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McIntosh
graduates as Davis finishes
apprentice Marines' basic
in Air Force
U.S. Air Force Airman First
Class Jason A. McIntosh has
graduated from the supply-man-
agement inventory apprentice
course at Lackland Air Force
Base in San Antonio, Texas.
A 1995 graduate of The Ever-
green State College in Olympia,
McIntosh is the son of Bob and
Anita McIntosh, who live on
Rocky Road near Shelton.
During his apprenticeship, ac-
cording to the Army and Air
Force Hometown News Service,
he received instruction in proper-
ty accounting, customer and
Western Union death messages bench stock support and mission-
capable procedures. He also
Among his more vivid mem-
ories of working for Western
lJnion as a teenager, says Bob,
were those occasions when he
was called upon to deliver tele-
grams bearing news of death.
Often as not, he says, they
weren't merely fbrmal confirma-
tion. They were a stunned loved
one's first notification.
"But l never knew at the
time," says Bob. "The only thing
that 1 knew was that it was a
death message, because they had
a stamp with a star on it and
stamped it first on the red ink
pad ..... bing, bing, binl4 - and then
you saw that through the glas-
sine window and knew it was a
death message. You didn't need
to know the de.tails. It was just
that you had to make sure that
some medical problem didn't de-
vch)l) = fainting or something."
ONE I'IME, recalls Bob, he
was dispatched to a rooming
h,use with just such a red-
starred delivery. "This was dur-
ing lhc early I)epression," he
says. "'And there were whole fam-
ilies - with one or two children, I
,ql/t))ose just I11 O/IP rooln.
"I was walking down the hall-
way. The hallway doors were
()ptm, so people could notice who
was going by. They had instruc-
tions they gave to us: If a woman
was by herself, then you went
and got neighbors or somebody to
be with her. But this woman
seemed to be able to handle the
situation, so I had tier sign for
the telegram. She had her son
there- teenaged son.
'Td gotten just a doorway or
two away - and of course heard
her open the envelop. Then she
let out a cry and collapsed. I
would have returned to see, but
the neighbors all poured in.
Above the clamor of the neigh-
bors being concerned about her
was this kid saying, 'Well, I
TOLD her to sit down before she
read it! But she WOULD lave to
fall down!'"
Bob blurts a soft but irrepress-
ible laugh, in spite of himself.
"Well," he says, "so it went.
"ANOTHER CASE, was more
tragic. I went to this home in
South Denver, about 9 o'clock at
night, and it was just this elderly
woman living all by herself. And
she was poverty-stricken, and I
could tell she was having a hard
time. So after she signed it she
said, 'You open it.' So I opened it
and read it aloud. And it said,
'George shot and killed our two
daughters.' That was all."
The message was from the
woman's daughter. George was
the woman's son-in-law.
"Well, she didn't faint," says
Bob. "But I felt so sorry to have
to read that to her - and no
neighbors. It was quite evident
that she lived by herself, with no
contact. Well, what I should have
done was gone and informed the
neighbors, whether she was as-
sociated with them or not - that
this woman was by herself and
had received such tragic news.
But somehow...
"Well, I s'pose it was because I
hadn't been instructed specifical-
ly what to do. Cuz she seemed to,
uh, regain her composure after a
little bit and seemed to be all
right. But I've always had some
guilt, on reflection, that I didn't
think more about whether she ac-
tually needed people to talk to or
anything."
AND HOW'D HE FEEL
about confronting such grief at so
early an age? "
"Well, I just took it in stride,"
says Bob. "My thought was to
just make sure that she was able
to physically function - didn't
pass grit. But I SHOULD have
gone to a neighbor and said that
she'd received this death message
and she should be checked on oc-
casionally.
"Or maybe I should even have
called the police, if the neighbors
didn't feel any concern. One of
the things that occurred to me at
the time was that if I went to see
the neighbors they might have
strong disinclinations to get in-
volved. Because that's the way it
was."
In any event, says Bob, he
stuck faithfully to his Western
Union regimen for some three
years, regularly bicycling 16 to
20 miles or more per shift, not
counting his daily commute to
the main office in downtown
Denver from his home - nearly
eight miles up the plain.
"THAT'S RIGHT," says Bob,
chuckling. "And the thing that
amazes me is that I was content
to ride that bike even in icy
weather instead of just buying
another bike and chaining it to a
post in downtown Dener and
then leaving another one at the
end of the streetcar ride. I coulda
taken the streetcar for 10 cents.
"But there was something
about my pride - in not riding
the streetcar - I just couldn't see
spending my money that way."
He laughs.
"Now I look at it and think,
'How stupid!' But that's a teen-
ager. You're bound in by certain
ideas..."
Gallagher
For
Shelton
School Board,
Pos. 2
• Caring
• Dedicated
• Sound Judgement
• Supportive
of School Staff
"Among our accomplishments during
my term on the board, we completed a
c<)mnmnity-drivcn strategic phm, and
expanded our nmsic and arts programs.
"But more importantly, more students
have graduated from high school."
"Dedicated to Excellence in Education"
i
[ ! Paid bY C°mmittee t° Reelect Ross Gallagher, Shelton School Board, I
Position 2,240 S. 7th St., Shelton, WA 98584
:, i '
worked doing equipment manage-
ment and learning effective ware-
housing techniques and pro-
cedures for operating materiel-
handling equipment.
McIntosh also, according to the
Air Force publicist, practiced us-
ing electronic data-processing
equipment for inventory.
In superior court:
Page 16 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, October 14, 1999
Lagasa found guilty, gets
1997 SHS grad sentence fcr meth delivery
Donald Lee Lagasa, 33, of 1911 mine there on June 14. ferment and come to their aid if
Washington Street, Shelton, was
found guilty Monday of delivery
of methamphetamine after a one-
day trial in Mason County Supe-
rior Court.
Lagasa was arrested during an
August 13 raid at that address by
WESTNET (West Sound Narcot-
ics Enforcement Task Force), an
organization of police agencies in
Mason and Kitsap counties that
focuses on enforcement of state
drug laws. He was charged with
selling a "teener" of the illegal
drug to an undercover police offi-
cer on June 14.
Judge James Sawyer sen-
tenced Lagasa Wednesday to 24
months in prison. He ordered him
to pay a $3,000 drug fine, $500 to
the crime victims' fund, $500 to-
wards his attorney's fee and $210
in court costs. Lagasa will be un-
der 12 months of supervision by
the Washington Department of
Corrections after his release.
Deputy Prosecutor Reinhold
Schuetz called Officer Roy AI-
h)way of the Bremerton Police De-
partment as the first witness for
the state. Alloway wears long
hair and a full beard as part of
He said that the confidential
informant called a telephone
number at that address and
asked Lagasa if there was any
methamphetamine, also called
"crank" and "C.R.," for sale there•
He said Lagasa and the inform-
ant agreed to meet outside the
house.
"We were not going inside this
particular place," Alloway said.
The informant, he told the jury,
drove her car and he was in the
passenger's seat when they ar-
rived at 1911 Washington Street•
He said Lagasa came out of the
house.
"HE WALKED around to the
driver's window, which was
open," he said. "He basically said
hello to the driver and myself. He
immediately reached out towards
the informant with the bag in
hand. I reached out to take the
bag and I handed him the pre-
recorded funds."
The money in question was $80
that had been photocopied by
WESTNET before the purchase
took place• Schuetz then asked
Alloway to examine a plastic bag
any trouble arose.
He described
chase from about two
away• "A white male
the vehicle, bent into the
short period of time
went back into the re
said.
OLSEN SAID that
he told Alloway he
from his many years _
for the SPD. He testifies v
rag as the evidence officer i
ase, weighing the u:
methamphetamine ann
ing a field test of the subs1
He then testified that he
to execute a search
1911 Washington
he identified Lagasa there
time. - oergi, he
Cross-examined by t-#
testified that the vehi¢leT;t'd
to the confidential inmr- ......
t the informant d
hat both _ . =^,t0
vehicle were searched,pr:;" to the
bu Allowav, eallea oa:,,o
Y" " e helped ex
stand said h . _:a e re€"
search warrant and Sin; h0t¢
ognized Lagasa tro m^hi
graph that Olsen had sn,,-
his work as a WESTNET under-
cover officer. He said the agency
has been keeping an eye on 1911
Washington Street.
"WE RECEIVED numerous
with a small paper envelope in- after the controlled b l,Yh e state
side. The officer said the envelope Schuetz then restea or the de
case and Ser resteu '
contained the illegal drug. , gi . _ an wit's,"
"This is the methamphetamine lense without calh.ng. Jre=rP
that Mr. Lagasa sold me," he es. During his elOSml ts "
said. chuetz talk:d;::tnts; $
dSuced at th _ +hat .
Crime Lab that sh°Weui'-$e
substance in question
Marine Private David M. Davis
recently completed basic training
at the U.S• Marine Corps Recruit
Depot in San Diego.
Davis, the son of Lou Ann L.
Davis of Shelton and a 1997
graduate of Shelton High School,
successfully finished the 12 weeks
of training designed to challenge
recruits physically and mentally.
He and his fellow trainees be-
gan their days with running and
calisthenics at 5 a.m. Classroom
and field assignments included
first aid, uniform regulhtions,
combat water survival, marks-
manship, hand-to-hand combat
and weapons training.
Close-order drill and acting as
a small infantry unit during field
work added to the regimen. Re-
cruits also learned Marine Corps
values.
The training culminated in the
54-hour team effort called, "The
Crucible," a problem-solving evo-
lution that concluded with the
ceremony in which Davis received
his Marine Corps emblem and
was called a Marine for the first
time.
uu
complaints about that location Alloway testified that after the
lllVi d and the occupants there being in- purchase he gave the meth-
volved in the distribution of amphetamine to Detective l=jtee
nmthamphetamine,' he said. Charles Olsen of the Shelton Po- amphetamine. -her ths |1: z
Alloway testified that he made lice Department. He said Olsen "This is the same teon Jt t Jl"'got
arraignments through a confiden- weighed the drug and put it in an the defendant delivere:at , ia'|J_ ]
evidence bag 14th of this year and.a z said. |[era
ALLOWAY, cross-examined by , -"'G rellts., J[,
• sence is this case," cnut l
defense attorney Ronald Sergi, IN HIS CLO8I, o co#ia,|[(: '
ivi__ g the defendant by name when they whether or not Alloway, lonY #|[IL sl
.......... l weren't calling specifically for La- viction if you do fi:t ';;u sb0,llgT'
asked Alloway if Lagasa be careful in your delile" o It ,",
Sergi
.. was in the wrong place at the hesaid ..... arl? IlK .- aei
d Lewi , 11
us drugs, Alloway said. olds, Donal - : IL, .....
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIOIIIItItIIIIIItlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIUIHood Canal I II tlttlll IIIItilliitltilll trolledtialis at informant426_3240.8 purchaser° ofmake'a teener"a con- Y __
Thursday, October 14 (1.75 grams) of methampheta-
Low ............ 2:32 a.m ................... : . . 0.4 It. testified that they didn't ask for Sergi asked the jurY_. , and 01# |lat
High ............... 9:25 a.m. 13.3 ft.
Low ................ 3:10p.m 5.8ft. Pair of dr r called to set up the buy. "We are biased."Thisisa, |
High ..... 8:01 p.m. 11.t ft. refreshers s
Friday, October 15 gasa, he said. guilty, and thats Y..- =ati0# Jl' t
LOW ................ 3:15a.m. 0.6,t set for seniors
High .............. 10:22 a.m. 13.2 ft.
Low .............. 4:07 p.m. 6.3 ft.
High ............... 8:41 p.m. 11.6 ft. forTW°seniordrivingcitizensClasseSwill bedesignedoffered wrong time,, "No He chose to sell The jurors were.s Mln^aStepo, l#r, |lRyh.
Saturday, October 16
Low .............. '..4:04 a.m. 0.9 ft. during the next week. Schuetz then called Olsen to rance, Jeanne Dove, 'l°mri'|t!t ft
High ........... :..11:26a.m. 13.1 11, The Washington Traffic Safety the stand. He said he was in Kenneth Ayres, L°,U):e S$1.|Ia
low ................ 5:17p.m. 6.5 it. Education Association offers charge of"surveillance and cover" Lynn DoV:,nJC:Ulll#de]l
High ............... 9:33 p.m. 11.1 It. "Seniors Getting There Safely during the controlled buy. That Alice Nilss , asth |lf=:'
Sunday, October 17 from a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, means he was supposed to watch ly Cull Charles Kegg Jlt'2t
Low ................. 5:00 a.m 1.3 It. October 16, at Olympic College Alloway and the confidential in- ternatejuror. _,ll] it e
High .............. 12:31 p.m. 13.2 ft. Shelton. _ 11111 [Jl. eh
Low ................ 6:39 p.m. 6.4 ft.
High .............. 10:42 p.m. 10.7 ft. Gerald Apple will be instructor Comment o
Monday, October 18 for the one-clay course, the last of'
LOW ................ 6:01 a.m. 1.6 ft. its series to be offered until next
High ............... 1:29 p.m. 13.3 It. spring. To register, call 427-9670
Low ................ 7:52p.m. 6.0 ft. (275(4467 from North Mason),
Tuesday, October 19 Extensi n 396. ,,
High .............. 12:02 a.m. 10.6 ft.
Low ................ 7:04 a.m. 1.8 ft. The 55 Alive senior driving
High ............... 2:15 p.m. 13.6 ft. course offered by the American d
Low ................ 8:43p.m. 5.2It. Association of Retired Persons is Show! lli
Wednesday, October 20 scheduled for 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Oc-
High ............... 1:20 a.m. 10.8 ft. tober 18 and 19 at Mason General
Low ................ 8:03 a.m. 1.9 ft. Hospital. B
Low ................ 9:22 p.m. 4.3 ft. Preregistration tbr the two-day Denney 6:Mg:dmaY.6F:000000000p00 II
Thursday, October 21 session is required. Information
High ............... 2'.27 a.m. 11.4 it. on the driving refresher course is =/ Ii
Low ................ 8:56a.m. 2.0 ft. available from instructor Donald IP'AIIIMIIN[IUI00I soutus,"- )[%'
High ............... 3:23 p.m. 14.0 ft. Payne at 426-0590. Registration cL|AN|R$ at 1'All-ORS 426 337 |
Low ................ 9:57 p.m. 3.2 ft.
%
*Varial)le APY on balances of $75,000 and above.
.50%
*Variable APY on balances of $40,000 to $74,999.
To open an Ultimate Business or Personal Money Market Account, stop by or call us today/
42 West Coast Bank branches across Washington and Oregon to serve you, including:
Shelton
(360) 426-5581
Hoodsport
(360) 877-5272
Offer good at ;ill West C.ast Bank hranchc' in ()rcgon and Washirgton. The Annual Percentage Yield (APY) may change after accoutat
()pcnmg. The APY is aCctlratc ;is of ( )ct()bcr 1 , 19tit), slid is subicct to ch;ulgc <)r may cld at ally time without notice, $75,000 is the rain"
imt, m balance required to obtain the stated APY of 4.75%. For balances from $40,()00 m $7,4,999 the A )Y is 4.5(1%; for bal mccs froth
$15,000 to $39,t)99 the APY is 3,5(1% on a Business M(mcy Market Account and 3.56% on a Personal M(mcy Market Account; for bal"
anccs from $1 to $14,999 the APY is 2.43% otx a Busincs Money Market Ace(rant and 3.15% on a Personal Money Market A¢coullt'
Fccs could reduce earnings on this account. Member FI)[C'. Ask for details regarding FI)IC insurance.
McIntosh
graduates as Davis finishes
apprentice Marines' basic
in Air Force
U.S. Air Force Airman First
Class Jason A. McIntosh has
graduated from the supply-man-
agement inventory apprentice
course at Lackland Air Force
Base in San Antonio, Texas.
A 1995 graduate of The Ever-
green State College in Olympia,
McIntosh is the son of Bob and
Anita McIntosh, who live on
Rocky Road near Shelton.
During his apprenticeship, ac-
cording to the Army and Air
Force Hometown News Service,
he received instruction in proper-
ty accounting, customer and
Western Union death messages bench stock support and mission-
capable procedures. He also
Among his more vivid mem-
ories of working for Western
lJnion as a teenager, says Bob,
were those occasions when he
was called upon to deliver tele-
grams bearing news of death.
Often as not, he says, they
weren't merely fbrmal confirma-
tion. They were a stunned loved
one's first notification.
"But l never knew at the
time," says Bob. "The only thing
that 1 knew was that it was a
death message, because they had
a stamp with a star on it and
stamped it first on the red ink
pad ..... bing, bing, binl4 - and then
you saw that through the glas-
sine window and knew it was a
death message. You didn't need
to know the de.tails. It was just
that you had to make sure that
some medical problem didn't de-
vch)l) = fainting or something."
ONE I'IME, recalls Bob, he
was dispatched to a rooming
h,use with just such a red-
starred delivery. "This was dur-
ing lhc early I)epression," he
says. "'And there were whole fam-
ilies - with one or two children, I
,ql/t))ose just I11 O/IP rooln.
"I was walking down the hall-
way. The hallway doors were
()ptm, so people could notice who
was going by. They had instruc-
tions they gave to us: If a woman
was by herself, then you went
and got neighbors or somebody to
be with her. But this woman
seemed to be able to handle the
situation, so I had tier sign for
the telegram. She had her son
there- teenaged son.
'Td gotten just a doorway or
two away - and of course heard
her open the envelop. Then she
let out a cry and collapsed. I
would have returned to see, but
the neighbors all poured in.
Above the clamor of the neigh-
bors being concerned about her
was this kid saying, 'Well, I
TOLD her to sit down before she
read it! But she WOULD lave to
fall down!'"
Bob blurts a soft but irrepress-
ible laugh, in spite of himself.
"Well," he says, "so it went.
"ANOTHER CASE, was more
tragic. I went to this home in
South Denver, about 9 o'clock at
night, and it was just this elderly
woman living all by herself. And
she was poverty-stricken, and I
could tell she was having a hard
time. So after she signed it she
said, 'You open it.' So I opened it
and read it aloud. And it said,
'George shot and killed our two
daughters.' That was all."
The message was from the
woman's daughter. George was
the woman's son-in-law.
"Well, she didn't faint," says
Bob. "But I felt so sorry to have
to read that to her - and no
neighbors. It was quite evident
that she lived by herself, with no
contact. Well, what I should have
done was gone and informed the
neighbors, whether she was as-
sociated with them or not - that
this woman was by herself and
had received such tragic news.
But somehow...
"Well, I s'pose it was because I
hadn't been instructed specifical-
ly what to do. Cuz she seemed to,
uh, regain her composure after a
little bit and seemed to be all
right. But I've always had some
guilt, on reflection, that I didn't
think more about whether she ac-
tually needed people to talk to or
anything."
AND HOW'D HE FEEL
about confronting such grief at so
early an age? "
"Well, I just took it in stride,"
says Bob. "My thought was to
just make sure that she was able
to physically function - didn't
pass grit. But I SHOULD have
gone to a neighbor and said that
she'd received this death message
and she should be checked on oc-
casionally.
"Or maybe I should even have
called the police, if the neighbors
didn't feel any concern. One of
the things that occurred to me at
the time was that if I went to see
the neighbors they might have
strong disinclinations to get in-
volved. Because that's the way it
was."
In any event, says Bob, he
stuck faithfully to his Western
Union regimen for some three
years, regularly bicycling 16 to
20 miles or more per shift, not
counting his daily commute to
the main office in downtown
Denver from his home - nearly
eight miles up the plain.
"THAT'S RIGHT," says Bob,
chuckling. "And the thing that
amazes me is that I was content
to ride that bike even in icy
weather instead of just buying
another bike and chaining it to a
post in downtown Dener and
then leaving another one at the
end of the streetcar ride. I coulda
taken the streetcar for 10 cents.
"But there was something
about my pride - in not riding
the streetcar - I just couldn't see
spending my money that way."
He laughs.
"Now I look at it and think,
'How stupid!' But that's a teen-
ager. You're bound in by certain
ideas..."
Gallagher
For
Shelton
School Board,
Pos. 2
• Caring
• Dedicated
• Sound Judgement
• Supportive
of School Staff
"Among our accomplishments during
my term on the board, we completed a
c<)mnmnity-drivcn strategic phm, and
expanded our nmsic and arts programs.
"But more importantly, more students
have graduated from high school."
"Dedicated to Excellence in Education"
i
[ ! Paid bY C°mmittee t° Reelect Ross Gallagher, Shelton School Board, I
Position 2,240 S. 7th St., Shelton, WA 98584
:, i '
worked doing equipment manage-
ment and learning effective ware-
housing techniques and pro-
cedures for operating materiel-
handling equipment.
McIntosh also, according to the
Air Force publicist, practiced us-
ing electronic data-processing
equipment for inventory.
In superior court:
Page 16 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, October 14, 1999
Lagasa found guilty, gets
1997 SHS grad sentence fcr meth delivery
Donald Lee Lagasa, 33, of 1911 mine there on June 14. ferment and come to their aid if
Washington Street, Shelton, was
found guilty Monday of delivery
of methamphetamine after a one-
day trial in Mason County Supe-
rior Court.
Lagasa was arrested during an
August 13 raid at that address by
WESTNET (West Sound Narcot-
ics Enforcement Task Force), an
organization of police agencies in
Mason and Kitsap counties that
focuses on enforcement of state
drug laws. He was charged with
selling a "teener" of the illegal
drug to an undercover police offi-
cer on June 14.
Judge James Sawyer sen-
tenced Lagasa Wednesday to 24
months in prison. He ordered him
to pay a $3,000 drug fine, $500 to
the crime victims' fund, $500 to-
wards his attorney's fee and $210
in court costs. Lagasa will be un-
der 12 months of supervision by
the Washington Department of
Corrections after his release.
Deputy Prosecutor Reinhold
Schuetz called Officer Roy AI-
h)way of the Bremerton Police De-
partment as the first witness for
the state. Alloway wears long
hair and a full beard as part of
He said that the confidential
informant called a telephone
number at that address and
asked Lagasa if there was any
methamphetamine, also called
"crank" and "C.R.," for sale there•
He said Lagasa and the inform-
ant agreed to meet outside the
house.
"We were not going inside this
particular place," Alloway said.
The informant, he told the jury,
drove her car and he was in the
passenger's seat when they ar-
rived at 1911 Washington Street•
He said Lagasa came out of the
house.
"HE WALKED around to the
driver's window, which was
open," he said. "He basically said
hello to the driver and myself. He
immediately reached out towards
the informant with the bag in
hand. I reached out to take the
bag and I handed him the pre-
recorded funds."
The money in question was $80
that had been photocopied by
WESTNET before the purchase
took place• Schuetz then asked
Alloway to examine a plastic bag
any trouble arose.
He described
chase from about two
away• "A white male
the vehicle, bent into the
short period of time
went back into the re
said.
OLSEN SAID that
he told Alloway he
from his many years _
for the SPD. He testifies v
rag as the evidence officer i
ase, weighing the u:
methamphetamine ann
ing a field test of the subs1
He then testified that he
to execute a search
1911 Washington
he identified Lagasa there
time. - oergi, he
Cross-examined by t-#
testified that the vehi¢leT;t'd
to the confidential inmr- ......
t the informant d
hat both _ . =^,t0
vehicle were searched,pr:;" to the
bu Allowav, eallea oa:,,o
Y" " e helped ex
stand said h . _:a e re€"
search warrant and Sin; h0t¢
ognized Lagasa tro m^hi
graph that Olsen had sn,,-
his work as a WESTNET under-
cover officer. He said the agency
has been keeping an eye on 1911
Washington Street.
"WE RECEIVED numerous
with a small paper envelope in- after the controlled b l,Yh e state
side. The officer said the envelope Schuetz then restea or the de
case and Ser resteu '
contained the illegal drug. , gi . _ an wit's,"
"This is the methamphetamine lense without calh.ng. Jre=rP
that Mr. Lagasa sold me," he es. During his elOSml ts "
said. chuetz talk:d;::tnts; $
dSuced at th _ +hat .
Crime Lab that sh°Weui'-$e
substance in question
Marine Private David M. Davis
recently completed basic training
at the U.S• Marine Corps Recruit
Depot in San Diego.
Davis, the son of Lou Ann L.
Davis of Shelton and a 1997
graduate of Shelton High School,
successfully finished the 12 weeks
of training designed to challenge
recruits physically and mentally.
He and his fellow trainees be-
gan their days with running and
calisthenics at 5 a.m. Classroom
and field assignments included
first aid, uniform regulhtions,
combat water survival, marks-
manship, hand-to-hand combat
and weapons training.
Close-order drill and acting as
a small infantry unit during field
work added to the regimen. Re-
cruits also learned Marine Corps
values.
The training culminated in the
54-hour team effort called, "The
Crucible," a problem-solving evo-
lution that concluded with the
ceremony in which Davis received
his Marine Corps emblem and
was called a Marine for the first
time.
uu
complaints about that location Alloway testified that after the
lllVi d and the occupants there being in- purchase he gave the meth-
volved in the distribution of amphetamine to Detective l=jtee
nmthamphetamine,' he said. Charles Olsen of the Shelton Po- amphetamine. -her ths |1: z
Alloway testified that he made lice Department. He said Olsen "This is the same teon Jt t Jl"'got
arraignments through a confiden- weighed the drug and put it in an the defendant delivere:at , ia'|J_ ]
evidence bag 14th of this year and.a z said. |[era
ALLOWAY, cross-examined by , -"'G rellts., J[,
• sence is this case," cnut l
defense attorney Ronald Sergi, IN HIS CLO8I, o co#ia,|[(: '
ivi__ g the defendant by name when they whether or not Alloway, lonY #|[IL sl
.......... l weren't calling specifically for La- viction if you do fi:t ';;u sb0,llgT'
asked Alloway if Lagasa be careful in your delile" o It ,",
Sergi
.. was in the wrong place at the hesaid ..... arl? IlK .- aei
d Lewi , 11
us drugs, Alloway said. olds, Donal - : IL, .....
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIOIIIItItIIIIIItlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIUIHood Canal I II tlttlll IIIItilliitltilll trolledtialis at informant426_3240.8 purchaser° ofmake'a teener"a con- Y __
Thursday, October 14 (1.75 grams) of methampheta-
Low ............ 2:32 a.m ................... : . . 0.4 It. testified that they didn't ask for Sergi asked the jurY_. , and 01# |lat
High ............... 9:25 a.m. 13.3 ft.
Low ................ 3:10p.m 5.8ft. Pair of dr r called to set up the buy. "We are biased."Thisisa, |
High ..... 8:01 p.m. 11.t ft. refreshers s
Friday, October 15 gasa, he said. guilty, and thats Y..- =ati0# Jl' t
LOW ................ 3:15a.m. 0.6,t set for seniors
High .............. 10:22 a.m. 13.2 ft.
Low .............. 4:07 p.m. 6.3 ft.
High ............... 8:41 p.m. 11.6 ft. forTW°seniordrivingcitizensClasseSwill bedesignedoffered wrong time,, "No He chose to sell The jurors were.s Mln^aStepo, l#r, |lRyh.
Saturday, October 16
Low .............. '..4:04 a.m. 0.9 ft. during the next week. Schuetz then called Olsen to rance, Jeanne Dove, 'l°mri'|t!t ft
High ........... :..11:26a.m. 13.1 11, The Washington Traffic Safety the stand. He said he was in Kenneth Ayres, L°,U):e S$1.|Ia
low ................ 5:17p.m. 6.5 it. Education Association offers charge of"surveillance and cover" Lynn DoV:,nJC:Ulll#de]l
High ............... 9:33 p.m. 11.1 It. "Seniors Getting There Safely during the controlled buy. That Alice Nilss , asth |lf=:'
Sunday, October 17 from a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, means he was supposed to watch ly Cull Charles Kegg Jlt'2t
Low ................. 5:00 a.m 1.3 It. October 16, at Olympic College Alloway and the confidential in- ternatejuror. _,ll] it e
High .............. 12:31 p.m. 13.2 ft. Shelton. _ 11111 [Jl. eh
Low ................ 6:39 p.m. 6.4 ft.
High .............. 10:42 p.m. 10.7 ft. Gerald Apple will be instructor Comment o
Monday, October 18 for the one-clay course, the last of'
LOW ................ 6:01 a.m. 1.6 ft. its series to be offered until next
High ............... 1:29 p.m. 13.3 It. spring. To register, call 427-9670
Low ................ 7:52p.m. 6.0 ft. (275(4467 from North Mason),
Tuesday, October 19 Extensi n 396. ,,
High .............. 12:02 a.m. 10.6 ft.
Low ................ 7:04 a.m. 1.8 ft. The 55 Alive senior driving
High ............... 2:15 p.m. 13.6 ft. course offered by the American d
Low ................ 8:43p.m. 5.2It. Association of Retired Persons is Show! lli
Wednesday, October 20 scheduled for 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Oc-
High ............... 1:20 a.m. 10.8 ft. tober 18 and 19 at Mason General
Low ................ 8:03 a.m. 1.9 ft. Hospital. B
Low ................ 9:22 p.m. 4.3 ft. Preregistration tbr the two-day Denney 6:Mg:dmaY.6F:000000000p00 II
Thursday, October 21 session is required. Information
High ............... 2'.27 a.m. 11.4 it. on the driving refresher course is =/ Ii
Low ................ 8:56a.m. 2.0 ft. available from instructor Donald IP'AIIIMIIN[IUI00I soutus,"- )[%'
High ............... 3:23 p.m. 14.0 ft. Payne at 426-0590. Registration cL|AN|R$ at 1'All-ORS 426 337 |
Low ................ 9:57 p.m. 3.2 ft.
%
*Varial)le APY on balances of $75,000 and above.
.50%
*Variable APY on balances of $40,000 to $74,999.
To open an Ultimate Business or Personal Money Market Account, stop by or call us today/
42 West Coast Bank branches across Washington and Oregon to serve you, including:
Shelton
(360) 426-5581
Hoodsport
(360) 877-5272
Offer good at ;ill West C.ast Bank hranchc' in ()rcgon and Washirgton. The Annual Percentage Yield (APY) may change after accoutat
()pcnmg. The APY is aCctlratc ;is of ( )ct()bcr 1 , 19tit), slid is subicct to ch;ulgc <)r may cld at ally time without notice, $75,000 is the rain"
imt, m balance required to obtain the stated APY of 4.75%. For balances from $40,()00 m $7,4,999 the A )Y is 4.5(1%; for bal mccs froth
$15,000 to $39,t)99 the APY is 3,5(1% on a Business M(mcy Market Account and 3.56% on a Personal M(mcy Market Account; for bal"
anccs from $1 to $14,999 the APY is 2.43% otx a Busincs Money Market Ace(rant and 3.15% on a Personal Money Market A¢coullt'
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