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CLARION P E N I N S U L A
Sunday, June 23, 2019 Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
Vol. 49, Issue 223
In the news Troopers: 3 dead in plane crash on Kenai Peninsula ANCHORAGE — Alaska State Troopers say three people were killed when a small plane crashed on land near a bay on the Kenai Peninsula. Troopers spokesman Ken Marsh says the crash occurred Friday night in Little Johnstone Bay, about 30 miles southeast of Seward. Troopers identified the pilot as 63-year-old Kem Sibbitt of Fairbanks. The identities of the two passengers were not immediately released. All three bodies were recovered Saturday. Marsh didn’t know the purpose of the flight in the Helio Courier aircraft, but he said it was a private plane. The National Transportation Safety Board will investigate.
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‘It looks bleak right now’ Oilers face financial peril, turn to community for help By JEFF HELMINIAK Peninsula Clarion
Massive declines in gaming revenue and sponsorship have put the future of the Peninsula Oilers summer collegiate baseball team in jeopardy. The Oilers are playing out their 46th consecutive season and are the only Alaska Baseball League team never to have taken a season off. The squad of top collegiate players has three National Baseball Congress World Series titles to its credit and has sent 125 players to the major leagues. All this from the See OILERS, page A3
By Brian Mazurek Peninsula Clarion
The Peninsula Oilers play the Chugiak-Eagle River Chinooks on Sunday, June 16, at Coral Seymour Memorial Park in Kenai. (Photo by Jeff Helminiak/Peninsula Clarion)
May job numbers in Alaska up from year earlier JUNEAU — Alaska’s unemployment rate fell to 6.4% last month, which would be its lowest level in more than a decade. But the figure is preliminary and could still change; the state’s unemployment rate had stood at 6.5 percent since August. State labor department economist Karinne Wiebold says until there are several months of movement in a certain direction it is too early to say if this means anything. Federal labor statistics show the last time Alaska’s unemployment rate was 6.4% was December 2007. The state labor department says Alaska gained 900 jobs between May 2018 and last month. Construction added the most jobs during that time, followed by the oil and gas sector. Manufacturing, which the department says is mostly seafood processing, was down 600 jobs over that period. — Associated Press
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Swan Lake Fire grows to 23,000 acres
Singing under the solstice Louisiana musician Meghan Linsey (left) performs with bandmate and fiance Tyler Cain on Friday at the Diamond M. Ranch Summer Solstice Music Festival on Kalifornsky Beach Road. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
The Swan Lake Fire has reached 23,210 acres and continues to spread eastward, according to a Saturday update from the Alaska Incident Management Team. The fire, which was started by lightning strikes on June 5, is located in the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge northeast of the community of Sterling. There are 335 personnel managing the fire, including five crews from the Lower 48 that arrived on Thursday and Friday. In addition, aerial firefighting efforts will be bolstered by the arrival of several large “scooper” planes from Canada that will scoop water out of Skilak and Hidden lakes to attack the fire’s edge. Those recreating near the lakes should be aware of these operations and avoid the center of the lakes. More than 200 community members attended a fire information meeting on Friday night at the Sterling Community Center to hear an update from the incident management team on the status of the Swan Lake Fire. During the meeting, several personnel detailed the strategies being used to contain the fire and protect critical infrastructure while allowing the fire to burn through dense black spruce forest. Operations Section Chief Chris Wennogle said that the southwest perimeter of the fire, known as Division Alpha, has been the priority area for creating fire lines due to its proximSee FIRE, page A2
Agency estimates $1.3M 30-day Wasilla special session By Becky Bohrer Associated Press
JUNEAU — A 30-day special legislative session in Wasilla could cost $1.3 million, according to estimates from the Legislative Affairs Agency, which has cited logistical and security
concerns with Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s recommended meeting venue. Dunleavy called lawmakers into a special session July 8 in Wasilla to finalize this year’s payout to residents from the state’s oil-wealth fund, the Alaska Permanent Fund. He has
recommended they meet at Wasilla Middle School. Legislative leaders have been weighing their options. Dunleavy, a Republican, represented Wasilla and surrounding areas for five years in the state Senate. Legislative Affairs esti-
Hamming it up Amateur radio operators gather for field day By Brian Mazurek Peninsula Clarion
The airwaves were abuzz on Saturday as amateur radio operators from the Kenai Peninsula gathered to participate in the Amateur Radio Relay League’s Annual Field Day. The 24-hour event gives radio operators from all over North America a chance to practice their skills and connect with fellow ham radio enthusiasts from hundreds or thousands of miles away. The local Moose Horn Amateur Radio Club set up their portable headquarters at the field across from the Vintage Pointe Senior Apartments and spent the day exchanging call signs with people from Alberta, Canada, San
From left, George Van Lone, Max Carpenter and Ed Seaward monitor the airwaves inside the Moose Horn Amateur Radio Club’s mobile operation center in Kenai, during the Amateur Radio Relay League’s annual Field Day on Saturday. (Photo by Brian Mazurek/Peninsula Clarion)
Francisco and even Ho- joying good food and great nolulu, while catching up weather. See HAM, page A3 with old friends and en-
mates the cost of convening and immediately adjourning a special session in Wasilla at around $240,000. It estimates a 30-day special session in Juneau that includes House and Senate Finance committee meetings in Anchorage could cost around $855,000.
Jessica Geary, the agency’s executive director, said the Juneau estimate she was asked to provide, which was released Thursday by the House majority, assumes minimal floor sessions at the Capitol and committee meetings in AnSee $1.3M, page A2
Borough looks to expand oversight of Airbnb, VRBO By ViICTORIA PETERSEN Peninsula Clarion
The Kenai Peninsula Borough hopes to crack down on technologybased businesses — like Airbnb, VRBO and similar websites — with new compliance software. Creating compliance with these sites will allow the borough to better monitor and regulate these businesses, as well as collect sales tax. A quick search on airbnb.com shows hundreds of home, cabins and even yurts for rent, as well as add-on experiences like halibut charters, a guided hike up Mount Marathon, a sailboat tour of Kenai Lake and more. Earlier this month, many residents testified at the borough assembly
against the recently passed bed tax, voicing their frustrations over popular hospitality booking sites like Airbnb and VRBO, which make it simple for residents to put their homes, cabins and properties up for rent during high-traffic summer months. Airbnb has over 6 million listings worldwide, according to its website. Marcia Kuszmaul, owner of Juneberry Lodge and president of the Homer Bed and Breakfast Association, said there are more than 1,500 Airbnb listings in Homer, Kenai, Soldotna and Seward, not including the surrounding areas. She said last year in Homer, there were 340 Airbnb listings, and this year there are 429. “It’s very frustrating See BORO, page A2
A2 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
The sounds of summer take over Seldovia
TOP: Kat Moore walks through the assembled crowd while she plays her set at the Seldovia Boardwalk Hotel on Friday, as part of a round of street performances during the Seldovia Summer Solstice Music Festival. ABOVE: Noah Procter (right) and Kelly Barber perform outside the Seldovia Harbor Inn on Friday. (Photo by Megan Pacer/ Homer News)
. . . $1.3M Continued from page A1
chorage. She said a prior estimate for a full special session in Juneau was around $1.1 million. The agency, in a written document outlining concerns with the school, cited
issues with security, logistics and technology. It said classrooms won’t work for legislative offices, and committees would have to meet at legislative information offices in Wasilla or Anchorage, citing the lack of teleconference infrastructure at the school. Any potential travel for committee hearings away from the
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Emily Anderson performs in front of Thyme on the Boardwalk on Friday as part of a round of street performances during the Seldovia Summer Solstice Music Festival in Seldovia. (Photo by Megan Pacer/Homer News)
school is not included in the cost estimate, Geary said. Matt Shuckerow, a Dunleavy spokesman, expressed skepticism with the cost estimates and what he characterized as excuses. “Legislators unfortunately are going to great lengths to find reasons to not meet in the Mat-Su Valley,” he said, referring to the region
in which Wasilla is nestled. He said the school is “more than adequate.” Senate President Cathy Giessel said three factors are being considered as lawmakers mull their options: cost, the ability to maintain reliable recordings and documentation of committee meetings and floor sessions and the separation of pow-
ers. “The Legislature has jurisdiction over its own function, and we are very aware of that and we are not willing, I guess you would say, to relinquish our standing as a separate but equal branch of government,” she said. Giessel, an Anchorage Republican, acknowledged the constitution allows for
a governor to call a special session. But she called Dunleavy’s proposal unprecedented. Past special sessions outside Juneau, in Anchorage, have been called by the Legislature, “under its own jurisdiction,” she said. “We are looking at the implications of the call that is presently before us and our response to it,” she said.
. . . Boro
We need to be collecting (taxes) — it’s criminal we are not regulating them. It’s a shame we’re having housing issues in my backyard.” Chief of Staff James Baisden told residents at the June 4 meeting that the borough has included $50,000 in the FY 2020 budget to purchase compliance software to address booking sites that aren’t contributing to sales tax. “We may be a little bit behind, but I wanted to make sure this group heard that,” Baisden said. Borough finance director, Brandi Harbaugh, said the compliance software should be implemented by the end of the year. Currently, the borough’s audit team uses a number of tools and resources to track compliance with local business-
es, such as annual field trips to physically canvass communities, online tools used on Craigslist and Facebook and state business license listings. “With those mechanisms and those tools we’ve used over the years — they’ve been effective,” she said. “With the changes with the electronic technology we have these days — Airbnb, VRBO, those types of things — they’re challenging without memberships. This software will offer us direct access to the properties that advertise on those platforms.” The software is subscription based, costing approximately $50,00 a year. The software uses the geographic area of the borough to give the borough information they can download and utilize “to prove and show documentation that folks are
indeed renting or leasing their rooms, houses, facilities, whatever they may be advertising on there.” Harbaugh said the borough doesn’t have an estimate as to how much sales tax revenue could be generated. “The goal is to create compliance and a level playing field for those who may not be registering with the Kenai Peninsula Borough,” she said. It is also unclear how the 10% bed tax, if passed by the voters in October, would affect residents hosting on Airbnb, VRBO or other booking websites and apps. While there is no applicable sales tax in Anchorage, Airbnb indicates on their website that guests who book Airbnb listings are subject to the municipality’s 12% room tax.
several different directions, which has made the winds affecting the fire difficult to predict. Scattered thunderstorms are forecasted for Sunday and Monday with temperatures increasing later in the week, and the potential thunderstorms could create problems for the fire-
fighters on the ground. A recording of the full meeting can be found online at the Alaska Division of Forestry’s Facebook page, and akfireinfo.com provides the latest information on all wildfires in Alaska. The Kenai Peninsula Borough’s Office of Emergency Man-
agement has set up a call center operating from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. every day to answer questions about the Swan Lake Fire. The number for the call center is 907262-INFO, and people can also call the team managing the fire directly at 208-3913488.
Continued from page A1
to know we’re competing on rates,” she said at the June 4 assembly meeting. “Some of these folks are charging $50 a night. So what do you do?” Adrienne Sweeney, owner of Homer’s Driftwood Inn, said the growth in Airbnbs has negatively impacted the housing market in Homer. “In Homer we’re having a housing crisis,” she said at the June 4 meeting. “I have employees who have to move out in May, live in a tent and then get their housing back in September because we have been flooded with Airbnbs and VRBOs who are flying under the radar. They are not regulated. But, if you can’t beat them join them. I have 13 Airbnb listings.
. . . Fire Continued from page A1
ity to Sterling and the Sterling Highway, and has been well contained at this time. “We have a lot of forces on the ground primarily focusing on that Division Alpha area to prevent that fire from moving towards the community,” Wennogle said. Wennogle said that the southeastern side of the fire has been the main source of smoke, which has caused reduced visibility along the Sterling Highway. To the north, Wennogle said the environment turns to mostly wetlands and provides a natural buffer for containing the fire. Incident meteorologist Julia Ruthford, who is in charge of monitoring the weather forecasts in the immediate area of the fire, said during the meeting that the Kenai Peninsula has a unique weather system compared to the rest of the state. Sea breezes can come from
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Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, June 23, 2019 |
Amiel Jeanette Severson
Mary Louise Murray
August 6, 1963 - June 18, 2019
September 23, 1942 - June 1, 2019
With love-filled broken hearts, the family of Amiel Jeannette Severson announces her passing on Tuesday, June 18, 2019 at her home in Soldotna. Amiel will lovingly be remembered by her husband Bill; children and/or spouses Desiree Dunn, Stephen and Marissa Severson, Danielle and Jeff Meyers, Donica and Shea Nash, Delissa and Daniel Owen, and Damaris Severson; grandchildren Mereiedi, Tigris, Isabeau, and Seralai Dunn; Owen and Annie Severson; Lev and Hugo Meyers; Jeren, Jax, Eleni, and Flint Nash; Gideon Owen and a sibling yet to be born; mother Barbara Ruckman; brothers Joel and Chuck Kopp; sister Sara Erickson, along with many other aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, cousins and friends. Amiel was born August 6, 1963 in South Naknek and graduated from Cook Inlet Academy in 1981. She also attended Biola University and University of Alaska Anchorage. She was a wonderful mother, homemaker, and teacher’s aide. She was involved in various ministries at the Soldotna Bible Chapel. She especially loved studying and teaching from the Bible. Amiel’s family shares, “Amiel had a gift for spreading love, joy, and happiness in our family. She was a spark for us, and her zest for life was contagious. She loved encouraging people, and many regularly experienced her unconditional love. Amiel had a passionate love of God and her faith in Him was unshakable. She gave her life for her family and loved them with all her heart. She was truly a remarkable woman! Her family will deeply miss her presence until we reunite again with her in heaven.” Memorial donations or condolences may be made in memory of Amiel to – 33150 Baylor Street – Soldotna, Alaska 99669 c/o Bill Severson. A memorial service is planned for Saturday, June 29 at 7:00 p.m. at Soldotna Bible Chapel, 300 West Marydale, Soldotna, with a reception to follow. Also on Saturday afternoon, a graveside service will be held for family at Kenai Municipal Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Stephen Severson, Jeff Meyers, Shea Nash, Daniel Owen, Charles Mark Kopp, Charles Michael Kopp, and Paul Kopp.
Longtime Sterling resident Mary L. Murray, 76, left this earth to be with her Heavenly Father, Jesus Christ on June 1, 2019 after battling metastatic breast cancer. There will be a celebration of her life at Hidden Lake, where her family will scatter her ashes, at a later date. Mary Louise Murray was born Sept. 23, 1942 in Muskegon, Mich. Her love for family and friends, and her faith in our Lord Jesus helped her through this journey and gave her peace in her final days. She did not want a formal service, as she wanted those who loved her to remember her as she was in life smiling and strong. She was our rock and will be missed. Mary was preceded in death by her daughter, Cheryl Ann Murray, her parents, James and Marie Hull, sister, Joyce Hull, and brothers, James and Paul Hull. She is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, Sondra and Bulmaro Reyes of Soldotna; son and daughterin-law, Joe and Andrea Murray of Sterling; grandsons, Marcos Reyes of Soldotna and Logan Murray of Sterling; granddaughter, Allison Murray of Sterling; her brother, John Hull of Miller, Mo.; and many nieces and nephews. Rather than flowers, please donate in her memory to St. Jude or the Wounded Warrior Project. Arrangements were by Peninsula Memorial Chapel in Kenai.
Around the Peninsula North Pen Rec Service Area events — Log Rolling is being offered at the Nikiski Pool on Tuesdays from 7:45-8:45 p.m. throughout the summer. This is free family fun class. Registration is not required. Pool admission rates apply. For more information, contact Nigel at 776-8800. — Pre-School Aquatic Play Classes will be offered in July and August. This class is for little ones 3-6 years of age. Parent are not required to be in the water. Students will have fun exploring the water through games with Mr. Nigel. For more information, call 776-8800. — Inner Tube Water Polo will be offered on Monday July 15, 6-9 p.m. at the Nikiski Pool. For those 15 years and older. Pickup games and tournament. Come out for a night of fun and competition. For more information, please contact Nigel at 776-8800. — NPRSA’s 3 on 3 Surf & Turf Volleyball Tournament will be held on Friday July 19, at the Nikiski Pool. Must be at least years of age. Teams of 3 will compete on grass and in the pool. For more information, please contact Jackie at 776-8800. — Nikiski Pool’s Annual Cardboard & Duct Tape Boat Challenge will be offered on Monday August 5, at 6 p.m. Teams must register in advance and will build a boat from duct tape and cardboard, and see if the boat can survive the pool obstacle course. Two age categories and teams of 3-5 people. For more information or to register please call Nigel at 776-8800. See Community for more events, page C3
. . . Oilers Continued from page A1
outpost of the small town of Kenai and the friendly, quaint confines of Coral Seymour Memorial Park. Currently, the Oilers are struggling to find enough money to get through the season. “It looks bleak right now,” said Michael Tice, the president of the Oilers board. “I want to try and stay positive that fundraising efforts and donations will pay off. I want to stay positive about it, but it’s really looking negative right now.” Diana Tice, who is Mi-
chael’s wife and an executive assistant for the team, said the organization is counting dollars for every road trip. “Funding has always been in place for us before the season started,” Diana said. “It’s not in place right now.” Michael said he has been affiliated with the organization since 2000. This is the first year in his time with the Oilers that funding has not been in place for the season. “It’s not good,” he said. “I really don’t know how to describe it.” Tice said the funds are not in the bank right now to get the players home. He said the Oilers will find a way to get players home,
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Travis K. Schreiner A Celebration of Life
2:00 PM - June 29th 2019 300 Marydale Ave. Soldotna, AK Don, Angela and Shauna Schreiner invite you to a Celebration of Life for Travis Schreiner. We look forward to sharing our memories and sharing some great stories with family and friends about Travis and his many adventures growing up on the Kenai Peninsula. A get together with food and refreshments is planned at Paradisos Restaurant in Kenai immediately following the Celebration.
For those interested in becoming an amateur radio operator, the folks at Moose Horn also provided the opportunity to take the 35-question certification exam right there on the spot. Anyone who passes the exam with at least a 75% is issued a unique and universally recognized call sign by the Federal Communications Commission. In many cases, operators know each other’s call signs better than they know their real names, and several of the people participating in the Field Day proudly displayed their call signs on their hats and license plates. While it’s not a requirement for certification, many ham radio operators take on the role of first responders in the event of an emergency where traditional lines of communication break down. That’s exactly what happened in the wake of the 1964 earthquake, when ham radio operators came together to be the voice of remote communities that had no other way to communicate with each other. The Alaska-Pacific Emer-
gency Preparedness Net, which was set up in the wake of the earthquake, still operates to this day on the 14.292 MHz frequency band and has amateur operators checking in five days a week. George Van Lone — better known by his call sign, KL7AN — is a member of the Moose Horn club and still has the radio that his wife’s aunt used during the earthquake. Van Lone said the radio is currently in storage in California, but he’s hoping to get it up to Alaska soon and is considering donating it to a museum to preserve it as a part of history. “Radios were a lot bigger in those days, so we’re still trying to figure out how to get it up here,” Van Lone said. While scanning the different frequencies to find anyone broadcasting for the Field Day — also known as a “search and pounce” — Van Lone picked up on someone transmitting out of San Francisco and after a few attempts managed to get their attention and add them to the list. By midafternoon, the Moose Horn station had only been in contact with a handful of other operators. Van Lone attributed this to the fact
that most stations outside of Alaska don’t point their receivers in this direction and Alaska transmissions sometimes get lost in translation. “The problem is that we’ve got our antennae pointed at them, but they’ve got their antennae pointed at each other,” Van Lone said. “So a lot of times we hear them but they don’t hear us.” Ron Hovarth, call sign W8PVZ, never had an interest in amateur radio until his dad passed away in 2006. Hovarth’s dad was an operator for 75 years, and Hovarth knew that his dad’s call sign would go back to the FCC to eventually be recycled. So while living in Bethel he and a friend earned their certifications, and Hovarth was able to acquire his dad’s old call sign after a little bit of haggling with the FCC. Now he uses it to keep his dad’s spirit alive on the airwaves, and has since used his ham radio to communicate with people all over the world. “I remember flipping burgers on my back porch in Bethel while talking to someone in South America,” Hovarth said. Hovarth also recalled a time when he connected with two World War II
veterans, one living in the United Kingdom and one living in Australia. After talking with them for a while, the two veterans had the realization that they were stationed at the same military base in Australia during the war — they even played a game of baseball against each other. “They kept narrowing down the details of when and where they were stationed, and all of a sudden it was like, ‘Oh so you’re the guy I tagged out at second base!’” Hovarth said. Anyone interested in taking the amateur radio certification exam or joining the Moose Horn Amateur Radio Club can contact Max Carpenter at wa7b@aol.com. Carpenter, call sign WA7B, has been an amateur radio operator for over 30 years — going all the way back to when he broadcasted on the “funny channels” of CB radio that were not exactly legally sanctioned at the time. Carpenter is the president of the Moose Horn Club and administers the certification exams to would-be operators. The club gets together for lunch on Thursdays and has a meeting every month.
either through fundraising and donation of air miles that takes place this season, or continued generosity of board members, who already donated air miles and use of their credit cards to get the team up here. The team also will make some money from beer and concessions at Seymour Park. “It’s kind of two-fold,” Tice said. “Gaming is going down and sponsorships are going down.” In 2009, Tice said the team raised $179,000 in gaming and $56,000 in sponsorships. Gaming and sponsorships are the two major ways the Oilers raise money. In 2018, those numbers were down to $55,000 for gaming and $35,000 for sponsorships. Tice said that from 2011 to 2013, the economy was in the tank and gaming has never gotten above $100,000 per year since then. In June 2018, then-Gov. Bill Walker signed a smokefree workplace law for the state. The law didn’t take effect until Oct. 1, 2018, but the Oilers went smokefree at their bingo hall in June 2018. During the season, visiting teams stay at the bingo hall. “We knew it was coming, so we instituted it a bit early,” Tice said. “We figured we might as well not have visiting players exposed to smoke.” Tice said that once cold weather arrived, the bingo hall saw a drop in attendance. “You’ve kind of got to
keep people’s attention when they are playing bingo and pull tabs,” Tice said. “If they go outside to smoke, they’re not playing pull tabs.” Gaming was already going down, generating $20,000 less than fiscal 2016 in the fiscal year ending September 2017 and $19,000 less than fiscal 2017 for fiscal 2018. “I really don’t want to lose another $20,000 this year, but we’re already way down,” Tice said. Sponsorship is down because corporate sponsors have disappeared. Diana Tice said the corporate entities in town all used to have local representatives to run sponsorship pitches through. Those representatives are gone and Diana said she has no luck at corporate offices. “We lost our big corporate sponsors,” Diana said. “Small businesses are what’s carrying us right now.” The Oilers have cut expenses to the bone. Diana Tice is a part-time employee, while general manager Victoria Smith is, for the most part, a summer employee. The team added a fourth member to the coaching staff this season, but that was with the understanding that the coaching staff take over field maintenance. The coaches are now housed at the bingo hall. According to Michael Tice, head coach Kyle Brown has been great about helping the team save money, putting in a conservative
bat order, then carrying the bats up here himself to save on shipping costs. Tice said putting on a baseball season costs from $120,000 to $180,000, depending on how it’s calculated. There are certain costs that can’t be reduced, like the $35,000 for annual airfare costs. So the team will take help in any fashion, including airline miles. “They can just write a check if they want,” Tice said. “At the same time, if people want to call us or pop in the office and say, ‘Hey, I’ve got an idea.’ “What we need is somebody to not just give us an idea, but also bring five people with them to make it happen. We’re staff-poor right now.” Donations are being accepted at oilersbaseball. com. The Oilers are a nonprofit, so donations are tax deductible. The team also is doing things like raffles and selling root beer floats at each home game, and will have a fundraising cornhole tournament at the ballpark on July 21, with more details to come. “For me, it’s like we’re playing small ball all summer,” Diana Tice said. “Every bit of fundraising we can do can add up.” Michael said the team would like to raise $35,000 by the end of the season. In an ideal world, the team would raise $100,000 for next season and be ready for another summer of baseball. Tice said the team will have to decide by an Alaska
Baseball League meeting in October whether it is going to play next season, or take it off to get some money in the bank. The team also does Little League camps in Kenai, Soldotna and Homer, gives out scholarships and has helped out with the Frontier Community Services World Series. This year, the World Series has been taken over by the Kenai Centennial Savvy Lions, renamed Strides: World Series Baseball and will be held June 29 at Seymour Park. “We’d like to thank everybody who has helped us already,” Tice said. “We’ve got some committed sponsors. Some of the local sponsors have given incredible help.”
Continued from page A1
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Opinion
A4 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
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Serving the Kenai Peninsula since 1970 Jeff Hayden Publisher ERIN THOMPSON......................................................... Editor RANDI KEATON....................................... Circulation Director FRANK GOLDTHWAITE......................... Production Manager
What others say
One prosecution is enough The U.S. Supreme Court ruled
on Monday that if you are convicted in a state court of a criminal offense, the federal government can put you on trial again for essentially the same crime, and if you’re convicted, your new sentence can be added to your old one. In our view, that’s a violation of the Constitution’s prohibition against double jeopardy. In 2015, Terance Gamble’s vehicle was searched at a traffic stop in Alabama and a gun was found. Gamble, who had a robbery conviction on his record, pleaded guilty to a state charge of being a felon in possession of a firearm, and was sentenced to a year in prison. But he was also charged by the U.S. government for essentially the same crime arising from the same incident. Gamble pleaded guilty to the federal charge as well, while preserving his right to challenge the second prosecution as a violation of the 5th Amendment’s command that no person shall be “subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.” In our view, that’s a violation of the Constitution’s prohibition against double jeopardy. The justices rejected his argument Monday by a 7-2 vote. Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. cited the court’s longstanding view that the federal government and the states are separate “sovereigns” and that “a crime under one sovereign’s laws is not ‘the same offense’ as a crime under the laws of another sovereign.” Alito also emphasized that a ruling in Gamble’s favor would depart from “170 years of precedent.” The court shouldn’t lightly cast aside precedents. But there were several reasons for the court to do so in this case, as Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Neil M. Gorsuch argued in persuasive dissents that put the focus where it should be: on the injustice of subjecting anyone to two trials for the same crime. Ginsburg questioned the notion that the federal government and the states are separate “sovereigns,” writing that it “overlooks a basic tenet of our federal system, namely that under the Constitution ultimate sovereignty resides in the governed.” But even if the separate sovereigns theory once made sense, Ginsburg suggested that things changed with Supreme Court’s decision in 1969 to apply the double jeopardy clause to the states as well as the federal government. She’s correct. If federal and state prosecutions are governed by the same constitutional rules, the double jeopardy clause prohibits successive prosecutions regardless of which level of government files the indictment. In his dissent, Gorsuch pithily described the consequences of the majority’s reasoning: “My colleagues say that the federal government and each state are ‘separate sovereigns’ entitled to try the same person for the same crime. So if all the might of one ‘sovereign’ cannot succeed against the presumptively free individual, another may insist on the chance to try again. And if both manage to succeed, so much the better; they can add one punishment on top of the other.” The concerns expressed by Ginsburg and Gorsuch aren’t new. In a powerful dissent in a 1959 decision, the late Justice Hugo Black wrote: “If double punishment is what is feared, it hurts no less for two ‘sovereigns’ to inflict it than for one.” There are a few situations in which one can justify separate state and federal prosecutions arising from the same events. The U.S. Department of Justice has brought federal civil rights prosecutions against defendants acquitted in state court of crimes of violence against racial minorities. But Ginsburg suggested in her dissent that federal civil rights laws and state laws criminalizing assault are different enough to qualify as separate “offenses.” The state and federal charges against Gamble were aimed at the same crime and motivated by the same purpose: to punish felons found to be in the possession of a firearm. The court should have ruled that, under the Constitution, one prosecution was enough. — The Los Angeles Times, June 18
Budget climate puts higher education at risk A laska V oices J im J ohnsen In this austere budget environment, and after intense scrutiny, the Legislature passed a budget that includes a reasonable $5 million general fund reduction for the University of Alaska. In the next few days, the governor will decide whether the state will continue its investment in the university — allowing Alaskans of all ages to carry on, uninterrupted, with their vocational, continuing or higher education — or veto a large portion of the UA budget. Make no mistake, the university cannot absorb an additional, substantial reduction in state general funds without abruptly halting numerous student career pathways mid-stream, eliminating services, or shutting down community campuses or universities. An additional reduction of even $10 million — on top of the $51 million in cuts we’ve already taken — will mean the discontinuation of programs and services with little or no notice, and that in turn will have ripple effects, damaging UA’s ability to generate revenue and causing even greater harm across the state. Severe reductions in state Undesignated General Fund (UGF) as originally proposed by the governor
would require closure of hundreds of programs and affect thousands of students. To provide context for such a reduction, $134 million is nearly the equivalent of the total UGF budget for UAA and UAS combined. At that level we may need to cut whole programs or close one or more of our universities, UAA, UAF or UAS. But a university system is not like a typical corporation or factory; it needs a critical mass of faculty with different specialties to provide a quality education. Eliminating whole programs to reduce costs does not eliminate our responsibility to affected students. We are obligated to complete their programs, which carries costs that delay any immediate savings. The university’s total budget this year is comprised of $327 million from the state (about 40% ). The remainder comes from tuition and fees paid by our students, research grants and contracts, proceeds from land development, and private donations. However, those private revenue sources will inevitably be harmed if general fund support is reduced. Prior cuts have had the effect of reducing opportunities for our students and services to our communities, while increasing tuition. The cumulative reduction in the university’s budget of $195 million over the last five years has resulted in significant reductions in administrative staff and services, to the point that further reductions will compromise UA’s ability to meet its many obligations.
Indeed, the university’s statewide administration, which provides consolidated support services, has taken a 37% cut over the last several years, almost triple the average cut across the university system. Still, the university remains a highly accessible and affordable path to an excellent education and the opportunities that only education can provide in the workplace. However, that will not continue with further substantial reductions. We have had numerous meetings with the governor and his team, demonstrating how the university has focused its mission, reduced costs, increased private fundraising, developed strategic plans with measurable goals, created a task force to look at the university’s structure, and developed an exciting vision for how the university enables Alaskans to create a strong and sustainable future for our state. The governor was receptive, and I think impressed with the work that’s been accomplished by the university. However, he may feel compelled to follow through with his original proposal to reduce the university’s appropriation. As a result, if the governor vetoes a substantial amount, I ask that you contact your legislator to request that he or she consider overriding that veto. The educational investments and opportunities for thousands of Alaskans will depend on it.
And at that time hundreds of oldtimers had retired from the state salmon fishery. But when it was discovered that there was a property right attached to the permits, hundreds of these fishermen opted not to retire but rather applied and qualified for salmon entry permits statewide. So rather than reducing the effort on salmon, the effort was increased by several hundred units of fishing gear in all districts of the state. Thus defeating the whole purpose of the limited entry program’s reduction efforts. Thousands of Alaskans may recall having salmon, halibut, scallops and prawns several times per week as a healthy diet for their families. But as a result of limited entry and quota shares in the above said species, I personally know of no work-
ing family that can afford $18 to $27 per pound fish for dinner at night for their families. In my 60-plus years in Alaska’s fishery, I recall red salmon I was paid .75 $ each for. In the ’60s in Kodiak, I sold king crab at the dock for .8 cents per pound and by the 1980s the governments of the U.S. and Canada gave a multibillion dollar halibut fishery to a handful of elitist vessel owners in Seattle and Vancouver, B.C., most of whom are now millionaires. So I find myself asking when was it that a government license became a property right in a capitalist nation. So much for the good intentions of the 8th amendment of Alaska’s Constitution.
Jim Johnsen is the president of the University of Alaska.
Letter to the Editor A betrayal of Alaska’s 8th amendment In the Alaska government’s gift of a multimillion dollar salmon resource to a handful of resident and nonresident commercial fishermen, they made a small number of resident and nonresident fishermen very wealthy people — at the expense of thousands of Alaskans, who as a result, were denied their constitutional right of access to a common resource, guaranteed and provided for in the 8th Amendment to Alaska’s Constitution, section 3. The goal of the California entry commissioners brought into the state of Alaska by the Legislature was to invoke an entry program that would reduce the number of gear units in the state’s salmon fishery.
— John A. Anderson, Kenai
News and Politics
2020 Democrats strongly defend abortion rights at forum By WILL WEISSERT Associated Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Twenty Democratic presidential candidates attending a Planned Parenthood forum on Saturday vowed to defend abortion rights under nearly any circumstance while largely ignoring nuances around the issue that have already roiled their party heading into the 2020 election. The event sponsored by Planned Parenthood Action Fund — the group's political arm — was the first of the election season centered on abortion. It came on the sidelines of the South Carolina Democratic Party's state convention, a pivotal gathering of the party faithful in the South's first primary state.
The candidates were united in decrying a series of tough, recent abortion restrictions approved by Republican-controlled legislatures around the country geared to ultimately provoke a Supreme Court case that could overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade decision. Those efforts have come alongside attempts to strip taxpayer funding from Planned Parenthood, which abortion rights advocates and some leading medical groups say would make it harder for lowincome women to get access to basic health care, not only abortion. "We've been on defense for 47 years and it's not working," Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren said of Roe v. Wade, which legalized abortion. Warren, who turned 70 on Saturday, said trying to restrict abortion
usually boils down to sexism. "You're not going to lock women back in the kitchen. You're not going to tell us what to do," she declared, eliciting a standing ovation from hundreds in the crowd, many sporting pink Planned Parenthood T-shirts. Most Democratic voters support abortion rights, though the issue doesn't always energize the party's base in South Carolina and other conservative states. Despite that, the Democrats vying for the chance to try and unseat President Donald Trump next year were unwavering in their support for the procedure and in their defense of Planned Parenthood — showing just how far the party has moved compared to presidential races in recent memory.
Nation
Trump postpones nationwide immigration enforcement sweep By COLLEEN LONG and LISA MASCARO Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Saturday delayed a nationwide immigration sweep to deport people living the United States illegally, including families, saying he would give lawmakers two weeks to work out solutions for the southern border. The move came after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called Trump on Friday asking him to call off the raids. But three administration officials said scrapping the operation was not just about politics. They said Immigration and Customs Enforcement leaders had expressed serious concerns that officers’ safety would be in jeopardy because too many details about the raids had been made public. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to speak about private discussions. “At the request of Democrats, I have delayed the Illegal Immigration Removal Process (Deportation) for two weeks to see if the Democrats and Republicans can get together and work out a solution to the Asylum and Loophole problems at the Southern Border,” Trump wrote on Twitter. “If not, Deportations start!” The operation, which sparked outrage and concern among immigrant advocates, had been expected to begin Sunday and would target people with final orders of removal, including families whose immigration cases had been fasttracked by judges. The cancellation was another sign of the Trump administration’s difficulty managing
In this April 3 file photo, a couple who did not want to give their names embrace outside CVE Group as a bus from LaSalle Corrections Transport departs the facility in Allen, Texas. (Smiley N. Pool/The Dallas Morning News via AP, File)
the border crisis. The number of people crossing the U.S.-Mexico border has risen dramatically under Trump, despite his tough rhetoric and hard-line policies. Balancing a White House eager to push major operational changes with the reality on the ground is a constant challenge for the Department of Homeland Security. Trump gave the first public word of the planned sweep earlier this week, saying in a tweet that an operation was coming up and the agency would begin to remove “millions” of people who were in the United States illegally. Later, leaks to the media included sensitive law enforcement details, such as the day it was to begin, Sunday, plus specific cities and other operational details. On Saturday, ICE spokeswoman Carol Danko criticized the leaks in context of their po-
tential impact on ICE personnel, saying in a statement that “any leaks telegraphing sensitive law enforcement operations is egregious and puts our officers’ safety in danger.” Pelosi called Trump on Friday night and the two spoke for about 12 minutes, according to a person familiar with the situation and not authorized to discuss it publicly. She asked him to call off the raids and he said he would consider the request, the person said. It’s unclear what else was said during the call. But in a statement Saturday before the president’s decision was announced, Pelosi appealed to the same compassion Trump expressed in declining to strike Iran because of the potential for lost lives. “The President spoke about the importance of avoiding the collateral damage of 150 lives in
Iran. I would hope he would apply that same value to avoiding the collateral damage to tens of thousands of children who are frightened by his actions,” she said. She called the raids “heartless.” Pelosi responded to Trump’s announcement with her own tweet, saying: “Mr. President, delay is welcome. Time is needed for comprehensive immigration reform. Families belong together.” Halting the flow of illegal immigration has been Trump’s signature campaign issue, but Congress has been unable to push his proposals into law with resistance from both Democrats and Republicans. Bipartisan talks over the immigration system have started and stalled but are again underway among some in the Senate.
AP sources: US struck Iranian military computers this week By TAMI ABDOLLAH Associated Press
WASHINGTON — U.S. military cyber forces launched a strike against Iranian military computer systems on Thursday as President Donald Trump backed away from plans for a more conventional military strike in response to Iran’s downing of a U.S. surveillance drone, U.S. officials said Saturday. Two officials told The Associated Press that the strikes were conducted with approval from Trump. A third official confirmed the broad outlines of the strike. All spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the operation. The cyberattacks — a contingency plan developed over weeks amid escalating tensions — disabled Iranian computer systems that controlled its rocket and missile launchers, the officials said. Two of the officials said the attacks, which specifically targeted Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps computer system, were provided as options after Iranian forces blew up two oil tankers earlier this month. The IRGC, which was designated a foreign terrorist group by the Trump administration earlier this year, is a branch of the Iranian military. The action by U.S. Cyber Command was a demonstration of the U.S.’s increasingly mature cyber military capabilities and its more aggressive cyber strategy under the Trump administration. Over the last year U.S. officials have focused on persistently engaging with adversaries in cyberspace and undertaking more offensive operations. Tensions have escalated between the two countries ever since the U.S. withdrew last year from the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran and began a policy of “maximum pressure.” Iran has since been hit by multiple
rounds of sanctions. Tensions spiked this past week after Iran shot down an unmanned U.S. drone — an incident that nearly led to a U.S. military strike against Iran on Thursday evening. The cyberattacks are the latest chapter in the U.S. and Iran’s ongoing cyber operations targeting the other. Yahoo News first reported the cyber strike. In recent weeks, hackers believed to be working for the Iranian government have targeted U.S. government agencies, as well as sectors of the economy, including finance, oil and gas, sending waves of spearphishing emails, according to representatives of cybersecurity companies CrowdStrike and FireEye, which regularly track such activity. This new campaign appears to have started shortly after the Trump administration imposed sanctions on the Iranian petrochemical sector this month. It was not known if any of the hackers managed to gain access to the targeted networks with the emails, which typically mimic legitimate emails but contain malicious software. Tensions have run high between the two countries since the U.S. withdrew from the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran last year and began a policy of “maximum pressure.” Iran has since been hit by multiple rounds of sanctions. Then Iran shot down an unmanned U.S. drone this week. “Both sides are desperate to know what the other side is thinking,” said John Hultquist, director of intelligence analysis at FireEye. “You can absolutely expect the regime to be leveraging every tool they have available to reduce the uncertainty about what’s going to happen next, about what the U.S.’s next move will be.” CrowdStrike shared images of the spear-phishing emails with the AP. One such email that was confirmed by FireEye appeared
to come from the Executive Office of the President and seemed to be trying to recruit people for an economic adviser position. Another email was more generic and appeared to include details on updating Microsoft Outlook’s global address book. The Iranian actor involved in the cyberattack, dubbed “Refined Kitten” by CrowdStrike, has for years targeted the U.S. energy and defense sectors, as well as allies such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, said Adam Meyers, vice president of intelligence at CrowdStrike. The Department of Homeland Security said in a statement released Saturday that its agency tasked with infrastructure security has been aware of a recent rise in malicious cyber activities directed at U.S. government agencies by Iranian regime actors and proxies. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Director Christopher C. Krebs said the agency has been working with the intelligence community and cybersecurity partners to monitor Iranian cyber activity and ensure the U.S. and its allies are safe. “What might start as an account compromise, where you think you might just lose data, can quickly become a situation where you’ve lost your whole network,” Krebs said. The National Security Agency would not discuss Iranian cyber actions specifically, but said in a statement to the AP on Friday that “there have been serious issues with malicious Iranian cyber actions in the past.” “In these times of heightened tensions, it is appropriate for everyone to be alert to signs of Iranian aggression in cyberspace and ensure appropriate defenses are in place,” the NSA said. Iran has long targeted the U.S. oil and gas sectors and
other critical infrastructure, but those efforts dropped significantly after the nuclear agreement was signed. After Trump withdrew the U.S. from the deal in May 2018, cyber experts said they have seen an increase in Iranian hacking efforts.
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | A5
North Korea: Kim receives ‘excellent’ letter from Trump SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — President Donald Trump sent North Korean leader Kim Jong Un a letter, a government-controlled news agency reported Sunday. Kim “said with satisfaction that the letter is of excellent content,” the Korean Central News Agency reported. “Appreciating the political judging faculty and extraordinary courage of President Trump, Kim Jong Un said that he would seriously contemplate the interesting content,” the agency said. The White House declined to confirm that Trump had sent a letter to Kim. Nuclear talks between the U.S. and North Korea broke down after the failed summit between Kim and Trump in February in Vietnam. The U.S. is demanding that North Korea abandon its nuclear weapons entirely before international sanctions are lifted. North Korea is seeking a step-by-step approach in which moves toward denuclearization are matched by concessions from the U.S., notably a relaxation of the sanctions. The North Korean report on Trump’s letter came days after Kim’s summit with visiting Chinese President Xi Jinping, which experts say underscored China’s emergence as a major player in the diplomatic push to re-
solve the nuclear standoff with the North. North Korean state media said Kim and Xi discussed the political situation surrounding the Korean Peninsula and reached unspecified consensus on important issues. Xi is expected to meet with Trump next week in Japan. Analysts say he could pass him a message from Kim about the nuclear negotiations. Kim during his annual New Year’s speech said he would seek a “new way” if the United States persists with sanctions and pressure against North Korea. Following the collapse of his meeting with Trump in Hanoi over disagreements in exchanging sanctions relief and disarmament, Kim said Washington has until the end of the year to offer mutually acceptable terms for a deal to salvage the negotiations. Trump and Kim exchanged letters in 2018 after a summit in Singapore to discuss the nuclear issue. White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said at the time that the letters addressed their commitment to work toward North Korea’s “complete denuclearization.” In September 2018, Trump told a cheering crowd at a campaign rally in West Virginia that Kim “wrote me beautiful letters and they’re great letters. We fell in love.”
Around the Nation Climate change protesters arrested outside New York Times NEW YORK — Police say 70 climate change protesters were arrested after they blocked traffic outside the New York Times building. The protesters from the group Extinction Rebellion hung banners on the skyscraper in midtown Manhattan on Saturday and on the outside of the Port Authority Bus Terminal across the street. The protesters were taken into police custody after they lay down on Eighth Avenue and blocked traffic. Charges are pending. A spokeswoman for Extinction Rebellion, Eve Mosher, says the group wants the media to report on “the climate emergency” so that “people can start pushing for more radical responses.” A Times spokeswoman says in an email that no national news organization devotes more resources to covering climate change than the Times. — Associated Press
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A6 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
World
Climate protesters storm open-pit mine
Around the World
By KIRSTEN GRIESHABER and CHRISTOPH NOELTING Associated Press
Device to trap plastic waste in Pacific Ocean relaunches
HOCHNEUKIRCH, Germany — Hundreds of environmental activists broke through a police cordon to enter one of Germany’s biggest lignite coal mines Saturday, determined to draw attention to the urgency of climate change after a plan to make the European Union carbon neutral by 2050 failed to find agreement. Police ordered the activists to leave the vast, open-pit Garzweiler mine in western Germany, citing life-threatening dangers. German news agency dpa reported that some officers were hurt, but didn’t have any further details. The occupation was among several demonstrations near the mine and adjacent power plants that attracted thousands of people to the village of Hochneukirch and surrounding Rhineland areas. Earlier Saturday, dozens of protesters temporarily blocked railroad tracks used to transport coal. The vast majority of rallies and protests remained peaceful. The mine has been a focus of environmental protests in recent years because the operator, German utility company
SAN FRANCISCO — A floating device designed to catch plastic waste has been redeployed in second attempt to clean up a huge island of trash swirling in the Pacific Ocean between California and Hawaii. Boyan Slat, creator of The Ocean Cleanup project, announced on Twitter that a 2,000-foot long floating boom that broke apart late last year was sent back to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch this week after four months of repair. A ship towed the U-shaped barrier from San Francisco to the patch in September to trap the plastic. But during the four months at sea, the boom broke apart under constant waves and wind and the boom wasn’t retaining the plastic it caught. “Hopefully nature doesn’t have too many surprises in store for us this time,” Slat tweeted. “Either way, we’re set to learn a lot from this campaign.” Fitted with solar-powered lights, cameras, sensors and satellite antennas, the device intends to communicate its position at all times, allowing a support vessel to fish out the collected plastic every few months and transport it to dry land. The plastic barrier with a tapered 10-foot-deep screen is intended to act like a coastline, trapping some of the 1.8 trillion pieces of plastic that scientists estimate are swirling in the patch while allowing marine life to safely swim beneath it. During its first run, the organization said marine biologists on board the support vessel did not observe any environmental impact. Slat has said he hopes one day to deploy 60 of the devices to skim plastic debris off the surface of the ocean.
Numerous environmental activists walk to the site of the Garzweiler open-cast mine in Garzweiler, Germany, Saturday. The protests for more climate protection in the Rhineland continue. ( David Young/dpa via AP)
RWE, planned to cut down a forest to enlarge it. “It’s important to increase the pressure on the government,” protester Selma Schubert said. “The government doesn’t do enough against climate change.” Participants in the Saturday protests held banners calling for climate protection and sang songs as they marched. According to German environmental group Bund, more
than 8,000 people took part. “You’re building a movement, that’s beautiful,” Seimi Rowin, who came from Scotland to protest, said. “But we need to get to the next step … otherwise future generations will pay for it.” Following months of climate protests by students and a sharp rise in the polls for Germany’s Green party, Chancellor Angela Merkel recently threw her weight behind the goal of mak-
ing Germany climate neutral by 2050. That would mean the country’s economy no longer would add greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. Scientists say ending fossil fuel use by mid-century is a must if countries want to achieve the 2015 Paris climate accord’s most ambitious goal of keeping global temperatures from rising more than 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit compared to pre-industrial times.
White House unveils $50 billion Palestinian economic plan By MATTHEW LEE AP Diplomatic Writer
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration on Saturday unveiled a $50 billion Palestinian investment and infrastructure proposal intended to be the economic engine to power its much-anticipated but still unreleased “deal of the century” Middle East peace plan. The scheme, which calls for a mix of public and private financing and intends to create at least a million new jobs for Palestinians, was posted to the White House website ahead of a two-day conference in Bahrain that is being held amid heavy skepticism about its viability and outright opposition from the Palestinians. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Saturday reiterated his rejection of the proposal and the conference. The “Peace to Prosperity” workshop on Tuesday and Wednesday will also take place amid heightened regional tensions over Iran that threaten to overshadow its goals. With no official participation from the two main protagonists, Israel and the Palestinians, and scant enthusiasm from others, continued uncertainty and
strong doubts over the plan’s political vision and the distraction of potential U.S.-Iran conflict, expectations are decidedly low. President Donald Trump’s senior adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner faces high hurdles in building support for the initiative. The 10-year plan calls for projects worth $27.5 billion in the West Bank and Gaza, and $9.1 billion, $7.4 billion and $6.3 billion for Palestinians in Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon, respectively. Projects envisioned include those in the health care, education, power, water, hightech, tourism, and agriculture sectors. It calls for the creation of a “master fund” to administer the finances and implementation of the projects that is says are akin to the Marshall Plan that rebuilt Europe after World War II. The plan foresees more than doubling the Palestinian gross domestic product, reducing the Palestinian poverty rate by 50 percent and cutting the sky-high Palestinian unemployment rate to nearly single digits, according to the documents, which do not specify exactly how the projects will be funded. It also calls for linking the West Bank and Gaza with a modern transportation net-
work, including high-speed rail service. Such ideas have been floated in the past in previous peace proposals but have run into Israeli security concerns. “Generations of Palestinians have lived under adversity and loss, but the next chapter can be defined by freedom and dignity,” the White House said, calling the plan “the most ambitious international effort for the Palestinian people to date.” But an already tough sell that has vexed U.S. administrations for decades is made tougher not least because Trump and his aides have refused to endorse a two-state solution to the conflict that has long been seen as the only viable path to lasting peace. They have also suggested they are open to unilateral Israeli annexation of occupied territory in the West Bank. And, officials say there is no intention of discussing either issue or the most contentious parts of their proposal to end the long-running conflict. Thus, the core political issues that are key to resolving the dispute, such as borders, the status of the holy city of Jerusalem, Israel’s security and the fate of Palestinian refugees, will not be raised. Such matters, U.S. officials have said, may have to wait until the fall, after Israeli elec-
tions, leaving numerous questions that potential investors almost certainly want answers to before making even tentative financial commitments. Palestinian leaders, angered by what they and their supporters see as blatant U.S. bias toward Israel, want nothing to do with the workshop and will not participate. The Palestinians have called for mass demonstrations against the conference on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. “The plan cannot pass because it ends the Palestinian cause,” Abbas said on Saturday. “We are not going to attend this workshop, the reason is that the economic situation should not be discussed before a political situation, so long as there is no political situation, we do not deal with any economic situation.” An economic adviser to Abbas said projects envisaged in the U.S. proposal could be considered, but only after the political question is agreed upon. “Yes, we need to build the infrastructure, the investment, the tourism sector … but that cannot come before ending the Israeli occupation,” Mohammed Mustafa, head of Palestinian Investment Fund, told The Associated Press.
2 finalists in UK leadership race make pitch By SYLVIA HUI Associated Press
LONDON — The two finalists in the race to lead Britain’s governing Conservative Party — and become the country’s new prime minister — made their first formal pitches to party members Saturday, both vowing to be the right man to deliver Brexit. Ex-foreign secretary and former London mayor Boris Johnson, the runaway favorite of Tory lawmakers, faced off with Jeremy Hunt, the current foreign secretary, at a Conservative conference in central England’s Birmingham. Opening his address with a focus on delivering Britain’s stalled exit from the European Union, Johnson told the audience “We need to get Brexit done” and be prepared to leave the EU without a withdrawal deal in place. “I am here to tell you that in all confidence we can turn this thing around,” he said. “I am utterly convinced that with the right energy and the right commitment, common sense will prevail. But just in
case it does not, we must prepare to come out anyway.” Johnson has won backing from the Conservative Party’s die-hard Brexiteers by insisting the U.K. must leave the bloc on the rescheduled date of Oct. 31, with or without a divorce agreement with the EU to smooth the way. Both Johnson and Hunt said they would succeed in seeing Britain out of the EU, a challenge that defeated Prime Minister Theresa May. She quit as Conservative leader earlier this month after repeatedly failing to win Parliament’s backing for her Brexit deal and will leave 10 Downing Street when her successor is selected. Hunt pitched himself as the better negotiator, warning that “catastrophe awaits,” if the wrong leader is sent to Brussels for talks with EU leaders. “If we send the wrong person, there’s going to be no negotiation, no trust, no deal, and if Parliament stops that, maybe no Brexit,” he said. “Send the right person, and there’s a deal to be done.” For the party conference in Birmingham, both contenders
were given time to make a short speech before answering questions from the host and audience members. The Saturday “hustings” was the first of more than a dozen such party meetings set to take place across Britain in coming days. Johnson refused to comment when asked about a police visit early Friday to the London home he shares with partner Carrie Symonds after a neighbor reported an altercation. The incident dominated news headlines in Britain on Saturday. The Guardian newspaper said neighbors reported hearing screaming, shouting and banging inside the home. The responding officers found all the
occupants “safe and well” and no legal offenses were committed, police said. Johnson said the public could judge his character and ambition by his track record as London mayor and his plans for the country. Johnson and Hunt are the final two from a field of 10 contenders that was winnowed down in a series of votes by party lawmakers. About 160,000 party members across Britain will decide who wins in a by-mail vote. The winner of the runoff, due to be announced the week of July 22, will become the new Conservative leader and replace Theresa May as Britain’s next prime minister.
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See us on our website www.akrecreational.com Located Mile 102.5 or 50755 Sterling Hwy. (6 miles SOUTH of Soldotna)
Iran state TV: Ex-Defense Ministry staffer hanged for spying TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s state TV says authorities have executed a former staff member of the Defense Ministry who was convicted of spying for the CIA. The Saturday report says Jalal Hajizavar was hanged last week in a prison near Tehran. The report said Hajzavar admitted in court that he was paid to spy for the CIA. The report said authorities also confiscated espionage equipment from his residence. It said the court sentenced Haizavar’s wife to 15 years in prison for her role in the espionage. Occasionally, Iran announces the detention of spies from foreign countries, including the U.S. and Israel. In 2016, Iran executed a nuclear scientist convicted of spying for the U.S. — Associated Press
Today in History Today is Sunday, June 23, the 174th day of 2019. There are 191 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On June 23, 1972, President Richard Nixon and White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman discussed using the CIA to obstruct the FBI’s Watergate investigation. (Revelation of the tape recording of this conversation sparked Nixon’s resignation in 1974.) President Nixon signed Title IX barring discrimination on the basis of sex for “any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.” On this date: In 1537, Spanish explorer Pedro de Mendoza, the founder of Buenos Aires, died aboard his ship while heading back to Spain. In 1836, Congress approved the Deposit Act, which contained a provision for turning over surplus federal revenue to the states. In 1868, Christopher Latham Sholes received a patent for his “Type-Writer,” featuring a QWERTY keyboard; it was the first commercially successful typewriter. In 1892, the Democratic National Convention in Chicago nominated former President Grover Cleveland on the first ballot. In 1938, the Civil Aeronautics Authority was established. In 1947, the Senate joined the House in overriding President Harry S. Truman’s veto of the Taft-Hartley Act, designed to limit the power of organized labor. In 1950, Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 2501, a DC-4, crashed into Lake Michigan with the loss of all 58 people on board. In 1968, a syndicated newspaper column by Joseph Kraft coined the term “Middle America.” In 1969, Warren E. Burger was sworn in as chief justice of the United States by the man he was succeeding, Earl Warren. In 1985, all 329 people aboard an Air India Boeing 747 were killed when the plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean near Ireland because of a bomb authorities believe was planted by Sikh separatists. In 1988, James E. Hansen, a climatologist at the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, told a Senate panel that global warming of the earth caused by the “greenhouse effect” was a reality. In 1995, Dr. Jonas Salk, the medical pioneer who developed the first vaccine to halt the crippling rampage of polio, died in La Jolla (HOY’-ah), California, at age 80. Ten years ago: Hardening the U.S. reaction to Iran’s disputed elections and bloody aftermath, President Barack Obama condemned the violence against protesters and lent his strongest support yet to their accusations that the hardline victory was a fraud. “Tonight Show” sidekick Ed McMahon died in Los Angeles at 86. Dr. Jerri Nielsen FitzGerald, who’d diagnosed and treated her own breast cancer before a dramatic rescue from a South Pole station, died in Southwick, Massachusetts, at 57. Five years ago: U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, visiting Baghdad, told leaders of Iraq’s factions they had to keep their commitments to seat a new parliament before a Sunni insurgency swept away hopes for a lasting peace. President Barack Obama, speaking at the White House Summit on Working Families, said the United States should join the rest of the industrialized world and offer paid leave for mothers of newborns. Dominik Hasek (HAH’-shik), Peter Forsberg, Rob Blake, Mike Modano (moh-DAH’-noh) and coach Pat Burns and referee Bill McCreary were elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame. One year ago: Trump administration officials said the government knew the location of all children in its custody after separating them from their families at the border, and that it was working to reunite them. The Vatican tribunal convicted a former Holy See diplomat, Monsignor Carlo Capella, and sentenced him to five years in prison for possessing and distributing child pornography. Today’s Birthdays: Singer Diana Trask is 79. Musical conductor James Levine (luh-VYN’) is 76. Actor Ted Shackelford is 73. Actor Bryan Brown is 72. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is 71. Actor Jim Metzler is 68. “American Idol” ex-judge Randy Jackson is 63. Actress Frances McDormand is 62. Rock musician Steve Shelley (Sonic Youth) is 57. Actor Paul La Greca is 57. Writer-director Joss Whedon is 55. Rhythm and blues singer Chico DeBarge is 49. Actress Selma Blair is 47. Actor Joel Edgerton is 45. Rock singer KT Tunstall is 44. Rhythm and blues singer Virgo Williams (Ghostowns DJs) is 44. Actress Emmanuelle Vaugier is 43. Singer-songwriter Jason Mraz is 42. Football Hall of Famer LaDainian Tomlinson is 40. Actress Melissa Rauch is 39. Rock singer Duffy is 35. Country singer Katie Armiger is 28. Thought for Today: “Loneliness is the poverty of self; solitude is the richness of self.” -- May Sarton, Belgian-born American poet (1912-1995).
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | A7
Public Safety Police reports Information for this report was taken from publicly available law enforcement records and includes arrest and citation information. Anyone listed in this report is presumed innocent. n On June 6 at 6:36 a.m., Alaska State Troopers received a report that the Ninilchik General Store had been burglarized sometime during the night. Investigation showed that unknown person(s) forced entry into the building and attempted to break into the ATM located inside. The investigation is ongoing. n On June 10 at about 7:00 p.m., Alaska State Troopers responded to a hit-and-run in Nikiski. Investigation revealed that Mathew Lay, 23, of Nikiski, became upset due to a four-wheeler speeding in the area. Mathew Lay located the four-wheeler and rammed the four-wheeler with his vehicle. This resulted in two people having minor injuries. Neither party was transported from the scene. Mathew Lay was arrested for two counts of third-degree assault, criminal mischief, reckless driving, and driving while license suspended. n On June 10 at about 11:20 a.m., Alaska State Troopers received report of a burglary at a cabin off the Escape Route near Herring Road. The complainant reported that a bug tent, a solar radio, and a lantern had been taken. At this time, no suspects have been identified. Anyone with information regarding this case is encouraged to call the Alaska State Troopers at 1-907262-4453. n On June 10 at 5:43 p.m., Alaska State Troopers responded with Central Emergency Services to an ATV accident on Robinson Loop near Higher Ground. Investigation
Court reports The following judgments were recently handed down in Kenai District Court: n Jennifer Gadola, 34, of Anchorage, pleaded guilty to violating condition of release, committed May 10. She was sentenced to five days in jail and fined a $100 court surcharge and a $50 jail surcharge. Katheryn Jean Heazlett, 29, of Nikiski, pleaded guilty to an amended charge of second-degree harassment, committed Apr. 15. She was sentenced to 10 days in jail and fined a $100 court surcharge and a $50 jail surcharge. n Steven Jeffrey Jicha, 32, of Sterling, pleaded guilty to driving under the influence, committed June 17, 2018. He was sentenced to 30 days on electronic monitoring with 27 days suspended, fined $1,500, a $75 court surcharge, a $150 jail surcharge and $66 for the first three days of monitoring ordered, ordered to complete Alcohol Safety Action Program treatment, had his license revoked for 90 days, ordered ignition interlock for six months, and placed on probation for one year.
revealed that a 13-year-old female, of Sterling, was riding her ATV when she lost control and crashed. She was pronounced deceased on scene by Emergency Medical services. She was wearing a helmet. The investigation into the cause of the crash is continuing. Next of kin was notified. n On June 11 at 6:53 p.m., Alaska State Troopers responded to a reported disturbance on the side of the Sterling Highway, near Mile 103. Investigation revealed that Devan Renee Chandler, 21, of Soldotna, had approached another person to confront them over a suspected theft. A fight ensued after Chandler unlawfully entered the other’s vehicle. Chandler was issued misdemeanor citations for disorderly conduct and seconddegree criminal trespass. n On June 10 at 3:58 a.m., Kenai police responded to a call reporting five individuals checking out vehicles at a local apartment complex’s parking lot. Officers arrived on scene and contacted multiple individuals. After investigation, Jonathan J. Herrmann, 18, of Kenai, was arrested for fifthdegree misconduct involving a controlled substance and taken to Wildwood Pretrial Facility. n On June 10 at 7:33 a.m., Kenai police responded to a vehicle versus pole accident near Mile 6 of the Kenai Spur Highway. After investigation of the scene and Kenai Fire Department responding for medical attention, Bruce E. Passe, 63, of Kenai, was issued a summons for driving under the influence and leaving the scene of a motor vehicle accident. n On June 10 at 6:17 p.m., Kenai police responded to the report of a disturbance. One of the parties contacted had an active warrant, and Richard D. Groves, 31, of Sterling, was arrested on a Soldotna Alaska State Troopers misdemeanor
warrant for failure to report to Wildwood Pretrial Facility on May 3 to serve sentence on the original charge of driving under the influence, 120 days to serve with 100 days suspended. Groves was taken to Wildwood Pretrial. n On June 11 at 10:37 p.m., Alaska State Troopers attempted to stop a white Hyundai Sonata near Mile 86 of the Sterling Highway for traveling 80 miles per hour in a posted 55 miles per hour zone inside the Sterling Highway Safety Corridor. The vehicle failed to stop for about a mile-and-a-half before yielding near Mile 88 of the Sterling Highway. The driver, a 17-yearold male, of Sterling, was issued a misdemeanor citation for second-degree failure to stop for a peace officer and a minor offense citation for speeding. n On June 12 at 1:53 a.m., Alaska State Troopers attempted to stop an orange 2012 Chevrolet Sonic near Mile 83 of the Sterling Highway for speeding, 61 miles per hour in a 45 miles per hour zone. The vehicle failed to stop and accelerated to speeds in excess of 100 miles per hour. A tire deflation device was successfully deployed near Mile 93.5 of the Sterling Highway. The vehicle ultimately stopped at Mile 103 of the Sterling Highway. The driver was identified as Johnny Havird, 42, of Anchorage, and the passenger was identified as Michelle Charlie, 21, of Anchorage. Investigation resulted in Havird being arrested and charged with first-degree failure to stop at the direction of a peace officer, driving while license revoked for driving under the influence, third-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance, two counts of fourth-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance, second-degree misconduct involving weapons, and three counts of third-degree misconduct involving. Charlie
was arrested and charged with third-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance, two counts of fourth-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance, second-degree misconduct involving weapons, and three counts of third-degree misconduct involving weapons. Charlie was additionally found to have a warrant for her arrest out of Anchorage for probation violations on original charges of driving under the influence, first-degree vehicle theft, and failure to stop for a peace officer. Both were taken to Wildwood Pretrial Facility without bail, pending arraignment. n On June 11 at 9:18 p.m., Alaska State and Wildlife Troopers in Soldotna were advised by the Kenai Air Traffic Control tower of small plane making a reported emergency landing about 18 miles down Mystery Creek Road, near Trapper Joe Lake. It was not known if anyone was injured. Wildlife troopers responded to the area, along with Kenai National Wildlife Federal Law Enforcement Officers, and were able to contact the plane occupants. The pilot, Paul Dale, 65, of Kenai, and his passenger reported sustaining no injuries after having had to perform an emergency landing when their plane suffered mechanical issues. Both the pilot and passenger were taken from the incident location back to their vehicle in Soldotna. n On June 11, Alaska Wildlife Troopers contacted Keith Hoppes, 61, of Soldotna, at Bing’s Landing. Hoppes was observed fishing on the Kenai River. When approached to check his fishing license, he was unable to produce a valid 2019 Alaska fishing license. A correctable citation was issued for sport fishing without license in possession, with bail set at $200.On May 29, Alaska State Troopers Contacted Orlando
Gonzales, 48, of Chugiak, regarding his bear bait sites. Gonzales said he had been using the bear bait sites for multiple years within 1/4 mile from the Seward Highway. Gonzales had two bear bait sites located off Mile 51 of the Seward Highway. Both sites were located and measured at 0.12 miles from the road. Gonzales received two strict liability violation citations: two counts of illegal bear bait within 1/4 mile of a road. Restitution for the bear shot in 2018 was included in one of the citations. Bail was set at $500 for each bear bait site and restitution for one black bear at $600, with a total bail of $1,600. n On June 12 at 7:38 p.m., Mark Kreidenweis, 68, of Kasilof, called Alaska State Troopers, reporting that his neighbor, Jeremy Hawk, 47, of Kasilof, had fired a gun at him. Investigation revealed that Kreidenweis had provided false information with the intent of implicating another in an offense. Investigation also revealed that Hawk had been permanently trespassed from Kreidenweis’s property. Hawk admitted to entering Kreideweis’s property the prior day. Hawk was given a misdemeanor Alaska Uniform Citation for seconddegree criminal trespass. Kreidenweis was arrested for false report and, subsequently, disorderly conduct. Kreidenweis was taken to Wildwood Pretrial Facility and was to be released on his own recognizance. n On June 12 at 8:03 p.m., Anchor Point Alaska State Troopers responded to a head-on collision at Mile 126 of the Sterling Highway. Witnesses on scene reported that a Monte Carlo departed its lane of traffic into the oncoming lane of traffic and struck a Toyota. The witnesses report-
ed that the Toyota had taken evasive action into its own lane’s guardrail. The unidentified male driver of the Monte Carlo was entrapped and cut free by Emergency Medical Services. Both the driver and passenger of the Monte Carlo were taken from the scene by Emergency Medical Services. The driver of the Toyota was uninjured. The unidentified Monte Carlo driver was medevac’d via Life Med to an Anchorage hospital. The female passenger of the Monte Carlo, later identified as Megan Middleton, 26, of Soldotna, was taken to a local hospital. The Sterling Highway was closed from about 8:00 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. for scene investigation. The Anchorage Police Department assisted with further attempts to identify the Monte Carlo driver. Investigation is ongoing. n On June 12 at 12:27 p.m., Soldotna Alaska State Troopers were dispatched to a burglary in the neighborhood of Kalgin Drive in Soldotna. Investigation revealed that George Carpenter, 24, burglarized the residence the day before and stole about $300 worth of personal belongings. Carpenter was contacted and found to be in possession of the stolen belongings. He was arrested and taken to Wildwood Pretrial Facility for first-degree burglary, second-degree theft, and first-degree criminal trespass. n On June 11 at 7:54 a.m., Soldotna Alaska Wildlife Troopers contacted Lauren Canales, 22, of Dayton, Texas, while he was sportfishing for king salmon. Investigation revealed that Canales did not have a valid 2019 king salmon stamp. Canales was issued a citation for not having a valid king salmon stamp. Bail for the offense is set at $220. AS16.05.340(a)(24) King Salmon Stamp required for Non-Residents.
n Hannah Nicole Kelson, 21, of Clam Gulch, pleaded guilty to fourth-degree theft, committed Dec. 15, 2016. She was fined $500 with $250 suspended, a $50 court surcharge and a $50 jail surcharge, ordered to pay restitution, ordered to have no contact with Sportsman’s Warehouse, and placed on probation for six months. n Hannah Nicole Kelson, 21, of Clam Gulch, pleaded guilty to an amended charge of attempted third-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance, committed May 18, 2017. She was sentenced to 180 days in jail with all but time served suspended, fined a $50 court surcharge and a $150 jail surcharge with $100 suspended, ordered to complete a substance/alcohol abuse assessment and follow all recommendations (completed), ordered to have no contact with a specifically named person or with Sportsman’s Warehouse, and was placed on probation for 12 months. All other charges in this case were dismissed. n Bryan Keys, 54, of Kenai, pleaded guilty to an amended charge of second-degree harassment, a domestic violence offense committed Dec. 19, 2017. He was sentenced to 10 days in jail (time served), fined a $50
court surcharge and a $50 jail surcharge, and placed on probation for 12 months. n Bryan Wayne Keys, 54, of Kenai, pleaded guilty to violating condition of release, committed July 27, 2018. He was fined a $50 court surcharge and a $150 jail surcharge with $100 suspended and placed on probation for 12 months. n Bryan Keys, 54, of Kenai, pleaded guilty to violating condition of release, committed Dec. 10. He was fined a $50 court surcharge and a $150 jail surcharge with $100 suspended and placed on probation for 12 months. n Zachariah Patrick Lange, 25, of Soldotna, pleaded guilty to one count of fourth-degree assault (recklessly injure), a domestic violence offense, and one count of fourth-degree assault (causing fear of injury), committed Feb. 23. On count one, he was sentenced to 270 days in jail with 250 days suspended, fined a $100 court surcharge and a $150 jail surcharge with $100 suspended, ordered not to consume of buy alcohol for 36 months, ordered to complete an anger management assessment and follow all recommendations, ordered to have no contact with victim unless written consent is in the court file,
and was placed on probation for 36 months. On count two, he was ordered not to consume or buy alcohol for 36 months, ordered to complete an anger management assessment and follow all recommendations, ordered to have no contact with victim unless written consent is in the court file, and was placed on probation for 36 months. All other charges in this case were dismissed. n Roy V. Lester, 47, of Soldotna, pleaded guilty to driving while license cancelled, revoked or suspended, committed Mar. 20, 2018. He was sentenced to 20 days in jail with 10 days suspended, fined a $50 court surcharge and a $150 jail surcharge with $100 suspended, and placed on probation for 12 months. n Kenneth Paxton Oder, 50, committed Jan. 8. He was sentenced to 180 days in jail with 120 days suspended, fined a $50 court surcharge and a $150 jail surcharge with $100 suspended, ordered to pay restitution, forfeited all items seized, ordered to have no contact with a specifically noted Kenai address, and was placed on probation for one year. All other charges in this case were dismissed. n Elizabeth C. Oskolkoff, 44, of Kenai, pleaded guilty to
an amended charge of seconddegree harassment, committed Apr. 10. She was fined a $100 court surcharge and a $150 jail surcharge with $100 suspended, ordered not to consume, possess or buy controlled substances, ordered to complete a substance/ alcohol abuse assessment and follow all recommendations, ordered to have no contact with victim except in official capacity, and was placed on probation for 12 months. n Jonathan M. Paris, 48, of Kenai, pleaded guilty to disorderly contact (loud nose disturbing neighbor), committed May 21. He was sentenced to time served and fined a $100 court surcharge and a $50 jail surcharge. n Noah Dale Price, 23, of Soldotna, pleaded guilty to driving while license cancelled, revoked or suspended, committed Feb. 21. He was fined a $100 court surcharge and a $50 jail surcharged and had his license suspended for 90 days. n Noah Dale Price, 23, of Soldotna, pleaded guilty to fourth-degree theft, committed Apr. 23. He was sentenced to five days in jail and fined a $100 court surcharge and a $50 jail surcharge and ordered to pay restitution. n In an amended judgment,
Noah Dale Price, 23, of Soldotna, pleaded guilty to one count of an amended charge of fifthdegree criminal mischief, one count of first-degree criminal trespass (on land, intend crime), one count of second-degree criminal trespass (vehicle), another count of fifth-degree criminal mischief, domestic violence offenses committed May 5. On count one, he was sentenced to 10 days in jail and fined a $100 court surcharge and a $50 jail surcharge. On count two, he was sentenced to 360 days in jail with 270 days suspended, ordered to pay restitution, ordered to have no contact with victim, forfeited all items seized, and was placed on probation for 24 months. On count three, he was sentenced to 10 days in jail. On count four, he was sentenced to 10 days in jail. All other charges in this case were dismissed. n Dominic Sunrise Ronellenfitch, 23, of Kenai, pleaded guilty to third-degree theft, committed Jan. 8. Ronellenfitch was sentenced to 360 days in jail with 240 days suspended, fined a $100 court surcharge and a $150 jail surcharge with $100 suspended, ordered to pay restitution, forfeited items seized, ordered to have no contact with a Nikiski address, and placed on probation for 12 months.
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A8 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
AccuWeather® 5-day forecast for Kenai-Soldotna Today
Monday
Partly sunny and pleasant Hi: 69
Tuesday Wednesday Thursday
Partly sunny
Lo: 52
Hi: 65
Partly sunny and nice
Lo: 51
Hi: 64
RealFeel 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.
Lo: 51
Hi: 71
Lo: 54
66 70 70 71
Today 4:34 a.m. 11:39 p.m.
Sunrise Sunset
Last June 25
New July 2
Daylight Day Length - 19 hrs., 4 min., 44 sec. Daylight lost - 0 min., 17 sec.
Alaska Cities 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
Partly sunny and pleasant
Hi: 73
Moonrise Moonset
Tomorrow 4:35 a.m. 11:39 p.m.
First July 9
Today 2:19 a.m. 11:55 a.m.
Today Hi/Lo/W 49/44/r 71/59/pc 41/33/c 64/51/c 56/47/c 61/50/pc 73/56/t 69/49/t 69/51/pc 53/47/c 78/58/t 80/59/pc 61/50/r 78/53/pc 62/52/c 64/52/s 63/48/r 58/50/r 57/41/pc 70/47/c 59/49/sh 65/52/s
Kotzebue 54/47
Unalakleet 57/49 McGrath 71/51
Tomorrow 2:29 a.m. 1:11 p.m.
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
Talkeetna 80/57
Bethel 64/51
Today Hi/Lo/W 54/47/pc 71/51/c 58/51/r 58/45/pc 79/56/t 78/53/pc 76/56/t 59/48/sh 48/36/pc 52/45/c 65/52/pc 57/51/sh 62/52/c 80/57/t 76/47/pc 74/55/pc 57/49/c 64/51/pc 75/57/pc 69/55/s 80/57/t 61/51/c
Anchorage 71/59
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
80/55/pc 86/59/pc 83/60/s 84/64/t 91/71/t 82/62/s 94/75/pc 83/59/pc 69/47/sh 92/77/t 77/46/pc 75/44/s 83/64/pc 75/54/s 66/37/t 95/70/pc 74/63/sh 89/69/t 79/58/pc 60/42/t 76/66/c
82/59/s 81/53/s 83/53/t 80/64/c 91/73/c 85/64/s 96/78/pc 86/67/s 77/55/pc 94/75/pc 78/54/s 80/50/s 84/65/s 77/60/s 68/46/pc 88/70/t 85/69/pc 84/70/pc 77/67/t 55/44/t 85/72/c
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
75/55/pc 93/70/pc 81/64/pc 79/52/pc 91/80/pc 78/64/c 65/45/c 81/61/t 77/54/pc 74/49/pc 95/76/s 64/60/sh 73/43/pc 78/55/pc 67/47/c 82/56/pc 69/48/c 89/75/pc 93/82/t 75/64/c 93/77/pc
82/68/pc 88/71/t 84/70/pc 83/55/s 91/70/t 84/69/t 61/47/t 78/62/c 80/67/pc 64/56/pc 95/69/s 78/58/pc 74/36/s 81/68/t 70/48/pc 85/62/s 73/49/pc 90/76/s 93/79/pc 82/66/t 95/76/pc
Jacksonville Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami Midland, TX Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York Norfolk Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix
6:47 a.m. (14.7) 8:00 p.m. (14.7)
12:58 a.m. (5.2) 1:16 p.m. (1.8)
First Second
5:23 a.m. (8.5) 6:53 p.m. (8.1)
12:10 p.m. (0.5) --- (---)
First Second
11:37 a.m. (24.8) --- (---)
6:01 a.m. (6.6) 6:28 p.m. (2.1)
Almanac Readings ending 4 p.m. yesterday
Temperature
From Kenai Municipal Airport
High .............................................. 62 Low ............................................... 44 Normal high ................................. 62 Normal low ................................... 45 Record high ....................... 76 (1997) Record low ........................ 35 (1968)
Precipitation
From the Peninsula Clarion in Kenai
24 hours ending 4 p.m. yest. . Trace Month to date ........................... 0.11" Normal month to date ............ 0.76" Year to date ............................. 3.50" Normal year to date ................. 4.74" Record today ................ 0.75" (1995) Record for June ........... 2.93" (1955) Record for year ........... 27.09" (1963)
Valdez 64/51
Juneau 63/48
Kodiak 65/52
106 at Thermal, Calif. 22 at Yellowstone N.P., Wyo.
High yesterday Low yesterday
96/78/pc 89/70/t 93/83/pc 89/74/s 92/77/pc 74/64/pc 82/67/t 92/72/t 94/81/pc 103/76/s 73/55/pc 79/62/pc 91/67/t 93/81/pc 79/61/s 80/72/s 90/76/pc 82/68/r 93/78/pc 82/64/pc 99/78/s
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
77/51/pc 80/57/pc 72/55/pc 72/44/pc 78/50/s 92/56/s 69/51/pc 92/71/t 72/63/pc 81/54/s 84/52/s 66/55/pc 74/62/c 75/50/pc 75/55/pc 91/79/pc 89/69/t 97/71/s 93/80/pc 83/66/pc 90/70/t
81/65/pc 82/58/pc 71/53/c 67/49/pc 89/59/s 96/58/s 77/58/pc 95/76/pc 71/61/pc 78/56/s 77/45/s 66/53/c 74/57/pc 72/47/c 80/57/s 93/79/s 82/59/t 96/69/s 84/65/t 86/70/pc 80/59/t
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
92/80/t 95/73/s 56/48/pc 108/73/s 79/59/pc 92/83/t 82/64/s 64/40/s 73/52/s 90/59/pc 48/40/pc 80/59/t 81/61/pc 86/72/pc 77/57/s 90/68/pc 84/61/s 86/77/c 61/46/sh 76/70/pc 66/55/c
89/80/t 93/74/s 59/47/sh 111/81/s 82/57/s 93/83/sh 84/66/s 62/33/s 77/65/pc 93/67/pc 47/40/r 74/59/t 82/58/s 76/56/pc 84/66/pc 82/66/s 84/63/s 88/80/t 57/53/sh 77/66/c 67/52/c
Drenching and severe thunderstorms will threaten the corridor from northern Texas to the southwestern Great Lakes today. Snow will make it will feel far from summer in the Colorado Rockies.
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation
Cold -10s
140 S. Willow St. Kenai, AK 99611 • (907) 283-4834 Open 7 Days a Week 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
0s
10s
20s
Showers T-storms 30s
40s
50s
Rain
60s
70s
Flurries 80s
Snow
Ice
90s 100s 110s
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JUNE 23 – JUNE 29
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2.89
LB
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3.89
LB
4.99
LB
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Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019
Country Foods JUNE 23 - JULY 9
Ketchikan 58/50
83 at Fort yukon and Fort Yukon 33 at Atqasuk
Today’s Forecast
City
94/73/t 79/59/t 90/82/s 94/75/s 91/69/t 79/62/pc 89/71/c 93/69/pc 94/79/pc 101/67/s 69/61/t 77/63/t 93/75/pc 93/81/c 83/66/s 83/67/pc 85/62/t 74/60/t 95/75/pc 84/67/s 100/75/s
Sitka 57/51
State Extremes
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Fresh GROUND BEEF
First Second
(For the 48 contiguous states)
Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
City
2:02 a.m. (5.2) 2:20 p.m. (1.8)
Anchorage
High yesterday Low yesterday
World Cities
City
7:28 a.m. (15.9) 8:41 p.m. (15.9)
National Extremes
National Cities City
First Second
Deep Creek
Glennallen 61/50
Cold Bay 56/47
Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
3:53 a.m. (5.1) 4:11 p.m. (1.7)
Seward Homer 65/52 64/52
Kenai/ Soldotna Homer
Dillingham 69/51
Unalaska 52/48 Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
8:41 a.m. (16.6) 9:54 p.m. (16.6)
Kenai/ Soldotna 69/52
Fairbanks 78/58
Low(ft.)
First Second
Seward
Anaktuvuk Pass 66/44
Nome 58/45
Full July 16
Yesterday Hi/Lo/W 59/51/pc 71/54/sh 58/53/sh 59/47/pc 80/57/sh 79/61/pc 68/49/pc 59/51/sh 60/46/pc 52/46/c 62/46/pc 58/50/r 61/54/r 75/51/s 78/59/r 74/54/pc 57/54/c 63/47/sh 71/49/pc 65/46/pc 73/51/pc 60/54/pc
Prudhoe Bay 48/36
High(ft.)
Kenai City Dock
Seldovia
Lo: 55
* Indicates estimated temperatures for yesterday
Yesterday Hi/Lo/W 50/46/r 65/52/pc 38/34/c 65/51/pc 54/47/c 59/48/sh 74/59/sh 72/46/sh 67/54/r 52/46/c 79/58/sh 83/64/s 78/56/sh 76/53/sh 59/53/r 63/47/s 58/55/c 57/53/r 65/52/pc 68/50/sh 58/51/c 64/50/pc
Tides Today
Plenty of sun
Sun and Moon
10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.
Utqiagvik 41/33
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SECTION
Sports
B Sunday, June 23, 2019
n Dash Run Into Summer results posted Page B2
Oilers snap skid Peninsula holds off Chinooks By JEREMIAH BARTZ Frontiersman.com
Steven Ordorica of the Peninsula Oilers fires a pitch during an 11-5 loss to the Mat-Su Miners on Friday in Palmer. (Photo by Jeremiah Bartz/Frontiersman)
The Peninsula Oilers snapped a four-game losing skid Saturday night with a tight 6-5 Alaska Baseball League victory over the Chugiak/Eagle River Chinooks at Chugiak’s Lee Jordan Field. The Oilers (6-10) scored three runs in the top of the sixth inning to take a tworun lead, then made it stand — barely — as the Chinooks threatened to come back in the ninth. Friday at Hermon Brothers Field in Palmer, the Oil-
ers lost 11-5 to the Mat-Su Miners to drop their fourth straight, all to the Miners in a series sweep. The Oilers will play three more road games before returning home, starting today with a 2 p.m. game with the Chinooks. The Oilers continue with a 7 p.m. Monday meeting in Chugiak and a 7 p.m. Tuesday contest in Anchorage with the Bucs. Skyler Messinger went 3 for 4 with an RBI, while Giancarlo Servin was 2 for 4 and Jaden Fein went 1 for 3 with two RBIs. Jake Adams started for the
Oilers but lasted four innings before Drew Thorpe entered in relief and was credited with the win. Thorpe gave up a run on two walks in the fifth inning, while Adams gave up three runs on one hit and six walks in four innings of work. Servin pitched three scoreless frames of relief for Peninsula with one hit and three walks and five strikeouts, while Damon Keith earned the save with one inning, giving up a run on two hits and one walk with one strikeout. The Chinooks led 4-3 enSee OILERS, page B4
Legion Twins pitcher Harold Ochea offers up a pitch Saturday to a Service batter at Coral Seymour Memorial Park in Kenai. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
Twins sweep doubleheader Post 20 walks off on Service in league game By JOEY KLECKA Peninsula Clarion
The Legion AA Twins had chance after chance to score against the Service Cougars, but nothing worked until the last moment in a wild finish Saturday at Coral Seymour Memorial Park. The Twins rallied from a three-run hole in the bottom of the seventh to win 8-7 on a walk-off, taking advantage of an error by Service’s third baseman on a ground-
er by Tanner Ussing to end the game. The Twins then won the nonleague game 10-0 over the Cougars for Post 20’s fourth straight win, pushing their league record to 3-2 and 5-4 overall this summer. Trailing 7-4 in the seventh, the rally got started with a leadoff bloop single by Davey Belger, followed by a walk by Jeremy Kupferschmid and a single up the middle by David Michael to load the bases with See TWINS, page B4
The Twins’ Mose Hayes evades the tag of Service second baseman Kyle Andrew (left) Saturday at Coral Seymour Memorial Park in Kenai. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
Soldotna’s Youngren takes 2nd in Mayor’s Marathon Staff report Peninsula Clarion
Soldotna runner Megan Youngren led peninsula runners Saturday at the Mayor’s Marathon in Anchorage with a runner-up finish in the women’s race. Youngren trailed women’s champion Marine Dusser of Anchorage across the line by a scant 22 seconds, finishing with a time
of 3 hours, 6 minutes, 11 seconds, and was 11th overall in the field of 656. Fairbanks’ Ashley Perry was third in 3:17:47. Youngren led the women’s field for much of the race, including the final split section at mile 21.9 when she held a four-minute lead over Dusser, but Dusser was able to finished strong to grab the win. Lauren Kuhns of Homer placed two peninsula runners in the top
five, taking fifth in the marathon a time of 1:13:51. Kurgat crossed the finish line together with fellow in a time of 3:22:59. In the men’s marathon, Paul UAA teammate Felix Kemboi. MEN Rottich of Albuquerque, New Marathon Mexico, won in a sizzling time of 10 — 1. Paul Rottich, Albuquerque NM, 2:27:19, almost 22 minutes ahead Top 2:27:19; 2. Joshua Herzberg, Chicago Ill, of his nearest competitor, Chicago 2:49.01; 3. Josh Panasuk, Missoula MT, runner Joshua Herzberg, who ran 2:51:30; 4. Mike Brunette, Libertyville IL, 2:56:03; 5. Noble Gurney, Palmer, 2:57:57; 6. a time of 2:49:01. William Graham, Anchorage, 2:58:23; 7. MiThe Mayor’s Half Marathon chael Maloney, Minneapolis MN, 2:59:56; 8. was won by Caroline Kurgat, both Albert Marban, Dallas TX, 3:00:44; 9. Austin Anchorage, 3:04:35; 10. Ryan Morthe women’s and overall winner, in Huneck, gan, Missoula MT, 3:06:14.
Peninsula finishers — 229. Ronnie Plate II, Soldotna, 4:49:16. Half Marathon Top 10 — 1. Felix Kemboi, Anchorage, 1:13:51; 2. Brian Sweeney, Anchorage, 1:14:18; 3. Ryan Cox, Anchorage, 1:15:23; 4. Sam Tilly, Indian, 1:18:36; 5. Koji Tanaka, Hiroshima JPN, 1:19:08; 6. Preston Wethington, Anchorage, 1:23:03; 7. Samuel Johnston, Scottsdale AZ, 1:23:20; 8. Richie Johnston, Scottsdale AZ, 1:24:16; 9. John McCulley, Bend OR, 1:24:39; 10. Josh Taylor, Wasilla, 1:25:14. Peninsula finishers — 75. Daniel Meuninck, Seward, 1:44:51; 79. Justin Lee, Soldotna, 1:45:16; 110. Don Connelly, Soldotna, 1:51:11; 164. Peter Cannava, Soldotna, 1:58:18; 192.
See RUN, page B4
Germany, Norway advance By The Associated Press
NICE, France — Ingrid Hjelmseth proved to be a shootout hero once again as Norway beat Australia on penalties Saturday night to advance to the quarterfinals of the Women’s World Cup. Hjelmseth saved Emily Gielnik’s kick and Ingrid Engen, who is playing in her first World Cup, hit the decisive penalty as Norway won the shootout 4-1 after the match had finished 1-1. Australia captain Sam Kerr, who was frustrated by Norway most of the night despite several opportunities, fired her penalty shot high and wide. “It was a great win,” Hjelmseth said. “I was just
focusing and picking a side when they put the ball down. I was just telling myself, ‘OK, I will go to the right,’ and then I took a chance and it was good for us, it was the right side.” Hjelmseth saved two penalties in her last shootout — the semifinal of the 2013 European Championship. “That was a good one,” she said. “I think when you’re a goalie you can only be a hero so it’s just about picking a side and just finding the right timing to go so you don’t get the VAR stuff.” Norway will face the winner of Sunday’s game between England and Cam-
eroon. The shootout came after a game during which neither team had a clear advantage, though Norway succeeded in keeping Australia’s Kerr from being much of factor. Kerr had a goal ruled out in the second half after offside was called. Australia also had two penalties denied on video review in normal time. The game went to extra time after Australia’s Elise Kellond-Knight scored from a corner to make it a 1-1 game in the 83rd minute. Forward Isabell Herlovsen put Norway up 1-0 with a goal in the 31st. See CUP, page B2
Norway players celebrate after winning the penalty shootout of the Women’s World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Norway and Australia at the Stade de Nice in Nice, France, Saturday. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)
B2 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
USMNT crushes Trinidad in Gold Cup
By TOM WITHERS AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND — The only embarrassment and shame was felt on the other side. Two years later, the U.S. soccer team turned the tables on Trinidad and Tobago. Gyasi Zardes scored two goals in a three-minute span, Christian Pulisic added one during a five-goal barrage in the second half and the Americans unloaded on their nemesis in a 6-0 blowout in the CONCACAF Gold Cup on Saturday night, earning a small dose of revenge over the team that handed them a nightmarish loss in 2017. Aaron Long scored his first two international goals — one with his head, the other off his chest — and Paul Arriola scored as the U.S. tallied five times in 25 minutes while cruising to its second shutout this week and advancing to the quarterfinals in Philadelphia on June 30. It was the first matchup between the U.S. and Trinidad and Tobago since Oct. 10, 2017, when the Americans, needing only a tie to qualify for the 2018 World Cup, lost 2-1 to the Soca Warriors. The embarrassing defeat snapped a streak of seven straight World Cup appearances by the Americans and triggered a top-to-bottom overhaul of the men’s program, which has operated in the imposing shadow of the powerful U.S. women, seeking their fourth world title in France. There would be no repeat performance by this revamped U.S. team, which is determined to win back global respect. “Every time we step on the field we want to make a statement,” said Zardes,
‘For us, we advance to the next round. That’s important. Our focus was to prepare for this game knowing that if we’d be able to go to the next round. That was the focus of the group. Trinidad was in our way.’ — Gregg Berhalter, USMNT coach who just missed getting a third goal. “We’re trying to change the way the world views American soccer.” The Americans posted their most lopsided win since beating Honduras 6-0 in a World Cup qualifier on March 24, 2017, when Pulisic, who took over this game in the second half, also scored and had a pair of assists. But while much of the pre-game talk centered on the U.S. getting payback, the Americans insist they’ve put the past behind them. “For us, we advance to the next round,” coach Gregg Berhalter said. “That’s important. Our focus was to prepare for this game knowing that if we’d be able to go to the next round. That was the focus of the group. Trinidad was in our way.” Not anymore. With the U.S. leading 1-0 on Long’s goal in the 41st minute, Zardes scored from right in front shortly after U.S. goalkeeper Zack Steffen made a diving save
USWNT agrees to mediation REIMS, France (AP) — U.S. Soccer and players for the women’s national team have tentatively agreed to mediate a lawsuit that accuses the federation of gender discrimination and seeks equitable pay. The federation and representatives for the players confirmed the agreement, first reported in the Wall Street Journal, to pursue mediation following the Women’s World Cup. “Here to win a World Cup, lawyers are at home to do their thing, so we both have our jobs,” defender Kelley O’Hara said Saturday. “This team has always been good at compartmentalizing. We focus on the task at hand and I haven’t paid any mind on anything that’s been going on. That’s something we’ll pick back up when we get home but right now my only focus is winning the World Cup.” The United States, the defending champion and three-time World Cup winner, won its first three games of the tournament and is set to play Spain on Monday in the knockout stage. The championship game is set for July 7 in Lyon. Twenty-eight members of the current player pool filed the lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles in March. The lawsuit alleges “institutionalized gender discrimination” that includes inequitable compensation when compared with their counterparts on the men’s national team. “While we welcome the opportunity to mediate, we are disappointed the plaintiffs’ counsel felt it necessary to share this news publicly during the Women’s World Cup and create any possible distraction from the team’s focus on the tournament and success on the field,” U.S. Soccer said in a statement.
Results posted for Run Into Summer Staff report Peninsula Clarion
The third week of the Run Into Summer five-kilometer series went to Samuel Roberts, who won the 5K race on the streets of old Kenai Tuesday with a time of 19 minutes, 36 seconds, beating runner-up Tyler Hippchen over a minute. The women’s winner was Karalyn Veideffer in a time of 26:16, good for fifth overall. Run Into Summer
Tuesday in Kenai 1. Samuel Roberts, 19:36; 2. Tyler Hippchen, 20:42; 3. Sean Goff, 21:24; 4. Jay Brott, 22:05; 5. Karalyn Veideffer, 26:16; 6. Craig Babitt, 26:57; 7. John Johnson, 28:45; 8. John Pothast, 31:28; 9. Sheilah-Margaret Pothast, 31:28; 10. Katie Johnson, 33:41; 11. Maria Sweppy, 36:29; 12. Kathy Hammer, 37:03; 13. Alberta Cole, 43:51; 14. James Milburn, 49:11; 15. Amy Milburn, 49:11.
United States defender Aaron Long is congratulated by midfielder Weston McKennie (8) after scoring a goal against Trinidad and Tobago during the second half of a CONCACAF Gold Cup soccer match Saturday in Cleveland. The United States won 6-0. (AP Photo/David Dermer)
to stop Trinidad from tying a match the Americans dominated. Michael Bradley chipped the ball from the left side to a charging Nick Lima, who headed the ball to Zardes in front. The American striker only had to guide it by Trinidad keeper Marvin Phillip in the 65th minute. Two minutes later, Zardes buried a hard shot from the left side for his 10th international goal and second two-goal game for the Americans. Zardes nearly completed a hat trick, but his low shot from up top in the 70th minute hit the left upright. Next up for the Americans is a matchup with Panama on Wednesday in Kansas City, Kansas. The Panamanians improved to
2-0 in Group D of the 16team tournament with a 4-2 win over Guyana, also clinching a quarterfinal berth. On a picture-perfect night along the shores of Lake Erie, the American team controlled possession and tempo while thoroughly outplaying T&T, which was blanked 2-0 by Panama in its opening match and was eliminated. The Soca Warriors were content to sit back and let the U.S. attack, hoping to spring counters. They nearly connected in the 61st minute as Cordell Cato eluded three defenders on the right side and hit teammate Levi Garcia in stride. But Garcia’s shot was high and wide, a close call that prompted a collective gasp
from the U.S. faithful. “Big moment,” Trinidad coach Dennis Lawrence said. “When you get in that position, you have to put that away.” Lawrence was upset with how his team collapsed following the U.S. team’s second goal. “How can you play so good for 65 minutes and then so awful for the last 25?” he said, repeating his postgame message to his players. “We have to learn to stand up and fight. We lost focus and we paid the price.” Berhalter stuck with the same starting lineup he used in the opener over Guyana but gave the captain’s arm band to Steffen for the first time. Bradley captained the Americans in the opening
4-0 win over Guyana. Long, who plays in the MLS for the New York Red Bulls, put the U.S. ahead off a beautiful feed from the left side by Pulisic. Shortly after the U.S. was awarded a free kick, the Americans kept pressing and maintained possession in Trinidad’s half before Pulisic spotted Long inside the 6-yard-box and delivered an arching pass to the forward, who left his feet, connected and drove the ball past a sprawling Phillip. The score touched off a flag-waving celebration behind the goal by red-whiteand blue clad U.S. fans, who have been anxiously awaiting their team’s chance at some redemption. After a 20-month wait, they got a little.
Scoreboard Soccer Women’s World Cup SECOND ROUND Saturday, June 22 At Grenoble, France Germany 3, Nigeria 0 At Nice, France Norway 1, Australia 1, Norway won 4-1 on penalty kicks Sunday, June 23 At Valenciennes, France England vs. Cameroon, 7:30 a.m. At Le Havre, France France vs. Brazil, 11 a.m. Monday, June 24 At Reims, France Spain vs. United States, 8 a.m. At Paris Sweden vs. Canada, 11 a.m. Tuesday, June 25 At Montpellier, France Italy vs. China, 8 a.m. At Rennes, France Netherlands vs. Japan, 11 a.m. All Times ADT
Basketball WNBA Standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Connecticut Washington Chicago Indiana Atlanta New York
W 9 6 5 5 2 3
L Pct GB 1 .900 — 3 .667 2½ 3 .625 3 5 .500 4 6 .250 6 7 .300 6
WESTERN CONFERENCE Seattle Las Vegas Minnesota Los Angeles Phoenix Dallas
6 5 5 4 2 2
4 .600 — 4 .556 ½ 5 .500 1 5 .444 1½ 5 .286 2½ 6 .250 3
Saturday’s Games Minnesota 92, New York 83 Las Vegas 86, Dallas 68 Sunday’s Games Washington at Atlanta, 9 a.m. Connecticut at Chicago, 2 p.m. Los Angeles at Phoenix, 2 p.m. Indiana at Seattle, 3 p.m. Monday’s Games No games scheduled All Times ADT
Baseball AL Standings
East Division W L Pct GB New York 49 27 .645 — Tampa Bay 44 33 .571 5½ Boston 42 36 .538 8 Toronto 28 49 .364 21½ Baltimore 22 55 .286 27½ Central Division Minnesota 50 26 .658 — Cleveland 41 35 .539 9 Chicago 36 38 .486 13 Detroit 26 46 .361 22 Kansas City 26 51 .338 24½ West Division Houston 48 30 .615 — Texas 41 36 .532 6½ Oakland 41 37 .526 7 Los Angeles 38 40 .487 10 Seattle 34 47 .420 15½ Friday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 4, Houston 1 Boston 7, Toronto 5, 10 innings Cleveland 7, Detroit 6 Chicago White Sox 5, Texas 4, 10
innings Minnesota 8, Kansas City 7 St. Louis 5, L.A. Angels 1 Tampa Bay 5, Oakland 3 Seattle 10, Baltimore 9 Saturday’s Games Minnesota 5, Kansas City 3, 10 innings St. Louis 4, L.A. Angels 2 Toronto 8, Boston 7 Oakland 4, Tampa Bay 2 Baltimore 8, Seattle 4 Cleveland 2, Detroit 0 N.Y. Yankees 7, Houston 5 Texas 6, Chicago White Sox 5 Sunday’s Games Toronto (Stroman 4-9) at Boston (Porcello 5-6), 9:05 a.m. Detroit (Norris 2-5) at Cleveland (Plesac 2-2), 9:10 a.m. Houston (Verlander 9-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Happ 7-3), 10:05 a.m. Minnesota (Pineda 4-3) at Kansas City (Bailey 6-6), 10:15 a.m. Chicago White Sox (Nova 3-5) at Texas (Sampson 5-4), 11:05 a.m. Tampa Bay (Stanek 0-1) at Oakland (Anderson 7-4), 12:07 p.m. Baltimore (Ynoa 0-4) at Seattle (Kikuchi 3-5), 12:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Skaggs 6-6) at St. Louis (Mikolas 5-7), 3:05 p.m. All Times ADT
NL Standings
East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 45 32 .584 — Philadelphia 39 37 .513 5½ Washington 37 39 .487 7½ New York 37 40 .481 8 Miami 29 46 .387 15 Central Division Chicago 41 35 .539 — Milwaukee 41 36 .532 ½ St. Louis 40 36 .526 1 Cincinnati 36 39 .480 4½ Pittsburgh 35 40 .467 5½ West Division Los Angeles 53 25 .679 — Colorado 40 36 .526 12 San Diego 38 39 .494 14½ Arizona 38 40 .487 15 San Francisco 33 42 .440 18½ Friday’s Games N.Y. Mets 5, Chicago Cubs 4 Miami 2, Philadelphia 1 Pittsburgh 2, San Diego 1 Washington 4, Atlanta 3 Cincinnati 11, Milwaukee 7 St. Louis 5, L.A. Angels 1 San Francisco 11, Arizona 5 L.A. Dodgers 4, Colorado 2 Saturday’s Games St. Louis 4, L.A. Angels 2 N.Y. Mets 10, Chicago Cubs 2 Miami 5, Philadelphia 3 Pittsburgh 6, San Diego 3 Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 5 L.A. Dodgers 5, Colorado 4, 11 innings Atlanta 13, Washington 9 San Francisco 7, Arizona 4 Sunday’s Games Miami (Yamamoto 2-0) at Philadelphia (De Los Santos 0-0), 9:05 a.m. Atlanta (Soroka 8-1) at Washington (Voth 0-0), 9:35 a.m. San Diego (Lucchesi 6-4) at Pittsburgh (Brault 3-1), 9:35 a.m. Cincinnati (DeSclafani 4-3) at Milwaukee (Woodruff 8-2), 10:10 a.m. N.Y. Mets (deGrom 4-6) at Chicago Cubs (Hamels 6-2), 10:20 a.m. Colorado (Senzatela 6-5) at L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 7-4), 12:10 p.m. San Francisco (Anderson 2-2) at Arizona (Kelly 7-7), 12:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Skaggs 6-6) at St. Louis (Mikolas 5-7), 3:05 p.m. All Times ADT
Twins 5, Royals 3, 10 inn. Min.010 000 020 2—5 KC 000 000 030 0—3
9 7
0 0
Berrios, T.Rogers (8), May (9), Parker (10) and Astudillo; Duffy, Kennedy (9), Peralta (10) and Gallagher. W_May 2-1. L_Peralta 2-3. Sv_Parker (10). HRs_Minnesota, Cron (17), Cave (1), Sano (9).
Indians 2, Tigers 0 De. Cle.
000 011
000 000—0 6 000 00x—2 6
0 0
Turnbull, Hardy (6), Ni.Ramirez (7), Alcantara (8) and Joh.Hicks; Civale, Wittgren (7), O.Perez (8), Cimber (8), Hand (9) and R.Perez. W_Civale 1-0. L_Turnbull 3-7. Sv_Hand (22).
Athletics 4, Rays 2 TB Oak.
001 011
000 100—2 6 000 20x—4 8
0 1
Y.Chirinos, D.Castillo (7), Kolarek (8) and Zunino; Fiers, Buchter (7), Petit (7), Hendriks (9) and B.Taylor, Phegley. W_Petit 2-1. L_D.Castillo 1-6. Sv_Hendriks (1). HRs_Tampa Bay, Choi (9). Oakland, Chapman (18).
Orioles 8, Mariners 4 Bal. Sea.
000 100
302 120—8 8 001 011—4 7
1 0
Cashner, Yacabonis (7), J.Rogers (8), Givens (9) and Severino; Milone, Bautista (6), Altavilla (7), Biddle (8), Festa (9) and Narvaez. W_Cashner 7-3. L_Milone 1-2. HRs_Baltimore, Villar (9), Santander (2). Seattle, Santana (17).
Blue Jays 8, Red Sox 7 Tor. Bos.
000 051
100 430—8 10 000 001—7 9
0 2
Law, Gaviglio (2), Kingham (6), Dan.Hudson (8), Giles (9) and Maile, D.Jansen; Johnson, Shawaryn (6), Walden (7), M.Barnes (8), Brasier (8), J.Smith (9) and C.Vazquez. W_Kingham 3-1. L_M.Barnes 3-2. Sv_Giles (12). HRs_Toronto, Tellez (14), Galvis (11). Boston, Vazquez (10).
Yankees 7, Astros 5 Hou. NY
000 000
002 300—5 11 022 30x—7 7
3 0
Miley, Harris (6), Pressly (7), Guduan (8) and Stassi; Tanaka, Holder (7), Ottavino (8), Britton (9) and Romine. W_Holder 5-2. L_Pressly 1-1. Sv_Britton (3). HRs_Houston, Reddick (9), Alvarez (6). New York, Urshela (6), Romine (2).
Rangers 6, White Sox 5 Chi. Tex.
400 301
001 000—5 7 002 00x—6 14
1 1
Despaigne, Osich (4), Marshall (6), Minaya (6) and Collins; Lynn, Leclerc (8), C.Martin (9) and Mathis. W_Lynn 9-4. L_Marshall 3-1. Sv_C.Martin (3). HRs_Chicago, Anderson (11). Texas, Mazara 2 (12).
Cardinals 4, Angels 2 LA SL
000 000
000 110—2 6 022 00x—4 5
2 0
N.Ramirez, Pena (3), Jewell (7), L.Garcia (8) and Lucroy; Dak. Hudson, A.Miller (8), J.Hicks (8), Webb (9) and Molina. W_Dak. Hudson 6-3. L_Pena 5-2. Sv_ Webb (1). HRs_Los Angeles, Upton (3), Pujols (13). St. Louis, Ozuna (20).
Mets 10, Cubs 2 NY Ch.
122 000
131 000—10 12 000 101—2 6
1 1
Wheeler, Flexen (8) and W.Ramos; Quintana, Wick (5), Brach (7), Ryan (8), Caratini (9) and Contreras. W_Wheeler 6-5. L_Quintana 4-7. HRs_New York, Ramos (8), Frazier (8), Alonso (26).
Marlins 5, Phillies 3 Mia. Phi.
001 002
000 310—5 7 010 000—3 7
0 0
E.Hernandez, Brice (6), Chen (7), Quijada (9) and W.Castillo; Velasquez, Nicasio (6), Morgan (7), E.Ramos (7), Hammer (8), Alvarez (9) and Realmuto. W_Brice 1-0. L_Morgan 2-2. Sv_Quijada (1). HRs_Miami, Riddle (4). Philadelphia, Hoskins (16), Harper (13).
Brewers 6, Reds 5 Cin. Mil.
301 400
010 000—5 6 200 00x—6 5
2 0
L.Castillo, Lorenzen (4), Stephenson (5), Garrett (6), Hughes (7), D.Hernandez (8) and Barnhart; Chacin, Claudio (5), Albers (5), Houser (7), Hader (8) and Grandal. W_Albers 4-2. L_L.Castillo 7-2. Sv_Hader (18). HRs_Cincinnati, Puig (16), Suarez (16). Milwaukee, Grandal (17).
Pirates 6, Padres 3 SD Pit.
000 000
100 101—3 6 020 04x—6 10
0 0
Paddack, Wieck (6), Wingenter (7), Stammen (8) and Mejia; Archer, R.Rodriguez (6), Liriano (7), Crick (8), Feliz (9), F.Vazquez (9) and Stallings, Diaz. W_Crick 3-3. L_Stammen 5-4. Sv_F.Vazquez (19). HRs_San Diego, Machado (16). Pittsburgh, Osuna (3).
Braves 13, Nationals 9 Atl. Was.
001 302
120 441—13 14 030 100—9 11
0 1
Foltynewicz, Blevins (5), Dayton (6), Minter (7), Swarzak (8), Jackson (9) and Flowers, McCann; A.Sanchez, Rosenthal (7), Rainey (7), Ross (8), Grace (9) and Suzuki. W_Minter 1-4. L_Ross 0-1. HRs_Atlanta, Swanson (14), Flowers (7). Washington, Adams (10).
Dodgers 5, Rockies 4, 11 inn. Col.102 000 LA 011 010
100 00—4 8 010 01—5 14
1 1
Lambert, McGee (6), B.Shaw (7), Estevez (8), W.Davis (10), Tinoco (11) and Iannetta, Wolters; Ryu,
Y.Garcia (7), Ferguson (7), Floro (8), K.Jansen (9), P.Baez (10), Kelly (11) and R.Martin. W_Kelly 2-3. L_Tinoco 0-1. HRs_Colorado, Tapia (6). Los Angeles, Verdugo 2 (7).
Transactions BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Optioned LHP Sean Gilmartin to NorfolK (IL). Selected the contract of RHP Matt Wotherspoon from Norfolk. CLEVELAND INDIANS — Selected the contract of RHP Aaron Civale from Columbus (IL). Designated OF Leonys Martin for assignment. MINNESOTA TWINS — Reinstated RHP Blake Parker from the family medical emergency List. Optioned RHP Kohl Stewart to Rochester (IL). National League MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Recalled RHP Aaron Wilkerson from San Antonio (PCL). Optioned RHP Corbin Burnes to San Antonio. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Placed OF Gregory Polanco on the 10-day IL, retroactive to June 19. Recalled OF Jason Martin from Indianapolis (IL). HOCKEY National Hockey League CAROLINA HURRICANES — Acquired C Patrick Marleau and conditional 2020 first- and seventhround draft picks from Toronto for a 2020 sixth-round draft pick. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Acquired F John Quenneville from New Jersey for F John Hayden. LOS ANGELES KINGS — Acquired a 2019 (No. 50) secondround draft from Montreal for the 2019 third- (No. 64) and fifth-round (No. 126) draft picks. NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Acquired D P.K. Subban from Nashville for D Steven Santini, D Jeremy Davies, a 2019 second- and a 2020 second-round draft pick. OTTAWA SENATORS — Acquired the 2019 second-round (No. 37) draft pick from Florida for the 2019 second- (No. 44) and and thirdround (No. 83) draft picks. PHILADELPHIA FLYERS — Acquired the 2019 second-round (No. 34) draft pick from Nashville the 2019 second- (No. 45) and third-round (No. 65) draft picks. TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING — Acquired a conditional 2020 firstround pick, a 2019 third-round (No. 71) draft pick and G Marek Mazanec from Vancouver for F J.T. Miller. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Traded F Patrick Marleau to Carolina for a conditional 2020 first-round draft pick and a 2020 seventh-round draft pick. VEGAS GOLDEN KNIGHTS — Acquired the 2019 second-round (No. 41) draft pick from San Jose for the 2019 second- (No. 48) and third-round (No. 82) draft picks. SOCCER Orange County SC — Signed D Michael Orozco.
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | B3
. . . Cup Continued from page B1
Australia had to play the final 16 minutes of extra time at a numerical disadvantage after defender Alanna Kennedy was sent off on a red card for hauling down Norway forward Lisa-Marie Utland. Norway peppered Australia’s goal but was repeatedly denied by goalkeeper Lydia Williams. “It was tough,” Kerr said. “A lot of the girls had already played a lot of minutes so we were already running on empty and then obviously Alanna getting sent off is not ideal but we stuck together. We were still confident and believing in each other but it just didn’t come off tonight.” Kerr ended the tournament tied with American Alex Morgan for the most goals at five. “Only big players can miss penalties, because small players don’t take them,” coach Ante Milicic said when asked what he told Kerr after the match. Australia was thwarted in its attempt to reach the quarterfinals for a fourth straight time. “This team had high expecta-
tions and goals coming into this tournament so to go out this way it was pretty rough and I haven’t really wrapped my head around it I don’t think,” said defender Steph Catley, who had Australia’s only successful penalty kick during the shootout. “Doesn’t really feel like we’re out if that makes sense. It’s devastating.” Germany 3, Nigeria 0 Alexandra Popp had just scored a go-ahead goal against Nigeria in her 100th international appearance when Japanese referee Yoshimi Yamashita signaled for a video review to determine whether a German teammate Svenja Huth, who was in an offside position, obstructed the view of goalkeeper Chiamaka Nnadozie. “I was a bit irritated to be honest,” the German captain said through a translator. Popp’s goal stood, and a few minutes later the match was stopped for another video review, this time to determine whether Germany’s Lina Magull had been fouled in the penalty area by Evelyn Nwabuoko. Having seen the stud marks in her teammate’s leg, Popp was pleased the referee took
a look and awarded a penalty kick. “Otherwise, I would have asked myself why we were using this technology,” Popp said, “so it was quite obvious in the pictures.” Germany advanced to the Women’s World Cup quarterfinals for the eighth straight time, beating African champion Nigeria 3-0 Saturday at Grenoble, France. Nigeria coach Thomas Dennerby endorsed VAR but said it caused disruptions. “Football is also a game with a rhythm and if you break the rhythm sometimes that is not good,” he said. “It’s good for the game, but I don’t think anybody really has the final solution for VAR yet.” Popp scored in the 20th minute. Sara Däbritz made it 2-0 in the 27th with the penalty kick and Lea Schüller got the final goal in the 82nd. “All the interruptions are quite difficult to handle, especially emotionally, but we tried to keep calm,” Germany coach Martina Voss-Tecklenburg said through a translator. “Maybe they can speed up the whole process.” Players are unsure when a video review will be signaled. “It was a bit of insecurity through-
out the match because we didn’t quite know what was assessed in a certain moment,” Popp said. “But in general I think it’s important to have this sort of assessment.” Second-ranked Germany, which has outscored opponents 9-0, plays the winner of Monday’s match between Sweden and Canada on June 29 at Rennes. German Chancellor Angela Merkel called Voss-Tecklenburg after the match, “She congratulated us,” VossTecklenburg recalled. “She said she was very delighted.” The weeklong layoff gives time for midfielder Dzsenifer Marozsán’s broken left middle toe to heal. Injured in the opening win over China on June 8, Marozsán recovered sufficiently to be available as a substitute Saturday if she had been needed. “Based on today’s physical appearance, I would say she’s able to play the next match,” Voss-Tecklenburg said, The Germans, who won the tournament in 2003 and 2007, have never failed to reach the quarterfinals. No. 38 Nigeria was in the knockout phase for the second time, the first since it lost in the
quarterfinals to Brazil in 1999, and it joined Cameroon to become the first pair of African teams to reach the knockout stage in the same Women’s World Cup. The Indomitable Lionesses play England on Sunday. Popp scored on a 4-yard header off Magull’s corner kick, her 48th international goal. Däbritz scored on a low penalty kick beyond the outstretched left hand of Nnadozie, her third goal of the tournament and 13th of her international career. Nigeria had an excellent chance to cut its deficit in the 50th when second-half substitute Rasheedat Ajibade streaked up a flank and passed to an open Desire Oparanozie, but the ball was just ahead of the forward and rolled by. Schüller got her ninth international goal following a giveaway by Halimatu Ayinde. The Super Falcons were missing defender Ngozi Ebere and midfielder Rita Chikwelu, who served suspensions for yellow card accumulation, and forward Asisat Oshoala, who was injured. “I think we showed the whole world that Nigeria has a team that improved a lot,” Dennerby said. “It’s going the right way.”
Pujols homers in return, but Cards win By The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — Albert Pujols took a curtain call for his adoring fans at Busch Stadium after homering against the Cardinals, but Marcell Ozuna connected to lead Dakota Hudson and St. Louis over the Los Angeles Angels 4-2 on Saturday. Pujols hit his 13th home run, a solo drive in the seventh inning. He got a standing ovation as he rounded the bases and the cheers grew louder until Pujols emerged from the dugout and tipped his hat to the sellout crowd. Ozuna hit his teamleading 20th homer of the season off Felix Peña in the sixth inning to make it 4-0 lead. Ozuna homered for the second straight day. Hudson (6-3) gave up one run on five hits in a season-high 112-pitch stint. He struck out six and walked one. YANKEES 7, ASTROS 5 NEW YORK — Giancarlo Stanton hit a pair of go-ahead, two-run singles, both off third baseman Yuli Gurriel’s glove, and New York won its eighth straight. Houston lost its seventh in a row in the matchup of AL division leaders. Zack Britton earned his third save. The Astros stranded 11 runners. Gio Urshela and Austin Romine went deep for New York, giving the Yankees a homer in 25 straight games. That tied Joe DiMaggio and the 1941 Yankees for most in franchise history. The 2002 Texas Rangers hold the major league mark at 27.
DODGERS 5, ROCKIES 4 LOS ANGELES — Alex Verdugo hit his second home run of the game in the 11th inning and Los Angeles extended its winning streak to five games. Verdugo hit a fastball from Jesus Tinoco (0-1) into the Rockies’ bullpen for his fourth hit of the game and second
career game-ending homer. It was the second straight night the Dodgers won with the long ball. Raimel Tapia’s pinch-hit home run in the seventh had given the Rockies a 4-3 lead, but Beaty tied it at 4 in the eighth with an RBI single.
out two in a perfect sixth for the last-place Marlins, who’ve won three in a row. Wei-Yin Chen tossed 2 1/3 scoreless innings and José Quijada retired César Hernández on an infield popup for the final out with the bases loaded for his first save in his seventh big-league appearance. Bryce Harper and Rhys TWINS 5, ROYALS 3 Hoskins hit back-to-back homKANSAS CITY, Mo. — ers for the Phillies. JT Riddle C.J. Cron homered and singled hit a solo shot for Miami. in the go-ahead run in the 10th inning, and Minnesota beat PIRATES 6, PADRES 3 Kansas City. PITTSBURGH — Adam Miguel Sanó and Jake Cave also homered for the Twins, Frazier hit a tiebreaking, twowho blew a 3-0 lead in the run single in the eighth inning eighth before pushing ahead and Pittsburgh beat San Diego. It was 2-all when Starling for good in the 10th. Eddie Rosario’s double to deep right off Marte led off the eighth with Wily Peralta (2-3) scored Cave a triple against reliever Craig Stammen (5-4). Josh Bell and for a two-run cushion. Trevor May (2-1) worked a Corey Dickerson walked to scoreless ninth and Blake Park- load the bases, and Frazier siner retired the side in the 10th gled up the middle. Elias Diaz for his 10th save in 11 chances. added on with an RBI single AL Central-leading Minnesota and pinch-hitter Jung Ho Kang has won two straight after los- had a sacrifice fly. Kyle Crick (3-3) worked ing four of its previous five. around a walk and a hit in the eighth. Felipe Vazquez faced METS 10, CUBS 2 just one batter to earn his 19th CHICAGO — Rookie slug- save of the season. ger Pete Alonso hit his 26th homer to set the NL record for BLUE JAYS 8, most homers before the AllRED SOX 7 Star Game as New York routed Chicago. BOSTON — Freddy Galvis Alonso broke a tie with and Rowdy Tellez hit back-toLos Angeles’ Cody Bellinger back homers to help Toronto (2017). He’s still seven short rally from a six-run deficit, and of Mark McGwire’s major Eric Sogard drew a four-pitch, league record 33 accomplished bases-loaded walk to break an in 1987. eighth-inning tie. Todd Frazier and Wilson Boston scored five times Ramos also homered for the in the second and led 6-0 after Mets, who won consecutive three before its bullpen blew road games for the first time in a save for the 15th time in 31 over two months. chances. The Blue Jays trailed Zack Wheeler (6-5) al- 6-1 before scoring four in the lowed one run on five hits in seventh on two homers and a seven innings. He retired 15 wild pitch, then added three straight batters from the second more in the eighth, when Matt through the sixth. Barnes (3-2) and Ryan Brasier combined to walk four straight batters with two outs.
MARLINS 5, PHILLIES 3
PHILADELPHIA — Wilkin Castillo hit a go-ahead two-run double in the seventh inning in his first game back in the majors in 10 years, lifting Miami over Philadelphia. The Phillies have lost six in a row and 15 of 21. Austin Brice (1-0) struck
ATHLETICS 4, RAYS 2 OAKLAND, Calif. — Matt Chapman homered in the third inning and doubled in the goahead run in the seventh, leading Oakland past Tampa Bay. Ramón Laureano had two hits, was hit by pitches twice — including once with the
Los Angeles Angels’ Albert Pujols tips his cap to the crowd before his first at-bat during first inning of a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday in St. Louis. (AP Photo/L.G. Patterson) bases loaded — and threw out to end his career-high hitting The Braves hammered Joe a runner from center field for streak and the longest in the Ross (0-1) who squandered a the A’s. Khris Davis singled majors at 18 games. 9-8 lead for Washington, which and scored. had won five in a row.
ORIOLES 8, MARINERS 3 SEATTLE — Jonathan Villar hit a three-run homer, Anthony Santander had a two-run shot and Baltimore ended a 10-game skid with a win over Seattle. Andrew Cashner worked six strong innings for the Orioles, who snapped the eighthlongest losing streak in club history. Cashner (7-3) allowed two runs while scattering five hits and striking out three.
INDIANS 2, TIGERS 0 CLEVELAND — Aaron Civale dazzled in his major league debut, striking out the side to begin the game and allowing just two infield hits over six innings in Cleveland’s win over Detroit. Civale struck out six, walked three and worked out of a sixth-inning jam. José Ramirez had an RBI triple in the second while Oscar Mercado added an RBI single in the third.
BREWERS 6, REDS 5
BRAVES 13, NATIONALS 9
MILWAUKEE — Yasmani Grandal led off for the first time in his career and homered in his opening at-bat to help Milwaukee snap a season-high five-game losing streak. Grandal put the Brewers ahead 5-4 with an RBI double in the fourth. Two outs later, he scored on Lorenzo Cain’s bloop single that chased Reds starter Luis Castillo (7-2). NL MVP Christian Yelich scored a run, but went 0 for 3
WASHINGTON — Dansby Swanson hit a tie-breaking three-run homer in the eighth inning, Freddie Freeman drove in five runs and Atlanta rallied from a four-run deficit against Washington’s beleaguered bullpen. Freeman tied the Braves’ franchise record of 10 consecutive games with an RBI. Sid Gordon also accomplished the feat for the then-Boston Braves in 1951.
RANGERS 6, WHITE SOX 5 ARLINGTON, Texas — Nomar Mazara hit two home runs, Lance Lynn shook off a four-run first inning and retired 17 of the last 18 batters he faced, and Texas beat Chicago. Run-scoring singles by Texas’ Shin-Soo Choo and Delino DeShields wiped out Chicago’s 5-4 lead in the sixth inning. Mazara had his fourth career two-homer game and drove in three runs.
GIANTS 7, DIAMONDBACKS 4 PHOENIX — Alex Dickerson had three RBIs, and five San Francisco relievers held Arizona scoreless for five innings. Dickerson, who doubled twice, has now driven in nine runs in two games after a sixRBI night on Friday. Mike Yastrzemski homered and Brandon Crawford drove in two as the Giants have won the first two games of a weekend series against struggling Arizona.
NASCAR returns to action at Sonoma By GREG BEACHAM AP Sports Writer
SONOMA, Calif. — The Cup Series drivers had a rare break from their grinding schedule last week, and they’re returning to competition at a NASCAR stop that sometimes feels like a vacation. Most drivers have spent the week enjoying wine tasting sessions and extravagant meals at the wineries and restaurants nestled in Northern California’s beautiful rolling hills. They’re sleeping in luxury hotels instead of their usual luxury motor homes. Across the paddock, everybody seems to be in a good mood. “Well, wait until Sunday,” points leader Joey Logano said with a smirk. All that comfort and relaxation will be forgotten when the season resumes on a track with a high de-
gree of difficulty and potential for frustration. The first road course race of the season already challenges drivers with its elevation changes, and it got even trickier with a new layout this weekend: Sonoma is celebrating its 50th anniversary by reincorporating “The Carousel,” a wicked elevationchanging turn, for the first time in a NASCAR race since 1997. An element of the unknown is usually a boost to entertainment value in motor sports, and the drivers are as curious as everybody else to see what will happen when the green flag drops. Most drivers are excited about it, even after spending the past two days furiously trying to figure out the best way to handle the Carousel — and whether they can go two-wide and pass in that stretch. “It’s obviously more turns now, and that makes it more likely we’ll
get a timely caution to shake up the race,” Clint Bowyer said. “But nobody really knows what it will mean.” Yet nobody will be surprised if the season’s best drivers to date have more success in Sonoma. Kyle Busch has already won four times this year, while Martin Truex Jr. and Brad Keselowski have three victories apiece. Truex is the defending champion at Sonoma, and Busch — his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate — has won twice here. “It’s certainly interesting to have the new layout,” Busch said. “This place is always a challenge to pass at, and now I feel like there’s only two passing corners now, where before there might have been more.” More things to watch from wine country: LARSON LEADS: Kyle Larson
will start on the pole for the third consecutive year in Sonoma, but he finished 26th and 14th in those previous two races. The Northern California native has never finished better than 12th on his home track, and he didn’t sound extraordinarily confident about his chances after winning the pole: “I feel like each year I’ve qualified here, I went really well, but made a lot of mistakes and knew there were a lot of opportunities for me to clean up my mistakes.” TRACK EVOLUTION: The Carousel addition has forced the drivers to learn on the fly, but NASCAR is improvising as well. After drivers repeatedly scattered dirt across the track while running wide on Turn 5 during practice Friday, NASCAR worked overnight to add an asphalt curb where the dirt had been. “I’m so glad they made that adjustment,” Ty Dillon
said. “I’m not going to run on it (in qualifying), but I think people will use it a lot tomorrow.” GOLDEN CHANCE: California natives Jimmie Johnson and Kevin Harvick haven’t won yet this season, but they’ve got reason to be optimistic. Harvick won at Sonoma in 2017 and has four top-10 finishes here in his last five starts. Johnson hasn’t won anywhere in more than two years, but the seven-time champ starts 11th on Sunday at the track where he won in 2010. BOOGITY BYE: For those watching at home, the Fox telecast is likely to be a lengthy farewell to Darrell Waltrip, who is retiring from his commentary job after the race. The Hall of Fame driver has been involved in NASCAR since 1972, and he has been a prominent broadcaster since 2001, becoming a fixture in the sport’s public perception.
B4 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
Trades take NHL draft’s thunder By JOHN WAWROW AP Hockey Writer
The Twins’ David Michael swings at a pitch by Service’s Andrew Jaidinger on Saturday at Coral Seymour Memorial Park in Kenai. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
. . . Twins Continued from page B1
one out. Mose Hayes laced a grounder off the mound that helped him reach on an error by the Service second baseman, who couldn’t field it cleanly, allowing a run to score for a 7-5 game. Seth Adkins then drew a walk to force in another run to cut it to 7-6, and Twins veteran Logan Smith used a squeeze bunt to bring home the tying run. “I ended up having to trust Logan there, get mostly down the basepath and see if he could squeeze it in there,” said Michael, who scored the tying run. Ussing then took a whack at the first pitch he saw, sending it down the third-base line and past the glove of Service’s Dawson Beaty, bringing home the winning run to end the game. Ussing finished 2 for 4 in the first game to lead the Twins, and said his first-pitch swing that won it came on a near check swing. “The first swing I got out in front, pulled off a little bit,” Ussing said. “I thought I was going to get thrown out.” Twins coach Robb Quelland said having two veteran ball players like Michael and Smith playing the crucial roles on the squeeze bunt was huge. “I knew (Smith) would give us the best effort on the team to put a bunt down,” he said. “He wouldn’t cause an
. . . Run Continued from page B1 Roy Stuckey, Soldotna, 2:02:05; 200. Bill Taylor, Kenai, 2:03:13. 5K Top 10 — 1. John Mushett, Anchorage, 16:30; 2. Max Hartke, Chugiak, 16:47; 3. Slade Manning, Anchorage, 17:04; 4. Connor Owens, Palmer, 17:43; 5. Todd Jackson, Anchorage, 17:57; 6. Koster Lynch, Kennewick WA, 18:20; 7. Paul Oldenburg, Anchorage, 18:29; 8. William Stanko, London KY, 18:35; 9. Max Johnson, Anchorage, 18:36; 10. Matt Tompkins, Anchorage, 18:48. Peninsula finishers — 67. John Pothast, Soldotna, 29:17; 157. David Morris, Soldotna, 1:08:15. WOMEN
. . . Oilers Continued from page B1
tering the sixth inning, but the Oilers got things going with a leadoff single by Messinger. Later, Taylor Johnson scored to tie the game on a wild pitch, then the Oilers took the lead when Jaden Fein was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded to force in a run. Connor McCord drove in another run on a fielder’s choice knock.
The Twins’ Mose Hayes slides into third base Saturday ahead of the tag of Service’s Dawson Beaty at Coral Seymour Memorial Park in Kenai. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)
out for that runner on third, he would do what the team needed.” Quelland said pulling off the three-run comeback gave him confidence that the team is beginning to see the improved batting from the lower end of the lineup. “Our eight and nine guys aren’t outs by any means,” Quelland said. “Most teams would be seven-eight-nine going, ‘Oh no’, and we’re like, ‘Yes!’ “It was good energy, they showed patience, they grew by leaps and bounds.” Prior to the dramatic finish, the Twins struggled with four errors on the day and also had trouble getting the timely hits. Post 20 left the bases loaded twice, first in the second inning and later in the sixth, both threats being ended on ground-outs. The Twins also missed a chance to score in the bottom of the fourth when a single by Seth Adkins encouraged Quelland to send baserunner Mose Hayes around third to score, but the throw from left field
beat Hayes home for the out to end the inning. Service led 5-1 in the third inning after scoring four in the top of the frame, three on errors made by the Twins. Post 20 scored twice in the bottom of the third to cut the gap to 5-3. The day also featured an official infield assist for Michael, who dove in the first inning to catch a low line drive but ended up bouncing the ball off his nose. The deflection by Michael ended up turning into an out at first, but Michael missed his first at-bat due to a bloody nose. “I get the assist for it, right?” Michael said. “It was a square hit, and went straight to Mose.” Kupferschmid picked up the win on the mound by tossing the final two innings for the Twins, giving up one run on one hit and two walks, while whiffing one. Harold Ochea started and lasted five innings, giving up six runs (only two earned) on four hits and two walks with two strikeouts. While Ussing had two
hits on the day, the Twins also got base knocks from Michael, Hayes, Adkins, Jacob Boze, Belger and Harrison Metz. Post 20 had trouble with Service catcher Josh Smith, who batted in three runs in a 2-for-3 day. Sam Maudsley started for Service and went four innings with three runs (two earned), giving up three runs — two earned — on four hits and five walks with three strikeouts. In Game 2, the Twins pitching staff shut down the Cougars with a combined two-hit shutout by Chris Jaime and Jacob Boze. Jaime gave up one hit in four innings with two walks, while Boze pitched one clean inning of relief with one hit and one strikeout. The Twins took an early 3-0 lead in the first inning and scored runs in every inning before forcing the game to end after five on the run rule. Hayes went 2 for 3 with two runs to lead Post 20, while Smith had two RBIs.
Marathon Top 10 — 1. Marine Dusser, Anchorage, 3:05:49; 2. Megan Youngren, Soldotna, 3:06:11; 3. Ashley Perry, Fairbanks, 3:17:47; 4. Elizabeth Kiblinger, St. Louis MO, 3:17:47; 5. Lauren Kuhns, Homer, 3:22:59; 6. Molly Templin, Anchorage, 3:25:00; 7. Shannon Perrins, Anchorage, 3:26:00; 8. Colby Woeltz, Boston MA, 3:27:31; 9. Aubra Lewellen, Portland OR, 3:27:43; 10. Lara Zoeller, Eagle River, 3:29:41. Peninsula finishers — 27. Kristen Buckwalter, Homer, 3:50:48; 69. Elizabeth Roedl, Homer, 4:15:10; 275. Kristen Downum, Kenai, 7:16:36. Half Marathon Top 10 — 1. Caroline Kurgat, Anchorage, 1:13:51; 2. Elena Danielson, St. Joseph MN, 1:26:55; 3. Nancy Jeptoo, Anchorage, 1:29:02; 4. Emily Evans, Anchorage, 1:30:51; 5. Laura McDonald, Los Angeles CA, 1:31:44; 6. Nicole Zanardi, San Francisco CA, 1:35:06; 7.
Lindy Henrick, Anchorage, 1:35:35; 8. Greta Koppy, Ames IA, 1:36:53; 9. Jacalyn Stark, Anchorage, 1:37:02; 10. Lucy Swygman, 1:38:53. Peninsula finishers — 45. Kat Sorensen, Seward, 1:52:48; 82. Jodi Hanson, Soldotna, 2:00:24; 197. Cynthia McMillin, Sterling, 2:15:40; 231. Sidney Epperheimer, Kenai, 2:18:04; 232. June Stuckey, Soldotna, 2:18:05; 235. Bailey Epperheimer, Kenai, 2:18:17; 313. Cecilia Borries-Strigle, Kenai, 2:26:12; 340. Shelli Furlong, Soldotna, 2:29:10; 364. Lisa Kosto, Soldotna, 2:31:59; 383. Jesse Hughes, Soldotna, 2:33:52; 443. KatieMae Tallent, Kenai, 2:43:59; 446. Copper Fuller, Kenai, 2:44:29; 518. Jessica Scogin, Soldotna, 2:56:40; 618. Peggy Leonard, Ninilchik, 3:26:04; 688. Kathryn Epperheimer, Kenai, 3:56:46. 5K Top 10 — 1. Hallidie Phillips, Anchorage, 18:06; 2. Jenna Fasulo, Morris-
ville PA, 19:01; 3. Clarissa Smith, Anchorage, 20:18; 4. Arielle Breuninger, Lancaster PA, 20:29; 5. Michelle Witt, Anchorage, 20:40; 6. Ashlee Weller, Anchorage, 20:43; 7. Denali Kemppel, Anchorage, 21:49; 8. Laura Martin, Charleston WV, 22:18; 9. Milana Breuninger, Lancaster PA, 22:26; 10. Katarina Lukic, Eagle River, 22:52. Peninsula finishers — 27. Susan Craig, Soldotna, 26:07; 57. Sheilah-Margaret Pothast, Soldotna, 29:16; 147. Heather Swanson, Soldotna, 37:05; 152. Yoshie Yamaoka, Soldotna, 37:54; 161. Kerri Nelson, Soldotna, 38:36; 215. Mary Hasson, Hom, 49:25. Buddy Half Relay 3-person Top 5 — 1. Blister Sisters, Anchorage, 1:54:28; 2. The Stragglers, Eagle River, 2:17:41; 3. Quiner Family, Kenai, 2:18:04; 4. Schleicher Gals, Freeport MN, 2:22:57; 5. Poland Go!, Anchorage, 2:31:33.
Chugiak loaded the bases with one out in the bottom of the ninth, and got one run on an RBI groundout by J. Paul Fullerton, but Keith was able to end it on a groundout by Daniel Freeman. The Miners hit the field Friday night riding a sixgame winning streak. But Mat-Su head coach Tyler LeBrun said there was still work to be done at the plate. And the Miners answered that call. “They’re grinding, working on their game,” LeBrun
said after Mat-Su notched its seventh straight victory. “We were not hitting the way we want as a team. Entering tonight we were hitting .209 with too many strikeouts.” Infielder Josh Bristyn enjoyed his best night in a MatSu uniform, finishing 3 for 4 with three RBIs and a run scored. The Gonzaga product entered the contest with three hits, two runs and an RBI during his first nine games with the Miners. “He’s been working on his swing. It was good to see him
kind of break out,” LeBrun said. Damon Keith drove in four of the Oilers’ five runs in the loss. Keith had a tworun triple in the sixth. Connor McCord was 3 for 4 at the plate, with a run. John Mackay recorded two hits and two runs. Infielder Rickey Martinez also had his first multihit game with the Miners. Martinez was one of three Miners with two hits. Catcher Kody Ruff added two hits, two runs and an RBI. Drew William-
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — The traditional team-by-team roll call to open the second day of the NHL draft hadn’t yet begun when the league’s looming salary-cap crunch began overshadowing the final six rounds Saturday. Norris Trophy-winning defenseman P.K. Subban is off to New Jersey. Forward Patrick Marleau, a 21-year veteran, is headed to Carolina. And center J.T. Miller, one year into a five-year $26.25 million contract, was traded to Vancouver. The common denominator spurring each of the trades were teams seeking to shed salaries to address more pressing roster needs before the NHL’s free agency period opens July 1. And the urgency to make the trades became more real when the league and NHL Players’ Association announced next year’s salary cap was set at $81.5 million — $1.5 million lower than initially projected. “We had to make a business decision,” Nashville Predators general manager David Poile said about trading Subban. And then there was Toronto Maple Leafs GM Kyle Dubas, who only two days ago suggested there was “a strong chance” Marleau would be back for the final year of his contract. “I think everyone here knows how we feel about Patrick Marleau and what he has done for our organization,” Dubas said, noting he kept Marleau informed of trade talks. “We didn’t want to do one of those trades where it was moving a salary or a cap hit that was going to take anybody off our roster.” For Toronto, losing the 39-year-old Marleau — and his $6.2 million salary — provides more flexibility to re-sign 22-year-old Mitchell Marner, a restricted free agent after completing his threeyear entry-level contract. Miller became expendable in Tampa Bay, where the Lightning are focused on resigning center Brayden Point, also a restricted free agent. As a result, Vancouver added a versatile center while giving up journeyman minor-league goalie Marek Mazanec and two draft picks in the deal, including a conditional 2020 first-round selection The trades started before Ottawa opened the second round by selecting American center Shane Pinto at No. 32 overall, and pushing the conclusion of the draft into the background.
The Devils came away the big winners. A day after taking American center Jack Hughes at No. 1 overall, New Jersey acquired Subban in a trade with Nashville. The Predators picked up defensemen Steven Santini and Jeremy Davies, the 34th pick in this year’s draft and a second-rounder next year. “We have cap space, cap space, cap space, and we said if there was a time to book it now, we did,” Devils GM Ray Shero said of adding Subban and his $9 million salary cap hit over each of the next three seasons. New Jersey could afford it after entering the offseason with about $34 million salary cap space available. “P.K. is excited,” Shero said. “It’s great for our market.” Subban released a video on social media in which he thanked the Predators and their fans, and then looked forward to joining the Devils. “I just want to tell you guys, are you guys ready for The Subbanator? Because I’m ready to go,” he said. Marleau, meanwhile, has a decision to make as to whether he’ll play for Carolina or have the team offer him a buyout. Hurricanes GM Don Waddell said he’s open to either option. The key for Carolina in the deal was acquiring a conditional first-round pick in next year’s draft. Columbus Blue Jackets GM Jarmo Kekäläinen shook his head in summing up the trade from Toronto’s perspective. “So $3.8 million for a first-round pick? No thank you,” he said, noting that would’ve been the price for Toronto to buy out Marleau’s contract. What was initially considered a deep pool of unrestricted free agents is beginning to dwindle with defenseman Erik Karlsson re-signing with San Jose, forward Skinner re-signing with Buffalo, and Philadelphia acquiring and signing center Kevin Hayes. The first round of the draft was unusually quiet, featuring just one trade. Florida sent a second-round pick to Philadelphia to move up three spots to No. 11. And yet, Philadelphia’s Chuck Fletcher was among several general managers predicting things would pick up. “I think we made the only trade, didn’t we? Yeah, that’s really unusual,” Fletcher said. “But I think the fact the draft’s so early, and there’s still 10 days until the start of free agency ... my expectation is there’ll still be some activity before July 1.”
Peninsula Oilers’ Connor McCord takes the throw at first as Mat-Su’s Justin Kirby slides back during an 11-5 loss to the Miners on Friday in Palmer. (Photo by Jeremiah Bartz/Frontiersman)
son and Justin Kirby also scored two runs each. Eight of Mat-Su’s nine starters scored at least a run, and eight of nine also drove in at least a run. “We’ve been emphasizing putting the ball in play, giving yourself a chance,” LeBrun said. The Miners also cashed in 10 walks thrown by the Oilers pitching staff. “We want to keep putting pressure on pitchers, and we took advantage of a lot of walks,” LeBrun said.
Mat-Su did all of its damage in two innings. The Miners batted around in the first, posting an early 5-0 lead. Mat-Su added six runs in the fourth. Brandon Birdsell earned the win on the mound for Mat-Su, allowing six hits and two earned runs over five innings. The Texas A&M righthander also fanned six. The Miners improved to 10-5, an Alaska Baseball League best, and completed the four-game sweep of the Oilers with the win.
C
Home&Health
Sunday, June 23, 2019
G ardening
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RIGHT AT HOME: Outdoor decor that’s ‘out there’ and edgy
L ee R eich
Garden Conservancy lets you peek at some private gardens What are your plans for the weekend? Consider garden hopping. To some special private gardens. An organization called The Garden Conservancy makes it easy to find and visit them. Each year, the Garden Conservancy puts out a booklet called the Open Days Directory, with descriptions of about 300 private gardens that are opened to the public on specified dates. (Full disclosure: My garden is one of those this year.) In each directory, you can look gardens up by state or location. If you’re looking for gardens to visit on, say, June 22, you could find all of them, near and far, that can be visited that day. This year, that day’s offerings include two gardens in New Jersey, eight in New York, two in Pennsylvania and six in Washington state.
THE BEGINNINGS OF THE CONSERVANCY The Garden Conservancy began with the vision of Frank Cabot and the garden of Ruth Bancroft. In 1988, Bancroft was getting on in years and unable to lavish the care needed to maintain her extraordinary and artfully designed Walnut Creek, California, garden of cacti, succulents and native plants. After visiting her garden, Cabot conceived of the Garden Conservancy as an organization to “preserve exceptional American gardens for the public’s education and enjoyment.” He was no garden slouch himself: His gardens — Les Quatre Vents in La Malbaie, Quebec, and Stonecrop in Cold Spring, New York — are famous. The latter is open to the public on days spelled out in the Open Days Directory. The Garden Conservancy now provides the legal, financial, and horticultural expertise to transition certain gardens from private to non-profit ownership. Gardens on the island of Alcatraz and at Steepletop, the poet Edna St. Vincent Millay’s home in Austerlitz, New York, are among ones that have been saved from weeds, pests and the vagaries of weather that threaten neglected gardens.
HOW YOUR VISITS HELP Money from memberships, directory sales and garden visits help support the Garden Conservancy’s efforts. The directory costs $25 and each garden visit $10, but a coupon in each directory provides free admission to one garden. (Children under 12 are free, and coupons from previous years can still be used for garden entry this year.) Directories and further information are available from the Garden Conservancy (888-842-2442, www. gardenconservancy.org ). The roster of gardens in the directory changes from year to year. And the gardens vary, some formal, others cottagey, some quirky, some intimate and others sprawling. Perhaps your own garden is a candidate for Open Days, or Open Day visits will inspire you to loftier heights in your own back, front and side yards. Happy hopping.
This undated photo shows the entrance to a garden in New Paltz, N.Y. (Lee Reich via AP)
This photo shows British designer David Harber’s Torus sculpture. (Clive Nichols/David Harber via AP) By Kim Cook The Associated Press
The outdoor furnishings market has been dominated for years by wicker-look resin furniture and beachy prints. Spindly folding lawn chairs have given way to deep, comfy seating, and fabric choices have grown from sweaty, rough plastics to weatherproof linen, soft cotton, even velvet. The living room has most certainly moved outdoors. But for those whose design sensibility skews toward the avant garde, there haven’t been a lot of options. Until now. More and more designers and makers are producing cool, imaginative pieces for backyard and balcony. If you’re into artsy decor, there’s no reason why your outdoor space can’t reflect that as well. British artist David Harber has developed a global following for his innovative outdoor sculptures, which play with light and landscape. In his Oxfordshire studio, Harber and his team create sculptures, water features and sundials out of metal. Sunlight filters through a piece called Mantle, made of bronze petals fused together and gilded on the inside the light transforms the middle into molten gold. One of his most popular pieces, Torus, is a circular expanse of super-polished steel that reflects the landscape or water in front of it. It’s there in front of you, yet appears transparent. Armillary spheres were the first thing Harber learned to make, and he says the marriage of art and science drew him to the form.
“I’ve made (them) for tiny cottage gardens, and for hotels they have a universal appeal,” he says. Available in brass, steel and bronze, the spheres can be custom engraved. Some people have commissioned phrases with personal meaning others have had their spheres etched with family names, house names, latitude and longitude, or distances to significant destinations. In his Brooklyn, New York, studio Opiary, sculptor Robert Remer takes a more freeform approach to his artful outdoor pieces. His sculptures, planters and seating, made of steel armatures and resin-fortified cement, look otherworldly. The Archaic planter collection of abstract, organic shapes resembles pieces of a dinosaur skeleton or water-eroded rock. Little niches throughout the pieces can be planted with moss, alpines and succulents. The Drillium chair and chaise were inspired by aircraft construction and bones. Curvy, sensuous lines with circular cutouts and little crevices for plants contrast with the hefty presence of the concrete material. You could see these pieces on an interplanetary patio. The Museum of Modern Art’s store is carrying Moroso’s M’Afrique collection of colorful outdoor furniture, handmade in Senegal with woven materials and painted steel. M’Afrique showcases the region’s innovative weaving craft Moroso teamed with designers like Tord Boontje to create the collection. Among the pieces: the Banjooli table, with bright
This photo shows one of British designer David Harber’s armillary spheres. (Clive Nichols/David Harber via AP)
yellow polyethylene cords woven to evoke overlapping feathers and inspired by the courtship dance of the ostrich. The Shadowy armchair has a Seussian exaggerated profile with high back, curvy canopy, and eye-popping colorways like black and white or orange and yellow. Thomas Heatherwick’s Spun chair, made by Magi for Herman Miller , looks like a giant child’s spin top. Placed upright, it’s sculpture. Tipped on its side, it’s a playful, comfortable seat. Spun comes in black, white or red.
Loll Designs’ Rapson chair at Perigold is a futuristic plastic version of a traditional wing chair it comes in a bunch of colours including leaf green, apple red and sunset orange. Finally, for fans of a certain HBO series, Amedeo Designs’ Throne chair, available at Houzz.com , might be just the thing. Intricately carved and substantially sized, the piece is actually made of lightweight resin — the perfect place from which to have a commanding view of whatever the backyard games might be.
UC Davis doctors can peek into your whole body with one scan By Cathie Anderson The Sacramento Bee (TNS)
Starting this summer, physicians at UC Davis Health will be able to use a powerful new scanner that can render detailed, 3-D images of the inner workings of the entire human body in as little as one minute, the creators of the device announced recently. UCD researchers Ramsey Badawi and Simon Cherry said the sophisticated EXPLORER total body scanner cost roughly $18 million to design and construct, almost 10 times the assessed value of the building that houses it near the Selland Family’s Obo’ cafe. It is the only such medical imaging scanner in the country. The two men advocated for EXPLORER for 15 years because they wanted doctors to be able
to look at the human body as a holistic system when patients with cancer, heart disease, diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, metabolic syndrome, arthritis and even infection. The EXPLORER uses a technology already in existence, positron emission tomography, but until the advent of the new device, PET scanners could take pictures of just six to nine inches of the human body at one time. “If you take that scanner and just make it long enough to cover the whole patient, you are going to get … better image quality,” Badawi said. “Or you might be able to scan much faster. Or, you could reduce the amount of radiation that the subject needs to get in order to get a good PET scan … and you get total body coverage.” UC Davis partnered with United Imaging to
build the EXPLORER, and Cherry published video of the first scans of a body on YouTube in November 2018. It now has almost 400,000 views. To get these images, clinical lab workers inject patients with radioactive material that EXPLORER’s ring of detectors track as it disperses throughout the body. In the case of cancer patients, for instance, they give patients a radioactive sugar. “In a PET scan, what we’re doing is using these radio tracers, this radioactive sugar, to track what real sugar is doing in the body, so an example would be looking at the amount of sugar used by the liver. Another example might be looking at sugar used by the brain or by the heart or by cancer,” Badawi said. “It turns out that most cancers are really hungry for sugar, and
they tend to suck it up more than regular tissues would.” While some companies have purported to do “whole body scans” for years, what they have really done is produce images of slices of the body. With EXPLORER, you can see sugar moving up the vein of a patient’s leg, go to the heart, then out to the lungs, back to the heart and into the arteries as a clock ticks off the seconds and minutes. “At 3 minutes, the kidneys will start to excrete it and it will go out into the bladder,” said Badawi, providing a medical version of “color commentary” while showing a video at the EXPLORER Molecular Imaging Center on Folsom Boulevard in Sacramento. “Boom! There we go. The bladder starts to fill, and the stuff that doesn’t get excreted, gets sucked up by the
brain and the liver and the heart.” The EXPLORER’s detectors extend roughly six to seven feet in length, circling an open space where the patient lies. The machine took nearly two weeks to install. The main body was actually fairly easy to get into the room, Cherry said, but it took quite a while to hook up the cables and computer equipment needed to process all the data coming from the machine. He and Badawi noted that EXPLORER has a role not only in diagnosis but also in treatment. “You might diagnose that someone has a primary tumor in the liver, for example,” Cherry said. “The question is: Has it spread? Has it spread to the lungs? Has it spread to the brain? You need to know that for treatment. If it’s just in one place, you’ll typically go in sur-
gically and take the tumor out, but if it’s spread, that’s not going to help.” The EXPLORER images can tell doctors where tumors have spread or whether a chosen medication is working to shrink tumors, Cherry said, but it also can help in researching new treatments for illnesses such as Parkinson’s disease where experts theorize that the disease may start in one part of the body and migrate to another part of the body. “There’s a lot of evidence that Parkinson’s disease actually starts in the gut and migrates up to the brain,” Cherry said. “Now we can study that because we can see the whole body. And then we also know the immune system is involved in many diseases. How good is the immune system at fighting disease? Your immune system is everywhere on your body.”
C2 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
’Yarn Bombers’ use craft to make a statement By Natalie Pompilio The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Jessie Hemmons did her first public “yarn bombing” in 2009, crocheting a 12-inch cozy around a bike rack in downtown Philadelphia. It was small but colorful, tangible. She knows that most who walked past didn’t notice it. Her more recent works in the city have been harder to miss: the words “TIME’S UP” in white letters on a 4-by-3-foot black background affixed to a wall a pink bikini atop the business suit of a larger-than-life statue of a late politician known for brutish behaviour a quote from “Game of Thrones”’ Daenerys Targaryen, “The next time you raise a hand to me will be the last time you have hands,” hung on a wall in pink letters on a green, 6-by-6-foot background. “It started as something I felt I could do to insert a certain femaleness or womanliness into street art. I didn’t have to make street art as men were doing it to fit in,” said Hemmons, 32, of Philadelphia, whose Instagram tag is ishknits. “Now that the space and platform are there, I can start to be more overt and bring attention to certain issues like women’s equality and civil rights.” Modern yarn bombing — also known as yarn storming, guerrilla knitting, yarn graffiti or graffiti knitting — has come a long way since 2005, when Texas artist Magda Sayeg used some extra yarn to knit a doorknob cover for her women’s
boutique, then made a cozy for a nearby stopsign pole, and then another. Sayeg, the “mother of yarn bombing,” unknowingly ignited a craft craze. While some fiber artists choose to keep their statements simple and stick to snugly dressing items ranging from bikes to buses with interlocking loops of yarn, others use their knitting and crochet needles to create works designed to agitate, excite or inspire. And they’re not the first to do so. “There’s a long history of women using handicrafts, the tools available to them, for subversive aims,” said Hinda Mandell, editor of the upcoming book “Crafting Dissent: Handicraft as Protest from the American Revolution to the Pussyhats” (Rowman & Littlefield). During the American Revolution, Mandell said, women showed their patriotism by shunning fine British textiles and wearing clothing made from coarser, homespun cloth. During both World Wars, “Knit Your Bit” was a national campaign to encourage women to make socks and sweaters for soldiers fighting overseas. In 2017, in Women’s Marches across the country, pink hats with cat ears signified female empowerment. Mandell, who is on Twitter as ↕crochetactivism, cites one yarn artist who knits tiny gray hangers that she puts in public places and sends to politicians taking up abortion rights issues. “The soft yarn with the fatalistic image of the hanger is really arresting,” she said.
The Tempestry Project, an initiative founded in Washington in 2016, encourages knitters and crocheters to make banners in blocks of different colours, from light blues to bright reds, to represent changing temperatures. In many instances, yarn bombing could be considered vandalism, even if the works can be removed with scissors and without damage. Hemmons says that most people who talk to her mid-installation are positive, but twice people have reported her to the police. She evaded capture both times, and successfully installed her work in one case: a fanny pack on the city’s famous “Rocky” statue. In Vermont in 2014, a woman was arrested and others cited for trespassing when they staged a “knit-in” protest at a gas company that proposed a controversial pipeline. Yarn crafts appear to be gaining in popularity along with the do-it-yourself movement in general. The Craft Yarn Council, a Texas-based trade association, estimates that 38 million Americans are active crocheters or knitters. The group’s executive director, Jenny Bessonette, says the number has grown in part because of the development of new yarns, including faux fur, “rumple” and multi-colored “cake” yarns. “People used to think, ‘That’s my grandma’s craft,’ but our research and social media following tells us that more and more younger people are picking up knitting and crocheting,” she says. Mandell, an associate professor at Rochester
This 2017 photo provided by Hinda Mandell shows crochet emoji faces outside of Susan B. Anthony’s historic home in Rochester, N.Y. (Hinda Mandell via AP)
Institute of Technology’s School of Communication, said she uses crocheted pieces to send messages. After a Jewish cemetery in Rochester was desecrated in 2017, she created six-pointed stars with hearts in the middle and placed them on pine trees near the broken tombstones. After 11 people were killed at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh in 2018, Mandell helped organize crafters who made and in-
stalled 2,500 of the heartwithin-a-star symbols there. “When there is an event in the news that is upsetting to me, I respond with yarn,” she said. Many knitters and crocheters see their crafts as stress relievers. Philadelphia crochet artist Nicole Nikolich, 27, has used her art to make political statements but much of her work is more light-hearted. She makes and installs giant flowers or quotes
like “You’re so gorgeous,” a line from a Taylor Swift song. “For me, it’s mostly about just creating and beautifying, making people stop and smile,” said Nikolich, known on Instagram as lace—in— the—moon. “What’s really great is when someone reaches out and says, ‘You really made my day,’ or ‘I saw your new piece on Instagram and my run this week will be based on finding it.”’
Hall of Famer Brian Dawkins tackling mental wellness head on
In this 2018 file photo, Former NFL player Brian Dawkins delivers his speech at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. (AP Photo/Ron Schwane, File) By ROB MAADDI AP Pro Football Writer
PHILADELPHIA — Brian Dawkins is tackling mental health issues the same aggressive way he took on anyone who dared cross the middle during his Hall of Fame career as a safety for the Philadelphia Eagles and Denver Broncos. Since revealing he suffered from depression and had suicidal thoughts early in his playing career, Dawkins has been on a mission to spread awareness. He recently spoke at the Stay in the Game Forum to identify ways
sports can be leveraged to have a positive impact on mental wellness. The event was organized by groups including Beyond Sport and the major professional sports leagues, including MLB, NFL, NBA and the NHL. “We’re trying to bring awareness to something that affects 44 million people,” Dawkins told The Associated Press. “One in five adults have a mental health condition or are going through some things. I like to talk about my cerebral wellness instead of mental health. I believe we need to begin to change the narrative when we
begin to speak about our cerebral wellness. I think there’s so much negativity surrounding mental health that it’s gonna be hard to take that stigma completely off, so I believe that individuals in every walk of life, you need to take control of it, take ownership of it, you change the way that you feel comfortable for yourself to talk about yourself.” The topic hits home for Dawkins, who shortly before his Hall of Fame induction ceremony last year publicly shared the personal issues he faced. A ferocious player nicknamed “Weapon X” and revered in Philadelphia for his physical style of play and his emotional connection with fans, Dawkins talked openly about the pressure he felt as a rookie secondround pick playing for a playoff contender in 1996. That, combined with being a newlywed and a new parent, was too much for him at times. It led Dawkins to drink alcohol excessively and spiraled into a depression that made him feel like ending his life was the only way out. “I know what it feels
like, my version of depression,” Dawkins said. “The things I went through, the dark place that I went through, the times that I didn’t want to come out of my house. I did not want to leave the home. I put on a mask every day to go to work and I was pretending to be something that I was not, not in a good way, not in a positive reinforcement way of positive thinking. I was pretending to be something and covering a whole lot of pain in my life. “So to be able to now get on out on a national scale… we’re having these conversations on how sports can be a positive conduit to help others begin to talk about their feelings, talk about the things that are going on in their lives so they can be better versions of themselves so they won’t find themselves in those dark pits.” In May, the NFL mandated that all 32 teams must retain by the start of training camp a behavioral health team clinician focused on supporting players’ emotional and mental health and well-being. Dawkins didn’t have that option 23 years ago. His
wife, Connie, and Eagles defensive coordinator Emmitt Thomas persuaded Dawkins to seek help. He began to see a psychiatrist and was prescribed medication for depression. But it was a renewed commitment to his faith that helped him control his issues. “That is my No. 1 pillar,” Dawkins said. “That’s just the pinnacle of me, my faith, my belief in the Lord. So everything else trickles down from that concrete rock. Everything else may move. My emotions may go up and down. People around me disappoint me. But that’s something that will never disappoint me.” Dawkins says he begins each day with prayer, scripture reading and meditation. It gives him the mindset that he will “dominate” that day. “I recognize that when I lead with my spirit, when I allow my spiritual man to be the leader of me, my actions will then follow,” he said. “I’ll be a more loving individual. I’ll be a kinder individual. I’ll be a more patient individual. I’ll see opportunities that others see as bad things,
I will see them as things that can actually increase me and bless me down the road. Count it all joy when you go through tests of all kinds. So when I began to view things from that perspective, even when I fall, that’s an opportunity for me to get stronger every time so there’s no area in my life that I can’t get stronger. When I’m winning, I’m getting stronger. And even when I’m losing, I’m getting stronger because I can find something in there that can strengthen me for the next time. That’s why my faith is concrete. It’s the absolute strongest part of this walk.” As a cerebral wellness advocate, Dawkins is looking forward to effecting change through the Brian Dawkins Impact Foundation, which is in the planning phases of its first community initiative in his hometown of Jacksonville, Florida. “It’s designed to help disadvantaged young people, families and communities while promoting spiritual mental and physical wellness,” Dawkins said.
On Gardening: Viking begonias shaking up the garden world By Norman Winter Tribune News Service (TNS)
Life seemed as it should for all of us gardeners and horticultural gurus. We loved Big Begonias, Whopper Begonias and Tophat that had just introduced white. Shoot we still had Dragon Wing at the throne when it came to hanging baskets. Then something happened in the space-time continuum of begonias and gardeners. Our happiness has been shaken thanks to Viking begonias. You see we can’t be happy now until we get our hands on each and every color in this new series of begonias. These have been the jaw-droppers at all of the trials this summer. Eight standard vari-
eties and 4 that are called XL. You may have heard of the one called Viking Red on Chocolate XL as it is a 2019 AAS Winner. My gut tells me, however, that this one largely slipped under the radar this year, and to be honest, I would like to know why. At trials which typically seem like an ocean of color, begonias typically have an uphill battle to steal the limelight from plants like lantanas, zinnias, and salvias, but not the case this year. The Viking series of begonias is coming from Sakata Seed that also brought us SunPatiens and in a similar fashion, these begonias too are packed with vigor and performance. The eight regular
selections are suggested to reach a height of 20-24 inches with a spread of 24 to 28 inches. The XL group takes on a more dwarf azalea frame reaching 28-34 inches tall with a width of 32 to 36 inches or should we say, THREE FEET. The rows of these begonias were uniform and stunning and seemed to be the gathering place of greenhouse producers, garden center owners, and professional designers. The consensus was I want it and I want it NOW. To be honest it will be next year before most of us get our hands on it. The wrinkle in that may come from the 2019 AAS Winner Red on Chocolate XL. Seeds are out there although 99.5% of us have never grown a
begonia from seed. Visit your garden center often this season and keep your eyes open, you never know. You’ll find three leaf colors in the series, bright green, bronze, and chocolate. The foliage is so luscious you want to touch it. While I have touted the size of the plants know also that the flowers are enormous and colorful with rose, pink, scarlet and coral flame. Judges were impressed with how the deep bronze of this year’s AAS Winer remained sharp and intense no matter what area of the country it was grown. Hello Sakata, we want it now! Whether you choose to grow in sun or partialsun, the soil should be fertile, organic-rich and
well drained. Work in 3 to 4 inches of organic matter, turning the soil to a depth of about 8 inches. While tilling, add two pounds of a slow-release, 12-6-6 fertilizer with minor nutrients per 100 square feet of bed space. These plants are everblooming and have the ability to form an almost dwarf shrub-like appearance. They lend themselves to create stunning vistas when mass planted. Believe me when I say, however, they can stand alone in large containers dazzling on the porch patio or deck. The Garden Guy looks forward to the day where they are combined with bananas, gingers and elephant ears for a tropical paradise. Sakata, I want them NOW!
C2 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
’Yarn Bombers’ use craft to make a statement By Natalie Pompilio The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Jessie Hemmons did her first public “yarn bombing” in 2009, crocheting a 12-inch cozy around a bike rack in downtown Philadelphia. It was small but colorful, tangible. She knows that most who walked past didn’t notice it. Her more recent works in the city have been harder to miss: the words “TIME’S UP” in white letters on a 4-by-3-foot black background affixed to a wall a pink bikini atop the business suit of a larger-than-life statue of a late politician known for brutish behaviour a quote from “Game of Thrones”’ Daenerys Targaryen, “The next time you raise a hand to me will be the last time you have hands,” hung on a wall in pink letters on a green, 6-by-6-foot background. “It started as something I felt I could do to insert a certain femaleness or womanliness into street art. I didn’t have to make street art as men were doing it to fit in,” said Hemmons, 32, of Philadelphia, whose Instagram tag is ishknits. “Now that the space and platform are there, I can start to be more overt and bring attention to certain issues like women’s equality and civil rights.” Modern yarn bombing — also known as yarn storming, guerrilla knitting, yarn graffiti or graffiti knitting — has come a long way since 2005, when Texas artist Magda Sayeg used some extra yarn to knit a doorknob cover for her women’s
boutique, then made a cozy for a nearby stopsign pole, and then another. Sayeg, the “mother of yarn bombing,” unknowingly ignited a craft craze. While some fiber artists choose to keep their statements simple and stick to snugly dressing items ranging from bikes to buses with interlocking loops of yarn, others use their knitting and crochet needles to create works designed to agitate, excite or inspire. And they’re not the first to do so. “There’s a long history of women using handicrafts, the tools available to them, for subversive aims,” said Hinda Mandell, editor of the upcoming book “Crafting Dissent: Handicraft as Protest from the American Revolution to the Pussyhats” (Rowman & Littlefield). During the American Revolution, Mandell said, women showed their patriotism by shunning fine British textiles and wearing clothing made from coarser, homespun cloth. During both World Wars, “Knit Your Bit” was a national campaign to encourage women to make socks and sweaters for soldiers fighting overseas. In 2017, in Women’s Marches across the country, pink hats with cat ears signified female empowerment. Mandell, who is on Twitter as ↕crochetactivism, cites one yarn artist who knits tiny gray hangers that she puts in public places and sends to politicians taking up abortion rights issues. “The soft yarn with the fatalistic image of the hanger is really arresting,” she said.
The Tempestry Project, an initiative founded in Washington in 2016, encourages knitters and crocheters to make banners in blocks of different colours, from light blues to bright reds, to represent changing temperatures. In many instances, yarn bombing could be considered vandalism, even if the works can be removed with scissors and without damage. Hemmons says that most people who talk to her mid-installation are positive, but twice people have reported her to the police. She evaded capture both times, and successfully installed her work in one case: a fanny pack on the city’s famous “Rocky” statue. In Vermont in 2014, a woman was arrested and others cited for trespassing when they staged a “knit-in” protest at a gas company that proposed a controversial pipeline. Yarn crafts appear to be gaining in popularity along with the do-it-yourself movement in general. The Craft Yarn Council, a Texas-based trade association, estimates that 38 million Americans are active crocheters or knitters. The group’s executive director, Jenny Bessonette, says the number has grown in part because of the development of new yarns, including faux fur, “rumple” and multi-colored “cake” yarns. “People used to think, ‘That’s my grandma’s craft,’ but our research and social media following tells us that more and more younger people are picking up knitting and crocheting,” she says. Mandell, an associate professor at Rochester
This 2017 photo provided by Hinda Mandell shows crochet emoji faces outside of Susan B. Anthony’s historic home in Rochester, N.Y. (Hinda Mandell via AP)
Institute of Technology’s School of Communication, said she uses crocheted pieces to send messages. After a Jewish cemetery in Rochester was desecrated in 2017, she created six-pointed stars with hearts in the middle and placed them on pine trees near the broken tombstones. After 11 people were killed at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh in 2018, Mandell helped organize crafters who made and in-
stalled 2,500 of the heartwithin-a-star symbols there. “When there is an event in the news that is upsetting to me, I respond with yarn,” she said. Many knitters and crocheters see their crafts as stress relievers. Philadelphia crochet artist Nicole Nikolich, 27, has used her art to make political statements but much of her work is more light-hearted. She makes and installs giant flowers or quotes
like “You’re so gorgeous,” a line from a Taylor Swift song. “For me, it’s mostly about just creating and beautifying, making people stop and smile,” said Nikolich, known on Instagram as lace—in— the—moon. “What’s really great is when someone reaches out and says, ‘You really made my day,’ or ‘I saw your new piece on Instagram and my run this week will be based on finding it.”’
Hall of Famer Brian Dawkins tackling mental wellness head on
In this 2018 file photo, Former NFL player Brian Dawkins delivers his speech at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. (AP Photo/Ron Schwane, File) By ROB MAADDI AP Pro Football Writer
PHILADELPHIA — Brian Dawkins is tackling mental health issues the same aggressive way he took on anyone who dared cross the middle during his Hall of Fame career as a safety for the Philadelphia Eagles and Denver Broncos. Since revealing he suffered from depression and had suicidal thoughts early in his playing career, Dawkins has been on a mission to spread awareness. He recently spoke at the Stay in the Game Forum to identify ways
sports can be leveraged to have a positive impact on mental wellness. The event was organized by groups including Beyond Sport and the major professional sports leagues, including MLB, NFL, NBA and the NHL. “We’re trying to bring awareness to something that affects 44 million people,” Dawkins told The Associated Press. “One in five adults have a mental health condition or are going through some things. I like to talk about my cerebral wellness instead of mental health. I believe we need to begin to change the narrative when we
begin to speak about our cerebral wellness. I think there’s so much negativity surrounding mental health that it’s gonna be hard to take that stigma completely off, so I believe that individuals in every walk of life, you need to take control of it, take ownership of it, you change the way that you feel comfortable for yourself to talk about yourself.” The topic hits home for Dawkins, who shortly before his Hall of Fame induction ceremony last year publicly shared the personal issues he faced. A ferocious player nicknamed “Weapon X” and revered in Philadelphia for his physical style of play and his emotional connection with fans, Dawkins talked openly about the pressure he felt as a rookie secondround pick playing for a playoff contender in 1996. That, combined with being a newlywed and a new parent, was too much for him at times. It led Dawkins to drink alcohol excessively and spiraled into a depression that made him feel like ending his life was the only way out. “I know what it feels
like, my version of depression,” Dawkins said. “The things I went through, the dark place that I went through, the times that I didn’t want to come out of my house. I did not want to leave the home. I put on a mask every day to go to work and I was pretending to be something that I was not, not in a good way, not in a positive reinforcement way of positive thinking. I was pretending to be something and covering a whole lot of pain in my life. “So to be able to now get on out on a national scale… we’re having these conversations on how sports can be a positive conduit to help others begin to talk about their feelings, talk about the things that are going on in their lives so they can be better versions of themselves so they won’t find themselves in those dark pits.” In May, the NFL mandated that all 32 teams must retain by the start of training camp a behavioral health team clinician focused on supporting players’ emotional and mental health and well-being. Dawkins didn’t have that option 23 years ago. His
wife, Connie, and Eagles defensive coordinator Emmitt Thomas persuaded Dawkins to seek help. He began to see a psychiatrist and was prescribed medication for depression. But it was a renewed commitment to his faith that helped him control his issues. “That is my No. 1 pillar,” Dawkins said. “That’s just the pinnacle of me, my faith, my belief in the Lord. So everything else trickles down from that concrete rock. Everything else may move. My emotions may go up and down. People around me disappoint me. But that’s something that will never disappoint me.” Dawkins says he begins each day with prayer, scripture reading and meditation. It gives him the mindset that he will “dominate” that day. “I recognize that when I lead with my spirit, when I allow my spiritual man to be the leader of me, my actions will then follow,” he said. “I’ll be a more loving individual. I’ll be a kinder individual. I’ll be a more patient individual. I’ll see opportunities that others see as bad things,
I will see them as things that can actually increase me and bless me down the road. Count it all joy when you go through tests of all kinds. So when I began to view things from that perspective, even when I fall, that’s an opportunity for me to get stronger every time so there’s no area in my life that I can’t get stronger. When I’m winning, I’m getting stronger. And even when I’m losing, I’m getting stronger because I can find something in there that can strengthen me for the next time. That’s why my faith is concrete. It’s the absolute strongest part of this walk.” As a cerebral wellness advocate, Dawkins is looking forward to effecting change through the Brian Dawkins Impact Foundation, which is in the planning phases of its first community initiative in his hometown of Jacksonville, Florida. “It’s designed to help disadvantaged young people, families and communities while promoting spiritual mental and physical wellness,” Dawkins said.
On Gardening: Viking begonias shaking up the garden world By Norman Winter Tribune News Service (TNS)
Life seemed as it should for all of us gardeners and horticultural gurus. We loved Big Begonias, Whopper Begonias and Tophat that had just introduced white. Shoot we still had Dragon Wing at the throne when it came to hanging baskets. Then something happened in the space-time continuum of begonias and gardeners. Our happiness has been shaken thanks to Viking begonias. You see we can’t be happy now until we get our hands on each and every color in this new series of begonias. These have been the jaw-droppers at all of the trials this summer. Eight standard vari-
eties and 4 that are called XL. You may have heard of the one called Viking Red on Chocolate XL as it is a 2019 AAS Winner. My gut tells me, however, that this one largely slipped under the radar this year, and to be honest, I would like to know why. At trials which typically seem like an ocean of color, begonias typically have an uphill battle to steal the limelight from plants like lantanas, zinnias, and salvias, but not the case this year. The Viking series of begonias is coming from Sakata Seed that also brought us SunPatiens and in a similar fashion, these begonias too are packed with vigor and performance. The eight regular
selections are suggested to reach a height of 20-24 inches with a spread of 24 to 28 inches. The XL group takes on a more dwarf azalea frame reaching 28-34 inches tall with a width of 32 to 36 inches or should we say, THREE FEET. The rows of these begonias were uniform and stunning and seemed to be the gathering place of greenhouse producers, garden center owners, and professional designers. The consensus was I want it and I want it NOW. To be honest it will be next year before most of us get our hands on it. The wrinkle in that may come from the 2019 AAS Winner Red on Chocolate XL. Seeds are out there although 99.5% of us have never grown a
begonia from seed. Visit your garden center often this season and keep your eyes open, you never know. You’ll find three leaf colors in the series, bright green, bronze, and chocolate. The foliage is so luscious you want to touch it. While I have touted the size of the plants know also that the flowers are enormous and colorful with rose, pink, scarlet and coral flame. Judges were impressed with how the deep bronze of this year’s AAS Winer remained sharp and intense no matter what area of the country it was grown. Hello Sakata, we want it now! Whether you choose to grow in sun or partialsun, the soil should be fertile, organic-rich and
well drained. Work in 3 to 4 inches of organic matter, turning the soil to a depth of about 8 inches. While tilling, add two pounds of a slow-release, 12-6-6 fertilizer with minor nutrients per 100 square feet of bed space. These plants are everblooming and have the ability to form an almost dwarf shrub-like appearance. They lend themselves to create stunning vistas when mass planted. Believe me when I say, however, they can stand alone in large containers dazzling on the porch patio or deck. The Garden Guy looks forward to the day where they are combined with bananas, gingers and elephant ears for a tropical paradise. Sakata, I want them NOW!
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | C3
Community It
is what
it is W ill M orrow
It’s not easy eating green There was a point last week where I realized that the only thing green I had eaten in five days was mint chip ice cream. Giving up vegetables for a week wasn’t intentional. My wife had to fly out of state unexpectedly, my son is off set-netting in Bristol Bay, and my daughter was doing her own thing for meals. That left me more or less on my own for meals, which isn’t a big deal. I’m a decent cook, and I know how to prepare healthy meals. In fact, my breakfasts alternate between fruit smoothies and cheese omelettes all week — though I admit, I could have added some spinach to an omelette or two and we wouldn’t be having this conversation. Really, the problems came with lunch and dinner. You see, being left to my own devices coincided with a busy week. It included two trips to Anchorage and back, helping with set-up and take-down for the Tri The Kenai, and a day spent out of the office for work. That meant lunches were grab-and-go, whether it was the peanut butter and jelly sandwiches I pack for some of those days, or a meal from one of the food vendors at the Kenai River Festival. Busy days also made for late dinners. Once I got home from work, or from helping out with the youth mountain bike program at Tsalteshi Trails, I still had to take the dogs for a good walk before I could take care of myself. I suppose I could have put off the dog walking, but after being cooped up for the day, my dogs were pretty insistent on getting some attention. There was another factor in my veggie-free diet. Normally, when everyone else is out of the house, it’s an opportunity for me to cook the things no one else likes. Usually it’s either something blackened, or hot dogs. But this time around, because my wife’s trip was unexpected, there was an obstacle to cooking what I wanted: leftovers. I’m not a fan of leftovers, and with just me in the house, they were going to last for more meals than I would’ve liked. But I’m even less of a fan of wasting food, and so I had a couple of slices of meatlover’s pizza to get through, some brats (as close to hot dogs as the rest of my family will let me get), and a couple of hamburger patties to grill up. I even cooked up some side dishes to go with them, but they all happened to be starches – couscous or rice. And it was a missed opportunity for me. I prefer my veggies to be oven-roasted, rather than steamed, whereas other family members prefer the expedience of throwing them in the microwave. Like I said, it wasn’t intentional. Once I realized my omission, I added some salad and fresh vegetables to my shopping list (in addition to more mint chip ice cream). And as it turns out, I was not the only one in the family needing some more green in my diet. One of our dogs has been, to put it delicately, excessively scooching, and the veterinarian suggested some extra veggies in her diet, too. So, if you happen to see me in the grocery store, feel free to check my cart – and to remind me that mint chip ice cream shouldn’t be the only thing green in my basket. I mean, the dog needs her veggies, right? Will Morrow lives in Kenai. You can email him at wkmorrow@ptialaska.net.
Meet the Clarion: Mail room leader Jason Antebi By KAT SORENSEN Peninsula Clarion
Jason Antebi just celebrated his fifth year with the Peninsula Clarion as the paper’s self-described mail room leader, inserter and helper extraordinaire. “I get the paperwork done each evening for the paper being run that night for the office and the drivers who deliver the routes,” Jason said. Jason puts together the Homer News, the comics pages for the Peninsula Clarion and makes sure that all the correct inserts, or sections, are ready for the paper the evening before it’s delivered. He also mails or bundles the papers each night and helps with the recycling. He can be found in the mail room Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday or Saturday. “I love representing Sound Publishing and the Peninsula Clarion. I love being a part of the press room crew. Frank Goldthwaite is a fantastic pressman and boss. Sean
Jason Antebi just celebrated his fifth year with the Peninsula Clarion as the mail room leader. (Photo courtesy Jason Antebi)
Jones is just amazing. And our
newest addition Jeremy has
been terrific,” Jason said. Jason, who was born and raised throughout California, moved to Kenai in 2005. One of his best memories of living in Alaska is the day he married his wife, Janice Gottschalk, in 2018. “It was a Friday the thirteenth which made even more memorable. We had family and friends and our wedding cake was themed towards Friday the thirteenth,” Jason said. Jason also has three daughters, two sons, a grandson, a dog and a cat. “Meeting me you wouldn’t think I was a grandpa yet. But proudly I am, and love being Grandpa Jason to my wonderful grandson Tobias. He brings me such joy,” he said. This summer, he plans to spend quality time with his family. He also enjoys spending time with his friends, going to the movies or catching a local sports games, like the Oilers or Kenai River Brown Bears. “So far it’s been a beautiful summer and I hope it continues,” he said.
Thank you from the Ninilchik Traditional Council Ninilchik Traditional Council (NTC) Youth Education Leadership Program (YELP) received a generous donation of personal protection equipment (PPE) from BlueCrest Energy, LLC. The donation included hard hats, high visibility vests, safety glasses and gloves. The PPE was donated to assist the youth group coordinators to help educate the kids in general safety as well as the equipment use and limitations. The YELP group enjoyed their learning session and were very excited to try out the new gear. The session was very interactive, and the kids did an amazing job answering the test questions after the PowerPoint presentation. NTC appreciates the collaboration with BlueCrest Energy, LLC to help our youth learn about safety. Thank you, BlueCrest Energy LLC!
Jack Kvasnikoff, Bluecrest Energy safety specialist, NTC Tribal Member and a former president of the council, is seen here with the group after completing the PPE review. (Photo courtesy Shelley Self)
Stitches of Love needs storage space
The Recycling Bin Only recycle screw-top plastic bottles and jugs Effective now, only recycle screw-top plastic bottles and jugs. Clear plastic clamshell containers and cups are no longer recyclable. Plastic bottles with screw tops and milk and household detergent jugs remain valuable in the recycling marketplace. Plastic clamshells and plastic cups are made from a lower-grade plastic, so they are currently not being made into other products. Recycling continues to have much potential to grow: new mills are being built in the United States and more manufacturers are making products out of materials that are more recyclable.
Stitches of Love is a quilt group that began in 2004. We provide quilts for many community services, including hospice, children services, Love INC, Heritage Place, the Kenaitze Tribe, school nurse stations, children pillow cases for the hospital and more. We give well over 100 quilts a year to these programs. We are a nonprofit organization. Any help we might receive could be a business write-off. We have accumulated a lot of fabric from two quilt shops that closed, and local citizens who continually donate to us. We need a secure space, at least 15 by 15 feet to store the fabric, in the Soldotna area. If you have space or know someone who could help us, please contact Jane Avery at 252-2794 or Barb Steckel at 262-2407. If you would like to know more about our group, please contact us.
Thank you for your support of the Sterling Community Senior Center Salmon Classic Roundup This is an appreciation letter to the hundreds of merchants and individuals who donated several hundred items to the Sterling Community Senior Center for the Salmon Classic Roundup. This fundraiser is the main fundraiser for the center for Meals on Wheels. As one of those who contacted many merchants on the Kenai, I understand the many requests these merchants are bombarded with yearly. Yet, they realize the importance of senior centers, especially the Meal on Wheels program — which feeds many individuals. If not for the generosity of these merchants and individuals these fundraisers would be difficult to have. The next most important thing is for the communities to turn out for these and support programs which help feed others. Again, I would like to say that I greatly appreciate all that donated and all who are going to attend the fundraiser. I also appreciate all the volunteers who work endlessly to make this event a huge success, as well as a wonderful time with great food and drink, as well as being able to be awarded some awesome prizes for their successful bidding. Without each of these who donated items and time there would be no such events to help others in need. — Jerry Baty
Around the Peninsula Drawdown: Book to Action Climate Series Cook Inletkeeper and KenaiChange are excited to host the fourth event in our Drawdown: Book to Action Climate Series on Thursday, June 27 from 5:3-8 p.m. This month’s topic is food and agriculture, and the event will include a local foods potluck; bring a dish to share! We will meet at the new Inletkeeper Community Studio, at 35911 Kenai Spur Hwy, Suite 13. This series uses the bestselling book “Drawdown: The Most Comprehensive Plan Ever Proposed to Reverse Global Warming” to focus on climate action and local solutions. The series is held the fourth Thursday of each month. Past meetings covered energy and transportation. Future topics will include built environment, land use, and community action. For more information contact laura@inletkeeper.org
Love Inc garage sale Love Inc will hsot a garage sale coming up Friday and Saturday, June 28-29 from 9 a.m.5 p.m.. Saturday they will also have lemonade stand available. All profits go back into the community Helping Neighbors In Need! 44410 K-Beach Road, Soldotna. Contact 907262-5140.
KP Young Adult Ministry
Pebble mine demonstration
KP Young Adult Ministry is available at Ammo Can Coffee Thursday nights at 7 p.m. KP Young Adult Ministry is geared toward fostering the healthy Christian Community for young adults between the ages of 18 and 25 years old. For more information contact us through our Facebook Page KP Young Adult Ministry.
A demonstration in opposition to the Pebble Mine will take place on the evening of Wednesday, June 26 outside the office of Sen. Lisa Murkowski. We will meet at 5 p.m. at the Blazy Mall (44539 Sterling Highway, Soldotna) and walk to Soldotna Creek Park for Music in the Park at 6 p.m. Bring your own sign, or borrow one from us!
Tumbledown House at Flats Bistro KDLL Public Radio in Kenai has a benefit concert with San Fransisco band Tumbledown House at 9 p.m. Tuesday, June 25 at the Flats Bistro in Kenai. Tickets are $25, available online at www.kdll.org and at the Flats. More information is available at KDLL 91.9 FM on Facebook.
Caregiver Support Program Open House The Kenai Peninsula Family Caregiver Support Program will host an open house in the Blazy Mall, Suite # 209 on Tuesday, June 25 from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Drop by our office to see how we may best serve you via access to our lending library, durable medical equipment closet, gain information and assistance, or stop by to visit over coffee and a snack. For more information, call Sharon or Judy at 907-2621280.
ARRL Field Day 2019 Join us for Field Day 2019 at Kenai Bluff, 225 Kenai Spur View Dr., on Saturday-Sunday, June 22-23. This event is an opportunity for amateur radio operators and others who are interested in practicing emergency communication, participating in an informal contesting and having fun. Come out to see how amateur radio can be invaluable during an emergency and see who you can contact. It is the most popular on-the-air operating event in amateur radio. All are invited to join the Moosehorn Amateur Radio Club, gear up and get in action. The equipment setup will occur mid-morning on Saturday, with operations continuing through early Sunday morning. Amateur license exams will be given on Saturday, 1 p.m. Contact Max at wa7b@aol.com to schedule. See EVENTS, page C4
C4 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
. . . Events Continued from page C3
LeeShore Center board meeting
The LeeShore Center will be holding its monthly board meeting at The LeeShore Center on Wednesday, June 26. The meeting is open to the public and begins at 6 p.m. For further information call 283-9479.
Midnight Sun FFA Chapter Lemonade Stand The Kenai Peninsula members of the Midnight Sun FFA Chapter will be selling lemonade during Alaska’s Lemonade Day on Saturday, June 29 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The FFA members will be at the Soldotna Fred Meyer’s front entrance (entry B). The students will be selling special lemonades as well as goodies! Please stop by and visit, and show your support for agriculture’s future in Alaska!
Golf Fore a Cure 4th Annual Alzheimer’s Golf Tournament and Concert will take place Sunday, June 23 at Bird Homestead Golf Course. $70 per person. Registration and lunch: 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Shotgun starts at 1:30 p.m. Cost includes green fees, music, lunch and dinner. Public welcome for silent auction, dinner and music following tournament. Troubador North concert at 5:30 p.m. $15 per person. Kids free under 12. Contact Karen at 907-398-2605.
Rock’n the Ranch 2019 Music Festival Rock’n the Ranch at the Rusty Ravin 2019 Music Festival will take place Friday-Saturday, July 12-13 at Rusty Ravin Plant Ranch at Mile 12.5 K-Beach Road. Friday’s event runs 6 p.m. to midnight. Saturday 2 p.m. to midnight. Featuring Gasoline Lollipops, Blackwater Railroad Company, H3, Juno Smile, Harpdaddy, Ghost the World, The Caper. Admission: one-day $35, two-day $55. Kids under 15 free with a parent.
Conversation at the Planned Parenthood Dr. Al Gross will be at the Planned Parenthood Health Clinic on Thursday, June 20 from 5:30-7 p.m. to meet and talk with the public. Gross is an independent, who is considering a run for the US Senate in 2020, a lifelong Alaskan, orthopedic surgeon, dad and commercial fisherman. He is an advocate for health care reform, supports Planned Parenthood and a woman’s right to make her own reproductive choices.
Free Pressure Canner Dial Gauge Testing The Cooperative Extension Service is offering free testing of pressure canner dial gauges weekdays from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. at the Extension Office located in the same building as Fish and Game on K-Beach Road. Gauges can be tested on or off the lid of the canner. It is important to have pressure canner dial gauges checked annually to help assure home canned food is safely processed. There will be free food preservation publications available. Pressure canners using weighted gauges do not need to be checked. For more information contact the Cooperative Extension Service Office at 907-262-5824.
Rhubarb-Palooza The Kenai Peninsula Food Bank is hosting a free Rhubarb-Palooza event (aka rhubarb juicing). The public is invited to bring trimmed and clean rhubarb to the Food Bank during the Farmers Market, June 25 from 3-6 p.m. Bring any amount of rhubarb — small or large — up to 30 pounds per household. Approximately 13 pounds of rhubarb yields a gallon of juice. Bring a bucket for the juice to take home. Don McNamara and Donna Rae Faulkner, owners and operators of Oceanside Farms, will be using their commercial-grade hydraulic fruit grinder and press that processes volumes of fresh rhubarb stalks into juice without the need to chop, freeze or cook it first. Their goal is to inspire and promote increased use of Alaska grown rhubarb. There will be rhubarb juice samples to taste and Cooperative Extension Service publications available on growing and using rhubarb. For more information contact the Cooperative Extension Service Office at 907-2625824.
Sterling Friday Flea Market The Sterling Community Center invites you to our Summer community event, Sterling Friday Flea Market. On Friday, June 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 information262-7224 or email scc@ acsalaska.net.
Food for Thought Join us in the Fireweed Diner, every Tuesday from 5-6 p.m. from June 11 through Sept. 10 for a meal and a time of learning about food and nutrition. June 11: What’s for Dinner? with Shelby Dykstra, dietetic intern; June 18: “What I have on Hand” Meal Planning with Amorette Payment, SNAP-ED nutrition educator; June 25:Bring the Kids! with Shelby Dykstra, dietetic intern. RSVP to Greg Meyer, executive director, 907-262-3111 or gmeyer@kpfoodbank.org.
‘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 K-Beach 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.
Kenai Senior Center activities The Kenai Senior Center is open 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday to Friday, and are open until 9:30 p.m. on Thursdays. Community meals are served Monday to Friday from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Cost for lunch is $7 suggested donation for individuals 60 or older, $14 for those under 60. Call 907-283-4156 for more information. — Walking Group, Tuesdays and Thursdays: 9-10 a.m. — Beginning Spanish, Thursdays: 1 p.m. — Birthday Lunch, Wednesday, June 19: 11:30 a.m. — Ring-a-Lings, lunchtime entertainment, Monday, June 24, 11 a.m. — Computer assistance, every other Friday: 1 p.m. — Kenai Senior Connection Board Meeting, Friday, June 28: 9:30 a.m.
Yoga in the Park Soldotna Parks & Recreation and The Yoga Yurt are ex-
cited 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 262-3151.
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.
2nd Annual Disability Pride The Kenai Peninsula will celebrate its 2nd Annual Pride Celebration on Saturday, July 20 at the Soldotna Creek Park from 12-4 p.m. This is a national event, which celebrates the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Disability Pride is seeking sponsors for this event and extends a warm invitation to you and your business to participate. We hope to hear back from you by June 3. Contact Maggie Winston at 907-740-0410 or Nikki Marcano at 907-262-6351. Donations can be mailed to Independent Living Center at 47255 Princeton Ave., #8, Soldotna, AK, 99669.
Kenai Performers’ summer drama camp Junior session, ages 5-7, June 17-June 28, MondayFriday, 10 a.m.-noon. Fee: $250. Senior session, ages 8-18, June 17-July 13, Monday-Friday, 12:30-4 p.m. Fee: $450. Location: 43335 K-Beach Road (backside of Subway). Early enrollment discount if fee is paid by June 1. For more information or to register, call Terri at 252-6808.
Sterling Community Rec Center —Pickleball: Monday, Wednesday, and Friday 10 a.m.12 p.m. —Beginner pickleball lessons: Tuesdays, 12 p.m. — Intermediate pickleball lessons: Wednesdays, 9 a.m. —Weight room: Open 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Friday (Free weights, squat rack, rowing machine, cardio bikes, tread mill, elliptical, and yoga balls/mats) —Zumba: Mondays at 6 p.m. —Teen Center: 12-15 years old. $2 per visit. 12-3 p.m. Monday-Friday. Air hockey, fosse ball, video games, WiFi, and gym time. —Summer rec program: 12-3 p.m. Monday to Friday. Registration anytime Call for information 907-262-7224. Adults $3 per visit, seniors $2 per visit, teens $2 per visit, and children $1 per visit
Kenai Senior Center activities The Kenai Senior Center is open 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday to Friday, and are open until 9:30 p.m. on Thursdays. Community meals are served Monday to Friday from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Cost for lunch is $7 suggested donation for individuals 60 or older, $14 for those under 60. Call 907-283-4156 for more information.
Soldotna Public Library activities For more information, contact the library at Soldotna Public Library at 262-4227. —Moon Marvels (SRP): Tuesday, June 25 at 2:30 p.m. Investigate the lunar phases through a delicious Oreo activity and discover the Moon’s influence on our culture as it changes! All ages are welcome. —DIY Galaxy Slime: Wednesday, June 26 at 4 p.m. We have everything you need to make slimy, stretchy, sparkly, oozing galaxies. —Summer Writing Contest: Submissions due July 31. Got a short story you’re itching to get out on paper? Fiction, nonfiction, fantasy, dystopia, we’ll take it all! Submit your entries to Leslie at the desk or lmeyer@soldotna.org by July 31. 3,000 word maximum, ages 13-19. — Flying High with Civil Air Patrol: Tuesday, July 2 at 2:30 p.m. The Alaska Civil Air Patrol Cadets are visiting to explain their program mission and showcase the four forces that allow planes to fly. Think you have all four down? Learn to fold the best paper airplanes and find out! — Solar Viewing: Tuesday, July 9 at 2:30 p.m. Never ever look at the sun —unless you have a specialized telescope! Andy Veh from KPC is bringing his solar viewing telescope to let you sneak a peek at our very own sun. — Habitat Space: Tuesday, July 16 at 2:30 p.m. Do animals need space? Ranger Michelle from the Wildlife Refuge will be helping us discover what animals need to survive. Hands on activities and fun for all. — Coffee, Donuts, and a Show: Saturday, July 13 at 10:30 a.m. Start your weekend off right! Relax and enjoy coffee and donuts while watching a film on a Saturday morning. The actors from a canceled sci-fi series help aliens win a war. Tim Allen, Sigourney Weaver, Alan Rickman, Tony Shalhoub, Daryl Mitchell. Rated PG. — Sit and Knit: Saturday, July 13 at 1 p.m. Sit and knit with us today from 1:00pm to 3:00pm. Stop by any time for our yarn swap, or just relax and work on an ongoing project. All fiber crafting welcome! — EBook Class: Wednesday, July 17 at 4: p.m. Bring your laptop, tablet, or smart phone for assistance using your library card to read electronic books or listen to audiobooks. Get answers to basic device questions and help using the library’s downloadable media services. — DIY Galaxy Shirts: Wednesday, July 17 at 4 p.m. Bring a black or white T-shirt, shorts, canvas shoes, etc. to turn into shimmering constellations. All teen programs are designed for middle-school and high-school students. — TAG Meeting: Friday, July 19 at 4 p.m. Interested in planning awesome teen events at the library? Want a say in after hours programs or the kind of books that we have? Do you like snacks? The Teen Advisory Group meets monthly. — Apollo 11 Moon Landing Anniversary Celebration: Saturday, July 20 at 2 p.m. Join us for a discussion group sharing their memories of the Apollo 11 moon landing in Alaska. Where were you on July 20, 1969? If you remember and watched the historic Apollo 11 moon landing you could win a door prize! — Lunar Landing Finale Party: Tuesday, July 23 at 2:30 p.m. We’ve had a great summer out in the stars but now it’s time to come back to Earth. Come build your own Lunar Lander for our egg drop and see if your design has what it takes to beat gravity! All ages welcome, light refreshments provided. — Black Light Finale Party: Wednesday, July 31 at 4 p.m. Summer is coming to a close, and the Summer Reading Program is no different. Hit up the black light party in the basement complete with snacks, video games, and Nerf® battles! We will also draw names for our Summer Reading Grand Prize! — Progress Days Book, Art, and Bake Sale: Saturday, July 27 at 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Join us for the Progress Days
parade starting at 10am with concessions and a bake sale during the festivities! Immediately following the parade there will be an even bigger book, art, and bake sale. All proceeds benefit the Soldotna Library Friends. Ongoing events —Stars and Stories: Tuesdays at 2:30 p.m. Discover new planets, study space habitats, learn from a master storyteller, and eat the moon! We’ll have a different craft or activity every week. —Family Movies (SRP): Thursdays at 2:30 p.m. Join us every week in the Community Room for a free, familyfriendly movie and popcorn! All movies are rated G or PG. Call the library or stop by the front desk for movie title information. Thursday, June 27 at 2:30 p.m.: An astronaut races to escape from an alien planet that bears a striking resemblance to 1950s-era America. — Big Play Date (Infant to Preschool): The first Monday of the month at 10:30 a.m. A ball pit, a tunnel, Duplo Blocks, and more! This is an open-play hour of fun with plenty of activities to stimulate growth, learning, and imagination. —Code Club Mondays at 4 p.m. Interested in learning Scratch, Python, Java, HTML, or more? Join Code Club and learn to build websites, games, and basic apps. Absolute beginner-friendly! Laptops provided. Ages 10-18 welcome. —Toddler Story Time (18 months-3 years): Tuesdays at 10:30 a.m. Get up and get moving at the library with stories, songs, and silly fun that encourages your toddler’s language skills! —LEGO® Brick Club Tuesdays at 4 p.m.: Tell your stories and build your world with Lego® bricks. Bring a friend with you and let your imagination go wild. Adult supervision needed for those under the age of 10. —Bouncing Babies Story Time (birth-18 months): Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m. Come share songs, stories, and snuggle time with Bouncing Babies. —Preschool Story Time (3-5 years): Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. Come share stories, songs, and other learning fun! —Teen Lounge: Every Wednesday at 4 p.m. Teen Lounge is a weekly program for middle-school and high school students. Join us for PS4, board games, nerf battles, study sessions, crafts, and other fun! Snacks provided. —Summer Food Service (SRP): Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays at 11:30 a.m. Our library will be partnering with the Food Bank of Alaska and the USDA to provide those 18 and under with a nutritious lunch! This institution is an equal opportunity provider.
Kenai Community Library —Lego Maker Mondays, Mondays from 4-5 p.m.: Do you like LEGOs? Why not join us each week to create with LEGO based on themes inspired by children’s books! Best for children ages 6-12; children under 8 must be accompanied by an adult. —Wee Read Story Time, Tuesdays at 10:30 a.m.: Designed for children ages 0-3. Every Tuesday enjoy a program full of stories, songs, finger play and more! No registration required. —Chess Club, Tuesdays at 4 p.m.: Get ready to ROOK the HOUSE every Tuesday! Do you like playing Chess or would you like to learn how? The Kenai Community Library is proud to offer a casual program for chess players of all ages and skill levels. Chess boards will be provided. —Preschool Story Time, Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m.: Designed for children ages 3-5. Every Wednesday enjoy a program full of stories, songs, movement and more! No registration required. —Yarn Club, Thursdays at 2 p.m.: Do you Knit? Crochet? Embroider? Mend? Are you the kind of person who wants company doing so? Join other like-minded library patrons for a fun hour of crafting. Share ideas, get help, and just enjoy a semi quiet hour of your favorite yarn craft with other patrons who feel the same way. — Summer Food Program for Kids! Monday and Wednesday from 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. The Kenai Community Library will be offering a FREE lunch for all children 18 and under. This wonderful opportunity begins June 3 and ends Aug. 14. All meals must be eaten on site and are designated for children ONLY. This program is made possible by the Food Bank of Alaska. This institution and its partners are equal opportunity providers. —Booklover’s Book Club, Wednesday, June 26 at 5:30 p.m.: Join a friendly librarian at the Kenai Community Library for an engaging hour of discussion on books you are currently reading, books you have read and recommend and books you just did not care for! Come on in and chat with other booklovers! —Blast off with Aviation, Thursday, June 27 at 3 p.m.: Learn about various careers in aviation with special guests The CIVIL AIR PATROL! Also test your paper airplane making skills with a unique aviation challenge. Appropriate for ages 5-15. An adult must accompany children under 8. —AMERICAN EXPERIENCE, “Chasing the Moon,” Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Moon Landing, Thursday, June 27 at 5:30 p.m.: Join us at the Kenai Community Library to watch a preview of AMERICAN EXPERIENCE “Chasing the Moon” from Academy Award Nominee Robert Stone. The full six-hour documentary about the space race, from its earliest beginnings to the monumental achievement of the first lunar landing in 1969 and beyond, will air on Channel 7 July 8, 9 and 10. We have been selected to preview a clip from the documentary. Come join us for popcorn and discussion as we preview “The Giant Leap!” —Blast off with SCI-FI Movies, Wednesday, July 3 at 3 p.m.: We will be watching a Disney/Pixar classic about a junk collecting robot who eventually save mankind. During this interactive presentation we will be adding our own special effect sounds and dialogue! Appropriate for ages 5 to 15. Children under 8 must be accompanied by an adult. —Raspberry Pi Club, Friday, July 5 at 4 p.m.: Come join us at the library to create games and inventions, learn how to program, make music with Sonic Pi, meet new friends, and more! Whether you want to hone your skills or are learning about Pi for the first time, the Raspberry Pi club is the perfect place for you! If you plan to attend, please sign up at the front desk today!
Narcan kits available at Public Health Heroin overdoses are on the rise in Alaska. Narcan is an easy medication you can give to someone who is overdosing. It may save their life. Adults can get free Narcan nasal spray kits at the Kenai Public Health Center at 630 Barnacle Way, Suite A, in Kenai. For additional information call Kenai Public Health at 335-3400. Prevent dependence, get help, save a life.
Soldotna Speakers meet The Soldotna Speakers, a group for people to improve their public speaking and leadership skills in a friendly, supportive environment, meets the first and third Tuesday of each month from noon-1 p.m. in the upstairs conference room at Peninsula Community Health Services in Soldotna. See EVENTS, page C12
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | C5
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Perfect Little Getaway Van. Want to experience all Alaska has to offer, while being warm, dry, comfortable sleeping, and free from mosquitos and most off all--bear? Stand up while you cook. And you can park it in a regular parking spot in the city. Traveled the Lower 48 all last year, drove up the AlCan and now ready for a new adventure.For sale is B-3500 1 ton a fully selfcontained class B camper van with 360 V8 engine, automatic transmission with only 64,000 miles and a clear title. It has the following options: 1. Three way refrigerator LP gas, 12 V, or 110 V 2. Roof AC 3. Complete bathroom with sink. shower, and toilet (we opted not to use but it’s all there) 4. Built in microwave 5. Two burner gas stove 6. Water system with 30 gallons freshwater tank, 20 gallon gray water holding tank, and 10 gallon black water holding tank, 7. Furnace heater forced air 8. ceiling and stove exhaust fans 9. Dinette can be converted one full bed arrangement with new memory foam mattress 10. Power windows 11. Keyless Power door locks 12. Dash A/C and heater- works super well 13. Recently installed radio with AUX, USB, Blutooth and ports 14. Tow hitch- can be used to attach bike rack as well 15. Ride Rite air suspension system 16. Awning 10.5’ 17. Original vehicle and coach owners manuals18. All the basics to sleep already included. New tires and brakes. This van is ready to go for a quick weekend trip to the Kenai or a cross-country trip down the AlCan with a peace of mind knowing we just drove it up without a single incident! Asking $22,900.00 OBO Please no lowball offers. Email your phone number with any questions coachhousecampervan@gmail.com and we will call you back. Shown by appointment. Preapproved or cash buyers only.
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21046_01 C6 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
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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
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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
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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
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Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | C7
SUNDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON A
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In Search
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(8) CBS-11 11 (9) FOX-4
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(10) NBC-2
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(12) PBS-7
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(20) QVC
137 317
(23) LIFE
108 252
(28) USA
105 242
(30) TBS
139 247
(31) TNT
138 245
(34) ESPN 140 206 (35) ESPN2 144 209 (36) ROOT 426 687 (38) PARMT 241 241 131 254
(46) TOON 176 296 (47) ANPL 184 282 (49) DISN
173 291
(50) NICK
171 300
(51) FREE
180 311
(55) TLC
183 280
(56) DISC
182 278
(57) TRAV 196 277 (58) HIST
120 269
(59) A&E
118 265
(60) HGTV 112 229 (61) FOOD 110 231 (65) CNBC 208 355 (67) FNC
205 360
(81) COM
107 249
(82) SYFY
122 244
Cops ‘PG’
303 504
^ HBO2 304 505 + MAX
311 516
5 SHOW 319 546 8 TMC
329 554
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Catholic Mass ‘PG’
(6) MNT-5
(8) CBS-11 11 (9) FOX-4
4
4
(10) NBC-2
2
2
(12) PBS-7
7
7
Cops ‘PG’
Cops ‘PG’
Cops ‘14’
(28) USA
105 242
(30) TBS
139 247
(31) TNT
138 245
(34) ESPN 140 206 (35) ESPN2 144 209 (36) ROOT 426 687 (38) PARMT 241 241 (43) AMC
131 254
(46) TOON 176 296 (47) ANPL 184 282 (49) DISN
173 291
(50) NICK
171 300
(51) FREE
180 311
(55) TLC
183 280
(56) DISC
182 278
(57) TRAV 196 277 (58) HIST
120 269
(59) A&E
118 265
(60) HGTV 112 229 (61) FOOD 110 231 (65) CNBC 208 355 (67) FNC
205 360
(81) COM
107 249
(82) SYFY
122 244
4 PM
Cops ‘PG’
Cops ‘PG’
+ MAX
311 516
5 SHOW 319 546 8 TMC
329 554
Paid Program Raw Travel ‘G’ ‘PG’
P. Allen Small Town Smith Garden Big Deal ‘G’ Style Real Green CBS Week- Mantracker Tails of Valor ‘G’ end News ‘PG’ ‘G’ Funny You Funny You Boxing PBC: Jermell Charlo Should Ask Should Ask vs. Jorge Cota - Prelims. (N) (N) ‘PG’ (N) ‘PG’ (Live) BACK PAIN The Voyager Earth Odys- Consumer RELIEF NOW! With Josh sey With 101 “Safety Garcia Dylan First” ‘G’
Cops ‘PG’
Cops ‘PG’
Cops ‘PG’
Cops ‘PG’
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Last Man Last Man Last Man Standing Standing Standing Dooney & Bourke (N) (Live) ‘G’
Last Man Standing
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4:30
5 PM
TV A =Clarion DISH B = DirecTV 5:30 ABC World News
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America’s Funniest Home Videos A drone gets stuck in a woman’s hair. ‘PG’ Rizzoli & Isles “Don’t Hate the Player” Tommy returns home. ‘14’ 60 Minutes (N)
7 PM
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June 23 - 29,23, 2019 JUNE 2019 8:30
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Highwire Live in Times Square With Nik Wallenda Nik Wal- To Tell the Truth (N) ‘PG’ lenda walks across Times Square. (N Same-day Tape) ‘PG’ Madam Secretary “Refuge” LGBTQ citizens are being persecuted. ‘14’ 60 Minutes (N)
Paid Program Access (N) ‘PG’
Entertainers: With Byron Allen Chicago P.D. Investigating a Murdoch Mysteries Murdoch Heartland “Highs and Lows” Soldotna The Church pedophilia ring. ‘14’ races to stop a space proThe family supports Georgie. Church of of the Algram. ‘PG’ ‘PG’ God mighty God The Good Fight “The Schtup The Good Fight (N) ‘MA’ KTVA Night- Castle An armored-car driver Major Crimes List” (N) ‘MA’ cast is killed. ‘PG’ ‘14’ Entertainment Tonight (N) TMZ (N) ‘PG’ The Big Bang The Big Bang 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ ‘14’ ‘14’
Paid Program Outdoors‘G’ man/Buck McNeely America’s Got Talent “Auditions 3” Variety acts continue to audition. ‘PG’ Poldark on Masterpiece Uncertainty grips the country. ‘PG’
New Amsterdam Bloom faces Channel 2 Graham NCIS: New Orleans “Mirror, her personal demons head- News: Late Bensinger Mirror” Pride must re-investion. ‘14’ Edition gate a case. ‘14’ Endeavour on Masterpiece “Apollo” Endeav- Jamestown Henry and Wing- Pledge Programming TBA our investigates a car accident. (N) ‘14’ anuske clash. (N) ‘14’
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Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... “War of the Worlds” (2005) Tom Cruise. A man and his chilWith With With With dren try to survive an alien invasion. Du Jour - Fresh/Modern/Now Shoe Shopping “All Easy Pay Laurie Felt - Los Angeles How To Save on Summer (N) (Live) ‘G’ Offers” (N) (Live) ‘G’ “All Easy Pay Offers” ‘G’ Style (N) (Live) ‘G’ (3:00) “Stalked by a Reality “To Have and to Hold” (2019, Drama) Erika Christensen, “I Almost Married a Serial Killer” (2019, Suspense) Krista American Princess Amanda (:03) “I Almost Married a Serial Killer” (2019, Suspense) Star” (2018) Cynthia Preston, Antonio Cupo, Andy Favreau. Alice’s marriage is plagued by Allen, Louis Mandylor. A mom and her daughter enter the Wit- is lured back to New York Krista Allen, Louis Mandylor. A mom and her daughter enter Emily Bader. ‘14’ her husband’s infidelity. ness Protection Program. City. (N) ‘14’ the Witness Protection Program. Law & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicModern Fam- Modern Fam- Modern Fam- Modern Famtims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit “Imposter” ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit “Sanctuary” ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ (3:00) “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” (2016, Ac- The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Claws Desna finds Mac and (:01) Claws Desna finds Mac (:02) “Hot Pursuit” (2015, Comedy) Reese Witherspoon, tion) Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Amy Adams. Batman embarks Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Melba’s gift. (N) ‘MA’ and Melba’s gift. ‘MA’ Sofía Vergara, Matthew Del Negro. A policewoman must proon a personal vendetta against Superman. tect a wisecracking witness. (1:30) “Gladiator” (2000) “Captain America: Civil War” (2016, Action) Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Jo- Claws Desna finds Mac and Claws Desna finds Mac and “Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail” (2009) Tyler Perry, Russell Crowe. hansson. Captain America clashes with Iron Man. Melba’s gift. (N) ‘MA’ Melba’s gift. ‘MA’ Derek Luke. Madea raises hell behind bars. (3:00) MLB Baseball Los Angeles Angels at St. Louis Cardi- SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter nals. From Busch Stadium in St. Louis. (N) (Live) (3:00) UFC 237: Namajunas vs. Andrade From May 11, Formula 1 Racing Pirelli Grand Prix de France. (N Same-day Tape) E:60 ‘G’ UFC Fight Night From Feb. 17, 2019. 2019. (N) MLS Soccer Houston Dynamo at Portland Timbers. From Timbers Post- Frontier Days MLB Baseball Baltimore Orioles at Seattle Mariners. From T-Mobile Park in Seattle. Mariners Mariners All World Poker Tour Bellagio Providence Park in Portland, Ore. Game Postgame Access High Roller - Part 2. (:03) Bar Rescue ‘PG’ (:04) Bar Rescue “How to (:05) Bar Rescue “Bare Res- Bar Rescue A nightclubs Bar Rescue “Loose Lips Marriage Rescue “No Integ- (:01) Bar Rescue “Irish Eyes Bar Rescue “Tears for Beers” Train Your Goldfish” ‘PG’ cue” ‘PG’ 18-and-over night. ‘PG’ Loose Tips” ‘PG’ rity” (N) ‘14’ Aren’t Smiling” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ (1:25) “Pearl (:25) “Top Gun” (1986, Action) Tom Cruise, Kelly McGillis. A hot-shot Navy (6:55) Fear the Walking Fear the Walking Dead “Skid- (:05) NOS4A2 “The House of (:10) Fear the Walking Dead (:15) NOS4A2 “The House of Harbor” jet pilot downs MiGs and loves an astrophysicist. Dead ‘MA’ mark” (N) ‘MA’ Sleep” (N) ‘14’ “Skidmark” ‘MA’ Sleep” ‘14’ Samurai Jack Final Space Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- American Family Guy Family Guy Rick and The Jellies Mike Tyson Your Pretty American Family Guy Family Guy Rick and The Jellies ‘14’ ‘14’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ Dad ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ Mysteries Face... Hell Dad ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ ‘14’ The Aquarium The Aquarium Feisty baby The Aquarium: Unfiltered The Aquarium The rehabilita- (:01) Lone Star Law “Cross- (:02) Lone Star Law “Pan(:02) Lone Star Law “SubLone Star Law “Crossing the alligators arrive. “Ophelia the Octopus” (N) tion of elephant seals. ing the Line” ‘14’ handle Poachers” ‘14’ merged” ‘14’ Line” ‘14’ (2:30) “The Just Roll With Sydney to the Bunk’d ‘G’ Raven’s Raven’s Sydney to the Max “As Bad Andi Mack ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Amphibia ‘Y7’ Big City Raven’s Andi Mack ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Incredibles” It ‘Y7’ Max ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Home ‘G’ As She Gets” ‘G’ Greens ‘Y7’ Home ‘G’ Smarter Than Smarter Than Smarter Than (:26) All That (5:57) All (:29) Henry “Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel” (2009, Chil- Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ (:35) Friends (:10) Friends (:45) Mom ‘14’ ‘G’ That ‘G’ Danger ‘G’ dren’s) Zachary Levi, David Cross, Jason Lee. ‘PG’ ‘14’ (2:20) “Tar- (:25) “Toy Story” (1995) Voices of Tom Hanks. Animated. (:25) “Toy Story 2” (1999) Voices of Tom Hanks. Animated. “Moana” (2016) Voices of Dwayne Johnson, Auli’i Cravalho. Animated. A “Lilo & Stitch” (2002) Voices zan” (1999) Toys come to life when people are absent. Toys rescue Woody from a collector. once-mighty demigod and a teen sail across the ocean. of Daveigh Chase. 90 Day Fiance: The Other 90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever After? Colt and Larissa face 90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever After? Chantel gets shady (:01) sMothered “Our Own (:02) 90 Day Fiancé: Happily 90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever Way “Big Expectations” more legal issues. (N) ‘PG’ news about Pedro. (N) ‘PG’ Little World” (N) ‘14’ Ever After? (N) ‘PG’ After? ‘PG’ Naked and Afraid Mexico’s Naked and Afraid “Swamp Naked and Afraid XL: UnNaked and Afraid XL “Epi(:01) Naked and Afraid “Epi- (:02) Naked and Afraid “Bite (:02) Naked and Afraid ‘14’ Naked and Afraid “Episode 3 Cayo Venado. ‘14’ Don’t Care” ‘14’ censored All-Stars ‘14’ sode 5” (N) ‘14’ sode 3 Part 1” ‘14’ Club” ‘14’ Part 1” ‘14’ Paranormal Caught on Cam- Paranormal Caught on Cam- Paranormal Caught on Cam- Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Legendary Locations “What America Unearthed “Vikings Ripley’s Believe It or Not! era ‘PG’ era ‘PG’ era ‘PG’ “Invisible Worlds” ‘G’ “Showstoppers” (N) ‘G’ Lurks Within” ‘G’ in the Desert” ‘G’ “Showstoppers” ‘G’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers “Rat Rod American Pickers: Bonus Buys “High Priced Motorcycles” One of the rarest motorcycles ever. (N) ‘PG’ (:03) American Pickers: BoRolls” ‘PG’ nus Buys ‘PG’ “The Shawshank Redemption” (1994, Drama) Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman, Bob Gun- “Hacksaw Ridge” (2016, War) Andrew Garfield, Sam Worthington, Luke Bracey. Medic Des- (:04) Live Rescue: Rewind (:03) “Hacksaw Ridge” ton. An innocent man goes to a Maine penitentiary for life in 1947. mond Doss becomes a hero during World War II. “Live Rescue: Rewind 4” ‘14’ (2016, War) Andrew Garfield, Sam Worthington. Fixer Upper A home renova- Fixer Upper “A Modern Cabin Fixer Upper ‘G’ Lakefront Lakefront Beach Hunt- Beach Hunt- Island Life Island Life Hawaii Life Hawaii Life Beach Hunt- Beach Hunttion for a veteran. ‘G’ Makeover” ‘G’ Bargain Bargain ers (N) ‘G’ ers (N) ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ers ‘G’ ers ‘G’ Diners, Drive-Ins and The Great Food Truck Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ Guy’s Grocery Games “Is- Food Truck Diners, Drive Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Food Truck Diners, Drive Dives ‘G’ Race ‘G’ land Eats” ‘G’ Race Flay ‘G’ Flay ‘G’ Flay ‘G’ Flay ‘G’ Race Shark Tank Mobile fitness Shark Tank ‘PG’ Shark Tank A new dating Shark Tank ‘PG’ Shark Tank ‘PG’ Shark Tank Dual-use breath Cooking with Retirement The Profit “An Inside Look: company for kids. ‘PG’ app. ‘PG’ freshener. ‘PG’ Emeril Income ASL Signs” ‘PG’ Watters’ World The Next Revolution With Life, Liberty & Levin (N) Watters’ World The Next Revolution With Life, Liberty & Levin FOX News Sunday With MediaBuzz Steve Hilton (N) Steve Hilton Chris Wallace (N) (3:45) “CHIPS” (2017, Comedy) Michael Peña, Dax Shepard. An FBI agent (:20) “21 Jump Street” (2012, Comedy) Jonah Hill, Channing Tatum, Brie “We’re the Millers” (2013, Comedy) Jennifer Aniston, Jason Sudeikis. A (:35) South and a motorcycle cop probe police corruption. Larson. Young cops go under cover as high-school students. dealer goes to Mexico with a fake family to score drugs. Park ‘MA’ (:15) “Real Steel” (2011, Action) Hugh Jackman, Evangeline Lilly, Dakota Goyo. A boxing “Volcano” (1997, Action) Tommy Lee Jones, Anne Heche. (:15) Futura- (:45) Futura- (:15) Futura- (:45) Futura- (:15) Futura- (:45) Futurapromoter and his son build a robot fighter. Earthquakes and lava ravage Los Angeles. ma ‘14’ ma ‘14’ ma ‘PG’ ma ‘PG’ ma ‘PG’ ma ‘14’
Last Man Standing
Last Man Last Man Married ... Standing Standing With Q The Deals “Ninja” (N) (Live) ‘G’
Married ... With
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Real Time With Bill Maher 303 504 ‘MA’
^ HBO2 304 505
Cops ‘14’
Denim & Co. (N) (Live) ‘G’
50PlusPrime Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Actor Ed As- ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ner. ‘G’ The Inspec- Modern Fam- Frontiers ‘G’ CBS Weektors ‘G’ ily ‘PG’ end News Boxing PBC: Jermell Charlo vs. Jorge Cota. Former cham- Last Man Last Man pion Jermell Charlo takes on the hard-hitting Jorge Cota in the Standing ‘PG’ Standing ‘PG’ main event. (N) (Live) Leverage “The Low Low Price Channel 2 NBC Nightly Hollywood Game Night Job” The crew sabotages a News: Late News With Contestants lead teams of mega-store. ‘PG’ Edition Lester Holt celebrities. ‘14’ Pledge Programming TBA Pledge Programming TBA
PREMIUM STATIONS ! HBO
3:30
(7:30) “The Prestige” (2006) Hugh Jack(:45) “The Hate U Give” (2018, Drama) Amandla Stenberg, Regina Hall, (:05) “The Bourne Identity” (2002, Action) Matt Damon, (:05) “Night School” (2018, Comedy) Kevin Hart, Tiffany man. Two 19th-century magicians engage in a Russell Hornsby. A teen witnesses the fatal shooting of her childhood friend. Franka Potente. An amnesiac agent is marked for death after Haddish, Rob Riggle. A student puts up with a feisty teacher deadly rivalry. ‘PG-13’ ‘PG-13’ a botched hit. ‘PG-13’ at night school. ‘PG-13’ (6:59) “A Star Is Born” (:15) Divorce Financially (9:50) “12 Strong” (2018, War) Chris Hemsworth, Michael Barry ‘MA’ (:35) Barry (:05) Barry (:34) Barry (:06) Barry (:40) Barry (:10) Barry (:40) Barry (2018, Romance) Bradley strapped Robert seeks work. Shannon, Michael Peña. A U.S. Special Forces team battles “The Power of ‘MA’ “What?!” ‘MA’ “ronny/lily” ‘MA’ “The Audition” “berkman/ Cooper. ‘R’ ‘MA’ the Taliban and al-Qaida. ‘R’ No” ‘MA’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ block” ‘MA’ (7:40) “For Love of the Game” (1999, Drama) Kevin Cost- “Beyond Borders” (2003, Drama) Angelina Jolie, Clive (:10) Jett “Charles Junior” (:10) “War for the Planet of the Apes” (2017, Science Fiction) Andy Serkis, (:35) “Lost in ner, Kelly Preston. An aging pitcher thinks back on his life’s Owen, Teri Polo. A woman joins a doctor’s humanitarian ef- Jett plans a heist at a poker Woody Harrelson, Steve Zahn. Soldiers battle Caesar and his army of intel- America” momentous events. ‘PG-13’ forts. ‘R’ game. ‘MA’ ligent apes. ‘PG-13’ “Gone in Sixty Seconds” (2000, Action) Nicolas Cage, An- “Mystic River” (2003, Crime Drama) Sean Penn, Tim Robbins, Kevin Ba- (:25) “Mile 22” (2018, Action) Mark Wahl“The Help” (2011, Drama) Viola Davis, Emma Stone, Bryce gelina Jolie, Giovanni Ribisi. A retired thief must steal 50 cars con. A detective probes the murder of his friend’s daughter. ‘R’ berg. A CIA operative leads an elite team Dallas Howard. An aspiring writer captures the experiences of to save his brother. ‘PG-13’ through hostile terrain. ‘R’ black women. ‘PG-13’ (:15) “Mr. 3000” (2004, Comedy) Bernie Mac, Angela Bas“An Unfinished Life” (2005, Drama) Robert Redford, Mor- “Into the Blue” (2005, Adventure) Paul Walker, Jessica “Swingers” (1996, Comedy) Jon Favreau, (:40) “Freesett, Michael Rispoli. A baseball star comes out of retirement. gan Freeman, Jennifer Lopez. A Wyoming rancher shelters Alba, Scott Caan. Four divers cross paths with drug smugVince Vaughn. Show-biz hopefuls discuss way” (1996) ‘PG-13’ his abused daughter-in-law. ‘PG-13’ glers. ‘PG-13’ women and careers. ‘R’ ‘R’
CABLE STATIONS
108 252
3 PM
HairMax: The Science of Hair Growth (N) (Live) ‘G’ Joel Osteen Paid Program “The Call” (2013, Suspense) Halle Berry, Abigail Breslin, “The Perfect Assistant” (2008, Drama) Rachel Hunter, Chris “Killer Assistant” (2016, Suspense) Arianne Zucker, Brando “Stalked by a Reality Star” ‘PG’ ‘G’ Morris Chestnut. An emergency operator must save a teen Potter, Josie Davis. A woman wants to tell her married boss Eaton, George Stults. One-night stand spirals into a web of (2018) Cynthia Preston, Emily from a killer. that she loves him. ‘PG’ blackmail and murder. ‘14’ Bader. ‘14’ Queen of the South “Hospi- Law & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special Victalidad Sureña” ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ “The LEGO Batman Movie” (2017, Children’s) Voices of Will “Shrek the Third” (2007, Children’s) Voices of Mike Myers, “Man of Steel” (2013, Action) Henry Cavill, Amy Adams, Michael Shannon. Young Clark “Batman v Superman: Dawn Arnett, Michael Cera. Animated. Batman must save Gotham Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz. Animated. Shrek and friends Kent must protect those he loves from a dire threat. of Justice” (2016) Ben AfCity from the Joker’s hostile takeover. look for the true heir of Far, Far Away. fleck, Henry Cavill. NCIS: New Orleans “Sister “Red” (2010) Bruce Willis, Morgan Freeman. The CIA targets (:15) “Red 2” (2013, Action) Bruce Willis, John Malkovich, Mary-Louise “Gladiator” (2000, Historical Drama) Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix. A City: Part Two” ‘14’ a team of former agents for assassination. Parker. Retired operatives return to retrieve a lethal device. fugitive general becomes a gladiator in ancient Rome. SportsCenter (N) (Live) WNBA Basketball Washington Mystics at Atlanta Dream. 2018 World Series of Poker 2018 World Series of Poker 2018 World Series of Poker Baseball Tonight: Sunday MLB Baseball: Angels at From State Farm Arena in Atlanta. (N) (Live) From Las Vegas. From Las Vegas. From Las Vegas. Night Countdown (N) Cardinals Bassmasters From Lake Fork 2019 Scripps National Spelling Bee “Finals” Closing portion, College Basketball From April 4, 2019. ‘G’ High School Basketball From March 27, 2019. UFC 237: Namajunas vs. in Emory, Texas. from Washington, D.C. (N) Andrade (N) Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Charlie Moore West Coast Mariners All Mariners Pre- MLB Baseball Baltimore Orioles at Seattle Mariners. From T-Mobile Park in Seattle. (N) Mariners Mariners All ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ Sport Access (N) game (N) (Live) Postgame Access Bar Rescue Disaster ignites Bar Rescue A management- Bar Rescue “Corking the Bar Rescue A bar owner may Bar Rescue A struggling live Bar Rescue Brothers can’t (:01) Bar Rescue ‘PG’ (:02) Bar Rescue A son’s in the kitchen. ‘PG’ heavy staff. ‘PG’ Hole” ‘PG’ lose his legacy. ‘PG’ music venue. ‘PG’ see eye to eye. ‘PG’ excessive drinking. ‘PG’ (7:25) “A League of Their Own” (1992) Tom Hanks, Geena Davis, Madon- (:25) “Walk the Line” (2005, Biography) Joaquin Phoenix, Reese Witherspoon. The story of (:25) “Pearl Harbor” (2001, War) Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett. Best friends na. A women’s professional baseball league debuts in 1943. music legends Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash. become fighter pilots and romantic rivals in 1941. Summer Summer Heroes of Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans World of World of DC Super OK K.O.!OK K.O.!World of World of World of Craig of the Victor and Camp Island Camp Island Pure Go! ‘PG’ Go! ‘PG’ Go! ‘PG’ Gumball Gumball Hero Girls Heroes Heroes Gumball Gumball Gumball Creek ‘Y7’ Valentino Northwest Law The hunt for North Woods Law ‘PG’ North Woods Law “24 Hours North Woods Law “Judgment North Woods Law “Dead The Zoo A giraffe from Indi- The Zoo “Andre the Baby The Aquarium “Seal the a set of poachers. ‘14’ on the Job” ‘PG’ Day” ‘PG’ Moose Talking” ‘PG’ ana; cloud rats. ‘PG’ Goat” ‘PG’ Deal” ‘PG’ Big City Big City Amphibia ‘Y7’ Big City Raven’s Sydney to the Just Roll With Andi Mack ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Big City Raven’s Raven’s Raven’s “The Incredibles” (2004, Children’s) Voices Greens ‘Y7’ Greens ‘Y7’ Greens ‘Y7’ Home ‘G’ Max ‘G’ It ‘Y7’ Greens ‘Y7’ Home ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Home ‘G’ of Craig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter. Power Rang- SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob LEGO City Alvinnn!!! Alvinnn!!! SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob (:01) The (:22) The ers Adventures and and Loud House Loud House (:05) “Pocahontas” (1995, Children’s) Voices of Irene Be(:05) “A Bug’s Life” (1998) Voices of Dave Foley. Animated. (:15) “Mulan” (1998, Children’s) Voices of Ming-Na Wen, Eddie Murphy. Ani- (:20) “Tarzan” (1999, Children’s) Voices of dard, Judy Kuhn, Mel Gibson. Insects help an ant fend off grasshoppers. mated. A Chinese maiden disguises herself as a man. Tony Goldwyn, Glenn Close. Say Yes to the Dress ‘PG’ Say Yes to the Dress ‘PG’ Say Yes to the Dress “I’m Say Yes to the Dress ‘PG’ Say Yes to the Dress Cat Kate Plus Date Kate is finally Kate Plus Date Kate goes on 90 Day Fiance: The Other Having a Moment” ‘PG’ Cora and her fiancee. ‘PG’ ready to date. ‘PG’ two more dates. ‘PG’ Way “It’s Go Time” Building Off the Grid Building Off the Grid Kolin Building Off the Grid “Edge Building Off the Grid “Cob Building Off the Grid “Cabin Building Off the Grid “Cabin Building Off the Grid “Alaska Naked and Afraid “Honduran “Alaska” ‘G’ plans to build a cabin. ‘G’ of Maine” ‘G’ Cottage” ‘G’ Wanderlust” ‘G’ of No Return” ‘G’ Range” ‘G’ Hell” ‘14’ Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Legendary Locations “Slave Ripley’s Believe It or Not! ‘G’ America Unearthed The leg- America Unearthed “The Rip- Alien Highway “UFO Recov- UFOs: The Lost Evidence ‘PG’ ‘PG’ to Love” ‘G’ end of a giant. per Unmasked” ‘G’ ery” ‘14’ “Police UFO Files” ‘PG’ Counting Cars “Stude-Licious” Shannon restores a 1962 Karmann Ghia. ‘PG’ American Pickers Danielle American Pickers “Louisiana American Pickers “Mad as a American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers A piece of takes a vacation. ‘PG’ Purchase” ‘PG’ Picker” ‘PG’ space-age history. ‘PG’ Hoarders “Norman; Linda” Hoarders An immaculate “Wanted” (2008, Action) James McAvoy, Morgan Freeman, Angelina Jolie. “Zero Dark Thirty” (2012, Drama) Jessica Chastain, Jason Clarke, Joel Edgerton. Elite operatives hunt A woman dies in a hoarder’s home becomes a filthy pit. An office drone becomes part of a secret society of assassins. Osama bin Laden. home. ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Property Brothers “Cool Un- Property Brothers “Wishful Property Brothers “Structural Property Brothers “Family Fixer Upper ‘G’ Fixer Upper A home close to Fixer Upper The charm of Fixer Upper “Space in the der Pressure” ‘PG’ Building” ‘PG’ Opportunity” ‘PG’ Fun House” ‘PG’ Baylor University. ‘G’ small-scale living. ‘G’ Suburbs” ‘G’ The Pioneer The Pioneer The Pioneer The Pioneer Valerie Home Giada in Italy Barefoot Con- Barefoot Con- The Kitchen Orecchiette with The Kitchen Welcoming fla- Diners, Drive-Ins and Diners, Drive-Ins and Woman ‘G’ Woman ‘G’ Woman ‘G’ Woman ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ tessa tessa shrimp and corn. ‘G’ vors of summer. ‘G’ Dives ‘G’ Dives ‘G’ Smokeless HOOVER Never Fear Paid Program LifeLock Pro- Smokeless Paid Program Paid Program Shark Tank ‘PG’ Shark Tank Dual-use breath Shark Tank ‘PG’ Shark Tank ‘PG’ Grill CORDLESS ‘G’ tection Grill ‘G’ ‘G’ freshener. ‘PG’ America’s News Headquar- America’s News Headquar- FOX News Sunday With The Journal Editorial Report America’s News Headquar- The Greg Gutfeld Show (N) Fox Report with Jon Scott FOX News Sunday With ters (N) ters (N) Chris Wallace (N) ters (N) (N) Chris Wallace (N) (:10) The Of- (:45) The Office ‘PG’ (:20) The Of- (9:55) The Of- The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office “We’re the Millers” (2013, Comedy) Jennifer Aniston, Jason Sudeikis. A (:45) “CHIPS” fice ‘PG’ fice ‘14’ fice ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘14’ ‘PG’ dealer goes to Mexico with a fake family to score drugs. (7:30) “The Scorpion King 4: Quest for (:45) “Truth or Dare” (2017) Cassandra Scerbo, Brytni (:45) “Paul” (2011) Simon Pegg, Nick Frost. Two British sci-fi (:45) “The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor” (2008) Brendan Fraser. Power” (2015, Action) Victor Webster. Sarpy. Eight college friends awaken an evil spirit. nerds help an alien return to his spaceship. A young archaeologist awakens a cursed Chinese emperor.
Last Man Last Man Last Man (8) WGN-A 239 307 Standing Standing Standing LOGO by Lori Goldstein (N) (Live) ‘G’ (20) QVC 137 317 (23) LIFE
2:30
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Raw Travel ‘PG’
5
2 PM
Family Feud To Be An‘PG’ nounced
Manna-Fest Paid Program With Perry ‘G’ Stone ‘G’ BIG3 Basketball Triplets vs Aliens. (N) (Live) Inside PBC Boxing
To Be Announced
(3) ABC-13 13
JUNE 23, 2019
1:30
To Be Announced
4 SUNDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING A
B = DirecTV
9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30 1 PM
In the Kitchen With David “Ninja” (N) (Live) ‘G’
PREMIUM STATIONS ! HBO
A = DISH
9 AM
Soldotna Christian Worship Hour Paid Program “Bugsy Malone” (1976, Musical Comedy) Scott Baio, Jodie Church of ‘G’ Foster, John Cassisi. A spoof of Roaring ’20s musicals and God gangster pictures. (7:30) Face Larry King BIG3 Basketball Tri-State vs PGA Tour Golf Travelers Championship, Final Round. (N) (Live) the Nation Sp. Killer 3s. (N) (Live) Ocean Mys- Pets.TV ‘G’ FIFA Women’s World Cup 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup Round of 16: Teams TBA. FIFA Wom- Paid Program teries With Today (N) (Live) (N) (Live) en’s World ‘G’ Jeff Corwin Cup Today IndyCar IndyCar Racing REV Group Grand Prix at Road America. IndyCar 2019 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship Final Round. From Hazeltine National Golf Club Series Pre From Elkhart Lake, Wis. (N) (Live) Series Post in Chaska, Minn. (N) (Live) Race (N) Race (N) Samantha Weekends Rick Steves’ Fishing Pledge Programming TBA Brown Place With Yankee Europe ‘G’ Behind the ‘G’ Lines ‘G’
CABLE STATIONS (8) WGN-A 239 307
(43) AMC
8:30
Jerry Prevo
(3) ABC-13 13 (6) MNT-5
8 AM
(:20) “The Old Man & the Gun” (2018, Big Little Lies Mary Louise Euphoria “Stuntin’ Like My Last Week Euphoria “Stuntin’ Like My (:35) Axios Comedy-Drama) Robert Redford, Casey Af- tries to get closer to Jane. Daddy” Rue becomes excited Tonight-John Daddy” Rue becomes excited ‘14’ fleck, Sissy Spacek. ‘PG-13’ (N) ‘MA’ about Jules. ‘MA’ about Jules. ‘MA’ (3:40) Barry (:35) “Mean Girls” (2004) Lindsay Lohan. A (:15) Big Little Lies Abigail Big Little Lies “Tell-Tale “The Wicker Man” (2006) Nicolas Cage. (:45) “Knock Knock” (2015, Suspense) Keanu Reeves, Ana “Self/less” “berkman/ teen becomes friends with three cruel school- doesn?t want to go to colHearts” Renata faces an un- A lawman finds sinister forces at work on a de Armas, Lorenza Izzo. An architect finds himself at the (2015) ‘PG-13’ block” ‘MA’ mates. ‘PG-13’ lege. ‘MA’ certain future. ‘MA’ secluded isle. ‘PG-13’ mercy of two sinister seductresses. ‘R’ (3:35) “Lost in America” (:10) “Get Him to the Greek” (2010, Comedy) Jonah Hill, “The Town” (2010, Crime Drama) Ben Affleck, Rebecca (:05) “Sucker Punch” (2011, Action) Emily Browning, Ab“The Hustler” (1961, Drama) (1985, Comedy) Albert Russell Brand, Elisabeth Moss. An executive must drag a Hall, Jon Hamm. A woman doesn’t realize that her new beau bie Cornish, Jena Malone. A girl’s dream world provides an Paul Newman, Jackie GleaBrooks. ‘R’ boozy rock star to Hollywood. ‘R’ is a bank robber. ‘R’ escape from a dark reality. ‘PG-13’ son. ‘NR’ (2:00) “The (:27) Our (4:59) The Chi Brandon faces (5:57) City on a Hill FBI Our Cartoon Desus & Mero City on a Hill Decourcy finds City on a Hill Decourcy finds Desus & Mero “Mile 22” (2018, Action) Mark Wahlberg. Help” (2011) Cartoon a life-altering decision. ‘MA’ agent and D.A. form an alli- President ‘MA’ he has a new enemy. (N) ‘MA’ he has a new enemy. ‘MA’ ‘MA’ A CIA operative leads an elite team through President ance. ‘MA’ (N) ‘14’ hostile terrain. ‘R’ (3:40) “Freeway” (1996) Kiefer Sutherland. (:25) “Wildling” (2018, Horror) Liv Tyler. A “Into the Blue” (2005, Adventure) Paul Walker, Jessica “68 Kill” (2017, Comedy) Matthew Gray (:40) “Swingers” (1996, Comedy) Jon FaA serial killer draws a troubled teen into his teenager discovers the dark secret behind her Alba, Scott Caan. Four divers cross paths with drug smugGubler. A hardworking man agrees to steal vreau. Show-biz hopefuls discuss women and twisted game. ‘R’ strange childhood. ‘R’ glers. ‘PG-13’ $68,000 for a beautiful woman. ‘R’ careers. ‘R’
June 23 - 29, 2019
Axios (N) ‘14’ (:40) Last Week Tonight With John Oliver ‘MA’
Clarion TV
© Tribune Media Services
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C8 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
WEEKDAYS MORNING/AFTERNOON A (3) ABC-13 13 (6) MNT-5 5 (8) CBS-11 11 (9) FOX-4 4 (10) NBC-2 2 (12) PBS-7 7
8 AM
B
CABLE STATIONS
(20) QVC
137 317
(23) LIFE
108 252
(28) USA
105 242
(30) TBS
139 247
(31) TNT
138 245
(34) ESPN 140 206
(35) ESPN2 144 209
(36) ROOT 426 687 (38) PARMT 241 241
M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F M T W Th F
M T (43) AMC 131 254 W Th F M T (46) TOON 176 296 W Th F
(47) ANPL 184 282 (49) DISN
(50) NICK (51) FREE (55) TLC
9 AM
M T 173 291 W Th F M T 171 300 W Th F
180 311
M T 183 280 W Th F
The Doctors ‘14’ Providence Providence The Price Is Right ‘G’ Varied The Real Today-Hoda Sesame St. Splash
(6) MNT-5
5
(8) CBS-11 11 (9) FOX-4
4
4
(10) NBC-2
2
2
(12) PBS-7
7
7
Steve ‘PG’ Sesame St.
Hot Bench Millionaire Bold Paternity Super Why!
1:30
Strahan & Sara Divorce Divorce The Talk ‘14’ Paternity ES.TV ‘PG’ Days of our Lives ‘14’ Pinkalicious Go Luna
Clarion BTV = DirecTV
4 PM
4:30
5 PM
5:30
6 PM Jeopardy! (N) ‘G’
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
(31) TNT (34) ESPN (35) ESPN2 (36) ROOT (38) PARMT (43) AMC (46) TOON (47) ANPL (49) DISN (50) NICK (51) FREE (55) TLC (56) DISC (57) TRAV (58) HIST (59) A&E (60) HGTV (61) FOOD (65) CNBC (67) FNC (81) COM (82) SYFY
Wheel of For- The Bachelorette “1506” (N) ‘PG’ tune ‘G’
303 504
311 516
5 SHOW 319 546 8 TMC
ABC News at (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ‘14’ (:37) Nightline (N) ‘G’ 10 (N) DailyMailTV (N)
DailyMailTV (N)
Impractical Jokers ‘14’
Pawn Stars “Bumpy Ride” ‘PG’ KTVA Night- (:35) The Late Show With James Corcast Stephen Colbert ‘PG’ den TMZ (N) ‘PG’ TMZ ‘PG’ Entertainment Two and a Tonight Half Men ‘14’ Channel 2 (:34) The Tonight Show StarNews: Late ring Jimmy Fallon (N) ‘14’ Edition (N) POV “The Gospel of Eureka” Negotiating differences in Arkansas. (N) ‘MA’
(:37) Late Night With Seth Meyers Amanpour and Company (N)
Modern Fam- Modern Family ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ Family Guy Family Guy “Road to Ve- ‘14’ gas” ‘14’ 2019 NBA Awards (N) (Live)
Modern Family ‘PG’ Family Guy “Vestigial Peter” ‘14’
Modern Fam- WWE Monday Night RAW (N Same-day Tape) ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy American American ‘14’ “A Fistful of ‘14’ “Life of Brian” ‘14’ Dad (N) ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ Meg” ‘14’ ‘14’ Animal Kingdom Deran gets (:01) “A Good Day to Die Hard” (2013) Bruce Willis. John disturbing news. ‘MA’ McClane and his son battle Russian villains. MLB Baseball Colorado Rockies at San Francisco Giants. From Oracle Park in San FranSportsCenter (N) (Live) cisco. (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) UFC Main Event
How I Met How I Met Elementary A cab driver comYour Mother Your Mother mits a murder. ‘14’ Kirk’s Folly Jewelry (N) MicrodermMD Microderm(Live) ‘G’ abrasion System (N) ‘G’ (:03) “Tyler Perry’s the Family That Preys” (2008, Drama) Kathy Bates, Alfre Woodard. Greed and scandal test the mettle of two family matriarchs. Modern Fam- (:31) Modern (:01) Modern (:31) Modern ily ‘PG’ Family ‘PG’ Family ‘PG’ Family ‘PG’ Conan ‘14’ Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Conan ‘14’ Trip” ‘PG’ Trip” ‘PG’
(3:00) “A Good Day to Die (:01) Supernatural “The (:01) Supernatural “Fallen 138 245 Hard” (2013) Bruce Willis. End” ‘14’ Idols” ‘14’ (3:00) 2019 College World Series Finals, Game 1: Teams SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter 140 206 TBA. (N) (Live) O.J.: Made in America O.J. Simpson’s popularity explodes. Now or Never UFC Fight MLB Baseball: Rockies at 144 209 ‘14’ (N) Flashback Giants MLS Soccer Houston DyMariners All Mariners The Rich Eisen Show ‘PG’ Fight Sports MMA (N) Fight Sports: World Champi- Poker Night Heartland 426 687 namo at Portland Timbers. Access Spotlight onship Kickboxing in America Poker Tour Two and a Two and a Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops (N) ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ 241 241 Half Men Half Men (2:00) “Total “The Expendables” (2010, Action) Sylvester Stallone, Jet Li. Mercenaries “The Expendables 2” (2012, Action) Sylvester Stallone, “The Expendables 3” (2014, Action) Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham. “U.S. Mar131 254 Recall” embark on a mission to overthrow a South American dictator. Jason Statham, Jet Li. Barney Ross brings in new blood to fight an old associate. shals” American American Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Family Guy Family Guy Rick and Final Space Hot Streets Eric’s Awe- American American Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Family Guy Family Guy 176 296 Dad ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ ‘14’ some Show Dad ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Alaskan Bush People: Alas- Alaskan Bush People: Alas- Alaskan Bush People: Alas- Alaskan Bush People: Alas- Alaskan Bush People: Alas- Alaskan Bush People: Alas- Whale Wars “The Darkest Alaskan Bush People: Alas184 282 kan Grit ‘14’ kan Grit ‘14’ kan Grit ‘14’ kan Grit (N) ‘PG’ kan Grit (N) kan Grit (N) Hour” ‘14’ kan Grit Raven’s Andi Mack ‘G’ Sydney to the Just Roll With Bunk’d ‘G’ Raven’s Raven’s Home “Lost at Chel- Coop & Cami Sydney to the Amphibia ‘Y7’ Big City Raven’s Andi Mack ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ 173 291 Home ‘G’ Max ‘G’ It ‘Y7’ Home ‘G’ Sea” (N) ‘G’ Max ‘G’ Greens ‘Y7’ Home ‘G’ (:06) The (:27) The (4:58) The (:29) The Smarter Than Smarter Than “LEGO Batman: The Movie -- DC Superhe- Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘14’ (:35) Friends (:10) Friends (:45) Friends 171 300 Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House roes Unite” (2013) Clancy Brown ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ (3:00) “Lilo & Stitch” (2002) “Moana” (2016) Voices of Dwayne Johnson, Auli’i Cravalho. Animated. A “Cinderella” (2015, Children’s) Cate Blanchett, Lily James. A young woman The 700 Club “The Hunchback of Notre 180 311 Chris Sanders once-mighty demigod and a teen sail across the ocean. tries not to lose hope in the face of cruelty. Dame” (1996, Children’s) Say Yes to the Dress ‘PG’ Say Yes to the Dress ‘PG’ 90 Day Fiance: The Other 90 Day Fiance: The Other 90 Day Fiance: The Other (:01) Kate Plus Date (N) ‘PG’ (:02) sMothered “Our Own 90 Day Fiance: The Other 183 280 Way “It’s Go Time” Way Paul arrives in Brazil. Way “No Looking Back” Little World” ‘14’ Way Paul arrives in Brazil. Street Outlaws “The Hard Street Outlaws “Dark Side of Street Outlaws “One of the Street Outlaws: Full Throttle Street Outlaws “Episode 26” ‘14’ (:03) Street Outlaws ‘14’ Street Outlaws “Episode 182 278 Way” ‘14’ the Moon” ‘14’ Few” ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ 26” ‘14’ A Haunting “Haunted Past” A Haunting A home is inA Haunting “Evil Rises” ‘PG’ A Haunting “Battling Evil & Near Death” A demonic entity A Haunting A historian beA Haunting “Ghostly Voices” A Haunting A historian be196 277 ‘PG’ vaded by a demon. ‘PG’ threatens a family. (N) ‘PG’ comes possessed. ‘PG’ ‘PG’ comes possessed. ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers “Eyes on American Pickers “Texas American Pickers “VanAmerican Pickers “Corvette (:03) Pawn Stars “Pawning (:05) Pawn Stars “Sign of the (:03) American Pickers “Cor120 269 the Prize” ‘PG’ Treasures” ‘PG’ Tastic” (N) ‘PG’ King” (N) ‘PG’ Picasso” (N) ‘PG’ Times” ‘PG’ vette King” ‘PG’ (3:00) Live Rescue “Live Res- Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live Rescue “Live Rescue -- 06.24.19” (N Same-day Tape) Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: cue -06.10.19” Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol ‘14’ Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol 118 265 ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Love It or List It ‘PG’ Love It or List It “All Work Love It or List It A couple Love It or List It “Urban vs. Hidden Po- Hidden Po- Say Yes to House Hunt- House Hunt- Hunters Int’l Hidden Po- Hidden Po112 229 and No Play” ‘PG’ seeks more space. ‘PG’ Suburban Living” ‘PG’ tential ‘G’ tential ‘G’ the Nest ‘G’ ers (N) ‘G’ ers ‘G’ tential ‘G’ tential ‘G’ Best Baker in America ‘G’ Best Baker in America ‘G’ Best Baker in America ‘G’ Best Baker in America Best Baker in America Wedding Cake Champion- Chopped “Sweets: Pie Best Baker in America ‘G’ 110 231 (N) ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ ship (N) ‘G’ Jinks” ‘G’ American Greed “Online Dat- American Greed John Rog- American Greed ‘PG’ American Greed ‘PG’ American Greed “Online Dat- American Greed John Rog- Paid Program Retirement LifeLock Pro- Paid Program 208 355 ing Trap” ‘PG’ ‘G’ ers; Larry Bates. ‘PG’ ing Trap” ‘PG’ ers; Larry Bates. ‘PG’ ‘G’ Income tection Tucker Carlson Tonight (N) Hannity (N) The Ingraham Angle (N) Fox News at Night With Tucker Carlson Tonight Hannity The Ingraham Angle Fox News at Night With 205 360 Shannon Bream (N) Shannon Bream Parks and Parks and (:15) The Office Not everyone (5:50) The Of- (:25) The Of- The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Daily Alternatino (:06) South (:36) South 107 249 Recreation Recreation is getting a raise. ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ “Mafia” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Show With Arturo Park ‘MA’ Park ‘MA’ (2:30) “The (:45) “Volcano” (1997, Action) Tommy Lee Jones, Anne Heche, Gaby Hoff- “Jurassic Park III” (2001) Sam Neill. A search party encoun- (:03) “The Lost World: Jurassic Park” (1997, Adventure) Jeff Goldblum, Julianne Moore, 122 244 Thing” mann. Earthquakes and lava ravage Los Angeles. ters new breeds of prehistoric terror. Pete Postlethwaite. An expedition returns to monitor dinosaurs’ progress.
^ HBO2 304 505 + MAX
3:30
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
Chicago P.D. “Actual Physical 105 242 Violence” ‘14’ Bob’s Burg- Family Guy ‘14’ 139 247 ers ‘14’
PREMIUM STATIONS ! HBO
3 PM
Jeopardy Inside Ed. Live PD Live PD Dr. Phil ‘14’ Wendy Williams Show The Dr. Oz Show ‘PG’ Varied Programs
9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
(:01) Grand Hotel “Smokeshow” Gigi tries to save the hotel. (N) ‘PG’ Chicago P.D. “Care Under How I Met How I Met Last Man Last Man Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Dateline ‘PG’ Fire” Halstead goes under Your Mother Your Mother Standing ‘PG’ Standing ‘PG’ “The Good Doctor” Philander- “Crazy” A prominent doctor is cover to save a kid. ‘14’ ‘PG’ ‘14’ ing wife. ‘14’ murdered. ‘14’ The Ellen DeGeneres Show KTVA 5 p.m. CBS Evening KTVA 6 p.m. Evening News The NeighThe NeighGod Friended Me Miles gets Bull A priest is charged in a (N) ‘G’ First Take News borhood borhood an enticing offer. ‘PG’ fatal accident. ‘14’ Two and a Entertainment Funny You Funny You The Big Bang The Big Bang Beat Shazam Cell tower tech- So You Think You Can Fox 4 News at 9 (N) Half Men ‘14’ Tonight (N) Should Ask Should Ask Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ nicians; sisters. (N) ‘PG’ Dance The auditions continue ‘PG’ ‘PG’ in Los Angeles. ‘14’ Judge Judy Judge Judy Channel 2 NBC Nightly Channel 2 Newshour (N) American Ninja Warrior “Seattle/Tacoma City Qualifiers” Dateline NBC (N) (N) ‘PG’ ‘PG’ News 5:00 News With Jessie Graff and more. (N) ‘PG’ Report (N) Lester Holt Travel Detec- Rick Steves’ BBC World Nightly Busi- PBS NewsHour (N) Antiques Roadshow A 1951 Antiques Roadshow “Vintage Finding Your Roots With tive With Europe ‘G’ News ness Report inscribed Lone Ranger mask. Charleston” Newcomb College Henry Louis Gates, Jr. “Hard Peter ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ vases. ‘G’ Times” ‘PG’
CABLE STATIONS
(30) TBS
2:30
June 23 - 29, 2019 JUNE 24, 2019
(3:00) “Man on Fire” (2004) Denzel Washington. A body“Man on Fire” (2004, Crime Drama) Denzel Washington, Dakota Fanning, Christopher Married ... Married ... (8) WGN-A 239 307 guard takes revenge on a girl’s kidnappers. Walken. A bodyguard takes revenge on a girl’s kidnappers. With With (3:00) PM Style With Amy Stran “Birthday Bash Special” LOGO by Lori Goldstein “All Easy Pay Offers” (N) (Live) ‘G’ MicrodermMD Microderm- Peter Thomas Roth Clinical (20) QVC 137 317 (N) (Live) ‘G’ abrasion System (N) ‘G’ Skin Care (N) ‘G’ “Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad All By Myself” (2009, Comedy-Drama) Tyler Perry, Taraji P. “Madea’s Witness Protection” (2012, Comedy) Tyler Perry, Eugene Levy, Doris Roberts. Madea uses tough love on a Wall Street banker and his family. (23) LIFE 108 252 Henson, Adam Rodriguez. A boozy singer finds a way to change her life. (28) USA
2 PM
General Hospital ‘14’ Judge Judy Judge Judy Face Truth Face Truth Dish Nation Dish Nation Pickler & Ben ‘PG’ Nature Cat Wild Kratts
A = DISH
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud ABC World ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ News
(3) ABC-13 13
Hot Bench Millionaire Mod Fam
In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ “Man on Fire” In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Cops ‘PG’ Cops ‘PG’ In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night “Out for Justice” (1991, Action) Steven Seagal. “Under Siege” In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Last Man Last Man In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Last Man Last Man Du Jour - Fresh/Modern LOGO by Lori Goldstein Jayne & Pat’s Closet (N) (Live) ‘G’ Joan Rivers Classics Josie Maran Argan Oil Cosmetics (N) (Live) ‘G’ PM Style With Amy Stran How To Summer Beauty (N) (Live) ‘G’ Facets of Diamonique Gourmet Holiday (N) (Live) ‘G’ MicrodermMD System Westmore Beauty In the Kitchen with Mary Denim & Co. (N) (Live) ‘G’ An Intimate Affair (N) ‘G’ Gourmet Holiday (N) (Live) ‘G’ Vionic - Footwear (N) ‘G’ Cleaning the Kitchen (7:00) Kerstin’s Closet (N) (Live) ‘G’ Jayne & Pat’s Closet (N) (Live) ‘G’ L. Geller Makeup Studio Skechers (N) (Live) ‘G’ AnyBody Loungewear ‘G’ Tracy Anderson Martha Stewart - Fashion Isaac Mizrahi Live! (N) ‘G’ Jennifer’s Closet “Martha Stewart” (N) (Live) ‘G’ WEN Chaz Dean Martha Stewart - Fashion (N) (Live) ‘G’ David’s Birthday Bash The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ “Gift Wrapped” “The Christmas Contract” (2018) Hilarie Burton. ‘PG’ “Poinsettias for Christmas” (2018) Bethany Joy Lenz. “My Christmas Inn” (2018) Tia Mowry-Hardrict. ‘G’ “Flight Before Christmas” Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU NCIS “Bloodbath” ‘14’ NCIS “Shalom” ‘14’ NCIS “Escaped” ‘PG’ NCIS “Singled Out” ‘PG’ NCIS “Faking It” ‘PG’ NCIS ‘PG’ NCIS “Witch Hunt” ‘PG’ NCIS “Sandblast” ‘14’ Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Burgers Burgers Burgers Burgers Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Charmed ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ “The General’s Daughter” (1999, Suspense) John Travolta. “Run All Night” (2015, Action) Liam Neeson, Ed Harris. “Good-Die Hard” Charmed ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ “Star Wars: The Phantom Menace” (1999) Charmed ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ “This Is Where I Leave You” (2014) Tina Fey Charmed ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Charmed ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘PG’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ SportsCenter (N) (Live) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) World Series SportsCenter (N) (Live) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) World Series SportsCenter (N) (Live) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) World Series SportsCenter (N) (Live) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) All-Star Elect. SportsCenter (N) (Live) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) NFL Live First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NFL Live NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption NFL Live First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NFL Live NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption Woj/Lowe Conver. First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NFL Live NBA: The Jump High Noon Question Around Interruption NFL Live First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NFL Live NBA: The Jump High Noon Question Around Interruption NFL Live First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NFL Live NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) Max Question Around Interruption Woj/Lowe Football The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) MLS Soccer The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) ‘PG’ Mariners Mariners The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) ‘PG’ Mariners Mariners Junction Bensinger Mariners Mariners MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Milwaukee Brewers. (N) (Live) Mariners The Dan Patrick Show (N) MLS Soccer: Timbers at Impact The Rich Eisen Show ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) Mariners Mariners Bar Rescue ‘PG’ Bar Rescue ‘PG’ Bar Rescue ‘PG’ Bar Rescue ‘PG’ Bar Rescue ‘PG’ Two Men Two Men Two Men Two Men Mom Mom Stooges Stooges “Enter the Dragon” (1973, Action) Bruce Lee, John Saxon. “Constantine” (2005, Fantasy) Keanu Reeves, Rachel Weisz. “Total Recall” (1990) Arnold Schwarzenegger. Stooges Stooges “U.S. Marshals” (1998, Action) Tommy Lee Jones, Wesley Snipes. “The Expendables” (2010) Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham. “The Expendables 2” (2012) Stooges Stooges “Rambo III” (1988, Action) Sylvester Stallone, Richard Crenna. “Rambo: First Blood Part II” (1985, Action) “War Dogs” (2016, Comedy-Drama) Jonah Hill, Miles Teller. Stooges Stooges “Walk the Line” (2005, Biography) Joaquin Phoenix, Reese Witherspoon. “Field of Dreams” (1989) Kevin Costner, Amy Madigan. “The Great Outdoors” (1988) Stooges Stooges “Animal House” (1978) John Belushi, Kevin Bacon. “Revenge of the Nerds” (1984, Comedy) “The Sandlot” (1993, Children’s) Thomas Guiry, Mike Vitar. Total Drama Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball Gumball Total Drama Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball Gumball Total Drama Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball Gumball Total Drama Total Drama Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball Gumball Total Drama Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball Gumball Dr. Dee: Dee Tales ‘PG’ Dr. Jeff: RMV The Secret of The Zoo ‘PG’ Pit Bulls and Parolees Pit Bulls and Parolees River Monsters Varied Programs T.O.T.S. ‘Y’ Vampirina Mickey Big City Big City Big City Amphibia Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Sydney-Max Raven Big City Big City Raven Raven T.O.T.S. ‘Y’ Vampirina Mickey Big City Big City Big City Amphibia Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Sydney-Max Raven Big City Big City Raven Raven T.O.T.S. ‘Y’ Vampirina Mickey Big City Big City Big City Amphibia Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Sydney-Max Raven Big City Big City Sydney-Max Sydney-Max T.O.T.S. ‘Y’ Vampirina Mickey Big City Big City Big City Amphibia Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Sydney-Max Raven Big City Big City Roll With It Roll With It T.O.T.S. ‘G’ Vampirina Amphibia Big City Big City Big City Amphibia Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Sydney-Max Raven Big City Big City Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ PAW Patrol PAW Patrol 44 Cats (N) Alvinnn!!! LEGO City Loud House Smarter Henry Henry Loud House (:09) “Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel” (2009) SpongeBob PAW Patrol PAW Patrol 44 Cats (N) Alvinnn!!! Loud House Loud House Smarter Henry Henry Loud House “LEGO Batman: The Movie” LEGO City SpongeBob SpongeBob PAW Patrol PAW Patrol 44 Cats (N) Alvinnn!!! Loud House Loud House Smarter Henry Henry Loud House (:09) “Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked” (2011) SpongeBob PAW Patrol PAW Patrol 44 Cats (N) Alvinnn!!! Loud House Loud House Smarter Henry Henry Loud House (:09) “Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa” (2008) Chris Rock SpongeBob PAW Patrol Ryan PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol ‘Y’ PAW Patrol Ryan LEGO City Loud House PAW Patrol Ryan SpongeBob SpongeBob PAW Patrol Ryan Reba ‘PG’ 700 Club The 700 Club Movie Varied Programs The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Varied Programs Kate Plus Date ‘PG’ Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes to the Dress Four Weddings ‘PG’ Four Weddings ‘PG’ Four Weddings ‘PG’ Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes: ATL Sweet Home Sextuplets Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Four Weddings ‘PG’ Four Weddings ‘PG’ Four Weddings ‘PG’ Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes: ATL sMothered ‘14’ Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Four Weddings ‘PG’ Four Weddings ‘PG’ Four Weddings ‘PG’ Say Yes Say Yes My 600-Lb. Life ‘PG’ 90 Day: Other Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Four Weddings ‘PG’ Four Weddings ‘PG’ Four Weddings ‘PG’ Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes: ATL Outdaughtered ‘PG’ Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Four Weddings ‘PG’ Four Weddings ‘PG’ Four Weddings ‘PG’ Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes: ATL
6
B
Wendy Williams Show Court Court Young & Restless Varied Rachael Ray Live with Kelly and Ryan Dinosaur Cat in the
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
MONDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING A
B = DirecTV
9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30 1 PM
Good Morning America The View ‘14’ Channel 2 Morning Ed Dateline ‘PG’ (7:00) CBS This Morning Let’s Make a Deal ‘PG’ Hatchett The People’s Court ‘PG’ Mathis (7:00) Today ‘G’ Today 3rd Hour Go Luna Daniel Tiger Daniel Tiger Pinkalicious
4 2 7
(8) WGN-A 239 307
8:30
A = DISH
329 554
SATELLITE PROVIDERS MAY CARRY A DIFFERENT FEED THAN LISTED HERE. THESE LISTINGS REFLECT LOCAL CABLE SYSTEM FEEDS.
(3:20) “Life of the Party” Last Week (:40) “A Star Is Born” (2018, Romance) Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga, Sam Years and Years (N) ‘MA’ Years and Years ‘MA’ Axios ‘14’ (:40) “The 15:17 to Paris” (2018) Spencer (2018, Comedy) Melissa Mc- Tonight-John Elliott. A country music star falls in love with a talented singer. ‘R’ Stone. Three Americans thwart an ISIS attack Carthy. ‘PG-13’ on a European train. (3:35) “Robin Hood” (2010, Adventure) Russell Crowe, Cate Real Time With Bill Maher Axios ‘14’ (:45) Los Es- (:15) “Signs” (2002, Suspense) Mel Gibson, Joaquin Phoe- (:05) “Geostorm” (2017, Action) Gerard Butler, Jim SturBlanchett, William Hurt. Robin and his men battle the Sheriff ‘MA’ pookys ‘MA’ nix, Cherry Jones. A widower investigates huge circles in his gess, Abbie Cornish. A worldwide storm threatens humanity. of Nottingham. ‘PG-13’ crop fields. ‘PG-13’ ‘PG-13’ (2:10) “Em- (:45) “It” (2017, Horror) Jaeden Lieberher, Jeremy Ray Taylor, Sophia Lillis. Jett “Charles Junior” Jett “Black Widow” (1987, Suspense) Debra (:45) “The Last Seduction” (1994, Suspense) Linda Fio(:40) “Natural pire of the Maine children unite to fight an ancient, evil clown. ‘R’ plans a heist at a poker game. Winger. A Justice Department investigator rentino, Peter Berg. A greedy wife steals her husband’s drug Born Killers” Sun” ‘MA’ pursues a lethal woman. ‘R’ money and escapes. ‘R’ (1994) (3:15) “Wildlife” (2018, Dra- “The Kingdom” (2007, Action) Jamie Foxx, Chris Cooper, (6:55) Our (:25) “The Dark Tower” (2017) Idris Elba. A City on a Hill Decourcy finds Desus & Mero City on a Hill Decourcy finds Desus & Mero ma) Carey Mulligan. ‘PG-13’ Jennifer Garner. Federal agents seek a terrorist cell in RiCartoon Gunslinger defends the Dark Tower from the he has a new enemy. ‘MA’ (N) ‘MA’ he has a new enemy. ‘MA’ ‘MA’ yadh, Saudi Arabia. ‘R’ President Man in Black. ‘PG-13’ Korn’s Brian Head Welch: Loud Krazy Love “Dead Night” (2017, Horror) Brea Grant. A “Crank” (2006, Action) Jason Statham. A “American Assassin” (2017, Action) Dylan O’Brien, Michael “Assassination Games” (2011, Action) The journey of Brian Welch from KoRn. ‘MA’ mother loses her sanity during one night in the poisoned man scurries to find an antidote Keaton, Sanaa Lathan. Three agents join forces to battle a Jean-Claude Van Damme. Rival assassins woods. ‘NR’ within the hour. ‘R’ mysterious operative. ‘R’ join forces against a drug cartel. ‘R’
June 23 - 29, 2019
Clarion TV
© Tribune Media Services
9
release dates: June 22-28, 2019
25 (19)
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | C9
Next Week: Visit Independence Hall
Issue 25, 2019
Founded by Betty Debnam
A different kind of swim
Mini Fact:
Into the Pool!
At some pools, you might see a team of swimmers practicing complicated routines. These athletes are called synchronized (SIN-krohn-ized) swimmers. This graceful sport combines the skills used in dance, swimming and figure skating. Swimmers must be very strong and flexible. They must be able to hold their breath for a Underwater speakers long time. allow the swimmers Synchronized swimming routines to hear the music. take place in deep water. Swimmers are not allowed to touch the bottom of the pool. Routines are done to music. Swimmers learn the routine by doing it on the deck of the pool, then trying it in the water. This is called decking. Team routines are five minutes long. Individual, duet (two swimmers) and trio (three swimmers) routines are shorter. At competition, swimmers are judged individually on their figures, or positions. That score makes up half of their final score, including their routines. Judges look to see how long swimmers can hold their breath, how high they are in the water, their posture, and how difficult the routine is.
photo by Al Bello, Getty Images, courtesy USA Synchro
Swimmers begin their events by diving off “blocks,” or platforms at the end of the pool. photo by John Hodge/USA Swimming
Is there a pool near your home? Does it have a swim team? Many kids have fun competing in organized events called swim meets. To make the team, kids should be good at one or more of the four strokes: freestyle, butterfly, breaststroke and backstroke. More than 2.5 million kids across the United States are on swim teams at their local pool. Many are between the ages of 6 and 12. Some kids swim year-round and go on to swim in high school and college. Young kids may participate in all events. As their bodies grow, they may find one or two events they like best.
The competition
Swimmers may swim in order based on their seed times. This means that swimmers with similar times in an event will compete against each other. At some meets, swimmers are grouped by age.
The swimmers
Boys usually wear tightfitting, short racing suits. Girls wear one-piece suits. Some swimmers wear caps to control their hair. This also helps them to move through the water faster. Most swimmers also wear goggles to protect their eyes from the chemicals in the pool.
Swim meet basics
Have you ever been to a swim meet? Events move quickly. Crowds yell and cheer on their favorite swimmers. Here are some of the things you might see at a swim meet.
Events and heats
An event features a certain stroke over a set distance. For example, a swimmer might swim a 100-meter freestyle. If there are more swimmers than there are lanes in the pool, there will be heats. If there are 12 swimmers in the 100-meter freestyle but only 10 lanes, there might be two heats of six swimmers.
The officials
At a swim meet, you may see: • a referee, who enforces the rules and makes sure all the other officials are being fair; • a starter, who sounds a horn or shoots photo by Marin Rulsch a cap gun to start a race; • a stroke judge, who watches to make sure the stroke is being done correctly; • a turn judge, who makes sure swimmers start, finish and turn correctly.
Resources On the Web:
• usaswimming.org • bit.ly/MPswimsafe
At the library:
• “The Science Behind Swimming, Diving and Other Water Sports” by Amanda Lanser
The Mini Page® © 2019 Andrews McMeel Syndication
Try ’n’ Find
Mini Jokes
Words that remind us of swimming are hidden in this puzzle. Some words are hidden backward, and some letters are used twice. See if you can find: BACKSTROKE, BREASTSTROKE, BUTTERFLY, CAPS, COMPETE, EVENT, FIGURES, FREESTYLE, FUN, GOGGLES, HEAT, JUDGE, LANE, MEET, METER, REFEREE, ROUTINE, SEED, STARTER, SUMMER, SWIM, SYNCHRONIZED, TEAM, TURN.
X I E E R E F E R H
T E E M Y F U N E E
S G B C L D I B M A
P O A O F E B R M T
A G C M R Z M E U R
C G K P E I I A S E
F L S E T N W S X T
R E T T T O S T R R
Sue: Where do swimmers eat their meals? Stan: At pool tables!
E S R E U R E S O A
E R O T B H R T U T
S E K N N C U R T S
T T E E R N G O I S
Y E N V U Y I K N E
L M A E T S F E E E
E Y L E E G D U J D
Eco Note
You’ll need: • 1 (10-ounce) bag romaine lettuce • 1 cup fresh mushrooms, sliced • 3 pieces precooked bacon, heated and crumbled • 1 (11-ounce) can mandarin oranges, drained • 3 tablespoons sliced almonds
Dressing: • 1/3 cup canola oil • 3 tablespoons cider vinegar • 2 tablespoons sugar
What to do: 1. Place salad ingredients in large bowl. 2. Mix dressing ingredients in jar with tight lid; shake vigorously. 3. Pour dressing over salad. Toss and serve. Serves 2.
The Mini Page® © 2019 Andrews McMeel Syndication
Mandarin Orange Salad
* You’ll need an adult’s help with this recipe.
Cook’s Corner
Did you know that less than 1% of all the water on Earth can be used by people? The rest is salt water (the kind you find in the ocean) or is permanently frozen. As our population grows, more and more people are using up this limited resource. It is important that we use our water wisely and not waste it. For example, just by turning off the tap while you brush your teeth, you can save up to 8 gallons of water! That adds up to more than 200 gallons a month, enough to fill a huge fish tank that holds six small sharks! adapted from epa.gov
For later: Look in your newspaper for items about swim meets in your area.
Teachers: For standards-based activities to accompany this feature, visit: bit.ly/MPstandards. And follow The Mini Page on Facebook!
C10 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
Appreciate the opossum!
New York Times Crossword 1 9 16 20 21 22 23 25 26 27 28 29 30 33 34 35 36 41 42 45 46 48 49 52 55 56 58 61 64 66 67 69 70 71 72 73 75 76 79 80 81 83
ACROSS
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Exaggerated virility Effortless assimilation Last Sunday’s Alternatives Crossword to H.S. diplomas H Surgical removal procedure Answers E What might raise the roof? E Come down, in a way L Line never said by 86 Former Mississippi C A S 58-Across L L A senator Trent Columnist Bombeck A L I 87 The first recorded Birth-control R O L one was noted by A T M option, briefly A the Greek scientist “Please hold the line” B A K Hipparchus in 134 Shopping center? A V I B.C. Excerpt M O N A N G 89 2014 hit film Subjects of expertise featuring Oprah Lay an egg, say Winfrey Targets on “chest day” 90 Announcement Hollers from a band Line never 92 Colorful fish said by 83-Across 93 Surveillance aid Lobster ____ diavolo 95 Word before check or drop Official language 96 Overnighter of a U.S. territory 98 Chinese principle Medical research org. 99 TV detective who “Gotcha, man!” never said 121-Across Dec. 31, e.g. 106 Exercise done while sitting Diminutive for Theresa 108 Wax holders Takes the plunge 109 What a plus sign Will who played Grandpa may indicate Walton on “The Waltons” 110 Belief of Benjamin Franklin Big name in applesauce 114 Already: Fr. Film villain who never 115 Lhasa ____ said 23-Across, with “the” 16 May ordeal for 1 Some purchasers some H.S. students of expensive gowns Manhattan’s ____ Stadium 119 N.Y. engineering sch. 120 Pop singer Jason The “E” in Q.E.D. 121 Line never said Noses out? by 99-Across Counterpart of pitch 125 Last of the Stuarts Prefix with -lepsy 126 Thoroughly Title for two Beatles enjoyed something ____-Locka, Fla. 127 Birth Try, in a way 128 Obstinate responses Woodworker’s tool 129 “Oh, lordy!” Digital-image format 130 Corporations and 3:00 partnerships, e.g. Willowy Washer/dryer unit DOWN Commander who 1 Secret society never said 36-Across
F T A I A T F P I E E L A E L M R D E H D R A O Y G S L A S E I J O I N A B A M A K A K E L I N G D I S L I S T E D H A A N N D O D S T S
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A L O H A B E T O N R U S E C H I A
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U K E S
Moving too quickly to be seen clearly Half of an old crime duo Croque-monsieur ingredient Plural suffix? Drinks in moderation Post-____ Difficult kind of push-up German artist Dix “____ Love” (Cole Porter song) G.I. grub Without a buyer lined up Seattle-based insurance giant Least productive Some beans ____-Roman wrestling British noble who never said 44-Down Anastasia’s love in Disney’s “Anastasia” Irritably answers Purchase for a lorry Blood-typing letters Politician’s goal Impatient dismissals London’s ____ Park All over again Not yet rented Varicolored Like BFFs Formative
Jaqueline Bigar’s Stars HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Sunday, June 23, 2019: This year, you pick up on all sorts of vibes. You will tend to be more emotional than you have been in the past, as you will be more sensitive to others. If single, you might find dating very exciting, but you could go from one intense tie to another. You will know the right person when he or she comes along. If attached, the two of you seem more devoted to each other than in the recent past. Your bond deepens. PISCES always has a romantic suggestion. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH You have a lot on your mind that you finally choose to share with a partner. You are sometimes very serious-minded. However, expect surprises and good vibes once you open up. Tonight: As YOU like it. This Week: Your words and actions carry punch this week. Dealing with others could have a stressful tone. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Right now, you walk hand in hand with the unexpected. Those close to you who are flexible might enjoy this phase of your life. But someone who is dependent on you for stability might become upset. You will be dealing with a variety of different personalities. Tonight: Go with the moment. This Week: You might want to take the first few days of this week off. You will not feel up to snuff until Thursday. You will be hard to stop then. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Events and people propel you into the limelight. You might not be sure why you are where you are. Willingly take responsibility and allow more give-and-take between you and others. Tonight: Wherever you are, being noticed. This Week: You know how to draw another person’s attention. You will demonstrate how profound that skill is most of the week. CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHHH You might be far more emotional than you realize. Once you get on the phone with a loved one, you feel the unique intensity that exists between you. Do not fight the inevitable. Tonight: Work with a friend’s unpredictability. This Week: You are a lead player, especially at work or within the community. You will find it hard to stop and take a break until late Thursday. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You enjoy the romantic quality of relating closely, just you and one other person. Today you can frequently be found cooing and enjoying a loved one. You might be speaking of the future or considering a possible change. Tonight: Do not be surprised by what could happen. This Week: Yes, you are like a ray of sunshine this week and impossible to stop. All eyes are on you. Be aware! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH Allow the other party to make the first effort or to make the plans for the day. A sense of well-being surrounds and emanates out. Do not be surprised to receive several invitations. Tonight: Only what you want to do. This Week: You can fuss all you want; you are not in control this week. The question remains how gracefully you can defer to another person! LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Show your caring in a manner that means a lot to your sweetie. For some of you, that might look like a lengthy massage. For others, going out to a favorite dinner works well. Tonight: Though you might hear something shocking, listen to what is being shared. This Week: You wonder what is going on with those around you. Someone certainly acts as if he or she is on the warpath. If you can, duck. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHHH Defer to or indulge a loved one. If you want to please a child, you might go to the amusement park before you know it. Go with the moment, enjoying what you are doing as much as the receiver. Do not be surprised that you will often think of
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this day. Tonight: Be spontaneous. This Week: Be as direct as you can when handling a personal issue. Others need to hear what you feel and think. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH A loved one lets you know how valued you are. You both are very different. You like adventure and taking risks. You could be delighted to go kayaking. The other party loves staying close to home. Tonight: Be thankful for what your sweetie does. This Week: Creativity flows most of the week, starting on Monday. Do not allow a good idea to fall to the wayside. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Caring seems to naturally emanate from you. Your sensitivity speaks and another person is clearly drawn to you. You might note that you nearly know what someone is going to say before he or she says it! Tonight: Out at a favorite night spot. This Week: Pressure builds on the home front. A roommate or loved one might want to make some changes! AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You might want to do some shopping. You might not even have a list of items, but as you wander, you enjoy the various stores. You could easily pick up a token of affection for a special person in your life. Tonight: Indulge that loved one and others too! This Week: You could have a lot to say, and you will say it all at once, to the horror of one individual. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You have a big personality that comes out frequently. Whether inviting everyone over for a spontaneous costume party or an intense game of cards, you draw your closest friends, bringing them together. Tonight: Go with spontaneity. This Week: Your emotions trigger with ease. You could become possessive, angry and then helpful within hours! BORN TODAY Former English king Edward VIII (1894), Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas (1948), singer Duffy (1984)
A T S E A
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SUDOKU Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. 7
8
9
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5 2 8 3 6 9 7 1 4
6 7 4 5 8 1 3 2 9
9 1 3 4 7 2 5 6 8
2 5 6 1 9 7 4 8 3
1 3 9 6 4 8 2 7 5
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58 65
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Shade of green Line never said by 17-Down Iraq War danger, for short Rest of the afternoon Economizes Common landscaping tree with acorns Puts the kibosh on something Active ingredient in marijuana Sport making its Olympic debut in Tokyo in 2020 Number of Spanish kings named Carlos Small boat, maybe Angel Head, slangily Home to the Eads Bridge over the Mississippi: Abbr. Suffer Part of Caesar’s boast Las ____, Canary Islands Opposite of kill Elmer, to Bugs “Sounds good to me!” Many a northern Iraqi
92 97
105
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86
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7 4 2 8 1 3 9 5 6
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70 75
8 6 5 9 2 4 1 3 7
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3 9 1 7 5 6 8 4 2
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Last Sunday’s Answer Key
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Difficulty Level
34
37
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56
43 44 47 50 51 53 54 57 59 60 62 63 65 68 74 77 78 79 82 84 85
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22
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6/23
27 31
6 2
8
21
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106
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93
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5
23
42
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20
No. 0616 T A C T
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KIWI FRUIT 411
Dear Readers: The kiwi is a delicious, beautiful green summer fruit. About the size of a pingpong ball, the kiwi is actually a fuzzy berry originally from China. It arrived here in the United States in 1904, according to the U.S. Department of AgriA BIG FAN culture (www.USDA.gov). Dear Heloise: I live in an area where A kiwi has about 65 calories. Try it summer temperatures can exceed 100 de- out! grees for days in a row. Using the ceiling fan -- Heloise makes my house feel cooler. A CUT IN TIME My question is this: Should I turn off the fans for a few hours each day to let them Dear Heloise: I keep a pair of scissors “rest,” or is it OK to let them operate 24/7? next to my chair that I read the paper in ev-- Sarah P., Bakersfield, Calif. ery day. I cut out articles of interest, ads, Sarah, operating a ceiling fan is incred- etc., when I read them. ibly cheap, even if your ceiling fan has a This saves me from going back through light on it. No light on the fan costs as little the paper later to find them. Just be sure evas $10 per month, to around $30 per month eryone has read the paper before you start for one with a light. cutting! PET PAL But turn the fan off when you are not in -- Sharon in Florida Dear Readers: Meet Jackson, Melinda the room, for safety’s sake.
DON’T QUOTE ME By Seth A. Abel. Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz
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2019 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Dear Heloise: OPOSSUMS are awesome! We learned about opossums in school. They are marsupials, which means they are born underdeveloped, and then they complete their growth in their mother’s pouch. Kangaroos and koalas also are marsupials. An opossum is the size of a house cat, is nocturnal and lives in the forest. If you see one at night, just let it be. The opossum is looking for food, including ticks, mice, other small animals and plants. An opossum is harmless, won’t bite you, RARELY carries rabies and actually is quite beneficial to the environment, gobbling up all those insects. Opossums live about two years and grow to anywhere from 5 to 15 pounds. “Playing possum” is not a game to the animal; an opossum’s body can physiologically shut down in response to fear. I want to ask your readers to appreciate the opossum! -- Jennifer S., age 10, in Texas
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And did you know that the blades of the ceiling fan should go counterclockwise in summertime to force the air down and cooler? -- Heloise
2019 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Hints from Heloise
B.’s new furry family member! She adopted him recently; he is half Lab and half Saint Bernard. He’s a real sweetie, Melinda says, and Jackson is already a certified therapy dog. Melinda and Jackson are in Whittier, California. To see these two, visit www.Heloise.com and click on “Pet of the Week.” Do you have a furry and funny family member? Email a picture and description to Heloise@Heloise. com. -- Heloise
By Dave Green
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88 Rubin ____ (classic illusion) 91 Try for a part 93 ____ Graham, Oprah’s longtime beau 94 Former Penn State football coach 97 Go green, say 100 Standing 101 Hilarious joke, in slang 102 Titillating 103 Feudal estate 104 Cyrano de Bergerac’s love 105 How paint is usually sold 107 Stuns 111 Shiraz native 112 #, to a proofreader 113 Performers in old-fashioned dumb shows 115 Stuck, after “in” 116 Buzzing 117 Stinky Le Pew 118 ____ Helens 122 Communication syst. for the deaf 123 Comp ____ (coll. major) 124 Crossed
Top high school student plans to take on college by herself DEAR ABBY: My niece, “Amelia,” was a straight-A student in high school. She took advanced placement courses from 10th grade through 12th and was in all honors classes. She talked about going into the medical field after she got her college degree. Before starting college she wanted to take a year off and just live life because she’d had so many college-level courses almost her entire high school life.
medicine being a career she wants to pursue. This is a decision she should make without pressure, as well-intentioned as it may be.
My sister (her mother) and I talk every day. Amelia has left home now and returned to their home state of Ohio because she loved it there when she was younger. She hasn’t decided what she wants to go to school for and thinks she can afford to attend college fulltime, have an apartment on her own and pay for everything she needs. No matter how many times my sister tells her she needs to move back home and attend college here so she can finish her education, Amelia still seems to think she can do it all. My sister is afraid if she pushes her too much, she will shut down. What can we do to make this girl realize life will be easier at home and with support?
D E A R Abigail Van Buren ABBY: I am doing an ancestry search to present to my sisterin-law “Kate” as a surprise birthday gift. While doing the search, I discovered that her late mother, “Ellen,” has a sister who lives nearby. My brother believes Kate knows nothing about her. For unknown reasons, Ellen hadn’t spoken to almost her entire family in years; therefore, Kate knows little about them.
We’re not sure if I should include Ellen’s sister in the ancestry or not. I think Kate has the right to know, but I don’t want to upset her. Kate and Ellen were very close, and I’m afraid if -- AUNT WHO CARES IN THE she knew her mother withheld that inSOUTH formation, it may cause her pain, even DEAR AUNT: Amelia may be though Ellen has been gone nearly 15 suffering from burnout, which is years. What are your thoughts? why she wants a gap year before -- DON’T WANT TO CAUSE starting college. Because she’s an PAIN adult now, she may also want some DEAR DON’T: There is always a freedom that she can’t have if she reason for family estrangements. Ellives at home. The more your sister len may have been hurt or mistreatpressures her, the more Amelia will ed by her relatives, which is why she dig her heels in, so the matter should separated herself from them. Howbe put on the back burner for now. ever, Kate is an adult and should When the subject is raised again, it have the information you discovered should be in a non-confrontational to do with as she pleases, which inmanner -- with a spreadsheet handy cludes ignoring it. so your niece can show her mother Dear Abby is written by Abigail how she plans to finance her new Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillifestyle. lips, and was founded by her mother, Amelia is a high achiever. Give Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby her credit for intelligence. She may at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box or may not change her mind about 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Peninsula Clarion | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | C11
Crossword
Lake house vacation tradition changes after mom’s passing made it plain that he would like you to visit “as you naturally would.” Because you are feeling awkward, this is something you should discuss with him, if only to make sure he will be able to welcome you as he has in the past. It would Abigail Van Buren not be a breach of etiquette to level with him about what’s on your mind. Once you start going there and interacting, you will get to know his lady friend, and she will get to know you -- and that should break the ice.
DEAR ABBY: I’m the youngest of five, and all of us are successful in our own ways -- except for our middle youngest sibling. She dropped out of college, had a bad breakup with a married man and has given up all hope and efforts to live a normal life. She’s 34, refuses to work and still lives with our parents. She trashed the vehicle our father bought and paid for, and walks around the house -- THROWN IN SOUTH DAKOTA talking to herself, which I believe is for attention DEAR THROWN: Your father has because I have had serious conversations with
her. I’ve tried several times to be a sympathetic ear and encouraged her to find a job, but it’s not working. What can we do to help her get a job and move? She’s a burden on our family, and it’s depressing to have her present for family events she doesn’t dress for or make an effort to receive other family members. If this continues, I’m scared of what may happen after our parents pass. What can be done for an adult who refuses to grow up and move on?
-- HOPELESS IN GEORGIA DEAR HOPELESS: I have another idea why your sister walks around the house talking to herself and can’t motivate herself to be independent. She may be severely depressed or suffering from other mental problems. Talk to your parents and tell them they are not helping her by ignoring the fact that she isn’t functional. They need to insist that, as a condition of staying with them, she talk to a mental health professional. 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
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, June 24, 2019: This year, you learn to trust your instincts even more than you have in the past. Your timing could be far more precise than you realize it is. If single, you might meet someone you could care about deeply. Let this bond grow naturally. Give yourself time to get to know each other. If you’re attached, you and your partner want to please each other but can be willful. Take advice from ARIES with a grain of salt. They’re unusually willful. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH Because confusion surrounds your interactions and thoughts in the morning, you might opt to say little. Afternoon heralds clarity and understanding, but you might wait until later in the day or tomorrow to have a discussion. Tonight: Feeling great. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH A close loved one or friend might share with you that by pursuing a certain goal, you’ll achieve nothing but failure. According to this person, you might be disillusioned, but you still need to aim for your heartfelt desire. Tonight: In the thick of the moment. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You take the lead however you might need to in order to verify the financial implications of a certain action. You also might want to consider your time commitment. You’ll probably like what you see and continue. Nevertheless, you’ll feel more confident. Tonight: Join a friend for munchies. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHHH Decide to make important calls early in the day. You might hear news or have an opportunity to test out an idea that could bring benefits. The feedback that you receive will be worth considering. You have time to mull over the pros and cons. Tonight: Relax, then decide. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Investigate the financial implications of a project or offer. Ultimately, you’ll be responsible for most, if not all, of the costs. Discuss this matter with those in charge. You’ll be pleased to see an associate step up to the plate. Tonight: As you like. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You’ll see a personal situation
Rubes
By Leigh Rubin
from a different perspective. How you handle a personal matter could radically change because of the other party and his or her actions. Take in what you’re seeing, but don’t make any radical decisions yet. Tonight: Just don’t be alone. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHHH Your ability to move past a problem astounds many people. Once more, you’re challenged. Remain secure. You might not have an immediate solution, but you will reach an answer in the near future. Tonight: Do errands. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHHH To find solutions, tap into your imagination. No matter how you plan to handle a problem, you’ll most likely be successful. Refuse to isolate yourself. Answers pop up through contact with others. Tonight: Making the most of the moment. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH Getting going can be difficult or challenging. If you can, you might be very happy with calling today a lazy day. Sometimes, a break from your routine provides many positive results. Tonight: Do as you like. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You’re likely to say what’s on your mind without getting bogged down in details or becoming concerned about someone else’s reaction. If you maintain your openness, you’ll ultimately create an easier platform for discussion. Tonight: Know when to call it a night. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You might be working through a question that involves your budget. Finding the appropriate solution or path might take a talk or brainstorming session with several more-experienced people. Make no commitments just yet. You’ll know when to make a move. Tonight: Do an errand or two. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH Someone might find you confusing. Communicate with others in a meaningful way. For example, look at how each individual communicates, and follow their style. You could find that you become far more successful and draw more positive results. Tonight: Go for what you want. BORN TODAY Actress Minka Kelly (1980), co-founder of Disney Studios Roy Disney (1893), Roman Catholic Saint John of the Cross (1542)
Ziggy
Have they got your number? Dear Readers: Today’s SOUND OFF is about telemarketing calls that are using the names of family and friends: Dear Heloise: I got a phone call last night, and caller ID said it was from my son. I answered, only to get a marketer for some product I won’t buy. In fact, I encourage others I know to never buy a product from a telemarketer. So many marketing calls are scams. The Do Not Call list doesn’t screen out calls from my son, my friends or my alma mater. When will companies learn this is not an effective way to sell anything?” -- Bess G., Sherman, Texas Bess, telemarketing calls are becoming a real problem in this country. Readers, you can eliminate a number of these calls by going online and registering at www. donotcall.gov, or you can call 888-3821222. If you move or change phone numbers, you’ll need to re-register. -- Heloise SEND A GREAT HINT TO: Heloise P.O. Box 795001 San Antonio, TX 78279-5001 Fax: 1-210-HELOISE Email: Heloise@Heloise.com FAST FACTS Dear Readers: Here are some other uses for a wine rack: * Use to store rolled-up magazines and mats. * Roll guest hand towels and store for the bathroom. * Use to store wrapping paper. -- Heloise
SUDOKU Solution
8 1 9 3 5 7 6 2 4
2 5 4 1 8 6 9 7 3
6 3 7 4 2 9 1 5 8
4 6 5 7 1 3 8 9 2
7 8 1 5 9 2 4 3 6
1 4 2 9 6 5 3 8 7
Difficulty Level
B.C.
3 9 8 2 7 4 5 6 1
5 7 6 8 3 1 2 4 9 6/17
By Dave Green
4 9 7 3 2 2 8 1 6 8 7 2 6
8 7 9
5 6 4
3 5 7 4 9 8 3 6 1 2 1 5
Difficulty Level
6/24
By Johnny Hart
By Tom Wilson
Tundra
Garfield
9 2 3 6 4 8 7 1 5
Last Sunday’s Answer 6-17
2019 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Jacqueline Bigar’s Stars
2019 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
DEAR ABBY: Every summer, my husband and I, our two boys and my parents would take several vacations at Mom and Dad’s lake home. This is where Dad grew up and where we spent countless vacations as children. It holds much sentimental value to us all. We were lucky enough to have our own space upstairs and were free to enjoy the home as if it was ours. We always contributed to groceries and cleaning before we left, and it was very enjoyable for everyone. My mother passed away last year after a long battle with a debilitating disease. Dad is planning to retire soon and move permanently to the lake home, which is about seven hours away. However, he has found a girlfriend he has become close to, and upon retiring, he plans to have her move in with him. I am thrilled that Dad has found someone, but I’m left wondering how to handle visits to our beloved vacation spot once Dad’s new lady moves in. He insists we visit as we naturally would, which usually means staying several nights as it is quite far away. We don’t know Dad’s lady very well yet, and I’m feeling awkward about visiting. Do we continue to treat this as we once did, like it is partly ours? What’s proper etiquette here?
By Eugene Sheffer
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
C12 | Sunday, June 23, 2019 | Peninsula Clarion
. . . Events Continued from page C4
Tribe to participate in Summer Food Service Program
The Nikiski Community Recreation Center
The Kenaitze Indian Tribe is participating in the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Summer Food Service Program. Meals will be provided free of charge to all eligible children participating in the Tribe’s summer programs. To be eligible to receive free meals at a residential or non-residential camp, children must meet the income guidelines for reduced-price meals in the National School Lunch Program. Children who are part of households that receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits, or benefits under the Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations, or Temporary Assistance to Needy Families are automatically eligible. Acceptance and participation requirements are the same for all regardless of race, color, national origin, sex, age or disability. For more information, please contact Teresa Smith, Kenaitze Indian Tribe Early Childhood Manager, at 907-335-7260.
Kenai Watershed Summer Camp Come join the Kenai Watershed Forum for a session of “Wilderness, Wildlife & Wonder” summer camp. There will be several locally focused, science and environmentalthemed sessions for kids aged 6-12. Nurture your child’s sense of curiosity and uncover the wonders of the natural world through active play, exploration, games and art. All sessions will involve fostering a connection to nature through a hands-on, immersion in the outdoors, allowing them to see, feel, smell and directly experience flora and fauna of the Kenai Peninsula watershed for themselves. Megan Pike is our new camp director. She comes to the peninsula from Maine with a background in adapted outdoor education and recreation. Join Meg and get your kids in touch with their wild side! Registration is open online at www. kenaiwatershed.org.
Al-Anon support group meetings
—Call out to local vendors: It’s time to reserve your space! Booth Space is available for the annual Family Fun in the Midnight Sun/Nikiski Days Event scheduled for Saturday, June 15. Interested vendors are encouraged to contact us early. Applications will be available online www.northpenrec.com —Fitness classes: NPRSA has many offerings to help you meet your health goals in 2019. The following fitness classes are held at NCRC: Strong by Zumba with Samantha Pate: Mondays at 9:30 a.m. and Fridays at 9:30 a.m.; Yoga with Lacey Stock: Mondays at 6 p.m. and Wednesdays at 9:30 a.m.; Body Blast with Lacey Stock: Tuesdays at 6 p.m. Spin Class with Teri Langston: Wednesdays at 6 p.m. and Saturday at 9:30 a.m. —NCRC Open Gym Nights: Teen Center, Monday – Friday, 2:30-8 p.m. —Full Swing Golf, Monday – Friday. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Seeking host families The Central Peninsula AFS chapter is seeking host families for the 2019-20 school year. There are currently seven high school exchange students hosted by local families, and we will be sending four local students abroad next year. We have a strong organization and lots of support for host families. If you are interested in learning more, contact Eileen at 690-2779 or Laura at 394-6949. Soldotna Elementary Schools new student registration will be held from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 8 and Friday, August 9. Class Supply lists are available online at: http://soldotnaelementary.blogs.kpbsd.k12.ak.us/. Class lists will be posted on Friday, Aug. 16 at 4 p.m. We will also be having our Open House for students and parents on Monday, Aug. 26 5:30-6:30 p.m. The office will be open Aug. 1. Call 260-5100 for more information.
Narcan kits available at Kenai Public Health
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.
Heroin overdoses are on the rise in Alaska. Narcan is an easy medication you can give to someone who is overdosing. It may save their life. Adults can get free Narcan nasal spray kits at the Kenai Public Health Center at 630 Barnacle Way, Suite A, in Kenai. For additional information call Kenai Public Health at 335-3400.
2019 Women On Target Clinic schedule
Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month, the Kenai River Rotary Club will meet at Siam Noodles in Soldotna.
Go to our events and sign up on Eventbrite “get tickets” and review the instructions on Facebook-Kenai Peninsula Women on Target. You must be 18 years of age. June 29: Intro to pistol; August 2: Intro to Rifle. Sponsored by Friends of the NRA, Kenai Peninsula SCI and Snowshoe Gun Club.
SPEAK meeting SPEAK (Support Group for families of children who live though disabilities) will be meeting the third Thursday of each month at 6:30 p.m. at the Love Inc. building 44410 K-Beach Rd. Parents, Grandparents, Guardians, and care givers service providers and resource representatives are encouraged and welcome to come and participate. This is great way to connect with others through their overcoming successes as parents, grandparents, and caregivers. SPEAK is a resource-based group. Please no children, childcare is not available. Questions call 907-252-2558 or 907-9536325.
New Kenai River rotary meeting place Habitat for Humanity seeking family partner The Central Peninsula Habitat for Humanity is now looking for a family to partner with for their 2019 building season. If you would like more information, please contact Carri at 283-7797, or visit our website: https://hfhcentralpeninsula.org to apply online!
MAP volunteers needed Parents experienced with raising children with Chronic Medical Conditions and Intellectual/Developmental Disabilities are needed as MAP volunteers to help Mentor, Advocate and Partner with new parents in similar situations. Please join our volunteers in providing free Parentto-Parent support in our community. Register for training this week by visiting https://www.stonesoupgroup.org/
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event/mentor-advocate-partner-map-training-soldotna/ or call 907-953-8480 to inquire about more information on how you can help. The Kenai Peninsula Borough’s Land Management Division is calling for letters of interest from people looking for new agricultural land. The hope is that people will share some details that the borough can use to inform the program design. The kinds of major points officials think would be helpful in a letter include the size and general location needed, along with any other criteria that would be essential for the person’s production plans, and maybe an indication of the time frames that people are thinking if they were to take on an area of land with production goals. Letters should be addressed to KPB Land Manager, 144 North Binkley St., Soldotna AK 99669. More information can be found at kpb.us/land
KCHS 1969 reunion The KCHS 1969 50th High School Reunion will take place on July 26 at 6 p.m. at Pizza Paradisos. Dorothy Lou Hermansen, Maryam Gray House and Sheryl House Martin are serving as the event’s planning committee. Visit the Facebook page “KCHS 1969 50th Reunion” for more information. Graduates may register through that page, or by emailing Dorothy Hermansen at hootowl@chugach. net.
Ninilchik Community Neighborhood Watch The Ninilchik Community Neighborhood Watch would like to give public notice that we are now working together for a safer community. We encourage support and participation. Contact your local nonprofit organization at 907202-2103 or 907-398-8067.
Public Health announcement: Make sure your immunizations are up to date Now is a good time to make sure your immunizations are up to date. Measles outbreaks are happening as close as Washington State, a common travel destination for many Alaskans. Our public health officials are urging Alaskans to ensure that all of their immunizations, including the MMR vaccine, are current. Protect yourself and your family – and the whole community! To learn more, including vaccine requirements for schools and daycares, visit immunize.dhss.alaska.gov. For local questions community members can call Kenai Public Health at 907-3353400.
Update your records at Kasilof cemetery The Kasilof-Cohoe Cemetery Association is updating their records. If you have a reserved plot or a family member interred at Spruce Grove Memorial Cemetery in Kasilof, please notify us with your contact information, so we can keep our records current. Updated rules and regulations are also available. Email SpruceGroveCemetery@ gmail.com or send information to Kasilof Cohoe Cemetery Association, P.O.Box 340, Kasilof, AK, 99610.
Women’s exercise group A women’s exercise group meets from 7:15-8 a.m. each Monday, Wednesday and Friday in Soldotna in the cultural hall of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on Marydale Ave. It’s a free 45 minutes of aerobics and strength training geared for the “more mature” ladies in the community. Call Sally at 262-6637 for more information.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Hilcorp and Harvest Pipeline have crude oil and unodorized buried gas lines in the Kenai Peninsula Area that are identified by pipeline markers.
Be Safe! It’s Simple... Call at least Two Days before You Dig
IT’S FREE AND IT’S THE LAW
Signs of a Pipeline Leak include:
• Dead or discolored vegetation in an • • • • • • •
otherwise green area Dirt or dust blowing from a hole in the ground Bubbling in wet or flooded areas Blowing or hissing sound Flames if leak has ignited Pool of liquid on the ground Vapor clouds or heat waves rising above the pipeline Foul or unusual smell may indicate an oil leak
If you observe an emergency, call the 24-hour hotline at:
844-752-6108
SUNDAY COMICS
Sunday, June 23, 2019
DILBERT®/ by Scott Adams
WOMEN’S
SweeneyClothing s The Place To Go For The Brands You Know
Your Community Store
BOOTS
DOONESBURY/ by Garry Trudeau
SALLY FORTH/ by Francesco Marciuliano and Jim Keefe
MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM/ by Mike Peters
B.C./ by Mastroianni and Hart
ZIGGY/ by Tom Wilson
DENNIS THE MENACE/ by Hank Ketcham
MORT WALKER’S BEETLE BAILEY/ by Mort, Greg & Brian Walker
MARVIN/ by Tom Armstrong
THE BORN LOSER by Art & Chip Sansom