Peninsula Clarion, October 06, 2019

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By VICTORIA PETERSEN Peninsula Clarion

The official results of the municipal election will be presented at Tuesday’s Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly meeting. The results will be certified and the three new members of the assembly will be sworn in. Tyson Cox, Jesse Bjorkman and Brent Johnson are the unofficial winners of the assembly election. The assembly will also confirm the appointment of six service area board representatives. Robert Craig will be appointed to serve in seat B on the Anchor Point Fire and Emergency Service Area, with a term expiring October 2022. Jena Peterson will be appointed to the Bear Creek Fire Service Area seat E, with a term expiring October 2022. On the Eastern Peninsula Highway Emergency Service Area board, Riley Shurtleff will be appointed to seat B and Sean Carrington to seat C. Their terms will expire October 2022. On the Kachemak Emergency Service Area board, Donald F. Cotogno will be appointed to seat D and Matthew Schneyer will be appointed to seat E. Their terms will expire October 2022.

In the news UAA faculty confirm no confidence vote ANCHORAGE — University of Alaska Anchorage faculty has reaffirmed its vote of no confidence in the university president saying he ignored accreditation concerns and disregarded input. The resolution was approved Friday by the university faculty senate in a 33-3 vote, the Anchorage Daily News reports. The vote comes on the heels of a cautionary letter from the accreditor of Alaska universities. “The faculty are just deeply concerned about the future of the university,” Faculty Senate President Scott Downing said. Alaska regents should suspend University of See news, Page A2

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Construction coming to a close By Brian Mazurek Peninsula Clarion

As the days get shorter and winter weather makes its way to the Kenai Peninsula, the major road construction projects in the area have started wrapping up and winding down. Some will be completed by the end of construction season, but others will have work left to do next spring. Beaver Loop Road The Alaska Department of Transportation, in cooperation with Quality Asphalt Paving, has been resurfacing the length of Beaver Loop Road from Bridge Access Road to the Kenai Spur Highway, according to the project information on Alaska Navigator. The project includes the construction of a separated pedestrian pathway. Work has included grading, drainage improvements,

Signs redirecting traffic along the Kenai Spur Highway between Kenai and Soldotna can be seen on Saturday. (Photo by Brian Mazurek/Peninsula Clarion)

illumination, guardrail installation, signing and striping.

DOT Project Engineer Jason Baxley said that everything is currently on

schedule. Next week, crews will be paving the bottom layer of asphalt on the road,

and Baxley said that he expects crews to be working until mid-October at the latest. Next spring, crews will return to pave the top layer of asphalt on the road and finish paving the pedestrian path. Kenai Spur Highway, Sports Lake to Swire Road The Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities, in cooperation with Wolverine Construction, has been working to expand the Kenai Spur Highway to five lanes from Mile 5 to Mile 8, according to the project information on Alaska Navigator. DOT Project Engineer Marcus Forkner said that crews are set to wrap up by the end of October. The first round of paving will begin in the next few days, Forkner said Thursday, and he expects that work to be See road, Page A2

‘It meant the whole world to us’ KCHS volleyball to raise funds for family battling cancer

By JEFF HELMINIAK Peninsula Clarion

Candice Bowers will not be hammering kills as a senior on the Kenai Central High School volleyball team this season. She won’t be lending her voice to the school choir or serving in her usual role as part of school student leadership. But Tuesday evening will leave no doubt that Bowers is still a big part of all three of those entities at the high school. The Kardinals volleyball program will be putting on “Digging Deep for Donalen” in the school gym and commons from 3 to 6 p.m. Donalen Bowers, Candice’s sister and a 2016 Kenai Central graduate, was diagnosed with neuroblastoma, a rare form of cancer, in early July. The cancer is even rarer when found in somebody older than 5 years old, meaning Donalen, 21, is a high-risk patient because there is not a lot of evidence for treating that cancer in somebody her age. At the time of diagnosis, Donalen was living in Anchorage working on

From left, Brandiee, Helen, Donalen, Donald and Candice Bowers. (Photo provided by Bowers family)

finishing up a degree in art at the University of Alaska Anchorage. The cancer forced Donalen to relocate to Seattle for treatment that

is expected to last about 15 months. The whole Bowers family also decided to go to Seattle to support Donalen.

Candice; Candice’s sister, KCHS sophomore Brandiee; and Candice’s mother, Helen, arrived in August. Candice’s father, Donald,

has continued working in Anchorage and flying down to be with the family when possible. See fund, Page A2

School board to consider contract Assembly to take up service board elections By VICTORIA PETERSEN Peninsula Clarion

The school board will vote Monday on tentative contract agreement made by the district and associations in the early hours of Sept. 17. The executive boards of the Kenai Peninsula Education Association and the Kenai Peninsula Education Support Association voted to ratify the contract for teachers and support staff in the Kenai Peninsula Borough School District. The associations and the district had been negotiating for a contract for nearly 600 days, and bargaining was snagged on the rising cost of health care.

The agreement for a threeyear contract, reached at 1:37 a.m., will be effective between July 1, 2018 and June 30, 2021. The agreement is based on an offer the associations presented to the district back on May 13. The offer migrates employees from the district’s traditional health care plan to the highdeductible plan currently available, and removes a spending cap on health care costs. The cap was a funding limit that, when surpassed, required employees to split costs 50-50 with the district. Beginning in January 2020, every employee will migrate to one of two high-deductible plans — the current highdeductible plan and a new

modified one offered in the district’s proposal. Under the new plans, the district will pay 85% of health care costs, while the employee pays 15% with no cap. The traditional plan had more expensive premiums, meaning more money taken out of employees’ paychecks. The high-deductible plan ensures less expensive premiums, but has a higher upfront cost to employees receiving medical care. The Clarion previously reported in May that some employees on the traditional plan could have expected to pay $1,000 a month next year for their health care plan. When more than 400 educators moved to the See school, Page A2

By VICTORIA PETERSEN Peninsula Clarion

An ordinance changing service board elections to appointments will be voted on at Tuesday’s Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly meeting. The borough has 12 service boards, of which seven boards include elected positions. Historically, it has been difficult to find qualified candidates willing to run for service board seats, an Aug. 22 memo to the assembly from assembly members Willy Dunne and Brent

Hibbert said. “The borough is one of the few boroughs, if not the only, in the State of Alaska with elected service area boards,” the memo said. Changing from elected boards to appointed boards will significantly reduce the time and expense involved in borough elections, the ordinance said. Earlier this summer, the Election Stakeholders Group — a group established by the assembly to research ways to increase voter participation — published their See service, Page A2


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Alaska President Jim Johnsen and statewide administrators from taking any action to consolidate functions or conduct academic reviews, most faculty members said. No action should be taken until a response to the accreditor’s letter is completed with input from faculty, students and staff governance groups. The resolution was sent to the University of Alaska Board of Regents, school officials said. Regents scheduled a meeting Monday in response the letter. A budget crisis threatened the existence of the university system and they have since seen a one-year $135 million cut to a $25 million cut this

Road From Page A1

done by the end of this week. As phase one of the project is completed, that portion of the highway will remain two lanes through the winter. Temporary striping will be in place to direct traffic, and Forkner said that he expects the speed limit to stay at 45 mph through the winter. A temporary pedestrian pathway will be in place to allow access through the construction zone. Forkner said that there will be about a month and a half worth of work to be done

Service From Page A1

final report and recommendations. One of their six specific recommendations asks the borough to appoint service board members, rather than hold elections. “Appointed boards have proven to increase public

Fund From Page A1

“It’s nice that we’re all together, but we do miss our old life,” Candice said. Candice said insurance is covering the medical costs, but other costs for a family living away from home for so long add up fast. After staying in a hotel for the first month, which Candice said was mostly covered

Peninsula Clarion

year, regents said. “Now that circumstances have changed, the Board has opened the process to additional options and more involvement of university leadership, faculty, staff, and students,” said regents chairman John Davies.

fall of 2023. However, the current facilities would need to be available for use while construction was ongoing during the May-September cruise season, according to the railroad’s project schedule.

ANCHORAGE — The Alaska Railroad is looking for a partner to help it update and expand its cruise ship facilities in Seward in order to meet ever-increasing demand in the state’s tourism industry. Railroad officials issued a request for qualifications, or RFQ, on Sept. 16 to start

the process of searching for a project developer for what is estimated to be an approximately $60 million to $70 million undertaking. Specifically, the stateowned railroad wants to replace its current passenger vessel, pile-supported dock in Seward, which is 736 feet long and was built in 1966, with a floating dock capable of accommodating two vessels up to 1,080 feet in length. The plan also calls for building a new cruise passenger terminal building with space to accommodate up to 1,500 people. It’s all intended to meet the railroad’s needs for moving cruise passengers from port at the head of Resurrection Bay to other Southcentral destinations for the next 50 years. Railroad officials expect construction to begin in late 2021 and continue into the

next year before the project is completed. Crews are working on and off the roadway from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. During paving next week, drivers should expect pilot car operations with extended delays. Sterling Highway Shoulder Widening DOT has been working to widen the shoulders on the Sterling Highway from Mile 97 to Mile 118 between Soldotna and Clam Gulch. The work also included the installation of four largediameter culverts at Slikok Tributary, Crooked Creek, Clam Gulch and Coal Creek. DOT Project Engineer Jake Goodell said that crews

are wrapping up peripheral work on this project, which includes installing highway lighting, street signs and delineation treatments. Goodell expects work to be “about 99% finished” by Oct. 15, and crews will return next spring for about two more weeks worth of work. Next year, crews will be confirming that the grass planted during construction has grown in sufficiently along the highway and will then remove the artificial stormwater mitigation measures in place. Goodell said to expect short flagging zones for the next week as crews finish their work, and next year’s work will be off the road and

Alaska Railroad seeks to overhaul Seward cruise terminal

interest in service on a board as potential board members would not have to run or otherwise comply with the election process requirements,” the memo said. The memo said the clerk’s office has indicated thousands of dollars could be saved by eliminating the seats from the election process, the memo said. Cost savings would come from

by insurance, the family is now all in a big room at the Ronald McDonald Charity House. Kenai Central volleyball coach Tracie Beck has coached Candice in volleyball since the fifth grade at K-Beach Elementary, with the exception of Candice’s sophomore year of high school. As a teacher at K-Beach Elementary and then Kenai Middle School, Beck has gotten to know Candice well. Candice also has

a reduction in printing costs and the time required of election officials and the clerk’s office when it comes to reviewing ballots, the memo said. The ordinance said the appointment process will remain a public process, where openings will be advertised and the mayor will appoint interested applicants and the assembly confirms the appointment.

volunteered with Beck’s Kenai Middle School volleyball team, further strengthening the bond. “Last year it was fun to see her emerge as a leader and a mentor loving on all the middle school kids,” Beck said. “She’s just a very mature kid, she’s very giving and she’s got a great work ethic in everything she does.” Beck also knows Helen Bowers well, calling her an amazing, giving lady. For about five years, the

Kenai Peninsula’s award-winning publication (USPS 438-410) The Peninsula Clarion is a locally operated member of Sound Publishing Inc., published Sunday through Friday. 150 Trading Bay Road, Suite 1, Kenai, AK Phone: (907) 283-7551 Copyright 2019 Peninsula Clarion

Who to call at the Peninsula Clarion News tip? Question? Main number ................................................................................ 283-7551 Fax................................................................................................ 283-3299 News email ........................................................ news@peninsulaclarion.com

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

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ANCHORAGE — An Alaska man who was mauled by a bear before his father came to his rescue was being treated at Juneau hospital for deep bite wounds on his arm and leg, the father said Friday. Casey Bradford, 21, was in good spirits but in a lot of pain a day after the brown bear attack near the Chilkat River, according to his father, 55-year-old Scott Bradford of

Haines. “I saw this brown thing chasing him,” Bradford said. “My first thought was that it was a moose.” Bradford said he ran toward the bear and fired a shot over its head after it tackled his son. The spooked bear ran off as Bradford took better aim and fired again. He doesn’t know if he struck the animal. The attack occurred Thursday evening while the father and son were about 30 yards apart as they scouted a moose during a hunting outing. The light was fading when Casey Bradford suddenly started yelling and running toward his father. After the attack, the younger Bradford was in pain but not bleeding profusely, his father said. The pair made their way to their boat about a mile away. It was difficult for Casey

Bradford to walk, but the adrenaline kept them going. It was dark when they reached the boat. It took a short ride to reach their vehicle, and then it was a 25-mile drive to the Haines clinic. Casey Bradford was flown to Juneau’s Bartlett Regional Hospital by the Coast Guard. Scott Bradford went home, and spent a sleepless night wondering about all the what-ifs. “There were a lot of things going through my mind all night,” he said. “If that bear would have attacked him a few minutes before, this would be a different story.” Scott Bradford said he and his son have often gone hunting without each other. “We’re not doing that anymore,” he said. “We’ll be standing shoulder to shoulder from now on when we’re hunting.” — Associated Press

will have a minimal impact on traffic. Currently, crews are working from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. seven days a week. Construction crews are present on the roadway from Ski Hill Road to North Cohoe Loop Road, and drivers should expect slight delays. A high number of moose have been sighted along the project corridor. Drivers are advised use caution while traveling, especially at night. Sterling Highway Rehabilitation from Skilak Lake to Sterling DOT, in partnership with Granite Construction, has been working to improve road conditions on the

Sterling Highway from Mile 58 to Mile 79 between Sterling and the east end of Skilak Lake Road. Work has included upgrading passing lanes and the pedestrian walkway for Skyline Trail, road resurfacing, shoulder widening and replacement of the East Fork Moose River culvert. DOT Project Engineer Shaun Combs said that although activity from the Swan Lake Fire delayed work by several weeks, most of the major work including asphalt paving will be completed before winter. All permanent guardrails are in place, and both layers of asphalt will be paved by

next Thursday or Friday if weather permits, Combs said. Combs said that he expects to return to the project around next May or June, but most of the work will consist of peripheral tasks, like permanent striping and signage which should be completed by mid-June of 2020. For the remainder of the season, pilot car operations will be in place, with two cars running during the day and one car running at night to minimize traffic delays. For the latest information on all construction projects, visit Alaskanavigator.org.

into the Employee Health Care Reserve Account, an account that is used to pay for health care costs that exceed what’s anticipated in a year. The district is also increasing their annual contributions offering to $800 per employee, which can be used toward medical expenditures. Wage increases, including 0.5% for last year, 1% for this year and 2% for next year, were also included in the

proposal, and language was included to reflect district concerns about one-time money that’s currently tied up in a state lawsuit. If the lawsuit determines the onetime money will not come, the 2% wage increase for next year will be reduced accordingly. Another important element of the proposal makes support staff eligible for coaching and extracurricular positions and stipends.

Man recovering after bear mauling thwarted by his dad

School From Page A1

high-deductible plan, the district saved $1.2 million, a May 16 press release from the employee associations said. The agreed-upon proposal includes other benefits too. The district is going to put $668,748

Kenai Central has done a volleyball game that raises money for breast cancer, nabbing over $25,000 in the process. Beck was feeling very helpless about not being able to help the Bowers when they were down in Seattle, with a gofundme account set up for Donalen being the only possibility. Then it hit her: Why not change the breast cancer game this year to benefit the Bowers family? Beck had the idea in early September and called the Bowers family on Sept. 11 to ask if they were interested. “Coach called me one night when we just got home from the hospital when my sister was admitted,” Candice said. “It was one of the longer days. “My mom was on the phone too, and so was my little sister. We all started crying. We’re so thankful the community is coming together to help us. The support was amazing.” Beck said this fundraiser will be different than others because typically just the

volleyball team is involved. This time, Kenai Middle School and Kenai Central High School are joining the effort. The night includes: • A silent auction for baskets. Baskets are being provided by every team member and family, plus this year teachers also have had baskets in their classrooms that students have been filling up. • Simon Nissen, choir teacher at KCHS, and his students will perform the national anthem. • Ribbons for sale, with different colors of ribbons representing different kinds of cancer. • Rio Custodio’s famous egg rolls will be for sale. Rio is the mother of Roman Custodio, a manager for the volleyball team, and Beck said Rio’s egg rolls always draw a crowd. • KCHS student leadership has been going around to local businesses getting donations, and also acquiring items for the balloon pop. In the balloon pop, fans buy a balloon and get

to pop it to see the prize inside. • Teacher John Morton will have pottery pieces for sale made by players and students. Candice follows the volleyball team through social media and talking to f riends on the team. She also has put missing her senior year, and enrolling in a Washington online school instead, in perspective. “It doesn’t really matter to me because I want to go to college,” she said. “I think of high school as a milestone in life. It’s not like the end of my school years, so it’s not too big of a deal.” But what is a big deal to her is the way everybody is coming together Tuesday night. “It meant the whole world to us,” she said. “I do a lot for school leadership, (National Honor Society), and volunteer all the time around the schools. “Just knowing the people I’ve volunteered for and helped out are helping me back is special.”

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Peninsula Clarion

Sunday, October 6, 2019

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around the peninsula Want to be informed of local public safety and community information? Sign up to receive alerts from the Alaska State Troopers. Text your zip code to 888777 to opt in. Or go to www.nixle.com and click Sign up now. Stay instantly informed of trusted, neighborhood-level public safety and community information. You choose the information you want, for the addresses you want, all delivered at no cost, by text message, email and web.

ReGroup Meeting

All interested community members are invited to ReGroup meetings. They are the 3rd Monday each month September through May at the Hope Community Center off Kalifornsky Beach Road near Poppy Lane. For more information call 252-2773.

Paid recreation instructors wanted Soldotna Parks & Recreation is seeking paid instructors to teach one day workshops or weekly classes as part of our community education and recreation program. Do you have a skill, talent, hobby, or interest you would like to share with the community? Then this is a perfect opportunity for you. Help us promote life-long learning through a diverse offering of educational, cultural, and recreational activities for all ages. Call today to discuss possibilities 907-714-1211.

North Peninsula Recreation Service Area events — NPRSA’s NEW After School Program is now being offered 3-days-a-week for K-5th grade boys and girls. Cooking, arts n crafts, gym games and loads of fun will be offered. Bus transportation is provided from school. For more information, contact Jackie at 776-6416. — Check out the fitness classes and daily gym activities at the Nikiski Community Recreation Center. Fitness classes currently being offered are Yoga, Body Blast, Zumba Strong, Senior

Stride and Spin Class. Gym activities include tot time and home-school gym time, and pickle ball is held twice a week in the evenings. For more information, please contact Jackie at 776-8800. — The Nikiski Pool will be offering swim lessons and tiny tot classes this fall. Classes will begin in October. Registration will be offered until classes are full or up to the first day of class. For more information, contact Nigel at 776-8800. — The Nikiski Pool will be offering free programs this fall. Water volleyball will be offered Thursdays 6:45 p.m., for those 15 and older. Log Rolling will be offered Tuesday evenings at 6:45 p.m. This is for participants 5 years and older. And an Aqua Hiit Class will be starting in October that will focus on heart and lung health. All of these are free. For more information, contact Nigel at 776-8800. — 5K Costume Run: Saturday Oct. 19, 11 a.m. at the Nikiski Community Recreation Center. Entry fee is canned or non-perishable food items for the community food drive. — Nikiski Pool’s Annual Pumpkin Plunge: Wednesday Oct. 30, 5-6 p.m. for ages 4-10 years old — Trick or Treat Alley: 5:30-7 p.m. Oct. 31 at the Nikiski Community Recreation Center Check out our website for: www.NorthPenRec.com or Facebook page.

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. — Jim & Elena, lunchtime entertainment, Monday, Oct. 7, 11:30 a.m. — No-host to Rosco’s in Ninilchik, Tuesday, Oct. 8, 4;30 p.m. $7 ride fee — Our Lady of Angels Craft Bazaar and Coffee Shop, Friday, Oct. 11, 1-3 p.m. $3 ride fee — Kenai Peninsula Caregivers Group, Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1-3 p.m. — Octoberfest Birthday Lunch, Wednesday, Oct. 16, 11:30 a.m.

— Closed for Alaska Day, Friday, Oct. 18 — Christmas choir practice, every Monday through Christmas — Sterling Senior Center Pancake Breakfast and Fall Festival, Saturday, Oct. 26, 9 a.m. $5 ride fee — Ring-a-Lings, lunchtime entertainment, Monday, Oct. 28, 11 a.m. — Pumpkin painting, Monday, Oct. 28, 9-11 a.m. — Halloween Party, Thursday, Oct. 31, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. — Living Well Alaska, chronic disease selfmanagement program, Thursdays, Sept. 26-Oct. 31. $7 suggested donation > 60; $14 suggested donation 60. — Trick-or-treat at the senior center, Thursday, Oct. 31, 4-7 p.m. Nikiski Senior Center Lunch is everyday from 11:30-1 p.m. Members $8, nonmembers $9, kids 6-10 year $4, kids 5 and under are free. Yoga is offered from 10 to 11 a.m. Tuesdays, and pilates is offered on 10 to 11 a.m. on Mondays. The Nikiski Coloring and Craft Club meets to color over coffee and conversations after lunch on Wednesdays. Thursdays: Pinochle, 12-303:30 p.m.; Bible study, 1-3 p.m. Game night potluck will be hosted weekly, in the downstairs area of the center. Participants are encouraged to bring their favorite dish to share. 5:30 p.m., every Friday, Nikiski Senior Center. Games of Cribbage will be help upstairs weekly. 1 p.m., every Saturday.

Kenai Community Library October — DIY Candle Decorating: Monday, Oct. 7 at 5:30 p.m. Get in the spirit of fall during this hands on class! Learn to make a unique pressed leaf decorated candle and take one home to enjoy. Must pre-register at the front desk. Class size is limited to 10 participants. — Financial Smarts!: Wednesday, Oct 9 at 4 p.m./ Wednesday, Oct. 16 at 4 p.m. Ideas, Tips and proven methods from peers and pros on getting your monthly finances where you want them to be! Also, a chance to win $500 for your IRA with The Dash-forthe-Stash Contest! Oct. 9 — Savings Goals, Monthly Bills, Dash-for-the-Stash! Oct. 16 — Ryan Knapp of Edward Jones will be our quest speaker discussing investing

and the 5 Cs of Credit. Laptops will be available if you want to pull a free credit report and get another shot at Dash-for-the-Stash! — Cupcake Decorating Class: Thursday, Oct. 10 at 4 p.m. Join us for a spooky good time as we learn to decorate quick and easy cupcakes perfect for Halloween without the need to buy special equipment or fancy icing tips. All materials are provided. Each participant will get to decorate their own cupcake to take home. Space is limited, you must be registered to attend. Children under eight must be accompanied by an adult. — Let’s Draw! Tuesday, Oct. 15 at 4 p.m. Have fun drawing mangy werewolves and warty witches in this interactive class! We will be learning how to draw hair as a shape and other tips for a more effective drawing! If you plan to attend please sign up at the front desk. Children under 8 must be accompanied by an adult. — Ghost Hands: Thursday, Oct. 17 at 4 p.m. Join us for a ghoulishly good time! We will be making transparent ghost hands using household materials. These hands make great decoration! For more information please contact James at 283-8210 or visit www. kenailibrary.com. — American Girl Club: Monday, Sept. 16 at 4 p.m. Join us at the Kenai Community Library for our monthly American Girl Club! We will be making a Laptop for your doll! Bring your doll (doesn’t have to be an American Girl) or use one of ours! Meets at the same time and place as Lego Club. The dollhouse will be out for everyone to play with! — Special Halloween Story Time: Monday, Oct. 28 at 4 p.m. Before you visit our Haunted House, join us for a FREE not-too-scary Halloween Story Time for the whole family! No Registration required! — The 4th Annual Literary Haunted House: Saturday, Oct. 26 at 2-4 p.m. Monday, Oct. 28 at 4:30-6p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 29 at 11 a.m.-noon and 4-6p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 30 at 11 a.m.-noon and 4-6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 31 from 4-6 p.m. Join us for a FREE not-too-scary haunted house open to all ages. Watch your favorite villains come to life with bubbling potions, interactive exhibits, and so much more. No registration required! Children under 10 must have adult supervision.

— Day of the Dead: Calavera Mask: Friday, Nov. 1 at 1 p.m. Come help us celebrate Dia De Los Muertos with this fun cutting and coloring program. This Mexican Holiday is becoming more and more popular in the United States. Calavera Masks are used to help loved ones reconnect on these special days. Fun for the whole family! Children under 8 must be accompanied by an adult. — Comedy Club Workshop for Kids: Wednesday, Nov. 6 at 4 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 7 at 4 p.m. Comedy Show Thursday, Nov. 7 at 5 p.m. Are you a young Comedian? Join us for an exciting, twoday comedy workshop. We will be learning how to give a great comedic performance, as well as develop a comedy show for the public! Limited Space available, so sign up today! Raspberry Pi Club: Friday, Nov. 8 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!

Soldotna Public Library activities — Dry Ice Science!: Thursday, Oct. 17 at 4 p.m. Join our STEAM program to create “Crystal Balls” and foggy bubbles out of dry ice! Then watch as we demonstrate other ways in which dry ice can be used for experiments! Ages 7 and up only. All children under the age of 10 must be accompanied by an adult. — Halloween Craft: Thursday, Oct. 24 at 4 p.m. We will be making Halloween Masks. This craft will be held in our basement with the blacklights on: if you wear a white shirt you will glow in the dark!! The hall light will be on so it will not be too scary for the kids. Come and have fun with us! — Halloween StoryTime: Friday, Oct. 25 at 4 p.m. Enjoy (not so) scary stories, silly songs, and big

spooks ahead! Put on your Halloween costumes and join us for a special storytime, followed by cookie decorating! — Inktober is a monthlong drawing challenge: a different drawing in pen or marker every day. See inktober.com/rules or grab a bookmark at the front desk for a complete list of this year’s themes. Finished drawings may be displayed at the library. Complete five themes and win a prize! This program is designed for teens. — Movies @ the Library: Tuesday, Oct. 8 at 5:30 p.m. Join us for a movie and treats! Mothra, Rodan, and King Ghidora wreak havoc on humanity as they battle each other. For Earth to survive, Godzilla has to put a stop to the three titans and the destruction they bring. Rated PG-13. — Teen Super Smash Bros® Tournament: Thursday, Oct. 10 at 4 p.m. Bring your (XYB)A-game and come prepared to smash it out on the Nintendo Switch™. This program is aimed at ages 13-18. — Dry Ice Science!: Thursday, Oct. 17 at 4 p.m. Join our STEAM program to create “Crystal Balls” and foggy bubbles out of dry ice! Then watch as we demonstrate other ways in which dry ice can be used for experiments! Ages 7 and up only. All children under the age of 10 must be accompanied by an adult.

October

PFD

Special!

Services notice

Manny’s Driver Education

Mr. Richard “Ricky” Lewis Smith, Jr. Longtime Nikiski resident, Mr. Richard “Ricky” Lewis Smith, Jr., 48, died Monday, Sept. 16, 2019 at his home in Nikiski. A celebration of his life will be held 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 12 at The Challenger Learning Center in Kenai. Mike Vincent will be officiating. Arrangements are with Peninsula Memorial Chapel & Crematory.

Invest in your child’s future!

7thClasses Begin October 7th, and January 13th.

North Peninsula Recreation Service Area

907-776-8800, www.northpenrec.com North Peninsula Recreation Service Area invites you to join us for Christmas Comes to Nikiski! The Annual Craft Fair will be held Saturday December 14th from 10am to 4pm at the Nikiski Community Recreation Center. Vendor space is available for $10. Register by November 25th. Santa will be available for pictures, and we will have cooking decorating & craft activities for kids.

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For more information, check our website, Facebook page or call 776-8800

40th Annual Original Christmas Boutique

ONE DAY ONLY! Monday October 7, 2019

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The Rodriguez Family thanks the Peninsula residents for a fantastic summer season!

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Opinion CLARION P

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Voices of the peninsula | Todd Peplow

E N I N S U L A

Serving the Kenai Peninsula since 1970 Jeff Hayden Publisher ERIN THOMPSON. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Editor RANDI KEATON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Circulation Director FRANK GOLDTHWAITE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Production Manager

The opinions expressed on this page are solely those of the authors and do not represent the views of The Peninsula Clarion or its parent company, Sound Publishing.

What others say

Immigration policy sends message: stay away

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resident Trump’s latest assault on immigration, cutting the number of refugees accepted to a mere 18,000 from 30,000 last year, is better than the complete ban that some of his aides were seeking. But looking at mere numbers misses the point. This is the administration’s latest message to anyone dreaming of a freer life in America: that they should just stay away. The Trump administration has systematically acted to bar as many refugees and asylum seekers as possible, virtually from its first day, supplanting America’s traditional welcome to the world’s desperate people with a spirit of xenophobia and bigotry. Led by Stephen Miller, a zealot who has planted lieutenants throughout the government, the Trump White House has made its anti-immigration campaign something akin to a crusade, with “the wall” along the Mexican border as its symbol. The administration has tried to scare away Central Americans by separating children from their parents when families arrive at the border seeking asylum; it threatened to end “temporary protected status” for people escaping natural and other disasters in a number of countries, including Haiti, Nicaragua and Sudan; it suspended the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which let undocumented immigrants who arrived here as children stay and work; it has dramatically deported immigrants without regard for their ties to family and community; and it has enacted a system that would prevent migrants from seeking asylum if they passed through another country without first seeking asylum there. Any question about the mind-set guiding the administration should have been put to rest by President Trump’s icy explanation to reporters earlier this month for why he was barring residents of the hurricane-battered Bahamas from taking refuge in the United States. “I don’t want to allow people that weren’t supposed to be in the Bahamas to come into the United States, including some very bad people and some very bad gang members, and some very, very bad drug dealers,” he said. He offered not a shred of proof of any such danger, while the shattering evidence of Bahamians’ needs still lies everywhere. The limit announced by the State Department on Thursday (Sept. 26) is far below the 110,000 refugees a year that President Barack Obama said in 2016 should be let in. Most of the 18,000 slots, moreover, are already filled by Iraqis who worked with the American military, victims of religious persecution and some Central Americans. That would leave only 7,500 slots for families seeking unification, like parents of Rohingya children who have already been admitted. The proffered reason for the cut was the huge backlog in immigration courts as the number of people seeking asylum is expected to reach 350,000. Most refugees trying to enter the United States, though, have already been cleared. So it’s not immediately clear how lowering the annual limit will help ease the backlog. There are enormous backlogs, and the United States cannot let in everyone who wants to come. But the severity of the cutbacks makes clear that the administration’s rationale hides its real motive: to score political points with a base of voters fearful of immigration by seeming to keep out as many people as possible. This shortsighted politicking denies a fundamental virtue — and key advantage — of America’s democracy: that it is a land of immigrants and refugees. It ignores the contributions of immigrants to the greatness of the United States. There is no sensible argument for opening the borders to everyone. Any refugee or asylum program needs a solid vetting process. But Mr. Trump’s approach is not the answer. Congress should have stepped in long ago with serious immigration reform. But that failure is no reason for Americans to be taken in by Mr. Trump’s fear-mongering and evasive explanation. — The New York Times, Sept. 27

letter to the editor

Make your voice heard on 2020 Board of Fisheries meeting As reported earlier, the Alaska Board of Fisheries was called out by the Ombudsman for violating the Open Meetings Act. In their March meeting, the chairman had a lunch meeting and returned to bring up a revote on the location for the 2020 Upper Cook Inlet meetings. The board voted to move the meeting from Soldotna to Anchorage. The chairman would not elaborate on what circumstances had changed. This vote came down after the chairman assured Kenai city officials that the board would not be voting on the 2020 meeting location. I would encourage concerned Kenai peninsula residents to comment by email to the Board of Fisheries to hold the 2020 meeting in Soldotna. Kenai peninsula residents have endured 20 years of discrimination. An entire generation has been excluded from this so-called public process. A legitimate public process does not exclude or discriminate. Send your comments to Executive Director Glen Haight at the Board of Fisheries before Oct. 8. The Board will vote on the 2020 venue at the workshop in Anchorage, Oct. 23-24. John McCombs Ninilchik

Labor is not a partisan issue

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hile some issues are clearly more partisan than others, one often confused issue stands out. Believe it or not that is Labor. I’ve based my stance on my individual responsibility for informed decision-making, and I hope you will too, whether you’re a union member, an elected official, or the public. At its root, Labor emerged as an issue focused on balance. That meant fairness for workers and employers. Labor promoted self-reliance and individual responsibility. The employer and worker were to recognize each other’s rights so both could prosper. Unions provided the best trained workers in the world and held them to a high standard. Employers noticed and they liked it. Under balanced collective bargaining, they agreed to pay what our work was worth, and union members provided work worth paying for. Hence the growth of the middle class, with champions and bad actors on both sides. The champions gave us our Union Pride. We’ve worked hard for Alaska. We’ve fought against extreme conditions, and simply wanted to share in the prosperity. Alaska enjoyed an abundance of funds and available workforce during the pipeline days, and our most conservative elected officials supported organized labor. They understood our value and showed by supporting us. What’s in a name? Progressive, Conservative, Liberal, Democrat, Republican, Independent, Non-Partisan, Green, Constitutionalist, Stand for Salmon, or Stand for Alaska: each label can be misinterpreted or misidentified. If you think that to be conservative you have to hate unions, you have been

manipulated. For those who are willing to educate themselves and move beyond reflex and stop adopting positions based on hearsay, your reward is credibility. Tell me what you think your party stands for. Unions were once founded on the principles of: self-reliance, fairness, accountability, and a prosperous middle class. That prosperity was win-win rather than win-lose. It meant fairness on all sides. It meant finding the best path forward for workers, and the employer. Workers deserve fairness in compensation, working conditions, and the work they are asked to do. Employers need a competent workforce and an ability to make a profit. Our communities ideally thrive under well-negotiated agreements. As Americans, we’ve seen scandalplagued corporations, lending institutions, technology, ministries, charities, elected and appointed officials, political parties, and even unions. When institutions are “off mission,” get involved. Too many today are advocating to quit your party or quit your union. They are not mutually exclusive, and never were. Those bashing union members need to be educated. Laborers fit into any party, and we bring value. If someone tells you supporting unions doesn’t fit with conservative values, they need an education. Ronald Reagan said in 1980: “Where free unions and collective bargaining are forbidden, freedom is lost.” I supported Donald Trump, Mike Dunleavy, and many other candidates I thought would support and defend my Constitutional Rights, including my right to freely assemble and associate. Many other union members did

too. It’s not true that union members or even union bosses only support “liberals.” When I support someone, I don’t expect blind loyalty, just a fair shake. Union folks are realizing that Democrats who are antidevelopment and high spend haven’t supported jobs. That was the focus in their support for Trump. Republicans need to realize that union members who align with their values also need to be supported by them. That means supporting jobs and honoring contracts. It means being bold enough to recognize our right to free speech and assembly. Don’t let yourself be manipulated by party bullies who have another agenda. Stand up for working people and we’ll stand up for you. If you can’t do that, we’ll find someone else. The attorney general is telling union members they are forfeiting their First Amendment rights by belonging to a union. Nothing could be further from the truth. I am giving the union permission to represent me and speak for me, and that is not in any way restricting my own rights to speak. As proven by this op-ed. Members of organized labor deserve to be recognized for the value we bring to our communities. It’s time for parties to unify in support of Labor and leave their fighting for the naturally divisive issues. Todd Peplow is a lifelong laborer with conservative values, and a member of Public Employee’s Local 71, who has served our country through eight deployments. He is a Constitutional Rights advocate who supports firearms ownership, free speech, and the rights of the people to affiliate and assemble.

News and politics

Romney ramps up rhetoric on Trump By LINDSAY WHITEHURST Associated Press

SALT LAKE CITY — In the hours after President Donald Trump called on China to investigate his political foe — plowing through another political guardrail — Democrats and Trump critics looked for signs that his party would slap him back. Seeking foreign help in an election is illegal. Who would stand up and say so? Twenty-four hours later, Mitt Romney stepped in. “By all appearances, the president’s brazen and unprecedented appeal to China and to Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden is wrong and appalling,” he tweeted. The delayed criticism seemed to capture Romney’s continued discomfort with the role of chief Trump critic. The mild-mannered, failed-presidential-candidate-turned-senator has shown he feels compelled to speak out against Trump at key moments. But he doesn’t appear quick to the draw. While Trump detractors are looking to Romney to play a key role in rallying GOP opposition to the president in the unfolding impeachment saga, it’s far from clear Romney wants the job. Romney has left the door open further than most, said Reed Galen, a consultant who worked for Sen. John McCain, George W. Bush and Arnold Schwarzenegger before leaving the GOP in 2016. But “there’s a long way from opening a door and walking through it.”

The 72-year-old senator is unusually well positioned to take on a president who remains broadly popular with Republican voters. His job security is all but guaranteed in conservative Utah, where he’s a near celebrity. Many voters, particularly fellow members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, shared Romney’s wariness about Trump. A nationwide Associated Press survey of midterm voters last year found that while two-thirds of church members voted Republican, just over half approved of Trump’s job performance. The VoteCast survey also found that 64% of Utah voters wanted to see the senator confront the president. His political brand, forged as a governor in Massachusetts, the savior of the troubled 2002 Olympics and a wellappointed representative of the corporate-friendly wing of GOP, has very little to do with Trump and the populist uprising. All of that has some looking to Romney as a possible standard bearer. The antiTrump conservative group Defending Democracy Together is running new ads in Utah encouraging him to speak out. “I think Mitt Romney came back to the Senate for a reason, and I hope this is the reason,” said Sarah Longwell, the group’s executive director. As a former presidential nominee who built his career in part on this capacity for moral leadership, Romney has a role as a Republican elder statesman that few can match, she said. “This is going to be the moment where

Mitt Romney will play, I think, the decisive role in what Republicans do going forward.” Not everyone is so sure. While he lashed then-candidate Trump as a “phony” and a “fraud” in a 2016 speech that didn’t keep him from being elected, Romney also dined with Trump as he aimed to become secretary of state and accepted the president’s endorsement during his Senate run two years later. While he resumed the charge with a Washington Post op-ed on the eve of his Senate swearing in, Romney also agrees with many Trump administration policies and hasn’t taken up a McCain-like maverick mantle. Rather than relishing rhetorical fisticuffs, Romney sees himself as a voice for civility representing a deeply conservative state, said Utah State University political science professor Damon Cann. “I think Romney as a senator has been much more conservative than John McCain was,” both in terms of style and ideology, he said. Romney did not agree to be interviewed for this story. While his current position breaks from GOP ranks, he hasn’t gone so far as to support the impeachment inquiry. Even if he did, it’s unclear how many Republicans he might be able to sway to that view. The GOP has shifted seismically since Romney ran in 2012, away from his more cerebral approach to conservatism and toward the brand of populism that’s embodied by Trump, a leader who prizes loyalty.


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Pompeo: State Dept. will follow law By JILL COLVIN and MATTHEW LEE

By VERENA DOBNIK and REBECCA GIBIAN

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Saturday the State Department intends to follow the law in the House impeachment investigation and vigorously defended President Donald Trump, dismissing questions about the president’s attempts to push Ukraine and China to investigate a Democratic political rival. The Trump administration and House Democrats often disagree about what the law requires, leaving open the question of how Pompeo may interpret Democrats’ demands for key information about Trump’s handling of Ukraine. Pompeo, speaking in Greece, said the State Department sent a letter to Congress Friday night as its initial response to the document request and added, “We’ll obviously do all the things that we’re required to do bylaw.” He has allowed Democrats to interview a series of witnesses next week. Among them is Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, another key figure in the probe. The administration has struggled to come up with a unified response to the quickly progressing investigation. Democrats have warned that defying their demands will in itself be considered “evidence of obstruction” and a potentially impeachable offense. Pompeo has become a key figure in the Democrats’ investigation. He was on the line during the July phone call in which Trump pressed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son, Hunter — sparking a whistleblower

Associated Press

President Donald Trump, and Vice President Mike Pence arrive to at the Young Black Leadership Summit at the White House in Washington, Friday. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

complaint and now the impeachment inquiry. Pompeo had initially tried todelay a handful of current and former officials from cooperating with the inquiry and accused Democrats trying to “bully” his staffers. On Saturday, Pompeo did not back off his defense of Trump’s call with Ukraine. “There has been some suggestion somehow that it would be inappropriate for the United States government to engage in that activity and I see it just precisely the opposite,” he said. Trump has offered a series of contradictory statements when it comes to the Democrats’ subpoena of White House records. Asked Wednesday whether the White House intended to comply, Trump told reporters, “I always cooperate,” even as he dismissed the inquiry as “a hoax.” A day later, however, Trump had a different answer for the same question, saying he would instead leave the matter to his lawyers. “That’s up to them to decide,” he said, “But the whole investigation is crumbling.” By Friday, however, Trump

confirmed reports the White House was preparing a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., arguing that Congress cannot undertake an impeachment investigation without first having a vote to authorize it. Pelosi has insisted the House is well within its rules to conduct oversight of the executive branch under the Constitution regardless. It was unclear Saturday when or if that letter would be sent. Pompeo, meanwhile, made clear that the State Department had yet to turn over any document, but intended to follow a proper review. And he said he would do so faster than the Obama administration. “I remember precisely once when I was on that side and we were looking for documents, I remember precisely how long it took for those documents to come across,” he said in an apparent reference to his experience as a congressman during the investigation into the 2012 attack on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya. “We’re going to beat that. We’re going to be more responsive than the Obama

administration was in the years that preceded this particular Congress,” he said. A congressional aide familiar with Pompeo’s response confirmed that the State Department had indeed been in contact, even if Pompeo had failed to meet a Friday deadline to produce documents required by the subpoena. Trump, meanwhile, continued to seethe Saturday, denouncing the investigation as yet another “Witch Hunt!” and “a fraud against the American people!” In a series of tweets Saturday, including several sent as his presidential motorcade ferried him back and forth to his Virginia golf course, Trump defended his conduct and lashed out at critics, including a past foil, Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah. “I’m hearing that the Great People of Utah are considering their vote for their Pompous Senator, Mitt Romney, to be a big mistake. I agree! He is a fool who is playing right into the hands of the Do Nothing Democrats!” Trump wrote. He ended his tweet with an extraordinary call to impeach a senator from his own party.

Ex-officer not guilty of manslaughter WOODBINE, Ga. (AP) — A former Georgia police officer who fatally shot a fleeing, unarmed black man was acquitted Saturday of voluntary manslaughter and involuntary manslaughter. The jury, however, found Zechariah Presley guilty of violating his oath of office in the 2018 shooting of Tony Green, 33, in coastal Camden County near the Georgia-Florida state line. Presley was ordered to be jailed pending sentencing Oct. 18. He faces a prison term of one to five years. Presley sat silently at the defense table. Green’s relatives wiped away tears after the verdict was read. Pastor Mack De’Von Knight, whose church Green attended, denounced the acquittals outside the courthouse, saying the evidence was “open and shut.” “He admitted that he killed Tony Green in cold blood,” Knight said. “To me,

4 homeless men beaten to death with pipe in NYC

it’s hunting season for the young black man and we’re being gunned down in the streets and there’s no repercussions, there’s no consequences for these officers.” Though Presley’s body camera recorded his fatal encounter with Green, darkness and something covering the camera lens obscured the shooting and the moments leading up to it. That left the jury to weigh Presley’s court testimony recalling what had occurred with a sometimes conflicting account by prosecutors and investigators. Presley said he followed Green’s car on the night of June 20, 2018, because he believed Green was driving with a suspended license. Dash camera video showed Green drive the car off the road, then open the door and run. He briefly returned to the vehicle to grab an unseen object, then fled again.

North Peninsula Recreation Service Area

Presley chased Green on foot down a darkened street. A short struggle followed that’s not visible on the video. The recording picked up the electrified clicking sound from Presley’s Taser, followed by eight gunshots. Another officer arrives afterward to find Presley lying on the ground. Presley says Green had been on top of him, trying to grab his Taser. Presley then says: “And then I was going for my gun, and he started taking off. And I fired.” An autopsy found Green was struck by eight bullets — one to his chest, the rest

to his back and hips. Green also had small amounts of alcohol, marijuana, cocaine and a tranquilizer in his system. On the witness stand We d n e s d a y , P r e s l e y added details he had not mentioned previously. He said he opened fire after Green turned back to face him and extended an arm, saying he feared Green had a gun. Investigators determined the object in his hand was a cellphone. Presley’s attorneys argued the shooting was justified because Presley believed his life was in danger.

Blessing of the Animals October 13th, 2019 • 2-5 PM All companion animals (furry, feathered, winged and otherwise) are WELCOME at this service.

The Kenai United Methodist Church and St Francis by the Sea Episcopal Church would love to welcome you and your pet to an Animal Blessing Service. Please come join us.

Location: St Francis by the Sea Episcopal Church 110 South Spruce Street, Kenai, Alaska • 907-283-6040

907-776-8800, www.northpenrec.com

5K COSTUME RUN/WALK

Saturday October 19th 11am @ Nikiski Community Recreation Center 10-10:45am Registration All ages welcome!! PRIZES FOR BEST COSTUME!

Race Entry: Canned or nonperishable food items for our Community Food Drive.

PUMPKIN’ PLUNGE

Wednesday October 30th 5-6pm @ the Nikiski Pool Ages: 4-10 years old

Swim with & Decorate Pumpkins,in and out of water activities. FREE ADMISSION!! Call Nigel at 776-8800 for more information.

TRICK or TREAT ALLEY

Thursday October 31st 5:30-7pm @ Nikiski Community Recreation Center.

Retail Therapy at its Most Fabulous!

Friday

Oct. 11th 7–9pm

20%off storewide! Raffle Prizes • Door Prizes • Hor D’Oeuvres Sorry guys, ladies only. Store credits & gift certificates do not apply.

FREE ADMISSION!!

All children must be accompanied by a parent/guardian. If you would like to sponsor a door this year please contact Jackie at 776-8800. For more information, check our website, Facebook page or call 776-8800

Open Mon–Sat 10–6 • Sun 12–5 • 564 E. Pioneer Ave 235-6234 • www.homersjeans.com

NEW YORK — A homeless man wielding a long metal bar rampaged through New York City’s Chinatown early Saturday attacking other homeless people who were sleeping, killing four and leaving a fifth with serious injuries, police said. Police recovered the weapon, which was still in the suspect’s hands when he was arrested, officials said. “The motive appears to be, right now, just random attacks,” Chief of Manhattan South Detectives Michael Baldassano said at a Saturday news conference, adding there was no evidence yet that the victims were “targeted by race, age, anything of that nature.” Two law enforcement officials identified the 24-yearold suspect as Randy Rodriguez Santos. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because criminal charges hadn’t yet been finalized. Santos was taken into police custody early Saturday. Police say he has been arrested at least a half-dozen other times in the past two years, three times on assault charges. It wasn’t clear whether he had a lawyer to speak for him. The victims, all men, were attacked as they slept in doorways and sidewalks in three different locations in Chinatown, which is packed during daylight hours but empties out at night. Police responded to a 911 call just before 2 a.m. as one assault was in progress. They found one man dead in the street and a second with critical head injuries. A search of the neighborhood turned up three additional bodies.

The New York Post published photos of two of the victims under white sheets, one slumped in a blood-spattered doorway, the other on the sidewalk. The identities of the victims have not been released. Two of the men were killed on The Bowery, which cuts through the heart of Chinatown and has for decades been known as New York’s skid row. Two more died on East Broadway, the neighborhood’s main street. The lone known survivor was hospitalized in critical condition. Police planned to interview him as soon as possible, Baldassano said. Another homeless man who had slept in the area, Stephen Miller, said he knew one of the victims as kind and quiet. “No one knew him by name, but we saw him every day,” Miller said. “At this point, I’m just sad. This guy never did anything. Just had a life to live. It sucks that he’s out here in the rain and everything, but it doesn’t mean he doesn’t have a life to live.” New York City’s homeless population has grown to record levels over the past decade, and the homeless remain among the most vulnerable residents. In the past five years, an average of seven have been slain each year. Mayor Bill de Blasio launched new homeless outreach efforts early in his tenure in an attempt to move more people off the street and into shelters, but the program has faced challenges. City efforts to build more homeless shelters have dragged due to neighborhood opposition. De Blasio tweeted Saturday that he’s “stunned and horrified by this senseless act of violence against the most vulnerable members of our community.”

Today in History Today is Saturday, Oct. 5, the 278th day of 2019. There are 87 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Oct. 5, 1947, President Harry S. Truman delivered the first televised White House address as he spoke on the world food crisis. On this date: In 1829, the 21st president of the United States, Chester Alan Arthur, was born in North Fairfield, Vermont. In 1921, the World Series was carried on radio for the first time as Newark, New Jersey station WJZ (later WABC) relayed a telephoned play-by-play account of the first game from the Polo Grounds. (Although the New York Yankees won the opener, 3-0, the New York Giants won the series, 5 games to 3.) In 1953, Earl Warren was sworn in as the 14th chief justice of the United States, succeeding Fred M. Vinson. In 1958, racially-desegregated Clinton High School in Clinton, Tennessee, was mostly leveled by an early morning bombing. In 1983, Solidarity founder Lech Walesa was named winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. In 1984, the space shuttle Challenger blasted off from the Kennedy Space Center on an 8-day mission; the crew included Kathryn D. Sullivan, who became the first American woman to walk in space, and Marc Garneau, the first Canadian astronaut. In 1989, a jury in Charlotte, North Carolina, convicted former P-T-L evangelist Jim Bakker of using his television show to defraud followers. In 1999, two packed commuter trains collided near London’s Paddington Station, killing 31 people. In 2001, tabloid photo editor Robert Stevens died from inhaled anthrax, the first of a series of anthrax cases in Florida, New York, New Jersey and Washington. In 2005, defying the White House, senators voted 90-9 to approve an amendment sponsored by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., that would prohibit the use of “cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment” against anyone in U.S. government custody. (A reluctant President George W. Bush later signed off on the amendment.) In 2011, Apple founder Steve Jobs, 56, died in Palo Alto, California. In 2017, Hollywood executive Harvey Weinstein announced that he was taking a leave of absence from his company after a New York Times article detailed decades of alleged sexual harassment against women including actress Ashley Judd. Ten years ago: President Barack Obama filled the Rose Garden with doctors supportive of his health care overhaul, saying “nobody has more credibility with the American people on this issue than you do.” Americans Elizabeth H. Blackburn, Carol W. Greider and Jack W. Szostak won the 2009 Nobel Prize in medicine. A suicide bomber blew himself up in the lobby of the U.N. food agency in Islamabad, killing five staffers. Five years ago: A suicide bomber blew himself up in Grozny, killing five policemen and wounding 12 others as the Chechen capital celebrated the birthday of its pro-Russian leader, Ramzan Kadyrov. Geoffrey Holder, a Tony Award-winning director, actor, painter, dancer and choreographer, died in New York at age 84. One year ago: Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine and Democrat Joe Manchin of West Virginia announced that they would vote to confirm Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, all but assuring that Kavanaugh would be confirmed. A jury in Chicago convicted white police officer Jason Van Dyke of second-degree murder in the 2014 shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald. The government reported that the unemployment rate fell in September to 3.7 percent, the lowest since 1969, reflecting a healthy economy driven by strong consumer and business spending. In an elaborate prank orchestrated by the street artist Banksy, one of the artist’s paintings self-destructed in front of auction-goers in London, moments after it had been sold for $1.4 million. Today’s Birthdays: Actress Glynis Johns is 96. College Football Hall of Fame coach Barry Switzer is 82. Rhythm-and-blues singer Arlene Smith (The Chantels) is 78. Singer-musician Steve Miller is 76. Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin, D-Md., is 76. Rock singer Brian Johnson (AC/DC) is 72. Blues musician Rick Estrin is 70. Actress Karen Allen is 68. Writer-producer-director Clive Barker is 67. Rock musician David Bryson (Counting Crows) is 65. Astrophysicist-author Neil deGrasse Tyson is 61. Memorial designer Maya Lin is 60. Actor Daniel Baldwin is 59. Rock singer-musician Dave Dederer is 55. Hockey Hall of Famer Mario Lemieux is 54. Actor Guy Pearce is 52. Actress Josie Bissett is 49. Singer-actress Heather Headley is 45. Pop-rock singer Colin Meloy (The Decemberists) is 45. Rock musician Brian Mashburn (Save Ferris) is 44. Actress Parminder Nagra is 44. Actor Scott Weinger is 44. Actress Kate Winslet is 44. Rock musician James Valentine (Maroon 5) is 41. Rock musician Paul Thomas (Good Charlotte) is 39. Actor Jesse Eisenberg is 36. TV personality Nicky Hilton is 36. Actress Azure Parsons is 35. Rhythm-and-blues singer Brooke Valentine is 34. Actor Kevin Bigley is 33. Actor Joshua Logan Moore is 25. Actor Jacob Tremblay is 13. Thought for Today: “America has believed that in differentiation, not in uniformity, lies the path of progress. It acted on this belief; it has advanced human happiness, and it has prospered.” -- Louis D. Brandeis, U.S. Supreme Court justice (born 1856, died this date in 1941).


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World

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sunday, october 6, 2019

More than 80 dead in Iraq protests Haiti braces for more upheaval By QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA Associated Press

BAGHDAD — Iraqi protesters pressed on with angry anti-government rallies in the capital and across several provinces for a fifth day Saturday, setting government offices on fire and ignoring appeals for calm from political and religious leaders. Security agencies fatally shot 19 protesters and wounded more than three dozen in a sustained deadly response that has claimed more than 80 lives since the upheaval began. The semiofficial Iraqi High Commission for Human Rights, affiliated with the parliament, put the death toll at 94. It said nearly 4,000 people have been wounded since Tuesday, when mostly young demonstrators spontaneously initiated the rallies to demand jobs, improvements to electricity, water and other services, and an end to corruption in the oilrich nation. The violent deadlock presented the conflictscarred nation with its most serious challenge since the defeat of the Islamic State group two years ago and deepened the political crisis of a country still struggling with the legacy of multiple, unfinished wars since the U.S. invasion in 2003. “It has been 16 years of corruption and injustice,” said Abbas Najm, a 43-yearold unemployed engineer who was part of a rally Saturday in the square. “We are not afraid of bullets or the death of martyrs. We will keep going and we won’t back down.” Amid the chaos, masked gunmen stormed the office

By DÁNICA COTO Associated Press

Anti-government protesters set fires and close a street during a demonstration in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

of three TV news stations in Baghdad. Gunmen in black cars and wearing black clothes stormed the offices of Al-Arabiya, a Saudi-owned pan-Arab news channel on Abu Nawas Street, beat up some of the employees and smashed equipment before they fled, said Majed Hamid, the channel’s Baghdad correspondent. Hamid said the station had been receiving threats for several days. Gunmen also attacked the offices of Iraq’s private Dajla and NRT news channels, according to employees at the stations. Both of those stations are privately owned. Scrambling to contain the demonstrations, Iraqi leaders called an emergency session of parliament Saturday to discuss the protesters’ demands. But they lacked a quorum due to a boycott called by influential Shiite

cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, leader of parliament’s largest bloc. On Friday, al-Sadr called on Prime Minister Abdul-Mahdi’s government to resign and hold early elections, saying the shedding of blood of Iraqis “cannot be ignored.” Abdul-Mahdi said in an address to the nation that the protesters’ “legitimate demands” had been heard, but he defended the deadly response of security forces as a “bitter medicine” that was necessary for the country to swallow. In a desperate attempt to curb the growing rallies, authorities blocked the internet Wednesday and imposed a round-the-clock curfew on Thursday. The curfew, ignored by protesters, was lifted at 5 a.m. Saturday, allowing shops to open and traffic to flow in most

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of Baghdad before the new demonstrations began. As in previous days, protesters waited to gather until the afternoon, when temperatures were cooler and ensured greater participation, and security forces responded by opening fire. Health and security officials said more than a dozen people were killed and about 40 wounded in the capital on Saturday when security forces opened fire during protests in various neighborhoods, including central Tahrir Square, which remained closed to cars, and around which special forces and army vehicles deployed in an operation that extended as far as 1.2 miles away. The forces also unleashed tear gas, said health, police and medical officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not allowed to brief reporters.

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Haitians braced for more upheaval on Saturday as opposition leaders, emboldened by a massive protest demanding the resignation of President Jovenel Moïse, pledged to remain on the streets. Friday marked one of the largest demonstrations since the protests began weeks ago as opposition supporters say they are tired of corruption, ballooning inflation and a shortage of basic goods. They also called on other countries to withdraw support for Moïse, blaming him for Haiti’s economic and social problems. “If they love Jovenel that much, then send him somewhere else,” said Assad Volcy, who launched a political party two years ago but is joining forces with opposition leaders from other parties trying to oust Moïse. “We’re going to keep protesting until he resigns or goes to jail.” The unrest on Friday came after several weeks of protests in which 17 people have been reported killed, the economy has been largely paralyzed, 2 million children have been unable to go to school and badly needed aid has been suspended, especially to rural areas. The U.S., United Nations and other important international players have yet to drop their support for Moïse, making it appear unlikely that he will step

Around the World Hong Kong lawmakers seek to block mask ban

North Korea decries breakdown of talks US says were ‘good’

HONG KONG— A group of pro-democracy Hong Kong legislators filed a legal challenge Saturday against the government’s use of a colonial-era emergency law to criminalize the wearing of face masks at rallies to quell antigovernment demonstrations, as the protests diminished in intensity but didn’t stop. The mask ban that went into effect at midnight Friday triggered an overnight rash of widespread violence and destruction in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory, including the setting of fires and attacks on an off-duty police officer who fired a live shot in self-defense that wounded a 14-year-old teen. Two activists failed to obtain a court injunction Friday against the ban on face coverings that the government says have made it tough for police to identify radical protesters. In a second bid, lawmaker Dennis Kwok said a group of 24 legislators filed a legal appeal to block the anti-mask law on wider constitutional grounds. He said the city’s leader, Chief Executive Carrie Lam, acted in bad faith by bypassing the Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, in invoking the emergency law.

HELSINKI — North Korea’s chief negotiator said Saturday that discussions with the U.S. on Pyongyang’s nuclear program have broken down, but Washington said the two sides had “good discussions” that it intends to build on in two weeks. The North Korean negotiator, Kim Miyong Gil, said the talks in Stockholm had “not fulfilled our expectations and broke down. I am very displeased about it.” Speaking outside the North Korean Embassy, he read a statement in Korean that a translator next to him read in English. Kim said negotiations broke down “entirely because the U.S. has not discarded its old stance and attitude.” Saturday’s talks were the first between the U.S. and North Korea since the February breakdown of the second summit between President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un in Vietnam. North Korea has since resumed missile tests, including an underwater-launched missile that fell inside Japan’s exclusive economic zone Wednesday. State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus said Kim’s comments did “not reflect the content or the spirit” of the “good discussions” that took place over eight-and-a-half hours, adding that the U.S. accepted an invitation from Sweden to return to Stockholm in two weeks to continue discussions.

Taliban meet US peace envoy for first time since ‘dead’ deal

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down, despite protests that have made gasoline, food and water scarce in some areas. At least two people were shot on Friday as police in riot gear blocked the main entrance to the airport and fired tear gas at the crowd, which threw rocks, bottles and Molotov cocktails. Early Saturday, police said that eight people, including two police officers, were injured by gunfire in protests held Friday in Haiti’s southern and western regions. In addition, two homes were set on fire in Grand Anse and five people arrested in the south on charges including possession of knives. Carlos Dorestant, a 22-year-old motorcycle driver, said he saw the man next to him shot, apparently by police, as protesters crossed a barrier near the U.N. office. “We are asking everyone in charge to tell Jovenel to resign,” he said, his shirt stained with blood. “The people are suffering.” Several protesters held up signs asking the U.S. for help. “Trump give Haiti one chance” read one, while another quoted a tweet by presidential candidate Bernie Sanders. A third referred to U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who discussed the crisis with Haitians in Miami on Thursday. Some protesters also held out red cards for Moïse like those used to penalize and eject soccer players from a game.

KABUL, Afghanistan — The Taliban met with a U.S. envoy in the Pakistani capital, a Taliban official said Saturday, the first such encounter since President Donald Trump announced a month ago that a seemingly imminent peace deal to end Afghanistan’s 18-year war was dead. The official offered few details of Friday’s meeting between peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad and the Taliban delegation led by Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, a co-founder of the movement that was ousted in 2001 by the U.S.-led coalition. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the news media. U.S. officials have been keen to say peace talks haven’t resumed, at least not now in Islamabad. Still, the meeting is noteworthy as the United States seeks an exit from what has become its longest military engagement. More than 14,000 U.S. troops are still in Afghanistan and Trump has repeatedly expressed his frustration with their continued deployment, complaining they have taken on the duties of policing the country, a job he said the Afghan government needed to do. Khalilzad has been in Islamabad for much of the week meeting with senior government officials in what the U.S. State Department described as follow-up meetings to those he held in New York during last month’s U.N. General Assembly session. At the time, he met Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, who has been calling for a resumption of peace talks.

US senator barred from Kashmir as lockdown continues NEW DELHI — A U.S. senator and a wellknown Indian activist were barred from visiting Indian-administered Kashmir, the disputed Himalayan territory where at least 10 people were injured Saturday in a grenade blast as a government security and communications lockdown entered a third month. Director General of Police Dilbagh Singh said the blast was caused by a militant attack and occurred near the office of a civil administrator in Anantnag. He said a police official and a journalist were among those hurt and suffered minor injuries. “It was a militant attack,” he said, without elaborating. “Police are probing to identify and nab the culprit.” Since removing several constitutional provisions in August that gave the state of Jammu and Kashmir semi-autonomy, Indian authorities have flooded the Kashmir Valley, the heart of a decades-old armed insurgency, with thousands of additional troops. Mobile internet and phone services have been cut and landline phone access remains spotty, disrupting daily life and business in the valley, home — Associated Press


Schools A7

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Sunday, October 6, 2019

in the schools Skyview Middle Girls and Boys Intramural Basketball begins tomorrow, Monday, Oct. 7! All students who wish to join must turn in the required sports forms before participation. Forms must be filled out for each sport. All forms may be picked up at the Front Office or found online on the Skyview Middle School blog > Skyview Sports > Required Sports Paperwork. First Band/Choir/Drumline Performance: Tuesday, Oct. 8 at 7 p.m. in the Skyview Middle School Commons. Activity Night — Friday Oct. 11 from 2:45 to 4:45 p.m.: Parent volunteers needed. Please call the office at 260-2500 to help. Teens Against Tobacco Use: TATU is looking for fun, outgoing teen leaders who have a passion against Big Tobacco and would like to be involved in advocacy, activism, and peer education. Applications can be picked up from Nurse Sue. The annual training is on Thursday, Oct. 10. Congratulations to the August/September Students of the Month! Kael Aamodt, Kadee Adams, Layla Allain, Gabriel Almeida, Dalton Armstrong, Alianna Benson, Christopher Bessette, Aidan Bon, Elias Bouschor, Zachary Bouschor, Gracie Bras, Charlotte Buffan, Danika Buffan, Arianna Cannava, Kendyl Cannava, George Carpenter, Mackenzie Carson, Suwannee Chap.m. an, Avery Ciufo, Donovan Cole, Alexis Cole, Cooper Collier, Matthew Connelly Welch, Jake Cowgill, Kobe Curry, Aiden Day, Emily Day, Katelynn Derleth, Daniela Dimitrovski, Makayla Eberhard, Hayden Eck, Benjamin Engebretsen, Kendal England, Wyatt Faircloth, Danica Farrar, Blake Ferreira, Mya Fielden, Shaun Firmin, Hallie Fischer, Kiara Forkner, Destiny Friedersdorff, Wyatt Gagnon, Isabella Gares, Christopher Glaves, Terryn Gomez, Anders Hammerberg, Daisy Hannevold, Kellyn Hansen, Draek’Adam Harris, Aaliyah Helgeson, Cody Henley, Phillip Henry, Andi Hiler, Daxton Honey, Lydia Hopper, Haedyn Horstman, Kyler Howell, Emma Hunter, Haley Inman Josue Iraheta Sorto, Samantha Ivey, Anika Jedlicka, Michael Jessen, Derrick Jones, Brenden Jones, Josie Josephson, Bryce Kampstra, Carson Kandas, Matthew Karella, Noah Kirby, Hannah Leaders, Elijah Lee, Boyd Lehmberg, Kenai Lepule, Deighton Luck, Colby Lund Strength, Alexander MacMaster, Laurel Matson, Alyssa McDonald, Taylor McNeel, Paxton McKnight, Sophia Micciche, Luke Miller, Stefany Montague, Kiya Newcomb, Trenton Ohnemus, Sylus Pannell, Scott Powell, Charlene Pyatt, Frank Rabbit, Cole Radeck, Kristopher Renteria, Harland Richards, Valentino Rigutto, Meg Roberts, Allehya Roberts, Parker Rose, Madelyn Ross, Abigail Secor, Don Slats, Teagun Slaughter, Mathyas Smith, Kayla Steger, Cody Thompson, Brayden Truesdell, Joey Von Heeder, Hunter Wade, Brooke Walters, Charisma Watkins, Alexis Wells, Destiney Wheeler, Megan Whittom, Haiden Wilkinson, Peyton Williams, Isaak Winslow, Lokeni Wong, Julene Yager, Katelynn Yoder For more Skyview news Like Us on Facebook!

Kaleidoscope School of Arts and Science Oct. 7 The Life Skill we are focusing on this week is Common Sense — To use good judgment. Thank you to all the volunteers that helped construct our high-tunnel greenhouse it looks amazing! Tuesday, Oct. 8: 2 p.m. — PTA meeting Wednesday, Oct. 9: 4:15 p.m. — APC meeting in the Library Thursday, Oct. 10: 9:15 a.m. — third and fourth grade will be going to Anchor River for the egg take. Please send the appropriate outside gear for

this trip along with a sack lunch. Upcoming Events Oct. 14: 6 p.m. — first and second Celebration of Learning Oct. 15: Picture Retakes 6 p.m. — fifth grade will be joining the KCHS Choir Concert Oct. 16: 2:10 p.m. Early Release — School will be dismissed at 2:10 p.m. and buses will run 90 minutes earlier Oct. 17: 2:30 p.m. — fifth grade Celebration of Learning 3 p.m. — third and fourth grade Celebration of Learning Oct. 18: End of Quarter — No School Volunteers: Study trips are already scheduled so watch for student permission forms. If you’d like to volunteer on a trip, you need to be an approved volunteer. Two steps are required each school year to be approved. Go to http:// kaleidoscope.blogs.kpbsd. k12.ak.us/wpmu/volunteers and click the link to the background check. This may take two weeks for approval to be returned. Our Volunteer training is available at the KSAS office.

Soldotna High School PTSA meeting will be on Tuesday, Oct. 15 at 4 p.m. in the SoHi Staff Lounge. Snacks will be provided. Please join us for these events hosted in the library by the Counseling Department (All are welcome): Wednesday, Oct. 9, 5:30-7 p.m. / Monday, Nov. 18, 5:30-7 p.m. Bring your 2018 tax information and fill out the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid) to discover potential money for college or career training. SoHi Counselors and Kenai Peninsula College Financial Aid Department Staff will be assisting students and parents at these events. The after-school tutoring buses will start running on Sept. 3. There are two buses that leave at 4:15 p.m. You must be on the route list to ride the bus. See Ms. Wear in the library to find out more information and/or get on the bus list. You can also email her at twear@kpbsd.org or call 260-7036, 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday Soldotna Stars Letterman Jackets are available to order at http://www.neffco.com. Click on Varsity Jackets, find our school by State, select Soldotna High School, starting at $149 you can personalize it anyway you would like. Makes a great Christmas gift! SoHi Pool Schedule M,W,F Morning Lap 6:307:30 a.m. Sport Calendar — http:// www.arbiterlive.com/ Teams?entityId=21192 or http://www.asaa365.com/ There are two ways to order a transcript. Each way serves a different purpose. If you need a transcript sent to a college or NCAA or a similar agency, then you will need to log on to: http://www. parchment.com to order transcripts to be sent. The request is then forwarded to SoHi. After processing, it then goes through cyberspace — rather than the US mail — to get to its destination, which is much faster! ALL transcripts that are headed for NCAA, colleges, etc. have to be processed this way! FINAL TRANSCRIPTS! A final transcript is one that shows your second semester grades. If you order your transcript when we are IN second semester, you will need to make sure you choose “next grading period” when you go on to Parchment — that way your transcript request will wait until the grades are in at the end of the year before it is sent.

Nikiski North Star Elementary Thank you to the NNS PTA for purchasing and distributing Nikiski North Star T-shirts to each student in our school! This is a great way to celebrate our positive school culture

and sense of belonging. Please have your student wear their NNS shirt on Fridays. NNS uses Facebook to update families on events and happenings so please “like” our page if you are a Facebook user. Also, KPBSD has a Facebook page and a free KPBSD app which provides you with district and school notifications. You can also find the lunch menu on both pages. The first site council meeting of the school year will be held on Monday, Oct. 7 at 3:45 p.m. The meeting will take place in the school library. Everyone is encouraged to attend and get involved with the site council. Wednesday, Oct. 10 is picture retake day at NNS. Pictures will be taken in the library beginning at 9 a.m. For more information, please call the school office at 776-2600. The annual NNS/PTA fall carnival will be held on Saturday, Oct. 19 from 1-4 p.m. at the school. There will be lots of games, food, door prizes, book fair, basket auctions, face painting, costume contests and lots more. PTA is looking for candy donations that can be dropped off in the school office. It is always a fun time for the community to come out for a safe and exciting afternoon!

Redoubt Elementary Our next PTA meeting will be Oct. 8 at 3:45 p.m. in the teachers’ lounge. We are always looking for new members to join and attend our meetings. Fun Fest forms went home with your child last week. Fun Fest is Oct. 11 at 3:30-5 p.m. There will be no Boys and Girls Club on this day. Admission is $4. Snacks will be available for purchase. Our school’s 8th Annual Fun Run will be Oct. 12. Registration and bib pickup will be at 9 a.m. All are welcome to attend, please no dogs or strollers. $10 individual or $25 family. Pre-registration forms can be found in the lobby under the information screen. Our next early release is Oct. 16 at 1:45 p.m. Buses will be running 90 minutes early, and Boys & Girls Club will be open. Fall weather has arrived and the morning temperatures are becoming colder. Please start looking for your child’s winter gear. Many students are already asking for gloves and hats for morning recess. If you were unable to stop in to the fall registration please stop by the school to fill out this year’s mandatory paperwork.

Soldotna Elementary Oct. 8: International Walk Your Child to School Day 8 a.m. at the Catholic Church Oct. 8: Parent PACK Meeting 3:45 p.m. in the Library Oct. 16: Early Release Oct. 17: Pajama Day Oct. 18: In-Service Day (No School for Students) Oct. 29-Nov. 4: Book Fair Nov. 1: Parent Teacher Conference Day 1 Nov. 4: Parent Teacher Conference Day 2 Nov. 7: Picture ReTakes Parent Pack needs your help! Sign-up for email communications or like the Parent Pack on Facebook for up-to-date volunteer opportunities. To keep Soldotna Elementary School safe, all visitors and volunteers must sign in at the front office and pick up a visitor badge to wear while in the school. Anyone interested in volunteering can complete an online form by visiting the KPBSD website at www. kpbsd.k12.ak.us and click on the volunteers link. This process must be completed each school year and can take up to 10 days to process. Please contact the Human Resources Department with any questions. Parents can now track student lunch balances online by going to https://kpbsd. revtrak.net/. Student notes and bus passes will be sent to classes at 3 p.m. each day. Please send in

a note or call prior to this time to ensure your student gets the message.

Connections Dates To Remember: — Oct. 8: SOLDOTNA: Open Gym at Kenai Rec Center starts today! 12-2 p.m. — Oct. 9: SEWARD: 12:45 — 1:45 p.m. ADF & G Salmon Egg Take at Bear Lake Weir (more info below) — Oct. 10: 1:20-1:55 p.m. ADF&G Salmon Egg Take at Anchor River (more info below) — Oct. 10: Kenai Watershed Forum Elementary Program — Oct. 15: SOLDOTNA: Open Gym at Kenai Rec Center 12-2 p.m. — Oct. 16: PSAT Homer, Seward & Soldotna Office (more info below — Seward office call Julie at 907-224-9035) — Oct. 17: High School Eligibility Due — Oct. 17: Solid Rock Hay Maze from 1-3 p.m. FREE for Connections student (more info below) — Oct. 18: Wildlife Conservation Center Field trip 12:302:30 p.m. $6.25 per person — Oct. 22: SOLDOTNA: Open Gym at Kenai Rec Center 12-2 p.m. — Oct. 23: Kenai National Wildlife Refuge — BATS! — Oct. 24: Kenai Watershed Forum Middle/High School Program — Oct. 24: Homer Connections School Picture Retakes at Paul Banks Elementary School 1-3 p.m. — Oct. 28: Homer CPR and First Aid Certification (Including Child and Infant CPR — more info below) — Oct. 29: SOLDOTNA: Open Gym at Kenai Rec Center 12-2 p.m. — Oct. 31: SOLDOTNA: Fall Festival 1-3 p.m. (more info below) — Nov. 7: Kenai Watershed Forum Elementary Program — Nov. 8: AVTEC Tour (more info below) — Nov. 13: Kenai National Wildlife Refuge — OWL PELLETS! — Nov. 13: School Picture Retakes at Seward Middle School — Time TBD — Nov. 15: Central Peninsula School Picture Retakes at Borough Building 3-5 p.m. — Nov. 15: High School Eligibility Due — Nov. 21: Kenai Watershed Forum Middle/High School Program — Dec. 5: Kenai National Wildlife Refuge — PAPER MAKING! — Dec. 13: Semester Reports Due NEW: Soldotna Office — Free Tutoring: Connections is very excited to have Rebecca Weaver, Assistant Professor from the Kenai Peninsula College, at the Soldotna office every Thursday from 12-2 p.m. to tutor students and parents in math, physics, chemistry and science for free! If you are a parent or a student that needs help in any of these areas, please call us at 714-8880 to

make an appointment. Fall Artwork Welcome! The Soldotna office is collecting fall-themed artwork to display during September and October ! Here are some ideas: apples, pumpkins, leaves, seasonal colors, animals. Please stop by anytime during office hours (8 a.m.-4 p.m.) and drop off your fall-themed artwork. Remember to have your child’s name on the art piece and we look forward to seeing our artists in action! Central Peninsula Gym Time: Connections organized gym time will start back up in October, so please be on the lookout for those dates. In the meantime the Kenai Recreation Center has free gym time set aside for home-school students every Tuesday from 12-2 p.m. Please remember to wear non-skid sole shoes and if you have any questions you can call our office at 714-8880. Homer SPARC Gym Time: Come join other Connections Homeschool kids every Wednesday 1:30-2:30 p.m. at the SPARC for basketball, pickleball, soccer, and just plain running around! This is a free event, but students must check in with SPARC every week, so please go online and create an account if you don’t have one already. http://sparchomer.org/schedule/ Questions? Please contact Derek Bynagle dbynagle@kpbsd.org or 226-1880. SEWARD: ADF & G Salmon Egg Take at Bear Lake Weir: As part of the “Salmon in the Classroom” program, ADF&G invites students to participate in the silver salmon egg take at the Bear Lake Weir. The short presentation will be on Oct. 9 from 12:45 a.m.-1:45 p.m. Directions: Head out of town approximately 6 miles and take Bear Lake Road on the right. Go approximately 1 mile until you see the Weir and the crew. HOMER: Silver Salmon Egg Take at the Anchor River: As part of the “Salmon in the Classroom” program, ADF&G invites students to participate in the silver salmon egg take at the Anchor River. The short presentation will be from 1:201:55 p.m. Students will meet at the first parking lot to the right off Anchor River Road. Directions: turn on to the Old Sterling Highway (next to the Anchor River Inn), cross the wooden bridge, take a right on Anchor River Road, first parking lot to the right. To sign up or for more information please contact Derek Bynagle dbynagle@kpbsd.org. Hay Maze at Solid Rock Bible Camp: PLEASE RSVP: Please join Connections on Thursday, Oct. 17 from 1-3 p.m. for the annual Solid Rock Hay Maze! And it’s FREE for Connections students (parents pay $6, cash only please). All home-school families are invited, the cost is $6 (cash only) per person for non-Connections students/ families. Please bundle up for this event. Gloves, hats, warm layers and flashlights

are encouraged. If you have any questions contact the Soldotna office at 907-7148880 or email Kellie Davidson kdavidson@kpbsd.org to RSVP or for more information. The Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center: The Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center (AWCC) is a sanctuary dedicated to preserving Alaska’s wildlife through conservation, education, research and quality animal care. Come join Connections on Friday, Oct. 18 from 12:30-2:30 p.m. for an hourlong walking tour around AWCC and learn about bears, moose, muskox, wood bison, and meet Snickers the porcupine! Connections will have a grill and provide hot dogs and chips, families are welcome bring a snack to share. The cost is $6.25 per person (reimbursable for Connections students). Please tell the ticket attendant that “you are with Connections.” RSVP with Reubin rpayne@kpbsd.org or call 907-714-8880to reserve your spot. Homer CPR and First Aid Certification (Including Child and Infant CPR): This class is Monday, Oct. 28. The class is 6-8 hours and recommended for seventh12th graders. The cost is $55 plus $10 for the book. There are 12 seats for the class. For more information or to RSVP please contact Jake Parrett at jparrett@kpbsd.org. Soldotna Connections Annual Fall Festival: Come join the Soldotna Connections office for our annual Fall Festival: Oct. 31 from 1-3 p.m. We will have food, activities, games and trick-or-treating for students. Costumes encouraged, all ages and all home-school families welcome! This is always a fun and well attended event that students look forward to so we hope to see you here! AVTEC Tour: All Connections High School Students are invited to attend a free guided tour, lunch included, of AVTEC in Seward on Friday, Nov. 8. AVTEC offers a variety of educational programs such as: Construction, Welding, Heavy Equipment Mechanics, Maritime Studies, Electronics, Culinary Arts and many other courses. Please visit the AVTEC website at https://avtec.edu/ and take a few minutes to familiarize yourself with the programs available. Lunch will be provided so please RSVP Reubin Payne at rpayne@kpbsd.k12.ak.us or call the Connections office at 907-714-8880. WHEN:Friday, Nov. 8 at 10 a.m. WHERE:AVTEC — 519 4th Ave., in the auditorium on the 2nd floor HOMER FAMILES: Check out our new link for Homer events for Connections students: https://padlet. com/dbynagle/HomerConnections. These are community events in Homer that See briefs, Page A9

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Sunday, October 6, 2019

Peninsula Clarion

THANK YOU FROM KENAI PENINSULA DISTRICT 4-H to all of the people who help our programs go and grow!

KP 4-H Livestock Auction Buyers Blakeley’s Auction Diamond M Ranch Epperheimer, Inc. Frozen Oak Farms G & S Construction Hilcorp Alaska JML Buyers Group Kasilof Mercantile

Katie Stafford Kenai Spine Little Sinky MagTec Alaska Moerlein Construction Morgan Steel Ortho Physicians Peak Oilfield

Peninsula Health Center Professional Home I.V. Rusty Ravin Soldotna Dental Arts Soldotna Rotary The Study AK Three Bears Veal Construction

KP 4-H Livestock Auction Add-Ons

Grand Champion Corner: Grand Champion turkey bought by Blakeley’s Auction; Grand Champion young beef purchased by Three Bears; Grand Champ Chicken Pen bought by Moerlein Construction; Grand Champion hog purchased by Soldotna Rotary; Grand Champion Steer purchased by Epperheimer, Inc. and The Study; Grand Champion lamb purchased by Diamond M Ranch

Anderson Custom Building Blakeley’s Auction C & M Muffler Carrie Towner Cathy Glaser Connie’s Flowers Diamond M Ranch Elaine Carpenter Epperheimer, Inc. Fireweed Meadows G&S Construction Greg Crowe Hidden Spot Farm Hilcorp Alaska Jo Werner

John Lindeman Johnson Family Judy Walker Kasilof Mercantile Kenai Feed Kenai Premier Linda Tannehill Linda Werner Little Sinky MagTec Alaska Muse Orthopedic Physicians Alaska Patsy Clifford Paulette Coleman

Peak Oilfield Randy Milliron Rep. Ben Carpenter Ridgeway Farms Schnitzel Bomber Stacie Renfroe Three Bears Tim Iverson Veal Construction Velda Gelder White Gold Farm Zelda Loop

KP 4-H Clubs: Funky Farmers Fuzzy Wuzzy Fiber Homer 4-H Alls North Road Rangers Northwind Riders Peninsula Pioneers Seward Sea Otters Sterling Horse & Livestock Trail Blazers

2019 KP 4-H Junior Market Livestock Members at the Livestock Auction at the KP Fair.

2019 SUPPORTERS 360 North Aaron and Jeannine Morse Abraham England Alaska Best Water Alaska Bolt and Chain Alaska Hardy Gardens Alaska Industrial Hardware Alaska Peony Market Co-Op Altman Rogers, Inc. Amorette Payment Andy Kriner As the Screw Turns B and D’s Auto Bare Threads Beachy Construction Beemun’s Variety Beverly Allen Buckets Sports Bar & Grill Cad-Re Feed C & M Muffler Carmody Masonry Carol Bannock Carrol and JoAnne Martin Casey Matney CBC Rental & Supply Central Peninsula Hospital City of Kenai Coca Cola of Alaska Colorado State University Extension Connie Royal Connie’s Flowers Country Foods IGA Craig Schwartz Craig Taylor Equipment Crooked Creek RV Park Crowe Family Trust Dale Dolifka Davis Block Diamond M Ranch Diamond M Ranch & Resort Doors and Windows Dr. Bob Gerlach Dr. Christine Marlow

Dukowitz Machine Edward Jones – Ryan Kapp Edwin Yoder Eli Butler Elizabeth Kleweno Ellis Automotive Emily Knight Epperheimer, Inc. Firehouse BBQ FOE Kasilof FOE Kenai Footworks Forrest Nelson Foster Construction Frames & Things Fred Meyer Freedom Physical Therapy Friends of Dr. Jerry Nybakken Fritz Creek General Store Gary Stroh Geri Brigham Gilpatrick’s Hotel Chitina, Inc. Greatland Foods The Grog Shop Hall Quality Builders Helen Colyer Heritage Place Hooked on the Bean IDEA Inlet Fish Producers Island Watch J & H Sewing and Vacuum Janice Chumley Jay’s Painting Co. Jeanne Waldron Jennifer Hester Josiah Martin Jumpin’ Junction Kari Butler Kasilof Mercantile Kasilof Riverview Katie Cooper Kenai Builders Association

Kenai Christian Church Kenai Feed Kenai Library Kenai Peninsula Chapter of Alaska Farm Bureau Kenai Peninsula College Kenai Peninsula Fair Kenai Peninsula Food Bank Kenai Premier BBQ Sauce Kenai Premier Custom Meats Kenai Safeway Kenai Soil & Water Conservation District Koob Chiropractic Lee Coray-Ludden Lighthouse Community Church Linda Tannehill Lois Solmonson M & J Plumbing M & M Market Magpye’s Pizzeria Makayla Derkevorkian Management Recruiters Matheson MatSu/Copper River 4-H Matt Rankin Maya Johnson Melissa Reimers Merci Torkelson Merrill Sikorski Microcom Mott Enterprises, Inc. Mt. McKinley Meat & Sausage Mt. Spurr Cabinets National Western Stock Show Nikiski Rec Center Norm and Barb Blakeley Oral Surgery Associates Patty Hauptman Paulette Coleman Peninsula Clarion Peninsula Health Center, Inc. Peninsula Pumping Plus by Design

Pollard Wireline Poofy Puffin Upholstery Place Poppy Lane Flowers Prospector John’s Randy’s Glass Rayne Reynolds Ridgeway Farms River City Bookstore River City Cheer & Gymnastics Robert Thompson, MD Robin Carrico Rod N Real Ron’s Horseshoeing Ross Baxter Group Ruby’s Cafe Save U More Soldotna Animal Hospital Soldotna Dental Clinic Soldotna Mini Storage Soldotna Parks and Rec Soldotna Rotary Soldotna Sports Center Spenard Builders Supply Sponsors of KPW Livestock Teams State Farm, Nancy Field Steelhead Industrial Sterling Tool Rental Terry Best Terry Gifford The Jolly Rogers Taste of Paradise The Study Tiffany Sherman Tim and Nancy Veal United Rentals Valerie Granath Vicki Heinz Vincent’s Auto Walters and Associates West Chiropractic Western National Round Up White Gold Farm Whitey’s Music Ye Olde Curiosity Store

To learn more about Kenai Peninsula 4-H, call your local Cooperative Extension office at 262-5824.


Peninsula Clarion

Briefs From Page A7

Connections students may be interested in!

Mt. View Elementary Picture retakes are scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 16 for students needing to have their pictures retaken or students that missed the first picture day. Wednesday, Oct. 16 is an early release day for students. Students will be dismissed at 1:55 p.m. The annual Mountain View Carnival will be on Thursday, Oct. 17 from 5-8 p.m. and is open to the public. All funds earned will go towards student field trips or student activities, such as artists in schools, for all students. Proceeds may also be used for grade level equipment and supplies. There will be lots of food, games and prizes. Tickets are 25 cents each and most games cost two to four tickets to play. Parents are asked to sign up to help run a booth or to donate a cake or cookies for the cake walk and/or a prize for the prize walk. Parents need to have a background check through the school district to volunteer. Please call the office at 283-8600 if you need help with this process. Friday, Oct. 18 is an Inservice Day. There is no school for students.

K-Beach Elementary After reading Song for a Whale, Mrs. Baker’s fourth grade class reached out to author Lynne Kelly to tell her how much they enjoyed her novel. She wrote them back and set up a Skype book talk! She is going to answer their questions on her book as well as talking about what it takes to be a good writer. Mr. Daniels’s class is studying the Role of Producers in an Ecosystem this week. They enjoyed the K-Beach Caribou Migration event on Friday,

where students walk/run laps around the field to raise money for school activities. Students are looking forward to reaching their reading counts goals so they can go to the Solid Rock Hay maze on Oct. 17. There will be a band concert Oct. 11 at 6:30 p.m. in the K-Beach Gym. — Oct. 11: Band Concert — Oct. 16: Early Release Day — Oct. 17: School Picture Retake Day — Oct. 18: NO SCHOOL due to staff inservice

Kenai Middle School Basketball Intramurals begin today. Students must have a sports packet completed and turned in prior to participating. The cost for Intramurals is $30. Please only send $30. Once teams have been chosen, athletes will need to pay an additional $30. Basketball is open to all seventh and eighth grade students. Boys practice first this week from 2:30-4 p.m. Girls stay for mandatory study hall. Girls practice from 4 -5:30 p.m. We will alternate each week. Sixth grade students will have a short intramural program in the spring. The annual band fall concert will be Tuesday, Oct. 8 at 7 p.m. Bands performing will be the KMS Concert Band and KMS Intermediate Band. Also performing will be the KCHS Concert Band and the Drum Line. Emcees for the concert will be Bob Bird and Dan Gensel. Admittance to the concert is free. Picture Retakes are Wednesday, Oct. 9. Students should have their picture taken if they missed the original picture day. If you are not happy with your original pictures please return your packet and have your pictures retaken. If your student is interested in Robotics, be sure to have them grab an application for the Varsity Robotics Team at the office. Robotics is open to all grades. A team of 12

students will be selected. It’s almost time for the Annual Hay Maze field trip. On Oct. 23, seventh and eighth graders will attend. Sixth grade will attend on Oct. 24. Permission slips will be made available on Friday, Oct. 11. Permission slips will be accepted starting Monday, Oct. 14. Students must turn in a completed permission slip along with the $10 fee in order to hold a spot. Spots are limited and will be filled on a first come, first served basis. Save-the-Date Oct. 15: KMS Choir Concert Oct. 16: Early Release Oct. 17: Last Day of Quarter Oct. 18: No School for Students

Kenai Central High School September 2019 Student of the Month Rotary — Brooke Nash; Chamber — Hunter Beck; Elks — Chelsea Plagge; Kard of the Deck — Abigail Moffett; Super Staffer — Simon Nissen; Vocational Education — Colton Hall; Mr. Hartman Language Arts 12 — Keelin McGraw; Ms. Trower Spanish I — Emry Wolverton; Mr. Moss Study Skills — Onaca Daniels; Mrs. Crawford US History — Tucker Vann; Mrs. Calvert Study Skills — Isabella Katzenberger; Mr. Reid Ceramics/ Photo — Abigail Every; Mr. Morton Physics — Chelsea Plagge; Mr. Armstrong; Concert Band — Devin Murphy; Mrs. Sounart Physical Training — Leif Lofquist; Mr. Riddall Leadership — Taylor Pierce; Ms. Newberry

Nikiski Middle/High Monday, Oct. 7: FAFSA Completion Night, 6:30—8:30 p.m. Bring your documents and complete your student’s FAFSA with the support of KPC representatives! Dinner is provided! Seniors and parents check your email for a list of items you need to complete the FAFSA.; Middle School Basketball begins Tuesday, Oct. 8: PICTURE

RETAKES; High School Volleyball at Kenai — C Team 3 / JV 4 / Varsity 5 Friday, Oct. 11: High School Volleyball at Grace Tournament Middle School Saturday, Oct. 12: High School Volleyball at Grace Tournament; High School Football at TBA The first quarter celebration for middle school students is happening on Oct. 14. All

students with Cs or better will be participating in the afternoon activities designed by the students themselves. The cutoff date for grade consideration for this is on Oct. 11. Oct. 16 will be Early Release — students released at 12:45 p.m. Middle School Spirit Week will be Oct. 21-25 Current juniors and seniors can sign up to take the

Sunday, October 6, 2019

A9

Accuplacer if they are interested in taking a JumpStart class next semester. The Accuplacer will be administered on Oct. 22. The cost is $18, and sign up is in the Counselor’s office. Juniors can now sign up to take the PSAT with Mrs. Taylor. The PSAT will be given on Oct. 16. The September Kenai Elks Student of the Month is Joseph Yourkoski!

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A10

Sunday, October 6, 2019

Peninsula Clarion

AccuWeather 5-day forecast for Kenai-Soldotna ®

Today

Monday

Periods of clouds and sunshine

A blend of sun and clouds

Hi: 49

Lo: 27

Hi: 46

Tuesday Wednesday Thursday

Lo: 33

Cloudy Hi: 47

RealFeel

Lo: 41

Times of clouds and sun

Hi: 48

Hi: 46

Lo: 37

Kotzebue 38/28

Lo: 31

Sun and Moon

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

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

32 39 41 42

Today 8:22 a.m. 7:22 p.m.

Sunrise Sunset

Full Oct 13

Last Oct 21

Daylight Day Length - 11 hrs., 0 min., 37 sec. Daylight lost - 5 min., 30 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

Morning rain, then a shower

Yesterday Hi/Lo/W 53/45/pc 51/38/r 37/31/r 42/34/sh 53/47/sh 49/39/r 38/26/c 35/22/r 47/39/sh 56/49/c 36/31/sn 39/30/sn 43/34/r 40/31/r 53/46/r 47/46/r 52/45/r 54/40/r 36/31/c 48/41/sh 55/47/r 52/48/c

Moonrise Moonset

Today 6:10 p.m. none

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

Nome 43/31 Unalakleet 44/35 McGrath 42/30

Tomorrow 6:35 p.m. 12:27 a.m.

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

59/34/s 78/53/s 77/61/s 64/61/sh 84/75/pc 63/45/pc 96/67/s 67/47/pc 54/42/pc 97/67/s 58/46/r 62/37/pc 57/42/s 60/39/pc 57/34/r 78/75/c 81/50/s 68/65/c 63/48/r 65/37/s 80/51/pc

65/59/c 76/48/s 67/38/s 74/62/c 82/68/pc 74/67/pc 96/65/s 73/66/c 61/40/s 87/69/pc 59/37/pc 65/38/s 68/63/pc 70/54/sh 58/32/s 83/68/sh 76/58/t 77/64/c 66/47/pc 60/29/s 75/53/sh

Precipitation

From the Peninsula Clarion in Kenai

Glennallen 37/22 Valdez 43/30

Kenai/ Soldotna Homer

Dillingham 48/30

Juneau 50/33

National Extremes (For the 48 contiguous states) High yesterday Low yesterday

Kodiak 50/37

Cleveland Columbia, SC Columbus, OH Concord, NH Dallas Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Great Falls Hartford Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson, MS

70/44/pc 73/68/c 76/44/s 60/27/s 94/71/s 76/44/pc 67/37/pc 70/53/r 63/47/pc 52/45/r 88/66/s 51/44/r 70/32/s 58/41/r 52/34/pc 60/33/s 51/39/sh 87/75/s 93/73/s 75/49/pc 93/71/pc

73/53/pc 84/66/pc 76/53/sh 62/57/c 95/60/pc 74/50/sh 62/34/s 63/43/pc 70/50/pc 57/42/c 87/56/pc 58/38/c 69/36/s 64/49/pc 58/41/s 67/62/c 59/35/s 86/73/s 92/70/s 72/51/pc 90/67/pc

City

Jacksonville Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami Midland, TX Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York Norfolk Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix

104 at Jasper, Ala. 11 at Lyman, Wyo.

Sitka 52/39

State Extremes

Ketchikan 54/40

High yesterday 56 at Dutch Harbor Low yesterday 22 at Anaktuvuk Pass and Denali N. P.

Today’s Forecast Today, showers and thunderstorms will stretch from western parts of the Northeast to northeastern Texas. A high in the west will bring windy conditions and an enhanced fire threat for parts of California.

World Cities

City

24 hours ending 4 p.m. yest. . 0.00" Month to date .......................... 0.26" Normal month to date ............ 0.54" Year to date ............................ 10.22" Normal year to date .............. 13.39" Record today ................ 1.41" (1963) Record for Oct. ............. 7.36" (1986) Record for year ........... 27.09" (1963) Snowfall 24 hours ending 4 p.m. yest. ... 0.0" Month to date .......................... Trace Season to date ........................ Trace

Seward Homer 50/35 49/33

Anchorage 48/33

National Cities City

Fairbanks 38/25

Cold Bay 51/38

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

High .............................................. 51 Low ............................................... 36 Normal high ................................. 49 Normal low ................................... 33 Record high ....................... 56 (1964) Record low ........................ 16 (1958)

Kenai/ Soldotna 49/27

Talkeetna 42/24

Bethel 47/34

Today Hi/Lo/W 38/28/s 42/30/c 55/40/r 43/31/pc 38/24/c 35/18/i 42/27/c 51/37/r 34/27/sf 50/46/c 50/35/c 52/39/r 50/31/r 42/24/pc 39/21/c 35/24/c 44/35/c 43/30/c 43/26/c 44/33/c 44/24/c 50/28/r

Unalaska 51/46 Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

Almanac From Kenai Municipal Airport

First Nov 4

Yesterday Hi/Lo/W 37/34/c 41/34/sh 54/44/r 40/33/sh 35/30/sh 34/30/c 48/34/pc 54/41/r 35/30/sn 50/43/sh 50/39/r 53/50/r 54/50/r 47/28/pc 38/33/sn 36/28/i 39/36/sh 45/40/r 47/34/r 47/41/r 47/33/r 54/47/r

Internet: www.gedds.alaska.edu/ auroraforecast

Anaktuvuk Pass 28/10

Temperature

* Indicates estimated temperatures for yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W 54/45/pc 48/33/c 34/31/sf 47/34/c 51/38/pc 50/26/c 33/27/c 33/25/c 48/30/s 53/47/c 38/25/c 37/21/pc 37/22/c 37/16/c 53/33/r 49/33/pc 50/33/r 54/40/r 36/21/pc 48/26/pc 54/40/r 50/37/pc

Today’s activity: LOW Where: Weather permitting, low-level displays will be visible overhead from Utqiagvik to Fairbanks and visible low on the northern horizon from as far south as Anchorage and Juneau.

Prudhoe Bay 34/27

Readings ending 4 p.m. yesterday

Tomorrow 8:24 a.m. 7:19 p.m.

New Oct 27

Aurora Forecast

Utqiagvik 34/31

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

88/68/pc 73/55/t 89/81/pc 84/59/s 89/62/pc 83/60/s 85/54/pc 93/61/s 90/80/pc 95/68/s 60/53/r 58/47/r 95/58/s 92/76/pc 61/45/s 71/62/sh 89/67/pc 68/53/sh 93/73/pc 64/46/s 95/70/s

86/71/c 66/43/pc 88/79/sh 87/62/s 85/58/t 86/60/s 79/56/t 86/59/t 89/76/pc 93/52/s 66/48/s 62/44/pc 83/58/c 90/75/pc 69/65/c 80/68/pc 67/47/c 66/43/pc 88/75/pc 73/65/c 95/69/s

City

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

Pittsburgh Portland, ME Portland, OR Rapid City Reno Sacramento Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Santa Fe Seattle Sioux Falls, SD Spokane Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Wash., DC Wichita

68/43/s 61/32/s 66/45/pc 60/43/pc 71/36/s 82/46/s 61/37/pc 93/71/s 78/53/s 80/52/s 75/49/s 63/51/pc 61/50/r 58/40/pc 61/33/s 93/76/pc 76/55/t 92/64/s 82/66/sh 67/49/pc 77/64/r

72/52/sh 61/57/pc 71/48/pc 61/32/pc 72/44/s 86/51/s 61/39/s 96/67/s 76/60/pc 81/56/s 73/37/s 64/49/c 63/40/pc 61/42/s 67/55/sh 90/75/pc 68/42/pc 92/65/pc 65/48/t 74/68/pc 66/44/pc

City

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

Acapulco Athens Auckland Baghdad Berlin Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg London Madrid Magadan Mexico City Montreal Moscow Paris Rome Seoul Singapore Sydney Tokyo Vancouver

92/76/t 81/63/pc 63/52/sh 99/64/s 52/46/sh 90/79/pc 83/61/s 86/53/s 61/54/c 82/52/s 36/20/s 75/56/t 54/34/pc 50/39/pc 64/55/sh 75/57/pc 72/64/c 91/78/pc 66/58/r 83/75/pc 57/46/pc

87/77/t 79/66/s 62/53/pc 98/68/c 51/31/pc 86/77/t 80/64/s 85/59/s 61/49/r 82/53/pc 36/23/pc 76/53/t 59/53/sh 38/31/r 63/51/sh 75/59/s 73/56/pc 87/78/c 75/64/pc 73/65/c 57/49/c

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation

Cold -10s

Warm -0s

0s

Stationary 10s

20s

Showers T-storms 30s

40s

50s

Rain

60s

70s

Flurries 80s

Snow

Ice

90s 100s 110s

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

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

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Sports section B

|

peninsula Clarion

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peninsulaclarion.com

|

Sunday, October 6, 2019

Stars cruise past Kards By Jeff Helminiak Peninsula Clarion

Soldotna’s Galen Brantley III catches a touchdown over Kenai Central’s Braedon Pitsch on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2019, at Ed Hollier Field at Kenai Central High School in Kenai, Alaska. (Photo by Jeff Helminiak/Peninsula Clarion)

On Oct. 3, 2015, a Kenai Peninsula Pop Warner Jr. Midget team quarterbacked by an eighth-grader named Jersey Truesdell played a scrimmage at halftime of the Soldotna-Kenai Central game at Ed Hollier Field in Kenai. Saturday, Truesdell, now a senior, and the Stars turned in another exhibition, topping rival Kenai 57-12 to finish the regular season 7-0 overall and 3-0 in the Northern Lights Conference. “We’ve had this offense in since we were 6 or 7 years old,” said Soldotna senior Ray Chumley, who plays tight end and defensive end and was a member of that Jr. Midget Saints team. “It’s second nature to us at this point. We’ve been living and breathing it since we were 6 or 7 years old.”

The Stars took a 49-0 lead at halftime in winning their ninth straight over the Kardinals and moving their advantage in the rivalry to 30-16. SoHi head coach Galen Brantley Jr. is now 15-2 against Kenai. Soldotna played its starters for the first half. They scored on all seven drives, running 27 plays for an average of 14.4 yards per play. SoHi senior offensive guard and defensive tackle Trenton Walden has a good idea of how hard it can be to stop an attack directed by Truesdell. Walden played with the Saints until eighth grade, when he became too heavy for the Pop Warner weight limit. So in that scrimmage where the Saints offense looked just as smooth, if not smoother, than the SoHi varsity squad that topped Kenai 23-0 that day, Walden found himself on the other

team trying to stop the Saints. “I don’t know what team we were,” he said. “We were just a bunch of guys with white T-shirts over our shoulder pads.” The Stars have now won 14 straight NLC titles and will seek a path to an eighth straight state title when the Division II semifinals come to Soldotna next weekend. With that history of greatness, it means a lot when Brantley Jr. says of his current varsity, “They have more experience in this system than any group we’ve ever had.” Brantley Jr., current SoHi assistant Sarge Truesdell and Nathan Johnson molded the players since they were young and now the state, and even vaunted California programs, are seeing the effects of, as Brantley Jr. called it, “10,000 reps of trap.” That 2015 Saints team finished 8-1 after going 7-0,

7-0, 7-2 and 9-0 in previous years. “They’ve been together since elementary school,” said Kenai coach Dustin Akana, whose team finished 0-3 and 1-6. “SoHi’s been a well-oiled machine for a long time and it shows.” Wyatt Medcoff and Aaron Faletoi each had two rushing touchdowns in the first half. Medcoff had 126 yards on five carries, while Faletoi had 68 yards on seven carries. Tyler Morrison struck for a 40-yard interception return, while Truesdell also had scoring strikes to Galen Brantley III and Zach Hanson. While a solid youth program is one bedrock of SoHi’s dominance, another is the blowout varsity wins that allow freshmen and sophomores to earn valuable experience while mopping up in the second half. See rivals, Page B2

Daigle regains Division II state crown By Joey Klecka Peninsula Clarion

After falling short in her quest to defend her Division II state cross-country championship last year, Homer’s Autumn Daigle took solace in the fact that Kenai Central senior Jaycie Calvert was able to secure her first state crown with an undefeated 2018 season. Daigle’s explanation as to why she was OK with losing her title? Calvert’s expectations were higher, and she didn’t want to see the pressure break Calvert. “I said, ‘Jaycie, this is yours!’” Daigle recounted. “And she was like, ‘OK’, and just started running faster. … I didn’t give up, but I let that one go. I didn’t want to rob the victory from her senior year.” This year, as a senior with an undefeated streak, Daigle wanted to taste that same success. The Homer distance ace capped off an undefeated season by winning the Division II girls state championship Saturday at the Bartlett Trails in Anchorage, her second crown in three years, cruising through the 5K course in 19 minutes, 32.3 seconds. It’s the seventh straight year a Homer girl has graced the podium at state. Megan Pitzman took four straight top-three finishes from 2013 to 2016, and Daigle has taken three straight. Grace Christian swept the Division II boys and girls team titles on Saturday. The Grace girls placed four in the top 10 to beat runner-up Kenai Central 42-72. Kenai, the defending team champs, put three in the top 10, led by freshman Jayna Boonstra in fourth, sophomore Leah

Fallon in sixth and sophomore Logan Satathite in seventh. Homer finished fourth in the girls team race with 93 points, while the Seward girls took fifth with 131. Seward was led by freshman Lena Jagielski in 14th, while Homer backed up Daigle’s victory with a 15th-place run by junior Brooke Miller. The Grace boys won with 32 points, packing all five scoring runners in the top-10, while Seward took second with 81, beating ACS by five points. ACS junior Tristian Merchant blazed to victory in a time of 15:27, beating the field by 65 seconds. The Kenai boys were fifth with 106 points. Kardinals junior Maison Dunham led the charge in third with a time of 16:41. Dunham’s previous best state finish was sixth in 2018. Seward was led by junior Max Pfeiffenberger in 12th and senior Bjorn Nilsson in 13th. At the Division I level, the South girls and Dimond boys took home team titles. Dimond dominated the boys race with three in the top five, led by race winner Santiago Prosser. Prosser blazed the course in 15:14.4, beating runner-up Alexander Maurer of Service by 23 seconds. Soldotna senior Bradley Walters led the peninsula in 44th with a time of 17:39. The Division I girls race was dominated by West Valley senior Kendall Kramer, who captured her third straight state crown with a smoking time of 17:38.3, the fastest girls Bartlett course time since Allie Ostrander ran 17:06 as a senior in 2014. Kramer said she wasn’t expecting to threaten Ostrander’s course record. “She’s a whole another breed,” Kramer said.

South nipped West Valley for the team title 57-53, stacking three runners in the top 10 and all five scoring runners in the top 17. The race was one of the fastest in recent memory as 23 girls finished below the 20-minute barrier. Soldotna sophomore Jordan Strausbaugh led the peninsula in 30th with a time of 20:24, while Region III champion teammate Erika Arthur finished 40th in 20:41. Haines swept the Division III boys and girls team championships in the first year of the separate division for the smallest schools. Siyel Galindo-George of Haines won the boys race in 16:59, while Nikolaevsk sophomore Justin Trail led the peninsula with a ninth-place result in 17:55.2. Nikolaevsk head coach Steve Klaich praised Trail for setting his own PR by one second. Haines won the girls race as well with Avery Williamson getting the win in 21:08. Nikolaevsk senior Isabella Hickman finished 39th in 25:21, while senior teammate Sophia Klaich took 53rd in 26:20.

DAIGLE DOUBLE Daigle’s state title comes two years after she won her first. In 2017, Daigle used a last-second surge to outkick Seward senior Ruby Lindquist. The win came as a small shock to Daigle and the running community, which she said was different because the expectations weren’t there. “In the back of my mind I thought I could do it, but thought it would take a lot,” she said. “This year was different because I haven’t See run, Page B3

Homer’s Autumn Daigle leads the field at the Div. II girls state cross-country championships Saturday, Oct. 5, 2019, on the Bartlett High trails in Anchorage, Alaska. (Photo by Joey Klecka/ Peninsula Clarion)

Nikiski defeats Seward to clinch berth in playoffs By Jeff Helminiak Peninsula Clarion

The Nikiski football team shows off the Fish Bowl trophy they won by toppling Seward on Friday at Nikiski High School in Nikiski, Alaska. (Photo by Jeff Helminiak/Peninsula Clarion)

Clinching a spot in the playoffs. A homecoming victory. A win on senior day. Taking the first Fish Bowl trophy. The first home triumph of the season. Nikiski had it all in its 42-12 Peninsula Conference victory over rival Seward on Friday night, except for the bonfire. After the game, it was announced that there would be no homecoming big blaze due to rattling winds that had tore across the field the entire game. After the

wildfire chocked summer the peninsula had this summer, let’s just say nobody was complaining. Nobody from the Nikiski side was complaining about the game either. The Bulldogs finished their regular season by clinching the No. 2 playoff spot out of the Peninsula Conference. The Bulldogs (3-1, 3-4) will play at Barrow in the Division III semifinals Saturday. On homecoming, Nikiski also honored senior cheerleaders Aura Petrick and Jewelia Alex, plus senior football players Noah Litke,

Caleb Weeks, Hamilton Cox, Michael Eiter, Mason Payne, Sam Berry and Michael Mysing. To top it all off, Nikiski took the first Fish Bowl trophy ever awarded. The trophy will go to the winner of the NikiskiSeward game each year. The paperwork to Mysing’s senior day introduction was lost in the shuffle before the game, so fans didn’t get to hear all about him, but they learned soon enough. The senior had four rushing touchdowns, plus kicked all See clinch, Page B2


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Walden remembers how important it was for him to make his varsity debut late in a game against Palmer as a sophomore, so doing the same for today’s underclassmen is important. “We wanted to execute and get a lead so all the little kids could play,” he said. Brantley Jr. said the game worked out perfectly, with the varsity playing well for a half and staying healthy, and the young players gaining valuable experience. The Kardinals were able to win the second half 12-8. SoHi’s points came on a touchdown run by Dennis Taylor and a two-point conversion by Alvin Faletoi. Kenai got a pair of scoring runs from Tucker Vann, who led the team with 111 yards rushing on 21 carries. Akana’s squad came into the game knowing the playoffs were out of reach. The coach asked his players to play hard the whole game anyway, and he said they did that. The game also served as senior day for the Kards. Akana said quarterback Kayden Daniels did a good job of leading and staying positive, Braedon Pitsch, Hunter Beck and Gary Dent are great team players everyone wants to coach, Justin Anderson went out with an incredible punting

Peninsula Clarion

“They’ve been together since elementary school. SoHi’s been a welloiled machine for a long time and it shows.” game where he averaged 41 yards a kick, Will Stem fought hard despite an injury, and Zach Burnett gave effort and played hard. Saturday Stars 57, Kardinals 12 Soldotna 28 21 8 0 — 57 Kenai 0 0 0 12 — 12 1st Quarter Sol — Medcoff 13 run (Truesdell kick), 10:28. Sol — Aa. Faletoi 2 run (Truesdell kick), 8:52. Sol — Morrison 40 interception return (Truesdell kick), 4:56. Sol — Medcoff 1 run (Truesdell kick), 1:07. 2nd Quarter Sol — Brantley III 20 pass from Truesdell (Truesdell kick), 11:00. Sol — Hanson 4 pass from Truesdell (Truesdell kick), 5:11. Sol — Aa. Faletoi 10 run (Truesdell kick), 0:52. 3rd Quarter Sol — Taylor 1 run (Al. Faletoi run), 0:30. 4th Quarter Ken — Vann 1 run (kick blocked), 4:36. Ken — Vann 34 run (time expired), 0:10. Sol Ken First downs 16 7 Rushes-yards 33-357 36-144 Passing yards 110 16 Comp-att-int 7-9-0 2-6-1 Return yards 54 0 Punts 0 4-41.0 Fumbles-lost 1-0 2-1 Penalties 3-35 4-30 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing — Soldotna: Truesdell 3-39, Aa. Faletoi 7-68, Medcoff 5-126, Metcalf 2-45, Brantley III 1-1, Johnson 2-11, Spies 2-13, Taylor 2-3, Escott 1-31, Wilson 1-4, Al. Faletoi 3-7, Bond 2-9, Hoagland 1-(-2), Mellon 1-2. Kenai: Burnett 2-(-1), Vann 21-111, Daniels 3-(-11), Graves 1-(-1), Anderson 9-45. Passing — Soldotna: Truesdell 7-9-0—110; Kenai: Daniels 2-6-1—16. Receiving — Soldotna: Hanson 3-59, Brantley III 2-35, Medcoff 2-16. Kenai: Sylvester 1-5, Vann 1-11.

CIA soccer falls in Borealis semis Staff report

Peninsula Clarion

The Cook Inlet Academy coed soccer team lost 2-1 in overtime to Susitna Valley on Friday in the semifinals of the Borealis Conference tournament in Palmer. The Borealis tourney also serves as the state tournament for coed soccer in the fall. The loss sent CIA to play Tri-Valley at 10 a.m. Saturday. That result was not available as the Clarion went to press. Susitna Valley was the defending conference champion, but the Eagles gave the Rams all they could handle. “It’s disappointing to come so close and end up short, but we played some of the best soccer of our

season today,” CIA head coach Kenny Leaf wrote in an email. “I’m very proud of the effort I saw out there.” Leaf said cold, rainy weather made field conditions difficult on the natural grass at the MTA Events Center. Neither team was able to score in the first half. Fifteen minutes into the second half, Su Valley knocked in the first goal of the match. But shortly later, Linnaea Dohse crossed the ball to Tatum Rozak, who nodded the ball on goal. Isaac Johnson hammered home the equalizer. Neither team would score in regulation or the first five minutes of overtime. But in the 86th minute, Su Valley’s Dalton Pinard finished from close range for a 2-1 lead.

Steel sweep Brown Bears Staff Report Peninsula Clarion

The Kenai River Brown Bears were swept on the road against the Chippewa (Wisconsin) Steel, losing 8-2 on Friday and 5-0 on Saturday in North American Hockey League play. The Steel move to 6-2-0-0 and into first place in the Midwest Division, while Kenai River falls to 4-2-1-1 and is tied with Fairbanks for second in the division. The Brown Bears have their home opener Friday at 7:30 p.m. against the Janesville (Wisconsin) Jets at the Soldotna Regional Sports Complex. Chippewa’s Chase Hamstad lit the lamp just 10 seconds in Friday night to jump-start a barrage of scoring for the Steel. Friday’s loss snapped a four-game win streak for

Kenai River. It was the first game of the year that the Bears failed to come away with a point after seven games of NAHL action. The Brown Bears found life difficult against a Steel team ranked 10th (of 26 teams) in the league in scoring, but sixth-best in goals allowed. Hamstad’s quick strike led to a three-goal burst in the opening period for Chippewa. Kenai River broke through 54 seconds into the second when Theo Thrun tallied his team-high fourth goal of the year on a Bears’ power play, getting help from Zach Krajnik and Max Helgeson to cut the lead to 3-1. Chippewa came back with goals from Alec Schwab and Ian Famulak (on a shorthanded strike) to push the lead back to 5-1. Krajnik scored on the power play with 4:10

remaining in the second, but penalties continued to hurt the Bears, which committed four for a draining 24 minutes in the second period alone. Schwab finished the night with two goals for Chippewa, as did forward Jacob Dirks. Chippewa forward Connor Szmul tallied five assists. Landon Pavlisin took the loss in goal for Kenai River, giving up six goals on 35 shots. Danny Fraga took over for Pavlisin in the third period and gave up two goals on three shots. Grant Boldt stopped 27 of 29 for the Steel. Saturday, the Steel scored once in the first period, three times in the second and once in the third. Danny Fraga made 42 saves for Kenai River, while Trent Burnham stopped 27 for the Steel.

Friday Steel 8, Brown Bears 2 Kenai River 0 2 0 —2 Chippewa 3 2 3 —8 1st period — 1. Chippewa, Hamstad (Gotovets), :10; 2. Chippewa, Lindstrom (Szmul, Gotovets), 4:02; 3. Chippewa, Dirks (Szmul, Oyler), 16:55. Penalties — Kenai River 2 for 4:00; Chippewa 2 for 4:00. 2nd period — 4. Kenai River, Thrun (Krajnik, Helgeson), :54, PP; 5. Chippewa, Schwab (Szmul), 12:26; 6. Chippewa, Famulak (Szmul, Schwab), 15:33 (SH); 7. Kenai River, Krajnik (Thrun, Ritchie), 15:50, PP. Penalties — Kenai River 4 for 24:00; Chippewa 7 for 22:00. 3rd period — 8. Chippewa, Dirks (Lindstrom, Szmul), 11:39; 9. Chippewa, Dorfman (Oyler, Demsey), 15:14, PP; 10. Chippewa, Schwab (Dorfman, Kerchoff), 16:39. Penalties — Kenai River 4 for 16:00; Chippewa 3 for 14:00. Shots on goal — Kenai River 8-14-7—29; Chippewa 11-10-17—38. Goalies — Kenai River, Pavlisin (35 shots, 29 saves), Fraga (3 shots, 1 save); Chippewa, Boldt (29 shots, 27 saves). Power plays — Kenai River 0 for 2; Chippewa 0 for 1. Saturday Steel 5, Brown Bears 0 Kenai River 0 0 0 — 0 Chippewa 1 3 1 — 5 First period — 1. Chippewa, Ogle (un.), 14:40. Penalties — Kenai River 2 for 4:00; Chippewa 2 for 4:00. Second period — 2. Chippewa, Szmul (Schwengler, Kiecker-Olson), pp, 8:33; 3. Chippewa, Kerchoff (Black, Famulak), 15:22; 4. Chippewa, Druskinis (Lindstrom, Ogle), 16:43. Penalties — Kenai River 1 for 2:00. Third period — 5. Chippewa, Dorfman (un.), 5:08. Penalties — Kenai River 6 for 51:00; Chippewa 2 for 4:00. Shots on goal — Kenai River 4-12-11—27; Chippewa 16-18-13—47. Goalies — Kenai River, Fraga (47 shots, 42 saves); Chippewa, Burnham (27 shots, 27 saves).

SoHi netters take 1st loss; Kenai sweeps By Name Peninsula Clarion

The Soldotna volleyball team lost for the first time this season, falling to Wasilla on Saturday in Northern Lights Conference play in Wasilla. The scores were 29-31, 19-25, 25-20, 25-21 and 15-12. SoHi is now 10-1 in nontournament play and 5-1 in the league. “It was a wild gam e,” SoHi coach Luke Baumer said. “It’s always tough to play in Wasilla. I was pleased with how our girls played. “The loss wasn’t because we didn’t play well, it was because the ball fell Wasilla’s way.” Ituau Tuisaula had 26 kills and four blocks, while Sierra Kuntz had 53 assists, Serena Foglia had 11 kills and Holleigh Jaime had 18 digs and five aces. Soldotna travels to Homer for a 5 p.m. match Tuesday.

Soldotna 3, Wasilla 1 The Stars grabbed a rare road win over Wasilla on Friday night with a thrilling conference victory. SoHi won with game scores of 25-23, 25-18, 17-25 and 32-30, winning the last set on an outside hit by Morgan Bouschor, according to SoHi head coach Luke Baumer. “It was intense, back and forth all game,” Baumer said. “It was basically a battle of our serve-receive against their serve-receive, and it was about who could get the last sideout. They had their big guns and we had our big guns.” Baumer, who had never coached a game to 32 points, said it was the first win over Wasilla on the Warriors’ home court in four years. Baumer said that beating Wasilla gave SoHi another jolt of confidence with the region tournament only a

month away. “It’s a big win, and the girls were just super hyped up, there was a lot of energy,” he said. “They knew if they were going to wind up losing, they were going to lose by swinging and being aggressive.” The SoHi attack was led by senior Ituau Tuisaula, who had 21 kills and eight aces, while teammate Bailey Armstrong tallied 11 kills. Senior libero Holleigh Jaime recorded 24 digs, Sierra Kuntz had 49 assists and Bouschor notched 14 digs.

Kenai 3, Redington 0 The Kardinals secured a Southcentral Conference victory Friday night with game scores of 25-15, 25-21 and 25-13. The win pushed Kenai to 3-2 in conference play. Bethany Morris led the attack with 12 kills and nine digs, and was joined by Abby

Every with nine kills. Kaylee Lauritsen provided 11 assists and four aces, Jenna Streiff tallied 16 digs, Jaiden Streiff had two aces, Kailey Hamilton had nine assists and Erin Koziczkowski recorded two stuff blocks.

Kenai 3, Houston 0 The host Kardinals finished a Southcentral Conference weekend sweep by topping the Hawks by scores of 25-12, 25-18 and 25-12.

Seward 3, Houston 1 The Seahawks notched a Southcentral Conference win Friday in Seward over the Houston Hawks.

Redington 3, Seward 1 The Huskies took a Southcentral Conference win on the road Saturday in Seward.

Chilson, Aldridge, Showalter take Chainwreck race Staff Report Peninsula Clarion

Jordan Chilson, Morgan Aldridge and Landen Showalter claimed victory at the fourth race of the Chainwreck Cyclocross Series on Thursday at Tsalteshi Trails.

The physicians and staff of Peninsula Radiation Oncology Center invite all area cancer patients and a guest to attend our

Patient Appreciation LUNCHEON

Friday, Oct. 11 | 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Denali Room in the Central Peninsula Hospital 250 Hospital Place | Soldotna RSVP to 907.262.7762 or Melany@PeninsulaRadiation.com by Friday, September 27.

Bringing HOPE to the Kenai Peninsula 240 Hospital Place | Soldotna, Alaska 99669

In cyclocross, racers complete as many laps as possible within a time limit. Chilson turned five laps in 37 minutes, 21 seconds, while Tom Kobylarz was second with five in 39:05 and Aldridge was third, and the first woman, at five in 39:14. Dave EdwardsSmith was the third man with five laps in 39:18. Jen Showalter did five laps in 44:22 for second, while Kailey Mucha had five laps in 45:31. Landen Showalter was the

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the extra points, as the Bulldogs took a 28-0 lead after the first half. Mysing finished with 111 yards on the ground. “We had a pep rally right before the game,” Mysing said. “We were yelling at each other in the locker room. We were ready to play.” Nikiski head coach Paul Nelson said he wanted his team to take a step forward heading into the playoffs. Nelson said his squad did that against a Seward team that, despite finishing with just 12 players and an 0-4 and 0-8 record, refused to roll over. “We had to earn this one,” Nelson said. Nikiski opened the game with a scoring drive, but the Bulldogs’ next two drives were thwarted by an interception by Chad Quinn and turning the ball over on downs. The score rested at 7-0 after a period. Down 21-0, the Seahawks moved the ball to their own 45-yard line late in the second quarter, but Nikiski’s Caileb Payne picked off Seward quarterback Thommy Cronin. The backbreaker came two plays later, when Mysing wove his way through the defense for a 49-yard score with 17 seconds left in the half.

top junior with five laps in 41:29, while Dylan Hogue was second at 42:54 and Ethan Hogue was third with four laps in 37:42. Will Morrow was the top singlespeed racer, with four laps in 40:52. The series continues Thursday at the Skyview Middle School trailhead, with registration at 5:45 p.m. and racing at 6:15 p.m. 1. Jordan Chilson - 37:21 (5) 1st Place Men; 2. Tom Kobylarz - 39:05 (5) 2nd Place Men; 3. Morgan

“I was just running the ball where they were blocking for me,” Mysing said. “Everything was because of my blockers.” In the third quarter, Sam Berry, who rushed 13 times for 140 yards, had a score, then Eiter finished off the Seahawks with a 20-yard interception return. The Seahawks had five turnovers with Eiter, Caleb Weeks and Koleman McCaughey also getting fumble recoveries. The Seahawks, who forced Nikiski into three turnovers, didn’t quit in the fourth quarter. Seniors Quinn and Shane Sullivan both had scoring runs, Sullivan’s a 2-yard scamper with 6 seconds left that just beat a running clock. Quinn had 112 yards on the ground, while Sullivan had 128. “They fought like that all year,” Seward head coach Kelly Cinereski said of his team. “They don’t quit. They’ve been behind most of the year. They have good hearts. They’re just young.” Senior Andrew Milligan also played in his last game for the Seahawks, but Cinereski is optimistic about the future. He brings 16 players back, though some of those were not there Friday due to injury and ineligibility. Nelson said the game was special because this is the first group of seniors he’s had since they were freshmen. “I’m glad I’ve had the

Aldridge - 39:14 (5) 1st Place Women; 4. Dave Edwards-Smith - 39:18 (5) 3rd Place Men; 5. Rob Carson - 39:34 (5) Men; 6. Dan McIntosh - 40:38 (5) Men; 7. Jon Messick - 40:48 (5) Men; 8. Landen Showalter 41:29 (5) 1st Place Youth; 9. Mark Beeson - 41:37 (5) Men; 10. Jeff Helminiak - 42:41 (5) Men; 11. Jamie Nelson - 42:47 (5) Men; 12. Dylan Hogue - 42:54 (5) 2nd Place Youth; 13. Nathan Kincaid - 43:08 (5) Men; 14. Jeff McDonald - 44:03 (5) Men; 15. Jen Showalter - 44:22 (5) 2nd Place Women; 16. Kailey Mucha - 45:31 (5) 3rd Place Women; 17. Tor Dahl - 45:37 (5) Men; 18. CO Rudstrom - 37:30 (4) Men; 19. Ethan Hogue - 37:42 (4) 3rd Place Youth; 20. Patty Moran 37:49 (4) Women; 21. John Tabor - 38:35 (4) Men; 22. Dana McDonald - 38:47 (4) Women; 23. Robert Carson - 39:02 (4) Youth; 24. Madison McDonald - 39:17 (4) Youth; 25. Carl Kincaid - 40:00 (4) Men. 26. Alexis Collins - 40:31 (4) Youth; 27. Alicia Kincaid - 40:33 (4) Women; 28. Will Morrow - 40:52 (4) 1st Place Singlespeed; 29. Darrell Kincaid - 42:11 (4) Men; 30. Cindy Miller - 43:18 (4) Women; 31. Ollie Dahl - 43:45 (4) Youth; 32. Jane Adkins - 46:14 (4) Women; 33. Audrey McDonald - 46:28 (4) Youth; 34. Nels Dahl - 38:57 (3) Youth; 35. Aiden Collins - 49:48 (3) Youth; 36. Cassie Collins - 49:49 (3) Women.

opportunity to watch them grow up,” he said.

Homer 58, Ketchikan 24 The Mariners put an emphatic end to their 2019 season with a Friday night Peninsula Conference road win over Ketchikan. Homer (2-2 conference, 4-3 overall) failed to make the Div. III state playoffs after a loss to Nikiski last week put the Bulldogs in a clinching scenario this weekend. Nikiski locked up the second seed from the conference with a 42-12 win Friday night over Seward. Friday Bulldogs 42, Seahawks 12 Seward 0 0 0 12 — 12 Nikiski 7 21 14 0 — 42 1st Quarter Nik — Mysing 30 run (Mysing kick), 10:46. 2nd Quarter Nik — Mysing 3 run (Mysing kick), 11:56. Nik — Mysing 11 run (Mysing kick), 8:16. Nik — Mysing 49 run (Mysing kick), 0:17. 3rd Quarter Nik — Berry 8 run (Mysing kick), 6:25. Nik — Eiter 20 interception return (Mysing kick), 6:04. 4th Quarter Sew — Quinn 5 run (run failed), 4:53. Sew — Sullivan 2 run (time expired), 0:06. Sew Nik First downs 10 10 Rushes-yards 46-258 38-308 Passing yards 44 11 Comp-att-int 3-9-2 1-3-1 Return yards 31 20 Punts 2-7.5 1-48 Fumbles-lost 3-3 3-2 Penalties 5-48 6-55 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing — Seward: Quinn 10-112, Cronin 7-(11), Harshman 9-27, Sullivan 19-128, Sewell 1-2. Nikiski: Zoda 3-10, Berry 13-140, Mysing 7-111, C. Payne 1-0, M. Payne 3-6, Cox 1-6, Weeks 1-6, Eiter 1-1, Druesedow 3-20, Petty 3-8, Bostic 1-0, Litke 1-0. Passing — Seward: Cronin 3-8-2—44, Sewell 0-1-0—0. Nikiski: Litke 1-3-1—11. Receiving — Seward: Sullivan 1-31, Quinn 1-16, Harshman 1-(-3). Nikiski: Eiter 1-11.


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Kenai swimmers sweep Seward Invitational Staff Report Peninsula Clarion

The Kenai girls and boys swimmers swept the Seward Invitational on Saturday in Seward. The Kardinals girls scored 404 points, while Soldotna had 391 and Seward had 196. The Kardinals boys had 457 points, while Seward had

352 and Soldotna had 322. On the girls side, Seward’s Lydia Jacoby and Kenai’s Riley Reese each took a pair of victories. Jacoby won the 200-yard individual medley and 100 breaststroke, and Reese won the 50 freestyle and 100 breaststroke. On the boys side, Soldotna’s Ethan Evans and Seward’s Connor Spanos

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lost a race yet. It was more pressure this year, because everyone’s watching me and expecting me to win.” With a win streak on the line Saturday, Daigle said she approached the race with a different, more experienced, mind-set. She said winning races this year forced her to experiment with a different racing style than she had to become accustomed to. “I’m not a fan of leading races, but I had to learn how to do that this year,” she said. In Saturday’s race, Daigle took control of the race in the first kilometer and never looked back. After mixing it up with a group of girls in the opening kilometer, Daigle made her move over Anna Prussian of Sitka as they approached the halfway mark, and took a nine-second lead at the end of 3K. Daigle said Prussian’s presence behind her kept her motivated. “I didn’t even know she existed,” Daigle said about learning of her competition. “Then my coach gave me a page of all the (top) times and names this morning, and I’m like, ‘Who is that?’” Daigle also completed the state comeback after an interrupted season of races and practices. The Swan Lake Fire between Sterling and Cooper Landing canceled several meets, including the annual Tsalteshi Invite in August, and Daigle said the team dealt with over two weeks of indoor practices due to the smoke and unhealthy air. “I definitely felt that today,” she said. “Up the hills, I was dying.” Behind Daigle, the Kenai girls were

each had two wins. Evans won the 200 freestyle and 100 backstroke, while Spanos won the 50 freestyle and 100 butterfly. Seward Invitational

Saturday at Seward GIRLS Team scores: 1. Kenai, 404; 2. Soldotna, 391; 3. Seward, 196. 200-yard medley relay — 1. Seward, 2 minutes, 12.81 seconds; 2. Kenai, 2:17.60; 3. Soldotna, 2:41.65; 4. Kenai, 2:44.55. 200 freestyle — 1. Madelyn Barkman, Sol, 2:16.08; 2. Kylie Mullaly, Sew, 2:21.00; 3. Wren

celebrating a successful group effort. Boonstra’s debut in fourth place highlighted a big day for the Kardinals, who finished second in the team rankings. Boonstra, 14, said her highest goal was to place top 5, so fourth was a bonus. “It’s pretty exciting,” Boonstra said. “I definitely didn’t expect it. It’s been a great season.” Boonstra said her strong family history — her parents both were some of the nation’s top Nordic skiers and older sister Riana is a former Division I runner-up — helped inspire her. “I don’t feel pressure at all,” Boonstra said. “All my family members definitely set a good example for me. I have someone (Riana) to look up to.” Fallon followed up an eighth-place result in 2018 with a sixth on Saturday, and said she exceeded her own expectations, which included beating teammate Logan Satathite. Fallon said it was the first time she finished ahead of Satathite. “I started to pull away on the last downhill,” Fallon said. “And I started kicking it in sooner. I couldn’t feel my legs.” First-year head coach Bailey Beeson said the Kardinals left everything on the course, which is what she needed as a coach. “I gave the girls some names and some teams to chase after, and they listened,” Beeson said. “This is the most tired I’ve seen them, so it worked.”

DUNHAM LEADS D2 BOYS Dunham’s third-place result comes after finishes of sixth and 11th his first two years at state. Kenai’s other scoring runners were sophomore

Dougherty, Sew, 2:28.29; 4. Avari Gross, Ken, 2:43.36. 200 IM — 1. Lydia Jacoby, Sew, 2:14.02; 2. Madison Snyder, Sol, 2:32.10; 3. Madison McDonald, Ken, 2:56.86; 4. Deloma Watkins, Sol, 3:08.19. 50 freestyle — 1. Riley Reese, Ken, 26.81; 2. Rachel Spence, Sol, 30.55; 3. Sydney Johnson, Ken, 32.05; 4. Tirzah Frederickson, Sol, 33.16. Diving — 1. Daisy Rogers, Sol, 151.30. 100 butterfly — 1. Julia Anderson, Ken, 1:14.72; 2. Deloma Watkins, Sol, 1:27.30. 100 freestyle — 1. Riley Reese, Ken, 58.98; 2. Madelyn Barkman, Sol, 1:00.33; 3. Rachael Pitsch, Ken, 1:01.52; 4. Kylie Mullaly, Sew, 1:04.98. 500 freestyle — 1. Madison Snyder, Sol, 6:02.32; 2. Rachel Spence, Sol, 6:46.70; 3. Tirzah Frederickson, Sol, 6:59.97; 4. Avari Gross, Ken, 7:13.15. 200 freestyle relay — 1. Seward, 2:02.51; 2. Soldotna, 2:08.17; 3. Kenai, 2:14.33. 100 backstroke — 1. Sydney Johnson, Ken, 1:25.85.

teammate Joe Hamilton in 14th (17:23), freshman Ky Calvert in 26th (18:31), sophomore Luke Cross in 33rd (18:42) and sophomore Tyler Hippchen in 42nd (19:21). Dunham blazed the course Saturday with a different look, too. The junior ran with his hair dyed red and strung up in multiple braids, which he attributed to the girls on the team. Dunham said he needed some sort of motivation to keep up with the rainslicked trail. “Conditions were really bad,” he said. “The course was really mud. It wasn’t that bad, I just stumbled every once in a while.” While trying to keep up with Merchant was a lost cause, Dunham said Sitka’s Dominic Baciocco provided a good rabbit to chase. “I was trying to get second,” Dunham said. “(Baciocco) started off ahead of me and I couldn’t make it up. He always had 20 or 30 meters on me.”

SOHI GIRLS MIX IT UP Strausbaugh led the Stars in the Division I girls race, one week after finishing third at the Region III meet behind teammate Erika Arthur, who won the region meet. Strausbaugh said she was surprised to be running ahead of her friend from the beginning. “She’s very fast,” Strausbaugh said. “During practices we both run together and push each other. And especially during the race.” Strausbaugh and Arthur were followed across the line by senior Ryann Cannava in 60th (21:29), sophomore Ellie Burns in 67th (21:54) and sophomore Jordan Ruffner in 69th (22:06).

100 breaststroke — 1. Lydia Jacoby, Sew, 1:04.50; 2. Julia Anderson, Ken, 1:25.32; 3. Rachael Pitsch, Ken, 1:25.65; 4. Abigail Moffett, Ken, 1:33.35. 400 freestyle relay — 1. Kenai, 4:12.68; 2. Soldotna, 4:27.06. BOYS Team scores: 1. Kenai, 457; 2. Seward, 352; 3. Soldotna, 322. 200 medley relay — 1. Kenai, 1:55.67; 2. Kenai, 1:57.55; 3. Seward, 2:09.70; 4. Soldotna, 2:11.47. 200 freestyle — 1. Ethan Evans, Sol, 1:54.18; 2. Hunter Hollingsworth, Sew, 2:07.99; 3. Aiden Huff, Ken, 2:09.93; 4. Hunter Fry, Sew, 2:24.99. 200 IM — 1. Koda Poulin, Ken, 2:10.98; 2. Samuel Anderson, Ken, 2:32.79; 3. Peter Spanos, Sew, 2:42.71; 4. Kody Van Dyke, Sol, 2:45.31. 50 freestyle — 1. Connor Spanos, Sew, 23.12; 2. Sorin Sorensen, Ken, 24.20; 3. Trevor Bagley, Ken, 24.85; 4. Nathan Pitka, Sol, 25.30. Diving — 1. Foster Boze, Sol, 163.50; 2. Kaden

Strausbaugh finished 16th at state last year as a freshman, but said the slick trails made it difficult to run aggressively. “I tried pushing it up the hills,” she said. “But I think my problems was I wasn’t pushing it on the downhills or straights.” The SoHi girls finished seventh out of 10 teams at the Division I level. Stars head coach Ted McKenney said the competition Saturday was among the fiercest he has ever seen. “A good time for our runners today put us in the 30s in place,” McKenney said. “Our girl runs 16th (last year) and she runs faster this year and finishes 15 places back. The competition is just really tough, coupled with half a season of broken meets and practices.”

WALTERS LEADS D1 BOYS In the Division I boys race, Walters capped his high school cross-country career with a tough race, after a time of 17:08 put him in 23rd last year. Saturday, Walters echoed the sentiments of all peninsula teams in that the state race was difficult to peak for after the extended wildfire season. “Probably just a combination of how the season was going with smoke and bizarre temperatures,” he said. “We missed a lot of hard practices. I tried to go harder but it was a bad race. “It just feels when I try to go harder, I just can’t. My body stops me.” Walters was followed across the line by senior teammate Lance Chilton in 74th (18:41), Kaden Matson in 76th (18:47), junior Anchor Musgrave in 78th (18:57), junior Zachary Burns in 79th (18:57) and sophomore Quinn Cox in 80th (18:57).

Saltzgiver, Sol, 112.80. 100 freestyle — 1. Owen Rolph, Ken, 51.88; 2. Hunter Hollingsworth, Sew, 52.57; 3. John Moriarty, Sew, 58.03; 4. John Wright, Ken, 58.22. 100 butterfly — 1. Connor Spanos, Sew, 55.03; 2. Koda Poulin, Ken, 56.91; 3. Dominic Alioto, Ken, 1:03.51; 4. Nathan Pitka, Sol, 1:08.31. 500 freestyle — 1. Trevor Bagley, Ken, 5:42.08; 2. Jackson Bird, Sew, 6:07.03; 3. Brock Storms, Ken, 6:10.52; 4. Hunter Fry, Sew, 6:30.39. 200 freestyle relay — 1. Seward, 1:36.27; 2. Kenai, 1:40.28; 3. Kenai, 1:41.15; 4. Soldotna, 2:03.09. 100 backstroke — 1. Ethan Evans, Sol, 58.33; 2. Sorin Sorensen, Ken, 1:03.99; 3. Owen Rolph, 1:06.21; 4. Samuel Anderson, 1:08.80. 100 breaststroke — 1. John Wright, Ken, 1:16.51; 2. Cameron Prior, Ken, 1:29.90. 400 freestyle relay — 1. Seward, 3:38.10; 2. Soldotna, 3:55.22; 3. Seward, 4:28.94.

McKenney attributed the season of smoke and wildfire for setting up a tough challenge for the Stars. “I’m still proud of them for fighting and working hard,” he said. “Everyone else is ready and we’re just not peaking yet. We need another four weeks.”

Division I GIRLS Team scores — 1. South Anchorage, 53 points; 2. West Valley, 57; 3. Juneau-Douglas, 79; 4. Service, 80; 5. Chugiak, 119; 6. Eagle River, 144; 7. Soldotna, 222; 8. Lathrop, 229; 9. Colony, 235; 10. Kodiak, 244. Individual results (top 10) — 1. Kendall Kramer, WV, 17:38; 2. Sadie Tuckwood, Jun, 18:13; 3. Naomi Bailey, WV, 18:45; 4. Ava Earl, Sou, 19:00; 5. Maggie Druckenmiller, WV, 19:01; 6. Lucy Young, Sou, 19:03; 7. Nowelle Spencer, Ser, 19:08; 8. Kiah Dihle, ThM, 19:10; 9. Tatum Witter, Ser, 19:11; 10. Emily Walsh, ER, 19:14. Other peninsula — 30. Jordan Strausbaugh, Sol, 20:24; 40. Erika Arthur, Sol, 20:41; 60. Ryann Cannava, Sol, 21:29; 67. Ellie Burns, Sol, 21:54; 69. Jordan Ruffner, Sol, 22:06; 71. Cameron Blackwell, Sol, 22:16; 72. Katie Delker, Sol, 22:19. BOYS Team scores — 1. Dimond, 36; 2. Chugiak, 74; 3. West Valley, 83; 4. Juneau-Douglas, 102; 5. Service, 112; 6. West Anchorage, 140; 7. Kodiak, 169; 8. Lathrop, 213; 9. Colony, 251; 10. Soldotna, 288. Individual results (top 10) — 1. Santiago Prosser, Dim, 15:14; 2. Alexander Maurer, Ser, 15:37; 3. Hyrum Nelson, Chu, 15:53; 4. Noah Hoefer, Dim, 16:13; 5. Dallin Gardiner, Dim, 16:21; 6. Kaleb Beloy, Sou, 16:31; 7. Isaac Dammeyer, Wes, 16:34; 8. Michael Earnhardt, Chu, 16:40; 9. Finn Morley, Jun, 16:45; 10. Daniel Abramowicz, WV, 16:46. Other peninsula — 44. Bradley Walters, Sol, 17:39; 74. Lance Chilton, Sol, 18:41; 76. Kaden Matson, Sol, 18:47; 78. Anchor Musgrave, Sol, 18:57; 79. Zachary Burns, Sol, 18:57; 80. Quinn Cox, Sol, 18:57. Division II GIRLS Team scores — 1. Grace Christian, 42; 2. Kenai Central, 72; 3. Monroe, 83; 4. Homer, 93; 5. Seward, 131; 6. Sitka, 153; 7. Galena, 173; 8. Kotzebue, 181; 9. Mt. Edgecumbe, 190. Individual results (top 10) — 1. Autumn Daigle, Hom, 19:32; 2. Anna Prussian, Sit, 19:50; 3. Elise Metzger, Gra, 19:57; 4. Jayna Boonstra, Ken, 20:07; 5. Katie Bast, Mon, 20:33; 6. Leah Fallon, Ken, 20:45; 7. Logan Satathite, Ken, 20:48; 8. Rebekah Annett, Gra, 20:48; 9. Megan Nelson, Gra, 20:58; 10. Sophia Coverdell, Gra, 20:59. Other peninsula — 14. Lena Jagielski, Sew, 21:26; 15. Brooke Miller, Hom, 21:30; 17. Eryn Field, Hom, 21:41; 24. Hana Cooney, Sew, 22:31; 27. Mikaela Hall, Ken, 22:55; 29. Kara Super, Hom, 23:00; 31. Lucy Hankins, Sew, 23:13; 32. Gabriella Tews, Ken, 23:17; 35. Maranatha Brueckner, Sew, 23:28; 38. Maddox Berg, Hom, 23:40; 39. Aly Guernsey, Sew, 23:42; 46. Gracie Gummer, Hom, 24:32; 47. Leah Dunn, Hom, 24:33; BOYS Team scores — 1. Grace Christian, 32; 2. Seward, 81; 3. ACS, 86; 4. Sitka, 94; 5. Kenai Central, 106; 6. Hutchison, 161; 7. Valdez, 190; 8. Bethel, 195. Individual results (top 10) — 1. Tristian Merchant, ACS, 15:27; 2. Dominic Baciocco, Sit, 16:32; 3. Maison Dunham, Ken, 16:41; 4. Seth Kniegge, Gra, 16:43; 5. Vincent Coverdell, Gra, 16:59; 6. Paul Kopp, Gra, 17:00; 7. Asa Demmert, Sit, 17:00; 8. David Sliwinski, Gra, 17:01; 9. Cole Fritzel, Gra, 17:03; 10. Kaleb Smith, ACS, 17:05. Other peninsula — 12. Max Pfeiffenberger, Sew, 17:17; 13. Bjorn Nilsson, Sew, 17:23; 14. Joe Hamilton, Ken, 17:23; 18. Trey Ingalls, Sew, 17:43; 19. Jaden Van Dyke, Sew, 17:54; 22. Samuel Koster, Sew, 18:19; 24. Levi DeBoard, Sew, 18:24; 26. Ky Calvert, Ken, 18:31; 33. Luke Cross, Ken, 18:42; 42. Tyler Hippchen, Ken, 19:21; 44. Tucker Mueller, Ken, 19:33; 49. Clay Petersen, Sew, 19:39; 58. Josh Foster, Ken, 20:04.

Bringing HOPE

to women on the Kenai Peninsula. While 1 in 8 women will develop breast cancer in her life, there are over 3.1 million breast cancer survivors in the United States today. The best defense is early detection: Know how your breasts usually feel and look and report any changes to your physician right away. A mammogram is the most effective way to detect cancer when lumps are too small to be felt or seen. Experts recommend a yearly mammogram beginning at age 40 for women at average risk; for those with higher risk factors a mammogram may be recommended earlier. Talk to your doctor to see what screening options are right for you.

For more information, call 907-262-7762 or visit PeninsulaRadiation.com.

907.262.7762 | 240 Hospital Place, Ste. 101 | Soldotna, Alaska 99669 www.PeninsulaRadiation.com |

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Sunday, October 6, 2019

Shoppers have more options to return online purchases By Anne D’innocenzio Associated Press

NEW YORK — Ahead of the holiday season, shoppers have more options to return unwanted items bought online as retailers look for new ways to drive traffic. Plenty of retailers like Target and Walmart allow shoppers to easily drop off online returns at their stores. But now, a growing number of retailers are accepting rivals’ returns. Nordstrom’s new service hubs in Los Angeles and Manhattan accept returns of online orders from any retailer. In July, Kohl’s started

accepting Amazon returns in all 1,100 stores, up from 100 previously. Meanwhile, Happy Returns, a Santa Monica, California-based startup that works with about 30 online retailers, more than doubled the number of drop-off locations to 700. The moves come as retailers aim to reduce costs while making it easier for shoppers to return online items. The average return rate for online transactions is 25% compared with 8% for store purchases, according to Forrester Research’s online analyst Sucharita Mulpuru. Package delivery giant UPS is

adding 12,000 pickup and return locations inside CVS, Michaels and Advance Auto Parts stores. The new locations will bring to 21,000 the number of pickup points UPS has in the U.S. “Returning a product is annoying,” said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail. “If you can take some of the hassle by giving customers lots of options, that’s really customer service.” But Saunders and others note that shoppers need to make sure that they didn’t miss the return deadline. They also need to check other things like whether the items were bought on a retailer’s marketplace of

third-party sellers and also how fast can they get the refund. Also, some services like Happy Returns allows shoppers to return online orders in person without a box or label. For others, you need the packaging. Here are three tips for returning online orders: Know the rules when returning goods from rivals: Through a partnership with technology company Narvar, Walgreens now lets shoppers return online orders at more than 8,000 U.S. locations that have FedEx onsite to partners such as Levi Strauss and Urban Outfitters. Narvar’s concierge service also has drop-off locations at 15 Nordstrom

stores for its retail partners. Narvar CEO Amit Sharma says shoppers have to bring in their packaging with the QR code, but in the next few months, the packaging will be available for a fee. Meanwhile, Nordstrom’s service hubs — mini stores that do not have merchandise on hand — in Los Angeles and Manhattan allow shoppers to return online orders from any retailer. Customers bring the packaged items, with or without the preprinted return labels, and a salesperson will ship them out. There is no service fee. At the See returns, Page C2

New way to pamper your pet: fancy furniture By Katherine Roth Associated Press

No longer are furniture companies content to offer you staples like a sofa, easy chair and bed. Now they have those items for your pet, too, designed not to clash with the rest of your decor. Pottery Barn, Crate and Barrel, Ikea, Casper mattresses and other popular furniture purveyors have lines for pets, often in styles that complement their human-size living room furniture. Elegant furniture for pets is hardly new. The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has an 18th century dog kennel in its holdings that was made for Marie Antoinette for her royal dog Coco. The “niche de chien,” of gilded beech and pine covered in velvet, features a swank interior lined in silk. Other pet furniture of the period resembled canopied beds or tabouret-shaped chairs. (Coco is said to have gone with the queen to prison during the French Revolution.) In some homes, gone are the days when a plaid cushion tossed in a corner seemed just fine for a dog. “Dogs and cats are no longer sleeping in mud rooms or outside. They’re in the family den and they’re full-fledged family members,” says Martha Stewart Living’s Editor in Chief, Elizabeth Graves. “People refer to themselves as pet ‘parents,’ not ‘owners,’ and they treat their pets accordingly.” Casper says its dog bed offers “the perfect sleep environment designed and engineered around dog behavior,” and is made of “supportive and comforting foam.” Its decor-friendly outer covers run in gray, blue and sand — and in a range of sizes suited for dogs from tiny up to 90 pounds. More in the spirit of Marie Antoinette’s bed for Coco, Pottery Barn offers a “Chesterfield Pet Bed” with a handcrafted wood frame, button-tufted back, nail-head trim, and a removable velvet cushion that’s waterproof and washable. There’s plenty of inspiring furniture for cats, too. The Ombre Cat Cave, made in Nepal by Dharma Dog and Karma Cat and sold by Crate and Barrel, is billed as an “artisanal cat cave” designed to “provide a comfortable getaway for your favorite feline.” With a more contemporary aesthetic, Crate and Barrel’s cone-shaped Nooee Toby Pet Cave, in pale gray felt, is

Pottery Barn

Pottery Barn’s Chesterfield Pet Bed. No longer are furniture companies content to offer you staples like a sofa, easy chair and bed. Now they have those items for your pet, too, designed not to clash with the rest of your decor. Pottery Barn, Crate and Barrel, Ikea, Casper mattresses and other popular furniture purveyors have lines for pets, often in styles that complement their human-size living room furniture.

designed to look “sophisticated and understated in the modern home.” Ikea has recently introduced a line of pet furniture and accessories — Lurvig — made to coordinate with the company’s furniture lines for humans. Says Ikea Designer Inma Bermudez: “I feel that my pets are the ones who can really take me to the present moment. When we share our time together, my head is more free and other worries and stress fall away. They teach us respect, and their unconditional love is priceless.” The trick, designers say, is coming up with designs that look good to humans while meeting the comfort needs of pets. “The biggest challenge is not to humanize pet

products,” says Barbara Schäfer, a veterinarian who works in product risk assessment at IKEA. “It’s really important to use animal’s natural needs and behaviors like how they sleep, eat or play as starting points. Then we can design a product that fits in with our ‘human needs’ such as style and form.” And pet furniture doesn’t stop at pieces meant for lounging. There’s an array of food and water dish pedestals and stands on the market. “Especially for older pets, it can sometimes be hard for them to bend down,” says Graves, of Martha Stewart, which offers several DIY projects for cat beds and raised dishes. Elevated dishes can also look more, well, elevated in a home setting than food and water dishes set on the floor.

Tribal members aim to cultivate healthy future with gardens By Brian Hallenbeck The Day

NORTH STONINGTON, Conn. — In his mind’s eye, Daniel Menihan Jr. sees a time when backyard vegetable gardens dot the Mashantucket Pequot reservation, their yields nourishing healthy tribal families. By then, he figures, the Mashantuckets’ own commercial growing operation could be regularly supplying produce to Foxwoods Resort Casino restaurants. It’s a pretty picture. And it’s not far-fetched. Two years into a four-year collaboration with the University of Connecticut’s College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources, tribal members led by Menihan, a tribal councilor, have grown sweet corn and heirloom tomatoes on tribe-owned

property here on Swantown Hill, near Foxwoods’ Lake of Isles golf courses. They’re about to harvest honey and will soon plant lettuce. Funded through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Federally Recognized Tribes Extension Program, the undertaking seeks to improve food security among the Mashantuckets; engage tribal youth; boost the economic viability of the 1,100-member tribe’s agricultural enterprises and educate tribal members about nutrition and health. “It’s a great investment from the health standpoint,” said Menihan, who likes to emphasize that aspect of the program. “We bring the kids up here and let them pick stuff and take it home. They light up.” Menihan, joined by Shuresh Ghimire, a UConn Extension educator who helped the tribe

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secure the federal grant, led a recent tour of the Swantown Hill property. Part of a 187-acre parcel known as the Ackerman Farm, it was purchased by the tribe about 15 years ago. Participants in the program have tilled a cornfield and a children’s garden and constructed two side-by-side high tunnels — greenhouse-like structures that facilitate growing in a semi-controlled environment. The high tunnels are not heated, and the plants grown inside them are rooted in the ground. In greenhouses, plants typically are grown in containers. With Ghimire guiding the process, the tribe grew tomatoes in one of the high tunnels during the growing season that recently concluded. Some of the harvest was sold at a stand on the reservation to tribal members, employees and the community. The plan is to

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start selling tomatoes to Foxwoods in 2020. The $280,000 federal grant — $70,000 a year for four years — and additional funding from the Indian Land Tenure Foundation, a nonprofit organization, has so far provided for soil-testing, the high tunnels, hook-ups for water and electricity, development of a business plan and the purchase of such equipment as cold storage, a disc harrow, a rototiller and a mulch layer. A good chunk of the grant money goes to pay two youthful tribal members who are being trained in vegetable-growing, knowledge they will impart to tribal youth. Some of the training takes place in a classroom. In a sign of its commitment to the program, the tribe also has created two full-time positions to support the growing efforts,

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Menihan said. The program has helped foster a relationship between the tribe and UConn Extension, an outreach service that maintains offices around the state, including one in Norwich, about 10 miles from the tribe’s reservation. Despite the proximity, there had been little interaction between the two. “They rarely attended our events; we knew little about them,” Ghimire said. “We sat down together and talked about the need for this grant. We knew we could help them to grow their own food and help with health and nutrition within their cultural ways.” Menihan said U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, played a key role in making it happen. Growing vegetables was hardly See gardens, Page C2

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Sunday, October 6, 2019

Peninsula Clarion

Returns From Page C1

Amazon kiosks at Kohl’s, customers don’t need a box or a label for a free return. Happy Returns lets customers return items from online retailers including Eloquii, Rothy’s and Everlane. Happy Returns “return bars” can be found at shopping centers and other retailers including most recently all 276 Cost Plus World Markets. In return for serving as host for Happy Returns, its online retailer partners promote the locations and

offer customers coupons and other deals. Look for eco-friendly alternatives: Happy Returns is eliminating cardboard boxes used to ship bulk returns to retailers and substituting them with reusable totes made from recycled plastic. In an effort to reduce waste and make the return process easier, Target is in the process of eliminating packing slips from all orders shipped directly to customers from stores and fulfillment centers. To return an online purchase, customers can mail the items back using a link within their shipping confirmation email

or Target.com account, or by looking up the order using the Target app or the card they used for purchase when making a return at a store. Consider return service at home: Shoppers are increasingly able to have a return get picked up inside their home. Walmart says it will launch such a return service later this year but didn’t offer any details. It’s all part of how retailers are focusing more on in-home deliveries and other services. In June, Walmart announced it would have one of its employees deliver fresh groceries and put them in your refrigerator when you’re not home. It launched

its in-home delivery service in three cities: Pittsburgh, Kansas City, Missouri, and Vero Beach, Florida. Many digital natives are offering free in-home return pick up services, according to AlixPartners, a consulting company. For example, online mattress company Casper offers a 100-night free trial for its mattresses. If someone would like to return their mattress, its customer service team takes care of removing the mattress from the customer’s home at no cost and issuing a full refund. The returned mattress does not go in a box when picked up, according to Casper.

Dean Fosdick

Flowers that are cut for drying should be almost fully bloomed, like these. Many methods are available for flower drying, but most people simply hang them upside down by their stems for a couple of weeks in a dark, dry room.

To keep enjoying your garden’s flowers, consider drying them By Dean Fosdick Associated Press

Cut flowers have an intense but brief vase life, lasting generally about a week. Yet they can be preserved as attractive and long-lasting arrangements when properly dried and displayed. Air-drying is the simplest and cheapest way to go about it, but other methods may be better for locking in the flowers’ colors. People often use drying agents or desiccants that include one or more mixtures of sand, activated charcoal, glycerin, gels, borax, sawdust and cornstarch. Others dry plants using dehydrators, and microwave and standard ovens. Most common, though, is simply hanging the plants upside down by their stems in a dark, dry room. Hanging keeps the stems straight. The warmer the space, the faster the plants dry. Adding a fan helps speed things along. “Testing with a few flowers and different drying times may be necessary, however,” said Cindy Haynes, an associate professor of horticulture with Iowa State University Extension and Outreach. Silica sand, when used for preserving flowers, tends to be better at retaining their natural colors, but no single process works for all plants, Haynes said. When using this method, the entire flower head is normally submerged or covered in a box of the silica sand or gel. “This is often used for delicate flowers that don’t respond well to air drying or for flowers for crafts that don’t need the stems,” Haynes said. Blooms with a low moisture content, pinecones, seed heads, foliage, grains and grasses are the most popular choices for centerpieces or special occasion use (think wintertime

weddings or fragrant Valentine nosegays). Combining their different colors, sizes, shapes and textures results in the best displays. Certain flowers like globe amaranth, strawflower and celosia have petals that are partially dry at bloom so they dry quickly and retain their shape well during and after the drying process, Haynes said. “These species and several grasses and grains are often listed on ‘flowers for drying’ lists,” she said. “Other, more succulent flowers, are less successful as dried flowers.” Dried flowers usually are arranged into bouquets, but there are many other applications. Dried plants can be used for cooking (cakes, teas), bathing, paired with cleaning products (delightful scents), attached to homemade cards and parchment paper, and made into dyes, gifts, wreaths, or sachets and potpourri. Some generic tips for drying flowers: ■ Harvest in the cool of the morning, but after the dew evaporates. That prevents mold from developing. ■ Flowers that are cut for drying should be almost fully bloomed, according to horticulturists with Johnny’s Selected Seeds in Winslow, Maine. “In the weeks when they are drying, the flowers will continue to open,” they said in a fact sheet. ■ Remove all foliage from the stems, and do it while in the field. Leaves are unsightly when dried. ■ Collect more than you think you’ll need, to account for breakage while handling. Dried flowers are fragile. “Most flowers are dry after two weeks of airdrying and they will be dry to the touch,” Haynes said in an email. “In the dried state (and kept out of direct sunlight), they will retain their color and not change much over time.”

Associated Press

Ryan Chapman and other students starting Staffordshire University’s esports degree course play “Counter-Strike‚” in the school’s new London digital studio. A number of U.K. and U.S. universities are launching degrees in esports, or competitive multiplayer videogaming, to capitalize on the booming industry’s growing demand for skilled professionals.

Ready student one? Colleges launch degrees in esports By Kelvin Chan Associated Press

LONDON — On their first week in class, a group of students is playing a firstperson shooter video game in a sleek new digital studio. It’s their introduction to the degree in esports they’ve all enrolled in. The group clicking away on their mice are at the University of Staffordshire, one of several U.K. and U.S. schools launching programs aimed at capitalizing on the booming industry’s need for skilled professionals. Ryan Chapman, 18, said his parents were “skeptical at first” about studying esports, or competitive multiplayer videogaming. “But now they understand how big the industry is growing, the pace it’s growing at. They’re now really all for it because it’s a great industry to start to get into,” said Chapman, who was among the students in the lab playing Counter-Strike, one of the most popular esports games. The University of Staffordshire last year launched its bachelor’s and master’s esports programs, in which students mainly learn marketing and management skills tailored to the industry. This autumn, it’s expanding the program to London while

other schools are also debuting esports degree courses, including Britain’s Chichester University, Virginia’s Shenandoah University, Becker College in Massachusetts and The Ohio State University. In Asia, where esports has seen strong growth, schools in Singapore and China offer courses. The global esports market is expected to surge to $1.1 billion this year, up $230 million from 2018 on growth in sponsorships, merchandise and ticket sales, according to Newzoo . The research firm expects the global esports audience to grow in 2019 to about 454 million as fans tune in on livestreaming platforms such as Twitch and Microsoft’s Mixer. Esports tournaments have become a cultural phenomenon and now rival traditional sports events in size and scale. Big competitions are held in arenas where thousands of fans watch big-name professional video gamers compete for lucrative prize pools. Esports leagues have franchises in North America, Europe and Asia. The biggest names, such as Fortnite superstar Tyler “Ninja” Blevins, can earn millions in prize money and livestreaming deals. Esports are even

Gardens From Page C1

foreign to the historically agrarian tribe, which raised the “three sisters” — corn, beans and squash — as well as tobacco centuries ago. After the tribe reorganized in the 1970s and before it gained the federal recognition that allowed it to pursue gaming in the 1980s, members raised hogs, harvested maple syrup and grew hydroponic lettuce. More recently, the tribe’s Sugar Shack maple syrup business started selling syrup at Foxwoods in 2016 and currently provides it to the casino’s Cedars Steaks & Oyster and VUE 24 restaurants. The syrup also is

set to be a medal event at the Southeast Asian Games in the Philippines in November. Dozens of U.S. colleges have offered varsity level esports competitions for years. But some schools are taking it a step further by adding courses as the industry’s boom drives demand for professionals who know how to, for example, organize esports tournaments. New niche degrees partly highlight the changing economy, but they also reflect the “need to communicate to parents and students that there will be a job waiting for someone once they earn a degree,” which may include hefty tuition fees and student loans to pay for them, said Joni Finney, director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Institute for Research on Higher Education. She worried that some degrees are too specialized and that some schools are launching them to offset falling enrolment. “It’s really up to the faculty of those institutions to step up and say, ‘You know, a degree in business will cover these kinds of jobs,’ rather than saying we have a degree in a certain job category,” Finney said. Becker College formally

launched its Bachelor of Science in esports management this month after an initial “soft release” last year. “It’s no longer kids playing games in their basement,” said Alan Ritacco, dean of Becker College’s School of Design and Technology. The top esports players now earn almost as much as the highest paid stars in traditional sports like golf or tennis, he said. The schools emphasize that their courses aren’t about just playing video games. “People are unaware of the industry that goes behind esports,” said Matt Huxley, a lecturer at Staffordshire University’s Digital Institute London, a new outpost in tech hub Here East that the university, which is based near Birmingham, England, opened so students could be closer to companies in the capital. Huxley, who teaches a class on organizing tournaments, said learning about esports was akin to studying sports management. “If you were to go and study to be a director of football you’re not playing football, you’re learning the business behind how (player) transfers work, how you run a stadium and all those kind of operational things.”

available at the Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center and at the tribe’s Pequot Outpost convenience store. Ghimire said federal officials monitoring the tribe’s progress have been impressed. About 40 percent of the benchmarks for the four-year program were achieved in the first year, according to Menihan. Still ahead are the establishment of a 4-H Club for tribal youth and further educational outreach to tribal members in need of information about nutrition and diabetes, a disease endemic in Indian Country. Healthier eating, including less consumption of fast food, is a goal tribal populations embrace. Menihan wants to work

on establishing a Mashantucket Pequot Department of Agriculture as a standalone division of tribal government. He said the idea has the support of the tribal council and tribal membership. “You want to do right first,” he said of the health aspect of the growing program. “That’s the real priority.” Hence his goal of seeing, within 10 years, “vegetables growing in everybody’s backyards.” He readily acknowledged that the economics are important, too. Before the federal grant money runs out in 2021, the Mashantuckets’ commercial farming operation might have to be able to sustain itself as well as the tribe.


Peninsula Clarion

Sunday, October 6, 2019

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A letter from the publisher

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Peninsula Clarion through the years 1970 Clarion begins publishing weekly Owner — John Nelson Publisher — John Nelson

1972 Ownership transfers to Clint Young Publisher — Clint Young

1975 Ownership transfers to Dick Morgan, Pat O’Connell, and Max Swearingen Publisher — Max Swearingen

1992

2014

Publisher — Ronnie Hughes

Publisher — Vitto Kleinschmidt

1994

2016

1978

Publisher — Susie Morris Baker Publishing moves from weekly to Conversion from tabloid format to broadsheet format Monday through Friday

Publisher — Deedie McKenzie

2017

Publisher — Dick Morgan

Sunday publication begins

Ownership transfers to GateHouse Media Publisher — Joe Leong

1985

1999

2018

Wayne Dunworth joins ownership

Publisher — Stan Pitlo

1991

Web edition begins publishing

Ownership transfers to Sound Publishing Publisher — Terry Ward

1981

Ownership transfers to Morris Communications Publisher — William S. Morris III

1997

2000

2019 Publisher — Jeff Hayden

his October the Clarion celebrates 50 years serving the peninsula community. I would like to thank you — our readers, advertisers and employees — for making this landmark achievement possible! Over the past five decades, Clarion staff has covered the most significant events in peninsula history — from natural disasters and the latest political happening to economic booms and busts — as well as told the everyday stories of our community’s unique people. We have chronicled the moments that have impacted the lives of all our residents, and counted some of our most distinguished citizens as part of our family. Every Sunday, the Clarion will revisit the moments that brought us to where we are today by featuring articles from past issues. We truly hope you enjoy sharing these once-in-alifetime reflections of the people and places that have helped shape what the peninsula is today. We sincerely appreciate the opportunity to share our community’s past with you. Please feel free to share your memories and reflections with our editorial staff by emailing: ethompson@ peninsulaclarion.com. Thank you again for your support and dedication. We hope to continue bringing critical news to the peninsula and to go on telling the stories of our friends and neighbors for another 50 years. Jeffrey M. Hayden Publisher, The Peninsula Clarion


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Sunday, October 6, 2019

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Peninsula Clarion

Sea Side Story: ‘The Rumble’

ugust owes its buddy, September, a big-time apology. It showed up so late with its benchmark cool weather and prodigious rain-spawning clouds that ole number nine on the calendar had to perform double duty trying to get fall organized before October came knocking. Special note: Well done, September. The flora finally donned its fall fashions and we’ve received enough rain that migrating waterfowl are overnighting in an overflow pond on our access road. So, back off a bit, OK? September was a dazzling flyby of 30 days that tempered fires, rejuvenated the landscape and encouraged the charge of milling silver warriors up the cooling and rising streams. Nice things happen when Mother Nature chills after one of her “hot around the collar” snits and allows her four seasonal offspring to resume their customary playtimes. It wasn’t long after the region was refreshed by soothing veils of moisture working their magic on sunburned leaves and parched lawns that the fauna surrounding our cabin by the sea started to strut rather than sulk. Example: In a fishing column few weeks ago, I noted that as dawn morphed from a dull steel radiance to a crimson ember’s glow, I stepped out of the cabin to head out for an old fishing haunt when a bizarre fracas broke out in the middle of our driveway. A large gray hare had been nibbling along the edge of our sun-mugged lawn and had begun a leisurely hip-hop back into the surrounding brush when a clutch of adolescent pheasants suddenly appeared from the adjacent foliage. The floppy-eared critter froze as the curious youngsters approached, bobbing and weaving like wannabe Jets from “West Side Story.” Most of the brood were cautious and merely seemed interested in inspecting the furry creature, while others were the “bad boy” types showing off their ruffled, cock rooster, youth-muted colors in addition to signaling imminent gangsta assaults. The hare looked somewhat bemused by the feathered mob but held his ground until one of them would get too close, then went Bruce Lee on the encroacher with an impressive spin kick that never hit a thing but startled the testosterone out of the offender. The dustup lasted until the avian ruffians finally realized there was a minute possibility that the annoyed bunny just might luck out and permanently rearrange their beaks, so they faded into the underbrush, leaving the critter sitting on its butt wondering, “What the hell was that all about?” If that encounter had transpired 15 days earlier, the faux toughs would have just stood there watching each other sweat until they either suffered heatstroke or regained enough common sense

Unhinged alaska Nick Varney to stagger into the nearby shade. As of this writing, Sea Side Story standoffs between The Chicks and The Hares (another one has shown up) continue periodically but neither side has laid a claw or a hairy foot on each other much to the chagrin of the hawk watching from a nearby spruce. I figure he is patiently waiting for a full throwdown kerfuffle so he can swoop in and nail an unsuspecting combatant that is more interested in landing a peck or a punch than watching the skies. The way it looks, the raptor might as well go back to snacking on field shrews because the rumbles between these two factions are more of a display of heroic puffery than fur and feathers flying. They should be embarrassed. I’m sure all of the backforty drama will dwindle as quickly as the daylight hours when the first icicle winds burst across the fields announcing that it’s winter’s turn to frolic across the landscape. Come to think of it, that time may not be far off. Last week, during a lull in the progression of playedout tropical storms rolling north to die, the shrouds of overcasts receded enough to view the mountains across the bay. There was no question as to what lurked over there. The highest peaks and glacier walls held undisputable evidence that old man winter had peeked over their zeniths while brushing what looked to be the residue of a mini, powdered sugar, donut from his beard depositing a light cloak of termination dust on the apexes. It was a shot across our bow that only those with the brainpower of a breakfast burrito would ignore so it’s time to gear up and gear down depending what turns your crank over during the ensuing months. As for us? At the moment, we are dealing with a couple of new arrivals in our little patch of paradise. After a two-year hiatus, ermines are back in our woodpile and they are welcome because they are ravenous assassins when it comes to being local “meet and eat” rodent greeters although they can be a bit mischievous at times. For now, they seem content to scramble up to the top of a deck post that gives them an excellent view of the weenie stand-offs between the two gangs. What they are contemplating, I don’t have a clue, but it wouldn’t be surprising to walk out the door one morning and find a pile of fur or scattered feathers on the disputed turf. Man, oh man, will that p.o. the hawk. Nick can be reached at ncvarney@gmail.com.

Guide Tim Hiner inducted into Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame Tim Hiner, a guide on the Kenai river for the past 43 years, was inducted into the Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame at a ceremony in Soldotna on June 15. The ceremony took place along the banks of the Kenai River — where Hiner has guided and instructed more than 18,000 individuals as a fulltime professional guide. Hiner grew up in Western Michigan, where he began fishing at the age of 4. He soon developed a passion for panfish, bass, pike, walleyes, brook trout, steelhead and salmon. After high school and the U.S. Army, Hiner moved to Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula in spring of 1975 at the age of 23. Hiner started fishing the world-famous Kenai River, and shortly after went into full-time sport fish guiding. He is still owner/operator of Tim Hiner’s Fishing Alaska as a full-time professional guide today. Hiner has guided on the Kenai river in the Soldotna area almost exclusively with big salmon as his main target, but he is also an expert trout and steelhead fisherman and really enjoys teaching fishing. For the past 43 years, Hiner has kept a detailed journal for every charter he has ever fished for

Photo courtesy Tim Hiner

Pictured from left to right: Professional guides Jim Johnson, Don Johnson, Tim Hiner (holding plaque), Tim Lesmeister, chairman of Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame, guides Jimmy Jack Drath and Jason Lesmeister. The young “guides to be” are Jimmy Jack Drath’s sons.

every day, week and every year. He has instructed and guided more than 18,000 individuals from all walks of life, from all 50 states, from over 42 foreign countries and all seven continents. Tim has been active with many associations and has attended many meetings all with the aim of putting more fish in the river for

everyone. Since 1972 the Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame and Museum has been the official record-keeping institution for all Fresh Water species of fish. Their headquarters and museum in Hayward, Wisconsin, generates over 60,000 visitors each year to view the many artifacts that display

the history of Sport Fishing. In 1980, the Hall of Fame began recognizing individuals who had a major impact on the sport of fishing and have paid tribute to over 300 individuals since. For more information: www.freshwater-fishing.org. (Information submitted by Tim Hiner)

Around the Peninsula KPC Literacy Program The Kenai Peninsula College invites you to a Volunteer ESL (English as a Second Language) Tutor Information and Orientation on Thursday, Oct. 10. Choose to attend either from noon-1 p.m. or 5-6:00 p.m. We invite you to learn about: What you need to know to be a successful ESL volunteer; What resources are available to you. You do not need to speak a second language to be an ESL volunteer. Your attendance does not obligate you to be a volunteer. Come and learn about volunteer opportunities in our ESL program at KPC, Brockel Room 191. For more information contact Diane Taylor 262-0328 or email: dttaylor@alaska. edu.

ARC Lake cleanup

Kenai River Rotary of Soldotna will meet at ARC Lake for its semiannual cleanup Tuesday, Oct. 8. The public is invited to come help tidy up the recreational area for the upcoming winter usage. We gather at ARC Lake at 6:30 p.m. for traditional trash pickup.

Kenai Kennel Club will be offering a Family Dog Obedience class beginning Thursday, Oct. 24 at 6 p.m. This class will work on sit, down, stay, leave it, watch, recall and other obedience related activities students may want to work on. Dogs must be at least 6 months of age and have up-to-date vaccinations. Class size will be limited to 10 students. Please email kenaiobedience@gmail.com if you are interested in this class.

Take-a-Break Ladies Luncheon Take-a-Break Ladies Luncheon will take place Wednesday, Oct. 16 from 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. featuring an update on Freedom House and inspirational speaker Jennifer Waller on “A Lamp Undo My Feet.” Lunch $12. at Solid Rock Conference Center, Mile 90.5 Sterling Highway. Complimentary child care provided. For reservations call Susan at 335-6789 or 440-1319.

Clay on Display: Kenai Pottery Guild’s October Alaska Farm Bureau meeting Exhibit The next meeting of the Kenai Peninsula Chapter of the Alaska Farm Bureau will be held at the Cook Inlet Aquaculture building on K-Beach Road on Thursday, Oct. 17 at 6:30 p.m. Casey Matney of the Kenai Peninsula Cooperative Extension Service (CES) will be presenting an Update on UAF CES for Agriculture in Alaska and also Innovations for Integrated Pest Management. All members and interested parties are welcome to attend.

Kenai River Special Management Area Advisory Board meeting The Kenai River Special Management Area Advisory Board will meet on Thursday, Oct. 10 at 5:30 p.m. at the Gilman River Center on Funny River Road, Soldotna. Agenda topics include committee and agency reports. The public is welcome to attend. If you have any questions about the meeting you can contact Jack Blackwell at 907-2625581, Ext 21. Family Dog Obedience class

The Kenai Fine Art Center October exhibit “Clay on Display” will be featured Tuesday-Saturday noon-5 p.m. throughout the month of October. Artists from the Kenai Pottery Guild are providing a dazzling array of work. Included in the exhibit will be a challenge category. Each artist was challenged to create a full place setting. Located on 816 Cook St. in Old Town Kenai across from Oiler’s Bingo Hall. If you miss the opening come in and see the exhibit all month long,

Community Education & Recreation classes Mindful Strength: Tai Chi, Pilates, Yoga and Aerobics combined in one class to increase overall strength of the body and ease the mind. Thursdays, noon to 1 p.m. Starts Oct. 3. Alaska Herbal Solutions: Join us for four free classes to learn about the food and medicine that grows in your back yard. Tuesdays, 6:30-7:30 p.m.. Starts Oct. 8. Cross Stitching: Learn how to cross-stitch by completing a beginner’s

project. Aida cloth, floss and needles are provided. Students must bring a 5-6’ hoop, scissors, reading glasses if needed. Tuesdays 6:30-8 p.m. Starts Oct. 8. For more information call 907-714-1211. www.soldotna.org.

Caregiver Support Meeting

Soldotna Senior Center will host Caregiver Support Meeting-Training DVD on Caregiving: Vital Signs on Tuesday, Oct.8, 2019, 1 p.m. This program helps caregivers learn how temperature, pulse, respiration, blood pressure and pain assessment provide valuable information about their care partner’s health. Please join us to share your experiences as a caregiver, or to support someone who is a caregiver. Call Sharon or Judy at (907) 262-1280, for more information.

Soldotna Historical Society board meeting Soldotna Historical Society board meeting, Monday, Oct. 7, 4:30 p.m. at the Homestead Museum, 461 Centennial Park Road. Questions? Carmen 262-2791.

PROPS meeting

The Cook Inlet Regional Citizens Advisory Council’s PROPS (Prevention, Response, Operations and Safety) Committee meeting will be held in Kenai on Friday, Oct. 11 at 10 a.m. at the Cook Inlet Aquaculture Association building, 40610 Kalifornsky Beach Road. The public is welcome to attend. For an agenda, directions or more information call 907-283-7222 or 800-652-7222.

40th Annual Original Christmas Boutique The Kenai Senior Center will host the 40th Annual Original Christmas Boutique on Saturday, Oct. 12 from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Includes distinctive handcrafted gifts created by 12 local artisans and craftspeople.

Trapping and Snaring Orientation classes Continued on Page C5

4-H — What’s it all about? Reaching millions of kids, that’s what 4-H was established in 1902 and is the nation’s largest youth development organization, reaching almost 6 million young people from ages 5-18 in approximately 90,000 clubs. 4-H serves in rural, urban and suburban communities in every state across our nation with the goal of developing

citizenship, leadership, responsibility and life skills of youth through experiential learning programs and a positive youth approach. 4-H is delivered by Cooperative Extension — a community of more than 100 public universities across the nation that provides experiences where young people learn by doing.

(4-H.org) Because of its origins in the Midwest farmland, 4-H has historically been an organization associated with agriculture. While there is still a large degree of focus on agricultural clubs and projects, in more recent years, 4-H has broadened to include an emphasis on projects and clubs in the areas of STEM,

shooting sports, nature preservation, international exchange and community service. Almost anything a youth member or group of youth is interested in can be incorporated into a 4-H project or 4-H club, and here in Alaska, we have approximately 1,500 youth members with an additional 600 youth from military families.

National 4-H Week this year is Oct. 6-12 and is the time of year when 4-Hers on the Kenai enroll for the upcoming 4-H year. The new 4-H year starts on Oct. 1. If your youth has been contemplating enrolling in 4-H, now is the perfect time! There are nine active clubs in the Kenai Peninsula District, all of them busy

learning in a large variety of projects. Enrollment is easy at www.alaska4h.org, or you can call or email the Cooperative Extension Office at crankin4@alaska. edu or 262-5824 for more information! Submitted by Cassy Rankin, UAF Cooperative Extension Service, 4-H Program Assistant, Kenai Peninsula District.


Peninsula Clarion

Around the Peninsula The Kenai National Wildlife Refuge (Refuge) will hold its 2019 trapping orientation class and snaring seminar on Saturday, Oct. 26 from 9 a.m.-5 p.m., at the Refuge Environmental Education Center on Ski Hill Road in Soldotna. To obtain a permit to trap on the Refuge, it is mandatory to attend at least one Refuge trapping orientation. Trappers who have previously attended the trapping and snaring orientation do not need to re-attend; however, all refuge trappers are welcome. Starting Oct. 7, trapping permits for the 201920 season will be available at the Refuge Headquarters, on Monday through Friday from 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. For additional information, please contact Refuge Officer Joe Williams at 907-260-2852.

Spooky Seasons

The Kenai National Wildlife Refuge Visitor Center will host a Spooky Seasons event on Saturday, Oct. 26 from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Explore owls, bats, bugs and more creepycrawlies of the forest at this annual, interactive event for all ages.

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

Breast cancer awareness fundraiser VFW 10046 Auxiliary is sponsoring a Breast cancer awareness fundraiser. Raffle tickets are $5. Drawing is Oct. 31. Winner will receive custom totes and zip bags by SUE, Coffee cups and gift card, 2 liters Pink Ribbon Vodka, beautiful jewelry, watch, Breast Cancer Aware socks, caps, pins, hair clips and much, much more. For tickets see a member or stop at the post. More info 262-2722. ALL proceeds will directly assist local VFW Family Members fighting breast cancer.

North Pacific Fishery Management Council meeting in Homer The North Pacific Fishery Management Council is meeting in Homer on Sept. 30-Oct. 9. We have prepared a press release which outlines some of the specifics and I’m attaching it to this email, along with a brief summary of each of the agenda items. Notably, the Council will be holding its first “Introduction to the Council Process” workshop on Tuesday, Oct. 1, from 5:30-7 p.m. at the Best Western. It will offer a brief outline of what topics are on the agenda and provide an opportunity to learn about the Council process and how to participate.

Equipping grandparents

Sterling Grace Community Church is presenting “Equipping Grandparents,” a series on how to be a more involved as a grandparent. The series teaches how to know your grandchild better; how to influence the lives of your grandchildren; how to speak Christ into their lives, and how to leave your spiritual legacy to them. We will also discussing obstacles to relationships with grandchildren. Parents can also benefit from this series. The series will be held Wednesday evenings at the Sterling Senior Citizen Center at 6 p.m. starting on Oct. 2. Call Dr. Roger Holl at 862-0336 for more information.

service, learning about resources, and career/college awareness. Everybody is invited to attend (ages 18+) For more information, call 262-0327.

About Boating Safely class

The Kenai Coast Guard Auxiliary would like to announce that a class “About Boating Safely” will be taught at the Cook Inlet Aquacultural Center, 40610 K-Beach Road, Kenai. This is an eight-hour course and will be taught Tuesday, Oct. 8, from 6-10 p.m. and Saturday, 1-6 p.m. Registration is $40 Register online at: a1700202.wow.uscgaux. info. To register in person call Michael 907-201-1792. Deadline to register is Oct. 5.

Central Peninsula Fish & Game Advisory Committee meeting The Central Peninsula Fish & Game Advisory Committee will be holding a public meeting on Oct. 8 at 7 p.m. in Ninilchik at the Ninilchik School Library. Agenda topics will include Lower Cook Inlet finfish proposals and any other issues that come before the committee. For more information contact David Martin at 567-3306 or contact ADF&G Boards Support at 907-267-2354.

7th annual craft bazaar

Our Lady of the Angels Catholic Church will host a craft bazaar Friday, Oct. 11 from 12-6 p.m. and Saturday, Oct. 12 from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at 225 S. Spruce St., Kenai. Contact Lori at 283-3315 or Karen at 907-350-0843 to reserve a craft table ($30 and $40).

4th Annual Fall Pumpkin Festival Kenai’s 4th Annual Fall Pumpkin Festival will take place Saturday, Oct. 12 from noon-3 p.m. at Millennium Square (415 Spur View Dr., Kenai). Introducing, for the first time this year, the $2 Pumpkin Pick which includes a Hay Maze and Pumpkin Painting. There will also be food trucks, scarecrows, music, hay rides, petting zoo, face painting and more family fun for everyone! Call Kenai Parks, Recreation & Beautification Department at 907-283-8262 for additional information. You can also find this event on our Facebook page.

Sterling Community Center Oktoberfest Sterling Community Center Oktoberfest will take place Saturday, Oct. 12. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. Brats, beer, pork and cider. With live music provided by the Alaska Polka Chips. Tickets $20. Silent and live auction. Call 907-262-7224 for more info or tickets.

About Boating Safely class The Kenai Flotilla of the US Coast Guard Auxiliary will be conducting a two part boating class “About Boating Safely.” Classes will start on Tuesday, Oct. 8 from 5-9 p.m. The class will conclude on Saturday, Oct. 12 from 1- 7 p.m. Each class will be conducted at the Cook Inlet Aquaculture Center, located at 40610 Kalifornsky Beach Road, Kenai, AK. Please contact the Public Education Officer, Mike Chase, at 907 201-1792 for more information and registration for the class.

KDLL Adventure Talks Hebridean Way

Soldotna Historical Society board meeting will take place Monday, Oct. 7 at 4:30 p.m. at the Homestead Museum, 461 Centennial Park Road. Questions? Contact Carmen at 262-2791.

KDLL Adventure Talks has a presentation on biking the Hebridean Way — 250 miles along the islands off the northwest coast of Scotland. Tune in at 10 a.m. Oct. 16 for a discussion with Matt and Sarah Pyhala about the planning and logistics of an international bike trip. Then come to the live presentation at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 17 at the Kenai Visitors and Cultural Center. Admission is free for KDLL members, $5 for nonmembers.

Focusing on adult career success workshop

Free adult drive-thru flu vaccinations

NETS (Necessary Education, Technology and Skills) is a free fiveweek workshop to help adults gain skills, explore careers, and find a job! The workshop is every Tuesday and Thursday from 9:30-10:30 a.m. from Oct. 8-Nov. 7, in the Learning Center at Kenai Peninsula College. The course, taught by Terri Cowart, will focus on community

Central Peninsula Hospital is offering free adult drive-thru flu vaccinations on Wednesday, Oct. 16 from 3-5:30 p.m. on a first-come, first-served basis while supplies last. Enter the covered parking garage from Binkley Street onto Vine (by Soldotna Pharmacy) and follow the signs. Take this opportunity to beat the flu season by getting

Soldotna Historical Society board meeting

immunized!

Sterling Senior Center community meeting The Sterling Senior Center will be having a community meeting on Friday, Oct. 18 at 6 p.m. This is a public meeting to identify project proposals under the State of Alaska Community Assistance Program. Eligible nonprofits will present project proposals to be considered for CAP funding. The residents physically residing within the Sterling Precinct will make recommendations on how the CAP funds will be distributed for public projects or programs. This is a public meeting. All members of the public are welcome to attend.

Soldotna Rotary Club meet and greet On Oct. 19 at 10 a.m. at Fine Thyme in Soldotna, Soldotna Rotary Club will be hosting a meet and greet to have members of the community learn more about Soldotna Rotary and Rotary in general. Come hear stories of what this service club has done in the community and the world. Please contact jodi.stuart.rotarydistrict5010@gmail.com for more information.

Fishing Vessel Drill Conductor Training in Kenai The Alaska Marine Safety Education Association (AMSEA) will offer a Fishing Vessel Drill Conductor class in Kenai, Alaska on Oct. 25, from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Cook Inlet Aquaculture Association 40610 Kalifornsky Beach Road. The class is offered at a reduced cost of $50 for commercial fishermen. The cost is $175 for all others. Interested mariners may register online at www. amsea.org or call 907-747-3287. Instructor Rob Hulse will cover cold-water survival skills; EPIRBs, signal flares, and mayday calls; man-overboard recovery; firefighting; flooding and damage control; dewatering pumps, immersion suits and PFDs, helicopter rescue, life rafts, abandon ship procedures, and emergency drills.

True Tales, Told Live

True Tales, Told Live and KDLL public radio has a storytelling event at 6 p.m. Oct. 25 at Odie’s Deli in Soldotna. The theme is “Tail Tales: Stories of Animal Encounters,” with live music by Recess Duty. Admission is free. For more information or to sign up to tell a story, check out True Tales, Told Live on Facebook, or call Jenny Neyman with KDLL at 907-394-6397.

Stranding Hotline technical difficulties The Alaska SeaLife Center’s Stranding Hotline is working intermittently due to technical difficulties. In the meantime, below are the ways to reach our team if you have information about a stranded or injured marine mammal. Email wildliferesponse@alaskasealife.org. Call ASLC Security at 907-224-6342.

PING PONG back again by popular demand! Come one, come all, no age limit, no skill limit. If you have a pulse, you can play! Mondays from 6:15-8:15 p.m. at the Soldotna Regional Sports Complex. $2 per person. Bring a paddle if you have one, and bring a friend, if you have one! For more information, contact Ron Levy at 252-6931 or Matt Faris at 398-6693.

Sterling Community Center fall fest FallFest 2019: Mark your calendar for our Fall Craft and Vendor Fair on Saturday, Oct. 26, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Open to the public. There will be vendors, local crafts, food and drink, craft workshops, and much more! To reserve a space or for more information, please call 907-262-7224 or stop in MondayFriday between 9 a.m. and noon, 38377 Swanson River Road, Sterling.

KPB Solid Waste winter hours KPB Solid Waste facilities will be closed on Sundays for the winter from Oct 6, 2019 through April 26, 2020. For more information contact the KPB Solid Waste Department at 907-262-9667.

Sunday, October 6, 2019

C5

October — a month of justice, rainbow colors and the Hunter’s Moon By Bonnie Marie Playle

Every third year, October’s Full Moon is the Hunter’s Moon, also, called Blood Moon. Astrological signs for October: Libra and Scorpio. Birthstones: tourmaline and opal. Colors: as varied as the rainbow. Flowers: marigold and the cosmos. Bird: swan. Trees: hazelnut, rowan, maple and walnut. Days observed: Columbus Day of Indigenous Peoples’ Day and Halloween. I’ve included six wacky/special days as well. Libra is the seventh sign in the zodiac. Its symbol is the scales based on the Scales of Justice. The element is Air. The ruling planet is Venus. Libra is symbolized by the gryphon, a mythological creature with the head, wings and talons of an eagle and the hind legs of a lion. Librans seek equality, harmony and balance. The scales are a symbol of justice. Libra’s symbol is the only symbol in the zodiac that is inanimate (not represented by an animal or person). Scorpio is the eighth sign in the zodiac. Its symbol is the scorpion, the element is Water, the ruling planet is Pluto. Scorpios like truth, facts, being right, longtime friends and teasing. Their strengths are resourcefulness, bravery, being passionate, stubbornness and are true friends. The birthstones for October are tourmaline — representing wholesome energy. Green tourmaline is the best healing crystal of the physical heart, while pink tourmaline means a love of humanity and humanitarianism. Then there is the Opal meaning precious stone and is viewed as a symbol of hope. It is believed that if you aren’t born in October and wear the opal it will crack. Since both birthstones come in an array of colors, legend has it, they had their start in rainbows. The month’s colors are as varied as the rainbow, from white through to deep pink. Since October has varied colors, the rainbow symbolizes hope, which would pretty accurately describe it. October’s flowers are the marigold — a sign of warm or fierce undying love — and the cosmos, a symbol of order, peace and serenity. The bird for October is the swan, meaning grace and beauty and is associated with love, music and poetry. The tree for Oct. 1-3 is the hazelnut tree and is considered the tree of wisdom and learning. Hazelnut people are extraordinary, charming, understanding, moody and honest. Oct. 4-13 is the rowan tree, which is a sensitivity tree. Rowan people are full of charm, cheerful, love life and are emotional. Oct. 14-23 is the maple tree, which symbolizes generosity, balance, promise and practicality. Maple people have independence of mind, pride, good memory and learns easily. Oct. 24-31 is the walnut tree, the symbol for clarity and focus. Walnut people are passionate, aggressive, noble, no flexibility and no compromise. The first day observed in October is Columbus Day, which is the second Monday of the month, which is the 14th. This is a U.S. Holiday commemorating the landing of Christopher Columbus in the New World on October 12, 1492. It became a federal holiday in 1937. Since Christopher Columbus never set foot in present day United States it was time for a name change, hence Alaska Indigenous Peoples’ Day because they were the first settlers. The second day observed is Alaska Day, on Oct. 18, which encompasses Alaska Day in Sitka and runs through the 20th. The last day observed is Oct. 31, Halloween, which is a time of celebration and superstition. This is a way to usher in the winter season with gatherings, costumes and sweet treats. So what is there to do in October on the Kenai Peninsula? Oct. 10 the City of Kenai is hosting TRASHercise to encourage Kenai citizens to get out and exercise while cleaning up the town. Oct. 12 is the Kenai 4th Annual Fall Pumpkin Festival at

Millennium Square from noon to 3 p.m. This event is fun for the entire family, with a Hay Maze and Pumpkin Painting, also food trucks, scarecrows, music, hay rides, petting zoo, face painting and much more. This helps people enjoy autumn in preparation for winter. This is hosted by Kenai Parks, Recreation & Beautification Department. Oct. 12 Sterling Community Center is hosting Oktoberfest, which includes music, dancing and dinner. Come listen to Alaska Polka Chips play. There will be beers, brats, pork and cider for a nominal fee. Oct. 19 the Soldotna Chamber of Commerce is hosting the 25th Annual Pie Auction with a Haunted Manor theme. This will be held at the Soldotna Regional Sports Complex. The purpose of this event is to raise funds for community events and programs. Oct. 26 in Sterling is the Community Fall Fest Annual Craft and Vendor Fair — get some early Christmas shopping done. Oct. 27 in Soldotna at the Tsalteshi Ski Trails there will be a Halloween Spook Night event for children 10 and under. A nominal fee is required. Here is some October trivia as well as Alaska special days: Oct. 9 is Emergency Nurses’ Day. This is a day to appreciate all the emergency room nurses everywhere. Oct. 10, 1986 in Seward there was record precipitation in a 24-hour time frame of 15.05 inches. Oct. 6 is Bosses Day, so thanks all the bosses and appreciate them, their jobs aren’t always easy. Oct. 18, 1867, Russia transferred Alaska to the United States in Sitka. Also, on the 18th in 1966, the Alaska Federation of Natives was organized. The Alaska Federation of Natives is the largest statewide Native organization in Alaska. It’s run by 12 regional nonprofit and tribunal partnerships that run federal and state programs. 178 villages and 13 regional Native corporations makeup its memberships. The headquarters is in Anchorage. Oct. 24 is United Nations Day, so pray for the United Nations. Oct. 27, the fourth Sunday of the month, is Mother-In-Law Day, so let her know how much she is appreciated. On Oct. 28, 1988, international efforts to free two stranded gray whales in Barrow were a success. On Oct. 29, 1942, the Alaska Highway opened for travel. Also, on this date in 1958 on Annette Island, the most precipitation in one hour was recorded at 1.05 inches in Alaska. On Oct. 30, 1983, Alaska combined time zones. When this occurred Alaska had four time zones, now there are two. In 1983, 98% of the state’s population was in one of these zones — now called Yukon time — which is one hour earlier than Pacific Standard Time (PST) and four hours earlier than the Eastern Standard Time (EST). Part of the Aleutian Islands west of Juneau observe HawaiiAleutian time zone. So there’s Alaska Standard Time (AKST) and Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time (HAST). If you enjoy whale watching, then in October through February the gray whales migrate south. In October, there are fewer people, but nature is always available — the turning of leaves, animals in rut, shorter days, longer nights and of course the Northern Lights start dancing as temperatures starting dropping. Before, I mentioned the October moon being the Hunters’ Moon. This is because since the moon is full, it’s good to hunt by. In this month game is fattened and preparing for the coming winter. This is traditionally the time to fill freezers in preparation for winter. October is also Blood Moon, because the moon has a pinkish tint to it, and the fact hunters are hunting in preparation for winter. All months in the year in Alaska are spectacular, be safe and enjoy.


Classifieds C6AXX | PENINSULA CLARION | PENINSULACLARION.COM | Sunday, October 2019 | PENINSULA CLARION | PENINSULACLARION.COM | xxxxxxxx, xx,6,2019

Keep a Sharp Eye on the Classifieds

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

283-7551 www.peninsulaclarion.com Alaska Trivia

At 20,320 feet, Denali (Mt. McKinley) is the tallest peak on the North American continent.

LEGALS

Make CBJ your Employer of choice!

PUBLIC MEETING ANNOUNCEMENT

To view our current job openings, please visit our website at: http://www.juneau.org/personnel/jobs.php

A special meeting of the Board of Directors for the Central Emergency Services Area will be held on Monday, October 14th, at 12 pm at ERC, 253 Wilson Lane, Soldotna. The Board will discuss the Soldotna Station 1 Site Selection. For further information, please contact Chief Roy Browning at 262-4792. Pub: October 6, 2019

to learn about new openings, job details, CBJ benefits & more!

876508

PUBLIC NOTICE The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council will meet Friday, October 11, 2019, 10:00 a.m. in Ed Rasmuson Hall, 2nd floor of the Atwood Center, Alaska Pacific University Campus, 4455 University Drive, Anchorage. Topics for discussion include the FY 2020 Draft Work Plan. To participate, call: 800.315.6338, code 72241. For more information call: 907.278.8012 or 800.478.7745 or on the web at www.evostc.state.ak.us. If you have a disability and need special accommodations to participate, please contact Cherri Womac at the above contact numbers or email to cherri.womac@alaska.gov no later than 72 hours prior to the meeting to make any necessary arrangements. Pub: October 6, 2019 874997

@

Or call us at (907)586-5250

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Online

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EMPLOYMENT

Newspaper Carrier Now Accepting Applications Delivery Areas: * K-Beach Rd * South Soldotna * Anchor Point/ Ninilchik This is a great opportunity to be your own boss as an independent contractor and earn up to $1000 a month! Requirements: * Prospect must be reliable and available for early morning deliveries 5 days a week (Sun, Tues- Fri, for approximately 2-4 hours between 1 a.m. and 7 a.m.) * Have a valid Alaska drivers license * Must have a dependable vehicle for Alaskan roads and driving conditions * Furnish proof of insurance * Have a copy of current driving record (due upon contracting) Applications available at the Peninsula Clarion 150 Trading Bay Rd, Kenai For questions call 283-3584 Signature Gatherers Needed! Experience necessary $1 per signature, up to $25 per hour possible Call Scott in Anchorage 907-337-3171

EMPLOYMENT

JOIN A WINNING TEAM Alsco is a 130 year old Global Uniform & Linen Rental Company We are looking for a ROUTE SALES REPRESENTATIVE 4/10 COMMISSION for our Soldotna Area. • Competitive Hourly/Commission Pay Structure • Excellent Training Program • Excellent Benefit Package Requirements: • High School diploma or equivalent • Pass pre-employment background check & drug screen. • Willingness to join union All applicants must apply online at www.alsco.com A completed Alsco application and resumes to be considered for the position. EOE/M/F/H/V/AA Employer

Delivery Problems? •Did your paper not make it to your house this morning? •Did the paper carrier get the wrong house? •Going on Vacation? •Do you want to subscribe to the Peninsula Clarion? www.peninsulaclarion.com

Call our New Circulation Hotline! 283-3584

For more safety tips visit SmokeyBear.com


Classifieds

C7AXX | PENINSULA CLARION | PENINSULACLARION.COM | Sunday, October 2019 | PENINSULA CLARION | PENINSULACLARION.COM | xxxxxxxx, xx,6,2019 AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE

BEAUTY / SPA

2007 Porsche C4S Coupe

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REAL ESTATE FOR RENT FOR RENT

2 bedroom trailer Sterling AK W/D $650/mth $500 deposit, $400 pet fee plus lights/gas Call April 420-7933 or 262-6076 leave message

Excellent condition. 12K in after market accessories: Throttle Body GT3 size Titanium Headers Kenwood Stereo Lowering Springs $47, 500 907-398-8239

FURNISHED APARTMENTS FOR RENT

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

Health/Medical A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-855748-4275. (PNDC)

Automobiles Wanted DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. CALL 1-844-493-7877 (PNDC)

FARM / RANCH

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Barn Stored Quality Timothy Hay $10/bale 262-4939 252-0937

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

5/23/05

11:36 PM

Page 1

ARE YOU BEHIND $10k OR MORE ON YOUR TAXES? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Call: 1-844-229-3096 (PNDC) DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 10 Americans or 158 million U.S. Adults read content from newspaper media each week? Discover the Power of the Pacific Northwest Newspaper Advertising. For a free brochure call 916288-6011 or email cecelia@cnpa.com (PNDC)

58634_1

DID YOU KNOW Newspaper-generated content is so valuable it’s taken and repeated, condensed, broadcast, tweeted, discussed, posted, copied, edited, and emailed countless times throughout the day by others? Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising in FIVE STATES with just one phone call. For free Pacific Northwest Newspaper Association Network brochures call 916-288-6011 or email cecelia@cnpa.com (PNDC)

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DID YOU KNOW that not only does newspaper media reach a HUGE Audience, they also reach an ENGAGED AUDIENCE. Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising in five states - AK, ID, MT, OR & WA. For a free rate brochure call 916-288-6011 or email cecelia@cnpa.com (PNDC)

2/23/11 9:10 AM

CAN A BALL GAME LEAVE A CHILD WITH PERMANENT SIDE EFFECTS?

React to sports with rage and kids learn aggressive behavior. Keep your cool and kids learn to do the same. To learn more about preventing aggressive or violent behavior, call 877-ACT-WISE for a free brochure. Or visit ACTAgainstViolence.org.

You’re always teaching. Teach carefully.

ACT Against Violence is a joint project of the American Psychological Association & the National Association for the Education of Young Children.

COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL SPACE FOR RENT WAREHOUSE / STORAGE 2000 sq. ft., man door 14ft roll-up, bathroom, K-Beach area 3-Phase Power $1300.00/mo. 1st mo. rent + deposit, gas paid 907-252-3301

OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT OFFICE SPACE RENTAL AVAILABLE 609 Marine Street Kenai, Alaska 404 and 394sq,ft, shared entry $1/sq.ft 240sq.ft.Shared conference/Restrooms $0.50/sq.ft 283-4672

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

EVERY BUSINESS has a story to tell! Get your message out with California’s PRMedia Release - the only Press Release Service operated by the press to get press! For more info contact Cecelia @ 916-288-6011 or http://prmediarelease.com/california (PNDC) Stay in your home longer with an American Standard Walk-In Bathtub. Receive up to $1,500 off, including a free toilet, and a lifetime warranty on the tub and installation! Call us at 1-855-876-1237. (PNDC) WANTED! - Old Porsche 356/911/912 for restoration by hobbyist 1948-1973 Only. Any condition, top $ paid. 707-965-9546, 707-339-9803 Porscherestoration@yaahoo.com (PNDC)

HOME SERVICES DISH TV - $59.99/month for 190 channels. $100 Gift Card with Qualifying Service! Free premium channels (Showtime, Starz, & more) for 3 months. Voice remote included. Restrictions apply, call for details. Call 1-866681-7887 (PNDC)

4_1

Apartment for Rent Near Longmere Lake 2 bed, furnished, w/d all utilities paid, $950 +$350 deposit, no pets 907-398-9695

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

Need some room in the garage? Sell your old sporting & camping gear with a classified Ad today! Classifieds Dept.

283-7551

classi fieds@peninsulaclarion.com

For Sale 55 Acres Vacant Kenai Land. Parcel totals 55 acres with split zoning designations. Southerly 15+/- acres fronting Beach Access Rd zoned Industrial Heavy, remaining 40+/-acres zoned Rural Residential. Approx. 2.8 cleared-acres improved with gravel/sand base material in NE corner of IH zoned section. 1,770+/-feet of Bridge Access Rd. frontage. Access to east side of parcel via Childs Avenue. Asking Price: $475,000 Contact: Curt Nading Commercial Real Estate Alaska (907) 261-7302 Curt@crealaska.com


TV Guide C8 | PENINSULA CLARION | PENINSULACLARION.COM | Sunday, October 6, 2019 SUNDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON A (3) ABC-13 (6) MNT-5 (8) CBS-11 (9) FOX-4 (10) NBC-2 (12) PBS-7

B

Jack Van Impe Presents (N) ‘G’ In Search

13 5

2 7

Cops ‘PG’

(23) LIFE

108

(28) USA

105

242

(30)

TBS

139

247

(31)

TNT

138

245

140

206

(35) ESPN2 144

209

(36) ROOT

426

687

(38) PARMT 241

241

(49) DISN

173

(50) NICK

171

(51) FREE (55)

TLC

180

311 280

(56) DISC

182

278

(57) TRAV

196

277

(58) HIST

120

(59) A&E

118

(60) HGTV

112 110

(65) CNBC

208

(67) FNC

205

(81) COM

107

(82) SYFY

122

Rick Steves’ Europe ‘G’

Born to Explore-Wiese

Cops ‘PG’

Cops ‘PG’

Cops ‘PG’

Cops ‘PG’

Cops ‘PG’

311

516

5 SHOW

319

546

8 TMC

329

554

B

(3) ABC-13

13

(6) MNT-5

5

(8) CBS-11

11

(9) FOX-4

4

4

(10) NBC-2

2

2

(12) PBS-7

7

7

4 PM

108

252

105

242

(30)

TBS

139

247

(31)

TNT

138

245

140

206

(35) ESPN2 144

209

(36) ROOT

687

(38) PARMT 241

241

(43) AMC

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

5 SHOW

319

8 TMC

329

Cops ‘PG’

Last Man Standing

CAB

(8) W

PRE

5:30

6 PM

6:30

PBS NewsHour Weekend (N)

Alaska Insight

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

Kids Say the Darndest Things (N) ‘PG’ Madam Secretary Elizabeth confronts a former friend. ‘14’

8:30

Shark Tank Light therapy lamp; oxygen in a can. (N) ‘PG’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’

9 PM

9:30

The Rookie Nolan works a murder investigation case. (N) ‘14’ Murdoch Mysteries A fire complicates an investigation. ‘PG’ Madam Secretary “Hail to the Chief” (N) ‘PG’ TMZ (N) ‘PG’

OCTOBER 2019 October 6 - 12, 6, 2019 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 House Flipping 101

Access Hollywood (N) ‘PG’

Forensic Files ‘PG’

Forensic Files ‘PG’

Entertainers: With Byron Allen House Flipping 101

Soldotna Church of God God Friended Me “The Lady” NCIS: Los Angeles “Decoy” KTVA Night- Castle Castle deals with a Major Crimes (N) ‘PG’ (N) ‘14’ cast hostage situation. ‘PG’ ‘14’ The SimpBless the Bob’s Burg- Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang Funny You Funny You sons (N) ‘14’ Harts (N) ‘14’ ers (N) ‘14’ “Bri-Da” (N) Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Should Ask Should Ask ‘14’ ‘PG’ (N) ‘PG’ Graham Chicago P.D. ‘14’ The Tonight Show Starring Channel 2 Graham NCIS: New Orleans “My Bensinger Jimmy Fallon (N) (Live) ‘14’ News: Late Bensinger Brother’s Keeper” A Navy reEdition cruiter is murdered. ‘14’ The Durrells in Corfu on Poldark on Masterpiece The Press on Masterpiece “Death Downton Abbey on Masterpiece Change affects many at Masterpiece (N) ‘14’ family is caught in a dangerKnock” (N) ‘14’ Downton Abbey. ‘PG’ ous web. (N) ‘PG’

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

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

(:15) “The Old Man & the Gun” (2018, Comedy-Drama) (5:55) “Cold Pursuit” (2019, Action) Liam Neeson, Tom Succession “DC” Logan testi- The Righ(:35) Ballers Last Week (:35) Succession “DC” Logan (:40) The fies before Congress. (N) ‘MA’ teous Gem(N) ‘MA’ Tonight-John testifies before Congress. ‘MA’ Righteous 504 Robert Redford. An escapee from San Quentin embarks on a Bateman, Tom Jackson. A vigilante seeks justice against a string of heists. ‘PG-13’ drug lord and his crew. ‘R’ stones ‘MA’ Gemstones (3:59) Succession “Tern Hav- Succession “Argestes” Lo(5:59) Succession “Return” (6:59) Succession “Dundee” “Love Actually” (2003, Romance-Comedy) Hugh Grant, (:15) “Alfie” (2004, Comedy-Drama) Jude Law, Marisa Tomei, Omar Epps. A London womanizer works as a chauffeur 505 en” Logan attends a weekend gan’s business deal is threat- Shiv seeks answers from her The entire Roy clan travels to Laura Linney, Colin Firth. Various people deal with relationretreat. ‘MA’ ened. ‘MA’ father. ‘MA’ Scotland. ‘MA’ ships in London. ‘R’ in New York. ‘R’ (3:45) “Beyond the Reach” (2014) Michael (:20) “Buried” (2010, Suspense) Ryan “The Thomas Crown Affair” (1999, Suspense) Pierce Bros- (8:55) “Casino Royale” (2006, Action) Daniel Craig, Eva Green, Mads Mik- (:20) “Traffic” nan, Rene Russo, Denis Leary. An art thief steals an insurkelsen. James Bond plays poker with a man who finances terrorists. ‘PG-13’ (2000) ‘R’ 516 Douglas. A wealthy, ruthless hunter takes aim Reynolds. A kidnapping victim awakes in a at his hapless guide. coffin. ‘R’ ance investigator’s heart. ‘R’ (:15) Murder in the Bayou (:15) The Affair “506” EJ (:15) On Becoming a God The Circus: Couples The Affair “507” Noah and On Becoming a God in Cen- On Becoming a God in The Affair “507” Noah and Inside the Therapy “105” Whitney plan their wedding. tral Florida “Birthday Party” Central Florida “Birthday Whitney plan their wedding. 546 The victims were known infor- helps Joanie discover her his- in Central Florida “Flint mants. ‘MA’ tory. ‘MA’ Glass” ‘MA’ Wildest ‘MA’ (N) ‘MA’ (N) ‘MA’ Party” ‘MA’ ‘MA’ (3:00) “3:10 to Yuma” (2007, (:05) “Adventureland” (2009, Comedy-Drama) Jesse Eisen- “The Help” (2011, Drama) Viola Davis, Emma Stone, Bryce Dallas Howard. “Molly’s Game” (2017, Biography) Jessica Chastain, Idris Elba, Michael berg, Kristen Stewart. A college graduate takes a lowly job at An aspiring writer captures the experiences of black women. ‘PG-13’ Cera. Molly Bloom runs high-stakes poker games for the wealthy. ‘R’ 554 Western) Russell Crowe. ‘R’ an amusement park. ‘R’

October 6 - 12, 2019

Service Directory Clarion TV

Serving The PeninSula SinceSINCE 1979 1979 SERVING THEKenai KENAI PENINSULA

Printing

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WE COLOR THE FULL SPECTRUM OF YOUR PRINTING NEEDS 150 Trading Bay Road, Kenai, AK (907) 283-4977

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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

Chimney Sweep

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Auto Repair

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Notices

Last Man Last Man Last Man Standing Standing Standing Holiday Gift Preview (N) (Live) ‘G’

Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... Person of Interest “Nothing Person of Interest Root plots Standing Standing Standing Standing With With With With With With to Hide” ‘14’ an escape. ‘14’ Susan Graver Style “Week- Josie Maran Argan Oil Cos- Serta (N) (Live) ‘G’ Belle by Kim Gravel (N) Shoe Shopping With Jane Vince Camuto Footwear (N) Belle by Kim Gravel (N) end Edition” (N) ‘G’ metics (N) (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (N) (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (3:00) “My Husband’s Dou- “My Husband’s Secret Life” (2017, Suspense) Kara Killmer, “My Wife’s Secret Life” (2019, Suspense) Jason Cermak, (:03) “Abducted: The Mary Stauffer Story” (2019, Drama) (:01) “My Wife’s Secret Life” ble Life” (2018, Suspense) Brett Donahue, Mylene Dinh-Robic. A woman begins to ques- Blake Williams, Amber Lewis. Kent devises a revenge plan Alyson Hannigan. A teacher is held captive for 53 days by a (2019) Jason Cermak, Blake Amy Nuttall. ‘14’ tion her marriage after a miscarriage. against a woman. former student. Williams. Law & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicMr. Robot Elliott and Mr. Ro- (:03) Bluff City Law “Pilot” (:03) Bluff City Law ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit “Caretaker” ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ bot return. (N) ‘MA’ ‘14’ MLB Baseball MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at St. Louis Cardinals. Action from Game 3 of the NLDS. (N Subject to Black- Inside MLB “Rush Hour” (1998, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker, Tom “Rush Hour 3” (2007, Action) Jackie Chan, out) (Live) (N) (Live) Wilkinson. Mismatched police partners seek a kidnapped girl. Chris Tucker. Carter and Lee battle Chinese gangsters in Paris. (3:30) “The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” (2013, Fantasy) Ian McKellen, Martin Free- “Kong: Skull Island” (2017) Tom Hiddleston, Samuel L. Jackson. Explorers “Star Wars: A New Hope” (1977, Science Fiction) Mark Hamill, Harrison man. Bilbo and company encounter the fearsome dragon Smaug. encounter a gigantic ape and monstrous creatures. Ford. Young Luke Skywalker battles evil Darth Vader. SportsCenter (N) (Live) World Series of Poker (N) ‘G’ World Series of Poker (N) ‘G’ SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter With Scott Van SportsCenter (N) (Live) College Football Washington at Stanford. Pelt (N) (Live) UFC 243: Whittaker vs. Adesanya - Prelims Professional Fighters League From July 11, 2019. Baseball To- ChampionCollege Football Teams TBA. (Taped) SportsCenter SportsCenter night (N) ship Drive (2:30) College Football Idaho State at Montana. From MLS Soccer San Jose Earthquakes at Portland Timbers. High School Football Bothell at Skyline. Women’s College Volleyball Washington-Grizzly Stadium in Missoula, Mont. From Providence Park in Portland, Ore. Duke at Syracuse. (:03) Bar Rescue ‘PG’ (:04) Bar Rescue “Bug Bite” (:05) Bar Rescue “Reckless Bar Rescue “Getting Freaki at Bar Rescue Burnouts lose Bar Rescue “Spoiled Brat Bar Rescue “Get Off Your Bar Rescue “Weird Science” ‘PG’ Roundhouse” ‘PG’ the Tiki” ‘PG’ $200,000. ‘PG’ Party” ‘PG’ Ass!” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ The Walking (:22) The Walking Dead (:28) The Walking Dead Celebration takes (6:52) The Walking Dead The Walking Dead “Lines We (:14) Talking Dead (N) ‘14’ (:14) The Walking Dead The heroes question The Walking Dead ‘MA’ “Scars” ‘MA’ place at the Kingdom. ‘MA’ “Bonus Edition 916” ‘MA’ Cross” (N) ‘MA’ their civilization. ‘MA’ Dead ‘MA’ We Bare We Bare American Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Family Guy Family Guy Rick and Robot Chick- Squidbillies Black Jesus American Family Guy Family Guy Rick and Robot ChickBears ‘Y7’ Bears ‘Y7’ Dad ‘14’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ en ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘MA’ Dad ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ en ‘14’ Lone Star Law “Crash Lone Star Law “Fawn Stars” Lone Star Law “High Desert Lone Star Law A video of an Lone Star Law “In Hot Water” (:02) Lone Star Law “Red (:02) Lone Star Law “DeLone Star Law “In Hot WaCourse” ‘14’ ‘14’ Drama” ‘14’ illegal hunter. ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ Flag” ‘14’ ceived” ‘14’ ter” ‘14’ (3:20) “Finding Dory” (2016) “Moana” (2016, Children’s) Voices of Dwayne Johnson, Auli’i (6:55) Just (:25) Raven’s Bunk’d ‘G’ Coop & Cami Star Wars Big City Raven’s Just Roll With Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Albert Brooks Cravalho, Rachel House. Roll With It Home Resistance Greens ‘Y7’ Home ‘G’ It ‘Y7’ The Loud The Loud SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ (:35) Friends (:10) Friends (:45) Friends House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ ‘14’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ (2:35) “Hocus (:45) “Goosebumps” (2015, Fantasy) Jack Black, Dylan Minnette. Monsters (:15) “Hotel Transylvania” (2012) Voices of Adam Sandler. Animated. (:20) “Hocus Pocus” (1993) Bette Midler. Youths conjure up 31 Nights of Pocus” from the “Goosebumps” books spring to life. Dracula invites famous monsters to a special birthday party. three child-hungry witches on Halloween. Halloween 90 Day Fiance: Extra Love “Out of the Blue” Avery’s mom 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Days “Treat Me Right” Angela Unexpected “How I Broke My 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Day Fiancé: Before the deals with some bad news. (N) ‘14’ 90 Days ‘PG’ confronts Michael’s friends. (N) ‘PG’ Water” (N) ‘14’ 90 Days ‘PG’ 90 Days ‘PG’ Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier “New Frontiers, New Threats” (:01) Homestead Rescue To Be Announced Alaska: The Last Frontier “Thrill of the Hunt” ‘14’ “Collision Course” ‘14’ Exposed ‘14’ Spring arrives early in Alaska. (N) ‘14’ “Savage Wilderness” ‘PG’ ‘14’ The Dead Files Violent para- The Dead Files Steve and The Dead Files ‘PG’ The Dead Files “The Boiler Room and the Old Woman” A Witches of Salem Evil torAmish Haunting ‘14’ The Dead Files ‘PG’ normal activity. ‘PG’ Amy find a vortex. ‘PG’ historic sanatorium in Virginia. (N) ‘PG’ ments young girls. (N) ‘14’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers “Rock and American Pickers: Bonus Buys “One of a Kind Picks” A former juke joint; carnival. (N) ‘PG’ (:03) American Pickers: Boa Hard Place” ‘PG’ nus Buys ‘PG’ (2:30) “Fun “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” (2008, Romance-Comedy) Jason Segel, “21 Jump Street” (2012, Comedy) Jonah Hill, Channing Tatum, Brie Larson. (:32) Live PD (:04) Live PD (:34) Live PD (:03) Live PD (:34) Live PD With Dick and Kristen Bell, Mila Kunis. A musician encounters his ex and her new lover in Young cops go under cover as high-school students. Presents: PD Presents: PD Presents: PD Presents: PD Presents: PD Jane” Hawaii. Cam ‘14’ Cam ‘14’ Cam ‘14’ Cam ‘14’ Cam ‘14’ Love It or List It “Functioning Love It or List It “First House Love It or List It Empty nest- Beach Hunters Norfolk, Va.; Caribbean Life St. John; St. Hawaii Hunters Animal lovers Mexico Life Mexico Life Caribbean Life St. John; St. for Four” ‘G’ Frustrations” ‘PG’ ers disagree. ‘PG’ Cape Cod, Mass. ‘G’ Croix. (N) ‘G’ move to Oahu. ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ Croix. ‘G’ Halloween Wars “Mausoleum Halloween Wars “Demonic Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ Guy’s Grocery Games Halloween Wars Zombie dat- Haunted Gingerbread Show- Halloween Baking Champi- Halloween Wars Zombie datMayhem” ‘G’ Wedding” ‘G’ “Ghosts of GGG Past” ‘G’ ing show displays. ‘G’ down (N) ‘G’ onship ‘G’ ing show displays. ‘G’ Shark Tank Fitness apparel Jay Leno’s Garage “Califor- Jay Leno’s Garage “Love Jay Leno’s Garage “Larger Jay Leno’s Garage “SuperJay Leno’s Garage “The Driv- Oxygen Retirement Jay Leno’s Garage “Sky’s the Limit” ‘PG’ line. ‘PG’ nia Cruisin”’ ‘PG’ Stories” ‘PG’ Than Life” ‘PG’ cars” ‘PG’ ing Force” ‘PG’ Therapy Income 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) (3:15) “The Internship” (2013) Vince Vaughn. Old-school (5:50) “The Hangover” (2009) Bradley Cooper. Three pals (:15) “The Hangover” (2009, Comedy) Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms. Three South Park South Park (:35) Crank salesmen finagle internships at Google. must find a missing groom after a wild bash. pals must find a missing groom after a wild bash. ‘MA’ ‘MA’ Yankers ‘14’ (3:30) “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” (2001, Children’s) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert (:02) “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets” (2002, Children’s) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson. A ma- (:15) Futurama ‘14’ Grint. J.K. Rowling’s student wizard has his first adventure. levolent force threatens the students at Hogwarts.

PREMIUM STATIONS

311

Cops ‘PG’

Last Man Last Man 307 Standing Standing Serta (N) (Live) ‘G’ 317

(28) USA

+ MAX

Cops ‘PG’

A =Clarion DISH B = DirecTV TV

5 PM

Nature “Octopus: Making The HappiKids in CriContact” Octopus behavior. ‘G’ ness Machine sis: You’re ‘G’ Not Alone

(23) LIFE

304

4:30

Rock the Park oh baby! Family Feud ABC World America’s Funniest Home (N) ‘G’ “One Hump or ‘PG’ News Videos Magic tricks go awry; Two?” party mishaps. ‘PG’ Small Town 50PlusPrime Truck Tech Engine Power Detroit Mus- Xtreme Off Big Deal ‘G’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ cle ‘PG’ Road ‘PG’ (N) ‘G’ Best Friends Modern Fam- Frontiers ‘G’ CBS Week60 Minutes (N) ily ‘PG’ end News Paid Program Ocean MysFOX News Sunday With Entertainment Tonight (N) ‘G’ teries With Chris Wallace (N) Jeff Corwin (:15) NFL Football Indianapolis Colts at Kansas City Chiefs. (N) (Live)

CABLE STATIONS

^ HBO2

Cops ‘PG’

(10) N

“Isn’t It Romantic” (2019) Rebel Wilson. A Succession “Dundee” The (:15) “Kin” (2018, Science Fiction) Myles Truitt, Jack Reynor, “Diego Maradona” (2019, Biography) Diego Armando Marawoman becomes trapped in a real-life roman- entire Roy clan travels to Zoë Kravitz. Two brothers use a high-tech gun to battle an dona. A look at the career of soccer player Diego Maradona. ! tic comedy. ‘PG-13’ Scotland. ‘MA’ army of thugs. ‘PG-13’ (Subtitled-English) ‘NR’ (6:30) “Meet “Icebox” (2018, Drama) Anthony Gonzalez. A “The Meg” (2018, Science Fiction) Jason Statham, Li Succession “The Summer Succession “The Vaulter” (1:59) Succession “Hunting” (2:59) Succession Controthe Fockers” boy becomes trapped inside the U.S. immigra- Bingbing, Rainn Wilson. A diver must confront a 75-foot-long Palace” Tom maneuvers for a Connor and Willa host a soiLogan eyes a rival media versy surrounds a star anchor. ^ H tion system. ‘NR’ ‘MA’ prehistoric shark. ‘PG-13’ new position. ‘MA’ ree. ‘MA’ company. ‘MA’ (7:35) “Scary Movie 3” “Unfriended” (2014, Horror) Shelley Hennig. (:25) “Collision” (2013, Suspense) Frank (:10) “Annapolis” (2006, Drama) James Franco, Tyrese Gib- (1:55) “Quantum of Solace” (2008, Action) (:45) “Be(2003, Comedy) Anna Faris. An online presence terrorizes friends on their Grillo. Newlyweds survive a deadly car acson, Jordana Brewster. A young man enters the U.S. Naval Daniel Craig. James Bond seeks revenge for yond the + ‘PG-13’ computers. ‘R’ cident in Morocco. ‘R’ Academy. ‘PG-13’ the death of Vesper Lynd. Reach” Boxing Claressa Shields vs. Ivana Habazin. Shields takes on Habazin for the vacant WBO “Donnie Brasco” (1997, Crime Drama) Al Pacino, Johnny (:15) “Den of Thieves” (2018, Crime Drama) Gerard Butler, Pablo SchThe Circus: and WBC female super welter title from Flint, Mich. Depp, Michael Madsen. A mob lackey unknowingly takes an reiber, O’Shea Jackson Jr. Elite lawmen try to bring down a gang of tactical Inside the 5 S FBI agent under his wing. ‘R’ thieves. ‘R’ Wildest (7:05) “Lemony Snicket’s “The Help” (2011, Drama) Viola Davis, Emma Stone, Bryce Dallas Howard. “About a Boy” (2002, Comedy-Drama) (:15) “Adrift” (2018, Adventure) Shailene Woodley, Sam “3:10 to Yuma” (2007, WestA Series of Unfortunate An aspiring writer captures the experiences of black women. ‘PG-13’ Hugh Grant. A lonely boy finds a friend in a Claflin, Jeffrey Thomas. A couple fight for survival after sailing ern) Russell Crowe, Christian 8 Events” (2004) carefree bachelor. ‘PG-13’ into a hurricane. ‘PG-13’ Bale. ‘R’

SUNDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING 4

303

Cops ‘PG’

(9) F

Mexico With NOVA “Inside the Megafire” Rick Bayless Exploring the megafire threat. (12) P ‘PG’

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

+ MAX

! HBO

Lidia’s Kitch- Jamie’s Joanne Christopher Simply Ming en ‘G’ Quick & Easy Weir’s Plates Kimball’s Milk “Jay Hajj” ‘G’ Food Street

(8) C

ToyMakerz ‘PG’

505

131

Leverage Hurley is caught up Football Night in America in a drug deal. ‘14’ (N) (Live) ‘14’

(6) M

Counting Cars “Van Haulin” Danny and Shannon restore an Counting Counting Counting Cars “Burt ReynAmerican Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers Looking for American Pickers “The Su (58) H old VW van. ‘PG’ Cars ‘PG’ Cars ‘PG’ olds’ Rides” ‘PG’ deals in Virginia. ‘PG’ perfan” ‘PG’ (7:30) Hoard- Hoarders “Billy Bob; Jean” Hoarders “Lisa; Bertha” A Hoarders “Ron; Carol” Rooms Hoarders “Judy; Jerry” A “Big Daddy” (1999, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Joey Lauren “Fun With Dick and Jane” (2005) Jim CarA house is full of games and food hoarder is also a chef. in a man’s home are inacces- woman hoards in a friend’s Adams, Jon Stewart. A goofy ne’er-do-well adopts an impres- rey, Téa Leoni. A suddenly jobless couple turn (59) 265 ers ‘PG’ puzzles. ‘PG’ ‘PG’ sible. ‘PG’ home. ‘PG’ sionable youngster. to larceny to support luxury. Home Town “A Vacation Ev- Home Town “A Modern MilHome Town “Home is Where Home Town “Colorful Custom Stay or Sell “More Baby, Stay or Sell A couple moves Love It or List It “Need for Love It or List It Justin is tired 229 ery Day” ‘G’ (60) H of the chaos. ‘PG’ lennial Makeover” ‘G’ the Art Is” ‘G’ Cottage” ‘G’ More Space” ‘G’ to the suburbs. ‘G’ Efficiency” ‘PG’ The Pioneer The Pioneer The Pioneer The Pioneer Girl Meets Girl Meets The Kitchen Squash and The Kitchen “Feast of Fall Halloween Wars “Witches vs. Halloween Wars “Haunted Halloween Wars “Two231 Woman ‘G’ (61) F Woman ‘G’ Woman ‘G’ Woman ‘G’ Farm (N) ‘G’ Farm ‘G’ pumpkin recipes. ‘G’ Flavor” ‘G’ Warlocks” ‘G’ Motel” ‘G’ Faced” ‘G’ Paid Program Paid Program BACK PAIN Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Shark Tank A $4 million inShark Tank ‘PG’ Shark Tank Chic fashion ac- Shark Tank A darts-like card Shark Tank Sleep-away camp 355 ‘G’ (65) C for adults. ‘PG’ ‘G’ RELIEF ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ vestment. ‘PG’ cessories for dogs. ‘PG’ game. ‘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 360 ters (N) (67) ters (N) Chris Wallace (N) ters (N) (N) Chris Wallace (N) (:10) The Of- (:45) The Office Pam’s con(:20) The Of- (9:55) The Of- The Office (:05) The Of- (:40) The Of- (:15) The Of- (:45) “Wedding Crashers” (2005, Comedy) Owen Wilson, Vince Vaughn. (:15) “The Internship” (2013) 249 fice ‘PG’ (81) C tractions begin. ‘14’ fice ‘14’ fice ‘PG’ ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ Partygoers spend a wild weekend with a politician’s family. Vince Vaughn. (7:30) “Truth or Dare” (2017, Horror) Cas“Joy Ride 3: Roadkill” (2014, Suspense) Kirsten Prout, “Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead” (2008) Nicki Aycox. A crazy killer “Joy Ride” (2001) Steve Zahn, Paul Walker. Two brothers “Harry Pot244 sandra Scerbo, Brytni Sarpy. (82) S Dean Armstrong, Ben Hollingsworth. pursues some youths who took his car. incur the wrath of a psychotic truck driver. ter” 269

304

426

Cops ‘PG’

(3) A

Raw Travel ‘PG’

(9:55) The Walking Dead (10:58) The Walking Dead (:11) The Walking Dead Details of masked (:17) The Walking Dead (:18) The Walking Dead The Walking (43) A “Evolution” ‘MA’ “Adaptation” ‘MA’ tribe’s leader emerge. ‘MA’ “Bounty” ‘MA’ “Guardians” ‘MA’ Dead ‘MA’ World of World of Craig of the Craig of the Total Drama- Total Drama- World of World of World of World of World of World of (46) T Gumball Gumball Creek ‘Y7’ Creek ‘Y7’ Rama Rama Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball North Woods Law “Breaking North Woods Law “The Hunt North Woods Law “Invisible North Woods Law ‘PG’ Lone Star Law “Poachers & Lone Star Law A festival at (47) A and Entering” ‘PG’ Begins” ‘PG’ Evidence” ‘14’ Liars” ‘14’ tracts thousands. ‘14’ “Descendants 3” (2019, Children’s) Dove Cameron. Mal and Bunk’d ‘G’ Coop & Cami Raven’s Just Roll With Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ (2:55) Jes(:20) “Finding (49) D her friends face an unfathomable dark force. Home ‘G’ It ‘Y7’ sie ‘G’ Dory” Jurassic-Isla SpongeBob SquarePants Animated. A tour SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud (50) N Nublar of the city of Atlantis. ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ “Charlie & “Monster House” (2006, Children’s) Voices of Steve Bus“Scooby-Doo” (2002) Freddie Prinze Jr. Scooby and the “Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed” (2004) Freddie (:35) “Hocus Pocus” (1993, Children’s) Bette (51) F Chocolate” cemi, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Mitchel Musso. gang hunt spooks at a haunted resort. Prinze Jr. The gang investigates a group of ghouls. Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker. Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Days “True Colors” The re (55) the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress the Dress sults of the background check. ‘PG’ Gold Rush “No Guts, No Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier (56) D Gold” ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ “Earning Seven” ‘14’ The Kilchers mobilize. ‘14’ “Coming of Age” ‘14’ “Hill Country Hunt” ‘14’ “Wind and a Prayer” ‘14’ Alien Encounters in Area 51- Loch Ness Monster Lives: Vampires: Mysteries at the Most Terrifying Places in Most Terrifying Places in Most Terrifying Places in Most Terrifying Places The Dead Files A terminally ill (57) T woman’s claim. ‘PG’ Mysteries- Mus. Mysteries at the Museum Museum ‘PG’ America “Volume 1” ‘PG’ America “Volume 2” ‘PG’ America “Volume 3” ‘PG’ “Shadow Factory” ‘14’

^ HBO2

(34) ESPN

Jerry Prevo

P. Allen Mad Dog & Smith Garden Merrill MidStyle west Grill’n NFL PostPBR Bull Riding (Taped) Texas Music Paid Program Face the Nation (N) game (N) ‘G’ (:25) NFL Football Green Bay Packers at Dallas Cowboys. (N) (Live) The OT (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Horse Racing Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series. (N) (Live)

SU

3:30

(8:52) The Walking Dead “Stradivarius” ‘MA’ World of World of Gumball Gumball North Woods Law “No Room for Error” ‘PG’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Coop & Cami

(6:10) “Hulk” 24/7 College Football ‘PG’ 504 (2003)

137

oh baby! (N)

3 PM

Serta (N) (Live) ‘G’ Josie Maran Argan Oil Cos- Serta (N) (Live) ‘G’ (20) metics (N) (Live) ‘G’ “Lethal Seduction” (2015, Suspense) Amanda Detmer, Ca- “Seduced” (2016, Drama) Elisabeth Röhm, Jon Prescott, “My Husband’s Double Life” (2018) Amy Nuttall, Daniel leb Ruminer, Dina Meyer. A mother protects her son from a Julie Mond. Two women join forces to bring down a danger (23) Lapaine. ‘14’ predatory, obsessive woman. ‘14’ ous con man. Chrisley Chrisley Temptation Island “Casting Law & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special VicLaw & Order: Special Vic(:01) Law & Order: Special (:01) Law & Order: Special (28) Knows Best Knows Best Special” ‘14’ tims Unit “Head” ‘14’ tims Unit “Rage” ‘14’ tims Unit “Class” ‘14’ tims Unit “Lead” ‘14’ Victims Unit ‘14’ Victims Unit ‘14’ Impractical Impractical All Elite “The Longest Yard” (2005, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock, Burt Reyn- MLB on Deck (N) (Live) MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at TBA. Action from Game 3 of the NLDS. (N Subject Jokers “The Jokers ‘14’ Wrestling: olds. Prisoners train for a football game against the guards. to Blackout) (Live) (30) Q-Pay” ‘14’ Dynamite “Clash of the Titans” (2010) Sam Worthington. Perseus, son “Wrath of the Titans” (2012, Fantasy) Sam Worthington. “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” (2012, Fantasy) Ian McKellen, Martin Freeman, Richard Armitage. “Hobbit: of Zeus, embarks on a dangerous journey. Perseus must rescue Zeus from the underworld. Bilbo Baggins joins the quest to reclaim a lost kingdom. Desolation” (31) (6:00) Sunday NFL CountChampionCFB 150: Women’s Soccer United States vs Korea Republic. From MLS Soccer Teams TBA. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (34) E down (N) (Live) ship Drive Greatest Soldier Field in Chicago. (N) (Live) (6:00) Fantasy Football Now MLL Lacrosse Championship: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) College Football Final ChampionEXP Invitational APEX Leg- 2019 World Series of Poker 2019 World Series of Poker (35) E (N) (Live) ship Drive ends at X Games ‘G’ Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Women’s College Volleyball Duke at Syracuse. (N SameMLS Soccer San Jose Earthquakes at Portland Timbers. Timbers Post- College Football Idaho State at Montana. (36) R ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ day Tape) From Providence Park in Portland, Ore. (N) Game Bar Rescue “Empty Bottles Bar Rescue “Schmuck DyBar Rescue A failing dive bar Bar Rescue A members-only Bar Rescue “Father Knows Bar Rescue “John and Bert (:01) Bar Rescue ‘PG’ (:02) Bar Rescue “Storming (38) P Full Cans” ‘PG’ nasty” ‘PG’ in Orange, Calif. ‘PG’ bar in Kansas. ‘PG’ Best” ‘PG’ Bought a Bar” ‘PG’ the Castle” ‘PG’

303

(20) QVC

2:30

Paid Program Olivia Newton-John: Hopelessly Devoted to You The ‘G’ singer’s life and career. ‘14’

! HBO

(8) WGN-A 239

House Flipping 101

In the Kitchen With David (N) (Live) ‘G’

PREMIUM STATIONS

A

2 PM

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

(7:33) The Walking Dead 254 ‘MA’ Teen Titans Teen Titans 296 Go! ‘PG’ Go! ‘PG’ North Woods Law “Manhunt” 282 ‘PG’ Big City Pup Academy 291 Greens ‘Y7’ ‘G’ SpongeBob SpongeBob 300

183

(61) FOOD

NFL Postgame (N)

NFL Football Minnesota Vikings at New York Giants. (N) (Live)

Rick Steves’ Europe ‘G’

1:30

Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program House Flip‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ping 101

7

Joel Osteen 252 ‘PG’

176

House Flipping 101

Make It Artsy Cook’s Coun- My Greek ‘G’ try ‘G’ Table

317

184

Manna-Fest House FlipSoldotna Christian Worship Hour With Perry ping 101 Church of Stone ‘G’ God NFL Football New England Patriots at Washington Redskins. (N) (Live)

Travels With Darley ‘G’

Weekends With Yankee ‘G’

OCTOBER 6, 2019

1 PM

2019 WNBA Finals Washington Mystics at Connecticut Sun. (N) (Live)

2

137

(47) ANPL

Hearts of He- World of X Games roes (N) ‘G’

2019 Rugby World Cup New Zealand vs Namibia. From Tokyo Dome in Tokyo. (N) (Live)

(20) QVC

(46) TOON

Cars.TV (N) ‘PG’

B = DirecTV

10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30

2019 IAAF World Championships Day 10: Evening Session. From Doha, Qatar. (N) (Live)

307

131

9:30

4

(8) WGN-A 239

(43) AMC

Jerry Prevo The Gospel of Christ

A = DISH

9 AM

FOX NFL Sunday (N) (Live) ‘PG’

CABLE STATIONS

(34) ESPN

8:30

The NFL Today (N) (Live)

11 4

8 AM

© Tribune Media Services

5


TV Guide C9 | PENINSULA CLARION | PENINSULACLARION.COM | Sunday, October 6, 2019 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

M T 173 291 W Th F M T 171 300 W Th F

(51) FREE 180 311 (55) TLC

9 AM

M T 183 280 W Th F

B

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

5

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

4

4

(10) NBC-2

2

2

(12) PBS-7

7

7

(20) QVC

137 317

(23) LIFE

108 252

(28) USA

105 242

(30) TBS

139 247

(31) TNT

138 245

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

131 254

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

173 291

(50) NICK

171 300

(51) FREE 180 311 (55) TLC

183 280

(56) DISC

182 278

(57) TRAV 196 277 (58) HIST

120 269

(59) A&E

118 265

(60) HGTV 112 229 (61) FOOD 110 231 (65) CNBC 208 355 (67) FNC

205 360

(81) COM

107 249

(82) SYFY

122 244

+ MAX

311 516

5 SHOW 319 546 8 TMC

329 554

2 PM

2:30

General Hospital ‘14’ Judge Judy Judge Judy The Mel Robbins Show Dish Nation Dish Nation Tamron Hall ‘PG’ Nature Cat Wild Kratts

4:30

5 PM

TV A =Clarion DISH B = DirecTV 5:30

3 PM

3:30

Jeopardy Inside Ed. Live PD Live PD Dr. Phil ‘14’ Wendy Varied The Kelly Clarkson Show Varied Programs

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

October 6 - 12, 7, 2019 OCTOBER 2019 8:30

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

Chicago P.D. ‘14’

Last Man Last Man Law & Order: Special VicStanding ‘PG’ Standing ‘PG’ tims Unit A travel writer is murdered. ‘14’ KTVA 11 News at 6 The NeighBob Hearts borhood (N) Abishola (N) The Big Bang The Big Bang 9-1-1 “The Searchers” A masTheory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ sive tsunami hits. (N) ‘14’

How I Met Pawn Stars Your Mother “Daddy’s Girl” ‘14’ ‘PG’ Bull Chunk aims to get a new KTVA 11 (:35) The Late Show With James Cortrial for a man. ‘14’ News at 10 Stephen Colbert ‘PG’ den Fox 4 News at 9 (N) TMZ (N) ‘PG’ TMZ ‘PG’ Entertainment Two and a Tonight Half Men ‘14’

Channel 2 Newshour (N)

To Be Announced

The Ellen DeGeneres Show KTVA 11 (N) ‘PG’ News at 5 Two and a Entertainment Funny You Half Men ‘14’ Tonight (N) Should Ask ‘PG’ Judge Judy Judge Judy Channel 2 ‘PG’ ‘PG’ News 5:00 Report (N) Rick Steves’ Rick Steves’ BBC World Europe ‘G’ Europe ‘G’ News America

How I Met Your Mother ‘PG’ CBS Evening News Funny You Should Ask ‘PG’ NBC Nightly News With Lester Holt Nightly Business Report ‘G’

Wheel of For- Dancing With the Stars “Top 10” (N Same-day Tape) ‘PG’ tune (N) ‘G’

9 PM

Jeopardy! (N) ‘G’

PBS NewsHour (N)

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A college coed is found murdered. ‘14’ All Rise Two friends fight over a deleted avatar. ‘PG’ (:01) Prodigal Son Malcolm is forced to rethink his fears. (N) ‘14’ The Voice “The Blind Auditions, Part 5” The coaches seek America’s best voice. (N) ‘PG’

Antiques Roadshow “The Gen X Years” Matt Groening artwork. (N) ‘G’

Retro Report on PBS Social media; athlete protests. (N) ‘14’

The Good Doctor “Claire” A fisherman is injured. (N) ‘14’

ABC News at (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ‘14’ (:37) Nightline (N) ‘G’ 10 (N)

Dateline ‘PG’

DailyMailTV (N)

(:01) Bluff City Law A man’s fate is in Elijah’s hands. (N) ‘14’ Voice of America: Lowell Thomas and the Rise of Broadcast News ‘G’

Channel 2 (:34) The Tonight Show Star- (:37) Late News: Late ring Jimmy Fallon ‘14’ Night With Edition (N) Seth Meyers POV “America” Brothers care Amanpour and Company (N) for their grandmother. (N) ‘PG’

DailyMailTV (N)

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

M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... How I Met How I Met Elementary ‘14’ With With With With Your Mother Your Mother (3:00) PM Style With Amy Stran (N) (Live) ‘G’ LOGO by Lori Goldstein Belle by Kim Gravel (N) Tommie Copper Compres- Lug - Travel & Handbags (N) Pikolinos Footwear & Hand- Easy Solutions (N) (Live) ‘G’ “10th Anniversary” (N) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ sion Wear (N) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ bags (N) (Live) ‘G’ The King of The King of “All About Christmas Eve” (2012, Comedy) Haylie Duff, “My Christmas Inn” (2018, Drama) Tia Mowry-Hardrict, Rob (:03) “Jingle Belle” (2018, Romance) Tatyana Ali, Obba (:01) “My Christmas Inn” Queens ‘PG’ Queens ‘PG’ Chris Carmack, Connie Sellecca. Evelyn lives out two posMayes, Jackée Harry. A woman from San Francisco inherits a Babatunde, Tempestt Bledsoe. A songwriter returns home to (2018, Drama) Tia Mowrysible futures in parallel. ‘14’ cozy inn in Alaska. ‘G’ help with a Christmas pageant. ‘PG’ Hardrict, Rob Mayes. ‘G’ Chicago P.D. “Outrage” ‘14’ Modern Fam- Modern Fam- Modern Fam- Modern Fam- WWE Monday Night RAW (N Same-day Tape) ‘PG’ Temptation Island “Casting (:03) Modern (:32) Modern ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ Special” ‘14’ Family ‘PG’ Family ‘PG’ MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at TBA. Action from Game 4 of the NLDS. (If necessary). (N Subject to Inside MLB Family Guy Family Guy American American Conan Actor Family Guy Family Guy Conan Actor Blackout) (Live) (N) (Live) “JOLO” ‘14’ “Once Bitten” Dad ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ Henry Winkler. “Roasted Guy” “Fighting Irish” Henry Winkler. ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ (3:45) “Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back” (1980, Science Fiction) Mark “Star Wars: Return of the Jedi” (1983, Science Fiction) Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford, Carrie “The Legend of Tarzan” (2016) Alexander Skarsgard, Christoph Waltz. TarHamill, Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher. Fisher. Luke and his allies have a confrontation with Darth Vader. zan must save his captive wife in the jungles of Congo. NFL Football Cleveland Browns at San Francisco 49ers. (N) (Live) (:15) SportsCenter With Scott Van Pelt NFL PrimeTime SportsCenter With Scott NFL PrimeTime SportsCenter (N) (Live) Van Pelt (N) UFC 241: Cormier vs. Miocic 2 Daniel Cormier takes on Stipe Miocic in a heavyweight bout 2019 PFL Playoff Preview Baseball To- SportsCenter With Scott Van ChampionNow or Never SportsCenter With Scott Championfrom Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif. (N) Show (N) night (N) Pelt (N) (Live) ship Drive (N) Van Pelt ship Drive MLS Soccer: Earthquakes at College Football Idaho State at Montana. From Washington-Grizzly Stadium in Missoula, Seahawks High School Football Peninsula at Timberline. Fight Sports Timbers Mont. Press Pass MMA (N) Two and a Two and a Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops (N) ‘PG’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Cops ‘14’ Half Men Half Men (2:00) “X-Men 2” (2003, Ac- “Jurassic Park” (1993, Adventure) Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum. Cloned dinosaurs The Terror Terminal Islanders Lodge 49 The Lynx search for (:05) The Terror Terminal Is- (:05) Lodge 49 The Lynx tion) Patrick Stewart. run amok at an island-jungle theme park. come home. ‘14’ a Grail. (N) ‘14’ landers come home. ‘14’ search for a Grail. ‘14’ American American Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Family Guy Family Guy Rick and Final Space Tartakovsky’s Eric’s Awe- American American Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Family Guy Family Guy Dad ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ ers ‘14’ ers ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Morty ‘14’ ‘14’ Primal some Show Dad ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ ers ‘14’ ers ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ The Last Alaskans “No Man’s The Last Alaskans “The The Last Alaskans “Winter Is The Last Alaskans ‘14’ The Last Alaskans “The Last The Last Alaskans “Into the The Last Alaskans “Nothing The Last Alaskans “The Last Land” ‘14’ Hunted” ‘PG’ Coming” ‘PG’ Sunset” ‘14’ Darkness” ‘14’ Lasts Forever” ‘PG’ Sunset” ‘14’ Pup Academy Bunk’d ‘G’ Jessie “The Jessie ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘Y7’ Raven’s Just Roll With Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Coop & Cami Sydney to the Raven’s Just Roll With Jessie ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ ‘G’ Whining” ‘G’ Home ‘G’ It ‘Y7’ Max ‘G’ Home ‘G’ It ‘Y7’ The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud SpongeBob SpongeBob Movie Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ (:35) Friends (:10) Friends (:45) Friends House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ (3:10) “Hocus Pocus” (1993, Children’s) (:20) “Hotel Transylvania” (2012, Children’s) Voices of (:25) “Ghostbusters” (1984, Comedy) Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd. Four para- The 700 Club Family Guy Family Guy Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker. Adam Sandler, Andy Samberg, Selena Gomez. normal investigators battle mischievous ghouls. ‘14’ ‘14’ Say Yes to Say Yes to 90 Day Fiance: The Other 90 Day Fiance: The Other 90 Day Fiance: The Other 90 Day Fiance: The Other (:02) 90 Day Fiancé: Before (:02) Unexpected “How I 90 Day Fiance: The Other the Dress the Dress Way ‘PG’ Way “Torn” ‘PG’ Way (N) ‘PG’ Way ‘PG’ the 90 Days ‘PG’ Broke My Water” ‘14’ Way ‘PG’ Street Outlaws: Memphis Street Outlaws: Memphis: Street Outlaws: Memphis: Street Outlaws: Memphis (:01) Street Outlaws “No Prep Kings: Episode 1” (N) ‘14’ To Be Announced Street Outlaws “No Prep ‘14’ Full Throttle ‘14’ Full Throttle “No-Hio” ‘14’ “Grassroots Racin”’ ‘14’ Kings: Episode 1” ‘14’ My Haunted House “Dead My Haunted House “The My Haunted House “The Ghost Adventures “Havens of Horror” (N) ‘PG’ My Horror Story A home’s The Holzer Files “Phantoms Ghost Adventures “Havens Ringer & Route 160” ‘14’ Whispering & Ethel” ‘14’ Nanny & The Bayou” ‘14’ nursery is haunted. (N) of the Fire” ‘PG’ of Horror” ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers “Tunnels American Pickers “Junkyard American Pickers “One American Pickers “Flyer (:03) American Pickers “Dani (:05) American Pickers “A (:03) American Pickers “Flyer Finds” ‘PG’ and Treasures” ‘PG’ Wizard” ‘PG’ Wheel Deal” ‘PG’ Finds” (N) ‘PG’ 3D” (N) ‘PG’ Colonel of Truth” ‘PG’ Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live Rescue “Live Rescue -- 10.07.19” (N) ‘14’ Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Live PD: Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ (N) ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ Love It or List It ‘PG’ Love It or List It “Too Close Love It or List It ‘PG’ A Very Brady Renovation ‘G’ A Very Brady Renovation One of a One of a House Hunt- Hunters Int’l A Very Brady Renovation for Comfort” ‘PG’ “Episode 5” (N) ‘G’ Kind ‘G’ Kind ‘G’ ers ‘G’ “Episode 5” ‘G’ Haunted Gingerbread Show- Haunted Gingerbread Show- Haunted Gingerbread Show- Halloween Baking Champi- Halloween Baking Champi- Halloween Cake-Off “Infesta- Haunted Gingerbread Show- Halloween Baking Champidown ‘G’ down ‘G’ down ‘G’ onship (N) ‘G’ onship (N) ‘G’ tion!” (N) ‘G’ down ‘G’ onship ‘G’ American Greed “Recipe for American Greed A fake American Greed ‘PG’ American Greed “Billionaire American Greed “Recipe for American Greed A fake Dateline A murder outside Dateline “Evil Was Waiting” Murder” ‘PG’ movie producer. ‘PG’ Boys Bust” ‘PG’ Murder” ‘PG’ movie producer. ‘PG’ Pleasantville, Iowa. Tucker Carlson Tonight (N) Hannity (N) The Ingraham Angle (N) Fox News at Night With Tucker Carlson Tonight Hannity The Ingraham Angle Fox News at Night With Shannon Bream (N) Shannon Bream (:10) The Of- (:45) The Of- (:15) The Office Damaging (5:50) The Of- (:25) The Of- The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Daily Lights Out-D. The Jim Jef- (:36) South fice ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ information is leaked. ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ ‘14’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Show Spade feries Show Park ‘MA’ (3:02) “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets” (2002, Children’s) Daniel Radcliffe, Ru- “I Know What You Did Last Summer” (1997, Horror) Jen- (:04) “I Still Know What You Did Last Summer” (1998) Jen- “I’ll Always Know What You pert Grint. A malevolent force threatens the students at Hogwarts. nifer Love Hewitt, Sarah Michelle Gellar. nifer Love Hewitt, Freddie Prinze Jr. Did Last Summer”

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

Last Week Succession “DC” Logan testi- (:40) “A Star Is Born” (2018, Romance) Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga, Sam Elliott. A country music star falls in love with a talented singer. ‘R’ 303 504 Tonight-John fies before Congress. ‘MA’

^ HBO2 304 505

1:30

Strahan, Sara & Keke Divorce Divorce The Talk ‘14’ Paternity Simpsons Days of our Lives ‘14’ Molly Go Luna

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

4 PM

PREMIUM STATIONS ! HBO

Wendy Williams Show Hot Bench Hot Bench Court Court To Be Announced Young & Restless Mod Fam Bold Rachael Ray ‘G’ Paternity Live with Kelly and Ryan The Dr. Oz Show ‘PG’ Dinosaur Cat in the Sesame St. Splash

Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud ABC World (N) ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ News

CABLE STATIONS (8) WGN-A 239 307

WE

In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night JAG ‘14’ JAG ‘PG’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ M*A*S*H M*A*S*H In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night JAG “Father’s Day” ‘PG’ JAG ‘PG’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘PG’ “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” 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 Dog Dog Dog Dog Dog Dog In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night JAG ‘PG’ JAG “The Stalker” ‘PG’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘PG’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Last Man Last Man In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night JAG “Valor” ‘PG’ JAG “Tiger, Tiger” ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘14’ Blue Bloods ‘PG’ Last Man Last Man (7:00) Jennifer’s Closet LOGO by Lori Goldstein Facets of Diamonique Jewelry (N) (Live) ‘G’ IT Cosmetics (N) (Live) ‘G’ Belle by Kim Gravel ‘G’ Skechers (N) (Live) ‘G’ PM Style With Amy Stran Tommie Copper Wear Lug - Travel & Handbags Jayne & Pat’s Closet (N) (Live) ‘G’ Tommie Copper Wear Shoes & Fashion That’s Cool Oil Cosmetics Kitchen Unlimited Joan Rivers Classics Collection (N) (Live) ‘G’ Keurig: Gourmet Coffee Gourmet Holiday (N) (Live) ‘G’ Keurig: Gourmet Coffee Toni Brattin Hair Fabulous At Home with Mary Beth Nick Chavez Beverly Hills Susan Graver Style ‘G’ Northern Nights: Linens Affinity Diamond Jewelry At Home With Rick (N) ‘G’ FFANY Shoes on Sale (N) (Live) ‘G’ Earth Brands Footwear Isaac Mizrahi Live! (N) ‘G’ Clever & Unique Creations by Lori Greiner (N) ‘G’ Shoe Shopping With Jane (N) (Live) ‘G’ In the Kitchen with David The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ King King The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ King King The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ King King The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ King King The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ The Closer ‘14’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ Wife Swap ‘PG’ King King 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. “Trust” ‘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’ 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 Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU (7:30) NCIS Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law-SVU Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Burgers Burgers Burgers Burgers Burgers MLB Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad MLB on Deck (N) (Live) Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Amer. Dad Amer. Dad MLB on Deck (N) (Live) Charmed “Ex Libris” ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ “Star Wars: A New Hope” (1977) Mark Hamill. Star Wars: Charmed ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ “Monster-in-Law” Charmed ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ “Horrible Bosses” (2011) Jason Bateman. Charmed ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ “Snow White” Charmed ‘PG’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Supernatural ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ Bones ‘14’ SportsCenter (N) (Live) NFL PrimeTime (N) (Live) NFL Live (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Around Interruption Monday Night Countdown (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) American Game SportsCenter (N) (Live) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) NBA Countdown (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) CFB 150 Countdown SportsCenter (N) (Live) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question Around Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) Football Countdown First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NBA: The Jump (N) (Live) High Noon Question NFL Live SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NFL Live Football High Noon Question Daily Wager (N) (Live) NFL Live First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NFL Live Football High Noon Question Daily Wager (N) (Live) NFL Live First Take Jalen & Jacoby (N) NFL Live Football High Noon Question Daily Wager (N) (Live) NBA Rookie Special (N) First Take Jalen 2020 UEFA Euro Qualifying Iceland vs France. Group H. (N) (Live) Football Max Daily Wager (N) (Live) NFL Live The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) ‘PG’ MLS Soccer The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Everstrong Oxygen The Dan Patrick Show (N) ‘PG’ Bundesliga Soccer The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) ‘PG’ Seahawks Bensinger The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) ‘PG’ High School Football The Rich Eisen Show (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. The Dan Patrick Show (N) ‘PG’ High School Football Bar Rescue ‘PG’ (:02) Bar Rescue (:04) Bar Rescue (:06) Bar Rescue (:08) Bar Rescue (:10) Mom (:45) Mom (:15) Mom Mom (2:50) Mom (:25) Mom Stooges Stooges “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” (2009, Action) Hugh Jackman. “X-Men: The Last Stand” (2006, Action) Hugh Jackman. “X-Men 2” (2003, Action) Patrick Stewart. Stooges “X-Men: The Last Stand” (2006, Action) Hugh Jackman. “X-Men 2” (2003, Action) Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman, Ian McKellen. “Jurassic Park” (1993) Sam Neill, Laura Dern. M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H “National Lampoon’s Vacation” (1983, Comedy) “National Lampoon’s Vacation” (1983, Comedy) “Jurassic Park III” (2001, Adventure) Sam Neill. Stooges Stooges (:15) “Jaws the Revenge” (1987) Lorraine Gary. (:15) “Jaws 3” (1983, Suspense) Dennis Quaid, Bess Armstrong. “Jaws 2” (1978, Suspense) Roy Scheider, Lorraine Gary. Stooges Stooges “The Devil’s Own” (1997) Harrison Ford, Brad Pitt. “The Fugitive” (1993, Suspense) Harrison Ford, Tommy Lee Jones. “Road House” (1989) Kelly Lynch Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Total Drama Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Mao Mao Mao Mao Gumball Gumball Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Total Drama Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball Gumball Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Total Drama Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball Gumball Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Total Drama Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball Gumball Ben 10 ‘Y7’ Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Total Drama Gumball Gumball Gumball Gumball Total Drama Victor Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball Gumball Dr. Dee: Alaska Vet Dr. Jeff: RMV The Zoo ‘PG’ Secret Life-Zoo Pit Bulls and Parolees Pit Bulls and Parolees Varied Programs Mickey T.O.T.S. ‘Y’ Puppy Pals Puppy Pals Muppet Giganto Vampirina Elena Rapunzel’s Tangled Academy Ladybug Amphibia Big City Big City Big City Mickey T.O.T.S. ‘G’ Puppy Pals Puppy Pals Muppet PJ Masks Vampirina Elena Rapunzel TBA Mickey Ladybug Amphibia Big City Big City Big City Mickey T.O.T.S. ‘Y’ Puppy Pals “Spookley-Pumpkin” Giganto Vampirina Elena Rapunzel Puppy Pals Academy Ladybug Amphibia Big City Big City Big City Mickey T.O.T.S. ‘Y’ Puppy Pals Puppy Pals Muppet Giganto Vampirina Elena Rapunzel Puppy Pals Academy Ladybug Amphibia Big City Big City Big City Mickey Muppet Puppy Pals PJ Masks Vampirina Vampirina PJ Masks Elena Rapunzel Puppy Pals Academy Ladybug Amphibia Big City Big City Big City Bubble Bubble PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Ryan Blaze Blaze Ricky Zoom PAW Patrol PAW Patrol SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Bubble Bubble PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Ryan Blaze Blaze Ricky Zoom PAW Patrol PAW Patrol SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Bubble Bubble PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Ryan Blaze Blaze Ricky Zoom PAW Patrol PAW Patrol SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Bubble Bubble PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Ryan Blaze Blaze Ricky Zoom PAW Patrol PAW Patrol SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol PAW Patrol SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob The Middle 700 Club The 700 Club Varied Programs Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive Untold Stories of the E.R. Untold Stories of the E.R. Dr. Pimple Popper ‘14’ American Gypsy Wedding American Gypsy Wedding Say Yes Say Yes Unexpected ‘14’ Unexpected ‘14’ Untold Stories of the E.R. Untold Stories of the E.R. Dr. Pimple Popper ‘14’ American Gypsy Wedding American Gypsy Wedding Say Yes Say Yes Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive Untold Stories of the E.R. Untold Stories of the E.R. Dr. Pimple Popper ‘14’ American Gypsy Wedding American Gypsy Wedding Say Yes Say Yes Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive Untold Stories of the E.R. Untold Stories of the E.R. Dr. Pimple Popper ‘14’ American Gypsy Wedding American Gypsy Wedding Say Yes Say Yes Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive Untold Stories of the E.R. Untold Stories of the E.R. Dr. Pimple Popper ‘14’ American Gypsy Wedding American Gypsy Wedding Say Yes Say Yes

6 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’ The Doctors ‘PG’ Channel 2 Morning Ed Dateline ‘PG’ Providence Providence (7:00) CBS This Morning Let’s Make a Deal ‘PG’ The Price Is Right ‘G’ Injury Court The People’s Court ‘PG’ Judge Mathis ‘PG’ The Real ‘PG’ (7:00) Today ‘G’ Today 3rd Hour Today-Hoda Curious Go Luna Daniel Tiger Daniel Tiger Sesame St. Pinkalicious

4 2 7

(8) WGN-A 239 307

8:30

A = DISH

Our Boys The trial reaches its (:05) The Deuce “You Only (:05) Our Boys The trial climax. (N Subtitled-English) Get One” ‘MA’ reaches its climax. (Subtitled‘MA’ English) ‘MA’ (3:25) “Buzz” (2019, Docu“Welcome to Marwen” (2018, Biography) Steve Carell, The Deuce Lori runs into “Resident Evil: Apocalypse” (2004, Horror) (:35) “Insidious: The Last Key” (2018, Horror) Lin Shaye, (:20) “Signs” mentary) ‘NR’ Leslie Mann, Diane Kruger. A crime victim creates a miniature some familiar faces. ‘MA’ Milla Jovovich. Survivors of a deadly virus Leigh Whannell. A parapsychologist investigates a haunting in (2002) World War II town. ‘PG-13’ battle zombies. ‘R’ her old home. ‘PG-13’ (3:00) “Unknown” (2011, (4:55) “The Town” (2010, Crime Drama) Ben Affleck, Re“Maze Runner: The Death Cure” (2018, Science Fiction) Dylan O’Brien, (:25) “Friday Night Lights” (2004, Drama) Billy Bob Thorn- (:25) “Margin Suspense) Liam Neeson. becca Hall, Jon Hamm. A woman doesn’t realize that her new Thomas Brodie-Sangster, Kaya Scodelario. Thomas leads the Gladers into a ton, Derek Luke, Jay Hernandez. A football coach leads high- Call” (2011) ‘PG-13’ beau is a bank robber. ‘R’ WCKD-controlled labyrinth. ‘PG-13’ school players in Texas. ‘PG-13’ (3:00) “Godzilla” (1998) Matthew Broderick. “The House With a Clock in Its Walls” (2018, Fantasy) The Circus: The Affair “507” Noah and On Becoming a God in Couples “The House With a Clock in Its Walls” Nuclear testing in the South Pacific produces Jack Black, Cate Blanchett. An orphan unleashes a secret Inside the Whitney plan their wedding. Central Florida “Birthday Therapy “105” (2018, Fantasy) Jack Black, Cate Blanchett, a giant mutated lizard. world of witches and warlocks. ‘PG’ Wildest ‘MA’ Party” ‘MA’ ‘MA’ Owen Vaccaro. ‘PG’ (3:00) “A Bad Moms Christ- (4:50) “The Game” (1997, Suspense) Michael Douglas, “Pearl Harbor” (2001, War) Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett, Kate Beckinsale. Best friends be(:05) “The Company Men” (2010, Drama) Ben Affleck, Chris mas” (2017, Comedy) Mila Sean Penn. A businessman takes part in an unusual form of come fighter pilots and romantic rivals in 1941. ‘PG-13’ Cooper, Kevin Costner. Corporate downsizing throws three Kunis. ‘R’ recreation. ‘R’ men into turmoil. ‘R’

October 6 - 12, 2019

Clarion TV

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C10 Sunday, October 6, 2019 release dates: Oct. 5-11, 2019

Peninsula Clarion 40 (19)

Next Week: Play ball!

Issue 40, 2019

Founded by Betty Debnam

Keeping Up With Money

Money Fact-a-roonies

Mini Fact:

• Large denomination, or value, bills, such as $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000 bills, were printed until 1945. Those that were still circulating were removed in 1969. • U.S. currency is made up of 25% linen and 75% cotton. • When commercial banks send extra currency to the regional Fed, 15% of the returned bills are destroyed because they’re worn out.

There are 12 Federal Reserve Banks in cities around the country. photos courtesy 401kcalculator.org

History of the Fed

photos courtesy Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City

The idea of a central bank came up again and again during the early days of the United States. Some wanted a central bank to create one currency, or paper money in circulation, for all the If a bank has too much cash states. They thought it would on hand, it sends the extra to the regional Fed bank, help make the where it is counted and stored. economy more secure. Others feared such a bank would give bankers and businesses too much power. In 1912, President Woodrow Wilson asked for a proposal for a central bank that would divide its powers among different parts of the country. The Federal Reserve Act became law in 1913. It was a compromise, or settlement of *An economy is a country’s system of producing, selling and buying goods and services.

A Mini currency quiz

differences, between the central bank that private bankers wanted and the decentralized bank that much of the public wanted.

The average life of a $1 bill is 21 months. Can you guess the life spans for these other denominations? Why do you think some bills last longer than others?

A bank’s bank

One way to understand the Fed is to think of it as a “bank’s bank.” A reserve bank stores and distributes currency and coins to commercial banks. (A commercial bank is one that holds accounts for the public and businesses. You may have an account at a commercial bank.)

The source of money

The Bureau of Engraving and Printing supplies the regional reserve banks with paper money. In the United States, our money is called Federal Reserve Notes. These are produced in either Fort Worth, Texas, or Washington, D.C. Coins come from the U.S. Mint. The coins we use are produced in Denver, Philadelphia, San Francisco and West Point, N.Y. The dime Commercial banks keep shown here has a small P under a certain amount of their money in the form of coins and Franklin D. Roosevelt’s currency. If a bank needs more profile. The P means the money, it asks the regional dime was reserve bank to send it more. minted, or Detailed records are kept made, in Philadelphia. of the money coming in and going out of the regional Fed banks.

A. 55 months B. 18 months

C. 24 months D. 16 months

Answers: A. $50 bill; B. $10 bill; C. $20 bill; D. $5 bill

As candidates for president are reminding voters all the time, the health of our nation’s economy* is an important issue. It can also be a hard thing to understand. This week, The Mini Page takes a look at one aspect of the economy: where money comes from and how banks and the Federal Reserve Bank, or the Fed, manage the flow of it.

Resources On the Web:

• bit.ly/MPbillnotes • bit.ly/MPcurrency

At the library:

• “Curious About Money” by Mary E. Reid

The Mini Page® © 2019 Andrews McMeel Syndication

Try ’n’ Find

Mini Jokes

Words that remind us of money are hidden in this puzzle. Some words are hidden backward or diagonally, and some letters are used twice. See if you can find: ACCOUNT, BANK, BILLS, BUREAU, CIRCULATION, COINS, COMPROMISE, CURRENCY, DENOMINATION, ECONOMY, ENGRAVING, FEDERAL, LIFE SPAN, MINT, MONEY, PAPER, REGIONAL, RESERVE.

C B C R B R C M R A

O P O G A K I F X Q

I A M N X N R E A I

N P P I T A C D N U

S E R V N B U E O A

U R O A A X L R I E

C T M R P E A A T R

U N I G S C T L A U

R U S N E O I A N B

R O E E F N O N I U

E C M U I O N O M S

N C O Q L M G I O L

C Y E A Y V E E R H N E B O S Y M E J W R G E R N E D L I B

Milo: Why didn’t the quarter roll down the hill with the nickel? Mona: Because it had more cents!

Eco Note

Mini Spy Classics

Mini Spy Classics appear in the first issue of each month. Based on materials originally produced and/or created by Betty Debnam.

• • • •

umbrella carrot surfboard word MINI

• sailboat • squid • key • man in the moon • pencil • bell

• • • •

heart • fish strawberry kite • teapot letter E

• number 2 • letter L • exclamation point

The Mini Page® © 2019 Andrews McMeel Syndication

Hey Mini Spy Fans! Order your Mini Spy Booklets (Volumes 1, 2 and 3) with 48 of your favorite puzzles! Visit MiniPageBooks.com, or call 844-426-1256 to order. Just $4 plus $1 shipping.

Mini Spy and her friends are visiting a bank vault. See if you can find the hidden pictures. Then color the picture.

Did you know there’s a type of pollution that you can’t see? It’s noise pollution, and it affects our ears. Sound is measured in units called decibels (DES-uh-bels). The greater the number of decibels, the louder the sound and the more harmful it is to your ears. Start protecting your ears today! How? Turn down the volume on your television, video game, radio and music player. Wear hearing protectors while attending or participating in loud activities. Let a parent know if you are having difficulty hearing. adapted from epa.gov

For later: Look in your newspaper for articles about the economy.

Teachers:

For standards-based activities to accompany this feature, visit: bit.ly/MPstandards. And follow The Mini Page on Facebook!


Peninsula Clarion

New York Times Sunday Crossword

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BY TRACY GRAY / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).

46 With 12-Down, “Isle of Dogs” director 47 Work at a music school 49 When doubled, band with the 1984 No. 1 hit “The Reflex” 51 MGM rival of the ’30s 53 Money handler on a ship 55 Amber, originally 56 Miniature spring bouquet 60 Pummel with snowballs, say 61 Roulette choice 63 “I believe,” in Latin 65 Something that comes with a sock 66 Screen-minimizing key 67 Method for identifying mystery callers 70 M.L.B. stat 71 Downed 72 O’Connor’s Supreme Court successor 73 Futuristic deliverer of packages 74 Flank or shank 75 Athlete’s knee injury, familiarly 77 Bitter fruits 79 – 82 Material for classic hockey sticks 83 Bouquet offerers, maybe 84 Deep distress 85 Article in Paris Match 87 Animal mimic? 89 Response to “Who’s there?”

91 Some cheesecake photos 95 Accelerated alternative to broadband 98 “Poppycock!” 100 Rainwater diverters 101 Diez menos nueve 102 “Au contraire!” 103 Hairstyling icon Vidal 105 What it is to kill a mockingbird, in “To Kill a Mockingbird” 106 “I feel the same way!” 108 Voltage-increasing electrical device 111 Animal mimic? 113 Ask too much 114 Brand in the dessert aisle 118 Character in “Grease” who sings “There Are Worse Things I Could Do” 119 Like many measuring cups and spoons 120 Doctor Doom and Galactus, to the Fantastic Four 121 Homer, for one 122 “Yecch!” 123 Puts to rest, as rumors

5 Large waterfalls 6 Slack-jawed 7 Distant correspondent 8 Oktoberfest locales 9 Mideast capital once known as Philadelphia 10 Tender ender? 11 Holy, in Latin phrases 12 See 46-Across 13 Treat to reduce swelling 14 Run amok 15 Flamboyant rock genre 16 Woman’s name that’s one letter off from a fragrant flower 18 Prepare, as pot roast 20 Roadside produce sellers 24 Cheese with a red covering 26 Top-drawer 27 Sammy with 609 career home runs 29 Bard’s contraction 30 Cry a river 31 A quarter to four? 34 Ignore for the time being 37 Like xenon or neon 39 Popular moisturizing lotion 40 Subj. of Article 86 of the Uniform Code of DOWN Military Justice 1 2010s dance move 42 Paint choice involving dipping the 44 Solved head to the elbow 2 Inits. on 30 Rockefeller 48 Foe of Austin Powers Plaza until 1988 50 Dried chile peppers 3 Surgery sites, for short 52 ____-Aid 4 Christmas Eve no-no 53 Tagliatelle topper

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54 Reason for some bellyaching? 55 Got up again 56 Outer layer 57 Weapons that are about 3 1/2 feet long 58 Five books of Moses 59 Whack 60 Fuel common in Scotland 62 Doc at a clinic 64 Red-headed friend of Harry Potter

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83 Apiarist’s hazard 84 Oil painter’s primer 85 One-dimensional 86 Act of selfaggrandizement 88 They might get collared 90 Like a jammed printer 92 KOA visitors 93 Waipahu wreath 94 Form 1099 fig. 95 Distinctive part of a zebu 96 Kind of button

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67 Losing Super Bowl LIII team 68 Former leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel 69 Door openers for journalists 74 Family name? 76 “A bit of talcum/Is always walcum” writer 78 Set (down) 80 Chill in the air 81 Host of the Oscars, Grammys and Emmys

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Tracy Gray lives in Sparks, Md., near Baltimore, where she and her husband own and operate a lawn-and-landscaping business. She made her Times debut in 2010. Tracy always includes fresh, colorful vocabulary in her puzzles. Her last Sunday one, two years ago, is the only Times crossword ever to contain OVEN TIMER, RIVER THAMES, MALL OF AMERICA, MADAME TUSSAUDS, QDOBA or LEFT AJAR. This is her 27th puzzle for The Times. — W.S.

AC R O S S

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ON THE UP AND UP

1 Large decorative letter at the start of a chapter 8 Wood for crafts and rafts 13 Rapper Azalea with the 2014 hit “Fancy” 17 Farm stat 18 Weep for 19 Competitors in a classic advertising “war” 21 Salon bed acquisition, perhaps 22 Give a nudge 23 Discarded computers and such 25 Maintain the impression of wellbeing 28 [Grrr!] 29 General on Chinese menus 32 Put in order, in a way 33 Online instigator 35 “____ minute” (“Be patient”) 36 Ancient region of Asia Minor 38 Lopes of R&B’s TLC 39 Reconciled, as a couple 41 Ab-targeting exercise equipment 43 To the point 45 ____ Chex (old breakfast cereal)

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Sunday, October 6, 2019

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97 Feature of many a Cape Cod house 99 Played (around) 103 Little brats 104 Muscat citizen 107 Pasta also called risoni 109 Lhasa ____ (dog) 110 Aid for getting a boat in the water 112 Little ’un 115 Many an alibi 116 This may shock you 117 It’s twice twisted

Dad finally writes will and names surprise executor jeanne phillips Dear Abby his executor. Is this normal for people with adult children? I feel my parents are my responsibility to care for as they age. Assigning this duty to my aunt, who will be at least in her 70s when Dad passes, feels like an undue financial and emotional burden on her. Am I allowed to

DEAR DAD'S KEEPER: Subjects like these are often sensitive and difficult to address. However, you are "allowed" to talk to your father about any question you wish. Explain that you always assumed it would be your responsibility to take care of his affairs if he was unable to, and ask him why he chose the person he did to be his executor. He may not have wanted to burden you with the responsibility or had other reasons for naming his sister

Jaqueline Bigar’s Stars HAPPY BIRTHDAY Sunday, Oct. 6, 2019: This year, you find that you land safely no matter what goes on. A serious demeanor does not reveal the authentic you, but you often use that front. The playful personality within delights others. AQUARIUS is your friend.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You use spontaneity and the unexpected to gain within your immediate circle. You welcome change more than others realize. Be gracious in dealing with a loved one or child. At times, you feel this person is excessive. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. This Week: Lead Monday and Tuesday, but cocoon Wednesday and Thursday.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH Reach out for someone at a distance who you often do not speak to. You love catching up on news. You express a willingness to adapt plans if need be. Curb a tendency toward excess. Tonight: Making the most of the night. This Week: Lay low until Wednesday, when your ability to get what you want skyrockets.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH A partner makes an effort and appears to have reevaluated a problem that keeps emerging. You have a tendency to go to extremes, no matter what occurs. Be more open to this person’s suggestions. Tonight: Add spice to your life. This Week: Your playfulness emerges with friends and in meetings. By Wednesday, others ignore you; they have to get something done.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Your emotional nature seems to be tamer than usual. What might prove interesting is how a partner or loved one starts acting moody when you don’t! The less said, the better. Tonight: Go with another person’s suggestions. This Week: Negotiate and share through Tuesday. Learn more the remainder of the week.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH You seem to be dragging your heels around a project, causing a delay in getting to the more fun aspects of the day. A loved one misses you and wants to pitch in. Let it happen. You might enjoy yourself more. Tonight: Think Monday. This Week: The lion roars and still someone steals your thunder. Keep conversations at a oneon-one level.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH You cannot and should not hold back at present, especially if a friend or loved one seems more flexible than usual. Just be yourself and allow the child within to emerge. Fun will simply happen and will come with good vibes. Tonight: Forget tomorrow, enjoy now.

as his executor. In the final analysis, the decision was his to make. DEAR ABBY: My girlfriend and I have been together going on two years, and I feel like I want to marry her. I think I could spend the rest of my life with her. I have already asked her father. Recently she told me she wants to move closer to her family. They live in the middle of nowhere, and the only city close to them has extremely poor job prospects for both of us. As of right now they're a fourhour drive away from us, which I think is a reasonable

HHH Your thoughts revolve around your home, investments and the possibility for change. You see a situation differently than in the recent past. Be more open and fun-loving in how you approach a personal matter. Tonight: The later it becomes, the more fun you have. This Week: Creativity soars with naughtiness Monday and Tuesday. Work demands attention Wednesday and Thursday.

DEAR WILLING: I agree that once you and your girlfriend/fiancee move closer to her family, the chances of her agreeing to move farther from them is

sudoku

This Week: You plunge into work Monday. Others prove too distracting by Wednesday and Thursday.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

distance. We moved here only six months ago, and now she's clamoring to get back closer to home. To complicate things, I prefer an urban living environment, and that seems not to be an option. My girlfriend says she would be open to moving in the future, but if I'm being honest, that seems unlikely. What can I say to her? — WILLING TO COMPROMISE

By Dave Green

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SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You might be jammed between several choices and not sure which way to turn. A conversation with a relative or dear friend might suggest which way to go. Ultimately, trust yourself and your intuition. Tonight: Dinner at a favorite spot. This Week: Jump when it comes to domestic issues and property. Wednesday you experience some calmness.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Be aware of the costs of proceeding as you have. Fatigue marks your thoughts, and you might prefer not to make a decision at this moment. Try not to let this reluctance flow into your day. Tonight: It’s OK to indulge a little. This Week: Speak your mind but listen to what others say in return.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH Others value your attention and time. No matter which way you turn, you find someone seeking you out. Be gracious. Enjoy visiting, yet make time for a child or loved one. Sometimes, you can be overly serious. Relax. Tonight: Where the action is. This Week: Expenses seem to fall off the rail, but by Wednesday you gain more control.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You might want to hunker down and get into a project, a book or even the Sunday newspaper. You are a gregarious sign, but also one that loves your downtime. News from a distance puts a smile on your face. Tonight: Let the good times roll. This Week: You soar into the week, but know that you might have a surprise you will need to deal with ASAP.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You might want to greet a friend and let this person know how much you value him or her. A little craziness or silliness with friends or loved ones becomes likely as you relax. Help an uptight person get past his or her rigidity. Tonight: To the wee hours. This Week: You play tortoise this week. Not until Wednesday do you have the pizazz you are known for.

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unlikely. If you have a child, she will want him or her to know the grandparents, and possibly have help with baby-sitting, etc. Your reason for not wanting to move to the "middle of nowhere" because of the economic sacrifice involved makes sense. You need to think very carefully about what marriage to her will mean before taking the next step. And above all, have some serious conversations with her about your feelings. A compromise might be to move nearer to her family, but still in an area where you can both find adequate employment.

2 4 6 7 9 8 5 3 1

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9/29

Solution to last week’s 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.

10/06

S T R I K E Z O N E S F R A M E R A T E

P E A L F O M I E S T T E S R E R D A N P I R N E Y E L G E E R E S

N O T I M E T O S P A R E

S H I N E R E A T E R S

E R S E A L T O

F W I O E R D N E W E L P P A I S N O O T E V V E A N P T I F N U G L

Crossword Puzzle answers 9-29

R A W D E A L T I E S I N E T E

U P P I N G

S P I N

6 7 8 4 1 2 9 5 3

A R E S L U M P V E I L R Y L I M E S I T E A G O D Z D I T E C I N C A E D P I L D U P E S C I T I F S E N T O U E T E N N R O A D G N S W I E R T E O V O I N O P A R T W I I G M A C N E A R E G S D

A S A P

I K N E W I T P I N K I S O

L A N E C L O S U R E A L L E Y C A T S

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

talk to him about his choice of executor? — DAD'S KEEPER IN WASHINGTON

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

DEAR ABBY: I am 30 years old, the only child of divorced parents in their late 60s. Neither of them has remarried. Because of certain family events, I encouraged Dad to create a will four years ago. He never had one because he doesn't have much money or any property to bequeath, but my understanding is that putting things in writing helps immensely when the time comes. The will Dad finally produced is a cookie cutter one from the internet and not even notarized. But I was most surprised when I saw he had named his sister as


Clarion Features & Comics C12

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Peninsula Clarion

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peninsulaclarion.com

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Sunday, October 6, 2019

Husband’s family offers little sympathy after dad’s death DEAR ABBY: My are with you,” would father was killed recently suffice, they are so in a shooting. I have fearful they will say the received text messages wrong thing that they say and phone calls from nothing. Your husband’s my immediate famfamily may fall into this ily and close friends. category. Please try to My mother-in-law was forgive them. thoughtful enough to send me a card, and I DEAR ABBY: I am called to thank her the Dear Abby single, retired and have day I received it. children. I do have Jeanne Phillips no My husband has other some health issues. My close relatives. None of them called sisters have begun to hound me me, not even my sister-in-law. They about getting rid of things so they have my number, so that’s not the won’t have to do it in the event that issue. Is this the norm in the United I die. My entire estate, which is close States? I ask because I come from to $1 million, will go to them and a different background, and I find their children. this disheartening. — GRIEVING IN It is exhausting for me to pack NEVADA things and move boxes, and they DEAR GRIEVING: Please acare no help. I’d like to enjoy the time cept my deepest sympathy for the I have left and not have to listen to tragedy that took your father. When their complaints. What should I do? something so out of the ordinary — FED UP AND TIRED happens, many people don’t know DEAR FED UP: Tell your sisters what to say. While something as you would like to die (when the time simple as, “I’m so sorry,” or, “You comes) surrounded by the memenare in my prayers, and my thoughts tos that have brought you pleasure

throughout the years, and you do not plan to get rid of anything! Then suggest that when you are gone, they will have more than enough money to pay someone to cart away anything they don’t wish to keep. With a “close to $1 million” windfall in their pockets, the expense should not be onerous.

to your husband about it. Ask him why he has withdrawn from you, and whether he would be interested in working things out with the help of a licensed marriage and family therapist. If he is not willing, then realize it’s time to leave because the atmosphere you have described is toxic for you, and it isn’t a marriage.

DEAR ABBY: Would you think a husband is in love with his wife if he never talks to her, touches her or shows any interest in her? The worst kind of loneliness is the kind in marriage. What should a wife do if she feels her husband no longer cares for her? We have been married five years, and I think about the sevenyear itch. The first two years were difficult, and things haven’t gotten better. Would counseling help? I’m ready to leave. — CONFUSED IN PENNSYLVANIA DEAR CONFUSED: I am not sure who is itching, you or your husband. Because there is so much unhappiness in your marriage, talk

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.

Crossword | Eugene Sheffer

Abby shares more than 100 of her favorite recipes in two booklets: “Abby’s Favorite Recipes” and “More Favorite Recipes by Dear Abby.” Send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $16 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby, Cookbooklet Set, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling are included in the price.)

Jacqueline Bigar’s Stars CANCER (June 21-July 22)

This year, you’ll find it difficult to be bored. Underneath whatever you choose to do involving others and finances, a surprise could occur. You couldn’t dream this event up. If single, you meet someone who adds an element of magic and excitement to your life. Know that you don’t need to commit quickly. See how you feel with this person in a year. If you’re attached, you and your partner find your daily life revitalized especially your relationship. Learn to flow more and trust that situations can change quickly. AQUARIUS knows how to add excitement to your life.

HHHH You’re coming from a strong position and unlikely to modify it, especially if finances or emotions are involved. Be careful; before you know it, all could become explosive at the drop of a hat. Tonight: Maintain a strong sense of direction.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHHH Defer to others while knowing full well where you’re going with a project. You know what you want to achieve. You also understand that you might have to break away from your conventional, traditional paths. The end results could delight you. Tonight: Toss restrictive thinking.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You count on your friends and associates at work to help you achieve the results that you’re capable of and that you desire. Don’t kid yourself. Once you’re focused, anything and everything is possible. Use your mental prowess. Tonight: All smiles.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

HHHH Understand where you’re coming from before you leap into action. You might be uncomfortable with what you’re being asked to do, but you’ll do it, just like the good soldier you are. Tonight: Try to avoid fussiness.

HHH Others demand a lot from you, but count on one thing: You’ll deliver in a strong way but only when you’re ready. Today, you could be personally surprised by what comes down the path. You cannot complain of boredom! Tonight: Let it all hang out.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

HHH You can do nearly anything, if you so choose. Your sense of humor comes out when you’re dealing with a child or a new friend. A partner could stun you about a financial matter, but know that all could change just as quickly. Tonight: Teamwork proves rewarding.

HHHHH Chat away as much as you want. Do as much as you can and expect to achieve your exact goal. Meetings and interactions with key people make all the difference in your responses and sense of well-being. Tonight: Why not treat a

hints from heloise Dear Readers: Today’s SOUND OFF is about taking advantage of the public. — Heloise “Dear Heloise: Recently, I had a repairman out to inspect my heating system, and he came back with an estimate of how much I needed to pay to repair and replace parts. It was a little over $1,200. I said I was going to get a second opinion, which he didn’t like, and he told me the price was good for only 24 hours, then it would go up. “I got a second opinion, and yes, there were some repairs needed that would cost me about $89. My system is only 6 years old, so I couldn’t imagine how there could be such a high repair bill. Turns out, there was no need to replace so many parts. “Why do some repair people want to take advantage of a senior citizen or women in general? I know they aren’t all like that, but I’ve encountered too many. Tell your readers to get a second opinion if the price seems too high.” — Tanya L., Ironwood, Mich. Dear Readers: Here are some additional uses for

Rubes | Leigh Rubin

mayonnaise: ■ Remove sticker residue. Rub in a circular motion. ■ Conditioner: Rub a little on your hair and leave for 30 minutes, then shampoo as usual. ■ Erase water stains on wood by rubbing a small amount on the stain and letting sit overnight, then wiping up with a clean cloth. ■ Rub into cuticles to soften and moisturize them. — Heloise Dear Readers: A new scam is hitting homes all over America. Your phone rings once or twice and the caller hangs up. It may have a number with your area code on your phone. Whatever you do, DO NOT call back. These robocalls connect you to an overseas premium-rate number that keeps you on the line with long holds and other tactics, which are designed to increase your phone bill. If you get scammed, call your phone-service provider and ask that the charges be removed. — Heloise

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Monday’s answer, 9-30

HHHH Stay on top of whatever project you’re doing. Your enduring energy is charged by a surprise. Your fiery response could be a little out of whack. Try to tame your knee-jerk reactions. Tonight: Make time for an older person.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You say what you think, but be prepared others respond in a similar manner. A friend could be bellicose and touchy at first but settles in. You might be surprised by yet another person’s chilliness. Tonight: Favorite spot, favorite person.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Be aware of the costs of continuing as you have been. You could have an unexpected realization that floors you. You have some thinking to do, though your inclination might be to start a volley of words. Tonight: Keep to your budget. Otherwise, you might not like the results.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH You beam in more of what you desire. The unexpected happens while you’re at home. You might want to detach and eye a situation from a whole different perspective. Tonight: Respond to your energy levels.

cryptoquip

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHH You might need some downtime. You could find that a friend is deceptive and not sharing the truth. On the other hand, you could be disappointed by a long-term prospect. Stay as level as possible. Changes will occur. Tonight: Where the action is.

Dave Green Conceptis Sudoku | DaveByGreen

SUDOKU Solution

8 6 3 1 7 4 9 5 2

9 2 5 3 8 6 4 1 7

4 7 1 9 2 5 8 3 6

1 3 2 7 5 8 6 4 9

5 9 6 2 4 3 1 7 8

7 4 8 6 9 1 5 2 3

6 5 7 4 3 9 2 8 1

2 1 4 8 6 7 3 9 5

Difficulty Level

3 8 9 5 1 2 7 6 4 10/06

7

Difficulty Level

B.C. | Johnny Hart

Tundra | Chad Carpenter

Take it from the Tinkersons | Bill Bettwy

3

7 6 4 6 8 5 9 7 8 1 4 9 2 5 9 3 1 4 6 7 3 9 3 5 4 6 7 2 5 2 1

Ziggy | Tom Wilson

Garfield | Jim Davis

1

Shoe | Chris Cassatt & Gary Brookins

Mother Goose and Grimm | Michael Peters

10/07

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

pal to dinner?

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

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, Oct. 7, 2019:


SUNDAY COMICS

Sunday, October 6, 2019

DILBERT®/ by Scott Adams


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


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