Peninsula Clarion, September 29, 2018

Page 1

Atomic

Big run

Netanyahu accuses Iran of secret cache

Kenai girls ready to roll at state

World/A6

Sports/B1

CLARION

Clouds then sun 53/39 More weather on Page A2

P E N I N S U L A

Vol. 48, Issue 310

Friday, September 28, 2018 Kenai Peninsula, Alaska

$1 newsstands daily/$1.50 Sunday

In the news

Soldotna doesn’t take stand on Ballot Measure 1

Apartments owner fined for not warning tenants of arsenic ANCHORAGE (AP) — An Anchorage apartment complex owner who didn’t warn tenants that their water had high levels of arsenic has been fined nearly $600,000. The Anchorage Daily News reports Trudy Tush was fined $588,684 in federal court for violations of the Clean Water Act while the complex used well water. Tush could not be reached for comment Wednesday. The Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation in 2009 and 2011 issued violation notices for insufficient monitoring of well water. State officials in 2014 asked the EPA to step in. The EPA filed a federal court complaint in April. Officials in May confirmed the apartment complex in midtown Anchorage had been connected to an Anchorage water utility. Long-term exposure to arsenic at high levels has been linked to bladder cancer and other diseases.

By VICTORIA PETERSEN Peninsula Clarion

ABOVE: Firefighters prepare for a training session off Arc Loop Road on Thursday as part of the Alaska Fire Conference. BELOW: Firefighters respond to a controlled fire in a group of conexes off of Arc Loop Road in Soldotna. The area was set up to resemble a home and a fire was set in different sections of the building to test the firefighters. The training on Thursday was part of the Alaska Fire Conference which is being held in Kenai this week. (Photo by Kat Sorensen/Peninsula Clarion)

Firefighters come to Kenai

Florence death toll increases; 1,500 still in NC shelters RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — The death toll from Hurricane Florence has increased again, nearly two weeks after the eye of the storm reached the Carolinas. North Carolina Emergency Operations Center spokeswoman Sonja BennettBellamy said Thursday that an 85-year-old man from New Hanover County died Tuesday. The man contracted an infection in a wound he received while cleaning up storm debris on his property. The death toll now stands at 48 deaths in three states, 37 of them in North Carolina.

By KAT SORENSEN Peninsula Clarion

According to Jason Buist, a lieutenant with the Fort Wainwright Fire Department in Fairbanks, the best way to learn how to run into a burning building and put out fires is to run into a burning building and put out fires. So, that’s what firefighters from across the state did Thursday during a live burn training at the CES Arc Loop Road Training Facility in Soldotna. The training was one of many offerings at this year’s Alaska Fire Conference, which is being held in Kenai. The conference, which started on Sept. 24 and ends on Sept.

Inside ‘I just wanted to let you know, I’m very sorry. That’s not right,’ ... See page A8

You have to ask yourself a question: Why did Iran keep a secret atomic archive and a secret atomic warehouse?.’ ... See page A6

Index Opinion................... A4 Nation..................... A5 World...................... A6 Sports......................B1 Classifieds.............. B5 Comics.................... B6

Check us out online at www.peninsulaclarion.com To subscribe, call 283-3584.

28, brings together firefighters from throughout Alaska to participate in different trainings, from live burns like the one led by Buist to lessons in leadership. This year’s conference brought 225 firefighters, 47 different vendors and instructors to Kenai. “There are probably 350 people or so in the area,” said Chief Jeff Tucker of the Kenai Fire Department, who spearheaded this year’s events. “The conference moves around each year to different host communitues. It’s Alaska’s biggest conference for the fire service.” The conference ends tonight with a closing banquet.

A resolution that would formally oppose Alaska Ballot Measure 1, failed at Wednesday’s Soldotna City Council meeting. The resolution, which was presented by council member Lisa Parker in an effort to protect potential impacts the initiative would have on the city, received a 3-2 vote, however, four votes are required to pass a resolution. Parker said she brought the resolution forward because she was concerned about how the initiative would affect Soldotna’s wastewater treatment plant. She said the city has been trying to get answers about potential impacts from the state, the Department of Environmental Conservation, as well as reaching out to representatives for Stand for Salmon. “This petition has the potential to make significant financial impacts on the residents of the city of Soldotna,” Parker said. “That’s why I brought this forward. We don’t want to be operating in the dark as we’re dealing with policy issues in Alaska. We need to look at it in terms of not only how it affects Alaska, but how does it affect our community here.” Mayor Nels Anderson said he would estimate financial impacts on the wastewater treatment plant if the initiative were to pass would cost the city $40 million. Parker said the city was unable to get clarifications as to what the impacts would be if Alaska Ballot Measure 1 were to pass. The resolution was controversial, bringing in public testimony of all kinds forward. See STAND, page AX

Senate hears Kavanaugh, Ford Ice Alaska sues former leaders over mismanagement By COLLEEN LONG Associated Press

FAIRBANKS (AP) — The organization that plans the World Ice Art Championships in Fairbanks is suing its former leaders, claiming mismanagement of state funds. Ice Alaska filed the suit this week against former board leaders Hank Bartos, Dick Brickley and Hoa Brickley, seeking at least $2 million in damages, the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reported Wednesday. The lawsuit claims the three “knowingly and unlawfully engaged in a series of fraudulent transactions to acquire Ice Alaska’s personal assets, the Phillips Field property and other properties, with the use of state grant money.” The organization received a $2 million state grant in 2006. The lawsuit claims they put the organization into debt to take possession of an ice

park and other properties. Bartos said the allegations are false. “What I see is defamation. I’m going to be countersuing,” Bartos said. Dick Brickley and Hoa Brickley did not respond to the newspaper’s request for comment. Three years ago, Ice Alaska gave ownership of the George Horner Ice Park to D&H Enterprises, which is owned by Dick Brickley and Hoa Brickley. The organization in 2011 had purchased the property where it has held the annual ice event. The lawsuit accuses Bartos and the Brickleys of coercing the organizations’ board to give up the ice park by threatening that board members could be held personally liable for the debt to D&H Enterprises if they didn’t agree to give up the property. The lawsuit seeks

WASHINGTON — Thursday’s Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on sexual assault allegations against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh riveted Washington and the nation with hours of fiery, emotional testimony from the judge and Christine Blasey Ford, the woman accusing him of sexual assault when they were high schoolers. Kavanaugh denied the accusation. Here are some takeaways from the extraordinary hearing: HOW DID SHE DO? Ford gave a soft-spoken and steady account about what she said happened three decades ago in a bedroom at a small gathering of friends. She said she came forward not for political reasons, but because it was her “civic duty.” She described in detail how an inebriated Kavanaugh and another teen, Mark Judge, locked her in a room at a house party as Kavanaugh was grinding and groping her. She said he put his hand over her mouth to muffle her screams, and testiSee JUDGE, page A8

Christine Blasey Ford, top, and Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Thursday in Washington. (Pool Images via AP)


A2 | Friday, September 28, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

AccuWeather 5-day forecast for Kenai-Soldotna

Utqiagvik 33/27

®

Today

Saturday

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Clouds giving way to some sun

Sunny and mild

Abundant sunshine

Mostly sunny

Some sun; breezy in the afternoon

Hi: 53 Lo: 39

Hi: 57 Lo: 38

Hi: 56 Lo: 39

Hi: 56 Lo: 37

Hi: 55 Lo: 36

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

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

Prudhoe Bay 32/24

Anaktuvuk Pass 41/19

Kotzebue 50/39

Sun and Moon

RealFeel

Aurora Forecast

Internet: www.gedds.alaska.edu/auroraforecast

®

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

44 44 48 50

Today 8:03 a.m. 7:46 p.m.

Last Oct 2

New Oct 8

Daylight

Yesterday Hi/Lo/W

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

First Oct 16

Today 9:22 p.m. 12:29 p.m.

Length of Day - 11 hrs., 43 min., 24 sec. Moonrise Moonset Daylight lost - 5 min., 31 sec.

Alaska Cities

Tomorrow 8:05 a.m. 7:43 p.m.

Almanac Readings through 4 p.m. yesterday

Nome 51/46

Temperature

Unalakleet McGrath 51/42 52/37

Full Oct 24 Tomorrow 9:45 p.m. 1:53 p.m.

Yesterday Hi/Lo/W

City

Kotzebue 50/41/pc 55/47/c 53/44/r McGrath 54/36/pc 51/45/r 56/45/r Metlakatla 59/54/sh 38/31/pc 33/27/pc Nome 50/41/c 57/42/pc 62/48/r North Pole 51/33/pc 57/46/c 58/52/sh Northway 45/27/pc 51/40/r 58/40/pc Palmer 52/41/r 49/31/pc 51/33/s Petersburg 53/47/sh 49/24/pc 52/30/pc Prudhoe Bay* 42/22/sn 51/47/r 60/46/pc Saint Paul 53/46/c 53/45/sh 54/47/sh Seward 48/45/r 53/31/pc 53/32/s Sitka 57/53/sh 43/31/pc 43/22/s Skagway 57/41/c 48/31/r 52/35/r Talkeetna 54/38/pc 45/29/r 52/27/pc Tanana 49/33/s 59/44/sh 60/42/pc Tok* 47/23/pc 51/46/r 57/44/r Unalakleet 51/40/pc 54/44/sh 60/40/pc Valdez 50/43/r 60/54/sh 63/49/s Wasilla 51/42/r 50/33/pc 48/36/c Whittier 48/42/r 56/45/r 64/45/pc Willow* 51/39/sh 63/52/sh 63/44/s Yakutat 54/40/sh 58/50/r 56/51/c Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

Today Hi/Lo/W 50/39/c 52/37/pc 63/51/s 51/46/r 52/31/s 49/25/s 58/42/r 58/38/pc 32/24/pc 53/46/c 57/47/pc 60/49/pc 58/41/pc 56/39/pc 49/29/pc 47/28/s 51/42/c 57/41/pc 56/42/r 56/47/pc 54/40/pc 58/40/pc

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

68/50/pc 83/54/s 80/47/sh 76/67/t 85/71/t 75/65/pc 80/65/pc 67/64/r 52/48/sh 80/71/t 54/48/pc 82/48/s 69/63/pc 64/48/pc 70/37/pc 92/73/pc 61/60/r 83/71/t 70/48/pc 75/45/pc 62/54/r

65/52/pc 86/55/s 80/51/s 79/61/c 81/67/c 75/58/c 86/70/pc 74/57/c 48/36/c 81/65/c 50/32/pc 83/53/s 59/54/r 68/49/pc 53/34/pc 90/75/pc 71/53/pc 84/66/sh 60/42/sh 50/38/pc 72/52/s

From the Peninsula Clarion in Kenai

24 hours through 4 p.m. yest. 0.22" Month to date ............................ 1.52" Normal month to date ............. 2.92" Year to date ............................. 11.86" Normal year to date ............... 12.50" Record today ................. 1.18" (1960) Record for Sept. ............. 7.07" (1961) Record for year ............ 27.09" (1963)

Valdez Kenai/ 57/41 Soldotna Homer

Dillingham 60/46

Juneau 60/40

National Extremes Kodiak 56/51

Sitka 60/49

(For the 48 contiguous states)

High yesterday Low yesterday

112 at Thermal, Calif. 16 at Bodie State Park, Calif.

State Extremes High yesterday Low yesterday

Cold Bay 58/52

Ketchikan 63/49

66 at Annette 14 at Arctic Village

Today’s Forecast

(Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation)

Showers and thunderstorms will linger from Texas to parts of Virginia, Maryland and Delaware today. Rain will exit the coastal Northeast. Chilly air and spotty rain are in store for the North Central states.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

National Cities City

Precipitation

Anchorage 56/45

Bethel 62/48

Unalaska 52/45 Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

High ............................................... 49 Low ................................................ 43 Normal high .................................. 53 Normal low .................................... 36 Record high ....................... 59 (2003) Record low ......................... 17 (1956)

Kenai/ Soldotna 53/39 Seward 57/47 Homer 57/44

Talkeetna 56/39 Glennallen 52/35

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

From Kenai Municipal Airport

Fairbanks 53/32

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

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

67/51/c 90/70/t 65/53/r 72/54/s 79/60/pc 62/50/sh 80/47/pc 74/48/pc 64/49/pc 56/47/r 89/61/s 55/49/c 78/33/s 65/46/pc 47/43/sh 74/55/pc 60/52/c 85/76/sh 80/70/c 64/54/c 77/71/t

72/52/pc 89/71/c 72/51/s 58/45/r 84/67/pc 72/50/s 60/44/s 54/40/r 70/46/pc 50/29/sh 93/67/s 48/27/pc 77/44/pc 60/42/sh 50/34/sn 60/48/r 55/37/c 86/77/sh 84/70/t 72/50/pc 81/64/t

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

Yesterday Today Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 93/74/pc 73/40/s 91/84/pc 99/70/s 65/56/sh 80/64/s 63/60/r 67/59/r 90/82/pc 78/55/pc 70/47/pc 62/55/c 66/63/r 82/75/t 72/61/pc 76/75/r 72/46/s 77/53/pc 95/75/t 72/62/r 104/78/s

92/74/s 62/45/pc 90/81/s 100/75/s 77/60/pc 84/63/pc 74/55/s 78/61/pc 91/80/t 91/64/s 58/40/sh 55/35/pc 76/58/pc 85/73/t 66/58/r 81/69/sh 81/59/pc 57/42/r 93/75/s 72/59/pc 105/80/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

63/51/r 69/57/pc 84/53/s 53/48/sh 91/45/pc 96/53/s 79/50/s 81/65/pc 75/66/pc 64/52/c 84/46/s 73/52/s 65/50/sh 75/47/pc 62/47/c 94/77/pc 76/41/s 99/70/s 75/46/s 67/66/r 76/43/s

70/51/pc 58/47/r 86/56/s 49/36/c 90/53/pc 82/55/pc 87/64/pc 86/72/c 76/66/pc 67/57/pc 83/47/s 77/54/pc 57/36/c 69/47/s 69/52/pc 93/78/t 63/45/pc 100/71/s 79/62/pc 76/61/c 69/50/pc

City

Yesterday Hi/Lo/W

Acapulco 92/76/t Athens 65/59/r Auckland 58/49/pc Baghdad 108/73/s Berlin 73/55/s Hong Kong 88/77/pc Jerusalem 85/62/s Johannesburg 84/59/s London 74/48/s Madrid 83/56/s Magadan 55/38/pc Mexico City 75/55/t Montreal 63/46/pc Moscow 56/41/r Paris 79/41/s Rome 75/50/s Seoul 75/52/s Singapore 90/81/pc Sydney 68/50/s Tokyo 66/61/r Vancouver 63/48/pc

Today Hi/Lo/W 88/78/t 69/64/r 60/48/pc 106/73/s 61/40/c 88/77/pc 85/64/s 83/57/pc 64/41/pc 86/59/pc 53/46/c 72/55/t 67/51/pc 58/34/r 70/44/pc 77/58/s 73/57/pc 90/79/pc 79/57/s 76/64/s 67/51/s

Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice

-10s -0s 50s 60s

0s 70s

10s 80s

20s

30s

90s

40s

100s 110s

Cold Front Warm Front Stationary Front

For home delivery

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(USPS 438-410) The Peninsula Clarion is a locally operated member of Sound Publishing Inc., published Sunday through Friday. P.O. Box 3009, Kenai, AK 99611 Street address: 150 Trading Bay Road, Suite 1, Kenai, AK Phone: (907) 283-7551 Postmaster: Send address changes to the Peninsula Clarion, P.O. Box 3009, Kenai, AK 99611 Periodicals postage paid at Kenai, AK Copyright 2018 Peninsula Clarion

Who to call at the Peninsula Clarion

Order a six-day-a-week, 13-week subscription for $57, a 26-week subscription for $108, or a 52-week subscription for $198. Use our easy-pay plan and save on these rates. Call 283-3584 for details. Weekend and mail subscription rates are available upon request.

Want to place an ad? Classified: Call 283-7551 and ask for the classified ad department between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, or email classifieds@peninsulaclarion.com. Display: Call 283-7551 and ask for the display advertising department between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Nick Humphreys is the Clarion’s advertising director. He can be reached at 907-2837551. Contacts for other departments: General Manager........................................................................... Brian Naplachowski Production Manager ......................................................................... Frank Goldthwaite Online ............................................................................................ Vincent Nusunginya

News tip? Question? Main number............................................................................................. 283-7551 Fax ............................................................................................................ 283-3299 News email ..................................................................news@peninsulaclarion.com General news Editor ......................................................................... news@peninsulaclarion.com Jeff Helminiak, sports and features editor .......... jhelminiak@peninsulaclarion.com Education, Soldotna .................................................. news@peninsulaclarion.com Kenai, oil and gas ........................................................news@peninsulaclarion.com Police, courts ........................... Erin Thompson, ethompson@peninsulaclarion.com Kenai Peninsula Borough .......................................... newsl@peninsulaclarion.com Fisheries ..................................................................... newsl@peninsulaclarion.com Arts and Entertainment............................................... news@peninsulaclarion.com Community, Around the Peninsula .............................. news@peninsulaclarion.com Sports ................................................. Joey Klecka, jklecka@peninsulaclarion.com

Circulation problem? Call 283-3584 If you don’t receive your newspaper by 7 a.m. and you live in the Kenai-Soldotna area, call 283-3584 before 10 a.m. for redelivery of your paper. If you call after 10 a.m., you will be credited for the missed issue. Regular office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Trump approves federal funding for Hawaii’s Hurricane Lane HONOLULU (AP) — President Donald Trump has approved Hawaii’s request for a major disaster declaration for areas affected by Hurricane Lane. The declaration announced in a statement from the White House Thursday authorizes federal agencies to assist the state’s recovery efforts.

Freedom from Pain · Freedom to Live Life Fully

Todd Pollock PT, DPT, OCS Shawna Cooper MPT Proud to announce our newest clinician:

Ben Morris DPT

Physical Therapists with myofascial specialty

–ACCEPTING ALL MAJOR INSURANCES– Office: 907-335-1155 Fax: 907-335-1156 6383 Kenai Spur Highway, Kenai, AK 99611

Fast & Effective Results

Visit our fishing page! Go to peninsulaclarion.com and look for the Tight Lines link.

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Peninsula Clarion | Friday, September 28, 2018 | A3 School. Contact Wendi Dutcher at 907-398-1748 for more information. Sponsored by Studio 49.

Peninsula Clarion death notice and obituary guidelines:

Hosting a local event?

Adult flu vaccinations

The Clarion welcomes photos of public events for our Sunday Community page. Please submit photos to news@peninsculaclarion.com by Friday at 4 p.m. Photos will run on a firstcome, first-serve basis. When possible, please include names of subjects in photos, date and location of event.

Central Peninsula Hospital is offering Free Adult Drive Thru Flu Vaccinations on Wednesday, Oct. 3 from 3-5:30 p.m .on a first-come, first-serve 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 immunized!

The Peninsula Clarion strives to report the deaths of all current and former Peninsula residents. Notices should be received within three months of the death. We offer two types of death reports: Pending service/Death notices: Brief notices listing full name, age, date and place of death; and time, date and place of service. These are published at no charge. Obituaries: The Clarion charges a fee to publish obituaries. Obituaries are prepared by families, funeral homes, crematoriums, and are edited by our staff according to newspaper guidelines. Obituaries up to 300 words are charged $50, which includes a one-year online guest book memoriam to on Legacy. com. Obituaries up to 500 words are charged $100, which also includes the one-year online guest book memoriam. Tax is not included. All charges include publication of a black and white photo. Obituaries outside these guidelines are handled by the Clarion advertising department. How to submit: Funeral homes and crematoriums routinely submit completed obituaries to the newspaper. Obituaries may also be submitted directly to the Clarion, online at www.peninsulaclarion.com, or by mail to: Peninsula Clarion, P.O. Box 3009, Kenai, Alaska, 99611. Pre-payment must accompany all submissions not already handled by a funeral home or crematorium. Deadlines: Submissions for Tuesday – Friday editions must be received by 2 p.m. the previous day. Submissions for Sunday and Monday editions must be received by 3 p.m. Friday. We do not process obituaries on Saturdays or Sundays unless submitted by funeral homes or crematoriums. Obituaries are placed on a space-available basis, prioritized by dates of local services. Copyright: All death notices and obituaries become property of the Clarion and may not be republished in any format. For more information, call the Clarion at 907-283-7551.

Around the Peninsula

Pinochle League tournament

The Peninsula Pinochle League will being the 2018-2019 Ninilchik fire engine rollback and open house winter season of league play on Saturday, Oct. 6 at 12 p.m. at Join Ninilchik Fire Station for an open house and the rollthe Caribou Restaurant in Soldotna. This will be a tournament back of its new fire engine on Saturday, Sept. 29 from 11 a.m. play day with regular season to start Oct. 13. This is a team to 3 p.m. The event will include tours of the station, hot dogs, league format so bring a partner and join the league every Sat- hamburgers and fun. Free and open to the community. urday for a winter of fun. Contact Jean at 907-202-1812 or Jay at 907-252-6397.

Sterling caregiver support meeting

Soil and water meeting Kenai Soil & Water Board Meeting The monthly meeting of the Kenai Soil & Water Conservation District’s Board of Supervisors will be held Wednesday, Oct. 3, 5:30 to 7:30 pm, at the District office located at 110 Trading Bay, Suite 140. For information, call 283-8732 x5.

Community meeting A public meeting to identify project proposals under the State of Alaska Community Assistance Program (CAP) will be held at Love, Inc. at 44410 Kalifornsky Beach Road on Tuesday, Oct. 2 at 6 p.m. All are welcome.

Cardiac Support Group

The Sterling Senior Center will host a Caregiver Support Meeting-Training: Awakening the Five Senses of Persons Living with Dementia on Tuesday, Oct. 2 at 1 p.m. Please join us to share your experiences as a caregiver, or to support someone who is. Call Sharon or Judy at (907) 262-1280 for more information.

PROPS meeting The Cook Inlet Regional Citizens Advisory Council’s PROPS (Prevention, Response, Operations & Safety) Committee meeting will be held in Soldotna on Friday, Oct. 5 at 10 a.m. at the Kenai Peninsula College CTEC building, 156 College Road. The public is welcome to attend. For an agenda, directions, or more information call 907-283-7222 or 800-652-7222.

Cardiac Support Group will meet Monday Oct. 1 from 5-6:30 p.m. in the Borealis Room at Central Peninsula Hospi- Fall festival tal. The Borealis Room is immediately on the right just inside The Kenai United Pentecostal Church will host its annual the hospital cafeteria. New members are always welcome. For fall festival on Saturday, Sept. 29. The event will feature games, more info call Jeanette Rodgers at 262-5547 or 252-1018. food and entertainment and is free and open to everyone. The festival will take place at mile 16.5 on the Kenai Spur Highway. For more information contact Pastor Rodney Whicker at 907Kenai Senior Center activities 283-4949. 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 The Nikiski Community Council p.m. Cost for lunch is $7 suggested donation for individuals 60 The Nikiski Community Council will be meeting Monday, or older, $14 for those under 60. Call 907-283-4156 for more Oct. 1 at 7 p.m. at the Lake Marie Nikiski Senior Center on information. Holt-Lamplight Road. Residents will make recommendations —Kenai Senior Connection board meeting, Friday, Sept. 28 on how the State of Alaska FY19 Community Assistance Proat 9:30 a.m. gram (CAP) funds will be distributed for public projects or —Senior shopping day at Fred Meyer, Tuesday, Oct. 2 at 1 programs. All residents of the Nikiski community are invited p.m. Cost: free to attend.� —Social Security, Wednesdays, Oct. 3 and 17 from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Cost: free —Movie and popcorn night: “Moneyball� starring Chris Evening of Classics Pratt and Brad Pitt. Cost at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 4. Cost: The Redoubt Chamber Orchestra and other local musicians free will perform solos and ensembles on Friday, Oct. 5 at 7 p.m at —Mystery Drive on Monday, Oct. 8 from 12:30-4:30 p.m. Christ Lutheran Church. It will be a fun music-filled evening Cost: $5 with a feature a ‘Bid on the baton’ — a chance to conduct the —Card making with Kimberley on Tuesday, Oct. 9 from 1-2 orchestra. For further information please consult https://www. p.m. Cost: free facebook.com/KenaiPeninsulaOrchestra/ or Marion Parrish —Flu shots available on Wednesday, Oct. 10 from 9 a.m. to 907- 420-7179. 12 p.m. Free with Medicare card —Food bank shopping on Wednesday, Oct. 10 at 1 p.m. $3 Soldotna Historical Society Fall Fling ride fee —Thrift shopping day trip on Tuesday, Oct. 16 from 10 a.m. The Soldotna Historical Society will host its Fall Fling on to 5 p.m. $10 ride fee Saturday, Sept. 29 at the Donald E. Gilman Kenai River Center —Fall prevention presentation courtesy of Freedom Physi- from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Speaker Carroll Knutson will present cal Therapy from 11-11:30 a.m. Cost: free “History of Alaska Homesteading.� Contact Carmen at 262—“No Host� dinner on Tuesday, Oct. 23 at 4:30 p.m. $5 2791 for more information. ride fee —Birthday Lunch “Oktoberfest� at 11:30 a.m. $7 suggested Sterling community breakfast donation or free if your birthday is in October and you are more The Sterling Senior Center is serving breakfast on Saturday, than 60 years old. Sept. 29 from 9 a.m. to noon. Menu includes bacon, sausage, —Closed for Alaska Day on Thursday, Oct. 18 —Kumihomo (braid making) with kit on Tuesday, Oct. 23. ham, scrambled eggs, pancakes and biscuits and gravy. Everyone welcome. Adults $10. Children $5. All proceeds benefit the Cost: free —Halloween costume party on Wednesday, Oct. 31. Cost: center. Call 262-6808. free

Kombucha earns grandpa park ejection CHESAPEAKE, Va. (AP) percent alcohol, but Tatem’s — A picnic for a 60-year-old homebrewed drink had not grandfather fizzled out pretty been tested for alcohol content. quickly when he and his grandsons were kicked out of a park in Virginia for drinking kombucha. The bubbly, fermented tea originated centuries ago in China and typically contains a slight bit of alcohol. That’s what got Sid Tatem in trouble while celebrating his Just pennies a day. birthday with his two grandDid you know your landlord’s sons at Chesapeake’s Northinsurance only covers the building? west River Park. 3URWHFW \RXU VWXÇĽ 7KHUH¡V QR UHDVRQ WR WDNH D FKDQFH Like a good The Virginian-Pilot reports neighbor, State Farm is there. the three were sipping home&$// 0( 72'$< brewed kombucha at the park when a ranger asked what they Nancy A Field, Agent were drinking and then kicked 35202 Kenai Spur Hwy them out upon discovering Soldotna, AK 99669 what it was. Bus: 907-262-4440 City spokeswoman ElizaQDQF\ Ă€HOG F [F#VWDWHIDUP FRP beth Vaughn says the ranger acted because the beverage was given to juveniles. Kombucha sold in supermarkets must fall below 0.5 State Farm Fire and Casualty Company, State Farm General

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Man arrested for chasing after plane LONDON (AP) — An Irish man who missed his flight at Dublin Airport was arrested Thursday for running after the plane on the tarmac in a bid to flag it down. Witnesses said a man in his 20s broke through an airport door and ran toward the Ryanair plane, which was about to take off for Amsterdam, at around 7 a.m. Declan Harvey, who was at the airport, said he could hear a man shouting “Wait!� at the plane before he was tackled to the ground by airport workers. The airport said that a man became “agitated� after he and a woman arrived at the gate too late for their flight.

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Opinion

A4 | Friday, September 28, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

CLARION P

E N I N S U L A

Serving the Kenai Peninsula since 1970

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

What Others Say

Rosenstein and Trump Three days after he reportedly went to the White House to turn in his resignation, Deputy Atty. Gen. Rod Rosenstein is finally set to meet with President Trump on Thursday to discuss his continued employment. The right course for Trump is clear: He should tell Rosenstein to remain on the job. This might seem like counterintuitive advice. Rosenstein is probably the president’s second least favorite appointee at Justice — the least favorite being Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions, who enraged Trump when he took the ethically imperative step of recusing himself from any investigation related to the 2016 presidential campaign, which he served as a Trump adviser. That set the stage for Rosenstein to take charge and name Robert S. Mueller III as a special counsel to investigate possible coordination between Russia and the Trump campaign, an inquiry Trump has denounced as a “rigged witch hunt” even as Mueller has scored a string of guilty pleas and the conviction of Trump’s former campaign chairman. Rosenstein’s departure would clear the way for Trump to install a more pliable acting attorney general to supervise — or possibly subvert — Mueller’s investigation. So far, though, Trump has stayed his hand, possibly because removing Rosenstein would be viewed as a transparent attempt to obstruct justice by a president who has not only has sought to discredit Mueller, but has threatened to “get involved” in the Justice Department’s operations. Circumstances changed dramatically last week, however. The New York Times reported that shortly after assuming his post last year, the deputy attorney general suggested that he secretly record Trump and discussed recruiting Cabinet members to invoke the 25th Amendment to remove the president. Rosenstein called the story “inaccurate and factually incorrect.” Even so, alleged insubordination could give Trump a plausible pretext for getting rid of Rosenstein. That would be a disaster for the Mueller investigation and the Justice Department. Rosenstein isn’t just Mueller’s protector; he has become a symbol of continuity and institutional integrity at Justice. Those qualities make it imperative that Rosenstein, an experienced prosecutor, remain on the job, despite this latest controversy. It’s conceivable that the Mueller investigation could proceed unimpeded under the direction of another official. (The White House has suggested that if Rosenstein were to leave, Solicitor General Noel Francisco would assume that role, although there is some question about whether he would face a conflict because his former law firm represents the Trump campaign.) But even in the most optimistic scenario Rosenstein’s departure would be a disaster. Ominously, one of Trump’s personal attorneys suggested Monday that if the deputy attorney general resigned, there should be a “time out on this inquiry.” Keeping Rosenstein on the job would be good for the country, but (as the president himself might ask), what’s in it for Trump? Simply this: Rosenstein’s departure would be widely viewed — including by many voters in the midterm elections — as a blow to the impartial administration of justice and the principle that the president is not above the law.

Los Angeles Times, Sept. 26

What would reopening the FBI investigation into Judge Kavanaugh do? By MICHAEL BALSAMO Associated Press

WASHINGTON — It was a steady demand of Democrats at Thursday’s Senate hearing on sexual assault claims against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh: that an FBI background investigation into Kavanaugh should be reopened. Democrats say that’s critical to finding the truth between the accounts of Kavanaugh and his accuser, Christine Blasey Ford. Republicans say it’s unnecessary and a delaying tactic aimed at sinking Kavanaugh’s nomination. In fact, a reopened FBI investigation could help clarify the contradictory accounts. But it isn’t the silver bullet Democrats seem to suggest it would be. A look at what a reopened FBI investigation would and wouldn’t do:\ The FBI conducts background checks for federal nominees but the agency does not make judgments on the credibility or significance of allegations. Instead, the department compiles information about the nominee’s past and provides its findings to the agency that requested the background

check. In this case, that would be the White House. Typically, it does not go back decades, as it would need to do if it examined Kavanaugh’s actions in his teenage years, when Ford said he sexually assaulted her. Greg Rinckey, a lawyer specializing in employment law and the security clearance process, said FBI background checks aren’t meant to dig up decades-old claims that never resulted in a police report or criminal charges. “That’s not really what the FBI is looking for,” Rinckey said. “The FBI is looking for any kind of current problem. What do I mean by current? Seven to 10 years.” Republicans say reopening the FBI investigation is unnecessary because committee members have had the opportunity to question both Kavanaugh and Ford and other potential witnesses have submitted sworn statements. But if the FBI reopened the background investigation, agents could interview the accusers and witnesses and gather additional evidence or details. That could possibly corroborate or disprove the allegations, though the FBI would not reach

Quotable

a conclusion about Kavanaugh’s guilt or innocence. It would provide its findings to the Senate Judiciary Committee. There has been no suggestion that Kavanaugh may have committed a federal crime, so the FBI would not conduct a criminal investigation. If a crime had taken place, it would almost certainly fall under local jurisdiction, not federal. That means it would fall under the laws of Montgomery County, Maryland, where there is no statute of limitations for felony sexual offenses. The statute of limitations for misdemeanors is typically one or three years, depending on the offense. Democrats cite a precedent in reopening the FBI investigation of a Supreme Court nominee accused of sexual misconduct. In 1991, Anita Hill accused Clarence Thomas of sexually harassing her, saying he made unwanted advances and inappropriate comments. Thomas denied the allegations. Under Republican President George H.W. Bush, the White House asked the FBI to add to Thomas’ background check. Thomas was eventually confirmed.

Letters to the Editor:

Republican strategist Jennifer Jacobs, watching the hearing from her home in San Diego, was struck both by Ford’s sincerity and Kavanaugh’s depth of emotion. Both seemed believable, Jacobs said, but she felt convinced toward the end that Kavanaugh was not guilty. “I don’t want to discount that Dr. Ford had something happen to her, but I don’t think it was him,” she said. As to Kavanaugh’s evident emotion -- which some saw as unsettling -- Jacobs said: “Clearly, this is a compassionate man. He’s not some crazed barbarian. You can’t help but have compassion for him.” She was especially moved on behalf of Kavanaugh’s wife and children. “I literally was welled up with tears,” she said. — Jocelyn Gecker, Associated Press

Jalon Alexander was expecting to hear soft-spoken, deferential testimony when Kavanaugh took the stand. Instead, he said, he heard a fiery, raised voice -- and he didn’t find it convincing. “The more and more I listened to him, there was nothing he said that made me doubt Dr. Ford’s accusation,” he said. The student was rattled by the temperament he felt Kavanaugh exhibited and the anger he showed at Democrats while vying for a nonpartisan job. He even questioned the judge’s displays of emotion. “I didn’t see tears of genuine concern,” Alexander said. “Those tears to me scream, ‘I’m losing something I’m entitled to.’”

E-mail: news@peninsulaclarion.com

The Peninsula Clarion welcomes letters and attempts to publish all those received, subject to a few guidelines: n All letters must include the writer’s name, phone number and address. n Letters are limited to 500 words and may be edited to fit available space. Letters are run in the order they are received. n Letters addressed specifically to another person will not be printed. n Letters that, in the editor’s judgment, are libelous will not be printed. n The editor also may exclude letters that are untimely or irrelevant to the public interest. n Short, topical poetry should be submitted to Poet’s Corner and will not be printed on the Opinion page. n Submissions from other publications will not be printed. n Applause letters should recognize public-spirited service and contributions. Personal thank-you notes will not be published. Write: Peninsula Clarion P.O. Box 3009 Kenai, AK 99611

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— Matt Sedensky, Associated Press

Doonesbury By GARRY TRUDEAU


Nation Ford says her attacker was Kavanaugh By LAURIE KELLMAN Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Indelible. That’s the way Christine Blasey Ford described the details of what she says was a sexual assault by Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, on a summer evening three decades ago. Asked for the most vivid memory from that night, she did not name a physical violation. Rather, it was a specific sound she heard Kavanaugh and the other boy she says was in the room, Mark Judge. “Laughter — the uproarious laughter between the two,” Ford, her voice wavering, told the Senate Judiciary Committee at Thursday’s extraordinary hearing. “They were laughing with each other. … I was underneath one of them while the two laughed.” The moment crystallized the national debate over gender, power and whom to believe in the #Metoo era under President Donald Trump. Thursday’s hearing in many ways turned on Ford’s credibility as a victim of and a witness to an event that Kavanaugh staunchly denies. Central to the proceedings was the quality of Ford’s memory and whether her account was believable, an unknown when she took her seat

at the cramped witness table before the 21-member Senate Judiciary Committee. With the hearing well under way, Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., asked her what she remembered. “What is the strongest memory you have, the strongest memory of the incident, something you cannot forget?” Leahy asked as Ford took a sip of coffee. “Take whatever time you need.” Ford, a 51-year-old psychology professor, looked down and took a breath. “Indelible in the hippocampus is the laughter,” said Ford, referring to the area of the brain where traumatic memories are stored. “The uproarious laughter between the two and they’re having fun at my expense,” she said, her voice quaking. She looked down again. “You’ve never forgotten that laughter, you never forgotten them laughing at you?” Leahy asked. “They were laughing with each other,” Ford replied. “And you were the object of the laughter?” Leahy pressed. “I was, you know, underneath one of them while the two laughed,” she said. The spectacle riveted Washington and much of the nation. The U.S. Capitol was hushed, as senators and aides huddled

DETROIT — From Ford to Walmart to Procter & Gamble, a growing number of iconic American companies are warning that President Donald Trump’s tariffs on U.S. imports are raising their costs and prices. Jim Hackett, CEO of Ford, the second-largest U.S.-based automaker, said Wednesday that Trump’s taxes on imported steel and aluminum will cost Ford $1 billion through 2019. Likewise, Walmart, America’s largest retailer, has told the administration that Trump’s latest round of taxes — on $200 billion of Chinese imports — could increase prices for its shoppers. Walmart specifically mentioned items ranging from car seats, cribs and backpacks to hats, pet products and bicycles. Procter & Gamble, the consumer products giant, has warned of both potential price

increases and job losses as a result of the tariffs. In the meantime, drinking Coca-Cola is costing more because of Trump’s tariffs. Macy’s, too, has warned of likely price increases. So has Gap. On Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell took on the issue at a news conference after the Fed announced its latest interest rate hike. Asked about the Trump tariffs forcing up prices for America’s consumers, Powell agreed that Fed officials are hearing from businesses about forthcoming higher costs. “You don’t see it yet,” the chairman said, referring to the data the Fed studies. But, Powell acknowledged, “the tariffs might provide a basis for companies to raise prices in a world where they’ve been very reluctant to and unable to raise prices.” At his own news conference Wednesday in New York, Trump rejected any notion that his tariffs posed an economic risk, echoing assertions by his

Christine Blasey Ford testifies to the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday. (Saul Loeb/Pool Photo via AP)

in offices, watching. The hearing, played on televisions, rang through the West Wing of the White House as Trump flew back from New York — with the televisions on Air Force One tuned to the proceedings. Back in Washington, the president cancelled a meeting with Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and was expected to continue watching, aides said. Kavanaugh himself has explicitly said he is not questioning whether Ford had been attacked “by someone, at some point.” But he says he’s not the one who attacked her. He told at least one senator that it may have been a case of mistaken identity. Republicans on the Judiciary Committee released a document detailing their inves-

tigative work that showed they had interviewed two separate men who said they believed that they, not Judge Kavanaugh, assaulted Ford. Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah told CNN, “Somebody’s mixed up.” But with an eager-to-please demeanor and zero show of anger during the questioning, Ford stuck by her account. It was true, she said, that there were gaps in her memory of that night in the early 1980s — she could not recall which boy pushed her into the room, or how she got home. But the laughter, and the identity of her attacker, Ford said, remained crystal clear. “Absolutely,” Ford said, later adding, “100 percent.”

In this 2018 file photo Ford President and CEO Jim Hackett prepares to address the media at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)

administration that consumers would barely notice the new taxes. “It’s had no impact … on our economy,” the president said after meetings with foreign leaders at the United Nations General Assembly. Hackett, in a television interview Wednesday, revealed the $1 billion estimate that he said Trump’s steel and aluminum tariffs are costing Ford. He said the figure is a year-over-year

Man denies helping kill pregnant woman By DAVE KOLPACK Associated Press

FARGO, N.D. — A man on trial in the death of a North Dakota woman whose baby was cut from her womb denied any role in her death, testifying Thursday that when he walked into his apartment and heard a baby cry, he thought his girlfriend had given birth. William Hoehn, 33, disputed testimony from his now exgirlfriend, Brooke Crews, that he took any part in the August 2017 slaying of Savanna Greywind, 22. Crews is serving life in prison after pleading guilty to murder. Hoehn is charged with conspiracy to commit murder. He has admitted he helped to cover up the crime but denied knowing anything about Crews’ plans to kill Greywind. Crews testified this week that she didn’t “explicitly” tell Hoehn what she planned to do, but said when he walked in on a bloody scene in the couple’s apartment bathroom, he got a rope and twisted it around Greywind’s neck to make sure she was dead. The judge said this testimony could be taken as evidence that Hoehn had agreed to participate in the crime. When Hoehn was asked by his attorney, Daniel Borgen, whether he had any agreement with Crews to kill Greywind and take her baby, Hoehn said: “Absolutely not. No, no, no.” Crews also testified that she had faked a pregnancy to keep from losing Hoehn, and that

when he figured out she was lying, she felt pressured to get a baby. Hoehn disputed that, saying he believed Crews was pregnant until the day of Greywind’s death. Hoehn looked frequently at the jury during his testimony as he described arriving home that day and hearing a baby. “It wasn’t a wail, it wasn’t like a cry or nothing,” he said. “It was a distinct baby sound. I remember feeling elated and I thought, ‘Oh my god, she had the baby when I was at work.’ “ Hoehn said after he walked into the bathroom, he asked Crews, “Were you even pregnant?” He said she grabbed

Around the Nation SEC seeks to oust Tesla CEO Elon Musk over go-private tweet

More US corporate giants warn tariffs will mean price hikes By TOM KRISHER and JOSH BOAK AP Business Writers

Peninsula Clarion | Friday, September 28, 2018 | A5

her stomach and said, “I think so.” The case went to jurors after attorneys on both sides told them in closing arguments that they would have to wade through testimony from questionable sources. Borgen called Crews “the most devious, skilled liar we have ever seen.” Prosecutor Leah Viste said there’s enough circumstantial evidence to prove conspiracy in a case where “everyone related to the event is a liar.” “They made a plan and they carried out,” Viste said of Hoehn and Crews, calling them “two people deep in dysfunction.”

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increase from March through 2019. Ford buys most of its metals from U.S. producers, which have raised prices this year as a result of the tariffs on foreign competitors, the company has said. Hackett’s boss, Executive Chairman Bill Ford, said Thursday the company has met with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer to give input on trade policies.

DETROIT — U.S. securities regulators are asking a federal court to oust Tesla Inc. CEO Elon Musk, alleging in a complaint that he committed securities fraud with false statements about plans to take the company private. The Securities and Exchange Commission says in the complaint filed Thursday that Musk falsely claimed in an Aug. 7 statement on Twitter that funding was secured to take the company private at $420 per share, a substantial premium over the price at the time. The complaint filed in the U.S. District Court in Manhattan says that Musk had not discussed or confirmed key deal terms including price with any funding source. It also asks for an order enjoining Musk from making false and misleading statements along with repayment of any gains as well as civil penalties. “Corporate officers hold positions of trust in our markets and have important responsibilities to shareholders,” Steven Peikin, co-director of the SEC’s Enforcement Division, said in a statement. “An officer’s celebrity status or reputation as a technological innovator does not give license to take those responsibilities lightly.” An SEC press release says it wants the courts for a “bar prohibiting Musk from serving as an officer or director of a public company.” Tesla issued a response from Musk via email. “This unjustified action by the SEC leaves me deeply saddened and disappointed,” he said in the statement. “I have always taken action in the best interests of truth, transparency and investors. Integrity is the most important value in my life and the facts will show I never compromised this in any way.” The SEC alleged in the 23-page complaint that Musk made the statements using his mobile phone in the middle of a trading day. That day, Tesla shares closed up 11 percent from the previous day.

Defense enters 4th day of testimony in police shooting trial CHICAGO — Lawyers for a white Chicago police officer who shot black teenager Laquan McDonald to death in 2014 are scheduled to call more witnesses as they defend him against murder and other charges. Thursday will be the fourth day that Jason Van Dyke’s attorneys present evidence to Cook County jurors. Defense attorneys are trying to show it was reasonable for Van Dyke to have perceived McDonald as a threat. The officer shot the teen 16 times as he walked away carrying a knife. Several defense witnesses have testified about violent encounters McDonald had with authorities at a juvenile detention facility months earlier. And a truck driver testified that McDonald tried to stab him the night of the shooting. Prosecutors rested their case last week but could call more witnesses after the defense rests.

Charlottesville spent more $921K on deadly rally anniversary CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Charlottesville says it spent more than $921,000 on public safety work related to the one-year anniversary of the deadly white nationalist rally. The city released a cost estimate Thursday and said it filed a notice with the state earlier this month indicating that it’s interested in applying for emergency relief. Officials say more than 375 city employees were involved in public safety operations and the city spent $600,000 more this year than last, in part, because they anticipated a full weekend of activities. Virginia State Police said last month they spent more than $3.1 million to provide security. That amount includes police operations on two days and preparations leading up to the anniversary weekend. Police say around 700 troopers were in the area. — The Associated Press


A6 | Friday, September 28, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

World

Israel: Iran harboring ‘secret atomic warehouse’ By JENNIFER PELTZ and ANGELA CHARLTON Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused Iran on Thursday of keeping a “secret atomic warehouse” just outside its capital, despite the 2015 deal with world powers that was meant to keep it from obtaining nuclear weapons. Holding up a poster-board map of an area near Tehran before world leaders at the U.N. General Assembly, Netanyahu said Iranian officials were keeping tons of nuclear equipment and material in a warehouse near a rug-cleaning operation. Iranian state media called the announcement “ridiculous” and an “illusion.” Netanyahu’s disclosure — which he presented as a big reveal on the international community’s biggest stage — came four months after Israel announced the existence of what it said was a “half-ton” of Iranian nuclear documents obtained by Israeli intelligence in the Shourabad neighborhood near Tehran. Israel said the cache proved that Iranian leaders covered up their nuclear weapons program before signing the nuclear agreement. Iran hasn’t acknowledged the alleged seizure. “You have to ask yourself a question: Why did Iran keep a secret atomic archive and a secret atomic warehouse?” he asked. “What Iran hides, Israel will find.”

The new site Netanyahu identified sits a short distance from Shourabad. In referring to Netanyahu’s statements as “ridiculous,” the Iranian state TV report said the country is committed to nonproliferation and Iran’s nuclear program is under surveillance of the U.N. nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency. The website of state TV briefly reported the Netanyahu accusation and called it an “illusion.” Iran’s state-run, Englishlanguage Press TV channel carried Netanyahu’s remarks live but cut away after he made the allegation about the nuclear warehouse. The 2015 Iran nuclear deal came after years of Western sanctions over the country’s contested atomic program. The West long has feared it could be used to build nuclear bombs. Iran long has denied seeking atomic weapons. Under terms of the deal, Iran is allowed to keep documents and other research. The deal strictly limits how many centrifuges Iran can use and how large of a low-enriched uranium stockpile the country can keep. Netanyahu said the warehouse stored “massive amounts of equipment and materiel,” and he said Israel shared the information with the IAEA. The Vienna-based agency did not immediately respond to requests for comment. He noted that Israel had long opposed the multination-

Indonesia blasphemy woman endures cramped cell, bad food

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses the 73rd session of the United Nations General Assembly, at U.N. headquarters, Thursday. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

al agreement with Iran. Israel considers Iran its biggest threat, citing Tehran’s calls for Israel’s destruction, its support for hostile militant organizations like the Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah group and Iran’s development of long-range missiles. U.S. President Donald Trump pulled his country out of the nuclear deal in May, and his administration has been re-imposing sanctions on Iran. Israel applauded Trump’s decision, but many other nations lamented it as jeopardizing what they saw as the best chance for keeping Iran from becoming a nuclear-armed power. “Instead of coddling Iran’s dictators,” other countries should support the sanctions, Netanyahu said to applause. Netanyahu is known for his showmanship at the U.N. In 2012, he famously held up a drawing of a cartoon bomb while discussing Iran’s nuclear program. “Where should the

red line be drawn? A red line should be drawn right here,” Netanyahu said during his presentation, his marker squeaking across the poster. His revelation Thursday about Iran came shortly after Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas took Israel and the U.S. to task in his own speech, declaring that his people’s rights “are not up for bargaining” and that the U.S. was undermining the longdiscussed two-state solution. But Netanyahu devoted less attention to his country’s longrunning conflict with the Palestinians. Abbas halted ties with Trump’s administration in December after the U.S. recognized contested Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, and Palestinians have said a pending U.S. peace plan will be dead on arrival because of that and other recent U.S. moves that Palestinians see as favoring Israel.

Dutch police arrest 7 men suspected of plotting major attack By MIKE CORDER Associated Press

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Seven men were arrested Thursday in the Netherlands on suspicion of plotting a large-scale extremist attack that Dutch prosecutors said they think was foiled following a months-long investigation. The national prosecutor’s office said in a statement that heavily armed police arrested the men in the towns of Arnhem, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) south of Amsterdam, and Weert in the southern Netherlands close to the borders of Germany and Belgium. The investigation was launched by intelligence suggesting the alleged ring lead-

er, a 34-year-old man of Iraqi heritage, wanted to carry out an attack at the site of a large event and cause multiple casualties, according to the statement. The suspects allegedly wanted to use bomb vests and assault rifles to do harm at the event, and planned to detonate a car bomb at another location, prosecutors said. An investigation of potential targets was continuing. Prosecutors said the suspects ranged in age from 21 to 34. Three of them, including the 34-year-old Iraqi, were previously convicted of attempting to travel overseas to join extremist networks. The men were attempting to obtain AK47 assault rifles, handguns, bomb vests, grenades and raw materials for

Around the World

bombs and were looking for opportunities to train with such weapons, according to the statement. Prosecutors said that the investigation sped up this month because of the suspects’ “advanced preparations.” Minister for Justice and Security Ferd Grapperhaus told Dutch national broadcaster NOS that police acted in time to prevent an attack. “In a sense it is serious, but luckily it’s also good news - a terrorist cell that was plotting an attack has been taken down,” Grapperhaus said. “They weren’t so far that it was a danger to society, in the sense that it was nearly too late. But they were quite far in their preparations.” The men were to be brought before an investigating judge

on Friday at a behind-closeddoors hearing. The arrests came weeks after a 19-year-old Afghan citizen living in Germany allegedly stabbed two American tourists at Amsterdam’s main railway station in what prosecutors described as an attack with an extremist motive. The Dutch anti-terror coordinator’s office said in a tweet Thursday that the allegedly foiled plot fit the current threat profile for the Netherlands, which is at four on a scale that tops out at five. The office did not raise the level following the arrests. “Jihad networks are also active in the Netherlands with the intention to plot attacks in Europe,” the office said. “Today’s arrests must be seen in that light.”

JAKARTA, Indonesia — A rights group says the Indonesian woman imprisoned for blasphemy after complaining about noise from a mosque is sharing a cramped cell with 16 other women and given “terrible” food. Human Rights Watch researcher Andreas Harsono said the ethnic Chinese woman, Meiliana, was emotional but tough when he and other supporters visited her in prison in Medan this week. “She was sobbing when talking to us,” Harsono said Thursday in a statement about the visit. “The cell is about 30 square meters. The food is terrible,” he said. The case has highlighted how Indonesia’s blasphemy law has become a tool for Islamic hardliners to persecute followers of minority religions. Meiliana, who uses one name, was sentenced to 18 months in prison last month. She was charged in May, nearly two years after her comments sparked riots in Tanjung Balai, a Sumatran port town. Her husband and two sons feared for their safety and moved to Medan, said Gomar Gultom, secretary general of the Communion of Churches in Indonesia. He wrote on Facebook after visiting Meiliana that she was a “great person who dared to voice something that has been buried in the hearts of many people, maybe even in the hearts of some rational-minded Muslim friends.” Indonesia’s largest Muslim organization, Nahdlatul Ulama, has criticized the conviction and said the complaint wasn’t blasphemous. A civil society group is raising funds for an appeal. Meiliana’s ordeal began in July 2016 when she asked if the volume of the loudspeakers at her neighborhood mosque could be lowered. Rumors spread in Tanjung Balai that she wanted to stop the five-times-a-day call to prayer. Days later mobs attacked her home and burned and ransacked at least 14 Buddhist temples. “The police were busy dealing with the riots. But they also questioned Meiliana. She was not charged but needed to report to the police once a week for two years,” said Harsono. “But the case did not go away. Pressure from Islamists made the police hand over the case to the blasphemy law office.” Since 147 people have been imprisoned under blasphemy or related laws since 2004, according to monitoring by Human Rights Watch. The number of cases has slowed since 2014 under President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo’s administration. Last year, former Jakarta governor Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama, a Christian, was imprisoned for two years after being found guilty of blasphemy for comments made during his re-election campaign.

Egyptian rights group says authorities disappeared 2 lawyers CAIRO — A spokesman for an Egyptian human rights organization says authorities have moved two detained lawyers to an unknown location and they haven’t been heard from since. Ahmed el-Attar of Egyptian Coordination for Rights and Freedoms says Thursday that a court had ordered the release of Ezzat Ghoniem and Azzoz Mahgoub on Sept. 4 pending investigations into accusations they were plotting against Egypt, but the two disappeared while in custody on Sept. 14. He says the men’s families tried to visit them but were told they had already been released. Amnesty International says the men have been forcibly disappeared and are at great risk of torture, and urges authorities to make their whereabouts known. Both Ghoneim and Mahgoub supported victims of alleged police torture, the disappeared and their families in Egypt. — The Associated Press

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. 5th | 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Denali Room in the Central Peninsula Hospital 250 Hospital Place | Soldotna RSVP to 907.262.7762 or Melany@PeninsulaRadiation.com by Thursday, September 27.

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


Religion

Peninsula Clarion | Friday, September 28, 2018 | A7

People valuing people is what makes our country good How would you define a model citizen of the United States? How would such a person live? What would a good citizen do and value? Theodore Roosevelt says this: “The first requisite of a good citizen in this Republic of ours is that he shall be able and willing to carry his weight.” George W. Bush stated his values by saying: “Throughout our history, our most honorable heroes practiced the values of hard work and honesty, commitment to excellence and courage, and self-discipline and perseverance.” And Marisa Wambolt, a sixth grader, declares: “In my opinion, good citizenship in the community

V oices of F aith R ick C upp means to pick up trash or go to Girl Scouts like I do…. [After several other suggestions] These are ways that you can save the earth, the only one with Girl Scout cookies.” I love her focus. We must live in such a way as to preserve Thin Mints! There may well be life on other planets in our universe. The Bible is silent on the matter. But even if there are other civilizations, our planet may still be unique: the

only one with Girl Scout cookies. And know this. We certainly are the only one with Marisa Wambolt. She is of infinite worth, a child of God with meaning and purpose, born in God’s image. A good citizen would clearly want to preserve a planet with Marisa on it. So her definition of good citizenship helps me add to mine. A model citizen of the United States would live in such a way as to preserve what’s truly important. And what I offer to the discussion as of utmost importance is not Girl Scout cookies but Marisa Wambolt herself. Add to Marisa other sixth graders and other children. And to the importance of our children let’s

add the importance of their parents and grandparents, and in fact the importance of all people, young and old, even those not citizens of our country. A good country is not defined by its gross national product or any of its possessions. People define a country and relationships trump material goods. This is why the Bible warns repeatedly of the dangers of loving money and offers page after page of advice on loving people and serving them. It teaches us to give generously and show respect to everyone. It calls us to be good examples without becoming conceited. It urges us, as far as is possible on our part, to live at peace with others.

Our good country is made and kept that way by people who value people. And Christians have the added incentive of knowing how they treat others determines whether or not they are good citizens of God’s country. Jesus says “whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.” Matthew 25:40. So be a model citizen. And eat Girl Scout cookies. Rick Cupp is the minister at Kenai Fellowship. Sunday Bible classes are at 10 a.m. Coffee is at 10:45 a.m. and worship is at 11:15 a.m. Wednesday meal is at 6:15 p.m. with worship at 7 p.m.

Clothes Quarters open weekly

Church Briefs United Methodist Congregations to Worship Together The congregations of Kenai United Methodist Church and North Star United Methodist Church will worship together on Sunday, Sept. 30. The service will take place at 9:30 a.m. at the North Star location. North Star United Methodist Church is located at 51095 Kenai Spur Highway, milepost 25.5. The service will be led by pastor Bailey Brawner. A light brunch will follow. All are invited to attend.

Blessing and Appreciation of the Animals St. Francis by the Sea and Our Lady of Angels will host a Blessing and Appreciation of the Animals on Sunday, Oct. 7 from 1-4 p.m. at 110 South Spruce Street in Kenai. Parking, coffee, hospitality and treats for all the animals will be available. All are welcome.

Fall festival The Kenai United Pentecostal Church will host its annual fall festival on Saturday, Sept. 29. The event will feature games, food and entertainment and is free and open to everyone. The festival will take place at mile 16.5 on the Kenai Spur Highway. For more information contact Pastor Rodney Whicker at 907-283-4949.

food shortages. The Food Pantry is located at the Soldotna United Methodist Church at 158 South Binkley Street, and all are welClothes Quarters at Our Lady of the Angels is open every come. Non-perishable food items or monetary donations may be Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. the first Saturday of every month dropped off at the church on Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. For more information, call 907-283-4555. Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. or on Sunday from 9 a.m. until Submit announcements to news@peninsulaclarion.com. noon. For more information call 262-4657. Submissions are due the Wednesday prior to publication. For more information, call 907-283-7551.

Our Lady of Perpetual Help sets place at the table

United Methodist Church food pantry

The Kenai United Methodist Church provides a food pantry for those in need every Monday from noon to 3 p.m. The Methodist Church is located on the Kenai Spur Highway next to the Boys and Girls Club. The entrance to the Food Pantry is through the side door. The Pantry closes for holidays. For more information contact the church at 907-283-7868.

A Place at the Table, a new outreach ministry of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church, Soldotna continues to offer a hot meal and fellowship and blood pressure checks to anyone interested. The meal is every fourth Sunday of the month, from 4-6 p.m. at Fireweed Hall, located on campus at 222 West Redoubt Avenue, Soldotna. The Abundant Life Assembly of God church, Sterling, will be joining us in this ministry and providing a hot meal on the ‘Celebrate Recovery’ at Peninsula Grace Church second Sunday of the month at 4-6 p.m. at Fireweed Hall. Our Lady Celebrate Recovery meets each Wednesday from 6:30-8 p.m. at of Perpetual Help would like to invite other churches who would Peninsula Grace Church, 44175 Kalifornsky Beach Rd., Soldotna, like to join this ministry to perhaps pick up one of the other Sunday upstairs in room 5-6 in the worship center. Celebrate Recovery is evenings in the month. Please call for information: 262-5542. a Biblically based 12-step program that provides a safe place to share your hurts, habits and hang-ups, in a Christ-centered recovery Soldotna Food Pantry open weekly atmosphere. Come early for a free meal, served at 5:45. There is no charge, but donations are welcomed. Questions? Contact: 907The Soldotna Food Pantry is open every Wednesday from 11 598-0563. a.m. to 2 p.m. for residents in the community who are experiencing

Pope praises Latvians for keeping faith during occupation By NICOLE WINFIELD Associated Press

AGLONA, Latvia — Pope Francis praised Latvians on Monday for persevering through the horrors of Soviet and Nazi occupation, persecution and exile, and urged them to keep their Christian faith alive as subsequent generations confront new oppressions today.

On the third day of his Baltic pilgrimage, Francis traveled to Latvia and placed flowers at the monument to Latvian independence. He joined Lutheran and Orthodox leaders at a music-filled ecumenical prayer and acknowledged the many trials Latvians endured during two Soviet occupations and the World War II-era occupation by Nazi Germany: “the horror of war, then political repression,

persecution and exile.” “Yet you remained steadfast; you persevered in faith,” he told a gathering of elderly Latvians in Riga’s Catholic cathedral. “Neither the Nazi regime nor the Soviet regime could extinguish the faith in your hearts,” he said. “You fought the good fight; you ran the race, you kept the faith.” He continued the theme during a pilgrimage later Mon-

day to Latvia’s most important Catholic shrine at Aglona, near the southeastern border with Russia. During his homily outside the rain-drenched Mother of God basilica, Francis said Mary always stood near those who suffer “including those who have been put on trial, condemned by all, deported.” “Let us be ever ready to lift up the fallen, raise up the lowly

and to help end all those situations of oppression that make people feel crucified themselves,” he told the faithful who stood through rain showers awaiting his arrival. The basilica is home to an important icon of the Virgin Mary that draws pilgrims from across the Baltics and Russia each year. Francis is visiting Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia to mark their

100th anniversaries of independence and to encourage the faith in the Baltics, which saw five decades of Soviet-imposed religious repression and state-sponsored atheism. In addition, the Nazi occupation nearly exterminated their Jewish populations. In his arrival speech to Latvian President Raimonds Vejonis, Francis praised the Christian spirit that enabled the country to endure.

Religious Services Assembly of God

Church of Christ

Church of Christ

Lutheran

Church of Christ

Soldotna Church Of Christ

Christ Lutheran Church (ELCA)

Mile 1/4 Funny River Road, Soldotna

209 Princess St., Kenai 283-7752 Pastor Stephen Brown Sunday..9:00 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. Wednesday.................6:30 p.m. www.kenainewlife.org

Peninsula Christian Center

161 Farnsworth Blvd (Behind the Salvation Army) Soldotna, AK 99669 Pastor Jon Watson 262-7416 Sunday ....................... 10:30 a.m. www.penccalaska.org Nursery is provided

The Charis Fellowship Sterling Grace Community Church

Dr. Roger E. Holl, Pastor 907-862-0330 Meeting at the Sterling Senior Center, 34453 Sterling Highway Sunday Morning ........10:30 a.m.

Catholic Our Lady of Perpetual Help 222 W. Redoubt, Soldotna Oblates of Mary Immaculate 262-4749 Daily Mass Tues.-Fri. .................... 12:05 p.m. Saturday Vigil ........... 5:00 p.m. Reconciliation Saturday................4:15 - 4:45 p.m. Sunday Mass ............ 10:00 a.m.

262-2202 / 262-4316 Minister - Nathan Morrison Sunday Worship ........10:00 a.m. Bible Study..................11:15 a.m. Evening Worship ........ 6:00 p.m. Wed. Bible .................... 7:00 p.m.

Kenai Fellowship Mile 8.5 Kenai Spur Hwy.

Church 283-7682

Classes All Ages ........10:00 a.m. Worship Service.........11:15 a.m. Wed. Service ................ 7:00 p.m. www.kenaifellowship.org

Mile 91.7 Sterling Hwy. 262-5577 Minister Tony Cloud Sunday Services Bible Study..................10:00 a.m. Morning Worship ......11:00 a.m. Evening Worship ....... 6:00 p.m. Wednesday Service Bible Study.................... 7:00 p.m

Episcopal

Nikiski Church Of Christ 50750 Kenai Spur Hwy (mile 24.5) 776-7660 Sunday Services Bible Study..................10:00 a.m. Morning Worship ......11:00 a.m. Fellowship Meal....... 12:30 p.m. Afternoon Worship ... 1:30 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study.................... 7:00 p.m

Mile ¼ Kenai Spur Box 568, Soldotna, AK 99669 262-4757 Meredith Harber Worship ............10 a.m. & 6 p.m. Holy Communion 1st & 3rd Sunday of the month

Funny River Community Lutheran Church Andy Carlson, Pastor Missouri Synod 35575 Rabbit Run Road off Funny River Rd. Phone 262-7434 Sunday Worship ........11:00 a.m. www.funnyriverlutheran.org

Lutheran Sterling Lutheran Church LCMS 35100 McCall Rd. Behind Sterling Elementary School Worship: Sunday .... 11:00 a.m. Bill Hilgendorf, Deacon 907-740-3060

Non Denominational

Southern Baptist

Kalifonsky Christian Center

College Heights Baptist Church

Mile 17 K-Beach Rd. 283-9452 Pastor Steve Toliver Pastor Charles Pribbenow Sunday Worship .......10:30 a.m. Youth Group Wed. ..... 7:00 p.m. Passion for Jesus Compassion for Others

Kenai Bible Church

Kenai United Methodist Church

604 Main St. 283-7821 Pastor Vance Wonser Sunday School..............9:45 a.m. Sunday Worship ........11:00 a.m. Evening Service .......... 6:00 p.m. Wednesday Service .... 6:30 p.m.

Corner of Spur Hwy. & Bluff St., Kenai

North Kenai Chapel

Methodist

283-7868 Pastor Bailey Brawner Sunday Worship ........11:30 a.m. Food Pantry Mon...Noon - 3 pm

North Star United Methodist Church

Pastor Wayne Coggins 776-8797 Mile 29 Kenai Spur Hwy

Sunday Worship...................10:30 am Wed. Share-a-Dish/Video.....6:30 pm

“Whoever is thirsty, let him come”

776-8732 NSUMC@alaska.net Sunday Worship ..........9:30 a.m.

110 S. Spruce St. at Spur Hwy. - Kenai • 283-6040 Sunday Services Worship Service.........10:30 a.m. Eucharistic Services on the 1st & 4th Sundays

300 W. Marydale • Soldotna 262-4865 John Rysdyk - Pastor/Teacher Sunday:

283-6040

Star Of The North Lutheran Church L.C.M.S. Dustin Atkinson, Pastor Sponsor of the Lutheran Hour 216 N. Forest Drive, Kenai 283-4153 Worship Service.........9:30 a.m. You Are Invited! Wheelchair Accessible

Sunday School .......9:00 & 10:30 a.m. Morn. Worship .......9:00 & 10:30 a.m. Sunday Evening - Home Groups. Nursery provided

First Baptist Church of Kenai

12815 Kenai Spur Hwy, Kenai 283-7672 Sunday School..............9:30 a.m. Morning Worship ......10:45 a.m. Evening Service .......... 6:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer ..... 6:30 p.m.

Non Denominational King James Bible Study and Chapel Pastor Jep Hansen 907-262-3509

Mile 25.5 Kenai Spur Hwy, Nikiski

St. Francis By The Sea

44440 K-Beach Road Pastor: Scott Coffman Associate Pastor: Jonah Huckaby 262-3220 www.collegeheightsbc.com

Morning Worship ................9:30 a.m. Sunday School....................11:00 a.m. Sunday Evening Worship ..6:00 p.m.

Located on Echo Lake Rd ½ Mile off Sterling Hwy Bible Study at 6:00 pm Thursday Sunday Service 2:00 pm LIVE BROADCAST ON FACEBOOK


A8 | Friday, September 28, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

. . . Ice Continued from page A1

to place the properties into a trust. A state-required audit was conducted in 2012 following concerns about the organization’s use of the grant. The audit found problems with conflicts of interest, record keep-

. . . Judge Continued from page A1

A live classroom Firefighters respond to a controlled fire in a group of conexes off of Arc Loop Road in Soldotna. The area was set up to resemble a home and a fire was set in different sections of the building to test the firefighters. The training on Thursday was part of the Alaska Fire Conference which is being held in Kenai this week. (Photo by Kat Sorensen/Peninsula Clarion)

fied, “I believed he was going to rape me.” The 51-year-old mother of two said the incident was seared into her mind through trauma, while admitting some gaps in her memory around the attack. Ford, a California psychology professor making her first public remarks about the incident, choked up occasionally describing the alleged attack. Democratic senators questioned her directly, but the 11 Republican members on the committee instead chose to have a female sex crimes prosecutor from Arizona question Ford. Asked how certain she was that Kavanaugh was her attacker, she declared, “100 percent.”

HOW DID HE DO?

. . . Stand Continued from page A1

Many members supported Alaska Ballot Measure 1, saying Soldotna should support salmon habitat regulations. Cathleen Rolph is an adjunct professor at the Kenai Peninsula College, and she was the first of many to speak in support of the initiative. “Soldotna and the Kenai River are famous for salmon fishing,” Rolph said. “We are a salmon culture here. Salmon are very important to Alaskans, especially in Soldotna. We are the last place on earth that still has good salmon runs, even when runs are down.” Rolph said the state of Alaska could not afford salmon habitat recovery if runs were destroyed. “All over the world salmon habitat has been ruined,” Rolph said. “In the last nine years, the state of Washington has spent $5.5 billion in recovery efforts. We cannot afford that type of recovery here. With stricter permitting, Alaska won’t have to fit that bill.” Clark Whitney Jr., a teacher in the Kenai Peninsula Borough School District also expressed support for Alaska Ballot Mea-

‘This petition has the potential to make significant financial impacts on the residents of the city of Soldotna... We don’t want to be operating in the dark as we’re dealing with policy issues in Alaska. ’ — Soldotna City Councilmember Lisa Parker

sure 1. “Strength and the protection of salmon habitat should be welcomed by Soldotna since the economic health and the very identity of our town is largely dependent on healthy salmon runs,” Whitney said. “I agree with the city of Soldotna that it would be wonderful if a legislative process could create protections, but it’s obvious our legislature has no appetite for such a process.” While others, Linda Hutchings, commended the city for trying to take a stand against the initiative. Hutchings grew up on a homestead in Soldotna and spent summers commercial fishing on Kalifornsky Beach. She said present salmon protections are on the right path. “We have regulation, upon regulation that has to be addressed before a bridge, a park, a road, a school or a hospital can be built,” Hutchings said. “We do not need to start over.

We can continue in the direction we’re going.” She noted recent studies that show low returns of salmon as an issue with an issue, not with the Kenai River watershed. “It’s not a freshwater issue, we have to consider changes in our oceans,” Hutchings said. “We have great runs and poor runs through the years. The last few years have been poor in Cook Inlet, but stellar in Bristol Bay. It is not the industry at fault. Nature has a mind of its own. These thoughts in mind I thank the council for bringing this resolution and I urge you to support it.” Others testified to say they felt it was inappropriate for the council to take a stand on the issue. “I’d like you to consider not having an opinion on this because I also agree that it isn’t the place of the city council to tell their citizens what they should think or fear monger,”

Willow King said at the meeting. “That’s an old technique that needs to be gone.” Jack Hester simply asked the council why Alaska Ballot Measure 1 would keep the city from getting a permit. “Why are we fearful we wouldn’t be able to do that?” Hester said. “I mean if we’re doing the right thing, we should be able to do that?” The council did not offer a response. Before the council went to a vote, Council members Paul Whitney and Justin Ruffridge, both up for reelection next week, expressed their opposition to the resolution. “It’s an issue that goes to the voters and we shouldn’t be influencing that in any way shape or form,” Whitney said. Before calling for a vote, Mayor Nels Anderson gave his opinion on the matter. Anderson does not have a vote in the council, except in the case of a

Kavanaugh ditched his prepared remarks and instead issued a blistering statement declaring the confirmation process “a national disgrace.” He strongly denied Ford’s allegation, but said he believed she had been the victim of a sexual assault. The father of two daughters said one of his girls said they should “pray for the woman” accusing him. “That’s a lot of wisdom from a 10-year-old,” he said, choking up. Kavanaugh’s scorched-earth strategy gave President Donald Trump what he wanted: a nominee willing to fight back aggressively and yield no ground to Democrats. Echoing Ford, he said he was “100 percent certain” he did not commit the assault. At times, Kavanaugh’s frustrations boiled over. When Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota aksed if he ever drank so much he blacked out, he snapped, “Have you?” He later apologized. Moments after the hearing finished, Trump tweeted that Kavanaugh “showed America exactly why I nominated him.”

ing and accruing debt without board authorization. In response to the audit, Hoa Brickley said in a statement they had loaned the organization money as a last resort. “The Brickleys have personally donated more than $300,000 to Ice Alaska plus literally 1,000s of volunteer hours,” Hoa Brickley said. “To think there is a conflict of interest is clearly mistaken.” and she led off the questioning of Kavanaugh. Then she quickly faded away. After Mitchell asked Kavanaugh several detailed questions about Ford’s allegations, the GOP senators took matters into their own hands. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., led the way with a scorching denunciation of Democrats for raising the allegations against Kavanaugh in the final days of the confirmation process. From there, each GOP senator handled his own questions, while Mitchell sat silently nearby. Hours earlier, Mitchell opened her questioning of Ford by expressing sympathy for the professor, who said she was “terrified” to testify. “I just wanted to let you know, I’m very sorry. That’s not right,” Mitchell said. As her time for questioning Ford was coming to an end, Mitchell rhetorically asked Ford about the best way to question victims of sex crimes. “Would you believe me that no study says that this setting in five-minute increments is the way to do that?” Mitchell asked.

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

Republicans quickly expressed their determination to move forward. After huddling in the Capitol, senators said the Judiciary Committee will hold a Friday morning vote on whether to recommend Kavanaugh for confirmation. Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, a longtime committee member, said he thinks Kavanaugh will get confirmed by a party-line vote. Republicans’ margin for error in the full Senate is slim. If all Democrats oppose the nomination, just two GOP senators would sink Kavanaugh’s confirmation if they were to oppose him as well. Multiple Republican lawmakers haven’t said which way they will vote, including two women with reputations as moderates who have been willing to buck their party: Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska. Graham cautioned them WHAT HAPPENED TO against voting no. “To my Republican colTHE PROSECUTOR? leagues, if you vote no, you’re Republicans appointed Ari- legitimizing the most despicazona sex crimes prosecutor Ra- ble thing I have seen in my time chel Mitchell to question Ford, in politics,” he said.

Congress seeks law changes after grizzly hunt barred By MATTHEW BROWN Associated Press

BILLINGS, Mont. — Galvanized by court rulings protecting grizzly bears and gray wolves, Congressional Republicans on Wednesday pushed sweeping changes to the Endangered Species Act despite strong objections from Democrats and wildlife advocates who called the effort a “wildlife extinction package.” Republicans began with a morning vote in the House Natural Resource Committee to strip protections from gray wolves across the contiguous U.S. Courts restored safeguards for wolves in the Great Lakes region in 2014, frustrating states that had been allowing hunts to control wolf populations. Later Wednesday, lawmakers took up changes to the endangered species law itself, with a suite of bills that supporters said would make the law work better and eliminate obstacles to economic progress. Critics said the measures weaken the law by shifting power to state and local governments and away from federal scientists. Momentum for change to the 1973 act has been building since President Donald Trump took office last year. Adding impetus to the effort was a court ruling Monday in Montana that restored protections for grizzly

bears in and around Yellowstone National Park, putting on hold grizzly hunts that had been planned in Wyoming and Idaho. “This ruling in Montana to me is the prime example of why Congress should modernize the Endangered Species Act,” said Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chairman John Barrasso, a Wyoming Republican. “The grizzly bear has been fully recovered for 10 years. Even the Obama administration said so.” Barrasso said he prefers broad changes to the act rather than legislation on individual species. He has drafted legislation that includes a provision to block courts from intervening in decisions to lift protections for five years after those decisions are made. That would have prevented the grizzly ruling if it had been in place. Other Republican proposals would speed up the process of deciding if species need protections, provide conservation incentives to landowners and give state, local and tribal governments more power in species decisions. The hunts in Wyoming and Idaho would have been the first allowing members of the public with licenses to shoot bears in the contiguous U.S. since the 1990s. Alaska has had public grizzly bear hunting during that period. Whether the GOP proposals ultimately succeed could hinge

on who controls Congress next year. Barrasso said he does not expect significant changes to the act until after the November midterm election. The ranking Democrat on the House Natural Resources Committee, Arizona Rep. Raul Grijalva said the Republican proposals comprised a “wish list” for industries that see the law as a barrier to development. He said blocking lawsuits from wildlife advocates who would seek to restore protections could set a dangerous precedent, by making the government unaccountable in court for its actions. Democrats also took aim at the move to lift protections for wolves and questioned the severity of wolf attacks on livestock. Federal protections for wolves and bears are a sore spot in many rural communities, where the predators frequently are blamed in livestock attacks. Both species were nearly exterminated in the early 20th century but have rebounded in some areas since passage of the endangered act, which is meant to shield plants and animals from potential extinction. “Domestic dogs cause more cattle losses than wolves do, and nobody’s talking about trapping (and) hunting dogs,” said Democratic Rep. Don Beyer of Virginia, referring to U.S. Agriculture reports on predator losses. Wolves in the Northern Rockies are not federally-pro-

tected and are subject to hunting. On grizzly bears, Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney wants Congress to reverse U.S. District Judge Dana Christensen’s ruling, which returned Yellowstone bruins to the threatened species list after they were removed last year. The judge faulted federal wildlife officials for not giving enough consideration to bear populations that continue to struggle elsewhere in the Northern Rockies. A spokeswoman for Cheney, Maddy Weast, said the lawmaker was looking for the best way to advance the measure. The grizzly hunts planned in Wyoming and Idaho this fall would have allowed up to 23 of the animals to be killed. Hunters said that could have helped address rising numbers of grizzly-human conflicts. Bears frequently attack livestock and occasionally people, including a Wyoming hunting guide killed by a pair of grizzlies earlier this month outside Grand Teton National Park. Defenders of Wildlife attorney Jason Rylander acknowledged grizzly bears and wolves have become a flashpoint for dispute, but said politics should not decide a species’ fate. “In both the cases of grizzly bears and wolves, work on recovering them in the Lower 48 is not complete,” Rylander said. “We have to decide if we’re willing as a nation to recover

In this Sept. 25, 2013 photo, a grizzly bear cub rests near a cabin a few miles from the north entrance to Yellowstone National Park in Gardiner, Mont. A court ruling Monday, Sept. 24, 2018, that blocked grizzly bear hunts in the U.S. West carries far wider political implications amid a push by Congress for sweeping changes to how imperiled species are managed. (Alan Rogers/The Casper Star-Tribune via AP, File)

them beyond the pockets where they have been resurgent.” Jonathan Wood with the conservative Pacific Legal Foundation, said Monday’s court ruling on grizzlies amplified “the political appeal” for changes to the law that he said were needed. “The Obama administration had no more luck getting the gray wolf or grizzly delisted (from federal protections) than the Bush administration did. This is a consistent problem,” Wood said.

Under Trump, the U.S. Interior and Commerce departments in July proposed administrative changes to the species law that would end automatic protections for threatened plants and animals and set limits on designating habitat as crucial to recovery. Attorneys general from 10 states on Tuesday demanded that the administration abandon the proposals in a letter to Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.


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Sports

Friday, September 28, 2018

O ut of the O ffice V ictoria P etersen

Falling for fall T

his is my favorite time of year. Maybe because I was born teeter-tottering on the cusp of Leo and Virgo, one part holds on to fiery summer, while another yearns for cool winds and fall colors. Or maybe fall is my favorite because I love picking berries. As opposed to a scene of cake and candles, memories associated with my birthday more often bring me into a damp thicket of blueberry bushes at the base of Girdwood mountains and neck deep in the middle of a hidden salmonberry patch in Whittier. I don’t discriminate between berries, but if I had to choose, I’d always go for the harder-to-find salmonberries. I also like to try new things. In an effort to hold on to what’s left of summer, I opted for what was left — low-bush cranberries. Low-bush cranberries are high in antioxidants. They are ideally picked after the first frost, when they are ripe and firm. The berries can be dried, frozen or preserved as a juice, jelly or jam. They can be very acidic. They differ from highbush cranberries because they grow low, close to the ground, whereas the high-bush cranberries grow on a taller stem. Low-bush cranberries, also known as lingonberries, connect me back to my Swedish roots. My great-grandmother enjoyed them. She was Swedish and owned a Scandinavian gift shop in downtown Anchorage decades ago. My grandma’s house is now filled with Dale horses and memories of kladdkaka, a type of Swedish cake, as a result. I’ve picked these before, but it’s been awhile. Picking them can be a backbreaking task, as the berries sit literally on the ground. I’m lucky, though. The small, jewel-colored berries are scattered across the land on which I live. Before moving to the peninsula, I lived with my grandma in the home my grandpa built in Anchorage’s Spenard neighborhood. Through her kitchen window, you can see my family’s original homestead from the 1940s. Living with her gave me an appreciation for family. Living with my grandpa in his last year gave me an appreciation for what’s past and what should be remembered. It’s easy for me to remember food and recipes. They transcend time and generations. Maybe it’s the journalist in me trying to make a record of what I can before it’s lost forever, but I’ve spent the last few years learning the recipes and food of my ancestors in an effort to preserve their memories for generations to come. In the 1970s or 1980s, my grandma won a holiday cookie contest put on by the Anchorage See OFFICE, page B2

&

Recreation

Kenai girls take aim at state title Homer girls runners are among those who will try to keep Kards from Division II title By JEFF HELMINIAK Peninsula Clarion

The Kenai Central girls cross-country team won the Region 3 meet Saturday, while the Kardinals boys earned their first state appearance since 2014. It says something about the strength of the Kenai program that despite those accomplishments, Kenai will swap out two varsity runners on the girls team and another on the boys team for Saturday’s state meet at Bartlett High School in Anchorage. The Division II girls race is at noon, while the Division I girls race at 12:45 p.m., the Division II boys race at 1:30 p.m. and the Division I boys start at 2:15 p.m. “The great thing when you have 38 runners is you have to be competitive every race,” Kenai coach Maria Calvert said. “By the end of the year, you’re looking at who is really stepping up and cutting time. “It’s never an easy decision but you have to do what works best for the team.” Kick-started by Division I state titles by Allie Ostrander from 2012 to 2014, the Kenai program is

‘When I text these college kids and tell them to send the team words of encouragement, they all step up. It’s been really awesome.’ — Kenai coach Maria Calvert flourishing and that has continued with the move of the Kardinals to Division II this season. The Kenai girls, who won the Division I state title in 2015 and finished runner-up at that level the past two years, have not lost to Division II competition all season, and neither has senior Jaycie Calvert. Maria Calvert said the program is strong because of what is going on below and above the high school level. “(Kenai Middle School) does a really nice job getting large numbers of kids out for cross-country,” Calvert said. “This year of the 38 on our team, 19 or

20 are freshmen.” Some of those kids have gone on to great success, with Ostrander winning the last two NCAA Division I 3,000-meter steeplechase titles and fellow 2015 graduate Jonah Theisen winning the NCAA Division II steeplechase crown in 2016. Many others are competing at the college level. “When I text these college kids and tell them to send the team words of encouragement, they all step up,” Calvert said. “It’s been really awesome. “The running community has been stellar. Our kids go to the middle school and help out with meets or practice. It cultivates a love of running.” But the Calverts are fully aware there are plenty of other programs that have cultivated a strong love for running, like Grace Christian and Homer, that will be looking to chase down Kenai at state. The Grizzlies and Mariners have won every Division II girls title since 2008, with Homer winning from 2014 to 2016. “We can’t feel confident at this point,” Jaycie Calvert said Saturday at the Region 3 meet. “We have such good competition. We have to stay focused.” See RUN, page B2

Rams stop Vikes

Nikiski junior Sam Berry (3) lets out a roar of celebration after scoring a touchdown early Aug. 18, 2018, against Valdez at Nikiski High School. (Photo by Joey Klecka/Peninsula Clarion)

Playoff hunt spices up Kenai-SoHi Out of postseason, Nikiski looks to finish with homecoming victory By JOEY KLECKA Peninsula Clarion

Just like the unusual late-season summer weather, the Kenai Central football team doesn’t intend to go away. Last Saturday’s meeting at Ed Hollier Field against the visiting Kodiak Bears resulted in a 41-22 win and kept the Kards alive in the playoff hunt, thanks to their biggest game of the season. Saturday afternoon at Soldotna’s Justin Maile Field will be even bigger. A win may push Kenai into the playoffs. Kenai head coach Dustin Akana said

his squad has been focused this week for the task at hand. “It’s business,” Akana said. “We made a point to the boys, (that) we’ve got to get work done this week, because we all know who we’re playing.” In order to ready his crew for their biggest game of the season, Akana said he is bringing in a handful of Kenai alumni to give a Friday night motivational speech, all of whom have been to the playoffs and have won state titles. Akana said the group includes former players Luke Oliver and Danny Autrey, both of whom were part of the four-year

run of state crowns that Kenai won from 2002 to 2005. “They’re going to talk about what they did, they’re going to come and share their wisdom with the boys,” Akana said. “They went through it, they went through high school … so they know what needs to be put in to have a championship-winning team.” A Kenai victory will send the NLC into chaos with a three-way tie atop the standings between SoHi, Kenai and Eagle River. The tiebreaking procedure would likely resort to using common opSee PREP, page B3

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jared Goff hit Cooper Kupp in stride with a 70-yard touchdown pass that was just as gloriously wide-open as Rams coach Sean McVay had predicted when they drew it up this week. While his teammates celebrated, Goff ran to the sideline and pointed at McVay, who accepted the challenge with a celebratory chest bump. “I was fired up for him,” Goff said. “I told him after, ‘I didn’t mean to knock you over there.’” Although the big quarterback knocked the headset off his smaller coach’s head, both men were left smiling. With that throw and several more of similar brilliance, Goff turned a phenomenal first half into the biggest game of his career. And it was still just barely enough to beat Kirk Cousins and the Minnesota Vikings. Goff passed for career highs of 465 yards and five touchdowns, winning a scintillating duel with his Minnesota counterpart and leading unbeaten Los Angeles to a 38-31 victory Thursday night. Goff hit Kupp with two of his four TD throws during a 251-yard first half in which the third-year quarterback flawlessly executed the offense created by McVay. Goff finished 26 of 33 with a perfect 158.3 passer rating for the Rams (4-0), who won their third home game in 12 days. “It was just great command by him,” McVay said. “I think he’s having fun. No moment is too big for him, and it gives you confidence when you see him playing like this.”

Why seagulls have red dot on bill

T

here are lots of “seagulls” flying around the Kenai Peninsula. At the mouth of the Kenai River alone, more than 30,000 Herring and Glaucous-winged gulls have taken up residence! Have you ever stopped to really look at one? Have you noticed the red dot near the tip of the lower bill? Have you ever wondered why it is there? If you answer yes to these questions, then you’ve got the hallmarks of a good naturalist. If you choose to research it, you’re on the path to being a scientist. If you take it so far as to conduct experiments, you might even win a Nobel Prize. That’s precisely what happened to Nikolaas (Niko) Tinbergen. This Dutch ornithologist, a professor for many years at Oxford University, was co-awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1973 partly for figuring out

R efuge N otebook J ohn M orton what that red dot does. Gull nestlings peck at the red dot to get their parents to regurgitate food to them. But this relationship is much more complex than that. During the summer of 1946, right after World War II ended, Dr. Tinbergen and his students used gull dummies (cutouts and plaster effigies) to investigate which stimuli gull chicks responded to the most. By varying the color, contrast, head shape, bill shape, and the position and “lowness” of the bill, Tinbergen was able to demonstrate that this innate behavior of pecking was elicited by the red color of the dot contrasted

against the yellow bill. Tinbergen used this information to see if he could improve on nature. He created a “supernormal” stimulus by painting three white rings at the end of a long red rod. This abstract dummy received 26 percent more pecks than a three-dimensional, realistic plaster model of a gull’s head and bill. “Big deal,” you might say disparagingly. Tinbergen shared this Nobel Prize with Karl von Frisch and Konrad Lorenz, who figured out how bees communicate by “dancing” and how goslings imprint on their goose parents, respectively. All three biologists showed how some behaviors are innate or genetically programmed (as opposed to learned), triggered by specific key stimuli. Collectively, these three founded the When Herring gull nestlings peck at the red dot on their parent’s bill, the parents regurgitate modern field of ethology, or the food. Is this an instinctive or learned behavior? (Photo credit by Todd Eskelin/Kenai National See REFUGE, page B2 Wildlife Refuge)


B2 | Friday, September 28, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

. . . Run Continued from page B1

Calvert was able to defeat Grace senior Mazzy Jackson and Homer junior Autumn Daigle — the defending Division II state champ — at the region meet. Petersburg sophomore Maia Cowan also looms as a threat, as does the unknown. “You just never know, that’s the thing about state,� Maria Calvert said. Homer coach Bob Ostrom said throwing different runners in the mix changes things. For instance, he said last year in the girls state race, Sitka went out fast and forced the top runners to chase. When those top runners slowed at the end of the race, Daigle pounced. “The race required a different kind of toughness and she’s so tough. She doesn’t give up,� Ostrom said of Daigle. Calvert, Daigle and Jackson also will be battling for crucial team points in the team race. “She’s been leading the team so well,� senior Brooke Satathite said of Jaycie after the Region 3 race. “Without her, I

don’t know where we’d be.� Satathite continued a lateseason surge by finishing third at the region race. Also running for the Kardinals will be sophomore Nia Calvert and freshmen Logan Satathite, Summer Foster, Leah Fallon and Shelbi Naylor. Coach Calvert said senior Maria Salzetti will be an alternate after battling shinsplints. The coach said Jaycie Calvert, Brooke Satathite and Salzetti have done a great job leading the team. Homer will go with the same lineup as at regions — seniors Sienna Carey and Katia Holmes, Daigle, sophomore Brooke Miller and freshmen Fiona Hatton and Kaylin Anderson. Ostrom said he has a good feeling about the girls headed into state. “At regions, we were still just a bit tired,� he said. “Everybody didn’t quite have their best race. Everybody just has to move up a few spots to make the difference.� The Homer coach also said his boys team should be stronger than it has been all season. The Mariners have finished in the top three at state every year

since 2012, winning it all in 2016. Ostrom would like to see seniors Luciano Fasulo and Bill Rich, and sophomore Eyoab Knapp, get up and battle with race favorite Tristian Merchant of Anchorage Christian Schools. If that happens, it will be up to senior Corbin Mattingly, sophomores Clayton Beachy and Daniel Reutov, and freshman Austin Cline to score crucial points from the fourth and fifth slots. “I think it’s going to come down to the fourth and fifth runners who move up to get points,� Ostrom said. “Every team is strong in the top three. It’s going to come down to how the fourth and fifth runners perform.� Calvert will have a very young team toeing the line in juniors Ocean Matley, Tucker Mueller and Evan Stockton, sophomore Maison Dunham and freshmen Joe Hamilton, Samuel Roberts and Luke Cross. Dunham is the only member of the team who has run at state before. He ran 16:41 last Saturday at the Region 3 meet, just four seconds off his personal record. His times will have to

keep dropping considerably if he wants to keep up with Merchant. “I really can’t predict what is going to happen,� Calvert said. “State is such a special place and special arena. There’s a lot of excitement and a lot of people. “It’s going to be new for Maison to have a team with him and it will be new for the six other guys.� Seward sophomores Neil Lindquist and Max Pfeiffenberger both return to state at the Division II level. “Both runners have the same goals,� Seward coach Aaron Sorensen wrote in a text message. “They want to come into this meet healthy and hopefully race for a PR.� At the Division I level, the Soldotna boys return to state for the second straight year while the Stars girls make their first appearance since 2015. Soldotna coach Ted McKenney said his squad is not at the level of the top teams in the state. “We work hard but we just enjoy state right now,� McKenney said. “There’s no use ratcheting up the pressure when we’re still a notch away from competing at that top level at state.�

Scoreboard FOOTBALL Thursday’s scores SOUTH Miami 47, North Carolina 10 NC A&T 31, SC State 16 Presbyterian 10, Lindsey Wilson 0 MIDWEST N. Iowa 33, Indiana St. 0

NFL Standings AMERICAN CONFERENCE East Miami New England Buffalo N.Y. Jets South Tennessee Jacksonville Indianapolis Houston North Cincinnati Baltimore Cleveland Pittsburgh West Kansas City Denver L.A. Chargers Oakland

W 3 1 1 1

L 0 2 2 2

T Pct 01.000 0 .333 0 .333 0 .333

PF 75 57 50 77

PA 52 77 84 58

2 2 1 0

1 1 2 3

0 .667 0 .667 0 .333 0 .000

49 57 60 59

50 44 63 74

2 2 1 1

1 1 1 1

0 .667 0 .667 1 .500 1 .500

89 97 60 88

77 51 59 90

3 2 1 0

0 1 2 3

01.000 118 0 .667 61 0 .333 82 0 .000 52

92 70 93 81

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

2 2 1 1

1 1 2 2

0 .667 0 .667 0 .333 0 .333

64 59 41 55

44 55 53 62

2 2 2 1

1 1 1 2

0 .667 102 91 0 .667 104 103 0 .667 71 60 0 .333 80 85

2 1 1 1

1 1 2 2

0 .667 1 .500 1 .375 0 .333

63 70 90 70

55 83 110 88

4 1 1 0

0 2 2 3

01.000 140 0 .333 65 0 .333 73 0 .000 20

67 64 89 74

Thursday’s Games L.A. Rams 38, Minnesota 31 Sunday’s Games Cincinnati at Atlanta, 9 a.m. Tampa Bay at Chicago, 9 a.m. Houston at Indianapolis, 9 a.m. N.Y. Jets at Jacksonville, 9 a.m. Miami at New England, 9 a.m. Detroit at Dallas, 9 a.m. Buffalo at Green Bay, 9 a.m. Philadelphia at Tennessee, 9 a.m. Seattle at Arizona, 12:05 p.m. Cleveland at Oakland, 12:05 p.m. New Orleans at N.Y. Giants, 12:25 p.m. San Francisco at L.A. Chargers, 12:25 p.m. Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 4:20 p.m. Open: Washington, Carolina Monday’s Games Kansas City at Denver, 4:15 p.m. All Times ADT

BASEBALL AL Standings East Division W x-Boston 107 y-New York 98 Tampa Bay 88 Toronto 72 Baltimore 46 Central Division x-Cleveland 89 Minnesota 74 Detroit 64 Chicago 62 Kansas City 57 West Division

L 52 61 71 87 112

Pct GB .673 — .616 9 .553 19 .453 35 .291 60½

70 84 95 96 102

.560 — .468 14½ .403 25 .392 26½ .358 32

x-Houston 100 58 y-Oakland 96 63 Seattle 86 73 Los Angeles 78 81 Texas 67 92 x-clinched division y-clinched wild card

.633 — .604 4½ .541 14½ .491 22½ .421 33½

Thursday’s Games Houston at Baltimore, ppd. N.Y. Yankees 12, Tampa Bay 1 Minnesota 9, Detroit 3 Kansas City 2, Cleveland 1, 10 innings Texas 2, Seattle 0 Friday’s Games Chicago White Sox (Lopez 7-9) at Minnesota (Berrios 11-11), 10:10 a.m., 1st game Houston (Cole 15-5) at Baltimore (Hess 3-10), 3:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Happ 16-6) at Boston (Johnson 4-4), 3:10 p.m. Toronto (Pannone 4-1) at Tampa Bay (Glasnow 2-7), 3:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Giolito 10-12) at Minnesota (De Jong 0-1), 4:10 p.m., 2nd game Detroit (Zimmermann 7-8) at Milwaukee (Davies 2-7), 4:10 p.m. Cleveland (Clevinger 12-8) at Kansas City (Kennedy 3-8), 4:15 p.m. Oakland (Fiers 12-7) at L.A. Angels (Barria 10-9), 6:07 p.m. Texas (Perez 2-6) at Seattle (LeBlanc 8-5), 6:10 p.m. Saturday’s Games N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 9:05 a.m. Houston at Baltimore, 12:05 p.m., 1st game Toronto at Tampa Bay, 2:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 3:10 p.m. Detroit at Milwaukee, 3:10 p.m. Cleveland at Kansas City, 3:15 p.m. Houston at Baltimore, 3:35 p.m., 2nd game Oakland at L.A. Angels, 5:07 p.m. Texas at Seattle, 5:10 p.m. All Times ADT

Francisco (Bumgarner 6-6), 6:15 p.m. Saturday’s Games St. Louis at Chicago Cubs, 9:05 a.m. L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco, 12:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 12:10 p.m. Atlanta at Philadelphia, 3:05 p.m. Detroit at Milwaukee, 3:10 p.m. Miami at N.Y. Mets, 3:10 p.m. Washington at Colorado, 4:10 p.m. Arizona at San Diego, 4:40 p.m. All Times ADT

Yankees 12, Rays 1 NY TB

Sabathia, Cessa (6), Loaisiga (9) and Romine; Schultz, Pruitt (1), Kittredge (5), Hu (7), Wood (8), Milner (9) and Sucre. W_Sabathia 9-7. L_Schultz 2-2. HRs_New York, Voit (12), Andujar (27), Stanton 2 (37). Tampa Bay, Cron (29).

Royals 2, Indians 1, 10 inn. Cle. KC

Thursday’s Games Colorado 5, Philadelphia 3 N.Y. Mets 4, Atlanta 1 Chicago Cubs 3, Pittsburgh 0 Friday’s Games St. Louis (Wainwright 2-3) at Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 13-11), 10:20 a.m. Pittsburgh (Kingham 5-7) at Cincinnati (Castillo 10-12), 2:40 p.m. Atlanta (Gausman 10-10) at Philadelphia (Nola 16-6), 3:05 p.m. Miami (Urena 8-12) at N.Y. Mets (Oswalt 3-3), 3:10 p.m. Detroit (Zimmermann 7-8) at Milwaukee (Davies 2-7), 4:10 p.m. Washington (Ross 0-1) at Colorado (Freeland 16-7), 4:10 p.m. Arizona (Corbin 11-7) at San Diego (Lauer 6-7), 6:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 6-3) at San

100 000 000 0—110 0 001 000 000 1—2 8 1

Tomlin, Miller (5), Otero (7), Edwards (8), Olson (9), Ramirez (10) and Gomes; Sparkman, Lively (6), McCarthy (8), Peralta (9), Hammel (10) and Gallagher, Viloria. W_Hammel 4-14. L_Ramirez 0-3. HRs_Kansas City, Mondesi (13).

Twins 9, Tigers 3 Det. Min.

120 000000—3 8 0 005 04000x—9 12 0

Liriano, Coleman (3), Hall (5), Farmer (6), VerHagen (7), Hardy (8) and Greiner; Moya, Gonsalves (2), Magill (5), Busenitz (7), Littell (8), Curtiss (9) and Astudillo. W_Gonsalves 2-2. L_Liriano 5-12.

NL Standings East Division W L Pct GB x-Atlanta 89 70 .560 — Washington 81 78 .509 8 Philadelphia 78 81 .491 11 New York 75 84 .472 14 Miami 62 96 .392 26½ Central Division z-Chicago 93 66 .585 — z-Milwaukee 92 67 .579 1 St. Louis 87 72 .547 6 Pittsburgh 80 78 .506 12½ Cincinnati 66 93 .415 27 West Division Colorado 89 70 .560 — Los Angeles 88 71 .553 1 Arizona 81 78 .509 8 San Francisco73 86 .459 16 San Diego 64 95 .403 25 z-clinched playoff berth x-clinched division

400 304001—12 13 0 000 000100—1 2 0

Holmes (7) and Cervelli; Lester, Cishek (7), Edwards Jr. (8), Chavez (9) and Contreras. W_ Lester 18-6. L_T.Williams 14-10. Sv_Chavez (5).

HOCKEY NHL Standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W Detroit 6 6 Boston 7 5 Toronto 6 5 Montreal 6 4 Florida 6 3 Tampa Bay 6 3 Buffalo 6 2 Ottawa 5 1 Metropolitan Division N.Y. Islanders 7 5 Carolina 4 4 N.Y. Rangers 6 3 Philadelphia 7 3 Pittsburgh 5 2 New Jersey 5 1 Columbus 6 2 Washington 5 1

L OT 0 0 0 2 1 0 2 0 3 0 3 0 4 0 4 0 2 0 2 3 2 2 4 3

Pts GF GA 12 25 17 12 23 17 10 22 15 8 21 16 6 17 23 6 20 18 4 15 20 2 8 17

0 10 0 8 1 7 1 7 1 5 2 4 0 4 1 3

19 19 21 21 18 12 13 10

15 4 23 20 13 16 22 17

WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division Dallas 5 4 0 1 9 19 12 Winnipeg 7 4 3 0 8 25 27 St. Louis 5 3 2 0 6 14 12 Nashville 5 2 3 0 4 14 17 Minnesota 6 2 4 0 4 18 16 Colorado 4 1 3 0 2 7 18 Chicago 5 1 4 0 2 15 20 Pacific Division Calgary 9 4 2 3 11 35 34 Edmonton 6 5 1 0 10 30 16 Vegas 5 4 1 0 8 27 14 Arizona 6 3 2 1 7 20 20 San Jose 5 2 2 1 5 23 20 Anaheim 5 2 3 0 4 16 23 Los Angeles 6 1 4 1 3 18 27 Vancouver6 1 5 0 2 10 26 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Top three teams in each division and two wild cards per conference advance to playoffs.

Rangers 2, Mariners 0 Tex. Sea.

000 000200—2 7 000 000000—0 3

1 0

Jurado, Moore (7), Sadzeck (8), Leclerc (9) and Kiner-Falefa; Gonzales, Pazos (6), Duke (7), Armstrong (7), Vincent (8), Cook (9) and Zunino. W_Jurado 5-5. L_Duke 5-5. Sv_Leclerc (12).

Rockies 5, Phillies 3 Phi. Co.

001 000020—3 8 120 00020x—5 9

1 0

Arrieta, Hunter (7), Neshek (7), Loup (8), Neris (8) and Knapp; Senzatela, Oberg (5), Oh (7), Ottavino (8), W.Davis (9) and Iannetta. W_Oberg 8-1. L_Arrieta 10-11. Sv_W.Davis (42). HRs_Philadelphia, Bautista (2), Santana (24). Colorado, Dahl (14), Parra (6), Story (35).

Mets 4, Braves 1 Atl. NY

000 000010—1 6 001 00030x—4 5

0 0

Teheran, Biddle (7), Brach (7), Fried (8) and Suzuki; Vargas, Swarzak (8), Zamora (8), D.Smith (8), Gsellman (9) and Plawecki. W_Vargas 7-9. L_Teheran 9-9. Sv_Gsellman (13). HRs_New York, Plawecki (7), Mesoraco (10).

Cubs 3, Pirates 0 Pit. Chi. T.Williams,

000 000000—0 4 0 020 10000x—3 10 1 Neverauskas

(6),

Thursday’s Games Tampa Bay 6, Florida 2 N.Y. Rangers 4, Philadelphia 2 New Jersey 5, Winnipeg 3 Ottawa 2, Chicago 1 Edmonton 3, Arizona 2, OT Calgary 4, San Jose 3 Friday’s Games Pittsburgh at Columbus, 3 p.m. Buffalo vs. N.Y. Islanders at Oshawa, CAN, ON, 3 p.m. Carolina at Washington, 3 p.m. Detroit at Toronto, 3:30 p.m. Dallas at St. Louis, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Colorado, 5 p.m. Los Angeles at Vegas, 6 p.m. Saturday’s Games Calgary at Edmonton, 11 a.m. Philadelphia at Boston, 1 p.m. Toronto at Detroit, 3 p.m. Montreal at Ottawa, 3 p.m. Tampa Bay at Florida, 3 p.m. Columbus at Chicago, 4 p.m. Arizona at Vancouver, 6 p.m. Anaheim at Los Angeles, 6:30 p.m. All Times ADT

TRANSACTIONS BASEBALL American Association SIOUX FALLS CANARIES — Released RHP John Straka. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association SAN ANTONIO SPURS — Exercised their fourth-year team options on G Dejounte Murray and C Jakob Poeltl and third-year option on G Derrick White for the 201920 season.

FOOTBALL National Football League CAROLINA PANTHERS — Signed S Eric Reid to a one-year contract. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Released WR Freddie Martino. TENNESSEE TITANS — Released WR Rishard Matthews. HOCKEY National Hockey League NHL — Suspended St. Louis D Robert Bortuzzo for the final two preseason games and the first regular-season game for elbowing the head of Washington D Michal Kempny. BUFFALO SABRES — Assigned G Scott Wedgewood; D Will Borgen and Taylor Fedun; and Fs Rasmus Asplund and Victor Olofsson to Rochester (AHL). CAROLINA HURRICANES — Signed D Michal Cajkovsky to a one-year, two-way contract. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Agreed to terms with D Brandon Davidson on a one-year contract. COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS — Signed F Mark Letestu to a one-year, two-way contract and assigned him to Cleveland (AHL). DALLAS STARS — Assigned D John Nyberg to Texas (AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS — Assigned C Axel Holmstrom and LW Chris Terry to Grand Rapids (AHL). Assigned G Kaden Fulcher to Toledo (ECHL). Released Fs Colin Campbell, Carter Camper, Turner Elson, Matthew Ford, Dominik Shine and Trevor Yates; and D Marcus Crawford, Trevor Hamilton and Mackenze Stewart from their tryout contracts. LOS ANGELES KINGS — Assigned Fs Boko Imama, Drake Rymsha and Sheldon Rempal to Ontario (AHL). NEW YORK RANGERS — Assigned Fs Gabriel Fontaine, Tim Gettinger and Ryan Gropp; and D John Gilmour to Hartford (AHL). Released RW Bobby Butler from his professional tryout agreement and F Drew Melanson from his amateur tryout agreement. American Hockey League SAN DIEGO GULLS — Signed D Simon Benoit to a one-year contract. SOCCER Major League Soccer MLS — Fined Montreal M Ignacio Piatti an undisclosed amount for simulation/embellishment in a Sept. 22 match against New York City FC. Fined Chicago M-D Raheem Edwards an undisclosed amount for his role in instigating and escalating a mass confrontation incident in a Sept. 22 match against New England. COLLEGE EAST CAROLINA — Signed baseball coach Cliff Godwin to a one-year contract extension through the 2023 season. GUILFORD — Named Kim Kleimeier women’s tennis coach. ST. JOHN’S — Named Mike Cragg director of athletics. STOCKTON — Named Richard Ziegler women’s assistant basketball coach.

The coach did say there is value in seeing what that top level looks like. The top five boys runners — juniors Bradley Walters, Lance Chilton, Jack Harris and sophomores Makbeb Denbrock and Anchor Musgrave — all have a chance to test themselves against the best and see what happens. “We’ll see if they can move up,� McKenney said. “We’ll see if anybody can break the top 15. It’s going to be a tough race.� Freshmen Nate Johnson and Logan Shane also will run if they are healthy, with freshman Maleda Denbrock ready to step in if there is an injury. The girls have been led by freshman Jordan Strausbaugh, who finished third in her debut at the Region 3 race. “We learn to run, run fast and then race,� McKenney said. “Now, she’s deciding if she has any idea how to race. “She’s a good kid. I’m going to let her try it and not put too much pressure on her. Incremental improvement can take time or you can hurt the kid.� Seniors Tannis Lorring and Victoria Denison will cap their careers at state. “They’ve been great runners and great teammates and I’m looking forward to that for them,� McKenney said. Sophomore Erika Arthur re-

turns to state, while junior Cameron Blackwell and freshmen Jordan Ruffner and Ellie Burns will gain valuable experience. The peninsula also will have four runners at state who qualified at the Region 2 meet. Nikolaevsk qualified senior Michael Trail, junior Isabelle Hickman and freshman Justin Trail. Michael Trail went to state as a freshman and sophomore before just missing a berth his junior year, so coach Steve Klaich wrote in an email that this is a great way for Trail to end his career. Justin Trail finished second in the Region 2 meet. Next season, Klaich wrote, state crosscountry goes to three classifications, so this year Trail will gain valuable knowledge of what the rest of the state has to offer. “Isabelle Hickman shows a lot of heart and character as she has demonstrated that work ethic and determination produces great results,� Klaich wrote. Port Graham’s Eli Moonin will become the first runner from the school to run at state, according to coach Colby Way. “Eli is expected to enjoy the spectacle that is the state meet and put together a time that he can be happy with,� Way wrote. “A personal record at the meet would be a great way to cap his year.�

. . . Refuge

maladaptation and disease.� In his Nobel Lecture, Dr. Tinbergen addressed the unorthodox decision of awarding this prize to three men who had previously been regarded as “mere animal watchers.� Tinbergen stated that their revival of the “watching and wondering� approach to studying behavior could indeed contribute to the relief of human suffering. I encourage you to read The Herring Gull’s World (1960), a book written by Dr. Tinbergen in such an engaging way that even the nonscientist can appreciate the wonder of gull behaviors. And take notice the next time you see a gull (or a goose or a bee) in your wanderings on the Kenai Peninsula — there’s certainly more there than meets the casual eye.

Continued from page B1

study of animal behavior. The press release for this Nobel Prize addresses the significance of these scientists and their work to the rest of humanity: “Man is [also] equipped with a number of fixed action patterns, elicited by specific key stimuli. This holds true for the smile of the infant and for the behavior of a mother to her newborn child. “Psychosocial situations leading to conflicts, for example as a result of disturbances of the social organization of an animal society, may lead both to abnormal behavior and to somatic diseases such as hypertension and myocardial infarction. Research within these fields has led to important results, for example psychiatry and psychosomatic medicine, especially as regards possible means of adapting environment to the biological equipment of man with the aim of preventing

Dr. John Morton is the supervisory biologist at Kenai National Wildlife Refuge. Find more Refuge Notebook articles (1999-present) at https://www. fws.gov/Refuge/Kenai/community/Refuge_notebook.html.

. . . Office

were simple, like chocolate chip cookies, but instead of chocolate chips she used cranberries. Continued from page B1 She said she rolled the dough into a ball and baked them. She Times. She can’t remember the said things, like chocolate chips year or the date. I attempted to or nuts, could be added, but it look for the article, scrolling wasn’t necessary. through microfiche for hours, I plan to use that everbefore I finally gave up. She classic Nestle chocolate chip doesn’t remember the recipe, recipe, but instead of chocobut she remembers some of late chips, of course I’ll use the cookie elements, the most cranberries. important of which was the I’m making the cookies cranberries. before I see my grandma next In an attempt to re-create weekend. Our thing is usually this award-winning cookie, I making blueberry crumble, anwould need cranberries and other legendary recipe of hers, grandma’s memories. but this fall asks for a change, Grandma said the cookies and for something new.

Fraternal Order of Alaska State Troopers Proudly Presents

Reid returns to NFL CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Eric Reid’s return to the NFL created a buzz around the league on Thursday, six months after he filed a grievance alleging collusion by the NFL to prevent teams from signing him because of his participation in racial injustice protests during the national anthem alongside former San Francisco 49ers teammate Colin Kaepernick. Some NFL players were excited about the 2013 Pro Bowl safety signing a one-year deal with the Panthers, but were quick to point out they believe Kaepernick should be back in the league as well. Kaepernick congratulated his Reid on Twitter, saying Reid “should have been signed

the 1st day of free agency. ... He was the 1ST person 2 kneel alongside me. Eric is a social justice warrior, continues to support his family and communities in need.� Browns running back Carlos Hyde, who played with Reid and Kaepernick in San Francisco, was stunned to hear his former teammate had been picked up by the Panthers. “For real?� Hyde said following Cleveland’s practice. “I’m so happy for him. It’s been too long. I kind of felt like they was doing him the same way they were doing Kap, so it’s good to see E-Reid got signed and Kap should definitely be up next. It would be a real good thing then.�

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Saturday, October 13, 2018 7:30 p.m. Tickets $45/person-General Admission Tickets Available at Beemun’s Variety Store-Soldotna


Peninsula Clarion | Friday, September 28, 2018 | B3

. . . Prep Continued from page B1

ponents out of conference. Soldotna has victories over Railbelt Conference schools West Valley and Lathrop, two teams that Kenai lost to, but Eagle River has not played either opponent, and has no common out-of-conference opponents with either Kenai or SoHi. Soldotna head coach Galen Brantley Jr. said with the potential tiebreakers at stake, the easiest thing to do is win and avoid all that confusion. “That would be nice,” Brantley Jr. said. “It’s a rivalry game, so throw the records out the window. “There’s been years where Kenai was 7-1 and we weren’t doing so well and they lost to us, so anything can happen. We were aware of that a year ago, and they hung with us for a half.” Meanwhile, in Division III, the Peninsula Conference is all locked up heading into the last week. Houston captured its first conference title in school history with a perfect 4-0 record, the key victory in its schedule coming in Week 5 with a 22-20 win over Ketchikan, the team that will finish second. The Kings are currently 2-1 in conference with just a game against Seward left. Nikiski was eliminated last weekend with a 34-8 loss to Houston, and will miss the postseason for the first time in 11 years, and the first time in three years for head coach Paul Nelson at the helm. For Nelson, he said missing the playoffs is a disappointment and an odd feeling, considering Nikiski’s strong history of making it. “We talked to the guys, and it’s kind of a unique experience as a player and as a coach, because we’ve always been to the playoffs,” Nelson said. “This is the first year we haven’t gone in my years, and it’s kind of a new thing.” The most recent state postseason that did not feature Nikiski was 2007. During that run, the program went to five straight state finals from 2011 to 2015, winning two of them (2011 and 2013). As the school’s homecoming game, Nelson said the Bulldogs still have something to play for

with pride on the line. Playing a team that beat Nikiski 38-0 last year, Nelson said he expects the Bulldogs to come out for one last shining moment. “It’s (about) how you prepare yourselves when there’s no tomorrow,” he said. “We have no excuse to not give everything we have.” The following is a closer look at the Week 8 slate of games: Kenai (3-4) at Soldotna (6-1), 2 p.m. Saturday The Kardinals visit Justin Maile Field looking for a playoff spot and their first win over their crosstown rivals since the 2011 postseason, when Kenai toppled SoHi 28-12 in the medium-schools semifinals. Since then, Soldotna has been the victor in seven straight contests over Kenai, including the 2015 state championship game. Brantley Jr. said for the Stars, the week has been business as usual against a familiar opponent. “For us it’s a rivalry game, and we love playing Kenai,” Brantley Jr. said. “The kids have grown up together, they’ve played hockey together, soccer, Pop Warner together, so we have a relationship with kids in that community, and we love the opportunity to play them. “They do have some talented football players, and I know their season hasn’t gone the way they wanted but they can take care of that with a win Saturday.” A SoHi win would also give the Stars a remarkable 13th consecutive conference crown, dating back to 2006, a stretch of success that has resulted in a perfect record against NLC teams. “It’s a lot of years of young men that have bought in and committed themselves to the process of being successful,” Brantley Jr. explained. In a 57-13 nonconference win over Anchorage powerhouse Service last week, the Stars ground game piled up 521 yards on 56 carries, both season highs for SoHi. “We’re still making steady improvement but not anywhere near where we want to be,” Brantley Jr. said. “But I think we’ll see this improvement is a testament to the kids and their

Prep football standings

Prep football stats

Northern Lights Conference League Overall W L Pct. W L Pct. Soldotna 2 0 1.000 6 1 .857 Eagle River 2 1 .667 5 1 .833 Kenai 1 1 .500 3 4 .428 Kodiak 0 3 .000 2 4 .333 Houston Ketchikan Nikiski Homer Seward Homer 21, Seward 20 Houston 34, Nikiski 8 Kenai 41, Kodiak 22 Soldotna 57, Service 13

Peninsula Conference 4 0 1.000 2 1 .667 1 2 .333 1 2 .333 0 3 .000

6 5 3 1 2

1 .857 1 .833 4 .428 6 .142 4 .333

Week 7

Week 8 Homer at Nikiski, 2 p.m. Saturday Seward at Ketchikan, 2 p.m. Saturday Kenai at Soldotna, 2 p.m. Saturday

commitment to the process.” In their win over Kodiak, Akana said the Kards executed well in a must-win game, which he attributed to solid discipline and using what the coaching staff has taught them. “We had to win that game in order to move on, but the big part of the game was the boys executed how they’re supposed to execute,” he said. “They did their job, and because of that, they learned and saw if they do their job the way they’re coached to do it, they can win.” Akana said with the discipline and trickiness that has made the SoHi offense nearly unstoppable during its 59-game win streak from 2012 to 2018, his Kardinals defense will need to bring its own brand of discipline to keep SoHi at bay. Akana said each defensive lineman and linebacker must stick to their assignment to have a chance. “We have to have a 100 percent game to get the W,” Akana said. “But most of all, they’ve got to have confidence in themselves and trust in their teammates to be able to beat SoHi.” Homer (1-6) at Nikiski (3-4), 2 p.m. Saturday With nothing to play for except pride, Nelson said Nikiski is aiming to get the win in Week 8 to bring some needed momentum into the offseason. “We want to go up and not have a three-game losing streak to end the year,” he said. “It’s also about having fun and ending the season on

Eagles top Holy Rosary behind hat trick from Moos Cook Inlet Academy senior Hunter Moos provided the fireworks in CIA’s 5-1 quarterfinal win over Holy Rosary Academy at the 2018 Borealis Conference tournament Thursday at Anchorage’s Kincaid Park. Moos scored a hat trick for CIA in the tournament opener, helping move the Eagles soccer team to the tournament semifinals. CIA entered as the No. 1 seed, and advanced to a 4:30 p.m. Friday semi against thirdseeded Delta Junction. Earlier this year, the Eagles defeated Delta 3-1, giving the team confidence as they eye a championship in the seasonending tournament. “We’re looking forward to

Seward sweeps Huskies Staff report Peninsula Clarion

The Seward volleyball team picked up a Southcentral Conference victory Thursday night over Redington, sweeping the Huskies 3-0 with game scores of 25-9, 25-16 and 25-22. Seward middle hitter Coral Petrosius notched four kills, while Seward head coach Jodi Kurtz wrote in a text that Riley Von Borstel recorded some “amazing hits” to complement the attack of Petrosius. Kurtz added that Allie Toloff, Ashley Jackson and Von Borstel all had great service games. The Seahawks lifted their record to 1-2 in conference and 3-4 overall.

the opportunity to play (Delta),” said CIA head coach Kenny Leaf. “They’re a super team.” Moos got the Eagles on the board early Thursday with a goal in the fifth minute, then added two more scores in the last minute before halftime and in the first minute after the break. James Anderson also caused trouble for Holy Rosary, scoring in the 22nd minute with an assist from Sophie Nelson to put CIA up 2-0, then setting up Moos in the 40th minute for a 3-0 lead. Leaf said the Eagles were able to utilize the artificial turf field at Kincaid to their advantage, as the Eagles’ style of passing is emphasized well. “The turf suits us well,” Leaf said. “We are a controlled,

short-passing team, and on the turf, everything is true, the way the ball rolls as it comes off the turf helps us.” Addie Nelson played a through ball to Moos in the 41st minute to begin the second half, and Moos converted to push CIA’s lead to 4-0, and Nelson scored one herself just two minutes later on a cross from sister Sophie Nelson. “It’s very encouraging to see the style of play,” Leaf added. “We really controlled the ball well, played feet to feet, had good communication and were very expansive. We had lots of space to do the kind of things we like to do.” Holy Rosary scored with just three minutes left in regulation to ruin a shutout by Cook Inlet goalkeeper Lucas Cragg.

TEAM OFFENSE Team G Pts Rsh Pass Tot Soldotna 7 360 2885 393 3278 Kenai 7 210 2227 450 2677 Nikiski 6 130 1234 437 1671 Homer 6 81 802 491 1293 TEAM DEFENSE Team G Pts Rsh Pas Tot Nikiski 6 164 528 384 1319 Kenai 5 155 845 884 1729 Soldotna 7 124 906 1024 1930 Homer 6 269 1528 609 2137 PASSING YARDAGE LEADERS Name, school G Com Att Yds TD Int Litke, Nik 7 41 98 579 8 7 Kalugin, Hom 5 18 66 336 0 11 Truesdell, Sol 6 18 29 328 11 3 Felchle, Ken 7 38 65 305 2 4 Daniels, Ken 5 10 17 104 1 1 Brantley, Sol 1 1 1 55 1 0 Mann, Hom 1 1 1 25 0 0 Bradshaw, Hom 1 3 7 18 0 0 Riddall, Ken 2 0 2 0 0 0 Johnson, Sol 2 0 2 0 0 0

a good note.” RUSHING YARDAGE LEADERS Last year’s matchup ended Name, school G Att Yds Avg TD with Homer shutting down the Medcoff, Sol 7 69 709 10.2 12 Riddall, Ken 7 107 701 6.5 15 Nikiski offense for a 38-0 win Faletoi, Sol 7 71 691 9.7 7 en route to a 7-1 season. Berry, Nik 7 143 652 4.5 6 One year later, the Mariners Truesdell, Sol 5 42 440 10.4 7 Fisk, Hom 4 64 440 6.8 4 didn’t pick up their first vicMetcalf, Sol 7 37 350 9.4 4 tory until last weekend with a Burnett, Ken 7 41 286 6.9 2 Sarks, Nik 4 28 230 8.2 2 21-20 show against Seward, but Vann, Ken 5 20 210 10.5 2 Nelson acknowledged the loss McEnerney, Ken 3 28 192 6.8 1 of a valuable core of seniors Handley, Nik 2 29 175 6.0 0 Kalugin, Hom 5 63 170 2.7 3 that Homer experienced helped Anderson, Ken 5 35 164 4.6 2 play a role in that, plus current O’Reagan, Sol 4 19 142 7.4 1 senior Noah Fisk’s absence for Escott, Sol 4 12 126 10.5 1 Sylvester, Ken 4 12 122 10.1 1 a chunk of the season hurt the C. Johnson, Sol 4 11 118 10.7 2 team. Mann, Hom 2 17 99 5.8 1 Taylor, Sol 3 7 86 12.2 1 Homer had its most producEiter, Nik 2 16 75 4.6 0 tive outing of the year last week T. Johnson, Sol 4 19 64 3.3 1 with 300 team rushing yards, Golick, Hom 2 15 62 4.1 2 J. Harris, Nik 4 11 58 5.2 1 nearly doubling the season total Updike, Sol 3 8 57 7.1 1 in one afternoon, and Fisk put Kratos, Ken 3 8 40 5.0 0 up 184 yards himself. Jaime, Sol 3 6 37 6.1 0 Konev, Hom 1 2 31 15.5 0 “We expect it to be pretty D. Harris, Nik 5 17 28 1.6 1 even, because they lost Noah Felchle, Ken 4 8 20 2.5 0 Payne, Nik 1 8 18 2.2 0 Fisk for a few weeks and now McCaughey, Nik 1 6 13 2.1 0 have him back,” Nelson said. Bradshaw, Hom 3 9 13 1.4 1 “They’re better and improved. Sorhus, Sol 1 4 12 3.0 0 Baker, Ken 2 4 7 1.7 0 They just played a Seward team Hicks, Hom 1 2 4 2.0 0 and beat them close.” Gaona, Hom 1 6 4 0.6 0 Nelson said two starters will Tormdle, Ken 1 2 3 1.5 0 Dash, Hom 1 1 2 2.0 0 be unavailable due to grade inBrantley III, Sol 1 1 1 1.0 0 eligibility, but with quarterback Bond, Sol 1 2 1 0.5 0 Litke, Nik 5 15 1 0.1 0 Noah Litke providing a rock Napoka, Nik 1 1 0 0.0 0 to the stable of running backs Nikiski has, Nelson said he believes the Bulldogs are in for a good day. nereski praised the improvements made over the course of the season by his players, inSeward (2-4) at Ketchikan cluding freshman QB Tommy (5-1), 2 p.m. Saturday Cronin stepping in after startFollowing their elimination ing signal-caller Gunnar Davis last weekend after a tight loss went down with a concussion to Homer, the Seahawks will in Week 2. cap their 2018 season by hostLast week, Cronin racked up ing playoff-bound Ketchikan. 61 passing yards and a touchPrior to the Homer loss, down to complement a ground Seward head coach Kelly Ci- game that compiled 179 yards,

CIA soccer starts with win By JOEY KLECKA Peninsula Clarion

Through Sept. 22 Reported stats only

Delta Junction topped host school Lumen Christi 6-2 to advance. The semifinal matchup with Delta came after a late change to the tournament bracket by the Lumen Christi tournament director after an omitted regular season game involving Wasilla Lake Christian was added to the mix. CIA remained the top seed, but the added Wasilla Lake score resulted in several seeds changing. It also resulted in CIA’s matchup with third-seeded Delta today. In other results, Su-Valley shut out Birchwood Christian 4-0 and Wasilla Lake beat TriValley 5-1. Saturday’s tournament title game is 4:30 p.m. at Begich Middle School.

Morawitz, Hom 1 1 -3 -3.0 0 Wood, Hom 1 2 -8 -4.0 0 Hrencher, Hom 2 4 -15 -3.7 0 RECEIVING YARDAGE LEADERS Name, school G Rec Yds Avg TD Eiter, Nik 4 17 329 19.3 5 Konev, Hom 3 10 213 21.3 0 Brantley, Sol 4 9 191 21.2 6 Pitsch, Ken 5 8 122 15.2 2 Burnett, Ken 6 15 119 7.9 0 Berry, Nik 4 11 69 6.2 0 Hrencher, Hom 3 3 63 21.0 0 Fisk, Hom 3 4 56 14.0 0 McKibben, Ken 3 4 52 13.0 0 Payne, Nik 1 4 46 11.5 1 Handley, Nik 2 3 43 14.3 2 Carver, Ken 2 3 42 14.0 0 Updike, Sol 1 1 39 39.0 1 McEnerney, Ken 2 4 38 9.5 1 Metcalf, Sol 3 3 31 10.3 1 Medcoff, Sol 2 2 30 15.0 1 Hanson, Sol 1 2 30 15.0 2 Druesedow, Nik 1 1 28 28.0 0 Kalugin, Hom 1 1 25 25.0 0 Anderson, Nik 1 1 14 14.0 0 Kroto, Ken 1 1 11 11.0 0 Riddall, Ken 3 5 10 2.0 0 Grenier, Nik 1 1 9 9.0 0 Gaona, Hom 1 1 7 7.0 0 Faletoi, Sol 1 1 7 7.0 0 Baker, Ken 1 1 7 7.0 0 Golick, Hom 1 1 6 6.0 0 Wood, Hom 1 1 3 3.0 0 Tormdle, Ken 1 1 3 3.0 0 Anderson, Ken 1 4 3 0.7 0 SCORING LEADERS Name, school TD FG PAT1 PAT2 Pts Riddall, Ken 15 0 0 4 98 Medcoff, Sol 12 0 0 0 72 Truesdell, Sol 5 0 17 3 53 Faletoi, Sol 7 0 0 3 48 Brantley, Sol 7 0 0 1 44 Berry, Nik 6 0 0 2 40 Metcalf, Sol 4 0 0 3 30 Eiter, Nik 4 0 0 1 26 Fisk, Hom 4 0 0 0 24 Kalugin, Hom 2 0 0 2 22 Vann, Ken 3 0 0 0 18 Burnett, Ken 3 0 0 0 18 C. Johnson, Sol 2 0 5 0 17 Sarks, Nik 2 0 0 2 16 McEnerney, Ken 2 0 0 2 16 J. Harris, Nik 2 0 0 1 14 Golick, Hom 2 0 0 0 12 Sylvester, Ken 2 0 0 0 12 Pitsch, Ken 2 0 0 0 12 Anderson, Ken 2 0 0 0 12 Hanson, Sol 2 0 0 0 12 D. Harris, Nik 2 0 0 0 12 McKibben, Ken 0 1 7 0 10 O’Reagan, Sol 1 0 0 1 8 Felchle, Ken 1 0 0 1 8 Bradshaw, Hom 1 0 0 0 6 T. Johnson, Sol 1 0 0 0 6 Updike, Sol 1 0 0 0 6 Handley, Nik 1 0 0 0 6 \Payne, Nik 1 0 0 0 6 Escott, Sol 1 0 0 0 6 Taylor, Sol 1 0 0 0 6 Mann, Hom 1 0 0 0 6 Gaona, Hom 0 0 2 0 2 Morrison, Sol 0 0 0 1 2

led by Shane Saulivan’s 97yard day. The Kings’ lone loss of the year came in Week 5 to Houston, the Peninsula Conference champions. Ketchikan is headed to the postseason with the No. 2 seed locked up, so with virtually nothing to play for, the possibility of a close game against Seward could rear its head.

Today in History Today is Friday, Sept. 28, the 271st day of 2018. There are 94 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Sept. 28, 1787, the Congress of the Confederation voted to send the just-completed Constitution of the United States to state legislatures for their approval. On this date: In 1542, Portuguese navigator Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo arrived at present-day San Diego. In 1781, American forces in the Revolutionary War, backed by a French fleet, began their successful siege of Yorktown, Va. In 1892, the first nighttime football game took place in Mansfield, Pennsylvania, as teams from Mansfield State Normal and Wyoming Seminary played under electric lights to a scoreless tie. In 1920, eight members of the Chicago White Sox were indicted for allegedly throwing the 1919 World Series against the Cincinnati Reds. (All were acquitted at trial, but all eight were banned from the game for life.) In 1928, Scottish medical researcher Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin, the first effective antibiotic. In 1939, during World War II, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union signed a treaty calling for the partitioning of Poland, which the two countries had invaded. In 1964, comedian Harpo Marx, 75, died in Los Angeles. In 1976, Muhammad Ali kept his world heavyweight boxing championship with a close 15-round decision over Ken Norton at New York’s Yankee Stadium. In 1989, deposed Philippine President Ferdinand E. Marcos died in exile in Hawaii at age 72. In 1991, jazz great Miles Davis died in Santa Monica, Calif., at age 65. In 1993, first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton went to Capitol Hill to begin selling the administration’s health care plan to Congress. In 1995, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO chairman Yasser Arafat signed an accord at the White House ending Israel’s military occupation of West Bank cities and laying the foundation for a Palestinian state. Ten years ago: President George W. Bush urged Congress to pass a $700 billion rescue plan for beleaguered financial companies, saying in a written statement, “Without this rescue plan, the costs to the American economy could be disastrous.” Chinese astronauts aboard the Shenzhou 7 returned to Earth after completing their country’s first spacewalk mission. Austrian 16-year-olds voted for the first time in parliamentary elections under a law adopted in 2007. Five years ago: Locked in a deepening struggle with President Barack Obama, House Republicans demanded a one-year delay in major parts of the nation’s new health care law and permanent repeal of a tax on medical devices as the price for preventing a partial government shutdown threatened for Oct. 1. (Senate Democrats rejected the plan and the White House said that “any member of the Republican Party who votes for this bill is voting for a shutdown.”) The Global Citizen Festival, highlighting world poverty, took place in New York’s Central Park. One year ago: The Trump administration said its relief efforts in Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria were succeeding, though people on the island said help was scarce and disorganized. House Majority Whip Steve Scalise returned to the House chamber for the first time since he was wounded three months earlier by a gunman who opened fire at a Republican baseball practice. Today’s Birthdays: Actress Brigitte Bardot is 84. Actor Joel Higgins is 75. Singer Helen Shapiro is 72. Movie writer-director-actor John Sayles is 68. Rock musician George Lynch is 64. Zydeco singer-musician C.J. Chenier (sheh-NEER’) is 61. Actor Steve Hytner is 59. Actresscomedian Janeane Garofalo (juh-NEEN’ guh-RAH’-fuh-loh) is 54. Country singer Matt King is 52. Actress Mira Sorvino is 51. TV personality/singer Moon Zappa is 51. Actress-model Carre Otis is 50. Actress Naomi Watts is 50. Country singer Karen Fairchild (Little Big Town) is 49. Country musician Chuck Crawford is 45. Country singer Mandy Barnett is 43. Rapper Young Jeezy is 41. World Golf Hall of Famer Se Ri Pak is 41. Actor Peter Cambor is 40. Writer-producer-director-actor Bam Margera is 39. Actress Melissa Claire Egan is 37. Actress Jerrika Hinton is 37. Neo-soul musician Luke Mossman (Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats ) is 37. Pop-rock singer St. Vincent is 36. Rock musician Daniel Platzman (Imagine Dragons) is 32. Actress Hilary Duff is 31. Actor Keir Gilchrist is 26. Thought for Today: “To fight oppression, and to work as best we can for a sane organization of society, we do not have to abandon the state of mind of freedom. If we do that we are letting the same thuggery in by the back door that we are fighting off in front of the house.” -- John Dos Passos, American author (born 1896, died this date in 1970).


B4 | Friday, September 28, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

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SALES TAX DELINQUENT PUBLICATION

The Kenai Peninsula Borough Sales Tax code section 5.18.620(f) states that, as soon as practicable following the end of each calendar quarter, the mayor shall publish in a newspaper of general circulation a list of sellers not in compliance with the sales ordinance. The following is a list of businesses that were registered as sellers, for sales tax purposes, under the Kenai Peninsula Borough Code of Ordinances. As of September 19, 2018, according to Borough records, these businesses have a balance due greater than $100.00 and/or have failed to file a complete sales tax return for at least one period of the SECOND calendar quarter of 2018. IF A BUSINESS DISCONTINUES TO OPERATE, NOTIFICATION MUST BE GIVEN TO THE BOROUGH WHEN BUSINESS OPERATIONS CEASE. The Finance Department can be contacted at 144 N. Binkley, Soldotna, Alaska 99669, or by calling 714-2175. Toll free 1-800-478-4441. BUSINESS PUBLICATION BRAD K SNOWDEN BD 00204518 CUSTOM HOSE AND TUBE LLC DOUGLAS RALPH BD MF 00204817 MOMS HOTELS & SUITES MF means Missed Filing(s) BD means Balance Due 00106439 CUSTOM TATOOZ KIVI JASON BD MF 00201327 MOUNTAIN MADDNESS Businesses Published for Period: 4/2018-6/2018 MOTOR SPORTS JEFF R KNOWLTON BD 00201510 DEGRAFFENRIED TATTOO Account DBA OWNERS BD MF & HAIRSTUDIO PETER E DEGRAFFENRIED BD MF 00202177 MOUNTAIN WATERS 00204604 3 JS CRYSTAL M HARRINGTON, 3 JS LLC BD GUIDE SERVICE KOEHL S HALLIDAY BD 00201506 DIVINE EXPRESSIONS GAIL E KENNEDY BD 00203133 907 CUSTOMS THAWATCHAI LABNONGSANG BD MF 00101951 DOWNTOWN SEWARD HOUSE LLC LIBBRECHT TANGUY Y, 00203375 MUDDY MUTS LLC NICHOLAS J SORRELL, HEIDI M 00201013 A & P DIPPY DELIGHTS AUDREY B MARVIN BD SORRELL, KEMMER R SORRELL BD LIBBRECHT CHERYL BD MF 00103704 A FEAST ON THE FLY WOLFE MELANIE J BD MF 00204167 DRAGONFLY ON THE LAKE JESS B PACE BD LEANN C MCCAUGHEY BD MF 00203943 NATURAL EXPRESS 00203712 AAA TREE SERVICE ANDREW G HENNINGS BD MF 00036119 EAST WEST ALASKAN ADVENTURES HANSON SUSAN L., HANSON DAVID B. 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BD MF 00034671 NOMAD SHELTER INC TENHOFF JESSICA, TENHOFF LEE, HENKE SCOTT L BD MF 00203126 ENHAPPCED INC KENNETH L DORMADY BD MF NOMAD SHELTER INCORPORATED BD 00102577 AJOY CUSTOM SEWING JOY ANGELA M BD 00203749 ENVIROTECH DIVING INC JEREMIAH JEWELL BD MF 00203001 NORTH SHORE PROPERTIES LLC ERIC W MAROTZKE, 00203602 AK EXPRESS TAGS TITLES & SHARLET MAY DAVIS, 00104828 ERINS BEAUTY SALON WEBB ERIN E BD MATTHEW L MAROTZKE BD REGISTRATIONS LLC DARLENE KAY BYRD BD MF 00202238 ESPRESSO SIMPATICO ANGEL M STEFAN BD 00204684 NORTHERN WOODS 00202394 AK FINS AND GRINS CHARTERS LEONARD ROBERTS MF 00105459 FAMILY TATTOO THE GIPSON TODD BD GENERAL CONTRACTING LLC LORRAINE P BUTLER BD 00104449 AK PURE & SIMPLE PHOTOGRAPHY VEAL JESSICA BD MF 00202604 FANWORKS JENNIFER J SCHELLER, 00022161 NORTHWOOD RETIREMENT 00203530 AK STARFISH CO & MERMAID MARCI L NELSON, CHRISTOPHER B SCHELLER BD MF APTS/SOLDOTNA FRANTZ MARTY D BD CO BOUTIQUE SEAWEED AND THE MERMAID LLC BD 00005062 FIRE CONTROL SYSTEMS INC. 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EMPLOYMENT

Entry Level Pressman The Peninsula Clarion is seeking a Pressman for an entry level position. The successful Canidate must be mechanically inclined, ambitious, able to multi-task, take direction and work well independently, as well as part of a team. Salary dependent on experience, excellent benefit package. Please drop off resume to: The Peninsula Clarion 150 Trading Bay Rd Kenai, AK 99611

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EMPLOYMENT EDITOR - The Peninsula Clarion has an immediate opening for an Editor in Kenai, Alaska. This is not an entry-level position. The successful candidate must have a demonstrated interest in local political and cultural affairs, possesses excellent writing and verbal skills, experience editing reporters’ copy and other submitted materials and be proficient in designing and building pages with Adobe InDesign. Must represent the newspaper in the community and know the value and have experience with social media. Must lead, motivate, and mentor the editorial staff. We offer competitive compensation and a benefits package that includes medical, dental, vision and life insurance, paid time off and a 401K with an employer match. If you are interested, please email your cover letter, resume, and samples of your work to: careers@soundpublishing.com. Please be sure to note EDKENAI in the subject line. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Visit our website to learn more about us! www.soundpublishing.com

Alaska Trivia The average number of moose killed in Anchorage as a result of being hit by a vehicle is 156 per year.

EMPLOYMENT

DIRECT SERVICE ADVOCATE Part-Time Transitional Living Center Provide support, advocacy and assistance to homeless women and children residing in transitional housing who have experienced domestic violence and/or sexual assault. Excellent interpersonal and written communication skills, ability to work with diverse populations, work independently and on a team and promote non-violent behavior and empowerment philosophy. HS diploma or equivalent required; degree or experience working in related field preferred. Valid driver’s license required. Resume, cover letter and three references to:

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Executive Director, The LeeShore Center, 325 S. Spruce St., Kenai, AK 99611 by October 1, 2018. EOE

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Peninsula Clarion | Friday, September 28, 2018 | B5

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IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF ALASKA THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT AT KENAI In the Matter of the Estate of GLORIA ANN KRAUSE, Deceased. Case No. 3KN-18-00223 PR N O TIC E TO C R ED ITO R NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of the above-named estate. All persons having claims against the said deceased are required to present their claims within four (4) months after the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the undersigned Personal Representative of the estate, at DOLIFKA & ASSOCIATES, P.C., ATTORNEYS AT LAW, P.O. Box 498, Soldotna, Alaska, 99669. DATED this 26th day of September, 2018. PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE /s/SUSAN AMUNDSEN Pub: 9/28,10/5 & 12/2018 827753

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LANDSCAPING

PEONEY R O O T SA LE Saturday, September 29, 10-4

in front of Trustworthy Hardware, in Soldotna. 3 colors available, soil admendments also available. For more info call Wayne or Patty Floyd at Cool Cache Farms, or visit our Facebook page (facebook.com/coolcachefarms) for pictures.

HOMES FOR RENT Shop the classifieds for great deals on great stuff.

A SUMMER MASSA G E Thai oil massage Open every day Call Darika 907-252-3985

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LEGALS PUBLIC NOTICE ALCOHOLIC BEVERA GE CONTR OL BO ARD MEETING OCT OBER 15, 2018 KENAI, AK THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT Pursuant to Alaska Statutes 04.06.050, the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board is holding its regular meeting on Monday, October 15, 2018, to consider its agenda covering liquor license applications, license enforcement actions and suspensions, ongoing and proposed regulations projects, and other matters that may come before it. The board may hold hearings to ascertain the reaction of the public and a local governing body to license applications pursuant to AS 04.11.510(b)(2) when required by AS 04.11.470, AS 04.11.480, or on the board’s own initiative. The board will review written public comment on open regulations projects but will not take verbal public comment on any open regulations projects at this meeting. The meeting will be held on Monday, October 15, 2018, at the Old Kenai Court Room, 145 Main Street, Kenai, AK. The meeting will begin at 10:00 a.m. The public call in number for the meeting is 1-800-315-6338; code 69173#. The meeting is open to the public to attend at any time during the meeting. The board will reserve a time period for public comment regarding items not on the agenda and not relating to regulations currently out for public comment. The State of Alaska Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development and the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board comply with Title II of the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990 and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Individuals with disabilities who may need auxiliary aids or services or special modifications to participate in this public meeting should contact the Alcohol and Marijuana Control Office by email at amco.admin@alaska.gov by October 5, 2018, to make any necessary arrangements. Erika McConnell, Director (907) 269-0350 www.commerce.alaska.gov/web/amco Pub: 9/28/18 827589

LEGALS

HOMES FOR RENT PARTIALLY FURNISHED TWO LEVEL HOME ON RAINBOW STOCKED DOUGLAS LAKE IN NIKISKI 1/2 MILE OFF HOLT-LAMPLIGHT Two level 4302 sqft, 4 bedrooms, 3 1/2 bath, double kitchen-living room upstairs and down, with pool table, two laundry rooms, large deck overlooking Douglas Lake. 1296 sqft garage-hobby shop with double car door and a single 10x10 door for larger truck or motor home. Partially furnished living rooms and bedrooms. Catch rainbow trout from lawn chair or launch your boat from lawn or tie up your floatplane. $1900 plus tax/month with same deposit. Utilities not included. Wired for Direct TV. House Dog okay, but no other pets. No sub-leasing or smoking anything or Vaping. References required. 907-776-5747

OFFICE SPACE OFFICE SPAC E RENT AL AVA ILA B LE 609 Marine Street K enai, Alaska 404 and 394sq,ft, shared entry $1/sq.ft 240sq.ft.Shared conference/Restrooms $0.50/sq.ft 283-4672

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PUBLIC NOTICE MARIJU ANA CONTR OL BO ARD MEETING OCT OBER 16-17,2018 KENAI, AK THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT Pursuant to Alaska Statutes 17.38.111, the Marijuana Control Board is holding a meeting on October 16-17, 2018, to consider its agenda covering marijuana establishment license applications, updates on implementation of marijuana establishment licensing, ongoing and proposed regulations projects, and other matters that may come before it. The meeting will be held on Tuesday, October 16, and Wednesday, October 17, 2018, at the Old Kenai Court Room, 145 Main Street, Kenai, AK. The meeting will begin at 9:00 a.m. each day. The public call in number for the meeting is 1-800-315-6338; code 69176#. The meeting is open to the public to attend at any time during the meeting. The board will reserve a time period on Tuesday, October 16, 2018, for public comment regarding items not on the agenda and not relating to regulations currently out for public comment. The State of Alaska Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development and the Marijuana Control Board comply with Title II of the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990 and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Individuals with disabilities who may need auxiliary aids or services or special modifications to participate in this public meeting should contact the Alcohol and Marijuana Control Office by email at amco.admin@alaska.gov by October 5, 2018, to make any necessary arrangements. Erika McConnell, Director (907) 269-0350 www.commerce.alaska.gov/web/amco Pub: 9/28/18 827585

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Peninsula ThaiM assage by Lom Thai Combination (Signature Peninsula Style) Traditional Thai Massage | Deep Tissue Massage Oil and Hot Stone | Swedish Massage Foot Spa and Reflexology Thompson Corner Open 7 da ys/week 907-252-4211 Tam m y 702-910-6193

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WILDFIRE HAZARDS IN YOUR COMMUNITY

A single ember from a wildfire can travel over a mile to your home or community. Learn how to reduce wildfire damage by spotting potential hazards at fireadapted.org.

F IRE A DAPTED.ORG

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


B6 | Friday, September 28, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

FRIDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING A

5

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

4

(10) NBC-2

2

(12) PBS-7

7

5 PM

Chicago P.D. “Thirty BalHow I Met loons” Atwater and Burgess Your Mother get a new car. ‘14’ ‘PG’ The Ellen DeGeneres Show KTVA 5 p.m. (N) ‘G’ First Take Two and a Entertainment Funny You 4 Half Men ‘14’ Tonight (N) Should Ask ‘PG’ Judge Judy Judge Judy Channel 2 ‘PG’ News 5:00 2 ‘PG’ Report (N) (3:00) The Mayo Clinic: Faith BBC World News ‘G’ 7 -- Hope -- Science ‘PG’

CABLE STATIONS (8) WGN-A 239 307 (20) QVC 137 317 (23) LIFE 108 252 (28) USA 105 242 (30) TBS

139 247

(31) TNT

138 245

(34) ESPN 140 206 (35) ESPN2 144 209 (36) ROOT 426 687 (38) PARMT 241 241 (43) AMC 131 254 (46) TOON 176 296 (47) ANPL 184 282 (49) DISN 173 291 (50) NICK 171 300 (51) FREE 180 311 (55) TLC

4:30

5:30

Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud ABC World ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ News

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

4 PM

B

A = DISH

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

6 PM Jeopardy! (N) ‘G’

How I Met Your Mother ‘14’ CBS Evening News Funny You Should Ask ‘PG’ NBC Nightly News With Lester Holt Nightly Business Report ‘G’

6:30

7 PM

B = DirecTV

7:30

Last Man Last Man CSI: Miami “Out of Time” Standing ‘PG’ Standing ‘PG’ Recalling the team’s formation. ‘14’ KTVA 6 p.m. Evening News MacGyver Mac learns that Jack is in danger. (N) ‘14’ The Big Bang The Big Bang Last Man The Cool Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Standing (N) Kids “Pilot” ‘PG’ (N) ‘14’ Channel 2 Newshour (N) Manifest “Pilot” The Stones are mysteriously separated. ‘PG’ PBS NewsHour (N) Washington Alaska InWeek (N) sight

8 TMC 329 554

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

CSI: Miami “Hostile Takeover” Dateline ‘PG’ Horatio must submit to a gunman. ‘14’ Hawaii Five-0 “Ka ’Owili Blue Bloods “Playing With ’Oka’i” (N) ‘14’ Fire” (N) ‘14’ Hell’s Kitchen Veteran cooks Fox 4 News at 9 (N) compete against rookies. (N) ‘14’ New Amsterdam “Pilot” Dateline NBC (N) ‘PG’ Goodwin tries to overhaul his hospital. ‘14’ Great Estates Scotland “In- Art in the Twenty-First Cenveraray” Inveraray Castle. ‘G’ tury A non-profit art center. (N) ‘PG’

DailyMailTV DailyMailTV Impractical (N) (N) Jokers ‘14’

Pawn Stars ‘PG’

KTVA Night- (:35) The Late Show With James Corcast Stephen Colbert ‘PG’ den TMZ ‘PG’ TMZ ‘PG’ Entertainment Two and a Tonight Half Men ‘14’ Channel 2 (:34) The Tonight Show Star- (:37) Late News: Late ring Jimmy Fallon (N) ‘14’ Night With Edition (N) Seth Meyers The Hispanic Heritage Amanpour and Company (N) Awards Recognizing excellence. (N) ‘PG’

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

Shark Tank Chris Sacca; a device for babies. ‘PG’ Tucker Carlson Tonight

Shark Tank Enclosed tabletop Paid Program MyPillow food screen. ‘PG’ ‘G’ Topper Hannity The Ingraham Angle

Kevin Hart: Seriously Funny ‘14’ Wynonna Earp “Daddy Lessons” (N) ‘14’

Kevin Hart: Laugh at My Pain ‘MA’ Wynonna Earp The Pledge Moon looms. ‘14’

ComedyComedyStand Stand The Purge Jane must leave the office. ‘MA’

Paid Program Paid Program ‘G’ ‘G’ Fox News at Night with Shannon Bream Kevin Hart: Seriously Funny ‘14’ Futurama (:32) Futura‘PG’ ma ‘PG’

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

(2:15) “State “Atomic Blonde” (2017, Action) Charlize Theron, James VICE (N) ‘14’ “Father Figures” (2017, Comedy) Ed Helms, Owen Wilson, Real Time With Bill Maher (N VICE ‘14’ Animals (N) Tracey Ull- Real Time of Play” McAvoy, Eddie Marsan. A spy tries to take down an espioGlenn Close. Two brothers hit the road to find their long-lost Same-day Tape) ‘MA’ ‘MA’ man’s Show With Bill Ma(2009) nage ring in Berlin. ‘R’ father. ‘R’ (N) ‘MA’ her ‘MA’ (3:00) “Murder on the Ori- (:10) “The Greatest Showman” (2017, Musical) Hugh Jack- Ballers “No Ballers “The “The Shape of Water” (2017, Fantasy) Sally Hawkins, Mi- (:05) “Blade Runner 2049” (2017, Science Fiction) Ryan ent Express” (2017) Kenneth man, Zac Efron. P.T. Barnum creates the Barnum & Bailey Small Talk” Kids Are Aight” chael Shannon, Richard Jenkins. A mute woman bonds with a Gosling, Harrison Ford. A new blade runner embarks on a Branagh. circus in the 1800s. ‘PG’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ lab creature in a water tank. ‘R’ quest to find Rick Deckard. ‘R’ (3:20) “King Arthur: Legend of the Sword” “The Great Wall” (2016) Matt Damon. War- (:15) “Insidious: The Last Key” (2018, Horror) Lin Shaye, Outcast “To the Sea” Ander- Outcast “To the Sea” Ander- (10:55) “Insidious: The (2017, Adventure) Charlie Hunnam, Astrid riors defend the Great Wall of China from Leigh Whannell. A parapsychologist investigates a haunting in son decides to help Giles. son decides to help Giles. Last Key” (2018, Horror) Lin Bergès-Frisbey. ‘PG-13’ monsters. ‘PG-13’ her old home. ‘PG-13’ (N) ‘MA’ ‘MA’ Shaye. ‘PG-13’ (2:40) “The Lost World: (4:50) “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless (:40) “Jerry Maguire” (1996, Romance-Comedy) Tom Cruise, Cuba Good- ShoBox: The New Generation Devin Haney; Thomas Mattice; Cem Kilic. (N) ‘PG’ Jurassic Park” (1997) Jeff Mind” (2004, Romance) Jim Carrey, Kate ing Jr., Renee Zellweger. An attack of conscience changes an L.A. sports Goldblum. Winslet, Kirsten Dunst. ‘R’ agent’s life. ‘R’ Jimmy Vestvood: Amerikan Hero Man be- (:25) “Dean” (2016) Demetri Martin, Kevin “A Dog’s Purpose” (2017) Voice of Josh (:40) “Wakefield” (2016, Drama) Bryan Cranston, Jennifer “The Big Chill” (1983, Comedy-Drama) Wilcomes embroiled in conspiracy. ‘14’ Kline. A man falls in love while trying to keep Gad. A reincarnated dog keeps reuniting with Garner, Jason O’Mara. Howard hides out in the attic of his liam Hurt. A funeral reunites college friends his father sane. ‘PG-13’ its original owner. ‘PG’ home for weeks. ‘R’ from the 1960s. ‘R’

September 23 - 29, 2018

Clarion TV

13

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5 SHOW 319 546

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

Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home House Hunt- Hunters Int’l House Hunt- Hunters Int’l Dream Home Dream Home ers (N) ‘G’ ers ‘G’ Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive

PREMIUM STATIONS

+ MAX 311 516

9 PM 20/20 (N) ‘PG’

(3:00) “Remember the Titans” (2000, Dra- “Blades of Glory” (2007, Comedy) Will Ferrell, Jon Heder. Carter An obnoxious radio DJ Married ... Married ... Married ... How I Met How I Met Person of Interest “Number ma) Denzel Washington, Will Patton. Rival male skaters compete as a pair. is murdered. ‘14’ With With With Your Mother Your Mother Crunch” ‘14’ Beauty Night with Sandra & Alberti (N) (Live) ‘G’ NYDJ Not Your Daughter’s Vince Camuto Footwear (N) Duraflame Heaters (N) Josie Maran Argan Oil Cosmetics (N) (Live) ‘G’ Easy Solutions “Duraflame” Jeans (N) (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (N) (Live) ‘G’ Grey’s Anatomy “Staring at The Closer “Live Wire” A man The Closer “Dial M for The Closer Brenda must de- The Closer “Sudden Death” (:03) The Closer “Split Ends” (:03) The Closer Two Ti(:01) The Closer Brenda the End” Herman and Arizona wearing a wire is shot. ‘14’ Provenza” Provenza’s car is cide how to treat a case. ‘14’ Detective Sanchez’s brother A murdered hairstylist. ‘14’ juana police officers are found must decide how to treat a bond. ‘14’ stolen. ‘14’ is shot. ‘14’ dead. ‘14’ case. ‘14’ Law & Order: Special Vic- Law & Order: Special Vic- Law & Order: Special Vic- Law & Order: Special Vic- Law & Order: Special Vic- Modern Fam- Modern Fam- Modern Fam- Modern Fam- Modern Fam- Modern Famtims Unit “Loophole” ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit “Haystack” ‘14’ tims Unit ‘14’ tims Unit “Sin” ‘14’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ ily ‘PG’ American American Family Guy Family Guy Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- “Captain America: Civil War” (2016, Action) Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Jo- ELEAGUE CS:GO Premier “Sky High” (2005, Children’s) Dad ‘14’ Dad ‘14’ ‘14’ “Space Cadet” ers “Uncle ers ‘PG’ hansson. Captain America clashes with Iron Man. 2018- Mousetrap. (N) ‘14’ Michael Angarano, Kurt ‘14’ Teddy” ‘14’ Russell. NCIS: New Orleans “One NCIS: New Orleans “OutNCIS: New Orleans “Music to “Olympus Has Fallen” (2013) Gerard Butler, Aaron Eckhart. “London Has Fallen” (2016) Gerard Butler. A Secret Service Arrow Lance returns to the Good Man” ‘14’ laws” ‘14’ My Ears” ‘14’ A disgraced agent must rescue the president. agent must save the captive U.S. president. Mayor’s office. ‘14’ (3:00) MLB Baseball New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox. SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter From Fenway Park in Boston. (N) (Live) College Football Memphis at Tulane. From Yulman Stadium in New Orleans. (N) (Live) Women’s College Volleyball USC at Stanford. From Maples NFL Matchup NFL Live Marty & McGee (N) Pavilion in Stanford, Calif. (N) (Live) (N) Seahawks Seahawks Mariners All Mariners Pre- MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners. From Safeco Field in Seattle. (N) (Live) Mariners MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners. From Safeco Field in Press Pass Press Pass Access game (N) Postgame Seattle. (:12) Mom ‘14’ (4:48) Mom (:24) Mom ‘14’ “The Waterboy” (1998) Adam Sandler, Kathy Bates. A “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” (2008) Jason Segel, Kristen Bell, Mila Kunis. A “The Waterboy” (1998, Comedy) Adam ‘14’ simpleton’s angry outbursts lead to gridiron glory. musician encounters his ex and her new lover in Hawaii. Sandler, Kathy Bates, Henry Winkler. (3:25) “On Deadly Ground” (1994, Action) Steven Seagal, (5:55) “Hard to Kill” (1990, Action) Steven Seagal. Years “Armageddon” (1998, Science Fiction) Bruce Willis, Billy Bob Thornton, Liv Tyler. A hero tries to save Earth Fear the Michael Caine, Joan Chen. after nearly dying, a policeman seeks revenge. from an asteroid. Walking Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- The Brak The Brak Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burg- Bob’s Burgers ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘14’ ers ‘14’ ers ‘14’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ Show ‘PG’ Show ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘PG’ ers ‘14’ ers ‘14’ ers ‘14’ Treehouse Masters ‘PG’ Treehouse Masters “Off-the- Treehouse Masters: Out on Treehouse Masters (N) ‘PG’ Scaled An amazing idea for a Scaled A samurai-themed Treehouse Masters ‘PG’ Scaled An amazing idea for a Grid Getaway” ‘PG’ a Limb (N) ‘PG’ terrarium. (N) ‘PG’ enclosure. ‘PG’ terrarium. ‘PG’ (2:30) “De- (:35) “Disney’s Descendants 2” (2017, Children’s) Dove Under the Raven’s Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d “It’s a Bunk’d ‘G’ Raven’s Raven’s Raven’s Bizaardvark Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ scendants” Cameron, Cameron Boyce, Sofia Carson. ‘G’ Sea Home ‘G’ Blast!” ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Home ‘G’ ‘G’ The Loud The Loud SpongeBob Rise of the- Henry Dan- Henry Dan- I Am Frankie SpongeBob “The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie” (2004, Children’s) Friends ‘14’ (:35) Friends (:10) Friends (:45) Friends House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ Turtles ger ‘G’ ger ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ Voices of Tom Kenny, Bill Fagerbakke. ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ “Princess (:20) “The Parent Trap” (1998, Children’s) Lindsay Lohan, Dennis Quaid. “Frozen” (2013, Children’s) Voices of Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel, Jonathan Groff. Animated. The 700 Club “Nanny McPhee” (2005) Diaries 2” Reunited twin girls try to get their parents back together. A young queen’s icy powers trap a kingdom in eternal winter. Emma Thompson. Say Yes to Say Yes to Say Yes to the Dress ‘PG’ Say Yes to the Dress ‘PG’ 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Days Michael pleads with Unexpected “Extended: Epi- 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Days Michael pleads with the Dress the Dress Angela. (N) ‘PG’ sode 8” (N) ‘14’ Angela. ‘PG’ Treasure Quest: Snake Is- Treasure Quest: Snake BattleBots The Sweet 16 BattleBots “The Tournament” (:01) Treasure Quest: Snake Island “Closing in on the For- (:01) Treasure Quest: Snake Island “Closing in on the Forland “Blast Away” ‘14’ Island ‘14’ round kicks off. ‘PG’ (N) ‘PG’ tune / Episode 1” (N) ‘14’ tune / Episode 1” ‘14’ The Dead Files ‘PG’ The Dead Files ‘PG’ The Dead Files ‘PG’ The Dead Files ‘PG’ The Dead Files (N) ‘PG’ Haunted Live “Sept. 28, Kindred Spirits “Torment The Dead Files ‘PG’ 2018” (N) ‘14’ Upstairs” ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens “Area 52” ‘PG’ Ancient Aliens “The ReAncient Aliens “Beyond Ro- Ancient Aliens: Declassified “Pyramids, Monoliths, and Unexplained Structures” An in-depth look at Antarctica. (N) ‘PG’ (:03) Ancient Aliens: Declasturned” ‘PG’ swell” ‘PG’ sified ‘PG’ Live PD “Live PD -- 09.22.18” ‘14’ (:06) Live PD: Rewind “Live Live PD “Live PD -- 09.28.18” (N Same-day Tape) ‘14’ Live PD “Live PD -- 09.28.18” PD: Rewind No. 149” (N) ‘14’ ‘14’

Shark Tank Millennials pitch Shark Tank A vest with a business ideas. ‘PG’ twist. ‘PG’ The Ingraham Angle (N) Fox News at Night with Shannon Bream (N) (:15) The Office “Michael’s (:15) The Office “Goodbye (5:50) The Of- (:25) The Of- The Office The Office (81) COM 107 249 Last Dundies” ‘PG’ Michael, Part 2” ‘PG’ fice ‘PG’ fice ‘14’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ (3:07) “Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters” “Twister” (1996, Action) Helen Hunt, Bill Paxton, Cary Elwes. Storm chasers (82) SYFY 122 244 (2013, Children’s) Logan Lerman. race to test a new tornado-monitoring device.

^ HBO2 304 505

8:30

Wheel of For- Truth & Lies: Jonestown, Paradise Lost (N) tune (N) ‘G’

Shark Tank A unique dating Shark Tank Lozenges that (65) CNBC 208 355 service. ‘PG’ prevent overeating. ‘PG’ Tucker Carlson Tonight (N) Hannity (N) (67) FNC 205 360

! HBO 303 504

8 PM

SEPTEMBER 28, 2018

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Peninsula Clarion | Friday, September 28, 2018 | B7

SATURDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON A

B

8 AM

8:30

A = DISH

9 AM

9:30

B = DirecTV

SEPTEMBER 29, 2018

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

1 PM

1:30

College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)

(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

College Foot- College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) ball Scoreboard Xploration Xploration Wild America Career Day Sports Stars Laura McKen- Pets.TV ‘G’ Exploration Wonderama Wonderama Outdoor Outdoor Outer Space Weird but ‘G’ ‘G’ of Tomorrow zie’s Traveler W/Jarod (N) ‘G’ ‘G’ America America ‘PG’ True ‘PG’ (N) ‘G’ Miller Animal Res- Dog Tales Wild America Paid Program Auto Racing ‘PG’ College Foot- College Football SEC Teams TBA. (N) (Live) cue ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ball Paid Program MLB on FOX MLB Baseball FOX College College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) ‘G’ Pregame (N) Football Pregame (N) (6:00) 2018 Ryder Cup Day 2. Desde Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, Francia. (N) (Live)

2 PM

Curious George ‘Y’

CABLE STATIONS

Nature Cat ‘Y’ Ready Jet Go! ‘Y’

Wild Kratts ‘Y’ Odd Squad ‘Y’

(28) USA (30) TBS (31) TNT (34) ESPN

It’s Sew Easy Quilting Arts Quilt in a “New Looks” “Paint” ‘G’ Day ‘G’ ‘G’

Knit and Cro- MotorWeek chet Now! ‘G’ “Acura RDX” ‘G’

College Football Scoreboard Outdoor America

Outdoor America

3 PM

Married ... With

Married ... With

Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Married at First Sight One ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ couple does not see eye to 108 252 ‘G’ eye. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. “Remember the Chicago P.D. “Little Bit of Chicago P.D. “Last Minute 105 242 Devil” ‘14’ Light” ‘14’ Resistance” ‘14’ New Girl Drop the Mic “Rush Hour 3” (2007, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker, “LAXmas” ‘14’ ‘14’ Hiroyuki Sanada. Carter and Lee battle Chinese gangsters 139 247 in Paris. NCIS: New Orleans “The NCIS: New Orleans An abNCIS: New Orleans “Master 138 245 Recruits” ‘14’ duction is revealed. ‘PG’ of Horror” ‘14’ College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) 140 206

SATU

3:30

College Foot- (:37) College ball ScoreFootball (3) ABC-13 board Teams TBA. Wipeout Contestants tackle the log roll. ‘PG’ (6) MNT-5 The James Designing Brown Show Spaces ‘PG’

(8) CBS-11

(9) FOX-4

The Champi- Health & Hapon Within ‘G’ piness With Mayo Weekends The WoodRough Cut With Yankee wright’s Shop With Fine ‘G’ ‘G’

The Champi- College Footon Within ‘G’ ball (10) NBC-2 The This Old House Hour Stained glass window; stairs. ‘G’

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

Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... (8) WGN-A 239 307 With With With With (6:00) Saturday Morning Gifts “Duraflame” (N) (Live) ‘G’ (20) QVC 137 317 (23) LIFE

Arthur ‘Y’

2:30

(12) PBS-7

CABLE

M*A*S*H 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’ Blue Bloods “Framed” ‘14’ Blue Bloods “Inside Jobs” “Inga” ‘PG’ ‘14’ Duraflame Heaters (N) Josie Maran Argan Oil Cosmetics (N) (Live) ‘G’ Duraflame Heaters (N) Cuddl Duds - Live in Layers (Live) ‘G’ (Live) ‘G’ (N) (Live) ‘G’ “A Father’s Nightmare” (2018, Suspense) Joel Gretsch, “Seduced by a Stranger” (2017, Suspense) Chandra West, “The Midwife’s Deception” Jessica Lowndes, Ana Golja. A widower becomes suspicious Steve Bacic, Cate Sproule. Julie’s life is turned upside down (2018) Katie Savoy, Penelope of his daughter’s roommate. ‘14’ by Martin. Mitchell. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. “Grasping for NCIS “Suspicion” Intelligence NCIS “Requiem” A friend of NCIS A missing political refu- NCIS Grooming a Marine to Salvation” ‘14’ officer is killed. ‘PG’ Gibbs’ daughter. ‘14’ gee from Africa. ‘14’ be a supersoldier. ‘PG’ “Rush Hour” (1998, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker, Tom Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends “The Friends “The Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Wilkinson. Mismatched police partners seek a kidnapped girl. One in Vegas” One in Vegas” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ “Catch Me if You Can” (2002, Comedy-Drama) Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hanks, Christopher “Live Free or Die Hard” (2007, Action) Bruce Willis, Justin Walken. A teenage scam artist poses as a pilot, surgeon and lawyer. Long. America’s computers fall under attack. College Football Scoreboard (N) (Live) College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)

(8) WGN-A (20) QVC (23) LIFE (28) USA (30) TBS (31) TNT (34) ESPN

Football College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Football College Football Teams TBA. (35) ESPN2 144 209 (35) ESPN2 Scoreboard Scoreboard (N) (Live) Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Golf Life West Coast College Football Eastern Washington at Montana State. From Bobcat Stadium in Bozeman, Mont. (N) (Live) Pro Football Seahawks Seahawks (36) ROOT 426 687 ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ Sport Weekly ‘G’ Press Pass Press Pass (36) ROOT Bar Rescue “Down and Out in “Casino” (1995, Crime Drama) Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone, Joe Pesci. A mob employee makes a play for power in 1970s “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” (2008) Harrison Ford, Cate (38) PARMT 241 241 Las Vegas” ‘PG’ (38) PARMT Las Vegas. Blanchett. Indy and a deadly Soviet agent vie for a powerful artifact. (7:55) The (:25) The (8:55) The (:25) “Enter the Dragon” (1973, Action) Bruce Lee, John Saxon, Jim Kelly. A (11:55) “On Deadly Ground” (1994, Action) Steven Seagal, Michael Caine. (:25) “Hard to Kill” (1990, Action) Steven (43) AMC 131 254 Rifleman (43) AMC Rifleman ‘G’ Rifleman kung fu expert is sent to infiltrate an island fortress. An oil-company troubleshooter battles a corrupt chairman. Seagal, Kelly LeBrock, Bill Sadler. Ben 10 “The Teen Titans World of World of Total Drama- Total Drama- Adventure Adventure World of World of World of “Lego Batman: The Movie - DC Super He- World of World of (46) TOON 176 296 Feels” ‘G’ (46) TOON Go! ‘PG’ Gumball Gumball Rama Rama Time ‘Y7’ Time ‘Y7’ Gumball Gumball Gumball roes Unite” (2012) Jennie Jahns Gumball Gumball Tanked Giant pair of dice tank Insane Pools: Off the Deep Insane Pools: Off the Deep Insane Pools: Off the Deep Insane Pools: Off the Deep The Zoo A tomistoma stops The Zoo “The Eagle Has The Zoo “Training Dragons” (47) ANPL 184 282 for John Wall. ‘PG’ (47) ANPL End ‘PG’ End ‘PG’ End ‘PG’ End ‘PG’ laying eggs. ‘PG’ Landed” ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Raven’s Raven’s Andi Mack ‘G’ (:25) Andi “The Swap” (2016, Comedy) Peyton List, Stuck in the Stuck in the Stuck in the Stuck in the Raven’s Raven’s Raven’s Raven’s Jessie “G.I. (49) DISN 173 291 Home ‘G’ (49) DISN Home ‘G’ Mack ‘G’ Jacob Bertrand, Claire Rankin. ‘G’ Middle ‘G’ Middle ‘G’ Middle ‘G’ Middle ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Home ‘G’ Jessie” ‘G’ SpongeBob SpongeBob Rise of the- SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Power Rang- SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob (50) NICK 171 300 (50) NICK Turtles ers (6:00) “The Parent Trap” (:10) “Bolt” (2008, Children’s) Voices of John Travolta, Miley Cyrus. Ani(:20) “Tarzan” (1999) Voices of Tony Goldwyn. Animated. A “A Bug’s Life” (1998) Voices of Dave Foley. Animated. In(:40) “Frozen” (51) FREE 180 311 (1998) Lindsay Lohan. (51) FREE mated. A delusional TV dog winds up in New York. man raised by apes meets other humans. sects help an ant fend off grasshoppers. Make This Say Yes to Sweet Home Sextuplets ‘PG’ Sweet Home Sextuplets Untold Stories of the E.R. Untold Stories of the E.R. Untold Stories of the E.R. Untold Stories of the E.R. Untold Stories of the E.R. (55) TLC 183 280 Place Your (55) TLC the Dress “Drama Mama” ‘PG’ “Hit by a Train” ‘PG’ “Medieval Mayhem” ‘PG’ “Learning Pains” ‘PG’ “Shredded!” ‘PG’ Shifting Gears With Aaron Vegas Rat Rods “Desert Vegas Rat Rods “Viva Las Barrett-Jackson Live (N) (Live) ‘PG’ Vegas Rat Rods “Water Vegas Rat Rods A 1954 Tin Vegas Rat Rods “Freakshow (56) DISC 182 278 Kaufman ‘14’ (56) DISC Rat” ‘PG’ Vegas” ‘14’ Rat” ‘PG’ Woody Wagon. ‘PG’ on Wheels” ‘14’ Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Legendary Locations “City of Food Paradise “Sweet Home Food Paradise “Noodle Nir- Ghost Adventures “The Pio- Ghost Adventures “Los Co- Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ (57) TRAV 196 277 ‘PG’ (57) TRAV ‘PG’ Stone” ‘G’ Chicago” ‘G’ vana” ‘G’ neer Saloon” ‘PG’ ches Adobe” ‘PG’ College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)

(58) HIST (59) A&E

Mountain Men Eustace Mountain Men “Altitude” ‘PG’ 120 269 battles a beast. ‘PG’ Flipping Vegas A former frat Food Quest Tiny House Hunting ‘PG’ 118 265 house needs repair work. ‘PG’ ‘PG’

(65) CNBC

Fixer Upper A couple are 112 229 first-time buyers. ‘G’ Trisha’s The Pioneer 110 231 Southern Woman ‘G’ NASCAR Racing 208 355

(67) FNC

205 360

(81) COM

(:10) That ’70s (:40) That ’70s (:15) That ’70s Show The 107 249 Show Show gang pulls a prank. ‘14’ “Saw” (2004, Horror) Cary Elwes, Danny Glover. A doctor 122 244 must kill his cellmate or his family will die.

(60) HGTV (61) FOOD

(82) SYFY

The Pioneer Woman ‘G’ NASCAR Racing (N) America’s News Headquarters (N)

PREMIUM STATIONS ! HBO

303 504

^ HBO2

304 505

+ MAX

311 516

5 SHOW 319 546 8 TMC

329 554

Fixer Upper ‘G’ Trisha’s Southern NASCAR Racing (N)

Mountain Men A mid-winter Forged in Fire: Knife or melt. ‘PG’ Death ‘PG’ Zombie House Flipping The Tiny House Nation “325 team faces a flea-infested Sq. Ft. Texan’s Take Tiny house. ‘PG’ House” ‘PG’ Fixer Upper “Big Budget for a Fixer Upper ‘G’ Big House” ‘G’ The Kitchen “Breakfast of Cajun Aces Guy’s Ranch Champions” (N) ‘G’ (N) ‘G’ Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘G’ America’s News Headquar- The Journal Editorial Report ters (N) (9:50) That (:20) That ’70s (10:55) That That ’70s ’70s Show Show ’70s Show Show ‘14’ (:15) “Resident Evil: Extinction” (2007, Horror) Milla Jovovich, Oded Fehr, Ali Larter.

4 PM

4:30

5 PM

5:30

(3:37) College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Wipeout Contestants tackle the Arctic Circle. ‘PG’

5

How I Met Your Mother ‘14’ Frontiers ‘G’

Innovation The InspecNation tors (N) ‘G’ College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)

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

4

4

(10) NBC-2

2

2

(12) PBS-7

7

7

House Hunt- House Hunt- Hunters Int’l House Hunt- House Hunt- House Hunt- Hunters Int’l House Hunters ‘G’ ers ‘G’ ers ‘G’ ers ‘G’ ers ‘G’ ers ‘G’ Halloween Baking Champi- Baked ‘G’ Baked ‘G’ Chopped Food truck chefs Chopped A cheap, sweet onship ‘G’ battle it out. ‘G’ treat; a pork delicacy. ‘G’ Undercover Boss “EmpireUndercover Boss “WienerUndercover Boss “Family Undercover Boss CEO LowCLS” ‘PG’ schnitzel” ‘PG’ Dollar” ‘PG’ ell Hawthorne. ‘PG’ America’s News Headquar- America’s News Headquarters (N) Fox Report with Jon Scott ters (N) (N) (:05) That ’70s (:35) That ’70s (:10) “National Lampoon’s Vacation” (1983) Chevy Chase, Beverly “Role ModShow Show D’Angelo. A vacationing family detours into screwball side trips. els” (:15) “Lake Placid 2” (2007) John Schneider. A sheriff and a (:15) “Lake Placid” (1999) Bill Pullman. A monstrous crocohunter try to kill three giant crocodiles. ‘14’ dile chomps on villagers in rural Maine.

How I Met Your Mother ‘14’ CBS Weekend News

6 PM

6:30

7 PM To Be Announced

September 23 - 29, 2018

B = DirecTV

7:30 Family Feud ‘PG’

8 PM

SEPTEMBER 29, 2018

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel of For- To Be Announced tune ‘G’

Last Man Last Man Madam Secretary “Blame Chicago P.D. Ruzek’s career Standing ‘PG’ Standing ‘PG’ Canada” Elizabeth must nego- is in question. ‘14’ tiate with Iran. ‘14’ The Listener Toby saves a To Be Announced 48 Hours (N) ‘PG’ troubled teen. ‘14’ To Be Announced To Be Announced

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 Extra (N) ‘PG’

Paid Program Paid Program ‘G’ ‘G’

Murdoch Mysteries “All That Haven “Forever” Nathan The First Glitters” A murder in Northern struggles to return to Haven. Family ‘PG’ Ontario. ‘PG’ ‘14’ KTVA Night- Castle Alexis starts a video cast blog. ‘PG’ The Big Bang 2 Broke Girls Hell’s Kitchen Veteran cooks Two and a Theory ‘PG’ ‘14’ compete against rookies. ‘14’ Half Men ‘14’

Mr. Box Office ‘PG’ Person of Interest ‘14’ Mike & Molly ‘14’

(3:30) College Football Stanford at Notre Dame. From Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, (:05) Right(:29) Saturday Night Live (N) (Live) ‘14’ (:02) Leverage “The Fairy Channel 2 (:29) Saturday Night Live ‘14’ Ind. (N) (Live) ThisMinute Godparents Job” A clinic is News: Late (N) forced to close. ‘PG’ Edition (N) Martha Stew- Martha Bakes America’s Nigella: At My PBS NewsConsuelo Midsomer Murders Barnaby Vera Vera is reunited with Stuart. ‘PG’ Endeavour on Masterpiece “Ride” Morse Austin City Limits Alternative rockers LCD Soundsystem. art-Cooking ‘G’ Test Kitchen Table ‘G’ Hour Week- Mack Wealth- uncovers elite Mafia-like investigates a woman’s murder. ‘14’ ‘PG’ end (N) Track sect. ‘PG’

CABLE STATIONS

(61) FOOD (65) CNBC (67) FNC (81) COM (82) SYFY

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

House Hunt- Hunters Int’l 112 229 ers ‘G’ Kitchen Takeover “Hill Stress 110 231 Cafe” ‘G’ Undercover Boss “Bikinis 208 355 Sports Bar & Grill” ‘PG’ Watters’ World (N) 205 360

House Hunt- House Hunt- Hunters Int’l House Hunt- Love It or List It “Pond Paraers ‘G’ ers ‘G’ ers ‘G’ dise” ‘PG’ Big Food Big Food Halloween Wars ‘G’ Halloween Wars “Secret Truck Tip Truck Tip Creature Reveal” ‘G’ Undercover Boss “Mohegan Undercover Boss “Moe’s Undercover Boss “EmpireSun Casino” ‘PG’ Southwest Grill” ‘PG’ CLS” ‘PG’ Justice With Judge Jeanine The Greg Gutfeld Show (N) Watters’ World (N) (3:35) “Role Models: Unrated Special Edi- (:40) “Bad Teacher” (2011, Comedy) Cameron Diaz, Justin Timberlake. Two 107 249 tion” (2008) Seann William Scott. teachers vie for the affections of a rich substitute. “Anaconda” (1997) Jennifer Lopez, Ice Cube. A huge snake “The Last Witch Hunter” (2015) Vin Diesel. An immortal 122 244 stalks a film crew in the Brazilian jungle. warrior battles the resurrected Witch Queen.

PREMIUM STATIONS ! HBO

303

^ HBO2

304

+ MAX

311

5 SHOW 319 8 TMC

329

(60) HGTV

(61) FOOD

(65) CNBC (67) FNC (81) COM (82) SYFY

PREMIU

Blue Bloods “Men in Black” Blue Bloods “Warriors” ‘14’ Blue Bloods “Quid Pro Blue Bloods “Protest Too Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... Married ... “Disturbia” (2007) Shia (8) WGN-A 239 307 ‘14’ Quo” ‘14’ Much” ‘14’ With With With With With With LaBeouf, David Morse. Duraflame Heaters (N) Holiday Gift Preview “Duraflame” (N) (Live) ‘G’ Serta (N) (Live) ‘G’ Gift Guide (N) (Live) ‘G’ Your Best Night’s Sleep (20) QVC 137 317 (Live) ‘G’ “Serta” (N) (Live) ‘G’ (3:00) “The Midwife’s Decep- “Psycho Brother-In-Law” (2018, Suspense) Brittany “Conrad & Michelle: If Words Could Kill” (2018, Drama) (:03) “Killer Night Shift” (2018, Suspense) Christie Burson, (:01) “Conrad & Michelle: If Words Could Kill” (2018) (23) LIFE 108 252 tion” (2018, Suspense) Katie Falardeau, Zach Gold, Mike Duff. Kate’s brother-in-law wants Bella Thorne, Austin P. McKenzie, Paula Marshall. Two sui- Johnny Pacar, Cynthia Evans. A pregnant woman’s home Savoy. ‘14’ to take over the family. cidal teens have a toxic relationship. care nurse has a secret agenda. ‘14’ Bella Thorne. NCIS The murder of arms NCIS A mortar attack in Bagh- NCIS The team hunts a NCIS The team hunts for a NCIS Murder of a naval ofNCIS “Rekindled” ‘14’ The Purge Jane must leave NCIS An American couple is (28) USA 105 242 dealer La Grenouille. ‘14’ dad. ‘14’ killer. ‘14’ killer. ‘14’ ficer. ‘14’ the office. ‘MA’ attacked in Iraq. ‘14’ Friends Living Friends ‘PG’ Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Full Frontal Wrecked ‘MA’ Drop the Mic Drop the Mic arrangements. Frogger” ‘PG’ Maid” ‘PG’ Finale” ‘PG’ Finale” ‘PG’ Theory ‘14’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘14’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ Theory ‘PG’ With Saman‘14’ ‘14’ (30) TBS 139 247 ‘PG’ tha Bee (2:00) “Live Free or Die “London Has Fallen” (2016) Gerard Butler. A Secret Service “American Sniper” (2014, War) Bradley Cooper, Sienna Miller, Jake McDorman. Navy “Live Free or Die Hard” (2007, Action) Bruce Willis, Justin (31) TNT 138 245 Hard” (2007) Bruce Willis. agent must save the captive U.S. president. SEAL Chris Kyle logs an incredible number of kills. Long. America’s computers fall under attack. (2:00) College Football College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) SportsCenter With Scott SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) College Football Final (34) ESPN 140 206 Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Van Pelt (3:00) College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Football College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) College Football Final (N) 30 for 30 SportsCenter (35) ESPN2 144 209 Scoreboard Shorts Mariners All Mariners Pre- MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners. From Safeco Field in Seattle. (N) (Live) Mariners MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners. From Safeco Field in Seattle. Mariners (36) ROOT 426 687 Access game (N) Postgame Postgame “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” (1984, Adventure) Harrison Ford, Kate Cap“Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” (1989, Adventure) Harrison Ford, Sean Connery. “Raiders of the Lost Ark” (1981) Harrison Ford. An archae (38) PARMT 241 241 shaw, Ke Huy Quan. Indy squares off against bloodthirsty Indian cultists. Indy’s hunt for his missing father leads to the Holy Grail. ologist races Nazis to find a powerful relic. (2:25) “Hard “Armageddon” (1998, Science Fiction) Bruce Willis, Billy Bob Thornton, Liv Tyler. A hero tries to save Earth “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” (2015, Action) Henry Cavill, Armie Hammer. A (:31) “Deep Impact” (1998, Drama) Robert (43) AMC 131 254 to Kill” from an asteroid. CIA agent and a KGB agent join forces to thwart evil. Duvall, Tea Leoni, Elijah Wood. Home MovFamily Guy Dragon Ball Z My Hero Aca- Naruto: Ship- Boruto: Na- Dragon Ball FLCL: Alter- Attack on Jojo’s Bizarre Black Clover Hunter X One Punch Lupin the 3rd Cowboy Be- Samurai Jack (46) TOON 176 296 ies ‘14’ ‘14’ Kai ‘Y7’ demia puden ruto Next Super ‘PG’ native ‘14’ Titan ‘MA’ (N) Hunter ‘PG’ Man ‘14’ Part 4 bop ‘14’ ‘Y7’ The Zoo A silverback gorilla My Cat From Hell “Fluffy’s My Cat From Hell: Scratch My Cat From Hell “Guilt My Cat From Hell “My Pup Wolves and Warriors (N) My Cat From Hell “Guilt My Cat From Hell “My Pup (47) ANPL 184 282 receives surgery. ‘PG’ Last Stand” ‘PG’ Tracks (N) ‘PG’ Stricken Guardian” ‘PG’ From Hell” (N) ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Stricken Guardian” ‘PG’ From Hell” ‘PG’ (3:30) JesJessie ‘G’ Jessie “Coffee Bunk’d “It’s a Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ “Cinderella” (2015) Cate Blanchett. A young woman tries not (:05) Raven’s Raven’s Bunk’d ‘G’ Andi Mack ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Bunk’d ‘G’ (49) DISN 173 291 sie ‘G’ Talk” ‘G’ Blast!” ‘G’ to lose hope in the face of cruelty. Home Home ‘G’ The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud The Loud Henry Danger Knight Squad Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘14’ Friends ‘14’ (:35) Friends (:10) Friends (:45) Friends (50) NICK 171 300 House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ House ‘Y7’ (N) ‘G’ ‘G’ ‘14’ ‘14’ ‘14’ (3:40) “Frozen” (2013, Children’s) Voices of Kristen Bell, (:10) “Ratatouille” (2007, Children’s) Voices of Patton Oswalt, Ian Holm, Lou Romano. Ani- (8:50) “The Lion King” (1994, Children’s) Voices of Matthew “The Lion King II: Simba’s (51) FREE 180 311 Idina Menzel, Jonathan Groff. mated. A French rat enjoys good food and longs to become a chef. Broderick, Jeremy Irons, James Earl Jones. Pride” (1998) Untold Stories of the E.R. Untold Stories of the E.R. Long Island Medium “Read- Long Island Medium “Freez- Long Island Medium “Star-Crossed Spirits” Theresa gives Long Island Medium “Read- Long Island Medium “Freez (55) TLC 183 280 “Size Matters” ‘PG’ “Chocolate Pudding” ‘PG’ ing the Stars” ‘PG’ ing Theresa” ‘PG’ readings to celebrities. ‘PG’ ing the Stars” ‘PG’ ing Theresa” ‘PG’ Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People “Hu- Alaskan Bush People The Alaskan Bush People “Episode 4” (N) ‘PG’ Alaskan Bush People ‘14’ Alaskan Bush People “Birdy (56) DISC 182 278 “Raised Wild” ‘PG’ man Wolf Pack” ‘PG’ Browns must hurry. ‘PG’ Get Your Gun” ‘14’ Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures “Hotel Ghost Adventures (N) ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures “Twin Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ (57) TRAV 196 277 Léger” ‘PG’ Bridges Orphanage” ‘PG’ Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars: (:31) Pawn (:03) Pawn (:33) Pawn (:03) Pawn Stars A Brown (:03) Pawn (:33) Pawn (58) HIST 120 269 ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Pumped Up Stars ‘PG’ Stars ‘PG’ Stars ‘PG’ Bess musket. ‘PG’ Stars ‘PG’ Stars ‘PG’ Live PD “Live PD -- 09.21.18” ‘14’ (:06) Live PD: Rewind “Live Live PD “Live PD -- 09.29.18” (N Same-day Tape) ‘14’ Live PD “Live PD -- 09.29.18” PD: Rewind No. 150” (N) ‘14’ ‘14’ (59) A&E 118 265 (60) HGTV

(58) HIST (59) A&E

Clarion TV

A = DISH

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

Pawn Stars ‘PG’

Sesame Esme & Roy (8:55) “The LEGO NINJAGO Movie” (2017, (:37) “Pitch Perfect 3” (2017) Anna Kend(:15) REAL Sports With Bry- (:15) “Dude, Where’s My Car?” (2000, (:45) “Atomic Blonde” (2017) Charlize TherStreet “Last (N) ‘Y’ Children’s) Voices of Jackie Chan, Dave rick. The Barden Bellas reunite for an overant Gumbel ‘PG’ Comedy) Ashton Kutcher, Seann William on. A spy tries to take down an espionage ring ! HBO Straw” ‘Y’ Franco. ‘PG’ seas musical USO tour. Scott, Kristy Swanson. ‘PG-13’ in Berlin. ‘R’ (7:50) “17 Again” (2009) Zac Efron. A (:40) “Land of the Lost” (2009, Comedy) Will Ferrell, Anna (:40) VICE ‘14’ (:10) Real Time With Bill (:10) Insecure (:40) Ballers (:10) “The Mummy” (2017, Action) Tom Cruise, Russell 37-year-old man miraculously transforms into Friel, Danny R. McBride. A time-space vortex sucks three Maher ‘MA’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ Crowe, Annabelle Wallis. A soldier of fortune fights an an ^ HBO2 a teenager. ‘PG-13’ people into another reality. ‘PG-13’ cient, resurrected monster. ‘PG-13’ (7:25) “A Time to Kill” (1996, Drama) Sandra Bullock, Sam- (9:55) “Rush Hour 2” (2001, Action) Jackie “Lions for Lambs” (2007, Drama) Robert (:05) “Courage Under Fire” (1996, Drama) Denzel Wash(:05) “Green Zone” (2010, uel L. Jackson. A lawyer’s defense of a black man arouses Chan. Detectives battle a Hong Kong gangRedford. Inspired by a professor, two young ington, Meg Ryan. Officer reviews medal candidacy of female Action) Matt Damon, Greg + MAX the Klan’s ire. ‘R’ ster and his henchmen. men join the military. ‘R’ helicopter pilot. ‘R’ Kinnear. ‘R’ “Jerry Maguire” (1996, Romance-Comedy) Tom Cruise, Cuba Gooding Jr., Kidding ‘MA’ (:10) “Inglourious Basterds” (2009, War) Brad Pitt, Mélanie Laurent, Christoph Waltz. Sol- (1:55) “Legally Blonde” (2001, Comedy) Kidding ‘MA’ Renee Zellweger. An attack of conscience changes an L.A. sports agent’s diers seek Nazi scalps in German-occupied France. ‘R’ Reese Witherspoon, Luke Wilson, Selma 5 SHOW life. ‘R’ Blair. ‘PG-13’ (6:45) “Queen of the Desert” (8:55) “Season of the Witch” (2011, Action) “The Interpreter” (2005, Suspense) Nicole Kidman, Sean (:40) “Changing Lanes” (2002, Suspense) Ben Affleck, “Bad Grandmas” (2017, Comedy) Florence (2015, Biography) Nicole Kid- Nicolas Cage, Ron Perlman, Stephen Camp- Penn, Catherine Keener. A U.N. translator overhears an as- Samuel L. Jackson, Toni Collette. A car accident puts two Henderson. Four grandmothers accidentally 8 TMC man. ‘PG-13’ bell Moore. ‘PG-13’ sassination plot. ‘PG-13’ men on a collision course. ‘R’ kill a con man. ‘NR’

14

B

Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ ‘PG’ Live PD “Live PD -- 01.26.18” Riding along with law enforcement. ‘14’

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

SATURDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING A

Forged in Fire: Knife or Death ‘PG’ Live PD: Rewind “Live PD: Rewind No. 92” ‘14’

Love It or List It “Functioning for Four” ‘G’ Halloween Wars “Monster Party” ‘G’ Undercover Boss “Wienerschnitzel” ‘PG’ Justice With Judge Jeanine

House Hunters Renovation (N) ‘G’ Halloween Wars “Zombie Cooking Show” ‘G’ Undercover Boss “Family Dollar” ‘PG’ The Greg Gutfeld Show

(7:50) “Role Models: Unrated Special Edition” (2008, Comedy) Seann William Scott, Paul Rudd. “Lights Out” (2016) Teresa Palmer, Gabriel Bateman. A supernatural entity terrorizes a family at night.

Restored Brett restores a Love It or List It “Functioning majestic mansion. ‘G’ for Four” ‘G’ Halloween Wars The final two Halloween Wars “Monster teams face off. ‘G’ Party” ‘G’ Paid Program Paid Program American Greed ‘PG’ ‘G’ ‘G’ Watters’ World Justice With Judge Jeanine (9:55) “Superbad: Unrated Extended Edition” (2007, Comedy) Jonah Hill, Michael Cera. (9:55) Fu(:26) Futura- (10:57) Fu(:28) Futuraturama ‘PG’ ma ‘PG’ turama ‘PG’ ma ‘PG’

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

(2:45) “Atom- (:40) “Jane Fonda in Five Acts” (2018, Documentary) Jane Fonda, Tom “Phantom Thread” (2017, Drama) Daniel Day-Lewis, Vicky (:10) The Deuce “Seven-Fifty” (:10) Ballers (:40) Insecure (:10) “Phantom Thread” Lori envisions a future in Los ‘MA’ ‘MA’ (2017, Drama) Daniel Day504 ic Blonde” ‘R’ Hayden, Robert Redford. A look at the life, work and activism of Jane Fonda. Krieps, Lesley Manville. A renowned dressmaker finds ro‘NR’ mance in 1950s London. ‘R’ Angeles. ‘MA’ Lewis. ‘R’ The Deuce Candy looks to The Deuce “There’s an Art to The Deuce “Seven-Fifty” Lori Insecure Insecure Tracey UllREAL Sports With Bryant “Bring It On” (2000, Comedy) Kirsten Dunst. (:10) Swiped: Hooking Up in This” Candy grows creatively envisions a future in Los An- “Ready-Like” “Obsessedman’s Show Gumbel ‘PG’ High-school cheerleaders vie for a coveted the Digital Age ‘MA’ 505 make more artful films. ‘MA’ frustrated. ‘MA’ geles. ‘MA’ ‘MA’ Like” ‘MA’ ‘MA’ national title. ‘PG-13’ (3:05) “Green Zone” (2010, (:05) “The Water Diviner” (2014, Historical Drama) Russell “Hacksaw Ridge” (2016, War) Andrew Garfield, Sam Worthington, Luke (:20) “12 Strong” (2018, War) Chris Hemsworth, Michael (:35) “Why Crowe, Olga Kurylenko. An Australian looks for his missing Bracey. Medic Desmond Doss becomes a hero during World War II. ‘R’ Shannon, Michael Peña. A U.S. Special Forces team battles Him?” (2016) 516 Action) Matt Damon, Greg Kinnear. ‘R’ sons after World War I. ‘R’ the Taliban and al-Qaida. ‘R’ ‘R’ Shameless Frank gets into Shameless “Mo White!” Fiona Shameless Frank faces ob“Baby Driver” (2017, Action) Ansel Elgort, Kevin Spacey, (8:53) Kidding (:25) Kidding (9:55) Kidding Naked Naked Shameless pursues an investment oppor- stacles in his new role. ‘MA’ Lily James. A doomed heist threatens the life of a young ‘MA’ “Pusillani‘MA’ SNCTM (N) SNCTM (N) ‘MA’ 546 trouble with the PTA. ‘MA’ tunity. ‘MA’ getaway driver. ‘R’ mous” ‘MA’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ (:05) “Sleepless” (2017) Jamie Foxx, T.I.. A (:40) “The Rock” (1996, Action) Sean Connery, Nicolas Cage, Ed Harris. “Would You Rather” (2012, Horror) Brittany (:35) “The Caretaker” (2016) Meegan War- “Would You Rather” (2012, Snow. A sadistic man traps eight people in his ner. A woman senses an evil presence in her Horror) Brittany Snow, Jonny 554 Las Vegas cop must save his kidnapped son Alcatraz Island terrorists threaten to gas San Francisco. ‘R’ from gangsters. ‘R’ mansion. ‘NR’ grandmother’s home. ‘NR’ Coyne. ‘NR’

September 23 - 29, 2018

Clarion TV

© Tribune Media Services

15


B8 | Friday, September 28, 2018 | Peninsula Clarion

Crossword

Man uses wife’s problems at work against her at home a hostile work environment by giving you the silent treatment. They don’t have to love you, but they do have to work cooperatively with you, which they aren’t doing. You should report it to human resources or your boss, so it can be dealt with in a professional manner. As to your husband and what he’s been doing Abigail Van Buren on the home front, tell him he has a choice -- MAKE the time to work with a counselor and learn to fight fair or you will consult a lawyer about ending the marriage.

DEAR ABBY: I recently became friendly with a couple who lost their 40-year-old son six months ago. We have grown close over the last several months. The issue is, as they are mourning the passing of -- TOO TIRED TO FIGHT their child, they have turned their home into a shrine. DEAR TOO TIRED: As I see it, you have two There are pictures of him in every room, etc. I know issues to deal with. You have two “colleagues” at everyone handles grief differently, but this seems exwork who have ganged up on you and are creating cessive, if not a little creepy. I suggested they see a therapist, which they did, but

only a couple of times. Believe it or not, they were told they were on the right track! Do you have any suggestions?

-- FINDS IT DEPRESSING IN INDIANA DEAR FINDS: I sure do! Stop judging that couple and expecting them to get over the loss of their child on your timetable. Their therapist has told them they are on the right track, and if you are going to continue to be a supportive friend, you must abandon your preconceptions about how they should deal with their loss. Be supportive. Listen when they need to talk. And when you can, give them positive messages that may lighten their load.

Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. Abby shares more than 100 of her favorite recipes in two booklets: “Abby’s Favorite Recipes” and “More Favorite Recipes by Dear Abby.” Send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $14 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby, Cookbooklet Set, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling

Hints from Heloise

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Friday, Sept. 28, 2018: This year you will need to combat a tendency to overindulge, spend too much and cause yourself trouble. If you understand your longterm goals, you will fare well. If you are single, you meet a lot of people with ease. You might not be ready to settle down immediately, so give yourself the time and space you need. If you are attached, the two of you make quite the combo. Together, you can create endless mischief. TAURUS often anchors you. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH Stop yourself before you do anything you regret. You are more upbeat than you recognize. This attitude flows from you to others. Understand what is going on with your spending. You could feel the costs building. Avoid a controlling individual. Tonight: Go for what you want. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH You could feel more in touch with your long-term goals than you have in a long time. You might need to change plans by taking off for the weekend and/or seeing someone at a distance. Opportunity shines later in the day. Tonight: You call the shots, no matter what. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH Be courteous, but give yourself some much-needed space. You need to recharge and get some rest. By lying low and squeezing in a nap, you can revitalize yourself. Your ability to make up for lost time will be enhanced once you feel en-

Rubes

ergized. Tonight: Finish what you must. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHHH Focus on your longterm goals. Do not push too hard to make what you want happen. Have some faith. Lady Luck suddenly appears. You could find a loved one to be very controlling. If that is the case, step away. Be open to change. Tonight: Among the crowds. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Respond to a vague inquiry. Your ability to see what is going on allows greater give-and-take. Your openness might surprise the other party. Refuse to get stuck in what you must do; instead, make time for this individual. Tonight: Be spontaneous, and embrace a fun challenge. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Reach out to someone you care about. You don’t seem to be able to make a difference in how this person views a situation, but at least you can help him or her relax more. Understand that your efforts will be appreciated. Tonight: Christen the weekend by meeting up with friends. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You could make a substantial difference to a partner if you are willing discuss an important matter in terms that he or she can understand. No matter what, be sure to express your feelings. Be more forthcoming with your ideas. Tonight: Dinner with a favorite person. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You might feel reactive or somewhat out of control when dealing with one specific person. Your ability to get through a problem does not seem to count right now.

By Leigh Rubin

Ziggy

Open up to new possibilities presented by a partner. Do not insist on having your way. Tonight: Relax. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Do as much as you can to break free from your routine, especially if you are losing some of the enthusiasm you attach to certain activities. If you are single, someone you meet could be significant. You might be surprised by this connection. Tonight: Read between the lines. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Your creativity might be inspired by a far-out thought. You might wonder if it is possible to make this notion a reality. Test it out on others rather than decide its validity yourself. Getting feedback will be important. Tonight: Join a special friend or associate for dinner and drinks. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH Pressure builds. Your hands are full as it is, and an unexpected happening at your home might take up a large part of your weekend. Do not fight the inevitable. Know when to let go and give others their space; their tune might change quickly as a result. Tonight: Where the action is. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You might feel somewhat unresponsive in the morning. Take a nap, and you will come back feeling energized and ready to throw yourself into the moment. Someone could disclose some important information. Keep it hush-hush for now. Tonight: Be a social butterfly. BORN TODAY Actress Hilary Duff (1987), TV personality Ed Sullivan (1901), actress Naomi Watts (1968)

A BETTER GIFT? Dear Heloise: Hostess gifts sound great. But in theory, for any hostess over the age of 50, may I suggest one word? “Consumables” -- flowers, food, candy, scented soaps, candles, etc. We (people over 50) don’t need more stuff. -- Virginia H., via email How lovely to bring your hostess some fresh flowers or a delicious snack. -- Heloise SPICE UP YOUR TEA Dear Heloise: A great way to use aging spices is to make herbal tea. I add rosemary, sage and ginger to a pot of lemon balm tea for a refreshing brew. -- Leslie W. in Dallas Leslie, I agree! Experimenting with delicious tea flavors is a wonderful way to use spices and concoct your favorites! Add cinnamon or peppermint candies to hot tea for a sweet treat. - Heloise HAIR TODAY, GONE TOMORROW Dear Heloise: Before I shower, I comb my hair to get out loose hairs. When I’m done showering, I take a tissue and wipe the drain to pick up any showered hair for the next time or person. This might save a plumbing bill! -- Mary Ann M., Orange, Calif. TOTAL RECALL Dear Heloise: When I would run out of an item I purchase infrequently, I couldn’t remember where I bought it. Now, I write down the name of the store on the item as soon as I get it home. Your column is a treasure! I’ve learned so much from you and your many readers! - Judith E., Cypress, Calif. LIP TIP Dear Heloise: I found an old lipstick that I had never used before. When I tried to apply it, it was quite dry. I put lip balm on first, and then the lipstick. Much smoother! -- Carol L. in Houston

SUDOKU

By Tom Wilson

9 1 6 4 8 2 7 5 3

2 7 5 3 6 9 8 1 4

Difficulty Level

8 3 4 1 7 5 9 2 6

1 2 3 5 4 8 6 9 7

6 5 9 7 3 1 2 4 8

4 8 7 2 9 6 1 3 5

5 6 8 9 1 4 3 7 2

7 4 1 8 2 3 5 6 9

Previous Puzzles Answer Key

B.C.

Tundra

By Johnny Hart

Garfield

Shoe

By Jim Davis

Take it from the Tinkersons

8

Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to Friday.

By Bill Bettwy

3 9 2 6 5 7 4 8 1

6

9/27

7 2 8 9

Difficulty Level

4

1

By Dave Green

9 7 3 1

3 2 7 7 8

4 1 6 8 4

3

7

2 5

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

Jacqueline Bigar’s Stars

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

DEAR ABBY: My husband tends to fight dirty, and I don’t know how much more I can take. If we argue about some issue between us, he’ll say something along the lines of, “This is why you have so much trouble with your colleagues at work.” He knows this is a touchy subject, and it upsets me. I have ongoing issues with two work colleagues who give me the silent treatment for months over perceived (but not intentional) slights, and it causes me a lot of social isolation and anguish. I’m upset that he brings this up when we argue to validate his point of view. Of course, this escalates our fights and eventually he apologizes. However, I know the next disagreement we have he’ll resort to similar tactics. We have tried counseling, but it’s tough to fit into our busy schedules, and it never stopped him from resorting to personal attacks of character during our fights. I don’t know what to do anymore. I want to forgive him, but I don’t see the point since his apologies don’t mean anything. Is there anything left for us to try before I throw in the towel?

By Eugene Sheffer

9/28

By Chad Carpenter

By Chris Cassatt & Gary Brookins

Mother Goose and Grimm

By Michael Peters


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