Peninsula Clarion, October 22, 2018

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Schools

NFL

What’s happening this week

Panthers rally to defeat Eagles

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Sports/A6

CLARION

Cloudy 49/34 More weather on Page A2

P E N I N S U L A

Monday, October 22, 2018 Kenai Peninsula, Alaska

Vol. 49, Issue 19

In the news Road rage driver avoids jail time for pointing BB gun FAIRBANKS (AP) — An Alaska woman who menaced a family with a BB gun during a road rage incident will avoid jail time. Betty Jean Holder, 49, of North Pole was initially charged with two counts of felony assault, the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reported. In a plea arrangement, she pleaded guilty to one count of misdemeanor assault. She was sentenced to a year in jail, which was suspended, and two years of probation. Holder in June 2017 contacted Alaska State Troopers and reported that a vehicle had nearly collided with hers. She told an investigator she followed the second vehicle for a short distance and flipped her middle finger at the driver. Three hours later, the other driver, who had his teenage daughters with him, told a different story. He reported to troopers that he and Holder stopped at an intersection and that she gestured at him as he started to drive through. He backed up and made a sarcastic gesture indicating Holder should go first, he said. He also began recording video. The video showed Holder standing outside her vehicle holding what appeared to be a black semi-automatic handgun. The BB gun had “SIG Sauer” on the side with a model number of P226 and looked almost identical to a real SIG Sauer pistol, prosecutors said. “What? Are you scared?” Holder is recorded saying. One of the teens is recorded saying there were children inside the man’s vehicle. Holder replied, “Good,” and pointed the gun directly at the camera, according to the criminal complaint. The man immediately drove through the intersection. His 16- and 13-year-old daughters told troopers they believed Holder was pointing a real handgun and that they were going to be shot. Holder acknowledged getting out of her vehicle but denied pointing the BB gun toward the camera. She had the BB gun and a stun gun in her vehicle for self-defense, she said. Holder was ordered to attend an anger management assessment and to forfeit the BB gun. She will be banned from possessing a firearm until she concludes probation. She also was ordered not to contact the victims.

Index Local .......................A3 Opinion .................. A4 Schools ...................A5 Sports .................... A6 Classifieds ..............A9 Comics................. A12

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Walker says he quit race to boost Begich By BECKY BOHRER Associated Press

JUNEAU — Alaska Gov. Bill Walker’s surprising announcement that he was quitting his bid for re-election with less than 21 days to go was an effort to boost Democratic rival Mark Begich’s chances of beating Republican Mike Dunleavy. Walker, the only independent governor in the country, said Friday he could not win a three-way race and that Alaskans deserve a choice other than Dunleavy. There are a lot of things he and Begich don’t agree on, but Walker said Begich would be better for Alaska. Whether Begich can overtake the presumed front-runner remains to be seen with twoand-a-half weeks before the election. Begich, who said his campaign was “inundated” with calls after Walker’s announcement, thinks he can win. Some Democrats and independents had long worried Walker and Begich would split the vote, handing the race to Dunleavy. Walker, a former Republican, was elected in 2014 with Democratic support. The Gubernatorial candidates Democrat Mark Begich, left, and Republican Mike Dunleavy, right, take the stage amid an empty seat clincher for Walker’s decision for Gov. Bill Walker at a debate Friday in Anchorage. The two debated shortly after Walker, an independent, dropped out of the See QUIT, page A2 race just weeks ahead of the election. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

A tour of homesteading history School By VICTORIA PETERSEN Peninsula Clarion

Third-graders at Soldotna Elementary are learning all about their community. Marge Mullen, one of the city’s first homesteaders, is invited every year to teach students about what life was like in the early days on the peninsula. Mullen showed the students around Soldotna’s historic post office, where she used to receive mail. She visited the students in their classroom earlier last week to talk about her own homestead. “I took some survey tape and made a 14- by 16-foot square on the floor to show them that my homestead could have fit inside their school room,” Mullen said. Third-grade teacher at Soldotna Elementary, Shaya Straw, said having Mullen speak to the students is a great opportunity. “I think it’s cool they get to Marge Mullen shows a group of third-graders around the Howard Lee Homestead, which was have this firsthand account of used as the city’s first post office when she first homesteaded in Soldotna, Wednesday in Soldotna. (Photo by Victoria Petersen/Peninsula Clarion) history here,” Straw said.

Scientists show support for salmon measure By KEVIN GULLUFSEN Juneau Empire

Former scientists and fisheries managers are taking sides over Ballot Measure 1. On Wednesday, a group of 58 experts from state and federal agencies released a statement of support for the measure, which would change how development is permitted on some fish habitat. That follows a letter of opposition penned by 10 former habitat managers and State of Alaska commissioners, published in the Anchorage Daily News in late September. Ballot Measure 1 creates a different permitting structure for development on anadromous (e.g. salmon) fish habitat in Alaska. Oil and mining companies say it’s bad for business. Measure backers call it a much-needed update to state law.

Why are so many retired state employees speaking out? Alaska law bars current state employees from using their positions to advocate for “partisan political purposes.” Only retired permitting, habitat and fisheries biology experts are allowed to speak out without repercussions. Wednesday’s support statement, put together by conservation group Cook Inletkeeper, makes the case that Alaska’s current laws are too vague to properly protect wild salmon. Current habitat protections fall into Alaska’s Title 16, the Alaska Anadromous Fish Act. It’s about a page and a half long , single-spaced. Ballot Measure 1 is eight pages, and adds detail on what kind of habitat harm the Alaska Department of Fish and Game should allow from which projects.

Retired Juneau fisheries biologist Phil Mundy, one of the letter’s signers, worked for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game and the National Marine Fisheries Service for 23 years. Title 16 is “sketchy,” and vague, Mundy told the Empire. The state’s spawning and rearing streams are largely intact, Mundy said, unlike Washington state’s Columbia River Basin, where Mundy worked for 13 years. Passing the ballot measure would prevent what happened there from happening here, Mundy said. Alaska’s habitat may be pristine, he said, but that’s not guaranteed to last. “You don’t wait until the horses run off to close the barn door,” Mundy said. The larger number of experts voicing support for the measure was telling, Mundy added.

“As a consequence of being a larger group of people, we have a much broader experience with salmon habitat and salmon habitat issues. I would go with the weight of opinion,” Mundy said. A spokesperson for opposition group Stand for Alaska, Kati Capozzi, said the statement of support has a lot of federal managers, which weakens its relevance, she said. Twenty of the 58 signers worked exclusively for federal agencies. Ballot Measure 1 would affect state law, something federal fisheries scientists know less about, Capozzi said. “This is something that the state will have to implement, this is something that the state will have to live with and pay for, so you would think that they would be looking a little more toward state officials,” Capozzi said.

district, unions continue labor talks By VICTORIA PETERSEN Peninsula Clarion

The Kenai Peninsula Borough School District met last week with the Kenai Peninsula Education Association and the Kenai Peninsula Educational Support Association to continue negotiations on a contract for district teachers and staff. Teachers started the school year in August without a contract, although they did receive movement on their respective salary schedules. Pegge Erkeneff, communications liaison for the school district, said Wednesday’s meeting included conversations about health care. The district and the associations are waiting to hear a health care premium quote from Public Education Health Trust, an outreach program to assist in the procurement of affordable health care options for Alaska’s public school districts. At the negotiations, the school district offered a supposal, or one-time offer, to the associations, which was rejected. The associations, in turn, offered the district a package proposal, which is an offer that must be taken in its entirety. David Brighton, president of the Kenai Peninsula Education Association, said the package proposal expires Oct. 31. He said another meeting between the associations and the district has not been planned. “In theory, it could happen quickly,” Brighton said.


A2 | Monday, October 22, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

AccuWeather 5-day forecast for Kenai-Soldotna

Utqiagvik 27/22

®

Today

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

An a.m. shower; otherwise, cloudy

Overcast with a couple of showers

An a.m. shower; mostly cloudy, mild

Mostly cloudy, a shower in the p.m.

Cloudy and mild

Hi: 49 Lo: 34

Hi: 44 Lo: 37

Hi: 47 Lo: 37

Hi: 46 Lo: 36

Hi: 44 Lo: 36

The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature® is an exclusive index of the effects of temperature, wind, Sunrise humidity, sunshine intensity, cloudiness, precipitation, Sunset pressure and elevation on the human body.

35 38 40 41

Daylight Length of Day - 9 hrs., 31 min., 22 sec. Daylight lost - 5 min., 27 sec.

Alaska Cities

From Kenai Municipal Airport

Nome 40/31 Unalakleet McGrath 42/31 44/24

First Nov 15 Tomorrow 6:58 p.m. 7:23 a.m.

Yesterday Hi/Lo/W

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Kotzebue 33/26/pc 48/43/pc 46/36/pc McGrath 44/34/c 52/42/c 49/35/c Metlakatla 50/43/pc 27/20/c 27/22/c Nome 40/31/pc 42/34/pc 47/34/c North Pole 48/29/pc 48/40/sh 47/38/sh Northway 32/22/pc 51/45/r 52/39/c Palmer 49/42/sh 48/35/pc 42/29/pc Petersburg 52/43/pc 48/34/pc 43/22/pc Prudhoe Bay* 26/22/sn 47/41/r 50/36/sh Saint Paul 46/40/r 47/42/r 46/39/c Seward 49/44/r 50/27/pc 44/26/pc Sitka 56/51/r 32/24/pc 29/16/c Skagway 52/49/r 53/38/r 40/29/c Talkeetna 53/41/c 51/36/pc 41/23/pc Tanana 39/27/pc 50/46/r 47/43/sh Tok* 41/25/pc 52/45/r 51/36/r Unalakleet 42/28/c 52/46/c 49/48/r Valdez 45/40/r 52/43/pc 54/50/r Wasilla 51/43/c 31/20/pc 30/21/c Whittier 47/43/r 51/44/sh 52/34/c Willow* 51/36/c 55/45/c 55/50/sh Yakutat 52/46/r 52/48/r 50/45/r Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

Today Hi/Lo/W 32/26/c 44/24/c 54/51/sh 40/31/c 44/26/pc 36/23/pc 51/32/pc 55/49/sh 24/17/c 45/40/sh 49/42/sh 56/52/sh 48/45/r 49/33/c 38/25/pc 38/26/pc 42/31/c 44/36/c 49/31/pc 47/40/r 47/29/pc 50/46/r

National Extremes Kodiak 50/45

High yesterday Low yesterday

Ketchikan 54/50

56 at Sitka 3 at Anaktuvuk Pass

Today’s Forecast

(Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation)

Much of the nation will be dry as a fresh batch of cold air enters the upper Great Lakes with rain and snow showers today. Drenching rain will return to South Texas as showers dot the interior Southwest.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

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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

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55/43/pc 70/47/s 60/42/pc 50/32/s 66/50/pc 60/39/s 69/42/pc 64/36/pc 56/40/pc 50/31/s 76/59/pc 51/25/s 58/40/pc 56/39/pc 59/35/s 53/37/pc 61/36/pc 87/76/s 68/55/r 61/39/s 70/48/pc

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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 Editor ......................................................................... news@peninsulaclarion.com Jeff Helminiak, sports and features editor .......... jhelminiak@peninsulaclarion.com Education, Soldotna .............. Victoria Petersen, vpetersen@peninsulaclarion.com Police, courts ........................... Erin Thompson, ethompson@peninsulaclarion.com Arts and Entertainment............................................... news@peninsulaclarion.com Community, Around the Peninsula .............................. news@peninsulaclarion.com Sports ................................................. Joey Klecka, jklecka@peninsulaclarion.com

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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

41/36/c 47/37/pc 69/41/pc 67/37/s 73/37/s 83/48/s 73/48/pc 70/58/c 75/59/pc 63/49/pc 65/36/pc 56/45/pc 66/30/s 65/39/s 41/34/sn 85/74/pc 68/31/s 86/69/t 69/39/s 56/47/pc 70/39/pc

55/43/pc 49/37/s 72/47/pc 62/31/s 72/39/s 79/45/s 67/50/c 66/53/r 73/62/pc 64/51/pc 67/46/pc 64/47/pc 63/29/s 65/40/s 50/40/c 86/67/pc 70/42/pc 83/66/pc 69/46/pc 59/47/pc 72/50/pc

. . . Quit Continued from page A1

to leave the race, it appears, was his lieutenant governor’s abrupt resignation days earlier over an inappropriate overture to a woman. After his announcement Friday, Dunleavy campaign manager Brett Huber blasted Walker’s “bitter, partisan attack” on Dunleavy. In a statement, Huber said Walker’s decision to drop his re-election bid will provide voters “a clear choice.” Key issues in the race are crime, the economy and the future of the annual check Alaskans receive from the state’s oil-wealth fund, the Alaska Permanent Fund. Walker worries Dunleavy could undo actions he’s taken as governor, such as expanding Medicaid. Dunleavy has expressed concerns with the program. Dunleavy, a former state senator, wants to reduce state spending and supports a full payout of Permanent Fund dividend checks. Alaskans should get a say on any proposed change to how the dividend is calculated via an advisory vote, he said. The size of the checks has been capped since 2016, first by Walker, then by legislators, amid budget deficits. Lawmakers this year began using Permanent Fund earnings to fill much of the deficit after going through billions of dollars in savings amid gridlock and rejecting Walker tax proposals. Fund earnings also are used for dividend checks, setting the stage for a political fight. Begich, a former U.S. senator, has supported constitutionally protecting the dividend and using bonds for infrastructure projects. He also has noted his support of abortion rights, which distinguish him from Dunleavy and Walker. Walker’s announcement came three days after his lieutenant governor and close friend, Democrat Byron Mallott, resigned. Walker told reporters there wasn’t any one thing that caused him to abandon his campaign now, though he said it was a tough week.

Yesterday Hi/Lo/W

Acapulco 91/76/t Athens 72/61/pc Auckland 65/55/pc Baghdad 80/67/pc Berlin 59/35/pc Hong Kong 82/72/pc Jerusalem 76/60/s Johannesburg 71/48/s London 64/47/pc Madrid 70/57/pc Magadan 37/30/r Mexico City 69/57/sh Montreal 39/36/c Moscow 46/42/c Paris 66/43/pc Rome 73/57/pc Seoul 69/43/pc Singapore 89/78/pc Sydney 68/58/c Tokyo 70/56/s Vancouver 57/41/pc

Today Hi/Lo/W 85/75/t 71/61/t 69/52/c 87/65/s 54/38/sh 82/74/pc 81/65/pc 71/46/pc 56/42/s 74/50/pc 39/24/pc 72/55/pc 44/38/r 45/34/pc 59/40/pc 66/53/s 68/44/s 88/76/t 72/62/s 71/60/s 58/44/pc

He said conversations he’d had with Begich about Begich’s positions and the dynamics of the race also were considerations. “There was no, quote, deal as such on anything like that,” he said. Begich said there were talks with Walker about Alaska’s future, born of shared concerns about Dunleavy. “So we’d continue to have conversations to try to figure out, Is there a path forward to move Alaska and unify in a way that makes sense? And we are where we are,” he said. Jay Parmley, executive director of the state Democratic party, said he expects additional help from the Democratic National Committee. The Republican Governors Association already has been a major contributor to a third-party group backing Dunleavy. Pollster Ivan Moore said people are starting to pay closer attention to the race. But he said the impact of Walker’s decision remains to be seen. He said Dunleavy also could pick up some Walker votes. Stephen Gasche, a Juneau independent, leaned toward Walker before Mallott’s resignation and toward Begich after. On Friday, he said he would vote for Begich. “I am so glad I don’t vote early!” he said via Facebook messenger. Lindy Jones, a Walker supporter from Juneau, blamed Begich for creating a three-way race but said he’d “reluctantly” vote for him. Alaska Democrats opened their primaries to independents, and Walker, who wanted to run with Mallott, flirted with entering the primary. He backed out when it appeared Begich would run and instead gathered signatures to appear on the ballot, a move that ensured he and Mallott could be running mates. Jones said Walker’s decision to abandon his campaign was another example of tough decisions he’s made. “I think that he realizes that there’s going to be a spoiler if it’s a three-way race, and this is the only hope,” Jones said. “And frankly I don’t know if it’s going to be enough.” Libertarian Billy Toien also is running.

Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice

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Around Alaska Anchorage school board picks ex-CFO to serve on panel ANCHORAGE — The Anchorage School Board has announced that it has picked a former chief finance officer for the Anchorage School District to serve on the panel. School board President Starr Marsett says in a statement Sunday that Mark Foster has been selected from of a field of 32 candidates, the Anchorage Daily News reports. Foster takes the spot on the seven-member school board vacated by Bettye Davis, who resigned last month. Marsett says the board interviewed candidates for nine hours in an open meeting Saturday. The Daily News reports that the board voted for Foster 4-2 over Margo Bellamy, a former head of the district’s Equal Employment Office. Marsett says board members chose Foster because of his knowledge of school district budgets. Foster served as the district’s top finance official from 2013-2016. — Associated Press

SEWARD HIGHWAY, MP 75 to 90 ROAD CLOSURES Girdwood

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Turnagain Arm

COMPLETE ROAD CLOSURE

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PROJECT BOUNDARIES ile R tym

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Contacts for other departments: General Manager...................................................................... Brian Naplachowski Production Manager .....................................................................Frank Goldthwaite Online ....................................................................................... Vincent Nusunginya

77/61/pc 68/40/pc 86/77/pc 78/61/pc 64/44/s 79/58/pc 65/45/s 67/47/s 84/74/pc 70/53/pc 59/38/pc 57/33/s 67/41/s 75/65/pc 52/48/pc 63/48/s 70/46/pc 65/37/pc 83/65/pc 56/47/pc 87/70/pc

City

Place r Riv er

Display: Call 283-7551 and ask for the display advertising department between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

73/59/pc 64/29/s 88/77/pc 77/64/pc 59/41/s 81/62/s 55/34/s 60/41/s 91/75/pc 64/46/pc 50/28/pc 59/28/s 58/35/s 73/65/pc 48/45/pc 58/50/pc 68/43/pc 71/33/s 80/72/pc 51/46/r 89/73/pc

City

Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

ar d Sew

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twitter.com/pclarion

94 at Thermal, Calif. 8 at Bodie State Park, Calif.

State Extremes Cold Bay 47/38

CLARION P

Sitka 56/52

(For the 48 contiguous states)

High yesterday Low yesterday

r

50/40/pc 69/54/pc 75/48/pc 63/40/s 68/49/s 57/46/pc 65/53/r 58/43/pc 59/35/s 70/47/s 56/25/s 70/49/pc 53/43/s 50/41/sh 63/34/pc 72/55/pc 63/44/s 65/41/s 60/38/pc 65/38/pc 61/42/s

Juneau 49/48

ive

46/39/pc 67/47/pc 69/37/s 56/35/s 64/43/s 54/48/pc 74/57/c 54/45/pc 65/40/pc 64/39/s 64/26/s 69/37/s 49/44/r 42/34/c 71/42/s 65/53/s 47/36/pc 61/43/s 51/28/s 71/34/s 51/32/s

24 hours through 4 p.m. yest. Trace Month to date ........................... 4.87" Normal month to date .............. 1.99" Year to date ............................. 17.16" Normal year to date ............... 14.84" Record today ................. 0.42" (1981) Record for Oct. .............. 7.36" (1986) Record for year ............ 27.09" (1963) Snowfall 24 hours through 4 p.m. yest. .. 0.0" Month to date ............................. 0.0" Season to date ........................... 0.0"

Twen

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

From the Peninsula Clarion in Kenai

Valdez Kenai/ 44/36 Soldotna Homer

Dillingham 50/36

National Cities City

Precipitation

Anchorage 49/35

Bethel 47/34

Unalaska 46/40 Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

Kenai/ Soldotna 49/34 Seward 49/42 Homer 51/36

Talkeetna 49/33 Glennallen 40/29

* Indicates estimated temperatures for yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W

Fairbanks 44/26

High ............................................... 52 Low ................................................ 44 Normal high .................................. 41 Normal low .................................... 25 Record high ........................ 56 (1957) Record low ........................... 0 (1996)

Cre e

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

Moonrise Moonset

Today 6:47 p.m. 6:02 a.m.

Readings through 4 p.m. yesterday

Temperature

Tomorrow 9:05 a.m. 6:31 p.m.

New Nov 7

Almanac

s on

City

Last Oct 31

Internet: www.gedds.alaska.edu/auroraforecast

e ek

Yesterday Hi/Lo/W

Full Oct 24

Anaktuvuk Pass 27/13

Kotzebue 32/26

G lac

10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.

Today 9:03 a.m. 6:34 p.m.

Today’s activity: Moderate Where: Auroral activity will be moderate. Weather permitting, moderate displays will be visible overhead from Barrow to as far south as Talkeetna and visible low on the horizon as far south as Bethel.

Prudhoe Bay 24/17

Sun and Moon

RealFeel

Aurora Forecast

Planned Closure Details: 7 Drivers should be aware of overnight COMPLETE ROAD CLOSURES (both

north and southbound lanes) between MP 84.6 and 86.1 nightly, on Wednesday, October 24 and Thursday, October 25, and from Monday, October 29 through Thursday, November 1. 7 These COMPLETE ROAD CLOSURES will occur for six hours between

8:00pm and 5:00am on the scheduled days. 7 The road will be completely CLOSED during these times, with no alternate

or DETOUR ROUTES available. Please plan your trip accordingly.

AlaskaNavigator.org For more information, call DOT at 269-0450, Granite Construction Co. at 344-2593 or visit AlaskaNavigator.org.

The DOT&PF operates Federal Programs without regard to race, color, national origin, sex, age, or disability. Full Title VI Nondiscrimination Policy: dot.alaska.gov/tvi_statement.shtml. To file a complaint go to: dot.alaska.gov/cvlrts/titlevi.shtml.


Peninsula Clarion | Monday, October 22, 2018 | A3

Around the Peninsula League of Women Voters presentation on Ballot Measure 1

Fall craft bazaar The Soldotna Senior Center is hosting our annual Fall craft bazaar, amateur art show, and bake sale on Friday and Saturday, Nov. 2-3, from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. For more information on the amateur art show, including check-in and check-out times and art requirements, please contact the Soldotna Senior Center at 907-262-2322.

The League of Women Voters will host a presentation on Ballot Measure 1 on Thursday, Oct. 25 from 6-7 p.m. at the Borough Assembly chambers in Soldotna. Laura Rhyne and Kaitlin KPBSD budget development meeting Vadla from Cook Inletkeepers will speak for a YES vote. Owen The Kenai Peninsula Borough School District requests input from Phillips from Stand for Alaska and Linda Hutchings from Stand staff, parents, and community members at the districtwide KPBSD for the Kenai Peninsula will speak for a NO vote. budget development meeting, scheduled at various locations throughout the district on Tuesday, Oct. 30 at 6 p.m. For questions, call NataThe LeeShore Center monthly Board meeting lie Bates at 714-8888. The LeeShore Center will be holding its monthly Board meeting at The LeeShore Center on Wednesday Oct. 31. The meeting Sterling holiday craft and vendor fair is open to the public and begins at 6 p.m. For further information The Sterling Community REC Center will host a holiday craft and call 283-9479. vendor fair on Saturday, Nov. 10 from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Vendors still welcome. Call 262-7224. Booth spaces are $45.

Showcase with Kathleen Witkowska Tarr

days at 9:30 a.m. Bring water. —Holiday craft fair: The annual North Peninsula Recreation Center craft fair will take place Saturday, Dec. 8 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Free admission. Booth space for vendors is available. Call 776-8800. —Teen costume party: Friday, Oct. 26 from 7-10 p.m. Come in your best costume and dance the night away! — Toddler time: The Nikiski Community Recreation Center will be hosting Toddler Time on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays from 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Contact 776-8800. —Open gym nights: Teen Center, Monday–Friday, 2:30–8 p.m. Full Swing Golf, Monday–Friday, 10 a.m.–8 p.m.

Diabetes support group to meet The Diabetes Support Group meets the last Tuesday of every month in the River Tower of Central Peninsula Hospital. Meetings are free and open to the public. The group often has speakers on a variety of relevant topics. Please call Ruth Clare at 714-4726 if you have questions or need more information.

New Kenai River rotary meeting place

The KPC Showcase and River City Books presents “From Trunk or Treat Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month, the Kenai River Rotary the Inner Frontier to the Last Frontier: Thomas Merton’s 1968 The Anchor Point Senior Center is hosting Trunk or Treat on Alaska Journey” with author Kathleen Tarr on Thursday, Nov. Wednesday, Oct. 31 from 4:30-6 p.m. Come decorate your car, your Club will meet at Siam Noodles in Soldotna. 1 at 6:30 p.m. in the Mclane Commons, Kenai River Campus, kids, and have a great time! Kenai Peninsula College. Kathleen Witkowska Tarr is the author Kenai National Wildlife Refuge activities of “We are all poets here,” a blend of spiritual memoir and biogThe Kenai National Wildlife Refuge Visitors Center is open every raphy involving the world-famous spiritual writer, teacher, and Anchor Point Annual Holiday Bazaar day from 9 a.m.–5 p.m. on Ski Hill Road near Soldotna. For more Trappist monk, Thomas Merton. The Anchor Point Annual Holiday Bazaar will take place Satur- information, call 260-2820. All events are free. day, Nov. 3 from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Over 45 vendors! Stop by the Senior — Drop-in craft and self-guided trail walk, different each week Kenai Peninsula Family Caregiver Support Center and reserve a table today. Contact 235-7786. —Spooky Seasons, a not-so-scary all-ages event on Saturday, Oct. 27 from 12-4 p.m. Program workshop and open house —Saturday Wildlife Movies Refuge film at 11 a.m., noon, 2 p.m.; Pound for Pink Kenai Peninsula Family Caregiver Support Program work“Sea Ghosts: Beluga Whales” at 1 p.m.;“Ravens” at 3 p.m. shop and open house will take place Tuesday, Oct. 23 from 11 In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, a Pound for Pink a.m.-2 p.m. in the Blazy Mall, Suite # 209. Drop by our office to class raising money for Casting for Recovery on the Kenai Peninsula see how we may best serve you via access to our lending library, will be held on Sunday, Oct. 28 at Kenai Middle School. Contact Soldotna Public Library activities durable goods loan closet, gain information and assistance. At 1 Wendi Dutcher at 907-398-1748 for more information. Sponsored by For more information, contact the library at Soldotna Public p.m. the Sandra J, Kerns, M.Ed., MSW, LCSW on Winter’s Grace Studio 49. Library at 262-4227. Guidance Center will present “Offering Healing Experiences for —National Friends of the Library Week Oct. 21-27. Join Seasons of Feeling Lost What Was, What Is, What Could Be.” Trapping and snaring orientation classes with us in celebrating all the work the Soldotna Library Friends Please join us to share your experiences as a caregiver, or to supdo to support our library! If you’d like to help your local library, The Kenai National Wildlife Refuge will hold its 2018 trapping please consider becoming a member of the Soldotna Library port someone who is. Call Sharon or Judy at 907-262-1280, for orientation class and snaring seminar on Saturday, Oct. 27 from 9 Friends. more information a.m.-5 p.m. at the Refuge Environmental Education Center on Ski —Outsmart The Financial Scammers Tuesday, Oct. 23 at 6 Hill Road in Soldotna. To obtain a permit to trap on the Refuge, it p.m. Incidents of fraud are on the rise and scammers’ tactics are Senior Breakfast is mandatory to attend at least one Refuge trapping orientation. becoming more complex. This presentation will help give attendThe Sterling Senior Center is serving breakfast on Satur- Trappers who have previously attended the trapping and snaring ees the information they need to outsmart the scammers. During day, Oct. 27 from 9 a.m. to noon. Menu includes bacon, ham, orientation do not need to re-attend; however, all Refuge trap- the program, we’ll discuss how to spot certain red flags that may sausage, scrambled eggs, pancakes and biscuits and gravy. $10 pers are welcome. Starting October 5, trapping permits for the indicate a fraudulent encounter, resources individuals can turn to donation for adults and $5 for children. For further info, call 2018-19 season will be available at the Refuge Headquarters, on in the event they or a loved one are targeted, and steps attendees 262-6808. Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. For addi- can take now to help protect themselves and loved ones. This protional information, please contact Refuge Officer Joe Williams at gram will be taught by Edward Jones Financial Advisors. -907-260-2852. —Soldotna Library Friends Bargain Book Sale Thursday, Oct. Christmas Bazaar 25 from 2-6 p.m. Join us for great reading bargains! Star of the North Lutheran Women’s Missionary League Kenai Community Library events —Halloween Party Thursday, Oct. 25 at 4 p.m. Join us for Halmembers are hosting a Christmas Bazaar to help fund local, loween story time and a party! Come in costume and get ready for state, and national mission projects on Saturday, Nov. 17 from —Social Security 101: Video Conference Monday, Oct. 22. stories, activity pages, and a cupcake walk. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Star of the North Lutheran Church, 216 at 12 p.m. A FREE workshop from Social Security. When are —Medicare 101 Tuesday, Oct. 30 at 1 p.m. Jim Trombly, MasN. Forest Drive in Kenai. Baked goods and craft items will be you eligible to receive retirement benefits? How does early ter Medicare Counselor, will present an overview of the Medicare available for sale. All funds are distributed to help those less retirement affect your benefits? Do you qualify for disability, program, including Part D. Information will be provided on prefortunate. For more information call 283-4153 or 398-4846. survivors, and spouse benefits? What is the future of Social Se- scription drug plan comparisons. curity? Learn how to use my Social Security online account and —Escape the Room: Stranger Things Tuesday, Oct. 30 at 6 other online services. You should go to www.socialsecurity.gov/ p.m. You are called upon to rescue Eleven from the Upside Down Grand Group meeting myaccount to create a my Social Security account and print out before the Demogorgon finds you! Light refreshments will be The October Grand Group meeting will take place on Thursday, your Social Security Statement before attending the workshop. served. Registration required. Please call the front desk at 262Oct. 25 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Seaman building in Kenai, —Harry Potter Potions, Thursday, Oct. 25 at 5 p.m. Come make 4227 to reserve your spot. This program is designed for adults. 601 Frontage Rd, Suite 102. This month’s topic include “How’s it slime in our Harry Potter Potions Class! Space is limited for this —Teen Costume Contest Wednesday, Oct. 31 at 4 p.m. Think going at school?” and “How has raising your grandchildren changed free event so sign up early at the front desk. Geared toward teen you’ve got the best Halloween costume in town? Is it spooky, other relationships?” Informational workshops for grandparents are and tweens. Call Ryanna at 283-4378 for more information. funny, or just outright terrifying? Show us what you’ve got! Indialso available. A pot of chili is on the menu. Everyone is welcome. —Special Halloween Story Time, Monday, Oct. 29 at 4 vidual and group prizes. p.m.Before you visit our Literary Haunted House, join us for a —STEAM Activity with the Challenger Center Thursday, FREE not-too-scary Halloween Story Time for the whole family! Nov, 1 at 4 p.m. Learn about space and participate in some fun Registration open for the 2018 Women in No registration required! hands-on activities. Agriculture Conference —Literary Haunted House: Join us for a FREE not-too-scary Ongoing events: The 2018 Women in Agriculture Conference will take place on haunted house open to all ages. Watch your favorite villains come to —Teen Lounge, every Wednesday at 4 p.m., for middle school Saturday, Oct. 27 at four Alaska locations this year — Fair- life with bubbling potions, interactive exhibits, and so much more. and high school students. Join us for PS4, board games, Nerf batbanks, Delta Junction, Palmer and Soldotna. Altogether, the Children under 10 must have adult supervision. No registration re- tles, study sessions, and other fun! Snacks provided. event will include 34 video conference sites in Alaska, Mon- quired! Times: —Teen Innovation Lab: Mondays from Sept. 10–Oct. 29, 3:30 Friday, Oct. 26 at 10:30 a.m. to noon & 3-5 p.m. tana, Oregon, Idaho and Washington. Speakers will address this p.m. Join us in learning how to code websites, games, apps, and Saturday, Oct. 27 at 2-4 p.m. year’s theme, “Pump Up Your Financial Fitness.” Registration robots! Dip your toes in Javascript, HTML, and other programMonday, Oct. 29 at 4:30-6 p.m. and more information are available at http://womeninag.wsu. ming languages. We’ll also explore a variety of digital tools, such Tuesday, Oct. 30 at 11 a.m. to noon and 4-6 p.m. edu/. The early registration fee is $30 until Oct. 14 and $35 as Arduino, Ozobots, and Littlebits. The Innovation Lab will run Wednesday, Oct. 31 at 11 a.m. to noon and 3-5 p.m. after that date. Agriculture students, farm interns and members for eight weeks and is open to all teens. No experience needed. —Day of the Dead Wire Sculptures, Thursday, Nov. 8 at 4 p.m. of FFA or 4-H pay $20. The fee includes the workshop, a light —Toddler story time, 10:30 a.m. Tuesdays, for children ages Class size limited to 10 people. Must pre-register. Come learn how 18 months to 3 years. breakfast, lunch and conference materials. to make Calaveras (skeletons) Wire Sculptures in this hands on class. —Bouncing babies storytime, 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays, for Appropriate for ages 9 and older. For more information call James at children up to 18 months. SPOOK-TACULAR Fundraiser 283-8210. —Preschooler story time, 10:30 a.m. Thursdays, for chil—Raspberry Pi Club, Friday, Nov. 9 at 4 p.m. Join us at the library dren 3 to 5 years old. The Sterling Community Center will host a Spook-tacular fundraiser and fire truck dedication in memory of Jeff Clonts to create games, inventions, learn how to program, make music with —LEGO Brick Club, 4 p.m. Tuesdays. Tell your story on Saturday, Oct. 27. Event will include dinner, music, split the Sonic Pi, meet new friends, and more! Whether you want to hone your and build a world with LEGO. Adult supervision needed for pot, and silent auction. Soupbowl, salad, and dessert. Doors and skills or are learning about Pi’s for the first time, the Raspberry Pi club children under 10. bar open at 5:30 p.m. Dinner tickets are $15 for adults, $10 for is the perfect place for you! —Everyday Computer Skills for Beginners: Fridays at —Lego Maker Tuesdays from 4-5 p.m. Why not join us to build the Soldotna Public Library, Sept. 14–Nov. 2 at 12:30, Tueschildren 12 and under. To buy tickets over the phone call 262LEGO creations based on new themes each week and inspired by days and Wednesdays at Kenai Peninsula College from Sept. 7224. children’s books! Lego Makers, Mondays from 4–5 p.m. Designed 11–Oct. 31 at 12:30 p.m. for children ages 6-12; children under 8 must be accompanied by an —Do you want to learn how to use a computer or the Kenaitze Fall Harvest Carnival adult. internet, but just don’t know where to start? We’re offering —Wee Read Story Time, Tuesdays at 10:30 a.m. Designed for free courses in partnership with KPC focusing on learning The Kenaitze Indian Tribe’s Yaghanen Youth Program will children ages 0-3. Every Tuesday enjoy a program full of stories, how to use computers for everyday tasks such as using dochost a Fall Harvest Carnival from noon to 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 27 at the Yaghanen Youth Center, 35105 K-Beach Drive, Suite songs, finger play and more! No registration required. uments, finding information online, filling out forms, and —Chess Club, Tuesdays at 4 p.m. Get ready to ROOK the HOUSE connecting with friends and family through email or social B, in Soldotna. The carnival is open to youth ages 3 to 12 and includes games, prizes and food. Tickets are available at the every Monday! Do you like playing Chess, or would you like to learn media.Register in person at the KPC Learning Center or by door. The event is a fundraiser for the Yaghanen Youth Program. how? The Kenai Community Library is proud to offer a casual pro- phone 262-0327. gram for chess players of all ages and levels. Chess boards will be For more information, call 907-335-7290. provided. —Preschool Story Time, Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m. Designed for Refuge woodcutting permits Peninsula Piranhas tryouts children ages 3-5. Every Wednesday enjoy a program full of stories, The Kenai National Wildlife Refuge is offering personTryouts for the Peninsula Piranhas swim team are on Mon- songs, movement and more! No registration required. al use firewood permits for several woodcutting locations day, Nov. 5 from 4-4:30 p.m. at Kenai Central High School. around the refuge. These permits are for collection of dead Practices start Nov. 6 from 3-6 p.m. Contact KCHS pool coach Kenai Senior Center activities and downed wood, beginning Oct. 9. Permits with maps and Will at 283-7476. instructions can be obtained beginning Oct. 9 at the RefThe Kenai Senior Center is open 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday to Fri- uge Headquarters on Ski Hill Road in Soldotna. For further day, and are open until 9:30 p.m.on Thursdays. Community meals are information, visit Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, or call Time to Sign Up For Trunk or Treat 2018 served Monday to Friday from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Cost for lunch is (907) 262-7021. The Boys & Girls Club in Kenai is seeking the assistance $7 suggested donation for individuals 60 or older, $14 for those under from the community to make “Trunk or Treat 2018” bigger and 60. Call 907-283-4156 for more information. —“No Host” dinner on Tuesday, Oct. 23 at 4:30 p.m. $5 ride Narcan kits available at Kenai Public Health better than ever! The event will be held on Saturday, Oct. 27 fee from 3-5 p.m. and is free for all youth attending. We are seeking Heroin overdoses are on the rise in Alaska. Narcan is an —Kumihomo (braid making) with kit on Tuesday, Oct. 23. easy medication you can give to someone who is overdosing. sponsors, donations, trunks and volunteers. Businesses, community organizations or individuals interested in participating Cost: free It may save their life. Adults can get free Narcan nasal spray —Halloween costume party on Wednesday, Oct. 31. Cost: free call Kimberli Dent at 283-2682, Fax: 283-8190 or email at kits at the Kenai Public Health Center at 630 Barnacle Way, kdent@positiveplaceforkids.com for more info. Suite A, in Kenai. For additional information call Kenai Public Health at 335-3400. Nikiski Recreation Center activities

PRE PLANNING

Peninsula Memorial Chapels & Crematory 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.

—Nikiski Pool Closure: Due to unforeseen circumstances, the Nikiski Pool Facility will only be open for showers, fitness room, courts. —The great turkey challenge: This run/swim challenge will take palce on Saturday, Nov. 17 at 11 a.m. Registration from 10-10:45 a.m. at the NCRC. $5 entry fee per person. Multiple age categories. —Pumpkin plunge: Free annual event for children 4-10 years old on Tuesday, Oct. 30 from 5-6 p.m. —Spin class: The Nikiski Community Recreation Center offers spin class twice a week. Classes are Wednesdays at 6 p.m. and Satur-

Update your records at Kasilof cemetery The Kasilof-Cohoe Cemetery Association is updating their records. If you have a reserved plot or a family member interred at Spruce Grove Memorial Cemetery in Kasilof, please notify us with your contact information, so we can keep our records current. Updated rules and regulations are also available. Email SpruceGroveCemetery@gmail.com or send information to Kasilof Cohoe Cemetery Association, P.O.Box 340, Kasilof, AK, 99610.


Opinion

A4 | Monday, October 22, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

CLARION P

E N I N S U L A

Serving the Kenai Peninsula since 1970 Terry R. Ward Publisher

BRIAN NAPLACHOWSKI....................................... General Manager VINCENT NUSUNGINYA................................. Audience/IT Manager DOUG MUNN....................................................... Circulation Director FRANK GOLDTHWAITE.................................... Production Manager

What Others Say

The awful truth about how the U.S. treats immigrant families A disturbing Associated Press report shines a light on what happens to immigrant children separated from their parents and forced into foster-care settings mandated by the U.S. government. In a small number of cases, foster-care networks have yanked permanent custody of young children from their natural parents to serve the adoption wishes of American families. These horrendous separation policies predated the Trump administration. The fact that Democratic and Republican administrations were responsible for such atrocities means both parties are responsible for fixing it. The Trump administration has, however, made the problem worse by escalating the family-separation policy while coldly telling parents that permanently losing their children might be the price for entering this country illegally. Perhaps worse is that pious, pro-family, pro-life groups like Bethany Christian Services have become enablers for policies that are anything but Christian and pro-family. Separating children from their parents, then putting them up for adoption, destroys lives and leaves indelible psychological scars. A 3,900-word Associated Press investigative story tells the nightmare of Araceli Ramos Bonilla, a Salvadoran mother who was abused, threatened and badly beaten by the father of her then-toddler daughter, Alexa. Ramos decided to flee with Alexa to the United States in 2015. They were separated by authorities after being arrested in Texas. Ramos was deported. Alexa was handed over to Bethany Christian Services, which enthusiastically answered the government’s call for foster-care help. Sarah Zuidema, a former Bethany supervisor, told the AP: “They just felt that if these kids could know Jesus, everything would be OK.” Enormous constitutional questions arise when the government seizes children and hands them over to groups seeking to indoctrinate them religiously. Ramos was assumed to be some kind of heathen. She said she was forced to sign away custody of her child before being deported back to El Salvador. Her persistent pleas for help from U.S. authorities went nowhere. The Department of Homeland Security played dumb about the case, telling the AP it was unaware of “anyone contacting embassy or consulate in a foreign country to be reunified with a child. This is unsurprising given the fact that these parents made a knowing decision to leave their child in a foreign country.” Ramos wasn’t alone. In Missouri, another case involved a baby separated from a Guatemalan mother arrested in an immigration raid. A seven-year legal battle ensued, and the mother lost permanent custody to the child’s adoptive U.S. family. In Nebraska, the AP reported, another Guatemalan mother prevailed and got her kids back, but only after an expensive, five-year court battle. Yes, illegal immigration is an offense under the law. But it has never been, and never should be, an offense punishable by such Dickensian measures. These are tactics that made Argentina’s dictatorship so abhorrent. Has the U.S. government stooped to that level?

The poisonous allure of right-wing violence

Gavin McInnes is selling a marketable product. The pose of the right-wing provocateur and founder of the group the Proud Boys is that he’s simply a defender of normality and old-fashioned male fellowship, when what gives his cause its frisson of excitement is violence. McInnes is enjoying a media moment. After he gave a speech at New York’s Metropolitan Republican Club, a usually staid establishment on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, his Proud Boys fought with members of antifa on the streets, in what has been a publicity coup. The group got denounced by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, and video footage of the clash has been irresistible. The New York Times profiled McInnes the other day. McInnes may have more staying power than other fringe-y right-wing figures who have briefly gained prominence the past few years. He is outrageous, yet funny and whip-smart. He is obviously trying to preserve some credibility, or at least plausible deniability. His alt-right affiliation is clear enough, but he steered clear of the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va. The group bears the unmistakable stamp of his cracked vision — McInnes is like the Abbie Hoffman of right-wing street fighters. One level of initiation involves getting punched while shouting out the names of five breakfast cereals. This all feels like an elaborate joke, yet the business end of the Proud Boys is serious enough.

ism, “Among the Thugs,” Bill Buford writes of how he started out believing that there must be some underlying cause to the thuggery. Then he came to realize, no, the mayhem itself was the point. “Violence is one of the most intensely lived experiences and, for those capable of giving themselves over to it, is one of the most intense pleasures,” Buford writes. By McInnes’ account, his Proud Boys heartily agree. The violence of the Proud Boys has additional allure to a certain audience. It can be portrayed as merely defense against antifa goons. It is simple, and requires no effort at argument or persuasion. It is taken as a symbol of strength — the Proud Boys supposedly always win their fights. Needless to say, this is all poisonous. You can oppose antifa without brawling with it — one mob does not justify another. Violence outside the law is always wrong. We have democratic politics exactly so political and cultural disputes can be settled without resorting to fisticuffs — or firearms and bombs. If conservatism is to represent law and order, it must anathematize and exclude advocates of bloodshed. Gavin McInnes surely believes he has a growth commodity, and he might be right. All the more reason to resist his siren call of violence, which isn’t normal, clever or justified. Rich Lowry can be reached via email at comments.lowry@nationalreview.com.

Biologist: I ‘Stand for Salmon’

We Alaskans are fish people plain and simple. We revere them, catch them, can them, pickle them, view them in their natural state, consume them, sell them, share them, and revel in knowing that they prosper among us. Salmon bring nutrients to us from our oceans and breathe life into our wildlife, wetlands and forests. Fish are a part of who we are whether they are salmon, trout, pike or blackfish. They are the bellwether of our health as a people. Salmon were decimated, and in many cases extirpated, almost entirely from western Europe and North America’s east coast. Only remnants of wild stocks remain in very limited areas. Americans moved westward in the 1800s and began to log, build dams, clear land, and grow crops. Salmon lost that battle as well. Our leaders said not to worry. We will solve the problem by building hatcheries. It didn’t work. Wild stocks were lost forever, and hatcheries largely failed to the tune of billions of dollars. Now we are beginning to remove dams in California, Oregon and Washington, while attempts at fish and habitat restoration continue to cost the — St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Oct. 14 tax payers billions. Alaska is the last bastion for Pacific salmon. The last bastion of relatively healthy native fish stocks. Historically, salmon have always lost the battle when pitted against political careers, money, economics and development. But it doesn’t have to be this way. Alaska’s fisheries and their habitat deserve better. E-mail: It is time to give them the protection they news@peninsulaclarion.com need. A protection that, literally the world heretofore, has failed to do. The win/win is Write: Fax: Peninsula Clarion 907-283-3299 that this can be done in conjunction with P.O. Box 3009 Questions? Call: healthy development of our other renewKenai, AK 99611 907-283-7551 able and non-renewable resources. As a former habitat and fisheries biologist and consultant on the gas pipeline in

Letters to the Editor:

McInnes is open about his glorification of violence. In a speech, McInnes described a clash with antifa outside a talk he gave at NYU last year: “My guys are left to fight. And here’s Rich Lowry the crucial part: We do. And we beat the crap out of them.” He related what a Proud Boy who got arrested told him afterward: “It was really, really fun.” According to McInnes: “Violence doesn’t feel good. Justified violence feels great. And fighting solves everything.” Then, in keeping with his stance that the Proud Boys represent a return to groups that used to play a large role in American civil society (you know, like the Shriners), he declared the Proud Boys “normal.” All they want to do is have kids, live in the suburbs and love America. But patriotic suburban dads have better things to do than roam the streets of Manhattan getting into brawls with black-clad left-wingers, nor is this an activity conducive to meeting a nice girl and settling down. The atavistic impulse of the Proud Boys is straight from the movie “Fight Club,” in which a violent men’s group represents a revolt against banal, overly feminized bourgeois society. In his great book on soccer hooligan-

V oices of the

P eninsula M ike C hihuly the 1970s and early 1980s, I am so frustrated and shudder in disbelief at all the misleading information, scare tactics, and negative ads regarding Proposition 1. They talk about how extensive and comprehensive our current habitat laws are, betting on the presumption that you will believe them and never look for yourself. Title 16 is four short nebulous paragraphs. Who of you reading this piece have even read the portions of Title 16 that protect our fisheries? I believe very few people know what the current Alaska statute says and how it protects our anadromous and non-anadromous fishes … and even fewer have read Ballot Measure 1 in full and understand how it is different and better for Alaska’s salmon and the people who depend on them. Instead, many choose to watch and be misled by expensive and erroneous ads, paid for by big business purporting that the proposition is unwise and will stop every development project in the state. How ridiculous and foolish is that! They quote government officials and leaders who claim that Ballot Measure 1 would stall and/or eliminate all transportation and economic development projects statewide. Let’s get real folks. The bottom line here is money. No one wants to be forced to get a permit or ask for permission from government to do anything, and none of

the large developers want to spend a single dime beyond what is required. Big business likes the current Title 16 fisheries habitat laws because they know they require the minimum of effort and money to abide by. The people telling you this are mostly folks that care little about the resource and only about their profits and shareholders. Permitting is part of the cost of doing business in resource development. All these organizations have biologists on staff or consultants who take care of permitting and mitigating sensitive biological issues that arise during development. Throughout my entire 60 years as a biologist, fishing guide, and former Board of Fisheries member, there is one thing I have heard over and over from every user group: Let the biologists do their job! Take the politics out of research, management, allocation, and protection. Ballot Proposition 1 is a clear, honest chance to do just that. Our current Title 16 salmon protection is outdated, lacks specific criteria for fish protection, and worse yet, the go or nogo decision balances perilously on the fulcrum of the current political climate. Decisions about fish and their habitat can vary depending solely upon who sits in power. This is the people’s chance not only to protect fish and their habitat, but also to decide as Alaskans what we want responsible development in Alaska to look like. I’m hoping that everyone will educate themselves on this issue, and not sell out the one renewable resource that defines us as a people and a state. Please join me on Nov. 6 and Stand for Salmon. Mike Chihuly is a former habitat and fisheries biologist who lives in Ninilchik.


Schools Chance Percival

Soldotna High School Monday, October 22nd SoHi Staff Lounge: After Prom Parents of Juniors meeting at 5:30pm. After Grad Parents of Seniors meeting at 6:30pm. Next PTSA meeting is Thursday, November 15, 5:30pm SoHi Staff Lounge. *snacks will be provided at all meetings The Soldotna Girls Basketball team will be hosting their annual What Women Want Shopping Expo on Saturday, November 3rdfrom 10-4pm. Concessions will be open. There will be a bouncy house from Jumpin Junction from 11am-2pm and pictures with Frosty the Snowman from 11am-1pm. Soldotna High School will be hosting a College Goal Alaska FAFSA completion workshop for seniors and their parents on November 27th at 6pm in room 24. Bring your 2017 tax information. For more information, contact your school counselor. Parents of Juniors kick off meeting will be Monday, October 22, in the Sohi staff lounge at 5:30pm. Parents of Seniors kick off meeting will be Monday, October 22, in the Sohi staff lounge at 6:30pm The Soldotna High School Counseling Department will host two FAFSA Completion Workshops. Bring your 2017 tax info and get expert help filling out the FAFSA on Monday, October 8th 6pm in room 24 and Tuesday, November 27th 6pm in room 24. The afterschool tutoring buses will start running on 8/28. There are 2 buses that leave at 4:15. You must be on the route list to ride the bus. See Ms. Wear in the library to find out more information and/or get on the bus list. You can also email her at twear@kpbsd.k12.ak.us or call 260-7036. Soldotna Stars Letterman Jackets are available to order at www.neffco.com. Click on Varsity Jackets, find our school by State, select Soldotna High School, starting at $149 you can personalize it anyway you would like. Makes a great Christmas gift! SoHi Pool Schedule M,W,F Morning Lap 6:30am-7:30am Sport Calendar http://www.arbiterlive.com/ Teams?entityId=21192 or http://www.asaa365.com/ There are two ways to order a transcript. Each way serves a different purpose. If you need a transcript sent to a college or NCAA or a similar agency, then you will need to log on to: www.parchment.com to order transcripts to be sent. The request is then forwarded to SoHi. After processing, it then goes through cyberspace… rather than the US mail… to get to its destination, which is much faster! ALL transcripts that are headed for NCAA, colleges, etc. have to be processed this way! FINAL TRANSCRIPTS! A final transcript is one that shows your second semester grades… If you order your transcript when we are IN second semester, you will need to make sure you choose “next grading period” when you go on to Parchment… that way your transcript request will wait until the grades are in at the end of the year before it is sent. Skyview Today is the first day of the Second Quarter! Last week for Intramural Basketball. Girls information: Girls practice time will be from 2:30 to 4:30 pm. Please pick up girl participants at 4:30 pm. Boys information: A mandatory study hall will be from 2:40 to 3:50 pm and practice time will be from 4:00 to 5:45 pm. Please pick up boy participants at 5:45 pm. Early Release Day – Wednesday, October 24 - Students end the school day at 1:00 pm. The Skyview Scholastic Book Fair is currently underway in the Skyview Library. This fun reading event helps inspire students to become lifelong readers. LIBRARY book fair hours: Monday,

ConocoPhillips sponsoring Taste of College experience Many high school students have never really thought about the differences they may experience if they decide to pursue higher education. That is exactly why KPC developed the Taste of College program. Depending on the group and the time available, a typical program invites students and their sponsors to the Kenai River Campus for a predetermined curriculum, depending on the focus desired. To take advantage of KPC’s worldclass Career and Technical Education Center and the well-known and respected process technology and industrial process instrumentation programs, ConocoPhillips will be sponsoring five or six high school students from northern Alaska in November. The students will experience several different curriculum “strands,” depending on the students’ interest. This group of students will have options to spend time in process tech, instrumentation, paramedic and welding departments and will have a residence life experience by staying in the Kenai River Campus residence hall. Many staff and faculty cooperate to customize the Taste of College for the particular group of students visiting. “Thank you all, in advance for your help. I know you all will do an awesome job like you always do,” said Tammie Willis, KPC Associate Director of Residence Life. KPC Showcase presentations com-

Peninsula Clarion | Monday, October 22, 2018 | A5

K enai P eninsula C ollege A round C ampus ing up The public is invited to a free presentation at 6:30 p.m., Nov. 1 in the KRC McLane Commons. Author Kathleen Tarr will be presenting “From the Inner Frontier to the Last Frontier: Thomas Merton’s 1968 Alaska Journey.” Tarr will speak about her recent part-memoir, partbiography — “We Are All Poets Here” — that connects her own spiritual reflections to the fateful trip to Alaska taken 50 years ago by the renowned spiritual writer, teacher and Trappist monk. At 7 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 10 in the McLane Commons, the KPC Showcase, Kenaitze Indian Tribe, and UAA/APU Books of the Year will welcome Winona LaDuke, an indigenous author, activist, Harvard-trained economist, environmentalist, and two-time vice presidential candidate with Ralph Nader on the Green Party ticket. Countdown to spring registration has begun! Spring priority registration, giving current students access to registration according to class standing or veteran status, begins Nov. 9. KPC’s searchable schedule for spring classes will be available for viewing on-

October 22 - 11:30 to 12:30 pm / Tuesday, October 23 - 7:30 to 1:45 pm / Wednesday, October 24 - 11:30 to 12:30 pm / Thursday, October 25 - 7:30 to 1:45 pm / Friday, October 26 - 7:30 to 1:15 pm / Monday, October 29 - 11:30 to 2:30 pm / Tuesday, October 30 - 7:30 - 2:30 pm / Wednesday, October 31 - 11:30 to 2:30 pm / Thursday, November 1 (PTC day) - 12:00 to 4:00 pm and 5:00 to 7:00 pm. The book fair is also ONLINE until October 31 at: http:// www.scholastic.com/bf/soldotnamiddleschool. Book fair sales help support the Skyview library. Parents - Please remember to sign up for Parent/Teacher Conferences. Parent/Teacher Conferences at Skyview Middle School will be ONE DAY only: Thursday, November 1. Conference times are scheduled online. To find the link to schedule online and additional Parent/Teacher Conference information, please go to: KPBSD district web page > Schools > Skyview Middle School Homepage/ Blog > Student/Parent Information > Parent/Teacher Conferences. Skyview School Store - Skyview Middle has a school store. The school store is open now and will close on Thursday, November 1. After the store closes, the items will be printed and then sent to the school. Don’t delay, get your order in today! https:// skyviewstudentstore.itemorder.com Time to order a Panther yearbook! Discounts apply if ordered by October 31. Order online by visiting the Skyview Blog Homepage. The Kenai Peninsula Borough School District requests input from staff, parents, and community members at the districtwide KPBSD budget development meeting, scheduled at various locations throughout the district on Tuesday, October 30th at 6:00 PM. As new budget information becomes available, it will be posted here: http://www. kpbsd.k12.ak.us/departments. aspx?id=38. Please call Natalie Bates at 714-8888 with any questions. K-Beach Elementary

line Oct. 22, and all courses being offered in the UA system will be available for viewing at UAOnline Oct. 29. Current students are encouraged to meet with advisers to be certain they are planning course sequences efficiently to ensure they graduate on time. The priority registration schedule invites Veteran students to register on Nov. 9, seniors (90+ credits) on Nov. 12, juniors (60-89 credits) on Nov. 13, sophomores (30-59 credits) on Nov. 14, freshmen (029 credits) on Nov. 15 and pending degree-seeking students on Nov. 19. Registration will open to the general public on Nov. 26. For more information, contact KPC Student Services at 2620330 or email uaa_kpcinfo@alaska.edu. Scholarship application period open now This is the time of year that students need to make definitive plans on how to finance their next semester of education. Scholarships are a great source for students as they are direct awards, sometimes with restrictions, that don’t have to be repaid. The deadline for the KPC Scholarship application has been extended until Nov. 9. To apply, visit http://alaska.academicworks. com/users/sign_in to access the general application (fill out the UA Anchorage application) and choose KPC as the campus. It is suggested that students apply for all other recommended opportunities. Students also need to be sure to file the 2018/2019 Free Application for Student Aid at http://fafsa.ed.gov/.

The K-Beach’s annual Great Caribou Migration took place on Friday, October 5th. It was an excellent time and our parent turnout was tremendous! Thank you to all the parents for their support and help in this fundraiser. This is our only fundraiser for the school and will go a long way in helping purchase technology, equipment for classrooms, and help with field trips that our students take during the year. Our students ran a total of 7,336 laps which equals 917 miles all together. Our top running class was Mr. Daniel’s class with 542 laps which was an average of 22.33 laps per runner! Our top fundraiser was Brock Miller and our top fundraising class was Mrs. Krieger’s class. Way to go Caribou! Mr. Daniels’s Class is doing their monthly creek walk on Wednesday. They will be testing Slikok Creek water for PH, turbidity, conductivity, temperature, and dissolved oxygen. Additionally, they will be trying to trap fish for measurement purposes, then return them to the stream. Oct 24: Early Release Day; K-Beach will dismiss at 12:55 Oct 25th Band concert 6:30 p.m. K-Beach gym Redoubt Elementary Early release is October 24th @ 1:45. Boys and Girls club will be open. Please make sure your See SCHOOL, page A6 child knows how he/she is getting

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A6 | Monday, October 22, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

Sports/Schools

Panthers rally to top Eagles By The Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA — Cam Newton tossed a 1-yard touchdown pass to Greg Olsen with 1:22 left and the Carolina Panthers overcame a 17-point deficit in the fourth quarter to beat the Philadelphia Eagles 21-17 on Sunday. Julius Peppers sacked Carson Wentz, forcing a fumble on fourth down from the Panthers 14, to seal the victory. The Panthers improved to 4-2 with the biggest comeback in franchise history. The defending Super Bowl champion Eagles fell to 3-4. BUCCANEERS 26, BROWNS 23, OT TAMPA, Fla. — Chandler Catanzaro kicked a 59-yard field goal, the longest ever in overtime, with 1:50 remaining. Redeeming himself after missing an extra point, as well as a 40yard field goal on the final play of regulation, Catanzaro’s kick barely made it over the crossbar to end Tampa Bay’s three-game skid and hand the Browns (2-4-1) a NFL record-tying 24th consecutive road loss.

SAINTS 24, RAVENS 23 BALTIMORE — Justin Tucker missed the first conversion of his career after the Ravens scored the potential tying touchdown with 24 seconds left. Drew Brees threw two touchdown passes, locked up two more

. . . School Continued from page A5

home that day. Our 4th, 5th and 6th grade classes have earned their class reward and will be going to the Haze Maze on October 26th. Site Council Meeting, Tuesday, October 30th @ Soldotna High School, 6pm. Budget discussion, open to public. Halloween parade! October 31st @ 2:20 in our gym. Parents are welcome. Please no gore or weapons with your costumes. Parent/Teacher conferences are November 1st and 2nd. Children will be coming home with a form with an assigned conference time this week, please return these slips to the teacher to confirm time. Picture retakes are Thursday, November 8th, AM only. They usually are finished before noon. As temperatures continue to drop please make sure children dress for the weather for outdoor recess. Connections Our weekly updates include activities and due dates in the SOLDOTNA, HOMER, and SEWARD offices. Dates To Remember: 10/25 - Homer Office: Lifetouch School Photos/RETAKES 1:00pm – 3:00pm 10/25 – Soldotna Office: Hay Maze from 1-3pm (more info below) 10/31 – Soldotna Office: Annual Fall Festival from 1-3pm (more info below) 11/09 – AVTEC Tour (more info below) 11/14 - High School Eligibility Due 11/16 – Central Peninsula: School Pic Retakes @ Borough Bldg 3-5pm Central Peninsula Gym Time: Central Peninsula families are invited to come to gym time every Tuesday from 12-2pm at the Kenai Rec Center. Connections has organized activities, games and also free time for students of all ages to participate. Other homeschool families are invited and encouraged to participate. Please note: all students must have an adult present. Come check it out! Soldotna & Homer Offices: Thursday Art Show: The Soldotna & Homer offices are celebrating student art, grades K-12, every month! Paintings, drawings, ceramics, photography, digital art, etc… all are welcome and encouraged! Next month in November: Thankful theme! Thursday,

milestones and engineered a comeback that enabled the Saints (5-1) to wipe out a 10-point deficit.

REDSKINS 20, COWBOYS 17 LANDOVER, Md. — Redskins linebacker Ryan Kerrigan’s stripsack of Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott was recovered for a touchdown by Preston Smith with just under five minutes left and Washington held on when a last-second field-goal attempt by Brett Maher went off the left upright. What would have been a 47yard kick became a 52-yarder when Louis-Philippe Ladoceur was called for a snap infraction.

CHIEFS 45, BENGALS 10 KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Patrick Mahomes threw for 358 yards and four touchdowns, Kareem Hunt finished with three scores and Kansas City rebounded from its first loss to throttle Cincinnati. Mahomes was 28 of 39 with his only big mistake an underthrown interception, though the Chiefs (6-1) were already so far ahead of Cincinnati (4-3) by that point it didn’t really matter.

RAMS 39, 49ERS 10 SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Todd Gurley scored three touchdowns and Jared Goff threw two TD passes as the Rams took advantage of four takeaways and a blocked punt. The Rams (7-0) intercepted See NFL, page A7

Nov. 8th from 3-4pm December: Winter theme! Thursday, Dec 13th from 1-3pm. Connections will also have ornament craft stations and a dessert potluck! **please note: any and all submissions are welcome regardless of theme** Hay Maze @ Solid Rock Bible Camp: PLEASE RSVP: Connections needs your RSVP to host this event! Please join the staff on Thursday, Oct. 25th from 1-3:00pm. The cost is $6 per person (non-reimbursable). Bundle up for this event; gloves, hats, warm layers and flashlights are encouraged. The Connections program will be providing snacks and feel free to bring a guest. If you have any questions contact the Soldotna office at 907-714-8880 or email Carole Nolden at cnolden@kpbsd.org to RSVP or for more information. Soldotna Connections Annual Fall Festival: Come join the Soldotna Connections office for our annual Fall Festival October 31st from 1-3pm. There will be food, activities, games and trick-or-treating for students. Costumes encouraged, all ages and all homeschool families welcome! This is always a fun and well attended event that students look forward to! AVTEC Tour: All Connections High School Students are invited to attend a free guided tour, lunch included, of AVTEC in Seward on Friday, November 9th. AVTEC offers a variety of educational programs such as: Construction, Welding, Heavy Equipment Mechanics, Maritime Studies, Electronics, Culinary Arts and many other courses. Lunch will be provided so please RSVP to Reubin Payne at rpayne@kpbsd.k12.ak.us or call the Connections office at 907-714-8880. WHEN: Friday, November 9th @ 10:00am WHERE: AVTEC – 519 4th Ave, in the auditorium on the 2nd floor Free Shelf Overflowing! The Soldotna office has a free shelf with quite a few items. Please stop by during office hours to check out all the treasures! Soldotna Elementary Mark your calendars for these upcoming events: October 24 Early Release AT 1:55pm October 29- November 2 Book Fair in the Library November 1 & 2 Parent Teacher Conferences; No School for Students

Scoreboard Football AP Top 25

The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Oct. 20, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Alabama (61) 8-0 1525 1 2. Clemson 7-0 1454 3 3. Notre Dame 7-0 1400 4 4. LSU 7-1 1327 5 5. Michigan 7-1 1250 6 6. Texas 6-1 1186 7 7. Georgia 6-1 1136 8 8. Oklahoma 6-1 1065 9 9. Florida 6-1 998 11 10. UCF 7-0 996 10 11. Ohio St. 7-1 985 2 12. Kentucky 6-1 754 14 13. West Virginia 5-1 747 13 14. Washington St. 6-1 692 25 15. Washington 6-2 677 15 16. Texas A&M 5-2 622 17 17. Penn St. 5-2 528 18 18. Iowa 6-1 489 19 19. Oregon 5-2 450 12 20. Wisconsin 5-2 357 23 21. South Florida 7-0 291 21 22. NC State 5-1 186 16 23. Utah 5-2 180 NR 24. Stanford 5-2 144 NR 25. Appalachian St. 5-1 79 NR Others receiving votes: Texas Tech 54, Utah St. 50, San Diego St. 48, Fresno St. 35, Miami 34, Virginia 25, Houston 19, Purdue 17, Michigan St. 8, Cincinnati 7, Auburn 5, Mississippi St. 2, Boston College 2, UAB 1.

Basketball

Washington 0 Central Division Milwaukee 2 Detroit 2 Indiana 2 Chicago 0 Cleveland 0

2 .000 1½ 0 1.000 — 0 1.000 — 1 .667 ½ 2 .000 2 3 .000 2½

0 2 0 2 0 0 1

8 22 8 20 8 23 8 29 8 30 6 20 5 19

14 20 26 28 33 20 28

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Sunday’s Games Atlanta 133, Cleveland 111 Sacramento 131, Oklahoma City 120 Denver 100, Golden State 98 L.A. Clippers 115, Houston 112 Monday’s Games Charlotte at Toronto, 3:30 p.m. Orlando at Boston, 3:30 p.m. Indiana at Minnesota, 4 p.m. New York at Milwaukee, 4 p.m. Chicago at Dallas, 4:30 p.m. Memphis at Utah, 5 p.m. Washington at Portland, 6 p.m. Phoenix at Golden State, 6:30 p.m. San Antonio at L.A. Lakers, 6:30 p.m. All Times ADT

Hockey NHL Standings

— 1 1 1

2 1 3 2 4 4 5

Central Division 8 7 1 0 14 27 15 Nashville Colorado 8 5 1 2 12 29 19 Winnipeg 8 5 2 1 11 24 20 Minnesota 8 4 2 2 10 22 24 Chicago 8 4 2 2 10 30 32 7 3 4 0 6 19 21 Dallas St. Louis 7 2 3 2 6 21 24 Pacific Division Anaheim 9 5 3 1 11 24 22 Vancouver 8 5 3 0 10 25 24 8 5 3 0 10 30 24 Calgary San Jose 8 4 3 1 9 26 21 Vegas 8 4 4 0 8 18 21 Edmonton 6 3 3 0 6 13 19 Los Angeles 8 2 5 1 5 15 28 7 2 5 0 4 11 17 Arizona 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.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

1 .667 2 .333 2 .333 2 .333

4 3 4 3 4 3 2

WESTERN CONFERENCE

NBA Standings

L Pct GB 0 1.000 — 1 .667 1 1 .667 1 2 .333 2 2 .333 2

6 6 7 7 8 7 8

Southwest Division New Orleans 2 0 1.000 — San Antonio 1 1 .500 1 Dallas 1 1 .500 1 Memphis 1 1 .500 1 Houston 1 2 .333 1½ Northwest Division Denver 3 0 1.000 — Portland 2 0 1.000 ½ Utah 1 1 .500 1½ Minnesota 1 2 .333 2 Oklahoma City 0 3 .000 3 Pacific Division L.A. Clippers 2 1 .667 — Golden State 2 1 .667 — Phoenix 1 1 .500 ½ Sacramento 1 2 .333 1 L.A. Lakers 0 2 .000 1½

EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W Toronto 3 Boston 2 Philadelphia 2 Brooklyn 1 New York 1 Southeast Division Charlotte 2 Orlando 1 Miami 1 Atlanta 1

New Jersey Pittsburgh Columbus Washington Philadelphia N.Y. Islanders N.Y. Rangers

Atlantic Division GP W Toronto 9 6 Tampa Bay 7 5 Montreal 7 4 8 4 Boston 9 5 Buffalo Ottawa 7 4 Florida 6 1 8 1 Detroit Metropolitan Division Carolina 8 4

November 6 Fall Picture Re-take Day Parent Pack needs your help! Sign-up for email communications or like the Parent Pack on Facebook for up-todate volunteer opportunities. Student notes and bus passes will be sent to classes at 3:00pm each day. Please send in a note or call prior to this time to ensure your student gets the message. To keep our school safe, all visitors and volunteers must sign in at the front office and pick up a visitor badge to wear while in the school. Anyone interested in volunteering can complete an online form by visiting the KPBSD website at www. kpbsd.k12.ak.us and click on the volunteers link. This process must be completed each school year. Please contact the Human Resources Department with any questions. Mountain View Elementary Wednesday, October 24th, is an early release day. Students will be dismissed at 1:55 PM. Student Council has chosen Friday, October 26, as “Twin Day”. Also, this year EVERY FRIDAY (other than spirit days) will be “Wear Blue for Mountain View” Day. Wear blue or your Mountain View t-shirt. The Kenai Peninsula Borough School District requests input from staff, parents, and community members at the districtwide KPBSD budget development meeting, scheduled on Tuesday, October 30th at 6:00 PM in the Kenai Central High School Library. Parent-Teacher conferences will be held on Thursday & Friday, November 1st and 2nd. There will be no school for students. The Library will be holding a book fair the week of October 29 – November 2 during school hours and parent-teacher conferences. If you would like to volunteer to help with the book fair please call the office at 283-8600. Kaleidoscope The Life Skill we are focusing on this week is Courage–To act according to one’s beliefs despite fear of adverse consequences. Students are allowed to enter the building at 8:35. The door is unlocked prior to that time for band students only. Please be thoughtful of the time when dropping off your child as there is no staff on duty for supervision. Monday, October 22 APC Meeting at 4:15 in the

L OT Pts GF GA 3 0 12 34 30 1 1 11 28 18 1 2 10 24 19 2 2 10 27 23 4 0 10 22 25 2 1 9 28 25 2 3 5 21 25 5 2 4 19 36 3

1 9 26 25

Sunday’s Games Tampa Bay 6, Chicago 3 Calgary 4, N.Y. Rangers 1 Buffalo 4, Anaheim 2 Monday’s Games Colorado at Philadelphia, 3 p.m. Carolina at Detroit, 3:30 p.m. St. Louis at Winnipeg, 4 p.m. Washington at Vancouver, 6 p.m. All Times ADT

Soccer EASTERN CONFERENCE GF GA 69 40 61 33 56 44 48 47 60 50 40 43 47 52 48 55 55 63 48 61 43 73

WESTERN CONFERENCE x-S. Kansas City 17 8 8 59 x-LA FC 16 8 9 57 x-FC Dallas 16 8 9 57 17 11 5 56 x-Seattle

KSAS Library Tuesday, October 23 5th grade End of Quarter Celebration at 1:30 Wednesday, October 24 Early Release at 2:10 Up Coming Events October 29 - November 2 – Book Fair October 30- District Budget Meeting in the KSAS Library from 6:00-7:30 pm October 31-Character Day (Student Council sponsored Spirit Day); Costume Parade at 3:00 November 1 & 2-Parent Teacher Conferences, NO SCHOOL November 12- APC meeting in the library at 4:15 November 21-Early Release @ 2:10 November 22 & 23-Thanksgiving-NO SCHOOL Volunteers Volunteers are welcome any time at Kaleidoscope! Background checks and Volunteer Training are required for each school year to be an approved volunteer. Go to http://kaleidoscope.blogs.kpbsd.k12.ak.us/ wpmu/volunteers for the 2 links. Background checks may take up to 2 weeks to be processed. Volunteer Indemnification forms are to be completed 2 days before each study trip. Soldotna Prep After school tutoring is held Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays in the library from 2:30-3:30 pm. This is a great opportunity to receive help if students are behind, or just want some extra time to work on classroom assignments. Make sure transportation is arranged and students are picked up promptly at 3:30. October 24 – Early release (no after school tutoring) October 31 – Haunted Halls, 5:30-8:30 pm, cost is $3.00 sponsored by Student Council November 1 – Parent/ Teacher Conferences, 1:003:00 pm and 4:00-7:00 pm November 2 – Inservice day, no school for students Nikiski North Star There will be a site council meeting this afternoon at 3:45 pm in the staff lounge. Wednesday, October 24th is an early release day for students. NNS will dismiss at 2:00 pm. The annual NNS/PTA fall carnival will take place on Saturday, October 27th from 1:00 – 4:00 at the school. There will be lots of game booths, a cake walk, funky hair booth, trick or treat alley, duck pond, costume contest, face painting, silent auction baskets and lots more! The kitchen will be serving hot

63 67 51 50

53 46 55 58 64 61 52 66 47 68 55 56 34 62 48 69 one point

Sunday, October 21 Atlanta 2, Chicago 1 D.C. United 3, New York City FC 1 Montreal 2, Toronto FC 0 New York 1, Philadelphia 0 Orlando City 2, Columbus 1 Colorado 0, San Jose 0, tie LA Galaxy 3, Minnesota United 1 Portland 3, Real Salt Lake 0 Seattle 3, Houston 2 Sporting Kansas City 3, FC Dallas 0 Vancouver 2, Los Angeles FC 2, tie Sunday, October 28 Atlanta at Toronto FC, 12:30 p.m. D.C. United at Chicago, 12:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Colorado, 12:30 p.m. Houston at LA Galaxy, 12:30 p.m. Los Angeles FC at Sporting Kansas City, 12:30 p.m. Minnesota United at Columbus, 12:30 p.m. Montreal at New England, 12:30 p.m. Orlando City at New York, 12:30 p.m. Philadelphia at New York City FC, 12:30 p.m. Portland at Vancouver, 12:30 p.m. San Jose at Seattle, 12:30 p.m. All Times ADT

Racing Hollywood Casino 400

MLS Standings W L T Pts 21 6 6 69 x-Atlanta x-New York 21 7 5 68 x-NY City FC 15 10 8 53 x-Philadelphia 15 13 5 50 D.C. United 14 11 8 50 Columbus 13 11 9 48 Montreal 14 15 4 46 New England 9 13 11 38 Toronto FC 9 18 6 33 Chicago 8 18 7 31 Orlando City 8 21 4 28

Portland 15 9 9 54 Real Salt Lake 14 13 7 49 LA Galaxy 13 11 9 48 Vancouver 12 13 8 44 M. United 11 19 3 36 Houston 9 16 8 35 7 19 7 28 Colorado San Jose 4 20 9 21 NOTE: Three points for victory, for tie. x-clinched playoff berth

39 50 42 36

Sunday At Kansas Speedway Kansas City, Kan. Lap length: 1.50 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (13) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 267. 2. (7) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 267. 3. (27) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 267. 4. (6) Erik Jones, Toyota, 267. 5. (12) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 267. 6. (5) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 267. 7. (4) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 267. 8. (1) Joey Logano, Ford, 267. 9. (10) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 267. 10. (3) Aric Almirola, Ford, 267. 11. (23) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 267. 12. (2) Kevin Harvick, Ford, 267.

dogs, pretzels, nachos, drinks and cotton candy. Volunteers are needed to help set-up, serve food, run a booth and clean-up. If you would like to volunteer, please contact a PTA member or call the school office at 776-2600. The Scholastic book fair will be held in the school library beginning on Saturday, October 27th during the fall carnival. The book fair will also be open Monday, October 29th – Wednesday, October 31st from 9:00 am – 11:45 am and on Thursday, November 1st during parent/teacher conferences. The book fair will not be open on Friday, November 2nd. This is a great time to shop for awesome books for the children. Please call the library at 776-2630 if you need more information. Congratulations to the following students for their performance at the “Mind AMazes” meet: Milly Hornung, Emery Quick, Abby White, Alena Ellis, Levi Ellis, Jackson Hooper, Elijah Brigham, Joey Nightingale, and Sophia Whitaker. Job well done! River City Academy This upcoming week at River City Academy is shaping up to be a fun one, celebrating students’ progress during the first quarter. At River City Academy our students work at their own pace, but still have requirements and goals for classes. Every student uses the Summit Learning platform which uses a blue line to denote how much of a class students should have completed. On Wednesday, all of the students that are on pace with the blue line will attend the Blue Line Celebration. During this celebration students will have options of attending a movie with movie theatre style snacks provided. The rest of the students will use the time to work on getting caught up to the blue line. Since it is the end of the quarter, RCA is planning their Student Led Conferences. These conferences are RCA’s version of a parent teacher conference, but with more focus on the student. All RCA students will present to their parents and teachers about their progress. If you are a parent of an RCA student please call the office to schedule your conference time. Finally, River City Academy wants all parents to be aware that RCA is launching text messaging updates through the Summit Platform. If you wish NOT to receive these updates please call the

13. (14) Clint Bowyer, Ford, 267. 14. (9) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 266. 15. (16) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 266. 16. (21) Chris Buescher, Chevrolet, 266. 17. (20) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 266. 18. (11) Kurt Busch, Ford, 266. 19. (28) David Ragan, Ford, 265. 20. (15) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 265. 21. (25) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 265. 22. (22) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 264. 23. (31) Matt DiBenedetto, Ford, 264. 24. (8) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 263. 25. (30) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 263. 26. (29) Bubba Wallace, Chevrolet, 263. 27. (24) Michael McDowell, Ford, 262. 28. (26) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 259. 29. (35) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 258. 30. (19) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 258. 31. (36) JJ Yeley, Toyota, 256. 32. (18) Paul Menard, Ford, 256. 33. (38) BJ McLeod, Chevrolet, 250. 34. (34) Corey LaJoie, Chevrolet, 219. 35. (37) Kyle Weatherman, Chevrolet, Transmission, 216. 36. (39) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, Vibration, 157. 37. (33) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Toyota, Transmission, 151. 38. (17) William Byron, Chevrolet, Engine, 55. 39. (32) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, Accident, 37. 40. (40) Timmy Hill, Toyota, Engine, 3. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 152.713 mph. Time of Race: 2 Hours, 38 Minutes, 2 Seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.903 Seconds. Caution Flags: 3 for 17 laps. Lead Changes: 11 among 8 drivers.

school. Kenai High School The Swim Team headlines a busy week for Kenai’s athletes. The Swimmers will be in Homer from Thursday to Saturday to compete in their region tournament. The team will look to a strong showing to propel them to the state tournament coming up at the end of the month. The Lady Kards Volleyball team will take on cross-town rivals SOHI on Tuesday and will host Homer and Seward on the weekend in preparation for the upcoming region tournament. Kenai’s wrestling team will look to build off a strong showing at the Luke Spruill tournament as they continue their season at the Homer Invitational this weekend, while the Kardinal Choir will join into the Borough’s Honor Choir on Monday and Tuesday at SOHI. Tuesday 10/23: Volleyball @ SOHI Honor Choir @ SOHI Thursday 10/25: Swim @ Regions (Homer) Friday 10/26: Swim @ Regions (Homer) Wrestling @ Homer Invitational Volleyball vs. Homer Saturday 10/27: Swim @ Regions Wrestling @ Homer Invitational Volleyball vs. Seward Kenai Middle School BASKETBALLBoys practice early (2:30 – 4:00) this week, on Monday & Tuesday, then Late (4:00- 5:30) on Thursday & Friday. Girls will practice late on Monday & Tuesday, Early on Thursday & Friday. Wednesday, October 24th is an Early Release day. Students will be released at 12:57. Buses will accommodate the early release schedule. There are no after school sports practices on Wednesday. Intramural Basketball ends on Friday, October 26th. SAVE-THE-DATE October 29th – 31 is Red Ribbon Week Monday- Wear a Mustache or wear Red. Tuesday- Dress in Yellow and/or Black. Wednesday- Wear Halloween Costumes November 1 & 2 - No School for Students November 1-Open Arena style Conferences 12-4 & 5-7 November 2- Open Arena style Conferences 7:30 – 10:30 Scheduled Conferences 10:30 – 2:00


Peninsula Clarion | Monday, October 22, 2018 | A7

. . . NFL

NFL Scoreboard Standings AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 5 2 0 .714 214 179 Miami 4 3 0 .571 151 177 N.Y. Jets 3 4 0 .429 182 176 Buffalo 2 5 0 .286 81 175 South Houston 4 3 0 .571 155 144 Tennessee 3 4 0 .429 106 127 Jacksonville 3 4 0 .429 116 146 Indianapolis 2 5 0 .286 189 185 North Pittsburgh 3 2 1 .583 171 154 Cincinnati 4 3 0 .571 184 203 Baltimore 4 3 0 .571 176 101 Cleveland 2 4 1 .357 151 177 West Kansas City 6 1 0 .857 260 182 L.A. Chargers 5 2 0 .714 195 163 Denver 3 4 0 .429 165 164 1 5 0 .167 110 176 Oakland

NATIONAL CONFERENCE East Washington 4 Philadelphia 3 Dallas 3 1 N.Y. Giants South New Orleans 5 Carolina 4 Tampa Bay 3 2 Atlanta North Minnesota 4 Green Bay 3 Detroit 3 3 Chicago West L.A. Rams 7 Seattle 3 Arizona 1 San Francisco 1

2 4 4 5

0 .667 0 .429 0 .429 0 .167

126 154 140 117

121 138 123 162

1 0 .833 204 163 2 0 .667 142 131 3 0 .500 167 196 4 0 .333 167 192 2 2 3 3

1 .643 1 .583 0 .500 0 .500

177 148 157 170

165 144 158 134

0 3 6 6

0 1.000 235 128 0 .500 143 117 0 .143 92 184 0 .143 158 218

Monday’s Games N.Y. Giants at Atlanta, 4:15 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 25 Miami at Houston, 4:20 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 28 Philadelphia vs Jacksonville at London, UK, 5:30 a.m. Cleveland at Pittsburgh, 9 a.m. Washington at N.Y. Giants, 9 a.m. Seattle at Detroit, 9 a.m. Baltimore at Carolina, 9 a.m. Denver at Kansas City, 9 a.m. Tampa Bay at Cincinnati, 9 a.m. N.Y. Jets at Chicago, 9 a.m. Indianapolis at Oakland, 12:05 p.m. Green Bay at L.A. Rams, 12:25 p.m. San Francisco at Arizona, 12:25 p.m. New Orleans at Minnesota, 4:20 p.m. Open: Dallas, Tennessee, L.A. Chargers, Atlanta Monday, Oct. 29 New England at Buffalo, 4:15 p.m. All Times ADT

Chargers 20, Titans 19 Ten. 3 3 7 6—19 L.A. 10 0 7 3—20 First Quarter Ten_FG Succop 28, 9:44. LAC_Ty.Williams 75 pass from Rivers (Badgley kick), 9:35. LAC_FG Badgley 29, 1:48. Second Quarter Ten_FG Succop 33, 12:51. Third Quarter LAC_M.Williams 55 pass from Rivers (Badgley kick), 13:46. Ten_Henry 1 run (Succop kick), 9:43. Fourth Quarter LAC_FG Badgley 28, 12:29. Ten_Stocker 1 pass from Mariota (pass failed), :31. A_84,301. Ten LAC First downs 23 14 Total Net Yards 390 344 Rushes-yards 33-164 16-47 Passing 226 297 Punt Returns 1-0 2-14 Kickoff Returns 5-156 2-47 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-16 Comp-Att-Int 24-32-1 19-26-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-11 2-9 Punts 2-51.5 3-38.3 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 4-32 4-31 Time of Possession 35:23 24:37 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Tennessee, D.Lewis 13-91, Mariota 7-38, Henry 12-33, Fluellen 1-2. Los Angeles, Ekeler 12-42, M.Williams 1-3, J.Jackson 2-3, Rivers 1-(minus 1). PASSING_Tennessee, Mariota 24-32-1-237. Los Angeles, Rivers 19-26-0-306. RECEIVING_Tennessee, Sharpe 7-101, D.Lewis 6-64, C.Davis 3-10, Henry 2-32, J.Smith 2-11, Stocker 2-11, Taylor 1-8, Batson 1-0. Los Angeles, Allen 5-72, Ekeler 5-26, Ty.Williams 4-118, Gates 2-11, M.Williams 1-55, Benjamin 1-13, J.Jackson 1-11. MISSED FIELD GOALS_Tennessee, Succop 51.

Vikings 37, Jets 17 Min. NY

7 3 10 17—37 7 0 3 7—17

First Quarter Min_Thielen 34 pass from Cousins (Bailey kick), 13:22. NYJ_Herndon 12 pass from Darnold (Myers kick), 1:01. Second Quarter Min_FG Bailey 26, 10:13. Third Quarter Min_Murray 11 run (Bailey kick), 8:15. Min_FG Bailey 22, 5:49. NYJ_FG Myers 55, 2:39. Fourth Quarter Min_Murray 38 run (Bailey kick), 13:38. NYJ_Darnold 1 run (Myers kick), 10:27. Min_A.Robinson 34 pass from Cousins (Bailey kick), 5:16. Min_FG Bailey 43, 3:22. A_77,982. First downs

Min NYJ 15 16

Total Net Yards 316 263 Rushes-yards 24-88 24-71 Passing 228 192 Punt Returns 6-57 2-8 Kickoff Returns 2-57 6-193 Interceptions Ret. 3-78 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 25-40-0 17-42-3 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-13 3-14 Punts 8-47.8 8-47.1 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 5-1 Penalties-Yards 6-55 8-71 Time of Possession 32:11 27:49 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Minnesota, Murray 15-69, Thomas 1-23, Boone 4-4, Cousins 2-(minus 1), Diggs 2-(minus 7). New York, Crowell 11-29, Powell 5-20, Darnold 6-18, Cannon 2-4. PASSING_Minnesota, Cousins 25-40-0-241. New York, Darnold 17-42-3-206. RECEIVING_Minnesota, Thielen 9-110, Diggs 8-33, Treadwell 3-11, Murray 2-14, A.Robinson 1-34, Zylstra 1-23, Rudolph 1-16. New York, Cannon 4-69, Herndon 4-42, R.Anderson 3-44, A.Roberts 2-21, Crowell 1-21, Burnett 1-9, Powell 1-5, Tomlinson 1-(minus 5). MISSED FIELD GOALS_Minnesota, Bailey 42.

Buccaneers 26, Browns 23, OT Cle. 2 0 7 14 0—23 TB 3 13 7 0 3—26 First Quarter Cle_safety, 9:18. TB_FG Catanzaro 38, 3:02. Second Quarter TB_Jackson 14 run (kick failed), 14:54. TB_Winston 14 run (Catanzaro kick), 7:58. Third Quarter Cle_Njoku 15 pass from Mayfield (Joseph kick), 13:01. TB_Jones 2 run (Catanzaro kick), :28. Fourth Quarter Cle_Chubb 1 run (Joseph kick), 12:17. Cle_Landry 16 pass from Mayfield (Joseph kick), 2:28. Overtime TB_FG Catanzaro 59, 1:50. A_53,682. Cle TB First downs 17 34 Total Net Yards 305 456 Rushes-yards 23-119 32-114 Passing 186 342 Punt Returns 2-46 4-20 Kickoff Returns 2-42 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 2-13 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 23-34-0 32-52-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 5-29 4-23 Punts 9-51.7 4-46.8 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 3-2 Penalties-Yards 14-114 8-65 Time of Possession 30:27 37:43 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Cleveland, Chubb 18-80, Mayfield 4-43, D.Johnson 1-(minus 4). Tampa Bay, Winston 10-55, Barber 11-30, Jones 6-13, Jackson 2-8, Rodgers 3-8. PASSING_Cleveland, Mayfield 23-34-0-215. Tampa Bay, Winston 32-52-2-365. RECEIVING_Cleveland, Landry 10-97, Njoku 4-52, D.Johnson 4-23, Ratley 3-23, Callaway 1-14, Perriman 1-6. Tampa Bay, M.Evans 7-107, Howard 5-67, Godwin 5-59, Humphries 4-37, Brate 3-23, Auclair 3-15, Jackson 2-25, Jones 1-15, Rodgers 1-11, Cross 1-6. MISSED FIELD GOALS_Tampa Bay, Catanzaro 40.

Lions 32, Dolphins 21 Det. 7 10 9 6—32 Mia. 0 7 7 7—21 First Quarter Det_Roberts 15 pass from Stafford (Prater kick), 9:12. Second Quarter Det_FG Prater 29, 12:34. Mia_Stills 5 pass from Osweiler (Sanders kick), 7:33. Det_Blount 2 run (Prater kick), 1:02. Third Quarter Det_FG Prater 28, 8:32. Mia_Drake 54 run (Sanders kick), 7:06. Det_Roberts 4 pass from Stafford (run failed), 3:16. Fourth Quarter Det_FG Prater 35, 10:04. Mia_Amendola 24 pass from Osweiler (Sanders kick), 6:00. Det_FG Prater 50, 1:55. A_65,265. Det Mia First downs 24 19 Total Net Yards 457 322 Rushes-yards 35-248 19-107 Passing 209 215 Punt Returns 2-15 1-19 Kickoff Returns 0-0 3-74 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 18-22-0 22-31-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-8 4-24 Punts 1-61.0 4-45.5 Fumbles-Lost 2-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 6-43 4-50 Time of Possession 33:39 26:21 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Detroit, K.Johnson 19-158, Blount 10-50, Tate 1-30, Stafford 4-9, Abdullah 1-1. Miami, Drake 6-72, Gore 10-29, A.Wilson 2-4, Osweiler 1-2. PASSING_Detroit, Stafford 1822-0-217. Miami, Osweiler 22-310-239. RECEIVING_Detroit, Tate 4-36, Roberts 3-48, M.Jones 3-29, Golladay 2-37, K.Johnson 2-21, Willson 2-8, T.Jones 1-26, Abdullah 1-12. Miami, Amendola 6-84, Drake 4-15, Gesicki

3-44, A.Wilson 3-32, Grant 2-32, O’Leary 2-23, Stills 1-5, Gore 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS_Miami, Sanders 46.

Texans 20, Jaguars 7 Hou. 6 7 7 0—20 Jac. 0 0 7 0— 7 First Quarter Hou_FG Fairbairn 44, 10:22. Hou_FG Fairbairn 48, 2:39. Second Quarter Hou_Miller 5 run (Fairbairn kick), 5:31. Third Quarter Hou_Hopkins 10 pass from Watson (Fairbairn kick), 10:50. Jac_Yeldon 6 pass from Kessler (Lambo kick), 2:18. A_66,534. Hou Jac First downs 15 15 Total Net Yards 272 259 Rushes-yards 37-141 22-70 Passing 131 189 Punt Returns 2-0 1-21 Kickoff Returns 0-0 1-5 Interceptions Ret. 1-2 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 12-24-0 27-42-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-8 4-28 Punts 6-46.2 6-45.7 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 3-2 Penalties-Yards 6-35 2-15 Time of Possession 29:35 30:25 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Houston, Miller 22100, Blue 8-28, Watson 7-13. Jacksonville, Bortles 6-30, Yeldon 12-28, Kessler 2-8, Williams 1-2, Charles 1-2. PASSING_Houston, Watson 1224-0-139. Jacksonville, Bortles 6-12-0-61, Kessler 21-30-1-156. RECEIVING_Houston, Fuller 6-68, Hopkins 3-50, Ervin 1-19, Coutee 1-3, Miller 1-(minus 1). Jacksonville, Moncrief 7-76, Yeldon 5-40, Chark 4-31, Westbrook 4-17, Cole 2-21, Grinnage 2-17, Greene 1-8, Bohanon 1-5, Charles 1-2. MISSED FIELD GOALS_None.

Panthers 21, Eagles 17 Car. 0 0 0 21—21 Ph. 0 10 7 0—17 Second Quarter Phi_Jeffery 11 pass from Wentz (Elliott kick), 11:39. Phi_FG Elliott 46, 6:36. Third Quarter Phi_Goedert 1 pass from Wentz (Elliott kick), :39. Fourth Quarter Car_Samuel 14 run (kick failed), 10:41. Car_Funchess 18 pass from Newton (Wright pass from Newton), 4:08. Car_Olsen 1 pass from Newton (Gano kick), 1:22. A_69,696. Car Phi First downs 19 21 Total Net Yards 371 342 Rushes-yards 17-121 24-58 Passing 250 284 Punt Returns 2-12 2-14 Kickoff Returns 3-69 3-73 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 25-39-0 30-37-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-19 4-26 Punts 5-41.8 3-45.0 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-1 Penalties-Yards 5-78 4-35 Time of Possession 24:43 35:17 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Carolina, Newton 7-49, Wright 1-34, McCaffrey 7-29, Samuel 2-9. Philadelphia, Smallwood 9-32, J.Adams 4-17, Clement 8-6, Wentz 3-3. PASSING_Carolina, Newton 2539-0-269. Philadelphia, Wentz 30-37-0-310. RECEIVING_Carolina, Funchess 6-62, McCaffrey 6-51, T.Smith 4-61, Moore 3-29, Wright 2-37, Olsen 2-5, Samuel 1-16, Byrd 1-8. Philadelphia, Ertz 9-138, Jeffery 7-88, Agholor 6-20, Goedert 4-43, Clement 2-16, Smallwood 2-5. MISSED FIELD GOALS_Philadelphia, Elliott 36.

Patriots 38, Bears 31 NE 7 14 10 7—38 Chi. 10 7 7 7—31 First Quarter NE_Edelman 9 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 11:00. Chi_FG Parkey 46, 3:50. Chi_Trubisky 8 run (Parkey kick), :59. Second Quarter Chi_Howard 2 run (Parkey kick), 11:05. NE_Patterson 95 kickoff return (Gostkowski kick), 10:48. NE_J.White 5 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 3:58. Third Quarter Chi_Cohen 6 pass from Trubisky (Parkey kick), 12:04. NE_FG Gostkowski 29, 7:48. NE_Van Noy 29 blocked punt return (Gostkowski kick), 5:53. Fourth Quarter NE_J.White 2 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 8:40. Chi_T.Burton 11 pass from Trubisky (Parkey kick), 4:13. A_62,389. NE Chi First downs 21 29 Total Net Yards 381 453 Rushes-yards 27-108 25-134 Passing 273 319 Punt Returns 2-3 1-17 Kickoff Returns 4-179 4-92 Interceptions Ret. 2-0 1-3 Comp-Att-Int 25-36-1 26-50-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-4 2-14 Punts 4-42.8 5-34.6 Fumbles-Lost 3-2 0-0 Penalties-Yards 7-64 5-40

Time of Possession 29:51 30:09 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_New England, J.White 11-40, Barner 10-36, Michel 4-22, Brady 1-6, Patterson 1-4. Chicago, Trubisky 6-81, Howard 12-39, Cohen 6-14, Gabriel 1-0. PASSING_New England, Brady 25-36-1-277. Chicago, Trubisky 26-50-2-333. RECEIVING_New England, J.White 8-57, Hogan 6-63, Edelman 5-36, Gordon 4-100, Michel 1-13, Dorsett 1-8. Chicago, T.Burton 9-126, Cohen 8-69, Gabriel 3-26, K.White 2-64, Miller 2-35, Howard 1-9, Robinson 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS_None.

Colts 37, Bills 5 Buf. 0 0 5 0— 5 Ind. 0 24 0 13—37 Second Quarter Ind_Swoope 17 pass from Luck (kick failed), 13:31. Ind_Mack 29 pass from Luck (Mack run), 9:25. Ind_Hilton 5 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 1:41. Ind_FG Vinatieri 36, :00. Third Quarter Buf_FG Hauschka 34, 7:42. Buf_safety, :20. Fourth Quarter Ind_Hilton 1 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 13:13. Ind_Mack 20 run (kick failed), 5:26. A_56,848. Buf Ind First downs 15 22 Total Net Yards 303 376 Rushes-yards 22-135 37-220 Passing 168 156 Punt Returns 0-0 0-0 Kickoff Returns 3-48 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 3-51 Comp-Att-Int 20-31-3 17-23-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-7 0-0 Punts 4-46.3 4-47.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 1-0 Penalties-Yards 7-59 4-35 Time of Possession 26:41 33:19 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Buffalo, Ivory 16-81, M.Murphy 4-53, McCoy 2-1. Indianapolis, Mack 19-126, Hines 5-47, Wilkins 6-46, Luck 3-5, Brissett 4-(minus 4). PASSING_Buffalo, Anderson 2031-3-175. Indianapolis, Luck 1723-0-156. RECEIVING_Buffalo, M.Murphy 5-17, Benjamin 4-71, Z.Jones 3-27, Ivory 3-25, Clay 3-14, Holmes 1-13, Croom 1-8. Indianapolis, Rogers 4-40, Hilton 4-25, Ebron 3-31, Mack 2-33, Swoope 1-17, Wilkins 1-8, Alie-Cox 1-7, Hines 1-(minus 5). MISSED FIELD GOALS_None.

Saints 24, Ravens 23 NO 0 7 0 17—24 Bal. 0 10 7 6—23 Second Quarter Bal_FG Tucker 31, 6:04. NO_Watson 1 pass from Brees (Lutz kick), 1:53. Bal_Jackson 1 run (Tucker kick), :04. Third Quarter Bal_Andrews 8 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), 3:30. Fourth Quarter NO_Kamara 2 run (Lutz kick), 12:32. NO_Thomas 5 pass from Brees (Lutz kick), 4:58. NO_FG Lutz 39, 2:07. Bal_J.Brown 14 pass from Flacco (kick failed), :24. A_70,639. NO Bal First downs 26 25 Total Net Yards 339 351 Rushes-yards 39-134 23-77 Passing 205 274 Punt Returns 1-12 1-8 Kickoff Returns 1-16 3-50 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 22-30-0 24-40-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-7 1-10 Punts 2-44.0 3-45.7 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 6-52 5-54 Time of Possession 33:31 26:29 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_New Orleans, Kamara 17-64, T.Hill 6-35, Ingram 12-32, Brees 4-3. Baltimore, Collins 1138, Snead 1-13, Moore 1-9, Jackson 3-9, Flacco 1-4, Allen 3-3, Max.Williams 1-1, Edwards 2-0. PASSING_New Orleans, Brees 22-30-0-212. Baltimore, Flacco 23-39-0-279, Jackson 1-1-0-5. RECEIVING_New Orleans, Thomas 7-69, Watson 6-43, T.Smith 3-44, Arnold 2-35, Kamara 2-11, Ingram 2-10. Baltimore, J.Brown 7-134, Crabtree 5-66, Snead 3-23, Allen 3-21, Collins 3-10, Moore 1-14, Boyle 1-8, Andrews 1-8. MISSED FIELD GOALS_None.

Rams 39, 49ers 10 L.A. SF

3 19 10 7—39 0 7 3 0—10

First Quarter La_FG Zuerlein 35, 6:34. Second Quarter La_Gurley 7 run (Zuerlein kick), 14:23. La_safety, 12:59. La_FG Zuerlein 37, 10:05. La_Cooks 19 pass from Goff (Zuerlein kick), 2:30. SF_Kittle 10 pass from Beathard (Gould kick), :13. Third Quarter La_FG Zuerlein 33, 8:06. La_Gurley 1 run (Zuerlein kick), 6:04. SF_FG Gould 51, 2:37.

Fourth Quarter La_Gurley 12 pass from Goff (Zuerlein kick), 11:35. A_66,597. La SF First downs 20 16 Total Net Yards 331 228 Rushes-yards 35-146 24-107 Passing 185 121 Punt Returns 2-36 1-6 Kickoff Returns 2-47 1-21 Interceptions Ret. 2-18 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 18-24-0 15-27-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-17 7-49 Punts 4-30.5 5-32.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 3-2 Penalties-Yards 1-10 2-10 Time of Possession 32:51 27:09 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Los Angeles, M.Brown 13-65, Gurley 15-63, Cooks 1-7, Woods 1-6, Goff 2-4, Mannion 3-1. San Francisco, Mostert 7-59, Morris 9-25, Breida 5-15, Beathard 2-13, Juszczyk 1-(minus 5). PASSING_Los Angeles, Goff 1824-0-202. San Francisco, Beathard 15-27-2-170. RECEIVING_Los Angeles, Woods 5-78, Cooks 4-64, Gurley 4-23, N.Williams 2-17, Reynolds 1-19, M.Brown 1-6, Everett 1-(minus 5). San Francisco, Kittle 5-98, Mostert 4-19, Goodwin 2-24, Juszczyk 2-18, T.Taylor 1-6, Garcon 1-5. MISSED FIELD GOALS_None.

Redskins 20, Cowboys 17 Dal. 0 7 0 10—17 Was. 7 0 3 10—20 First Quarter Was_Bibbs 23 pass from A.Smith (Hopkins kick), 10:19. Second Quarter Dal_Gallup 49 pass from Prescott (Maher kick), 1:00. Third Quarter Was_FG Hopkins 21, 9:10. Fourth Quarter Was_FG Hopkins 25, 12:35. Dal_FG Maher 47, 9:46. Was_P.Smith 1 fumble return (Hopkins kick), 4:55. Dal_Prescott 1 run (Maher kick), 1:37. A_0. Dal Was First downs 17 15 Total Net Yards 323 305 Rushes-yards 22-73 32-130 Passing 250 175 Punt Returns 3-11 1-3 Kickoff Returns 1-26 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 22-35-0 14-25-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-23 1-3 Punts 5-41.6 6-37.8 Fumbles-Lost 3-2 1-0 Penalties-Yards 8-65 5-35 Time of Possession 29:05 30:55 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Dallas, Prescott 6-33, Elliott 15-33, Lewis 1-7. Washington, Peterson 24-99, A.Smith 4-16, Bibbs 2-13, Perine 2-2. PASSING_Dallas, Prescott 2235-0-273. Washington, A.Smith 14-25-0-178. RECEIVING_Dallas, Beasley 7-56, Hurns 5-74, Gallup 3-81, Swaim 3-25, Elliott 2-9, Jarwin 1-16, Schultz 1-12. Washington, Bibbs 4-43, Doctson 3-42, Harris 3-22, Reed 2-43, Floyd 1-20, Peterson 1-8. MISSED FIELD GOALS_Dallas, Maher 52.

Chiefs 45, Bengals 10 Cin. 0 7 3 0—10 KC 7 17 14 7—45 First Quarter KC_Hunt 6 pass from Mahomes (Butker kick), 8:08. Second Quarter KC_Hunt 15 pass from Mahomes (Butker kick), 13:18. Cin_Uzomah 4 pass from Dalton (Bullock kick), 7:25. KC_D.Harris 17 pass from Mahomes (Butker kick), 1:55. KC_FG Butker 26, :08. Third Quarter KC_Hunt 2 run (Butker kick), 11:19. KC_Parker 33 interception return (Butker kick), 11:10. Cin_FG Bullock 33, 6:16. Fourth Quarter KC_Hill 3 pass from Mahomes (Butker kick), 12:50. A_75,676. Cin KC First downs 15 33 Total Net Yards 239 551 Rushes-yards 19-65 29-198 Passing 174 353 Punt Returns 0-0 4-22 Kickoff Returns 3-65 1-23 Interceptions Ret. 1-21 1-33 Comp-Att-Int 19-33-1 28-39-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-13 2-5 Punts 5-51.6 0-0.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-0 2-0 Penalties-Yards 8-58 8-50 Time of Possession 26:17 33:43 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Cincinnati, Mixon 1350, Walton 4-10, Driskel 1-5, Fejedelem 1-0. Kansas City, Hunt 1586, Ware 8-59, Mahomes 4-45, Hill 2-8. PASSING_Cincinnati, Dalton 1529-1-148, Driskel 4-4-0-39. Kansas City, Mahomes 28-39-1-358. RECEIVING_Cincinnati, Green 7-117, Core 3-30, Boyd 3-27, Mixon 3-1, Uzomah 2-13, Erickson 1-(minus 1). Kansas City, Hill 7-68, Kelce 5-95, Hunt 5-55, Watkins 4-74, Ware 3-30, Robinson 2-13, D.Harris 1-17, Conley 1-6. MISSED FIELD GOALS_Kansas City, Butker 53.

Nuggets knock off Warriors By The Associated Press

DENVER — Gary Harris scored 28 points, Juancho Hernangomez blocked a tying layup just before the buzzer and the Denver Nuggets beat the Golden State Warriors 100-98 on Sunday night. Trailing by 13 points in the fourth quarter, the Warriors rallied and had a chance to tie it in the waning seconds. Stephen Curry drove down the lane and passed to big man Damian Jones, who had his shot blocked from behind by Hernangomez. The Nuggets improved to

3-0 despite missing 18 free throws, including six in the final quarter. Nikola Jokic had 23 points, 11 rebounds and six assist in his bid for a triple-double on a second straight night. HAWKS 133, CAVALIERS 111 CLEVELAND — Trae Young had 35 points with 11 assists — the best line for a first-year player since Steph Curry in 2010 — and Atlanta dropped Cleveland to 0-3 as it re-adjusts to life without LeBron James.

The No. 5 overall pick, Young is the first rookie to reach at least 35 points and 10 assists since Steph Curry in 2010. Young made six of Atlanta’s 22 3-pointers while overshadowing Cleveland rookie guard Collin Sexton. Young missed four of his first five shots, but finished 13 of 23 from the field.

the Clippers erase a four-point deficit late in the third, with Luc Mbah a Moute’s 3-pointer giving them the lead for good. Tobias Harris led the Clippers with 23 points. Danilo Gallinari added 20 and Harrell had 10 rebounds.

CLIPPERS 115, ROCKETS 112

OKLAHOMA CITY — Iman Shumpert scored 26 points and Sacramento beat Oklahoma City to spoil Russell Westbrook’s season debut. Westbrook missed the preseason and the first two regularseason games after having a procedure to deal with inflammation in his right knee.

LOS ANGELES — Montrezl Harrell led a fourth-quarter charge by the Clippers’ reserves with 17 points, and Los Angeles defeated Houston. Harrell and the bench helped

KINGS 131, THUNDER 120

Continued from page A6

C.J. Beathard twice and recovered two fumbles to give them seven straight wins to open the season for the first time since 1985. The Rams began 6-0 for three straight seasons in 1999-2001 before losing the seventh game.

PATRIOTS 38, BEARS 31 CHICAGO — Tom Brady threw for three touchdowns and the Patriots hung on when Kevin White got stopped at the 1 on a 54yard pass from Mitchell Trubisky. About four or five defenders swarmed White after he leaped to haul in that long heave, preventing him from crossing the goal line while preserving the fourth straight win for New England. The Patriots (5-2) also got two special teams touchdowns and came out on top even though they were missing Rob Gronkowski. The five-time Pro Bowl tight end missed the game because of ankle and back injuries.

TEXANS 20, JAGUARS 7 JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Blake Bortles fumbled on Jacksonville’s third play of each half, leading to 10 points and his benching. The Texans (4-3) won their fourth consecutive game thanks to those two turnovers and took a one-game lead in the AFC South. Deshaun Watson, who reportedly made the 800-mile road trip by bus instead of plane, had a touchdown pass despite playing with a bruised lung and injured ribs. Lamar Miller ran for a season-high 100 yards and a score. Cody Kessler replaced Bortles in the third quarter and threw a short touchdown pass to T.J. Yeldon , creating speculation he might supplant Bortles in the starting lineup.

LIONS 32, DOLPHINS 21 MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Kerryon Johnson rushed for 158 yards and the Lions repeatedly mounted long scoring drives. Matt Stafford was 18 for 22 for 217 yards and two touchdowns. Detroit had 457 total yards and 248 on the ground, with scoring drives covering 64, 85, 75, 65, 75, 63 and 44 yards. The Lions (3-3) punted once and had no turnovers to win on the road for the first time. They’ve climbed back to .500 after being outscored 78-44 in their first two games. Injury-ravaged Miami (4-3) lost at home for the first time this season — and lost another key player. Dynamic receiver Albert Wilson

was sidelined in the first half with a leg injury. Receiver Kenny Stills also limped to the locker room with a minute left.

CHARGERS 20, TITANS 19 LONDON — Adrian Phillips broke up Marcus Mariota’s pass attempt, the Titans’ second try for a 2-point conversion after a defensive penalty on the first attempt, and the Chargers held on. It was the fourth consecutive victory for the Chargers (5-2), who weathered the absence of running back Melvin Gordon (hamstring) and relied upon their defense to pull out the win. The Titans (3-4) drove 89 yards over the final 4:55 before Mariota’s 1-yard pass to tight end Luke Stocker pulled them within one point. Mariota, who went 24 for 32 for 237 yards with an interception, thought he had scored the touchdown himself. With 40 seconds left, he ran 3 yards on a draw and stretched for the end zone, but replay showed he was down inches shy of the goal line. After Stocker scored, Mariota’s first attempt was a pass intended for Tajae Sharp, an incompletion negated by a defensive holding call on Casey Hayward, and his second, toward Taywan Taylor, was tipped by Phillips.

VIKINGS 37, JETS 17 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Kirk Cousins threw two touchdown passes, Latavius Murray ran for two scores, and the Vikings pulled away in the second half for their third straight victory. Vikings wide receiver Adam Thielen became the fifth player in NFL history to get at least 100 yards receiving in seven consecutive games, catching nine passes for 110 yards and a touchdown. Murray, coming off career-high 155 yards rushing against Arizona, finished with 69 yards on 15 carries to help lift the Vikings (4-2-1) to their first win against the Jets on the road after losing the first five meetings away from home.

COLTS 37, BILLS 5 INDIANAPOLIS — Andrew Luck threw four touchdown passes and Marlon Mack had his first rushing scores of the season. The Colts (2-5) snapped a fourgame losing streak and finally won their 300th game since moving to Indianapolis from Baltimore in 1984. Adam Vinatieri scored five points to move within five of breaking Morten Andersen’s NFL career record (2,544). The Bills (2-5) lost their second straight, playing this one without injured starting quarterback Josh Allen.

Today in History Today is Monday, Oct. 22, the 295th day of 2018. There are 70 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Oct. 22, 1979, the U.S. government allowed the deposed Shah of Iran to travel to New York for medical treatment -- a decision that precipitated the Iran hostage crisis. On this date: In 1746, Princeton University was first chartered as the College of New Jersey. In 1797, French balloonist Andre-Jacques Garnerin (gahr-nayr-AN’) made the first parachute descent, landing safely from a height of about 3,000 feet over Paris. In 1811, composer and piano virtuoso Franz Liszt was born in the Hungarian town of Raiding (RY’-ding) in present-day Austria. In 1928, Republican presidential nominee Herbert Hoover spoke of the “American system of rugged individualism” in a speech at New York’s Madison Square Garden. In 1934, bank robber Charles “Pretty Boy” Floyd was shot to death by federal agents and local police at a farm near East Liverpool, Ohio. In 1962, in a nationally broadcast address, President John F. Kennedy revealed the presence of Soviet-built missile bases under construction in Cuba and announced a quarantine of all offensive military equipment being shipped to the Communist island nation. In 1981, the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization was decertified by the federal government for its strike the previous August. In 1986, President Reagan signed into law sweeping tax-overhaul legislation. In 1991, the European Community and the European Free Trade Association concluded a landmark accord to create a free trade zone of 19 nations by 1993. In 2001, a second Washington, D.C., postal worker, Joseph P. Curseen, died of inhalation anthrax. In 2002, bus driver Conrad Johnson was shot to death in Aspen Hill, Md., in the final attack carried out by the “Beltway Snipers.” In 2014, a gunman shot and killed a soldier standing guard at a war memorial in Ottawa, then stormed the Canadian Parliament before he was shot and killed by the usually ceremonial sergeant-at-arms. Ten years ago: Wall Street tumbled again as investors worried that the global economy was poised to weaken. The major indexes fell more than 4 percent, including the Dow Jones industrial average, which finished with a loss of 514 points. The fishing vessel Katmai sank in the Bering Sea off Alaska’s Aleutian Islands, killing seven crewmen; four survived. India launched its first mission to the moon to redraw maps of the lunar surface. (India lost contact with its lunar satellite Chandrayaan-1 last August.) The Philadelphia Phillies won Game 1 of the World Series, defeating the Tampa Bay Rays 3-2. Five years ago: The United States defended drone strikes targeting al-Qaida operatives and others, rejecting reports by Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International questioning the legality of attacks that the groups asserted had killed or wounded scores of civilians in Yemen and Pakistan. One year ago: The latest allegations of sexual harassment or assault in Hollywood targeted writer and director James Toback; the Los Angeles Times reported that he had been accused of sexual harassment by 38 women. U.S.-backed fighters in Syria captured the country’s largest oil field from the Islamic State group, marking a major advance against the extremists. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe scored a major victory in national elections that decisively returned his ruling coalition to power. Today’s Birthdays: Black Panthers co-founder Bobby Seale is 82. Actor Christopher Lloyd is 80. Actor Derek Jacobi is 80. Actor Tony Roberts is 79. Movie director Jan (yahn) de Bont is 75. Actress Catherine Deneuve is 75. Rock musician Leslie West (Mountain) is 73. Former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour is 71. Actor Jeff Goldblum is 66. Rock musician Greg Hawkes is 66. Movie director Bill Condon is 63. Actor Luis Guzman is 62. Actor-writer-producer Todd Graff is 59. Rock musician Cris Kirkwood is 58. Actor-comedian Bob Odenkirk is 56. Olympic gold medal figure skater Brian Boitano is 55. Christian singer TobyMac is 54. Singer-songwriter John Wesley Harding (Wesley Stace) is 53. Actress Valeria Golino is 52. Comedian Carlos Mencia is 51. Country singer Shelby Lynne is 50. Reggae rapper Shaggy is 50. Movie director Spike Jonze is 49. Rapper Tracey Lee is 48. Actress Saffron Burrows is 46. Actress Carmen Ejogo is 45. Former MLB player Ichiro Suzuki is 45. Actor Jesse Tyler Ferguson is 43. Christian rock singer-musician Jon Foreman (Switchfoot) is 42. Actor Michael Fishman is 37. Talk show host Michael Essany is 36. Rock musician Rickard (correct) Goransson (Carolina Liar) is 35. Rock musician Zac Hanson (Hanson) is 33. Actor Corey Hawkins is 30. Actor Jonathan Lipnicki is 28. Actress Sofia Vassilieva (vas-ihl-lee-A’-vuh) is 26. Actor Elias Harger is 11. Thought for Today: “There is no such thing as notoriety in the United States these days, let alone infamy. Celebrity is all.” -- Christopher Hitchens, Anglo-American author and essayist (1949-2011).


A8 | Monday, October 22, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

Rules &

official entRy foRm

Regulations

1. Each week the Peninsula Clarion will award a prize of $75 for the entry with the most winning picks. Tie games will be nullified. 2. Contestants may use the official entry blank or a reasonable facsimile. Only one entry per person is permitted. 3. Contestants must be at least 12 years old to participate. 4. Check the box of the team you think will win in each game in the entry blank. Each game must carry the sponsoring advertiser’s name after the pick. 5. Tie Breaker: Contestants must predict the total points scored of the two teams marked as the tie breaker game. In the event of the same tie breaker points, a winner will be chosen by a random drawing. 6. Deadline for entry is Friday at noon. Entries can be delivered to participating sponsors or the Peninsula Clarion office in Kenai or may be mailed to: Peninsula Clarion Football Contest, P.O. Box 3009, Kenai, AK 99611. Faxes will not be accepted. 7. Contest pages appear each Monday in the Peninsula Clarion Sports Edition. The winner will be announced within 2 weeks of the publish of this game. Judges’ decisions are final. Clarion employees and their immediate families are ineligible to enter.

Games Played October 27 thru 29 - Week #8

Check the teams you think will win on the form below. In case of a tie, the Tie Breaker Game points will determine the winner. Tie Breaker points are the accumulative points scored by both teams.

Name Address State Zip

________Phone_____ _ City ____ Email Address Sponsor

College 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

q Clemson q Wisconsin q Washington q Arizona State q Oregon q Texas A&M

at at at at at at

Florida State

q Northwestern q California q USC q Arizona q Mississippi State q

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

NFL

q Broncos 8. q Browns 9. q Seahawks 10. q Ravens 11. q Packers 12. q Saints

at

7.

Chiefs

q Steelers q Lions q Panthers q Rams q Vikings q

at at at at at

7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12.

Monday Night 13.

q Patriots

at

Bills

Tie Breaker Game: (Total points of Game # 13)

q

13. Tie Breaker:

The Week 6 Winner was Barbara Moore of Kenai! Barbara won by picking 10 of 13 correctly! Congrats Barbara! 11. Packers @ Rams

Open Until 11pm!

283-2222 George’s Nightclub!

7. Broncos @ Chiefs

9. Seahawks @ Lions

Dine In  Take Out  Delivery

6. Texas A&M @ Mississippi State

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COKE FLOAT $1.00 OFF

DJ Friday and Saturday Night Playing your favorite Top 40, and More!

10. Ravens @ Panthers

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5. Oregon @ Arizona

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ROAST BEEF CLASSIC SANDWICHES 2 for $699

Limitup1 to with coupon atofparticipating Arby’s® Buy 10this in multiples 2 with this coupon at restaurants. Not valid with any other offer,with discount participating Arby’s restaurants. Not valid any or value offer, menudiscount item, andornot transferable. Valid other value menu item, andthrough not 3. Washington @ California 10-31-18 Valid through 11-15-18 transferable.

12. Saints @ Vikings

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13. Patriots @ Bills

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4. Arizona State @ USC

8. Browns @ Steelers


Peninsula Clarion | Monday, October 22, 2018 | A9

$POUBDU VT XXX QFOJOTVMBDMBSJPO DPN DMBTTJýFE!QFOJOTVMBDMBSJPO DPN t 5P QMBDF BO BE DBMM LEGALS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF ALASKA THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT AT KENAI In the Matter of the Estate of JOSEPH SZCZESNY, Deceased. Case No. 3KN-18-00254 PR NOTICE TO CREDITOR NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of the above-named estate. All persons having claims against the said deceased are required to present their claims within four (4) months after the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the undersigned Personal Representative of the estate, at DOLIFKA & ASSOCIATES, P.C., ATTORNEYS AT LAW, P.O. Box 498, Soldotna, Alaska, 99669. DATED this 19th day of October, 2018. PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE /s/CARRIE BURFORD Pub: 10/22,29 & 11/5/2018 831036 IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF ALASKA THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT AT KENAI In the Matter of the Estate of POLLY RAE CRAWFORD, Deceased. Case No. 3KN-18-00253 PR NOTICE TO CREDITOR NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of the above-named estate. All persons having claims against the said deceased are required to present their claims within four (4) months after the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the undersigned Personal Representative of the estate, at DOLIFKA & ASSOCIATES, P.C., ATTORNEYS AT LAW, P.O. Box 498, Soldotna, Alaska, 99669. DATED this 19th day of October, 2018. PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE /s/TINA ROSE LOWENSTEIN MADRID Pub: 10/22,29 & 11/5/2018 831032 IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF ALASKA THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT AT KENAI In the Matter of the Estate of DALLAS WAYNE BURFORD, Deceased. Case No. 3KN-18-00261 PR NOTICE TO CREDITOR NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of the above-named estate. All persons having claims against the said deceased are required to present their claims within four (4) months after the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the undersigned Personal Representative of the estate, at DOLIFKA & ASSOCIATES, P.C., ATTORNEYS AT LAW, P.O. Box 498, Soldotna, Alaska, 99669. DATED this 19th day of October, 2018. PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE /s/CARRIE BURFORD Pub: 10/22,29 & 11/5/2018 831035

Keep a Sharp Eye on the Classifieds

Each week, our Classified section features hundreds of new listings for everything from pre-owned merchandise to real estate and even employment opportunities. So chances are, no matter what you’re looking for, the Classifieds are the best place to start your search.

www.peninsulaclarion.com

283-7551 150 Trading Bay Rd, Kenai, AK 99611

the doctor will hear you now

Shop the classifieds for great deals on great stuff. want better health care? start asking more questions. to your doctor. to your pharmacist. to your nurse. what are the test results? what about side effects? don’t fully understand your prescriptions? don’t leave confused. because the most important question is the one you should have asked. go to www.ahrq.gov/questionsaretheanswer or call 1-800-931-AHRQ (2477) for the 10 questions every patient should ask. questions are the answer.

283-7551

Call Today 283-7551

www.peninsulaclarion.com

www.peninsulaclarion.com


A10 | Monday, October 22, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

$POUBDU VT XXX QFOJOTVMBDMBSJPO DPN DMBTTJýFE!QFOJOTVMBDMBSJPO DPN t 5P QMBDF BO BE DBMM EMPLOYMENT

BEAUTY / SPA

APARTMENTS FOR RENT Brunsw ick Apartm ent 2 bedroom, Stor age, Laundry on premises $650 +$30tax, heat included $600 deposit 1 yr lease 262-7986 or 252-9634

Entry Level Pressman The Peninsula C larion is seeking a Pressm an for an entry level position. The successful Canidatem ust be m echanically inclined, am bitious , able to m ulti-task, take direction and w ork w ell independently, as w ell as part of a team.Salary dependent on experience, excellentbenefit package. Please drop off resum e to: The Peninsula Clar ion 150 Trading Bay R d Kenai,AK 99611

WAREHOUSE SPACE

HOMES FOR RENT

W A R EH O U SE / STO R AG E 2000 sq.ft., man door 14ft roll-up , bathroom, K-Beach area 3-Phase ow P er $1300.00/mo . 1st mo .rent+ deposit, gas paid 907-252-3301

Charming Cabin for R ent. 20’x24’ very nice cabin w/loft in ooded w setting, carport/stor age, StandUp Craw lSpace. $950.00/month includes utilities .W illreply ASAP.

SCRAPE UP MORE PROFIT By advertising your business in the

Service Directory!

Administrative vices Ser Technician

Call

KPC islooking for an exceptional individual to fill the position of Administrative ServicesTechnician. The successful candidate w ill conduct customer-f ocused servicesregardingpayroll, assist withvarious financialreports, and assist w ith other business office related services. This position is part-time , 25 hours per w eek, grade 76, $19.15per hour; benefits and tuition w aivers included. R eview of applications w ill begin 10/31/18; applications accepted until the position is closed. For m ore inform ation and to apply for this position go to KPC’s em ploym ent page at www .kpc.alaska.edu

283-7551 for more info A SUMMER MASSA G E Thai oil massage Open every day Call Dar ika 907-252-3985

News, Sports, Weather & More!

UA is an A A /EO em ployer and educationalinstitution and ohibits pr illegal discrimination gainst an ay individual: www .alaska.edu/nondiscrimination

DIRECT SERVICE ADVO C ATE Part-Tim e TransitionalLiving C enter Provide support, advocacy and assistanceto homelessw om en and children residing in transitional housingwho have experienced dom estic violenceand/orsexual assault. Excellent interpersonaland w ritten com m unication skills, ability to w ork w ith diverse populations, w ork independentlyand on a team and prom ote non-violent behavior and empo w erm entphilosophy. HS diplomaor equiv alentrequired; degree or experiencew orking in related field preferred. Valid driver’s license required. R esum e, cover letter and three erences ref to: Executive D irector,The LeeShore C enter, 325 S.Spruce St., Kenai,AK 99611 by October 31, 2018. EOE

Savadi. W elcom e to TraditionalThaiM assage by Bun in Soldotna 907-420-7496

!" " # $ % &'( DecideToDrive.org

) * *

Call 252-8392

GP NESSELRODE, LLC * PC Tune Ups * Create Web Sites * Internet * Email * Security

Computer Technical Support

Forced Air HRV Dryer Duct Residential & Light Commercial

Computer Tech Support

Cleaning

Cleaning

Automotive

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!

* Operating Systems * Software Tools & Games * Hard Drives * RAM * Parinters, Scanners, Copiers * Networks

greg@gpnllc.com

907-830-7880 kodiakisland1960@yahoo.com

Painting

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!

Insulation

Construction

Construction

Mel’s Residential Repair, Inc

Facebook/RaintechofAlaska www.raintechraingutters.com

Veteran Owned and Operated

facebook.com/qualitypainting4you

Classified Advertising. Top Soil

-JDFOTFE t #POEFE t *OTVSFE

Notices

(907) 262-2347

Installation

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

907-252-9409

Let It Work For You! 283-7551


Peninsula Clarion | Monday, October 22, 2018 | A11

WEEKDAYS MORNING/AFTERNOON

:30

A

S*H ‘PG’ Man Man ed G’

(56) DISC

’ ’ ’ ’

120 269

(59) A&E

118 265

M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F

M T (61) FOOD 110 231 W Th F

rnat. rnat.

Story

(65) CNBC 208 355 (67) FNC 205 360

(82) SYFY

PREMIUM STATIONS

ball

ve) p 25 ball

! HBO

303 504

ootball ^ HBO2 304 505

Coast inger Coast + MAX

1:30

2 PM

2:30

3 PM

3:30

(6:30) Evita (:45) “Taken” (2008) Liam Neeson. ‘PG-13’ Last Week (:05) “Adam” (2009) Hugh Dancy. (:45) “The Nutty Professor” (1996) ‘PG-13’ Real Time With Bill Maher Shape (7:30) “The Sentence” (:15) “The Good Lie” (2014, Drama) ‘PG-13’ (:15) “Land of the Lost” (2009) Will Ferrell. Queen of the World ‘G’ (:10) “Pitch Perfect 3” (2017) Greatest (7:25) “Duplicity” (2009) ‘PG-13’ Stolen Daughters: Kidnapped (10:50) “The Fugitive” (1993) Harrison Ford. (:15) “Reign of Fire” (2002) Christian Bale. REAL Sports Gumbel Marshals Citizen U.S.A. (:35) “The Greatest Showman” (2017) ‘PG’ (:35) “The Terminal” (2004) Tom Hanks. (:45) “17 Again” (2009) Zac Efron. ‘PG-13’ Stolen (7:30) “Reign of Fire” Bohemian “Romeo & Juliet” (2013) Douglas Booth. Words That Built America (:20) “Dances With Wolves” (1990) Kevin Costner. ‘PG-13’ (:25) Taken “Don’t Tell Mom-Babysitter” (:45) “Justice League” (2017) Ben Affleck. Citizen U.S.A. Last Week Real Time With Bill Maher Tracey Ull (:45) “Incarnate” (2016) ‘PG-13’ (:10) “Sherlock Holmes” (2009) Robert Downey Jr. ‘PG-13’ (:20) “Barbershop” (2002) ‘PG-13’ Hunter Killer (:20) “Atomic Blonde” (2017) ‘R’ Words That Built America “Kung Pow: Fist” (7:05) “Dunkirk” Room 104 (:25) “Drag Me to Hell” (2009) (:05) “Phantom Thread” (2017, Drama) ‘R’ Last Week Flight of the Conchords: Live in London (:15) “Victoria & Abdul” (7:45) “Practical Magic” (1998) REAL Sports Gumbel “The Layover” (2017, Comedy) ‘R’ “Liar Liar” (1997) Jim Carrey. “Happening” (:45) “GoodFellas” (1990) ‘R’ (7:05) “Whip It” “Battle of the Sexes” (2017) Emma Stone. (:05) “Fist Fight” (2017) ‘R’ Friends of God: Road Trip (:45) “My Dinner With Hervé” (2018) Peter Dinklage. Stolen (7:40) “A Walk in the Clouds” (:25) “John Wick: Chapter 2” (2017) ‘R’ “Grosse Pointe Blank” (1997) John Cusack. (:20) “Lost River” (2014) ‘R’ (2:55) “The Book of Eli” Elizabeth (:40) “X2” (2003, Action) Patrick Stewart. ‘PG-13’ (10:55) “Born on the Fourth of July” (1989) Tom Cruise. ‘R’ (:20) “15 Minutes” (2001) Robert De Niro. ‘R’ Get Out ‘R’ (7:35) “Jonah Hex” “Veronica Mars” (2014) Kristen Bell. ‘PG-13’ (10:50) “Kingdom of Heaven” (2005) Orlando Bloom. ‘R’ (:20) “Addicted to Love” (1997) (:05) “The 15:17 to Paris” (7:45) “Just Wright” (2010) ‘PG’ “Everything Must Go” (2010) (:10) “Dinner for Schmucks” (2010) ‘PG-13’ (:05) “Snatched” (2017) ‘R’ (:40) “Bad Company” (2002) ‘PG-13’ (7:30) “Firewall” (:15) “Unforgettable” (2017) Rosario Dawson. “Tightrope” (1984) Clint Eastwood. ‘R’ “Collateral” (2004, Suspense) Tom Cruise. ‘R’ “Conan the Barbarian” (7:00) “Baby Driver” ‘R’ “10 Things I Hate About You” (:45) “The Queen” (2006) Helen Mirren. “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” ‘R’ “Memento” (2000) Guy Pearce. “Pitch Black” (2000) Radha Mitchell. ‘R’ “Sleepless” (2017) Jamie Foxx. (:35) “The House on Sorority Row” ‘R’ (:15) “The Loft” (2014, Suspense) Karl Urban. ‘R’ “Thomas Crown” (7:30) “Titanic” (1997) Leonardo DiCaprio. ‘PG-13’ (:45) “The Edge of Seventeen” (2016) ‘R’ “Home Again” (2017) ‘PG-13’ (:15) “Jerry Maguire” (1996) Tom Cruise. ‘R’ Wakefield “The Tribes of Palos Verdes” ‘R’ (:15) “Lynyrd Skynyrd: If I Leave Here Tomorrow” “King Arthur” (2004) Clive Owen. ‘PG-13’ (:05) “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” Serv Sara Henry Rollins (:45) “Pearl Harbor” (2001, War) Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett, Kate Beckinsale. ‘PG-13’ “A Dog’s Purpose” (2017) ‘PG’ (:45) “Quantum of Solace” (2008) “Queen of the Desert” “The Promise” (2016) Oscar Isaac. ‘PG-13’ (:15) “Killshot” (2009, Drama) Diane Lane. ‘R’ “The Sum of All Fears” (2002) Ben Affleck. “Thomas Crown” Motherhood “Whale Rider” (2002) ‘PG-13’ (:15) New Wave: Dare to Be Different ‘14’ “The Condemned” (2007, Action) Steve Austin. ‘R’ “Texas Rangers” (2001) ‘PG-13’ Dream Hs “Hey Arnold! The Movie” “Fair Haven” (2016) Tom Wopat. ‘NR’ (:35) “You, Me and Him” (2017) ‘NR’ (:15) “Amistad” (1997, Historical Drama) Morgan Freeman. ‘R’ “Hundred-Foot” (:15) “Jasper Jones” (2017) Angourie Rice. ‘NR’ “Ping Pong Summer” (2014) ‘NR’ (:35) “Rosewater” (2014) Gael García Bernal. XTC: This Is Pop ‘14’ (:45) “Enemy of the State” ‘R’ “American Graffiti” (1973) ‘PG’ “Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work” “Vicky Cristina Barcelona” (:10) “Ghost in the Shell” (2017) ‘PG-13’ “The Sum of All Fears”

(58) HIST

(81) COM

9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30 1 PM

M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F

(57) TRAV 196 277

(60) HGTV 112 229

ers . Dad . Dad . Dad . Dad

9 AM

M T 107 249 W Th F M T 122 244 W Th F

182 278

David ‘G’

8:30

B = DirecTV

Street Outlaws ‘14’ Street Outlaws ‘14’ Street Outlaws: Memphis Outlaws Outlaws Outlaws Outlaws Outlaws Airplane Repo ‘14’ Airplane Repo ‘14’ Airplane Repo ‘14’ Airplane Repo ‘14’ Airplane Repo ‘14’ Airplane Repo ‘14’ Vegas Rat Rods ‘PG’ Vegas Rat Rods ‘PG’ Almost, Away Almost, Away Almost, Away Almost, Away Almost, Away Alaska Marshals ‘PG’ Expedition Unknown ‘PG’ Expedition Unknown ‘PG’ Building-Grid Building Off the Grid Building Off Building Off the Grid Building Off the Grid Building Off Building Off the Grid Alaska: The Last Frontier Dual Survival ‘PG’ Dual Survival ‘PG’ Dual Survival ‘PG’ Dual Survival ‘PG’ Dual Survival ‘PG’ Dual Survival ‘PG’ Dual Survival ‘PG’ Dual Survival ‘PG’ Monsters and Mysteries Monsters and Mysteries Monsters and Mysteries Scariest Night of My Life Scariest Night of My Life Scariest Night of My Life Scariest Night of My Life Scariest Night of My Life Destination Truth Destination Truth Destination Truth Destination Truth Destination Truth Destination Truth Expedition Unknown ‘PG’ Expedition Unknown ‘PG’ Mysteries at the Hotel Mysteries at the Hotel Mysteries at the Hotel Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum A Haunting ‘PG’ Kindred Spirits ‘PG’ Kindred Spirits ‘PG’ Kindred Spirits ‘PG’ Most Terrifying Places Most Terrifying Places Most Terrifying Places Chris- Hunting Monsters The Dead Files ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Counting Cars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Rome: Engineering Caligula: 1400 Days of Terror ‘PG’ Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens “The Return” ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Cold Case Files ‘14’ Cold Case Files ‘14’ Dog Dog Dog Dog Dog Dog Dog Dog Dog Dog Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ The First 48 ‘14’ The First 48 ‘14’ Intervention “Ryan” ‘14’ Intervention ‘14’ Intervention ‘14’ Intervention “Sierra” ‘14’ The First 48 ‘PG’ The First 48 ‘14’ Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage The First 48 ‘PG’ The First 48 ‘14’ The First 48 ‘14’ The First 48 ‘14’ The First 48 ‘14’ The First 48 ‘14’ The First 48 ‘14’ The First 48 ‘14’ (7:00) Live PD Riding along with law enforcement. ‘14’ PD Cam PD Cam Live PD Live PD Live PD Live PD Live PD Live PD Live PD Live PD Live PD Live PD Varied Programs Fixer Upper ‘G’ Varied Programs Paid Prog. Pioneer Wo. The Kitchen ‘G’ The Kitchen ‘G’ Halloween Baking Halloween Baking Halloween Baking Halloween Baking Halloween Baking Paid Prog. Pioneer Wo. Trisha’s Trisha’s Trisha’s Trisha’s Trisha’s Trisha’s Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Chopped Junior ‘G’ Chopped ‘G’ Chopped ‘G’ Paid Prog. Pioneer Wo. Farmhouse Farmhouse Farmhouse Farmhouse Farmhouse Farmhouse Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ Paid Prog. Pioneer Wo. Cupcake Wars ‘G’ Cake Wars ‘G’ TexasCake TexasCake Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Paid Prog. Pioneer Wo. Contessa Contessa Contessa Contessa Contessa Giada-Home Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Fast Money Halftime Power Lunch Closing Bell Fast Money Varied Mad Money ‘PG’ Shark Tank Outnumbered Outnumbered Overtime Daily Briefing Shepard Smith Reporting Your World W/ Cavuto The Five Special Report The Story With Martha Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Cleveland (:45) The Cleveland Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show The Office The Office The Office The Office Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Cleveland (:45) The Cleveland Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show The Office The Office The Office The Office Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Cleveland Cleveland South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Cleveland (:45) The Cleveland Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show The Office The Office The Office The Office Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Cleveland (:45) The Cleveland Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show The Office The Office The Office The Office (7:00) “Dead Still” ‘14’ “The Crooked Man” (2016) Angelique Rivera. ‘14’ “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” (2007) Daniel Radcliffe. (:02) “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” (2009) Butcher’s Block Butcher’s Block Butcher’s Block “Stickman” (2017) Alanna Bale, Valerie Buhagiar. (:03) “Cucuy: The Boogeyman” (2018) Brian Krause “Sorcerer’s Apprentice” Hellbenders (:28) “Stickman” (2017) Alanna Bale, Valerie Buhagiar. (:29) “Fright Night” (2011) Anton Yelchin, Colin Farrell. (12:48) “Van Helsing” (2004) Hugh Jackman, Kate Beckinsale. Insidious CSI: Crime CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene “See No Evil” (2006, Horror) Kane. (:15) “Cabin Fever 2: Spring Fever” (2009) Z Nation “Zombaby!” ‘14’ Z Nation ‘14’ Z Nation ‘14’ Z Nation ‘14’ “Silent House” (2011, Horror) Elizabeth Olsen. (1:59) “The Cabin in the Woods” (2011)

e Ed. PD

ow G’

8 AM

B

A = DISH

311 516

” ”

5 SHOW 319 546 aiser Drama Drama Drama Drama 8 TMC 329 554 ball

SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.

movieson 4 PM 4:30

’d ‘G’ Kate Winslet. A woman falls Split ››› (2016, Suspense) The Witches of Eastwick n MONDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING A = DISH B = DirecTV for an artist aboard the ill-fated OCTOBER 22,) 2018 ››› (1987 , Comedy Jack James McAvoy, Anya Taylor’d ‘G’ Nicholson, Cher. Three ship. ‘PG-13’ (3:15) 5 SHOW Taken ››› (2008 , Action ) Liam A B Joy. A man who has 23 n try to conjure(:37) upNightline their Maggie Grace. Slavers Wed. 7 p.m.; Fri. “Pilot” 4:45Middlep.m. ABC Newsdivorcees ’d ‘G’ Family Feud bonds Family Feud personalities Family Feud ABC World Jeopardy!three Wheel ofNeeson, For- Dancing With the Stars “Disney Night” (N Same-day Tape) The Rookie at (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live abducts Shannon. A mute woman (51) “dream man.” ‘R’ (2:02) kidnap the daughter of a former (N) ‘G’ (N) ‘PG’ (N) ‘PG’ ‘PG’ News (N) ‘G’ tune (N) ‘G’ ‘PG’ aged man joins the police 10 (N) (N) ‘14’ (3) ABC-13 13 geBob teens. ‘PG-13’ (1:57) + MAX with a lab creature in a water FREE Mon. 7:20 p.m.; Tue. 5:10 force. ‘14’ spy. ‘PG-13’ (1:31) ! HBO geBob Tue. tank. ‘R’ (2:03) ^ HBO2 Sat. Chicago P.D. Ruzak and How I 7 Metp.m.How I Met Last Man Last Man & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal InDateline “Frantic” A woman DailyMailTV DailyMailTV Impractical Pawn Stars p.m. Wed.Law 7 p.m. geBob Atwater become prison inYour Mother Your Mother Standing ‘PG’ StandingThe ‘PG’ Thomas Basketball player disap- Affair tent››› An autopsy reveals foul disappears from a mall in (N) (N) Jokers ‘14’ “Damn Yan (6) MNT-5 5 11:30 p.m. Superbad: Unrated Extended Crown geBob The Wedding ››› (1998, mates. Give ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ pears. ‘14’ play. ‘14’ Texas. Singer ‘PG’ kees” ‘PG’ Something’s Gotta ››› , Suspense ) Pierce (1999 ››› (2007 , Comedy ) Edition The Ellen DeGeneres Show KTVA 5 p.m. CBS Evening KTVA 6 p.m. Evening News The NeighHappy ToMagnum P.I. A father is ac- Bull “The Missing Piece” KTVA Night- (:35) The Late Show With James CorRomance-Comedy ) Adam (8) CBS-11 , 11Romance-Comedy ) (2003 Brosnan, Rene Russo. An (N) ‘G’ First Take Hill,News borhood (N) gether ‘PG’ cused of murder. ‘14’ ‘14’ cast Stephen Colbert ‘PG’ den Jonah Michael Cera. CoSandler,(N) Drew Barrymore. Diane X2 TMZ ››› , ActionTwo ) Patrick steals an insurance edding Jack Nicholson,Two and a Keaton. Entertainment Funny You Funny You The Big Bang The Big art Bang thief The Resident “The Germ” 9-1-1 “Dosed” An eating Fox 4 News at 9 (N) TMZ (N) ‘PG’ ‘PG’ (2003 Entertainment and a dependent teens hope to score 1980s wedding crooner Men ‘PG’ Bell chooses a new medical‘R’contest; a toddler A pageant. Tonight Jackman. Half Men ‘PG’ A music forTonight the(N) Should Ask Should Ask Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ FOX-4 4 exec 4 Halffalls Stewart, Hugh A investigator’s heart. (1:51) edding (9) booze babes at a party. (N) ‘PG’ and (N) ‘PG’ (N)5:05 ‘14’ p.m. (N) ‘14’ attempts to find true love. ‘PGedding mother of his young girlfriend. power-mad militarist pursues Fri. 8 device TMCfirm. Judge Judy Judy ‘NR’ Channel 2 NBC Nightly Channel Newshour (N) The Voice “The Battles, Part 3” The battle rounds13’ continue. Manifest Flights” 6:15 Channel 2 (:34) The Tonight Show Star- (:37) Late Sun. 210:30 (1:59) (81) COM (1:36) (81) “Connecting COM Sat. Tue. MAXJudge edding ‘PG-13’ (2:05) + Titanic ›››› (1997, Historical mutants. ‘PG-13’ + ‘PG’ News 5:00 News With (N) ‘PG’ Ben resists the voice in his News: Latethering Jimmy Fallon (N) ‘14’ (2:14) Night With (10) NBC-2 2 2 ‘PG’ Drama) Leonardo DiCaprio, 10:10 p.m. p.m. p.m. Report (N) Lester Holt head. (N) ‘PG’ Edition (N)MAX Thu. 11:05 p.m. Seth Meyers Midsomer Murders “Market BBC World Nightly Busi- PBS NewsHour (N) Antiques Roadshow Booker A Chef’s Life: The Final POV “The Apology” Women forced into sexual Breaking Big Amanpour and Company (N) © Gay” Tribune Media Services ness Report T. Washington archive; wine Harvest Vivian Howard hosts slavery. (N) ‘14’ “Roxane (12) PBS-7 7 7 for Murder” Woman is battered News ‘G’ to death. ‘PG’ ‘G’ pot. ‘G’ a harvest feast. ‘G’ ‘PG’

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5 PM

5:30

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

W

X

October 21 - 27, 2018

CABLE STATIONS (8) WGN-A 239 307 (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

303 504

^ HBO2 304 505 + MAX

311 516

5 SHOW 319 546 8 TMC

329 554

7

SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.

M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... How I Met How I Met Elementary “The Diabolical With With With With Your Mother Your Mother Kind” ‘14’ LOGO by Lori Goldstein (N) Isaac Mizrahi Live! (N) PM Style With Shawn Killinger “Isaac Mizrahi Live!” (N) Great Gifts (N) (Live) ‘G’ frye & co. Footwear & Hand- Accessories Gift List “Under Late Night Gifts (N) (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ bags (N) (Live) ‘G’ $50” (N) (Live) ‘G’ The First 48 A victim’s body The First 48: Miraculous The First 48 “Final InvestLive PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: (:03) 24 to Life A 20-year-old Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: is burned beyond recogniSurvivors Deadly home inva- ment; Writing on the Wall” Girl Women on Women on Women on Women on woman seeks forgiveness. Women on Women on Women on Women on tion. ‘PG’ sion in Dallas. ‘14’ witnesses murder. ‘14’ Patrol Patrol Patrol Patrol (N) ‘14’ Patrol Patrol Patrol Patrol NCIS Vance investigates a Modern Fam- Modern Fam- Modern Fam- Modern Fam- WWE Monday Night RAW (N Same-day Tape) ‘PG’ (:05) Modern (:35) Modern (:05) Modern (:35) Modern boxer’s death. ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ Family ‘PG’ Family ‘PG’ Family ‘PG’ Family ‘PG’ Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Final Space Brooklyn Brooklyn Brooklyn ers ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ “Cool Hand ‘14’ ‘14’ “The Blind “Livin’ on a ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ “Killer Queen” “Chapter Two” Nine-Nine ‘14’ Nine-Nine ‘14’ Nine-Nine ‘14’ Peter” ‘14’ Side” ‘14’ Prayer” ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ “Tomorrow- “Man of Steel” (2013, Action) Henry Cavill, Amy Adams, Michael Shannon. Young Clark “Suicide Squad” (2016, Action) Will Smith, Jared Leto, Margot Robbie. The Alienist “Hildebrandt’s Supernatural Lucifer tries to land” (2015) Kent must protect those he loves from a dire threat. Armed supervillains unite to battle a powerful entity. Starling” ‘MA’ get into heaven. ‘14’ (:15) NFL Football New York Giants at Atlanta Falcons. (N) (Live) (:15) SportsCenter With Scott Van Pelt NFL PrimeTime SportsCenter With Scott NFL PrimeTime SportsCenter (N) (Live) Van Pelt (:15) Fútbol Americano de la NFL Los Giants viajan al Mercedes-Benz Stadium para enColl. Football (:45) College Football Final SportsCenter With Scott Van 2018 World Series of Poker SportsCenter With Scott College Footfrentar a los Falcons en domingo por la noche. (N) (Live) Live Pelt (N) (Live) Main Event. (Taped) Van Pelt ball Bundesliga Soccer MLS Soccer Real Salt Lake at Portland Timbers. From Provi- College Football Oregon at Washington State. (Taped) College Football Colorado at Washington. (Taped) dence Park in Portland, Ore. Mom ‘PG’ Mom ‘14’ Mom ‘14’ Mom ‘14’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘14’ “John Wick” (2014, Action) Keanu Reeves, Michael Nyqvist, Alfie Allen. An “The Expendables 3” (2014, Action) Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham. ex-assassin hunts down the gangsters who ruined his life. Barney Ross brings in new blood to fight an old associate. “Friday the “Halloween” (2007) Malcolm McDowell, Scout Taylor-Compton. An escaped “Halloween H20: 20 Years Later” (1998, Horror) Jamie Lee Eli Roth’s History of Horror “Jeepers Creepers” (2001) Gina Philips, Justin Long. A 13th” (2009) psychopath slashes his way through his hometown. Curtis, Adam Arkin, Josh Hartnett. (N) ‘MA’ flesh-eating entity pursues sibling college students. World of World of American American Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Family Guy Family Guy Rick and Robot Chick- Aqua Teen Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Family Guy Family Guy Rick and Gumball Gumball Dad ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ en ‘14’ Hunger ers ‘PG’ ers ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ Treehouse Masters ‘PG’ North Woods Law “Things North Woods Law ‘PG’ The Crocodile Hunter: Steve Into Alaska (N) ‘PG’ (:01) Into Alaska “Release the (:01) North Woods Law Into Alaska ‘PG’ Are Afoul” ‘PG’ Irwin’s Best (N) Eagle” ‘PG’ “Down to the Wire” ‘PG’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Andi Mack ‘G’ Andi Mack ‘G’ Andi Mack Coop & Cami Raven’s Bizaardvark Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Andi Mack ‘G’ Raven’s Bizaardvark Bizaardvark (N) ‘G’ Home ‘G’ ‘G’ Home ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ The Loud The Loud SpongeBob The Loud The Loud The Loud iCarly ‘G’ SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ (3:00) “Maleficent” (2014, (:10) “Hocus Pocus” (1993, Comedy) Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker. (:20) “The Witches of Eastwick” (1987, Comedy) Jack Nicholson, Cher. The 700 Club “Warm Bodies” (2013) Fantasy) Angelina Jolie. Youths conjure up three child-hungry witches on Halloween. Three divorcees try to conjure up their “dream man.” Nicholas Hoult. Four Weddings “... And a Four Weddings Danielle; Long Island Medium (N) ‘PG’ Long Island Medium “An Ac- Long Lost Family “Waiting a Lifetime” A man searches for Long Island Medium ‘PG’ Long Island Medium “An AcLatte” ‘PG’ Kitty; Kally; Dawn. ‘PG’ cident on Tour” ‘PG’ his birth mother. (N) ‘PG’ cident on Tour” ‘PG’ Street Outlaws: Memphis: Street Outlaws: Memphis: Street Outlaws: Memphis: Street Outlaws: Memphis Street Outlaws: Memphis “Put Your Life on the Line” (N) ‘14’ Brake Room Brake Room Street Outlaws: Memphis Rules of the Road Rules of the Road Rules of the Road “What Makes a Man” ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ “What Makes a Man” ‘14’ Scariest Night of My Life Ghost Adventures “The Ghost Adventures “Asylum Ghost Adventures “Nopem- Ghost Adventures “Halloween Special: Transylvania” The Haunted Live “Oct. 19, Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Myrtles Plantation” ‘PG’ 49” ‘PG’ ing Sanatorium” ‘PG’ legend of Vlad The Impaler. ‘PG’ 2018” ‘14’ American Pickers A piece of American Pickers “On the American Pickers “The Jer- American Pickers “Pickin’ for American Pickers Mike finds (:03) American Pickers: Bo- (:05) American Pickers ‘PG’ (:03) American Pickers ‘PG’ space-age history. ‘PG’ Road Again” ‘PG’ sey Jaguar” ‘PG’ the Fences” ‘PG’ a rare microcar. ‘PG’ nus Buys (N) ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens “Beyond Ancient Aliens “The Viking Ancient Aliens A Ancient Aliens Accounts of (:01) Ancient Aliens Relics (:04) Ancient Aliens Unex- (:03) Ancient Aliens A Nazca” Gigantic lines extend Gods” A look into the Norse 14,000-year-old set of ruins. magic in ancient times. ‘PG’ may point to human origins. plained advances in evolu14,000-year-old set of ruins. for miles. ‘PG’ Viking. ‘MA’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ tion. ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Love It or List It “Pond Para- Love It or List It “Community Love It or List It A house is Love It or List It “Mother in Love It or List It “Lackluster House Hunt- Hunters Int’l House Hunt- Hunters Int’l Love It or List It “Lackluster dise” ‘PG’ Calling” ‘PG’ crowded with toys. ‘PG’ Law Matters” ‘PG’ Lake House” (N) ‘PG’ ers (N) ‘G’ ers ‘G’ Lake House” ‘PG’ Halloween Wars ‘G’ Halloween Wars ‘G’ Halloween Wars ‘G’ Halloween Baking Champi- Halloween Baking Champi- Halloween Wars “Halloween Haunted Gingerbread Show- Halloween Baking Championship ‘G’ onship (N) ‘G’ Time Travel” ‘G’ down ‘G’ onship ‘G’ American Greed Bill Mastro American Greed (N) ‘PG’ American Greed: Deadly American Greed “From Bouncer to Millionaire Fraudster” A American Greed “BabyLifeLock Pro- MyPillow Retirement Paid Program ‘G’ rigs bids. ‘PG’ Rich (N) ‘14’ former bouncer becomes a fraudster. ‘PG’ Faced Drug Lords” ‘PG’ tection Topper Income Tucker Carlson Tonight (N) Hannity (N) The Ingraham Angle (N) Fox News at Night with Tucker Carlson Tonight Hannity The Ingraham Angle Fox News at Night with Shannon Bream (N) Shannon Bream (:15) The Office “Viewing (:15) The Office “China” ‘PG’ (5:50) The Of- (:25) The Of- The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The President The Office (N) South Park (:31) South Party” ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ ‘PG’ “PDA” ‘14’ ‘PG’ ‘14’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Show ‘PG’ ‘MA’ Park ‘MA’ (2:02) “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood (:31) “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” (2010, Fantasy) Nicolas Cage, Jay Ba- “Cucuy: The Boogeyman” (2018) Marisol Nichols. A teen- Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Prince” (2009) Daniel Radcliffe. ruchel. A master wizard takes on a reluctant protege. age girl discovers an urban legend is true. ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’

PREMIUM STATIONS ! HBO

Clarion TV

SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.

(3:25) “The Shape of Water” (2017, Fanta- Pod Save America ‘MA’ VICE News sy) Sally Hawkins, Michael Shannon, Richard Tonight (N) Jenkins. ‘R’ ‘14’ (:10) “Pitch Perfect 3” (2017) Anna Kend- (:45) “Happening: A Clean Energy Revolurick. The Barden Bellas reunite for an overtion” (2017) James Redford examines the seas musical USO tour. dawn of the clean energy era. (2:55) “The Book of Eli” (4:55) “The Client” (1994, Suspense) Susan Sarandon, (2010, Adventure) Denzel Tommy Lee Jones. A boy with a mob secret hires a lawyer to Washington. ‘R’ protect him. ‘PG-13’ (2:30) “Me“Baby Driver” (2017, Action) Ansel Elgort, Kevin Spacey, The Circus: mento” (2000) Lily James. A doomed heist threatens the life of a young Inside the ‘R’ getaway driver. ‘R’ Wildest (3:05) “The Thomas Crown (:05) “50/50” (2011, Comedy-Drama) Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Affair” (1999) Pierce BrosSeth Rogen. Learning that he has cancer, a young man vows nan. ‘R’ to beat the odds. ‘R’

October 21 - 27, 2018

Stolen Daughters: Kidnapped by Boko (:35) “Public Enemies” (2009, Crime Drama) Johnny Depp, Christian Bale, (10:55) The Deuce Darlene Haram Nigerian schoolgirls are kidnapped. (N Marion Cotillard. G-man Melvin Purvis vows to nab notorious criminal John deals with unexpected news. Subtitled-English) ‘14’ Dillinger. ‘R’ ‘MA’ The Deuce Darlene deals with “My Dinner With Hervé” (2018, Docudrama) Peter Dinklage, (9:50) Camp- (:20) “The Sentence” (2018, Documentary) unexpected news. ‘MA’ Jamie Dornan, Andy Garcia. A journalist forms a friendship ing ‘MA’ Rudy Valdez shows the impact of his sister’s with Hervé Villechaize. ‘NR’ incarceration. ‘NR’ “High Crimes” (2002, Suspense) Ashley Judd, Morgan “The Siege” (1998, Suspense) Denzel Washington, Annette “The Bourne Identity” Freeman, Jim Caviezel. A lawyer must defend her husband in Bening, Bruce Willis. The FBI attempts to hunt down terrorists (2002, Action) Matt Damon. a military courtroom. ‘PG-13’ in New York. ‘R’ ‘PG-13’ Shameless Debbie helps Kidding Who Is Amer- Shameless Debbie helps Kidding SMILF ‘MA’ The Circus: “Baby Fiona pick up the pieces. ‘MA’ “Kintsugi” ‘MA’ ica? ‘MA’ Fiona pick up the pieces. ‘MA’ “Kintsugi” ‘MA’ Inside the Driver” ‘R’ Wildest “The Blues Brothers” (1980, Musical Comedy) John Be(:15) “Office Christmas Party” (2016, Comedy) Jason Bate- (:05) “I Got the Hook-Up” lushi, Dan Aykroyd, James Brown. Two musicians reassemble man, Olivia Munn, T.J. Miller. Two co-workers throw an epic (1998, Comedy) Master P. ‘R’ their hot band for a fundraiser. ‘R’ Christmas party. ‘R’

Clarion TV

© Tribune Media Services

9


A12 | Monday, October 22, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

Crossword

Need continues for self-help support for families in crisis cause I Love You again. Readers, the nonprofit B.I.L.Y. has been in existence for more than 35 years. This self-help group provides support for parents of children of all ages in coping with behavioral problems such as truancy, substance abuse and other forms of defiance of authority. I have received let- Abigail Van Buren ters from readers thanking me for recommending this group. For more information, go to bily.org. DEAR ABBY: My wife and I have been married for 13 years. It hasn’t always been easy. She recently decided on her own that we needed a fresh start because of some financial problems we are having, so she applied for a job in a state six hours away from any of our family. She accepted the job before telling me anything about it. Now she says our daughter and I should pack up and go with her. Several issues complicate matters. Our daughter is 11 and just started middle school. I don’t want to pull

her out before school is out. Second, I have several health issues, and my doctors are within two hours of home. All my doctors coordinate with each other. If we move, I’ll be too far away from them. I don’t want to start over with new ones. I love my wife and want to be with her, but I’m worried about the future if I move not only away from my doctors but also my family. Please help. -- NERVOUS IN NORTH CAROLINA DEAR NERVOUS: The decision your wife made should have been made jointly, not by her alone. Your reasons for wanting to remain where you are are valid, and I think you would be wise to discuss what’s going on with an attorney before this goes any further. 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. For everything you need to know about wedding planning, order “How to Have a Lovely Wedding.” Send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $7 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby, Wedding Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling are included in the price.)

Hints from Heloise

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, Oct. 22, 2018: This year you express a penchant for daydreaming, but will quickly and readily jump to action when the need arises. Avoid people who are controlling, especially in your profession; they could undermine your work and goals. If you are single, you could meet someone from out of the blue. This person could be The One. If you are attached, the two of you relate well but also experience an unusual intensity. Your sweetie seems to be an even stronger force! ARIES encourages you to take risks more often. 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 pulled like saltwater taffy, as people and situations demand your presence. A boss might be difficult, and a partner or associate is challenging at best. Relax, and the tense moments will dissipate faster. Postpone major decisions, if possible. Tonight: Do what you enjoy. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HH Stand back and watch others’ tempers get fired up. Your observations could prove helpful at a later point. You could be too tired to get into the passing issues of the day right now. Be smart and say little. You also might be evaluating a personal matter. Tonight: Happiest at home. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You can listen to a friend and agree with his or her logic. Still, you might not want to follow through on this person’s suggestion. Listen to several different suggestions to see if one idea proves to be more comfort-

Rubes

able. Discuss your thoughts. Tonight: Kick up your heels. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HH Someone might be demanding in asking for help in dealing with an issue. You will say “yes,” but you’ll probably regret the time this commitment will take. Get more in touch with your feelings and obligations, if possible. Prioritize, then act. Tonight: Happily head home. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Reach out to someone at a distance. A meeting might be possible, despite the miles between you. A partner shares some inspirational and powerful ideas. You could be terse when dealing with this person. Be aware that you might be seen as difficult. Tonight: Be adventurous. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH You could be listening to someone you feel very close to. Understand how much this person has to offer, and be sure to use his or her suggestions. Don’t try to move a person who is unmovable and stubborn. You will be wasting your time. Tonight: Be with a special friend. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Defer to someone else. You might not be ecstatic about this course of action, but ultimately it will benefit you. Be aware of your limited influence. Recognize what doors this person could cause to close. You might revisit an important decision. Tonight: Accept an invitation. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Defer to others, and get past an emotional limitation. You know what works for you. Do not hesitate to ask for what you want. You might not think you will receive a positive response, but you will. Keep

By Leigh Rubin

Ziggy

in mind that you are simply starting up a conversation. Tonight: Hang out. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH Your willingness to dig below the surface allows you to take the next step. Your creativity emerges with whatever issue or conversation heads your way. Use caution with spending. You will get some strong results. Do not underestimate your influence. Tonight: Let the party go on. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH You could be quite concerned about your choices in the next few days. You might not be sure of yourself, which is unusual. However, you present a strong demeanor. Note that what you thought you wanted might no longer be valid. Tonight: Choose a favorite stressbuster. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Your sunny personality melts someone else’s resistance. Still, you might not be as open as you would like to be. The real issue might be your resistance -- even though you might not have recognized it before now. Ask a friend for much-needed feedback. Tonight: Remain calm. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Zero in on your priorities. You will be able to manifest what you want. If you are pursuing something different from your norm, consider whether you have an inner resistance that is likely to emerge. Become more in tune with your surroundings. Tonight: Go where the crowds are. BORN TODAY Actor Jeff Goldblum (1952), actor Jesse Tyler Ferguson (1975), actor Christopher Lloyd (1938)

HARDWOOD FLOORS Dear Heloise: Hardwood floors need a little TLC, and they’ll look great for years to come. Here are a few hints I’ve learned to keep your wood in pristine condition: First, never slide furniture across the floor. Pick it up, if you can, or use plastic sliders. Use rugs on your floor, especially in front of doors that lead into the house. Try to not wear high heels too often, as they might dent the floor. Keep your floors clean. Dirt over time wears down the finish and beauty of hardwoods. -- Robert K. in Cleveland FLAT-SCREEN TV Dear Readers: Many people have flatscreen TVs but don’t know the proper way to clean them. Here are some suggestions from the experts: 1. Turn off and unplug the TV before you start cleaning. 2. Always follow the manufacturer’s warranty guidelines. 3. Use a microfiber cloth to dust the screen. That might be all you need to do, but if smudges remain, use a damp (not wet) microfiber cloth to wipe the smudge. 4. NEVER spray liquid on the screen, never use paper towels or abrasive materials, and never use alcohol or ammonia cleaning products. They remove the antiglare protective covering on the screen. -- Heloise CLEAN THAT SINK Dear Heloise: Want a truly clean sink? Fill your sink (whether metal or porcelain) with water almost to the brim, add 1 cup of bleach and let sit for 20 minutes. Unplug the sink and drain the water. Then use a scouring powder and sponge, and scrub the sink, including the faucets and every part of the sink. Rinse well. If the area around the drain or faucet is still in need of a little more work, use a toothbrush to scrub it clean. -- A Reader, via email

SUDOKU

By Tom Wilson

9 1 4 2 3 7 8 5 6

5 2 3 1 6 8 4 7 9

2 7 9 4 8 3 1 6 5

4 5 1 6 9 2 3 8 7

8 3 6 7 5 1 9 2 4

1 6 2 3 7 9 5 4 8

3 4 8 5 1 6 7 9 2

Previous Puzzles Answer Key

Tundra

By Johnny Hart

Shoe

By Jim Davis

Take it from the Tinkersons

By Bill Bettwy

7 9 5 8 2 4 6 3 1

4

9 8 1 2 3 7 8 2 1 7 3 5 2 9 8

10/19

Difficulty Level

Garfield

By Dave Green

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. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to Friday.

6 8 7 9 4 5 2 1 3

B.C.

Friday’s Answer 10-19

5

3 5

4 1

4

6 8 8 2 4 7 1 6 8 3 1

Difficulty Level

7 10/22

By Chad Carpenter

By Chris Cassatt & Gary Brookins

Mother Goose and Grimm

By Michael Peters

2018 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Jacqueline Bigar’s Stars

2018 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

DEAR ABBY: It’s been several years since you have mentioned Because I Love You (B.I.L.Y.) as a resource for parents in crisis. What is happening to our groups -- as well as similar ones -- is a decrease in attendance. Yet the problems today are worse than when I started B.I.L.Y. many years ago. The schools don’t want a group such as ours on their campus because they’re afraid it signals that there are problems on their campus. Well, there are problems on ALL campuses today! The legalization of recreational marijuana has sent a message to our youth that it’s safe to use. Parents of 10-year-olds have come to our group because their child is using. Kids are dying at a faster pace than ever before, and much of it is because of synthetic drugs on the streets. Parents can be a major part of the problem, and a group like B.I.L.Y. offers suggestions for solutions. It’s not just drugs that we deal with but also mental health issues, gender ID, school dropouts, gang involvement and more. We rely on the media to help us with referrals. Will you please consider mentioning B.I.L.Y. again as you so generously have in the past? Parents in the U.S. and Canada need to be aware that we are here for them. Thanks, Abby! -- DENNIS PONCHER, FOUNDER, B.I.L.Y. DEAR DENNIS: I’m happy to mention Be-

By Eugene Sheffer


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