including chemotherapy, radiation and

counseling. It even offers a class on makeup and wigs for patients who have lost their hair. Jurovcik runs Paroba College, an Everett beauty school, and had no shortage of help with that. Next door, doctors can do surgery at the hospital. “One of the best things about the partnership is all the medical staff discuss all the cases,” she said. “They were all working on my case from the beginning. … There is input from other staff. It’s like a built-in second opinion.” Dr. Steve Martinez specializes in breast cancer surgeries. He’s affiliated with the Everett Clinic and works with patients in the partnership. Before this, he worked at UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento, considered to be on the leading edge of cancer care in the U.S. He says what’s going on with the partnership in some cases perhaps surpasses what he saw at UC Davis. Cancer, he said, isn’t a disease one doctor can fight. It takes a team of experts. Treatment usually involves some combination of surgery, chemotherapy and perhaps radiation. The partnership brings together doctors,

specialists and other providers who can work together to help a patient. “These are all competitors,” he said. “What’s the incentive to get a bunch of competitors working together? Honestly, they would provide better care.” Here’s one example. Before he’s able to perform surgery, a wire is placed in the tumor. Before, a patient had the wire placed in her breast and had to drive across town with the wire inserted in her chest before the surgery. Now, it’s handled in one location. Before, a patient had to make multiple appointments with various doctors and specialists. Now all meet together and talk, and a newly diagnosed patient can meet with all in one day at the center. That gets patients treatment more quickly and seamlessly, he said. “If you’re newly diagnosed with cancer there’s a lot of information,” Martinez said. “People want a thoughtful plan and options.” The benefits are clear, he said. Jurovcik is in remission and back to enjoying life with her husband, Josh, and their two daughters, Aubree, 5, and Leah, 3. It’s been tough on her family but they’re getting through it. Her youngest daughter has never known her mother without cancer. They’re welladjusted but they have to deal with sickness and mortality at an age most kids don’t. She’s back to work at the beauty school and looking forward to life. “I don’t think after something like this it ever goes completely back to normal,” she said. “I am healthy, I am here, I’m on the right side of the ground. That’s as much as you can ask for.”


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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 7


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8 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Skagit program tailors cancer treatment to each patient Marysville Globe and Arlington Times staff The Skagit Regional Health Breast Institute, funded in part through $600,000 in grants from Safeway, realizes that breast cancer treatment is not one size fits all. The team examines and discusses each case to develop a treatment plan tailored to the uniqueness of each patient. There may be more than one right option. Doctors make sure patients make an informed decision. Breast cancer treatment begins with precision diagnostics followed by a thorough evaluation. From diagnosis to curative treatment, most women with breast cancer will have some type of surgery. Breast surgery has evolved dramatically over the past

decade, and many less-invasive procedures are now available. Most cancers are treated with drug therapy to kill dividing cancer cells. Using highly precise techniques to plan and deliver individualized treatments, Skagit minimizes the dose to normal tissues while delivering high doses to the cancer. Drug therapy includes chemotherapy and biotherapy. Chemotherapy is systemic drug therapy administered orally or through an IV that kills cancer cells at different stages of growth. These drugs may also kill healthy cells, resulting in common side effects such as nausea, hair loss and diarrhea. Biotherapy is a systemic drug therapy that may be targeted specifically to kill only cancer cells. These drugs generally have fewer side effects and toxicities than chemotherapy. New drug

therapies are being developed to more specifically treat the cancer and spare healthy cells by using the patient’s own immune system to attack and kill the cancer. The other major type of treatment is radiation oncology. Radiation oncology specializes in treating cancer using radiation therapy. Radiation therapy uses high-energy x-rays to treat tumors. Sometimes a patient will go through both types of treatment. Some women decide to be part of clinical trials. That treatment includes the use of new drugs developed to fight cancer. Cancer trials usually compare existing treatments to something thought to be better, so cancer patients always receive at least the best treatment currently available. Some complementary medicine may help relieve certain symptoms of cancer, relieve side

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think pink

The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 9

What to tell children about a parent’s cancer “I can’t imagine going through that with a child that age,” we moms with cancer tell each other. Every parent, every kid, every cancer is so different. And we don’t want to imagine it — how do you tell your 5-year-old? How do you know what your teenager is thinking? My husband and I feel as if we don’t have it too hard, as these things go. Matilda is 15 months old, so we don’t have to worry about what to tell her about my diagnosis of Hodgkin’s lymphoma. But what would we tell her? Most of the results from a quick search for “kids and cancer” or “parents and cancer” is about the even harder-to-imagine situation of having a kid with cancer.

People are working to help fill in blanks, to answer parents’ questions when one has cancer diagnosed. Here’s a look at advice from experts and parents, as well as resources to get more help: Be honest. “Tell them, at least as long as they’re old enough to understand. Tell them, don’t lie to them, but give them ageappropriate information,” said Jen Singer, a writer and mother of two who was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in 2007. Four years later, she launched a site aimed at providing resources for parents in similar situations. Singer used the word “cancer” and showed her kids, 8 and 10 years old at the time, her X-ray. She told them the medicine would make the blob shrink down — and make her hair fall out. Iris Cohen Fineberg, president

of the Association of Oncology Social Work, said that trying to protect your children by keeping the problem from them isn’t the best approach. “They sense tension, they sense fear, they sense anxiety, but if they don’t have anyone communicating about that, then they’re sensing it but they don’t know what to make of it, which can be scary, too,” she said. Don’t make promises you can’t keep. You can say you believe everything is going to be OK and detail what you’re doing to take care of yourself, but don’t make a definitive statement that everything will be fine if you’re not sure it’s true. Do talk about the great doctors and treatment you’re getting, Fineberg said. “Pointing out all the things that are helping to make it fine, that gives them some material to

work with,” she said. Use the right words. “Cancer” isn’t necessarily the scary word for them that it can be for us, said Claudia Califano, a child and adolescent psychiatrist and professor at Yale University’s Child Study Center. Don’t call your cancer a booboo. Euphemisms can confuse younger kids, making them worry when they scrape their knee that they’ll lose their hair or get really sick. Adjust to the child. Califano advised thinking about where a child is developmentally as well as how each child communicates. Some will have lots of questions immediately, while others will want to sit quietly with the information for a while. It’s helpful to think about where children communicate best, Califano said: Some prefer bedtime, others

when driving in the car. Some will respond with changes in behavior — difficulty sleeping, or more fears or separation anxiety. Califano coaches parents to pay attention to how their kids are reacting and to trust themselves. “Our view is that generally, the parents are the best. You guys are the ones to do this and the people that are closest to the child,” she said. Get the right help. A good place to start is a social worker. “It doesn’t need to be because you’re in particular distress or because you don’t have a support system,” Fineberg said. “Social workers are very much trained in communication, they’re trained to think in family systems, they’re trained to think very holistically and to think about the environment that you are having to manage your situation in.”

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By Terri Rupar The Washington Post


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10 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Fighting cancer and its surprises Arlington woman, family, doctors beat her cancer despite disease’s twists By Lauren Salcedo For the Globe-Times

The diagnosis It began with a routine checkup that February.

GLOBE-TIMES

Kristin Banfield, director of human resources and communications for the city of Arlington, confronted more than one surprise in her fight against cancer.

When Dr. Johanna Wang of the Everett Clinic in Marysville conducted a breast exam during the appointment, Wang noticed something at the top left side of Banfield’s chest. “She tried to have me feel it, but I couldn’t. That’s how deep it

was,” Banfield said. Wang sent her for a mammogram at Providence Regional Medical Center in Everett. With no family history of breast cancer, Banfield was surprised. “I’m 35, a mammogram,

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a noninvasive breast cancer, and DCIS is characterized by abnormal cells in the milk duct. “Stage 0 means it hasn’t gone anywhere outside of that,” Banfield said. She was scheduled for a lumpectomy in mid-April to remove the tumor. DCIS is treatable, but if left unchecked, can spread into the breast tissue outside of the milk ducts. “Here I am at 35, we have a 4-year-old daughter and, in two months, I have gone from a regular checkup to a lumpectomy,” Banfield said. She was overwhelmed by the turn of events and looked online for information. “I did something I tell people never to do — I went on the Internet. Don’t go on the Internet, you just read all these horror stories. You have to stay away from that kind of negativity.” A lumpectomy is considered a breast-saving surgical procedure where the tumor is removed, often with some of the surrounding breast tissue. Banfield said she didn’t feel much pain, but did feel soreness following surgery. The usual treatment for DCIS

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After studying public administration at the University of Southern California and spending a year as an intern in Washington, D.C., Kristin Banfield settled down in Arlington and began a career doing what she loves. “Since I graduated college, I’ve worked in government,” said Banfield, director of human resources and communications for the city of Arlington. “I always knew that’s what I wanted to do.” At the start of 2008, she and her husband, Bill, were planning a trip to Quebec, Canada, for a hockey tournament and their daughter, Teeghan, was set to begin kindergarten in the fall. Everything was going well for the young family. “We love hanging out with family and friends, camping and just enjoying life,” Banfield said. “That’s what I remember was going on at the time, but 2008 is what I call, ‘the year I would like to forget.’”

really?” she said. “Since it was my first mammogram, my mom offered to go with me. She is a cancer survivor as well; she had thyroid cancer in her 20s. But we weren’t even thinking of cancer at that point.” Following the mammogram, her doctors decided to do an ultrasound as well. That’s when Banfield began to worry. “The ultrasound was the same day, and they said, ‘We definitely see something in there,’” she said. They ordered a biopsy to find out more. “It’s a long needle with a hole at the end,” Banfield said of the procedure. “They take five samples, so you feel a bit sore the next day.” The doctor believed it looked like a fibroadenoma, which is a benign tumor. “A few days later, the breast center called to go over the results,” Banfield said. “It was what they call ADH, which stands for atypical ductal hyperplasia. It means the cells are growing.” They did another test and found that the lump was DCIS, or ductal carcinoma in situ — Stage 0 breast cancer. Stage 0 refers to


The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 11

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12 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

From Page 10

is radiation, followed by five years on an estrogen blocker called Tamoxifen. Prior to beginning radiation that May, her doctor requested that she undergo an MRI exam. Following the exam, Banfield and her family set out early on a Memorial Day camping trip. “My oncologist was looking through my records and found that, for some reason, they hadn’t done one test, which checks how responsive it is to estrogen and progesterone,” she said. “So they sent it off to the lab again.” While the Banfield family was celebrating the holiday in Moses Lake, her oncologist, Dr. Oliver Batson of Providence Regional Medical Center, was trying to reach her. “Doctor Batson said, ‘I don’t like doing this over the phone but we had your tumor retested, and it’s actually Stage 1,’” said Banfield, who was stunned. “That meant it was invasive. “And that same day, I got the phone call on the MRI. They found another tumor.”

Weighing options “Radiation was off the table with the results that my first tumor was actually invasive and that there was a second tumor discovered. We needed to reset our game plan with the new information,” Banfield said. “I could do another lumpectomy and remove the second tumor, or I could get a mastectomy and

“It’s worth it if I get to see my daughter graduate high school and graduate college and walk down the aisle.” — Kristin Banfield

remove the whole breast.” She was unhappy with the result of her first lumpectomy. “Because my tumors were so responsive to estrogen, there was no chance for any more kids,” Banfield said. So she met with a plastic surgeon. “He offered to make something beautiful, that made me feel like a woman. And I wouldn’t have to worry or stress about it anymore.” In July of 2008, Banfield underwent surgery to have her left breast removed. It was during that surgery that doctors found a third tumor that didn’t show on the MRI. With no breast tissue left to radiate, that left chemotherapy to complete her treatment. “They have a cool test called Oncotype DX, which tests your tumors’ likelihood of recurrence and its responsiveness to chemo. They rate it on a scale and for anything over 30, they recommend chemotherapy. Mine was just under 20,” Banfield said. “At that point, I was the luckiest person in the world. Not only do I not have to go through radiation, I also don’t have to do chemotherapy.”

“It’s not that often that you don’t have to do radiation or chemo. From my perspective it’s very unusual,” she said. Banfield then decided, as a precautionary measure, to have her right breast removed. She had the surgery in September 2008. “If you only have cancer on one side, there’s a good chance they will find it on the other side,” she said. “They took my right side and ran it through all the same tests that they would if there was a lump there. There was nothing there. It’s always nerve-racking but you can’t live your life in constant fear, because that is not a life to live.”

Reconstructing her life In January 2009, she had her final surgery, this time for reconstruction. “It was the longest year of my life, and for my husband and daughter as well,” she said. “My husband was my rock. I could always go to him, and he would focus on the positive, even when I was focusing on the negative. When we would go to a doctor appointment, I would hear only negatives, and he would see the positive, and he kept me on that

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patients through Relay for Life. “For the last two years, I was the event chair for Marysville/ Tulalip Relay for Life,” she said. “You meet so many survivors. We share our stories, but we focus on how we can make survivors and caregivers feel appreciated, feel blessed and feel like they are not alone. There’s unfortunately millions of us out there. But we are all doing something about it, to hopefully find a cure.” Banfield is still taking the Tamoxifen, and new studies show that taking it for 10 years decreases the risk of recurrence. “The side effects are miserable. You get hot flashes and your hair starts getting thinner,” Banfield said. “It basically puts you in menopause. I’ve been on it six years in October, and I’m bound and determined to make it the first 10 years.” She would do anything to make sure she can be there for Teeghan, who just started sixth grade at Haller Middle School. “It’s worth it if I get to see my daughter graduate high school and graduate college and walk down the aisle,” she said. “It’s a very small price to pay to be able to see all of that.” Banfield said she is lucky to have a big support system during her battle with cancer, including her doctors, nurses, neighbors, co-workers, family and friends. “Everywhere I turned, someone was saying, ‘You can do this’ and ‘You’re going to make it through this,” she said. “We all made it through it, and we are stronger for it.”

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path. I’m sure that when I was under and having surgery, he was probably a nervous wreck. And I think anyone would be. When you see the person you love suffering, you want to take all that pain away.” The toughest part of her journey was waiting for results. “I think the worst part is probably the time in between when you have your surgery and you are waiting for your test results,” she said. “It’s so nerve-racking. It just takes that long to run all those tests. They have gotten faster, but I think it’s always going to be the hardest part.” Despite the stress and fear that came with the diagnosis and surgeries, Banfield said she had several inspiring people to look to for support. “I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy. I don’t have enemies, but I wouldn’t wish it on anyone,” she said. “I’ve seen people die, and I’ve seen people survive. My mom is my inspiration — she is a 30plus year survivor. If she can deal with raising me and my brother and survive cancer, then I felt I could too. When my daughter was born, my mom’s mom was undergoing treatment for skin cancer. When you see an 80-year-old woman going through chemo and radiation and saying, ‘Ah, you’re going to be fine.” And she is my grandma? If she can do it at 80, I can do it at 30.”

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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 13

‘Angelina effect’: Women listened when Jolie spoke By Geoffrey Mohan Los Angeles Times

Angelina Jolie’s public revelation about having risky mutations in a gene related to breast cancer sent DNA screening referrals through the roof, at least in the U.K., a new study suggests. The “Angelina effect” persisted for many months as many more women got genetic tests for the presence of a version of the BRCA1 gene that sharply raises the risk of breast and ovarian cancer, according to the study, published Thursday in the journal Breast Cancer Research. Researchers looked at data from more than 30 genetic screening clinics and services in the U.K. and found a more than twofold increase in the number of people referred by their general practitioners during June and July last year, compared with the same period the year before. Jolie announced in May 2013 that she had

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Angelina Jolie’s recent revelation about having a gene mutation led to an increase in women getting genetic testing for the BRCA1 gene.

recently undergone a double mastectomy and reconstructive surgery. The higher referral rates persisted through last

October, according to the study. Public announcements by celebrities about health issues often rouse the hypochondriacs, but researchers noted that many of the women who came in had been procrastinating about returning for a follow-up screening. The study’s lead investigator, Dr. Gareth Evans, who studies medical genetics and epidemiology at the University of Manchester, said the phenomenon could reflect the strength of Jolie’s image as both glamorous and strong. It is unclear if a similar rise in screening has been documented in the U.S., but the British researchers said there is no reason to suspect the phenomenon was isolated to England. Since the introduction of screening in the late 1990s, the rate of precautionary bilateral mastectomy has risen sharply among women diagnosed with cancer in a single breast, studies have shown.

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think pink

14 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Events throughout year raise funds for cancer research Herald and Globe-Times Staff Millions of dollars are donated every year to fund research to find a cure for cancer, and some of that money comes from events held right here in Snohomish County. The fifth annual Night of Hope Masquerade Gala held at the Tulalip Resort Casino on Sept. 13 was one such event. About 250 people attended, at a cost of $150 a ticket or more. Along with dinner, entertainment and dancing, much more money was raised at silent and live auctions. There are other local events that raise money to fight cancer this month: Hope Chest: An Evening of Wine, Comedy and Live Music, fundraiser to support breast cancer services at Citrine Health, 6:30 to 9 p.m. Oct. 3., 2940 W.

JEFF FADDIS / HERALD FILE PHOTO

Balloons mark the start and finish line during the Relay for Life fundraiser for the American Cancer Society, June 9, 2012 at Edmonds Stadium. Relay for Life events are staged throughout the county, usually in June.

Marine View Drive, Everett. Bring a bottle of wine for “Stock Your Cellar” event. Food and auction. Tickets: $50. For more:

call 425-259-9899 or go to www. citrinehealth.org. Making Strides Against Breast Cancer, a non-competitive 5K

walk that raises awareness about breast cancer and funds for research and patient services, 9 a.m. registration with walk starting at 10 a.m. Oct. 4, Snohomish County Courthouse Plaza, 300 Rockefeller Ave., Everett. Learn more at www.snohomishcountystrides.org. A fun run will take place this year on Oct. 25 at Arlington’s Legion Park, 114 N. Olympic Ave. Called Taking Steps to Beat Breast Cancer, the event will start at 10 a.m. It is a 5-kilometer walk or run. Four other events have longer traditions locally. The annual Relay for Life has events in Arlington and Marysville. In Arlington, the event for next year already is planned. It will take place June 20, 2015, starting at noon that Saturday. It will be at Arlington High School, 18821 Crown Ridge Road.

To sign up for either that relay or the one in Marysville go to www.relay.acsevents.org. The one in Marysville-Tulalip will be June 28, 2015, at Marysville-Pilchuck High School, 5611 108th St. NE. At those events, walkers get sponsors to donate an amount each time they go around the track, or sometimes just a flat rate. Business and corporate sponsors also donate funds. At the event itself more money is raised as businesses have tents set up around the track. Items are sold or drawings held to raise even more funds. Two other events in Arlington and Marysville are called Bark for Life. These are similar to the Relay for Life, except that you walk your dog. Both events are in May. The one in Arlington is at Haller Middle School and the one in Marysville is at Asbury Field.

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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 15

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think pink

16 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Nourishing the body key to cancer fight By Deanna Duff For The Herald

Finding the time and energy to plan meals can be difficult under normal circumstances. It can be particularly overwhelming for cancer patients when the act of eating itself becomes a challenge. “During chemotherapy, I had severe taste bud changes the whole time. Nothing had much taste or it tasted awful. It was hard to eat because you just don’t want to,” said Corinna Howard, diagnosed with breast cancer in June 2013. The 44-year-old received treatment — surgery, chemotherapy and radiation — at Everett’s Providence Regional Cancer Partnership. Medications caused chronic pancreatitis, a digestive disease, which further exacerbated eating issues. She lost upward of 50 pounds and struggled with nutrition issues. “Especially with the pancreatitis, no one ever really advised me on what I needed to do to get better,” Howard said. Like many patients, Howard identified palatable foods through trial and error. However, dietary tips can sometimes help ease the process. Many medical institutions offer nutrition counseling via registered dietitians and classes.

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What to eat? “I see a lot of people who start following a very restrictive diet after being diagnosed,” said Margaret Hines, registered oncology dietitian at Providence Regional Cancer Partnership. “It’s not necessarily the time

to make big changes and start eating only kale smoothies. People need to maintain weight, hydration and keep the immune system strong during treatment,” Hines said. Common treatment side effects include taste changes and sensitivity to food temperature,

mucositis characterized by sores and dryness of the mouth and digestive tract, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. Overall fatigue can also become an obstacle. For patients with diminished appetites, large amounts can be overwhelming. Try smaller

meals and snacks. Whenever possible, Hines recommends incorporating healthy, highcalorie items such as avocados, extra olive oil and nut butters. Add peanut butter to everything from shakes to toast for a calorie and protein boost. “Both cancer itself and treatment causes the body’s metabolism to change. Try to compensate for the extra protein the body consumes for healing,” recommended Angela Merges, registered dietitian at Swedish Medical Center’s Edmonds Breast Center. Increase protein — preferably lean — at every meal and snacks. Merges recommends additions such as an extra egg at breakfast and chicken, salmon or tuna salad for lunch. Add cheese to crackers, potatoes and sandwiches. Additionally, eat whole-grain carbohydrates for energy. Many patients experience a change in taste, which can shift even daily. Chemotherapy often imparts a metallic flavor to food. The effect, Hines said, is sometimes lessened by eating with plastic utensils, cooking in glassware and avoiding food from cans. “The blander the better for me,” Howard said. “Cream of See Page 18

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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 17

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think pink

18 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

From Page 16

Wheat was a go-to along with oatmeal, plain crackers and mashed potatoes. The less flavor, the less conflict between my taste buds and what I knew it should normally taste like.” Well-intentioned friends and family — even businesses — sometimes pressure patients to eat “cure-all” foods. Follow your gut both literally and figuratively. “Unfortunately, cancer patients are vulnerable to all sorts of weird diet advice,” Hines said. “There is no magic bullet, elixir or herb that you can take to make everything immediately better. If there was, we’d tell you.” Instead, Hines recommends consulting with an oncologist, registered dietitian or reputable sources such as the American Cancer Society or National Cancer Association.

Hydration Staying hydrated is essential to good health, but even more so during cancer treatment. “Especially with chemo, doctors generally advise lots of fluids to help flush things through,” Hines said. “Treatment can diminish the sense of thirst, so we usually tell people to drink more than they think they need.” If water doesn’t whet the appetite, flavor it with crushed fruit. Beverages such as Gatorade are recommended both for replenishing fluid and electrolytes. Popsicles, fruit juice and

Nutrition tips

THINKSTOCK.COM

Boost your intake of protein by eating eggs and cheese. An omelette or frittata is an easy way to do this.

broth are also good options. “If you don’t have much appetite or problems with nausea, separate fluid intake from meals. Don’t fill up on water so that you don’t eat food and vice versa. You don’t want to miss out on either,” Merges said.

Food preparation Arlington native Karena Raino-Nevratakis was diagnosed with breast cancer in October 2011. After her first round of chemotherapy, she ate at a restaurant and soon after contracted pneumonia. “I recommend staying home and out of public restaurants as much as possible when it comes

to food,” the 39-year-old said. “I caught pneumonia after going to the restaurant and associate the two as possibly connected.” Cancer patients often experience neutropenia, abnormally low counts of white blood cells, which help fight infections. Food bacteria that is safe for a healthy person can be high-risk for those with weakened immune systems. Cook meals — particularly meat — thoroughly. “There is some controversy around eating fresh fruit and vegetables,” Merges said. “If you do, wash it really, really, really well. Some foods, like raspberries and lettuce, are hard to wash because they have little pockets where mold and dirt hides. The

(425) 252-0413 Ext. 113 WE OFFER A VARIETY OF CLASSES TO MEET YOUR FAMILY’S NEEDS:

■ Eat smaller, more frequent meals and snacks rather than large, overwhelming servings. ■ To combat weight loss, incorporate healthy, high-calorie foods such as avocados, olive oil and peanut butter. ■ Eating whatever is palatable is preferable to not eating at all. ■ Bright flavors, such as strawberry and lemon, sometimes offset a lack of taste. ■ If food tastes unpleasant, bland items and tepid temperatures are often more tolerable. ■ Boost protein by adding items such as eggs and cheese to meals. ■ Soft foods, shakes, ice cream and soups are easier when dealing with mouth sores. ■ Avoid fibrous foods when suffering from diarrhea. Soluble fiber in applesauce, however, helps decrease diarrhea. ■ Drink lots of water. Add fruit, lemon or cucumbers for flavor. Popsicles, broth and fruit juice are also good options. ■ Place eight full glasses of water in the fridge every morning as a visual reminder to hydrate. ■ Separate meals and water intake — don’t fill up on one at the expense of the other. ■ If you’re neutropenic, stick with cooked, canned or packaged foods that are bacteria free. ■ Avoid public restaurants whenever possible. ■ If cooking at home, make double batches and freeze leftovers for when you’re too tired to prepare meals. ■ Prepare food in the morning when you have the most energy. safest is to stick with cooked, canned or packaged versions.” If dining out is a must, pass on raw items such as salads and sushi. Inform servers of the need for food to be cooked extra hot and well done. Be cautious even of meals prepared by well-meaning friends

and family. Ensure that proper food-safety precautions were taken. Even if a patient simply can’t tolerate the taste, feel free to decline. “Find what works best for you so food doesn’t become another stressor,” Merges said. “You know your body best.”

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The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 19


20 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

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Cancer survivor numbers triple from 40 years ago By Kelly Gilblom Bloomberg News

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NEW YORK — About 1 in 22 Americans is a cancer survivor, triple the percentage seen 40 years ago, according to a report that suggests science may be slowly catching up with the deadly disease. About 14.5 million people in the United States have outlasted cancer or lived with a malignancy for more than five years, according to a report Tuesday by the American Association for Cancer Research. The progress reflects the use of new scientific tools that have allowed researchers to explore the genetic basis of cancer and target the molecular triggers that set it off or allow it to flourish. Targeted cancer drugs approved between 1998 and 2001, including Roche Holding’s Herceptin for breast cancer and Novartis’s Gleevec for leukemia, helped ignite the genomic strategy that continues to pay dividends today, the report said. Since Aug. 1 of last year, regulators have cleared five new targeted treatments for cancer. “There have been a mixture of successes and not-so-much successes, but the number of successes are growing rapidly when you look at all the new FDAapproved therapies,” Jeffrey Engelman, an oncologist and spokesman for the cancer organization said. “It’s a rather exciting time.” Increasingly, patients suffering from cancers such as leukemia are being splintered into smaller groups based on the specific genetics of their malignancies, rather than where

the disease occurs. That has allowed researchers to pinpoint specific genetic mutations with new drugs, such as Spectrum Pharmaceuticals’ Beleodaq for lymphoma, approved by the Food and Drug Administration in July. Along with focusing on specific genetic mutations, the newest medications also lessen side effects such as nausea and fatigue, said Ken Anderson, a physician and spokesman for the American Association for Cancer Research. “These new medicines offer the opportunity for unprecedented extent and frequency of responses on the one hand and a very favorable side effect profile on the other,” Anderson said in a telephone interview. About 1.6 million people in the U.S. will be diagnosed this year with cancer, a disease that cost the country $216.6 billion in 2009 in direct spending and lost wages, according to the cancer group’s report. Other new types of cancer treatments are now focusing on the immune system, to help protect the body from the growth of cancer cells. This month, for instance, the FDA approved Merck & Co.’s immunotherapy Keytruda, for melanoma. “There are a lot of companies, there are a lot of people on the academic side as well as on the industry side working very aggressively and what we’re seeing is the number of new drugs coming to market is just increasing,” said David Mauro, a physician and researcher

at Merck. Keytruda is for patients that have tried BristolMyers Squibb Co.’s Yervoy, an immunotherapy that works differently than Merck’s drug. Rich Murphy is a married father of three children from Marshfield, Massachusetts. He thought he was suffering from allergies when his doctor found a golf-ball size tumor in his nose in July 2008. Surgeons removed the lump and he was cancer-free for a year until a scan showed the cancer had spread to his spine and midsection. He enrolled in a clinical trial, taking Yervoy for free, and his tumors shrunk 20 percent. When the cancer grew back, his doctor took him off the medication. He was placed in another clinical trial of Merck’s Keytruda, which was then known as MK-3475. His tumors shrank, he said in a telephone interview, and now have disappeared. “These clinical trials are hope for people who have no hope,” Murphy said. While the new generation of drugs has increased survival chances, many people still do not have specific treatments for their cancer. Further, some cancers grow resistant to standard therapies during treatment, meaning patients can go into remission or see tumors shrink and return, and then must be treated again. “The goal is not to play this cat and mouse game,” Engelman said. “If we understand enough, we’ll be able to develop combinations of different agents up front.”


The Daily Herald Sunday, 10.05.2014 21

think pink

Myth busted: Study shows no link between bras, cancer By Lenny Bernstein The Washington Post

It seems almost preposterous that a study like this one had to be conducted. But apparently the belief that wearing a bra for long periods of time can cause breast cancer persists, and it turns out the issue hadn’t really been studied in scientific fashion. Until now, there has been just one academic look at this myth, back in 1991, and it was quite limited. But a new and rigorous examination of the issue concludes that “no aspect of bra wearing, including bra cup size, recency, average number of hours per day worn, wearing a bra with an underwire, or age first began regularly wearing a bra, was associated with risks of either invasive ductal carcinomaor invasive lobular carcinoma breast cancer.” The study by researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle was conducted because “we saw those rumors on the Internet and we had the data to examine this in a scientific

way,” said Lu Chen, a researcher at the facility and a doctoral student at the University of Washington School of Public Health, who led the team. It compared 454 postmenopausal women with invasive ductal carcinoma and 590 women with invasive lobular carcinoma diagnosed between 2000 and 2004 with 469 women who did not have cancer. The women, who were 55 to 74 years old, were asked about their bra-wearing habits as part of a much larger examination of breast cancer risk factors funded by the National Cancer Institute. The reasoning behind the cancer myth is that a bra, particularly one with underwire, somehow blocks the flow of lymph to an area beneath the armpit where bacteria and other waste products would normally be cleared from around the breast. It’s not clear how it began, but many note a 1995 book, “Dressed to Kill,” which pointed out an association between lower breast cancer rates in societies where women

don’t wear bras and higher rates in cultures where they do. The book did not examine other possible explanations. “This is a common confusion,” Chen said. “They see two things happening at the same time and they think one causes the other.” The 1991 study found that women who go braless had fewer breast cancers than others, but the difference wasn’t statistically significant. And the researchers suggested that the weak correlation might be attributed to the braless women being leaner; obesity is a known risk factor for breast cancer. Chen suggested that the reason for the lack of research since then is probably because the idea of bras causing cancer “seemed so implausible, so people didn’t look at it.” When she finally did, her research was able to establish that there is no connection. “It was one of the myths going around on the Internet,” she said. “But this notion has no scientific basis.”

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think pink

22 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

Vanishing cancer could be key to a cure For a small fraction of patients, their cancers disappear without standard treatments. Researchers are looking for explanations. By Julie Deardorff Chicago Tribune

In her 28-year career, Dr. Deborah Axelrod, a New York physician, says she’s had just one patient whose advanced breast cancer inexplicably vanished. The patient, Ann Fonfa, endured multiple surgeries to remove cancerous tumors that kept growing back. All the while, Fonfa refused the recommended treatments of chemotherapy and radiation, instead experimenting with unproven alternative therapies, including changing her diet, taking herbs and reducing stress. Seven years after her original diagnosis, Fonfa received good news: The cancer was undetectable. Fonfa, 66, has been cancer-free for the past 14 years.

A medical mystery In a few rare cases, people defy cancer without medical treatment or by using therapies that See Page 24

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think pink

24 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

From Page 22

are considered inadequate, a phenomenon known as spontaneous remission. Scientists have been fascinated and baffled by these developments for as long as cancer has been recognized as a disease. Was it luck? Or did the patients do something special to harness the awesome power of the immune system? Studying these exceptional people, however, is fraught with difficulty, controversy and the dangers of promoting bad science. The potential benefits of highlighting the unusual recoveries should be balanced against the risks, experts warn, including offering patients false hope, blaming those who succumb and encouraging alternative treatments in place of conventional methods that could prolong or save lives. “We have all heard or seen a few cases like this,” said Axelrod, of the Perlmutter Cancer Center

“For every person we hear about who refuses cancer therapy and lives, there are additional people who refuse standard medical therapy and die.” — Dr. Rebecca Johnson, a cancer specialist and survivor of breast cancer

at New York University Langone Medical Center. “I have also seen women die of neglected cancers, despite a fervent belief that they will be cured with a nontraditional treatment.” The public hunger for new ways to fight cancer — along with the enormous gap in scientific evidence — is reflected in the recent best-selling book “Radical Remission” by Kelly Turner, a psychotherapist and

independent researcher who wrote about nine factors she believes could play a role in spontaneous remission.

Talking with the victors The best way to win the war on cancer, according to Turner, is to talk to those who have already won. “It’s only false hope if the stories are false,” she said. “But these people truly had cancer.

And they are well now.” Turner interviewed more than 200 people, including Fonfa, and analyzed more than 1,000 published cases. She found that those who heal from cancer without using conventional treatments — or after the treatments failed — had made significant lifestyle changes, such as radically altering their diet, using herbs and supplements, and embracing social support. Medical experts say such observations aren’t very meaningful given the lack of a comparison group.

The dangers “For every person we hear about who refuses cancer therapy and lives, there are additional people who refuse standard medical therapy and die,” said Dr. Rebecca Johnson, a cancer specialist in the Seattle area who has also battled breast

cancer. “There’s no way to count the latter number. Without formal scientific studies, it’s impossible to generate statistics on the efficacy of alternative treatments.” Turner stresses that she is not suggesting that patients abandon standard medical interventions. Instead, she hopes to encourage further study and share the stories of people diagnosed with advanced cancer who experienced unexpected recoveries. It’s impossible to know how often spontaneous remission occurs because physicians often don’t document or publish the cases, the patient may simply stop showing up at the doctor’s office, and most cancer patients in the past century have been conventionally treated in one way or another. To date, the medical literature consists only of individual case See Page 25

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think pink From Page 24

studies and overviews. Some incidents, when more closely scrutinized, prove not to have been remissions at all.

Under study Still, the phenomenon has been reported with virtually all kinds of cancer, more frequently in some types than others. Kidney, brain, uterine and skin cancer (melanoma) were the four most common types, according to a review of 176 published cases from 1900 to 1960 by University of Illinois College of Medicine surgeons Tilden Everson and Warren Cole. In cases of infant neuroblastoma, regression is so common that screening isn’t recommended, according to the National Cancer Institute. Everson and Cole didn’t specify that the remission had to be permanent. They also excluded cases of lymphoma or leukemia because of the natural fluctuations in growth rates of these cancers. In a follow-up study looking at incidence rates from 1900 to 1987, University of Calgary researchers found lymphoma and leukemia ranked among the most common remissions, along with melanoma and

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cancers of the brain and the retina. By contrast, the most common cancers overall were lung, colon and rectum and breast, according to the study. “In prostate, colon and lung cancer, I have not seen a documented case of cancer spontaneously vanishing without treatment,” said Larry Norton, deputy physician-in-chief for breast cancer programs at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City. Cases of spontaneous regression have fueled speculation that cancer may be vulnerable to sudden surges of the immune system, which can occur with a high fever, bacterial infection, blood transfusion, or major surgery or antibiotic usage. The reaction may deprive the tumor of something it needs to survive — blood, lactic acid, thyroid hormones — and thus starve it until it collapses and dies.

Coley toxins In the late 1800s, New York surgeon William Coley noticed that contracting a post-surgical infection seemed to help some cancer patients. He began treating people with cancer by infecting them with certain kinds of

bacteria, which came to be known as Coley toxins. Coley had some success, but researchers weren’t able to replicate his work, and other forms of treatment overshadowed his ideas, according to the American Cancer Society. Immune system theories are also weakened by the fact that thousands of cancer patients get fevers, antibiotics, blood transfusions and surgeries and only a few of them experience spontaneous regression. Nonetheless, immunotherapy treatments for cancer remain an active research area, with new discoveries yielding cancer vaccines and drugs that have extended lives. The journal Science named cancer immunotherapy its 2013 Breakthrough of the Year in part for shifting the treatment paradigm to target the immune system rather than the tumor. Turner and other researchers suspect some combination of psychological or spiritual factors could also be at play in cases of regression. Some research suggests that major mental or emotional changes can significantly affect the body’s chemistry, especially the hormones released by the

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think pink

26 Sunday, 10.05.2014 The Daily Herald

From Page 25

pituitary and pineal glands. That can lead to changes in the physiological system, including the immune system. Dr. Lorenzo Cohen, a professor of general oncology and director of the Integrative Medicine Program at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, has found that exceptional patients — those who had advanced, incurable cancer and who subsequently became disease-free or lived longer than expected — had adopted an attitude of “activism” that includes taking responsibility for their health and actively coping with their disease. He cautions that patients can become “active” in their life and treatment and still not survive. But his team’s findings suggest that “‘activism’ in its different forms might have a role in survival or more importantly for

patient coping,” according to the study, published in the journal Supportive Care in Cancer. “We need to go back and examine archived tumors and blood samples of these exceptional patients,” Cohen said. “Is there something unique about these tumors in terms of gene expression profiles that accounts for prolonged survival? It’s all speculative, which is why getting tumor and blood samples from patients is equally as important as talking to them about how they are leading their lives.”

Engaged in health Patients can benefit in general if they feel engaged in their health and well-being, Cohen said. The majority of cancers are caused by lifestyle factors such as smoking, being overweight, having an unhealthy diet and a lack of exercise, as well as

sedentary behavior. So making healthier lifestyle choices — at any stage of the game — may shift cancer outcomes, Cohen said. Fonfa, president and founder of the Annie Appleseed Project, a cancer patient advocacy group, was diagnosed with a slowgrowing breast cancer in 1993. Though she underwent surgery, she declined chemotherapy and radiation because she said her body overreacts to chemical exposures. Instead, Fonfa adopted a vegan diet, exercised more and took enzymes. “I concentrated on the joy of life,” said Fonfa, who lives in Delray Beach, Florida. “Serving in the advocacy world has been very valuable.” Surgery temporarily eliminated the tumors, but each time they grew back. In 1997, after three lumpectomies and a mastectomy, she was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer.

Finally, Fonfa tried Chinese herbs. After the first dose, she said, she broke out in hives. But within 10 months, the remaining tumors had vanished, something Fonfa attributes to a change in her immune system. “I have friends who have done everything mainstream and conventional, and they die. No one really knows the luck of the draw,” she said.

Regression rare in breast cancer cases Regression is rare in breast cancer, with just 32 reported cases, according to a 2008 study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine. However, the researchers noted that one factor behind the small numbers may be “the fact that these cancers are rarely allowed to follow their natural course.” Fonfa knows her cancer could return at any time but is

confident she will survive that, too. Turner, who included Fonfa in her book, said it’s irresponsible to disregard such stories, adding that studying anomalies has proved scientifically useful in the past. “When we ignore these cases, we lose the chance to learn something about the immune system,” Turner said. But any book that implies it’s possible to triumph over cancer even when the situation looks hopeless needs important caveats, Cohen said. “Even if you’re leading a wholesome life with a healthy diet, regular exercise, connected to others, fostering love all around, eating organic, meditating every day and not having any negative interactions, you may still die of cancer,” Cohen said, “because those are just some of the factors that contribute to the progression of disease or getting it in the first place.”

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