Peninsula Clarion, June 07, 2019

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Vol. 49, Issue 212

In the news Suspect in theft of village safe arrested in Bethel BETHEL — A man suspected of stealing a safe from a city building in the Southwest village of Napakiak has been arrested. Alaska State Troopers say 52-year-old Alfred Evan was arrested Wednesday in Bethel while at the courthouse on another matter. Troopers on Nov. 12 were notified that someone had stolen the safe in Napakiak, a village of 360 about 15 miles southwest of Bethel. Investigators determined that the suspect used a crowbar to break into the city building. The bolted-down safe and other items were taken. Investigators identified Evan as the burglary suspect through DNA evidence and video evidence. A judge issued an arrest warrant. Evan is charged with burglary, theft and criminal mischief. Online court documents do not list his attorney.

Driver dies in crash of fuel tanker on Dalton Highway ANCHORAGE — The driver of a fuel tanker died in a crash on the Dalton Highway. Alaska State Troopers say 60-year-old Richard Flansberg of Delta Junction was killed Monday afternoon at Mile 36. A passenger, 60-yearold Larry Bloodworth of Anchorage, was transported by Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. to an Alyeska medical facility at Pump Station 6. Flansberg had not used a seat belt. Troopers say speed and road conditions may have contributed to the crash. The crash punctured the front tank of the tanker. An estimated 2,000 gallons of heating fuel spilled. — Associated Press

Index Local................A3 Opinion........... A4 Nation..............A5 Religion............A6 Sports..............A7 Classifieds.... A10 Comics.......... A13 Business........A14 Check us out online at www.peninsulaclarion.com To subscribe, call 283-3584.

Play ball!

New facility for teen migrants to open

Oilers open ABL season on road

Nation/A5

Sports/A7

Partly sunny 66/47 More weather on Page A2

W of 1 inner Awa 0* 201 Exc rds f 8 o e Rep llence r in or ti * Ala n ska g ! Pres s

CLARION P E N I N S U L A

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Friday-Saturday, June 7-8, 2019 Kenai Peninsula, Alaska

$1 newsstands daily/$1.50 Sunday

Thunderstorms spark 5 fires

District, educators to talk contract next week

By Brian Mazurek Peninsula Clarion

Suppression efforts continue on a large wildfire near Tustumena Lake that started Wednesday night as a result of thunderstorms and lightning strikes across the Kenai Peninsula. A helicopter pilot discovered the fire at 6 p.m. Wednesday night while en route to check on a lightning strike in the area. As of midnight Wednesday, the Tustumena Lake Fire had reached 121 acres in size and a crew of 15 was working to prevent the flames from spreading by mopping up hot spots and digging fire lines where needed. According to the latest update on Akfireinfo.com, the suppression teams included The Division of Forestry’s Pioneer Peak Interagency Hotshot Crew and the Yukon Type 2 Initial Attack Crew, which are based in Palmer and Soldotna, respectively. Division of Forestry Public Information Officer Andy Alexan-

By VICTORIA PETERSEN Peninsula Clarion

A photo of the Tustumena Lake Fire taken at 11 p.m. on Wednesday, illustrates the effect retardant and water drops have on the fire. (Photo by Jason Jordet/Alaska Division of Forestry)

drou said that these are elite crews who are trained specifically in ground suppression techniques for larger fires. In addition to suppres-

sion crews on the ground, an air tanker based in Palmer was sent to the Tustumena Lake Fire Wednesday night and dropped four loads of retardant at the

Food, fun and fish Kenai River Fest returns for 29th year By JOEY KLECKA Peninsula Clarion

For a 29th consecutive year, the annual Kenai River Festival is expected to bring the fun in the sun — or rain — at Soldotna Creek Park. Hosted by the Kenai Watershed Forum, the festival runs Friday, Saturday and Sunday, beginning tonight from 5 to 10 p.m. Saturday the festival will run 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. and Sunday it will run 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. A sign welcomes visitors to the 1994 Kenai River FesThe festival dates back tival in Soldotna. (Photo provided by the Kenai Waterto 1991 and has been grow- shed Forum) ing and attracting bigger crowds each year. Perhaps Creek Park. Bornemann is helping to the most remarkable growth Watershed Forum Ex- organize the event for the is that of its venue, Soldotna ecutive Director Branden See FEST, page A2

head of the blaze. The Tustumena Lake Fire started in the footprint of the 2007 Caribou Hills fire, among fallen spruce See FIRE, page A2

Weeks after voting to strike, school district employee associations and the district will meeting again for negotiations Tuesday. Negotiations will begin at 10 a.m., and the location is unknown at this time. After contract negotiations with the Kenai Peninsula Borough School District hit a standstill, peninsula educators and staff voted to strike May 22, with more than 75% of certified staff voting “yes” on a walkout. For over a year, contract negotiations between the Kenai Peninsula Borough School District and the Kenai Peninsula Education Association and Kenai Peninsula Educational Support Association have snagged on the rising cost of health care. A previous agreement effective through June 2018 remains in use for employees without contracts.

19th annual Air Fair to take flight By Brian Mazurek Peninsula Clarion

The skies of the Kenai Peninsula will be busier than usual this weekend. The 19th annual Kenai Peninsula Air Fair and Fun Flight takes place on Saturday, with two separate events being held at the Soldotna and Kenai airports. Mary Bondurant, Kenai Airport Manager, has been involved with the Air Fair since its inception. “It started out as a bunch of pilots in the civil air patrol getting together to dust the wings off their

planes,” Bondurant said. “Now it’s an all-day event open to the public. It’s great to see how much it’s grown over the years.” The fair will start at 8 a.m. in Soldotna at the MARC hangar with a fundraising breakfast and static displays from the Experimental Aircraft Association. During the breakfast, pilots will be able to register for the Air Fair’s main event: the Poker Run. Pilots who participate in the Poker Run will have to fly to at least five of the eight airports on See AIR, page A14

Republican senator tries to kick-start motion on budget By Alex McCarthy Juneau Empire

Sen. John Coghill was getting impatient. The North Pole Republican stood on the Senate floor Thursday morning and said he wanted

the Senate to take another vote on a bill that would give Alaskans a $3,000 Alaska Permanent Fund dividend. If that vote failed, according to the Alaska Legislature’s rules, the bill would be permanently shelved.

With just 15 senators in attendance, there wouldn’t be enough votes in favor of the bill (Senate Bill 1002), and Coghill said in an interview Thursday that he didn’t think there would even be enough votes to agree to re-vote

Community seeks funds to move homes away from river AKIAK (AP) — An Alaska community with a rapidly eroding riverbank is seeking funding to relocate homes, officials said. Money is available, but Akiak officials will have to go through a complicated bureau-

cratic process to obtain funding to save buildings in danger of falling into the Kuskokwim River, KYUK-AM reported Monday. Akiak, a community of about 350 people on the river’s west bank northeast of Bethel, lost

a one-mile stretch of riverbank to erosion in May, with parts of the river moving 75 feet closer to the community and putting one house within 15 feet of the river. Moving houses and connecting them to serSee MOVE, page A14

on the bill. But his motion was more about sending a message, he said. “My bold move was just to kind of kick us in the shins and say, ‘We’ve got to get going, guys,’” Coghill said. The senators agreed

ANCHORAGE (AP) — Alaska has awarded a contract to study whether the state can become the first in the nation to change its Medicaid program into a block grant system, officials said. The state Department of Health and Social Services issued a notice May 29 of its intent to award

Kenai Peninsula Air Fair June 8th, 2019

FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL (907) 283-7951 OR (907) 262-4672

www.KenaiAirport.com

See SEN, page A3

State awards contract to study Medicaid block grant system

19th Annual

www.ci.soldotna.ak.us

to adjourn without voting on the bill again, but Coghill said he thought the message was received that with just over a week left in special session, lawmakers need to start legislating with urgency.

the contract to analyze the prospect of implementing block grants for federal Medicaid payments, work requirements for enrollees, and shifting some Alaska Medicaid recipients to private insurance, the Alaska Journal of Commerce reported WednesSee BLOCK, page A14

PUBLIC WELCOME


AccuWeather® 5-day forecast for Kenai-Soldotna Today

Saturday

Partly sunny Hi: 66

Partly sunny

Lo: 47

Hi: 60

Sunday

Monday

Mostly cloudy

Lo: 46

RealFeel

Hi: 60

Hi: 63

Lo: 47

Hi: 64

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

65 68 68 69

Today 4:41 a.m. 11:27 p.m.

Sunrise Sunset

First June 9

Full Last June 17 June 25

Moonrise Moonset

Today 9:40 a.m. 2:28 a.m.

Daylight Day Length - 18 hrs., 46 min., 18 sec. Daylight gained - 2 min., 39 sec.

Alaska Cities Yesterday Hi/Lo/W 48/42/c 69/49/pc 34/29/sn 60/42/pc 54/43/pc 61/47/pc 63/48/c 56/44/sh 67/43/pc 49/42/pc 70/48/r 68/47/pc 71/41/pc 69/39/pc 68/49/c 63/43/sh 67/44/sh 67/49/pc 58/42/pc 69/45/pc 64/43/pc 66/49/s

Tomorrow 4:39 a.m. 11:28 p.m.

Kotzebue 50/43

Lo: 47

Unalakleet 49/41 McGrath 69/48

New July 2

Tomorrow 11:12 a.m. 2:52 a.m.

Yesterday Hi/Lo/W 48/42/c 70/49/pc 64/49/pc 49/35/c 67/49/c 66/48/r 68/43/pc 63/43/sh 37/31/c 47/41/pc 69/48/pc 61/48/pc 70/48/c 72/47/pc 70/40/r 63/43/c 49/43/pc 65/46/pc 68/47/sh 64/44/pc 71/48/sh 59/42/s

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 66/53

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

76/64/sh 86/56/pc 78/58/pc 79/65/pc 76/71/c 88/71/pc 94/69/t 89/70/pc 94/57/pc 77/69/t 87/57/s 76/58/pc 78/68/pc 74/57/r 82/42/s 84/71/t 83/65/c 84/71/pc 75/57/pc 77/48/s 83/63/r

80/56/s 89/60/s 82/61/pc 74/64/t 85/69/t 77/61/s 96/72/pc 83/63/pc 67/45/t 84/70/t 91/60/t 62/41/pc 71/61/s 76/56/s 83/42/pc 84/73/t 77/63/c 78/68/t 77/57/pc 80/47/t 80/66/c

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

70/58/r 84/72/c 83/64/c 79/57/pc 90/68/c 83/64/c 81/54/pc 84/69/pc 73/58/pc 81/46/s 96/64/s 89/61/s 77/42/s 79/61/c 76/46/t 84/69/pc 81/49/pc 87/73/pc 95/75/c 84/65/c 87/69/t

75/60/pc 84/68/t 83/65/pc 79/51/s 86/70/pc 82/66/c 84/54/s 84/61/pc 79/57/s 76/57/s 100/72/s 93/69/s 74/39/s 81/56/s 58/37/sh 83/60/s 56/39/sh 88/74/pc 93/71/pc 82/66/c 83/66/t

City

First Second

6:18 a.m. (20.0) 7:34 p.m. (18.2)

12:44 a.m. (3.1) 1:17 p.m. (-2.7)

First Second

5:37 a.m. (18.8) 6:53 p.m. (17.0)

12:13 p.m. (-2.7) --- (---)

First Second

4:14 a.m. (11.0) 5:46 p.m. (8.8)

11:09 a.m. (-1.9) 11:13 p.m. (3.0)

First Second

10:30 a.m. (29.3) 11:33 p.m. (28.5)

5:04 a.m. (4.8) 5:46 p.m. (-1.7)

Deep Creek

Seward

Anchorage

CLARION

Kenai Peninsula’s award-winning publication (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

Erin Thompson Editor ....................... ethompson@peninsulaclarion.com Jeff Helminiak Sports & Features Editor .........................jhelminiak@peninsulaclarion.com Victoria Petersen Education .................. vpetersen@peninsulaclarion.com Joey Klecka Sports/Features ............. jklecka@peninsulaclarion.com Brian Mazurek Public Safety...............bmazurek@peninsulaclarion.com Kat Sorensen Fisheries & City .......... ksorensen@peninsulaclarion.com Tim Millings Pagination ....................tmillings@peninsulaclarion.com

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Publisher ...................................................... Jeff Hayden Production Manager ............................ Frank Goldthwaite

Temperature

From Kenai Municipal Airport

High .............................................. 71 Low ............................................... 41 Normal high ................................. 60 Normal low ................................... 41 Record high ....................... 75 (1970) Record low ........................ 29 (1952)

Precipitation

From the Peninsula Clarion in Kenai

24 hours ending 4 p.m. yest. . 0.00" Month to date ........................... 0.01" Normal month to date ............ 0.21" Year to date ............................. 3.40" Normal year to date ................ 4.19" Record today ................ 0.79" (1998) Record for June ........... 2.93" (1955) Record for year ........... 27.09" (1963)

(For the 48 contiguous states)

Kodiak 60/48

114 at Death Valley, Calif. 29 at Leadville, Colo.

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

Sitka 56/48

State Extremes High yesterday Low yesterday

Jacksonville 95/76/c 86/74/t Kansas City 82/67/c 83/63/c Key West 91/83/pc 89/83/pc Las Vegas 102/83/pc 98/73/s Little Rock 75/70/t 81/68/r Los Angeles 75/63/pc 75/60/pc Louisville 84/68/c 77/68/t Memphis 74/71/t 81/69/r Miami 91/81/t 91/81/t Midland, TX 89/59/s 95/67/s Milwaukee 65/54/pc 72/53/pc Minneapolis 85/59/s 88/63/s Nashville 79/73/c 80/70/r New Orleans 89/82/t 87/78/t New York 83/68/pc 78/64/s Norfolk 90/70/s 79/70/t Oklahoma City 73/65/t 82/62/pc Omaha 88/68/pc 87/67/pc Orlando 92/74/t 90/76/t Philadelphia 86/71/pc 84/64/s Phoenix 103/77/pc 102/76/s

E N I N S U L A

Readings ending 4 p.m. yesterday

Juneau 64/49

Ketchikan 63/49

73 at Seward 29 at Barrow

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

78/66/pc 76/54/pc 65/52/pc 83/54/s 83/60/pc 82/58/sh 86/64/t 93/67/t 67/61/pc 64/52/pc 83/46/s 66/50/pc 91/56/s 60/52/c 74/57/pc 91/77/pc 84/68/t 99/69/s 82/69/t 90/71/pc 75/67/c

81/61/pc 72/54/pc 62/51/sh 86/53/t 73/44/pc 80/60/s 79/48/pc 97/75/s 70/62/pc 70/55/s 85/52/s 57/50/sh 88/65/pc 60/43/c 78/53/s 89/81/t 86/63/c 99/66/s 82/66/c 83/68/pc 85/64/c

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

92/78/t 83/64/c 57/51/sh 114/80/s 87/66/t 89/82/t 85/76/pc 70/47/s 66/50/s 78/48/s 55/41/c 74/58/t 73/52/pc 85/54/s 68/50/c 78/61/s 76/63/r 83/82/t 68/46/s 85/70/pc 63/46/pc

88/79/t 87/69/s 59/53/sh 112/84/s 78/61/s 90/83/sh 83/65/s 69/42/s 63/52/r 74/51/s 54/42/pc 75/57/t 77/50/s 88/63/s 64/52/t 80/66/s 73/59/r 88/81/t 64/54/sh 75/67/r 63/49/c

Rain and thunderstorms will soak areas from the middle and lower Mississippi Valley to the Southeast coast today. Severe storms will fire over the interior West while the Northwest is cool and showery.

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation

Cold -10s

Warm -0s

0s

. . . Fest Continued from page A1

ninth time, and remembers a time when the thought of using the park as an event venue was crazy talk. The area was formerly listed as a DOT contaminated site, a far cry from the present scene of children laughing, dogs playing and music ringing through the park. “It’s kind of unbelievable, honestly,” Bornemann said. “When I started (helping to organize) the festival, we were backing trucks up to make the stage, and now we have a stage capable of holding musicians and music.” After bouncing between Kenai and Soldotna in its early years, the festival eventually found a permanent residence in Soldotna sometime in the mid-2000s, Bornemann said.

. . . Fire Continued from page A1

trees and fresh grass. Alexandrou said that these areas make for flashier fires that ignite quickly, but they tend not to spread as easily as crown fires — blazes that reach the tops of standing trees and get carried by the wind. The Tustumena Lake Fire was one of eight wildfires started by lightning on Wednesday, according to the Alaska Interagency Coordination Center, with five occurring on the Kenai Peninsula and three in Southwest Alaska. Alexandrou said that Wednesday’s fires are the first instances this year of lightning-caused fires on the peninsula. The other 19 recorded have been caused by human activity. Almost 4,200 lightning strikes occurred across the state on Wednesday, with 128 occurring on the Kenai Peninsula. The Tustumena Lake Fire is located in the Cari-

Stationary 10s

20s

Showers T-storms 30s

40s

50s

Rain

60s

70s

Flurries 80s

Snow

Ice

90s 100s 110s

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

P

Almanac

Valdez 64/46

High yesterday Low yesterday

World Cities Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

2:35 a.m. (3.0) 3:08 p.m. (-2.8)

National Extremes

National Cities Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

7:31 a.m. (20.7) 8:47 p.m. (18.9)

Glennallen 58/40

Cold Bay 57/45

Unalaska 53/44

Low(ft.)

First Second

Seward Homer 63/47 64/49

Kenai/ Soldotna Homer

Dillingham 68/49

High(ft.)

Kenai City Dock

Kenai/ Soldotna 66/47

Fairbanks 68/46

Talkeetna 70/48

Bethel 64/42

Today Hi/Lo/W 50/43/pc 69/48/pc 61/50/c 50/40/pc 68/46/c 70/46/pc 68/49/pc 59/48/sh 44/34/pc 47/40/pc 63/47/c 56/48/c 64/53/sh 70/48/pc 66/44/sh 66/42/pc 49/41/s 64/46/pc 69/49/pc 63/50/sh 71/48/pc 59/48/pc

Prudhoe Bay 44/34

Anaktuvuk Pass 61/41

Nome 50/40

* Indicates estimated temperatures for yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W 50/43/pc 66/53/pc 38/32/pc 64/42/s 57/45/pc 61/46/pc 65/47/sh 61/41/sh 68/49/pc 52/45/pc 68/46/c 69/47/pc 58/40/sh 69/42/pc 65/52/pc 64/49/pc 64/49/pc 63/49/c 60/43/s 71/48/pc 60/48/c 60/48/pc

Tides Today

Seldovia

Rather cloudy with spotty showers

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

Tuesday

An afternoon shower in places

Lo: 45

Utqiagvik 38/32

Bornemann estimates that 8,000 to 10,000 people came through last year, and credited the city of Soldotna and Sen. Peter Micciche for helping bring about the turnaround of the park, cleaning it up and constructing the space that locals now enjoy. “They had the vision to see the site, right on the Kenai river, this gem of the city, and thought, ‘Let’s make the investment’,” Bornemann said. “I think they’re seeing the fruits of their labor.” In talking with former organizers and volunteers from the earliest days of the festival, Bornemann said it is clear that what has kept the event in the eye of the central peninsula for 29 years is the mix of fun and education. Music, food and beer are the main draws — with education and the fishing industry on the Kenai River taking center stage. “Our mission is to cel-

ebrate the Kenai River and what it gives our community,” he said. “That has stayed through since its origins to this point.” Between fish-painting, salmon dissections and more than 40 artisan vendor booths that feature artwork celebrating the river, there is no shortage of creativity and spectacle. Everything from ceramics, photography, clothing and homemade products will be on display. There will also be at least 12 food vendors throughout the grounds, all of which Bornemann said operate from within Alaska. “It’s all Alaska,” he said. “We’re pretty committed to that. The “Alaska Made” symbol is certified through the state, and we’ve made sure they’re local, regional or statewide vendors. We’re very proud of that fact.” The festival music menu includes 12 bands that will

play throughout the weekend. Music starts Friday at 5 p.m. with Chris Towne and wraps up Sunday at 3 p.m. with Shamwari Marimba. Other groups include popular Seward ensemble Blackwater Railroad on Friday, Hot Mess on Saturday afternoon and Up A Mountain on Saturday night. The traditional Run for the River 10-mile and 5-kilometer races will return Saturday morning, with the 10-mile race taking off at 8:30 a.m. and the 5K shortly behind at 9 a.m. The popular eagle release also returns for another year on Saturday at 1 p.m. With an entire generation of peninsula families passing through the festival over the previous 28 years, Bornemann touted the event as a can’t-miss bucket-list item. “It’s a heartwarming feeling that people make this their priority that second week of June,” he said.

bou Hills approximately 30 miles south of Soldotna. Alexandrou said that the fire is at least 10 miles from the nearest structure and no evacuations were ordered. According to Akfireinfo. com, the other four fires on the peninsula are burning in

the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge. Fire managers are currently assessing what actions to take, if any. These fires are no more than an acre in diameter each and are in remote areas. Fire managers conducted detection flights

on the peninsula and in Southwest Alaska on Thursday to identify any additional fires started by Wednesday’s lightning. Visit Akfireinfo.com for the latest information on wildfire activity in Alaska.

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Peninsula Clarion | Friday, June 7, 2019 | A3

Lawrence Francis Lathrop Born Oakdale, CA, April 13, 1946 Died Soldotna, AK on June 4, 2019

Larry was a beloved science teacher and coach. Always on an adventure, Larry lived with a “nothing in moderation” philosophy. Everyone he knew remembers his larger than life stories, generous heart, immense strength, and gregarious nature. His decision to become a teacher was a natural choice as he educated all those he encountered. He was often approached by former students or athletes who would relate stories about how he had influenced their lives. A varsity letterman in football, wrestling and track in high school, he continued his athletic career on a scholarship to UC Berkeley. After competing in the 1972 Olympic Trials in wrestling, he returned to his alma mater to teach and coach. Larry came to Alaska and fell in love with the wild beauty of the land and adventurous spirit of the people. He moved his family to Kenai, where they spent summers commercial fishing, while Larry taught and coached at the Kenai Junior and High schools. He enjoyed the outdoors, hunting, fishing and gardening. He always said, “The Adventure Continues…” and as this journey ends, Larry will be missed by all. Public viewing to be held at Peninsula Memorial Chapel & Crematory 5pm -7pm on Friday, June 7, 2019. A Celebration of Life will be held Saturday, June 8, 2019 at 1:00pm at Soldotna Church of Christ, Mile 91.7, Sterling Highway, Soldotna, AK. Please sign his online guestbook at AlaskanFuneral.com to leave your memories and thoughts.

. . . Sen Continued from page A1

Both the Senate Majority and Senate Minority met following the floor session, and Coghill said he felt that people are more on board with pursuing a budget first before figuring out the dividend. “At least now, it looks like we have some agreement to move forward and get an operating budget so that it can actually be negotiated with the House, printed, put on the table and moved up to the governor before early next week,” Coghill said. Senators even entertained the thought of having a “call” of the Senate where law enforcement would have to track down absent senators and bring them to the floor. They ultimately voted against doing that. Sens. Tom Begich and Mike Shower were excused for Thursday’s floor session. Sens. Elvi Gray-Jackson, Natasha von Imhof and Bill Wielechowski were also absent. Gray-Jackson and Wielechowski voted earlier this week for a $3,000 PFD, and Shower is also in favor of a full dividend. Some senators were unhappy with the way Coghill introduced his motion, with five of the 20 senators not on the floor. Sen. Lora Reinbold, R-Eagle River, was particularly agitated as she spoke on the floor. “We’re basically disenfranchising voters, because thousands and thousands and thousands of Alaskans are not represented here today,” Reinbold said. The Senate has been gridlocked on the issue of the PFD, but most other topics have been agreed upon in special session. The Legislature passed House Bill 49, which repeals most of the criminal justice reform legislation SB 91. The conference committee (a group of legislators from the House and Senate) has all but fin-

ished an operating budget as well. Sen. Jesse Kiehl, DJuneau, said the Senate has been trying to fit the PFD in the budget, but it might be time to pass the budget and deal with the PFD later. “The operating budget is otherwise ready to go,” Kiehl said in an interview. “For three weeks, nobody’s gotten anywhere keeping them tied together. I think it’s time to split them.” If the Legislature can’t pass a budget by the end of the state’s fiscal year (June 30), the government will shut down the following day. Gov. Mike Dunleavy has pledged to veto a bill that does not guarantee a full $3,000 PFD. Pursuing the budget before the PFD would put the Senate on the same page as the House. Speaker of the House Bryce Edgmon said this week that members of the House Majority want to pass a budget before dealing with the PFD. Speaking to reporters after Thursday’s floor session, Senate President Cathy Giessel said many in the Senate are beginning to feel that same way as the clock continues to tick. “We need to get the operating budget moving,” Giessel said. “Right now we have an issue that is standing in the way of that.” The Senate will hold another floor session at 11 a.m. Friday, where the senators might again attempt to vote on the PFD amount. Reinbold said on the floor that she expects all 20 senators to be in attendance next Tuesday. The special session ends June 14 (next Friday), so tabling the PFD for now could lead to another special session, Kiehl said. Lawmakers want to make sure they get it right, he said. “There is not one single vote in the Senate for a zero PFD,” Kiehl said. “Everybody wants to pay a PFD. We’re arguing about how much and how. If it takes another special (session) to do it, we’ll have to do it.”

disposers. Contact NRC Alaska 877-375-5040 or Kenai Peninsula Borough Solid Waste Department 907-262-9667. This event is for households and small businesses. All busiVFW state service officer visit nesses are required to pre-register with NRC Alaska. Only households with more than 55 gallons of waste must preOn Tuesday, June 18 from 12-4 p.m. at VFW POST register. NRC Alaska manages this event. The Kenai Penin10046 at 134 N Birch Street in Soldotna, the VFW state sersula Borough Solid Waste Department provides the location. vice officer will help members and veterans learn how to get their benefits through the VA. Not a member yet? Check out Ninilchik Clam Scramble the post. Ninilchik Clam Scramble 5K mud and obstacle run will

Around the Peninsula

When is it time for a long-term facility?

Soldotna Senior Center will host a Caregiver Support meeting on Tuesday, June 11 at 1 p.m. Meeting topic: “When is it time for a long-term facility?” Many family members want to care for their loved one at home for as long as possible. What does “for as long as possible” really mean? We will discuss factors to indicate the time may be right to consider the additional support of an assisted living home or nursing home for more care. Please join us to share your experiences as a caregiver, or to support someone who is a caregiver. For more information, call Sharon or Judy at 907- 262-1280.

Kenai River Queens fundraising sale

The Kenai River Queens Womens Hockey team is having a HUGE fundraising garage sale Friday, June 7 and Saturday, June 8 from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. each day, rain or shine! Multiple families are donating awesome stuff for the sale! Come by the huge Dome garage across from Peninsula Powersports on the Kenai Spur Highway and check it out! Look for signs!

Sterling Friday Flea Market

The Sterling Community Center invites you to our Summer community event, Sterling Friday Flea Market. On Friday June 14, 21, 28, July 12, 19, 26 and Aug. 9 and 16. Open 10 a.m.-4 p.m. The market is for Crafters, fruit/vegetable Vendors, Merchandise Vendors, and Second Hand booths. 10-feet wide by 20-feet deep spaces for rent in parking lot for $10. Bring your own tents and tables or we have Rentals: 6-foot table and one chair $10. Get a space at the Sterling Friday Flea Market anytime during the summer. If the weather is not cooperating vendors can come inside. All vendors and customers will have access to Sterling Community Center facilities and vending machines. Call for registration and information 262-7224 or email scc@acsalaska. net.

Garden Club annual plant

The Central Peninsula Garden Club annual plant sale starts at 10 a.m., and runs until the plants are sold out, Saturday, June 8. Location is Peninsula Grace Church parking lot, 44175 Kalifornsky Beach Road, Mile 19.5, Soldotna. Sale will include annual & perennial flowers, vegetables, herbs, berries, rhubarb, trees, and bushes. This annual fundraiser is used to support local agriculture, club presentations, and school, youth, and community projects. Plant donations are very welcome. Dig up your extra perennials and donate your extra plant starts. Drop off times on Friday 6 to 7 p.m., and 8 to 9 a.m. on Saturday at the Church parking lot. Use clean pots with clean soil. Label with as much info as possible (variety, size, color, perennial or annual, etc). No house plants, please. Pots and plant labels are available from Cathy. For more info, call Cathy at 262-7248.

‘Blazing Guns at Roaring Gulch’ auditions

Kenai Performers is holding open auditions for a melodrama titled, “Blazing Guns at Roaring Gulch…or, The Perfumed Badge” by Shubert Fendrich on Sunday, June 23, 2-2:30 p.m. and Monday, June 24, 7-7:30 p.m. in their rental space located on the backside of Subway restaurant on KBeach Road. Play has roles for 4 men/5 women, age 16 and up. Performance dates are August 16-18 & 23-25, 2019. For more information contact Terri at 252-6808.

Yoga in the Park

Soldotna Parks & Recreation and The Yoga Yurt are excited to offer free yoga in the park in June and July. This is a gentle flow yoga for all skill levels on Fridays from 6-7:15 p.m. at Farnsworth Park in Soldotna. Farnsworth park is located at 148 S Birch Street and yoga will happen rain or shine so dress accordingly. For more information call 2623151.

Hazardous Waste Collection Day

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Central Peninsula Garden Club June workshops

Saturday, June 22: 10-11:30 a.m.: What do you really know about Worm Poo? This Workshop will tell you what’s Really true Oh Pooh! 1-2:30 p.m.: Tied to the garden watering? Come learn what relief can bring. Members Only registration begins June 1. Public registration begins June 8. Registration ends June 18. Register online at www.cenpengardenclub.org.

A Safe Place for the Heart

Camp Mend-A-Heart is a free day camp for ages 6 to 16 who have experienced a loss due to death. Camp is held at beautiful Solid Rock Camp, just outside of Soldotna. Many fun activities as well as age appropriate grief activities. Dates are Aug. 13 to the 15, 2019. All applications must be in by July. Please contact Hospice at 262-0453 for additional information, questions and applications. Monday to Thursday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Soldotna Senior Center Luau Fundraiser

Soldotna Senior Center will be hosting their annual Hawaiian Luau fundraiser on Saturday, June 15, starting at 5:30 p.m. This event is open to the public. Enjoy a fun filled evening starting with a wonderful Hawaiian feast, continuing with fabulous hula dancing demonstrations by the Pua Mae Ole hula dancing troupe, and wrapping up with our outcry auction. There will be many silent auction items Food for Thought available for bidding, as well as door prizes given throughJoin us in the Fireweed Diner, every Tuesday from 5-6 out the night. Tickets are $26 for adults and $13 for children p.m., beginning June 11 through Sept. 10 for a meal and a under 12. For tickets and reservations, please call 262-2322. time of learning about food and nutrition. June 11: What’s Midnight Sun Soiree for Dinner? with Shelby Dykstra, dietetic intern; June 18: The LeeShore Center invites you to join us at the Kenai “What I have on Hand” Meal Planning with Amorette Payment,SNAP-ED nutrition educator; June 25:Bring the Elks Lodge Saturday June 8, 6-11 p.m. for the Midnight Kids! with Shelby Dykstra, dietetic intern. RSVP to Greg Sun Soiree with Prime Rib Dinner, Silent Auction, Split the Meyer, executive director, 907-262-3111 or gmeyer@kp- Pot, Raffle, Door Prizes, Live Music and Dancing. Tickets are $60 per person or $110 per couple and available at The foodbank.org. LeeShore Center or online at www.leeshoreak.org. ProKenai Peninsula Woodturner’s meeting ceeds to help fund construction of a heated storage buildThe Kenai Peninsula Woodturner’s hold their month- ing. For more information contact the LeeShore Center at ly meeting at 1 p.m. Saturday, June 8. Location is the log 283-9479. building, Mile 100 on the Sterling Highway, just a few miles Seldovia Summer Solstice Music Festival south of Soldotna where Echo Lake Road meets the highInto its 20th year, the Seldovia Summer Solstice Music Fesway. There will be a woodturning demonstration. Nonmemtival is happening June 20-23 in Seldovia and is building to be bers are welcome. Questions? Call 801-543-9122. an event to remember. The headliners are the Sahnas Brothers Salmon Classic Round Up and Suzanne Lansford who play a blend of Greek, Latin, and The Sterling Senior Center is hosting its annual fund- Flaminco guitar music with the added flair of Suzanne Lansraiser, Salmon Classic Round Up, on June 22 at 5 p.m. BBQ ford’s excellent fiddle accompaniment. Happening at the same dinner, Silent Auction, Live Auction, beer and wine avail- time is the 5th annual Higgy’s En Plein Air Art Festival with able. Tickets are $30 each and are available at the center at Emil Vinberg and Jen Jolliff as Headliners. Both events have free 34453 Sterling Highway or online at: sterlingseniors.org/ workshops along with musical busking, a song circle with the events-activities Further info, call 262-6808. Sterling Area performers and other activities to make this a truly memorable Senior Citizens is a 501c3 non-profit focusing on food, weekend! Tickets are $40 for an all festival Adult pass, Teens $16., under 12 free. More info on Facebook- Seldovia Summer housing, security, and active lifestyles. Solstice Music Festival or the seldoviaartscouncil.net.

Hazardous Waste Collection Day will take place on Saturday, June 8 from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. at the Central Peninsula Landfill. Free to households; fees charged to commercial

Brian Lervold JeffH. Creech

take place on Saturday, June 15. Starting at Deep Creek running along the beach through numerous obstacles through Ninilchik River through the old village up the stairs to the Ninilchik View State Park. This is a family fun event. More information can be found at www.facebook.com/Ninilchikchamberofcommerce/. Benefits from the run help Ninilchik Emergency Services and Ninilchik Chamber of Commerce. If you have any question please feel free to contact Debbie Cary 907-398-8308.

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2019 TriTheKenai Triathlon

The 2019 TriTheKenai triathlon is set for Sunday, June 9. This event is a great beginner triathlon for adults (15+) and youth (6-14) and includes both individual and team events and for the serious-minded triathlete. We offer the more challenging intermediate distance event. The nonprofit TriTheKenai is a great family fun community event and this year our charity of choice is the Soldotna Montessori Food Box program. If you are not a racer, we are always in need of volunteers on race day. Contact Janice at volunteer@trithekenai. com. Get all the event details or register at www.trithekenai.com or email me at wahoo@trithekenai.com or call 252-0558.

Al-Anon support group meetings

Al-Anon support group meetings are held at the Central Peninsula Hospital in the Kasilof Room (second floor) of the River Tower building on Monday at 7 p.m., Wednesday at 7 p.m. and Saturday at 9 a.m. Park around back by the ER and enter through the River Tower entrance and follow the signs. Contact Tony Oliver at 252-0558 for more information.


Opinion

A4 | Friday, June 7, 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 RANDI KEATON....................................... Circulation Director FRANK GOLDTHWAITE......................... Production Manager

What others say

Celebrating, honoring lives lost too soon Keith Cox served the residents

of Virginia Beach in the public utilities department for 12 years. Well-liked by co-workers, he spent his final moments on Friday working to protect them from a gunman in the municipal center — sacrificing his life in the process. The remembrance of Cox, published in The Pilot on Monday, is one of many heartbreaking stories to emerge from the darkness that still hangs over this community, four days after the worst mass shooting in the city’s history. Attention should be paid to the criminal investigation being conducted by local, state and federal law enforcement agencies. They are diving into the details of the shooter’s life, his movements prior to the attack and the possible motivation for this horrific act in the hope of gaining some insight into why and how this happened. But for now, our focus should be on those precious lives cut short on Friday, celebrating their memory and paying tribute to their selflessness. They deserve no less from the community they served. So let us remember Cox, the public utilities account clerk who was described as a jovial, caring co-worker and a talented singer in the choir at New Hope Baptist Church, where his father serves as pastor. As the shooter roamed the building, Cox ushered several employees into an office, telling them to lock the door while he looked for others to help. Rich Nettleton spent 28 years working for the city as a utilities engineer. A Norfolk resident and Old Dominion University graduate, he was a lieutenant for the Army’s 130th Engineer Brigade in Germany, where he served with Beach City Manager Dave Hansen. Joshua Hardy spent more than four years as an engineering technician, but loved ones remembered him as a devout Christian whose love for children led him to author “The ABC Book on Protecting Yourself from Strangers,” a book he self-published in 2011. Missy Langer worked as an administrative assistant in the public utilities department for 12 years. Neighbors recalled her as a passionate Pittsburgh Steelers fan. She had a tough few years, long both her parents in the last five years, but was proud of the life she built in Virginia Beach. Kate Nixon was an engineer with a decade of experience working for the city, whose love of her husband and three children was plainly evident to all who knew her. Alex Gusev came to this country from Belarus in 2003 and was recalled by a colleague as “a model professional” who handled right-of-way issues for Virginia Beach. He was also a graduate of ODU who was quick to help friends and loved ones in need. For most of her 24 years in Virginia Beach government, Mary Lou Gayle worked as a right-of-way agent who was recalled by neighbors for the upkeep and improvements made to her home, which was described as “gorgeous.” A parishioner at St. John the Apostle Catholic Church, Gayle was well thought of by all those in her orbit. Tara Gallagher, a graduate of Portsmouth’s Woodrow Wilson High School, earned two engineering degrees from ODU before joining the city six years ago. LaQuita Brown, a Chesapeake resident, was a right-of-way agent for more than four years. Bert Snelling was a contractor visiting Building 2 for a permit when the shooting began. Another ODU graduate, Chris Rapp, joined the city 11 months ago after serving as Stafford County’s public works director for two years. He was recalled for his love of bagpipes, which he played with Tidewater Pipes & Drums, and his devotion to family and friends. And Bobby Williams, who joined the city in 1981, was repeatedly honored for his lengthy public service throughout his career. He was the type of employee who provides invaluable continuity and institutional memory to municipal government. Stories about each of the victims are available to read. They have been told with respect, grace and sensitivity, honoring the memory of each life lost and the emotional toll on those left behind. Hold them all in your hearts. — The Virginian-Pilot, June 4

Alaska is ignoring PFAS health risks A laska V oices K elly M c L aughlin I live in the Gustavus PFAS plume. Per/polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a toxic family of chemicals that were introduced into Gustavus’ drinking water via firefighting foam, known as Aqueous Film Forming Foam (AFFF), that Alaska’s Department of Transportation (ADOT) chose to use, uncontained, for testing and training at our airport. Gustavus Airport was identified as contaminated in July 2018. My home drinking water well near the airport was tested in September 2018. The results were 133 parts per trillion of PFAS. I subsequently became a voracious late night reader of scientific studies concerning PFAS. Anything measured in parts per trillion (ppt) seems pretty insignificant, but I quickly found that is not the case with these chemicals. Like lead, there is growing evidence that no amount of PFAS is safe. Its man-made bond is indestructible. It moves far and wide, wherever water goes, and the carbon/ fluorine bonds hold. Forever. Alaska’s Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) was in the process of adopting new regulations at the time my well was tested. Because of the extremely toxic nature of these PFAS chemicals, the ADEC was in the process of developing, and

was already using, a more stringent set of regulations, so my well was tested for five different PFAS commonly associated with AFFF. Water that tested above 65 ppt for the sum of these five PFAS was considered a health hazard. The regulation packet that initiated this approach was up for public comment shortly after my results came in. I was impressed by the attention to scientific literature and the overall concern by the state government and advocacy groups. I was proud that my state was attempting to lead the nation in health-protective regulations regarding PFAS. However, based on the literature I was reading, even 65 ppt of five PFAS was not conservative enough and my public comment reflected that. Many studies suggest that there is no safe level of exposure due to the propensity of PFAS to bioaccumulate and biomagnify. The public comment period ended, a new Alaska governor took office, and we waited to hear what our feedback had accomplished. And we waited. We heard Gov. Mike Dunleavy had put the new regulatory package on hold, then we started to hear that the carefully researched and drafted regulations had been dismissed entirely. We were going to go backwards, adopting an outdated standard; instead of counting the sum of five PFAS, Alaska would count only two. Dunleavy and DEC Commissioner Jason Brune were giving the top-down order to ignore three of the most commonly detected PFAS compounds in Alaska: PFNA, PFHxS and PF. The scientific literature

that prompted 2018’s DEC staff to act quickly to implement more protective standards was being blatantly disregarded by the new administration. Recently, ADEC scientists’ protests to this non-scientific, outdated approach are being disregarded as “opinion” despite the existence of dozens of peer-reviewed scientific papers that back them up. Scientists and state workers with 30 years of experience protecting Alaskans at DEC are afraid that speaking against this administration’s decision could cost them their jobs. This rollback in regulations by our state government is not only negligent, it is an unconscionable attack on public health and safety. Health risks from PFAS include (from Alaska’s Department and Social Services web page): ulcerative colitis, liver damage, abnormal fat metabolism, high cholesterol, kidney cancer and chronic kidney disease, high blood pressure in pregnant women, decreased response to vaccines, testicular cancer and decreased fertility, thyroid disease, and reduced birth weight. Knowing there is such a toxic contaminant in our drinking water and choosing to ignore the vast body of recent science on PFAS goes directly against DEC’s mission of “Conserving, improving, and protecting Alaska’s natural resources and environment to enhance the health, safety, economic, and social well-being of Alaskans.” Kelly McLaughlin is the Gustavus PFAS Action Coalition (GPAC) Chair.

News and Politics

Bloomberg to plunge $500M into clean energy effort By JULIE PACE AP Washington Bureau Chief

WASHINGTON — Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is plunging $500 million into an effort to close all of the nation's remaining coal plants by 2030 and put the United States on track toward a 100% clean energy economy. The billionaire Bloomberg's investment in the Beyond Carbon initiative marks the largest ever philanthropic effort to combat climate change, according to the mayor's foundation. The organization will

bypass the federal government and instead seek to pass climate and clean energy policies, as well as back political candidates, at the state and local level. "We're in a race against time with climate change, and yet there is virtually no hope of bold federal action on this issue for at least another two years. Mother Nature is not waiting on our political calendar, and neither can we," Bloomberg said. Bloomberg considered but ultimately passed on seeking the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination. Instead, he vowed to point his vast

wealth and political connections toward fighting climate change and defeating President Donald Trump. Bloomberg will formally unveil the Beyond Carbon effort Friday during a commencement address at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The initiative mirrors Bloomberg's work on gun control, which has focused on bolstering state and local efforts. The former mayor's financial contributions to Democratic candidates who backed stricter gun laws was also considered integral to the party's ability to retake the House in 2018.

Democrats unveil new strategy in subpoena battles with Trump By MARY CLARE JALONICK Associated Press

WASHINGTON — House Democrats are poised to make it easier for their committee chairmen to take President Donald Trump’s administration to court, escalating their legal efforts against a president who has vowed to fight “all of the subpoenas.” A resolution unveiled Thursday would authorize contempt cases against Attorney General William Barr and former White House counsel Donald McGahn for failing to comply with subpoenas. It would also empower committee chairmen to take legal action to enforce subpoenas in the future without a vote of the full House, so long as they have approval from a bipartisan group of House leaders. Democrats have the majority on the five-person group.

Trump’s vow to stonewall House Democrats has left them with few good options outside the courtroom to pursue investigations of the president. Barr defied a subpoena to provide an unredacted version of special counsel Robert Mueller’s Trump-Russia report, along with underlying evidence from the report. McGahn, who is frequently referenced in the report, has defied subpoenas to provide documents and testify before the Judiciary Committee. The White House directed McGahn not to comply with requests for documents during his tenure there, and has also directed other witnesses not to comply. Former communications director Hope Hicks and a former aide to McGahn, Annie Donaldson, also defied subpoenas this week at the request of the White House. The administration said they don’t have the legal right to turn

over documents from their time working for Trump. The House is scheduled to vote on the resolution Tuesday. By allowing committee chairs to act without a House vote in the future, leaders can avoid tying up precious floor time — and also prevent Democrats from more conservative districts from taking multiple votes on contempt resolutions. Many of those members have said they would prefer to be working on policy instead of investigations of the president. At the opposite end of the Democratic caucus, several of the most liberal members are pressuring House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to open impeachment proceedings against Trump. But Pelosi has so far rejected that option, preferring a slower, more methodical approach to investigating the president — including the court fights.


Peninsula Clarion | Friday, June 7, 2019 | A5

Nation/World Putin says Russia didn’t meddle in US vote By GARY PRUITT Associated Press

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday reaffirmed his staunch denial that his government meddled in the 2016 U.S. presidential election despite the extensive evidence to the contrary, and insisted Moscow has no intention of interfering in any future votes, either. Speaking in response to a question from The Associated Press during a meeting with chief executives of international news agencies in St. Petersburg, the Russian leader said that “we didn’t meddle, we aren’t meddling and we will not meddle in any elections.” Putin and other Russian officials have hotly denied any interference with the U.S. vote to help Donald Trump win the presidency, even though U.S. special counsel Robert Mueller has uncovered evidence of a Kremlin operation to interfere with the 2016 vote. He charged 12 Russian military intelligence officers with breaking into Democratic Party emails, and also indict-

ed other Russians who used phony social media accounts to spread divisive rhetoric and to undermine the U.S. political system. Putin insisted that “we don’t have and never had any plans to interfere in U.S. domestic politics,” but added that the Russian government can’t stop private citizens from expressing their views about developments in the U.S. online. “How can we ban them from doing that?” he said. “Do you have such a ban with regard to Russia?” The president added that Russia had offered to agree on a set of rules regarding modern communications to President Barack Obama’s administration and then Trump’s White House, but neither was ready to make the deal. During his meeting, Putin also warned that the U.S. reluctance to start talks on extending a key arms control pact raises the threat of an uncontrollable arms race, and said that Moscow has no plans to send troops to shore up Venezuela’s embattled leader. Asked about Trump’s

Training rollover kills West Point cadet, injures many

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a meeting with heads of world’s leading news agencies at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in St. Petersburg, Russia, Thursday. (Yuri Kochetkov/Pool Photo via AP)

tweet this week that Moscow had informed Washington it had “removed most of their people from Venezuela,” Putin said that Russian experts come and go to service Russian-made weapons bought by Caracas. “We aren’t building any military bases there, we aren’t sending troops there, we have never done that,” Putin said. “But we have fulfilled our contract obligations in the sphere of military-technical cooperation and we will keep doing that.”

The Russian leader said the U.S. sanctions against Venezuela have hurt ordinary people, and warned Washington against using force to oust Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. Russia has staunchly backed Maduro, while the U.S. and several dozen other nations have thrown their support behind opposition leader Juan Guaidó and recognized him as interim president, asserting that Maduro’s re-election last year was illegitimate.

US opens new mass facility in Texas for migrant children By GARANCE BURKE Associated Press

The federal government is opening a new mass facility to hold migrant children in Texas and considering detaining hundreds more youths on three military bases around the country, adding up to 3,000 new beds to the already overtaxed system. The new emergency facility in Carrizo Springs, Texas, will hold as many as 1,600 teens in a complex that once housed oil field workers on governmentleased land near the border, said Mark Weber, a spokesman for Office of Refugee Resettlement. The agency is also weighing using Army and Air Force bases in Georgia, Montana and Oklahoma to house an additional 1,400 kids in the coming weeks, amid the influx of children traveling to the U.S. alone. Most of the children crossed the border without their parents, escaping violence and corruption in Central America, and are held in government custody while authorities determine if they can be released to relatives or family friends.

This May 2019 file photo shows some of 1,036 migrants who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border in El Paso, Texas. (U.S. Customs and Border Protection via AP, File)

All the new facilities will be considered temporary emergency shelters, so they won’t be subject to state child welfare licensing requirements, Weber said. In January, the government shut down an unlicensed detention camp in the Texas desert under political pressure, and another unlicensed facility called Homestead remains in operation in the Miami suburbs. “It is our legal requirement to take care of these children so that they are not in Border Patrol facilities,” Weber said. “They will have the services that ORR always provides, which is food, shelter and water.” Under fire for the death

of two children who went through the agency’s network of shelters and facing lawsuits over the treatment of teens in its care, the agency says it must set up new facilities to accommodate new arrivals or risk running out of beds. The announcement of the program’s expansion follows the government’s decision to scale back or cut paying for recreation, English-language courses and legal services for the more than 13,200 migrant toddlers, school-age children and teens in its custody. The Health and Human Services department, which oversees the refugee office, notified shelters around the

country last week that it was not going to reimburse them for teachers’ pay, legal services or recreational equipment, saying budget cuts were needed as record numbers of unaccompanied children arrive at the border, largely from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador. In May, border agents apprehended 11,507 children traveling alone. Attorneys said the move violates a legal settlement known as the Flores agreement that requires the government to provide education and recreational activities to migrant children in its care. Last week, attorneys filed a motion claiming that the government also was violating the decades-old settlement by keeping kids at Homestead for months in some cases, instead of releasing them within 20 days. “If they are going to open the program up in these numbers and they can’t even manage the influx facility that they have in a humane way, then compounding that is going to be disastrous,” said Holly Cooper, an attorney at the Immigration Law Clinic at University of California, Davis who represents detained youth.

Ex-deputy in Parkland shooting out of jail on reduced bail

Former Broward Sheriff’s Office deputy Scot Peterson appears in the courtroom for a hearing at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Thursday. (Amy Beth Bennett/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP, Pool) By CURT ANDERSON AP Legal Affairs Writer

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — A former Florida deputy charged with 11 criminal counts after failing to confront the gunman in the Parkland school massacre was released from jail Thursday after a judge reduced his bail and lifted some restrictions. Scot Peterson walked out of the Broward County Jail with his attorneys after Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer set bond at $39,500, down from the initial amount of $102,000. Peterson said nothing before getting into a car that drove him away.

Scherer also eliminated a previous requirement that Peterson wear a GPS monitor. His bond is secured by $330,000 in real estate and he will be allowed to go to his home in North Carolina. “He’s going to be on standard pretrial release,” the judge said. Peterson, 56, is charged with child neglect, culpable negligence and perjury stemming from the February 2018 shooting that left 17 dead at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. If convicted, he faces a potential maximum prison sentence of nearly 100 years. While out on bail, Peterson cannot possess a fire-

Around the World

arm or take any job involving children, Scherer said. Peterson, dressed in beige jail clothes, did not speak during the hearing. His attorney, Joseph DiRuzzo, said Peterson should not face the neglect and negligence charges because he was not legally a caregiver with direct responsibility for the welfare of the students. “They are overreaching. These definitions don’t apply to my client,” DiRuzzo told reporters after the hearing. Assistant State Attorney Tim Donnelly said case law supports the charges. “The definition of caregiver is very broad,” Donnelly said. The charges stem from Peterson’s decision to remain outside a school building — where he was the assigned resource officer — on Valentine’s Day last year when police say defendant Nikolas Cruz, 20, fired 140 rounds from an AR-15 rifle. Cruz faces the death penalty if convicted of the killings. His attorneys have said he would plead guilty in return for a life prison sentence. DiRuzzo said Peterson was abruptly arrested without warning earlier

this week after an internal affairs “name-clearing” hearing at the Broward Sheriff’s Office. Sheriff Gregory Tony said Peterson was fired after that hearing, even though he had previously announced his retirement.

WEST POINT, N.Y. — A vehicle loaded with West Point cadets on summer training overturned in rough, wooded terrain Thursday, killing one cadet and injuring several others, the U.S. Military Academy said. The tactical vehicle operated by two soldiers overturned around 6:45 a.m. as it was headed to a land navigation site as part of standard summer cadet training, said West Point’s superintendent, Lt. Gen. Darryl A. Williams. The two soldiers were injured along with 19 cadets in the Class of 2020. Williams said none of the injuries were life-threatening. Injuries included broken arms and facial abrasions, an official with the hospital at West Point said. “It is not common for these vehicles to turn over. It is very rough terrain,” Williams told reporters at a briefing near the accident site Thursday afternoon. “You can see the hills we have here.” Helicopter footage from WNBC showed a truck flipped over in a wooded area. The investigation is continuing, Williams said, and “we don’t know the details of how the accident actually happened.” The “light medium tactical vehicle” that rolled over has a 5-ton payload and an extended bed, according to West Point. That vehicle class has a passenger capacity of 20, not counting those in the cab, according to an Army technical bulletin. It was not clear whether all the cadets were aboard the vehicle, as opposed to nearby, academy spokesman Lt. Col. Christopher Ophardt said. Officials were notifying relatives and did not release the identity of the cadet who died. President Donald Trump tweeted Thursday afternoon: “So sorry to hear about the terrible accident involving our GREAT West Point Cadets. We mourn the loss of life and pray for the injured. God Bless them ALL!” Classes ended at West Point last month, but the academy runs summer military training exercises for cadets in the heavily wooded hills outside the main gates. The rollover occurred on a fire break road as the vehicle was leaving Camp Natural Bridge, where trainees live during the summer, Ophardt said.

Syria rebels launch attack on government forces in northwest BEIRUT — Syrian insurgents launched an offensive Thursday against government forces in northwestern Syria, armed opposition and a war monitoring group said, part of a see-sawing battle for control of the edge of the rebel-held territory there. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the rebel offensive began Thursday afternoon with a volley of rockets and missiles lobbed at government forces in a handful of villages recently captured from the opposition on the southern edge of the rebel stronghold. The Observatory said the rebels burned tires to obstruct warplanes’ vision. The war monitoring group said rebel fighters advanced in one of the villages — Al-Jebeen — after intense clashes. The government and its ally Russia responded with a wave of airstrikes, including dropping barrel bombs on villages nearby, the Observatory said. A rebel umbrella group, National Front for Liberation, confirmed the offensive, saying it aimed to repel government forces. Syrian state media said the insurgents shelled residential homes in the northern countryside of Hama, an area controlled by government forces, causing damages. Syrian State news agency SANA said army units responded to the source of the rockets with artillery. Human Rights Watch said the Syrian-Russian military alliance has used internationally banned indiscriminate weapons, such as barrel bombs and incendiary weapons, in populated areas in northwest Syria in recent weeks. More than 3 million people live in the rebel-held area, nearly half of them already displaced from other rounds of violence. Government forces began a ground offensive in late April against areas under rebel control since 2015, after a Russia-Turkey-backed cease-fire in place for months failed to reduce the influence of extremists in the stronghold or open a highway that links government-controlled cities. Some areas in the stronghold have been in rebel hands since as early as 2011, when the civil war began. — The Associated Press

THIS SUMMER AT THE

SOLDOTNA PUBLIC LIBRARY! June 4 — July 23 Pre-readers — Grade 6 CODE CLUB Mondays at 4:00pm FREE FOOD FOR KIDS T/TR/F at 11:30am

  

Pick up a reading log starting May 22 Record at least 10 books to earn cool prizes and enter to win a grand prize! Prizes can be picked up starting July 15th

STARS & STORIES Tuesdays at 2:30pm

ROCKET LAUNCH KICKOFF PARTY

FAMILY MOVIES Thursdays at 2:30pm

LUNAR LANDING FINALE PARTY

JUNE 4 • 2:30pm JULY 23 • 2:30pm FOR A FULL SCHEDULE OF PROGRAMS, VISIT OUR WEBSITE OR FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK!

www.soldotna.org/library www.facebook.com/SoldotnaLibrary • 235 N. Binkley St. • 262-4227


A6 | Friday, June 7, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion

Religion

Pope to meet Putin before Vatican Ukraine meeting By Nicole Winfield and Nataliya Vasilyeva The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Vatican next month, a day before Catholic leaders from Ukraine gather at the Holy See to discuss the continuing conflict there and the fallout from the schism between the Russian and Ukrainian Orthodox Churches. The Vatican confirmed the July 4 audience Thursday. It will be the third meeting between Francis and Putin.

Francis and Moscow Patriarch Kirill sat down for talks in 2016 in the first meeting of the heads of both churches in a century. That summit, in Cuba, was seen as a possible step toward a papal visit to Russia. Not a single pope has ever set foot in Russia. Asked if Putin would extend an invitation for Francis to visit Russia, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters Thursday that it was too early to say. Last month, the Vatican announced that Francis had invited the leadership of Ukraine’s Greek Catholic Church, a minority

Church Briefs ‘In The Wild’ vacation bible school First Baptist Church is going ‘In The Wild’ for VBS this summer. Get ready for some amazing real-life encounters with Jesus, Sunday-Thursday, June 9-13 at 6:30-9 p.m. VBS is for ages 4 years through grade 6. Go to www.fbcsol.org for the registration form.

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 Saturday of every month from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. For more information, call 907-283-4555.

Vacation Bible School Sterling Lutheran Church is hosting Vacation Bible School July 8-12, with the theme Miraculous Mission. We will be exploring the stars and God’s plan for His children, starting at 9 a.m. each day with breakfast, ending at noon. The church is directly behind Sterling Elementary School, 35100 McCall Rd, Sterling. Church 262-9259 to leave a message, or Pastor Hilgendorf 7403060.

Kasilof Community Church Food Pantry Kasilof Community Church Food Pantry starts Wednesday, June 5 and every Wednesday from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. for residents in the community who are experiencing food shortages. The pantry is located in the church office building next to the Kasilof Mercantile, about mile 109 on the Sterling Highway. All are welcome. Non perishable food items may be dropped at this same location Monday thru Thursday from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Contact the church office for more information at 262-7512.

3rd Annual Community Block Party Soldotna Bible Chapel will host a Community Block Party on Wednesday, June 12 from 6-8 p.m. on the lawn and parking lot of Soldotna Bible Chapel at 300 W. Marydale Ave. Free food from the grill. Events include:

eastern rite church loyal to the pope, for meetings July 5-6. The aim, it said, was to lend support “in the delicate situation in which Ukraine finds itself.” Last year, the Orthodox Church of Ukraine formally split from the Russian Orthodox Church in a schism recognized by the spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians. The push for a fullfledged and independent Ukrainian Orthodox Church was bolstered by fighting in eastern Ukraine between government forces and Russia-backed rebels.

The Vatican hasn’t entered into the fray for fear of upsetting relations with the various players. It said the summit of the Greek Catholic leadership is aimed at helping “promote peace and understanding, where possible, with the Latin rite church and other churches and Christian communities.” Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014 and backs separatist rebels who have been fighting Ukrainian forces in the country’s east for the past five years, a conflict that has left over 13,000 dead. Former Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko had

huge blow-up obstacle course, face painting, balloon target practice, kids crafts, balloon sculptures/animals, magic show, bubbles, chalk, hula hoops. In case of rain event moves inside. Call 262-4865 for more information or call Sue Comstock 252 7346.

Annual Western Kenai Peninsula Picnic The public is invited to attend Annual Western Kenai Peninsula Picnic on Saturday, June 9 at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church in Soldotna. There will be an outdoor Mass, weather permitting, beginning at 11 a.m. followed by picnic with food, games music and great fellowship. As part of the celebration, the Catholic parishes of the Kenai Peninsula will be paying tribute to the Oblate priests who have been providing spiritual guidance to these parishes for the past 13 years. They will be leaving the area on July 1 to accept new assignments. This is an opportunity to say goodbye to them. All are welcome to join in this special celebration.

Farewell celebration The public is invited to a farewell celebration on June 9 for the Oblate Missionary priests who have served the Western Kenai Peninsula for the last 13 years. An outdoor Mass will be celebrated beginning at 11 a.m. at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church in Soldotna. This will be followed by a picnic with food, games, music, tributes, etc. There are indoor facilities in case of rain. This event is to express gratitude to these priests who have provided guidance, joy and spirituality. Please join us.

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.

touted the creation of an independent Ukrainian church as a cornerstone of his unsuccessful bid for re-election. Poroshenko and many other prominent figures have argued that it was vital to set up an independent Ukrainian church and sever centuries-long ties with the Russian church after the annexation of Crimea. Moscow accused Kyiv of trying to use church issues for political purposes. Earlier this year, Putin criticized the decision to set up a new Orthodox church in Ukraine, saying that it was rooted in “struggle for power” and triggered “animosity and in-

tolerance.” He also warned of sectarian violence and said that Moscow is ready to “do everything to protect human rights, including freedom of conscience.” Some Ukrainian parishes saw scuffles and clashes earlier this year between the proponents of the new church and those who wanted to stay affiliated with the Moscow Patriarchate. But the violence has overall been sporadic and low-level. Ukraine’s new President Volodymyr Zelenskiy eschewed Poroshenko’s religious policy and said that the state should not interfere in religious affairs.

United Methodist Church food pantry The Kenai United Methodist Church provides a food pantry for those in need every Monday from 12:30-3 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.

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 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. 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.


Sports O ut of the

O ffice M egan P acer

In pursuit of a green thumb

T

his spring, I decided to get serious about gardening. By gardening, I mean finding the most hearty, resilient plants I could and sticking them in a variety of hodgepodge troughs and decorative pots on my front porch. By serious, I mean planning to completely gut the small plot of grass in front of said porch, grab some rocks from the beach and turn it into a quaint garden, before giving up on that idea in favor of something less ambitious. Given my track record with keeping things alive (poor to dismal) I figured perennials would be the safest way for me to go this year. I popped down to a local feed and garden store in Homer and spent the better part of two full weekends meticulously browsing the many rows and greenhouses, making notes, perfecting my choices to fit the perfect color scheme and doubling back after second guessing myself. By the end of it all, I came away with a branching, creeping bush that produces small, bluepurple blooms, a mixture of purple and orange flowers which I believe are pansies (or something else that starts with a P) and two strong, tall lupines of a color that is yet to be determined. Come on. After an intro like that, did you really think I’d remember the proper names of all those plants by the time I got around to writing this? Spring came early to Homer, and with it my confidence. I rehabilitated my pots and small plastic flowerbeds with what I assume is top notch soil (the bag looked pretty fancy). I arranged my patio furniture to align perfectly with all my assorted plants once they were in. I got all the plant starters (no seeds for this gal. It’s best to know one’s strengths) nice and cozy in their various homes and gave them a big helping of water. Then it rained for about a week straight. I could tell my little wards were drenched and unhappy in their pots, but, not knowing how best to help them, decided to ride it out. Most of them pulled through and we moved on to drier, sunnier times. I managed to save two of the poppies (or did I say pansies?) from a savage attack from some small, unknown critter, that from the looks of it had tried to burrow into their home in the dirt. All this and a few odd weeks later, everything is still technically alive, but not flourishing in the way I told myself they would this year. I look at the lupines lining the Homer Spit this summer, as they do every summer — decorating its length with their bright splash of purple. They are an iconic Alaska plant. You can hardly find an Alaska See OUT, page A9

&

Peninsula Clarion | Friday, June 7, 2019 | A7

Recreation

Ostrander cruises to steeple final Boise State star opens door to possible historic nationals 3-peat Staff report Peninsula Clarion

The run at a historic threepeat for Boise State’s Allie Ostrander began Thursday night with a relatively easy preliminary win at the NCAA Division I Track and Field Championships in Austin, Texas. Ostrander won a semifinal heat in the women’s 3,000-meter steeplechase Thursday to qualify for Saturday’s championship final, running a time of 9 minutes, 44.32 seconds, to finish as the top seeded athlete in the event. Ostrander’s personal best in the event is 9:38.57. Ostrander, a redshirt junior for the Broncos, had to finish top five in order to earn an automatic spot in Saturday’s final. The 2015 Kenai Central grad is looking to become

the first women to win three straight national steeplechase crowns, and will go for the record at 2:54 p.m. (AKDT) on a nationally-televised broadcast on ESPN2. Running with the lead pack for the first 1,200 meters, Ostrander took the lead and began to steadily put a gap on the field, making it to the finish line over three seconds clear of second place, setting a facility record in the process at Mike A. Myers Stadium at the University of Texas Austin. “The first race of NCAA’s is always kind of nerve-wracking,” Ostrander said in a Boise State press release. “It was nice to get through the prelims cleanly and focus my attention on the final.” Ostrander will also attempt the steeple and 5,000-meter double for a third straight year. The women’s 5,000 final is

Allie Ostrander competes in a women’s 3,000-meter steeplechase preliminary heat Thursday, June 6, 2019, at the NCAA Div. I Track and Field Championships in Austin, Texas. (Photo provided by Boise State Athletics)

scheduled for 4:25 p.m. (AKDT), won the 5,000 title but has finishes only 90 minutes after the steeple- of fourth and eighth in each of the chase final. Ostrander has never last two years.

Blues edge closer to the Cup St. Louis defeats Boston to take 3-2 Finals series lead By JIMMY GOLEN AP Sports Writer

BOSTON — From last place in the league to the brink of their first Stanley Cup championship, the St. Louis Blues need one more win to complete their improbable journey. They have a young goaltender leading the way. Jordan Binnington stopped 38 shots, and the Blues withstood the emotional rush of Zdeno Chara’s return to beat the Bruins 2-1 on Thursday night and take a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven final. They can win the championship at home in Game 6 on Sunday night. “We’ve had quite the season so far. We’ve been through quite a lot,” defenseman Colton Parayko said. “But we continued to battle. We never gave up on each other. It put us closer together, especially now.” One game after chopping down the Bruins’ giant captain with a deflected puck off his jaw, the Blues quieted the rest of a city still celebrating its last championship: The New England Patriots were receiving their Super Bowl rings a few miles away, the second in what Bostonians hoped would be a third title in the last 12 months. But it’s St. Louis — whose Rams lost to the Patriots in the 2002 Super Bowl, and

St. Louis Blues goaltender Jordan Binnington, right, stops a shot at the goal line as Boston Bruins’ David Krejci, left, of the Czech Republic, pokes at it during the third period in Game 5 of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup Final, Thursday in Boston. A video review confirmed there was no goal on the play. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

whose Cardinals fell to the Red Sox in the 2004 and 2013 World Series — that is one win from skating off with the Stanley Cup. “We’ve got a big job ahead of us, that’s the way I look at it,” said coach Craig Berube, who took over when Mike Yeo was fired

in November with the team mired in last place in the Central Division. “I hope our team looks at it that way.” Ryan O’Reilly and David Perron scored for St. Louis, which has won two straight See BLUES, page A8

Oilers blasted in ABL season opener Staff report Peninsula Clarion

The Peninsula Oilers opened their 2019 Alaska Baseball League season with an 11-1 loss to the Anchorage Bucs Thursday at Mulcahy Stadium in Anchorage. Powered by a deep lineup that outhit the Oilers 16-6, the Bucs were able to break open a scoreless game early with four runs in the bottom of the second,

including a two-run homer by Blake Paugh. Paugh went deep twice and finishe 3 for 5 with three RBIs. The Oilers got hits from Victor Carlino, Damon Keith, Skyler Messinger, Drew Thorpe, Camden Vasquez and Kenai Central grad Paul Steffensen, who collected his first career ABL hit in his league debut with a leadoff single in the top of the ninth inning. Steffensen ended up 1 for 4.

Jonathan Carlos started but only lasted two innings for the Oilers on the mound. Carlos gave up five runs on five hits and two walks, with three strikeouts. Eric Reardon, Jacob Reed and Keith finished it out in relief, with Reed being the only reliever to not allow a run in his three frames of work. Mason Wells whiffed six in five innings of pitching for the Bucs, giving up a run on four hits against the Oilers.

After a scoreless opening to the game, Anchorage got on the board in the bottom of the second with a two-out single by Chad Castillo that scored two runs for a Bucs lead. That was followed by a two-run blast by Paugh for a 4-0 lead. The Bucs led 8-0 before Peninsula broke its shutout in the top of the fifth inning, getting an RBI single by Carlino to go through the gap. See OPEN, page A9

Geologists search for large, glacier-transported granitic boulders

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A four-foot high granitic boulder sits on a hilltop in the Caribou Hills of the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska. (Photo by Ed Berg)

laciers have carried granitic boulders 200-plus miles down Cook Inlet from interior mountains during the last two glaciations. The most recent glaciation deposited hundreds of these “erratic” boulders in the Sterling-Soldotna area. This glacial expansion, known as the Moosehorn stade, climaxed about 22,000 years ago, we think. The earlier glaciation was much larger, nearly filling the Cook Inlet trough, almost covering the Caribou Hills and extending beyond Kodiak. We estimate the age of this “penultimate” glaciation at 50-70,000 years, based on dates of similar glaciations in the Alaska and Brooks Ranges.

R efuge N otebook E d B erg & D ick R eger We want to pin down the timing of these two glacial advances, and possibly get dates on even older glaciations. We plan to use “cosmogenic exposure” dating to estimate how long the boulders have been sitting in their present positions after being dropped by retreating glaciers. Here is the basic idea: The Earth’s surface is constantly bombarded by cosmic rays created by supernovae explosions many light years away. These

cosmic rays create new elements (isotopes) like Beryllium-10 and Chlorine-36 in the upper surface of boulders exposed to the sky. The outer inch of a boulder can be sampled and taken into a lab to measure the new isotopes; the greater the proportion of new isotopes, the longer the exposure. Granitic rocks are particularly good for this kind of dating because their quartz crystals trap the new isotopes. Cosmogenic dating doesn’t tell the age of the rock; it only tells how long the rock surface has been exposed to cosmic rays. The rock itself is much older, perhaps 50 to 250 million years. During the relatively recent glaciations, massive See BIG, page A9


A8 | Friday, June 7, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion

. . . Blues

Scoreboard

basketball NBA Playoffs FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Toronto 2, Golden State 1 Thursday, May 30: Toronto 118, Golden State 109 Sunday, June 2: Golden State 109, Toronto 104 Wednesday, June 5: Toronto 123, Golden State 109 Friday, June 7: Toronto at Golden State, 5 p.m. Monday, June 10: Golden State at Toronto, 5 p.m. x-Thursday, June 13: Toronto at Golden State, 5 p.m. x-Sunday, June 16: Golden State at Toronto, 4 p.m. All Times ADT

hockey NHL Playoffs STANLEY CUP FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) St. Louis 3, Boston 2 Monday, May 27: Boston 4, St. Louis 2 Wednesday, May 29: St. Louis 3, Boston 2, OT Saturday, June 1: Boston 7, St. Louis 2 Monday, June 3: St. Louis 4, Boston 2 Thursday, June 6: St. Louis 2, Boston 1 Sunday, June 9: Boston at St. Louis, 4 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 12: St. Louis at Boston, 4 p.m. All Times ADT

baseball National League

East Division W L Pct GB Philadelphia 35 27 .565 — Atlanta 33 29 .532 2 New York 30 32 .484 5 Washington 28 34 .452 7 Miami 23 37 .383 11 Central Division Chicago 34 27 .557 — Milwaukee 35 28 .556 — St. Louis 31 29 .517 2½ Pittsburgh 30 31 .492 4 Cincinnati 28 33 .459 6 West Division Los Angeles 43 20 .683 — Colorado 32 29 .525 10 San Diego 32 31 .508 11 Arizona 31 32 .492 12 San Francisco 25 36 .410 17 Thursday’s Games N.Y. Mets 7, San Francisco 3 Pittsburgh 6, Atlanta 1 St. Louis 3, Cincinnati 1 Milwaukee 5, Miami 1 Colorado 3, Chicago Cubs 1 San Diego 5, Washington 4 Friday’s Games St. Louis (Mikolas 4-5) at Chicago Cubs (Hamels 4-2), 10:20 a.m. Cincinnati (Mahle 2-5) at Philadelphia (Eflin 5-5), 3:05 p.m. Arizona (Kelly 5-6) at Toronto (Stroman 3-7), 3:07 p.m. Atlanta (Soroka 6-1) at Miami (Urena 4-6), 3:10 p.m. Colorado (Senzatela 4-4) at N.Y.

Mets (deGrom 3-5), 3:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Davis 0-0) at Milwaukee (Woodruff 7-1), 4:10 p.m. Washington (Fedde 1-0) at San Diego (Margevicius 2-6), 6:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 5-0) at San Francisco (Pomeranz 1-6), 6:15 p.m. Saturday’s Games Arizona at Toronto, 11:07 a.m. Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 12:05 p.m. Atlanta at Miami, 12:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 12:10 p.m. Colorado at N.Y. Mets, 3:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco, 3:15 p.m. St. Louis at Chicago Cubs, 3:15 p.m. Washington at San Diego, 6:10 p.m.

American League

East Division W L Pct GB New York 39 22 .639 — Tampa Bay 37 23 .617 1½ Boston 33 29 .532 6½ Toronto 23 39 .371 16½ Baltimore 19 43 .306 20½ Central Division Minnesota 41 20 .672 — Cleveland 31 31 .500 10½ Chicago 29 32 .475 12 Detroit 23 36 .390 17 Kansas City 19 43 .306 22½ West Division Houston 43 21 .672 — Texas 32 28 .533 9 Oakland 31 31 .500 11 Los Angeles 30 33 .476 12½ Seattle 26 40 .394 18 Thursday’s Games Tampa Bay 6, Detroit 1 Boston 7, Kansas City 5 Houston 8, Seattle 7, 14 innings N.Y. Yankees 6, Toronto 2 Minnesota 5, Cleveland 4 Texas 4, Baltimore 3 Oakland 7, L.A. Angels 4 Friday’s Games Arizona (Kelly 5-6) at Toronto (Stroman 3-7), 3:07 p.m. Minnesota (TBD) at Detroit (Boyd 5-4), 3:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (German 9-1) at Cleveland (Plesac 0-1), 3:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Chirinos 6-2) at Boston (Porcello 4-5), 3:10 p.m. Oakland (Anderson 6-4) at Texas (Lynn 7-4), 4:05 p.m. Baltimore (Ynoa 0-2) at Houston (Cole 5-5), 4:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Nova 3-5) at Kansas City (Bailey 4-6), 4:15 p.m. Seattle (Gonzales 5-6) at L.A. Angels (Heaney 0-0), 6:07 p.m. Saturday’s Games Tampa Bay at Boston, 9:05 a.m., 1st game Oakland at Texas, 10:05 a.m., 1st game Chicago White Sox at Kansas City, 10:15 a.m. Arizona at Toronto, 11:07 a.m. Baltimore at Houston, 12:10 p.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 12:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Cleveland, 12:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Boston, 2:10 p.m., 2nd game Oakland at Texas, 5:05 p.m., 2nd game Seattle at L.A. Angels, 6:07 p.m. All Times ADT

Rays 6, Tigers 1 T.B. 100 200 030 —6 14 0 Det. 100 000 000 —1 8 0 Stanek, Beeks (3), Roe (7), Wood (8), Castillo (9) and d’Arnaud; Norris, Alcantara (6), Stumpf (8), Farmer (8), A.Adams (9) and Greiner. W_Beeks 5-0. L_Norris 2-5. HRs_Tampa Bay, d’Arnaud 2 (2), Adames (6).

Red Sox 7, Royals 5 Bos. 004 000 300 —7 9 0 K.C. 020 010 101 —5 14 0 Weber, Brewer (2), Walden (4), Brasier (6), J.Taylor (7), Hembree (8), Barnes (9) and C.Vazquez; Duffy, Flynn (3), Barlow (6), McCarthy (8) and Gallagher. W_Brewer 1-2. L_Duffy 3-3. Sv_ Barnes (4). HRs_Boston, Betts (10). Kansas City, Gordon (10), Soler (16), Cuthbert (3).

Astros 8, Mariners 7 Hou. 300 010 110 100 01—8 14 0 Sea. 100 000 311 100 00—7 11 0 (14 innings) Verlander, Harris (7), Pressly (7), Osuna (8), Rondon (10), James (11), Devenski (13) and Chirinos; A.Adams, Milone (1), Elias (7), Bautista (8), Bass (9), Brennan (11), Gearrin (12), Festa (14) and Narvaez. W_Devenski 1-0. L_Festa 0-1. HRs_Houston, Mayfield (1), Chirinos (10), Bregman (18). Seattle, Narvaez (9).

Twins 5, Indians 4 Min. 102 010 100 —5 7 2 Cle. 000 010 201 —4 4 1 Berrios, Magill (7), May (7), Rogers (8) and Astudillo; Bauer, Edwards (9), J.Smith (9) and R.Perez. W_Berrios 8-2. L_Bauer 4-6. Sv_Rogers (6). HRs_Minnesota, Kepler 3 (15). Cleveland, Mercado (2), Perez (10).

Yankees 6, Blue Jays 2 N.Y. 040 200 000 —6 8 1 Tor. 000 001 001 —2 8 1 Happ, Green (8), A.Chapman (9) and Sanchez; Jackson, Pannone (4), Mayza (8), Luciano (9) and Maile. W_Happ 6-3. L_Jackson 0-4. Sv_A.Chapman (18). HRs_ New York, Hicks (3), Urshela (4). Toronto, Sogard (5).

Rangers 4, Orioles 3 Bal. 100 011 000 —3 8 1 Tex. 020 020 00x —4 8 0 Hess, M.Castro (7) and Sisco; Jurado, Chavez (7), C.Martin (8), Kelley (9) and Kiner-Falefa, Mathis. W_Jurado 3-2. L_Hess 1-8. Sv_Kelley (7). HRs_Baltimore, Mancini (13). Texas, Pence (12).

Athletics 7, Angels 4 Oak. 000 330 100 —7 9 0 L.A. 000 120 001 —4 9 3 Fiers, Buchter (7), Hendriks (7), Trivino (8), Soria (9) and Phegley; Skaggs, Barria (5) and Garneau. W_Fiers 5-3. L_Skaggs 4-6. HRs_Oakland, Piscotty (8). Los

Angeles, Trout (16).

Mets 7, Giants 3 S.F. 000 201 000 —3 3 0 N.Y. 200 000 14x —7 13 0 S.Anderson, Moronta (7), Watson (7), Melancon (8) and Vogt; Wheeler, S.Lugo (8), Familia (9) and Nido. W_S.Lugo 3-0. L_Melancon 2-1. HRs_San Francisco, Belt (9), Sandoval (8). New York, Smith (4), Frazier (5), Rosario (8).

Pirates 6, Braves 1 Atl. Pit.

100 000 000 —1 7 0 030 000 03x —6 10 1

Foltynewicz, Newcomb (7), Webb (8) and McCann; Archer, Liriano (7), F.Vazquez (8) and Stallings, E.Diaz. W_Archer 3-5. L_Foltynewicz 1-5. Sv_F.Vazquez (15). HRs_Atlanta, Freeman (16). Pittsburgh, Polanco (6), Moran (8).

Cardinals 3, Reds 1 Cin. 000 100 000 —1 5 0 S.L. 001 000 20x —3 9 0 DeSclafani, Garrett (6), Lorenzen (7), W.Peralta (8) and Barnhart; Hudson, Miller (7), Gant (7), J.Hicks (9) and Wieters. W_Gant 5-0. L_Lorenzen 0-1. Sv_J.Hicks (12). HRs_St. Louis, DeJong (9).

Brewers 5, Marlins 1 Mia. 000 001 000 —1 5 1 Mil. 301 000 10x —5 9 0 C.Smith, Brice (6), Guerrero (7), Romo (8) and Alfaro; F.Peralta, Jeffress (7), Hader (8) and Pina, Grandal. W_F.Peralta 3-2. L_C. Smith 3-4. Sv_Hader (14). HRs_ Milwaukee, Moustakas 2 (18), Yelich (23).

Rockies 3, Cubs 1 Col. 000 200 100 —3 6 0 Chi. 000 001 000 —1 5 0 Lambert, Diaz (8), Oberg (9) and Iannetta; Quintana, Edwards Jr. (8), Ryan (9) and Contreras. W_Lambert 1-0. L_Quintana 4-5. Sv_Oberg (3).

Padres 5, Nationals 4 Was. 400 000 000 —4 4 1 S.D. 020 030 00x —5 6 1 Corbin, Sipp (6), Guerra (6), Grace (8) and Gomes; Lucchesi, Wisler (6), Wingenter (7), Stammen (8), Yates (9) and Hedges. W_Lucchesi 5-3. L_Corbin 5-4. Sv_Yates (23). HRs_Washington, Dozier (9). San Diego, Renfroe (18).

transactions BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Placed OF DJ Stewart on the 10-day IL. Recalled INF/OF Stevie Wilkerson from Norfolk (IL). DETROIT TIGERS — Sent SS Jordy Mercer to Toledo (IL) for a rehab assignment. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Optioned INF Taylor Ward to Salt Lake (PCL). Recalled RHP Jaime Barria from Salt Lake. Announced

RHP John Curtiss elected free agency in lieu of accepting an outright assignment. SEATTLE MARINERS — Placed OF Braden Bishop on the 10-day IL. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Released C Erik Kratz. Sent 2B Joey Wendle to Charlotte (FSL) for a rehab assignment. National League CHICAGO CUBS — Assigned OF Jim Adduci outright to Iowa (PCL). COLORADO ROCKIES — Placed LHP Mike Dunn on the 10day IL, retroactive to Monday. Selected the contract of RHP Peter Lambert from Albuquerque (PCL). Sent OF Charlie Blackmon to Albuquerque for a rehab assignment. Transferred LHP Harrison Musgrave to the 60-day IL. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Activated C Austin Barnes from the 10-day IL. Optioned C Will Smith to Oklahoma City (PCL)kill. SAN DIEGO PADRES — Reinstated SS Fernando Tatis Jr. from the 10-day IL. Optioned INF Ty France to El Paso (PCL). FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Released OL Andrew Lauderdale. Claimed OL Desmond Harrison off waivers from Cleveland. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Signed OT Ka’John Armstrong. DETROIT LIONS — Waived WR Jordan Smallwood. Signed WR Jermaine Kearse. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Agreed to terms with QB Carson Wentz on a four-year contract extension through the 2024 season. HOCKEY National Hockey League DALLAS STARS — Signed D Roman Polak and F Mattais Janmark to one-year contract extensions. SOCCER Major League Soccer MLS — Fined Portland Timbers M Sebastian Blanco and D Larrys Mabiala for violating heads to the face against the LA Football Club. Fined Atlanta United FJosef Martinez for simulation/embellishment against the Chicago Fire. COLLEGE ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE — Named Debbie Williamson supervisor of women’s basketball officials. COLONIAL STATES ATHLETIC CONFERENCE — Announced Valley Forge will join the conference as a core member, effective July 1, 2020. AUGUSTA — Announced the resignation of assistant men’s basketball coach Drew Gibson to take the same position at Navy. BRADLEY — Named Halley Morell women’s golf coach. ETSU — Announced sophomore QB Cade Weldon is transferring from Miami and junior QB Chance Thrasher from Coastal Carolina. NEW JERSEY CITY — Named Jacob Mishkin men’s and women’s tennis coach. NIAGARA — Signed women’s basketball coach Jada Pierce to a contract extension through the 2022-23 season. VANDERBILT — Named Carlos Daniel men’s basketball strength and conditioning coach.

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since a 7-2 loss at home in Game 3. It was the first time in the series a team has won two in a row. Tuukka Rask stopped 19 shots and Jake DeBrusk scored for Boston. “It’s behind us now, but it’s tough,” said Bruins forward Noel Acciari, who was flattened on what the Bruins thought was an illegal hit right before Perron’s goal. “Tough pill to swallow. It’s a must-win from here on out.” Chara left Game 4 dripping blood after taking that puck off his face, but he gave the building a lift when he followed Rask onto the ice for the pregame skate wearing a fullface shield. He got a lengthy cheer for his introduction, and he went out of the way to deliver the game’s first hit, just 15 seconds in, on Brayden Schenn. When things went bad later, the crowd tried to spur the team on with chants of “Chara!” But the 42-year-old defenseman’s toughness could only carry so far. O’Reilly scored in the opening minute of the second period, backhanding in a rebound for his third goal in his last five periods. It was still 1-0 midway through the third when the referees disregarded a leg sweep by Tyler Bozak that knocked Acciari out of the game. But he was still on the ice when Perron followed with a shot that banked off Rask’s pad and into the net.

Keuchel, Braves agree to 1-year, $13M contract By RONALD BLUM AP Baseball Writer

NEW YORK — Free agent pitcher Dallas Keuchel and the Atlanta Braves have agreed to a one-year contract that would pay the 2015 AL Cy Young Award winner about $13 million, a person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity Thursday night because the agreement was subject to Keuchel passing a physical, which is scheduled for Friday. Keuchel’s contract would include a salary of about $21.21 million, and he would get a prorated share that amounts to approximately $13 million because 114 days will remain in the 186-day season. A 31-year-old left-hander, Keuchel was 12-11 with a 3.74 ERA in 34 starts last season for Houston and turned down a $17.9 million qualifying offer in November.

Kepler homers 3 times, Twins avoid sweep to Tribe CLEVELAND (AP) — Max Kepler homered three times and José Berríos (8-2) locked up Cleveland’s lineup into the seventh inning as the Minnesota Twins avoided a sweep — and their first three-game losing streak — by beating the Indians 5-4 on Thursday night. Kepler, who entered hitless in his previous 21 atbats, connected in the first, third and seventh innings off Indians starter Trevor Bauer (4-6). Kepler also walked in the fifth. The 26-year-old outfielder came up in the ninth with a chance to become the 19th player in history to hit four homers in one game — a feat rarer than a perfect game. But left-hander Josh Smith kept the left-handed swinging Kepler in the park, getting him to hit a hard grounder to the right side that he beat out for a single.

It was Kepler’s second career three-homer game. The other one also came against the Indians on Aug. 1, 2016. The AL-Central leading Twins took the series finale and again moved 10½ games ahead of Cleveland, whose run of three straight division titles could be coming to an end. Indians rookie Oscar Mercado’s pinch-hit homer in the ninth pulled Cleveland to 5-4 before Taylor Rogers retired Roberto Pérez on a groundout for his sixth save. ASTROS 8, MARINERS 7, 14 INNINGS SEATTLE (AP) — Myles Straw led off the 14th inning with a triple and scored on Yuli Gurriel’s sacrifice fly, and Houston outlasted pesky Seattle in the longest game of the season by innings for either

team. Seattle staged tying rallies in the ninth and 10th innings and loaded the bases in the bottom of the 14th thanks to three walks by Chris Devenski (1-0), but the right-hander got Shed Long to fly out to end it. Houston led 5-1 after 6 1/2 innings but Seattle chipped away, tying it at 6 in the ninth on Edwin Encarnacion’s single against closer Roberto Osuna. That prevented Justin Verlander from becoming the first 10game winner in the AL. Matt Festa (0-1) allowed Straw’s triple — a ball that was played poorly by right fielder Domingo Santana — and one walk in the 14th for the Mariners.

BREWERS 5, MARLINS 1 MILWAUKEE (AP) — Christian Yelich hit his major league-leading 23rd home run and Mike Moustakas added two homers to lead Milwaukee over Miami.

Milwaukee won the series finale after getting outscored 24-3 in the first two games. The Brewers are a percentage point behind the NL Central-leading Chicago Cubs. Yelich hit a two-run homer in the first off Caleb Smith (34).

ROCKIES 3, CUBS 1 CHICAGO (AP) — Peter Lambert (1-0) allowed four hits over seven innings and struck out nine to win his major league debut. The 22-yearold right-hander was selected in the second round with the 44th overall pick of the 2015 amateur draft, He also singled on his first pitch as a big league batter, using a two-tone bat to loop a fastball from José Quintana (45) to right-center field. Scott Oberg threw a perfect ninth for this third save, completing a five-hitter. Colorado took a 2-0 lead in the third when David Dahl hit an RBI single and scored on the first of Ian Desmond’s two doubles.

CARDINALS 3, REDS 1

April. Aroldis Chapman got his Polanco in the second inning, 18th save in 19 opportunities. raising his season total to 15. Josh Bell had three doubles, increasing his major leagueRED SOX 7, ROYALS 5 leading total to 25, and had two KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) RBIs to take sole possession of — Mookie Betts hit a two-run the big league lead with 58. homer off Danny Duffy (3-3) in a four-run third inning, and RAYS 6, TIGERS 1 complete its first series sweep DETROIT (AP) — Travis since May 10-12 against the Chicago White Sox. Betts is d’Arnaud homered for the first 7 for 11 with five home runs time since March 31 last year, going deep twice. against Duffy. D’Arnaud missed all but Kansas City has lost six straight and nine of 10, drop- four games in 2018 due to ping to a big league-worst 19- Tommy John surgery. Willy Adames also homered for 43. Colten Brewer (1-2) pitched Tampa Bay. Jalen Beeks (5-0) pitched two scoreless innings of twohit relief. Matt Barnes, Bos- 4 1/3 scoreless innings for the ton’s seventh pitcher, allowed Rays, a major league-best 20-9 Jorge Soler’s one-out RBI on the road. Daniel Norris (2-5) allowed double in the inth but got his three runs and 11 hits in 5 2/3 fourth save. innings.

RANGERS 4, ORIOLES 3 ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Delino DeShields’ single led to a key error by Chris Davis during his first game in right field in almost three years, and Texas beat bangedup Baltimore. The Orioles lost left fielder Dwight Smith Jr. when he crashed into the wall just as he caught a fly ball by Rougned Odor. Ariel Jurado (3-2) gave up eight hits and three runs in six innings with six strikeouts, and Shawn Kelley got his seventh save. David Hess (1-8) gave up his major league-leading 20th home run.

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Paul DeJong hit a tiebreaking, tworun homer off Michael Lorenzen (0-1) in the seventh and St. Louis tied its season high with four stolen bases, closing within 2 1/2 games of the NL Central lead. DeJong had been in a 3-for-43 slide with no extra-base hits. Matt Carpenter, Kolten Wong, Marcel Ozuna and Dexter Fowler swiped bases for the METS 7, GIANTS 3 Cardinals, who are tied with Milwaukee for the NL lead NEW YORK (AP) — Amed with 37. Rosario and Dominic Smith hit back-to-back home runs to begin the first inning, then Todd YANKEES 6, Frazier hit a tiebreaking drive BLUE JAYS 2 off Mark Melancon (2-1) in the TORONTO (AP) — J.A. eighth . Happ (6-3) pitched seven Seth Lugo (3-0) pitched one strong innings to win his fifth inning for the win. The Mets straight decision, Aaron Hicks held the Giants to three hits. and Gio Urshela homered, and New York beat Toronto to PIRATES 6, BRAVES 1 avoid a three-game sweep. DJ LeMahieu had three hits PITTSBURGH (AP) — and two RBIs, and the Yankees Mike Foltynewicz (1-5) alsnapped a three-game losing lowed consecutive home runs streak, their first since early to Colin Moran and Gregory

ATHLETICS 7, ANGELS 4 ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Stephen Piscotty homered and drove in two runs, and Mike Fiers pitched six solid innings in Oakland’s victory over Los Angeles. Ramon Laureano had two RBIs and Mark Canha reached base four times for the Athletics, who rebounded from a five-game skid by taking two of three in Anaheim. Mike Trout hit a two-run homer for the Angels, who made three errors and have lost three of four.

PADRES 5, NATIONALS 4 SAN DIEGO (AP) — Hunter Renfroe hit a two-run homer and left-hander Joey Lucchesi settled down after falling behind 4-0 in the first inning to help San Diego beat Washington. The Padres snapped the Nationals’ four-game winning streak and welcomed back prized rookie shortstop Fernando Tatis Jr., who missed 34 games with a strained left hamstring. The 20-year-old Tatis singled in the fifth and scored the second of three Padres runs that gave San Diego the lead.


. . . Big Continued from page A7

avalanches brought this rock down onto glaciers which carried it to the Kenai Peninsula. Granitic boulders can be found throughout upper Cook Inlet, the Anchorage bowl, and across the Kenai Peninsula lowland to the mouth of Kachemak Bay. They could potentially be found on Kodiak, at the southern end of past glacial advances. We need boulders that have not been disturbed since they were dropped by the melting glacier. Boulders on the beach, along rivers or in gullies cannot be used because they have been eroded out of the glacial deposits. They were protected from cosmic ray exposure by the overlying

. . . Out Continued from page A7

postcard without them. These lupines seem to have no trouble at all growing there between the sea and asphalt. They push up through the dirt and incessant wind as though they were born to do it. Not so with my own lupines. They are stouter, brighter and more boisterous — essentially made to be looked at. They grab the eye, but they do not thrive in less-thanperfect conditions like the Spit flowers. Maybe it’s just me. I’m factoring in a large margin of user error here. I can’t control the frequent downpours that douse my plants with more water than they want or need. I sometimes neglect to notice when they’ve gone a bit more dry than they should, and I don’t mind telling you I’m less than perfect at actually following the planting directions. Root needs be dammed, I pictured my lupine in this specific pot, so in this pot it shall live! I’m not a perfect plant mother. I wouldn’t be invited to sit on the PTA, let’s leave it at that. Still, I can’t

. . . Open Continued from page A7

The Oilers and Bucs play again Friday at 7 p.m. at Mulcahy. The Oilers will stay at Mulcahy for two

soil, and they may have been tipped or rolled when they were exhumed by erosion. The tops of such disturbed boulders could give dates that are thousands of years too young. The best boulders are on uplands or in flat muskegs, with little soil or vegetation cover, and tall enough to be above most of the snow, say 3-5 feet high. There are many such boulders in the Soldotna-Sterling area (from the Moosehorn glacial advance), but they are few and far between on the southern Kenai (from the penultimate glaciation). Please contact us if you know of any granite boulders on the southern Kenai which might be suitable for this study. Ed Berg is in Homer (608-628-2088, edwardberg100@gmail. com) and Dick Reger lives in Soldotna (907-394-1081, regerrd80@gmail.com).

help but wonder why my carefully bred flowers seem to wither at my less-thanperfect touch when the lupines on the Spit endure the same, if not worse, conditions throughout the season. Wind, rain, neglect, errant bicycle tires — the works. Am I really so hopeless, or will the wilder ones always win out? Is it something in their plant veins? I know there’s more to gardening than sticking a plant in a pot and hoping for the best, and I do think I’m learning some things as I go along. When one of my flower children don’t seem to be feeling very well (leaves drooping or dry and brittle) I try moving them around the porch to benefit from different concentrations of sunlight. When a plant seems to be going a little catawampus, I always make sure to restructure the dirt around them to give a more stable base. Sometimes, when my neighbors aren’t looking, I even talk to them a little. Just your average small talk about work and the weather — nothing extravagant. What can I say? I’ll try anything to get this black thumb to turn a few shades lighter.

games against the Anchorage Glacier Pilots Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m., then will get one game in Chugiak against the Chugiak/Eagle River Chinooks on Monday. The Oilers get their home opener June 12 against the Chinooks.

Peninsula Clarion | Friday, June 7, 2019 | A9

Bradley leads after 1st round of Canadian Open ANCASTER, Ontario (AP) — Keegan Bradley had a 7-under 63 for a one-shot lead after the first round of the RBC Canadian Open on Thursday. “Today I was in complete control of my ball,” Bradley said. “Then when you couple that with feeling good on the greens, that’s when a 63 or a good, nice round happens.” Bradley was convinced that his clubhouse lead would not withstand the afternoon groups, but it did. Roberto Castro of the U.S., was the only player that teed off in the second wave to reach second, tying Canada’s Nick Taylor, Ireland’s Shane Lowry, South Korea’s Sungjae Im and South Africa’s Erik van Rooyen. This year the tournament has moved up in the golf calendar, making it a lead-in event to the U.S. Open and drawing a significantly stronger group of competitors. Defending tournament champion Dustin Johnson, the No. 2 player in the world, shot a 1-over 71. Last year Johnson pulled away from the field after a nearly two-hour rain delay to win his first Canadian Open, firing 6-under 66 in last year’s final round to finish at 23 under. Brooks Koepka, fresh off his PGA Championship win, shot an even-par 70 and is tied for 84th. Taylor of Abbotsford, British Columbia, led the Canadian contingent, shooting a 6-under 64. Taylor, who started on hole No. 10, made four birdies in a row to open his back nine at the Hamilton Golf and Country Club. Mackenzie Hughes was one of five Canadians within three shots of Brad-

ley. Adam Hadwin of Abbotsford had a 5-under 65, while David Hearn of nearby Brantford, Ontario, and Drew Nesbitt of Shanty Bay, Ontario, both tied Hughes. As soon as Hughes’ partners were done teeing off at No. 13, he bent down, opened up a small bag and pulled out a jersey. It took a moment for fans to realize what he was doing, but as Hughes straightened out the familiar black and red of a Kawhi Leonard Toronto Raptors jersey, the cheers rose to a crescendo, with spectators pounding on the boards that surround the hockey-themed hole at the RBC Canadian Open known as The Rink. Like many Raptors fans, Hughes hopes that Toronto wins the NBA Finals against the Golden State Warriors and can re-sign Leonard, who will become a free agent this summer. “I don’t think my wearing the jersey influenced him at all, but I hope that he stays,” Hughes said. “I try to have some fun with that hole. Life’s short so, whatever, I’m just going to have some fun,” said Hughes, who donned a Toronto Maple Leafs jersey at last year’s version of the Rink at Glen Abbey Golf Club in Oakville, Ontario. “The crowd enjoys that stuff so it’s fun for me to do. “I love all these Toronto sports teams whether it’s Leafs, Raptors, Blue Jays. That was just a fun way to show my Toronto pride and Canada pride.” Hughes, from nearby Dundas, Ontario, walked up the fairway in the jersey to chants of “Let’s go Raptors”

Maddon thinking ahead with Kimbrel CHICAGO (AP) — Cubs manager Joe Maddon is projecting how to use Craig Kimbrel, even before Chicago announces a deal with the free agent closer. Maddon said Thursday he thought the 31-yearold right-hander might be ready to pitch in about three weeks. “I would imagine in the position that’s he’s been in, he had some kind of a strat-

egy of program mapped out,” Maddon said. “The first thing you do is find out and then set up program. You think about a three-week window, normally it sounds right. Think about relief pitchers in spring training. Conventionally it would be like that kind of a window. But you’ve got to talk to the guy first and see what he’s been doing.” Kimbrel, who has 333 saves and a 1.91 ERA over

PARIS (AP) — Sure, Novak Djokovic wants to win each match he plays. And, yes, he wants to come through at key moments, such as when he got broken early in his French Open quarterfinal and was in danger of dropping a set for the first time in the tournament. What matters most to Djokovic, though, is the big picture. And so he’s excited to be two victories away from doing something only one other man, Rod Laver, ever has in tennis: holding all four major titles at once on two separate occasions. “The longer I play or the further I go, I guess, in my career, the sense of history-making is only getting stronger. That’s one of the greatest motivations I have, obviously,” Djokovic said after a methodical 7-5, 6-2, 6-2 dismantling of Alexander Zverev on Thursday. Djokovic already won four straight majors in 201516. And since his shocking loss to unheralded Italian player Marco Cecchinato in the quarterfinals last year at Roland Garros, Djokovic has compiled a 26-0 record at the Grand Slams, winning Wimbledon, the U.S. Open, and the Australian Open along the way. “There is no better way

to make history of the sport than to win Slams and play your best in the biggest events,” Djokovic said. “Those are the pinnacle achievements that you can have in our sport.” Due to Wednesday’s washout, Djokovic will be back on the court without a day’s rest for Friday’s semifinals against Dominic Thiem. Thiem, last year’s runnerup, rolled past 10th-seeded Karen Khachanov 6-2, 6-4, 6-2 . In the other semifinal, 11time French Open champion Rafael Nadal renews his rivalry with Roger Federer. It’s the first time since 2011 that all top four seeds have reached the semifinals in Paris. Even if Djokovic raises another trophy come Sunday, however, Laver will remain the only man to have won all four Grand Slams in the same calendar year twice, in 1962 and 1969. Yet even Laver is awed by what Djokovic is accomplishing. “I marvel at someone like Novak with his ability and his consistency,” Laver said. “When you look at the way he plays the game, he doesn’t go bang, bang, bang, ace, volleys. He wins every individual point from the baseline.” With so much physical exertion, there was a moment

nine major league seasons, turned down a $17.9 million qualifying offer from Boston last November and remained a free agent. Starting this week, a team could sign him without the loss of amateur draft picks or international signing bonus pool allocation. Chicago’s bullpen has 11 blown saves this year. Brandon Morrow has not returned from offseason

elbow surgery, and Pedro Strop came back Tuesday from a hamstring injury that had sidelined him since May 6. Strop and Steve Cishek have been closing. “When you get a guy like Kimbrel, whoever was being utilized, who was in that role easily steps aside,” he said. “When the whole group realize this makes us better, then everybody falls in line.”

Eagles sign 4-year extension with Wentz By ROB MAADDI AP Sports Writer

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Carson Wentz proved to the Philadelphia Eagles in three years he’s worth a huge investment. Wentz and the Eagles have agreed on a four-year contract extension through the 2024 season. The deal announced Thursday night adds four years to Wentz’s rookie contract. It’s worth $128 million with more than $107 million guaranteed, according to ESPN.

“From the moment I got drafted here, I knew this place was special, I knew they had the most passionate fans in the world, in all of sports, and I knew we had the opportunity to build something truly special and to be cemented here means the world to me,” Wentz wrote on Twitter. Wentz is 23-17 in three seasons as the starting quarterback but has missed 13 games, including five playoff contests over the past two years. He finished third in NFL MVP voting in 2017

Djokovic has history within grasp By ANDREW DAMPF AP Sports Writer

and went on to shoot a 4-under 66 to finish the first round in a tie for 15th. He would have been in an even better position if he hadn’t double-bogeyed the 18th hole, his only score worse than par. “Just spoiled it at the end there, but I was 6 under through 17 and it was pretty stress free for the most part,” Hughes said. “All in all it’s a great day score-wise, just not the way I wanted to finish.” There are 26 Canadians in the field at the national championship, and they’re all hoping to end a 65-year spell of futility. The previous Canadian to win the event was Pat Fletcher in 1954 at Vancouver’s Point Grey Golf and Country Club. “We all obviously want to be the first one to win this, but we all want each other to do well,” said Hadwin, who briefly delayed his post-round news conference so that Hughes could concentrate on teeing off nearby. “Any Canadian winner is good.” NOTES: A three-minute pause in play starting at 12:10 p.m. was held as six planes from the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum flew over the course to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the Allied invasion of Normandy, France. The group of planes included a rare Lancaster Mk 10 bomber from the Second World War and a modern CC-130 Hercules. “It’s obviously an emotional day for a lot of people,” Hadwin said. “To kind of see the planes that were used and then a couple newer age ones, it was pretty cool to stand on the fairway and see that.”

against Zverev when Djokovic appeared out of breath after sending a backhand wide to give the fifth-seeded German a break and a chance to serve out the opening set. But Djokovic found his second wind, started pushing Zverev back and forth to the corners like a windshield wiper, broke right back and reeled off five straight games to take the set and a 3-0 lead in the second. “(I) really thought that the first set should have gone my way,” Zverev said. “Once he’s in control, he’s very tough to beat. He’s world No. 1 for a reason.”

Anisimova topples defending champ PARIS (AP) — Amanda Anisimova smacked one last backhand winner to complete her upset of defending champion Simona Halep in the French Open quarterfinals, flung her racket and covered her mouth with both hands. Eyes wide, Anisimova then spread her arms with palms up and said, “What?!” In a tournament filled with surprises, Anisimova provided the latest Thursday. Just 17 and ranked merely 51st, yet possessing the mindset and mien of someone much more experienced and accomplished, the American withstood a late charge by Halep and

won 6-2, 6-4 to reach her first Grand Slam semifinal. “I don’t think it will sink in, at least not for today. Yeah, I mean, it’s crazy,” said Anisimova, who was born in New Jersey to Russian parents and moved to Florida when she was 3. “I really can’t believe the result today. And getting the opportunity to play against Simona, that’s amazing. But how it ended is even crazier to me.” That’s a fair assessment of the entire tournament. Serena Williams, No. 1 Naomi Osaka and No. 2 Karolina Pliskova lost in the third round; Angelique Kerber and Caroline Wozniacki were gone in the first. The highest-seeded player in the semifinals is No. 8 Ash Barty, the Australian who will face Anisimova. Barty advanced by beating No. 14 Madison Keys of the United States 6-3, 7-5. “I felt,” Barty said, “like I was in control.” The other semifinal is No. 26 Johanna Konta of Britain against unseeded 19-yearold Marketa Vondrousova of the Czech Republic. Because rain washed out all play Wednesday, the women’s semifinals — normally Thursday, one after another in the main stadium — will be played simultaneously on the second- and third-largest courts Friday morning.

when backup quarterback a Super Bowl victory over Nick Foles led the Eagles to the Patriots.

Today in History Today is Friday, June 7, the 158th day of 2019. There are 207 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On June 7, 1998, in a crime that shocked the nation, James Byrd Jr., a 49-year-old black man, was hooked by a chain to a pickup truck and dragged to his death in Jasper, Texas. (Two white men were later sentenced to death; one of them, Lawrence Russell Brewer, was executed in 2011 and the other, John William King, was executed in April, 2019. A third defendant received life with the possibility of parole.) On this date: In 1712, Pennsylvania’s colonial assembly voted to ban the further importation of slaves. In 1769, frontiersman Daniel Boone first began to explore present-day Kentucky. In 1776, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia offered a resolution to the Continental Congress stating “That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States.” In 1848, French painter and sculptor Paul Gauguin was born in Paris. In 1892, Homer Plessy, a “Creole of color,” was arrested for refusing to leave a whites-only car of the East Louisiana Railroad. (Ruling on his case, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld “separate but equal” racial segregation, a concept it renounced in 1954.) In 1948, the Communists completed their takeover of Czechoslovakia with the resignation of President Edvard Benes (BEH’-nesh). In 1958, singer-songwriter Prince was born Prince Rogers Nelson in Minneapolis. In 1965, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Griswold v. Connecticut, struck down, 7-2, a Connecticut law used to prosecute a Planned Parenthood clinic in New Haven for providing contraceptives to married couples. In 1977, Britons thronged London to celebrate the silver jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II, who was marking the 25th year of her reign. In 1981, Israeli military planes destroyed a nuclear power plant in Iraq, a facility the Israelis charged could have been used to make nuclear weapons. In 1993, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that religious groups could sometimes meet on school property after hours. Ground was broken for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland. In 2004, a steady, near-silent stream of people circled through the rotunda of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, where the body of the nation’s 40th president lay in repose before traveling to Washington two days later for a state funeral. Ten years ago: Extreme-right parties gained in European Parliament elections, including the first seats won by the all-white British National Party. Roger Federer completed a career Grand Slam, winning his first French Open title by sweeping surprise finalist Robin Soderling 6-1, 7-6 (1), 6-4. The British musical “Billy Elliot” won 10 Tony Awards, including best musical and a unique best actor prize for the three young performers who shared the title character: David Alvarez, Trent Kowalik and Kiril Kulish. Five years ago: Actor-comedian Tracy Morgan was critically injured when a Walmart tractor-trailer rammed into his chauffeured limousine bus on the New Jersey Turnpike, setting off a chain-reaction crash that killed fellow comedian James “Jimmy Mack” McNair. Ukraine’s new president, Petro Poroshenko, took the oath of office, calling for pro-Russian rebels in the country’s east to lay down their arms. Maria Sharapova won her second French Open title in three years, beating fourth-seeded Simona Halep 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-4 in the final. California Chrome failed in his bid to win the first Triple Crown in 36 years, losing the Belmont Stakes by coming in fourth to long shot Tonalist. One year ago: The Trump administration said in a court filing that it would no longer defend key parts of the Affordable Care Act, including provisions that guarantee access to health insurance regardless of any medical conditions; it was a rare departure from the Justice Department’s practice of defending federal laws in court. In advance of a summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, President Donald Trump declared that “attitude” is more important than preparation. A government report found that suicide rates inched up in nearly every U.S. state from 1999 through 2016. The Washington Capitals claimed their first NHL title with a 4-3 victory over the Vegas Golden Knights in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final in Las Vegas. Today’s Birthdays: Movie director James Ivory is 91. Former Canadian Prime Minister John Turner is 90. Actress Virginia McKenna is 88. Singer Tom Jones is 79. Actor Ronald Pickup is 79. Poet Nikki Giovanni is 76. Actor Ken Osmond (TV: “Leave It to Beaver”) is 76. Former talk show host Jenny Jones is 73. Americana singer-songwriter Willie Nile is 71. Actress Anne Twomey is 68. Actor Liam Neeson is 67. Actress Colleen Camp is 66. Singer-songwriter Johnny Clegg is 66. Author Louise Erdrich (UR’drihk) is 65. Actor William Forsythe is 64. Record producer L.A. Reid is 63. Latin pop singer Juan Luis Guerra is 62. Vice President Mike Pence is 60. Rock singer-musician Gordon Gano (The Violent Femmes) is 56. Rapper Ecstasy (Whodini) is 55. Rock musician Eric Kretz (Stone Temple Pilots) is 53. Rock musician Dave Navarro is 52. Actress Helen Baxendale is 49. Actor Karl Urban is 47. TV personality Bear Grylls is 45. Rock musician Eric Johnson (The Shins) is 43. Actress Adrienne Frantz is 41. Actorcomedian Bill Hader is 41. Actress Anna Torv is 40. Actress Larisa Oleynik (oh-LAY’-nihk) is 38. Former tennis player Anna Kournikova is 38. Actor Michael Cera is 31. Actress Shelley Buckner is 30. Rapper Iggy Azalea is 29. Actress-model Emily Ratajkowski is 28. Rapper Fetty Wap is 28. Thought for Today: “That would be a good thing for them to cut on my tombstone: ‘Wherever she went, including here, it was against her better judgment.’” -- Dorothy Parker, American writer (born 1893, died this date in 1967).


A10 | Friday, June 7, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion

Contact us; www.peninsulaclarion.com, classified@peninsulaclarion.com • To place an ad call 907-283-7551

Shoot for the Stars! The sky’s the limit when you turn to the “Employment” section of the classifieds. It’s still the easiest, fastest and most effective way to pinpoint the best job opportunities out there. So, if you’re considering a new job or change of career, make us your first step in the right direction.

LEGALS

Tuesday, June 11, 2019 at 7:00 PM The RSA Board Meeting will be held in the Betty J. Glick, Assembly Chambers, George A. Navarre Borough Administration Bld, 144 N. Binkley Street, Soldotna Invited to attend are all members of the public. If you would like to speak at the meeting, please call the Road Service Area office at 262-4427, toll free within the Borough at (800) 477-4427 or Email us at: roads@kpb.us. Agenda’s are available at 47140 E. Poppy Lane, Soldotna or on our website at www.kpb.us. Pub: June 7, 2019 858305

NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF ALASKA AT KENAI In the Matter of the Estate of: GLENN TRUMAN TURNER Decedent Date of Birth: July 10, 1937 Case No: 3KN-19-00112PR NOTICE TO CREDITORS You are notified that the court appointed Meleade Wasson as personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against the person who died are required to present their claims within four months after the date of the first publication of this notice or the claims will be forever barred. Dated this 15th day of May, 2019. /s/Meleade Wasson 33872 Community College Dr, #3 Soldotna, AK, 99669 Pub: May 31, June 7 & 14, 2019 859263 IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF ALASKA AT KENAI In the Matter of the Estate of: Billie Jean Douglas, AKA Jean B Douglas Decedent Date of Birth: 0-17-1932 Case No.: 3KN-19-00114PR

283-7551

www.peninsulaclarion.com

EMPLOYMENT

GARAGE SALES

Office Administrator wanted for Anchor Point Oil & Gas Exploration Company. We are seeking an Office Administrator for our operation in Anchor Point. High school Diploma & previous office experience are required; duties include: meet & direct vendors, answering phones, filing, printing, receive invoices, data entry, assist other staff members, etc. Hours are: Mon-Fri, 8-5;

Yard Sale, Multi-Family, Sat. 6/8, 10-3, 37245 Lou Morgan Rd., Sterling (corner Scout Lake Rd/Lou Morgan Rd) Homeschool stuff, kids’ outdoor gear, edu. games, toys, books, Partylite candleholders, lia Sophia jewelry, doTERRA supplies, Longaberger baskets, scrapbooking, pic frames, gold panning, wheelbarrow, tools, ladders. Low prices.

EMPLOYMENT Tyonek Construction Group Inc., a subsidiary of Tyonek Native Corporation, is seeking a Construction Project Manager Key Qualifications: - Oil and gas experience - Experience producing and overseeing proposals and cost estimates - Ability to perform dirt work and assist in the process of bridge installations

FARM / RANCH

Tullos Funny Farm

Quality Timothy Accepting Hay orders 262-4939 252-0937

BEAUTY / SPA

To apply or see more information, please visit: https://tinyurl.com/tyonek-job

EMPLOYMENT

Financial Aid Clerk Kenai Peninsula College is currently seeking a customer oriented and highly motivated individual who can provide excellent customer service and clerical support in the Financial Aid office located at the Kenai River Campus. This is a 25 hour per week, 12 month position, $16.99 per hour; benefits and tuition waivers included. Expected hire date is June/July 2019. For more information and to apply for this position go to KPC’s employment page at www.kpc.alaska.edu UA is an AA/EO employer and educational institution and prohibits illegal discrimination against any individual: www.alaska.edu/nondiscrimination.

A SUMMER MASSAGE Thai oil massage Open every day Call Darika 907-252-3985

EMPLOYMENT

NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF ALASKA THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT AT KENAI In the Matter of the Estate of STEPHEN GEORGE PETERSON, Deceased. Case No.: 3KN-19-00120 PR NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that VIRGINIA LEE PATE has been appointed the personal representative of the Estate of STEPHEN GEORGE PETERSON. All persons having claims against the Decedent are required to present their claims within four months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the personal representative c/o the Law Offices of Gilman & Pevehouse, 130 S. Willow St., Suite 3, Kenai, Alaska 99611, or the Clerk of the Court. DATED this 30th day of May, 2019. /s/Virginia Lee Pate c/o Gilman & Pevehouse 130 S. Willow St., Suite 3 Kenai, AK 99611 Pub: May 31, June 7 & 14, 2019 859319

Housekeeper Needed. Start Immediately. Work through approximately August 31, 2019 Duties: Making beds, vacuuming, cleaning bathrooms, washing & folding laundry. $15/hr 801-913-0044

Automobiles Wanted 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) 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)

From Stress to Refresh! Kenai Thai Massage Pranee & Yai

behind Wells Fargo 740-3379

NOTICE TO CREDITORS You are notified that the court appointed Matthew C Douglas as personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against the person who died are required to present their claims within four months after the date of the first publication of this notice or the claims will be forever barred. Dated this 22nd day of May, 2019. /s/Matthew C Douglas Personal Representative 4512 Peyote Dr Pasco, WA 99301 Pub: May 24, 31 & June 7, 2019 858158 IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF ALASKA THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT AT KENAI In the Matter of the Estate of: JOSEPH BERNARD LYNCH Deceased Case # 3KN-19-00075 PR NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notice is hereby given that CHAD DRESSEL has been appointed personal representative of the above-named estate. All persons having claims against the decedent are required to present their claims within four months after the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated this 17th day of May, 2019. /s/ Chad Dressel 3846 Gabler Ave. S Buffalo, MN 55313 Pub: May 24, 31 & June 7, 2019 858301

Peninsula Thai Massage by Lom Thai Combination (Signature Peninsula Style) Traditional Thai Massage | Deep Tissue Massage Oil and Hot Stone | Swedish Massage Foot Spa and Reflexology Thompson Corner Open 7 days/week 907-252-4211 Tammy 702-910-6193

Savadi. Traditional Thai Massage by Bun 139A Warehouse Dr, Soldotna 907-406-1968


Peninsula Clarion | Friday, June 7, 2019 | A11

Contact us; www.peninsulaclarion.com, classified@peninsulaclarion.com • To place an ad call 907-283-7551 Health/Medical

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

Business Property

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)

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)

Professional Office Space

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) 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)

Become a Published Author. We want to Read Your Book! Dorrance Publishing-Trusted by Authors Since 1920 Book manuscript submissions currently being reviewed. Comprehensive Services: Consultation, Production, Promotion and Distribution. Call for Your Free Author’s Guide 1-888-913-2731 or visit http://dorranceinfo.com/northwest (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)

APARTMENT FOR RENT Soldotna, 1 bed/1 bath, 2 bed/1 bath No Smoking/Pets W/D hookup $850/$950 + Electric 907-252-7355 ASHA Approved

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)

1872’ office space, prime location, immaculate condition, network wired. Utilities, mowing, snow plowing provided. Soldotna 398-4053

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

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) 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) 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) 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) 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)

OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT 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

Newer 1 bedroom duplex on Beaverloop Rd. 1 large bedroom In-floor heating Washer, dryer, & dishwasher heated garage Handicap accessible No smoking or pets Singles or couples preferred $1,100 monthly rent First month’s rent and $1,000 deposit to move in 1-year lease required Call 283-4488

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Stay in your home longer with an American Standard Walk-In Bathtub. Receive up to $1,500 off, including a free toilet, and a lifetime warranty on the tub and installation! Call us at 1-855-876-1237. (PNDC) **STOP STRUGGLING ON THE STAIRS** Give your life a lift with an ACORN STAIRLIFT! Call now for $250 OFF your stairlift purchase and FREE DVD & brochure! 1-855-466-4107. (PNDC

The early stages of communication disorders are easier to spot when you know the signs.

Multi-Use Facility w/ fenced 5.11 Acres FOR SALE or LEASE. Shop/Warehouse-Office-Equipment Vehicle Bldg & Yard. 5,679SF Shop/warehouse w 5bays, (3) bays have 12’x12’ OD doors, (1) bay has 16’x12’ OH drive-through bay, (1) drive though no OH, Offices, break rm, restrm, storage rm, 3-phase, generator. 2,660sf Office bldg, 1-story, 8-offices, lrg break rm, restrms, kitchenette, storage, jan closet, handicap ramp, generator. 6,630SF Equip bldg (11) 12’wide bays x 32’ deep w power & storage. 4,000 gal diesel tank, 3-phase, vehicle plugins. Lease $5,500.00/mo Tenant pays R/E taxes, bldg insurance, maint, utilities, all services, etc NNN. Sale $700,000. Mark Rowley, Brkr, 244-3000 or Melonie Chapman, Licensee 907-242-5309 Brkr & Licensee are members of Sellers LLC & have a financial interest in this property. mchapman@pacifictower.com

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Early detection can improve treatment and quality of life. For more information visit IdentifyTheSigns.org.

SMALL LOTS AT THE RIVER $12,995-$39,995 Sterling, Alaska 866-411-2327

283-7551 Advertise in the Service Directory today! - Includes Dispatch. 283-7551

Advertise “By the Month” or save $ with a 3, 6 or 12 month contract. Call Advertising Display 283-7551 to get started!

TODD’S GARAGE

You Call = We Haul

Auto Repair

Construction

283-7551

Tree Service

Sell it in the Classifieds

Interstate Batteries After Market Body Parts Propane and AMSOIL Tu-Fr 10-5, Sa 10-4 • Closed Su/Mo 262-5333 • 800-760-5333

Lawn • Preparation • Excavation • Driveways Land Clearing • Septic Systems

Check us out on facebook and online www.sterlingcustomhomes.net CALL DAVID @ 907.398.4781

Lawn Care

Landscaping

Also offering other services check out our prices!

Need Cash Now?

283-7551

Roofing

Place a Classified Ad. Notices

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

Roofing

150 Trading Bay Road, Kenai, AK (907) 283-4977

Hydro Seeding & Landscaping Hydro Seeding on the peninsula since 1997

Insulation

Printing

Business cards carbonless Forms labels/Stickers raffle Tickets letterheads Brochures envelopes Fliers/Posters custom Forms rack/Post cards and Much, Much More!

WE COLOR THE FULL SPECTRUM OF YOUR PRINTING NEEDS

• 4 Wheelers • Welding and Electrical

Call Todd Today! 907-283-1408 12528 KENAI SPUR HIGHWAY KENAI ALASKA, 99611

@

CHECK US OUT

Serving The PeninSula SinceSINCE 1979 1979 SERVING THEKenai KENAI PENINSULA

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

• Automotive • RV Repair, • Outboard • Snow Machines

Moose River RV Parts and Propane RV Parts

Auto Repair

GOT JUNK?

Construction

Saturday Morning Delivery Available

Specializing in Customized Mechanics

Cleaning

Gravel

Standley Screened Topsoil + Gravel

Online

www.peninsulaclarion.com


A12 | Friday, June 7, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion

FRIDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING A

B

5

(8) CBS-11 11 (9) FOX-4

4

4

(10) NBC-2

2

2

(12) PBS-7

7

7

5 PM

A = DISH

5:30

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

B = DirecTV

7:30

8 PM

JUNE 7, 2019

8:30

9 PM

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

(:31) NBA 2019 NBA Finals TBA at Golden State Warriors. Game 4 action. (N) (Live) Jimmy Kim- (:01) JeopWheel of For- 20/20 ABC News at (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ‘14’ (:37) Nightline (N) Countdown mel Live (N) ardy! (N) ‘G’ tune (N) ‘G’ 10 (N) (N) (Live) ‘14’ Chicago P.D. The team helps How I Met How I Met Last Man Last Man CSI: Miami “Meltdown” A jew- CSI: Miami “Mommie Dead- Dateline ‘PG’ DailyMailTV DailyMailTV Impractical Pawn Stars Burgess find her sister. ‘14’ Your Mother Your Mother Standing ‘PG’ Standing ‘PG’ elry heist ends in murder. ‘14’ est” A suburban mother is (N) (N) Jokers ‘14’ ‘PG’ “Pilot” ‘14’ ‘14’ murdered. ‘14’ The Ellen DeGeneres Show KTVA 5 p.m. CBS Evening KTVA 6 p.m. Evening News Whistleblower “Sea World” Hawaii Five-0 “Pua a’e La Ka Blue Bloods A run-in with KTVA Night- (:35) The Late Show With James Cor(N) ‘G’ First Take News (N) ‘PG’ Uwahi O Ka Moe” ‘14’ community activists. ‘14’ cast Stephen Colbert ‘PG’ den Two and a Entertainment Funny You Funny You The Big Bang The Big Bang Beat Shazam Beauty queens; MasterChef The fight into the Fox 4 News at 9 (N) TMZ (N) ‘PG’ TMZ ‘PG’ Entertainment Two and a Half Men ‘14’ Tonight (N) Should Ask Should Ask Theory ‘14’ Theory ‘PG’ sanitation workers. ‘PG’ top 20 continues. ‘14’ Tonight Half Men ‘14’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Judge Judy Judge Judy Channel 2 NBC Nightly Channel 2 Newshour (N) American Ninja Warrior “Atlanta City Qualifiers” Drew Drech- Dateline NBC (N) Channel 2 (:34) The Tonight Show Star- (:37) Late ‘PG’ ‘PG’ News 5:00 News With sel and more. ‘PG’ News: Late ring Jimmy Fallon ‘14’ Night With Report (N) Lester Holt Edition (N) Seth Meyers (3:00) Ken Burns: The Na- BBC World Nightly Busi- PBS NewsHour (N) Washington Great Performances “Pavarotti: A Voice for Suze Orman’s Financial Solutions for You Finding financial Memory Rescue With Daniel tional Parks Making of the News ‘G’ ness Report Week (N) the Ages” Celebration of Luciano Pavarotti. ‘G’ solutions. ‘G’ Amen, MD ‘G’ national parks series. ‘G’ ‘G’

CABLE STATIONS (8) WGN-A 239 307 (20) QVC

137 317

(23) LIFE

108 252

(28) USA

105 242

(30) TBS

139 247

(31) TNT

138 245

(34) ESPN 140 206 (35) ESPN2 144 209 (36) ROOT 426 687 (38) PARMT 241 241 (43) AMC

4:30

ABC World News

(3) ABC-13 13 (6) MNT-5

4 PM

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

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

M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ Pure Anna returns to a life of Married ... Married ... How I Met How I Met Elementary ‘PG’ crime. ‘14’ With With Your Mother Your Mother (3:00) In the Kitchen with Isaac Mizrahi Live! (N) (Live) ‘G’ DaretoShareBeauty with Breezies Intimates Collec- Urban Decay Cosmetics (N) Joan Rivers Classics Collec- Breezies Intimates CollecDavid - Fri-YAY! Edition Shawn “Fri-YAY!” (N) ‘G’ tion (N) (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ tion (N) (Live) ‘G’ tion (N) (Live) ‘G’ Wife Swap “Kraut/Hardin” Wife Swap “Ridgely/Corrao” Wife Swap Florida and Arizo- “The Notebook” (2004, Romance) Ryan Gosling, Rachel McAdams, James Garner. A man (:03) Dance Moms “Abby’s (:01) “The Notebook” (2004) Fashion-conscious mom; fru- A cowgirl swaps with a subur- na mothers swap lives. ‘PG’ tells a story to a woman about two lovers. Big Comeback” Abby returns Ryan Gosling, Rachel Mcgal mom. ‘PG’ banite. ‘PG’ to Pittsburgh. ‘PG’ Adams. Law & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special Vic“The Mummy Returns” (2001, Adventure) Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, John Hannah. (9:55) Modern (:25) Modern (10:55) Mod- (:25) Modern tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit “Babes” ‘14’ tims Unit “Lead” ‘14’ Two evil forces pursue the son of adventurer Rick O’Connell. Family Family ‘PG’ ern Family Family ‘PG’ American American Family Guy Family Guy Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- “Central Intelligence” (2016, Action) Dwayne Johnson, “Hitch” (2005, Romance-Comedy) Will Smith, Eva Mendes, “17 Again” (2009, ComDad ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ “Sibling Ri‘14’ ers ‘14’ ers ‘14’ Kevin Hart, Amy Ryan. A CIA agent recruits an ex-classmate Kevin James. A smooth-talker helps a shy accountant woo edy) Zac Efron, Leslie Mann, valry” ‘14’ for a top-secret case. an heiress. Thomas Lennon. Bones Human remains with Bones “The Proof in the Pud- Bones Booth’s brother has “Red” (2010) Bruce Willis, Morgan Freeman. The CIA targets “Gladiator” (2000, Historical Drama) Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix, Connie Nielsen. A alien attributes. ‘14’ ding” ‘14’ surprising news. ‘14’ a team of former agents for assassination. fugitive general becomes a gladiator in ancient Rome. NBA: The College Track and Field NCAA Men’s & Women’s Outdoor Championships. SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter With Scott Van SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) 2019 NBA Finals TBA at Jump (N) (N) (Live) Pelt (N) (Live) Golden State Warriors. College Baseball College Baseball NCAA Regional/Super Regional: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) UFC Main Event ‘14’ Unlocking Qualifiers Now or Never UFC Top 10 SportsCenter Victory Highlights (N) Bowling Mariners Mariners All Mariners Pre- MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Los Angeles Angels. From Angel Stadium of Anaheim in Mariners MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Los Angeles Angels. From Angel Stadium Spotlight Access game (N) Anaheim, Calif. (N) (Live) Postgame of Anaheim in Anaheim, Calif. Mom ‘14’ Mom ‘14’ Mom ‘14’ Mom ‘14’ Mom ‘14’ Mom ‘14’ “Coming to America” (1988, Comedy) Eddie Murphy, Arsenio Hall. An Afri- “Coming to America” (1988, Comedy) Eddie Murphy, Arsenio Hall. An African prince and his royal sidekick come to Queens. can prince and his royal sidekick come to Queens. (3:30) “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” (2000, Comedy“First Blood” (1982, Action) Sylvester Stallone. A Vietnam “Rambo: First Blood Part II” (1985, Action) Sylvester Stal- NOS4A2 Vic discovers super- (:14) Fear the Walking Dead Drama) George Clooney, John Turturro. vet is hounded by a brutal small-town sheriff. lone. Ex-Green Beret goes on Vietnam mission. natural abilities. ‘14’ “Here to Help” ‘MA’ American American Family Guy Family Guy Robot Chick- Aqua Teen Hot Streets Rick and Your Pretty Tropical Cop Mike Tyson Family Guy Family Guy Robot Chick- Rick and Your Pretty Dad ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ en ‘14’ Hunger ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ Face... Hell Tales Mysteries ‘14’ ‘14’ en ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ Face... Hell I Was Prey “Attacked in NatureNatureNatureNatureNatureNatureI Was Prey “Close to Home” I Was Prey “Alone in the I Was Prey “Blood in the I Was Prey “Close to Home” Alaska” ‘PG’ Solved Solved Solved Solved Solved Solved ‘PG’ Wild” ‘PG’ Water” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Raven’s Sydney to the Coop & Cami Bunk’d ‘G’ Raven’s Andi Mack ‘G’ “The Lion King” (1994) Voices of Matthew (:35) “Moana” (2016, Children’s) Voices of Dwayne Johnson, (:25) Andi Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Max ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Broderick, Jeremy Irons. Auli’i Cravalho, Rachel House. Mack ‘G’ The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud Crashletes Henry Dan- Movie Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ ‘PG’ ger ‘G’ (3:00) “Tarzan” (1999) Voices “Beauty and the Beast” (1991, Children’s) Voices of Paige iHeartRadio Wango Tango (N) iHeartRadio Wango Tango (N) The 700 Club “Garfield” (2004, Children’s) of Tony Goldwyn. O’Hara, Robby Benson, Richard White. Breckin Meyer. Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to 90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever After? “Extended: Severed 90 Day Fiance: The Other Way Four Americans have found 90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress Ties” Buried emotions get stirred up. (N) ‘PG’ love abroad. (N) After? ‘PG’ BattleBots The Sweet 16 BattleBots “The TournaBattleBots Just four bots BattleBots (N) ‘PG’ (:02) Jeremy Wade’s Dark (:03) Guardians of the BattleBots ‘PG’ round kicks off. ‘PG’ ment” ‘PG’ remain. ‘PG’ Waters (N) ‘PG’ Glades ‘14’ Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Paranormal Caught on Cam- Paranormal Caught on Cam- Paranormal Caught on Camera “Haunted House and Portals to Hell “LaLaurie Portals to Hell An estate Portals to Hell “LaLaurie era ‘PG’ era ‘PG’ Ghosts in the Sky” (N) ‘PG’ Mansion” (N) ‘14’ brimming with activity. ‘14’ Mansion” ‘14’ Ancient Aliens “Alien Mes- Ancient Aliens Various Ancient Aliens Myths behind To Be Announced Unidentified: Inside Ameri- (:05) Ancient Aliens Alien To Be Announced sages” ‘PG’ human-like species. ‘PG’ reptilian aliens. ‘PG’ ca’s UFO Investigation abductions claims. ‘PG’ Live PD “Live PD -- 06.01.19” ‘14’ To Be Announced Live PD “Live PD -- 06.07.19” (N Same-day Tape) ‘14’ Live PD “Live PD -- 06.07.19” ‘14’

House Hunt- House Hunt- House Hunt- House Hunt- House Hunt- House Hunt- 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’ ers ‘G’ ers ‘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 (65) CNBC 208 355 (67) FNC (81) COM (82) SYFY

205 360

Undercover Boss ‘PG’

Tucker Carlson Tonight (N) Hannity (N)

(:10) South (:45) South (:15) South Park “My Future 107 249 Park ‘MA’ Park ‘MA’ Self ’n’ Me” ‘MA’ (3:35) “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” (2009, Action) Hugh 122 244 Jackman, Liev Schreiber, will.i.am.

PREMIUM STATIONS ! HBO

303 504

^ HBO2 304 505 + MAX

311 516

5 SHOW 319 546 8 TMC

Undercover Boss ‘PG’

329 554

Undercover Boss “Wienerschnitzel” ‘PG’ The Ingraham Angle (N)

Undercover Boss “Forman Undercover Boss “Mood Undercover Boss “Maaco” Paid Program Paid Program Mills” ‘PG’ Media” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘G’ ‘G’ Fox News at Night With Tucker Carlson Tonight Hannity The Ingraham Angle Shannon Bream (N) (5:50) South (:25) South South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park Park ‘MA’ Park ‘MA’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ “Ghostbusters” (1984, Comedy) Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis. (:25) “Ghostbusters II” (1989, Comedy) Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd. A longFour paranormal investigators battle mischievous ghouls. dead Carpathian warlock attempts to return to Earth.

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

(2:55) “The (:35) “Night School” (2018, Comedy) Kevin Hart, Tiffany VICE News “Halloween” (2018, Horror) Jamie Lee Curtis, Judy Greer, Real Time With Bill Maher (N Wyatt (:35) Real Time With Bill Wyatt Invasion” Haddish, Rob Riggle. A student puts up with a feisty teacher Tonight (N) Andi Matichak. Laurie Strode faces a showdown with killer Same-day Tape) ‘MA’ Cenac’s Prob- Maher ‘MA’ Cenac’s Prob(2007) at night school. ‘PG-13’ ‘14’ Michael Myers. ‘R’ lem Areas lem Areas (3:15) Game of Thrones: The Wyatt (:45) Chernobyl Taking risks to expose the “The Cold Blue” (2018) A (:15) Gentleman Jack (:15) “Deadpool 2” (2018, Action) Ryan Reynolds, Josh Bro- (:15) “Brüno” (2009, ComLast Watch ‘MA’ Cenac’s Prob- truth. ‘MA’ meditation on youth, war and “Why’ve You Brought That?” lin, Zazie Beetz. Deadpool joins forces with a team of mutants edy) Sacha Baron Cohen, lem Areas trauma. ‘NR’ ‘MA’ to fight Cable. ‘R’ Paula Abdul. ‘R’ (3:55) “A Thousand Words” (2012) Eddie “Housesitter” (1992, Comedy) Steve Martin. (:15) “Game Night” (2018, Comedy) Jason Bateman, Rachel Warrior Ah Sahm rejects his Warrior Ah Sahm rejects his (10:55) “GoodFellas” (1990) Murphy. A literary agent’s loquaciousness will A screwy waitress forces herself into an archi- McAdams, Kyle Chandler. A murder mystery party turns into a warrior roots. (N) ‘MA’ warrior roots. ‘MA’ Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta. ‘R’ be his undoing. ‘PG-13’ tect’s life. ‘PG’ wild and chaotic night. ‘R’ (2:45) “The “Playing It Cool” (2014) Chris Evans, Aubrey (:15) “Adrift” (2018, Adventure) Shailene Woodley, Sam “XY Chelsea” (2019, Documentary) Whistle- “XY Chelsea” (2019, Documentary) Whistle- The Chi “Lean Into It” BranBack-up Plaza. A man maintains a platonic relationship Claflin, Jeffrey Thomas. A couple fight for survival after sailing blower Chelsea Manning leaks military blower Chelsea Manning leaks military don takes a big step with Plan” with a gal he loves. ‘R’ into a hurricane. ‘PG-13’ secrets. ‘NR’ secrets. ‘NR’ Jerrika. ‘MA’ (3:00) “Eight Below” (2006, (:15) “The Man in the Moon” (1991, Drama) Sam Water“The Three Musketeers” (1993, Adventure) Charlie Sheen, “The Man in the Iron Mask” (1998, Adventure) Leonardo (:15) “Inglourious Basterds” Children’s) Paul Walker. ‘PG’ ston, Tess Harper. An adolescent girl experiences the pangs Kiefer Sutherland. The Musketeers seek to break Richelieu’s DiCaprio, Jeremy Irons. Ex-musketeers attempt a bloodless (2009, War) Brad Pitt. ‘R’ of first love. ‘PG-13’ pact with Britain. ‘PG’ coup against their king. ‘PG-13’

June 2 - 8, 2019

Clarion TV

SATURDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING A

B

(3) ABC-13 13 (6) MNT-5

5

(8) CBS-11 11 (9) FOX-4

4

4

(10) NBC-2

2

2

(12) PBS-7

7

7

(20) QVC

137 317

(23) LIFE

108 252

(28) USA

105 242

(30) TBS

139 247

(31) TNT

138 245

(34) ESPN 140 206 (35) ESPN2 144 209 (36) ROOT 426 687 (38) PARMT 241 241 (43) AMC

131 254

(46) TOON 176 296 (47) ANPL 184 282 (49) DISN

173 291

(50) NICK

171 300

(51) FREE

180 311

(55) TLC

183 280

(56) DISC

182 278

(57) TRAV 196 277 (58) HIST

120 269

(59) A&E

118 265

A = DISH

4 PM

4:30

5 PM

5:30

Family Feud ‘PG’

Family Feud ‘PG’

Family Feud ‘PG’

ABC World News

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel of For- Shark Tank An easy-to-use tune ‘G’ 3D printer for kids. ‘PG’

(82) SYFY

8 PM

13

JUNE 8, 2019

8:30

9 PM

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

20/20

Extra (N) ‘PG’

American Ninja Warrior Contestants face Giant Cubes. ‘PG’ Murdoch Mysteries Murdoch Heartland “Naming Day” The The First Mr. Box Ofand his team protect Mark family keeps secrets. ‘PG’ Family ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ Twain. ‘PG’ 48 Hours (N) KTVA Night- Castle “The G.D.S.” ‘PG’ Person of cast Interest ‘14’ Two and a Two and a MasterChef The cooks pair Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Half Men ‘14’ Half Men ‘14’ up to make cupcakes. ‘PG’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Channel 2 (:29) Saturday Night Live “Adam Sandler; News: Late Shawn Mendes” Adam Sandler; Shawn Edition (N) Mendes performs. ‘14’ 70s Soul Superstars (My Music) Motown, R&B, soul and disco artists. ‘G’ Food: WhatShould I Eat?

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’ Pure Anna returns to a life of Person of Interest “Return Person of Interest “Pilot” ‘14’ Bones Brennan looks at Wen- Bones Brennan is accused of crime. ‘14’ 0” ‘14’ dall’s broken arm. ‘14’ murder. ‘14’ (3:00) QVC Presents Beauty Urban Decay Cosmetics (N) PM Style With Amy Stran (N) (Live) ‘G’ DeLonghi Pinguino 3-in-1 philosophy - beauty (N) (Live) ‘G’ How To Summer (N) (Live) Bash (N) (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ Portable Air Conditioner ‘G’ (3:00) “The Princess Dia“The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement” (2004, “Adriana Trigiani’s Very Valentine” (2019, Romance) Kelen (:05) “Pride & Prejudice: Atlanta” (2019, Romance) Tiffany (:01) “Adriana Trigiani’s ries” (2001) Julie Andrews, Children’s) Anne Hathaway, Julie Andrews. A young princess Coleman, Jacqueline Bisset. A woman tries to save her fam- Hines, Juan Antonio, Jackée Harry. Mrs. Bennet seeks out Very Valentine” (2019, RoAnne Hathaway. must marry or give up the throne. ily’s wedding shoe business. eligible mates for her five daughters. mance) Kelen Coleman. (:10) “The Mummy Returns” (2001, Adventure) Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, John Han- “San Andreas” (2015, Action) Dwayne Johnson, Carla Gugino. A rescue “The Mummy” (1999, Adventure) Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, John Hannah. Two evil forces pursue the son of adventurer Rick O’Connell. pilot must save his family after an earthquake. nah. A mummy seeks revenge for a 3,000-year-old curse. Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ “Hitch” (2005, Romance-Comedy) Will Smith, Eva Mendes, The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Full Frontal The Last O.G. “Norbit” (2007, Comedy) EdKevin James. A smooth-talker helps a shy accountant woo Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘14’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ With Saman- ‘MA’ die Murphy, Thandie Newton. an heiress. tha Bee “Sorcerer’s “Doctor Strange” (2016, Action) Benedict Cumberbatch, Chiwetel Ejiofor. “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2” (2017, Science Fiction) Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana. The “The Incredible Hulk” (2008) Edward Norton. Bruce Banner Apprentice” The Ancient One introduces Dr. Stephen Strange to magic. team unravels the mystery of Peter Quill’s parentage. faces an enemy known as The Abomination. UFC 238: Cejudo vs. Moraes - Prelims (N) (Live) Boxing Oscar Valdez vs. Jason Sanchez. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter College Track & Field

College Baseball NCAA Regional/Super Regional: Teams TBA. (N) (Live)

Welcome/NFL Welcome/NFL Welcome/NFL Qualifiers UFC 25 Greatest Fights The UFC counts down the greatest Highlights battles to ever transpire inside the Octagon. (2:00) NHRA Drag Racing Mariners Mariners Pre- MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Los Angeles Angels. From Angel Stadium of Anaheim in Mariners MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Los Angeles Angels. From Angel Stadium Route 66 NHRA Nationals. Spotlight game (N) Anaheim, Calif. (N) (Live) Postgame of Anaheim in Anaheim, Calif. (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. (1:30) “Walk “Armageddon” (1998, Science Fiction) Bruce Willis, Billy Bob Thornton, Liv Tyler. A hero tries to save Earth The Son Eli takes a scalp. (:01) The Son Eli takes a (:02) “Taken” (2008, Action) Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace. the Line” from an asteroid. (N) ‘14’ scalp. ‘14’ Slavers kidnap the daughter of a former spy. Dragon Ball Z Dragon Ball Rick and Rick and Family Guy My Hero Aca- Dragon Ball Attack on Neverland Sword Art JoJo-DiaBlack Clover Boruto: Na- Naruto: Ship- Hunter X Gemusetto Kai ‘Y7’ Super ‘PG’ Morty ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ ‘14’ demia Super ‘PG’ Titan ‘MA’ Online mond ‘14’ ruto Next puden Hunter ‘PG’ Ma. Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet (:01) Dodo Heroes (N) ‘PG’ (:02) The Aquarium (:02) The Secret Life of Dodo Heroes ‘PG’ Vet ‘PG’ “Hog Wild” ‘PG’ “Blown Away” ‘PG’ “A Lucky Break” ‘PG’ the Zoo Raven’s Sydney to the Sydney to the Bunk’d ‘G’ Raven’s “Moana” (2016, Children’s) Voices of Dwayne Johnson, Auli’i (:20) Sydney (:10) Big City (:35) Big City Raven’s Andi Mack ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Max ‘G’ Max ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Cravalho, Rachel House. to the Max Greens Greens Home ‘Y’ The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud Game Shak- Cousins for Full House ‘G’ Full House ‘G’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ (:35) Friends (:10) Mom ‘14’ (:45) Mom ‘14’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ ers ‘G’ Life ‘G’ ‘PG’ (3:55) “Maleficent” (2014, Fantasy) Angelina Jolie. A terrible “The Jungle Book” (2016, Children’s) Neel Sethi, Voice of Bill Murray. “Thor: The Dark World” (2013, Action) Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman. (:05) “Space Jam” (1996) betrayal turns Maleficent’s pure heart to stone. Young Mowgli meets an array of animals in the jungle. Thor must save the Nine Realms from an ancient enemy. Michael Jordan. Dr. Pimple Popper “Popping Dr. Pimple Popper ‘14’ Trading Spaces “Into the Trading Spaces “The Honey (:01) Nate & Jeremiah by (:02) Nate & Jeremiah by (:02) Trading Spaces “Back Trading Spaces “The Honey Popeye” ‘14’ Woods” ‘G’ Don’t List” (N) ‘G’ Design (N) ‘PG’ Design ‘PG’ to School” ‘G’ Don’t List” ‘G’ Dirty Jobs Searching for the Street Outlaws “Shine on You Street Outlaws “The Hard Street Outlaws “Dark Side of Dirty Mudder Truckers “The Dirty 7 vs. South Carolina / The Street Outlaws “Burning Rub- Dirty Mudder Truckers ‘14’ Greenland shark. ‘14’ Crazy Diamond” ‘14’ Way” ‘14’ the Moon” ‘14’ Dirty 7 vs. New England” (N) ‘14’ ber Down Under” ‘14’ Ghost Adventures “Grand Ghost Adventures “Upper Ghost Adventures “Palomino Ghost Adventures “Black Ghost Adventures “Crescent Ghost Adventures “Kay’s Ghost Adventures “Return to Ghost Adventures “Crescent Canyon Caverns” ‘PG’ Fruitland Curse” ‘PG’ Club” ‘PG’ Dahlia House” ‘PG’ Hotel” (N) ‘PG’ Hollow” ‘PG’ Tombstone” ‘PG’ Hotel” ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens “Earth Station Egypt” Extraterrestrials; Egypt. Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens: Declassified (N) ‘PG’ Unidentified: Inside Ameri- (:05) Ancient Aliens: Declas‘PG’ ca’s UFO Investigation sified ‘PG’ Live PD “Live PD -- 05.31.19” ‘14’ To Be Announced Live PD “Live PD -- 06.08.19” (N Same-day Tape) ‘14’ Live PD “Live PD -- 06.08.19” ‘14’

Love It or List It A couple (60) HGTV 112 229 seeks more space. ‘PG’ Chopped Lamb appetizer; (61) FOOD 110 231 vegetable steak. ‘G’ Undercover Boss “The Dw (65) CNBC 208 355 yer Group” ‘PG’ Watters’ World (N) (67) FNC 205 360 (81) COM

© Tribune Media Services

B = DirecTV

The Good Doctor “Hubert” Brothers bargain over life and death. ‘14’ Wipeout “Flush Hour” Obsta- How I Met How I Met Last Man Last Man Madam Secretary “Minefield” Chicago P.D. “Turn the Light cles include the Johns. ‘PG’ Your Mother Your Mother Standing ‘PG’ Standing ‘PG’ Elizabeth pushes for a land- Off” Platt asks Ruzek for ‘14’ ‘PG’ mine treaty. ‘14’ help. ‘14’ Innovation Hope in the Frontiers ‘G’ CBS Week- The Listener Toby disturbs a God Friended Me ‘PG’ 48 Hours (N) Nation Wild (N) ‘G’ end News crime scene. ‘14’ (3:00) MLB Baseball (N) (Live) Paid Program OutdoorsComics Un- Comics Un- Mom ‘14’ Mom ‘14’ ‘G’ man/Buck leashed W/ leashed W/ McNeely Byron Allen Byron Allen Leverage Sterling convinces Channel 2 To Be AnPawn Stars Pawn Stars Songland “will.i.am” ‘PG’ Dateline NBC the team to do a job. ‘PG’ News: Week- nounced ‘PG’ “Ah, Shoot” end ‘PG’ (3:00) Food: What the Heck Moments to Remember (My Music) 1950s and ’60s hits. ‘G’ Story Songs (My Music) Songs that tell Should I Eat? ‘G’ stories. ‘G’

CABLE STATIONS (8) WGN-A 239 307

Paid Program Paid Program ‘G’ ‘G’ Fox News at Night With Shannon Bream South Park (:35) South ‘MA’ Park ‘MA’ (10:52) Fu(:25) Futuraturama ‘PG’ ma ‘PG’

Love It or List It “Need for Love It or List It “Functioning Love It or List It Justin is tired Love It or List It A couple Love It or List It “New Kid on Efficiency” ‘PG’ for Four” ‘G’ of the chaos. ‘PG’ needs more space. ‘G’ the Block” ‘PG’ Chopped “Grill Masters: Fi- Chopped Big flavors meet big Chopped “Grill Masters: Chopped Barbecue rivals Chopped Four Texas grill nale Battle” ‘G’ personalities. ‘G’ Memphis” ‘G’ battle it out. ‘G’ masters compete. ‘G’ Undercover Boss “American Undercover Boss “UnderUndercover Boss “UnderUndercover Boss “Forman Undercover Boss “Mohegan Seafoods” ‘PG’ cover Boss: Busted!” ‘PG’ cover Employee” ‘PG’ Mills” ‘PG’ Sun Casino” ‘PG’ Justice With Judge Jeanine The Greg Gutfeld Show (N) Watters’ World Justice With Judge Jeanine The Greg Gutfeld Show (N) (:10) The Of- (:45) “The Longest Yard” (2005, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock, Burt Reynolds. Pris- “The Longest Yard” (2005, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock. Prisoners 107 249 fice ‘14’ oners train for a football game against the guards. train for a football game against the guards. (:05) “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1” (2010, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Ru- (:10) “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2” (2011, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Ru122 244 pert Grint. Harry sets out to destroy the secrets to Voldemort’s power. pert Grint, Emma Watson. Harry may have to make the ultimate sacrifice.

PREMIUM STATIONS

Love It or List It “An Artful Promise” ‘PG’ Chopped “Grill Masters: Finale Showdown” ‘G’ Paid Program Paid Program ‘G’ ‘G’ Watters’ World

Love It or List It A couple needs more space. ‘G’ Chopped Barbecue rivals battle it out. ‘G’ The Profit An owner puts her business at risk. ‘PG’ Justice With Judge Jeanine

“Happy Gilmore” (1996, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Christopher McDonald, Julie Bowen. (:02) Futura- (:32) Futura- (:02) Futura- (:32) Futurama ‘PG’ ma ‘PG’ ma ‘PG’ ma ‘PG’

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

(3:15) “At the Heart of Gold: (4:55) “Crazy Rich Asians” (2018, Romance-Comedy) Con- “A Star Is Born” (2018, Romance) Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga, Sam Elliott. (:20) Big Little (:12) Big Little Lies Jane de- (:10) Chernobyl Taking risks Lies ‘MA’ flects Ziggy’s questions. ‘MA’ to expose the truth. ‘MA’ 303 504 Inside the USA Gymnastics stance Wu. A woman learns more about her boyfriend and his A country music star falls in love with a talented singer. ‘R’ Scandal” rich family. ‘PG-13’ (3:36) Sharp (:31) Sharp Objects “Falling” (:24) Sharp (:15) Gentleman Jack Anne (:15) “Robin Hood” (2010, Adventure) Russell Crowe, Cate Blanchett, Wil- (:45) Real Time With Bill Last Week Wyatt (:45) “Clash liam Hurt. Robin and his men battle the Sheriff of Nottingham. ‘PG-13’ Maher ‘MA’ Tonight-John Cenac’s Prob- of the Titans” ^ HBO2 304 505 Objects ‘MA’ Camille crosses a line. ‘MA’ Objects “Milk” Lister returns to Shibden ‘MA’ Hall. ‘MA’ lem Areas (2:35) “Suck- (:25) “The Descent” (2005) Shauna Mac(:05) Warrior Ah Sahm rejects “Bring It On” (2000, Comedy) Kirsten Dunst. (:40) “Bring It On Again” (2004) Anne (:10) Warrior Ah Sahm rejects (:05) “The Last Seduction” donald. Six spelunkers encounter hungry his warrior roots. ‘MA’ High-school cheerleaders vie for a coveted Judson-Yager. College cheerleaders compete his warrior roots. ‘MA’ (1994) Linda Fiorentino, Peter + MAX 311 516 er Punch” underground predators. national title. ‘PG-13’ against the varsity team. Berg. ‘R’ Billions “Lamster” Wendy The Chi “Lean Into It” Bran“The Kingdom” (2007, Action) Jamie Foxx, Chris Cooper, “Mile 22” (2018, Action) Mark Wahlberg. (:35) “The Italian Job” (2003, Crime Drama) Mark Wahl(:25) The Chi don takes a big step with Jennifer Garner. Federal agents seek a terrorist cell in RiA CIA operative leads an elite team through berg, Charlize Theron. A thief and his crew plan to steal back “Lean Into It” 5 SHOW 319 546 weighs her options. ‘MA’ Jerrika. ‘MA’ yadh, Saudi Arabia. ‘R’ hostile terrain. ‘R’ their gold. ‘PG-13’ ‘MA’ (:15) “Assassination Games” (2011, Action) Jean-Claude “American Assassin” (2017, Action) Dylan O’Brien, Michael “House of the Dead” (2003, Horror) Jona- “Dead Night” (2017, Horror) Brea Grant. A “House of the Dead” (2003, Keaton, Sanaa Lathan. Three agents join forces to battle a than Cherry, Tyron Leitso. Young people mother loses her sanity during one night in the Horror) Jonathan Cherry, Ty 8 TMC 329 554 Van Damme, Scott Adkins, Michael Higgs. Rival assassins join forces against a drug cartel. ‘R’ mysterious operative. ‘R’ battle zombies on an island. ‘R’ woods. ‘NR’ ron Leitso. ‘R’ ! HBO

June 2 - 8, 2019

Clarion TV

© Tribune Media Services

15


Peninsula Clarion | Friday, June 7, 2019 | A13

Grief clouds woman’s life 20 years after loss of baby though the baby was stillborn, I’m sure the loss was grieved by your grandfather as well as your aunt.

DEAR ABBY: Our oldest son has had a girlfriend for almost two years. She’s a lovely, kind and quality person, the type you would want him Abigail Van Buren to marry. The problem I’m having is that I have slipped and called her by the name of his former girlfriend. This happens sometimes during casual conversation, especially when I’m not concentrating. I have tried to be careful because I don’t want to hurt her or my son’s feelings, but sadly, I have. I know she has heard me at least a couple of times. I have no affinity for the former girlfriend. Abby, this is damaging my relationship with my son and his girlfriend although she is too classy to say a word. What do I do?

-- CRYSTAL IN NEVADA DEAR CRYSTAL: Your aunt should have sought grief counseling after she lost her baby. That she would throw a birthday party a year later and expect everyone to participate as if the child had lived is truly sad. Because you and your relatives feel she still hasn’t gotten beyond the tragedy, those closest to her should suggest she talk with a therapist now or join -- HEARTBROKEN IN NEW ENGa support group. LAND That said, I am not sure her wish that DEAR HEARTBROKEN: When it her little angel be mentioned at your happens again -- and it may -- apolograndfather’s funeral was out of line. Al-

DEAR ABBY: My brother-in-law is starting a business and has offered my husband a job he is well-qualified for. I think it’s a bad idea to mix family and business. I should mention that it’s my husband’s brother, and in the past when my husband has done odd jobs for him, he has had trouble getting paid for them. Do you agree with me that it’s a bad idea for my husband to work for his brother?

-- NOT SO SURE DEAR NOT: Working for a relative can pack a double whammy because of unresolved emotional baggage that can come with the job, but it’s not always a bad thing. Sometimes it works out very well. However, because your husband’s brother has a history of not paying his debts, I agree with you that in this case, it would be a bad idea. 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.

Hints from Heloise

Rubes

By Leigh Rubin

You can get a lot done if you so choose. If you have plans, do not change them. You might need to recharge your energy. The unexpected could trigger a strong reaction. Tonight: A must appearance. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHHH Make a point of following your friends. They seem to have a strong opinion about what needs to happen. You have been juggling the pros and cons for a while. The end results depend on how you handle pressure. Tonight: Out celebrating. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Others look at what is happening around you. They wish they had the respect of others that you have. You deal with an erratic relationship with ease and a big smile. You know what to do. Be positive about what is happening. Tonight: Out. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHHH Reach out to a loved one at a distance. You love hearing from this person and catching up on others’ news. You could find that you are unusually highstrung, even for you. Try to squeeze in some exercise. Tonight: Calm down and TGIF. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH Your closeness to a key associate or partner could make all the difference in how you handle a dynamic change. You also view this person as insightful, especially around funds. Get together for a late lunch meeting, which could easily go to the end of the day. Tonight: Only with favorite people. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Others naturally seek you out. Right now, you are searching for a special friend whom you often confide in and get feedback from. You could find today’s path hectic. An unexpected development could easily distract you. Of late, you have found that an element of your personal or domestic life is out of sync. Tonight: TGIF. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You might decide to veer from your routine. You will schedule appointments for yourself. You might not be in the mood to socialize as much as you are to clear your desk or complete a project that is close to your heart. Tonight: Squeeze in some exercise. BORN TODAY Vice President Mike Pence (1959), musician Prince (1958), singer Tom Jones (1940)

Ziggy

PROPERTY TAXES Dear Readers: We continue to have an amazing response to a Sound Off letter about rising property taxes. One letter in particular spoke volumes about property taxes for the elderly. -- Heloise “Dear Heloise: I read about escalating property taxes in your column. I live in a small town of about 9,000 people with no sewers and no streetlights, and my taxes were $4,000.19. We are seniors, and for us that’s a lot of money, especially on a fixed income. It is extremely hard to come up with the money, and this may result in having to sell our home. I don’t know if there are any options for us, but we are just like many other seniors who struggle to get by each month.” -- Joyce R. in California BRING YOUR OWN FOOD Dear Heloise: I just read the letter from Connie W. of Tucson, Arizona, in the San Angelo (Texas) StandardTimes. She asked what to feed her vegan sister-in-law. When I visit friends or relatives, since I have a special diet, I always take food that I can eat. I take enough for everyone else to enjoy with me if they choose to do so. That way, I don’t put a burden of preparing special food on my hosts, and I don’t have to worry about what I’ll eat. It’s always a good idea to let your hosts know in advance so they don’t have to worry about the menu on your account. -- Sylvia P., via email

SUDOKU Solution

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5 1 4 6 8 3 7 9 2

9 7 6 2 5 4 3 1 8

1 6 3 5 4 2 9 8 7

7 4 5 8 1 9 2 6 3

8 9 2 1 6 7 4 3 5

Difficulty Level

B.C.

4 5 7 3 9 8 1 2 6

6 3 1 4 2 5 8 7 9

1

6/06

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9 6 4

1

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8

1 8 3

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4 6/07

By Johnny Hart

By Tom Wilson

Tundra

Garfield

2 8 9 7 3 6 5 4 1

By Dave Green

2019 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Jacqueline Bigar’s Stars HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Friday, June 7, 2019: This year, you open up to a change of pace or lifestyle. You become more enthusiastic about your day-to-day interactions. If you’re single, you could meet someone on the bus to work or when taking off on a mini trip. You could be delighted by this person’s fun-loving and experience-oriented style. If you’re attached, the two of you might take a seminar on how to communicate better, or decide on a massage class together. This class or happening will only bring you closer and add to your bond. At the same time, you will understand each other even more. LEO loves to entice you to join them! 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 Your playfulness takes you down an interesting path. Use care when eyeing an important expense or financial matter. You feel more connected than you have in a long time. Tonight: Add in some naughtiness. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH You could be overly tired and dragging your feet over a sudden event. You can handle what is going on, knowing how it will turn out. Your confidence helps others remain confident. Tonight: Happily head home first. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH Speak your mind, but do not be surprised at another person’s reaction. You will have a colorful conversation as a result. What is clear is that both of you are ready for the weekend. Tonight: At your favorite haunt. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Be aware of the costs of making an expenditure. You might want to consider saying no rather than getting too involved in deciding about this object. Your final reaction could be a surprise, not only to others but to you. Tonight: Invite a friend to join you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHHH Your energy draws many people toward you. You surprise a boss, older friend or relative, and this person might be highly reactive. Demonstrate your caring in such a way that others can receive your message. Tonight: All smiles. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH Step back and be less reactive.

By Eugene Sheffer

gize, explain that it’s embarrassing, and you don’t know why it happens. Then THANK her for being as classy as she has been about it.

2019 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

DEAR ABBY: My aunt had a stillborn baby 20 years ago. At the time, I was a teenager. Ever since then she has lived a morbid lifestyle -- like you’d see in a scary movie. After the first year, she threw a party with a cake for all of us, and wanted us to sing “Happy Birthday” to a baby that never lived. When my grandfather died recently, she made sure the preacher announced that my grandfather also had another grandchild. I found out that when her cat died she kept it in the house for several days because she didn’t want to let it go. It bothers us a lot, because she acts like she is the victim in life and tries to make people feel guilty for being happy. How do we talk to her?

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


A14 | Friday, June 7, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion

Business

US and Mexico: Negotiators claim progress; no deal yet By JILL COLVIN, MATTHEW LEE and LUIS ALONSO LUGO Associated Press

WASHINGTON — U.S. and Mexican officials claim to be making progress as they labored for a second day to avert import tariffs. But President Donald Trump is still threatening to impose them as he tries to pressure Mexico into stemming the flow of Central American migrants across the United States’ southern border. Vice President Mike Pence, monitoring the talks from his travels in Pennsylvania, said Thursday the U.S. was “encouraged” by Mexico’s latest proposals but that, so far, tariffs still were set to take effect on Monday. He added that it would be “for the president to decide” whether Mexico was doing enough to head off the tariffs. Pence said that, among other issues, negotiators had been discussing a potential agreement to make it difficult for those who enter Mexico from other countries to claim asylum in the U.S. Mexico has long resisted that request. Trump has threatened to impose a 5% tax on all Mexican goods beginning Monday as part of an escalating tariff regime opposed by many in his own Republican Party. The frantic, last-minute talks underscore Trump’s chaotic approach even when decisions have enormous economic consequences for both the U.S. and its closest allies. Trump has embraced tariffs as a tool he can use as leverage against other countries, dismissing the potential harm to American consumers and manufacturers. Traveling in Europe, Trump told reporters that negotiators had made “a lot of progress,” but continued to

President Donald Trump speaks before he departs Shannon Airport, Thursday, in Shannon, Ireland. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

play coy. “We’ll see what happens,” Trump said in Ireland before leaving for France to attend a D-Day ceremony. “But something pretty dramatic could happen. We’ve told Mexico the tariffs go on. And I mean it, too. And I’m very happy with it.” It remained unclear whether any deal could be struck with Trump out of the country. Many in Washington still expect the tariffs to go into effect barring a major new concession from Mexico, though lawmakers who have been in talks with both U.S. and Mexican officials said they were hopeful a deal could be reached to satisfy Trump, or at least delay the tariffs’ implementation. Mexican Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard spent several hours at the State Department Thursday morning, while Trump’s legal counsel and other Mexi-

can aides met at the White House Thursday afternoon. Ebrard told reporters as he left the State Department that progress was being made and that he was likely to return following consultations at the embassy. He returned in early evening. His spokesman, Roberto Velasco, tweeted that “Options continue to be explored.” “The stance of the United States is focused on measures of migratory control, ours on development,” he said. White House spokeswoman Mercedes Schlapp said in an interview that conversations were continuing but “it looks like we’re moving toward this path of tariffs because what we’ve seen so far is that the Mexicans, what they’re proposing, is simply not enough.” Pence, who led the discussions Wednesday with Secretary of State Mike

FESTIVAL OF READINGS

Diane Ackerman Diane Ackerman

Prize-winning Author,Prize-winning Poet, andAuthor, Naturalist Poet, and Naturalist

2019 KACHEMAK BAY WRITERS’ CONFERENCE

Japan plans carbon emission cuts, more nuclear energy TOKYO — Japan is calling for further efforts to cut carbon emissions by promoting renewables but also nuclear energy despite the 2011 Fukushima reactors meltdowns. The energy white paper, adopted by the Cabinet Friday, says Japan faces an “urgent task” of reducing carbon emissions coming from utilities that have relied heavily on fossil fuels to make up for shortages of cleaner nuclear energy. The call comes as the Fukushima nuclear reactors are slowly being restarted amid lingering antinuclear sentiments since the 2011 crisis. Japan wants further development of renewable energy and has set a 22% to 24% target while maintaining nuclear energy at around the same level. It also pledges to reduce carbon emissions by 26% from 2013 levels by 2030. So far it has so far achieved a 7% reduction.

Walmart service to deliver groceries inside customers’ homes

Saturday, June Saturday, 15 June at 8:00pm 15 at 8:00pm

at Homer High School at Homer Mariner High School Theater Mariner Theater (600 E. Fairview (600 Avenue) E. Fairview Avenue)

Sunday, June Sunday, 16 at June7:30pm 16 at 7:30pm Kazim Ali Kazim Ali Christian Kiefer Christian Kiefer Martha Amore Martha AmoreRosemary McGuire Rosemary McGuire Barrie Jean Borich Barrie Jean Borich Elena Passarello Elena Passarello Erin Coughlin Hollowell Erin Coughlin Hollowell at Alice’s Champagne at Alice’sPalace Champagne Palace (195 E. Pioneer Avenue) (195 E. Pioneer Avenue)

Monday, June Monday, 17 at June7:30pm 17 at 7:30pm Richard Chiappone Janet Lee Carey Jamie Ford BJ Hollars

In brief

Richard Chiappone Ishmael Hope Ishmael Hope Janet Lee Carey Nancy LordNancy Lord Jamie Ford Tess TaylorTess Taylor BJ Hollars

at Land’s End Resort at Land’s End Resort (End of the Homer (EndSpit) of the Homer Spit)

All events are free and All events open are free to the and open public. to the public. Book signings will Bookfollow. signings will follow. 235-7743 235-7743 writersconference.homer.alaska.edu writersconference.homer.alaska.edu

Pompeo and other U.S. officials, told reporters in Pennsylvania that the administration had “made it very clear that our neighbors to the south, Mexico, must do more to end the tide of illegal immigration that is besetting our southern border.” During Wednesday’s talks, the gulf between the countries was clear as Mexico offered small, thus far undisclosed concessions, and the U.S. demanded major action. A senior administration official said the U.S. once again pressed Mexico to step up enforcement on its southern border and to enter into a “safe third country agreement” that would make it difficult for those who enter Mexico from other countries to claim asylum in the U.S. But Mexico surprised U.S. officials Thursday when they returned to the negotiating table and said they would commit to what Pence had requested, according to the official, who cautioned that significant questions about timing and implementation remain.

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day. The $100,000 contract calls for Boston-based Public Consulting Group to draft a paper by June 30 studying whether the initiatives will save Alaska money. Public Consulting will analyze whether enrolling Medicaid recipients in private insurance is feasible and could lead to overall

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vices like water, sewer, and roads will cost millions of dollars, City Administrator David Gilila said. “I can’t fathom even to estimate the dollar figure” Gilila said. Federal agriculture and housing and urban development grants are avail-

. . . Air Continued from page A1

the peninsula, pick up a ticket from each location, then return to Kenai and exchange their tickets for playing cards that are used as a poker hand. The pilot with the best hand at the end of the day will have first pick from a number of prizes donated by local businesses. Prizes include two round-trip tickets to Anchorage from Grant Aviation, a $100 gift card to Spenard Builders Supply and a $200 fuel gift certificate from Crow-

NEW YORK — The online delivery wars are heating up inside shoppers’ homes. Walmart is now offering to have one of its employees deliver fresh groceries and put them in your refrigerator when you’re not home. The nation’s largest grocer said Friday that it will be offering the service this fall for more than one million customers in three cities: Pittsburgh, Kansas City, Missouri, and Vero Beach, Florida. Later this year, the service, called InHome Delivery, will also accept returns for items purchased on Walmart.com. Two years ago, Walmart tested a similar service in the Silicon Valley area but teamed up with delivery startup Deliv and worked with August Home, makers of smart locks and smart home accessories. That test has since been stopped. The new service is part of Walmart’s drive to expand its shopping options that include curbside pickup and online grocery delivery.

Protester arrested at Jeff Bezos Amazon conference in Vegas LAS VEGAS — A woman was arrested Thursday after approaching Amazon CEO and founder Jeff Bezos and yelling about chicken farms on stage at a conference in Las Vegas, authorities said. Bezos’s appearance at Amazon’s re:Mars event at the Aria resort was briefly interrupted before the woman was surrounded by security guards and ushered away. Direct Action Everywhere spokesman Matt Johnson identified the protester as 30-year-old Priya Sawhney of Berkeley, California. Sawhney was held on suspicion of misdemeanor trespassing and may face more serious charges, Las Vegas police Officer Laura Meltzer said. Bezos was explaining plans to send satellites into space when the woman appeared on stage. Johnson said Sawhney was protesting conditions at a California poultry farm that supplies Amazon. — Associated Press

savings for the state, said DHSS spokesman Clinton Bennett. Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy sent a letter to President Donald Trump March 1 that discussed Medicaid block grants. Alaska House Democrats denounced the idea in a letter to state DHSS Commissioner Adam Crum last month. A report done for the state in early 2016 “found that costs of private coverage would be prohibitively high compared to Med-

icaid coverage,” the lawmakers wrote. Alaska is probably the least likely state for the concepts to work because of the state’s struggling private health insurance market, said Democratic state Rep. Zack Fields. “The idea that we’d make half-baked decisions with our largest federal stream of investment, which, by the way, is life or death for 215,000 Alaskans that rely on Medicaid health insurance — it’s just crazy,” Fields said.

able, said Joel Neimeyer, a consultant working with Akiak. “After the Anchorage/Mat-Su Valley earthquake in November of last year, Alaska is eligible for a lot of disaster funding,” Neimeyer said. Alaska’s Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management is working with the village on possible relocation funding. The process is complicated. Akiak must obtain a contractor and conduct a

planning process, submit reports to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and compete with other communities. “If they don’t have an approved hazard mitigation process by October 31, they cannot compete,” Neimeyer said. Neimeyer estimated a seawall could cost $80 million. For now, Gilila said the community is stabilizing the riverbank with metal poles and burlap tarps.

ley Petroleum. The participating airports are in Homer, Kasilof, Kalifornsky Meadows, Kenai, Ninilchik, Quartz Creek, Seward and Soldotna. Pilots can start the run and pick up tickets from any of the 8 airports, but must register in Kenai and end their flight in Kenai to be eligible for the prizes. Registration is $40 the day of the Air Fair and includes a souvenir T-shirt as well as breakfast and lunch during the event. At noon the festivities will move over to the Kenai Airport for a barbecue and a military

appreciation ceremony. As pilots fly out and return from their Poker Run excursions around the peninsula, Air Fair visitors can enjoy a performance from the 9th Army band or take a ride in a historic aircraft with the Commemorative Air Force, with the day ending at 3 p.m. Military and private aircraft will be on display as well, including a World War II-era BT-13 Valiant built in 1942. All pilots are welcome to bring their aircraft to display, but Bondurant recommended calling her at 907-283-7951 before arriving to confirm that there is enough space.


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