kitsap veterans life, october 25, 2013

16
A Sound Publishing Monthly Magazine November 2013 www.kitsapveteranslife.com

Upload: sound-publishing

Post on 21-Mar-2016

216 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

October 25, 2013 edition of the Kitsap Veterans Life

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

LifeVeteransA Sound Publishing Monthly Magazine November 2013

www.kitsapveteranslife.com

Page 2: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

2 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3

Friday & Saturday November 8th & 9th 10:00 am To 4:00 pm Free Parking & Admission

Handcrafted Arts, Crafts, & Gifts By Local Artists Dollar Raffle Tickets: Choose From Gift Baskets By Fair Vendors Or A Beautiful Quilt

The Hansville Art & Craft Guild Presents:

Holiday Fair 2013 Bring Your Family & Friends To The Greater Hansville Community Center At Buck Lake County Park

Finish Your Holiday Shopping Before Thanksgiving!

The Hansville Art & Craft Guild Presents:

Holiday Fair 2013 Bring Your Family & Friends To The Greater Hansville Community Center At Buck Lake County Park

Friday & Saturday November 8th & 9th 10:00 am To 4:00 pm Free Parking & Admission

Handcrafted Arts, Crafts, & Gifts By Local Artists Dollar Raffle Tickets: Choose From Gift Baskets By Fair Vendors Or A Beautiful Quilt

Finish Your Holiday Shopping Before Thanksgiving!

The Hansville Art & Craft Guild Presents:

Holiday Fair 2013 Bring Your Family & Friends To The Greater Hansville Community Center At Buck Lake County Park

The Hansville Art & Craft Guild Presents:

Holiday Fair 2013 Bring Your Family & Friends To The Greater Hansville Community Center At Buck Lake County Park Friday & Saturday November 8th & 9th 10:00 am To 4:00 pm Free Parking & Admission

Handcrafted Arts, Crafts, & Gifts By Local Artists Dollar Raffle Tickets: Choose From Gift Baskets By Fair Vendors Or A Beautiful Quilt

Friday & Saturday November 8th & 9th 10:00 am To 4:00 pm Free Parking & Admission

Handcrafted Arts, Crafts, & Gifts By Local Artists Dollar Raffle Tickets: Choose From Gift Baskets By Fair Vendors Or A Beautiful Quilt

Finish Your Holiday Shopping Before Thanksgiving!

Finish Your Holiday Shopping Before Thanksgiving!

Nobody cares more about yourmortgage experience.

© 2013, Cobalt Mortgage, Inc., 11255 Kirkland Way, Suite 100, Kirkland, WA 98033. Toll Free: (877) 220-4663; Fax: (425) 605-3199. NMLS Unique Identi� er: 35653; Arizona Mortgage Banker License #0909801; Licensed by the Department of Business Oversight under the California Residential Mortgage Lending Act.; Regulated by the Colorado Division of Real Estate; Nevada Mortgage Banker #3723; Nevada Mortgage Broker #3725; Oregon Mortgage Lender License #ML-2991; Washington Consumer Loan License #520-CL-48866. Timothy E. Samuels, NMLS-109468, MLO-109468. Ticket # 2013082310000891

Tim Samuels MLO#109468Loan Offi cer

Direct: 360-516-5002 Cell: 360-440-4899

TeamSamuelsLending

you a team that cares

• Pool Table• Internet Access

• Free Coffee• Pac-Man and Play Station 2

A&CSPORTS PUB

360-377-3248

3249 Perry Avenue • Just South of Sylvan on Perry

in East Bremerton

OFFTRACK

BETTING!Wed. Through Sun.

$750 Pitcher$200 Pt or BottleAt Game Time Only!

Texan Randy Hardin spent 15 years aboard ships in the Navy before he was assigned to his first shore duty. Hardin enlisted at the age of 18 in the Navy in his hometown of Longview, Texas in 1974. He arrived at bootcamp two days after his high school graduation and spent the next 30 years in the United States Navy.

Hardin retired as a com-mand master chief on April 9, 2004.

“My first ship was the USS Sperry (AS-12), a sub-tender stationed out of San Diego. From there I went to the USS Inflict (MSO-45), a mine-sweeper stationed in Little Creek, Virginia,” Hardin said. “Then I served on the USS Point Loma (AGDS-2) and then the USS Bagley (FF-1069), both out of San Diego. That took up 15 years. Then I was assigned to my first shore duty in New Orleans, Louisiana.”

Hardin applied for and was accepted to the com-mand master chief program and left shore duty early to

complete his training. Before that, however, Hardin was an electronics technician. Hardin made chief in 1984 and was promoted to master chief petty officer in 1990; he received orders as a com-mand master chief in 1992.

According to the Navy, a command master chief petty officer is the most senior enlisted sailor in a United States Navy. The command master chief serves as a liai-son between commissioned officers and enlisted sailors.

Hardin echoes this, say-ing, “My job as a command master chief was to serve people. I helped sailors and their families while also helping the ship complete its mission.”

As a command master chief, Hardin was also called upon to ensure active com-munication throughout the chain of command while also upholding the Navy ethos and Navy core values.

His first tour as a com-mand master chief was USS Texas (CGN-39) in 1992. The ship has since been decom-missioned.

“It’s long gone — probably razor blades by now,” Hardin said.

The USS Texas was sta-tioned at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard for refurbishing when it was decommis-sioned. Hardin, not one to wait idly for anything, transferred to Newport, Rhode Island, as an instruc-tor for leader training at the US Navy Senior Enlisted Academy.

Hardin was selected as Command Master Chief of the USS Enterprise (CVN-65) for two years. His final duty station was Naval Station Kitsap-Bangor. Hardin oversaw shore com-mands in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Alaska.

While serving in an active leadership role, Hardin continued his education. He received a Bachelors of Business Administration from Northwood University and a graduate certificate in organizational leadership from Chapman University.

Several months before retiring, he researched and started his own business, Abiding Home Care, which

he ran with his wife Jerrine, from 2004 to 2010. In 2010, he sold the business to Martha & Mary.

“I was part of the deal,” he said with a laugh. “I have served at Martha & Mary as the Administrator of Home and Community Services since 2010.”

Both Hardin and his wife came from families that actively participated in the care and nurturing of their elderly relatives. Hardin recalled memories of his family packing up the car with cleaning supplies and food and sundries. His fam-ily would go once a week and

clean relatives’ homes, stock the pantry and refrigera-tor with food and prepared meals and spend time with them.

Hardin said they would consistently do this, visiting those relatives that still lived independently and those that were residing at nursing homes.

“The culture and economy has pushed the care of our elderly family away from us,” Hardin said. “My guid-ing principle (in starting a home care business) was that I wanted to go to bed each night knowing I had helped someone. That’s why I was also so open to being acquired by Martha & Mary,” he said.

Hardin has lived in Kitsap County for the past 15 years. That’s not to say that his home state doesn’t appeal to him.

“Like any good Texan, I yearn for Texas sometimes,” he said with a laugh.

Hardin is very active in his job at Martha & Mary. He is also very involved with his church, St. Elizabeth

Orthodox Church in Poulsbo.

“I serve on the parish council and with the finance committee,” he said.

Hardin has some advice for those ready to retire: “Be flexible. Don’t think you’re going to do just one thing. Expand your vision and look for ways to continue to serve.”

He also has some sage advice for the younger folks looking into the military as a career.

“The military should always be an option,” he said. He cautions, however: “It’s not a job, though. It’s a way of life. You’ve got to be ready to adopt the traditions, structure and hierarchy and make it your own.”

Hardin is proud of his service in the Navy. He’s also proud to be a veteran.

“A veteran, to me, is a hero,” he said. “I don’t want to get into politics (Hardin quickly mentions recent events like the national vet-eran memorial closures), but I don’t think we treat them well enough.”

VETERAN PROFILE/ RANdy hARdINBy Jessica Ginet

Randy Hardin

Page 3: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

Veterans Life is published monthly by Sound Publishing Inc.; Corporate Headquarters: 19351 8th Avenue, Suite 106, Poulsbo, WA 98370. SUBSCRIPTIONS: $24/year via USPS. Copyright 2013 Sound Publishing Inc

3888 NW Randall Way, Suite 100, Silverdale, WA 98383www.kitsapveteranslife.com

LifeLifeLifeLifeLifeLifeLifeLifeLifeLifeLifeLife

This month’s Veterans Life is dedicated to all veterans as we celebrate their day on Nov. 11. On the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, an armistice, or temporary cessation of hostilities, was declared between the Allied nations and Germany in the First World War, then known as “The Great War.”

Commemorated as Armistice Day, beginning the following year, Nov. 11 became a legal federal holiday in the United States in 1938. In the aftermath of World War II and the Korean War, Armistice Day became Veterans Day, a holiday dedicated to American veterans of all wars. Veterans of all wars and of service during peace time can be proud of their service and we hope you enjoy the stories we have this month to honor Veterans Day.

Reporter Kevan Moore writes about the history of Veterans Day and about the local observances planned on Nov. 11 here in Kitsap County. Other special Veterans Day observances also are listed.

There’s a story about Art Baker, who served 20 years in the Navy and the Army, who now gives his time vol-unteering at a Port Orchard elementary school. After sustaining severe head injuries in a car accident, Baker uses his time with the school children to keep his mind sharp. Reporter Chris Chancellor writes about Baker’s miracle comeback.

Readers also get to meet Robert Gossett of Bremerton who recently was reunited with a Navy Good Conduct medal that belonged to his father, Edmund. Through a series of connections and coincidences, the medal found its way back to the Gossett home where it has been placed in a special location in the dining room china cabinet.

In another story, Silverdale business woman Jenny Thomas shares her memories of the year she spent in Vietnam working for the American Red Cross at the height of the Vietnam War. She’s written a book about her experiences and hopes to show another side of the war to readers.

This month’s veteran profile by Jessica Ginet is about Texan Randy Hardin who spent 15 years aboard ships in the Navy before he was assigned to his first shore duty. Hardin enlisted at 18 in the Navy in his hometown of Longview in 1974. He arrived at bootcamp two days after his high school graduation and spent the next 30 years in the U.S. Navy.

The Bond this month comes from Navy veteran Luciano Marano who served on the USS Lincoln. He’s a staff writer at the Bainbridge Island Review and has written for Veterans Life before. He tells us about Veterans Day from a veteran’s perspective.

Please feel free to send you comments and suggestions about Veterans Life to [email protected]. We’d love to hear from you.

On the inside

The Bond

“Thanks for your service,” is a phrase that gets used a lot, especially on Veterans Day. Here’s one man’s opinion on how to thank a vet. 15

A veTerAn volunTeer

Navy and Army veteran Art Baker spends time in the classroom. But his volunteer work is helping him as much as the kids.10

veTerAns dAyVeterans Day has roots that date back to Nov. 11, 1919. And the day is

always celebrated in fine fashion in Kitsap County.

InsIde

4

Administration (360) 308-9161

Classified Ads (360) 394-8700

Display Advertising (360) 308-9161

Fax (360) 308-9363

Newsroom (360) 308-9161

ADMINISTRATIONPUBLISHER

SeAN McDONAlD [email protected]

ADVeRTISINGMARKETING REPRESENTATIVES

RITA NICHOlSON [email protected] ZUVeR [email protected] HUMBle [email protected]

MARKETING ARTISTBRyON KeMpF [email protected]

NeWSROOMEDITOR

leSlIe [email protected]

SENIOR REPORTER KeVAN [email protected]

SENIOR REPORTER CHRIS [email protected]

REPORTER SeRAINe [email protected]

CIRCUlATION CIRCULATION MANAGER

HeleN [email protected]

“Scan this code and start receiving local news on your

mobile device today!”

on The cover: A local veteran displays his service proudly on his back at a Veterans Day observance last year at the Kitsap County Fairgrounds. Photo by Kevan Moore.

Kitsap’s Best Values in Flooring Since 1975

Saveup to 30%

EARTHSCAPESSheet Vinyl Flooring

4535 AUTO CENTER WAY, BREMERTON360-479-3463

Visit us at www.CarpetOne.comSTORE HOURS: MON. - SAT. 9AM - 5:30 PM

CLOSED SUNDAY’S

Incredibly durable - created with

the latest in � ex-� t technology

Page 4: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

4 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3

At Azusa Pacific, we’re committed to serving military members, veterans, and their families.If you’re seeking a top-ranked local university that goes the extra mile for our nation’s military heroes, look no further. Azusa Pacific University has been named a Military Friendly School by G.I. Jobs magazine, placing it among the top 15 percent of schools in the country helping military students reach their educational dreams.

Azusa Pacific is a Yellow Ribbon University and a Servicemembers Opportunity College. CONTACT US TODAY!Tammy Oluvic, Director of Military and Veterans Outreach(626) 815-4631 • [email protected]/military God-honoring Excellence Since 1899

Programs LocationsAPU offers master’s degrees, credentials, and accelerated bachelor’s degree programs in:

BusinessEducation Leadership Nursing Psychology Theology

AzusaHigh DesertInland EmpireLos AngelesMurrieta

Orange CountySan DiegoVentura CountyOnline

Our eight Southern California locations and online programs provide convenience and flexibility, so you can earn your degree when and how you want.

15092

Silverdale9800 Silverdale Way NW #101

360-662-1300

Always30% OFF for

Armed Forces Men and Women

w/MilitaryI.D.*

On Base - Off Base!WEDELIVER!

Order Online at PapaJohns.com

19410 8th Ave. N.E., Suite 102, Poulsbo • 360-779-1566 • 800-990-9116 www.andersondenturedental.com

“I have worn dentures for 27 years and have never had such attentive care. The dentures are wonderful!”Anderson Denture Patient

• Denture Repair• Relines (while you wait)• Denturist & Dentist on Staff

• Denturist & Dentist on Staff• Crowns & Bridges• Cosmetic & General Dentistry

Denturist & Dentist on Staff

You'll love what we can do for your smile!• Extractions• Emergency Care• Dentures / Partials

FREE*New patient consultation

and oral exam*X-Rays excluded. Must present this

ad to receive.

Most Insurances Accepted

Veterans Day as we know it today has roots that go back to Nov. 11, 1919, which was declared Armistice Day by President Woodrow Wilson.

Major hostilities of World War I were for-mally ended at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, when the Armistice with Germany went into effect.

“To us in America, the reflections of Armistice Day will be filled with solemn pride in the hero-ism of those who died in the country’s service and with gratitude for the victory, both because of the thing from which it has freed us and because of the opportunity it has given America to show her sympathy with peace and justice in the councils of the nations,” President Wilson said in his declaration of the holiday.

In 1945, World War II

veteran Raymond Weeks from Birmingham, Alabama, had the idea to expand Armistice Day to celebrate all veterans, not just those who died in World War I. Weeks led a delegation to Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, who supported the idea of National Veterans Day. Weeks led the first national celebration in 1947 in Alabama and annually until his death in 1985.

In his 1954 Veterans Day Proclamation, President Dwight D. Eisenhower called for the formation of a Veterans Day National Committee to oversee national plan-ning and coordination of the Veterans Day obser-vance.

He named the Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs, Harvey V. Higley, as chairman of committee and called on the heads of all depart-ments and agencies of the executive branch of the government to assist the committee in every way

possible.Administrator Higley

called together leaders of veterans’ groups and asked them to serve on the committee. The orig-inal committee consisted

of associate chairmen from the following orga-nizations: The American Legion, American Veterans of World War II and Korea (AMVETS), Disabled American Veterans, Marine Corps League, United Spanish War Veterans, and the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States.

The full committee consisted of representa-tives from: the American National Red Cross; American Veterans

Committee, Inc.; Army Mutual Aid Association; Army and Navy Union, U.S.A.; Blinded Veterans Association; Catholic War Veterans of the U.S.A.; Coast Guard League; Disabled Officers Association; Fleet Reserve Association; Jewish War Veterans of the United States; Military Order of the Purple Heart, Inc.; Military Order of the World Wars; National Jewish Welfare Board;

National Society – Army of the Philippines; National Tribune; Navy Mutual Aid Association; Regular Veterans Association; United Indian War Veterans, U.S.A.; and the Women’s Forum on National Security. Many of these organizations continue to serve on the current Veterans Day Committee.

The committee meets three times a year in Washington, D.C., to plan Veterans Day activi-ties, including select-ing a national Veterans Day poster, recognizing regional observances that serve as model events to honor America’s veterans, and hosting the national ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery.

The committee also has an interest in ensur-ing that younger genera-tions understand the true meaning of Veterans Day, and the sacrifices veter-ans have made to secure and defend the freedoms of the United States of America.

The committee pro-duces a teacher resource guide and distributes it nationwide. The guide includes suggested activi-ties for Veterans Day pro-grams and information for students of all ages.

Staff RepoRt

A brief look at the history of Veterans Day

Photo courtesy of the Eisenhower Library

President Eisenhower signs the bill naming Veterans Day. The photo was taken on June 1. 1954, at the White House with representatives of Veterans organizations looking on.

Page 5: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

Local Kitsap County organizations work together every year to host what they describe as the largest Veterans Day program in the state of Washington.

The free event takes place in the Pavilion at the Kitsap County Fairgrounds and more than 1,800 people are expected to attend. Doors open at 9 a.m. so that visitors can view the many displays and visit the 24 booths. Vintage military uniforms and vehicles will be on dis-play.

Tom Danaher, a pubic affairs officer at Naval Base Kitsap, said that no events or activities are slated to take place on base, as the day is for veterans, not active-duty members of the military.

“But you can bet your bottom dollar I’ll be (at the Pavilion),” said Danaher, a former Navy surface warfare officer who served for 30 years.

Danaher, who has served on the event’s planning committee in past years, was quick to single out former Navy Captains Earl and Sandra Smith, of the lead sponsoring Bremerton-Olympic Peninsula Navy League, for their tireless

years of effort to make the event so successful.

“What will we do when they decide they won’t do this anymore?” Danaher asked. “They’re irreplaceable.”

Sandra Smith served for 27 years and Earl Smith served for 35 years.

“We’re both Vietnam veterans,” Mrs. Smith said. “We didn’t exactly get the welcome home that people are getting now. So, we want to make sure people are getting the recognition they deserve.”

The actual program begins at 10:30 a.m. with pomp and circumstance of a very formal Parade of Colors. Rear Admiral Dietrich Kuhlmann, Commander, Submarine Group Nine and Guy Stitt, Bremerton Navy League Ambassador will welcome everyone.

Kitsap County Commissioner Josh Brown will introduce all of the Military and political dignitaries. The Bremerton High School Marching Band will pro-vide the music.

This year, the keynote speaker is Lourdes E. Alvarado-Ramos, Director of the Washington State Department of Veterans Affairs. “Alfie”

Alvarado-Ramos joined WDVA in 1993 and was appointed Deputy Director in 2005.

She has a unique understanding of the agency, having led the Veterans Services Division and each of the State Veterans Homes as Superintendent. Alvarado-Ramos served 22 years on active duty, retiring in August 1993 as Command Sergeant Major and Troop Command Sergeant Major of Madigan Army Medical Center in Fort Lewis, Washington.

During her military career, she was the recipient of numerous awards and decorations to include the Legion of

Merit, Order of Military Medical Merit, Expert Field Medical Badge and Meritorious Service Medals.

The Bremerton-Olympic Peninsula Council of Navy League provides the coordina-tion and funds for this memorable event along with 42 other organiza-tions.

Crazy Eric’s Drive-In will be providing free refreshments following the program. Costco will provide free cake.

N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | 5

*APR refers to Annual Percentage Rate. Subject to credit approval. Variable interest rate based on U.S Prime Rate published in the Wall Street Journal Money Rates section on the Friday preceding the 27th of each March, June, September, and December plus our Margin of 2.90%. Changes in the interest rate will affect the number of your scheduled payments and will take effect on the first business day of each calendar quarter of each year. APR will never be greater than 18.00%. Repayment balance grace period is 25 days. Method of computing the balances and purchases is Average Daily Balance. Late payment fee is $25 or minimum payment amount if less. Conditions and Rate effective May 1, 2013.

SimplifyThe Season

Visa Gold 6.15% APRVariable Rate

*

Traveling to grandmas or buying gifts for the family? Our Visa Gold will simplify your season. One card, one great rate for purchases, balance transfers, or cash advances.

Apply today at kitsapcu.org/visagold

Why North Kitsap Auto Rebuild?

(360) 779-4799

We work with your insurance company and off er complimentary shuttle service to our customers

REPUTATIONWe pride ourselves on honesty, hard work, timelinessand convenience! KEEPING IT LOCALWe give back to our Community! Family owned: employing local technicians and staff who average over 20 years experience.QUALITY WORKMANSHIPWe guarantee our craftsmanship and warranty our work for the life of your vehicle.

1

3

2

Jim Sund, LCDRUSN Retired President.Owner-NK Auto Rebuild

We work with your insurance company and off er complimentary We work with your insurance company and off er complimentary We work with your insurance

shuttle service to our customers company and off er complimentary shuttle service to our customers company and off er complimentary

for the life of your vehicle.

NorthKitsapAutoRebuild.com

22177 Viking Ave. Way NWAAA Washington Top Shop Award 10 consecutive years

Kitsap Veterans Day event is one of state’s bestBy KEVAN MOORE

Save The Date Where: Kitsap Sun Pavilion Kitsap County FairgroundsWhen: Monday, Nov. 11Time: Doors open at 9 a.m., close at 1 p.m.Admission: FreeInformation Booths: 24 booths with military related displays, including vintage uni-forms and vehicles Food: Donated by Crazy Eric’s Drive-In, CostcoMusic: Bremerton High School Marching Band

Page 6: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

6 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3

SALUTING OURVETERANS

SALUTING OURVETERANS

Experience. Integrity. Continuity.

Anthony R. Hinson brings over 17 years of legal experience to Sherrard, McGonagle Tizzano, P.S., as a US Navy JAG officer and Internal Revenue Service attorney. Tony’s primary focus areas are estate and gift planning, business planning and Veteran’s issues.

“As a current Navy Reserve JAG with over 19 years of total service, 6 on prior active duty, I want to send a word of thanks to my fellow Sailors and to all of the Marines, Soldiers, and Airmen serving our nation. Bravo Zulu, shipmates!”

19717 Front Street NEPoulsbo, WA 98370

(360) 779-5551

sherrardlaw.com

• Will and Trusts • Probates and Estate Settlement

• Litigation

Olympic College honors all who

have served!

Veteran’s Day - November 11, 2013

Veterans are you interested in

attending OC?

Contact the Veteran’s Service Of� ce

at 1.800.259.6718 x7560or email

[email protected].

InHealth Imaging Salutes Our U.S. Veterans

“Thank You For Your Service To Our Country”

20700 NE Bond Rd., Building B Poulsbo, WA 98370

Are you at risk for lung cancer? InHealth Imaging is offering a free lung cancer

screening to current or former smokers between the ages of 55 and 79. Call InHealth Imaging today to see

if you qualify for this free screening.

360/307-7087 or 206/451-4220

Please note that appointment times for the free lung cancer screening are limited. Eligible smokers include those who

have smoked a pack a day for 30 years or two packs a day for 15 years or a pack a day for 20 years with additional risk factors, such as

exposure to asbestos, radon or other reactive chemicals.

InHealth Imaging Salutes Our U.S. Veterans

“Thank You For Your Service To Our Country”

20700 NE Bond Rd., Building B Poulsbo, WA 98370

Are you at risk for lung cancer? InHealth Imaging is offering a free lung cancer

screening to current or former smokers between the ages of 55 and 79. Call InHealth Imaging today to see

if you qualify for this free screening.

360/307-7087 or 206/451-4220

Please note that appointment times for the free lung cancer screening are limited. Eligible smokers include those who

have smoked a pack a day for 30 years or two packs a day for 15 years or a pack a day for 20 years with additional risk factors, such as

exposure to asbestos, radon or other reactive chemicals.

InHealth Imaging Salutes Our U.S. Veterans

“Thank You For Your Service To Our Country”

20700 NE Bond Rd., Building B Poulsbo, WA 98370

Are you at risk for lung cancer? InHealth Imaging is offering a free lung cancer

screening to current or former smokers between the ages of 55 and 79. Call InHealth Imaging today to see

if you qualify for this free screening.

360/307-7087 or 206/451-4220

Please note that appointment times for the free lung cancer screening are limited. Eligible smokers include those who

have smoked a pack a day for 30 years or two packs a day for 15 years or a pack a day for 20 years with additional risk factors, such as

exposure to asbestos, radon or other reactive chemicals.

InHealth Imaging Salutes Our U.S. Veterans

“Thank You For Your Service To Our Country”

20700 NE Bond Rd., Building B Poulsbo, WA 98370

Are you at risk for lung cancer? InHealth Imaging is offering a free lung cancer

screening to current or former smokers between the ages of 55 and 79. Call InHealth Imaging today to see

if you qualify for this free screening.

360/307-7087 or 206/451-4220

Please note that appointment times for the free lung cancer screening are limited. Eligible smokers include those who

have smoked a pack a day for 30 years or two packs a day for 15 years or a pack a day for 20 years with additional risk factors, such as

exposure to asbestos, radon or other reactive chemicals.

Experience. Integrity. Continuity.

Thank you for your support and service to our country!

William S. McGonagle is a principal of Sherrard McGonagle Tizzano. His emphasis is in civil litigation, which has been focused for the last twenty years to personal injury related claims. He also served in the U.S. Army JAG Corps in Seattle from 1965-1975.

Personal Injury • Auto Casualty and Collision

• Wrongful Death

241 Madison Avenue N.Bainbridge Island, WA 98110

(360) 779-2092

sherrardlaw.com

Todd E TidballFinancial Advisor

18887St Hwy 305 NESuite 100Poulsbo, WA 98370360-779-6123

The service and sacrifi ce of you and your family is appreciated.Thank you!

Stocks. Bonds. CDs.IRAs. Mutual funds.

Member SIPC

John N. HassoldWA State Lic. # CASTLBI952LH (360) 598-3103P.O. Box 2504 Cell (360)509-5286Poulsbo, Washington 98370 Fax (360) 779-6868castlewoodbuilders.us [email protected] Patriots Tea Party waves � ags on Trigger overpass

Thank you for your service to our country

www.stanleysteemer.com360-626-9012 1-800-steemer (783-3637)

Page 7: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

The year was 1967 and Jenny Thomas was on a plane, heading to Vietnam to work for the American Red Cross. She was 23 and had just graduated from college with a degree in sociology.

“It was like a morgue on the plane, very few saying little and most of us saying nothing,” she writes. “We were lost in thoughts about the immediate future. I, too, was pensive, too naive to even think about coming home in a body bag.”

A young woman who grew up in southern California, Thomas was so taken by a television pro-gram about the children in orphanages in Vietnam, she sought out a way to get there and help care for those kids.

“They were considered half-breeds,” she said. “They were part Vietnamese and part American, French or something else. Because of that, they weren’t accepted in their own country and they were just being warehoused in these orphanages. Some of them, too, had parents, but their fathers were fight-ing for the Viet Cong and their mothers couldn’t afford to care for them.”

She looked into enlisting in the military or going to work for the Peace Corp. But only the Red Cross would guarantee her that she’d be sent to Vietnam. So she signed up for a year’s service in DaNang, South Vietnam.

Those days seem like a long time ago to Thomas, who today sells real estate in Silverdale. But Thomas knows that her experiences have helped her to be the person she is. And her hope is that others can share her experiences — and see the Vietnam War in a differ-ent light — by reading her book, “A Different Light, The Vietnam War from a Woman’s Point of View.”

Her book was published in 2010 through a self-publishing company, Xlibris. Since publishing the book, Thomas has done most of the book promotion herself.

The year she spent in Vietnam — October 1967 to October 1968 — is told in first-person in her book, based on the diary she kept that year.

“I wrote every day,” Thomas said. “I also wrote letters home and my father kept them and I used them in my book, too.”

Her work in Vietnam for

the Red Cross consumed her days. She kept records and was a communications assis-tant, which meant she got to relay messages from home to U.S. service members.

“Sometimes it was great,” she said. “I got to tell young soldiers that they were fathers — that they had new babies at home.”

But she also had to tell them about deaths back home, or houses fires that had affected family mem-bers, or even relay deaths of military personnel from where she was to Red Cross officials back in the States.

On her days off, or after work, she spent time in the orphanages helping with the children.

“It was worse than I knew from what I’d seen on TV,” she said. “The Catholic sis-ters were doing what they could, but there were so many children — hundreds of them. The places were dirty and there was very lit-tle to feed the children. And all of them were starving for attention.”

From time to time, she’d take along GIs and the children were so taken with them.

“One little girl would just cling to this Marine lieutenant’s leg, every time he came,” she said. “She wouldn’t turn loose of him.”

Thomas experienced two events in her year in Vietnam where she thought her life was over. One was when she came face-to-face with a Viet Cong who held a gun to her.

“It was one night during the Tet offensive,” she said. “The Viet Cong hit a 500 gallon tank of jet fuel and the sky just lit up like it was day time. I had to get pic-tures of it so I ran up to the roof of one of the buildings in the complex and ran right into a man with a rifle. We locked eyes.”

But just that minute, a sol-dier arrived and told her to run and she did.

The other time was also during the Tet offensive when everything “just blew up” and a soldier with an M16 told her to get in a bun-ker. She hid there for three hours before she was able to come out to the compound where she was staying.

“It was difficult to know who the good guys were,” she said. “Many times the Viet Cong were just regular people who worked in the villages and even cut the generals’ hair by day,” she

said. “They wore regular clothes. But by night they’d put on what we called their black pajamas and they’d kill

for the North Vietnamese leaders.”

Thomas’s life in Vietnam was a distraction to life at

home. Her mother died of polio when she was only 3 years old and her father had remarried a woman who was abusive to her, she said. Her childhood was not easy.

Despite that, she had a calling to help others and stayed working for the Red Cross for several years after Vietnam. She was assigned to work in San Francisco, two years in Germany and then the naval base in Bremerton.

There, she met her hus-band and they spent their lives in Bremerton and had three sons. She’s been mar-ried 38 years and now has three grandchildren. She still sells homes and is in the

middle of writing her second book, “The Color Plaid.”

“It’s about my father, who was a B-17 bomber pilot in World War II,” she said. “He flew 35 missions and always brought his crews back safely.”

The title refers to a small piece of plaid fabric that she learned from her father in his later years, he had car-ried in his wallet since the day her mother died. It was a piece of her dress.

As for the title of her first book, it comes from the fact that she experienced two Vietnams when she was there.

N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | 7

Learn About Your VA Burial

Benefits

Veteran’s Benefits Program

Miller-Woodlawn Funeral Home & Memorial Park

5505 Kitsap Way Bremerton • (360) 377-7648

6:30 PM to 7:30 PMFirst & Third Tuesday

Each MonthJ. Charles Young Friendship Room

Refreshments will be servedPlease RSVP

Since 1975, ResCare has provided services that help individuals maximize their independence and quality of life.

360-698-85903100 NW Bucklin Hill Rd., Suite 100, Silverdale

Personalized Home Care

Services

Tue-Sat: 11am - 9pmSun: 11am - 8pmClosed Monday

In Ross Plaza • 10408 Silverdale Way NW360-698-7900

A Healthy Alternative to the Drive-Thru!

....You will experience a unique and enjoyable meal in grilling your favorite meats at your very own table. We

use the finest beef, chicken, pork, and shrimp, along with freshest vegetables you can select from.

Come in for your great cuisine experience!

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

Full in-house service department Showroom Open 7 Days a Week!

Presenting

Serving the Olympic Peninsula since 1985

Come visit our showroom for great spa deals!

“Largest Spa by MAAX Spas”

Model 480

Now inOur Showroom

10424 Silverdale Way NW, Silverdale(360) 613-4005 • Ross Plazawith this coupon

Lunch: spend $15 take $3 off

Dinner: spend $25 take $6 off

Expires 11/30/13. Not valid with any other offers.

By LesLie KeLLy

Red Cross worker saw Vietnam in a different light

Leslie Kelly /Staff Photo

Author Jenny Thomas discusses her time in Vietnam.

See Light, Page 12

Page 8: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

8 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3

Join the all new

The Point Casino is proudly owned and operated by The Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe.

See the Wildcard Players Club for complete details. You must be a member of The Point Casino’s Wildcard Players Club to participate in some programs. Some restrictions may apply. Point Casino promotions, offers, coupons and/or specials may not

be combined without marketing management approval. Management reserves all rights to alter or cancel without prior notice. You must be at least 21 years old to participate in gaming activities, to attend entertainment events and to enter lounge/bar areas.

Knowing your limit is your best bet—get help at (800) 547-6133.

Close to Home... Far From Ordinary.®

Kingston, WA www.the-point-casino.com 1.866.547.6468

HEROES

DAY

First Thursday of every month& Veteran’s Day November 11thAll police, fire, EMT and military qualify with valid ID or pay stub: $25 in promotional play on slots or $25 table games match play and a Buy one get one free Lunch or Dinner Buffet.

From dining to gaming, it’s all fresh at The Point!

TPC-4814-3 Veterans Life.indd 1 10/18/13 11:18 AM

Robert Gossett holds the bronze medal in the palm of his aging hand. A smile crosses his face.

“I never knew he had it,” Gossett said of his father Edmund Gossett. “He never spoke of it.”

But the U.S. Navy Good Conduct medal engraved with Edmund’s name and the year 1932 is once again, back home with the family that cherishes it.

The journey began several months ago when Silverdale area resident Terry McCue bought a tool box at a garage sale. As McCue was going through the tool box, he found a Good Conduct Medal with the inscription “Edmund Gossett 1932” on it. Not knowing what to do with the medal, he gave it to Tony Laliberte, a foreman at Holmes Mechanical Inc., near Keyport.

“Terry had worked for us and he knew we had a col-lection of old things that we display on the shop wall,” said Ronnie Williams, administra-tive assistant at the company. “Most of what we have are old mechanical equipment plates that we put on display.”

But Laliberte took the medal and after looking at it, left it on his desk. It was Williams who picked it up one day and noticed the inscrip-tion on it.

“Tony said he had hoped to find who it belonged to but hadn’t had time to,” she said. “So I asked him if I could look into it and he said ‘Go ahead.’”

She went to work looking on the Internet at military websites, hoping she could find the name of Edmund Gossett. All she was able to find was a man by that name who had lived in Snyder,

Washington years ago. But Williams wasn’t even sure where that was. As a last resort, she phoned a life-long

friend who had just moved to the area to go to work as a veterans representative at WorkSource in Redmond.

That friend, Antonia Martinez, decided to research Ancestory.com and found that the family had stayed pretty much in the Kitsap area.

“I was looking for a reg-istry of families that might help,” she said. “But when I didn’t come up with anything I decided to call the Kitsap Historical Society. I figured they had to know.”

She was put in touch with KHS researcher Bonnie Chrey.

“I recognized the name Gossett,” said Chrey. “I had some friends with that name so I decided to give them a call.”

Her friends, Robert and DeAnna Gossett, were excited to get the call and told her that Robert’s father’s name was Edmund.

“All the pieces just fell into place,” said Chrey.

A meeting was arranged and the Gossetts and Chrey

went to Holmes Mechanical and met Laliberte and Williams. Williams placed the medal in Robert Gossett’s hand and they all smiled for photographs.

Gossett said his father was stationed on the USS Tennessee from 1928 to 1934, in Bremerton. He was born in Indiana, but settled in Bremerton after his Navy service. He spent his career working in Shop No. 38, Robert said of his father.

Following in his father’s footsteps, Robert also worked at the shipyard in Shop 99 for almost 38 years, retiring in 1987. He’s actually the third generation in the family to work in the shipyard, Robert’s wife DeAnna said. Robert’s mother’s father, Charles Erickson, worked in Shop 11.

Getting the medal back in family was “a pleasant sur-prise,” Robert said.

“My Dad never spoke of it,” he said. “But it must have been something that meant something to him because he kept it with him every day at work.”

Robert thinks that when his father retired from the shipyard, he probably checked his toolbox back in, forgetting that the medal was in it. Most likely, the tools were among those that became outdated and were sold off by the ship-yard, only to eventually end up in someone’s garage sale.

Now, the medal has a spe-cial place in the china cabinet in Robert and DeAnna’s home.

“It’s where it should be,” said DeAnna.

Williams agrees.“Like my friend Antonia

said, this medal had a life of its own,” Williams said. “And we finally got it to the right person.”

By LesLie KeLLy

Medal makes it’s way home

Contributed Photo

Tony Laliberte, left, DeAnna and Robert Gossett and Ronnie Williams pose together with the Good Conduct Medal which belonged to Robert’s father Edmund Gossett.

Leslie Kelly /Staff Photo

Robert holds the medal.

Page 9: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | 9

You receive it on Graduation Day. But it’s never handed to you. Because when it’s a degree from Columbia College, it’s a degree that demands effort and rewards hard work. That’s a notion our students at 18 campuses on military bases truly understand.

Offering Associate,Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees.

Contact Columbia College’slocal representative at

[email protected] call (253) 861-6564.

Tour glassOn Nov. 9, the Tacoma

Museum of Glass joins the national celebration of Veterans Glassblowing Day with free admission to veterans and their families and discounted hands-on glass fusing workshops. Vets and their families are invited to create fused glass art, one-of-a-kind glass tile, pendants, or magnets.

Design it and the museum fires it for you. The event happens from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., and workshops start on the hour. Cost is $20 for those ages 6 and up. The museum is at 1801 Dock St. in Tacoma.

VeT jobs

Home Depot’s support of the nation’s military extends beyond the new HomeTown community as they offer plenty of resources to veterans.

The company recently launched a new website

highlighting the commitment, w w w.homedepotmi l itar y.com, and has offered its free “Military Skills Translator Tool,” designed to help translate and match an applicant’s military skills to positions that might offer the best career fit. VetJobs, G.I. Jobs magazine and Military Spouse magazine have all named Home Depot a top military-friendly employer.

bowl for VeTsBowling For Veterans, a

fundraiser to help raise funds for local veterans programs through the Fred Needham VFW Post 2269, will be Nov. 3, from noon to 3 p.m. at Hi-Joy Bowl, 1011 Bethel Ave., in Port Orchard. Registration is $15 for three games for all ages and there will also be a raffle.

For more information, call Mike Lacari at 360-876-2669 or 360-649-1954.

DuTy callsBainbridge Performing

Arts will host a special artist reception for Bill Woods on Veterans’ Day, Monday, Nov. 11.

The BPA Gallery presents “Duty Calls, Honor Serves,” an exhibition featuring dramatic and compelling images of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery by veteran and photographer Bill Woods.

The exhibit includes fundraising and a raffle of two American flags that have flown over the U.S. Capitol, with all proceeds to benefit the Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society, Naval Base Kitsap.

An artist reception will be held from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.

Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. Admission is free. BPA is located at 200 Madison Ave. North, Bainbridge Island.

chaTTerTalk about veterans from around the web

PORT ANGELES — Hundreds of North Olympic Peninsula veterans gathered Oct. 3 at the Clallam County Fairgrounds to get informa-tion and services and meet other veterans.

More than 250 veterans had checked in by noon at the Veterans Stand Down sponsored by Voices for Veterans, a nonprofit dedi-cated to assisting homeless veterans on the Peninsula. Those in need could get ser-vices ranging from haircuts to employment, while others showed up simply for the camaraderie. Breakfast and lunch were served.

More than 20 organiza-tions were present, from a local animal-care organiza-tion providing food, snacks and toys for veterans’ pets, to state and federal public services.

The longest line was for haircuts, where veterans waited an hour or more for military-smart trims. Free clothing and bedding, hygiene kits and outdoor equipment were available, including a stack of back-packs donated by the Army Reserves.

A few of the veterans who attended the event were homeless.

“It’s hard to get them to come in,” said Cheri Tinker, director of Sarge’s Place, a veterans shelter in Forks.

By noon, about five homeless veterans had been identified and were being offered services, and more could come in later, said Maggie Roth, who managed the intake table at the stand down.

The assembled veterans did not report having prob-lems — yet — due to the partial federal shutdown. Many of the services offered to veterans are managed at the state or local level and Veterans Administration medical benefits are not affected by the shutdown.

Veterans attending served during Korean and Vietnam wars, during the Cold War and in Iraq, Afghanistan.

Crew members of the Coast Guard Cutter Swordfish served lunch to veterans. The youngest vet-erans were in their early 20s, while the oldest was Charlie Nickles, 87, of Port Angeles, a Navy veteran who served on two transport ships from 1945-47.

Nickles had never been to a Stand Down before, and his eyes sparkled as he took in the many service mem-

bers around him.“It was quite a surprise,”

Nickles said.At the other end of the

spectrum, youthful veterans said they found the older veterans had paved the path for the coming generations.

“It’s more of a brother-hood,” said Jerrod Brown, 26, of Sequim, who served in the Navy as a master at arms, the Navy’s military police force.

The older generation of veterans has welcomed the new, young Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, Brown said.

One of the more surpris-ing needs Thursday was food and supplies for cats, said Cheryl Bowers, president of New Leash on Life, a non-profit group that helps low-income animal lovers.

“We want to keep the vet-erans’ pets out of our animal shelters,” Bowers said.

By noon, gallon bags of dog food and baggies of dog toys and chews, flea treat-ments and wormers were still available, but Bowers said the cat supplies had run out early in the morning.

For more information phone 360-417-2383, 360-640-0296 or 360-302-1285.

Pa hosts ‘stand Down’

Page 10: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

Some long for the sim-plicity of relaxed summer days. Olalla Elementary School volunteer Art Baker prefers crunching through the brownish autumn leaves en route to the fifth-grade classroom where he works with students to solve fractions.

It is among the myriad tasks the 55-year-old Baker performs at the school.

“They do me a favor because the doctor told me I had to use my mind as much as I possibly can,” said Baker, who spent 17 years in the Navy and three years in the Army, with duties ranging from quality insurance inspections on trident nuclear submariners to working as an elevator mechanic.

On May 21, 2000, Baker’s wife drove their Ford Explorer through a stop sign at the intersection

on Pine and Sidney roads and collided with another vehicle. Baker, who was ejected from the vehicle, was airlifted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle.

“I’m kind of like a walk-ing miracle because every part of my brain was dam-aged,” he said. “At first they thought I was dead and then they thought I was going to be in a convales-cence home for the rest of my life.”

Baker believes his left arm saved him. The blow to his head was softened when he hit the ground because it landed on the arm, which was shattered. Surgeons were able to save the arm by inserting a metal plate with a dozen screws to sta-bilize it.

“I can tell you when the weather changes,” he said, laughing.

Among myriad injuries Baker suffered from the

accident was memory loss. He cannot recall all of the details from his recov-ery, which lasted several months, but vividly recalls the doctor entering his room every morning seek-ing his first and last names — among other details.

“Finally he walked in the door one time and I said, ‘My name is Art Michael Baker Jr. Why do you ask me these questions all of the time?’” he said. “He said they basically were seeing how my mind was reacting. The doctors have told me they can’t explain why I can do the things I do because every part of my brain was damaged.”

In addition to his dimin-ished mental capacity, Baker suffered physical setbacks. He was busy liv-ing an active life — Baker said he worked 18-19 hours per day in the mili-tary — and maintained a vigorous schedule after leaving active duty. At the time of the accident, Baker was working at Industrial Rubber & Supply in Fife.

But he said the accident disrupted his equilibrium. And lacking balance led to a fear of heights, which

ended his career working on elevators.

Enter Olalla Elementary.The Bakers’ son went to

the school in sixth grade, but their daughter, Rachael, who now is a sophomore at South Kitsap High School, began attending Olalla in first grade.

“I can’t say enough about this school and what my daughter did when she went to this school,” he said.

Baker said an impetus behind his passion for working in school stems from his childhood. He said the education system in New York City was so poor that he often had multiple teachers in a one-month span.

“There were probably like 75 kids in my class and we really didn’t have volun-teers,” Baker said. “When I was 12, there were kids that were 18 years old in my

class. Back then they just failed you, failed you and failed you.”

Baker not only wanted a better experience for his children, but others. Another volunteer, Frankie Gower, whose late husband, Dewayne, was South Kitsap School District’s superin-tendent until his retire-ment in 1995, said Baker is unique from most because he remained involved with the school after his chil-dren left.

“He gets here before the teachers do,” Gower said. “You couldn’t find a better volunteer — ever — than Mr. Baker.”

Baker, who is legally deaf and can communicate with others because of cochlear implants, maintains that the accident caused him to somewhat slow his lifestyle.

First-year Olalla princi-pal Charlotte Flynn never sees Baker resting, though. She said his day begins with the school’s break-fast program and then runs through small-group instruction, listening to children read and working with them on art projects.

“The man is full of ener-gy,” Flynn said. “He just goes and goes all day long. Everyone appreciates and loves him.”

Baker, whose wife also volunteers within the district and works as a lunchroom server at Olalla and John Sedgwick Junior High, shared similar senti-ments about the staff at the school.

“The teachers and the staff here are just unbeliev-able,” she said. “If you need something and ask, they’ll bend over backwards to get you what you need.”

Baker estimates that he knows 95 percent of the children at Olalla. Among them is second-grader Reese Willson.

“He’s really nice,” she said. “He has done a lot of stuff for our class and school.”

After being stationed for five and a half years on the USS Nimitz, Baker said he enjoys the freedom to walk around the school and work on different sets of activities.

“Like every other par-ent, they want their kids to evolve and get the best education they can,” he said. “I really enjoy being around kids. Kids can teach you a lot.”

1 0 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3

NORTH KITSAP HIGH SCHOOL1780 NE Hostmark • Poulsbo, WA • 360-396-3100

www.nkschools.org/nh/site/default.aspAll proceeds support North Kitsap High School A.S.B.

Come and enjoygood food, music

& shopping!

Saturday, Nov. 2, 9:30 am - 5:00 pmSunday, Nov. 3, 11:00 am - 4:00 pm

Admission: $3 per person

Arts, Crafts& Edible Gifts

Ken Replogle, Luthier(360) 990-0890

www.skunkbaystrings.com

Ken Replogle, Luthier

www.skunkbaystrings.com

Custom AcousticInstrument Creation

& Repair

Ken Replogle, Luthier

By CHRIS CHANCELLOR

Volunteer work keeps veteran busy in classroomBaker still remains active after nearly dying in a car accident

Indigo Fountain Massage3656 NW Munson Street • Silverdale360.731.8665 • IndigoFountain.com

Gift Certi� catesThe perfect present

for any occasion!

Chris Chancellor/Staff Photo

Art Baker, who served 20 years in the Navy and Army, talks with Olalla Elementary School second-grader Reese Willson. Baker said volunteering helps him “use my mind as much as possible” after suffering a severe head injury from a car accident in 2000.

Page 11: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | 11

Under Grad is $285 • Grad is $412

800.259.6718x7280

David Morgan is just a regular kind of guy. He’s a U.S. Army veteran from the 1980s. He left the Army and built a career in the con-struction trades.

He’s got a family, a son who is a senior at North Kitsap High School, and a wife who works two jobs so that the bills get paid when Morgan’s carpentry jobs don’t come in.

On his next birthday, he’ll be 50 years old. He lives with constant back pain and he just wants to know what’s wrong with him so he can get treated.

“I’m a 50-year-old carpen-ter who can’t move that fast,” he said. “There’s not a lot of work for me but I take what I can get.”

Morgan is one of thou-sands of veterans who are waiting on the Veterans Administration to review his claim for disability benefits. After being rejected once,

he’s submitting an appeal.His first claim was sub-

mitted in July 2012 and it took 14 months for him to get a rejection.

“I waited 14 months and all I got was a piece of paper telling me that they didn’t have enough information from the VA examination to make a decision so they were denying my claim until they got more from the VA,” he said. “But when I went to the VA, all they did was take an X-ray. I asked to have an MRI and they said I didn’t need it.”

Frustrated with the pro-cess, Morgan sought the help of Rep. Derek Kilmer’s office and through vet rep Nicholas Carr in Kilmer’s Tacoma office, he was set up with another doctor’s appoint-ment with a physician that contracts with the VA.

Kilmer’s office receives from one to three requests for help with VA matters each week, said Stephen Carter, spokesman for

Kilmer. Responses to Kilmer’s staff from the VA can take from a week to a month, he said.

According to statistics from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, the backlog of claims is improv-ing. Claims take 125 days to process, and anything that takes longer is classified as backlogged.

In 2010, 2011, and 2012, the VA received 1 million claims per year. There are a total of 3.9 million veterans receiving disability benefits at an average cost to the government of $54 billion dollars each year.

The VA estimates that the backlog of claims is at 418,500, and that number was tabulated as the federal government shut down in early October.

Of those waiting in the backlog, 37 percent are Vietnam veterans, 21 percent are Iraq and Afghanistan era vets, 24 percent are Gulf War vets, 11 percent, like Morgan,

are peacetime vets. Another 7 percent fall into the “other” category.

In some cases, appeals can take up to four years.

But Morgan can’t wait that long.

“I’ve been told that I should get my VA benefits if I can,” he said. “But I’ve also been told maybe this could be an L&I (Labor and Industries) claim. But L&I won’t look at it until I’ve exhausted my chances with the VA.”

That’s because he said the back pain stems from bad landings when he was a paratrooper in the Army. He went in at age 18 in September of 1982. Time at bases in Texas, Alabama and Georgia led him to Fort Bragg, N.C., where he was part of the ammo supply unit in charge of a quick reaction force. In all, he made 29 jumps. It was on a jump over the Cicely Drop Zone when a newbie didn’t know the wind currents and blew into him, causing his chute to collapse and he landed hard on a runway.

“He turned right into me,” Morgan said. “It was one of those feet, butt and head landings.”

Soon after that, Morgan

left the Army with three years of active duty. He admits he had some bad times in the military but left with an honorable discharge. After that, he worked trim-ming trees, hanging sheet rock and, for a time, was a commercial fisherman in Alaska. He settled back in the Central Kitsap area and began working construction.

“I had a hand in build-ing most of the schools on Bainbridge Island,” he said. “And we worked on fire sta-tions. Whenever there was work, I was working.”

But because he went from job to job and company to company, he doesn’t have a long history with any one company. He was a union worker for some of that time, but can’t really pin-point an exact injury to file an L&I claim.

So, he said, he’s been instructed by the DisabledAmerican Veterans representative to pursue get-ting his VA disability.

“I just want to get it fixed,” he said. “When I went to the doctor the first time, he offered me pain pills and told me to lose weight.

“To me, that wasn’t what I needed. I need to know what’s wrong with my back

and how to fix it — or if it can be fixed.”

Waiting 14 months to find out nothing doesn’t sit well with him.

“It’s like I’m having to beg to get someone to look at me,” he said. “There’s gotta be a better way to treat peo-ple. I thought my service to this country was supposed to mean something. I thought there were benefits for my service.”

Morgan has an appoint-ment soon with the doctor and with a mental health expert to see if he has some delayed PTSD symptoms from his service.

He wonders if he’s being treated differently because he did get into some trouble when he was on active duty.

And it’s crossed his mind that he might be at the bot-tom of the list because he served during peace time.

Meanwhile, Morgan waits.“I’m a patient person, but

I can only take so much,” he said.

If you have had an experi-ence with the VA regarding disabilities that you want to share, email [email protected]

By LesLie KeLLy

Local veteran waiting to hear about his claim

Page 12: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

American Legion Post 245 Service Office Assisting Veterans Open every Thursday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 19068 Jensen Way, Suite 3A Downtown Poulsbo 360-779-5456

American Legion Post 245 General Meeting every

third Thursday at 7 p.m. 19068 Jensen Way, Suite 3A Downtown Poulsbo www.alpost245.org 360-779-5456

WorkSource Kitsap County Veterans Representatives 1300 Sylvan Way, Floor 2 Bremerton, 98310

360-337-4767 [email protected]

Disabled Veterans Outreach Michael Robinson Disables Veterans Outreach 360-337-4727 [email protected]

American Legion Post 149 4922 Kitsap Way Bremerton, WA 98312 360-373-8983 www.legion149wa.org

VWF Post 239 Bremerton Post 190 Dora Ave Bremerton, WA 98312 360-377-6739 Meetings are 7 p.m. 2nd Tuesday of the month

Silverdale American Legion Post 109 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale Meets on the third Monday of the month at 7 p.m. at All Star Lanes & Casino Alpost109cmdr@gmail.

com Facebook: American Legion Post 109 Silverdale

American Legion Post 172 Bainbridge Island 7880 NE Bucklin Hill Road, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110. 206-842-5000

Disabled American Veterans 2315 Burwell St. Bremerton, Wa. 98312 360-373-2397

Marine Corps League Olympic Peninsula Detachment 531 2315 Burwell St. Bremerton, WA 98312 360-265-7492 Meets on the first Wednesday of the month at 6 p.m.

Mason County VFW Post No. 1694 in Shelton Memorial Hall, Second and Franklin streets Meets second and fourth Thursdays of each month at 7 p.m. Beverages and snacks are served at 6 p.m. by the Ladies Auxiliary. For more information please call 360.426.4546.

American Legion Post 200, Belfair PO Box 24, Belfair, Wash. 98528 360-731-4415 Meets first Thursday of the month at 6 p.m. This month: Nov. 7 at El Sombrero, 23969 NE Highway 3, Belfair For more information: email Tom Welch at [email protected]

To be listed in Veterans Resources, email [email protected]

1 2 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3

*Residential offers only. Expires 10/30/13. Equipment fees, Universal Service Fund, E911, taxes, surcharges and other fees apply. High Speed 15 Internet offer is good after a $15/mo. Instant Rebate, taken off regular price of High Speed 15, currently $49.95/month with qualifying services, $59.95/month without. Includes 300GB data transfer usage per month. Usage beyond 300GB/month subject to additional charges. Minimum computer system requirements apply. Speed is not guaranteed and is affected by user’s computer, sites accessed and number of devices connected. Cable modem required. Multimedia modem required when internet and phone service is combined. Wireless Home Networking regularly $8/month and includes mul-timedia modem. Installation is $29.95 and good for 1 computer, or 3 computers with Wireless Home Networking. Phone installation is $29.95 for 4 existing pre-wired outlets. Money-Back Guarantee good for new products/services only and credited on a pro-rated basis up to the first 30 days. Serviceable areas only. Prices subject to change. Not valid with other offers. Certain restrictions and additional fees may apply. Call for complete details. WASHINGTON RESIDENTS: The base rates listed are subject to a 2% Regulatory Recovery Fee, which added together determines the total price.

ORDER TODAY.1-877-993-7036 | wavebroadband.com

You have faster speed options.You have a friend in broadband.Connect all of your devices with Wave’s High Speed 15:

• 15 Mbps downloads• 2 Mbps uploads• Private & secure network without limitations on number of connected devices

WBB_SP_09.13

Veterans resources

“There was the ugli-ness of war and the beauty of a country that was green and was once peaceful,” she said.

The cover is a combi-nation of two photos she took, one showing the beauty of Vietnam in a Formosa tree with roll-ing mountains and soft blue sky.

Below the tree lie dead bodies, which she pho-tographed in a village nearby after 500-pound bombs were dropped.

The bodies, she said, were left out for days as a warning to others in the village to fear the Viet Cong.

“Everyone was con-fused by the war and the politics of the war,” she said, ref lecting on Vietnam. “For me, it was a time to grow up.”

To get a copy of her book, email [email protected], or call 360-509-3367. Each copy is $25 and includes mailing charg-es.

Jenny Thomas is the author’s pen name.

LightCONTINUED FROM PAGE 7

Page 13: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

N O V E M B E R , 2 0 1 3 | V E T E R A N S L I F E I 1 3

1. Call (800) 388-2527, go online to www.nw-ads.com or E-mail classifi [email protected].

2. Get 4 weeks of advertising and reach thousands of readers in the Service Directory section of your local community newspaper and on the WEB for one low price.

3. Jump for joy because of the amount of work that has begun fl owing to keep you busy for months.

Log on to a website that’s easy to navigate

Whether you’re buying or selling,the Classi�eds has it all.From automobiles and

employment to real estate and household goods, you’ll �nd

everything you need24 hours a day at

www.nw-ads.com.

Find what you need 24 hours a day.

Real Estate for RentKitsap County

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

1 BR FURN. waterfront cottage! Available No- vember through June 30 th. No smok ing o r pets. $800 month, first, last, $200 deposit. 206- 842-2776.

BREMERTON 2: TWO BR DUPLEX’s Near PSNS, Olympic College, hospital, K-12 schools, YMCA & on bus line. Up-to-date w/ hard- wood f loors! Water & sewer incl. No smoking. No pets. Rent + deposit. (1) $750. (2) $800 with washer & dryer. 360- 871-7779.

OLALLA(2) 3 BR, 1.5 BA, 1335 SF duplex homes w/ car- por t . Qu ie t , f r iend ly, family community with play ground. 10 minutes to ferry. Near schools. Newly remodeled with paint & flooring. Small pets okay by manage- ment. Water included. $1,025 per month and first. Last & deposit ne- gotiable. 360-990-7308.Get the ball rolling...Call 800-388-2527 today.

Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527

Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds.www.nw-ads.com

Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds.www.nw-ads.com

Real Estate for RentKitsap County

PORT ORCHARD

4 BEDROOM, 2 Full Bath, Newer Rambler! Spacious Living, Kitch- en & Dining Rooms. Air Conditioning & Air Purifier! Fenced Back Yard. 2,100 SF on 1/2 acre in Great Neigh- b o r h o o d ! $ 1 , 5 5 0 Month. Available No- vember 1st. 425-822- 7515

Apartments for Rent Kitsap County

KINGSTON

1 B E D R O O M V I E W Apartment. Unfurnished, Open Floor Plan, Cus- tom Cabinets, All Appli- ances. Washer/ Dryer In Unit. Spotlessly Clean. Park Like Setting, Water & Mountain Views. $850 per month, 1 year lease, $425 depos i t . Cred i t Check & References Re- quired. Cal l 360-509- 8421.

SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.

Find what you need 24 hours a day.

Get the ball rolling...Call 800-388-2527 today.

WA Misc. RentalsDuplexes/Multiplexes

PORT ORCHARD

Pr i va te c l ean 3 BD, W/D, detached garage, close to freeways, shop- ping & downtown with fe r r i es t o Sea t t l e . 2 units- 1 at $835, end unit $865. $800 deposit. No pets. Call Donna, cell 253.350.9614 or home 253.838.0697

real estaterentals

Commercial RentalsOffice/Commercial

OFFICE &WAREHOUSE SPACE FOR RENT

Twelve Trees Business ParkVarying sizes and

configurations available. North Poulsbo area. Call Mark, Crista or

Christine at: 360-779-7266

Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527

announcements

Announcements

COUPLE SEEKING TO ADOPT

Loving couple seeking to ADOPT an infant. We can offer your baby a lifetime of opportunity, humor, adventure andfinancial security. We will provide a happy home, sharing our

interests in the outdoors, travel, music, and sports. Let us help

support you with your adoption plan. Contact

us at direct at206-920-1376, toll-free

at 877-290-0543 or email AndrewCor- [email protected]

You can also contact our attorney at

206-728-5858, ask for Joan file #0376.

SUYEMATSU Far ms. Tractor Rides On Week- ends, U-Pick Pumpkins, H a y M a z e , W i n t e r Squash and Gourds. Open Monday thru Fri- day, 1-6pm. Saturday and Sunday, 10am-5pm. 9229 NE Day Road , Bainbridge Island. 206- 842-1429

Announcements

HALLOWEEN BASH, Saturday, October 26th. Por t Orchard Eagles. Dinner 6-7pm. The Band ‘50/50’ star ts at 8pm. Dinner, Cocktails, Raf- f les, Live Music, Cos- t u m e C o n t e s t . 4 0 0 1 Jackson Ave, Por t Or- chard, 98366. 360-876- 2338 Membership Drive, Public Welcome!

KITSAP HAUNTED Fair- g r o u n d s . O c t o b e r 11th-12th, 18th-19th, 25th-26th and 31st from 5-11pm. Tickets $12 at the door. “Frights Out” November 1st-2nd from 7pm-11pm. Tickets $5 at the door. Kitsap County Fairgrounds, 1200 Fair- grounds Road NW, Bre- merton.www.KitsapHauntedFair- grounds.com

jobsEmployment

General

CarriersThe North Kitsap Herald has openings for Carrier Routes. No collecting, no selling. Friday morn- ings. If interested call Christy 360-779-4464

EmploymentGeneral

CREATIVE ARTISTThe Bainbridge Island Review, a weekly com- munity newspaper locat- ed on beaut i fu l Bain- bridge Island, WA, has an immediate opening for a full-time Creative Artist. Duties include ad design, designing pro- motional materials and providing excellent inter- nal and external custom- er service. Requires ex- cellent communication skills and the ability to work in a fast paced deadline-oriented envi- ronment . Exper ience w i th Adobe Crea t i ve Suite, InDesign, Photo- shop, Illustrator and Ac- robat strongly preferred, as is newspaper or other media experience. Must be able to work indepen- dently as well as part of a team. We offer a great w o r k e n v i r o n m e n t , health benefits, 401k, paid holidays, vacation and sick time. Please e- mail your resume, cover letter, and a few sam- ples of your work to:[email protected]

or mail to:BIRCA/HR DepartmentSound Publishing, Inc.

19351 8th Avenue, Suite 106,

Poulsbo, WA, 98370.

Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Em- p l o y e r ( E O E ) a n d strongly supports diver- si ty in the workplace. Visit our website atwww.soundpublishing.comto learn more about us!

click! www.nw-ads.com email! classi� [email protected] call toll free! 1.888.399.3999 or 1.800.388.2527

Local readers.Local sellers.Local buyers.

We make it easy to sell...right in your communityreal estate

for sale jobshome

services stuff wheelsreal estate

for rent - WA PN

W M

arke

tPla

ce!

OfficeHours:8-5pm

Mondayto Friday

print &online24/7

So

easy

you

can

do it

stan

ding

on

your

hea

dww

w.nw-ads.co

m

Page 14: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

1 4 I V E T E R A N S L I F E | N O V E M B E R , 2 0 1 3 O C T O B E R , @

Be the icing on their cake...Advertise in the

Service Directoryin The Classifieds.

Call:(800) 388-2527

e-mail:[email protected] go online 24 hours a day:

www.nw-ads.comto get your business

in the

The opportunityto make a difference is

right in front of you.

Recycle this newspaper.

EmploymentGeneral

INCOME OPPORTUNITY!

The Bainbridge Island R e v i e w n e w s p a p e r seeking qual i ty motor route carriers. Thursday night delivery. No collec- tions. Must be at least 18 years of age. Reliable people with reliable vehi- cle please call Brian.

206-842-6613

Business Opportunities

Great Opportunity for Retired Military....PACKAGING &

SHIPPING BUSINESS FOR SALE

We are selling our11 year old business

in Port Orchard.Great future. $75,000 price negotiable. For details please call:

360-286-5458www.packand

mail.netwww.packandmail.net

professionalservices

You’ll find everything you need in one website 24 hours a day 7 days a week: nw-ads.com.

Professional ServicesAttorney, Legal Services

Notice to ContractorsWashington State Law

(RCW 18.27.100)requires that all adver- tisements for construc- tion related services in- clude the contractor’s current depar tment of Labor and Indust r ies registration number in the advertisement.Failure to obtain a certifi- cate of registration from L&I or show the registra- tion number in all adver- tising will result in a fine up to $5000 against the unregistered contractor.For more information, call Labor and Industries Special ty Compliance Services Division at

1-800-647-0982or check L&Is internet site at www.lni.wa.gov

homeservices

Home ServicesHauling & Cleanup

GOT CLUTTER?WE TAKE IT ALL!

Junk, Appliances,Yard Debris, etc.

Serving Kitsap Co. Since 1997

360-377-7990206-842-2924

Home ServicesLawn/Garden Service

* SILVER BAY *All Grounds CareClean-Up, Pruning, Full

Maint., Hedge, Haul, Bark/Rock, Roof/Gutter

Free Estimates360-698-7222

Reach readers the daily newspapers miss when you advertise in the Classifieds. 1-800-388-2527 or www.nw-ads.com

stuffAppliances

MATCHING Washer and Dryer set, $355. Guaran- teed! 360-405-1925

Firearms &Ammunition

1or100: BUYING GUNS Rifles, Pistols, Shotguns and other related items. Complete col lect ions, estates or single piec- es!!! Free experienced appraisals 360-791-6133A SERIOUS GUNCOLLECTOR BUYING individual pieces or en- tire collections/ estates. Fair pr ices. Rick 206- 276-3095.

flea marketFree ItemsRecycler

FREE: CRIB Mattress and Pad, like new. Also Lace eyelet comfor ter, White and bumper pads. Can go together. Call 360-779-3706 (Poulsbo)

Spas/Hot TubsSupplies

$1000 SPAI Need The Room

Soak your stress away! Soft exterior

surround lighting. All supplies! Works great!

Nice wood encase- ment. Solid cover.

Custom 20 jet fiber- glass spa. ‘99 Cole- man 400 Spectrum Series Lowboy. Ac-

comadates 5 people. 7.5’ x 6.25’ x 2.8’

360-649-2715. Kitsap.

pets/animals

Dogs

STANDARD POODLE AKC POODLE Standard Super sweet puppies, very intelligent and fami- l y r a i s e d ! Tw o ye a r health gauruntee. Adult weight between 50 - 55 lbs. Black coloring;2 lit- t e r s 1 5 p u p p i e s available. 3 Brown color- ing. 13 Black coloring. Accepting puppy depos- i ts now! $1,000 each. Please call today 503- 556-4190.YORKSHIRE TERRIER / YORKIE

A K C R E G I S T E R E D Puppies. Males and Fe- males. Very Small Fa- ther (3 lbs) and Mother Are On Site. Born and Raised In Our L iv ing Room. Wor ming and First Shots Done. Come and Be Loved By My Lit- tle Babies. Call Anytime, 360-631-6256 or 425- 330-9903

garage sales - WA

Garage/Moving SalesKitsap County

PORT ORCHARD ABRAHAM’S HOUSE Fundraiser! Friday only, October 25th from 9 am to 6 pm. Furniture, co- letibles, house wares, holiday decor, baseball cards and toys. Some- thing for the whole fami- ly! At Christian Life Cen- ter, 1780 SE L inco ln Ave. Cash only.

1.25 million readers make us a member of the largest suburban newspapers in Western Washington. Call us today to advertise.800-388-2527

Bazaars/Craft Fairs

10TH ANNUAL JeffCo Holiday Fair. Nov. 2nd & 3 rd . Sa t . , 9am-5pm. Sun., 10am-4pm. Get a head start on your Holi- day Season! Stocking Stuffers. Pictures with Santa both days 12- 4pm. Hourly Raffles. Fair Restaurant Open. Jeffer- son County Fairgrounds, 4907 Landes St, Por t Townsend. www.jeffco- fairgrounds.com

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR. Poulsbo First Lutheran. Fr iday, November 1st, 9am-5pm and Saturday, November 2nd, 9am- 4pm. Over 40 tables of Crafts and Handmade i tems! No admiss ion charge. Food conces- sion. 18920 4th Ave NE, downtown Poulsbo.

HOLIDAY BAZAAR. Oc- tober 25th - 26th, 10am - 5 p m . O c t o b e r 2 6 t h , 10am - 4pm. Parkwood Community Club, 3045 SE Madrona, Por t Or- c h a r d . A d m i s s i o n : FREE! (accepting non- pe r i shable i t ems fo r South Kitsap Helpline). Gifts for all occasions!PORT ORCHARD

COLBY UMC BAZAAR! Kitsap’s Destination Ba- zaar! November 1st and 2nd. Fr iday, 9:30am - 4pm; Saturday, 9:30am - 2 p m . C o l b y U n i t e d Methodist Church, cor- ner of Southworth Drive and Harvey Street . A Ver i table Bout ique of Handmade Items by Our Wo m e n s G r o u p. N o Vendors. Kitchen Items, Baske ts , Bake Sa le , N e e d l ew o r k , D e c o r, Cards, Gifts. Hot Lunch Served Both Days from 11:30am to 1:30pm. Pro- ceeds Benefit Missions. 360-871-3365.

THE HANSVILLE Art & Craf t Gui ld Presents: Holiday Fair 2013. Bring your Family & Friends to the Greater Hansvi l le Community Center at Buck Lake County Park Friday & Saturday, No- vember 8th & 9th, 10am to 4pm. Free Parking & Admission. Handcrafted Arts, Crafts & Gifts by Local Artists. Dollar Raf- fle Tickets. Choose from G i f t Baske ts by Fa i r Vendors or a Beautiful Quilt. Finish your Holi- day Shopping Before Thanksgiving!

Easy as ABC…

Selling? Buying?

Call:800-388-2527

E-mail:classified@

soundpublishing.comor Go Online

24 hours a day:www.nw-ads.comto place an ad inthe Classifieds.

Reach thousands of readerswith justone phonecall.

Scoop up the savings with our Service Guide SpecialAdvertise your service for4 weeks in your local paper and online for one low price.Call 1-800-388-2527 or go onlinetoday to www.nw-ads.com for more information or to place your ad.

Find what you need 24 hours a day.

The Northwest’s largest classifi ed network.Over 1.25 million readers in print

and online.Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds.www.nw-ads.com

Page 15: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

“Thanks for your service.”That’s a phrase that gets

used a lot, especially around Veterans Day.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad for it. I’m glad that people are recognizing the contributions and sacrifices of our military members and thanking them. It’s just that I know that I personally never wanted to be thanked.

I feel as if, unless you were actually drafted, nobody joined the military by acci-dent. I never met one person in my five years who got on the wrong bus at the airport and just decided to follow the crowd. We all knew what we were doing, and it’s not like we didn’t get anything out of the deal.

So let’s get away from the idea of ‘thanks’ for just a minute. Let’s try something else.

It’s just one man’s opinion. When I was stationed

onboard the USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) and acting as the Distinguished Visitor Program coordinator, we hosted guests while out to sea from all kinds of professions. These are people who were invited and paid to be flown out to the carrier and spend two or three days touring the ship and seeing actual deployment operations.

The guests were important people in fields of business, technology, politics, educa-tion and law enforcement. They were there to get edu-cated about what the Navy actually did.

It’s a great program and I got to meet some very inter-esting and influential people.

That being said, there were very few people who ever left the ship unimpressed. Almost all of the guests I helped host made comments about how much safer and how proud they felt knowing that there were ships like the Lincoln out there doing what

they do every day. They always thanked us.

I thanked them for coming and got ready to receive a new group.

But that’s not what I want-ed to say.

I wanted to tell them that they were right to feel proud and safe, that we do have this situation in hand, and that they need to remember that when they get back to their own jobs.

I didn’t want them to thank me. I wanted them to remember me. I wanted them to take that feeling of respon-sibility and duty they saw in

the young sailors that they were so impressed with and bring it to their own offices.

They knew, then, that they didn’t need to worry about the nation’s defense. I wanted to know that I didn’t need to worry about the nation’s edu-cation system, or whatever that person was responsible for.

If the country were one small town, this would be easier to explain.

The firefighter doesn’t need to worry about install-ing new brakes in his car because the mechanic is there to take care of that.

Likewise the mechanic is not concerned that there would be nobody to save his garage should a fire occur.

Everybody has their own part and the deployed service members are counting on coming home to a country where they don’t have to worry about the availability of food or airline safety (or the government shutting down) or whatever. They’re counting on everyone to do their own part.

That’s how you thank a veteran. Do whatever you do, and do it the best that

you can. We owe that much to each other. We should all keep in mind that sense of duty, and not just on November 11.

Like I said, it’s just one man’s opinion.

I personally dedicate this Veterans Day Bond column to all the sailors of the USS Abraham Media Department, past and present.

If you have a service mem-ory or photo that you’d like to share, email [email protected]

N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | 1 5

“Your community theater” Free parking for our guests.

COUPON

Bring in this ad to redeem. Expires 11/30/2013

One coupon per person, per visit.

A N Y G O U R M E T I C E B E V E R A G E

655 4th Street Bremerton Washington

Showtimes: 360.362.4888 Web: seefilm.net

$1 .00 O F F

Your premier Northwest escape

at water’s edge

SILVERDALE BEACH HOTEL

3073 NW Bucklin Hill Rd Silverdale WA 98383

360-698-1000www.silverdalebeachhotel.com

EVERYTHING IS BETTER AT THE BEACH!The Beachfront Martini Lounge

6pm to 10pm Every FridayFood • Music • Drinks

The Lounge is open until MidnightStay & Enjoy Our Fire Pit!

FAST & FRIENDLY SERVICES

• Haircut ..................... $20• Military/Senior ..... $17• Buzzcut ................... $12• Neck ............................$5• Camo (Tint) ............ $30• Beard...........................$8• Kids Cut ................... $17

Fast, Friendly ServiceWalk-Ins or

Appointments Available

Downtown Bremerton517 4th Street

360-782-2263www.acmebarbershop.com

Serving Washingtonfor over 8 years.

Mon-Sat9am-8pm

Sunday11am-5pm

360.377.63895050 ST Hwy. 303 NE • Suite 117a E. Bremerton(In the Fred Meyer Shopping Center)www.a-1computers.com

Ready to Kill youR ComputeR?FReediaGNoStiCS!

w/this ad. Expires 11/30/13Running Slow? Virus? Call Us!

The Bond/ LasT Look

By Luciano Marano

Don’t thank them, think of them

Page 16: Kitsap Veterans Life, October 25, 2013

1 6 | V E T E R A N S L I F E | N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 3

harrisonhealthpartners.org

Six convenient locations on the Peninsula to serve you!

You want the best healthcare for you and your family. That means top doctors and the latest technology, as well as compassionate care and convenience.

Harrison HealthPartners is a rapidly expanding medical group associated with Harrison Medical Center. We provide award-winning, patient-focused healthcare to best meet the needs of families throughout the Kitsap and Olympic peninsulas. It is a privilege to be entrusted with your care, and we look forward to being your partner in health.

Visit a Harrison HealthPartners primary care provider near you!

Belfair Primary Care21 NE Romance Hill Road, Suite 104 Belfair, WA 98528 360-277-2950

Port Orchard Family Medicine and Internal Medicine450 S. Kitsap Blvd., Suite 200 Port Orchard, WA 98366 360-744-6250

Bremerton Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, and Endocrinology2601 Cherry Ave., Suite 315 Bremerton, WA 98310 360-405-7900

Poulsbo Internal Medicine, Adult Primary Care & Rheumatology22180 Olympic College Way, Suite 102 Poulsbo, WA 98370 360-779-4444

Forks Family Medical Center461 G St. SW Forks, WA 98331 360-374-6224

Silverdale Family Medicine & Dermatology9927 Mickelberry Road, Suite 131 Silverdale, WA 98383 360-337-5800

Harrison HealthPartners primary care clinics. We have you and your family covered.