Drilling
Softball
Trump admin shifts offshore plans
SoHi tops Kenai in nonconference play
Alaska/A15
Sports/A7
CLARION
Sunny 51/27 More weather on Page A2
P E N I N S U L A
Vol. 49, Issue 177
In the news Governor adds Whittier to disaster declaration ANCHORAGE — Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy has amended a state disaster declaration to add an area that includes the town of Whittier. The Anchorage Daily News reports the Republican governor amended the declaration last week so the area can get assistance for the damage caused by the magnitude 7.1 earthquake last year. The area was left out of former Gov. Bill Walker’s declaration from the Nov. 30 quake that shook Southcentral Alaska. Dunleavy said in a letter to lawmakers that the state has identified $507,000 in potentially eligible repairs in the town. The quake damaged critical utility infrastructure, docks, harbor parking areas and the breakwater protecting the boat harbor. Whittier city manager Jim Hunt says the damage estimate is conservative.
Bethel city council introduces ordinance to pay its members BETHEL — An Alaska city council has introduced a measure to begin paying council members for their previously uncompensated service. KYUK-AM reported Thursday that the Bethel City Council discussed an ordinance proposal to pay its members $100 for every regular council meeting, $25 for each special city council meeting and water and sewer subsidies up to several hundred dollars per month. The council in western Alaska will vote on the ordinance May 14 and a public vote will be held before it takes effect, although the council can pass an “advisory vote” overriding the public vote. — Associated Press
Correction The article “‘Rosie’ Makes Home Debut at SoHi” printed in the April 18 edition of the Peninsula Clarion contained an error. The plane researched by “Rosie” playwright Nathan Erfurth was not a B-52 Bomber, as reported, but a B-17F “Flying Fortress.” The Clarion regrets the error.
Index Local................A3 Opinion........... A4 Nation..............A5 Religion............A6 Sports..............A7 Classifieds.... A10 Comics.......... A14 Alaska............A15 Check us out online at www.peninsulaclarion.com To subscribe, call 283-3584.
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PFD talks begin in House, Senate By Alex McCarthy Juneau Empire
After putting serious discussions off for the first 100 days of session, legislators are diving into Alaska Permanent Fund dividend talks this week. The House State Affairs Committee debated multiple proposals about the permanent fund and the dividend Thursday afternoon, including Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s proposed constitutional amendment. The amendment (House Joint Resolution 6), which Dunleavy introduced Feb. 20, would require any changes to the PFD formula to be approved by a statewide vote. Thursday’s hearing was the first hearing in the committee for the bills and proposed amendments, and the committee will pick them up again next week. At a future hearing (or hearings), there will be an opportunity
Soldotna library receives donation By KAT SORENSEN Peninsula Clarion
Rep. Sarah Vance, R-Homer, questions Angela Rodell, Chief Executive Officer of the Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation, during a House State Affairs Committee meeting about House Bill 139 at the Capitol on Thursday. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)
for public testimony. Dates for that will be set later. Members of the committee also heard House Bill
132 from Rep. Adam Wool, D-Fairbanks, that would tie the PFD amount closer to the state’s oil and gas rev-
enue. If the price or volume of oil production increases, the bill states, so does the See PFD, page A3
The Soldotna Library Friends have donated $3,100 to the Joyce K. Carver Memorial Soldotna Public Library for the purchase of supplies and to support library programming. “Library staff are very grateful for the hard work and support of the Soldotna Library Friends, and for the contributions of our community donors,” said Soldotna Librarian Rachel Nash in a letter to the Soldotna City Council outlining the donation. The donation will be split up for several different uses: $1,400 will be used to promote and support the 2019 summer reading program; $1,000 will be used to supSee FRIENDS, page A3
K-Selo gets 2-year extension on grant By VICTORIA PETERSEN Peninsula Clarion
Efforts to build a new school in Kachemak-Selo are still going strong, and a two-year extension on a state grant gives the borough more
time to find additional funds for their match. Last year, the Legislature enacted a bill allowing Department of Education and Early Development construction grant recipients to request an extension of up to
seven years. The Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly passed an ordinance at their Jan. 23 meeting asking for an extension on the $10 million state grant for a new school. Brenda Ahlberg, com-
munity and fiscal projects manager, said the borough requested a seven-year extension, but received only a two-year extension, making the deadline for the grant June 29, 2021. This means the borough has two more
Nikiski students ‘Seize the Day’ By JOEY KLECKA Peninsula Clarion
A diverse cast will put on a two-week production of the musical “Newsies” at Nikiski High School. The show, which is being produced in partnership with Triumvirate Theatre, will feature actors and actresses from around the peninsula, a handful of performers from the Mat-Su Valley, and special appearance by interim Kenai Peninsula Borough School District Superintendent John O’Brien. O’Brien plays a “relatively small part” as the mayor of New York City, Triumvirate President Joe Rizzo said. “About a month ago, we called and asked him to do this,” Rizzo explained. “Then, literally, it must’ve been three or four days later when he was announced as the (interim superintendent).” Rizzo is the show’s pro-
years to find around $5 million to fulfill the 35% match required of the grant. K-Selo has been in need of a new school for nearly 10 years. In 2011, the village petitioned the school See K-SELO, page A15
Prescription drug takeback this weekend By Brian Mazurek Peninsula Clarion
guest directors. Based on the 1899 newsboy strike demanding fair
As part of a nationwide effort to combat opioid and prescription drug abuse, a local coalition of community members and law enforcement agencies is hosting an event on Saturday to dispose of unused and expired medication. From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., people can drop off their unused prescriptions at the Soldotna police station as part of National Prescription Drug Take Back Day, hosted locally by Change 4 the Kenai. Anyone who drops off their unused prescriptions on Saturday will receive a $5 gift card to Fellers Coffee Wagon in Soldotna and be entered to win a $25 gift to Fred
See NEWS page A15
See DRUG, page A2
The cast of “Newsies” sings during rehearsal Wednesday at the Nikiski High School auditorium. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
ducer, and in his 20th year in the Nikiski High theater program, has seen a lot on stage. This time, Rizzo is welcom-
ing a collection of theater talent from Wasilla and Palmer, including Collin Christiansen and Beau Hagerty as
Peninsula educators recognized Senators optimistic they can finish session on time as BP Teachers of Excellence By Alex McCarthy Juneau Empire
By VICTORIA PETERSEN Peninsula Clarion
Several Kenai Peninsula educators were recognized for their excellence at a statewide banquet in Anchorage on Wednesday. Wendy Todd of Paul Banks Elementary in Homer, Jennifer Hornung of Nikiski Middle/High School in Nikiski and Julie Doepken of William H. Seward Elementary School in Seward received the BP Teachers of Excellence award. Thirteen teachers across the state were
See AWARD, page A3
Kenai Peninsula Borough School District Superintendent Sean Dusek stands next to BP Teachers of Excellence honorees, Wendy Todd, Julie Doepken, Martha Fleming and Jennifer Hornung at the BP Teachers of Excellence reception in Anchorage on Wednesday. (Photo courtsey of BP Teachers of Excellence.)
As the end of Legislative session approaches, lawmakers expressed differing views on whether the job will get done, and get done right, in time. Sen. Bert Stedman, the co-chair of the Senate Finance Committee, told reporters Thursday morning that he was confident that the Legislature can get a budget to Gov. Mike Dunleavy and a robust package of crime bills done, all by the 121st day of session on May 15. The constitutional limit for sessions is 121
days, but the governor or Legislature can call a special session of up to 30 days. Thursday was the 101st day of session. Stedman, R-Sitka, said the budget will likely hit the Senate floor sometime next week. He said many aspects of the Senate’s current proposal are similar to the House proposal that rejected many of Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s proposed cuts. “My conversations with him are pretty direct, frankly,” Stedman said of talking with Dunleavy. “I expressed to him that there’s no way See END, page A2
A2 | Friday, April 26, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
AccuWeather® 5-day forecast for Kenai-Soldotna Today
Saturday
Plenty of sun Hi: 51
Plenty of sun
Lo: 27
Hi: 51
Sunday
Partial sunshine
Lo: 28
RealFeel
Hi: 53
Tuesday
Cloudy
Lo: 33
Hi: 53
Lo: 34
10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.
44 50 49 51
Today 6:15 a.m. 9:52 p.m.
Sunrise Sunset
Last Apr 26
New May 4
Daylight Day Length - 15 hrs., 36 min., 58 sec. Daylight gained - 5 min., 28 sec.
Hi: 51
Alaska Cities Yesterday Hi/Lo/W 42/34/c 48/30/pc 15/9/c 45/21/s 42/21/pc 44/38/sn 45/20/pc 44/14/r 47/23/s 40/34/c 50/26/s 38/23/pc 52/26/c 50/24/s 45/29/sh 43/31/r 44/30/sh 46/35/sh 37/23/c 48/21/sh 47/37/sh 45/33/sn
Moonrise Moonset
Tomorrow 6:12 a.m. 9:54 p.m.
Kotzebue 34/25
Lo: 36
Unalakleet 34/20 McGrath 46/22
Tomorrow 5:19 a.m. 12:47 p.m.
Yesterday Hi/Lo/W 36/27/c 47/22/pc 47/38/sh 30/18/c 48/25/pc 47/19/pc 51/29/s 46/32/sn 18/3/s 36/27/sn 45/34/sf 47/37/sh 47/31/pc 51/27/s 45/17/s 44/19/pc 34/13/pc 46/35/pc 50/31/pc 43/34/sf 52/25/pc 46/35/c
City Kotzebue McGrath Metlakatla Nome North Pole Northway Palmer Petersburg Prudhoe Bay* Saint Paul Seward Sitka Skagway Talkeetna Tanana Tok* Unalakleet Valdez Wasilla Whittier Willow* Yakutat
Anchorage 48/31
City
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
66/38/pc 60/45/r 79/48/s 78/54/s 74/49/s 75/58/s 74/53/c 67/45/r 74/61/sh 73/52/t 62/48/pc 71/49/r 88/53/s 81/55/s 73/56/c 71/47/t 56/42/pc 58/41/sh 74/64/r 75/47/pc 61/36/pc 60/33/c 72/40/s 67/42/pc 55/47/pc 53/48/r 66/36/pc 61/35/r 62/33/pc 70/37/t 85/62/pc 82/54/t 81/56/pc 62/41/r 80/62/c 74/48/t 67/46/pc 63/40/s 59/38/s 68/41/t 71/56/r 64/42/s
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
67/48/sh 86/56/pc 66/52/r 66/34/s 82/59/pc 66/54/r 63/43/pc 64/49/pc 59/48/sh 70/46/pc 89/56/s 66/38/s 73/34/t 71/46/pc 58/33/s 69/41/pc 61/35/pc 87/72/pc 85/64/pc 63/53/r 77/63/t
57/41/r 79/48/t 61/39/r 47/43/r 78/56/s 61/40/sh 73/45/t 63/46/pc 62/36/r 54/32/pc 92/63/s 58/33/pc 73/38/s 60/35/s 53/36/sh 58/46/r 57/39/c 86/70/pc 84/60/s 63/41/s 76/49/pc
City
Jacksonville Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami Midland, TX Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York Norfolk Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix
First Second
8:27 a.m. (14.9) 10:27 p.m. (14.1)
3:00 a.m. (6.9) 3:48 p.m. (3.5)
First Second
7:46 a.m. (13.7) 9:46 p.m. (12.9)
1:56 a.m. (6.9) 2:44 p.m. (3.5)
First Second
6:28 a.m. (8.3) 8:50 p.m. (7.0)
12:32 a.m. (4.4) 1:43 p.m. (1.4)
First Second
12:58 a.m. (25.4) 12:47 p.m. (23.1)
6:59 a.m. (9.1) 7:38 p.m. (3.8)
Deep Creek
Anchorage
Almanac Readings ending 4 p.m. yesterday
Temperature
From Kenai Municipal Airport
Juneau 51/31
(For the 48 contiguous states) High yesterday Low yesterday
Kodiak 49/33
109 at Death Valley, Calif. 13 at Bodie State Park, Calif.
High yesterday Low yesterday
Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
86/58/pc 73/45/pc 86/75/pc 96/68/pc 73/62/r 77/58/pc 77/62/r 67/65/r 86/70/pc 87/51/s 63/41/pc 72/57/pc 77/62/c 77/65/t 66/48/sh 80/65/pc 77/49/pc 73/53/sh 86/61/pc 67/55/c 99/68/s
86/54/t 67/54/pc 86/75/pc 96/71/s 77/53/s 74/56/pc 69/46/s 74/53/s 90/70/pc 81/62/s 60/37/s 60/35/pc 72/45/pc 81/63/pc 64/50/r 79/54/t 74/57/s 64/53/c 82/62/t 71/49/r 100/72/s
(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 2019 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
Today’s Forecast
City
Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
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
60/49/r 54/38/pc 74/46/pc 60/41/pc 85/52/pc 87/61/s 73/51/pc 87/54/s 70/60/pc 64/52/s 76/39/s 62/44/pc 72/53/c 64/39/pc 65/36/pc 83/68/pc 72/46/pc 94/58/s 83/55/pc 77/62/c 73/47/pc
61/37/r 46/42/r 67/45/pc 62/34/t 82/49/pc 87/54/s 74/46/t 80/58/s 70/60/pc 72/51/s 74/46/pc 63/45/pc 60/37/c 61/40/sh 66/40/r 81/64/t 72/57/pc 97/62/s 79/61/s 71/51/t 75/56/pc
City
Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Acapulco Athens Auckland Baghdad Berlin Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg London Madrid Magadan Mexico City Montreal Moscow Paris Rome Seoul Singapore Sydney Tokyo Vancouver
87/68/pc 72/54/s 65/59/c 81/54/s 79/54/s 88/78/sh 75/55/pc 70/55/pc 63/48/pc 59/46/pc 37/24/c 85/56/pc 52/41/c 75/45/s 59/50/t 78/52/s 61/57/r 90/82/t 80/61/s 74/64/r 55/39/pc
84/74/pc 76/58/pc 67/58/pc 86/56/s 78/49/c 87/78/t 76/56/pc 72/47/s 60/44/t 63/39/pc 39/24/pc 80/51/pc 53/43/r 71/51/pc 62/48/t 67/51/t 57/40/sh 88/80/t 82/57/s 60/51/r 57/42/pc
Rain and thunderstorms will pester the eastern quarter of the nation today. Another storm will bring rain, high-elevation snow and thunder to the northern and central Rockies. Most other areas will be dry.
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation
Cold -10s
Warm -0s
0s
Stationary 10s
20s
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50s
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Flurries
70s
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Snow
Ice
90s 100s 110s
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Tribes say state unwilling to consult on projects BETHEL (AP) — The Alaska governor’s administration has refused to consult with two Native tribes on proposed projects, the tribes have said. The Orutsararmiut Native Council and the Chilkat Indian Village said they have been blocked in their attempts to work with Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy and members of his administration, Alaska’s Energy Desk reported Wednesday.
Orutsararmiut leaders from Bethel in western Alaska have asked for governmentto-government consultation regarding a proposed gold mine with the state Department of Natural Resources, Department of Environmental Conservation and Department of Fish and Game. Government-to-government consultation is a federal process and not applicable to state permitting, according to a letter sent to the tribe by de-
partment commissioners. “I was shocked. I couldn’t believe they were denying our request and it was like another shutdown to our voices,” said Mary Matthias, Orutsararmiut council natural resources director. The administration has also refused to work with Chilkat leaders in the state’s southern region on a mineral exploration effort, the tribe said. Dunleavy is willing to use
government-to-government process consultation only if there is an “absolute” outcome possible, he said last week. “We’re going to be sitting down with various stakeholder groups associated with rural Alaska,” Dunleavy said. “We want to have genuine conversations, though, that move us from point A to point B. We just don’t want to have conversations for the sake of conversations.”
. . . End
House Bill 145 on Wednesday, which makes a variety of changes to criminal justice laws in the state. It increases sentencing ranges for sex and drug offenders and seeks to close loopholes in sex offense and sex offender registration loopholes. In Pruitt’s eyes, though, it doesn’t go far enough. He said that if this bill — instead of Dunleavy’s stricter proposed bills — is passed by the Legislature, he would encourage the governor to veto it and call a special session to take a more serious look at crime. “We shouldn’t have to be in a special session to deal with this,” Pruitt said. “We should have talked about this a long time ago. That’s part of where, I hope the public is as frustrated as I am.” The governor’s crime bills are moving, but are going slowly. The Senate Finance Committee heard Senate Bill 32 on Thursday
afternoon, which ramps up penalties for drug offenses. Senate President Cathy Giessel, R-Anchorage, told reporters Thursday morning that she still believes legislators are dedicated to passing a complete, effective crime package. Stedman was also confident that crime bills will be finished
by the end of the 121st day. “Correcting the crime problem has been the No. 1 goal for the Senate this session,” Giessel said. “We are laser-focused on it. Clearly the budget is ahead of it in priority, but right behind it is the crime bill. Something will get passed this session. We are confident of that.”
Continued from page A1
we can deliver the budget reductions in one year. It can’t be done. We need legislative action, the agencies need time to prepare themselves, there’s a litany of things. We’re delivering what we can deliver.” Others aren’t so happy with the pace of the Legislature’s progress. At a press conference Thursday morning, House Minority Leader Lance Pruitt lamented that crime legislation still hasn’t been passed. Even more frustrating, Pruitt said, is that the House Majority proposed a criminal justice bill that he called too soft, and that the bill appears to be moving quickly (it was introduced Wednesday and the House Judiciary Committee met about it Thursday). Rep. Matt Claman, DAnchorage, introduced
SEWARD HIGHWAY, MP 75 to 90 RESCHEDULED ROAD CLOSURES Girdwood
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Turnagain Arm
Hig
h w ay
ee k n Cr Ker
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PROJECT BOUNDARIES
COMPLETE ROAD CLOSURE APRIL 29 – 30
Portage Por ta
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40s
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Ketchikan 46/35
52 at Glennallen and Willow -6 at Arctic Village
Sew
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Sitka 44/36
State Extremes
nC
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From the Peninsula Clarion in Kenai
24 hours ending 4 p.m. yest. . 0.00" Month to date .......................... 0.34" Normal month to date ............ 0.48" Year to date .............................. 1.84" Normal year to date ................ 2.96" Record today ................ 0.22" (1976) Record for April ........... 2.21" (1955) Record for year ........... 27.09" (1963)
r so
CLARION E N I N S U L A
Precipitation
Valdez 47/28
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
P
High .............................................. 50 Low ............................................... 35 Normal high ................................. 49 Normal low ................................... 31 Record high ...................... 61 (2005) Record low ........................ 12 (1955)
National Extremes
World Cities Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
4:51 a.m. (6.8) 5:39 p.m. (3.4)
Glennallen 42/18
Kenai/ Soldotna Homer
Dillingham 48/28
National Cities Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
9:40 a.m. (15.6) 11:40 p.m. (14.8)
Seward Homer 48/28 49/29
Cold Bay 46/35
Unalaska 41/37
First Second
Kenai/ Soldotna 51/27
Fairbanks 47/23
Talkeetna 50/25
Bethel 45/23
Today Hi/Lo/W 34/25/pc 46/22/pc 46/36/sh 29/20/c 46/21/pc 46/22/s 50/27/s 43/33/sh 21/9/s 40/32/c 48/28/s 44/36/sh 53/33/c 50/25/s 44/18/s 44/21/s 34/20/pc 47/28/s 50/27/s 45/30/s 53/26/s 54/30/c
Low(ft.)
Seward
Anaktuvuk Pass 29/7
Nome 29/20
* Indicates estimated temperatures for yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W 44/33/c 48/31/s 21/12/pc 45/23/s 46/35/pc 51/27/s 44/22/pc 40/15/s 48/28/s 42/38/pc 47/23/pc 42/20/s 42/18/s 51/21/pc 52/34/c 49/29/s 51/31/c 46/35/sh 36/20/pc 54/24/s 49/32/sh 49/33/s
Prudhoe Bay 21/9
High(ft.)
Kenai City Dock
Seldovia
First Full May 11 May 18
Today 4:54 a.m. 11:35 a.m.
Tides Today
Partly sunny
Sun and Moon
The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature® is an exclusive index of the effects of temperature, wind, humidity, sunshine intensity, cloudiness, precipitation, pressure and elevation on the human body.
City Adak* Anchorage Barrow Bethel Cold Bay Cordova Delta Junction Denali N. P. Dillingham Dutch Harbor Fairbanks Fort Yukon Glennallen* Gulkana Haines Homer Juneau Ketchikan Kiana King Salmon Klawock Kodiak
Monday
Utqiagvik 21/12
. . . Drug Continued from page A1
Meyer. Shari Connor with Change 4 the Kenai said that the nationwide event is important because it draws attention to the potential dangers of unused prescription drugs. When medication is no longer being used but is still accessible in the home,
there is a risk of accidental consumption by pets or children. Disposing of unneeded medication also lowers the chances of prescription drug abuse. Connor said that in addition to takeback events like this one, there are permanent disposal bins at the Kenai and Soldotna police stations, and environmentally safe disposal bags will also be handed out during Saturday’s event.
Planned Closure Details: • The ROAD CLOSURES scheduled for Monday, April 22, and Tuesday, April 23 at MP 81.8 were canceled due to weather and have been rescheduled. • Drivers should be aware that the COMPLETE ROAD CLOSURES (both north and southbound lanes) at MP 81.8 nightly, have been rescheduled for Monday, April 29, and Tuesday, April 30. • These COMPLETE ROAD CLOSURES will occur between 9:00pm and 3:00am on the scheduled days. AlaskaNavigator.org
• The road will be completely CLOSED during these times, with no alternate or DETOUR ROUTES available. Please plan your trip accordingly.
AlaskaNavigator.org
• These nightly ROAD CLOSURES are for the installation of cross culverts.
AlaskaNavigator.org For more information, call DOT at 269-0450, Granite Construction Co. at 344-2593 or visit AlaskaNavigator.org.
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 | Friday, April 26, 2019 | A3
Around the Peninsula Flotilla class notice
. . . PFD Continued from page A1
dividend. Rep. Sarah Vance, RHomer, said she disagreed with the proposal, especially because the PFD was meant to try and offset the state’s reliance on volatile oil revenues, and this bill ties the dividend even more closely to oil prices. Wool said this bill helps ensure that the state won’t shell out large amounts of money in PFD payments if revenues are low. Vance, who was cordial in her disagreement with Wool, posed a hypothetical question after hearing Wool’s explanation. “Who do you represent,” Vance said, “the state or the people?” Wool answered the question briefly, saying the people of Alaska and state government are “inextricably entwined” and that a good state government helps the people. House Joint Resolution 18, proposed by Rep. Jonathan Kreiss-Tompkins, D-Sitka, seeks to combine the two funds in the permanent fund into one fund, and to protect it in the constitution. That proposal didn’t face many negative comments Thursday, as
. . . Friends Continued from page A1
port various library programs throughout the year; $500 will be used for the One Thousand Books Before Kindergarten program enhancing preliteracy and
. . . Award Continued from page A1
awarded the teachers of excellence award. Martha Fleming of Seward High School was also granted an Education Ally Award at Wednesday’s banquet. The Alaska BP Teach-
committee members on both sides of the aisle agreed with the general idea of protecting the permanent fund. Both joint resolutions, because they’re amendments to the constitution, would require a two-thirds majority vote from the House and Senate. In the other legislative body, the Senate Finance Committee is expected to start adding amendments to its budget proposal Friday morning, and Sen. Bert Stedman (co-chair of the committee) told media members Thursday that at least some of those amendments will be about the PFD. During the committee’s meeting Thursday, Sen. Natasha von Imhof, R-Anchorage and co-chair of the committee, gave a brief preview of how passionate the discussions should be. She said she believes the statutory formula for the PFD is out of date and that the Legislature shouldn’t drain the state’s savings just to pay a large dividend now. “By raiding the permanent fund,” von Imhof said, “and partaking extra draws on the earnings reserve account just so we can pay a full dividend — that statute was made 30 years ago, 40 years ago, that’s not applicable today — is fiscal insanity and irrational and irresponsible.” $200 will be used to purchase toys for the children’s area. The donation hasn’t officially been approved. An ordinance to appropriate the funds was introduced at Soldotna’s City Council meeting Wednesday, with a public hearing scheduled for May 8. ers of Excellence program recognizes teachers throughout Alaska “for their dedication to teaching and for inspiring students,” according to their website. The program launched in 1995, and has awarded hundreds of teachers nominated by their peers, students, parents and community members.
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Soldotna Senior Softball
Soldotna Senior Softball is ready to play the first time, this season, May 7. This will be our 9th season. The group plays on Tuesday mornings at Centennial Park next to the Old Museum at the Little League Field. Players start arriving at 9 a.m. and play until 11 or 11:30 a.m. It is co-ed from around age 50 and up. It does not matter how long it’s been since you played or if you can’t run, pinch runners are provided. If you are interested and want more information, please call Paul 394-6061.
Kenai National Wildlife Refuge: Hook to Table Hands-on Campfire Cooking
The staff of the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge is excited to lead youth participants through the cleaning and cooking of their Trout Pond catch over a wood fire during this year’s Sport, Rec and Trade Show on Saturday, April 27 and Sunday, April 28. Find the Refuge tent outside near the pond and stop in with or without a fresh catch to learn the ins and outs of campfire cooking, how to compost fish waste and more. Participants will leave with their fish cooked and seasoned, and a new outdoor skill ready for the summer season!
Alaska Farm Bureau meeting
Kenai Peninsula Chapter of the Alaska Farm Bureau meets at 6 p.m. on Thursday, May 2 at the Kenai Peninsula Aquaculture Building on K-Beach Road. There will be a potluck starting at 6, with a business meeting to follow. All Farm Bureau members and other interested persons are invited to attend. A Zoom setup will be available for those unable to attend in person. For sign on information, email kpchapterfb@gmail.com.
ASEA/AFSCME Local 52 Cook Inlet Chapter is offering three scholarships to applicants who have not previously received a scholarship. Scholarship applications must be received or postmarked by May 31 of the current year. Applications are available at the ASEA/AFSME Cook Inlet Chapter website.http://www.afscmelocal52.org/index. php/union-leadership/chapters/cook-inlet-chapter. Questions: Send email to cookinlet3432@outlook.com or ginakuntzman@yahoo.com. Emailed applications are not accepted.
Fishing Vessel Drill Conductor Class
The Alaska Marine Safety Education Association (AMSEA) will offer a Fishing Vessel Drill Conductor class in Homer on April 27 from 8 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. The class will be conducted at the Best Western Bidarka Inn, 575 Sterling Highway. This class is free to commercial fishermen, thanks to support from the Alaska Department of Commerce, Community & Economic Development, the National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health, and AMSEA members. The cost is $175 for all others. Interested mariners may register at www.amsea.org or call 907-747-3287.
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There will be a community Garage and Vendor Sale at the Sterling Community Center this Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. It will be an outside event (weather permitting) with plenty of spaces for you all to shop at. There is still space available for anyone that would like to set up for a minimal fee of $10. This will be the perfect time and place for all to stop in after eating at the fundraiser breakfast at the Sterling Senior Center. Call 262-7224 if you would like to rent a space.
The United States Coast Guard Auxiliary, Kenai Flotilla, will be conducting a GPS for Mariners class on Saturday, May 4 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Cook Inlet Aquaculture Center located at 40610 Kalifornsky Beach Road, Soldotna. This is an introduction to navigation utilizing a GPS receiver. The class will focus on the GPS equipment typically used by recreational boaters. The cost of the class is $40, inKenai Watershed Summer Camp cluding the text book. Deadline for registration is March 28. Please contact the Public Education Officer, Mike Chase at Come join the Kenai Watershed Forum for a session of 907-201-1792 for more information and class registration. “Wilderness, Wildlife & Wonder” summer camp. There will be several locally focused, science and environmentalKenai River Paddling Film Festival themed sessions for kids aged 6-12. All sessions will involve The 2nd annual Kenai River Paddling Film Festival will fostering a connection to nature through a hands-on, immerreturn to the Soldotna Sports Center at 6:30 p.m. on Satur- sion in the outdoors, allowing them to see, feel, smell and day, May 18. This year’s festival will feature 12 of the year’s directly experience flora and fauna of the Kenai Peninsula best paddling films, including locally made films and nine watershed for themselves. Megan Pike is our new camp diaward winners from the Paddling Film Festival World Tour. rector. Join Meg and get your kids in touch with their wild Admission is $10 in advance at Peninsula Power Sports and side! Registration is open online at www.kenaiwatershed. $15 the night of the festival. Admission includes a free digi- org. tal subscription to Paddling Magazine. Preceding the film Donations for VFW May Garage Sale will be a gear swap hosted by the Kenai Watershed Forum. Food will be available from Yo Tacos. All proceeds from the Spring Cleaning? Moving? Left over Garage Sale Items? film festival and gear swap go towards river conservation Donate those reusable items to the VFW May Garage Sale. and supporting paddling here on the Kenai Peninsula. Drop off at VFW Post new building addition, Birch Street, Soldotna on Saturday April 27 between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. National Infant Immunization Week (No clothing or consignments). All proceeds go the the new National Infant Immunization Week is an annual obser- Building addition. More info call Lee @ 420-7503. vance to highlight the importance of protecting infants from Professional assistance to veterans vaccine-preventable disease and to celebrate the achievements of immunization programs in promoting healthy A Department Service Officer from the Disabled Americommunities. This year National Infant Immunization Week can Veterans organization will be providing free, profesis April 27- May 4. Is your child up to date on their shots? sional assistance to veterans and their families in obtaining Don’t know? Contact your Doctor or call Kenai Public benefits and services earned through military service and Health at 335-3400. provided by the Department of Veterans Affairs. He will be at the Kenai Vet Center on Wednesday, May 15 from 9 a.m. Tribe to participate in Summer Food to 4 p.m. Please call 907-257-4803 to get an appointment or Service Program just walk in. The Kenaitze Indian Tribe is participating in the U.S. De- Sterling Senior Center breakfast partment of Agriculture’s Summer Food Service Program. The Sterling Senior Center will be serving breakfast on Meals will be provided free of charge to all eligible children Saturday, April 27, from 9 a.m. to noon. Menu includes panparticipating in the Tribe’s summer programs. To be eligible to receive free meals at a residential or non-residential camp, cakes, scrambled eggs, bacon, sausage, biscuits and gravy. children must meet the income guidelines for reduced-price Adults $10, children $5. All proceeds benefit the center. Evmeals in the National School Lunch Program. Children who eryone welcome! are part of households that receive Supplemental Nutrition Alzheimer’s Community Forum Assistance Program benefits, or benefits under the Food An Alzheimer’s Community Forum will be held WednesDistribution Program on Indian Reservations, or Temporary day, May 1, 5-7 p.m. at the Soldotna Library. Hear a brief Assistance to Needy Families are automatically eligible. overview on Alzheimer’s, dementia and memory loss. Bring Acceptance and participation requirements are the same for all regardless of race, color, national origin, sex, age or dis- a friend who has been affected by the disease. Share your ability. For more information, please contact Teresa Smith, thoughts about how we can help people in your community. Kenaitze Indian Tribe Early Childhood Manager, at 907- Light refreshments will be provided. Registration is requested. Call 907-953-0160 or email harrismc78@gmail.com. 335-7260.
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Opinion
A4 | Friday, April 26, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
CLARION P
E N I N S U L A
Serving the Kenai Peninsula since 1970 Jeff Hayden Publisher ERIN THOMPSON......................................................... Editor DOUG MUNN........................................... Circulation Director FRANK GOLDTHWAITE......................... Production Manager
What Others Say
World governments must unite against terror This was a despicable, inexcusable
act of violence that targeted innocent people. Terrorist bombings struck Colombo and elsewhere in Sri Lanka almost simultaneously, killing and injuring hundreds of people, including Japanese nationals. The blasts targeted churches where many Christians had gathered for Easter events, and luxury hotels that have many foreign guests. There were explosions at eight venues, including suicide attacks. Sri Lankan authorities have detained members of a domestic Islamic extremist group that allegedly conducted the attacks. Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said the government believes “there may be links” between this group and the Islamic State extremist group. IS has claimed responsibility for the bombings and released footage that purported to show the men who committed the attacks. The authenticity of these claims is unclear, but based on the targets chosen and the elaborate methods used, it seems IS provided some kind of support to the group that carried out the bombings. In March, the United States declared that all territory that was under IS control had been recaptured. However, the group’s radical thinking continues to spread over the internet and through other channels. There is a lingering risk that the tentacles of these beliefs could reach into societies plagued by poverty, discrimination and other problems. Alarmingly, there is a possibility Sri Lankan authorities missed signs that a terrorist attack was coming. Although foreign intelligence agencies had warned of a planned suicide bombing attack on Christian churches, the Sri Lankan prime minister and Cabinet ministers reportedly did not receive this information. Tensions could be rekindled. Political wrangling between Wickremesinghe and Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena apparently formed a backdrop to these events. It is essential that a government operates in unison and quickly deals with a possible terrorist attack to prevent it from happening. The Sri Lankan government must seriously take to heart that it was one step behind in dealing with the situation and take steps to prevent any recurrence. Cooperation with investigative agencies in the United States and elsewhere also will be crucial for fully uncovering the truth of what happened. Beginning in the 1980s, Sri Lanka’s government, which was led by the majority Buddhists, clashed fiercely with an extremist Hindu group that was demanding a separate, independent state. Terrorist bombings perpetrated by the extremists often occurred, but the nation’s security situation had improved since the civil war ended in 2009. There are concerns the latest attacks could again trigger heightened tensions between people of different religions and ethnicities. A chain of terrorist attacks and retaliation must not be allowed to occur. About 40,000 Japanese visit Sri Lanka each year for tourism and other purposes. The Foreign Ministry has called for Japanese people to avoid nonessential and nonurgent travel to Sri Lanka. Many people are planning overseas trips for the upcoming 10-day Golden Week holiday. Travelers should make sure they check the latest information about the security situation in their holiday destination. Sharing information with other nations is essential for counterterrorism measures. Japan should spearhead discussions on this issue, including at the summit meeting of the Group of 20 major and emerging economies to be held in Osaka in June. — The Japan News, April 25
How to be bird-friendly
It’s The Year of the Bird — and not just here in Homer. People around the world are celebrating 2018-19 as Year of the Bird to mark the centennial of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA), one of the oldest wildlife protection laws in the United States. We began this celebration in May of 2018, so will share our stories with you until May of 2019. These are some things that you can personally do to help our feathered friends as they live around, or migrate through our area: You can create new habitats. Since the weather is warming up, it is time to clip off willow branches while they are still dormant. Put them in a bucket of peralite or starting soil and add water. Keep at least 12 inches of water in the bucket, and leave it outside in a sunny location (freezing won’t hurt). Within a couple months, leaves and roots will appear. That is the time to poke a pointed stick wider than the roots into the ground about a foot, gently put the willow stick in, and fill it in with wet dirt. Now (this is important), take a round plastic bottle like water bottles, cut off the top and bottom, and make a slice from top to bottom. This will go around each start at ground level and protect it from being chewed by rodents. Leave it there. Don’t let the starts dry out too much. Willows attract insects (bird food) and protect streams from erosion. Do not use pesticides or herbicides in or around your yard — especially if any runoff will go into a stream. What kills plants or insects is bad for birds and children.
V oices of the
P eninsula C arla S tanley No matter how big your yard or space is, you can make it bird friendly. A variety of colorful perennials and annuals will attract pollinators as well as birds. We are seeing more humming birds in the area, so you can try a humming bird feeder near those colorful flowers. Don’t get the red stuff. Just use 1:4 sugar to water. They like those fuchsia hanging baskets too! Birds like spaces that are a little messy. Leave a brush pile off on the edge for the sparrows who are ground nesters, have a water source or bird bath (keep it clean) for drinking and bathing, and keep pets away, (especially cats). Keep dogs on the leash during migration and nesting (MayJuly). You have seen those signs around town! Even if you don’t have a yard to create as bird-friendly, you may go where birds congregate to feed during migration or nest in the summer, so be a responsible pet owner and keep your dog under control with a leash or well-trained, obedient dog by your side. Plovers and song birds nest on the Spit in the summer and will react negatively when their nest is threatened. If you see a displaying bird,
please leave the area so the nestlings will survive. If you are a parent of small children, birds are a wonderful way to learn geography. ”Where do those Arctic Terns or sandpipers go when they leave Homer?” You can do art projects like the USFWS Jr. Duck Stamp art; or just make a clay bird and decorate it with feathers. Our song birds, shorebirds, cranes, even seabirds migrate seasonally. Some go thousands of hazardous miles over unfriendly territories with loss of habitat for resting and feeding. Many do not make it to their destinations. We all can do something to help them along their way, either in our own backyards, our community, or through education. Birds are the bellwether of the ecological health of our communities, our country, and our world. Many species populations have dropped dramatically in the last decade. North America has more than a billion fewer birds than it did just 40 years ago. We can all try to stop that decline. Thank you for caring about our feathered friends. You can learn more at the Kachemak Bay Shorebird Festival May 9-12. Go to kachemakshorebird.org. Carla Stanley is an active local birder. This article is brought to you by the Kachemak Bay Birders. For more information about Kachemak Bay Birders birding trips, meetings, and other activities and events, go to kachemakbaybirders.org. Check out also the Bird of the Month, Citizen Science opportunities, Local Bird Information and much more.
Letter to the Editor Don’t tell Alaskans what to do with their money I read where the Legislature is considering not giving Alaskans their lump sum payment of the Alaska Permanent Fund dividend. They are proposing breaking it down into quarterly payments. I find the reasons for this idea, at the very least, impact the rights of all Alaskans. Example: I get my entire permanent fund credited to my checking account today. Tomorrow I die. My will
states my family gets my assets upon my death, after my liabilities are satisfied. Will my family be authorized to draw the remaining three quarters afterwards? Or, will the state put that money back into the fund; therefore, leaving my family without that earned inheritance? Sen. Peter Micciche suggests that quarterly payments “will reduce some of the more negative behavior that occurs from a very small subset of the residents of the state when they get a really big check in one place.” Any
way you cut it, this rationale punishes the vast majority of Alaskans for the behavior of the very few. The senator also is quoted as saying, “We believe the smaller quarterly payments will be much more likely to end up in the economy at a higher proportion.” To that I respond, when Alaskans need advice on what to do with their money and where to spend it, they will seek out a financial counsellor. — Dean Hill, Sterling
News and Politics
O'Rourke might halt new oil and gas drilling on federal land By SCOTT SONNER Associated Press
RENO, Nev. — Former Texas Congressman Beto O'Rourke said Thursday he's willing to consider a moratorium on new leases to drill for oil and gas on federal lands as a way to help combat climate change. The Democratic presidential hopeful told reporters while campaigning in Nevada on Thursday the nation needs to rethink how it protects its public lands and "keep them from being diminished in size as has happened under" the Trump administration. O'Rourke said that concern, combined with the need to reduce total greenhouse emissions, makes it especially important that U.S. taxpayers don't allow oil and gas companies "to contribute more to the problem." "So, rethinking the leasing of public lands and perhaps creating a moratorium on any future leases — and reviewing all those that are in existence — is in order," he told reporters after a speech to the University of Nevada
Young Democrats at a packed coffee shop on the edge of the Reno campus. "If we continue to add to the problem and do not invest in the solution, which is going to be renewable energy, then we will have squandered this limited time that is left to us," he said. O'Rourke said federal procurement policies are one of the biggest tools the government has to bring change on many fronts. "What we buy and from whom we buy, and in what form the energy is — to whom we lease and to whom we allow to use federal and national lands — we should be the biggest player in the change that we know that we need to produce," he continued. O'Rourke campaigned in Las Vegas last month on his first visit to the early caucus state. But it was the first time he'd appeared in northern Nevada. Later Thursday, he spoke to a crowd of about 200 at a restaurant in Carson City, including climate change as one of his themes along with immigration, health care and the economy. O'Rourke said he's glad former
Vice President Joe Biden formally announced Thursday that he too is seeking the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination. "He is joining an extraordinary field of candidates with amazing diversity and backgrounds and experience and life stories," he told reporters in Reno. "I think he brings some extraordinary experience in public service to this and glad he's in the race. I think it's good for our party, it's good for Democrats, good for America — so glad he's in." O'Rourke said it's up to voters, not to him, to decide whether Biden should be considered the front-runner in the race or whether he's too much of a centrist candidate. The former El Paso city councilman planned events in southern Nevada on Friday with UNLV Young Democrats in Las Vegas and at a brewery in neighboring Henderson. Nevada's caucuses next February are third in the presidential selection process following New Hampshire and Iowa.
Peninsula Clarion | Friday, April 26, 2019 | A5
Nation Biden launches 2020 bid warning ‘soul’ of America at stake people” on both sides of the violent encounter, which left one woman dead. “We are in the battle for the soul of this nation,” Biden declared. “If we give Donald Trump eight years in the White House, he will forever and fundamentally alter the character of this nation — who we are. And I cannot stand by and watch that happen.” Yet Biden will get a chance to take on Trump only if he survives a Democratic field that now spans at least 20 contenders. And his party’s more liberal wing was far from welcoming in the hours immediately after he declared his candidacy. Justice Democrats, a group created from the remnants of Bernie Sanders’ failed 2016 campaign, came out against Biden on Thursday and spent much of the day assailing him on social media.
By STEVE PEOPLES and THOMAS BEAUMONT Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Declaring the “soul of this nation” at stake, former Vice President Joe Biden pushed into the crowded 2020 presidential contest Thursday and quickly sparked a fierce debate over the direction of the modern-day Democratic Party. Ignoring the political noise in his own party, Biden aimed directly at Donald Trump in an announcement video seizing on the Republican president’s response to the deadly clash between white supremacists and counterprotesters in Charlottesville, Virginia, two years ago. That was the spur for him to launch a third presidential bid, Biden said, noting Trump’s comments that there were some “very fine
Around the Nation 37 hurt, including 7 critical after Chicago-area gas leak BEACH PARK, Ill. — A chemical leak that caused a toxic plume to hang for hours over a northern Chicago suburb Thursday sickened dozens of people, including seven who are in critical condition, officials said. Lake Forest Fire Chief Mike Gallo said a tractor was towing two separate two-ton containers of anhydrous ammonia when the leak occurred around 4:30 a.m. Initial reports suggested the vehicle was involved in a crash, but the sheriff’s office later said that was not the case. The cause of the leak has not been released. The leak created a toxic cloud that lingered for several hours over Beach Park, about 40 miles north of downtown Chicago. Authorities ordered residents within a 1-miles radius to stay inside and close their windows. Area schools were closed for the day. Eleven firefighters were among the 37 people who were hospitalized, and one of the injured firefighters was among the seven in critical but stable condition, according to the Lake County Sheriff’s Office. Three law enforcement officers were in good condition and several others were serious but stable, sheriff’s spokesman Christopher Covelli said. Authorities said most of those injured suffered breathing problems. “This is a very dangerous chemical that can cause unconsciousness and, worst case scenario, death,” Covelli said.
Former Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden arrives at the Wilmington train station Thursday in Wilmington, Delaware. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)
As an older white man with often centrist views, Biden must now prove he’s not out of step with Democrats trying to push the party to the left. He’s been taking steps in recent weeks to clean up perceived missteps from
his long record in elected office, including his role as a senator in allowing sexual harassment accuser Anita Hill to be grilled by an all-male committee during Clarence Thomas’ Supreme Court confirmation hearings.
Trump administration reevaluating offshore drilling plans exceeded his authority. Interior Secretary David Bernhardt told The Wall Street Journal on Thursday that the legal challenges may be “discombobulating” to the administration’s overall drilling plans. Bernhardt says the administration may have to wait for the challenges to fully play out in court. Interior spokeswoman Molly Block said that given the court setback, the agency “is evaluating all of its options.” The Interior Department’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management “will carefully consider all public input received, including comments from governors of affected states, before making final decisions” on expanded drilling off the
By MATTHEW DALY and ELLEN KNICKMEYER Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration said Thursday it is reevaluating its controversial plan to sharply expand offshore drilling as it responds to a court ruling that blocked oil and gas development off Alaska and parts of the Atlantic. Governors and lawmakers from both Republicanand Democratic-led states have strongly opposed the expanded drilling. And a federal judge last month ruled against President Donald Trump’s executive order to open the Arctic and parts of the Atlantic to broader oil and gas development, saying Trump had
country’s coasts, Block added. Environmental groups welcomed what they said amounted to a delay in the administration’s coastal drilling expansion plans. Collin O’Mara of the National Wildlife Federation said the administration “needs to go one step further and fully and permanently scrap its plan to open our coasts to unfettered offshore drilling.” But Randall Luthi, head of the National Ocean Industries Association trade group, urged against a “hard stop” in administration planning on expanded offshore drilling. “What cannot be delayed … is the importance of domestic production to meet the growing demand for af-
fordable, reliable American energy,” he said. The Trump administration announced a new five-year plan last year that would open up 90 percent of U.S. offshore reserves to development by private companies. Then-Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke said it would promote responsible energy development, boost jobs and pay for coastal conservation efforts. The plan calls for expanded drilling in the Arctic and off the Atlantic coast and would open up waters off California for the first time in more than three decades. Drilling would be allowed from Florida to Maine in areas that have been blocked for decades.
Illinois child welfare system under fire after boy’s death CHICAGO — Disturbing details emerged Thursday of the torture authorities say preceded the beating death of a 5-year-old Illinois boy who had extensive contact with child welfare workers, escalating scrutiny of a state agency already being reviewed because of the recent deaths of two other children. Court documents allege Andrew “AJ” Freund’s parents killed him by beating him and subjecting him to long, cold showers. An autopsy determined the boy died from blunt force trauma to his head and had been struck multiple times. His plastic-wrapped body was found Wednesday in a shallow grave a few miles from the family’s home in Crystal Lake, about 50 miles northwest of Chicago. Child welfare workers had been called repeatedly to the dilapidated and filthy house that stunk of dog feces. Details of the gruesome death raised the question: Why did those workers not leave with the boy? — The Associated Press
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M12. The Peddler M13. The Peddler M14. Hibernation Textiles M15. Fishe LLC M16. Run Wild Bohemian Creations M17. All Alaska Custom
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3 Friends Dog Park NOAA AK Wildlife Troopers INFORMATION KPAR ATEC Caribou Hills Cabin Hoppers Trustworthy Hardware Trustworthy Hardware Trustworthy Hardware Trustworthy Hardware Trustworthy Hardware Matt Potter Taxidermy Prospector John Tim Akers Memorial PCHS KPTMC Kenai Peninsula Driving KRSA Kenai Performers Division of Forestry AK H20 Sports Dinners Ready Soldotna Army Recruiting Sweeney’s Sweeney’s Kenai Peninsula Satellite Kenai Peninsula Satellite Fish & Game Fish & Game Cook Inlet Academy Aquatic Adventures NAVHDA Eagle Eye Gallery/Bees Wax Wraps Peninsula Clarion G.U.N. Apparel Alaska Bullion & Coin The Annex Gunstore AK Industrial Hardware Absolute Alaska Adventures Exploring Alaska Native Voices TV Show Visit Anchorage AK Highschool Rodeo AK Highschool Rodeo Mechanical Bull Ammo-Can Coffee Papa Murphy’s
Join the Kenai Performers in the Conference Room on Saturday at 12pm, 2pm and 4pm and laugh until you cry as they put on “Shorter Sudden Theatre: 10-minute comedies”
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Page 6, 2019 Sport Rec and Trade Show
A6 | Friday, April 26, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
Religion
Expiration date — made for eternity V oices
of
F aith
F rank A lioto
Remember when you never needed to look at the expiration date on milk to know that it was bad? Opening it up and taking one whiff was all you needed. But then you would read the label and have justification to throw it out or your thinking would be challenged based on the expiration date. You
would then ask whoever in the room to smell or taste the milk, which always leads to an interesting dialogue. We live in a world where it seems everything has an expiration date branded on it. Manufacturers make this a practice either as per the regulations or to boost sales. As our Alaskan days of sunshine get longer and the evidence of spring bursts forth all around us, I am reminded of some ageless truths about the order of creation and the
perspective of time found in the Bible. In Ecclesiastes 3, we discover God’s beautiful but amazing world is too big for us, and its satisfactions are too small and fleeting. The author brings us through a range of ups and downs of life and writes, “there is a time for everything.” Within the understanding of looking at life through different seasons, the overarching theme is that human life has an expiration date: “A time to be born and a time to die.”
(Ecc. 3:2). If our focus is just to live for the day, then we miss what really we were made for. Jesus combated the thinking of his day and challenged people’s view of life and how to order one’s world. Jesus discouraged people to buy into the idea and to say to oneself: “Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry.”’ (Luke 12:19). The looming question is, “If the claims of the Bible about eternity
urday of every month from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. For more information, call 907-283-4555.
Church Briefs United Methodist Church food pantry The Kenai United Methodist Church provides a food pantry for those in need every Monday from noon to 3 p.m. The Methodist Church is located on the Kenai Spur Highway next to the Boys and Girls Club. The entrance to the Food Pantry is through the side door. The Pantry closes for holidays. For more information contact the church at 907-283-7868.
Sanctuary Dedication Star of the North Lutheran will celebrate the Sanctuary Dedication on Saturday, June 1 at 216 N Forest Drive, Kenai. Worship Service begins at 2 p.m. with a reception following. Members of the congregation began meeting in 1960 at the Deering’s General Store and then at the old library in Old Town Kenai. For more information, please call 283-4153.
Clothes Quarters open weekly Clothes Quarters at Our Lady of the Angels is open every Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. the first Sat-
Soldotna Food Pantry open weekly The Soldotna Food Pantry is open every Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. for residents in the community who are experiencing food shortages. The Food Pantry is located at the Soldotna United Methodist Church at 158 South Binkley Street,and all are welcome. Nonperishable food items or monetary donations may be dropped off at the church on Tuesday from 10a.m. to 1 p.m. and Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. or on Sunday from 9 a.m. until noon. For more information call 262-4657.
Our Lady of Perpetual Help sets place at table A Place at the Table, a new outreach ministry of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church, Soldotna continues to offer a hot meal and fellowship and blood pressure checks to anyone interested. The meal is the second, third and fourth Sunday of each month, from 4-6 p.m. at Fireweed Hall, located on campus at 222 West Redoubt Avenue, Soldotna. The Abundant Life Assembly of God
and God wanting to be in relationship with humanity are true: What is my response?” Ecclesiastes 3:11 says “He (God) has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart;” God’s desire is to work out good in this world even as everything will eventually expire as His plan is to be an intimate relationship with His creation. God also has put inside of humanity or each person the longing to find this relationship with Him as He
has created our souls for eternity. The question for us is, “How will we respond to His love and grace?” God’s plan is for humanity to be with Him when our bodies expire for eternity because He has made us without an expiration date. Maybe it is time to take a whiff of our thoughts on eternity and being in a relationship with God! Pastor Frank Alioto serves as a Chaplain with Central Peninsula Hospital and Central Emergency Services.
church, Sterling, will be joining us in this ministry and providing a hot meal on the second Sunday of the month at 4-6 p.m. at Fireweed Hall. The Soldotna Church of the Nazarene will offer the meal on the third Sunday of each month. Our Lady of Perpetual Help will offer on the fourth Sunday of each month. Our Lady of Perpetual Help would like to invite other churches who would like to join this ministry to perhaps pick up one of the other Sunday evenings in the month. Call 262-5542.
‘Celebrate Recovery’ at Peninsula Grace Church Celebrate Recovery meets each Wednesday from 6:30-8 p.m. at Peninsula Grace Church, 44175 Kalifornsky Beach Rd.,Soldotna, upstairs in room 5-6 in the worship center. Celebrate Recovery is a Biblically based 12-step program that provides a safe place to share your hurts, habits and hang-ups, in a Christ-centered recovery atmosphere. Come early for a free meal,served at 5:45. There is no charge, but donations are welcomed. Questions? Contact: 907-598-0563. Submit announcements to news@peninsulaclarion. com. Submissions are due the Wednesday prior to publication. For moreinformation, call 907-283-7551.
Rep. King compares criticism of him to persecution of Christ The Associated Press
CHEROKEE, Iowa — Iowa Republican Steve King says the criticism he has faced from fellow members of Congress over his offensive remarks gives him “better insight” into what Jesus Christ experienced when he was persecuted for his beliefs. King was attending a town hall meeting Tuesday in his home district
in northwest Iowa when someone attending voiced concern about Christianity being persecuted in the U.S., the Sioux City Journal reported . King answered, in part, by drawing a comparison to facing his “accusers” on the House floor. “When I have to step down to the floor of the House of Representatives, and look up at those 400-and-some accus-
ers … you know we just passed through Easter and Christ’s passion … and I have better insight into what he went through for us partly because of that experience,” King said. The House voted 4241 in January to rebuke King for remarks he made to The New York Times in which he asked why the terms white nationalist and white supremacist came to be considered
offensive. King was also stripped of his committee assignments for two years. King did not initially deny making the remarks to the Times and even cast a vote in support of his public rebuke. He has since said the Times mischaracterized his comments and on Tuesday said the newspaper had misquoted him. The controversy
sparked numerous calls for King’s resignation, including the editorial boards of at least four daily newspapers with circulations in his district. King has long been known for making caustic comments , especially on issues related to race and immigration. Shortly before his November re-election — the closest contest he has faced in his nine terms
— the Washington Post reported that King met in Austria with the far-right Freedom Party, which has Nazi ties. King also has called for an electrified fence on the U.S. southern border, defended racial profiling as a needed component of law enforcement and has suggested white people made more contributions to civilization than other groups.
Religious Services Assembly of God
Church of Christ
Church of Christ
Church of Christ
Soldotna Church Of Christ
Mile 1/4 Funny River Road, Soldotna
209 Princess St., Kenai 283-7752 Pastor Stephen Brown Sunday..9:00 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. Wednesday.................6:30 p.m. www.kenainewlife.org
Peninsula Christian Center
161 Farnsworth Blvd (Behind the Salvation Army) Soldotna, AK 99669 Pastor Jon Watson 262-7416 Sunday ....................... 10:30 a.m. Wednesday..................6:30 p.m. www.penccalaska.org Nursery is provided
The Charis Fellowship Sterling Grace Community Church
Dr. Roger E. Holl, Pastor 907-862-0330 Meeting at the Sterling Senior Center, 34453 Sterling Highway Sunday Morning ........10:30 a.m.
262-2202 / 262-4316 Minister - Nathan Morrison Sunday Worship ........10:00 a.m. Bible Study..................11:15 a.m. Evening Worship ........ 6:00 p.m. Wed. Bible .................... 7:00 p.m.
Kenai Fellowship Mile 8.5 Kenai Spur Hwy.
Church 283-7682
Classes All Ages ........10:00 a.m. Worship Service.........11:15 a.m. Wed. Service ................ 7:00 p.m. www.kenaifellowship.org
Episcopal
50750 Kenai Spur Hwy (mile 24.5) 776-7660 Sunday Services Bible Study..................10:00 a.m. Morning Worship ......11:00 a.m. Fellowship Meal....... 12:30 p.m. Afternoon Worship ... 1:30 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study.................... 7:00 p.m
Nazarene
Connecting Community to Christ (907) 262-4660 229 E. Beluga Ave. soldotnanazarene.com Pastor: Dave Dial Sunday Worship: 11:00 a.m. Wednesday Dinner & Discipleship 6:00 p.m.
Funny River Community Lutheran Church
Kenai United Methodist Church
Andy Carlson, Pastor Missouri Synod 35575 Rabbit Run Road off Funny River Rd. Phone 262-7434 Sunday Worship ........11:00 a.m. www.funnyriverlutheran.org
Star Of The North Lutheran Church L.C.M.S.
You Are Invited! Wheelchair Accessible
St. Francis By The Sea
110 S. Spruce St. at Spur Hwy. - Kenai • 283-6040 Sunday Services Worship Service.........11:00 a.m. Eucharistic Services on the 1st & 4th Sundays
283-6040
Lutheran
Our Lady of Perpetual Help
Methodist
Dustin Atkinson, Pastor Sponsor of the Lutheran Hour 216 N. Forest Drive, Kenai 283-4153 Sunday School..............9:30 a.m. Worship Service.........11:00 a.m.
Nikiski Church Of Christ
Catholic 222 W. Redoubt, Soldotna Oblates of Mary Immaculate 262-4749 Daily Mass Tues.-Fri. .................... 12:05 p.m. Saturday Vigil ........... 5:00 p.m. Reconciliation Saturday................4:15 - 4:45 p.m. Sunday Mass ............ 10:00 a.m.
Mile 91.7 Sterling Hwy. 262-5577 Minister Tony Cloud Sunday Services Bible Study..................10:00 a.m. Morning Worship ......11:00 a.m. Evening Worship ....... 6:00 p.m. Wednesday Service Bible Study.................... 7:00 p.m
Lutheran
Christ Lutheran Church (ELCA)
Mile ¼ Kenai Spur Box 568, Soldotna, AK 99669 262-4757 Pastor Meredith Harber Worship ............11 a.m. & 6 p.m. Holy Communion 1st & 3rd Sunday of the month
Sterling Lutheran Church LCMS 35100 McCall Rd. Behind Sterling Elementary School Worship: Sunday .... 11:00 a.m. Bill Hilgendorf, Pastor 907-740-3060
Non Denominational
Corner of Spur Hwy. & Bluff St., Kenai
283-7868 Pastor Bailey Brawner Sunday Worship ........11:30 a.m. Food Pantry Mon...Noon - 3 pm
North Star United Methodist Church Mile 25.5 Kenai Spur Hwy, Nikiski “Whoever is thirsty, let him come”
776-8732 NSUMC@alaska.net Sunday Worship ..........9:30 a.m.
Non Denominational Kalifonsky Christian Center
Mile 17 K-Beach Rd. 283-9452 Pastor Steve Toliver Pastor Charles Pribbenow Sunday Worship .......10:30 a.m. Youth Group Wed. ..... 7:00 p.m. Passion for Jesus Compassion for Others
Kenai Bible Church
604 Main St. 283-7821 Pastor Vance Wonser Sunday School..............9:45 a.m. Sunday Worship ........11:00 a.m. Evening Service .......... 6:00 p.m. Wednesday Service .... 6:30 p.m.
North Kenai Chapel Pastor Wayne Coggins 776-8797 Mile 29 Kenai Spur Hwy
Sunday Worship...................10:30 am Wed. Share-a-Dish/Video.....6:30 pm
300 W. Marydale • Soldotna 262-4865 John Rysdyk - Pastor/Teacher Sunday: Morning Worship ................9:30 a.m. Sunday School....................11:00 a.m. Sunday Evening Worship ..6:00 p.m.
Southern Baptist College Heights Baptist Church
44440 K-Beach Road Pastor: Scott Coffman Associate Pastor: Jonah Huckaby 262-3220 www.collegeheightsbc.com
Sunday School .......9:00 & 10:30 a.m. Morn. Worship .......9:00 & 10:30 a.m. Sunday Evening - Home Groups. Nursery provided
First Baptist Church of Kenai
12815 Kenai Spur Hwy, Kenai 283-7672 Sunday School..............9:30 a.m. Morning Worship ......10:45 a.m. Evening Service .......... 6:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer ..... 6:30 p.m.
Sports O ut of the
O ffice J eff H elminiak
Winter to summer
I
n January, it took allusions to neuroscience, the Green Bay Packers and Metallica for me to explain in this space how the Culture of the North can inform a successful transition from summer to winter. Now it’s April. Surely a column is not needed to instruct a successful transition from winter to summer. I mean, it’s summer. Everybody loves summer, right? Logic says the transition should be easy. Google says not so fast, as does Clarion columnist Kat Sorensen. Type in “spring SAD,” for seasonal affective disorder, into the all-knowing algorithm and plenty of articles emerge about depression. Sorensen, earlier this month, called a more subtle phenomenon the “Here comes the sun malaise.” The first sunny signs of spring have her bouncing off walls and up mountains, but this soon turns to a “melancholic limbo.” The Culture of the North concept taught by Alan Boraas, professor of anthropology at Kenai Peninsula College, is as useful in spring as it is in fall. Boraas says language is important, because it sets expectations. We carelessly import language that doesn’t fit the North at our peril. How does the Lower 48 speak of spring? In March, there’s page-turning talk of spring break, spring fever, spring training, spring cleaning and Opening Day for the boys of summer. April brings Easter and the Masters, and whether it’s Jesus or Tiger Woods, both events are loaded with feelings of a new season of brilliant and glorious growth. The problem is the March and April of the Lower 48 are not the March and April of the North. Yes, there will usually be a spate of glorious weather during these two months that sets expectations soaring. I’ve been here for over 20 years, though, and know March as a month where Tsalteshi Trails is still covered with snow and April as a month where “spring” sports coverage requires a poofy down jacket. Increasing daylight, a few brilliant days and Lower 48 media all scream, “Summer’s almost here.” Winds off Cook Inlet scream something else entirely. Melancholic limbo ensues. The solution lies outside, not Outside. “What does the day bring you?” Boraas said in November on “Kenai Conversation” on public radio station KDLL. “It’s not about planning your own activities, it’s about adapting to the day.” See OUT, page A9
&
Peninsula Clarion | Friday, April 26, 2019 | A7
Recreation
SoHi girls defeat Ketchikan Staff report Peninsula Clarion
The Soldotna girls soccer team started a Southeast road trip with a 2-0 victory over nonconference foe Ketchikan. Margarida Mendoca notched the shutout in net for the Stars (51-2 overall). After a scoreless first half, Ryann Cannava and Drysta Crosby-Schneider sent the Stars to victory with second-half goals. Soldotna coach Jimmy Love said Ketchikan’s goalie had some incredible saves in the first half. “At the half, I told them, ‘Keep pushing. Keep pushing. We’ll get one,’” Love said. A little over six minutes into the second half, Journey Miller sent a corner kick in to Cannava
for a goal. With about four minutes left in the game, Kortney Birch played the ball to Haley Buckbee, who found Drysta Crosby-Schneider with a tough angle from the right side at the top of the 18-yard box. CrosbySchneider managed to score on the near post. “It was a great shot from her,” Love said. The coach said Mendoca was fantastic, making six saves overall, including two that were very key. Considering the travel and a wet, turf field that had the ball bouncing all over the place, Love said his team played well. “We were taking a half second to look where we wanted to put the ball,” Love said. “We played
a little more relaxed.” The SoHi boys did not play Thursday, but join the team Friday. The Stars play in Juneau, girls at 5:15 p.m., boys at 7 p.m. Saturday SoHi takes on Thunder Mountain, with the girls at noon and boys at 1:45 p.m. Homer girls 10, Voznesenka 0 The host Mariners won the Peninsula Conference matchup against the Cougars to move to 5-1-4 overall and 3-0-2 in the league. Voznesenka is still a developing program, so Homer coach Mike Tozzo was able to play his junior varsity players. Mariah McGuire had a shutout in net, while Ava Halstead had three
goals and Aiyana Cline added two. Also scoring for Homer were Shine Carey, Sailey Rhodes, Mya Houglum, Jamie Parish and Harmony Davidson. “It was nice to get them the extra game,” Tozzo said of his JV squad. “They don’t have many games and it’s nice to give the girls a purpose behind attending all of the practices. I think they played really well.” Tozzo also liked what he saw from Voznesenka. “I give Voznesenka a lot of credit,” the coach said. “They keep showing up every year and playing hard. They only had 11 girls - no subs.” Homer hosts Grace Christian on Friday, with the girls at 5 p.m. and the boys at 7 p.m.
Soldotna tops Kenai By JOEY KLECKA Peninsula Clarion
Soldotna’s Casey Earll offers up a pitch to a Kenai Central batter Thursday at the Soldotna Little League fields. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
After an empty opening inning, it didn’t take long for the Soldotna Stars to light a match on offense against their Kenai Peninsula rivals. The Stars scored seven runs in the second inning to steamroll their way to an 18-5 nonconference victory over Kenai Central in four innings Thursday at the Soldotna Softball Fields. SoHi moved to 1-1 overall this year while Kenai dropped to 0-3. Stars senior Bailey Berger highlighted the second-inning explosion with a grand slam, the first home run of her three-year varsity career. “It felt great, actually, it’s almost like I didn’t feel it at all,” Berger said. “I honestly thought they were going to catch it. I thought it’s OK, though, my team is behind me.” Berger ended up hitting 2 for 3 on the day with five RBIs, including a bases-loaded walk in the fourth inning. The senior second baseman said the SoHi dugout stayed loud throughout the game with cheers and chants that helped keep the hot bats going. “I wanna say it was the fact that we were behind each other on every pitch,” Berger said. “There was
never a spot where we were down.” Soldotna banged out 10 hits and drew 11 walks against Kenai starter Lexi Reis. “Those walks and patience at the plate helped,” SoHi head coach Kelli Knoebel said. “We were able to just get behind ourselves, stay disciplined and allow ourselves to trust ourselves.” SoHi starting pitcher Casey Earll allowed three hits and seven walks while whiffing six, but also went 2 for 2 with her bat, including a triple and two walks. Additionally, Casey Card went 1 for 3 with a double, Ashley McDonald was 1 for 2 with two walks, Bailey Smith drew two walks, Estrella Slats hit 2 for 4 and Ashlyn Asp drew two walks. “The team was behind my pitcher, and that was big for Casey Earll,” Knoebel said. “Getting Casey that first win under her belt is big, and allowing her defense to talk it up.” The top four in SoHi’s batting lineup — McDonald, Card, Earll and Berger — all scored three runs apiece. The Kenai offense managed to get 11 runners on base and head coach John Manley said facing “one of the best teams in See RIVAL, page A8
Cardinals take Murray with top pick By BARRY WILNER AP Pro Football Writer
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A Heisman Trophywinning quarterback at the top, two more QBs along the way — and a whole lot of guys who like nothing better than putting passers on the ground.
That was the look for the first round of the NFL draft Thursday night. Arizona defied NFL custom and at least temporarily created a quarterback quandary by selecting Oklahoma’s Kyler Murray to start proceedings in a wet and wild selection show. As thousands of fans withstood rain that began just about when Commissioner Roger
Goodell spoke Murray’s name, the Cardinals spent a second straight high pick on a signal caller. Arizona moved up from 15th overall to 10th in 2018 to grab Josh Rosen. NFL teams simply don’t do that, but with a new coach in college-trained Kliff Kingsbury, the Cardinals made the bold move. At least until See NFL, page A8
Connecting the dots on a hike
A
A photo submitted to iNaturalist showing a female Lycia rachelae on April 7, 2016. This is one of only a few species of moths where the female is flightless. (Photo by Matt Bowser/USFWS).
s experts continue to learn more about our environment and flood the world with facts, figures, predictions and management directions, it can be a little overwhelming. Most people head out into the woods for exercise, the chance to see some “natural” beauty, and for some a rejuvenation of the soul by taking in fresh air and the sounds of the woods. These interactions with the wild side are often missing from our daily lives of electronic screens and the urban environment. Recently a visitor came in the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge Visitor Center with questions from their hike. They walked down the
R efuge N otebook T odd E skelin Keen-Eye Trail at our headquarters in Soldotna and were stumped by a bunch of plants that they wanted to know the names of, including what species of alder was found in this area. The previous day, when I saw the turnout for one of the refuge’s many guided walks, I became aware of just how much people are starving for information about the natural world around them. I have led many bird hikes and am always sur-
prised by what interactions along the trail are the ones that make the hike memorable. Birders often focus on how many species they can find and measure the quality of the hike by their tally lists or how many rare species were seen. In truth, though, it was actually some event like watching a boreal chickadee carry moose hair back to line their nest that marked a successful hike and made the longest lasting impression. That was the moment where they got a glimpse of the interconnectedness and the beauty of the ecological system of which we are a part. What makes a “moment” can vary, but each are valid. See HIKE, page A8
A8 | Friday, April 26, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
. . . Rival Continued from page A7
the conference” made for a tough day for Kenai, but he remained optimistic with the major improvements his team has made at the plate. “We haven’t been hitting, and that was one of our better hitting games,” Manley said. “And pitching … that was one of Lexi’s better games of the year.” Manley said while the Kenai atbats were improved, but the team still has work to do to in getting runners home. “We’re taking steps to getting better and I’m feeling good about it,” he said. At the plate, Reis notched a hit and a walk and two runs, Leinani Rapoza hit 1 for 2 with a walk,
Kylan Lakshas was 1 for 2 with a walk and a run scored, Zaharah Wilshusen went 1 for 2 with a walk and Abby Avery drew two walks. The Kards took the first lead of the game in the top of the second inning when Reis singled and later scored on a wild pitch by Earll. However, SoHi returned with a hunger in the bottom of the frame, starting with a walk by Smith. Ashlyn Asp walked to load the bases with no outs, and Lillian Gomez grounded into a fielder’s choice to score a run, tying it at 1-all. Card blasted a two-run double through the gap to give SoHi the lead at 3-1, and the bases loaded up again after a walk by Earll. Berger then crushed a pitch over the left field fence to really blow the game open at 7-1.
“The kids love the moment and love to help out the team,” Knoebel said. Kenai got one back in the top of the third on an RBI ground-out by Nereid Phillips, but SoHi scored four more in the bottom of the inning, including a two-run triple by Earll on a laser down the left-field line. Earll ended up scoring when the throw home went wide, putting the Stars up 10-2. Smith later scored on a wild pitch by Reis to make it 11-2. The Kards got their biggest inning in the top of the fourth with three runs. Lakshas started the two-out rally with a bloop single with the bases loaded to score a run. Rapoza then drew a basesloaded walk to force in another run and Wilshusen knocked in a run on a single to cut the lead to 11-5. In the bottom of the fourth, the
first four SoHi batters reached on three singles and a walk, including RBI hits by Lillian Gomez and McDonald. The final two runs that ended the game were brought in on a single by Slats. Homer 20, Palmer 1 The Mariners exploded on offense for a blowout victory Thursday at home. Homer scored 12 runs in the first inning, and led 20-1 after two before eventually forcing the mercy rule after 2 1/2 innings. The Mariners out-hit the Moose 17 to 4, led by four batters with three hits each — Annalyn Brown, Grace Godfrey, Brianna Hetrick and Dellah Harris. Godfrey belted out a triple and finished with four RBIs, and Becca Chapman also had four RBIs to go with two hits. Hetrick and Kaitlyn Johnson both
notched doubles as well. Annalyn Brown dominated on the mound with one run on four hits and a walk in three innings of work, and hit the strike zone 25 times on 31 total pitches. In comparison, Palmer’s pitching staff threw 101 pitches as the Homer lineup continued to roll. Homer started the wheel turning in the first inning with an opening walk by Brown, followed by two singles by Godfrey and Hetrick. Godfrey scored on a passed ball and Kaylin Anderson singled in a run, before a big two-run single by Chapman made it 4-0. Dellah Harris hit a two-run single to push the lead to 6-0, and was followed by an RBI single by Godfrey and an RBI double by Hetrick. In the second inning, Godfrey ripped a two-run triple to left field to push the lead to 14-1.
Palmer baseball gets past SoHi at Wasilla tourney Staff report Peninsula Clarion
The Soldotna Stars baseball squad fell 7-5 to Palmer on Thursday at the Buddy Dale Invitational in Wasilla. Palmer’s Luke Guggenmos spun a gem, whiffing 12 in six innings for the Moose, allowing four runs (one earned) on six hits and two walks. Owen Hayes earned the save with an inning of relief, giving up one unearned run on a hit.
Tanner Ussing got the start for SoHi and went 2 2-3 innings, scattering five hits for four runs (three earned) with three walks and one strikeout. Davey Belger went three frames in relief and gave up three runs on three hits and three walks while whiffing two, and Atticus Gibson finished the sixth inning with no trouble. Soldotna received a power boost from David Michael, who hit 3 for 4 with an RBI and two runs. Trapper Thompson batted in two runs. Palmer’s biggest threat was
Hayes, who hit 3 for 4 and scored three runs. Palmer struck first, starting with a twoout single by Hayes in the first inning. Hayes scored from second on a SoHi error to make it 1-0 Palmer. The Moose notched three runs in the third on an Anthony Jones single and a tworun single by Kaj Taylor to make it 4-0. SoHi got two runs back in the fourth inning, starting with a single by Jacob Boze and a double by Tanner Ussing that put
two runners in scoring position with no outs. Trapper Thompson reached on error to score a run, then Ussing scored on a bad throw by the pitcher to cut the gap to 4-2. Palmer got both runs back in the bottom of the fourth, but the Stars continued pressing in the fifth. Michael ripped an RBI double to the field and Thompson had an RBI single to slice the lead to 6-4, but that would be as close as the Stars would get. The Stars will face the Dimond Lynx on day three of the tournament Friday.
Spurs win at home, force Game 7 with Nuggets BY RAUL DOMINGUEZ Associated Press
SAN ANTONIO — LaMarcus Aldridge and DeMar DeRozan helped San Antonio overcome a huge effort by Nikola Jokic and force a Game 7 against Denver. Aldridge scored 26 points and DeRozan added 25 to help the Spurs beat the Nuggets 120-103 on Thursday night. “They’ve been great at throwing a punch at us and running away with it,” DeRozan said. “We tried to sustain that and understand whatever they do we have to match it, be more aggressive, understand we have to keep our rhythm, being aggressive on both ends and we did that.” Jokic scored 27 of his 43 points
. . . NFL Continued from page A7
they likely move Rosen elsewhere in a trade. “My job is to come in every day, work hard and get better each and every day, do what I can to make this team better,” Murray said. “I’ve known Josh since high school, so me and him are cool. We got along really well, so I’ve always been fond of him. But us being teammates now, I can’t control anything but going in there and working hard.” Resplendent in a pink suit — nothing close to the Cardinals red he will be wearing in Arizona — Murray was a first-round baseball pick by the Oakland A’s. He becomes the 22nd Heisman Trophy winner to go first overall and is the second straight Sooners quarterback to pull it off: Baker Mayfield went to
. . . Hike Continued from page A7
For some it may be seeing how fluctuations in the numbers of woodpecker species are closely tied to the age and size of recent forest fires and the insects that flourish afterward. Others may be fascinated by a moonwort and what makes them only come above ground every few years, or leaf miner moths whose larvae draw intricate patterns as they consume the internal parts of a leaf, leaving the clear, waxy cuticle behind. So, where can you get access to that next level of information? Never pass up the opportunity to go on a guided hike. It may be a refuge ranger sharing their experiences on a particular trail. It might be a native elder talking about generations of local plant
in the second half to post the third highest point total this postseason behind the 50 by Portland’s Damian Lillard and 45 from Golden State’s Kevin Durant. Jokic also finished with 12 rebounds and nine assists to fall an assist shy of his second triple double of the series. Game 7 is Saturday in Denver, where the Nuggets had the league’s best home record during the regular season. The winner will face Portland. “I don’t know, it’s my first Game 7,” Jokic said when asked what he expected in the finale. “It’s probably going to be even tougher than this one.” The young Nuggets have to ponder that after a strong effort wasn’t enough in Game 6.
Denver dominated the paint, outscoring San Antonio 72 to 36, but the Nuggets were 8 for 31 outside the paint. The Spurs were 4 for 9 on 3-pointers in the fourth quarter to help overcome Jokic’s output. “He played great tonight, he did his thing, that’s for sure,” San Antonio center Jakob Poeltl said. “But I think we answered that with a team effort we had a lot of guys coming in and putting up big points and contributing in different ways.” The Spurs had five players score in double figures, including a series-high 19 points from Rudy Gay. Every San Antonio starter shot 50 percent from the field and, for the first time in the series, the Spurs’ bench outscored the Nug-
gets’, 36-13. “We had a lot of people participate tonight,” San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich said. “Lot of people came and had good games. I think the Nuggets have had that pretty regularly and we had that tonight, so, that was great to see.” The Spurs needed the win to continue the series after a listless performance in a 108-90 loss in Denver on Tuesday in which the Nuggets led by as many as 30 points. San Antonio surged to a 34-24 lead by shooting 67 percent from the field in the first quarter while Denver missed all seven of its 3-point attempts. Jokic kept the Nuggets in the game in the third quarter, scoring 17 points on 8-for-9 shooting.
Cleveland in 2018. “BACK TO BACK!!!!! CONGRATS K1!!!! Well deserved my brotha!!!” Mayfield tweeted. As for bypassing baseball, Murray has no qualms about the decision. “I love playing multiple sports. I grew up playing multiple sports,” he said. “I just think there’s no reason to limit yourself to one sport. I love to compete, so it wasn’t a big deal for me.” With quarterbacks so in demand these days, the Giants might have reached a bit for Duke’s Daniel Jones at the sixth spot, and the Redskins did just the opposite to get Dwayne Haskins. They stayed put at No. 15 and the Ohio State star fell to them. Perhaps serendipitously, he held a bowling party about 30 miles away Thursday night. “I’m just going to work on getting my head in that playbook,” said Haskins, a oneyear starter for the Buckeyes.
“I’m going to do all I can to get physically and mentally ready for the upcoming season and just motivate my guys that’s coming in with me in this rookie class.” After Murray, though, defense became the order of the night. Of the first 20 picks, 12 were for that side of the ball, all of them pass-rushing threats. Ohio State edge rusher Nick Bosa went second to San Francisco as expected. The 49ers have used a first-round selection on four defensive linemen in the past five drafts. “I see him as a three-down player,” general manager John Lynch said. “He’s got to come in and do it, but he plays the run well. His best strength is rushing the passer, but he can play all three downs and play in all situations.” Bosa’s older brother, Joey, plays for the Chargers and was the 2016 Defensive Rookie of the Year. Their father also played in the NFL.
“Good genes, man,” Bosa said with a laugh. “It was just excitement all around. My brother wanted me to go higher than he did (third overall), so just for my dream to come true and my family to be there to watch, it was pretty great.” Bosa is the highest Ohio State draft pick since offensive tackle Orlando Pace went No. 1 to St. Louis in 1997. He missed all but three games last season with a core muscle injury, but already had exhibited the kind of playmaking that lifts players to loft status. Such as the second pick in the draft. The Jets, widely speculated to trade the third pick, used it on Alabama defensive tackle Quinnen Williams. Not even a starter until 2018, he won the Outland Trophy last season and is Alabama’s highest-drafted defensive player since linebacker Cornelius Bennett went No. 2 overall in 1987.
use for medicinal or health benefits. Regardless who is leading the hike, open your mind to the ideas and experiences the leader wants to share with you and you will find that your own solo hikes will grow in value. You will begin to see relationships that you never would have noticed just hiking down the trail to get to the endpoint. Another important resource for the curious mind is iNaturalist. This webbased data portal (now also a mobile app) is a place where you can post photos of plants, insects and animals. You don’t even have to know what species you are photographing. A community of iNaturalists will begin identifying the observation from your photograph, even if your only ID is “spider.” I post photos to iNaturalist, but I also use it as a data source. Before hitting
an unknown trail, I will look and see what others have posted and found interesting. Hopefully, using this resource I will not skip over some nondescript plant or insect that may have the most interesting story on my entire hike. It is through observations like this you may learn about the yellow coralroot. This is a species of leafless orchid that derives some of its nutrition from an association with a fungus that lives in the soil. Who knew? Or you may discover a Lycia rachelae moth. It is one of the few moth species where the female is flightless and has no wings and we have seen them right here on the trails near Headquarters Lake. The visitor with questions about alders now knows that green alder or Alnus viridis has been documented along the trail they were visiting. Also, a species of broomrape can
be found parasitizing alders in this same area. If you haven’t seen broomrape it looks like an 8- to 12-inchtall pinecone and grows off of the roots of many alder species. You are likely already experiencing some of this heightened awareness even in your normal life. Most fisherman can tell you that sea lice on sockeye salmon are an indication that the fish has not been in fresh water very long. Transfer that curiosity to the world around you when hiking through the woods and who knows what you will discover. Todd Eskelin is a Wildlife Biologist at Kenai National Wildlife Refuge. Find more Refuge Notebook articles (1999-present) at https://www.fws. gov/Refuge/Kenai/community/Refuge_notebook. html or other info at http:// w w w. f a c e b o o k . c o m / ke nainationalwildliferefuge.
San Antonio went on a 22-4 run to open the fourth quarter to take command. Jamal Murray added 16 points and Gary Harris had 14 points for the Nuggets. TIP-INS Nuggets: The Nuggets have advanced beyond the first round in eight of 16 previous postseason appearances. Their previous advancement was 2009 when they lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in the Western Conference Finals. ... Spurs: San Antonio is 23-9 against Denver in seven postseason matchups. The Nuggets’ lone series win over the Spurs came in the opening round of the 1985 playoffs.
Today in History Today is Friday, April 26, the 116th day of 2019. There are 249 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On April 26, 1865, John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln, was surrounded by federal troops near Port Royal, Virginia, and killed. On this date: In 1564, William Shakespeare was baptized at Holy Trinity Church in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. In 1607, English colonists went ashore at present-day Cape Henry, Virginia, on an expedition to establish the first permanent English settlement in the Western Hemisphere. In 1777, during the American Revolutionary War, 16-year-old Sybil Ludington, the daughter of a militia commander in Dutchess County, New York, rode her horse into the night to alert her father’s men of the approach of British regular troops. In 1933, Nazi Germany’s infamous secret police, the Gestapo, was created. In 1945, Marshal Henri Philippe Petain (ahn-REE’ fee-LEEP’ payTAN’), the head of France’s Vichy government during World War II, was arrested. In 1968, the United States exploded beneath the Nevada desert a 1.3 megaton nuclear device called “Boxcar.” In 1977, the legendary nightclub Studio 54 had its opening night in New York. In 1986, an explosion and fire at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine caused radioactive fallout to begin spewing into the atmosphere. (Dozens of people were killed in the immediate aftermath of the disaster while the long-term death toll from radiation poisoning is believed to number in the thousands.) In 1989, actress-comedian Lucille Ball died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles at age 77. In 1994, voting began in South Africa’s first all-race elections, resulting in victory for the African National Congress and the inauguration of Nelson Mandela as president. China Airlines Flight 140, a Taiwanese Airbus A-300, crashed while landing in Nagoya, Japan, killing 264 people; there were seven survivors. In 2006, Whitney Cerak and Laura Van Ryn, two students at Indiana’s Taylor University, were involved in a van-truck collision that killed five people; in a tragic mix-up that took five weeks to resolve, a seriously injured and comatose Cerak was mistakenly identified as Van Ryn, who had actually died in the crash and was buried by Cerak’s family. In 2008, police in Amstetten, Austria, arrested Josef Fritzl, freeing his daughter Elisabeth and her six surviving children whom he had fathered while holding her captive in a basement cell for 24 years. (Fritzl was later sentenced to life in a psychiatric ward.) Ten years ago: The United States declared a public health emergency as more possible cases of swine flu surfaced from Canada to New Zealand; officials in Mexico City closed everything from concerts to sports matches to churches in an effort to stem the spread of the virus. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton made an unannounced visit to Lebanon, where she met with President Michel Suleiman. Five years ago: President Barack Obama opened the first visit by a U.S. president in nearly half a century to Malaysia, the third stop on his weeklong goodwill trip through Asia. A British helicopter crashed in southern Afghanistan, killing five NATO troops. One year ago: Bill Cosby was convicted of drugging and molesting Temple University employee Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia mansion in 2004; it was the first big celebrity trial of the #MeToo era and completed the spectacular downfall of a comedian who broke racial barriers on his way to TV superstardom. (Cosby was later sentenced to three to 10 years in prison.) Mike Pompeo was sworn in as secretary of state, minutes after being confirmed by the Senate; he then flew immediately to Brussels for meetings at NATO headquarters. President Donald Trump’s White House doctor, Ronny Jackson, withdrew his nomination to be Veterans Affairs secretary in the face of accusations of misconduct. Teachers in Arizona and Colorado converged on state capitols as they launched widespread walkouts in a bid for better pay and education funding. Four quarterbacks were chosen in the first 10 selections in the NFL draft, with the Cleveland Browns grabbing Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield out of Oklahoma. Today’s Birthdays: Architect I.M. Pei is 102. Actress-comedian Carol Burnett is 86. Rhythm-and-blues singer Maurice Williams is 81. Songwriter-musician Duane Eddy is 81. Singer Bobby Rydell is 77. Rock musician Gary Wright is 76. Actress Nancy Lenehan is 66. Actor Giancarlo Esposito is 61. Rock musician Roger Taylor (Duran Duran) is 59. Actress Joan Chen is 58. Rock musician Chris Mars is 58. Actor-singer Michael Damian is 57. Actor Jet Li (lee) is 56. Rock musician Jimmy Stafford (Train) is 55. Actor-comedian Kevin James is 54. Record company executive Jeff Huskins is 53. Former U.S. Poet Laureate Natasha Trethewey (TREHTH’-eh-way) is 53. Actress Marianne Jean-Baptiste is 52. Country musician Joe Caverlee (Yankee Grey) is 51. Rapper T-Boz (TLC) is 49. First lady Melania Trump is 49. Actress Shondrella Avery is 48. Actress Simbi Kali is 48. Country musician Jay DeMarcus (Rascal Flatts) is 48. Country musician Michael Jeffers (Pinmonkey) is 47. Rock musician Jose Pasillas (Incubus) is 43. Actor Jason Earles is 42. Actor Leonard Earl Howze is 42. Actor Amin Joseph is 42. Actor Tom Welling is 42. Actor Pablo Schreiber is 41. Actor Nyambi Nyambi is 40. Actress Jordana Brewster is 39. Actress Stana Katic is 39. Actress Marnette Patterson is 39. Actor Channing Tatum is 39. Americana/roots singer-songwriter Lilly Hiatt is 35. Actress Emily Wickersham is 35. Actor Aaron Weeks is 33. Electro pop musician James Sunderland (Frenship) is 32. New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge is 27. Thought for Today: “Perfect order is the forerunner of perfect horror.” -- Carlos Fuentes, Mexican author (1928-2012).
Learn to cook your catch Staff report Peninsula Clarion
The Kenai National Wildlife Refuge will provide hook to table, hands-on campfire cooking lessons at the Kenai Peninsula Sport Rec and Trade Show, which is Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Soldotna Regional Sports Complex. Refuge staff will assist youth in the cooking of their Trout Pond catch, using a wood fire, throughout this year’s sports show. In order to take advantage of this opportunity, find the refuge tent near the pond. Those interested can stop in with or without catch and learn campfire cooking and how to compost fish waste, among other things. Participants leave with fish cooked and seasoned.
Havlicek dies at 79 BOSTON (AP) — John Havlicek’s legacy was built over 16 years with the Boston Celtics, eight of them as NBA champions, making him among the best to ever play the game. One play immortalized him forever. “Havlicek stole the ball! “Havlicek stole the ball!” Celtics radio announcer Johnny Most screamed, a moment that remains among the famous plays in NBA history. The Celtics said Havlicek died Thursday in Jupiter, Florida. He was 79. The cause of death wasn’t immediately available. The Boston Globe said he had Parkinson’s disease. Voted one of the 50 greatest players in NBA history, Havlicek’s steal of Hal Greer’s inbounds pass helped the Celtics hold off Philadelphia in the 1965 Eastern Conference final. “John Havlicek is one of the most accomplished players in Boston Celtics history, and the face of many of the franchise’s signature moments,” the Celtics said in a statement. “He was a champion in every sense, and as we join his family, friends, and fans in mourning his loss, we are thankful for all the joy and inspiration he brought to us.” Nicknamed “Hondo” for his resemblance to John Wayne, Havlicek was drafted ninth in the first round in 1962 out of Ohio State by a Celtics team stocked with stars Bill Russell, Bob Cousy, K.C. Jones, Sam Jones, Tom Sanders, Tom Heinsohn and Frank Ramsey.
Peninsula Clarion | Friday, April 26, 2019 | A9
Scoreboard Basketball NBA Standings FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Sunday, April 21 Boston 110, Indiana 106, Boston wins series 4-0 Golden State 113, L.A. Clippers 105 Toronto 107, Orlando 85 Portland 111, Oklahoma City 98 Monday, April 22 Milwaukee 127, Detroit 104, Milwaukee wins series 4-0 Utah 107, Houston 91 Tuesday, April 23 Toronto 115, Orlando 96, Toronto wins series 4-1 Philadelphia 122, Brooklyn 100, Philadelphia wins series 4-1 Denver 108, San Antonio 90 Portland 118, Oklahoma City 115, Portland wins series 4-1 Wednesday, April 24 Houston 100, Utah 93, Houston wins series 4-1 L.A. Clippers 129, Golden State 121, Golden State leads series 3-2 Thursday, April 25 San Antonio 120, Denver 103, series tied 3-3 Friday, April 26 Golden State at L.A. Clippers, 6 p.m. Saturday, April 27 San Antonio at Denver, 6 p.m. All Times ADT CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Saturday, April 27 Philadelphia at Toronto, 3:30 p.m. Sunday, April 28 Boston at Milwaukee, 9 a.m. All Times ADT
Hockey NHL Playoffs CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Thursday, April 25 Boston 3, Columbus 2, OT, Boston leads series 1-0 St. Louis 3, Dallas 2, St. Louis leads series 1-0 Friday, April 26 Carolina at N.Y. Islanders, 3 p.m. Colorado at San Jose, 6 p.m. Saturday, April 27 Dallas at St. Louis, 11 a.m. Columbus at Boston, 4 p.m. All Times ADT
Football 2019 NFL Draft Selections At Nashville, Tenn. Thursday FIRST ROUND 1. Arizona, Kyler Murray, qb, Oklahoma. 2. San Francisco, Nick Bosa, de, Ohio State. 3. N.Y. Jets, Quinnen Williams, nt, Alabama. 4. Oakland, Clelin Ferrell, de, Clemson. 5. Tampa Bay, Devin White, lb, LSU. 6. N.Y. Giants, Daniel Jones, qb, Duke. 7. Jacksonville, Josh Allen, de, Kentucky. 8. Detroit, T.J. Hockenson, te,
Iowa. 9. Buffalo, Ed Oliver, dt, Houston. 10. Pittsburgh (from Denver), Devin Bush, lb, Michigan. 11. Cincinnati, Jonah Williams, ot, Alabama. 12. Green Bay, Rashan Gary, de, Michigan. 13. Miami, Christian Wilkins, de, Clemson. 14. Atlanta, Chris Lindstrom, g, Boston College. 15. Washington, Dwayne Haskins, qb, Ohio State. 16. Carolina, Brian Burns, de, Florida State. 17. N.Y. Giants (from Cleveland), Dexter Lawrence, dt, Clemson. 18. Minnesota, Garrett Bradbury, c, N.C. State. 19. Tennessee, Jeffery Simmons, dt, Mississippi State. 20. Denver (from Pittsburgh), Noah Fant, te, Iowa. 21. Green Bay (from Seattle), Darnell Savage, s, Maryland. 22. Philadelphia (from Baltimore), Andre Dillard, ot, Washington State. 23. Houston, Tytus Howard, ot, Alabama State. 24. Oakland (from Chicago), Josh Jacobs, rb, Alabama. 25. Baltimore (from Philadelphia), Marquise Brown, wr, Oklahoma. 26. Washington (from Indianapolis), Montez Sweat, de, Mississippi State. 27. Oakland (from Dallas), Johnathan Abram, s, Mississippi State. 28. L.A. Chargers, Jerry Tillery, dt, Notre Dame. 29. Seattle (from Kansas City), L.J. Collier, DE, TCU. 30. N.Y. Giants (from New Orleans through Green Bay and Seattle), Deandre Baker, cb, Georgia. 31. Atlanta (from L.A. Rams), Kaleb McGary, ot, Washington. 32. New England, N’Keal Harry, wr, Arizona State.
Baseball AL Standings
East Division W L Pct Tampa Bay 16 9 .640 New York 14 11 .560 Toronto 11 14 .440 Boston 11 15 .423 Baltimore 10 16 .385 Central Division Minnesota 13 9 .591 Cleveland 14 10 .583 Detroit 12 12 .500 Chicago 9 14 .391 Kansas City 8 17 .320 West Division Seattle 17 11 .607 Houston 15 10 .600 Oakland 14 13 .519 Texas 12 12 .500 Los Angeles 10 16 .385
ciari’s short-handed goal in the first period, then fell behind in the third after Brandon Dubinsky and PierreLuc Dubois scored in a span of 13 seconds. “I think we know how to respond to that. We didn’t get rattled,” Rask said. “We felt like we were going to get it back, and we did.” Coyle tied it when he onetimed a backhanded centering pass from Marcus Johansson into the net with 4:35 left to force overtime. He ended it by deflecting a shot from Johansson into the net.
ST. LOUIS — Vladimir Tarasenko added to his growing playoff resume. Tarasenko scored two goals and the St. Louis Blues beat the Dallas Stars 3-2 Thursday night in first game of the teams’ Western Conference semifinal series. Robby Fabbri also scored and Jordan Binnington made 27 saves for the Blues, who had lost three of four to Dallas during the regular season. It was Tarasenko’s seventh career multi-goal game in the postseason, tying him with Bernie Federko for second-
most in franchise history. “Just God-given talent,” Blues coach Craig Berube said. “He’s a powerful guy that can skate. When he drives wide like that he’s really tough to handle.” Jason Spezza and Jamie Benn scored for the Stars. Ben Bishop made 17 saves. Game 2 will be Saturday in St. Louis, before the series moves to Dallas for the third and fourth games of the bestof-seven series. Tarasenko’s power-play goal with 1:57 left in the second broke a 1-1 tie. It was the first power-play goal in 17 chances allowed by the Stars this postseason. “We talk a lot about the power play and we work on it in practice and I will say that the hard work pays off and good thing it works,” Tarasenko said. “(Brayden Schenn) made a great pass and it created a good scoring chance for me.” Tarasenko gave the Blues a 3-1 lead at the 3:51 mark of the third period, skating by defenseman Miro Heiskanen and beating Bishop with a shot into the top left corner. “I just missed the pokecheck,” Bishop said. “I would have kind of liked to have that one back. I just missed it and obviously he put it in the net. He’s a dangerous player and he’s a good player and you can see why.”
enough to ski Tsalteshi comfortably in shorts and a T-shirt. Continued from page A7 It can form crust, providing rocket-fast skiing or pavement-easy snowshoeBoraas said getting out each day and moving on the ing at places that are norlandscape for an hour or so mally hard or impossible to reach. Crust skis on Skilak is critical. Lake, the Kenai River ice “It’s recreation, but it’s shelf and a complete circuit really more than recreation,” he said. “It is critical on Crescent Lake are among my most memorable to the health and survival experiences in Alaska. and mental health in the It can also form a North. And it’s not hard.” creamy corn perfect for In fact, it’s often epic, skiing down mountains or, because snow does funny things in spring before it, as even better and as proven Deborah Landau wrote, “re- last week, it can fall as angelic powder in late April. treats without complaint.” Problem is the good stuff It can hang on long
climbs up the mountains. It hides farther and farther away, mushifying earlier and earlier every day. The rubber band snaps. You don’t want to get up at 4 a.m. and drive 22 miles out Homer’s East End Road to ski crust. You don’t want to haul your tele gear up a muddy, slushy trail to try and find a few turns. You’ve fallen through bad ice into Headquarters Lake once, and you don’t want to do it again. Head down in melancholy, defeat is conceded, until you look up and are struck with a startling realization. Hey! It’s summer.
BOSTON — Charlie Coyle wasn’t thinking about his first goal, which tied things up at the end of regulation. Or his second, which won it in overtime. What was weighing on him was the time he coughed up the puck and handed Columbus a goal, even though he redeemed himself by leading Boston to a 3-2 victory in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals on Thursday night. Asked about his two late goals, Coyle said: “I had a costly turnover in the third period. You can’t have that during the game. “I’m just relieved we got the win,” he added somberly. “I didn’t really care who scored.” Coyle tied the game in the final five minutes of regulation and scored again with 5:15 gone in overtime to help the Bruins take the opener of the best-of-seven series and send Columbus to its first loss of the playoffs. Tuukka Rask stopped 20 shots for Boston, which took a 1-0 lead on Noel Ac-
. . . Out
BLUES 3, STARS 2
— — 2 4½ 6½ — ½ 2½ 3 6
Thursday’s Games Boston 7, Detroit 3 Cleveland 2, Houston 1 L.A. Angels 11, N.Y. Yankees 5 Seattle 14, Texas 2 Friday’s Games Oakland (Fiers 2-2) at Toronto (Stroman 1-3), 3:07 p.m. Tampa Bay (Morton 2-0) at Boston (TBD), 3:10 p.m. Baltimore (Cobb 0-1) at Minnesota (Perez 2-0), 4:10 p.m. Cleveland (Kluber 2-2) at Houston (McHugh 3-2), 4:10 p.m. Detroit (Norris 1-0) at Chicago White Sox (Rodon 3-2), 4:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Skaggs 1-2) at Kansas City (Duffy 0-0), 4:15 p.m. Texas (Miller 1-1) at Seattle (Kiku-
Bruins nip Blue Jackets By The Associated Press
GB — 2 5 5½ 6½
chi 1-1), 6:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Paxton 2-2) at San Francisco (Bumgarner 1-3), 6:15 p.m. Saturday’s Games Baltimore at Minnesota, 10:10 a.m. Oakland at Toronto, 11:07 a.m. Cleveland at Houston, 12:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at San Francisco, 12:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Boston, 12:05 p.m. Detroit at Chicago White Sox, 3:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Kansas City, 3:15 p.m. Texas at Seattle, 5:10 p.m. All Times ADT
NL Standings
East Division W L Pct New York 13 11 .542 Philadelphia 13 12 .520 Atlanta 12 12 .500 Washington 11 12 .478 Miami 8 17 .320 Central Division St. Louis 15 9 .625 Chicago 12 11 .522 Pittsburgh 12 11 .522 Milwaukee 13 13 .500 Cincinnati 10 14 .417 West Division Los Angeles 16 11 .593 Arizona 15 11 .577 San Diego 14 11 .560 Colorado 11 14 .440 San Francisco 11 14 .440
GB — ½ 1 1½ 5½ — 2½ 2½ 3 5 — ½ 1 4 4
Thursday’s Games Arizona 5, Pittsburgh 0 L.A. Dodgers 2, Chicago Cubs 1 Cincinnati 4, Atlanta 2 Miami 3, Philadelphia 1, 10 innings Friday’s Games Miami (Urena 1-3) at Philadelphia (Eickhoff 0-1), 3:05 p.m. San Diego (Strahm 0-2) at Washington (Scherzer 1-3), 3:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Anderson 2-0) at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 2-2), 3:10 p.m. Colorado (Senzatela 1-1) at Atlanta (Fried 3-0), 3:20 p.m. Cincinnati (DeSclafani 0-1) at St. Louis (Mikolas 2-1), 4:15 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 1-3) at Arizona (Ray 0-1), 5:40 p.m. Pittsburgh (Archer 1-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 2-1), 6:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Paxton 2-2) at San Francisco (Bumgarner 1-3), 6:15 p.m. Saturday’s Games Cincinnati at St. Louis, 10:15 a.m. N.Y. Yankees at San Francisco, 12:05 p.m. San Diego at Washington, 12:05 p.m. Miami at Philadelphia, 2:05 p.m. Milwaukee at N.Y. Mets, 3:10 p.m. Colorado at Atlanta, 3:20 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Arizona, 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at L.A. Dodgers, 5:10 p.m. All Times ADT
Red Sox 7, Tigers 3 Det. 003 000 000—3 Bos. 023 101 00x—7
7 0 10 2
Zimmermann, B.Farmer (4), Alcantara (5), Jimenez (7), Stumpf (8) and Hicks; Porcello, Hembree (7), Brewer (8), Brasier (9) and Leon. W_Porcello 1-3. L_Zimmermann 0-4. HRs_Detroit, Castellanos (1). Boston, Chavis (2).
Indians 2, Astros 1 Cle. 001 010 000—2 Hou. 001 000 000—1
4 4
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Bauer, Hand (9) and Perez; Cole, Harris (8), Osuna (9) and Chirinos. W_Bauer 3-1. L_Cole 1-4. Sv_Hand (7). HRs_Cleveland, Bauers (3), Martin (4). Houston, Springer (8).
Angels 11, Yankees 5 NY 001 120 010— 5 9 2 LA 000 042 50x— 11 9 1 Tanaka, Holder (6), Tarpley (7), Harvey (7), Kahnle (8) and Sanchez; Cahill, J.Anderson (5), Ramirez (6), C.Allen (8), Robles (8), Ramsey (9) and Lucroy. W_ Ramirez 1-0. L_Tanaka 2-2. HRs_ New York, Urshela (1). Los Angeles, La Stella (7), Calhoun (6).
Mariners 14, Rangers 2 Tex. 000 000 020— 2 9 1 Se. 500 223 20x— 14 14 1 Hearn, B.Martin (1), Springs (4), Gomez (5), Leclerc (7), Mathis (8) and Kiner-Falefa; Gonzales, Elias (8), Bradford (9) and Narvaez. W_Gonzales 5-0. L_Hearn 0-1. HRs_Seattle, Beckham (6).
Diamondbacks 5, Pirates 0 Ari. Pit.
200 120 000—5 000 000 000—0
9 5
0 0
Greinke, Chafin (8), Hirano (9) and Murphy; Taillon, Liriano (6), Crick (8), Kela (9) and Diaz. W_ Greinke 4-1. L_Taillon 1-3.
Dodgers 2, Cubs 1 LA Chi.
000 010 010—2 000 000 001—1
4 7
0 1
Stripling, P.Baez (5), Ferguson (7), Kelly (8), Jansen (9) and Gale; Lester, Brach (6), Rosario (8), Ryan (8) and Contreras. W_P. Baez 2-1. L_Lester 1-1. Sv_Jansen (8). HRs_Chicago, Almora Jr. (1).
Reds 4, Braves 2
Atl. Cin.
000 000 020—2 001 020 01x—4
11 0 5 0
Teheran, Parsons (7) and McCann; Castillo, Hernandez (7), Duke (8), R.Iglesias (8) and Barnhart. W_Castillo 3-1. L_Teheran 2-3. Sv_R.Iglesias (6). HRs_Atlanta, Freeman (3).
Marlins 3, Phillies 1, 10 inn.
Mia. 001 000 000 Phi. 010 000 000
2—3 12 0 0—1 4 0
C.Smith, Kinley (7), Quijada (7), Steckenrider (8), Guerrero (9), Romo (10) and Alfaro; Nola, Morgan (7), Dominguez (8), Neris (9), Ramos (10) and Realmuto. W_Guerrero 1-0. L_Neris 0-1. Sv_ Romo (4). HRs_Miami, Castro (3). Philadelphia, Rodriguez (1).
Transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball MLB — Suspended New York Mets pitcher Jacob Rhame two games and fined him an undisclosed amount for intentionally throwing a pitch in the area of the head of Philadelphia’s Rhys Hoskins during an April 23 game. American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Assigned RHP Josh Lucas outright to Norfolk (IL). BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned LHP Bobby Poyner to Pawtucket (IL) and Darwinzon Hernandez to
Portland (EL). CLEVELAND INDIANS — Traded OF Cameron Maybin to the N.Y. Yankees for cash. DETROIT TIGERS — Optioned RHP Zac Reininger to Toledo (IL). KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Optioned LHP Tim Hill to Omaha (PCL). Sent LHP Brian Flynn to Omaha for a rehab assignment. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Placed INF Zack Cozart on 10-day IL, retroactive to April 24. Recalled INF Luis Rengifo from Salt Lake (PCL). MINNESOTA TWINS — Optioned LHP Gabriel Moya to Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Placed OF Clint Frazier on the 10-day IL, retroactive to April 23. Optioned RHP Jonathan Loaisiga from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Recalled RHP Joseph Harvey from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. TEXAS RANGERS — Recalled LHP Taylor Hearn from Nashville (PCL). National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Sent LHP Jonny Venters to Gwinnett (IL) for a rehab assignment. CHICAGO CUBS — Optioned LHP Tim Collins to Iowa (PCL). Reinstated LHP Jon Lester from the 10-day IL. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Optioned 3B Mitch Walding and RHP Drew Anderson to Lehigh Valley (IL). Designated LHP James Pazos for assignment. Selected the contract of 2B Sean Rodriguez from Lehigh Valley (IL). Recalled RHP Enyel De Los Santos from Lehigh Valley. FOOTBALL National Football League CLEVELAND BROWNS — Signed WR Ishmael Hyman. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Exercised their fifth-year option on CB Jalen Ramsey. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Acquired DE Frank Clark and a 2019 third-round draft pick (No. 92) from Seattle for a 2019 first- (No. 29) and third-round (No. 84) draft picks and a 2020 second-round draft pick. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Signed DT Tim Jernigan to a oneyear contract. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Exercised their fifth-year option on CB Vernon Hargreaves III. HOCKEY National Hockey League CAROLINA HURRICANES — Recalled F Clark Bishop from Charlotte (AHL). HORSE RACING BREEDERS’ CUP — Named Christopher McNamara senior vice president/corporate partnerships. SOCCER National Premier Soccer League NEW YORK COSMOS — Signed F Jochen Graf from Memphis (USL Championship). COLLEGE ARKANSAS — Named Jordyn Wieber women’s gymnastics coach. BUCKNELL — Named Trevor Woodruff women’s basketball coach. CALIFORNIA — Named Austin Risenhoover women’s associate head soccer coach. NORTH CAROLINA — Men’s junior basketball G Seventh Woods will transfer. OKLAHOMA — Named Molinari men’s assistant basketball coach.
NOTICE TRANS-FORELAND PIPELINE COMPANY, LLC FILES APPLICATION FOR KENAI LNG COOL DOWN PROJECT On March 29, 2019, Trans-Foreland Pipeline Company LLC (Trans-Foreland) filed an application with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) requesting approval of the Kenai LNG Cool Down Project (Project). The Project consists of modifications at the existing liquefied natural gas (LNG) export facility in Nikiski, Alaska, known as the Kenai LNG Plant. On April 12, 2019, FERC issued a formal notice of the Project’s application. The Project is subject to FERC jurisdiction under the Natural Gas Act. FERC has assigned docket number CP19-118-000 to the Project About the Project: Trans-Foreland owns the Kenai LNG Plant, which includes a dock and 161.1-acre liquefaction facility, via Trans-Foreland’s subsidiary, Kenai LNG LLC. The Kenai LNG Plant includes related tanks, compressors, exchangers, equipment, and ancillary facilities used for operation. The Kenai LNG Plant is operated by Trans-Foreland’s affiliate, Tesoro Logistics GP, LLC. The Project includes the installation, construction and operation of a new boil-off-gas (BOG) booster compressor unit, trim vaporizers, ancillary facilities, additional LNG transfer system valves, and equipment to manage the existing BOG facilities (collectively referred to as the BOG Management System) to facilitate the import of LNG to cool down the existing LNG storage tanks and associated LNG facilities. The installation of the BOG Management System and cool down of the existing LNG facilities and LNG storage tanks will allow the Kenai LNG Plant to provide up to 7.0 million standard cubic feet per day of natural gas to Trans-Foreland’s affiliated Kenai Refinery located adjacent to the Kenai LNG Plant. The area designated for Project workspace is wholly within the existing Kenai LNG Plant’s fenced operating footprint of about 76 acres. The Project will not entail acquisition of any easement rights, and will have no direct impact on any adjoining or nearby landowner. Trans-Foreland or its affiliate will apply to the Department of Energy’s Office of Fossil Energy for authorization to import LNG before the Project enters service in 2020. Pending regulatory approval, Trans-Foreland expects commencement of construction in the third quarter of 2019 and the Project in-service by the fourth quarter of 2020. FERC’s Notice of Application (NOA) and pamphlet for landowners titled An Interstate Pipeline On My Land? What Do I Need To Know? are available on FERC’s website at www.ferc.gov. FERC’s Office of External Affairs can be reached toll-free at 1-866-2083372. Trans-Foreland is mailing the NOA and an information packet about the Project to affected landowners and governmental entities. An electronic copy of the application is available for review at the Kenai Community Library, located at 163 Main St. Loop, Kenai, AK. Both the application and other Project information are available on the FERC website using the eLibrary link (click on the “eLibrary” link, click on “General Search” and enter the docket number in the “Docket Number” field excluding the last three digits). For more information, contact: Casey Sullivan Government & Public Affairs Manager Marathon Petroleum Company 1076 Ocean Dock Road Anchorage, AK 99501 (907) 261-7221 csullivan1@marathonpetroleum.com
Martin Marz Tariff Manager Andeavor 19100 Ridgewood Parkway San Antonio, TX 78261 (210) 626-6517 Martin.j.Marz@andeavor.com
A10 | Friday, April 26, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
Contact us; www.peninsulaclarion.com, classified@peninsulaclarion.com • To place an ad call 907-283-7551 EMPLOYMENT
Automobiles Wanted
BEAUTY / SPA
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. CALL 1-844-493-7877 (PNDC) Got an older car, boat or RV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1-866-270-1180 (PNDC)
NEWSPAPER CARRIER The Peninsula Clarion is accepting applications for a Newspaper Carrier. • • • • • •
WANTED! Old Porsche 356/911/912 for restoration by hobbyist 1948-1973 Only. Any condition, top $ paid! PLEASE LEAVE MESSAGE (707) 965-9546. Email: porscherestoration@yahoo.com. (PNDC)
Must have own transportation. Independent Contractor Status. Home Delivery - 6 days a week. Must have valid Alaska drivers license. Must furnish proof of insurance. Copy of current driving record required.
GARAGE SALES
For more information contact Peninsula Clarion Circulation Dept. 907-283-3584 or drop off an application/resume at the Peninsula Clarion 150 Trading Bay Road, Kenai.
MOVING SALE! Saturday & Sunday, April 27-28 10AM-4PM 41110 Goldeneye Ave. Soldotna Household items, linens, tools, clothing, camping gear, holiday, artwork - everything!
The Peninsula Clarion is an E.O.E.
DIRECT SERVICE ADVOCATE Part-Time Transitional Living Center
2353306
COURT ORDERED DIVORCE AUCTION. 3 SideBySides, Boston Whaler boat, RV toy hauler, 4 wheelers, high end home furnishings. Items online starting 4/24-5/4. Register @ www.lotjot.com. administrator@lotjot.com 907632-6309
Provide support, advocacy and assistance to homeless women and children residing in transitional housing who have experienced domestic violence and/or sexual assault. Excellent interpersonal and written communication skills, ability to work with diverse populations, work independently and on a team and promote nonviolent behavior and empowerment philosophy. HS diploma or equivalent required; degree or experience working in related field preferred. Valid driver’s license required. Resume, cover letter and three references to:
LEGALS KENAI PENINSULA BOROUGH SCHOOL DISTRICT INVITATION TO BID #121-19; #122-19; & #123-19 Expendable Products; Dry Food Products; & Freeze/Chill Food Products The Kenai Peninsula Borough School District hereby invites qualified vendors to submit bids for acceptance by the District to purchase Expendable Products; Dry Food Products; & Freeze/Chill Food Products.
KUBOTA TRACTOR 2007 Diesel B7610 4WD; Front Loader with Ballast Box, 3 cycle - 24 HP; $17,500. A workhorse machine that’s maintained like new with only 200 hours. The 4WD front loader makes short work of major projects for heavy duty jobs like hauling, raking and scraping in gardens, fields, paddocks and pastures. Perfect for upkeep of agricultural and livestock grounds or landscaping and general maintenance on large or smallscale business or personal property. The vehicle includes a post-hole digger, 3-point hitch and 9inch bit, landscape rake and chains. Also equipped with block heater so well-suited for cold weather use including snow removal and plowing. Serious inquires only; Located Anchorage; cash; akannmg@yahoo.com
S: 3.5 in
IT
only
www.kpbsd.k12.ak.us Kenai Peninsula Borough Code requires that businesses or individuals contracting to do business with the Kenai Peninsula Borough School District be in compliance with Borough tax provisions.
TAKES A
Alaska Trivia
An adult bull moose weighs between 1,200 and 1,400 pounds and can stand 7 feet tall at the shoulders.
SPARK.
854254
LEGALS
T: 7 in
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 17th day of April, 2019. PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE 5d75x10d5_BW.qxd 9/7/05 5:55 PM Page 1 /s/MARILYNN JOHNSON Pub: 4/19, 4/26 & 5/3, 2019 853302
B: 7 in
S: 6.75 in
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF ALASKA THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT AT KENAI In the Matter of the Estate of VICTORIA MARIE PENNISON-JOHNSON, Deceased. Case No. 3KN-19-00074 PR
Please ONLY YOU CAN PREVENT WILDFIRES. smokeybear.com
2-column size B
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LAST REVISION: 9/18/06 2:26 PM
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COPYWRITER DIGITAL ARTIST PRINT PRODUCER ACCT MANAGER
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AClogo_blk.eps USForestry_BWlogo.eps NASF_logo.eps P4597_SMOKEY_BW.eps underline.ai
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CLIENT APPROVAL:
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FRANCISCO
GONZALEZ KEN COPEN
Helvetica Neue, ITC Franklin Gothic, SignPainter INKS
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H o p e i s m o r e p o w e r f u l t h a n a h u r r i c a n e.
Help victims of Hurricane Katrina and thousands of other disasters across the country each year by donating to the Disaster Relief Fund, which enables the Red Cross to provide food, shelter, counseling and other assistance to those in need.
This message brought to you by the American Red Cross and the Ad Council.
1-800-HELP NOW redcross.org
A SUMMER MASSAGE Thai oil massage Open every day Call Darika 907-252-3985
Weatherports 8x10 and 12x18. alaskasnowflake9@gmail.com
Executive Director, The LeeShore Center, 325 S. Spruce St., Kenai, AK 99611 B: 3.75 in by May 2, 2019. T: 3.75 in EOE
One (1) original of the sealed bid(s) must be submitted to the Purchasing Department, Kenai Peninsula Borough School District, 139 East Park Avenue, Soldotna, AK 99669, no later than 4:00 PM local time on May 29, 2019. Bids can be obtained by calling 907-714-8876 during normal business hours, or from the District website.
Pub: April 26, 2019
Merchandise
100 etg
From Stress to Refresh! Kenai Thai Massage Pranee & Yai
behind Wells Fargo 740-3379
Peninsula Clarion | Friday, April 26, 2019 | A11
Contact us; www.peninsulaclarion.com, classified@peninsulaclarion.com • To place an ad call 907-283-7551 SERVICE DIRECTORY
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
Wanted! Housekeeper 2 days/week, for handicapped in Soldotna. 262-6545
DONATE YOUR CAR FOR BREAST CANCER! Help United Breast Foundation education, prevention, & support programs. FAST FREE PICKUP - 24 HR RESPONSE - TAX DEDUCTION. 1-855-385-2819. (PNDC)
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
Health/Medical
Over $10K in Debt? Be debt free in 24 to 48 months. No upfront fees to enroll. A+ BBB rated. Call National Debt Relief 1-888-231-4274 (PNDC)
A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-855748-4275. (PNDC)
Spectrum Triple Play! TV, Internet & Voice for $29.99 ea. 60 MB per second speed. No contract or commitment. More Channels. Faster Internet. Unlimited Voice. Call 1-888-960-3504. (PNDC)
Attention: Oxygen Users! Gain freedom with a Portable Oxygen Concentrator! No more heavy tanks and refills! Guaranteed Lowest Prices! Call the Oxygen Concentrator Store: 1-855-641-2803 (PNNA)
Unable to work due to injury or illness? Call Bill Gordon & Assoc., Social Security Disability Attorneys! FREE Evaluation. Local Attorneys Nationwide 1-844335-2197. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL (TX/NM Bar.) (PNDC)
FDA-Registered Hearing Aids. 100% Risk-Free! 45-Day Home Trial. Comfort Fit. Crisp Clear Sound. If you decide to keep it, PAY ONLY $299 per aid. FREE Shipping. Call Hearing Help Express 1-844-678-7756. (PNDC)
COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL SPACE FOR RENT WAREHOUSE / STORAGE 2000 sq. ft., man door 14ft roll-up, bathroom, K-Beach area 3-Phase Power $1300.00/mo. 1st mo. rent + deposit, gas paid 907-252-3301
Now Accepting Applications fo Remodeled Spacious 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Affordable Apartments. Adjacent to Playground/Park Onsite Laundry; Full Time Manager
OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT
Rent is based on 30% of Gross Income & Subsidized by Rural Development For Eligible Households. Contact Manager at 907-262-1407 TDD 1-800-770-8973
OFFICE SPACE RENTAL AVAILABLE 609 Marine Street Kenai, Alaska 404 and 394sq,ft, shared entry $1/sq.ft 240sq.ft.Shared conference/Restrooms $0.50/sq.ft 283-4672
COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL SPACE FOR RENT
Keep a Sharp Eye on the Classifieds
APARTMENTS FOR RENT EVERY BUSINESS has a story to tell! Get your message out with California’s PRMedia Release - the only Press Release Service operated by the press to get press! For more info contact Cecelia @ 916-288-6011 or http://prmediarelease.com/california (PNDC)
Life Alert. 24/7. One press of a button sends help FAST! Medical, Fire, Burglar. Even if you can’t reach a phone! FREE Brochure. CALL 844-818-1860. (PNDC)
Professional Office Space
Medical-Grade HEARING AIDS for LESS THAN $200! FDA-Registered. Crisp, clear sound, state of-the-art features & no audiologist needed. Try it RISK FREE for 45 Days! CALL 1-844-295-0409 (PNDC) OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 1-844-359-3986 (PNDC)
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES ARE YOU BEHIND $10k OR MORE ON YOUR TAXES? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Call: 1-844-229-3096 (PNDC)
Newer 1 bedroom duplex on Beaverloop Rd. 1,100 sq. ft. 1 large bedroom (275 sq. ft.) Vaulted ceilings throughout In-floor heating Gas appliances and heating Washer, dryer, & dishwasher Large 1 car heated garage Handicap accessible No smoking or pets Singles or couples preferred $1,100 monthly rent Landlord pays gas and garbage p/u First month’s rent and $1,000 deposit to move in 1-year lease required Call 283-4488
DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 10 Americans or 158 million U.S. Adults read content from newspaper media each week? Discover the Power of the Pacific Northwest Newspaper Advertising. For a free brochure call 916288-6011 or email cecelia@cnpa.com (PNDC) DID YOU KNOW Newspaper-generated content is so valuable it’s taken and repeated, condensed, broadcast, tweeted, discussed, posted, copied, edited, and emailed countless times throughout the day by others? Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising in FIVE STATES with just one phone call. For free Pacific Northwest Newspaper Association Network brochures call 916-288-6011 or email cecelia@cnpa.com (PNDC)
1872’ office space, prime location, immaculate condition, network wired. Utilities, mowing, snow plowing provided. Soldotna 398-4053
COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL SPACE FOR RENT
FOR RENT One Bed/one bath Nikiski $700, utilities included. First and last month + $200 deposit required. Pets on Approval Call 208-791-3142
DID YOU KNOW that not only does newspaper media reach a HUGE Audience, they also reach an ENGAGED AUDIENCE. Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising in five states - AK, ID, MT, OR & WA. For a free rate brochure call 916-288-6011 or email cecelia@cnpa.com (PNDC)
LOG HOME rotton log repair, residential remodel, Painting, and home maintenance Licensed Bonded Insured 235-9446 or 399-1695
ROOMS FOR RENT 3 bed/3 bath house 1200-1300/month includes w/d, elec, gas kitchenette, private bathroom, direct tv Call 907-254-0167
HUNGER KEEPS UP ON CURRENT EVENTS, TOO. 1 IN 6 AMERICANS STRUGGLES WITH HUNGER.
SIGN UP FOR FREE AMBER ALERTS ON YOUR CELL PHONE.
Go to wirelessamberalerts.org. Sign up today. Then when an AMBER Alert is issued in the areas you’ve
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.
chosen, you’ll receive a free text message. If you spot the vehicle, the suspect or the child described in the Alert, call 911. If your phone is wireless, you’re no longer helpless.
TOGETHER WE’RE
283-7551
Hunger is closer than you think. Reach out to your local food bank for ways to do your part. Visit FeedingAmerica.org today.
www.peninsulaclarion.com
A child is calling for help.
r Alert-Swing (2col x 7") Advertise in the ServiceOKDirectory today! - Includes Dispatch. NCM P60048D1
AD COUNCIL Product: NCM w/COR 3/4 x 7 Trim: … Bleed: … Gutter: 0 DATE wspaper MECH: mc CW: … PROD: … HEADLINE: … • COPY: 7.25 • LEGAL … … ACCT: … ACCT2: … O: … STUDIO2: … + Partners : 200 Varick St. New York, NY 10014 212 366-3500
Interstate Batteries After Market Body Parts Propane and AMSOIL Tue-Fr 9-5, Sat 10-4 • Closed Sunday/Monday 262-5333 • 800-760-5333
Specializing in Customized Mechanics
• Automotive • RV Repair, • Outboard • Snow Machines
• 4 Wheelers • Welding and Electrical
Call Todd Today! 907-283-1408 12528 KENAI SPUR HIGHWAY KENAI ALASKA, 99611
Serving The PeninSula SinceSINCE 1979 1979 SERVING THEKenai KENAI PENINSULA Business cards carbonless Forms labels/Stickers raffle Tickets letterheads Brochures envelopes Fliers/Posters custom Forms rack/Post cards and Much, Much More!
Printing
Notices
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
TODD’S GARAGE
Moose River RV Parts and Propane
Insulation
Construction
Cleaning
RV Parts
me Saved: 5/19/06 5:29 PM
283-7551
Advertise “By the Month” or save $ with a 3, 6 or 12 month contract. Call Advertising Display 283-7551 to get started!
Lawn Care
CD
Roofing
CLI
Car Repair
AE
Tree Service
CW
Roofing
PRF DQC PRD AD
Construction
erkley+partners
Business Cards Raffle Tickets oFEnvelopes We Color the FUll SPeCtrUM YoUr PrintingRack/Post needS Cards (907) 283-4977 150 Trading Bay Dr. Suite 2 Carbonless Forms Letterheads Custom Forms And Much More Labels/Stickers Brochures Fliers/Posters
WE COLOR THE FULL SPECTRUM OF YOUR PRINTING NEEDS 150 Trading Bay Road, Kenai, AK (907) 283-4977
A12 | Friday, April 26, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
WEEKDAYS MORNING/AFTERNOON A (3) ABC-13 13 (6) MNT-5 5 (8) CBS-11 11 (9) FOX-4 4 (10) NBC-2 2 (12) PBS-7 7
8 AM
B
CABLE STATIONS
(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
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 M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F
M T (43) AMC 131 254 W Th F M T (46) TOON 176 296 W Th F
(47) ANPL 184 282 (49) DISN
(50) NICK (51) FREE (55) TLC
9 AM
M T 173 291 W Th F M T 171 300 W Th F
180 311
M T 183 280 W Th F
(6) MNT-5
5
(8) CBS-11 11 (9) FOX-4
4
4
(10) NBC-2
2
2
(12) PBS-7
7
7
Hot Bench Millionaire Bold Paternity Super Why!
1:30
Strahan & Sara Divorce Divorce The Talk ‘14’ Paternity Simpsons Days of our Lives ‘14’ Pinkalicious Go Luna
2 PM
2:30
General Hospital ‘14’ Judge Judy Judge Judy Face Truth Face Truth Dish Nation Dish Nation Pickler & Ben ‘PG’ Nature Cat Wild Kratts
Clarion BTV = DirecTV
3 PM
3:30
Jeopardy Inside Ed. Live PD Live PD Dr. Phil ‘14’ Wendy Williams Show The Dr. Oz Show ‘PG’ Varied Programs
4 PM
4:30
5 PM
Chicago P.D. The unit targets How I Met a cocaine supplier. ‘14’ Your Mother ‘14’ The Ellen DeGeneres Show KTVA 5 p.m. (N) ‘G’ First Take Two and a Entertainment Funny You Half Men ‘14’ Tonight (N) Should Ask (N) ‘PG’ Judge Judy Judge Judy Channel 2 ‘PG’ ‘PG’ News 5:00 Report (N) The Andes: Kingdoms of BBC World the Sky Challenges of the News ‘G’ Andes. ‘G’
CABLE STATIONS
April APRIL 21 - 27,26, 2019 2019
A = DISH
5:30
6 PM
6:30
(3:00) 2019 NFL Draft Coverage of the second and third rounds of the NFL Draft. (N) (Live)
(3) ABC-13 13
Wendy Williams Show Hot Bench Court Court Millionaire Young & Restless Mod Fam Rachael Ray ‘G’ Live with Kelly and Ryan Steve ‘PG’ Dinosaur Cat in the Sesame St.
In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ M*A*S*H M*A*S*H In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘PG’ Last Man Last Man In the Heat of the Night “Give Me Your Life” (1994) Carl Weathers ‘PG’ In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night Cops ‘PG’ Cops ‘PG’ Cops ‘PG’ Cops ‘PG’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘PG’ In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Last Man Last Man In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ “Sleep.-Enemy” Kerstin’s Favorites LOGO by Lori Goldstein Quacker Factory by Jeanne Bice (N) (Live) ‘G’ Beauty at Any Age (N) ‘G’ Vionic - Footwear “Footwear” (N) (Live) ‘G’ PM Style With Amy Stran Patio & Garden “Scott Living” (N) (Live) ‘G’ Roberta’s Unique Gardens (N) (Live) ‘G’ QVC in the Garden (N) ‘G’ Outdoor Living Garden accents and more. (N) ‘G’ You’re Home with Jill (7:00) Kitchen Unlimited With Carolyn (N) (Live) ‘G’ Jayne & Pat’s Closet (N) (Live) ‘G’ Gourmet Holiday (N) (Live) ‘G’ Outdoor Entertaining ‘G’ JAI Jewelry (N) (Live) ‘G’ Mary Beth’s Closet (N) (Live) ‘G’ Jayne’s Closet (N) (Live) ‘G’ JAI Jewelry (N) (Live) ‘G’ Cuddl Duds: Layers Beauty With Benefits Tools for Efficient Living Isaac Mizrahi Live! (N) ‘G’ Pretty Problem Solvers L. Geller Makeup Studio Susan Graver Style ‘G’ Sandra’s Beauty Secrets (N) (Live) ‘G’ In the Kitchen With David The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Escaping Polygamy ‘14’ Escaping Polygamy ‘14’ Escaping Polygamy ‘14’ Escaping Polygamy ‘14’ Escaping Polygamy ‘14’ Escaping Polygamy ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Grey’s Anatomy ‘14’ Grey’s Anatomy ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Grey’s Anatomy ‘14’ Grey’s Anatomy ‘14’ Grey’s Anatomy ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Grey’s Anatomy ‘14’ Grey’s Anatomy ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ “Abducted: The Carlina White Story” “Terror in the Woods” (2018) Ella West Jerrier. ‘14’ “Believe Me: Abduction” Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘PG’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU NCIS “So It Goes” ‘PG’ NCIS “Personal Day” ‘14’ NCIS ‘14’ NCIS “16 Years” ‘PG’ NCIS “Saviors” ‘14’ NCIS “Day in Court” ‘PG’ NCIS ‘14’ NCIS “React” ‘14’ Chicago Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law-SVU Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Burgers Burgers Burgers Burgers Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Charmed ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ “Total Recall” (2012) Colin Farrell, Kate Beckinsale. “Doctor Strange” (2016, Action) Benedict Cumberbatch. Charmed ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ “S.W.A.T.” (2003, Action) Samuel L. Jackson, Colin Farrell. “Red 2” (2013, Action) Bruce Willis, John Malkovich. Charmed ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ “Red” (2010) Bruce Willis, Morgan Freeman. “Olympus Has Fallen” (2013) Gerard Butler. NBA Basketball Charmed ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones “Pilot” ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ NBA Basketball Charmed ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones Quarantined. ‘14’ SportsCenter (N) (Live) NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) MLB Baseball SportsCenter (N) (Live) NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter Special (N) SportsCenter (N) (Live) NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) NFL Live (N) (Live) College GameDay (N) (Live) NFL Draft Countdown SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) NFL Live (N) (Live) College GameDay (N) NFL Draft Countdown 2019 NFL Draft (N) (Live) First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NFL Live NBA: The Jump Question Around Interruption NFL Live First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NFL Live NBA: The Jump Question Around Interruption College Football ‘G’ First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NFL Live NBA: The Jump Question Around Interruption NFL Live First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) NBA Countdown (N) (Live) The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) Red Bull X Fighters The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) ‘PG’ West Coast Spotlight The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Mariners MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at San Diego Padres. (N) (Live) Mariners The Dan Patrick Show (N) The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) ‘PG’ Wm. Lacrosse The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) Wm. Lacrosse Bar Rescue ‘PG’ Bar Rescue ‘PG’ Bar Rescue ‘PG’ Bar Rescue ‘PG’ Bar Rescue ‘PG’ Two Men Two Men Two Men Two Men Mom Mom Stooges Stooges (:15) “The Great Outdoors” (1988) Dan Aykroyd. (:15) “The Breakfast Club” (1985) Emilio Estevez. “Kindergarten Cop” (1990, Comedy) Arnold Schwarzenegger. Stooges Stooges “XXX” (2002) Vin Diesel. A spy tries to stop an anarchist with weapons. “The Fugitive” (1993, Suspense) Harrison Ford, Tommy Lee Jones. “Men in Black” “Home Alone” (1990) Macaulay Culkin, Joe Pesci. “Home Alone 2: Lost in New York” (1992) Macaulay Culkin. “Men in Black” (1997) Tommy Lee Jones. “Men in Black II” M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H “Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome” (1985) Mel Gibson. “Under Siege” (1992) Steven Seagal, Tommy Lee Jones. “The Hangover Part III” (2013) Stooges Stooges (8:50) “Face/Off” (1997, Action) John Travolta, Nicolas Cage, Joan Allen. (11:50) “Eraser” (1996) Arnold Schwarzenegger, James Caan. (:20) “The Expendables 2” (2012) Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Teen Titans Teen Titans Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Craig Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball We Bare Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Teen Titans Teen Titans Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Craig Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball We Bare Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Teen Titans Teen Titans Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Craig Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball We Bare Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Teen Titans Teen Titans Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Craig Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball We Bare Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Teen Titans Teen Titans Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Craig Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball We Bare Dr. Dee: Alaska Vet ‘14’ Dr. Jeff: RMV The Zoo ‘PG’ Crikey! It’s the Irwins Pit Bulls and Parolees Pit Bulls and Parolees I Shouldn’t Be Alive ‘PG’ Varied Programs Giganto Puppy Pals PJ Masks Vampirina Fancy Vampirina Puppy Pals Puppy Pals PJ Masks PJ Masks Ladybug Ladybug Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Big City Big City Giganto Puppy Pals PJ Masks Vampirina Fancy Vampirina Puppy Pals Puppy Pals PJ Masks PJ Masks Ladybug Ladybug Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Big City Big City Giganto Puppy Pals PJ Masks Vampirina Fancy Vampirina Puppy Pals Puppy Pals PJ Masks PJ Masks Ladybug Ladybug Jessie ‘G’ Big City Big City Giganto Puppy Pals PJ Masks Vampirina Fancy Vampirina Puppy Pals Puppy Pals PJ Masks PJ Masks Ladybug Ladybug Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Big City Big City Giganto Puppy Pals PJ Masks Vampirina Fancy Vampirina Puppy Pals Puppy Pals PJ Masks PJ Masks Ladybug Ladybug Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Big City Big City Corn & Peg PAW Patrol Butterbean Abby PAW Patrol Top Wing PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Blaze Blaze PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Ryan SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Corn & Peg PAW Patrol Butterbean Abby PAW Patrol Top Wing PAW Patrol Ryan Blaze Blaze PAW Patrol PAW Patrol SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Corn & Peg PAW Patrol Ryan Abby PAW Patrol Top Wing PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Blaze Blaze PAW Patrol PAW Patrol SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Corn & Peg PAW Patrol Butterbean Abby PAW Patrol Top Wing PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Blaze Blaze PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Ryan SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Ryan PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol SpongeBob SpongeBob Ryan SpongeBob Reba ‘PG’ 700 Club The 700 Club Movie The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Varied 7 Little Johnstons ‘PG’ Little People, Big World Little People, Big World Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes My 600-Lb. Life ‘PG’ My 600-Lb. Life ‘PG’ 90 Day Fiancé ‘PG’ 7 Little Johnstons ‘PG’ 7 Little Johnstons ‘PG’ 7 Little Johnstons ‘PG’ Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes My 600-Lb. Life “Ashley R’s Story” ‘PG’ 90 Day Fiancé ‘PG’ 7 Little Johnstons ‘PG’ Nate & Jeremiah Nate & Jeremiah My 600-Lb. Life “Schenee’s Story” ‘PG’ My 600-Lb. Life ‘PG’ My 600-Lb. Life ‘PG’ 90 Day Fiancé ‘PG’ 7 Little Johnstons ‘PG’ Sister Wives ‘PG’ Sister Wives ‘PG’ Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress My 600-Lb. Life “Octavia’s Story” ‘PG’ 90 Day Fiancé ‘PG’ 7 Little Johnstons ‘PG’ Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes My 600-Lb. Life “Renee’s Story” ‘PG’ My 600-Lb. Life Justin has eaten his life away. ‘PG’ 90 Day Fiancé ‘PG’
6
B
WE
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
FRIDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING A
B = DirecTV
9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30 1 PM
Good Morning America The View ‘14’ The Doctors ‘14’ Channel 2 Morning Ed Dateline ‘PG’ Providence Providence (7:00) CBS This Morning Let’s Make a Deal ‘PG’ The Price Is Right ‘G’ Hatchett The People’s Court ‘PG’ Judge Mathis ‘PG’ The Real ‘PG’ (7:00) Today Today 3rd Hour Today-Hoda Go Luna Daniel Tiger Daniel Tiger Pinkalicious Sesame St. Splash
4 2 7
(8) WGN-A 239 307
8:30
A = DISH
How I Met Your Mother ‘14’ CBS Evening News Funny You Should Ask (N) ‘PG’ NBC Nightly News With Lester Holt Nightly Business Report ‘G’
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
Paid Program Jeopardy! ‘G’ (N) ‘G’
8:30
9 PM
9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
Wheel of For- 20/20 tune (N) ‘G’
Last Man Last Man CSI: Miami “Kill Clause” Standing ‘PG’ Standing ‘PG’ Deadly jellyfish are used as a weapon. ‘14’ KTVA 6 p.m. Evening News MacGyver Two tourists go missing. (N) ‘PG’ The Big Bang The Big Bang Last Man The Cool Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘14’ Standing ‘14’ Kids ‘14’ Channel 2 Newshour (N) PBS NewsHour (N)
CSI: Miami “Count Me Out” Dateline ‘PG’ An explosion threatens agents’ lives. ‘14’ Hawaii Five-0 (N) ‘14’ Blue Bloods A cop killer comes up for parole. ‘14’ Proven Innocent Levi and Fox 4 News at 9 (N) Madeline uncover more truths. (N) ‘14’ The Blacklist Red seeks help The Blacklist “Rassvet” Kata- Dateline NBC (N) with a tough decision. (N) ‘14’ rina Rostova’s story continues. (N) ‘14’ Washington Alaska InState of the Art The art scene International Jazz Day From Week (N) sight across America. (N) ‘PG’ St. Petersburg (N) ‘G’
ABC News at (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ‘14’ (:37) Nightline (N) 10 (N) DailyMailTV (N)
DailyMailTV (N)
Impractical Jokers ‘14’
Pawn Stars ‘PG’
KTVA Night- (:35) The Late Show With James Corcast Stephen Colbert ‘PG’ den TMZ (N) ‘PG’ TMZ ‘PG’ Entertainment Two and a Tonight Half Men ‘14’ Channel 2 (:34) The Tonight Show Star- (:37) Late News: Late ring Jimmy Fallon ‘14’ Night With Edition (N) Seth Meyers Live From Lincoln Center Amanpour and Company (N) Leslie Odom Jr. performs. ‘G’
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
(3:00) “Sleeping With the “Sleeping With the Enemy” (1991, Suspense) Julia Roberts, Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... How I Met How I Met Elementary “Step Nine” ‘14’ (8) WGN-A 239 307 Enemy” (1991, Suspense) Patrick Bergin, Kevin Anderson. With With With With With With Your Mother Your Mother (3:00) In the Kitchen With Isaac Mizrahi Live! (N) DaretoShareBeauty with Shawn (N) (Live) ‘G’ Fitbit Versa Smartwatch (N) Mally: Color Cosmetics (N) (Live) ‘G’ Today’s Top Tech “Fitbit” (N) (20) QVC 137 317 David (N) (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ “Believe Me: “The Gift” (2015, Suspense) Jason Bateman, Rebecca Hall, Joel Edgerton. “Enough” (2002, Suspense) Jennifer Lopez, Billy Campbell, Juliette Lewis. A (:33) “The Good Mistress” (2014) Annie (:01) “Enough” (2002, Suswoman takes her daughter and flees her abusive husband. Heise. A woman has a one-night stand with pense) Jennifer Lopez, Billy (23) LIFE 108 252 Abduction” An old acquaintance causes trouble for a man and his wife. her friend’s husband. ‘14’ Campbell. Law & Order: “Marvel’s the Avengers” (2012, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans. Superheroes join “Avengers: Age of Ultron” (2015, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruf- Modern Fam- Modern Fam- Modern Fam (28) USA 105 242 SVU forces to save the world from an unexpected enemy. falo. The Avengers reassemble to battle a technological villain. ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ American American Family Guy Family Guy “Old School” (2003, Comedy) Luke Wilson, Will Ferrell, “Fist Fight” (2017, Comedy) Charlie Day, Ice Cube, Tracy ELEAGUE FIFA 19 PS4 “Rush Hour 3” (2007, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker, Dad ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Vince Vaughn. Three men relive their wild past by starting a Morgan. A fired teacher challenges a snitch to a fight after Semis 2. (N) ‘14’ (30) TBS 139 247 Dad ‘14’ Hiroyuki Sanada. fraternity. school. Bones “Woman at the AirBones Witness Protection Bones A lonely teenager is “Snow White & the Huntsman” (2012) Kristen Stewart, Charlize Theron. A “Thor: The Dark World” (2013, Action) Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman. (31) TNT 138 245 port” ‘14’ Program. ‘14’ murdered. ‘14’ huntsman sent to capture Snow White becomes her ally. Thor must save the Nine Realms from an ancient enemy. NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (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
2019 NFL Draft The top athletes available are chosen. From Nashville, Tenn. (N) (Live)
SportsCenter With Scott Van Pelt (N) (Live) UFC Main Event ‘14’
NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. (N Same-day Tape) Women’s College Lacrosse Mariners All Mariners Pre- MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners. From T-Mobile Park in Seattle. (N) (Live) Mariners MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners. From T-Mobile Park in Access game (N) Postgame Seattle. Two and a Two and a Two and a Two and a Two and a Two and a “We’re the Millers” (2013, Comedy) Jennifer Aniston, Jason Sudeikis. A “We’re the Millers” (2013, Comedy) Jennifer Aniston, Jason Sudeikis. A Half Men Half Men Half Men Half Men Half Men Half Men dealer goes to Mexico with a fake family to score drugs. dealer goes to Mexico with a fake family to score drugs. “Expendables (:25) “The Expendables 3” (2014, Action) Sylvester Stallone, Jason Sta“Escape Plan” (2013, Action) Sylvester Stallone, Arnold Schwarzenegger. A “Total Recall” (1990) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Rachel Ticotin. Strange 2” tham. Barney Ross brings in new blood to fight an old associate. security expert must break out of a formidable prison. dreams lead an earthling to intergalactic intrigue. American American Family Guy Family Guy Robot Aqua Teen Lazor Wulf Rick and Your Pretty The Eric An- Mike Tyson Family Guy Family Guy Robot Rick and Your Pretty Dad ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Chicken Hunger ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ Face... Hell dre Show Mysteries ‘14’ ‘14’ Chicken Morty ‘14’ Face... Hell Tanked “Mel’s Drive In Tank” Tanked “All in the Ocean” Animal Cribs “Pot-Bellied Pig Animal Cribs “Bunny Beach Animal Cribs (N) ‘PG’ (:01) Tanked ‘PG’ (:01) Tanked “Adrian Peter- Animal Cribs ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Palace” ‘PG’ Bungalow” ‘PG’ son’s MVP Tank” ‘PG’ Big City Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Coop & Cami Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Sydney to the Sydney to the Coop & Cami Bizaardvark Sydney to the Coop & Cami Andi Mack ‘G’ Sydney to the Bizaardvark Bizaardvark Greens ‘Y7’ Max ‘G’ Max ‘G’ ‘G’ Max ‘G’ Max ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud Crashletes Henry Dan- “The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water” (2015) The Office The Office Friends ‘PG’ (:35) Friends (:10) Friends (:45) Friends House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ (N) ‘PG’ ger ‘G’ Voices of Tom Kenny, Bill Fagerbakke. ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ (3:30) “National Treasure” (2004, Adventure) Nicolas Cage, Diane Kruger. A “National Treasure: Book of Secrets” (2007) Nicolas Cage, Jon Voight. Pretty Little Liars: The Per- The 700 Club “Norm of the North” (2016) man tries to steal the Declaration of Independence. Ben Gates sets out to establish an ancestor’s innocence. fectionists ‘14’ Heather Graham (3:00) 90 Day Fiancé “Where Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to 90 Day Fiancé “Colt & Larissa: Our Journey So Far” Colt and 90 Day Fiancé “Ashley & Jay: Our Journey So Far” Catching 90 Day Fiancé Colt and LarTruth Lies” ‘PG’ the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress Larissa’s relationship. (N) ‘PG’ up with Ashley and Jay. (N) ‘PG’ issa’s relationship. ‘PG’ Gold Rush: Dave Turin’s Gold Rush “Dangerous Gold Rush “Lethal Landslide” Gold Rush: Parker’s Trail Gold Rush “The Monster Mine” Parker explores a lawless (:05) Mummies Unwrapped Gold Rush Parker explores a Lost Mine ‘PG’ Depths” ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ “Mercury Rising” (N) ‘G’ town. (N) ‘14’ ‘PG’ lawless town. ‘14’ Ghost Adventures “Mineral Ghost Adventures “Wester- Ghost Adventures “Lutes Ghost Adventures (N) (Live) Ghost Adventures (N) ‘PG’ Portals to Hell “The Alaskan Ghost Adventures “Stone Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Springs Hotel” ‘PG’ feld House” ‘PG’ Casino” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Hotel” (N) ‘14’ Lion Inn” ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens “The Alien Ancient Aliens “Russia De- Ancient Aliens “The PhaAncient Aliens: Declassified “The Supernatural Ones” Beings with otherworldly abilities. (N) ‘PG’ (:03) Ancient Aliens: DeclasAgenda” ‘PG’ classified” ‘PG’ raoh’s Curse” ‘PG’ sified ‘PG’ Live PD “Live PD -- 04.20.19” ‘14’ (:06) Live PD: Rewind “Live Live PD “Live PD -- 04.26.19” (N Same-day Tape) ‘14’ Live PD “Live PD -- 04.26.19” PD: Rewind No. 212” (N) ‘14’ ‘14’
Island Hunt- Island Hunt- Island Hunt- Island Hunt- HGTV Smart Home 2019 Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home (60) HGTV 112 229 ers ‘G’ ers ‘G’ ers ‘G’ ers ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive (61) FOOD 110 231 Shark Tank All-female golf Shark Tank Aromatherapy (65) CNBC 208 355 caddy company. ‘PG’ sprays. ‘PG’ Tucker Carlson Tonight (N) Hannity (N) (67) FNC 205 360 (81) COM (82) SYFY
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ The Ingraham Angle (N) Fox News at Night With The Ingraham Angle Fox News at Night With Shannon Bream (N) Shannon Bream (:10) South (:45) South (:15) South Park “World War (5:50) South (:25) South South Park South Park Chappelle’s Chappelle’s Chappelle’s Chappelle’s The New Ne- Key & Peele Key & Peele (:35) Key & 107 249 Park ‘MA’ Park ‘MA’ Zimmerman” ‘MA’ Park ‘MA’ Park ‘MA’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ Show ‘14’ Show ‘14’ Show ‘14’ Show ‘14’ groes ‘14’ ‘14’ Peele ‘14’ (2:15) “Limit- “Ant-Man” (2015, Action) Paul Rudd, Michael Douglas, Evangeline Lilly. Ant- “Iron Man” (2008, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Terrence Howard, Gwyneth Paltrow. A billion- (9:56) Fu(:27) Futura- Futurama Gary and His 122 244 less” Man uses his shrinking skills to battle Yellowjacket. aire dons an armored suit to fight criminals. turama ‘PG’ ma ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Demons
PREMIUM STATIONS ! HBO
303 504
^ HBO2 304 505 + MAX
311 516
5 SHOW 319 546 8 TMC
329 554
Shark Tank ‘PG’
Shark Tank ‘PG’
Shark Tank A capsule that keeps beverages hot. ‘PG’ Tucker Carlson Tonight
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
(3:45) “Blockers” (2018, Comedy) Leslie REAL Sports With Bryant VICE News “Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again” (2018, Musical Comedy) Mann. Three parents chase down their daugh- Gumbel ‘PG’ Tonight (N) Amanda Seyfried. Pregnant Sophie reunites with her mom’s ters on prom night. ‘R’ ‘14’ old pals and beaus. ‘PG-13’ (3:35) “Down a Dark Hall” (:15) “Knock Knock” (2015, Suspense) Keanu Reeves, Ana Game of Thrones ‘MA’ (:02) Barry Veep “South (2018, Horror) AnnaSophia de Armas, Lorenza Izzo. An architect finds himself at the “What?!” ‘MA’ Carolina” ‘MA’ Robb. ‘PG-13’ mercy of two sinister seductresses. ‘R’ (3:10) “The Terminal” (2004) Tom Hanks. (:20) “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” (2017) (:20) “Blindspotting” (2018) Daveed Diggs. A European living in an airport befriends a Frances McDormand. A woman tangles with the police over A police shooting tests the bond between two stewardess. ‘PG-13’ her daughter’s murder. ‘R’ best friends. ‘R’ (3:00) “Gods and Monsters” “Quantum of Solace” (2008, Action) Daniel Craig, Olga “American Assassin” (2017, Action) Dylan O’Brien, Michael (1998, Biography) Ian McKel- Kurylenko, Mathieu Amalric. James Bond seeks revenge for Keaton, Sanaa Lathan. Three agents join forces to battle a len. ‘R’ the death of Vesper Lynd. ‘PG-13’ mysterious operative. ‘R’ (2:50) “The (:45) “Pride & Prejudice” (2005, Drama) Keira Knightley, Matthew MacFa- “Adventureland” (2009, Comedy-Drama) Jesse Eisenberg, Death of dyen, Judi Dench. A man begins a convoluted courtship with a young woman. Kristen Stewart. A college graduate takes a lowly job at an Stalin” ‘PG’ amusement park. ‘R’
April 21 - 27, 2019
Shark Tank All-female golf caddy company. ‘PG’ Hannity
Clarion TV
Real Time With Bill Maher (N Wyatt Real Time With Bill Maher Wyatt Same-day Tape) ‘MA’ Cenac’s Prob- ‘MA’ Cenac’s Problem Areas lem Areas “Crazy Rich Asians” (2018, Romance-Comedy) Constance “Anchorman: The Legend Wu. A woman learns more about her boyfriend and his rich of Ron Burgundy” (2004) family. ‘PG-13’ Will Ferrell. Warrior “The White Mountain” Warrior “The White Mountain” (10:50) “Game of Death” Mai Ling offers Ah Sahm a Mai Ling offers Ah Sahm a (1979, Adventure) Bruce Lee, way out. (N) ‘MA’ way out. ‘MA’ Gig Young. ‘R’ “The Catcher Was a Spy” (2018, Suspense) (:35) The Chi “Past Due” (:35) Billions Paul Rudd. A baseball player becomes a spy Brandon gets a new opportu- ‘MA’ during World War II. ‘R’ nity. ‘MA’ “Extract” (2009) Jason Bateman. A freak (:35) “Coyote Ugly” (2000) Piper Perabo. workplace accident throws a factory owner’s A struggling songwriter cuts loose in a rowdy life into chaos. ‘R’ New York bar. ‘R’ © Tribune Media Services
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Peninsula Clarion | Friday, April 26, 2019 | A13
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APRIL 27, 2019
9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30 1 PM
1:30
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2:30
2019 NFL Draft Day three of the NFL Draft from Nashville, Tenn. (N) (Live)
(3) ABC-13 13 (6) MNT-5
8 AM
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Florida Bow Hunting Adventure Turkeys ‘PG’ Quest Paid Program The James ‘G’ Brown Show To Be Announced RightThisMinute (N)
(10) NBC-2
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(12) PBS-7
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Let’s Go Luna! ‘Y’
CABLE STATIONS
SA
3:30
Hearts of He- The Great Dr. roes (N) ‘G’ Scott (N) ‘G’ (3) AB
Xploration Xploration Wild America Career Day Outer Space Weird but ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘PG’ True ‘PG’ Animal Res- Dog Tales ‘G’ To Be Announced cue ‘G’ To Be Announced Consumer 101 (N) ‘G’
3 PM
Sports Stars Laura McKen- Pets.TV ‘G’ Exploration Wonderama Wonderama Scott Martin Lindner’s of Tomorrow zie’s Traveler W/Jarod (N) ‘G’ ‘G’ Challenge Angling Edge (N) ‘G’ Miller ‘PG’ ‘G’ PGA of America Special (N) PGA Tour Golf Zurich Classic of New Orleans, Third Round. From TPC Louisiana in Avondale, La. (N) (Live) PBC Face to NASCAR Monster Energy Series GEICO Face (N) 500, Qualifying. From Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Ala. (N) Premier League Soccer Brighton & Hove Albion FC vs New- Premier NHL Hockey Conference Semifinal: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) castle United FC. (N) (Live) League Goal Zone Nature Cat ‘Y’ Ready Jet Wild Kratts ‘Y’ Odd Squad Arthur ‘Y’ It’s Sew Easy Quilting Arts Beads, Knit and Cro- MotorWeek Weekends Go! ‘Y’ ‘Y’ ‘G’ The Festival of Baubles, and chet Now! ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ With Yankee Quilts. ‘G’ Jewels ‘G’ ‘G’
Wipeout Obstacles include Big Ball-ville. ‘PG’
(6) M
Designing Spaces ‘PG’
(8) CB
Hope in the Wild (N) ‘G’
(9) FO
Leverage “The Hot Potato NBC Nightly Job” The team recovers a News With (10) N stolen object. ‘PG’ Lester Holt The WoodHome Diag- The This Old House Hour wright’s Shop nosis ‘G’ Selecting pavers for hard (12) P ‘G’ scape. (N) ‘G’
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CAB
Married ... Married ... 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’ 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’ (8) WGN-A 239 307 With (8) W With (6:00) Saturday Morning Q “Fitbit” (N) (Live) ‘G’ Fitbit Versa Smartwatch (N) Dooney & Bourke “All Easy Pay Offers” Prestigious brand of Fitbit Versa Smartwatch (N) Isaac Mizrahi Live! (N) (Live) ‘G’ (20) QVC 137 317 (20) Q (Live) ‘G’ handbags. (N) (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program “Girl in the Box” (2016) Zane Holtz, Addison “Abducted: The Carlina White Story” (2012, “Who Killed JonBenét?” (2016, Docudrama) Eion Bailey, “Cleveland Abduction” ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ Timlin. A woman is kidnapped by a couple Docudrama) Aunjanue Ellis, Keke Palmer, Michel Gill, Julia Campbell. Police investigate the murder of (2015) Taryn Manning, Ray- (23) L (23) LIFE 108 252 ‘G’ and becomes their slave. ‘14’ Sherri Shepherd. ‘PG’ 6-year-old JonBenét Ramsey. ‘14’ mond Cruz. ‘14’ Growing Up NCIS Senator asks Gibbs for NCIS “Murder 2.0” ‘14’ NCIS “Caged” Women’s NCIS Ducky is stabbed at a NCIS British prisoners flee “Marvel’s the Avengers” (2012, Action) Robert Downey Jr. Superheroes join (28) USA 105 242 Chrisley ‘14’ help. ‘PG’ (28) U forces to save the world from an unexpected enemy. prison riot. ‘14’ crime scene. ‘14’ stateside. ‘14’ “Olympus Has Fallen” (2013, Action) Gerard Butler, Aaron “Rush Hour” (1998, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker, Tom “Rush Hour 3” (2007, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker, “Fist Fight” (2017, Comedy) Charlie Day, Ice Cube, Tracy Wilkinson. Mismatched police partners seek a kidnapped girl. Hiroyuki Sanada. Carter and Lee battle Chinese gangsters Morgan. A fired teacher challenges a snitch to a fight after (30) TBS 139 247 Eckhart, Morgan Freeman. A disgraced agent must rescue (30) T the president. in Paris. school. (7:00) “The Incredible Hulk” (2008, Action) “Snow White & the Huntsman” (2012) Kristen Stewart, Charlize Theron. A “Thor: The Dark World” (2013, Action) Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman. NBA Tip-Off NBA Basketball First Round: (31) TNT 138 245 Edward Norton, Liv Tyler. (31) T huntsman sent to capture Snow White becomes her ally. Thor must save the Nine Realms from an ancient enemy. (N) (Live) Teams TBA. (Live) 2019 NFL Draft Day three of the NFL Draft from Nashville, Tenn. (N) (Live) UFC Fight Night: Jacare vs. (34) ESPN 140 206 (34) E Hermansson - Prelims College Softball Georgia at South Carolina. (N) (Live) College Softball Florida at Auburn. From Jane B. Moore UFC Main Event ‘14’ UFC UFC Fight Night: Jacare vs. Hermansson - EA Sports Madden NFL 19 (35) ESPN2 144 209 (35) ES Field in Auburn, Ala. (N) (Live) Prelims (N) (Live) Bowl (N) (Live) Paid Program Paid Program PBA Bowling Playoffs: Round of 16. From Portland, Maine. MLS Soccer Portland Timbers at Toronto FC. From BMO Timbers Post- Bundesliga Soccer FC Augsburg vs Bayer 04 Leverkusen. Mariners All (36) ROOT 426 687 ‘G’ (36) R ‘G’ Field in Toronto. (N) (Live) Game (Taped) Access
Bar Rescue “Twin vs. Twin” Bar Rescue A western bar. Bar Rescue ‘PG’ “Friday” (1995) Ice Cube, Chris Tucker. Buddies in South “Next Friday” (2000, Comedy) Ice Cube, Mike Epps, Justin Pierce. A young “Friday After (38) PARMT 241 241 ‘PG’ (38) PA ‘PG’ Central L.A. ponder repaying a dealer. man lives with kin who won the lottery. Next” The Rifle“Scarface” (1983, Crime Drama) Al Pacino, Michelle Pfeiffer, Steven Bauer. A Cuban immigrant fights to the top of Miami’s “Total Recall” (1990) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Rachel Ticotin. Strange “Escape Plan” (2013, Action) (43) AMC 131 254 man ‘G’ (43) A drug trade. dreams lead an earthling to intergalactic intrigue. Sylvester Stallone. Ben 10 (N) Teen Titans Teen Titans World of World of World of World of World of Total Drama- Total Drama- Victor and World of World of World of Total Drama Total Drama (46) TOON 176 296 ‘Y7’ (46) T Go! ‘PG’ Go! ‘PG’ Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Rama Rama Valentino Gumball Gumball Gumball My Cat From Hell “Breaking My Cat From Hell “Mayday! My Cat From Hell “Nightmare My Cat From Hell “Ferocious My Cat From Hell “Pee The Zoo “The Great Gaur The Zoo “A Warthog Named The Vet Life Dr. Blue and Dr. (47) ANPL 184 282 Bald” ‘PG’ (47) A Mayday!” ‘PG’ on Cat Street” ‘PG’ Foster” ‘PG’ Battle” ‘PG’ Move” ‘PG’ Peaches” ‘PG’ Ross help goat. ‘PG’ Big City Bizaardvark Bizaardvark Coop & Cami “Mulan” (1998, Children’s) Voices of Ming-Na (:35) Sydney Coop & Cami Coop & Cami Sydney to the Sydney to the Bunk’d ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Jessie “G.I. Jessie” Jessie (49) DISN 173 291 Greens ‘Y7’ ‘G’ (49) D ‘G’ Wen, Eddie Murphy. to the Max Max ‘G’ Max ‘G’ gets a big surprise. ‘G’ (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
SpongeBob
Rise of theTurtles “Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides” Say Yes to Say Yes to the Dress the Dress Deadliest Catch “Swarm Chasers” ‘PG’ Food Paradise Ghost pepper burger in Texas. ‘G’ Swamp People “Leviathans” ‘PG’ Flipping Vegas A former frat house needs repair work. ‘PG’
Alvinnn!!! Alvinnn!!! Ryan’s Mys- SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob The Loud The Loud (50) N and and tery House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ (:10) “Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa” (2008, Children’s) (:10) “Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted” (2012, Chil- (:15) “Jumanji” (1995, Children’s) Robin Williams, Bonnie Hunt. A sinister (:20) “Toy (51) F Voices of Ben Stiller, Chris Rock. dren’s) Voices of Ben Stiller, Chris Rock. board game puts its players in mortal jeopardy. Story” Say Yes to Say Yes to 90 Day Fiancé “Elizabeth & Andrei: Our Continuing Journey” 90 Day Fiancé “Russ & Paola: Our Continuing Journey” Catching up with Russ and Paola. 90 Day Fiancé ‘PG’ (55) T the Dress the Dress Elizabeth and Andrei navigate life. ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Deadliest Catch “Rival Sur- Deadliest Catch “Knife in the Mysteries of the Abandoned Mysteries of the Abandoned Mysteries of the Abandoned Mysteries of the Abandoned Mysteries of the Abandoned (56) D vival” ‘PG’ Ribs” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Bizarre Foods: Delicious Delicious Delicious Paranormal Caught on Cam- Paranormal Caught on Cam- Haunted Hospitals ‘PG’ Haunted Hospitals “Campus Portals to Hell “The Alaskan (57) T Destinations ‘G’ Destinations Destinations era ‘PG’ era ‘PG’ Haunting” ‘PG’ Hotel” ‘14’ Swamp People “No Man’s Swamp People “Cow KillSwamp People “Bringing the Navy SEALs: America’s Secret Warriors “Part 1” The his- Navy SEALs: America’s Secret Warriors “Part 2” The (58) H Land” ‘PG’ ers” ‘PG’ Heat” ‘PG’ tory of the SEALs’ predecessors. ‘14’ SEALs execute high-profile missions. ‘14’ To Be Announced Zombie House Flipping Live PD “Live PD -- 03.02.18” Riding along with law enforcement. ‘14’ Live PD “Live PD -- 06.09.18” Riding along with law enforceAshlee and Duke clash over ment. ‘14’ (59) A designs. ‘PG’ Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Property Brothers “Living in Property Brothers “Uplift and Property Brothers “A Differ- Property Brothers “A Little (60) H Harmony” ‘PG’ Electrify” ‘PG’ ent Dream” ‘PG’ Bit of Home” ‘PG’ Trisha’s Trisha’s The Pioneer The Pioneer The Kitchen “Spring Into Ac- 30-Minute 30-Minute Family Food Showdown ‘G’ Worst Cooks in America ‘G’ Guy’s Grocery Games “No- Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ (61) F Southern Southern Woman ‘G’ Woman ‘G’ tion” (N) ‘G’ Meals ‘G’ Meals ‘G’ Shop Showdown” ‘G’ Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Undercover Boss “The Dw- Undercover Boss ‘PG’ Undercover Boss Undercover Boss “Vivint” (65) C ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ yer Group” ‘PG’ “Menchie’s” ‘14’ ‘PG’ America’s News Headquarters (N) America’s News Headquar- The Journal Editorial Report America’s News Headquarters (N) Fox Report with Jon Scott Life, Liberty & Levin (67) F ters (N) (N) Parks and (:45) Parks and Recreation Parks and Parks and Parks and Parks and Parks and Parks and Parks and Parks and Parks and Parks and Parks and “That’s My Boy” (2012, Com (81) C Recreation “Pawnee Zoo” ‘PG’ Recreation Recreation Recreation Recreation Recreation Recreation Recreation Recreation Recreation Recreation Recreation edy) Adam Sandler. “Shadows of the Dead” (2016, Horror) Kennedy Tucker, “Hellboy II: The Golden Army” (2008, Action) Ron Perlman, Selma Blair. “I, Frankenstein” (2014) Aaron Eckhart. Frankenstein’s crea- “Devil” (2010, Horror) Chris Messina, Logan (82) S Thomas Miguel Ruff, Taylor Jorgensen. ‘MA’ Hellboy and his team battle an underworld prince. ture gets into a war involving immortals. Marshall-Green, Geoffrey Arend.
PREMIUM STATIONS
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
PRE
Sesame Esme & Roy (8:55) “Ramona and Beezus” (2010, (:40) “Shanghai Knights” (2003, Comedy) Jackie Chan, (:35) “Jonah Hex” (2010, Action) Josh VICE Special Report: The (:15) “Deadpool 2” (2018, Children’s) Joey King, Selena Gomez, John Owen Wilson. Chon Wang and his comrades shake up Victo- Brolin, Megan Fox. A supernatural gunslinger Future of Work ‘14’ Action) Ryan Reynolds, Josh ! H ! HBO 303 504 Street (N) ‘Y’ (N) ‘Y’ Corbett. ‘G’ rian England. ‘PG-13’ faces an old enemy. ‘PG-13’ Brolin. ‘R’ “Date Night” (2010) Steve Carell, Tina Fey. Real Time With Bill Maher Wyatt “BlacKkKlansman” (2018, Comedy-Drama) John David (:15) “Native Son” (2019, Drama) Ashton Sanders, Margaret REAL Sports With Bryant ‘MA’ Cenac’s Prob- Washington, Adam Driver. Ron Stallworth works under cover Qualley, Nick Robinson. A young African-American man Gumbel ‘PG’ ^ HBO2 304 505 A case of mistaken identity leads to a wild ^ H adventure. ‘PG-13’ lem Areas to infiltrate the KKK. ‘R’ comes of age. ‘NR’ (6:55) “The (:25) “Grosse Pointe Blank” (1997, Ro(:15) “Upgrade” (2018, Science Fiction) Logan Marshall(11:55) “Unfriended: Dark Web” (2018) “Justice League” (2017, Action) Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Warrior “The mance-Comedy) John Cusack, Minnie Driver, Green, Betty Gabriel. A man uses superhuman strength to Colin Woodell. Something sinister targets a Gal Gadot. Batman, Wonder Woman and other heroes unite Itchy Onion” + M + MAX 311 516 House” ‘R’ Dan Aykroyd. ‘R’ punish his wife’s killers. ‘R’ group of online friends. ‘R’ to battle evil. ‘PG-13’ ‘MA’ (7:00) “Molly’s Game” (2017, Biography) “Midnight Sun” (2018) Bella Thorne. A “The Forgotten” (2004) Julianne Moore. A (:35) “I Feel Pretty” (2018, Comedy) Amy Schumer, Michelle “Molly’s Game” (2017) Jessica Chastain. Molly Bloom runs high-stakes poker games for 5 SH 5 SHOW 319 546 Jessica Chastain, Idris Elba, Michael Cera. ‘R’ teen who can’t be exposed to sunlight finds psychiatrist tells a woman her dead son never Williams, Rory Scovel. A woman gains a renewed sense of romance. ‘PG-13’ existed. ‘PG-13’ self-confidence. ‘PG-13’ the wealthy. ‘R’ (:15) “The Back-up Plan” (2010, Romance-Comedy) Jen“Diary of a Mad Black Woman” (2005, Comedy-Drama) “Thank You for Your Service” (2017, War) Miles Teller, “Midnight Run” (1988, Comedy) Robert De Niro, Charles Haley Bennett, Joe Cole. U.S. soldiers deal with emotional Grodin, Yaphet Kotto. A bounty hunter and an accused em- 8 T 8 TMC 329 554 nifer Lopez. A single woman becomes pregnant, then meets Kimberly Elise, Steve Harris. A woman starts over after her her ideal man. ‘PG-13’ husband leaves her. ‘PG-13’ and physical scars. ‘R’ bezzler must duck the mob. ‘R’
14 SATURDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING A
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Wipeout “The Cat-Face Shirt” Obstacles include Fail Boat. ‘PG’ Innovation Hope in the Nation Wild (N) ‘G’ To Be Announced
5 PM
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6 PM
(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 241 241 131 254
(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
How I Met Your Mother ‘14’ Frontiers ‘G’
How I Met Your Mother ‘14’ CBS Weekend News
6:30
7 PM
7:30
Last Man Last Man Madam Secretary Jay gets Standing ‘PG’ Standing ‘PG’ kidnapped in Nice, France. ‘14’ The Listener “In Our Midst” Ransom “Broken Record” ‘14’ (N) ‘PG’ MasterChef The Kidz Bop Kids stop by. ‘PG’
NHL Hockey Conference Semifinal: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Martha Stew- Martha Bakes America’s Christopher PBS Newsart-Cooking ‘G’ Test Kitchen Kimball’s Milk Hour WeekStreet end (N)
CABLE STATIONS (8) WGN-A 239 307
(43) AMC
4:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
April APRIL 21 - 27,27, 2019 2019 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
Rock the Park Vacation Cre- Family Feud Family Feud Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel of For- American Idol “214 (Disney Night)” The contestants perform 20/20 (N) (N) ‘G’ ation (N) ‘G’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ tune ‘G’ Disney songs. ‘PG’
(3) ABC-13 13 (6) MNT-5
4 PM
TV A =Clarion DISH B = DirecTV
Chicago P.D. “Promise” An il- Murdoch Mysteries Murdoch legal immigrant’s murder. ‘14’ works with Brackenreid’s nephew. ‘PG’ FBI ‘14’ 48 Hours (N) 9-1-1 “Broken” A power outage at the call center. ‘14’
Extra (N) ‘PG’
American Ninja Warrior Competitors tackle six obstacles. ‘PG’ The First Mr. Box OfFamily ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’
Heartland “Out of the Shadows” Tim rallies the family to take a ride. ‘PG’ KTVA Night- Castle “XY” Castle searches cast for Beckett. ‘PG’ Two and a Two and a Gordon Ramsay’s 24 Hours Mike & Molly Half Men ‘14’ Half Men ‘14’ to Hell and Back “Social” ‘14’ ‘14’
Person of Interest ‘14’ Mike & Molly ‘14’
(:05) Pawn Stars ‘PG’
Pawn Stars Chicago P.D. “Home” A meth Dateline NBC Channel 2 (:29) Saturday Night Live ‘14’ “Phoning It In” lab bust uncovers a scam. ‘14’ News: Late ‘PG’ Edition (N) Consuelo Midsomer Murders “Market Vera “Young Gods” Troubled past of a sports Endeavour on Masterpiece “Cartouche” Austin City Limits SingerMack Wealth- for Murder” Woman is battered fanatic. ‘PG’ Mysterious death. ‘14’ songwriter Father John Misty. Track to death. ‘PG’ ‘PG’
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’ Gone A woman’s daughter is “Ghost Rider” (2007, Action) Nicolas Cage, Eva Mendes, Wes Bentley. A Cops ‘PG’ Person of Interest “SNAFU” kidnapped. ‘14’ motorcycle stuntman is a supernatural agent of vengeance. ‘14’ Fitbit Versa Smartwatch (N) Dooney & Bourke “All Easy Pay Offers” Prestigious brand of Fitbit Versa Smartwatch (N) Dyson: Designs for Living philosophy - beauty “All Easy Pay Offers” (N) (Live) ‘G’ Spring Cleaning “Dyson” (N) (Live) ‘G’ handbags. (N) (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (N) (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (3:00) “Cleveland Abduc“I Am Elizabeth Smart” (2017, Docudrama) Alana Boden, Smart Justice: The Jayme Closs Case The Smart Justice: The Jayme Closs Case The (:01) Cleveland Abduction: (:01) Smart Justice: The tion” (2015) Taryn Manning, Skeet Ulrich, Deirdre Lovejoy. Elizabeth Smart endures abduction and rescue of Jayme Closs. (N) ‘14’ abduction and rescue of Jayme Closs. ‘14’ Beyond the Headlines ‘14’ Jayme Closs Case ‘14’ Raymond Cruz. ‘14’ months of brutality by her captors. ‘14’ “Marv-Aveng- “Avengers: Age of Ultron” (2015, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruf- “Ant-Man” (2015, Action) Paul Rudd, Michael Douglas, Evangeline Lilly. Ant- (:05) “Iron Man” (2008, Action) Robert Downey Jr. A billioners” falo. The Avengers reassemble to battle a technological villain. Man uses his shrinking skills to battle Yellowjacket. aire dons an armored suit to fight criminals. “Old School” (2003, Comedy) Luke Wilson, Will Ferrell, The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Full Frontal With Samantha Full Frontal With Samantha The Last O.G. “College Vince Vaughn. Three men relive their wild past by starting a Theory ‘14’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘14’ Theory ‘14’ Theory ‘14’ Bee Reaffirming the First Bee Reaffirming the First “Scenario” Road Trip” fraternity. Amendment. (N) ‘MA’ Amendment. ‘MA’ ‘MA’ (2008) (3:00) NBA Basketball First Round: Teams NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live) Inside the NBA (N) (Live) NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. The Last O.G. ‘MA’ TBA. (N Subject to Blackout) UFC Fight Night: Jacare vs. 2018 World Series of Poker 2018 World Series of Poker SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter Hermansson - Prelims From Las Vegas. From Las Vegas. Overwatch League (N) (Live) SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter NFL Combine Welcome/NFL Welcome/NFL EA Sports Madden NFL NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. (N) 19 Bowl (Taped) Mariners All Mariners Pre- MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners. From T-Mobile Park in Seattle. (N) (Live) Mariners MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners. From T-Mobile Park in Seattle. Mariners Access game (N) Postgame Postgame (3:30) “Friday After Next” (2002, Comedy) “Friday” (1995) Ice Cube, Chris Tucker. Buddies in South “Next Friday” (2000, Comedy) Ice Cube, Mike Epps, Justin Pierce. A young “Friday After Next” (2002) Ice Cube. Two cousins land jobs Ice Cube, Mike Epps. Central L.A. ponder repaying a dealer. man lives with kin who won the lottery. as security guards at a shopping mall. (3:00) “Escape Plan” (2013) Sylvester Stal- “Gran Torino” (2008, Drama) Clint Eastwood, Christopher Carley, Bee Vang. The Son Eli brings Pete home (:05) The Son “Numunuu” ‘14’ (:10) “Open Range” (2003) Robert Duvall, Kevin Costner. lone, Arnold Schwarzenegger. A veteran faces his longtime prejudices. from Mexico. ‘14’ Cattle herdsmen battle a ruthless rancher in 1882. Dragon Ball Z Dragon Ball Rick and Rick and Family Guy Family Guy Dragon Ball My Hero Aca- Neverland Sword Art JoJo-DiaBlack Clover Boruto: Na- Naruto: Ship- Hunter X Attack on Kai ‘Y7’ Super ‘PG’ Morty ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Super ‘PG’ demia Online mond (N) ‘14’ ruto Next puden Hunter ‘PG’ Titan ‘MA’ The Vet Life “California Drea- The Vet Life “Dr. Blue Gets The Vet Life “A Tale of Two The Vet Life: Bonus Tails The Vet Life “A Boy Who (:02) The Secret Life of (:02) The Zoo “Giraffe in the The Vet Life “A Boy Who min”’ ‘PG’ Tanked” ‘PG’ Tails” ‘PG’ (N) ‘PG’ Spayed Wolf” ‘PG’ the Zoo City” ‘PG’ Spayed Wolf” ‘PG’ Sydney to the Sydney to the Coop & Cami Coop & Cami “Monsters, Inc.” (2001, Children’s) Voices of (:40) “Finding Dory” (2016, Children’s) Voices of Ellen De- Coop & Cami Andi Mack ‘G’ (:25) Raven’s Bizaardvark Bizaardvark Max ‘G’ Max ‘G’ John Goodman, Billy Crystal. Generes, Albert Brooks, Ed O’Neill. Home ‘G’ ‘G’ The Loud The Loud Henry Dan- Henry Danger “Danger Games” Dr. Minyak Game Shak- Cousins for SpongeBob SpongeBob The Office The Office Friends ‘PG’ (:35) Friends (:10) Friends (:45) Friends House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ ger ‘G’ plans to ruin a concert. ‘G’ ers (N) ‘G’ Life (N) ‘G’ ‘PG’ ‘14’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ (3:20) “Toy Story” (1995, Children’s) Voices (:20) “Toy Story 2” (1999) Voices of Tom Hanks. Animated. (:25) “Zootopia” (2016, Children’s) Voices of Ginnifer Goodwin. Animated. (9:55) “Real Steel” (2011, Action) Hugh Jackman. A boxing of Tom Hanks, Tim Allen. Toys rescue Woody from a collector. Police rabbit Judy Hopps joins forces with a wily fox. promoter and his son build a robot fighter. (3:00) 90 Day Fiancé Nicole and Azan’s long-distance roTrading Spaces “Back to Trading Spaces “In It to Twin Nate & Jeremiah by Design Outdaughtered ‘PG’ Trading Spaces “A Surprise Trading Spaces “In It to Twin mance. ‘PG’ School” ‘G’ It” (N) ‘G’ (N) ‘PG’ in the Truck” ‘G’ It” ‘G’ Mysteries of the Abandoned Mysteries of the Abandoned Mysteries of the Abandoned Mysteries of the Abandoned Mummies Unwrapped (N) ‘PG’ Mummies Unwrapped ‘PG’ Mummies Unwrapped ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures “Leslie’s Ghost Adventures “Kennedy Ghost Adventures “Hotel Ghost Adventures “Witches Ghost Adventures (N) ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures “Astoria Ghost Adventures “Norblad Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Family Tree” ‘PG’ Mine” ‘PG’ Léger” ‘PG’ In Magna” ‘PG’ Underground” ‘PG’ Hostel” ‘PG’ “Hacksaw Ridge” (2016, War) Andrew Garfield, Sam Worthington, Luke Bracey. Medic Des- “American Sniper” (2014, War) Bradley Cooper, Sienna Miller, Jake McDorman. Navy (:05) American Pickers ‘PG’ (:03) “American Sniper” mond Doss becomes a hero during World War II. SEAL Chris Kyle logs an incredible number of kills. (2014) Bradley Cooper. Live PD “Live PD -- 04.19.19” ‘14’ (:06) Live PD: Rewind “Live Live PD “Live PD -- 04.27.19” (N Same-day Tape) ‘14’ Live PD “Live PD -- 04.27.19” PD: Rewind No. 213” (N) ‘14’ ‘14’
Property Brothers “Renova- Property Brothers “Tight (60) HGTV 112 229 tion Therapy” ‘PG’ Transformation” ‘PG’ Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ (61) FOOD 110 231 (65) CNBC 208 355 (67) FNC
205 360
(81) COM
107 249
(82) SYFY
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Property Brothers “Cool Un- Love It or List It “Opportunity Love It or List It ‘PG’ 90 Day Dream Home (N) ‘G’ Love It or List It “All Work Love It or List It ‘PG’ der Pressure” ‘PG’ in the Attic” ‘PG’ and No Play” ‘PG’ Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ Restaurant: Impossible Diners, Drive-Ins and Diners, Drive-Ins and Restaurant: Impossible ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ Dives ‘G’ Dives ‘G’ Undercover Boss “UnderUndercover Boss “Mood Undercover Boss “Moe’s Undercover Boss “Painting Undercover Boss ‘PG’ Undercover Boss “The Dw- Paid Program Paid Program American Greed “Sholam cover Employee” ‘PG’ Media” ‘PG’ Southwest Grill” ‘PG’ With a Twist” ‘PG’ yer Group” ‘PG’ ‘G’ ‘G’ Weiss” ‘PG’ Watters’ World (N) Justice With Judge Jeanine The Greg Gutfeld Show (N) Watters’ World Justice With Judge Jeanine The Greg Gutfeld Show Watters’ World Justice With Judge Jeanine (N) (3:00) “That’s My Boy” (2012) Adam Sandler. A young (5:50) “Little Nicky” (2000) Adam Sandler. The son of Satan “That’s My Boy” (2012, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Andy Samberg. A young “The Interview” (2014, Comedy) James man’s estranged father tries to reconnect with him. must retrieve his brothers in New York City. man’s estranged father tries to reconnect with him. Franco, Seth Rogen, Lizzy Caplan. (:15) “Iron Man” (2008, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Terrence Howard, Gwyneth Paltrow. A “Marvel’s the Avengers” (2012, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans. Superheroes join (:02) Alien (:33) Futura- (:03) Futura- (:33) Futurabillionaire dons an armored suit to fight criminals. forces to save the world from an unexpected enemy. News Desk ma ‘PG’ ma ‘PG’ ma ‘14’
PREMIUM STATIONS ! HBO
303 504
^ HBO2 304 505 + MAX
311 516
5 SHOW 319 546 8 TMC
329 554
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
(3:15) “Deadpool 2” (2018, (:15) “The Darkest Minds” (2018, Science Fiction) Amandla 2019 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony Inductees include Def Leppard. Game of Thrones ‘MA’ Wyatt (:45) “RamAction) Ryan Reynolds, Josh Stenberg. Teens use powerful new abilities to take back their (N) ‘14’ Cenac’s Prob- page” (2018) Brolin. ‘R’ future. ‘PG-13’ lem Areas (:05) “The Meg” (2018, Science Fiction) Jason Statham, Li Gentleman Jack Anne Lister “The Wicker Man” (2006) Nicolas Cage. (:45) “Twisted” (2004, Suspense) Ashley Judd, Samuel L. Last Week (:05) “Green Zone” (2010, Bingbing, Rainn Wilson. A diver must confront a 75-foot-long returns to Shibden Hall. ‘MA’ A lawman finds sinister forces at work on a Jackson, Andy Garcia. An inspector investigates the deaths of Tonight-John Action) Matt Damon, Greg prehistoric shark. ‘PG-13’ secluded isle. ‘PG-13’ her ex-lovers. ‘R’ Kinnear. ‘R’ (3:30) Warrior (:35) Warrior Ah Sahm pays a (:20) Warrior (:10) Warrior “The White “Stakeout” (1987, Suspense) Richard Dreyfuss, Emilio Es- “Another Stakeout” (1993, Suspense) Richard Dreyfuss, (10:50) War- (:40) “Very ‘MA’ steep price. ‘MA’ “John China- Mountain” Mai Ling offers Ah tevez, Madeleine Stowe. A detective falls for a woman he is Emilio Estevez. An assistant district attorney joins an under- rior ‘MA’ Bad Things” man” ‘MA’ Sahm a way out. ‘MA’ assigned to observe. ‘R’ cover patrol. ‘PG-13’ ‘R’ (2:30) “Molly’s Game” Billions Axe discovers a trap Boxing Robert Easter, Jr. vs. Rances Barthelemy. Easter faces Barthelemy for the WBA world lightweight The Chi “Eruptions” Ronnie The Chi Brandon helps Jer- The Chi “Past (2017, Biography) Jessica set for him. ‘MA’ title from Las Vegas. (N) (Live) takes an inmate under his rika land a new client. ‘MA’ Due” ‘MA’ Chastain. ‘R’ wing. ‘MA’ (:10) “High Plains Drifter” (1973, Western) Clint Eastwood, “The Foreigner” (2017, Action) Jackie Chan, Pierce Bros“The House on Sorority Row” (1983, Hor- (:35) “Sorority Row” (2009, Horror) Briana Evigan, Leah “The House Verna Bloom. A mysterious stranger protects a corrupt town nan, Ray Fearon. A businessman seeks revenge against ror) Kathryn McNeil, Eileen Davidson, Lois Pipes, Rumer Willis. A killer stalks a group of sorority sisters. on Sorority from gunmen. ‘R’ deadly terrorists. ‘R’ Kelso Hunt. ‘R’ ‘R’ Row” (1983)
April 21 - 27, 2019
Clarion TV
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A14 | Friday, April 26, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
Affair that led to a long marriage remains a secret with a payment method in advance. My husband and I think this is very tacky. In addition to that, we find it poor form that this is being billed as the “party of the year” with “limited seating” for our child’s class. What are we teaching our children these days? Is it Abigail Van Buren a popularity contest? Is it that the kids from economically challenged homes are not welcome in our homes? What do you make of this? -- UNEASY IN MARYLAND DEAR UNEASY: I think the amount is excessive. What I make of it is that the entire class is being invited to celebrate the occasion, but the parents who are organizing the event have decided to turn it into a profit-making venture. If this doesn’t sit well with you, skip the party and plan to do something privately with your child. DEAR ABBY: I work in a branch of a large company that puts out a candy dish for our customers. A woman from another building (different company not related to us) often cuts through our office to get to the main street and other busi-
Hints from Heloise
Rubes
By Leigh Rubin
weekend but forgetting last-minute details at the office or at home. You’ll be asked to pitch in and help. As a result, you could be working late. Tonight: Know when to call it a day. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH You don’t know how to gain distance from a difficult situation that might be triggering you. Be as clear as you can about your feelings so that the others don’t feel slighted. Once the workday is over, you’ll feel better. Tonight: Go along with a request. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH You might be willing to take a stand. However, you might be unsure about the type of impact that you could have. You’re likely to weigh the pros and cons. You’ll decide to approach this matter differently. Tonight: Happily heading home. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Create more of what you want. Because of new information, you might opt to take an unforeseen oath. At least for a short while, you throw some of your associates into chaos. You need to remember that your end goals are the same. Tonight: Join a co-worker for TGIF. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Be aware of the costs of hearsay. The unexpected occurs when you’re conversing about a joint project or creative endeavor. An unexpected issue could arise around a child or love affair. How you deal with this issue has more to do with your style than any other factor. Tonight: Make it your treat. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You feel much more energized than you have in a while. You could encounter a hassle around a domestic matter. You’ll have difficulty settling a loved one or roommate who gets in an uproar when upset. Establish boundaries. Tonight: As you like it. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHH Keep some information you come across to yourself, at least until you’ve confirmed the facts about this news. Don’t reveal too much about what you’re thinking. Touch base with your sixth sense as well as your desires. Tonight: Keep the peace. BORN TODAY Comedian/actress Carol Burnett (1933), architect I.M. Pei (1917), singer Bobby Rydell (1942)
Ziggy
DO YOU KNOW? Dear Heloise: What is the busiest month for getting married? -- Hailey B., Daytona Beach, Fla. Hailey, part of that answer lies in where you get married. We asked several bridal consultants and found out that June still ranks as No. 1, with August second, September third and October a close fourth. In the southern part of the country, April is a popular month because it is warm but not too hot. January came in dead last. And why do so many girls get married in June? It’s an old tradition that comes from several sources. One is the taking of the annual bath, back in days when bathing was done once a year, usually in late May or June. The couple were as clean as they would be for the rest of the year. Also, June is named after Juno, who is the goddess of marriage, children and home. To marry in June was to honor her. -- Heloise HONEY VS. SUGAR Dear Heloise: Which is better for you: sugar or honey? -- Betty V., Livonia, Mich. Betty, honey and sugar are both comprised of glucose and fructose, though honey contains less of each. Honey has been used for centuries as a sweetener and a medicine. It has vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, amino acids and enzymes. Sugar does not. However, sugar has about 49 calories per tablespoon while honey has 64. Honey is sweeter than sugar, which means you could probably use less honey than sugar. It is not recommended to give honey to children under 12 months of age due to a risk of infant botulism. -- Heloise
SUDOKU Solution
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By Johnny Hart
By Tom Wilson
Tundra
Garfield
9 3 1 2 8 5 7 6 4
By Dave Green
2019 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Jacqueline Bigar’s Stars HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Friday, April 26, 2019: This year, you might want to put a halt to events that occur so quickly you can barely breathe. Learn to let changes wash over you. Change is perpetual and an element of stability in your life. If single, you could meet someone at work or in a public situation. If you’re attached, your bond is often observed. You and your partner keep the intimate details to yourself. Plan several weekends alone together. You get tense around AQUARIUS. 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) HHHH It could be burdensome but necessary to hear financial news. Integrate this information into your budget. A little caution goes a long way. Clear out a problem before the end of the day. Tonight: Join friends for TGIF. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH Your perspective and view of a personal matter might not be the only way to go. Let others share some of their ideas. Unexpected activity might throw your plans into disarray. At this moment, don’t try to keep the status quo. Tonight: Noticed by all. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH What has been tough and hard to get past suddenly dissolves. A new, different perspective allows you to hang loose and be more relaxed. Someone lets you know how vulnerable he or she is. Tonight: Only where you can listen to great music. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Your emotional personality often helps you but can also hinder you. In a sense, it’s a double-edged sword. Be more direct in how you handle an emotional situation. But first, slow down; center yourself. Understand what you want. Tonight: Follow a friend’s lead. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Others could be a little too playful for your taste. You could be stunned by a very sophisticated friend and his or her actions. Honor a fast change, thereby allowing greater give-and-take between you and a loved one. Tonight: Follow a friend’s lead. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH You could be left holding the bag. Others seem to be revving up for the
By Eugene Sheffer
nesses. When she comes through, she ransacks our candy dishes, looking for a couple of specific types of candy. It happens on a daily basis! We even gave her a “Christmas gift” hoping to satisfy her candy cravings. She brought the gift container back to us (empty) for next Christmas! How do we stop this behavior without being rude? -- SWEET TOOTH IN THE EAST DEAR SWEET TOOTH: It is not rude to draw the l ine when someone crosses it. The next time the woman raids the candy dish, the person nearest to it should tell her plainly it is intended for customers only! As for that candy container she returned, toss it. Giving her a present for “stealing” was a mistake, so don’t perpetuate it. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. Abby shares more than 100 of her favorite recipes in two booklets: “Abby’s Favorite Recipes” and “More Favorite Recipes by Dear Abby.” Send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $16 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby, Cookbooklet Set, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling are included in the price.)
2019 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
DEAR ABBY: Many years ago, I had an affair with a married man. We eventually married and have had a long, happy life together. It was love at first sight for me. Both of us had children with our former spouses. Since no one knows about our affair, I’m wondering what I should do with our love letters and the poems we wrote to each other over those five years. Neither of us wants to hurt our children or grandchildren nor be remembered negatively after our deaths. It would certainly shock them all. However, there is much information in these letters that might give insight into why we both wanted divorces so we could marry. We are getting along in years, so please advise. -- WONDERING IN TEXAS DEAR WONDERING: I see nothing to be gained by sharing these letters and poems. You and your husband have had a long and happy union. Because nobody knows about the affair and no questions have been raised about your earlier marriages, I see nothing positive about disclosing that information after your death. DEAR ABBY: We recently received an invitation to a party for our child’s fifth-grade graduation class. The host is charging $15 per adult and $10 per fifth-grade child (“children under 5 are free”). The invitation also states that spaces are limited and we need to book our attendance
Crossword
Shoe
By Jim Davis
Take it from the Tinkersons
By Bill Bettwy
By Chad Carpenter
By Chris Cassatt & Gary Brookins
Mother Goose and Grimm
By Michael Peters
Alaska
Peninsula Clarion | Friday, April 26, 2019 | A15
Trump admin reevaluating drilling plans . . . News Continued from page A1
By MATTHEW DALY AND ELLEN KNICKMEYER Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration said Thursday it is reevaluating its controversial plan to sharply expand offshore drilling as it responds to a court ruling that blocked oil and gas development off Alaska and parts of the Atlantic. Governors and lawmakers from both Republican- and Democratic-led states have strongly opposed the expanded drilling. And a federal judge last month ruled against President Donald Trump’s executive order to open the Arctic and parts of the Atlantic to broader oil and gas development, saying Trump had exceeded his authority. Interior Secretary David Bernhardt told The Wall Street Journal on Thursday that the legal challenges may be “discombobulating” to the administration’s overall drilling plans. Bernhardt says the administration may have to wait for the challenges to fully play out in court. Interior spokeswoman Molly Block said that given the court setback, the agency “is evaluating all of its options.” The Interior Department’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management “will carefully
wages for young newspapersellers, Newsies puts a dramatic spin on a historical event in turn-of-the-century New York City. The 1992 Disney movie — a box office flop that later gained popularity as a home video — was transformed into a musical production for Broadway and made its debut in 2012. Christiansen, Hagerty and Rizzo were all part of a production of “Newsies” put on in Wasilla in February by Triumvirate in partnership with Sims Theatre Production. Rizzo said it was the firstever stage performance of the show in the state of Alaska. “After the first week, me and Beau decided we needed to keep this going,” Christiansen said. “It was a super big dream and we made it a reality.” A Palmer theater veteran, Christiansen, 26, said he and Hagerty joined with Rizzo in helping bring “Newsies” down to the peninsula. Christiansen plays the role of union leader Jack Kelly, while Hagerty stars opposite him as Katherine Plumber, a young reporter who attempts to tell the story of the newsies’ struggle. “It takes some very big liberties with the actual factual story,” Rizzo said. “But that
In this July 16, 2017, file photo, ice is broken up by the passing of the Finnish icebreaker MSV Nordica as it sails through the Beaufort Sea off the coast of Alaska. (AP Photo/David Goldman, File)
consider all public input received, including comments from governors of affected states, before making final decisions” on expanded drilling off the country’s coasts, Block added. Environmental groups welcomed what they said amounted to a delay in the administration’s coastal drilling expansion plans. Collin O’Mara of the National Wildlife Federation said the administration “needs to go one step further and fully and permanently scrap its plan to
open our coasts to unfettered offshore drilling.” But Randall Luthi, head of the National Ocean Industries Association trade group, urged against a “hard stop” in administration planning on expanded offshore drilling. “What cannot be delayed … is the importance of domestic production to meet the growing demand for affordable, reliable American energy,” he said. The Trump administration announced a new five-year plan last year that would open
up 90 percent of U.S. offshore reserves to development by private companies. Then-Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke said it would promote responsible energy development, boost jobs and pay for coastal conservation efforts. The plan calls for expanded drilling in the Arctic and off the Atlantic coast and would open up waters off California for the first time in more than three decades. Drilling would be allowed from Florida to Maine in areas that have been blocked for decades.
doesn’t really matter because it’s entertaining.” Rizzo said the core group of the cast is from his theater production class at Nikiski High, of which about 24 are in the show. He said there are also additional names from Kenai, Soldotna and outlying areas on the peninsula. The show features a dynamic storyline and song set list that caters particularly to young talent. “It’s really a fun musical because it has a lot of tap dancing in it, a lot of acrobatics,” Rizzo said. “It’s a really high-energy show and that’s really attractive for the actors. They get to run around yelling, ‘Strike! Strike! Strike!’” Christiansen delivers on several occasions with humorous lines and dramatic singing, and said the hook of the play is the social issues that intertwine with each other. “It’s an emotional roller coaster,” Christiansen said. “You have humor and this story based on a true story, that has a lot of political and social implications all tied in. So you have the humor but also the deep story of the underdog, and that classic story takes you on the roller coaster.” “Newsies” runs Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m. each night, and will return for another two-night showing next weekend.
Health commissioner downplays block grant idea By BECKY BOHRER Associated Press
JUNEAU — After Gov. Mike Dunleavy told President Donald Trump that Alaska was interested in receiving Medicaid dollars as a block grant, Dunleavy’s health commissioner downplayed the prospect to lawmakers. During a confirmation hearing earlier this month, Adam Crum said there is no current mechanism for the
. . . K-Selo Continued from page A1
board for a new facility. In 2016, the state appropriated $10,010,000 for construction of the school, but in order to proceed the borough needed to provide a match. Borough residents voted down the match bond package, which was nearly $5.5 million, last October. The $10 million grant the borough received from the state originally expired June 30. The borough is seeking alternative ways to fund the project, Ahlberg said. “Given the state of the economic challenges we’re trying to overcome, now is the time that we need to seek alternative solutions for this project,” Ahlberg said. “The district is looking to consolidate schools due to the future fis-
federal government to provide block grants for Medicaid. Crum said that option would be considered if available but is not the main plan now. He called Dunleavy’s comments a “foot in the door,” and a way to let the government know Alaska is interested in pursuing options that provide more flexibility. In response to questioning, Crum said he was not actively involved in suggesting to Dunleavy that Alaska signal
to Trump an interest in block grants. Crum was confirmed to lead the Department of Health and Social Services last week. In a March 1 letter, Dunleavy followed up on a meeting with Trump by laying out issues where he saw opportunities for the administrations to work together. That included Medicaid. Dunleavy wrote that Seema Verma, administrator of the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, “has urged
cal uncertainties. While these challenges cannot take away from the students’ needs in K-Selo, the borough administration would like to identify a better approach that resolves the building issues.” It’s uncertain if voters will see another K-Selo bond package on the ballots again. “Last year the voters clearly stated that they did not approve of the 35% match or the $15 millionplus construction cost and Prop 1 failed,” Ahlberg said. The current school in Kachemak-Selo is made up of three borough-leased buildings and serves about 46 students. In a December memo, Ahlberg told the assembly that the current school has deteriorated to the point that it is no longer viable as an educational facility. The proposed new K-12 school will be 15,226 square feet, the memo said. Some residents have expressed
concern about the $16 million costs for the school, given its remoteness and small student population. However, a state statute based on the number of students dictates the size of the school, and the borough does not have the flexibility to downsize the building. Shipping in materials is also expected to increase the cost. One of the largest drivers of the cost comes from the remote nature of the village. The community sits at the bottom of a steep bluff only accessible by a dirt switchback trail, too narrow and steep for most vehicles to traverse. The borough initially considered upgrading the road to borough standards but found it would be too expensive. Ahlberg said the borough, school district and community will resume talks about next steps in the coming months.
us to be the first state to receive Medicaid dollars as a block grant. We are eager to do this, but your support of her on this ‘first’ will keep the proper focus and speed on the application.” In a statement, Crum said “early overtures from our federal partners” included ideas like block grants.
Crum said Dunleavy’s point was to let the federal government know “we wanted to be on the leading edge of innovation for the Medicaid program” and work toward an “Alaska specific solution that provides the flexibility we need for better health outcomes and a more effective spend of our dollars.”
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He said this has allowed for ongoing discussion of ideas. Dunleavy spokesman Matt Shuckerow said the Dunleavy administration is being openminded on Medicaid. Block grants have been one part of the discussion but at this point, “nothing is moving forward in that manner,” Shuckerow said.
J U N E 1 4 –18
2 01 9 K AC H E M AK B AY
Fiction • Nonfiction • Poetry • Publishing Keynote Speaker:
Diane Ackerman
Award-winning poet, essayist and naturalist FACULTY
Kazim Ali Martha Amore Barrie Jean Borich Janet Lee Carey Richard Chiappone Elizabeth Evans CONFERENCE ACTIVITIES • Daily workshops, panel presentations, readings and craft talks • Opening keynote dinner, four luncheons and receptions • Manuscript reviews optional • Evening readings open to the public - FREE • “Open Mic” sessions • Agent/Editor consultations optional • Boat cruise with authors optional • “First Pages” session submissions due 5/1 • Writers’ Circles • Academic credit available optional • Post-conference workshop optional June 18–20, limited enrollment
Jamie Ford B.J. Hollars Erin Coughlin Hollowell Ishmael Hope Christian Kiefer Nancy Lord
Rosemary McGuire Kristin Nelson Elena Passarello Tess Taylor
SUPPORTERS INCLUDE:
BENEFACTORS
Atwood Foundation First National Bank Alaska KBC and Caroline Coons Writers’ Endowment UA BP and ConocoPhillips Academic Affairs Fund University of Alaska Anchorage Peggy Shumaker and Joe Usibelli PATRONS Alaska State Council on the Arts Advance Printing • Alaska Airlines Gary and Jane Klopfer • Land’s End Resort Jo and Peter Michalski • Tutka Bay Lodge Thank you to all the numerous other business supporters and individuals that make this prestigious conference possible!
CONTRIBUTORS Eleanor Andrews Sarah Barton Barbara and Gary Baugh Bay Excursions The Homer Bookstore Homer News Lorrie and Morris Horning Karen Hunt Mary Hughes and Andrew Eker Kachemak Bay Broadcasting, Inc. Connie and Kerry Ozer Cathryn Rasmuson Ravn Alaska Beth Rose Deborah Smith Two Sisters Bakery UAA University Advancement Fran Ulmer Usibelli Foundation
At Land’s End Resort • Enrollment is limited – Sign up early! • For additional information, including registration form:
http://writersconference.homer.alaska.edu
KachemakBayWritersConf@alaska.edu • Phone: (907) 235-7743 Conference registration includes workshops, receptions, opening dinner and lunches:
$395 Early Registration (May 1, 5 p.m.) $425 General Registration (May 2–June 7, 5 p.m.) $450 First Day of Conference (June 14, space available) $350 Early Student Registration (May 1, 5 p.m., admitted UA degree-seeking students)
A16 | Friday, April 26, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion