THE
Shutdown Trump, senators at impasse on border funds Nation/A5
Sunday
Hoops Season previews for 3A, 4A schools Sports/B1
CLARION P E N I N S U L A
Sunday, December 23, 2018 Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
Vol. 49, Issue 72
In the news Refuge open for snowmachine use The Kenai National Wildlife Refuge is open to snowmachine use effective Friday, Dec. 21. Refuge Manager Andy Lorager announced on Thursday that all areas of the Refuge traditionally open to snowmachining are now open. Closed areas include Swan Lake and Swanson River Canoe Systems, all areas above timberline and areas within the Skilak Wildlife Recreation Area. This doesn’t include Hidden, Kelly, Petersen and Engineer lakes, which are open to provide snowmachine access for ice fishing if conditions allow. “The Refuge advises that snowmachine users exercise caution, especially on lakes, rivers and streams many of which are either not yet frozen or not sufficiently frozen to support a snowmachine,” the Refuge said in a release. “In addition, rocks and tree stumps can be hazardous in areas of less snow accumulation.” For more information, call the Refuge at 907-262-7021.
Authorities find body of missing snowmobiler ANCHORAGE — Authorities say they have found the body of a snowmobiler who had gone missing, the Anchorage Daily News reports. The body of Vanton Pettigen, 66, was discovered Saturday in Big Lake north of Anchorage, the Daily News says. On Friday, Anchorage television station KTUU reported the body of his wife, LaVerne Pettigen, 64, was found in Big Lake. Alaska State Troopers spokeswoman Megan Peters said troopers used sonar and a remotely operated vehicle to find the woman, who went missing with her husband nearly a week ago. The couple had planned an afternoon ride Dec. 14 out of Big Lake. — Associated Press
Clouds 27/13 More weather on page A8
$1 newsstands daily/$1.50 Sunday
Holidays bring out giving spirit By JOEY KLECKA Peninsula Clarion
Three years ago a fresh start and a new mental outlook led Soldotna’s Matt Brown to realize what was most important in life — helping others. After battling alcoholism and getting sober, Brown took on the task of giving to those who need it most by starting up his own charity, Kids Need Christmas. “I went to rehab for my alcohol problem, got sober and just celebrated three years,” Brown said in a recent interview. “This and the gym, those two things are what keeps me going. I’ve been lucky enough to be blessed with a great opportunity.” Brown’s efforts are one of many of the Kenai Peninsula’s successful endeavors during the season of giving. With just two days until Christmas, Brown and other programs, businesses and organizations around the central peninsula are wrapping up fundraising and charity efforts to make sure everyone can enjoy a happy holiday season. The Toys for Tots program, which has partnered with the
Kenai explores accelerated funding for bluff project By KAT SORENSEN Peninsula Clarion
Rows of toys ready to be claimed by needy families sit on the backroom shelves of the Kenai Salvation Army Family Services store. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
Salvation Army Church for the ninth straight year on the peninsula, has raised $1,700 for needy families with a total of 679 toys collected since Nov.
1, thanks to the help of 35 local host businesses, according to Kenai Chamber of Commerce President Johna Beech. But Brown, a snowmachine
drag racer who funds his racing team out of his own pocket, uses his racing sponsorship money to provide toys, clothSee GIVE, page A3
‘There’s something about snow’ Celebrating solstice at the refuge with a sunset walk By JEFF HELMINIAK Peninsula Clarion
The first few steps in snowshoes for Theo Carroll, 75, of Soldotna did not go well. Carroll was just steps out of the parking lot of the Environmental Education Center at the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge on Friday night when she got her refuge-issued snowshoes caught up in the plentiful powder and went down. “I was the first one to fall down,” said Carroll, who just as importantly popped right back up after a lesson from Ranger Michelle Ostrowski, an education specialist at the refuge. “You can’t shuffle along. You really have to lift up your feet.” By the end of the 1-mile walk to and from Headquarters Lake, though, Carroll had decided she needed a pair of snowshoes of her own. “I want to come again,” she said. “I want to walk the pe- John Loranger, Ruby Glaser, Linda Loranger and Alice Main snowshoe on Headquarters Lake rimeter of that lake.” during a winter solstice event at the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge on Friday. (Photo by Jeff See SNOW, page A7 Helminiak/Peninsula Clarion)
Kenai is looking to set a path to move forward with the long-awaited bluff erosion project. City Manager Paul Ostrander told the city council Wednesday that work on the project has been “pretty active over the last three weeks,” as Ostrander pursues accelerated funding for the project with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Ostrander said the city will draft a letter to the Alaska district of the Army Corps saying that the city of Kenai will fully fund the design phase of the bluff erosion project. “However, if the project goes through to construction, the design phase contribution that we made would be credited toward our ultimate cost share of 35 percent,” Ostrander said. “So, basically, we are spending money now and it will be credited so we spend less when we get to construction.” With this plan, Ostrander said Kenai’s bluff erosion process would take a good step forward following the Army Corps feasibility study, which was finalized in November. “There’s a lot of these feasibility reports done around the country and they’ll sit on the shelf for years, never getting the federal funding necessary to get to the design phase,” Ostrander said. “If we can get approval to actually work through the design phase, it gets us in front of all these other projects and positions us for federal funding for the construction part of it, so I think this is the right move.” The objective of the project, which has been in the works for more than 30 years, is to stall the 3-feet-per-year erosion on a 1-mile stretch of land starting from North Beach, past the senior center and ending where the original canneries were. The idea is to install a milelong rock berm, using anchor rocks that would halt the erosion of the ground beneath Old Town Kenai. Ostrander said following the letter stating the city’s inSee BLUFF, page A3
Index Opinion................... A4 Nation..................... A5 World...................... A6 Business..................A7 Sports......................B1 Community..............C1 Classifieds.............. C3 TV Guide.................C5 Mini Page.................C6 Homes & Health......D1
Check us out online at www.peninsulaclarion.com To subscribe, call 283-3584.
Honey: The sweetest gift By VICTORIA PETERSEN Peninsula Clarion
It’s probably the sweetest gift there it. Honey has been a symbolic offering for thousands of years. In ancient Egypt, beekeepers would gather honey to prevent diseases and heal wounds. The Greeks gifted honey to their Gods as a sacrificial offering. Even in the Bible, the term “milk and honey” is described to the Israelites as the bounty of the promised land in Canaan, Exodus 3:8. The sweetness of honey has slipped into holiday traditions around the world. During the Jewish holiday of Rosh
See HONEY, page A7
In this photo taken Aug. 6, 2015, Sarah Souders replaces full frames with empty frames in her hives in Kenai. (Kelly Sullivan(/Peninsula Clarion)
University researchers analyze data from earthquake ANCHORAGE (AP) — Researchers at the University of Alaska Anchorage are expecting to gain a wealth of information from the magnitude 7.0 earthquake that rocked southcentral Alaska last month. Researchers are analyzing data captured during the powerful Nov. 30 quake, Anchorage television station KTUU reported. The information collected is important for improvements to building codes, according to the scientists. “This is actually a gold mine here for us to data mine,” said Zhaohui Joey Yang, a professor and chair of UAA’s Civil Engineering Department. “To learn from that, we can hope-
fully help to improve the building design codes to make our community even safer.” The earthquake damaged roads and structures, but it caused no widespread catastrophic damage. It has been followed by thousands of aftershocks. Data from the quake was collected from various areas including Anchorage, Eagle River and the MatanuskaSusitna Borough. Yang and a team funded by the National Science Foundation collected perishable geotechnical data from such sources as ground fissures, slope failures, fill around bridge abutments and building foundations.
A2 | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion
Alaska
Some families displaced by quake Teen Fairbanks education board member eyes political future By DEVIN KELLY Anchorage Daily News
ANCHORAGE — Albert Schoonbeek and Candice Roberson slept on a mattress in their living room for the first few nights after the Nov. 30 earthquake rocked Southcentral Alaska. The bedroom was unsafe, they worried. The 7.0 quake caused the floor of their garage, which was on the same side of the house as the bedroom, to drop half a foot. More bad news followed. Last week, an engineer told the family the unsteady garage could collapse in a strong aftershock — and take down the entire East Anchorage house with it. Schoonbeek and Roberson, who are married, moved in with a friend. They expect to stay there for months. They don’t yet know how to fix their home or if they even can. “We’re feeling dead in the water,” Schoonbeek said, standing in front of the house on a recent morning. “I just don’t know what’s going to happen next or what steps to take.” Schoonbeek and Roberson are among an unknown number of people displaced by the Nov. 30 earthquake. A city map released earlier this week showed more than 100 homes and buildings in Anchorage and Chugiak-Eagle River had been found to be structurally unsafe. More than 40 people had been placed in hotel rooms as of Friday, Dec. 14, through a state disaster program, said Logan Stolpe, a public information officer for the Alaska Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management. The hotel stay is for people with no other options, he said, and extends up to 30 days. Beyond that, homeowners and renters can apply for aid through the state’s individual assistance program at ready.alaska. gov. The aid includes up to 18
By AMANDA BOHMAN Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
In this Thursday, Dec. 13 photo, Albert Schoonbeek and Candice Roberson talk about the Unsafe tag their home received after an engineer inspected their home in East Anchorage, Alaska, after the earthquake. Schoonbeek and Roberson are among an unknown number of people displaced by the Nov. 30 earthquake.(Anne Raup/Anchorage Daily News via AP)
months of temporary housing for homeowners and up to three months of housing for renters, Stolpe said. But the state didn’t have statistics on temporary homelessness caused by the quake, Stolpe said. He said it was hard to track those who moved in with friends or family. The total extent of the damage is also still becoming clear as inspections continue. Two other families in Schoonbeek and Roberson’s Muldoon cul de sac have evacuated, but none of the homes showed up as red-tagged on the city map. For Schoonbeek, 32, and Roberson, 30, the past two weeks have been filled with visits from engineers, frustrating calls to insurance and mortgage companies and conflicting
CLARION P
E N I N S U L A
(USPS 438-410) The Peninsula Clarion is a locally operated member of Sound Publishing Inc., published Sunday through Friday. P.O. Box 3009, Kenai, AK 99611 Street address: 150 Trading Bay Road, Suite 1, Kenai, AK Phone: (907) 283-7551 Postmaster: Send address changes to the Peninsula Clarion, P.O. Box 3009, Kenai, AK 99611 Periodicals postage paid at Kenai, AK Copyright 2018 Peninsula Clarion
Who to call at the Peninsula clarion
News tip? Question?
Main number ........................................................... 283-7551 Fax .......................................................................... 283-3299 News email..................................news@peninsulaclarion.com
General news
Erin Thompson Editor ................................... ethompson@peninsulaclarion.com Jeff Helminiak Sports & Features Editor ........ jhelminiak@peninsulaclarion.com Victoria Petersen General News ........................ vpetersen@peninsulaclarion.com Joey Klecka Sports/Features ......................... jklecka@peninsulaclarion.com Tim Millings Pagination ................................ tmillings@peninsulaclarion.com
Circulation problem? Call 283-3584 If you don’t receive your newspaper by 7 a.m. and you live in the Kenai-Soldotna area, call 283-3584 before 10 a.m. for redelivery of your paper. If you call after 10 a.m., you will be credited for the missed issue. Regular office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. General circulation questions can be sent via email to circulation@ peninsulaclarion.com. The circulation director is Doug Munn.
For home delivery Order a six-day-a-week, 13-week subscription for $57, a 26-week subscription for $108, or a 52-week subscription for $198. Use our easy-pay plan and save on these rates. Call 283-3584 for details. Weekend and mail subscription rates are available upon request.
Classified:
Want to place an ad?
Call 283-7551 and ask for the classified ad department between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, or email classifieds@peninsulaclarion.com.
Display: Call 283-7551 and ask for the display advertising department between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Contacts for other departments:
Publisher ......................................................................... Terry Ward Production Manager ..............................................Frank Goldthwaite
messages about whether they should stay or go. The couple’s small house, with its blue trim and bright yellow door, was built in 1982 at a time of rapid subdivision growth in Anchorage. Schoonbeek and Roberson bought it in 2016, liking the quiet neighborhood and the views of the Chugach Mountains. From the street, their home looks like it may have survived the quake more or less unscathed. But a closer look reveals the extent of the damage. The floor of the garage was ripped from a sunken foundation. Daylight streamed in between the floor and the bottom of the doors. Fresh snow now covers a ruined deck that Roberson was forced to hack away from the building with a circular saw. Schoonbeek shoved against the garage, and it shivered on impact. Inside the house, doors and windows won’t open and the main hallway stands crooked. It feels like a “fun house,” as Schoonbeek said. Roberson is a counselor at a Mountain View elementary school. She was driving to work when the earthquake struck around 8:30 a.m. Trees dumped snow on her car, a green light flashed and she saw something that looked like lightning. She called her husband, who was standing outside his office building on Minnesota Drive in West Anchorage. He told her she should turn around and check the house. When Roberson got there, the front door wouldn’t open. More than an hour later, after fighting traffic, Schoonbeek arrived and forced it open. The initial damage seemed manageable. Very little had fallen from cupboards or bookcases. The sewage line, though, was backing up. The next day, the couple looked up engineering firms on the internet. Schoonbeek called more than a half-dozen to find one that did residential inspections. The engineer who came told them the house was a bit off-kilter but safe to live in, Schoonbeek said. The garage was unsafe, the engineer said, and would need to be torn down. The couple spent a few nights in the living room because they thought the end of the house that was closest to the garage was more dangerous. Every vibration of the earth triggered a flood of worry. On Tuesday, the engineer called back. He said he had reviewed pictures of the house after doing other inspections. The damage was worse than he thought, and he wanted them to move out, Schoonbeek said. Schoonbeek and Roberson called another engineering firm for a second opinion. After another inspection, they were handed a “red tag” — a red one-page report reading “UNSAFE” at the top. The second engineer told them that no part of the house was safe, and that it may be a total loss. “He said a big aftershock was going to bring this whole
house down,” Schoonbeek said. The couple emptied their fridge, packed up clothes and toiletries and moved out small electronics. Roberson grabbed a box of family photos and put it in the trunk of her car. Before turning to friends, Schoonbeek called a few hotels. Most hotels he called were all booked, he said. Others wouldn’t take them because of their cat, Nina. Later, Roberson said she got several calls from state officials asking if they needed a hotel room. They worried hotel expenses would cut into later state assistance for their damaged home. Stolpe, the state public information officer, said the state is helping keep pets and families together in hotel rooms. He also said a hotel stay would not detract from a later grant to pay for damage. For Alaskans contending with serious structural damage, the financial questions are looming large. Like many in Anchorage and Mat-Su, Schoonbeek and Roberson learned they weren’t covered by earthquake insurance. The engineers have roughly estimated that it would cost $50,000 just to eject their house back to level ground. Fixing or tearing down the garage or repairing the foundation and damaged doors and sheetrock would cost even more, Schoonbeek said. A major federal disaster declaration, which opens up additional aid, may be months away. Speaking to reporters in Anchorage and Eagle River on Friday, Sen. Lisa Murkowski said she thought the aid was likely to come. But federal aid would be capped at $34,000. For the state, the maximum amount is about half that, up to $17,000. That won’t cover the most serious property damage, Murkowski said. “This is not to make you whole,” Murkowski said. “This is to help with assistance.”
FAIRBANKS — Alden Jerome collects bow ties, reads books about leadership and hosts a show that is broadcast at his school, Hutchison High School. The 16-year-old, who won a statewide public speaking contest in March, is halfway through his term as the student representative on the Board of Education, the highest position in student governance. He is hoping to have a future in politics. It’s easy to forget that Jerome is a teenager at school board meetings. Many of his arguments are as polished as his adult colleagues’. The junior at Hutch showed up to an interview at the NewsMiner wearing a pink buttondown shirt, chinos and socks with pictures of former President Barack Obama, one of the political leaders Jerome admires most. “I always was willing to sit at the adult table figuratively or literally,” he said. Jerome’s vote on the Fairbanks North Star Borough Board of Education is only advisory, but he can weigh in on policy decisions and offer ideas. One idea he is advocating for is a longer lunch period three days a week for qualified 11th and 12th graders. Jerome started in student politics after joining the Pearl Creek Elementary School student council, at the encouragement of a gym teacher, when he was in the sixth grade. He liked it and continued in student governance at Randy Smith Middle School. In the eighth grade, he was elected student council president. Last year, he was sophomore class president at Hutch. Student council officers from high schools across the district selected Jerome as the school board representative in a vote in last April. He beat three other nominees. Being the voice of more than 13,000 students can be “a little overwhelming,” Jerome said, but he is determined to represent student interests. One of Jerome’s top issues is to lengthen the lunch hour for upper class members who meet academic qualifications. “It’s the largest part of my head space when I am thinking about issues I want to address,” he said. Jerome is hearing from older students that they feel disconnected from peers, he said. They want more opportunities for socializing during the school day. Jerome thinks a longer lunch period is the answer. Students presently have
30 minutes to each lunch. “Thirty minutes of social activity to six hours of school is not a very good ratio to me,” Jerome said. He thinks a longer lunch hour would boost student performance. “I believe that students are going to perform better when they do have more social time,” Jerome said. He made his case to the school board earlier this term and is working on convincing administrators. Jerome said he keeps in touch with his constituents from other high schools via social media. He has lived in Fairbanks since the age of 2 when he moved here with his family. His mother is a physical therapist and his father is a research scientist. Jerome also has an older sister who is a senior at West Valley High School. Jerome applied to Hutchison High School thinking he wanted to be an engineer but he has since switched to the arts, audio/visual technology and communications track. After high school, he plans to study political science or journalisms in college. He is on the school swim team and also belongs to the National Honor Society. He is vice president of the local Future Farmers of America chapter. Jerome has been participating in public speaking competitions through FFA since the fourth grade. “It didn’t come naturally to me,” he said. “It really is a lot of practice. I think everybody gets nervous in public speaking, but it’s a matter of addressing your nervousness to overcome it.” The politics bug bit him when he was age 6. That was the year Obama was elected president. “He was breaking ground,” Jerome said. “He was doing something that had never been done before. That was inspiring to me.” Jerome also admires U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont, and Ohio Gov. John Kasich, a Republican. Jerome is a host of Hawk HIT News, a five-minute show that airs three days a week at Hutch. The show is a mix of announcements and playful segments. One segment, “Destroying Things,” shows Jerome’s best friend, Rodney, taking a sledgehammer to various no-longeruseful items such as the school homecoming float, a broken windshield and an inoperable printer. “Students love this,” Jerome said.
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | A3
Around the Peninsula Christmas Eve Candlelight Services Kasilof Community Church Christmas Eve Candlelight Services will take place at 6 p.m. on Dec. 24
Testify at a School Board meeting from Homer or Seward The KPBSD Board of Education will open two additional locations for public testimony via video during a school board meeting. Homer Middle School and Seward Elementary School sites will be open — if there are advance signups — starting with the Jan. 14 school board meeting. Sign up no later than 3 p.m. the Friday prior to a Board of Education meeting to guarantee the remote site will be open and staffed.
The Anchorage Fish & Game Advisory Committee
holidays from Dec. 22, 2018 to Jan. 2, 2019. Registration for space available so sign up today. For more information please the upcoming spring semester is available online at www.kpc. contact James at 283-8210 or visit us on Facebook. alaska.edu. Classes start on Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2019. —Raspberry Pi Club, Friday, Jan. 4 at 4 p.m. Come join us at the library to create games and inventions, learn how to program, make music with Sonic Pi, meet new friends, and more! Narcan kits available at Kenai Public Health Whether you want to hone your skills or are learning about Pi Heroin overdoses are on the rise in Alaska. Narcan is an easy for the first time, the Raspberry Pi club is the perfect place for medication you can give to someone who is overdosing. It may you! save their life. Adults can get free Narcan nasal spray kits at the —Lego Maker Mondays from 4-5 p.m. Why not join us to Kenai Public Health Center at 630 Barnacle Way, Suite A, in build LEGO creations based on new themes each week and inKenai. For additional information call Kenai Public Health at spired by children’s books! Lego Makers, Mondays from 4–5 335-3400. p.m. Designed for children ages 6-12; children under 8 must be accompanied by an adult. —Wee Read Story Time, Tuesdays at 10:30 a.m. Designed Kenai Community Library holiday events for children ages 0-3. Every Tuesday enjoy a program full of We are full of holiday spirit here at the library! Join us for stories,songs, finger play and more! No registration required. one of our holiday-themed programs which include: Apple But—Chess Club, Tuesdays at 4 p.m. Get ready to ROOK the ter Workshop, Candy Cane Family Craft, and Christmas Carols HOUSE every Monday! Do you like playing Chess, or would at the Library. As always these classes are free but you must pre- you like to learn how? The Kenai Community Library is proud register; so stop by or give us a call to sign up. Also, between to offer a casual program for chess players of all ages and levels. Dec. 26-29 we have a Scavenger Hunt Drop-In planned for pa- Chessboards will be provided. trons to find famous characters throughout the library and earn a —Preschool Story Time, Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m. Designed small prize! Keep an eye out for all of our upcoming events and for children ages 3-5. Every Wednesday enjoy a program full of programs by “Liking” us on Facebook. stories, songs, movement and more! No registration required.
The Anchorage Fish & Game Advisory Committee will meet on Tuesday, January 8th at Cabela’s conference room, located at 155 W 104th Avenue at 6:30 pm. Agenda will include preparation of comment on statewide finfish proposals 161-173, select Hospice Memorial Tree an AC rep for that meeting, and any other business that may From Nov. 23 – Dec. 23 Hospice of the Central Peninsula properly come before the committee. The public is invited to will have a Memorial Tree standing in the Peninsula Center address any concerns they have. For more information contact Mall. Community Members may remember their loved ones Martin Weiser at mweiser@crsalaska.com. with an ornament placed on our tree! No donation is too small to receive as many ornaments as you would like. Stop by the tree in the Mall during Mall hours, stop by Hospice’s office, AKC Star Puppy class or request an ornament online at www.hospiceofcentralpeninKenai Kennel Club will be offering an AKC Star Puppy class sula.com. beginning Thursday, Jan. 10 at 6 p.m. This is a six-week class, and you can receive a Star Puppy Certificate at the end. We will also be offering a Family Dog Obedience class beginning Thurs- Kenai Performers Wonka bars sale day, Jan. 10 at 7 p.m. Please email kenaikennelclub@gmail.com Kenai Performers is selling chocolate Wonka bars as a prowith questions or to register. Go to Kenaikennelclub.com for the motional fundraiser. Funds raised will help pay production costs class schedule and more information. for their spring musical, “Roald Dahl’s Willy Wonka.” Hidden among the candy bars are five, special Golden Tickets. Finders of the tickets will win FREE admission to one of the shows. Grief Recovery Method Workshop The Wonka bars are 4.5 ounces of scrumptious milk chocolate, The Grief Recovery Method Workshop: The Action Program big enough to share with the whole family, and are $5 each. for Moving beyond Death, Divorce and Other Losses 9-week Candy bars are available at Curtain Call Consignment Boutique program/Closed group will take place on Wednesday evenings in Kenai and at River City Books in Soldotna. Thank you, Counfrom 6-8 p.m. Jan. 2019: 9, 16, 23, 30. February 2019: 7, 13, try Foods for sponsoring our fundraiser! For more information, 20, 27. March 2019: 6. Takes place at PCHS 230 E. Marydale please call Terri at 252-6808. Soldotna (conference room upstairs). Sponsored by PCHS. Fee: $95.00 (scholarships available). To register or for further information call: Gail Kennedy • Certified Grief Recovery Special- Habitat for Humanity seeking family partner ist®• 907-602-9944 The Central Peninsula Habitat for Humanity is now looking for a family to partner with for their 2019 building season. If you would like more information, please contact Carri at 283SEES candy fundraiser 7797, or visit our website: https://hfhcentralpeninsula.org to Annual SEES candy fundraiser is going on now at Soldotna apply online! Professional Pharmacy while supplies last. All proceeds go to the PCD foundation (Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia).
Kenai Senior Center activities The Kenai Senior Center is open 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday to Friday, and are open until 9:30 p.m. on Thursdays. Community meals are served Monday to Friday from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Cost for lunch is $7 suggested donation for individuals 60 or older, $14 for those under 60. Call 907-283-4156 for more information.
Nikiski Recreation Center activities —Facilities Closures: The Nikiski Pool and Community Recreation Center will be closed for Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and New Year’s Eve. —Swim Lessons: Open registration for lesson will begin at noon on Jan. 2. Lessons available will be group and semi-private for beginners, advanced beginners and intermediates. Tiny Tots and Pre-School Aquatic play will also be available for registration. Lessons will be available January to April. —Spin class: The Nikiski Community Recreation Center offers spin class twice a week. Classes are Wednesdays at 6 p.m. and Saturdays at 9:30 a.m. Bring water. —Youth Winter Camps: Camp for K through fifth-grade students and a camp for middle school students Jan. 2-3 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Camps will be $10 per day with various activities, including: games, outside activities and cooking. —Open gym nights: Teen Center, Monday–Friday, 2:30–8 p.m. Full Swing Golf, Monday–Friday, 10 a.m.–8 p.m. Call 776-8800 for more info.
Diabetes support group to meet
Kenai National Wildlife Refuge: December
The Diabetes Support Group meets the last Tuesday of every month in the River Tower of Central Peninsula Hospital. The Kenai National Wildlife Refuge Visitors Center is open Meetings are free and open to the public. The group often has Cook Inlet Pipeline Infrastructure Risk every day from 9 a.m.–5 p.m. on Ski Hill Road near Soldotna. speakers on a variety of relevant topics. Please call Ruth Clare Assessment deadline For more information, call 260-2820. All events are free. at 714-4726 if you have questions or need more information. — Drop-in craft and self-guided trail walk, different each Experts wishing to participate in the Cook Inlet Pipeline Infrastructure Risk Assessment expert panel on pipeline integrity week New Kenai River rotary meeting place —Saturday Wildlife Movies: 11 a.m., noon, 2 p.m.: “Refand safety now have until Jan. 18, 2019, to apply. The previous uge Film”; 1 p.m.: “Wolverine: Chasing the Phantom”; 3 p.m.: Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month, the Kenai River deadline was Jan. 5, 2019. “Alone in the Wilderness II” Rotary Club will meet at Siam Noodles in Soldotna.
Soldotna/Kenai 100+ Women Who Care meeting
The Soldotna/Kenai 100+ Women Who Care group will be meeting Dec. 27 from 6-7 p.m. at the Don Gillman Kenai River Center on Funny River Road. This will be our fourth quarter meeting. All members in good standing will have a chance to pitch for a cause or nonprofit they support. Three names will be drawn; those three will make their pitch, and the group will vote on the cause that receives the funds from the meeting.
Al-Anon support group meetings Al-Anon support group meetings are held at the Central Peninsula Hospital in the Kasilof Room (second floor) of the River Tower building on Monday at 7 p.m., Wednesday at 7 p.m. and Saturday at 9 a.m. Park around back by the ER and enter through the River Tower entrance and follow the signs. Contact Tony Oliver at 252-0558 for more information.
Kenai Peninsula College holiday schedule KPC’s two campuses (Kenai River and Kachemak Bay) and Seward extension site (Resurrection Bay) will be closed for the
. . . Give Continued from page A1
ing and financial help for needy families. Brown said Kids Need Christmas has helped 75 families this fall, and he hopes to reach at least 100 by extending the charity deadline into April. Brown’s race team, dubbed AK-49 Racing (Brown is also the owner of AK-49 clothing company), competes in the biweekly Freddie’s Roadhouse drag races near Ninilchik, and Brown said he funds operations on his own dime, with all sponsorship money going to help other families. Brown, a lifelong Soldotna resident who works for Marathon Petroleum in Nikiski, has sponsorship deals with around a dozen businesses. Brown said his girlfriend Kelsey Cronin have taken in struggling families who have either contacted them through
their Facebook page or via word of mouth and set up an appointment with each one to hear their story. He said that he even will pay gas money to people to make the drive out to his place. “We talk, they share their hardships. It’s kind of like a therapy session,” Brown said. “It’s a pretty humbling experience.” Brown should know. He went through his own struggles with alcohol before finally giving it up completely. That experience, he said, shaped his view of the community and helped him realize the importance of extending a hand to those less fortunate. “I wanted a way to give back and be able to make it personal,” he said. “There’s no better way than my racing snowmachines in winter to get local businesses to sponsor me, and the money is used for gift cards and toys for families.” In 2017, Brown’s program
Wilderness First Aid course
The Kenai National Wildlife Refuge is hosting a Wilderness For more information, contact the library at Soldotna Public First-Aid course on Saturday-Sunday, January 12-13, 2019. Course Library at 262-4227. cost $185, plus $45 extra for CPR. For more information contact —Family Movie at the Library, Thursday, Dec. 27 at 2:30 Michelle Ostrowski at michelleostrowski@fws.gov or debajango@ p.m. 14 years ago, an incredible family saved the world. In this gmail.com. Must be 16 or older. long-awaited sequel, it’s Dad’s turn to watch their super-powered kids as Mom heads out to stop the next supervillain. Rated PG. Soldotna Community Schools Program —Window Painting, Friday, Dec. 28 at 4 p.m. Have a favor—Adult & High School indoor soccer every Wednesday ite quote, your best superhero, or an alien landscape to share? night from 7-9 p.m. This is a drop-in game as is only $2 per We’ve got window markers and big, boring windows in the teen night. area. Come help us decorate! For more information please call 907-714-1211. —Noon Year’s Eve Story Time, Monday, Dec. 31 at 11 a.m. If you have kids who can’t quite make it all the way to midnight, here’s a great alternative! We have stories, songs, and a craft, Kenai Community Library events and then help us countdown to noon and the big balloon drop. —Drop-in Scavenger Hunt, Dec. 26-29. ALL DAY. Pick up —Family Movie at the Library, Thursday, Jan. 2 at 2 p.m. a Scavenger Hunt clue sheet at the front desk and find hidden Join us for a movie and popcorn! We will be showing Disney’s characters throughout the library! A prize awaits you if you get Christopher Robin. Rated PG them all right! All ages are welcome to play. — Pac-Man® Tag (Teens), Friday, Jan. 4 at 5:45 p.m. Man vs —2019 Vision Boards, Thursday, Jan. 3 at 4 p.m. Start the ghosts: the final showdown. Who will win? We’re turning you year off right with this fun goal setting program designed for loose in the library to find out. This program is after-hours and teens and adults! Take a moment and plan for 2019! Limited will go until 7:15. Please arrive by 5:45!
was able to help 65 local children and families with toys, clothing or financial help. Kids Need Christmas offers three levels of sponsorship for local businesses, moving from $500 to $2,000 for a yearlong sponsorship package. Meanwhile, the Toys for Tots program and the Salvation Army Church has once again come through big time for local families. Craig Fanning, an envoy at the Salvation Army Church in Kenai for 17 years, said the red kettle program, which deploys volunteers to various business locations around town to ring the bells, has come close to topping $60,000 the last two years and has come close again in 2018. “We get to almost everywhere,” Fanning said. “We’re hoping to do that this year.” Fanning also said the Salvation Army’s Angel Tree toy drive has collected between 1,000 and 1,100 toys for strug-
PRE PLANNING . . . Bluff Peninsula Memorial Chapels & Crematory Continued from page A1
Kenai 283-3333 • Soldotna 260-3333 • Homer 235-6861
Call or stop by and talk to Grant or B.J. and let them guide you through the pre-arranging process. Have them show you the amazing benefits of planning your funeral ahead of time. If you’re not sure if you want to come in or not, flip a coin to help make your decision. Heads you Win. Tails you Win.
Soldotna Public Library activities
tent, approval for the accelerated funding will require more communication with the Army Corp and a trip to Washington, D.C.
gling families. The nationwide program starts with the families in need filling out a form delineating family size and numbers, and after an “angel” is placed on the tree with that info, donors can decide which angel family they would like to help out. The drive had a Christmas tree centered in the Soldotna Fred Meyer this year. Fanning said drives like Angel Tree have made a world of difference for needy families. “We have people bringing toys in that didn’t even know we were doing something,” he said. “It’s really a community effort.” Fanning’s wife Jeannie heads up the Salvation Army Family Services department, and said the general donations that the place receives make sure to account for all children in any given family. That way, it prevents a donor sending one child in a family a gift, but leaving out the other children. Jeannie Fanning said the
“This letter is the first step in that, and it’s the path that we need to go down to get it to happen,” Ostrander said. “I can tell you it probably won’t be quick, because nothing with the Corp is quick … but it’s positive progress, I think, and it’s clearly an identified path that makes the most sense for the city.”
Salvation Army doles out two or three toys, two clothing articles and four “stocking stuffer” items, picked by the families, in any one package. She credited the hard work of her current peers, Debbie Paul Cannavan and Jessie Wait. “Without those people, I’d be dead in the water,” Fanning said. “They are my absolute hands and feet.” Fanning said the Salvation Army Family Services donated to around 280 families in total this year, and said even families of inmates from the Wildwood Correctional Complex are
helped, something the Salvation Army has been doing since 2003. “We’re trying to keep a connection between the inmate and the child,” she said. “It just helps open a dialogue between them.” Fanning said the program has seen a significant drop in inmate problems during the fall season, noting that “all the inmates are on good behavior and happy they get to do this program.” “It just unfolds in layers,” Fanning said. “It’s like an onion, you peel it back and it affects everyone.”
Manny’s Driver Education th Classes Begin Jan. 7th Feb. 25 April. Classes Begin Aug 27, Oct 8, & Dec 38th
Give a gift that keeps on giving! Class D Road Testing (Vehicle Available) Class D Road Testing (Vehicle Available) May Reduce Insurance Rates for May Reduce Insurance Rates for Some Companies Some Companies •• Approved Homeschool Vendor Approved Homeschool Vendor CallCall to to Register: Register: 283-9518 283-9518 • •• •
Opinion
A4 | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion
CLARION P
E N I N S U L A
Serving the Kenai Peninsula since 1970 Terry R. Ward Publisher
ERIN THOMPSON..................................................................... Editor VINCENT NUSUNGINYA................................. Audience/IT Manager DOUG MUNN....................................................... Circulation Director FRANK GOLDTHWAITE.................................... Production Manager
What Others Say
Trump’s Syria pullout sends allies a dangerous message PRESIDENT TRUMP’S sudden move to yank U.S. troops out of Syria undermined at a stroke several foreign policy goals he has championed. The president promised to finish the job of destroying the Islamic State, but the withdrawal will leave thousands of its fighters still in place. He vowed to roll back Iran’s aggression across the Middle East, but his decision will allow its forces to entrench in the country that is the keystone of Tehran’s ambitions. He promised to protect Israel, but that nation will now be left to face alone the buildup by Iran and its proxies along its northern border. The president’s top national security advisers had carefully developed and articulated a strategy of maintaining a U.S. presence in Syria until the Islamic State was beyond revival and Iran withdrew its forces — a plan they were defending up until this week. Mr. Trump has again demonstrated, to them and to the world, that no U.S. policy or foreign commitment is immune from his whims. Mr. Trump claimed the Islamic State had been defeated, but that is not the view of the Defense and State Departments. Thousands of jihadist fighters are still in Syria and control splotches of territory in the Euphrates Valley. A U.S. withdrawal will give the extremists an opportunity to reconstitute, as they did in Iraq following the premature U.S. withdrawal ordered by President Barack Obama. Until Wednesday, a prime talking point of senior national security officials was that, “if we’ve learned one thing over the years, (the) enduring defeat of a group like this means you can’t just defeat their physical space and then leave,” as the State Department’s special envoy for the global campaign against the Islamic State, Brett McGurk, put it last week. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said it another way in September: “Getting rid of the caliphate doesn’t mean you then blindly say, ‘Okay, we got rid of it,’ march out, and then wonder why the caliphate comes back.” Mr. Trump has justified some of his most controversial decisions, including his continued support for Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, as needed to contain Iran’s threat to the United States and its allies. But the Syrian withdrawal hands Tehran and its ally Russia a windfall. Iran has deployed thousands of fighters and allied militiamen to Syria and aspires to create a corridor to Lebanon and the Mediterranean, as well as a new front against Israel along the Golan Heights. In reaction to that threat, Mr. Trump’s national security adviser, John Bolton, announced Sept. 24 that “We’re not going to leave (Syria) as long as Iranian troops are outside Iranian borders, and that includes Iranian proxies and militias.” U.S. ambitions in Syria have never been backed by adequate resources, and a case could be made that neither Congress nor the American public were prepared to support the mission suggested by Mr. Bolton. But Mr. Trump’s decision appears to have been precipitated by the bellicose rhetoric of Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who last week threatened — not for the first time — a military operation against Syrian Kurds, even though U.S. troops are positioned around them. The autocratic Turkish ruler appears to have extracted multiple favors from Mr. Trump in recent days, including the sale of U.S. Patriot missiles and a promise to reexamine the possible extradition of his rival, Fethullah Gulen, from Pennsylvania. If Mr. Trump received anything in return, he hasn’t disclosed it. The Syrian Kurdish forces, which have fought alongside the United States and played a crucial role in liberating most of eastern Syria from the jihadists, will be perhaps the foremost victims of Mr. Trump’s decision. Betrayed by Washington, they will now be subject to a military offensive by Turkey. The stab in the back will send an unforgettable message to all who are asked to cooperate with the United States in the fight against terrorism: Washington is an unreliable and dangerous partner.
Season’s hallucinations
T’was the time around Xmas, and all through the White House, Not a creature was stirring, they were much further south. For Trump’s jesters, reporters and the groupies who follow, It was time for a break in rich Mar-aLago. Melania was restless as she tossed in her bed, She was missing her trees, the ones she dyed red. Donald Trump was still up, it was no time for sleeping, There was golf to set up, not to mention his tweeting. He couldn’t relax, allow his insults to turn duller, He had opponents to ravage, and attacks on Bob Mueller. No visions of sugar plumbs danced in his head, Just Cohen and Flynn feeding into his dread. And ways that he might use his power to pardon, Before he’s an inmate, controlled by a warden. So lost in a reverie over a presidential indictment, The clatter on the lawn startled him, his heart racing, he was frightened. “Mueller’s coming to get me, good lord, what a mess!” He fleetingly thought he’d be under arrest. His mind started racing with all the confusion, In panic he was shouting, “There is no collusion!” Then he composed himself, took a breath and a pause,
It was not the feds after all, just that perv Santa Claus. He is usually jolly, but this year he was storming, About how the North Pole was melting, drowning Bob Franken in global warming. Had no presents at all, he was sarcastically droll, All he brought for The Donald were some bags full of coal. He carried an attitude, he’d never been meaner, As he reached in a pocket to hand Trump a subpoena. Involving Stormy, and Karen, and Trump’s aphrodisiacal fun, Indictments where his name is “Individual One.” But that wasn’t all that made Donnie nervous, He wondered how Santa Claus had snuck past Secret Service. He had quite a disguise, though he did appear fat, But what fooled everyone was his red MAGA hat. What to Trump’s wondering eyes was really obscene? It was what the reindeer were plopping onto his green. Santa, meanwhile, ignored them; he was really a boor, Leaving deer piles behind him, he entered Trump’s door. He had no more gifts but headed straight to the rear, Right to the fridge, he was searching for
beer. All of these centuries, who would have thunk, That jolly old elf was really a drunk? But Don had no beer, just Diet Coke, no alcohol, That’s one vice he doesn’t have, no drinking at all. Which surprises his critics who witness his act, His constant use of the alternative fact. Some even say that their own diagnosis, Is that POTUS is afflicted with a raving psychosis. “Remove him” a few say, others are more on the fence, His replacement no better, after all it’s Mike Pence. A few desperate ones have another approach, They say, “There must be a way that we could impeach both.” Claus was anxious to leave, his search for booze thwarted, He needed to get out before being deported. He didn’t have papers and in this immigrant climate, He was nothing more than a threatening “migrant.” So he shouted, “On Hannity, Blitzer, Acosta,” “Happy holidays all, including this monster.” Who is mostly known for his gross falsifying, Or let’s call it what it is, he’s constantly lying. This report of what happened is based on some interviews, But Trump denies everything, says it’s only “fake news.”
News and Politics
‘Twas 4 days before Christmas ... By ALAN FRAM Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The chaos that is President Donald Trump’s White House seemed to wash over the Capitol as this weekend’s partial federal shutdown hovered. While the workings of Congress are often tumultuous, especially as year-end adjournment nears, things seemed even more unbridled than usual. Congressional leaders and Trump bargainers led by Vice President Mike Pence failed to prevent scores of government agencies from shuttering their doors Saturday. Senators who’d gleefully left town earlier in the week, thinking their year’s work was done, flew glumly back for votes that they’d hoped — vainly, it turned out — would keep all agencies open after 12:01 a.m. Saturday. The usually laconic Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., left a Friday meeting with GOP senators to eagerly show reporters a button that said, “Senate Cranky Coalition.” Virtually all senators, McConnell said, “are a part of this coalition. Yeah, almost unanimous agreement.” None traveled further for more fleeting gratification than Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz. He flew home to Hawaii, treated his Twitter followers to a selfie capturing part of his 17 minutes with his family, then zoomed back to Washington. — The Washington Post, Dec. 19 “Wheels down IAD ready to vote no on
this stupid wall,” he tweeted at dawn as his plane landed at Dulles International Airport outside Washington. Republican Sen. Mike Rounds said he’d been home in South Dakota for four hours Thursday when he learned he needed to return to Washington. He was among several senators who said they left Washington with the impression that the House would approve a Senate-passed bill keeping government open and that Trump would sign it. “We figured they would have a battle, show that they were not happy about it but would move forward,” Rounds said. House members were also in town and lawmakers did not know when they’d be able to leave for Christmas and New Year’s Day. Administration officials met in the Capitol with congressional leaders for hours Friday in hopes of resolving the standoff. To kill time, the Senate kept a procedural roll call vote open for more than four hours. The House alternated between long recesses and votes on the kind of bills that always seem to emerge at these moments, including one renaming the Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge in Florida as the Nathaniel P. Reed Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge. In this latest version of Congress’ increasingly frequent shutdown burlesques, the sore spot was Trump’s demand for $5 billion in taxpayer money to start building a border wall he’s repeatedly said Mexico would finance. Aware of polls showing the wall and a shutdown over it are widely disliked except by loyal Trump supporters, Democrats had little reason to assent. A bill bearing those
funds that would also keep agencies functioning into February was stalled. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., wrapped the shutdown standoff together with the plunging stock market, Trump’s abrupt pullout of U.S. troops from Syria and the sudden resignation of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis. “This may have been the most chaotic week of what’s undoubtedly the most chaotic presidency ever in the history of the United States,” Schumer said. Trump took ownership of the shutdown last week, proclaiming on live television that he’d be “proud” to close the government over his demands for the wall. Most congressional Republicans wanted to avoid a shutdown in the final days of their two-year lock on the White House and Congress. They were relieved when Trump seemed to signal he’d sign a bill temporarily keeping government afloat without any wall money. But after the Senate approved just such a measure, conservative pundits and hard-right House members rebelled. Trump reversed himself again and demanded the wall funds and warned, “We’re totally prepared for a very long shutdown.” That caused disgust, dissension and dismay among many on Capitol Hill. And that was just Republicans. Meanwhile, the Capitol Lounge near the Capitol was offering shutdown-themed drinks beginning after midnight Friday. A cocktail with tequila was dubbed “Mexico Will Pay for This.”
Nation
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | A5
Partial government shutdown North Carolina asked feds to open vote likely to extend past Christmas fraud case last year By LISA MASCARO, DARLENE SUPERVILLE and KEVIN FREKING Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The federal government was expected to remain partially shut down past Christmas as the standoff deepened Saturday over President Donald Trump’s demand for funds to build a border wall with Mexico. With Trump’s insistence on $5 billion for the wall and negotiations with Democrats in Congress far from a breakthrough, even a temporary measure to keep the government running while talks continued seemed out of reach until the Senate returned for a full session Thursday. From coast to coast, the first day of the shutdown played out in uneven ways. The Statue of Liberty was still open for tours, thanks to funding from New York state, and the U.S. Post Office was still delivering mail, as an independent agency. In Arizona, the Grand Canyon was remaining open with state funding, the governor said. But visitors arriving at Carlsbad Caverns National Park in southern New Mexico could check out only the surface, not the underground cavern that is the park’s main attraction. The memorial to Oklahoma City bombing victims was to continue to operate, but the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library Center at College Station, Texas, said its National Archives facilities were closed during the shutdown. Yet the disruption affected many government operations and the routines of 800,000 federal employees. Roughly 420,000 workers were deemed essential and were expected to work unpaid. An additional 380,000 were to be furloughed, meaning they will stay home without pay. The Senate had already passed legislation ensuring that workers will receive back pay, and the House was likely to follow suit. No one knew how long the closures would last. Unlike other shutdowns, this one seemed to lack urgency, coming during the long holiday weekend after Trump had already declared Monday, Christmas Eve, a federal holiday. Rather than work around the clock to try to end the shutdown, as they had done in the past, the leaders of the
By MICHAEL BIESECKER and GARY D. ROBERTSON Associated Press
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is met by reporters as he arrives at the Capitol on the first morning of a partial government shutdown, as Democratic lawmakers, and some Republicans, are at odds with President Donald Trump on spending for his border wall, in Washington, Saturday. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
House and the Senate effectively closed up shop. But they didn’t rule out action if a deal were struck. “Listen, anything can happen,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters after he closed the Senate’s rare Saturday session hours after it opened. But after ushering Vice President Mike Pence through the Capitol for another round of negotiations, the Republican chairman of the Appropriations Committee, Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama, said a quick end to the shutdown was “not probable.” At the White House, Trump hosted a lunch Saturday with conservative lawmakers, including House Freedom Caucus chiefs Mark Meadows of North Carolina and Jim Jordan of Ohio, and several senators. Absent from the guest list were GOP leaders or any Democrats, who would be needed for a deal. “I am in the White House, working hard,” tweeted the president, who canceled his Florida holiday getaway to his club Mar-a-Lago due to the shutdown. First lady Melania Trump was flying back to Washington to be with her husband. Trump’s re-election campaign sent out a fundraising email late Saturday launching
what he called “the most important membership program ever - the OFFICIAL BUILD THE WALL MEMBERSHIP.” The president urged donors to sign up. With Democrats set to take control of the House on Jan. 3, and Speaker Paul Ryan on his way out, the shutdown was providing a last gasp of the conservative majority before the new Congress. Trump savored the prospect of a shutdown over the wall for months. Last week he said he would be “proud” to close down the government. He had campaigned on the promise of building the wall, and he also promised Mexico would pay for it. Mexico has refused to do so. In recent days, though, Trump tried to shift blame to Democrats for not acceding to his demand. He has given mixed messages on whether he would sign any bill into law. After the luncheon at the White House, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said, “It’s clear to me he believes the additional funding is necessary.” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York met with Pence on Saturday at the request of the White House, according to Schumer’s office. But the senator’s spokesman said they remained “very far apart” on a spending agreement. Schumer said the “Trump
shutdown” could end immediately if the president simply dropped his demand for money. “If you want to open the government, you must abandon the wall,” Schumer said. Democrats said they were open to other proposals that didn’t include the wall, which Schumer said was too costly and ineffective. They have offered to keep spending at existing levels of $1.3 billion for border fencing and other security. But Trump, digging in, tweeted about “the crisis of illegal activity” at American’s southern border is “real and will not stop until we build a great Steel Barrier or Wall.” Republican leaders largely stayed in the background of the negotiations. McConnell acknowledged that any deal to reopen government would require Democratic support for passage and the president’s signature. Senators approved a bipartisan deal earlier in the week to keep the government open into February and provide $1.3 billion for border security projects, but not the wall. But as Trump faced criticism from conservatives for “caving” on a campaign promise, he pushed to House to approve a package temporarily financing the government but also setting aside $5.7 billion for the border wall.
Fiance accused of killing Colorado woman By JAMES ANDERSON and MEAD GRUVER Associated Press
DENVER — The fiance of a Colorado woman who has been missing since Thanksgiving Day was arrested Friday on allegations of killing the mother of his child, and police said she likely died at her house in a mountain town. But authorities declined to say whether they had found the body of Kelsey Berreth, 29, what led to the arrest of Patrick Michael Frazee and what motive there might be for Berreth’s disappearance and slaying. Frazee, 32, was arrested at his home in the alpine town of Florissant on suspicion of murder and solicitation of murder, said Miles de Young, chief of police in neighboring Woodland Park, where Berreth lived. “As you can tell from the arrest, sadly, we do not believe that Kelsey is still alive,” De Young said. Authorities also declined to elaborate on the solicitation of murder charge, how they believe Berreth was killed or other aspects of the investigation, which spans several states and involves the FBI. Frazee was appointed a public defender, Adam Steigerwald, at a court hearing Friday, but the attorney didn’t immediately return a phone message seeking comment. Jeremy Loew, a private lawyer who had represented him, previously said Frazee cooperated with investigators and provided DNA
samples. Police have said Frazee was the last person to see Berreth alive. The couple shared a baby daughter but didn’t live together. Her mother has said financial struggles delayed them from moving in together but that her daughter was excited to get married. The disappearance of the young pilot mystified family and friends and led to a social media push for information on her whereabouts. Berreth was last seen at a grocery store near her home. Surveillance video showed her walking in on Thanksgiving Day with what appears to be the couple’s daughter in a baby carrier. Frazee had told police that they met that afternoon so he could pick up the child. De Young said the girl is in protective custody and will be turned over to Berreth’s family. Authorities searched Frazee’s cattle ranch and Berreth’s townhome but declined to say what they found. De Young did say evidence suggests “the crime” occurred at Berreth’s home and that her cellphone was found in Idaho. Investigators were working to recover the phone, which is an important clue. Police said the only signs of Berreth after Thanksgiving were some text messages and that location data suggested the phone by Nov. 25 was near Gooding, Idaho, 800 miles (1,290 kilometers) from her house. Her mother, Cheryl, lives in
Laclede, Idaho, 580 miles (930 kilometers) north of Gooding, but police have not explained whether that has any significance in where the cellphone was discovered. Police started looking for Kelsey Berreth on Dec. 2 at her mother’s request. Investigators who went to Berreth’s house found cinnamon rolls in the kitchen and both of her cars outside. De Young said the company where Berreth worked as a flight instructor, Doss Aviation, had accounted for all their planes and that police had no reason to believe she used someone else’s plane. Cheryl Berreth told NBC News that her daughter’s relationship with Frazee had been good and loving. She said the couple had weathered some financial struggles. Frazee runs a cattle ranch, and prices for the industry have been poor, delaying their plans to find a house together, Cheryl Berreth said. “They had plans that haven’t worked out as they would have liked. But they’ve dealt with that and they’ve made things work regardless,” she said. The mother told CBS that her daughter was looking forward to being married but said the couple had not set a wedding date. Kelsey Berreth was “a little reserved and sometimes softspoken” but often talked about Frazee, whom she was dating when she was a flight instructor at Springs Aviation in 2016,
company owner Bobby Hosmer said. Formal charges are pending and could take as long as 10 days to file, District Attorney Dan May said. The search and arrest affidavits will stay sealed during the investigation, he said. Frazee was being held without bond. A judge set the next court hearing for Dec. 31.
RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina’s top elections official issued an urgent plea nearly two years ago for the Trump administration to file criminal charges against the man now at the center of ballot fraud allegations that have thrown a 2018 congressional race into turmoil. N.C. Board of Elections Executive Director Kim Strach warned in a January 2017 letter first obtained by The Associated Press that those involved in illegally harvesting absentee ballots in rural Bladen County would likely do it again if they weren’t prosecuted. Josh Lawson, the top lawyer for the elections board, said Friday that Strach’s memo was followed less than a month later with the first of several inperson meetings during which state investigators provided FBI agents and federal prosecutors with evidence accusing Leslie McCrae Dowless Jr. and others of criminal activity. “Our findings to date suggest that individuals and potentially groups of individuals engaged in efforts to manipulate election results through the absentee ballot process,” Strach wrote in the letter, dated 10 days after President Donald Trump’s inauguration. “The evidence we have obtained suggest that
these efforts may have taken place in the past and if not addressed will likely continue for future elections.” At the time, there was only an acting U.S. attorney in office. Later in 2017, Trump’s appointee arrived, but took no action to prosecute the matter. Instead, he assigned his staff to focus on a different priority — prosecuting a handful of non-citizens who had allegedly voted. A spokesman for Robert J. Higdon, Jr., who took over as the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina in September 2017, has declined to comment on why no charges were filed following the state’s criminal referrals against Dowless and other Bladen County political operatives. Justice Department spokeswoman Kelly Laco in Washington also declined to comment on Friday. Higdon’s office issued a media release in August of this year touting charges against 19 foreign nationals it said voted in North Carolina in the 2016 presidential election, during which more than 6.9 million ballots were cast in the state. The cases were filed in the wake of Trump’s false claim that he lost the 2016 popular vote to his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton because millions of illegal immigrants had cast ballots across the country.
FDA casts shadow on hemp win, calling CBD products illegal By CARLA K. JOHNSON AP Medical Writer
SEATTLE — The hemp industry still has work ahead to win legal status for hempderived cannabidiol, or CBD oil, as an ingredient in food or dietary supplements despite the big farm bill President Donald Trump signed this week designating hemp as an agricultural crop. CBD oils have become increasingly popular in lotions, tinctures and foods, but their legal status has been murky and the Food and Drug Administration has sent warning letters to some companies making health claims for CBD. In a statement following Thursday’s bill signing in Washington, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb restated his agency’s stance that CBD is a drug ingredient and therefore illegal to add to food or health products without approval from his agency. “Selling unapproved products with unsubstantiated therapeutic claims is not only a violation of the law, but also
can put patients at risk, as these products have not been proven to be safe or effective,” Gottlieb wrote. CBD is a non-psychoactive compound found in hemp, a version of the cannabis plant that is low in THC, the part of cannabis that gives pot its high. An FDA-approved drug for the treatment of seizures, Epidiolex, contains cannabisderived CBD. GW Pharmaceuticals’ syrup became the first prescription drug derived from the cannabis plant in June. The FDA statement also specified parts of hemp that are safe as food ingredients, but the CBD stance disappointed advocates. Courtney Moran, a lobbyist for Oregon hemp farmers, said she plans to work with U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, to nudge the FDA toward greater acceptance of CBD. “We do hope the FDA does clear a pathway for these products that have already hit store shelves and are out in the marketplace,” Moran said. She said it’s an “opportunity for industry to educate the FDA.”
Christmas Cooperative
In the Peninsula Center Mall - Near Ginger’s Restaurant
~Open Through December 31st~
~Local Artisans - Handmade Items~ AK KREATIONS By Kyle and Angel Stanton
ALASKA BIRDHOUSES By Rick and Phoebe Abbott
CLAUDETTE’S TRAVELING BOUTIQUE By Claudette Barber
CUSTOM STAINED GLASS By Sandy Stevens & Kathleen Reardon
HEYWIRE JEWELRY By Diane Somers
~Hours~
Monday-Saturday Sundays 10am-7pm 2pm-5pm For More Information Please Call 907-394-2164
SKINNY SALMON DESIGNS By Christie Abbott
SOAP STONZ By Dave and Joyce Tugan
TASTEFULLY SIMPLE By Barb Larion
A6 | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion
World
US envoy to anti-IS coalition Tsunami triggered by volcano kills at quits over Trump’s Syria move least 43 in Indonesia By MATTHEW LEE AP Diplomatic Writer
WASHINGTON — Brett McGurk, the U.S. envoy to the global coalition fighting the Islamic State group, has resigned in protest over President Donald Trump’s abrupt decision to withdraw U.S. troops from Syria, a U.S. official said, joining Defense Secretary Jim Mattis in an administration exodus of experienced national security figures. Only 11 days ago, McGurk had said it would be “reckless” to consider IS defeated and therefore would be unwise to bring American forces home. McGurk decided to speed up his original plan to leave his post in mid-February. Appointed to the post by President Barack Obama in 2015 and retained by Trump, McGurk said in his resignation letter that the militants were on the run, but not yet defeated, and that the premature pullout of American forces from Syria would create the conditions that gave rise to IS. He also cited gains in accelerating the campaign against IS, but that the work was not yet done. His letter, submitted Friday to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, was described to The Associated Press on Saturday by an official familiar with its contents. The official was not authorized to publicly discuss the matter before the letter was released and spoke on condition of anonymity. Trump played down the development, tweeting Saturday night that “I do not know” the envoy and it’s a “nothing event.” He noted McGurk
By ALI KOTARUMALOS Associated Press
In this June 7, 2017 file photo, Brett McGurk, the U.S. envoy for the global coalition against IS, speaks during a news conference at the U.S. Embassy Baghdad, Iraq. AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)
planned to leave soon anyway and added: “Grandstander?” Shortly after news of McGurk’s resignation broke, Trump again defended his decision to pull all of the roughly 2,000 U.S. forces from Syria in the coming weeks. “We were originally going to be there for three months, and that was seven years ago we never left,” Trump tweeted. “When I became President, ISIS was going wild. Now ISIS is largely defeated and other local countries, including Turkey, should be able to easily take care of whatever remains. We’re coming home!” Although the civil war in Syria has gone on since 2011, the U.S. did not begin launch-
ing airstrikes against IS until September 2014, and American troops did not go into Syria until 2015. McGurk, whose resignation is effective Dec. 31, was planning to leave the job in midFebruary after a U.S.-hosted meeting of foreign ministers from the coalition countries, but he felt he could continue no longer after Trump’s decision to withdraw from Syria and Mattis’ resignation, according to the official. Trump declaration of a victory over IS has been roundly contradicted by his own experts’ assessments, and his decision to pull troops out was widely denounced by members of Congress, who called his ac-
tion rash and dangerous. Mattis, perhaps the most respected foreign policy official in the administration, announced on Thursday that he will leave by the end of February. He told Trump in a letter that he was departing because “you have a right to have a Secretary of Defense whose views are better aligned with yours.” The withdrawal decision will fulfill Trump’s goal of bringing troops home from Syria, but military leaders have pushed back for months, arguing that the IS group remains a threat and could regroup in Syria’s long-running civil war. U.S. policy has been to keep troops in place until the extremists are eradicated.
Syria sends reinforcements east after Trump’s pullout plan BEIRUT (AP) — Syrian troops have sent reinforcements to the eastern province of Deir el-Zour close to an enclave controlled by the Islamic State group and along the front with U.S.-backed Kurdish-led fighters, a war monitor and pro-government pages on social media said Saturday. The reinforcements arrived after U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday announced he was pulling all 2,000 U.S. troops out of Syria. Trump has now declared victory over IS, contradicting assessments by his own experts, with many lawmakers calling his decision rash and dangerous. A senior Kurdish politician on Friday called on France to play a larger role in Syria following the U.S. withdrawal. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the government sent thousands of its elite forces to Deir
el-Zour that borders Iraq, where IS holds the last area under its control in Syria. The Observatory said the troops and pro-government fighters were deployed on the west banks of the Euphrates River close to the IS-held enclave, mostly in the towns of Mayadeen and Boukamal. It added that troops brought to the area include members of the Tiger Force, an elite unit that defeated rebels and IS gunmen on several fronts over the past two years. A pro-government Facebook page posted a photo of Tiger Force commander Brig. Gen. Suheil and also reported that troops under his command have arrived in Deir el-Zour. It also posted photos of military vehicles said to be arriving in the area. U.S.-backed Syrian fighters of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces have been trying to capture the area from
IS since Sept. 10. The battles have left hundreds of IS and SDF fighters dead. On Friday, senior Kurdish politician Ilham Ahmed warned in Paris that SDF fighters may have to withdraw from the front lines in the fight against IS to deploy along the borders with Turkey after Ankara said it plans to carry an attack. The Observatory’s chief, Rami Abdurrahman, said the troops were deployed for a possible attack on IS or to assume control of areas that could be evacuated by SDF fighters. In Washington, Brett McGurk, the U.S. envoy to the global coalition fighting IS, has resigned in protest to Trump’s abrupt decision to withdraw U.S. troops from Syria, joining Defense Secretary Jim Mattis in an administration exodus of experienced national security officials. Only 11 days ago, McGurk had said it would be “reckless”
to consider IS defeated and therefore would be unwise to bring American forces home. He decided to speed up his plan to leave in mid-February. Earlier Saturday, Iran’s Foreign Ministry said the U.S. military presence in Syria has damaged the region in the government’s first comments on Trump’s plan to pull U.S. troops from the war-torn country. The official IRNA news agency quoted Bahram Ghasemi, ministry spokesman, as saying the presence of U.S. troops during Syria’s civil war has damaged peace and security in the region. “Basically, the deployment and presence of U.S. forces in the region was wrong, illogical and a tension-maker,” said Ghasemi. Iran has been a key supporter of the Syrian government and along with Russia helped turn the balance of power in favor of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces.
China calls US arrogant, selfish after indictment By YANAN WANG Associated Press
BEIJING — China called the U.S. arrogant and selfish on Friday after two Chinese citizens were charged with stealing American trade secrets and other sensitive information on behalf of Beijing’s main intelligence agency. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said “the Chinese government has never participated in or supported anyone in stealing trade secrets in any way.” She accused the U.S. of undermining the development of other countries in order to defend its own hegemony. “The U.S. is a world superpower, and it’s quite arrogant and selfish,” she said during a regular press briefing. The U.S. Justice Department announced Thursday the indictment of Chinese nationals Zhu Hua and Zhang Shilong for allegedly carrying out an exten-
sive cyberespionage campaign against government agencies and major corporations. Besides the alleged U.S. infiltration, Zhu and Hua are also accused of breaching computers linked to companies in at least 11 other countries, including Japan, the United Kingdom and India. More than 90 percent of Justice Department economic espionage cases over the past seven years involve China, said Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, and more than twothirds of trade secrets cases are connected to the country. “China’s state-sponsored actors are the most active perpetrators of economic espionage,” FBI Director Chris Wray said in announcing the case. “While we welcome fair competition, we cannot and will not tolerate illegal hacking, stealing or cheating.” Hua, the Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, said: “They believe that a lie repeated a thou-
sand times will become the truth, but I want to tell them that a lie is still a lie even after it has been repeated ten thousand times.” In a written statement issued earlier Friday, she said the U.S. was “fabricating facts.” The whereabouts of Zhu and Zhang are unclear. China does not have an extradition treaty with the U.S. “There is some cooperation under the framework of Interpol, but if the Chinese government doesn’t agree with the U.S. charges, there is no way to extradite the accused,” said Li Fangping, a Beijing-based criminal lawyer. Li said that if Zhu and Zhang travel to other countries that have signed treaties with the U.S., they could be detained for possible extradition, as was the case with Chinese tech executive Meng Wanzhou’s recent arrest in Canada. The indictment says the pair worked for the Huaying Haitai
Science and Technology Development Company in Tianjin and acted in association with the Chinese Ministry of State Security’s bureau in the northeastern port city. A public company registry says that Huaying Haitai’s work includes the development of computer software, consulting and business related to a variety of technical equipment. Among the cyberespionage maneuvers detailed in the indictment is the alleged use of a phishing technique which sent emails that appeared to be coming from legitimate email addresses but were in fact from members of “Advanced Persistent Threat 10,” the Chinabased hacking group to which Zhu and Zhang purportedly belong. James Gong, a cybersecurity senior associate at the Herbert Smith Freehills law firm in Beijing, said the mere announcement of charges is likely to affect public perception of China.
JAKARTA, Indonesia — A tsunami apparently caused by the eruption of an island volcano killed at least 43 people after the waves hit the coast around Indonesia’s Sunda Strait, sending a wall of water some 65 feet inland and damaging hundreds of houses including hotels, the government and witnesses said. Some 600 people have been reported injured when the tsunami hit about 9:27 p.m. Saturday, the Disaster Management Agency said. Scientists from Indonesia’s Meteorology and Geophysics agency said it could have been caused by undersea landslides from the eruption of Anak Krakatau, a volcanic island formed over years from the nearby Krakatau volcano. They also cited tidal waves caused by the full moon. “I had to run, as the wave passed the beach and landed 15-20m (meters) inland,” Norwegian Øystein Lund Andersen wrote on Facebook. He said he was taking pictures of the volcano when he suddenly saw a big wave come toward him. “Next wave entered the hotel area where I was staying and downed cars on the road behind it. Managed to evacuate with my family to higher ground trough forest paths and villages, where we are taken care of (by) the locals. Were unharmed, thankfully.” The worst affected area
was the Pandeglang region of Banten province in Java, which encompasses the Ujung Kulon National Park and popular beaches, the disaster agency said. Of the deaths, 33 were in Pandeglang. In the city of Bandar Lampung on southern Sumatra, hundreds of residents took refuge at the governor’s office. Alif, a resident in Pandeglang district who goes by one name, said the tsunami reached about 9.84 feet high. He told MetroTV station that many people were still searching for missing relatives. The Anak Krakatau volcano in the Sunda Strait that links the Indian Ocean and Java Sea erupted about 24 minutes before the tsunami, the geophysics agency said. The 1,000-foot-high volcano, about 124 miles southwest of capital Jakarta, has been erupting since June. In July, authorities widened its no-go areas to 1.24 miles from the crater. Physical losses included 430 heavily damaged homes, nine heavily damaged hotels and 10 heavily damaged vessels. Footage posted by the head of the disaster agency showed the aftermath of flooded streets and an overturned car. In September, more than 2,500 people were killed by a quake and tsunami that hit the city of Palu on the island of Sulawesi, which is just east of Borneo.
Somalia blast kills at least 16 near presidential palace By ABDI GULED Associated Press
NAIROBI, Kenya — An explosives-packed vehicle detonated at a military checkpoint near Somalia’s presidential palace, killing at least 16 people and wounding more than 20 others, police said. The al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab extremist group, which often targets Mogadishu, claimed responsibility for the attack. Those killed include three staffers from the London-based Universal TV station, including prominent journalist Awil Dahir Salad, said police Capt. Mohamed Hussein, who gave the toll of dead and wounded. The bomber targeted the checkpoint near the rear entrance of the heavily fortified palace, Hussein said. A lawmaker and a deputy mayor of Mogadishu were among those wounded, he said. Soldiers also were among the dead, Col. Ahmed Mohamud said.
The blast and a second, smaller one nearby appeared to target those heading to work on what was a business day in the Horn of Africa nation. A plume of smoke rose over the capital as ambulances rushed to the scene. “At first I saw a vehicle driving to and fro, then we tried to stop people walking here and there, and then in the blink of an eye the vehicle exploded, causing havoc,” traffic police officer Mohamed Harun told The Associated Press. Al-Shabab, the most active Islamic extremist group in subSaharan Africa, was pushed out of Mogadishu years ago but continues to control large parts of rural southern and central Somalia. The U.S. military, which partners with Somali forces and a 20,000-strong African Union peacekeeping mission, has greatly increased airstrikes against alShabab under the Trump administration. At least 47 U.S. strikes have been carried out this year.
Business
A decade-long rally on Wall Street looks like it’s ending By MARLEY JAY AP Markets Writer
NEW YORK — After almost 10 years, Wall Street’s rally looks like it’s ending. Another day of big losses Friday left the U.S. market with its worst week in more than seven years. All of the major indexes have lost 16 to 26 percent from their highs this summer and fall. Barring huge gains during the upcoming holiday period, this will be the worst December for stocks since 1931. There hasn’t been one major shock that has sent stocks plunging. The U.S. economy has been growing since 2009, and most experts think it will keep expanding for now. But it’s likely to do so at a slower pace. As they look ahead, investors are finding more and more reasons to worry. The U.S. has been locked in a trade dispute with China for nine months. Economies in Europe and China are slowing. And rising interest rates in the U.S. could slow its economy even more. Dysfunction in Washington isn’t helping the situation, with another Trump administration cabinet member announcing his resignation this week and the government Friday night on the brink of a partial shutdown. Stocks are now headed for their single worst month since October 2008, when the market was being battered by the global financial crisis. December is generally the strongest time of the year for U.S. stocks. Traders often talk about a “Santa rally” that adds to the year’s gains as people adjust their portfolios in anticipation of the year to come. But not this year. No sector of the market has
. . . Honey Continued from page A1
Hashanah, apples are dipped into honey and honey cake is eaten to welcome the new year. Challah bread, an eggy sweet bread eaten during the Jewish holidays is typically sweetened with honey. During the Madhu Purnima, which was celebrated in September this year by Buddhist in India and Bangladesh, it is traditional to gift honey to Buddhist monks during the festival. In Greece, special Christmas cookies called melomakarona are dipped in honey and covered in chopped walnuts. During the holy month of Ramadan, Muslims enjoy honey-drenched dishes, like the
. . . Snow Continued from page A1
Such can be the magic of a sunsetting, snow-capped winter solstice walk of an hour and a half in the refuge, even if one of the featured guests — a nearly full moon — sat this one out behind a bank of clouds. Ostrowski, who started at the refuge in 1997, has put on snowshoe walks like this one before, but this is the first one she’s done on the solstice. “At least in my mind, yes, this is a celebration of the shortest day of the year and reflecting on that darkness,” she said of the event, which drew 14 people. “It’s also a celebration of the excitement of increased daylight.” The evening started with a brief snowshoe lesson by Ostrowski, then a question. What made you come out? Answers ranged from wanting to try snowshoeing, to having bad knees and simply wanting to get out of the house, to, “My snowshoes have been in the closet for two years. It was time to get them out again.” Married couple John Loranger, 30, and Ruby Glaser, 28, are from New York City and visiting the area for 10 days. Andy Loranger, John’s father, is the Refuge Manager, so the couple has done activi-
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | A7
Connected cars accelerate down datacollection highway By MICHAEL LIEDTKE AP Technology Writer
This photo shows the exterior of the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday evening. Stocks went into another slide Thursday in what is shaping up as the worst December on Wall Street since the depths of the Great Depression, with prices dragged down by rising fears of a recession somewhere on the horizon. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 464 points, bringing its losses to more than 1,700 since last Friday. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison)
been spared. Large multi-national companies join smaller domestic ones in their losses. And huge high-tech companies, once the best-performing stocks on the market, are now leading the way lower. Technology’s huge popularity during the recent boom years made it even more vulnerable as investors’ moods turn sour. Amazon, Facebook, Apple, Netflix, and Google’s parent company, Alphabet, have seen their market values fall by hundreds of billions of dollars. “If you live by momentum, you die by momentum,” said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist for CFRA.
The Nasdaq composite, which contains a high concentration of tech stocks, has sunk almost 22 percent from its record high in late August. Several big technology companies, notably Facebook and Twitter, have also suffered as a result of scandals over matters such as data privacy and election meddling, and traders worry that the industry will face greater government regulation that could increase costs and affect their profits. The major U.S. indexes fell 7 percent this week and they’ve sunk more than 12 percent in December. Investors around the world have grown increasingly pes-
simistic about the global economy’s prospects over the next few years. It’s widely expected to slow down, but traders are concerned the cooling might be worse than they previously believed. After a sharp early gain Friday, the S&P 500 index retreated 50.80 points, or 2.1 percent, to 2,416.62. The S&P 500, the benchmark for many index funds, has fallen 17.5 percent from its high in September. The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank 414.23 points, or 1.8 percent, to 22,445.37. The Nasdaq skidded 195.41 points, or 3 percent, to 6,332.99. The Russell 2000 index of smaller-company stocks lost 33.92 points, or 2.6 percent, 1,292.09.
bite-sized honey puffs called loukoumades. With thousands of species of bees and varying flora across the globe, no jar of honey is the same. Besides supporting the local economy, there can be other benefits to buying your honey products locally. James Reid along with his sister Ana, run Stoked Beekeeping Company in Homer. He said eating locally harvested honey connects you to the land and flora around you. They harvest honey and sell it raw, and also use the beeswax to make specialty, foodsafe cloth wraps. James Reid said honey is made using local pollen and nectar. He said eating their byproducts can help acclimate a body to the pollen
of local flora, which in turn can help with seasonal allergies. To get the community more involved with local honey, the Reids offer tours of their hives every summer. Sarah Souders of Sarah’s Alaska Honey has been harvesting honey for 18 years. She said honey harvested on the Kenai Peninsula is special because of the pollen taken from vast fields of fireweed. “Alaska honey is unique and light in flavor,” she said. She said local honey makes a great gift, and her stock usually runs out after Christmas time. “It’s much more personal than something from WalMart,” Souders said. It’s not just Alaskans who
seek out Kenai Peninsula honey. Souders said she has people from all over the world call her to order honey. “Someone from Qatar has been calling me all week trying to order our fireweed honey,” she said. She said she limits her sale of honey online to try to focus on selling to locals first. Souders will be hosting a beekeeping class next month. Information for the class can be found on Sarah’s Alaska Honey Facebook page. To find Sarah’s honey, give her a call at 907-252-5132. James Reid said his honey can be found at the Homer Salmon Sisters Shop or by calling him at 424-558-1015, or emailing him at stokedbeekeeping@ gmail.com.
ties on the refuge before. This was the first organized activity, though, and what stood out to Glaser was how much Ostrowski augmented the occasion. “We learned so much,” Glaser said. “It was nice being with a ranger who was so informative.” At one stop, Ostrowski quizzed the group on what is needed for snow to form (cold air, moisture and particles in the atmosphere that can be anything from bacteria to dust to volcanic ash) to what number of sides a true snowflake has (six). She told about how snow plays a vital role in the survival of animals from camouflage (for example snowshoe hares and ptarmigan), to giving an advantage to those with big feet (lynx, snowshoe hares), to providing vital insulation to vegetation and creatures like mice, shrews and voles that tunnel just above ground under the snow. (This is why the refuge requests that walkers and snowshoers stay on trails near the headquarters. Walking off the trail collapses those tunnels, exposing the subnivean — meaning “under snow” — animals to cold and predators. The same precaution is not necessary on lakes). On Headquarters Lake, as the shortest day of the year expired, Ostrowski told about
how wolves travel in the snow in a straight line to conserve energy for taking down big prey. After getting off the lake, the ranger gave a brief lesson in how to identify tracks. Unfortunately, the track she identified was from a dog. Dogs are allowed on the refuge, but are not allowed on the trails surrounding the headquarters. John Loranger was born in Anchorage and moved to the refuge area when he was about 1, staying until he was 5. He mostly grew up in the suburbs of Houston, and was quick to note the solstice doesn’t mean much in the constant lights and bustle of New York City. This solstice walk on the refuge was another matter. “The forest is magical at all times of the year, but there’s something about snow,” Loranger said. “I appreciate each season for what is different about it. Winter is important for rest and rejuvenation.” Carroll certainly caught on quickly. She moved to Soldotna this summer from Florida to be closer to her family. Her first Alaska winter has not slowed her down. She still aims to walk 25 miles a week, just like in Florida. “It’s not a hard adjustment and in other ways it’s a significant adjustment,” Carroll said. “I did a lot of athletic activities in Florida in the morning to beat the heat. Now I wait until
later in the day for the warmth.” Carroll has been doing most of that walking on cleared sidewalks, but that scene could be changing to what she called the “magnificent, gorgeous” forest in the winter. Even at night. “What I really take from this is how light and brilliant it felt,” Carroll said. “It wasn’t dark at all. “I thought I would need a flashlight. I brought two and didn’t need them.” Ostrowski said Carroll would not be the first person to take a maiden cruise on refuge-issued snowshoes then decide to purchase a pair at the store. “I love getting people outside and active and enjoying their refuge in any season at any time of day,” Ostrowski said. She said the best way to keep up with activities in the refuge is through their Facebook page or by a monthly flyer which shows upcoming activities. The flyer can be picked up at the visitors center, or Ostrowski does an email blast every month. To get on that email list, contact Ostrowski at 907-260-2839 or michelle_ostrowski@fws.gov. Suggestions for future programs also can be sent to Ostrowski. “The refuge is always open to adding ideas for programs the public may have been looking for,” Ostrowski said. “We’re always looking for ways for people to connect with the refuge.”
SAN FRANCISCO — That holiday trip over the river and through the woods to grandmother’s house could turn into nice little gift for automakers as they increasingly collect oodles and oodles of data about the driver. Automakers are collecting valuable pieces of information thanks to the internet connections, cameras and sensors built into most vehicles in recent years. The online access makes it possible for cars to be unlocked remotely if the keys are lost. It’s how safety features can be upgraded wirelessly and maintenance schedules adjusted based on performance. But these digital peepholes are also offering a windshieldsize view of people’s lives. That’s creating the potential for intrusive marketing pitches and government surveillance. No serious incidents have occurred in the United States, Europe and Japan, but a red flag has already been raised in China, where automakers have been sharing location details of connected cars with the government. “We are not that far away from when 100 percent of all new cars will come equipped with data modems,” Navigant Research analyst Sam Abuelsamid predicted. “Having the potential to collect more data about people in their cars means there is going to be potential for abuses, too.” Here are some key questions about the auto industry’s acceleration down the data-collection highway: Q: What kind of cars collect data? A: In 2016, about one in every five cars sold globally could be plugged into the internet, according to BI Intelligence. By 2020, about three out of every four cars sold will be online.
So if you are driving a 2009 Toyota Corolla, you probably only have to worry about the tracking and data collection being done by the smartphone resting on the cup holder. But as those older models go to the scrapyard, it will become difficult to avoid a vehicle set up for gathering data that will be sent to automakers. Q: Which automakers are leading the way in this trend? A: General Motors accounted for 46 percent of connectedcar shipments last year, according to the market research firm Counterpoint. They’re followed by BMW (20 percent), Audi (14 percent) and Mercedes Benz (13 percent). In addition, Tesla’s Model S sold since 2012 all come with connectivity. The firm said the biggest markets for connected car sales last year were China (32 percent), the United States (13 percent), Germany (11 percent) and the United Kingdom (9 percent). Q: Do I own data that’s collected? A: Under U.S. law, it’s unclear. Drivers own the data stored in the “black boxes” that monitor vehicles in a crash. Police and insurers need a driver’s consent — or a court order — to get that data. But there are no laws addressing data collected by automakers through vehicle internet connections. So far, few automakers will share their data in the United States without the owners’ consent, Abuelsamid said. Twenty companies — including GM, Toyota, Ford, Hyundai and Mercedes-Benz — signed a voluntary agreement in 2014 to get permission before sharing a driver’s location, health or behavior with third parties. The agreement doesn’t require approval from drivers for data to be shared with emergency workers or for internal research.
Today in History Today is Sunday, Dec. 23, the 357th day of 2018. There are eight days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Dec. 23, 1948, former Japanese premier Hideki Tojo and six other Japanese war leaders were executed in Tokyo. On this date: In 1783, George Washington resigned as commander in chief of the Continental Army and retired to his home at Mount Vernon, Va. In 1788, Maryland passed an act to cede an area “not exceeding ten miles square” for the seat of the national government; about 2/3 of the area became the District of Columbia. On Dec. 23, 1805, Joseph Smith Jr., principal founder of the Mormon religious movement, was born in Sharon, Vt. In 1913, the Federal Reserve System was created as President Woodrow Wilson signed the Federal Reserve Act. In 1941, during World War II, American forces on Wake Island surrendered to the Japanese. In 1954, the first successful human kidney transplant took place at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston as a surgical team removed a kidney from 23-year-old Ronald Herrick and implanted it in Herrick’s twin brother, Richard. In 1967, President Lyndon B. Johnson, on his way home from a visit to Australia and Southeast Asia, held an unprecedented meeting with Pope Paul VI at the Vatican; during the two-hour conference, Johnson asked the pope for help in bringing a peaceful end to the Vietnam War. In 1968, 82 crew members of the U.S. intelligence ship Pueblo were released by North Korea, 11 months after they had been captured. In 1975, Richard S. Welch, the Central Intelligence Agency station chief in Athens, was shot and killed outside his home by the militant group November 17. In 1986, the experimental airplane Voyager, piloted by Dick Rutan (ruhTAN’) and Jeana (JEE’-nuh) Yeager, completed the first non-stop, nonrefueled round-the-world flight as it returned safely to Edwards Air Force Base in California. In 1997, a federal jury in Denver convicted Terry Nichols of involuntary manslaughter and conspiracy for his role in the Oklahoma City bombing, declining to find him guilty of murder. (Nichols was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.) In 2003, the government announced the first suspected (later confirmed) case of mad cow disease in United States, in Washington state. A jury in Chesapeake, Va., sentenced teen sniper Lee Boyd Malvo to life in prison, sparing him the death penalty. A gas well accident in southwestern China killed 233 people. New York Gov. George Pataki posthumously pardoned comedian Lenny Bruce for his 1964 obscenity conviction. Ten years ago: Rene-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet (reh-NAY’-teeay-REE’ ma-GOHN’ duh lah veel-oo-SHAY’), founder of an investment fund that had lost $1.4 billion in Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, was discovered dead after committing suicide at his Madison Avenue office. A military-led group seized control of the airwaves in Guinea and declared a coup after the death of the country’s long-time dictator, Lansana Conte. Five years ago: The last two imprisoned members of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot (Maria Alekhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova) were given amnesty and set free after spending nearly two years in prison for a protest at Moscow’s main cathedral. Auburn’s Gus Malzahn was honored as The Associated Press national coach of the year. Mikhail Kalashnikov, 94, designer of the AK-47 assault rifle, died in Izhevsk, Russia. One year ago: The top leadership of the Miss America Organization resigned amid a scandal over emails in which pageant officials had ridiculed past winners over their appearance and intellect and speculated about their sex lives. A federal judge in Seattle partially lifted a Trump administration ban on certain refugees after two groups argued that the policy kept people from some mostly Muslim countries from reuniting with family living legally in the United States. Today’s Birthdays: Actor Ronnie Schell is 87. Emperor Akihito of Japan is 85. Pro and College Football Hall of Famer Paul Hornung is 83. Actor Frederic Forrest is 82. Rock musician Jorma Kaukonen (YOR’-mah KOW’-kah-nen) is 78. Rock musician Ron Bushy is 77. Actor-comedian Harry Shearer is 75. U.S. Army Gen. Wesley K. Clark (ret.) is 74. Actress Susan Lucci is 72. Singer-musician Adrian Belew is 69. Rock musician Dave Murray (Iron Maiden) is 62. Actress Joan Severance is 60. Singer Terry Weeks is 55. Rock singer Eddie Vedder (Pearl Jam) is 54. The former first lady of France, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, is 51. Rock musician Jamie Murphy is 43. Jazz musician Irvin Mayfield is 41. Actress Estella Warren is 40. Actress Elvy Yost is 31. Actress Anna Maria Perez de Tagle (TAG’lee) is 28. Actor Spencer Daniels is 26. Actor Caleb Foote is 25. Thought for Today: “If you want to do things, do things.” -- Grace Paley, American writer (1922-2007).
A8 | Sunday , December 23, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion
AccuWeather 5-day forecast for Kenai-Soldotna
Utqiagvik -12/-20
ÂŽ
Today
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Intervals of clouds and sunshine
Intervals of clouds and sunshine
Cloudy, a bit of snow; breezy
Mostly cloudy
Cloudy with a bit of snow
Hi: 27 Lo: 13
Hi: 20 Lo: 14
Hi: 27 Lo: 22
Hi: 28 Lo: 22
Hi: 30 Lo: 24
The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel TemperatureÂŽ is an exclusive index of the effects of temperature, wind, Sunrise humidity, sunshine intensity, cloudiness, precipitation, Sunset pressure and elevation on the human body.
10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.
17 19 24 22
Daylight Length of Day - 5 hrs., 41 min., 36 sec. Daylight gained - 0 min., 12 sec.
Alaska Cities Yesterday Hi/Lo/W
City Adak* Anchorage Barrow Bethel Cold Bay Cordova Delta Junction Denali N. P. Dillingham Dutch Harbor Fairbanks Fort Yukon Glennallen* Gulkana Haines Homer Juneau Ketchikan Kiana King Salmon Klawock Kodiak
Last Dec 29
Today 10:13 a.m. 3:54 p.m.
New Jan 5
Moonrise Moonset
First Jan 13
Today 5:33 p.m. 11:04 a.m.
Yesterday Hi/Lo/W
City
Kotzebue -7/-11/pc 37/24/r 39/32/sn McGrath -10/-24/pc 24/18/pc 23/15/pc Metlakatla 42/36/c -10/-14/pc -12/-20/pc Nome -6/-17/pc 2/-10/sn 3/-3/pc North Pole -6/-12/pc 31/25/c 30/21/pc Northway -13/-21/pc 43/38/r 34/18/c Palmer 22/7/pc 12/3/pc -1/-9/pc Petersburg 37/30/sn 11/6/pc 5/-9/pc Prudhoe Bay* -1/-7/sn 28/18/sn 24/8/pc Saint Paul 24/21/c 32/31/c 33/28/pc Seward 38/33/sn -5/-11/pc -3/-12/pc Sitka 43/40/r -8/-17/sn -9/-15/s Skagway 30/26/pc 8/-9/pc 16/6/pc Talkeetna 25/21/s -6/-12/s -5/-19/pc Tanana -6/-30/pc 25/23/c 24/18/pc Tok* -8/-17/pc 35/24/i 35/23/i Unalakleet 2/-13/pc 32/28/c 31/22/pc Valdez 28/24/sn 39/34/r 39/34/c Wasilla 23/13/pc -10/-14/pc 0/-4/pc Whittier 36/33/sn 24/15/pc 18/1/c Willow* 20/9/pc 39/36/c 39/33/sn Yakutat 38/32/sn 42/38/sn 40/30/sh Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Albany, NY Albuquerque Amarillo Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Buffalo, NY Casper Charleston, SC Charleston, WV Charlotte, NC Chicago Cheyenne Cincinnati
39/37/sf 60/33/pc 62/34/s 44/34/pc 53/36/pc 49/42/pc 79/38/s 51/41/pc 39/25/pc 56/30/s 33/25/sn 38/22/s 56/52/pc 32/29/c 31/14/pc 55/44/pc 38/35/r 55/39/s 34/28/c 29/24/sn 38/32/c
38/27/pc 49/31/pc 50/32/pc 52/31/pc 57/37/sh 47/34/pc 63/37/pc 47/36/pc 42/30/c 59/33/sh 30/17/pc 38/32/sn 42/31/s 37/30/sn 37/25/pc 61/44/s 47/30/r 58/35/pc 39/25/c 42/27/pc 42/28/pc
Almanac Readings through 4 p.m. yesterday From Kenai Municipal Airport
Nome 4/-3 Unalakleet McGrath 8/2 -5/-15
Full Jan 20 Tomorrow 6:55 p.m. 11:51 a.m.
Fairbanks -3/-12
Today Hi/Lo/W 5/1/pc -5/-15/pc 39/35/sh 4/-3/sn -4/-12/pc -12/-20/pc 21/12/pc 35/30/c -12/-21/c 26/21/c 35/24/c 38/32/sf 25/20/pc 23/6/pc -2/-8/pc -11/-15/pc 8/2/c 24/16/pc 21/11/pc 36/28/c 17/4/pc 31/22/pc
High ............................................... 30 Low ................................................ 25 Normal high .................................. 26 Normal low .................................... 10 Record high ........................ 43 (1985) Record low ....................... -35 (1965)
Kenai/ Soldotna 27/13 Seward 35/24 Homer 35/23
Talkeetna 23/6 Glennallen 16/6
Precipitation
From the Peninsula Clarion in Kenai
24 hours through 4 p.m. yest. 0.00" Month to date ............................ 1.76" Normal month to date .............. 1.00" Year to date ............................ 20.81" Normal year to date ................ 17.86" Record today ................. 0.62" (1970) Record for Dec. ............. 3.96" (1988) Record for year ............ 27.09" (1963) Snowfall 24 hours through 4 p.m. yest. .. 0.0" Month to date ............................ 11.7" Season to date ......................... 12.3"
Anchorage 23/15
Bethel 3/-3
Valdez Kenai/ 24/16 Soldotna Homer
Dillingham 24/8
Juneau 31/22
National Extremes Kodiak 40/30
Sitka 38/32
(For the 48 contiguous states)
High yesterday Low yesterday
85 at McAllen, Texas -6 at West Yellowstone, Mont.
State Extremes High yesterday Low yesterday
Cold Bay 30/21
Ketchikan 39/34
44 at Cordova -32 at Buckland
Today’s Forecast
(Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation)
Mainly light snow will extend from the Upper Midwest to the interior Northeast today. Rain showers will fall farther south to the Gulf coast. More rain and snow is forecast for the Northwest.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. Š2018
National Cities City
Internet: www.gedds.alaska.edu/auroraforecast
Temperature
Tomorrow 10:13 a.m. 3:55 p.m.
Unalaska 30/24 Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Anaktuvuk Pass -14/-20
Kotzebue 5/1
* Indicates estimated temperatures for yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W
Today’s activity: Low Where: Auroral activity will be low. Weather permitting, low-level displays will be visible overhead from Barrow to Fairbanks and visible low on the northern horizon from as far south as Anchorage and Juneau.
Prudhoe Bay -12/-21
Sun and Moon
RealFeel
Aurora Forecast
World Cities
City Cleveland Columbia, SC Columbus, OH Concord, NH Dallas Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Great Falls Hartford Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson, MS
Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 34/32/sn 54/41/s 35/34/c 54/50/sh 66/42/pc 34/33/c 38/26/sn 34/20/c 34/31/i 26/18/sf 71/46/s 33/23/pc 53/23/s 33/30/c 35/16/s 50/42/sh 35/26/s 82/70/s 76/41/s 40/30/pc 64/30/s
Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
City
41/30/c 62/40/pc 42/29/c 36/20/s 57/36/s 41/28/pc 47/26/c 41/23/s 40/29/sf 25/13/sn 65/37/s 22/8/pc 51/24/s 38/27/c 42/28/c 41/27/s 40/25/c 82/69/s 67/46/pc 41/26/c 63/35/c
Jacksonville Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami Midland, TX Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York Norfolk Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix
59/46/pc 47/29/pc 75/67/pc 65/44/pc 62/30/s 70/49/pc 46/36/pc 58/32/s 69/53/pc 75/43/s 32/28/c 32/23/sn 52/30/pc 65/39/s 48/43/c 57/48/s 55/33/s 45/27/pc 62/46/s 46/42/pc 72/46/pc
64/45/s 47/29/pc 73/66/pc 63/43/pc 54/31/s 69/50/pc 44/31/sh 52/32/c 73/59/pc 53/35/s 37/22/c 29/17/c 49/29/r 71/50/c 44/35/pc 53/42/s 51/31/s 43/25/s 68/46/s 46/37/pc 73/47/s
Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
City
Pittsburgh Portland, ME Portland, OR Rapid City Reno Sacramento Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Santa Fe Seattle Sioux Falls, SD Spokane Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Wash., DC Wichita
35/32/i 55/48/c 45/38/r 39/24/pc 46/27/pc 54/36/pc 38/26/pc 77/37/pc 66/51/pc 56/44/pc 55/24/s 48/37/r 41/28/pc 33/23/c 33/30/sn 63/52/pc 51/30/pc 75/41/s 60/28/s 53/44/pc 56/29/s
41/29/c 37/20/pc 50/43/r 41/22/pc 53/33/c 57/43/c 42/32/c 65/42/pc 67/52/pc 58/51/c 45/24/pc 50/41/r 35/17/s 37/31/sn 34/27/c 66/48/s 49/28/pc 75/44/pc 53/32/s 50/38/pc 50/30/pc
City
Yesterday Hi/Lo/W
Acapulco 88/71/pc Athens 63/39/s Auckland 70/60/pc Baghdad 63/40/s Berlin 45/41/c Hong Kong 76/67/pc Jerusalem 56/41/s Johannesburg81/60/pc London 54/48/pc Madrid 46/44/c Magadan 12/8/s Mexico City 69/37/pc Montreal 34/32/r Moscow 21/16/sn Paris 54/49/c Rome 61/53/c Seoul 51/34/s Singapore 88/78/pc Sydney 71/64/pc Tokyo 54/50/r Vancouver 43/37/r
Today Hi/Lo/W 86/72/pc 62/49/pc 72/64/r 63/43/pc 46/33/c 72/61/sh 57/42/s 86/63/s 54/42/r 53/35/pc 6/-6/pc 70/40/pc 23/13/s 24/20/sn 56/50/r 62/48/pc 44/19/pc 87/76/t 73/60/pc 54/46/r 47/39/r
Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice
Faster service, quality and savings the box stores can’t match� # " # !
DECEMBER 23- DECEMBER 31, 2018
PORTERHOUSE STEAKS TEAKS S
5.99LB
50s 60s
0s 70s
10s 80s
20s 90s
30s
40s
100s 110s
Cold Front Warm Front Stationary Front
BAILEY’S PUMPKIN SPICE LIQUEUR
Country Foods “Your HOMETOWN PROUD family...
-10s -0s
VETERANS AND SENIOR SUNDAY
5% OFF
purchase over $25
BUY A FARMLAND BONELESS HAM B
750 ML
$9.99
29.99
$
$
COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE
1.49LB
GET T A 10-12 LB TURKEY
FREE
$
KOBE BEEF BOTTOM ROUND ROAST
4.88LB
$
USDA SDA PRIME PR ME PRIM NEW YORK STEAKS
8.99LB
$
DONT FORGET TO VISIT OUR FACEBOOK PAGE WITH THE MEAT DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY!
NO LIMITS IN THE MEAT DEPT.
GEORGE DICKEL TABASCO BARREL FINISH WHISKEY
750 ML
$19.99 Country Liquor 283-7651
DECEMBER 23- DECEMBER 31, 2018
Sports
SECTION
B Sunday, December 23, 2018
SoHi faces challenges Kenai’s departure leaves Stars as lone peninsula 4A team By JOEY KLECKA Peninsula Clarion
Soldotna’s Brittani Blossom launches a 3-point shot Dec. 14, 2018, over Kodiak defender Lisa Marcelo at the Powerade/Al Howard Tip-Off tournament at Soldotna. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
Season preview
Upon waving goodbye to its crosstown rival in the N0rthern Lights Conference, the Soldotna Stars suddenly have no one else with which to play. The inevitable exit by Kenai Central from the Class 4A level of prep basketball has left Soldotna as the lone peninsula team still competing at 4A, leaving the Stars to battle it out with Northern Lights Conference opponents Colony, Wasilla, Palmer and Kodiak. SoHi’s closest conference opponent on the road is Palmer, a solid 3 1/2-hour drive north. “It’s tough,” said SoHi boys coach Nolan Rose. “All the 4A schools want to play other 4A schools, so it’s difficult to schedule them to come down here.” Not only is SoHi the last remaining 4A hoops team on the peninsula, but the Stars still must compete with the big dogs from the north. The Wasilla Warriors are the defending boys and girls NLC champions and the Wasilla boys are the reigning 4A state boys champions. Both Colony boys and girls programs finished runner-up at
the conference tournament last year after stellar seasons. With the Northern Lights Conference tournament being held at Soldotna in March, SoHi girls coach Kyle McFall said home court will be big, but not as important as seeding going into the weekend. With the loss of Kenai leaving the NLC with five teams, the bottom two squads will play on opening night of the tournament, while the top three seeded teams get a bye. McFall said he hopes the Stars can secure a top three spot headed into the tournament, which will allow them a first-day bye. “It’s still going to be a matter of who executes better and can we not turn the ball over in big moments,” McFall said. “We’re capable of beating those teams, but we’ve got to make sure we’re being consistent and maintaining that intensity.” That won’t be easy on the girls side, as the defending NLC champion Wasilla returns senior Olivia Davies, the reigning conference girls MVP.
Last March at the NLC tournament, Soldotna lost to Kenai on the first day and was left to fight for fifthplace honors, which the Stars ultimately earned. McFall said SoHi has suffered from defensive lapses in the past, but with the growth and experience the Stars return, he thinks a shift in fortunes is in order. “The big mantra this year is about consistency and building toward that,” McFall said. “We’re getting better at that.” On the boys side, the Stars are looking to build upon a near miss at last season’s region tournament, when SoHi lost a tournament semifinal to No. 1 Colony and an automatic berth to state. The Stars ended up with a fourth-place tourney finish after losing to Palmer on the final day. The Soldotna boys haven’t been to state since a fifth-place showing in 2010. “The formula’s the same,” Rose said. “It’s all about getting in that semifinal game and figuring out a way to knock these teams off, and a little home-court advantage is good.” The SoHi boys have yet to play a See SOHI, page B2
Ravens defeat Chargers By The Associated Press
Juneau’s Sadie Tuckwood races after Kenai’s Jaycie Calvert (right) Feb. 24, 2018, at Kenai Central High School. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
Hoops field gets crowded Kenai puts 4 on peninsula in Southcentral Conference By JOEY KLECKA Peninsula Clarion
The hoops field is getting crowded in the Class 3A Southcentral Conference. The addition of Kenai Central to the Class 3A level of high school basketball has injected the Southcentral with another dose of competition, and now with eight teams, the conference has also split into two divisions, a North and South division.
The eight-team SCC is now comprised of Kenai, Nikiski, Homer and Seward in the North division, and Anchorage Christian, Grace Christian, Houston and Redington in the South division. Each team will play the other three division opponents twice and the out of division opponents once, creating a schedule of 10 conference games. The Southcentral Conference tournament will be held in See SC, page B4
CARSON, Calif. — Just like that, the Baltimore Ravens have gone from a midseason swoon to the brink of their first playoff trip in four years. The resurgent Ravens continued their late push with a 22-10 victory over the Los Angeles Chargers on Saturday night behind Lamar Jackson’s first 200-yard passing game and a stingy defense that held one of the NFL’s top offenses under 200 yards for the first time since 2014. Baltimore, which has won five of its past six with Jackson as the starter, dominated for most of the night to remain in possession of the last AFC wild card with one game remaining in the regular season. And the Ravens (9-6) would move into first place in the AFC North if Pittsburgh loses at New Orleans on Sunday. “I’m proud of our guys. So many of them stepped up and made plays,” coach John Harbaugh said. “Our guys were winning the 1-on-1 battles and our coverage was real good.” Baltimore got a win against a Los Angeles squad that had already clinched a playoff spot with wins in 10 of its last 11 games. The Chargers’ loss, which drops them to 11-4, deals a big blow to their hopes of winning the AFC West. “We couldn’t get them off the field on defense. And we couldn’t stay on the field on offense,” coach Anthony Lynn Nikiski senior Bethany Carstens goes up for a shot Dec. 13, 2018, against Kotzebue at the Craig said. “We got outplayed. We Jung Kenai River Challenge at Kenai Central High School. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula got outcoached. It’s just that See NFL, page B2 Clarion)
Kenai boys nip Homer late Kards girls fashion blowout; Seward, Nome split notched a Southcentral Conference victory over the Mariners. Brooke Satathite had nine The visiting Kenai Central points to lead the Kardinals, boys came back from a 40-32 while Marina Carroll had six deficit in the fourth quarter to for Homer. edge Homer 48-47 in Southcentral Conference action FriNome girls 43, Seward 34 day night. Homer led 14-10 after the The visiting Nanooks notched first quarter and 30-22 at half- a nonconference victory over the time before carrying that eight- Seahawks on Friday. point lead into the third quarter. Nome led 14-10 after the But the Kardinals closed on a first quarter, 22-20 after the 16-7 kick to take the game. second quarter and 27-24 after Andrew Bezdecny and Adam the third quarter. Trujillo had 18 apiece to lead the Brooke Anungazok had 18 charge for Kenai. Trujillo had points to lead the Nanooks, nine points in the fourth quarter. while Kastyn Lie added 13 For Homer, Joseph McGhee led points. For Seward, Riley Von the way with nine points. Borstel had 14 points. Staff report Peninsula Clarion
Kenai girls 51, Homer 8 The
visiting
Kardinals
Seward boys 39, Nome 35 The host Seahawks over-
came a deficit in the fourth quarter to notch a nonconference victory Friday. Nome led 11-6 after the first quarter, but Seward led 20-16 at halftime. Nome came back to take a 25-24 lead entering the fourth quarter, but Seward won the final frame 15-10. Max Pfieffenberger had 12 points to pace the Seahawks, while Gareth Hanson had 18 points for the Nanooks. Friday girls Kardinals 51, Mariners 8 Kenai 11 12 13 15 — 51 Homer 0 5 3 0 — 8 KENAI CENTRAL (51) — Calvert 7, Hamilton 8, Maw 8, Streiff 4, Hanson 5, L. Satathite 6, Severson 4, B. Satathite 9. Totals — 21 8-12 51. HOMER (8) — Sonnen 0, Inama 0, Bishop 1, Bales 1, Doughty 0, Todd 0, Parish 0, Morris 0, Carroll 6, Hetrick 0, Hatfield 0, Dawson 0. Totals — 3 2-8 8. 3-point goals — Kenai 1 (Calvert) Team
See PREP, page B3
Kenai Central’s Andrew Bezdecny tries to break away from the Homer defense Friday, Dec. 21, 2018, at the Homer High School Alice Witte Gym in Homer. (Photo by Michael Armstrong/ Homer News)
B2 | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion
Beal scores 40, Wizards top Suns in triple OT By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Bradley Beal had 40 points and his first career triple-double to lift the Washington Wizards over the Phoenix Suns 149-146 in triple-overtime Saturday night. With All-Star point guard John Wall sidelined due to illness, Beal scored 10 points in the third overtime, including a slicing layup that made it 146-144 with 40 seconds to play. He also had a career-high 15 assists and 11 rebounds. Thomas Bryant added a careerhigh 31 points, hit all 14 of his shots and made all three of his free throws. At one point, Bryant scored 16 of 18 points for Washington across a stretch of the first and second overtime. He also had 13 rebounds. Devin Booker had 33 points and 14 assists for the Suns, who ended their four-game winning streak after giving back a seven-point lead late in the fourth quarter. Deandre Ayton had 26 points and 17 rebounds for his fifth consecutive double-double, but fouled out midway
. . . SoHi Continued from page B1
game this year after last weekend’s Powerade/Al Howard tournament was canceled due to multiple teams pulling out, but Rose said two basketball camps in June — one at Colony High and another at one of Gonzaga University’s camps — have already put 26 games under the player’s belts. Plus, a holiday tournament in Ketchikan, the Clark Cochrane Classic, next weekend should help him figure out the team’s strengths and weaknesses. Until then, Rose joked that the only thing his players can do is gain some height. “If we could get about 6 inches taller in each spot, that’d work,” he said. “Those (Valley) teams are really good, they’ve done well at the state tournament. These are some of the best teams in the state, and beating them is difficult.” The SoHi boys lost a chunk of seniors off the 2017 squad, including four that started, and Rose said his returning cast includes just two names that hold significant varsity starting experience — junior point guard Jersey Truesdell and 6-foot-3 senior post David Michael. Truesdell returns after grabbing Second-Team All-Conference honors last year. Joining Truesdell and Michael is senior forward Brock Kant, 6-2 junior Zach Hanson and 6-2 junior shooting guard Ray Chumley. Rose said Hanson is out for an injury but expects to return later in the season. Until then, Rose said Tyler Morrison will be filling in on the starting list. Rose tabbed junior guard Mekhai Rich as one of his top bench options, along with senior forward Tommy Wells, 6-8 senior Wyatt Denna, junior
through the second overtime. 76ERS 126, RAPTORS 101 PHILADELPHIA — Joel Embiid had 27 points and 11 rebounds, Ben Simmons added 26 points, 12 rebounds and eight assists and Philadelphia routed short-handed Toronto. JJ Redick added 22 points for the 76ers, who pulled within 2½ games of first-place Toronto in the Atlantic Division. Pascal Siakam scored 26 points and Kyle Lowry added 20 for the Raptors, who slipped to 25-10. Toronto played without two-time defensive player of the year Kawhi Leonard, as well as Serge Ibaka and Jonas Valanciunas. Leonard was held out of the lineup to rest on the second game of a back-to-back after scoring a season-high 37 points in the Raptors’ 126-110 home win over Cleveland on Friday night. Toronto coach Nick Nurse said prior to Saturday’s contest that Leonard may be available for the second game of a back-to-back going forward. It was Philadelphia’s third victory in the last 23 games against the Raptors.
and Tobias Harris each scored 21 points, Montrezl Harrell added 20 as Los Angeles dealt Denver its worst loss of the season. The Nuggets (21-10) had not lost by more than 10 points and had won four straight. Nikola Jokic led the Nuggets with 19 points in 20 minutes before being ejected. Jamal Murray added 18 points and Monte Morris 15. The Clippers outscored the Nuggets in the paint 80-50. After losing four consecutive games, the Clippers have won two straight.
Bucks, who shot 37 percent — and 9 for 43 from 3-point range. It was the sixthworst 3-point percentage in NBA history for a team taking at least 40 shots from beyond the arc.
ROCKETS 108, SPURS 101
with six rebounds in 21 minutes off the bench. The made field goals also were his most this season, and Jerebko received a rousing ovation when he took a seat with 6:39 to play. Mavericks rookie sensation Luka Doncic made 5 of 11 shots with three 3-pointers in the first half for 14 of his 19 points. DeAndre Jordan matched his season high with 23 rebounds, getting 12 before the break. Draymond Green had 14 points, 10 rebounds and five assists in Golden State’s 12th straight victory against the Mavericks at Oracle Arena.
HOUSTON — James Harden had 39 points and 10 assists to lead Houston past San Antonio. Clint Capela had 21 points and a season-high 23 rebounds, and Eric Gordon had 18 points on 4-of-12 shooting from 3-point range. HEAT 94, BUCKS 87 DeMar DeRozan led San Antonio with THUNDER 107, JAZZ 106 MIAMI — Josh Richardson scored 16 28 points and eight assists. LaMarcus Alpoints, Dwyane Wade had a pair of big dridge scored 18 points, and Rudy Gay SALT LAKE CITY — Paul George baskets in the final minutes and Miami added 13. had 43 points and 14 rebounds to help held Giannis Antetokounmpo to a seasonOklahoma City hold off Utah. low scoring effort. Jerami Grant and Steven Adams each WARRIORS 120, Wade finished with 13 points for Miscored 15 as the Thunder (21-10) won MAVERICKS 116 ami, which extended its season-high wintheir fourth straight game and tied Denver ning streak to four games. Hassan WhiteOAKLAND, Calif. — Kevin Durant for the best record in the Western Conferside had 11 points and 13 rebounds, and had 29 points with a key 3-pointer with 15 ence. Russell Westbrook had eight points Kelly Olynyk and James Johnson each seconds left, and added 12 rebounds and on 3-for-17 shooting with 12 rebounds and scored 11 points for the Heat. eight assists, as Golden State held off a nine assists. Antetokounmpo was held to a season- fourth-quarter rally. Rudy Gobert had 20 points and 10 low nine points — his previous was 12 — Stephen Curry contributed 22 points, rebounds for the Jazz (16-18). Donovan on 3 for 12 shooting, though he did have five rebounds and five assists and Jonas Mitchell scored 20, Derrick Favors added CLIPPERS 132, NUGGETS 111 13 rebounds. Khris Middleton scored 18 Jerebko provided a nice boost with a sea- 16 and Ricky Rubio had 12 points and 14 LOS ANGELES — Danilo Gallinari points and Eric Bledsoe added 17 for the son-high 23 points on 10-for-12 shooting assists.
. . . NFL
‘If we could get about 6 inches taller in each spot, that’d work.’
Continued from page B1
simple.” Jackson, the 32nd overall draft pick in April, completed 12 of 22 passes for 204 yards. He had come into the game averaging 146.2 yards in the previous five games.
— Nolan Rose, SoHi boys coach
Levi Rosin and 6-3 junior HudTITANS 25, REDSKINS 16 son Metcalf. Rose said Metcalf NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The is currently recovering from a Tennessee Titans finally have a shoulder injury, but is hopeful victory in a game where quarterto return to action. back Marcus Mariota left injured, The Soldotna girls return and Blaine Gabbert did much four starters as part of an exmore than just win. perienced senior class that McGabbert kept the Titans’ playFall hopes can take SoHi back off hopes alive. to state for the first time in five The veteran threw a 2-yard years. SoHi’s most recent state touchdown pass to MyCole Pruitt appearance resulted in a fourthwith 4:30 left and the Titans rallied to beat the Washington Redskins place finish in 2014. 25-16 on Saturday for their fourth “The big thing I love about straight victory. this group is they’re really un“I don’t know,” Gabbert said selfish,” McFall said. “Teams when asked if this was the biggest can’t just focus in on one perwin of his eight-year career with son and try to stop them.” four teams. “It was a fun win. We SoHi’s starting five includes got a big game next week.” senior guard Aliann Schmidt, The victory was Tennessee’s who McFall said can also use first in the seven career games that her 5-foot-10 height as a post Mariota has left with an injury. Coming off the bench for the player. Schmidt is a returnthird time this season, Gabbert ing First-Team All-Conference threw for 101 yards after the player, and is joined by senior Redskins knocked Mariota out of sister Danica Schmidt, a 5-footthe game late in the first half with 11 guard. Danica returns after a a stinger. Gabbert hit Taywan Second-Team All-Conference Taylor for 35 yards to jump-start member in 2017. the winning drive, Derrick Henry “(Danica) has improved in ran four times for 33 yards, his breaking down defenses, she last an 18-yarder to the 2. Gabhas good vision, and now she’s bert then hit Pruitt at the back of the end zone. developed a good outside shot,” The Titans (9-6) must beat McFall said. Andrew Luck and the IndianapoThe Schmidts are joined by lis Colts and have either Baltisenior shooting guard guard more or Pittsburgh lose once to Brittani Blossom and 6-foot earn the AFC’s second wild-card junior post Ituau Tuisaula, both spot for a second consecutive returning starters, and junior playoff berth. Drysta Crosby-Schneider. “The only scenario that any McFall’s first options off of us are smart enough to worry the bench include senior Haley about is us preparing to win and ultimately win, and that’s all we Buckbee, junior Meijan Leaf, senior Kalyn McGillivray and Soldotna’s Jersey Truesdell looks for an opening against the Kodiak defense last season at can do right now,” first-year Titans coach Mike Vrabel said. sophomore Morgan Bouschor. Soldotna High School. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
Canadians get past Golden Knights in overtime By The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — Phillip Danault completed a hat trick late in the third period, Paul Byron scored in overtime and the Montreal Canadiens beat the Vegas Golden Knights 4-3 on Saturday. Danault entered the game with two goals this season. His third score of the game came with 1:25 left in the third period, setting up Byron’s backhand goal 1:59 into OT. Carey Price made 23 saves, and the Canadiens swept the season series against Vegas. Brandon Pirri scored twice and Jonathan Marchessault also scored for Vegas. William Karlsson, who leads Vegas with 29 points, had two assists. Marc-Andre Fleury, one win shy of his 50th as a Golden Knight, made 43 saves. BLUES 3, FLAMES 1 CALGARY, Alberta — David Perron had a goal and an assist and Jake Allen made 28 saves to lead St. Louis. Perron has nine goals and 11 assists in 16 games against Calgary since the start of the 2014-15 season. Tyler Bozak and Oskar Sundqvist also scored to help St. Louis finish 2-1-0 on their trip through Western Canada.
KINGS 3, SHARKS 2 SAN JOSE, Calif. — Ilya Kovalchuk scored in overtime in his return from an ankle injury and lifted Los Angeles. Kovalchuk also scored in the first period, and Alex Iafallo had a goal and an as-
sist. Kovalchuk had missed 10 games after having an ankle bursectomy. Kovalchuk hadn’t recorded a point in his previous 11 games before the procedure. Jonathan Quick made 29 saves.
PANTHERS 2, RED WINGS 1 DETROIT — Roberto Luongo made 33 saves and Florida defeated Detroit. Mike Hoffman and Evgeni Dadonov scored for Florida. Panthers leading scorer Jonathan Huberdeau and captain Aleksander Barkov each had two assists. Barkov has seven points (four goals, three assists) in his last four games.
BLUE JACKETS 4, FLYERS 3 PHILADELPHIA — Cam Atkinson scored two goals and Artemi Panarin had a goal and two assists as Columbus ran its winning streak to three games. Zach Werenski also scored and PierreLuc Dubois added three assists for the Blue Jackets. James van Riemsdyk had a goal and an assist and Sean Couturier and Phil Varone netted goals for Philadelphia, which lost its first game since interim coach Scott Gordon replaced the fired Dave Hakstol and 20-year-old Carter Hart took over the goaltending duties.
BRUINS 5, PREDATORS 2 BOSTON — Patrice Bergeron returned to the lineup after missing 16 games and scored two goals, reaching 300 for his career in leading Boston. Bergeron set up Brad Marchand’s tiebreaking score as Boston won for the sixth time in eight games. David Pastrnak had his team-leading
23rd goal and added two assists. Marchand had two assists and defenseman Charlie McAvoy set up Bergeron’s first goal. Jaroslav Halak stopped 28 shots in his third start for Boston and assisted on Sean Kuraly’s empty-netter.
PENGUINS 3, HURRICANES 0 RALEIGH, N.C. — Sidney Crosby set up three goals and Matt Murray made 38 saves as Pittsburgh blanked Carolina. Jake Guentzel scored twice and Kris Letang added a goal for the Penguins, who won for the fifth time in six games. It was Murray’s second shutout in 14 starts this season. The Hurricanes lost for the fifth time in six games.
SABRES 3, DUCKS 0 BUFFALO, N.Y. — Linus Ullmark made 36 saves and Buffalo got goals from Rasmus Dahlin and Jeff Skinner in beating Anaheim. Jack Eichel and Sam Reinhart each had two assists and Connor Sheary added an empty-net goal as Buffalo snapped a twogame skid in the second game of a backto-back. The Ducks finished a five-game road trip with their third consecutive loss following a 9-0-1 stretch. John Gibson stopped 21 shots.
COYOTES 6, AVALANCHE 4 GLENDALE, Ariz. — Brad Richardson scored twice in the final 3:39 to lead Arizona past Colorado. Derek Stepan, Christian Fischer and Richard Panik scored for Arizona, and Conor Garland added his first career NHL
goal. Alexander Kerfoot scored twice, and Gabriel Landeskog, and Nathan MacKinnon added goals for the Avalanche, who have lost three of four. J.T. Compher added two assists for Colorado.
overtime to give Dallas a win over Minnesota. Ben Bishop made 30 saves for Dallas, and Jamie Benn finally beat Minnesota goaltender Devan Dubnyk 1:58 into the third period for his eighth goal in the past 14 games. Dubnyk stopped 25 shots for the Wild, MAPLE LEAFS 5, RANGERS 3 who have lost four in a row and nine of 12. TORONTO — Mitch Marner scored Jason Zucker pushed the game to overtime twice during a wild third period and To- with his 10th goal of the season with 2:03 left in regulation. ronto beat New York. The teams combined for six goals in JETS 1, CANUCKS 0 the final period, including Marner’s empty-net goal with 20 seconds left after Chris VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Kreider cut the margin to 4-3. Mark Scheifele scored with 1:32 left in Morgan Rielly had a goal and an assist, the third period and Laurent Brossoit and Patrick Marleau and Andreas Johnsmade 40 saves for his first shutout for son also scored for Toronto (23-10-2). Winnipeg. Frederik Andersen made 25 saves, and Scheifele scored his 22nd of the season John Tavares and Johnsson each had two from the left face-off dot on a give-and-go assists as the Leafs won their third straight play with defenseman Dustin Byfuglien. game. Brossoit’s shutout is his first in 38 NHL games. CAPITALS 4, SENATORS 0 The Jets have won 11 of their last 13 OTTAWA, Ontario — Pheonix Copley games. The victory was Winnipeg’s eighth made 35 saves for his first career shutout straight victory over the Canucks. The Canucks lost in regulation for just for Washington. Brett Connolly, Matt Niskanen, Jakub the second time in nine games (6-2-1). Vancouver goaltender Jacob MarkVrana and Michal Kempny scored for the Capitals (22-10-3). Washington is 7-1-0 in strom stopped 22 shots. its past eight games and has scored at least four goals in 10 of its past 13. LIGHTNING 6, OILERS 3 Mike McKenna stopped 29 shots in EDMONTON, Alberta — Nikita place of the injured Craig Anderson. Copley is the first rookie goalie to Kucherov had a goal and four assists, blank the Senators since James Reimer in Steven Stamkos and Tyler Johnson each scored twice and Tampa Bay extended its 2011. point streak to 12 games. J.T. Miller also scored for the NHLSTARS 2, WILD 1 OT leading Lightning (28-7-2), who are 11-0ST. PAUL, Minn. — Alexander Radu- 1 in their last 12 games for the best run by lov scored with 10 seconds on the clock in any team in the league this season.
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | B3
. . . Prep
Jermall Charlo keeps title, Jermell loses his
Continued from page B1 fouls — Kenai 13, Homer 6. Fouled out — none. Nanooks 43, Seahawks 34 Nome 14 8 5 13 — 43 Seward 10 10 4 10 — 34 NOME (43) — Witrosky 2, Bockon 5, Lie 13, Anungazok 18, De. Medin 0, Da. Medin 3, Kalerak 0, Gray 2. Totals — 16 9-15 43. SEWARD (34) — Dow 0, Sawyer-Lemme 4, Ambrosiani 0, Schilling 0, Von Borstel 14, Sieverts 3, Jackson 8, Dougherty 0, Casagranda 3, Sewell 0. Totals — 12 7-17 34. 3-point goals — Nome 2 (Bockon, Anungazok); Seward 3 (Von Borstel 2, Jackson). Team fouls — Nome 18, Seward 17. Fouled out — Bockon. Friday boys Kardinals 48, Mariners 47 Kenai 10 12 10 16 — 48 Homer 14 16 10 7 — 47 KENAI CENTRAL (48) — Felchle 1, Baker 0, Bezdecny 18, McEnerney 0, Stockton 6, Trujillo 18, Pitsch 2, McKibben 0. Totals — 19 7-16 48. HOMER (47) — Munns 5, Beachy 7, Adkins 4, Reutov 8, Raymond 0, Anderson 2, Knapp 0, McGhee 9, Swoboda 8. Totals — 17 10-15 47. 3-point goals — Kenai 2 (Trujillo 2); Homer 3 (Beachy, Reutov, Swoboda). Team fouls — Kenai 12, Homer 16. Fouled out — McEnerney. Seahawks 39, Nanooks 35 Nome 11 5 9 10 — 35 Seward 6 14 4 15 – 39 NOME (35) — Hoffner 3, Evans 6, Schaeffer 2, Hanelouth 6, Hanson 18, Smith 0. Totals — 13 3-5 35. SEWARD (39) — Basalo 0, Spanos 4, Koster 2, Moriarity 3, Cronin 4, Ingalls 6, McMurray 0, Pfieffenberger 12, Jarvis 3, Nilsson 5. Totals — 16 -16 39. 3-point goals — Nome 6 (Hanson 3, Hanelouth 2, Hoffner); Seward 4 (Ingalls 3, Nilsson). Team fouls — Nome 19, Seward 9. Fouled out — Hanson, Smith.
NEW YORK (AP) — Jermall Charlo had every reason to be distracted when he entered the ring to defend his WBC interim middleweight championship. Minutes before his bout with Matt Korobov, Jermall’s twin, Jermell, lost a unanimous decision to Tony Harrison, costing Jermell his WBC super welterweight crown. It was a new experience for both Charlos, who entered Saturday night unbeaten. Jermall (28-0) kept up the family name with a one-sided 12-round victory over the game but outclassed Korobov (27-2). “I felt like Jermell made his fight harder than it was,” he said. “I had a really tough opponent, but he wasn’t better than me. There was a lot on my mind in the ring.” Jermall was emphatic at the finish — perhaps to erase any doubt with this set of judges. He staggered Korobov in the middle of the 12th round, and they slugged it out pretty much until the finish. Jermall Charlo won 119-108 on one card, 116-112 on the other two. The AP had it 117-111 for Charlo over Korobov, who Kenai Central’s Hayley Maw against Homer on Friday, Dec. 21, 2018, in Homer, Alaska. (Photo was subbing for Willie Monroe by Michael Armstrong/Homer News) Jr. after Monroe failed a drug
No. 2 Black Knights take down Houston By The Associated Press
FORT WORTH, Texas — Army quarterback Kelvin Hopkins Jr. ran for 170 yards and an Armed Forces Bowl-record five touchdowns and the No. 22 Black Knights overwhelmed Houston 70-14 on Saturday to reach 11 wins for the first time in program history. The Black Knights (11-2) won their ninth consecutive game since an overtime loss at playoff team Oklahoma exactly three months earlier. Hopkins had a nifty 77-yard TD run on the last play of the first quarter for a 14-0 lead. The junior quarterback initially ran right before cutting back the other way and alluding one tackler. He sent two other defenders sliding to the ground when he switched directions again back toward the middle of the field. Houston (8-5) lost for the fourth time in five games since starting 7-1 and getting into the AP Top 25 poll for a week in late October. The Cougars suffered their most-lopsided loss in their 27 bowl games, and their biggest loss overall since a 66-10 loss at UCLA in 1997. Along with his 11 rushing attempts before coming out of the game midway through the third quarter when it was 497, Hopkins completed the first 1,000-yard passing season for Army since 2007. He was 3-of3 passing for 70 yards, including a 54-yarder that set up one of his three 1-yard TD plunges. He also had a 2-yard TD run. Army got 507 of its 592 total yards on the ground in its highest-scoring game this season — and the most points in the program’s nine bowl appearances. The Black Knights won a bowl for the third consecutive year, including last year’s Armed Force Bowl over San Diego State.
Wake Forest a 37-34 victory over Memphis in the Birmingham Bowl on Saturday. The Demon Deacons (7-6) then had to wait to celebrate until Riley Patterson’s 43-yard field goal attempt went wide right as time expired. Both teams scored touchdowns over the final 1:15. Memphis (86) lost a big lead for the second straight game after jumping ahead by 18 points in the first half. Game MVP Newman ran for three touchdowns and passed for a fourth to lead Wake Forest, throwing for 328 yards and rushing 23 times for 91 more. He led the Demon Deacons on a 75-yard drive starting at the 1:15 mark, covering most of it with completions of 49 and 20 yards to Alex Bachman. The second catch was reviewed and the spot was upheld at the 1-yard line after Bachman’s right arm hit the pylon. Newman kept the ball for the go-ahead score. Memphis’ Tony Pollard scored on a 97-yard kickoff return to tie the NCAA career mark with seven.
TROY 42, BUFFALO 32
MOBILE, Ala. — Sawyer Smith threw for 320 yards and four touchdowns, B.J. Smith and Sidney Davis ran for touchdowns and Troy beat Buffalo in the Dollar General Bowl on Saturday night. Troy (10-3) secured the hardfought win on Davis’ 20-yard touchdown run with 3:09 remaining, a play after Buffalo’s Tyree Jackson fumbled to give the Trojans possession. The entertaining game that had several big swings in momentum, especially during a strange third quarter that featured Buffalo scoring seven points despite not running an offensive play. Troy took a 21-17 lead on Smith’s 2-yard touchdown run with 9:47 left in the third and then immediately recovered an onside kick. The Trojans were driving for another score before B.J. Smith’s fumble bounced into the hands of Buffalo’s Tyrone Hill, who ran 93 yards for a touchdown to give the Bulls a 24-21 lead. Troy jumped ahead 35-24 after two quick touchWAKE FOREST 37, downs in the fourth quarter and MEMPHIS 34 held off Buffalo’s final rally. Jackson threw for 274 yards BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Jamie with a touchdown and an intercepNewman scored on a 1-yard run tion for Buffalo (10-4). with 34 seconds left to help give
Shiffrin wins again COURCHEVEL, France (AP) — Mikaela Shiffrin wrote more World Cup history Saturday, winning a slalom for a women’s record-equaling 35th career victory in the discipline and 50th win overall. Shiffrin extended her firstrun lead of 0.04 seconds to finish 0.29 clear of Petra Vlhova, who has been runner-up to the American star in all three traditional slaloms this season. Shiffrin tied her childhood idol Marlies Schild of Austria with 35 slalom wins on the World Cup circuit. Schild’s final slalom victory, in December 2013, was achieved at the age of 32. Shiffrin turns 24 in March.
Shiffrin is also the youngest of the eight skiers, four men and four women, to win 50 World Cup races across all disciplines. Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark’s 86 wins is the record. “It’s so distracting that they give out those numbers for me,” Shiffrin said in a post-race interview. “I was trying as hard as I could not to focus on that today.” Olympic slalom champion Frida Hansdotter was third Saturday, trailing Shiffrin by 0.37. Shiffrin has won every slalom race since her surprise fourth-placed finish at the Pyeongchang Olympics in February.
test. “I haven’t been that far in a fight in a couple of years. It felt good to be in there, get hit and bang with someone,” Jermall added. “He was an experienced guy who will make me better.” Earlier, Harrison withstood a late surge by Jermell Charlo to take his title in a unanimous decision that drew heavy boos from the crowd of 9,177 at Barclays Center. When the verdict was announced, Harrison leaped around the ring in celebration while Charlo stood in disbelief. Soon after, Charlo broke into Harrison’s interview on Fox to say “You know I won this fight.” Not according to judges Julie Lederman and Ron McNair, who had it 115-113 for Harrison. Robin Taylor scored it 116-112 for the winner. The AP had it 115-113 for Charlo. “I got back to my corner after every round,” Harrison said. “They told me to just keep doing what you’re doing. You’re dictating the pace. I dictated the pace. That’s what champions do. Champions don’t just try to knock people out. That’s all he wanted to do. I dictated it. I used my jab. I dictated the fight. That’s what champions do.”
Scoreboard Football NFL Standings AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 9 5 0 .643 374 310 Miami 7 7 0 .500 295 374 5 9 0 .357 215 333 Buffalo N.Y. Jets 4 10 0 .286 292 359 South Houston 10 4 0 .714 352 281 Tennessee 9 6 0 .600 293 270 Indianapolis 8 6 0 .571 372 300 Jacksonville 4 10 0 .286 225 289 North Pittsburgh 8 5 1 .607 384 316 9 6 0 .600 363 263 Baltimore 6 7 1 .464 309 348 Cleveland Cincinnati 6 8 0 .429 337 413 West x-Kansas City 11 3 0 .786 499 380 x-L.A. Chargers 11 4 0 .733 405 320 6 8 0 .429 306 299 Denver Oakland 3 11 0 .214 260 418
NATIONAL CONFERENCE East 8 6 Dallas Philadelphia 7 7 Washington 7 8 N.Y. Giants 5 9 South y-New Orleans 12 2 Carolina 6 8 5 9 Atlanta Tampa Bay 5 9 North y-Chicago 10 4 Minnesota 7 6 5 8 Green Bay Detroit 5 9 West y-L.A. Rams 11 3 Seattle 8 6 San Francisco 4 10 Arizona 3 11 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division
0 .571 0 .500 0 .467 0 .357
276 311 281 307
269 318 335 348
0 .857 0 .429 0 .357 0 .357
459 333 356 344
292 344 381 403
0 .714 1 .536 1 .393 0 .357
383 323 332 284
264 308 331 333
0 .786 0 .571 0 .286 0 .214
448 363 301 192
343 292 373 367
Saturday’s Games Tennessee 25, Washington 16 Baltimore 22, L.A. Chargers 10 Sunday’s Games Atlanta at Carolina, 9 a.m. Houston at Philadelphia, 9 a.m. N.Y. Giants at Indianapolis, 9 a.m. Green Bay at N.Y. Jets, 9 a.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 9 a.m. Buffalo at New England, 9 a.m. Cincinnati at Cleveland, 9 a.m. Jacksonville at Miami, 9 a.m. Tampa Bay at Dallas, 9 a.m. L.A. Rams at Arizona, 12:05 p.m. Chicago at San Francisco, 12:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at New Orleans, 12:25 p.m. Kansas City at Seattle, 4:20 p.m. Monday’s Games Denver at Oakland, 4:15 p.m. All Times AST
Ravens 22, Chargers 10 Bal. 3 3 10 6—22 L.A. 0 3 7 0—10 First Quarter Bal_FG Tucker 24, 12:43. Second Quarter Bal_FG Tucker 35, 2:50. LAC_FG Badgley 38, :40. Third Quarter LAC_Gordon 1 run (Badgley kick), 13:18. Bal_Andrews 68 pass from L.Jackson (Tucker kick), 12:18. Bal_FG Tucker 56, 5:36. Fourth Quarter Bal_T.Young 62 fumble return, 2:40. A_25,571. Bal LAC First downs 15 14 Total Net Yards 361 198 Rushes-yards 35-159 16-51 202 147 Passing Punt Returns 2-17 2-33 Kickoff Returns 3-55 2-45 Interceptions Ret. 2-(minu 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 12-22-0 23-37-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-2 4-34 Punts 3-50.0 7-41.6 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 2-1 Penalties-Yards 4-40 8-69 Time of Possession 31:25 28:35 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Baltimore, Edwards 14-92, L.Jackson 13-39, Dixon 8-28. Los Angeles, Gordon 1241, Benjamin 1-6, Mi.Williams 1-4, Rivers 1-1, J.Jackson 1-(minus 1). PASSING_Baltimore, L.Jackson 12-22-0-204. Los Angeles, Rivers 23-37-2-181. RECEIVING_Baltimore, Andrews 2-83, Jo.Brown 2-27, Dixon 2-20, Boyle 2-15, Crabtree 1-20, H.Hurst 1-18, Edwards 1-13, Moore 1-8. Los Angeles, J.Jackson 7-47, K.Allen 5-58, Gates 3-21, Gordon 3-13, Green 2-12, Ty.Williams 1-12, Benjamin 1-11, Mi.Williams 1-7. MISSED FIELD GOALS_Baltimore, Tucker 53, Tucker 65.
Titans 25, Redskins 16 Was. 3 7 3 3—16 Ten. 6 3 0 16—25 First Quarter Was_FG Hopkins 50, 12:09. Ten_Henry 1 run (kick failed), 5:37. Second Quarter Was_Floyd 7 pass from J.Johnson (Hopkins kick), 4:28. Ten_FG Succop 42, :00. Third Quarter Was_FG Hopkins 40, 4:57. Fourth Quarter Ten_FG Succop 33, 14:55. Was_FG Hopkins 46, 8:09. Ten_Pruitt 2 pass from Gabbert (Succop kick), 4:30. Ten_Butler 56 interception return, :00. A_60,746. Was Ten 17 20 First downs Total Net Yards 292 291 Rushes-yards 34-161 27-99 Passing 131 192 Punt Returns 0-0 1-16 1-31 Kickoff Returns 1-28 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 2-57 Comp-Att-Int 13-23-2 17-25-0 3-19 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-22 Punts 2-53.5 4-42.3 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 8-49 2-10 Time of Possession 33:03 26:57 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Washington, Peterson 26-119, J.Johnson 4-22, Thompson 4-20. Tennessee, Henry 2184, Mariota 1-7, D.Lewis 3-5, Jennings 1-2, C.Davis 1-1. PA S S I N G _ W a s h i n g t o n , J.Johnson 13-23-2-153. Tennessee, Mariota 10-13-0-110, Gabbert 7-11-0-101, Henry 0-1-0-0. R E C E I V I N G _ Wa s h i n g to n , Crowder 5-78, Doctson 3-30, Sprinkle 2-22, Peterson 1-8, Thompson 1-8, Floyd 1-7. Tennessee, Taylor 3-64, C.Davis 3-45, Jennings 3-29, D.Lewis 3-20, Pruitt 2-29, Firkser 2-16, Henry 1-8. MISSED FIELD GOALS_None.
Bowl Glance
Friday, Dec. 21 Bahamas Bowl Nassau FIU 35, Toledo 32 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl Boise BYU 49, Western Michigan 18 Saturday, Dec. 22 Birmingham (Ala.) Bowl Wake Forest 37, Memphis 34 Armed Forces Bowl Fort Worth, Texas Army 70, Houston 14 Dollar General Bowl Mobile, Ala. Troy 42, Buffalo 32 Hawaii Bowl Honolulu Louisiana Tech 31, Hawaii 14 Wednesday, Dec. 26 SERVPRO First Responder Bowl Dallas Boston College (7-5) vs. Boise State (10-3), 9:30 a.m. (ESPN) Quick Lane Bowl Detroit Minnesota (6-6) vs. Georgia Tech (7-5), 1:15 p.m. (ESPN) Cheez-It Bowl Phoenix California (7-5) vs. TCU (6-6), 5 p.m. (ESPN) All Times AST
Basketball NBA Standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Toronto 25 10 .714 — Philadelphia 22 12 .647 2½ Boston 18 13 .581 5 Brooklyn 15 19 .441 9½ New York 9 25 .265 15½ Southeast Division Charlotte 16 15 .516 — 15 16 .484 1 Miami Orlando 14 17 .452 2 Washington 13 20 .394 4 Atlanta 8 23 .258 8 Central Division Milwaukee 22 10 .688 — Indiana 21 12 .636 1½ Detroit 15 15 .500 6 Cleveland 8 25 .242 14½ Chicago 8 25 .242 14½ WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division Houston 17 15 .531 — San Antonio 18 16 .529 — Memphis 16 16 .500 1 Dallas 15 16 .484 1½ New Orleans 15 18 .455 2½ Northwest Division
Denver 21 10 .677 Oklahoma City 21 10 .677 Portland 18 14 .563 Utah 16 18 .471 Minnesota 14 18 .438 Pacific Division Golden State 22 11 .667 L.A. Lakers 19 13 .594 L.A. Clippers 19 13 .594 Sacramento 17 15 .531 Phoenix 8 25 .242
— — 3½ 6½ 7½ — 2½ 2½ 4½ 14
Friday’s Games Charlotte 98, Detroit 86 Toronto 126, Cleveland 110 Atlanta 114, New York 107 Indiana 114, Brooklyn 106 Chicago 90, Orlando 80 Milwaukee 120, Boston 107 San Antonio 124, Minnesota 98 Sacramento 102, Memphis 99 Utah 120, Portland 90 L.A. Lakers 112, New Orleans 104 Saturday’s Games L.A. Clippers 132, Denver 111 Washington 149, Phoenix 146, 3OT Philadelphia 126, Toronto 101 Houston 108, San Antonio 101 Miami 94, Milwaukee 87 Golden State 120, Dallas 116 Oklahoma City 107, Utah 106 Sunday’s Games Atlanta at Detroit, noon Washington at Indiana, 1 p.m. Charlotte at Boston, 2 p.m. Chicago at Cleveland, 2 p.m. Miami at Orlando, 2 p.m. New Orleans at Sacramento, 2 p.m. Phoenix at Brooklyn, 2 p.m. Minnesota at Oklahoma City, 4 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Golden State, 4:30 p.m. Dallas at Portland, 5 p.m. Memphis at L.A. Lakers, 5:30 p.m. All Times AST
Men’s Scores EAST
American U. 82, Md.-Eastern Shore 58 Brown 78, Marist 53 Bucknell 84, Rhode Island 82 CCSU 93, Maine 90, 2OT Duquesne 85, E. Kentucky 84, OT Fairfield 63, New Hampshire 57 Georgetown 102, UALR 94, OT Harvard 75, George Washington 61 Hofstra 107, Rosemont 54 Holy Cross 60, Siena 57 La Salle 57, Towson 51 Lehigh 88, St. Francis (Pa.) 76 Mount St. Mary’s 83, St. Mary’s College of Maryland 44 Niagara 78, Army 66 Rutgers 68, Columbia 65, OT Saint Joseph’s 45, Loyola of Chicago 42 St. John’s 104, Sacred Heart 82 Stony Brook 76, Quinnipiac 73 Syracuse 82, Arkansas St. 52 Temple 82, Drexel 64 Villanova 81, UConn 58 Wagner 77, Hartford 68 West Virginia 74, Jacksonville St. 72 Yale 99, Iona 84
Milwaukee 67, W. Michigan 66 Missouri 79, Illinois 63 Missouri St. 93, Ark.-Pine Bluff 72 Montana 85, S. Dakota St. 74 N. Illinois 100, Chicago St. 59 N. Iowa 64, North Dakota 62 Nebraska 86, Cal St.-Fullerton 62 Rio Grande 68, McNeese St. 64 UMKC 95, Elon 59 Winthrop 79, S. Illinois 71 Wisconsin 84, Grambling St. 53 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 73, Texas State 70 SMU 81, Cornell 53 Texas A&M 92, Marshall 68 Tulsa 69, Oral Roberts 59 UTEP 76, Wyoming 65 FAR WEST Arizona 70, UC Davis 68 Arizona St. 80, Kansas 76 Boise St. 83, Pacific 71 Drake 66, New Mexico St. 63 Fresno St. 93, UT Martin 53 Grand Canyon 85, MVSU 64 Indiana St. 72, Colorado 67 Long Beach St. 64, Colorado St. 61 Nevada 68, Akron 62 Ohio St. 80, UCLA 66 Penn 75, New Mexico 65 Rider 74, N. Colorado 67 San Diego 82, Washington St. 75 San Diego St. 90, BYU 81 San Francisco 74, Stanford 65 UC Riverside 60, Loyola Marymount 53 UC Santa Barbara 84, Idaho St. 65 UNLV 73, Hawaii 59 Utah Valley 85, Sam Houston St. 79 Weber St. 83, Delaware St. 69
Women’s Major Scores EAST
Liberty 55, Duquesne 51 Loyola (Md.) 75, Monmouth (NJ) 67 Northeastern 63, Maine 55 SOUTH Auburn 96, Elon 44 Ohio 109, Richmond 58 Syracuse 57, UCF 52 Towson 76, Marshall 69 Tulane 67, Texas State 61 MIDWEST Jackson St. 72, Ill.-Chicago 57 Minnesota 91, Rhode Island 71 Notre Dame 87, Marquette 63 Xavier 61, New Orleans 45 SOUTHWEST Oklahoma 77, SMU 61 Southern Cal 73, Texas-Arlington 61 Texas Tech 75, Texas Southern 55 FAR WEST Long Beach St. 50, Utah St. 48 Pacific 72, Cal St.-Fullerton 64 Saint Mary’s (Cal) 83, Old Dominion 65 UConn 76, California 66 Utah Valley 56, UC Riverside 53
Hockey
SOUTH
NHL Standings
Alabama A&M 67, Tulane 59 Auburn 93, Murray St. 88 Austin Peay 75, Liberty 66 Campbell 70, Alabama St. 69 Clemson 78, South Carolina 68 Davidson 88, Central Penn College 54 ETSU 89, Norfolk St. 61 Florida 77, Florida Gulf Coast 56 Florida St. 81, Saint Louis 59 Georgia 70, Georgia Tech 59 Hampton 89, Howard 82 Kentucky 80, North Carolina 72 Louisiana Tech 73, Texas A&MCC 68 Memphis 99, Tennessee St. 41 Miami 75, FAU 55 Mississippi St. 67, Wright St. 63 NC State 98, SC-Upstate 71 Nicholls 84, Mobile 67 Old Dominion 76, Morgan St. 53 Richmond 74, High Point 59 Seton Hall 78, Maryland 74 Tennessee 83, Wake Forest 64 UNC-Greensboro 83, Samford 75 VCU 70, Wichita St. 54 Virginia 72, William & Mary 40 W. Kentucky 71, Saint Mary’s (Cal) 68
EASTERN CONFERENCE
MIDWEST Boston College 65, DePaul 62 Bradley 63, SE Louisiana 60 CS Northridge 85, SIU-Edwardsville 79 Cent. Michigan 81, Jackson St. 72 Cincinnati 77, SC State 56 Dayton 81, Presbyterian 69 E. Michigan 90, Siena Heights 72 Evansville 80, Green Bay 75 Indiana 94, Jacksonville 64 Iowa 110, Savannah St. 64 Kansas St. 69, Vanderbilt 58 Michigan 71, Air Force 50
Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 37 28 7 2 58 154 106 Toronto 36 24 10 2 50 135 99 Buffalo 37 21 11 5 47 111 105 Boston 36 20 12 4 44 102 91 Montreal 37 19 13 5 43 115 117 Detroit 37 15 17 5 35 105 121 Florida 34 14 14 6 34 109 122 Ottawa 37 15 18 4 34 118 144 Metropolitan Division Washington 35 22 10 3 47 129 103 Columbus 35 20 12 3 43 114 109 Pittsburgh 36 18 12 6 42 119 110 N.Y. Islanders 34 17 13 4 38 98 97 N.Y. Rangers 34 15 14 5 35 100 112 Carolina 34 14 15 5 33 85 100 Philadelphia 34 14 16 4 32 101 123 New Jersey 34 12 15 7 31 102 122
WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division Winnipeg 36 24 10 2 50 128 101 Nashville 37 22 13 2 46 111 95 Colorado 37 19 12 6 44 129 115 Dallas 36 18 15 3 39 98 99 Minnesota 35 17 15 3 37 103 99 St. Louis 34 14 16 4 32 96 114 Chicago 38 13 19 6 32 108 139 Pacific Division Calgary 37 22 12 3 47 127 103 San Jose 37 19 12 6 44 121 111 Vegas 38 20 15 3 43 114 108 Anaheim 38 19 14 5 43 95 109 Edmonton 36 18 15 3 39 102 111 Vancouver 39 17 18 4 38 117 125 Arizona 35 15 18 2 32 89 98 Los Angeles 36 13 20 3 29 82 109 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Top three teams in each division and two wild cards per conference advance to playoffs.
Friday’s Games Washington 2, Buffalo 1 New Jersey 5, Ottawa 2 Chicago 2, Colorado 1 Saturday’s Games Boston 5, Nashville 2 Columbus 4, Philadelphia 3 Florida 2, Detroit 1 St. Louis 3, Calgary 1 Montreal 4, Vegas 3, OT Los Angeles 3, San Jose 2, OT Arizona 6, Colorado 4 Buffalo 3, Anaheim 0 Washington 4, Ottawa 0 Pittsburgh 3, Carolina 0 Toronto 5, N.Y. Rangers 3 Dallas 2, Minnesota 1, OT Winnipeg 1, Vancouver 0 Tampa Bay 6, Edmonton 3 Sunday’s Games Columbus at New Jersey, 8:30 p.m. Boston at Carolina, 1 p.m. Florida at Chicago, 3 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, 3 p.m. Detroit at Toronto, 3:30 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Dallas, 4 p.m. Los Angeles at Vegas, 4 p.m. Arizona at San Jose, 4 p.m. All Times AST
Transactions BASEBALL American League CLEVELAND INDIANS — Signed OF Brandon Barnes and RHP Brooks Pounders to minor league contracts. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Agreed to terms with RHP Matt Harvey on a one-year contract. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Agreed to terms with RHP Charlie Morton on a two-year contract. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Signed 2B Eric Sogard to a minor league contract. National League CINCINNATI REDS — Designated LHP Robby Scott for assignment. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Designated RHP Ryan Meisinger for assignment. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA — Fined New Jersey coach Kenny Atkinson $25,000 for verbally abusing game officials and failing to leave the court in a timely manner following his ejection. ATLANTA HAWKS — Transferred F Alex Poythress from Erie (NBAGL). FOOTBALL National Football League NFL — Fined Seattle LB Bobby Wagner for a facemask penalty and Houston DE Jadeveon Clowney and Arizona DE Chandler Jones for roughing-the-passer penalties. Each was fined $20,054. Fined Seattle CB Justin Coleman and Cleveland LB Jamie Collins $26,739 each for unnecessary roughness penalties. Fined New Orleans DE Marcus Davenport $20,054 for roughing the passer penalty. Fined Baltimore CB Jimmy Smith and RB Kenneth Dixon; Denver CB Jamar Taylor; Cleveland WR Antonio Callaway; L.A. Rams CB Marcus Peters; and Carolina G Andrus Peat $10,026 each for unnecessary roughness penalties. DETROIT LIONS — Placed WR Bruce Ellington and S Charles Washington on injured reserve. Signed WR Chris Lacy and CB Dee Virgin from the practice squad. Signed WR Deontez Alexander to the practice squad. GREEN BAY PACKERS — Placed CB Will Redmond on injured reserve. Signed RB Lavon Coleman from the practice squad. HOUSTON TEXANS — Activated CB Kayvon Webster from injured reserve. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed S Rolan Milligan from the practice squad. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Placed OT Jermey Parnell and S Ronnie Harrison on injured reserve. Signed CB Breon Borders and OL Brandon Thomas from the practice squad. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — Activated WR Ted Ginn Jr. from injured reserve. HOCKEY National Hockey League CALGARY FLAMES — Assigned F Ryan Lomberg to Stockton (AHL). Activated F Michael Frolik from injured reserve. CAROLINA HURRICANES — Recalled Fs Clark Bishop and Janne Kuokkanen from Charlotte (AHL). COLORADO AVALANCHE — Recalled G Joe Cannata from Utah (ECHL) to Colorado (AHL). LOS ANGELES KINGS — Placed D Dion Phaneuf on injured reserve, retroactive to Dec. 11. Activated F Ilya Kovalchuk from injured reserve.
B4 | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion
. . . SC
Continued from page A1
Seward this year, making for a three-day bonanza of wild action, predicted Seward coach Al Plan. “We’re really excited about it,” Plan said. “Adding Kenai, that will be a three-day slugfest, eight games a day, it’s going to be busy with a lot of folks in Seward.” The Kenai and Nikiski boys have already opened the doors for a conference rivalry with a thrilling overtime battle at the season-opening Craig Jung Kenai River Challenge tournament last week. The Kardinals prevailed over the Bulldogs in that game. Kenai also escaped with a tight, 48-47 conference win over Homer this weekend, once again giving fans hope that the Southcentral’s South division battle could be one for the ages. Kenai boys coach Ken Felchle said he can’t wait to see his squad in action against the top 3A programs in the state, namely Grace and ACS, and is also excited at the prospect of building a tight rivalry with Nikiski. “We just had a dogfight with Nikiski, and they in all honesty may have one of the top three players in the region in Jace Kornstad,” Felchle said. “We’re excited just for the atmosphere that this region brings. We loved the (NLC) but a lot of our games were farther away. Being down here we’ll have more home games, the fans and family members will travel to closer local gyms. “It’s just an exciting atmosphere. Just a ton of stuff that’s super exciting.” Still, it’s nearly unanimous that the road to state still runs through the two Anchorage programs, Grace and Anchorage Christian. “They’re the teams to beat until further notice,” said Nikiski coach Reid Kornstad. “It’s going to be brutal,” added Seward coach Curtis Berry. The ACS girls are the twotime defending state champions and have won state titles in three of the last five years. “Our conference is the state tournament,” said Nikiski coach Rustin Hitchcock. “Our conference is chock-full, and Kenai’s going to compete now. It makes your eyebrows go up like, you’ve got to be aware.” If there is one team that can knock off one of the Anchorage powerhouses, it likely will be the Nikiski girls. The hopes of the Bulldogs lie in senior guard Bethany Carstens, the reigning Class 3A Girls Player of the Year and a near-lock for the MVP award at any tournament the Bulldogs compete at. Carstens has dealt with injuries in the past, missing her entire freshman campaign to an ACL tear, then missing the 2017 state tournament as a sophomore after tearing the ACL in her other knee. However, Carstens’ work ethic and dedication has fueled
her to a remarkable recovery that has resulted in a Division I college commitment at Chicago State University, and she isn’t slowing down anytime soon. “I feel like there’s a weight off my chest,” Carstens said at the recent Craig Jung Kenai River Challenge tournament. “I’m pretty excited to play without worrying about stats, and I think this is the strongest I’ve felt since sophomore year.” Conference action picks up shortly after the school year resumes in January, so don’t blink or it might be missed. The following is a closer look at each peninsula team: KENAI KARDINALS The Kenai boys are looking for their first state appearance since 2012, when Felchle coached the Kardinals to sixth place at the 4A state dance. The Kards lost a chunk of senior talent from the 2017 squad, with only one true starter returning in senior point guard Connor Felchle. But Felchle’s presence is joined by three other senior starters in 6-foot5 post Dominick Efta, forward Logan Baker and center Adam Trujillo. The fifth member of the starting cast is junior shooting guard Andrew Bezdecny. The bench is impressive as well, starting with 6-4 junior Evan Stockton, who will be joined by junior forward Braedon Pitcsch, senior forward Kaden McKibben and senior Tyrone McEnerney. The Kenai girls return with head coach Cary Calvert back at the helm, and feature a loaded senior lineup led by point guard Jaycie Calvert and forward Brooke Satathite, both of whom are three-year starters. Both earned Second-Team All-Conference honors in the Northern Lights Conference in 2017, and both exhibit stacked athleticism as evidenced by a state cross-country running championship in late September. Joining Calvert and Satathite on the starting roster is senior guard Hayley Maw and junior post Liz Hanson, both of whom are second-year starters. Calvert said the fifth spot isn’t set in stone yet, but will be shared by juniors Jaiden Streiff, Kailey Hamilton and Damaris Severson. Calvert also said incoming freshman Logan Satathite could see a lot of time off the bench, and sophomores Kaylee Lauritsen and Lexi Reis round out the roster. NIKISKI BULLDOGS Reigning Southcentral Conference MVP Bethany Carstens has averaged over 20 points per game in her high school career, and head coach Rustin Hitchcock said her presence on the court helps her teammates. “Our starters are top of the line,” Hitchcock said. “But it’s unreal how deep our bench is. Nine players are going to do it for us.” Hitchcock made his debut
as Nikiski girls head coach at the Kenai tournament in midDecember and helped the Bulldogs secure the championship with a perfect 3-0 weekend. Hitchcock spent the past year on the bench as an assistant coach for the Nikiski boys team, under Reid Kornstad, and already has the pedigree to go with his promotion. Hitchcock coached the Cook Inlet Academy girls to a Class 1A state title in 2013 with a triple overtime win over peninsula rival Nikolaevsk. Hitchcock said being used to athletic teams is nothing new to him. “We’re fast and we can run,” he said about the current Nikiski program. “I’m having flashbacks to CIA.” The Nikiski girls have been to state two years in a row, but haven’t made it to the state final since 2006, when the Bulldogs last won it all. First, they must make it through the conference tournament with a clean run. Nikiski lost last year’s final 76-54 to ACS, even as Carstens netted a game-high 21 points. Hitchcock said while Carstens provides a strong court presence, the Bulldogs will be focused on playing team ball. With the amount of attention Carstens gets from opponents, it opens up the floor to others, such as seniors Emma Wik and Kelsey Clark and juniors America Jeffreys and Kaycee Bostic. Wik has proven to be a stealthy shooter from the perimeter and Clark’s scrappiness grabbing rebounds under the rim has created nightmares for opposing teams. Hitchcock said his first options off the bench include sophomore Lillian Carstens, junior Kaitlyn Johnson, junior Angela Druesedow and senior Carlee Rizzo. The Nikiski boys are looking for their first state appearance since 2016, when the Bulldogs finished sixth. Nikiski last won the state title in 1996. Kornstad enters his 19th season with the boys program, and hopes to follow up last year’s close miss at the conference tournament with a return to the big dance. Nikiski finished third at the SC tournament and finished one spot short of nabbing an “at-large” bid to state via the Winning Percentage Index (WPI). “That was pretty successful for us,” Kornstad said. “They’re a good group of guys, a closeknit group of friends, and I really like the culture we’re building on the team. I’m really looking forward to the next few months and see if we can make a run at the end of the season.” The 2018 senior-laden team includes a starting lineup of Jace Kornstad, Cody Handley, Seth DeSiena and Shane Weathers, as well as junior Noah Litke. Kornstad was a First-Team All-Conference player in 2017, and Handley made the Second-Team list. At 6-4, Handley will be heavily relied on as a post presence, controlling the glass and dominating the low space,
Nikiski guard Jace Kornstad dribbles the ball up the floor Feb. 25, 2017, against Grace Christian. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
while Kornstad and Litke patrol the perimeter with deadly shooting. Coach Kornstad’s first option off the bench is junior Michael Mysing, who Kornstad said provides the team a spark on the defensive end and can shoot and attack space on the offense. HOMER MARINERS Back for his fourth season with the Homer girls is head coach Chad Felice, who is eyeing a first return trip to the 3A state tournament since his debut season, when the Homer girls made the state final and finished second. The last player remaining from that state team? Senior Rylyn Todd, who watched as a freshman bench player in March 2016 as her team came close to winning it all. Homer’s last state championship came in 1991. Felice said Todd was named a captain this year in hopes of having her knowledge rub off on the others. “It helps her with having played varsity all four years,” Felice said. “Having that experience playing at the state tournament, it’s huge and fun and she gets to tell all the girls about that experience, and maybe it puts their goals up a little higher.” Todd will be joined by junior post Marina Carroll,
junior shooting guard Kelli Bishop, junior point guard Rylee Doughty and senior post Alia Bales. Felice said his bench will include sophomore Laura Inama and senior Briana Hetrick. The Homer boys get head coach Weston Carroll back for a fourth year. The Mariners came close to making state last March with a loss to Grace Christian in the conference semifinals before losing out to Nikiski for thirdplace honors. Three of Homer’s starters last year graduated, leaving seniors Seth Adkins and Joseph McGhee as the returners. Other players that got significant time include sophomore Clayton Beachy, junior Daniel Reutov, both of whom have played integral roles in early season tournaments this season. SEWARD SEAHAWKS Curtis Berry returns for another go-round as head coach of the Seward girls, and said his girls program will be a work in progress in 2018-19. “It’s going to be a mishmash,” Berry said. “We’re going to gain momentum as we go, up our tempo. Right now we’re still getting our legs under us. “One thing we’ll be is scrappy.” Berry pointed to four-year seniors Riley Von Borstel and
Ashley Jackson as key components to this year’s group. “They kind of know what’s going on,” he said. Von Borstel and Jackson will be joined by sophomores Kaitlyn Lemme, Sequoia Sieverts and Anevay Ambrosiani. Berry said his bench consists of freshman guard Hannah Schilling, junior Sophia Dow and Shelly Sewell. Al Plan returns as head coach of the boys and heads up a young team, with just three seniors to his roster. Plan said at the recent Service tournament, his starting lineup varied each day as he experiments with what will make the Seahawks a serious contender. “This year, we’re more of an outside perimeter team with a little inside presence,” Plan said. “We’ll depend on speed and shooting for whatever advantage we have.” Returning to the starting lineup is junior post Connor Spanos and senior Josh Jarvis. Both veterans have a post presence that Plan said will be complemented by sophomore guard Max Pfeiffenberger. Junior guard John Moriarty and sophomore guard Sam Koster round out the starting lineup. Plan said his bench will be led by 6-3 junior post Bjorn Nilsson, sophomore guard Trey Ingalls, senior Nathaniel Basalo and Tommy Cronin.
No. 18 Arizona State pulls off upset of No. 1 Kansas By The Associated Press
TEMPE, Ariz. — Rob Edwards scored 15 points and hit two free throws with 6.1 seconds left, setting off a wild celebration in the desert as No. 18 Arizona State knocked off No. 1 Kansas 80-76 on Saturday night. The second No. 1 team to play in Tempe drew a star-studded crowd, with Michael Phelps, Jason Kidd, Grant Hill, Eddie House and Arizona governor Doug Ducey among the third-largest crowd (14,592) in school history. Arizona State (9-2) struggled hitting shots around the rim and stopping Kansas preseason All-American Dedric Lawson while falling behind by nine. Like Arizona State did while beating Kansas a year ago, the Sun Devils rallied late, using a 10-0 run to go up 76-74 with 90 seconds left. NO. 3 TENNESSEE 83, WAKE FOREST 64 KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Grant Williams had 22 points and 10 rebounds as No. 3 Tennessee trounced Wake Forest for its sixth consecutive victory. Kyle Alexander scored a career-high 19 points and had eight rebounds to help Tennessee (10-1) extend its home winning streak to 15 games. The Volunteers haven’t lost at Thompson-Boling Arena since last season, falling 94-84 to Auburn on Jan. 2.
NO. 4 MICHIGAN 71, AIR FORCE 50 ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Iggy Brazdei-
kis scored 19 points and Charles Matthews added 17 to lead Michigan past Air Force. The Wolverines (12-0) went on a 19-3 run in the first half and never looked back. Michigan is 12-0 for only the third time in school history. The Wolverines also did it in 1985-86 and 2012-13.
NO. 5 VIRGINIA 72, WILLIAM & MARY 40 CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — De’Andre Hunter scored 18 points, Kyle Guy had 16 and Virginia pulled away after halftime and beat William & Mary. The Tribe (4-8) used a 14-3 run spanning halftime to trim a 17-point deficit to 34-28 early in the second half, but Mamadi Diakite’s basket sparked a 17-2 run that put Virginia (11-0) in command again. Guy had nine points in the run, including the last six.
Doughty and Wiley were two of five players to score in double figures for Auburn (10-2). Chuma Okeke had 17 points, Harper finished with 12 and Bryce Brown added 11. Ja Morant led Murray State (8-2) with 25 points and eight rebounds. Murray State trailed by only three points at halftime and took the lead early in the second half before Auburn went ahead for good with 13:11 to play.
NO. 19 KENTUCKY 80, NO. 9 NORTH CAROLINA 72
CHICAGO — Keldon Johnson scored 21 points, Reid Travis added 20, and Kentucky beat North Carolina in a matchup between two of college basketball’s winningest programs. Johnson scored 16 in the second half, helping the Wildcats (9-2) hold off the Tar Heels (8-3) in their first meeting since the 2017 NCAA South Regional final. NO. 6 NEVADA 68, AKRON 62 Kentucky won its second in a row since RENO, Nev. — Caleb Martin and Jor- an overtime loss to Seton Hall at Madison dan Caroline scored 19 points apiece, and Square Garden. Cameron Johnson led North Carolina Martin hit a 3-pointer with 45 seconds left with 17 points. to help Nevada fend off Akron. Martin’s big shot helped bail out the Wolf Pack (12-0) after another poor perNO. 11 FLORIDA STATE 81, formance from beyond the arc. Nevada SAINT LOUIS 59 missed its first nine 3-point attempts, capping a 19-for-88 stretch going back three SUNRISE, Fla. — David Nichols games. scored a season-high 19 points off the bench and Florida State shot a season-best 55 percent to beat Saint Louis in the oneNO. 7 AUBURN 93, day Orange Bowl Classic. MURRAY STATE 88 The Billikens shot only 30 percent — AUBURN, Ala. — Samir Doughty their season low, and the best effort yet for scored 20 points, Austin Wiley had 17 Florida State’s defense. points and 10 rebounds and Auburn held The Seminoles (11-1) won their sixth off Murray State. game in a row and matched the best 12-
game record in school history. Saint Louis (8-4) suffered its most lopsided loss of the season. Javon Bess had 16 points and Carte’Are Gordon scored 14 for the Billikens.
Aric Holman had 12 points, nine rebounds, four blocks and four assists for the Bulldogs (11-1), while Lamar Peters chipped in 11 points and Tyson Carter scored 10.
NO. 15 OHIO STATE 80, UCLA 66
NO. 22 INDIANA 94, JACKSONVILLE 64
CHICAGO — C.J. Jackson scored 20 of his 22 points in the second half, and Ohio State handed UCLA its third consecutive loss. Kaleb Wesson had 15 points and 12 rebounds for the Buckeyes (11-1), who have won five in a row since its only loss of the season last month against Syracuse. Ohio State got its second win at the United Center this season in the opener of the CBS Sports Classic.
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Juwan Morgan recorded the second triple-double in Indiana history and the Hoosiers won their sixth straight. Morgan finished with 10 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists, joining Steve Downing against Michigan in 1971 as the only Indiana player to accomplish the feat. Downing did it with points, rebounds and blocks.
NO. 16 WISCONSIN 84, GRAMBLING STATE 53
NO. 23 IOWA 110, SAVANNAH STATE 64
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Ethan Happ scored 19 points and grabbed his 1,000th career rebound, sending Wisconsin past Grambling State. Happ finished with eight rebounds for Wisconsin (10-2). He is the 15th player in Big Ten history to reach 1,000 rebounds. D’Mitrik Trice scored 14 points for the Badgers. Dallas Polk-Hilliard had 17 points and 10 rebounds to lead Grambling State (6-7).
IOWA CITY, Iowa — Joe Wieskamp scored a career-high 24 points, Jordan Bohannon had 18 on six 3s and Iowa blew past Savannah State for its fourth straight victory. Tyler Cook scored 16 points in 17 minutes for the Hawkeyes (10-2).
NO. 17 MISSISSIPPI STATE 67, WRIGHT STATE 63
LINCOLN, Neb. — James Palmer Jr. scored 23 points and Nebraska took control midway through the first half to defeat Cal State Fullerton. Nebraska (10-2) won its 18th straight home game, a streak dating to last season. Isaiah Roby had 20 points for the Cornhuskers.
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Quinndary Weatherspoon scored 14 points and went 5 of 6 from the free-throw line in the final minute as Mississippi State held off Wright State for its eighth straight victory.
NO. 25 NEBRASKA 86, CAL STATE FULLERTON 62
SECTION
C Sunday, December 23, 2018
It
is what
it is
Community
n Also inside Crossword C2 Classifieds C3
Thanks for a great show
W ill M orrow
What goes around … What’s the most meaningful gift you’ve ever received? I ask that question having recently come home from a gift exchange during which I was on the receiving end of a whole lot of karma — but more about that in a minute. There are all types of gifts, and what has great meaning for one person may be much different for another. When you ask someone about a meaningful gift, they may think about a family heirloom, or something spiritual, or even a natural talent. Sometimes, a gift is more meaningful to the person giving it than to the recipient. We’ve got a few of those items stashed around the house, tucked in a drawer or the back of the closet. They are items that were very special to someone else, and therefore, I feel like they should be special to me. Or maybe it’s something that I know the giver put some thought into, but for whatever reason, I never made the same emotional connection. Either way, we’ve accumulated things over the years that we can’t get rid of because they’re special, even though these gifts might not be special to me. In fact, the most meaningful gift I’ve received is a keychain. My wife gave it to me when we first started dating. It’s a leather strip with a brass plate that has “I love you” etched into it. I’ve had it with me every day for almost 24 years. I cherish it even more than my wedding ring. At this point, it’s become pretty well worn. It’s hard to read some of the letters on the brass plate. I even had to re-attach the loop holding the key ring with some glue, but the leather is getting old and thin in other places, too. I could save it as it is, and put it in a drawer, but as a gift with special meaning, I’d rather keep it with me. Perhaps someday I’ll have to cut a new strip of leather, and rivet the brass plate to it. The drawer is for things that don’t mean quite as much to me. That brings me back to our gift exchange, and to karma. You see, in addition to the gifts you hang on to because someone else thinks they’re special, there are gifts you hang on to so that one day you may re-gift them. We happened to have just such an item in our closet — an electronic, battery-powered, light-up corkscrew for opening wine bottles. It was not of much use to us because, quite frankly, most of our wine comes from a box. I think the corkscrew came to us from a different white elephant gift exchange, and I figured last year’s white elephant gift exchange would be the perfect opportunity to unload it — I mean, make a lovely holiday gift of it to somebody else. Apparently, last year’s recipients had the same plan. So, when my turn came to pick a gift from the pile, karma intervened, and the gift that I had re-gifted came back to me. And for some reason, nobody wanted to take it from me. On the bright side, I already know exactly what I’ll be bringing to next year’s white elephant, but the experience has taught me something important. Next time, I’m going to include a nice bottle of wine with the electric corkscrew, so the recipient will have a reason to actually take it out of the box and use it. Hopefully, that will improve my karma, too, because I fully expect the corkscrew to come back to me again a year after that. As the gift-giving season draws to a close, I sincerely hope that you are able to find meaning in gifts both given and received. And if anyone needs to open a bottle of wine, I’ve got the perfect gift for you. Will Morrow lives in Kenai. Email him at wkmorrow@ptialaska.net.
Those of us who attended the Christmas concert last Sunday put on by the Kenai Central High School combined choirs were thoroughly entertained. Mr. Nissen’s work with our young people is to be applauded. It was a great way to contribute to the Christmas season. Thanks kids. —Richard Hultberg
Simon Nissen organizes students in his choir class, grouping singers of similar vocals in the same section on Dec. 15, 2017 at Kenai Central High School in Kenai, Alaska. (Photo by Kat Sorensen/Peninsula Clarion)
Alaska Waste donates kids’ bikes to Love Inc.
This holdiay season, Alaska Waste donated 30 bikes, 8 scooters and 4 tricycles that our team built for children in need to local Soldotna charity Love Inc. The entire Alaska Waste Kenai team participated in the effort — whether through donating, building the bikes, or delivering them. The team raised around $2,000 for the donation and spent a morning building the bikes. “We are excited and looking forward to next year and are already planning to expand in more cities in our service area. Thanks to everyone for making Christmas special, not only for the kids, but really for each of us, because of this program,” said Dennis Smith, longtime Alaska Waste sales representative for the Kenai Peninsula area.
Alaska Waste employees show off their handiwork. (Photo courtesy of Alaska Waste)
(From left to right) Alaska Waste workersCharlie Kuntz, Josue (Sway) Rivera-Cruz, Tim Lawrence, Steven Denicola, Dave Johnson. prepare bikes for donation to Love Inc. (Photo: Josue Rivera-Cruz/Alaska Waste)
Registration opens in January for new beginner’s classes Registration for the Sterling Judo Club’s new beginners’ class will run from Jan. 8-17. The youngest members will need to be at least 8 years old. Teens and adults may register and begin instruction any time, although everyone interested is encouraged to start with the new beginners now. Judo is an Olympic sport, means of self defense, and a great recreational activity for most members of the family. It is also a means of getting at least four hours of exercise each week. For some of the younger members, judo is also a helpful way to gain self confidence, improve self control and learn about respect for others. To register it will be necessary for a parent or adult participants to come to the class any Tuesday or Thursday evening between 5:45 and 8 p.m. There is no charge to participate in the program although there is an annual registration required by our national judo organization to cover program insurance, sanction, etc. This non-refundable annual fee is $80. There may be some limited assistance available for anyone interested but who may not presently have sufficient resources to cover the registration or uniform costs. For more information visit the Sterling Judo Club’s Face Book page or contact one of the class teachers: Senseis Bob Brink at 2429330, or Clay Holland at 394-1823, Bob Ermold, or one of our other board members: Sensei Kati Gibler, Bob Ermold, Marcus and Terre Lee and Carrie Fairbanks. The Sterling Judo Club is a local sports recreation program for most ages meeting at the Sterling Elementary School Gym during the school year.
John & Sharon Williams celebrate 50 years John & Sharon Williams celebrate 50 years On Wednesday, Dec. 19, 2018, John and Sharon Williams of Kenai celebrated 50 years of marriage. They celebrated a blessing of the marriage with family and friends on Saturday, Dec. 22 at Our Lady of the Angeles Catholic Church in Kenai. The family will hold an open house public reception for the couple at Paradisos Restaurant in Kenai on Sunday, Dec. 23 from 2-4 p.m. The community is invited, and all are welcome to attend the reception on Sunday. Sharon is the daughter of the late Dan and Thelma Isaacs, who moved to Alaska from Washington state. Her brother Ron and his wife Deniece Isaacs are also longtime residents of Kenai. John is the son of Jack Williams, moving to Kenai from Downey, California, via Fairbanks where he worked at Nike Missile sites around Fairbanks and Eielson Air Force Base spending three and a half years at the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System at Clear, Alaska, before making his way to the peninsula. The couple met in Nikiski in early 1968 and were married by the Reverend Roy Moore at the home of Bob and Dorothy Clark. Attending Sharon and John were Ruth Hastings as
matron of honor and Bob Bethurem as best man. The couple held a reception at their residence in Nikiski at Bernice Lake Estates. In Nikiski, John worked for Chemical Construction Company helping to build Colliers Carbon and Chemical plant, later to be known as Agrium. He worked as a foreman over installation of instrumentation at Collier’s as well as Tesoro. In 1971 John and Sharon moved into the city of Kenai, and then into their longtime family home in March 1974. Over the years the couple have been active members of Our Lady of the Angeles Catholic Church, as well as serving the community in both public and private capacities for many years. They were instrumental in ensuring the University of Alaska had a presence on the peninsula, and both John and Sharon spent many years working at the Kenai Peninsula Community College with John serving as the first full time instructor where he spent 17 years teaching petroleum technology and process instrumentation. John also served as Mayor of the City of Kenai for 18 years, and as the Kenai Peninsula Borough Mayor for 3. They have many longtime friends and family across the Kenai Peninsula and the State of Alaska.
C2 | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion
Is your pet gifted?
PET PAL Dear Readers: Todd the Toad has appeared to wish us all Merry Christmas! Reader Colleen found Todd clinging to the side of her cats’ water dish in her basement. He’s been with her family for a year, and has posed for many pictures. To see Todd and our other Pet Pals, visit www. Heloise.com and click on “Pet of the Week” at the top of the page. -- Heloise
CHECK ON YOUR NEIGHBOR
Hints from Heloise
Dear Readers: This time of year, everyone is caught up in the hustle of the holidays, but COMPACT PACKING don’t forget to check on your neighbor. A Dear Heloise: We will be traveling to Chi- senior who may be alone might appreciate a cago from Houston this Christmas, and we quick visit or phone call. were wondering how we were going to carry -- Heloise our winter coats, mittens, etc. They are bulky! THE DAILY GRIND Voila! I put the coats in those zip bags that you vacuum all the air out of, and they fit in Dear Heloise: I read Heloise every day a tote bag that we checked. We were able to in the Houston Chronicle. Have you noticed pull out our coats at the baggage claim. Hope that many restaurants have replaced salt and others find this helpful. pepper shakers with “grinders,” necessitating -- Jo Ann K., Pearland, Texas wrapping your whole hand around the grinder? ON A ROLL I think this is unsanitary. Who knows where Dear Readers: Here’s a fun gift for young- the person using grinders has had his hands? sters: Take a roll of colorful duct tape and un- With shakers, it’s easy to use a napkin. furl several lengths of it. Place coins down -- James W., via email the sticky side of the tape -- quarters, dimes, TAG -- YOU’RE IT! a rare silver dollar or half dollar, a “gold” dollar coin -- and rewrap. Kids will have fun Dear Heloise: Christmas is right around seeing what the tape will reveal! the corner. I use last year’s beautiful ChristGreat discussions can ensue about history mas cards in place of bows and name tags on and money! gifts. The cards can be cut to different sizes. -- Heloise -- C.D. in Missouri
New York Times Crossword TOP GEAR By Sam Ezersky. Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz
ACROSS 1 Early wake-up time 7 Title for Iran’s Ruhollah Khomeini 11 Herbert of old “Pink Panther” films 14 Penultimate tourney round 19 “Doesn’t matter to me” 20 Not yet completed 21 ____ moment 22 Sash go-with 23 Ancient capital of Laconia 24 Brew 25 Letters before single, double or triple 26 Lace tip 27 Casting doubt on 30 Lake Volta’s land 3 1 The best, informally 3 2 Radio/TV character played in film by Michael Horse (1981) and Johnny Depp (2013) 33 Like some ruins in the Western Hemisphere 35 Lookalike 36 8.5” x 11”: Abbr. 37 Scare quote? 38 Words of resignation 4 0 Topic concerned with hacking and software rights 42 Put on a few layers 44 Three-star mil. rank 4 5 Pope who supported the House of Borgia 47 Diminishing returns? 50 They’re between shoulders 54 Word with shot or suit 5 5 Rowdydow 56 Not abstaining 57 Much sales 58 “No bid” 60 An end to depend 62 Head honcho 63 “Resume speed,” musically 64 Emailing option 65 Riddle- ending query 67 Toward the stern 6 9 Its first letter stands for “India” 70 Certain tenant 72 Lex, e.g., in N.Y.C. 74 Misfortunes 75 Going for broke 77 Sides in Risk 78 Bette Midler’s “Divine” nickname 80 Tense periods, for short 82 Archer of film
N A P
Last Sunday’s Crossword Answers
A S A L
L A M O
F I E F
I S L A
S U S H I
A N T I C A N C E R
O S L O
D E W N A I T Y C H N I R E L E L E S I S H N T A A L C R E H O A C I M A L E R L L A E O F O T T N T S O
83 Dangerous environment 84 Easy-to- swallow pill 85 Food item cracked open before eating 87 Prized duck 89 It comes after II Chronicles 91 “Today was just brutal!” 94 Coiner of the term “Oedipus complex” 96 / 97 Thickheaded 100 Words of denial 101 Lost 103 All-nighter aid 105 Sets of plotted points 106 Shade of pink 108 Immediately … or where this puzzle’s five shaded squares appear? 111 Floor 112 Japanese symbol of luck 113 Largo or lento 114 Swimming 115 Notable schemer 116 Some dash lengths 117 Rock stars are frequently on this 118 Come out 119 Standard parts of combo meals 120 “I’m good, thanks” 121 E-tail site since 2005 122 King’s speech?
Adult daughter’s sole topic of conversation is herself DEAR ABBY: My daughter is 40 years old and a lousy conversationalist. She will answer questions, but her conversation always turns to herself and her narrow, specific interests. She never asks me (or others) about ourselves, and when she starts talking about herself, there’s no stopping her. She seems to need to dominate every conversation. She has always been this way, and I think it’s partly because she’s anxious. She was bullied as a child, and I think that contributes as well. When she was little, her dad and I talked about it, but he’s very hands-off and didn’t want to address it. Because of that, her style never changed, and I now think we made a mistake. Can you suggest a way I could help her, even now, to become better at conversation? -- SMOOTH TALKER IN CALIFORNIA DEAR TALKER: You are well-meaning, but there is little you can do to turn your daughter into a better conversationalist. From your description, she may be deeply insecure. However, until she realizes that her coping mechanism is driving others away, your suggestions will be met with denial and ignored. The most helpful thing you could say, IF SHE ASKS for advice, would be that she needs unbiased guidance, which she can find by scheduling some time with a licensed mental health professional. DEAR ABBY: Will you please ask your readers NOT to open doors for toddlers? Since I became a parent and my son has learned to walk, I have been amazed at how many people will open the door in a store or supermarket to let him outside. I guarantee you, my son is safer inside the store than alone and unsupervised outside. While he may stand at the door wanting to go outside, he does not know what is best for him, and chances are I’m still inside the store. Abby, please remind your readers that although a child may be standing alone at the door, the parents are typically no more than 10 or 15 feet away. If they wanted him to go outside, they would open the door for him. Thanks! -- CONCERNED PARENT OF A TODDLER
R C L O E I B O M P E S S N E D A W U R A A S T I L O T W H Z S E M A Y A L E T T H F I S H S T O H U T
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1 2 13 14 15 16 17 18 28 2 9 34 37 39 41
DEAR PARENT: As requested, I’m printing your letter. However, when parents take small children shopping, they should be extra careful about keeping them close and in their line of sight. Another concern is, toddlers have been Abigail Van Buren known to destroy displays of cans, bottles and boxes, and get underfoot, which creates a hazard for other shoppers. It isn’t always a “helpful” shopper who allows the little ones to exit. Sometimes the doors swing open automatically. It might be safer for all concerned if the little ones are kept securely fastened in the cart or a stroller. DEAR ABBY: My husband of many years has an offensive eating habit. When finishing his meal, he takes the plate or bowl, puts it to his mouth as one would a drinking glass, and shovels the remains into his mouth. As he does it he makes little sucking movements with his lips like an animal lapping food from a bowl. I find it revolting, but how can I address it without offending him? -- ANNOYED IN ALBUQUERQUE DEAR ANNOYED: Offending HIM? Try this: Say it in PLAIN ENGLISH! (Or just feed him sandwiches.) Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. Abby shares more than 100 of her favorite recipes in two booklets: “Abby’s Favorite Recipes” and “More Favorite Recipes by Dear Abby.” Send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $14 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby, Cookbooklet Set, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling are included in the price.)
1
No. 1223
A S I A M
W I N N O W
A N N E
A T B E S T
N A L R R E T O C B E A A N D E R E T G O T A O N R S E M O E N O R T R O W H I G H I C A C H T
V E L D T T A O S O N E S W E L S H
O I D R R E E S N O T W E R E C O O H E K R T R E A A S T S O U T I L F I N D F N E E L R T U D N E V E G I A L S A N D S T A N A E W A R
A S W E L L A S
H O M E M A K E R D S E T H R O I V M E E R N S T O V E R
A M A Z O N E C H O
B E N E A N T O N
E L A N
M I L D
E R I K A
A M P E D
DOWN Kind of year Collision Calf raised for its meat Gloucester and Kent in “King Lear” Certain bubbly, informally Final work of Willa Cather’s “Prairie Trilogy” Tennis commentator’s cry Police officer who’s not necessarily on horseback “Play next” command on a music app Shade of green Cowboy’s rope “Here we go again …” Followers of openers By oneself, in a way It’s played for half a beat in 4/4 time Country whose name consists of three consecutive state postal abbreviations Peaceful ____ spawn (hellions) “Ooh, let’s do that!” “Eww, that’s enough!” MetLife Stadium team, on scoreboards Clear and set, as tables Scanned IDs Italian pistol
2
3
4
5
6
2 2 5
8 9 1
4 7 3
2 5 7 6 7 4
1 5 5 12/23
Difficulty Level
SUDOKU Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once.
7
8
9
10
4 5 8 6 7 3 1 9 2
9 3 4 7 6 1 2 5 8
3 7 1 5 2 9 8 6 4
6 2 9 4 1 8 5 3 7
2 1 6 8 5 4 9 7 3
11
12
13
14 22
23
24
25
26
29
32
36
37
38
45
39
40
47 55
58
59
64
65
48
61
72
62
73
78
83
91
92
75 80
106
89 94
101 107
52
53
98
99
69
74 79
88
100
68
81
85
93
51
63
84 87
18
35
50
67
77
17
57
66
71
16
41
49
56 60
15
44
46
70
34
43
54
8 9 3 1 4 6 7 2 5
30
33
42
1 4 7 2 3 5 6 8 9
12/16
21
28
5 6 2 9 8 7 3 4 1
Last Sunday’s Answer Key
20
27
7 8 5 3 9 2 4 1 6
Difficulty Level
19
31
42 43 44 45 46 48 49 51 52 53 54 57 59 61 66 68 71 73
7 2 4
95
82 86
96 103
97
104
105
108
109
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
Gets to One who cracks the whip? Plastic construction piece Serving in a red-and-white striped box Totally out Juice brand Longtime N.B.A. on TNT analyst Who wrote “Some people talk to animals. Not many listen, though. That’s the problem.” Action of a ladle “Miss ____” (2016 political thriller) Some fall births Heroes of the Battle of Britain, for short Babe Mannerly Freelancers’ units: Abbr. Colorful treat that resembles a rocket All-Star Mets catcher of the 1990s-2000s Corner PC key
76
90
102
110
74 Tow destination 76 Scat snippet 7 9 “Quién ____?” 81 Sanctuaries 84 Be conned 8 6 [Shiver] 88 With 93-Down, half of a double helix 90 Skunklike, say 91 Like TV but not radio? 9 2 “Old MacDonald” farm sounds 93 See 88-Down 9 4 Purchase at an African market 95 “Yay, team!” 97 Cause damage 98 Volunteer’s declaration 9 9 Snowball fighter’s protection 102 Botanical opening 104 Marriage money 1 05 “Ciao!” 107 Gifts that one usually bows when receiving 109 Certain dirección 1 10 What stars have
Jaqueline Bigar’s Stars HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Sunday, Dec. 23, 2018: This year you have the ability to see both sides of an issue. The challenge remains to find a solution that is workable for you and the other party involved. If you are single, hopefully you won’t want to get into petty fights. You become more and more capable of having a quality bond with someone. If you are attached, the two of you could be working out some important issues. Once you clear the air, you and your sweetie will be very content with each other. LEO loves to remind you of the fun of kissing and making up. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH You could feel pushed to perform or act in a certain way. Emotions might be intense and touchy. You mean to express your feelings in the most agreeable way for another person to hear. Do not be surprised by this person’s strong stance. Tonight: Easy works. This Week: Use your creativity to make the week flow. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Reach out to a loved one you really care about. You might need to have a conversation with a person you care about, but who can be inordinately cold or withdrawn. Avoid an ultimatum, if possible. Tonight: Know that others are explosive. This Week: If you can take some extra time off, you will be happier. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH A discussion in the morning will encourage you and a partner to clear up the remaining holiday details. By midafternoon, the holiday spirit hits you. Put on some music while you finish up any wrapping you have to do. Tonight: Invite a friend over. This Week: You have a lot to share. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Your mood appears to be contagious. You will need to jump over an obstacle that involves a loved one’s resistance. Run errands and catch up on calls. Touch base with friends and start swapping good wishes for the holiday. Tonight: Indulge a loved one. This Week: You might go on a shopping spree and get some great buys. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH You sense some rumbling behind the scenes. Your mind could be working overtime. You might feel as if you cannot come to a solution or find a good response. Caring exists between you and another person. Tonight: Give a higher-up the control he or she needs. This Week: You hit your power days Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Honor what is going on with a parent or older relative. An unanticipated expense emerges from out of the blue, which
2018 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Dear Readers: Do you buy your furry family members GIFTS for Christmas and the holiday season? According to the American Pet Products Association (www.americanpetproducts.org), billions of dollars will be spent this year by pet parents giving their pets a Christmas present! And the gifts range from the practical (bones and sweaters) to the outrageous; how about giving your dog a spa treatment and a luxury gourmet meal for Christmas? Our pets are members of our family -- let’s pamper them this holiday season! -- Heloise
3 3 9
will encourage you to curb any frivolous spending. Still, you might opt to buy some small items for last-minute presents. Tonight: Out late. This Week: Not until later in the week do you feel mellow and content. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You’ll express the fervor of the holidays and encourage others to join in. A loved one could be cantankerous at best, but you’ll help even this person out. Whatever you do naturally pleases others. Stop midday and assess what is left to do. Tonight: Happy at home. This Week: Zero in on what you want. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You’ll be thinking ahead with the understanding that a roadblock is about to appear. You will move through your errands efficiently. You instinctively might recognize that someone has been left out. Do some backtracking. Tonight: At home. This Week: You will need to run the show. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You express unusual vitality and excitement about the next few days. Your creativity seems to feed off the holiday. You will delight a loved one just by sharing your thoughts and feelings. Make plans to join a group of friends. Tonight: Opt to be a duo. This Week: Be willing to reach out to someone who seems withdrawn. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You could be off-kilter and not sure how to handle a difference of opinion between you and a significant other. You could feel pushed beyond what you can deal with. Maintain a sense of humor, and you’ll be OK. Tonight: Stay on top of your obligations. This Week: A partner or loved one dominates the scene. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You’ll make an effort to complete what must be done. Take some time for yourself. Schedule a massage or take a walk. Doing some exercise will prevent you from getting stressed out. Listen to what is being suggested. Tonight: If tired, make it an early night. This Week: Defer to a loved one. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH Allow your imagination to take the lead. What comes up out of the blue could seem worrisome, but it’s actually not a problem. Letting a loved one know how you feel can only add to his or her self-confidence. Tonight: Catch a kiss under the mistletoe. This Week: You make a special effort to help others have a great few days. BORN TODAY Musician Eddie Vedder (1964), actress Susan Lucci (1946), musician Harry Judd (1985)
2018 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Is your pet gifted?
By Dave Green
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | C3
Contact us; www.peninsulaclarion.com, classified@peninsulaclarion.com • To place an ad call 907-283-7551
sul
nin
.pe ww
m
.co
ion
ar acl
w
Go Online and go to The Peninsula Clarion Online... and find the savings today! Look at the Classifieds, for items to buy, sell, or trade. Also look at our coupons, to find even more savings. The Peninsula Clarion online is your source for News, Sports, Weather, and up-to-date information about events happening right here on the Peninsula. 3d75x7_BW.qxd
9/7/05
5:57 PM
Page 1
LEGALS
Automobiles Wanted
Liquor License Transfer
H o p e is m o r e p o w e r f ul t h a n a h u r r i c a n e.
1- 8 0 0 - H E L P N O W r e d c r o s s .o r g
Interested persons should submit written comment to their local governing body, the applicant and to the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board at 550 West 7th Ave. Suite 1600 Anchorage AK 99501. 838239
This message brought to you by the American Red Cross and the Ad Council.
Food Services/Hospitality Bartender/Cocktail Server position available at the Duck Inn. Competitive wage, flexible hours, must work weekends. Apply in person.
today!
YOUR11:36 CAR, PM TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERI58634_1 DONATE 5/23/05 Page 1
Pioneer Liquor & Gas, doing business as Pioneer Liquor & Gas, located at 17959 Hope Highway Hope, AK 99605 is applying for a transfer of a Package Store AS 04.11.150 liquor license to Creekbend Company LLC dba Coldwater Market located at 19742 Hope Highway, Hope AK 99605.
Pub: Dec. 16, 23 & 30, 2018
Check us out
TAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. CALL 1-844-493-7877 (PNDC) Got an older car, boat or RV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1-866-270-1180 (PNDC)
58634_1
Dogs www.peninsulaclarion.com
Purebred GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES! Purebred Golden Retriever puppies. AKC limited registration, dewormed, first shots. 8 weeks Dec 28th Call/Text 907-252-7753
283-7551
150 Trading Bay, Kenai, AK 99611
Alaska Trivia Glaciers appear blue because the ice aborbs all of the colors of the spectrum except for blue which is reflected.
CAN A BALL GAME LEAVE A CHILD WITH PERMANENT SIDE EFFECTS?
LOCATE GREAT BARGAINS
You’ll find bargains galore in the Peninsula Clarion’s classifieds. There’s something for everyone— at a price anyone can afford! Call today to list your bargains for a quick sale.
React to sports with rage and kids learn aggressive behavior. Keep your cool and kids learn to do the same. To learn more about preventing aggressive or violent behavior, call 877-ACT-WISE for a free brochure. Or visit ACTAgainstViolence.org.
You’re always teaching. Teach carefully.
For more safety tips visit SmokeyBear.com www.peninsulaclarion.com
283-7551
ACT Against Violence is a joint project of the American Psychological Association & the National Association for the Education of Young Children.
NOTE TO PUB: DO NOT PRINT INFO BELOW, FOR ID ONLY. NO ALTERING OF AD COUNCIL PSAs. Modeling Non Violent Behavior - Newspaper - B&W - APA204-N-10064-E “Ball Game” 3 3/4 x 7 85 Line Screen digital files at Schawk: (212) 689-8585 Ref#: 58634
C4 | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion
Contact us; www.peninsulaclarion.com, classified@peninsulaclarion.com • To place an ad call 907-283-7551 Health/Medical
Professional Services
ANNOUNCEMENTS
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
WAREHOUSE SPACE
OFFICE SPACE
A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-855-7484275. (PNDC)
ARE YOU BEHIND $10k OR MORE ON YOUR TAXES? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Call: 1844-229-3096 (PNDC)
EVERY BUSINESS has a story to tell! Get your message out with California’s PRMedia Release - the only Press Release Service operated by the press to get press! For more info contact Cecelia @ 916-288-6011 or http://prmediarelease.com/california (PNDC)
FDA-Registered Hearing Aids. 100% Risk-Free! 45-Day Home Trial. Comfort Fit. Crisp Clear Sound. If you decide to keep it, PAY ONLY $299 per aid. FREE Shipping. Call Hearing Help Express 1-844-678-7756. (PNDC)
DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 10 Americans or 158 million U.S. Adults read content from newspaper media each week? Discover the Power of the Pacific Northwest Newspaper Advertising. For a free brochure call 916-288-6011 or email cecelia@cnpa.com (PNDC)
APARTMENT FOR RENT Soldotna, 2 bed/ 1 bath No Smoking/Pets W/D hookup, 850 sqft $950/$995 + Electric 907-252-7355 ASHA Approved
WAREHOUSE / STORAGE 2000 sq. ft., man door 14ft roll-up, bathroom, K-Beach area 3-Phase Power $1300.00/mo. 1st mo. rent + deposit, gas paid 907-252-3301
OFFICE SPACE RENTAL AVAILABLE 609 Marine Street K enai, Alaska 404 and 394sq,ft, shared entry $1/sq.ft 240sq.ft.Shared conference/Restrooms $0.50/sq.ft 283-4672
Life Alert. 24/7. One press of a button sends help FAST! Medical, Fire, Burglar. Even if you can’t reach a phone! FREE Brochure. CALL 844-818-1860. (PNDC)
DID YOU KNOW Newspaper-generated content is so valuable it’s taken and repeated, condensed, broadcast, tweeted, discussed, posted, copied, edited, and emailed countless times throughout the day by others? Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising in FIVE STATES with just one phone call. For free Pacific Northwest Newspaper Association Network brochures call 916288-6011 or email cecelia@cnpa.com (PNDC)
OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 1-844-359-3986 (PNDC)
Now Accepting Applications fo Remodeled Spacious 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Affordable Apartments. Adjacent to Playground/Park Onsite Laundry; Full Time Manager
DID YOU KNOW that not only does newspaper media reach a HUGE Audience, they also reach an ENGAGED AUDIENCE. Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising in five states - AK, ID, MT, OR & WA. For a free rate brochure call 916-288-6011 or email cecelia@cnpa.com (PNDC)
™ & © 2003 The Jim Henson Company
Medical-Grade HEARING AIDS for LESS THAN $200! FDA-Registered. Crisp, clear sound, state of-the-art features & no audiologist needed. Try it RISK FREE for 45 Days! CALL 1-844-295-0409 (PNDC)
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
Rent is based on 30% of Gross Income & Subsidized by Rural Development For Eligible Households.
DONATE YOUR CAR FOR BREAST CANCER! Help United Breast Foundation education, prevention, & support programs. FAST FREE PICKUP - 24 HR RESPONSE - TAX DEDUCTION. 1-855-385-2819. (PNDC)
Eats flies. Dates a pig. Hollywood star.
Contact Manager at 907-262-1407 TDD 1-800-770-8973
LIVE YOUR DREAMS Pass It On. www.forbetterlife.org
Spectrum Triple Play! TV, Internet & Voice for $29.99 ea. 60 MB per second speed. No contract or commitment. More Channels. Faster Internet. Unlimited Voice. Call 1-888-960-3504. (PNDC)
283-7551
Unable to work due to injury or illness? Call Bill Gordon & Assoc., Social Security Disability Attorneys! FREE Evaluation. Local Attorneys Nationwide 1-844-3352197. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL (TX/NM Bar.) (PNDC)
$
got stuff?
$ $
$
Turn it into cash!
Advertise in the Clarion Classifieds
$
$
283-7551 $ Open 8-6 M-F
$ That’s how easy it is to find job opportunities in the Classifieds. Just browse through the listings available, find the ones you qualify for and apply! It’s that easy.
Call today to start your subscription and reel in a new job!
283-7551
www.peninsulaclarion.com
www.peninsulaclarion.com
Painting
283-7551
Construction
Place a Classified Ad.
General Contractor, Residential/Commercial licensed, bonded and insured Experienced in: framing, flooring, electrical, plumbing, drywall, carpentry, foundation repair, decks, windows, doors, siding, painting, texturing, No charge for initial estimate Meet or beat competition!
907-830-7880 kodiakisland1960@yahoo.com
Call today!
Online
www.peninsulaclarion.com
Classified Advertising. Top Soil
Licensed • Bonded • Insured
Facebook/RaintechofAlaska www.raintechraingutters.com
Notices
(907) 262-2347
Snow Removal
Rain Gutters
Notice to Consumers The State of Alaska requires construction companies to be licensed, bonded and insured before submitting bids, performing work, or advertising as a construction contractor in accordance with AS 08..18.011, 08.18.071, 08.18.101, and 08.15.051. All advertisements as a construction contractor require the current registration number as issued by the Division of Occupational Licensing to appear in the advertisement. CONSUMERS MAY VERIFY REGISTRATION OF A CONTRACTOR. Contact the AK Department of Labor and Workforce Development at 907-269-4925 or The AK Division of Occupational Licensing in Juneau at 907-4653035 or at www.dced.state.ak.us/acc/home.htm
@
CHECK US OUT
Insulation
Mel’s Residential Repair, Inc
Need Cash Now?
Construction
Computer Tech Support
Cleaning
Automotive
Chiropractor
Advertise in the Service Directory today! - Includes Dispatch. 283-7551
Advertise “By the Month” or save $ with a 3, 6 or 12 month contract. Call Advertising Display 283-7551 to get started!
Let It Work For You! 283-7551
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | C5
SUNDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON A
B
8 AM
8:30
9 AM
A = DISH
9:30
B = DirecTV
10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30
Jerry Prevo
Entertainers: With Byron Kickin’ It: With Byron Allen American Ninja Warrior Allen Keanu Reeves; Jennifer Emily Blunt; Christian Bale; “Vegas Finals” Las Vegas Lopez. (N) ‘PG’ Jude Law. (N) ‘PG’ finals. ‘PG’ In Search Paid Program Manna-Fest Paid Program Soldotna The Church Christian Worship Hour ‘G’ With Perry ‘G’ Church of of Almighty Stone ‘G’ God God The NFL Today (N) (Live) NFL Football Houston Texans at Philadelphia Eagles. (N) (Live)
(3) ABC-13 13 (6) MNT-5
5
(8) CBS-11 11 (9) FOX-4
4
4
(10) NBC-2
2
2
(12) PBS-7
7
7
FOX NFL Sunday (N) (Live) ‘PG’
(20) QVC
137 317
(23) LIFE
108 252
(28) USA
105 242
(30) TBS
139 247
(31) TNT
138 245
(34) ESPN
140 206
(35) ESPN2 144 209 (36) ROOT
426 687
(38) PARMT 241 241 (43) AMC
131 254
(46) TOON
176 296
(47) ANPL
184 282
(49) DISN
173 291
(50) NICK
171 300
(51) FREE
180 311
(55) TLC
183 280
(56) DISC
182 278
(57) TRAV
196 277
(58) HIST
120 269
(59) A&E
118 265
(60) HGTV
112 229
(61) FOOD
110 231
(65) CNBC
208 355
(67) FNC
205 360
(81) COM
107 249
(82) SYFY
122 244
Cops ‘14’
Cops ‘PG’
Cops ‘14’
Cops ‘14’
^ HBO2
304 505
+ MAX
311 516
NFL on FOX Postgame (N) (Live) FIS Alpine Skiing Women’s Giant Slalom & Slalom. From Courchevel, France. (Taped)
Cops ‘14’
(6) MNT-5
4 PM
4:30
Outdoorsman/Buck McNeely Small Town Big Deal (N) ‘G’ Pet Vet-Team
(3) ABC-13 13 5
(8) CBS-11 11
Mom ‘14’ (9) FOX-4
4
4
(10) NBC-2
2
2
(12) PBS-7
7
7
PGA TOUR: Year in Review (N) Pati’s Mexi- Taste of Macan Table ‘G’ laysia-Yan
3 PM
3:30
Jerry Prevo
P. Allen Midwestern Smith Garden Grill’n Style Hope in the Wild ‘G’ Fox Winter Paid Program We Have a Dream Honoring Preview Spe- ‘G’ Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. cial (N) Leverage “The Order 23 Job” Football Night in America A shady hedge-fund man(N) (Live) ‘14’ ager. ‘PG’ Dining with Ciao Italia ‘G’ Craft in America “California” the Chef ‘G’ Diverse craft traditions of California. ‘PG’
Cops ‘PG’
Cops ‘PG’
Cops ‘PG’
“Bleed Out” (2018, Documentary) Steve “Inception” (2010, Science Fiction) Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon“Dave” (1993, Comedy) Kevin Kline. A Burrows takes on a profit-driven health care Levitt, Ellen Page. A thief enters people’s dreams and steals their secrets. presidential look-alike takes over for the ailing system. ‘NR’ ‘PG-13’ leader. ‘PG-13’ “Jack Frost” (1998, Children’s) Michael (:45) “Run Fat Boy Run” (2007, Romance-Comedy) Simon (:29) “Super Troopers” (2001) Jay Chan(:10) “Annabelle: Creation” (2017, Horror) Stephanie Sig- Room 104 (:29) Room Keaton. A deceased dad returns to life as a Pegg, Thandie Newton. An out-of-shape security guard enters drasekhar. Budget cuts threaten the jobs of man, Talitha Bateman. A nun and six orphans become the “Swipe Right” 104 “Arnold” fun-loving snowman. ‘PG’ a marathon. ‘PG-13’ five state troopers. ‘R’ target of a possessed doll. ‘R’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ (7:55) “Kingdom of Heaven” (2005, Historical Drama) Orlando Bloom, Eva (:20) “The Jackal” (1997, Suspense) Bruce Willis, Richard Mike Judge “Dinner for Schmucks” (2010, Comedy) Steve Carell, Paul (2:55) “Girls Trip” (2017, Green, Jeremy Irons. A young knight protects Jerusalem from invaders. ‘R’ Gere, Sidney Poitier. An imprisoned Irishman accepts an offer Presents: Rudd. Comic misadventures follow a man’s encounter with a Comedy) Regina Hall, Queen to nab an assassin. ‘R’ Tales buffoon. ‘PG-13’ Latifah. ‘R’ “Major League” (1989, Comedy) Tom Berenger, Charlie “Meet the Fockers” (2004, Comedy) Robert De Niro, Ben “A Bad Moms Christmas” (2017) Mila (:45) Rising “The Bourne Ultimatum” (2007, Action) Matt Damon, Julia Sheen, Corbin Bernsen. A ragtag team tries to turn its poor Stiller, Dustin Hoffman. Future in-laws clash in Florida. ‘PG- Kunis. Three friends try to make Christmas ‘PG’ Stiles. Jason Bourne continues to look for clues to unravel his performance around. ‘R’ 13’ perfect for their moms. ‘R’ true identity. ‘PG-13’ (7:15) “The Longshots” “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” (2005, Science “The Hundred-Foot Journey” (2014, Comedy-Drama) (:05) “The Hot Chick” (2002, Comedy) Rob Schneider, “Walking Out” (2017, Ad(2008, Docudrama) Ice Cube. Fiction) Martin Freeman, Mos Def. A human and his alien Helen Mirren, Om Puri. An Indian eatery opens near an acAnna Faris, Matthew Lawrence. A cheerleader and a man venture) Matt Bomer. ‘PG-13’ ‘PG’ friend begin an interstellar journey. ‘PG’ claimed French restaurant. ‘PG’ switch bodies via magic earrings. ‘PG-13’
4
B
PBA Bowling The PBA Clash. (N Same-day Tape)
Exoneration of Valentino Dixon Lidia’s Kitch- Nigella: At My en ‘G’ Table ‘G’
Clarion TV
SUNDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING A
2:30
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
! HBO
329 554
2 PM
Cops Team- “The Matrix” (1999, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne work. ‘PG’ Moss. A computer hacker learns his world is a computer simulation. In the Kitchen With David (N) (Live) ‘G’ Duraflame Heaters (N) Dooney & Bourke (N) (Live) ‘G’ Duraflame Heaters (N) La-Z-Boy (N) (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ Joel Osteen Paid Program “A Golden Christmas” (2009, Comedy) Andrea Roth, Bruce “Four Christmases and a Wedding” (2017, Romance) “Hometown Christmas” (2018, Romance) Beverley Mitchell, “Poinsettias for Christmas” ‘PG’ ‘G’ Davison, Alley Mills. A special dog helps a woman reunite Arielle Kebbel, Markie Post, Corey Sevier. Something magical Stephen Colletti, Melissa Gilbert. A woman resurrects her (2018) Bethany Joy Lenz, with a childhood friend. may finally bring a couple together. ‘14’ town’s live nativity. John Schneider. “Happy Gilmore” (1996, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Christo“Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” (2007, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert (12:59) “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” (2009, Children’s) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupher McDonald, Julie Bowen. Grint, Emma Watson. Harry prepares a group of students to fight Voldemort. pert Grint. New dangers lurk for Harry, Dumbledore and their friends. The King of “Fred Claus” (2007, Comedy) Vince Vaughn, Paul Giamatti, Miranda Rich- Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends Rela- Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘14’ Queens ‘PG’ ardson. Santa’s ne’er-do-well brother puts Christmas in jeopardy. tionship rules. ‘PG’ NCIS: New Orleans “One “The Family Man” (2000) Nicolas Cage, Tea Leoni, Don Cheadle. A Wall “Definitely, Maybe” (2008) Ryan Reynolds. A man’s young (:45) “The Wizard of Oz” (1939) Judy Garland, Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger. A Good Man” ‘14’ Street playboy wakes to an alternate suburban existence. daughter asks him about his romantic past. tornado whisks a Kansas farm girl to a magic land. (6:00) Sunday NFL CountBest Shot Best Shot Best Shot Best Shot Best Shot SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) down (N) (Live) (6:00) Fantasy Football Now Road to the Road to the Road to the Road to the SportsCenter SEC Storied College Basketball Diamond Head Classic, First Semifinal: TrueSouth World Axe Throwing League (N) (N) (Live) Playoff Playoff Playoff Playoff ‘G’ Teams TBA. (N) (Live) “Athens” Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program College Basketball Continental Tire Las Vegas Classic -Formula E Racing Round 1. Tennis Invesco Series: Champions Cup. From Houston. Surfing From Oceanside, ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ San Diego vs Washington State. Calif. Bar Rescue Jon Taffer resus- Bar Rescue “Broke Black Bar Rescue “Corking the Bar Rescue “I Smell a Rat” “The Mummy” (1999, Adventure) Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, John Hannah. A mummy “The Mummy Returns” citates Downey’s. ‘PG’ Sheep” ‘PG’ Hole” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ seeks revenge for a 3,000-year-old curse. (2001) Brendan Fraser. (7:00) “White Christmas” (1954, Musical (:45) “Miracle on 34th Street” (1947) Maureen O’Hara, John Payne. An ad- “Mr. Popper’s Penguins” (2011) Jim Carrey. A man turns “The Polar Express” (2004, Children’s) Voices of Tom Comedy) Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye. woman’s boyfriend defends Macy’s Santa in court. his luxurious apartment into a penguin habitat. Hanks, Michael Jeter, Nona Gaye. Teen Titans Teen Titans Total Drama- Total Drama- World of World of World of World of Total Drama- Total Drama- World of World of World of Teen Titans Bakugan Bakugan Go! ‘PG’ Go! ‘PG’ Rama Rama Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Rama Rama Gumball Gumball Gumball Go! ‘PG’ Battle Battle Dodo Heroes Jan Creamer Dodo Heroes “Izzy the Koala Dodo Heroes A baby elThe Steve Irwin Story Steve Irwin’s global impact. ‘PG’ The Crocodile Hunter: Best The Crocodile Hunter: Best The Crocodile Hunter: Best and Tim Phillips. ‘PG’ Whisperer” ‘PG’ ephant in Thailand. ‘PG’ of Steve Irwin ‘PG’ of Steve Irwin ‘PG’ of Steve Irwin ‘PG’ “MickeyMickey “Beethoven’s Christmas Adventure” (2011) (:40) “Santa Paws 2: The Santa Pups” (:15) Liv and L & M: Cali (:05) Austin & Austin & Jessie ‘G’ Bizaardvark Bizaardvark Twice” Mouse ‘G’ Kyle Massey, Munro Chambers. (2012) Cheryl Ladd, Kaitlyn Maher. Maddie ‘G’ Style Ally ‘G’ Ally ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob “Santa Hunters” (2014) Benjamin “Lil P-Nut” The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud Flores Jr., Breanna Yde. House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ “Beethoven- (:40) “Richie Rich’s Christmas Wish” (1998, Children’s) Toy Story(:15) Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town ‘G’ (:20) “The Nightmare Before Christmas” “Christmas With the Kranks” (2004) Tim Allen. A couple Adv” David Gallagher, Martin Mull, Keene Curtis. Time (1993) Voices of Danny Elfman. scramble to assemble a holiday celebration. Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to 90 Day Fiancé “No Way the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress Out” ‘PG’ The Last Alaskans “Two The Last Alaskans “No Re- Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier “A Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Kills” ‘PG’ grets” ‘PG’ Hunt ends in disaster. ‘14’ Predator Strikes” ‘14’ “Roll Yuletide Roll” ‘14’ ‘14’ “Range Danger” ‘14’ ‘14’ Biblical Mysteries Explained Biblical Mysteries Explained Biblical Mysteries Explained Forbidden History ‘PG’ Forbidden History ‘PG’ Haunted Case Files Jack Haunted Case Files “In God’s Haunted Case Files “Chilling ‘G’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Keena fights a spirit. ‘PG’ House” ‘PG’ Encounters” ‘PG’ Counting Counting Counting Counting Counting Counting Forged in Fire “Ngombe Forged in Fire “The Pata” Forged in Fire “The Naval Forged in Fire A legendary Forged in Fire “The Kilij” ‘PG’ Cars ‘PG’ Cars ‘PG’ Cars ‘PG’ Cars ‘PG’ Cars ‘PG’ Cars ‘PG’ Ngulu” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Cutlass” ‘PG’ spiked shield. ‘PG’ Hoarders “Kevin; Mary” Kevin Hoarders “Sandra” New homeowners must evict a hoarder. “Exodus: Gods and Kings” (2014, Action) Christian Bale, Joel Edgerton, John Turturro. Moses vows to free “The Scorpion King” (2002, Adventure) The faces eviction; Mary cleans ‘14’ the Israelites from slavery in Egypt. Rock, Steven Brand. A warrior battles an evil up. ‘PG’ ruler and a sorceress. Fixer Upper The Western Fixer Upper Homes in Hills- Fixer Upper An old VictoFixer Upper Jo wants her Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Hills neighborhood. ‘G’ boro, Texas. ‘G’ rian. ‘G’ sister to buy a house. ‘G’ The Pioneer The Pioneer The Pioneer The Pioneer Girl Meets Giada’s Holi- Barefoot Contessa The food The Kitchen Beef tenderHoliday Gingerbread Show- Holiday Baking Champion- Holiday Baking ChampionWoman ‘G’ Woman ‘G’ Woman ‘G’ Woman ‘G’ Farm ‘G’ day scene in London. ‘G’ loin. ‘G’ down ‘G’ ship ‘G’ ship ‘G’ The Profit ‘PG’ The Profit ‘PG’ The Profit ‘PG’ The Profit ‘PG’ Shark Tank Toilet training kit Shark Tank A dance fitness Shark Tank ‘PG’ Shark Tank ‘PG’ for cats. ‘PG’ program. ‘PG’ America’s News Headquar- America’s News Headquar- FOX News Sunday With The Journal Editorial Report America’s News Headquar- The Greg Gutfeld Show Fox Report with Jon Scott FOX News Sunday With ters (N) ters (N) Chris Wallace (N) ‘PG’ ters (N) (N) Chris Wallace (N) ‘PG’ (:10) The Of- (:45) The Office “Andy’s (:20) The Of- (9:55) The Of- The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office fice ‘PG’ Play” ‘PG’ fice ‘14’ fice ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ “PDA” ‘14’ “Snowmageddon” (2011, Science Fiction) Michael Hogan, “Santa Jaws” (2018, Science Fiction) Reid Miller. A shark “Santa’s Slay” (2005, Comedy) Bill Goldberg, (:45) “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest” (2006) Johnny Depp. David Cubitt, Magda Apanowicz. ‘14’ manifests and kills Cody’s entire family. ‘PG’ Douglas Smith. Capt. Jack Sparrow owes a blood debt to a ghostly pirate.
(:15) “The Blind Side” (2009, Drama) Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw, Quin303 504 ton Aaron. A well-to-do white couple adopts a homeless black teen. ‘PG-13’
8 TMC
1:30
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
Cops ‘14’
PREMIUM STATIONS
5 SHOW 319 546
1 PM
Advanced The American 20/20 A look at “Mary Poppins I’m Coming Home Celebrities D Advanced Athlete ‘PG’ Returns.” ‘PG’ visit their childhood homes. Vitamin D. Stellar Tribute to the HoliTribute to the Holidays Paid Program Raw Travel days Holiday messages and Israel Houghton and Yoland ‘G’ ‘PG’ music. Adams (:25) NFL Football Pittsburgh Steelers at New Orleans Saints. (N) (Live)
NFL Football Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Dallas Cowboys. (N) (Live)
Try 3 Week “A Star for Christmas” (2012, Children’s) Briana Evigan, Yoga Retreat Travis Van Winkle, Corey Sevier. A businesswoman falls in Now! love with a troubled actor. Pledge
CABLE STATIONS (8) WGN-A 239 307
DECEMBER 23, 2018
A = DISH
5 PM
5:30
Native Voices Family Feud ‘PG’
ABC World News
50PlusPrime Pawn Stars ‘G’ ‘PG’
Pawn Stars ‘PG’
6 PM
Modern Fam- Frontiers ‘G’ CBS Weekily ‘PG’ end News Mom “SawFOX News Sunday With Ice Age: A Bob’s Burgdust and Bris- Chris Wallace (N) ‘PG’ Mammoth ers “Boyket” ‘14’ Christmas watch” ‘PG’ (:20) NFL Football Kansas City Chiefs at Seattle Seahawks. (N) (Live)
(3:00) Football Night in America ‘14’ Craft in America “Visionaries” Outside With The Daytrip- PBS NewsInnovation of artists and cura- Greg Aiello per “Crockett, Hour Weektors. (N) ‘PG’ ‘G’ TX” ‘G’ end (N)
CABLE STATIONS
6:30
America’s Funniest Home Videos Christmas-themed clips. ‘PG’ Rizzoli & Isles A notable county prosecutor is arrested. ‘14’ 60 Minutes (N) ‘PG’
Alaska Insight
7 PM
December 23 - 29, 2018
B = DirecTV
7:30
Disney Prep Prep & Land& Landing ‘G’ ing: Naughty vs. Madam Secretary “Lights Out” The Air Force One hacker is identified. ‘14’ Madam Secretary “Family Separation: Part 1” ‘14’ The SimpBob’s Burgsons ‘PG’ ers ‘14’
8 PM
DECEMBER 23, 2018
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
The Year: 2018 Memorable moments from 2018. (N)
Advanced Access (N) ‘PG’ Entertainers: D Advanced With Byron Vitamin D. Allen Chicago P.D. “Ghosts” UpMurdoch Mysteries Murdoch Heartland “Sound of Silence” Soldotna The Church ton must take down a meth races to stop a space proAmy and Georgie work to help Church of of the Alring. ‘14’ gram. ‘PG’ a horse. ‘PG’ God mighty God God Friended Me “The Good NCIS: Los Angeles “Fool Me KTVA Night- Castle A dying man leaves a Major Crimes Samaritan” ‘PG’ Twice” ‘14’ cast baby with a priest. ‘PG’ ‘14’ Family Guy Rel Rel’s kids TMZ (N) ‘PG’ The Big Bang NFL GameDay Prime (N The Big Bang ‘14’ come to visit. Theory ‘PG’ Same-day Tape) Theory ‘PG’ ‘14’ (:40) RightChicago P.D. “Payback” Dateline NBC ‘PG’ Channel 2 Graham NCIS: New Orleans A petty ThisMinute Robberies lead to an unlikely News: Late Bensinger officer is found dead. ‘14’ (N) person. ‘14’ Edition Little Women on MasterVictoria on Masterpiece “Warp and Weft; The Sins of the Downton Abbey on Master- Downton Abbey on Masterpiece The sisters cope without Father” Victoria is paralyzed by sorrow. ‘PG’ piece ‘PG’ piece Rosamund arrives at their parents. ‘PG’ Downton. ‘PG’
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
“The Matrix Reloaded” (2003, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie- “The Matrix Revolutions” (2003) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne. Neo, Person of Interest “Lethe” Person of Interest “The High Person of (8) WGN-A 239 307 Anne Moss. Freedom fighters revolt against machines. Morpheus and Trinity battle vicious machines. ‘14’ Road” ‘14’ Interest ‘14’ American West Jewelry Duraflame Heaters (N) Susan Graver Style (N) Cold Weather Must-Haves Quacker Factory by Jeanne Shoe Shopping With Jane H by Halston - Fashion & Quacker Factory by Jeanne (20) QVC 137 317 “Carolyn Pollack” (N) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (N) (Live) ‘G’ Bice (N) (Live) ‘G’ (N) (Live) ‘G’ Accessories (N) (Live) ‘G’ Bice (N) (Live) ‘G’ (3:00) “Poinsettias for “Christmas Around the Corner” (2018, Drama) Alexandra “3 Holiday Tails” (2011, Romance-Comedy) Julie Gonzalo, (:03) “A Twist of Christmas” (2018, Romance) Vanessa (:01) “3 Holiday Tails” (2011) Breckenridge, Jamie Spilchuk, Sarita Van Dyke. A venture Bruce Davison. Puppies play matchmaker for a woman and Lachey, Brendon Zub, Lina Renna. Two single parents mix up Julie Gonzalo, Bruce Davison. (23) LIFE 108 252 Christmas” (2018, Drama) Bethany Joy Lenz. capitalist helps save a bookstore. her engaged ex-boyfriend. their children’s Christmas toys. “Harry Pot(:19) “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1” (2010, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Ru- (:28) “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2” (2011, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Ru- (:18) Modern (10:48) Mod- (:18) Modern (28) USA 105 242 ter” pert Grint. Harry sets out to destroy the secrets to Voldemort’s power. pert Grint, Emma Watson. Harry may have to make the ultimate sacrifice. Family ‘PG’ ern Family Family ‘PG’ Friends Chan- Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Guest “Fred Claus” (2007, Comedy) Vince Vaughn, Race” ‘PG’ Gum” ‘PG’ Strike” ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘14’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Book ‘MA’ Paul Giamatti. Santa’s ne’er-do-well brother (30) TBS 139 247 dler in Tulsa. Red Dot” ‘PG’ Pick” ‘PG’ ‘14’ puts Christmas in jeopardy. “Love Actually” (2003, Romance-Comedy) Hugh Grant, Laura Linney, Colin Firth. Various “The Intern” (2015, Comedy) Robert De Niro, Anne Hathaway. A 70-year-old “Failure to Launch” (2006, Romance-Comedy) Matthew Mc- “Definitely, (31) TNT 138 245 people deal with relationships in London. intern develops a special bond with his young boss. Conaughey, Sarah Jessica Parker. Maybe” SportsCenter (N) (Live) 2018 World Series of Poker 2018 World Series of Poker SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter With Scott Van SportsCenter (N) (Live) College Football Dollar General Bowl -- Buf (34) ESPN 140 206 Main Event. Main Event. Pelt (N) (Live) falo vs Troy. (3:00) World Axe Throwing E:60 Road to the College Basketball Diamond Head Classic, Second Semifi- SEC Storied College Football Makers Wanted Bahamas Bowl -- Florida SportsCenter (35) ESPN2 144 209 League (N) Playoff nal: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) ‘G’ International vs Toledo. (Taped) Chase Hawks Rough Stock Ship Shape West Coast Charlie Moore Snow Motion XTERRA Ad- World Poker Tour Borgata World Poker Tour Borgata Poker Night Hot Rod: The Untold Story of Hot Rod Hundley (36) ROOT 426 687 Rodeo TV (N) ‘G’ Sport ‘PG’ ventures Poker Open - Part 1. Poker Open - Part 2. in America (3:00) “The Mummy Returns” (2001, Adventure) Brendan “The Mummy” (1999, Adventure) Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, John Hannah. A mummy “The Mummy Returns” (2001, Adventure) Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, John Hannah. (38) PARMT 241 241 Fraser, Rachel Weisz, John Hannah. seeks revenge for a 3,000-year-old curse. Two evil forces pursue the son of adventurer Rick O’Connell. “The Santa Clause 2” (2002, Children’s) Tim Allen, Elizabeth Mitchell. Santa “The Polar Express” (2004, Children’s) Voices of Tom “The Santa Clause 2” (2002, Children’s) Tim Allen, Elizabeth Mitchell. Santa “Mr. Popper’s Penguins” (43) AMC 131 254 must get married in order to keep his job. Hanks, Michael Jeter, Nona Gaye. must get married in order to keep his job. (2011) Jim Carrey. The Shivering World of World of Family Guy Bob’s Burg- American Family Guy Family Guy Rick and The Shivering The Venture Dream Corp American Family Guy Family Guy Rick and (46) TOON 176 296 Gumball Truth Gumball ‘14’ ers ‘PG’ Dad ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ Truth (N) Bros. ‘14’ LLC ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ The Crocodile Hunter: Best The Crocodile Hunter: Best Crikey! It’s the Irwins ‘PG’ Crikey! It’s the Irwins (N) Amanda to the Rescue “Lava The Zoo Birth of penguin The Zoo The future of the Amanda to the Rescue “Lava (47) ANPL 184 282 of Steve Irwin ‘PG’ Dogs” ‘PG’ of Steve Irwin ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Dogs” (N) ‘PG’ causes sensation. ‘PG’ American bison. ‘PG’ Coop & Cami Coop & Cami Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Stuck in the Middle “Stuck at “Good Luck Charlie, It’s Christmas!” (2011, Bizaardvark Coop & Cami Raven’s Raven’s Andi Mack ‘G’ Bizaardvark Bizaardvark (49) DISN 173 291 Christmas” ‘G’ Children’s) Bridgit Mendler. ‘G’ ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Home ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ The Loud The Loud SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob “Cheaper by the Dozen 2” (2005) Steve Martin, Bonnie Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ (:35) Friends The six friends (:45) Mom ‘14’ (50) NICK 171 300 House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ Hunt. The Bakers’ vacation turns competitive. say goodbye. ‘14’ (:05) “The Santa Clause” (1994) Tim Allen, Judge Reinhold. (:10) “The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause” (2006, (:15) “Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas” (2000, Children’s) Jim Carrey, Jeffrey (10:55) “Life-Size 2: A (51) FREE 180 311 An adman takes over for fallen Santa. Children’s) Tim Allen, Martin Short. Tambor. A curmudgeon hates the Christmas-loving Whos of Whoville. Christmas Eve” (2018) (3:00) 90 Day Fiancé “No 90 Day Fiancé “More to Love: Backed Into a Corner” (N) ‘PG’ 90 Day Fiancé (N) ‘PG’ Return to Amish (N) ‘14’ (:01) My Big Fat American 90 Day Fiancé ‘PG’ (55) TLC 183 280 Way Out” ‘PG’ Gypsy Wedding ‘14’ Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier (:02) The Last Alaskans (:03) Alaskan Bush People Alaska: The Last Frontier (56) DISC 182 278 ‘14’ “Earning Seven” ‘14’ The Kilchers mobilize. ‘14’ Exposed (N) ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ (N) ‘PG’ (N) ‘PG’ Exposed ‘14’ Haunted Case Files “Born Of Haunted Case Files ‘PG’ Haunted Case Files ‘PG’ Haunted Case Files “At War Haunted Case Files “Demon Fear the Woods “Beast In the Haunted Case Files ‘PG’ Haunted Case Files “Demon (57) TRAV 196 277 The Devil” ‘PG’ With Spirits” ‘PG’ House” (N) ‘PG’ Woods” (N) ‘PG’ House” ‘PG’ Forged in Fire “The NagiForged in Fire “Karabela” Forged in Fire “The Zande To Be Announced (:03) Forged in Fire “The To Be Announced (58) HIST 120 269 nata” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Spear” ‘PG’ Landsknecht Sword” ‘PG’ (2:30) “The “Triple 9” (2016, Crime Drama) Casey Affleck, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Anthony “John Wick” (2014, Action) Keanu Reeves, Michael Nyqvist, (:01) “Nightcrawler” (2014, Suspense) Jake Gyllenhaal, (:04) “John Wick” (2014, AcMackie. Criminals and dirty cops hatch a devious scheme for a heist. Alfie Allen. An ex-assassin hunts down the gangsters who Rene Russo, Bill Paxton. A freelance cameraman prowls Los tion) Keanu Reeves, Michael (59) A&E 118 265 Scorpion King” (2002) ruined his life. Angeles for lurid stories. Nyqvist, Alfie Allen. Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Hawaii Life Hawaii Life Bahamas Life Bahamas Life Island Life Island Life Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Bahamas Bahamas (60) HGTV 112 229 (N) ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ Life ‘G’ Life ‘G’ Holiday Baking Champion- Holiday Baking Champion- Holiday Baking Champion- Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ Gingerbread Giants 2 (N) ‘G’ Holiday Baking Champion- Christmas Cookie ChalGingerbread Giants 2 ‘G’ (61) FOOD 110 231 ship ‘G’ ship ‘G’ ship ‘G’ ship ‘G’ lenge ‘G’ Shark Tank Fitness apparel Deal or No Deal “Happy Deal or No Deal “Beard or No The Profit Marcus must save The Profit A husband-andThe Profit “An Inside Look: Airfryer Oven The Profit ‘PG’ (65) CNBC 208 355 line. ‘PG’ Howie Days” ‘G’ Beard” ‘G’ Santa’s Toys. ‘PG’ wife team hits a wall. ‘PG’ Sweet Pete’s” ‘PG’ Scandalous: ChappaquidThe Next Revolution With Charles Krauthammer: Mak- Scandalous: ChappaquidThe Next Revolution With Charles Krauthammer: Mak- FOX News Sunday With MediaBuzz (67) FNC 205 360 dick (N) Steve Hilton (N) ing His Point (N) dick Steve Hilton ing His Point Chris Wallace (N) ‘PG’ “Hall Pass” (2011, Comedy) Owen Wilson, Jason Sudeikis. Two married (:25) “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby” (2006) Will Ferrell, “Dirty Grandpa” (2016, Comedy) Robert De Niro, Zac Efron, Aubrey Plaza. (:25) South (81) COM 107 249 men get one week to do whatever they please. John C. Reilly. A NASCAR driver has a new rival. A lawyer brings his foulmouthed grandfather to spring break. Park ‘14’ “Pirates(:45) “Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides” (2011, Adventure) Johnny Depp, (:45) “The Addams Family” (1991, Comedy) Anjelica Huston, Raul Julia. “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest” (2006, Ad (82) SYFY 122 244 Dead” Penélope Cruz. Capt. Jack Sparrow searches for the Fountain of Youth. Gomez’s long-lost brother, Uncle Fester, returns. venture) Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom.
PREMIUM STATIONS ! HBO
303
^ HBO2
304
+ MAX
311
5 SHOW 319 8 TMC
329
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
(2:30) “Dave” (:20) “Kingsman: The Golden Circle” (2017, Action) Colin (:45) Pete Holmes: Dirty (:45) “Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” (2009, Romance-Com- Sally4Ever (:10) “Blockers” (2018, Comedy) Leslie Mann, Ike BarinFirth, Julianne Moore. British spies join forces with their Clean ‘MA’ edy) Matthew McConaughey. Spirits of ex-lovers show a cad (N) ‘MA’ holtz, John Cena. Three parents chase down their daughters 504 (1993) American counterparts. ‘R’ his failed relationships. ‘PG-13’ on prom night. ‘R’ (:15) The Mak- “Love, Simon” (2018, Romance-Comedy) Nick Robinson, (:25) “Fifty Shades Freed” (2018) Dakota (:15) The (:45) Sally4Ever Deborah falls (:20) “The Snowman” (2017, Suspense) Michael Fass“Three off the wagon. ‘MA’ bender, Rebecca Ferguson. A detective plays cat-and-mouse Billboards 505 ing Of: Isle of Josh Duhamel, Jennifer Garner. A gay teen falls for an anony- Johnson. Dark events surround Christian Grey Shop ‘MA’ Dogs mous classmate online. ‘PG-13’ and new wife Anastasia. games with a serial killer. ‘R’ Outside” (2:55) “Girls Trip” (2017, “The Siege” (1998, Suspense) Denzel Washington, Annette “Atomic Blonde” (2017, Action) Charlize Theron, James “Thoroughbreds” (2017, Comedy) Olivia (:35) “Splice” (2009, Science Fiction) Adrien Cooke. Two teenage girls hatch a plan to Brody. Scientists use human DNA to create a 516 Comedy) Regina Hall, Queen Bening, Bruce Willis. The FBI attempts to hunt down terrorists McAvoy, Eddie Marsan. A spy tries to take down an espioLatifah. ‘R’ in New York. ‘R’ nage ring in Berlin. ‘R’ solve their problems. ‘R’ new hybrid. ‘R’ Ray Donovan Ray works to “American Assassin” (2017, Action) Dylan O’Brien, Michael Escape at Dannemora Matt Ray Donovan “Dream On” Escape at Dannemora Div- Escape at Dannemora Div- Ray Donovan “Dream On” Keaton, Sanaa Lathan. Three agents join forces to battle a and Sweat try to avoid misRay struggles to get the help ing into the minds of Matt and ing into the minds of Matt and Ray struggles to get the help 546 make things right with Sam. ‘MA’ mysterious operative. ‘R’ takes. ‘MA’ he needs. ‘MA’ Sweat. (N) ‘MA’ Sweat. ‘MA’ he needs. ‘MA’ (3:00) “Walk- (:45) “The Cider House Rules” (1999, Drama) Tobey Maguire, Charlize “Queen of the Desert” (2015, Biography) Nicole Kidman, (:10) “The Hundred-Foot Journey” (2014, Comedy-Drama) (:15) “The Hot Chick” (2002, ing Out” Theron, Delroy Lindo. Trained in medicine, an orphaned man seeks another James Franco, Robert Pattinson. A history of Gertrude Bell’s Helen Mirren, Om Puri. An Indian eatery opens near an acComedy) Rob Schneider. 554 (2017) path. ‘PG-13’ life. ‘PG-13’ claimed French restaurant. ‘PG’ ‘PG-13’
December 23 - 29, 2018
Clarion TV
© Tribune Media Services
5
release dates: Dec. 22-28, 2018
51 (18)
C6 | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion
Next Week: Winter reading
A Beloved Poem
’T
was the night before Christmas, when all through the house, Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse; The stockings were hung by the chimney with care, In hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there. The children were nestled all snug in their beds, While visions of sugarplums danced in their heads. And Mamma in her ’kerchief and I in my cap, Had just settled our brains for a long winter’s nap —
When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter, I sprang from the bed to see what was the matter. Away to the window I flew like a flash, Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash. The moon, on the breast of the new-fallen snow, Gave the luster of midday to objects below. When what to my wondering eyes should appear, But a miniature sleigh, and eight tiny reindeer; With a little old driver so lively and quick, I knew in a moment it must be St. Nick. More rapid than eagles his coursers they came, And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name — “Now, Dasher! now, Dancer! now, Prancer and Vixen! “On, Comet! on, Cupid! on, Donder and Blitzen! “To the top of the porch, to the top of the wall, “Now, dash away, dash away, dash away all!” As dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly, When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky, So, up to the housetop the coursers they flew, With the sleigh full of toys, and St. Nicholas too.
Founded by Betty Debnam
Moore’s accidental fame
Many families have favorite books that they read during the holiday season. One that has been around for a long time is “A Visit From St. Nicholas” by Dr. Clement C. Moore. (You may know it as “The Night Before Christmas.”) Legend tells that Dr. Moore, a scholar who grew up and lived in what is now New York City, wrote Clement C. Moore the poem for his family on Christmas Eve in 1822. His children told a family friend, Harriet Butler, about the poem, and she sent it to the editor of the Troy Sentinel newspaper in New York. The paper published it on Dec. 23, 1823, without naming an author. But in 1844, Moore took credit for “A Visit From St. Nicholas” when he included it in a book of his writing.
Mini Fact: Clement C. Moore was an only child.
And then, in a twinkling, I heard on the roof, The prancing and pawing of each little hoof; As I drew in my head, and was turning around, Down the chimney St. Nicholas came with a bound. He was dressed all in fur, from his head to his foot, And his clothes were all tarnished with ashes and soot; A bundle of toys he had flung on his back, And he looked like a peddler just opening his pack. His eyes, how they twinkled! His dimples, how merry! His cheeks were like roses, his nose like a cherry; His droll little mouth was drawn up like a bow, And the beard on his chin was as white as the snow. The stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth, And the smoke, it encircled his head like a wreath. He had a broad face and a little round belly, That shook when he laughed, like a bowl full of jelly. He was chubby and plump — a right jolly old elf; And I laughed when I saw him, in spite of myself. A wink of his eye and a twist of his head, Soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread. He spoke not a word, but went straight to his work, And filled all the stockings; then turned with a jerk, And laying his finger aside of his nose, And giving a nod, up the chimney he rose. He sprang to his sleigh, to his team gave a whistle, And away they all flew like the down of a thistle, But I heard him exclaim ’ere he drove out of sight,
A book for everyone
Dr. Moore did not apply for a copyright for his book. A copyright prevents other people from copying something created by an individual or group. For this reason, his poem has been published over and over, but Moore is usually given credit as the author. Over the years, Moore’s poem has been published many times as a book. This version is from 1928.
Resources On the Web:
• bit.ly/MPMoore • youtu.be/cEkZK9NZGFg
At the library:
• “The Young Oxford Book of Christmas Poems,” edited by Michael Harrison and Christopher Stuart-Clark
Mini Jokes Clara: Who says, “Oh, oh, oh”? Clint: Santa Claus walking backward!
Eco Note
“HAPPY CHRISTMAS TO ALL, AND TO ALL A GOOD NIGHT!”
images courtesy The Project Gutenberg
The Mini Page® © 2018 Andrews McMeel Syndication
Issue 51, 2018
One of the most powerful Pacific hurricanes on record obliterated a remote Hawaiian island, causing an important turtle nesting site to disappear in early October. Former Category-5 Hurricane Walaka was still packing Category-3 force just before it struck the remote French Frigate Shoals, about 400 miles northwest of the main Hawaiian Island of Kauai. Storm surge wiped out East Island, which is a critical habitat for green sea turtles, monk seals and various types of sea birds. adapted with permission from Earthweek.com
Teachers:
For standards-based activities to accompany this feature, visit: bit.ly/MPstandards. And follow The Mini Page on Facebook!
SECTION
D
Home & Health
Sunday, December 23, 2018
H omes L ee R eich
Christmas trees and their decorations have evolved
This photo shows a holiday tree in New Paltz, N,Y. (Lee Reich via AP)
In the story of St. Boniface, a Thunder Oak decorated with lit candles and gilded apples was glowing in the dark forest one Christmas day in 8th century Germany. The pagan god Thor was to be appeased with a human sacrifice. But Wynfred, an English Christian missionary later to be known as St. Boniface, split the giant oak into four parts with one stroke of an ax, revealing a small fir tree nearby … the first Christmas tree, perhaps.
SOME ARBOREAL HISTORY The exact origin of the Christmas tree isn’t known, but for centuries, people have had the urge to decorate trees at this time of year. In ancient Rome, decorated trees were part of the festival of Saturn, celebrated beginning Dec. 17. The Paradise Tree of the Middle Ages was a fir tree hung with red apples, a prop used in the Biblical play telling the story of Adam and Eve. That tradition was moved into homes after the “miracle plays” were banned in the 15th century. In Germany, a written record from 1604 describes trees decorated with paper roses, apples, and figures of Adam and Eve and a serpent. The custom of decorating trees at Christmas gained popularity in the British Empire in 1841 when Queen Victoria and Prince Albert celebrated the birth of their first son with a decorated tree at Windsor Castle.
AND NOW FOR SOME LIGHTS In the late 19th century, gas jets and then electric lights were tried as replacements for candles. According to the National Electrical Contractors Association, the first electric Christmas lights were lit in 1882, three years after the incandescent bulb was invented. Edward Johnson, a friend and partner of Thomas Edison, hand-wired 80 “patriotic” red, white and blue bulbs and wound them around a rotating evergreen tree in his home. In subsequent years, publicity (such as Grover Cleveland lighting the White House tree with electric lights) and electrification in rural areas made electric Christmas tree lights more popular.
RIGHT AT HOME: Scene-setting home fragrance names By KIM COOK Associated Press
The home-fragrance market has long been dominated by relatively simple iterations of popular aromas: vanilla, cinnamon, evergreen and citrus scents. But that marketplace of diffusers, candles and room sprays is full of fun, evocative names to distinguish the scents — names meant to pique our imaginations and bring home not just a sense of smell but of story. Perhaps lighting a jar of “Poet’s Garret” will inspire your sonnet-writing. A whiff of “Spring Party” might just ramp up the festivities. “Scent grabs us in a way that no other sense can,” connecting to parts of the brain that process emotion and memory, says New Yorkbased marketing strategist Alexander Jutkowitz. The names of home fragrances are meant to create a visual in your head first, and then the designers follow through with the fragrance blend. San Francisco letter-press designer Kimberly Austin has a line of jar candles, Sanctum for Austin Press . She’s given each concoction not only a cool name, but a little back story on the label. “Cowboy’s Camp,” for instance, is a mix of wood-smoke essence, tobacco, pine and horsehair. The story involves a cowboy setting up camp under the stars with his horse at his side. For “Dancer’s Dormer,” Austin sets the scene of a performer climbing the stairs to her attic apartment, walking on the ebony wood floor, and seeing a bouquet of geranium and juniper. Tangerine, vetiver and balsam characterize “Bear’s Cave,” with the story centering on a hibernating bear’s environment and the advent of spring. “I wanted them to be like vintage apothecary jars with samples of places and people,” says Austin. “I created the theme by thinking of both interior and exterior space, then coming up with characters that would be associated with them. All of the environments are meant to be special places offering calm, inspiration and peace. Our dream spots, so to speak.” At Aera, intriguing scents come in capsules you load into a diffuser that can be operated with an app. The collection, created by master perfumers and scent designers, includes evocative names like “Poetry” (vetiver, eucalyptus and guaiac, an oil from the South American palo santo tree), “Moondance” (bergamot, iris, amber) and “Kith & Kin” (orange zest, spice, soft wood). At Green Valley Aromatherapy in Courtenay, British Columbia, founder Barbara Greenwood offers essential oil mixtures like “Transitions,” with black pepper, rosemary, lemon and geranium. “Black pepper stimulates blood flow to help with lethargy and fatigue. Geranium is considered in aromatherapy to be a balancing oil and was added to help offer the warm hand of comfort. Lemon is a great oil to uplift and improve focus. Rosemary is considered to be a mental stimulant,” she says. Those seeking comfort might consider her “Solace,” a soothing blend of bergamot, marjoram and sandalwood. Or generate a festive air with “Spring Party,” a zingy mix of orange, peppermint and ylang ylang.
This photo shows one of Aera’s scent diffusers. (Scott Pitts/Aera via AP)
This photo shows some of the San Francisco-based designer’s scented candles. (Kimberly Austin/Austin Press via AP)
At interior design firm Haus Interior , cotton wax candles include “Summer Haus,” a seasonally reminiscent blend of coconut and tonka bean, a legume with a vanilla-caramel
US home construction rose last month, led by apartments
THE TREE The “technology” of the tree itself has also advanced over the years, mostly to adapt to warmer and drier homes. Firs, spruces and some pines were found to be the best evergreens at holding onto their leaves under these conditions, both for looks and to reduce the fire hazard from dry leaves indoors. Another way to offset the effects of today’s drier homes is to put the tree in the coolest spot, or at least not right where an air duct spills hot air out into the room. Spraying the tree with an anti-transpirant such as Wilt-Pruf also helps. Keeping the base of the tree in water — after making a clean cut — allows water to enter the base to replace moisture lost through the needles. A couple of tablespoons of bleach in the water inhibits bacterial growth which clogs the stems. Still, Christmas trees — and Christmas — don’t last forever. You may be heartened to know that the residents of Christmas, Florida, live up to their name by maintaining a year-round Christmas tree.
taste and aroma. “Dock Haus” is a mixture of summer-cottagey birch and cypress essences, while “Winter Haus” combines warm fig with the smoky notes of a wood fire.
In this photo, a construction crane is perched on the site of Court Square City View Tower in the Queens borough of New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File) By CHRISTOPHER RUGABER AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON — U.S. developers broke ground on more homes last month, but the increase occurred entirely in apartments. The construction of new single-family houses fell. The Commerce Department said Tuesday that housing starts rose 3.2 percent in November from the previous month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate 1.26 million. Despite the increase, that is down 3.6 percent from a year ago. Single-family starts dropped 4.6 percent in November and are down 13.1 percent from a year earlier.
Some of the data likely have been distorted by extreme weather. Home-building jumped 15.1 percent last month in the South in the aftermath of Hurricanes Florence and Michael. And home construction fell 14.2 percent in the West, possibly because of wildfires in California. Single-family homebuilding fell in the West by the most since February 2009. Still, rising mortgage rates have dragged down home sales in the past year, discouraging many builders and causing a slump in the overall housing market. Sales of new and existing homes are dropping and home price gains are slowing.
The unemployment rate is at a five-decade low and incomes are rising more quickly, but many would-be buyers struggle to find homes they can afford. Developers say that rising labor and materials costs make it harder for them to build more affordable properties. “Rising home prices and mortgage rates have created high hurdles for homebuyers, while cost increases have made it difficult for builders to deliver homes at the most in-demand price points,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist at realtor.com. Sales of new homes plummeted nearly 9 percent in October and the number of newly built, unsold homes sitting on the market has climbed to its highest level since 2009. And an index of home builders’ confidence has fallen sharply over the last two months. On Monday, the National Association of Home Builders said the index dropped last month to its lowest level in 3 ½ years. Mortgage rates shot up to nearly 5 percent in early November, the highest level in seven years. The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage has fallen back since then and hit 4.6 percent last week. Still, that is up from an average of 3.9 percent a year earlier. The construction of apartment buildings has soared in the past year, rising 20 percent nationwide. That could help keep rents in check. But single-family home building creates more jobs and economic activity and is closely watched by economists. Their construction requires more labor and yields more purchases of furniture and appliances. Single- family home building plunged 13.1 percent in November from a year earlier. Building permits for single-family homes ticked up 0.1 percent last month, suggesting that construction of those homes will level off in the coming months. Overall permits rose 5 percent last month and 0.4 percent from a year ago.
D2 | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion
‘Twas the Night before Christmas’ is theme of Pence holiday By DARLENE SUPERVILLE Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Christmas at Vice President Mike Pence’s official residence literally jumps out of the pages of “Twas the Night Before Christmas.” Every room on the main floor of the Naval Observatory represents a verse from the poem by Clement Clarke Moore, officially titled “A Visit from St. Nicholas.” Pence has a family tradition of reading the holiday classic to his three children every Christmas Eve even though they’re adults now and the gang includes a daughter-inThe Pence family cat “Hazel,” lies on the carpet during a tour of the holiday decorations at the Vice President’s residence in law. Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
The Pence family cat “Hazel” walks around the flower vase durHoliday decorations are seen at the Vice President’s residence in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex ing a tour of the holiday decorations at the Vice President’s Brandon) residence in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Stockings hung by the chimney with care? Nine red ones hang from the fireplace mantle in the dining room: Six for the Pences and three for pets Hazel, Harley and Marlon. Instead of visions of sugar plums dancing in their heads, kids can stop by a special candy station to fill up on them. The library was transformed into a den for Santa’s reindeer, with all nine names on the wall above a 125-pound gingerbread replica of the observatory. The library has reindeer decorations on the mantle and a tree decorated with reindeer ornaments, a reindeer topper and presents wrapped in reindeerprint paper underneath it. Wrapped gifts suspended from the foyer mimic presents tumbling down the staircase and straight into Santa’s nearby sack. “New fallen snow” covers the branches of a tree in the sunroom. The main attraction shines in the living room: an 11½foot (3.35-meter) North Carolina fir decorated with ornaments symbolizing the “bundle of toys” Santa “had flung on his back.” A life-size Santa replica stands next to the tree, reviewing his naughty or nice list. Guests arrive to an oversized copy of the poem opened beside a high-backed red velvet chair. Pence’s wife, Karen, recently gave The Associated Press an exclusive tour of their holiday decorations. Her family is spending Christmas in Washington.
Turn trendy tassels into inexpensive DIY earrings By HOLLY RAMER Associated Press
CONCORD, N.H. — Fringe is in fashion and tassels are trendy, and they’re not just on pillows and clothing. Handmade earrings adorned with embroidery floss make quick, inexpensive holiday gifts, and they’re easy to customize according to the recipient’s favorite color. Browsing aisles of jewelrymaking supplies at craft stores can be a bit overwhelming — so many mysterious little pieces and parts. The embroidery aisle is more straightforward, though choosing the perfect colors can take some time. But with each skein of thread costing about 60 cents, you can afford to get a few extras for backups. Even figuring out which tutorials to test was a bit of a chore: I found instructions for earrings sporting tiered tassels, multiple mini-tassels arranged along hoops and a variety of other DIY dangles. But with only a few days left until Christmas, time wasn’t on my side so I quickly narrowed my list down to three options. Two featured embroidery floss while the third used premade fringe to form the tassel. In all three cases, I found combing the finished tassels with a fine-tooth comb really helped separate the strands of floss and fluff them out a bit. Here’s what I found, with each method rated from 1 to 10, with 10 indicating the least expensive, easiest and best results:
CAPPED FRINGE: First up was a tutorial on a blog called Charleston Crafted , written by a couple remodeling their first home. This method looked like the simplest one I found, because it didn’t involve fussy cutting or tying embroider thread. Instead, fringe trim that can be purchased by the yard (though you’ll need only a few inches) is rolled up and glued into a little metal cap that attaches to an earring wire. But I couldn’t find the “jewelry end caps” called for in the instructions — the closest I could find was a “toggle clasp kit” that appeared to be similar. I think my caps were smaller, and the top of my fringe was thicker, which meant it was a bit tricky
to roll it tightly and then glue it in place. Still, this was a pretty easy process. While I used probably less than 50 cents worth of fringe, the lever-back earrings were more expensive than the other options, and there was only one set of caps in the clasp kit, making this the most expensive option. And while there were maybe half a dozen colors of fringe to choose from at my local fabric store, that was far fewer than the options for the other methods that use embroidery floss for the tassels. COST: 5 EASE: 7 RESULTS: 6 ———
OMBRE HOOPS: A blog called “Style & Forks” promised “The Easiest Tassel Earring Tutorial,” and while it was indeed the easiest of the three I tried, it wasn’t quite as easy as it looked. This method involves simply tying embroidery floss onto hoop earrings — no glue, no fiddly jewelry findings. So far, so good. But the instructions also call for wrapping the thread around two fingers — without saying how many times — and I found that resulted in short lengths of floss that were difficult to tie. Instead, I wrapped the thread around four fingers six times, which gave me enough to work with. The tutorial also doesn’t explain HOW to tie the embroidery thread to the hoop. I found better instructions and photos on a website for Darice , a company that makes craft supplies. Essentially, you fold the threads in half in a U-shape, hold it under the earring and pull the ends through the loop. I improvised an even easier way by putting a bit of tape on the ends to hold them together, which made poking them through the loop and tying the knot smoother. And then the tape is cut off when the tassel is trimmed. Once I got the hang of it, this method was quick, even though it involved adding multiple tassels to each hoop. This method was inexpensive, because it didn’t require pliers or glue. And it offers the most opportunity for customization. I used three shades of the same color for an ombre effect, but using all one color or mixing it up would be just as good.
This photo shows handmade earrings hanging on a Christmas tree in Hopkinton, N.H., which make for inexpensive stocking stuffers. (AP Photo/Holly Ramer)
COST: 8 EASE: 8 RESULTS: 8 ———
DANGLING HOOPS: My final attempt was based on a tutorial on the website Made in a Day . This method uses an entire skein of embroidery floss per earring, which makes for a chunkier tassel and also means no measuring. The floss is looped over an oval jump ring and tied to create the tassel, which was a bit harder than I expected. The instructions say to use glue, but not exactly where, and I ended up with some hot glue squirting out the side of my tassel top. Wrapping another jump ring around the tied portion also was not particularly easy. From there, however, it’s just a matter of trimming the tassel, slipping the jump ring onto a hooped earring and attaching the hoop to an earring wire. This method required the most pieces, and might be the most difficult if you’re not used
to working with tiny jump rings and pliers. But once proficient, you could whip up many pairs because the packages of supplies contain enough for doz-
We protect it. You live it. I’m here to help life go right – so you can enjoy it, while I help protect it. Let’s talk about your life insurance options. CALL ME TODAY. ™
Nancy A Field, Agent 35202 Kenai Spur Hwy Soldotna, AK 99669 Bus: 907-262-4440 nancy.field.c4xc@statefarm.com
State Farm Life Insurance Company (Not licensed in MA, NY or WI), State Farm Life and Accident Assurance Company (Licensed in NY and WI) Bloomington, IL 1601487
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | D3
Medical bills plague millennials; these tips may be the cure By SEAN PYLES NerdWallet
Chrystal McKay knew enough about medical care costs that she skipped the ambulance ride after a car accident. A friend drove her to the emergency room. That saved her one bill, but she faces another for more than $20,000 after her ER visit. The 29-year-old Stockton, California, woman must balance paying her debt with getting care for a sprained shoulder that may need surgery: “I have to weigh the pros and cons. I’m already $20,000 in debt, and any more treatment will just put me more in debt.” Uninsured at the time and facing a bill she doesn’t know how to handle, McKay finds herself in a position familiar to many in her generation. If she can’t cover the cost, her bill may wind up in collections. No matter your age or insurance status, there are ways to make medical debt more manageable, whether you just got the bill or it’s already in collections.
MEDICAL COLLECTIONS PEAK IN LATE 20s Young adults incur medical collections debt at a higher rate than older age groups, ac-
cording to a study published in Health Affairs , a health policy journal. The report looked at 2016 data from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s Consumer Credit Panel. It found that the frequency of medical debt in collections peaked at 11.3 percent, for people age 27, and stayed near that level until the mid-40s — even though medical spending in general is low for people in their 20s. The median amount in collections also peaked at age 27, at $684. In contrast, people in their 60s had higher rates of medical spending but fewer medical collections. That puts millennials — those born 1981-1996 — in the crosshairs. “There are a number of things that add up that make younger adults more prone to this kind of debt,” says economist Ben Ippolito, one of the study’s authors. Among them: - Less earning power: Americans ages 25 to 34 had a median income of $36,664 in 2017, according to the Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey. - Lack of insurance: Just under 20% of millennials in their late 20s and early 30s were uninsured, the highest rate seen in the Health Affairs report. - Mobility: Younger people tend to move more frequently, increasing the chances for lost
bills leading to collections. McKay’s income took a hit when she had to quit her doggrooming position as a result of her injuries; she expects to make about $30,000 for the year. And she was recently approved for state-run health insurance. But insurance doesn’t entirely shield people from medical collections. The study found that “most medical debts are relatively modest in size, which means they could be incurred before the insured person meets their deductible.”
UNCERTAIN HOW TO COVER MEDICAL BILLS McKay made a GoFundMe page to drum up some money but has only about $1,300 so far. However, she has the right idea in trying to take some type of action, even if the bill seems overwhelming. If your bill isn’t paid for several months, the debt could go into collections, which can drag down your credit score and make you appear riskier to potential creditors. “I find, by and large, people have no clue about how to handle a bill,” says Adria Gross, a medical bill advocate in New York. In nearly 30 years of experience, working at one point for an insurer and now negotiating bills on behalf of
US adults aren’t getting taller, but still putting on pounds
This April 3, 2018 file photo shows a closeup of a beam scale in New York. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison, File) By MIKE STOBBE AP Medical Writer
NEW YORK — You don’t need to hang the mistletoe higher but you might want to skip the holiday cookies. A new report released Thursday shows U.S. adults aren’t getting any taller but they are still getting fatter. The average U.S. adult is overweight and just a few pounds from obese, thanks to average weight increases in all groups — but particularly whites and Hispanics. Overall, the average height for men actually fell very slightly over the past decade. There was no change for women.
One factor may be the shift in the country’s population. There’s a growing number of Mexican-Americans, and that group tends to be a little shorter, said one of the report’s authors, Cynthia Ogden of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The findings come from a 2015-16 health survey that measures height and weight. More than 5,000 U.S. adults took part. CDC records date back to the early 1960s, when the average man was a little over 5 feet, 8 inches tall and weighed 166 pounds. Now, men are almost 1 inch taller and more than 30 pounds heavier. But
today’s average height of 5 feet, 9 inches is about a tenth of an inch shorter than about a decade ago. The average woman in the early 1960s was 5 feet, 3 inches and 140 pounds. Now, women are a half-inch taller and about 30 pounds heavier, on average. The average height is about the same as it was a decade earlier: 5 feet, 4 inches. Other survey findings: —In the last decade, the average weight of men rose about 2 pounds, to 198. For women, it rose 6 pounds, to nearly 171. —Men have 40-inch waistlines, on average. Women’s waistlines are a little under 39 inches. —The average height of black men and white men has been holding about steady, at a little under 5 feet 10. —Mexican-American and Asian-American men are roughly 3 inches shorter than whites and blacks, on average. There was a similar height gap in women. In 2016, about 18 percent of the nation’s population was Hispanic, up from about 13 percent in 2000, according to U.S. Census figures. Mexican-Americans account for nearly two-thirds of the Hispanic population.
AlaskaAlaska Airlines, Hilton Waikoloa Hawaii Forest & Trail, Jack’s Airlines, Hilton WaikoloaVillage, Village, Hawaii Forest & Trail, Jack’s DivingDiving Locker, and Enterprise will treat luckycouple couple a dream Hawaiian Locker, and Enterprise will treatone one lucky to to a dream Hawaiian vacation. This This trip trip willwill whisk you toHawaii Hawaii Island, “The Big Island.” vacation. whisk youaway away to Island, “The Big Island.” Unique in itsin encompassing 1212separate climate zones, natural beauty. Unique its encompassing separate climate zones, andand natural beauty.
ENTER FOR TO WIN! ENTER FORYOUR YOUR CHANCE CHANCE TO WIN! Go to Go Hawaii.com to start to Hawaii.com to start submitting contest entries. submitting contest entries. Earn more points on Hawaii.com Earn more points on Hawaii.com for more chances to win. for more chances to win.
Your complete source for island Your complete source for island travel. travel.
No purchase necessary. Must benecessary. 21+ years oldbeto21+ enter. accepted Hawaii.com until December 31, 2018 at 11:59 participants not permitted same email Any use of robotic, repetitive, automatic, No purchase Must yearsEntries old to enter. Entriesataccepted at Hawaii.com until December 31, 2018 at 11:59PM PMHST. HST. Multiple Multiple participants are are not permitted to sharetotheshare samethe email address. Anyaddress. use of robotic, repetitive, automatic, programmed or programmed or similar entry methodssimilar or agents voidorallagents entries Employees their immediate families)families) of Oahu Publications, Inc.Inc.(Hawaii.com) andallallparticipating participating sponsors not Winner eligible.willWinner will be for responsible for all taxes total value of the prize(s) entry will methods willbyvoidyou. all entries by you.(and Employees (and their immediate of Oahu Publications, (Hawaii.com) and sponsors are notare eligible. be responsible all taxes applicable to the applicable total value oftothethe prize(s) received. Prize(s) are non-transferable, redeemablenot forredeemable cash andfor must used re–sale. Prize(s)Prize(s) expire approximately fromthetheentry entry deadline. Winner willtorefer to the prizefor vouchers complete details, termsIfand restrictions. received. Prize(s) arenot non-transferable, cashnot andbemust notfor be used for re–sale. expire approximatelyone oneyear year from deadline. Winner will refer the prize vouchers completefor details, terms and restrictions. the winner has anyIf the winner has any issue with the prize orissue is notwith able redeem prize(s) as specifi ed they must theforfeit prizethe and another winner will will be be drawn. orextensions extensions be made by Hawaii.com. Winner authorizes OPIname to use name and likeness promotion at no additional thetoprize or is notthe able to redeem the prize(s) as specifi edforfeit they must prize and another winner drawn.Changes Changes or willwill not not be made by Hawaii.com. Winner authorizes OPI to use their andtheir likeness for promotion at nofor additional compensation. Winnercompensation. will be contacted. No be phone callsNo please. Alaska round-trip air travel for for 2 (valued Travelvalid valid any Alaska in NorthWinner America. travel times and package Winner will contacted. phoneSee callsprize please.details. See prize details.Airlines Alaska Airlines round-trip air travel 2 (valuedatat$2,800). $2,800). Travel fromfrom any Alaska AirlinesAirlines gatewaygateway in North America. travelWinner dates, times anddates, package components subject components subject to change and availability. Additional restrictions andrestrictions blackout dates may apply. Alaska offers low andand non-stops citiesalong alongthethe West to Hawaii. Learn more at www.alaskaair.com. Celebrate anescape inspiring island to change and availability. Additional and blackout dates may apply.Airlines Alaska Airlines offersfares low fares non-stopsfrom fromten ten cities West CoastCoast to Hawaii. Learn more at www.alaskaair.com. Celebrate an inspiring island for two withescape Five for two with Five (6) Nights Ocean View(6)Accommodations at Hilton Waikoloa Village . Included: charge self-parking andand daily 2 persons). Blackout apply and reservations areroom subject to room availability ($8,812 Nights Ocean View Accommodations at Hilton Waikoloa Village resort . Included: resortbenefi chargets, benefi ts, self-parking dailybreakfast breakfast(breakfast (breakfast forfor2 persons). Blackout dates dates apply and reservations are subject to availability ($8,812 value). Learn more value). at www.Learn more at www. hiltonwaikoloavillage.com. Join Hawaii ForestJoin & Trail onForest a Hidden Hike, A Peak toAPint at Hualalai. HikeHike thethecool lava-scaped slopes of Hualalai Volcano. Afterwards, enjoy a local tasting at Olabooking Brew.required. Advanced booking required. hiltonwaikoloavillage.com. Hawaii & TrailCraters on a Hidden Craters Hike, PeakExperience to Pint Experience at Hualalai. cooland andmisty misty lava-scaped slopes of Hualalai Volcano. Afterwards, enjoy a local brewery tourbrewery & tasting attour Ola&Brew. Advanced Cancellations within 24 hours or “no shows” void certifi cate. Gift Certifi cate may not be redeemed during black out dates 12/18-1/6. Certifi cate cannot be sold or transferred. ($384 value). Scuba Diving Pool Introduction Class for two adults with Cancellations within 24 hours or “no shows” void certificate. Gift Certificate may not be redeemed during black out dates 12/18-1/6. Certificate cannot be sold or transferred. ($384 value). Scuba Diving Pool Introduction Class for two adults with Jack’s Diving Locker.Jack’s Diving Locker. Try scuba diving in theTryJack’s pool for two people. and blackout datesdates maymay apply. Subject reservations recommended value). Enterprise 6-day mid-size at any Oahu Enterprise Rent-A-Car scuba Diving diving inLocker the Jack’s Diving Locker pool forAdditional two people.restrictions Additional restrictions and blackout apply. Subjecttotoavailability, availability, reservations recommended ($150($150 value). Enterprise Rent-A-CarRent-A-Car 6-day mid-size car rental at anycar Oahurental Enterprise Rent-A-Car location. Renter must location. be 21 years older a valid driver’s and license a major card. Additional restrictions andand blackout apply.Subject Subject to availability, reservations recommended. Renterormust be with 21 years or older with alicense valid driver’s andcredit a major credit card. Additional restrictions blackoutdates dates may may apply. to availability, reservations recommended.
In this photo, a nurse hooks up an IV to a flu patient at Upson Regional Medical Center in Thomaston, Ga. (AP Photo/David Goldman, File)
consumers, she’s seen the confusion medical bills can cause. “First thing people need to do if they can’t afford a bill is call their provider and see if they can negotiate it. And the provider probably can reduce what you owe,” Gross says. She advises having details of your income and how much you can pay at hand, to help you make your case.
Other options for handling your medical debt include: - Pursue a payment plan: Ask the provider to break up your bill into a number of payments to cover the cost over time. If they refuse, you can create your own by transferring the debt to a 0% APR credit card (though you’ll need good credit to qualify for one).
- Hire a professional: Medical bill advocates may be able to negotiate your bill down to a fraction of the original amount. - Try DIY settlement: You may be able to negotiate a lump sum settlement on your own, especially if the debt is already in collections. The creditor may accept your offer to pay less than you owe rather than risk receiving no payment at all.
5 low-calorie snacks that stray from the norm Snacking may not seem like part of a healthy diet, but the right snacks can help men and women fight midday hunger without contributing to unwanted weight gain. The following low-calorie snacks won’t compromise adults’ efforts to maintain healthy weights, and they might prove useful as men and women look for that extra boost during the day. 1. Popcorn: Popcorn is low in calories and a good source of dietary fiber. Popcorn also is high in polyphenols, which are antioxidants that have been linked to reductions in heart disease and certain cancers. Air-popped popcorn that is prepared without any oil is your best option, as a cup of such popcorn may only add up to about 30 calories. Avoid adding salt or butter or purchasing premade popcorn that is heavy on both, as both ingredients can compromise the health benefits of popcorn.
2. Nonfat Greek yogurt: Though it’s not as low in calories as popcorn, nonfat Greek yogurt is still a low-calorie snack that’s high in protein. Nonfat Greek yogurt may have as much as two times the amount of protein as traditional yogurts, and that’s beneficial because protein helps you feel full longer, which should help you maintain a healthy weight and avoid overeating. Nonfat Greek yogurt also tends to have less sugar than traditional yogurts, and its creamy texture gives many people the impression that they are eating something decadent. 3. Hummus: Made primarily from ground chickpeas, hummus is a protein- and fiber-rich snack that has been linked to a host of health benefits, including a reduced risk for heart disease and certain types of cancers. Dip vegetables such as baby carrots into hummus, and you’ll have a low-calorie snack that’s also
high in vitamin A and beta carotene. 4. Pistachios: Many people might read the labels of pistachios and be turned off by the fat content. But pistachios are low in saturated fat and high in protein, and a couple dozen pistachios may only amount to about 95 calories. Eat pistachios raw and do not add salt, which can negate their health benefits. 5. Grapes: Grapes might not be as popular as potato chips or other widely available snacks, but they are great sources of vitamin K and are loaded with antioxidants. Grapes are loaded with water, making them a filling snack that can help men and women avoid dehydration. According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, one cup of grapes can provide as much as 5 percent of the recommended daily value of dietary fiber despite containing just over 100 calories.
D4 | Sunday, December 23, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion
To understand life expectancy fall, start in West Virginia shut down. Last fall, he had just pulled out of a long-term habit of pain pills and other drugs when he bizarrely tore a tendon in his foot while picking up a piece of paper at a post office. It was so painful he rarely walked, but he continued to eat terribly. Out of a job and with his marriage in ruins, “I had no motivation” to be healthy, he said. “I didn’t care.” By January, the 5-foot-3 former mine foreman ballooned from 165 pounds to 196. “I was round as I was tall,” he said. A visit to the Williamson health center revealed he had alarming, diabetes-qualifying blood sugar levels. He’d had mini-strokes in the past, and his physician said a much bigger one was probably on its way if Muncy did not take drastic steps. The doctor put him on a tight carb-cutting diet, connected him to physical therapy and put him in the homevisit diabetes program. Now Muncy walks 5 miles a day and is a regular at the farmer’s market. His weight is down to about 145 pounds, he said in a recent interview. He still smokes, though.
AN UNCERTAIN FUTURE University of Washington
This photo shows Delbarton, W.Va.The state eclipses most others in the percentage of people affected by diabetes, heart disease and obesity. (AP Photo/Tyler researchers recently calculatEvert) ed something called “healthy By MIKE STOBBE AP Medical Writer
MADISON, W.Va. — If you want to understand why U.S. life expectancy is declining, West Virginia is a good place to start. The state is a bellwether of bad health, portending major problems years before they became severe nationally. “It seems that the worst outcomes happen here first,” said Dr. Michael Brumage, a West Virginia University public health expert who formerly ran the health department in Charleston. “We’re the canary in the coal mine.” The drug overdose death rate for all Americans today is where West Virginia’s rate was 10 years ago. The nation’s suicide rate is where West Virginia’s was nearly 20 years ago. Obesity was common in West Virginia before it became widespread in the rest of the country. And life expectancy started tumbling in the Mountain State before it began falling across the U.S. Maggie Hill has lived in the state for all of her 67 years. Sitting in her cabin in the town of Madison recently, she ticked off the many deaths that have befallen her family: An older brother drowned in a flood in 1977. A sister died in a house fire. Two siblings, both smokers, died of lung cancer. Two others were stillborn. Her first husband died of congestive heart failure. Then there were the suicides. Two of her three sons shot themselves to death, one of them after losing his job. Her second husband died the same way, using a gun in their bedroom closet one Sunday morning while she was still in bed. “I don’t think people have a lot to live for,” she said. “I really and truly don’t see things getting better.”
LIFE EXPECTANCY After decades of steady increases, U.S. life expectancy has been declining since 2014. A government report released last month said the trend continued last year, driven in part by suicides and drug overdoses — the socalled diseases of despair. What else is driving the decline? Experts say America’s obesity problem has worsened the diabetes death rate and helped stall progress against the nation’s leading killer, heart disease. West Virginia eclipses most other states in the percentage of people affected by diabetes, heart disease and obesity. It has had the nation’s highest rate of drug overdose deaths for years running. It also has the highest obesity rate and the highest rates of diabetes and high blood pressure. Adding to those woes
is the highest suicide rate among states east of the Mississippi River. Earlier this fall, U.S. health officials released for the first time life expectancy predictions at a neighborhood level. An Associated Press analysis of the data found wide disparities in cities and towns. Among states, the AP found, Hawaii had the highest life expectancy. West Virginia was the second lowest, behind Mississippi. Mississippi, Oklahoma and a few other states suffer death and disease rates that are about as bad — or sometimes worse. But those places have unusually large populations of low-income black or Native American people, who suffer a disproportionate share of disability, disease and death. West Virginia is 94 percent white. That makes it a telling indicator. Nearly 80 percent of the Americans who die each year are white people, and death rates rose in white men and women last year but were flat or falling in blacks and Hispanics. So white deaths — particularly those of people who are not elderly — are mainly responsible for the nation’s declining life expectancy.
WIDESPREAD ATTENTION Ten years ago, The Associated Press described Huntington, West Virginia, and its environs as the unhealthiest place in America , based on health survey data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that put it at the bottom of the charts in more than a half-dozen measures, including the highest proportions of people who were obese, had diabetes and had heart disease. The AP report, and others like it, drew widespread attention that peaked in 2010, when celebrity chef Jamie Oliver staged a reality TV show in Huntington to teach people how to eat better. The attention was not entirely welcomed. It felt like outsiders coming in to criticize and perpetuate “hillbilly” stereotypes, said Steve Williams, who was elected Huntington’s mayor in 2012. But Williams said it also was motivating, prompting changes in school food and even improvements to parks and sidewalks. “We get slammed all the time with obesity,” said Andy Fischer, a financial adviser who organized a 2,500-person community walking program. “We’ve got to get better.” These days, the Huntington area looks somewhat better in government health surveys. For example, the region’s obesity rate is only a
few percentage points above the national median — instead of 10 or 20 points. That said, it’s clear the Huntington area still has some big problems. It ranks among the worst metro areas in measures like the percentage of adults who smoke, have high blood pressure and have had a stroke.
OPIOIDS AND OBESITY
group. Another grant went to- life expectancy” — the periward restoring a greenhouse od someone born today could and helping people learn to expect to live in relative health. West Virginia, at 62½ garden. Many of the projects years, was the lowest among are baby steps, but confer- states. Clearly, health problems ence participants cited a few places where progress seems abound. Black lung disease rates broader. Huntington is one, and coal mine injury rates apthey say. Another is Mingo County, pear to be up. West Virginia has been at in the southwest corner of the state, deep in the heart of the top of the charts in hepacoal country. Life expectancy titis B and C infection rates. there has never been high. Adding to that, the state saw Jobs in the lumber and coal an HIV outbreak last year, industries were notoriously and it is still weathering a dangerous. Doctors could be hepatitis A outbreak — both hard to find. And there was associated with injection violence: The deadly Hat- drug users Maggie Hill, the lifelong field-McCoy feud played out in those hills, as did bloody West Virginian, has little labor battles between miners hope for the future. But she does have Charity. and coal companies. Charity is a 10-year-old The largest municipality in the county, Williamson, girl Hill adopted about five became known in the last years ago. Hill’s son had decade as a center for the been raising her but lost abuse of prescription opioid custody during his ongoing painkillers. (Some called the struggle with drug addiction, 3,000-person town “Pilliam- Hill said. Hill and Charity live in a son.”) small wooded valley with a But while the drug crisis was playing out, some local creek in it — a holler, as they leaders — led by a young say in West Virginia. Her doctor named C. Donovan house is a cabin that from the “Dino” Beckett — built a outside resembles a small, series of programs aimed at tidy barn. Charity has given creating a culture of health. her life a purpose, she said. “I taught her how to surIt started seven years ago vive when I’m gone,” she with the opening of a free said. “I have to. She’s going clinic that later became the Williamson Health and Well- to need to know how to cook. ness Center. That spawned … She needs to know how a community garden and a to keep house. She needs to vegetable delivery service, know how to mow grass, so a running club and once-a- if she ain’t got a man, she can month 5K races that draw a keep the yard clean. I teach few hundred runners. Also in her every bit of this.” Charity is a good student the works, for next year, is a federally funded treatment (“Four A’s and a B on her last program for people addicted report card,” Hill said). And there’s hope that she will do to drugs. So far, perhaps the most well enough to go to college. successful program is one Hill is saving for it. “She that sends health workers to wants to be a doctor,” Hill said. the homes of diabetics. If Charity does go to colJamie Muncy is one suclege, some place away from cess story. The 48-year-old lost his Boone County, Hill says she SIGNS OF CHANGE job three years ago when will move there with her. “If There are some signs of the mine he was working in I’m alive,” she said. hope in West Virginia. In October, health advocates held a conference on obesity in the South in West Virginia’s capiThe Office of Marcus C. Deede, M.D. tal city. It was a surprisingly Is pleased to announce that upbeat meeting. The South has long had the highest obesity rates in the country, and nowhere has Stephen M. Wahl, M.D. adult obesity been more comhas joined the practice at mon than in West Virginia. Peninsula Medical Center But future-focused projects 265 N. Binkley Street are popping up all over the state, aimed at getting kids to Soldotna, Alaska 99669 embrace exercise and healthy eating. Experienced fully qualified “We want to give people Family Physician, hope that we can be knocked Pediatric, Adult off the unhealthiest list” of states, said Kayla Wright, and Geriatric Medicine, director of an organization Sports Medicine, called Try This West Virginia Diabetes, & Joint Injections that’s funding many of them.
pital, joking that “people will wait on you hand and foot.” A few minutes later, he explained: “It’s all about treating them like people. They don’t get a lot of that.” Something seems to be working. Non-fatal overdoses in Huntington have fallen and are on track to be 40 percent lower than 2017, city officials said. They are optimistic deaths will be down this year, too. “If we can turn around overdose numbers here, we can do it anywhere,” Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams said in May at a health summit in Huntington. Politicians including President Donald Trump have decried the opioid epidemic, prioritizing it over other health crises. But obesity still presents a towering threat. West Virginians exercise less than other Americans. They eat fruits and vegetables less often. Only Mississippi has a larger proportion of adults drinking soda and other sugar-sweetened beverages each day. In some cases, state policies are not helping. For example, bariatric surgery can help certain obese people for whom conventional diet and exercise programs have no lasting effect. But West Virginia’s Medicaid program has unusually harsh cost-control barriers that make it difficult for severely obese people to get approved for surgery, according to a recent analysis by George Washington University. Then there’s the soda tax, which health advocates say can give consumers second thoughts about choosing those drinks. Last year, Gov. Jim Justice proposed raising it from 1 cent per 16.9-ounce bottle to a penny per ounce. It failed in the Republicancontrolled Legislature.
About the time Huntington was trying to tackle its weight problem, it was rocked by a new crisis — opioid addiction. West Virginia now has the distinction of having the nation’s highest drug overdose death rate. Last year, for the first time, the state’s body count surpassed 1,000. The epidemic also produced ripple effects such as a spike in the number of children taken into foster care because of dead or addicted parents. In the last two years, no West Virginia county has seen more overdose deaths than Cabell County, which includes Huntington. One of the grimmest spots has been Huntington’s West End — some locals call it “the Worst End.” The AP analysis of neighborhood-level death data found the area had a life expectancy at birth of only 62 years, 16 years shorter than national life expectancy. Huntington’s reputation crystalized on a chaotic Monday in August 2016, when emergency responders saw 28 overdoses over six hours — including two deaths. The city soon became known as America’s overdose capital. As documentary crews descended, Huntington tried to confront the problem. Among the efforts were quick-response teams charged with finding people days after they were treated for an overdose. The teams include a police officer, a clergy member, a paramedic and a treatment counselor who hand out overdose-reversing naloxone and provide information about treatment. They also direct people to a needle-exchange program run by the Cabell-Huntington Health Department. One of the key figures in the program is Thommy Hill, a former drug dealer who has become its gatekeeper and central cog. He knows every drug user who visits and constantly tries to persuade them to try treatment — arranging immediate transportation and handing them a backpack full of clothes if they agree. One morning in late October, bantering with a man who had come in for fresh needles, Hill lit up when the One grant paid for high visitor mentioned a past vaca- school students to build a 5K tion. Hill pitched him a one- trail and explore creating a week stay at a treatment hos- teen cross-country running
Please call to schedule an appointment Same day appointments available
907-262-9341
Sunday, December 23rd, 2018
DILBERT®/ by Scott Adams
DOUBLE H BOOTS
Available at
Sweeney s Clothing
DOONESBURY/ by Garry Trudeau
SALLY FORTH/ by Francesco Marciuliano and Jim Keefe
MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM/ by Mike Peters
B.C./ by Mastroianni and Hart
ZIGGY/ by Tom Wilson
DENNIS THE MENACE/ by Hank Ketcham
MORT WALKER’S BEETLE BAILEY/ by Mort, Greg & Brian Walker
MARVIN/ by Tom Armstrong
THE BORN LOSER by Art & Chip Sansom