Strabel takes down record

Transcription

Strabel takes down record
Seward, Alaska | $1.00
Strabel takes down record
Council
meets in
shadow of
4th of July
Page 3
AVTEC
construction
closes gym
Page 3
Board
hammers
out new
legislative
district plan
Page 3
Assembly
repeals fish
protection
regulations
Page 4
Author
illustrates
the power of
change
Page 5
Mount
Marathon
Race
Results
Pages 7 & 10
Racing and
Recreation
– Mountains
and
Merriment
Pages 8 & 9
SS Alameda
brought in
serum for
Nome
Not one, but two
racers break Spencer’s
32-year-old record
The race record considered to be
almost unbeatable by many marathoners familiar with the annual
Mount Marathon foot race fell not
once, but twice last week. In 1981,
Bill Spencer broke his former record
to set a mark that would stand for 32
years and thousands of racers. The
time, 43 minutes and 21 seconds, was
approached only once since – until
this year’s race when Eric Strabel
clocked a new 42 minute and 55
second race record.
“Is that clock right?” were Strabel’s
first words as race veteran Denali
Foldager greeted him at the finish
line. Her response of ”Umm yeah.
Why?” emphasized the unexpected
fall of the long-standing record.
Then, on the heels of Strabel, Rickey
Gates passed under the clock with
a time of 43 minutes and 4 seconds
to break the record a second time.
According to one onlooker it was like
having two first place finishers in the
same race.
Gates, an accomplished marathon runner but a rookie in the 2013
Mount Marathon Race, led Strabel in
the downhill until Strabel passed him
in a jaw-dropping 10 minute descent
to the finish line. Gates tumbled at
the base of the mountain and dislocated his shoulder which cut into
his finish time. He quickly reset his
shoulder while on the run and ended
up back in sight of Strabel, but he
couldn’t close the gap.
Matt Novakovich, last year’s
champion, with his eye on Strabel
had a sense that he was the competitor to beat. However, as Strabel said
at the race awards presentation,
Gates came out of left field and tested
everyone, making the race that much
Heidi Zemach
For The LOG
You can see how tough these
youngsters are by the serious, pained
look of determination on their faces
and the mud coating their bodies as
they come off the mountain and race
down Jefferson Street toward the
finish line. The Seward area runners
practically live in the shadow of
Mount Marathon. The race is in their
blood.
Page 16
SW 09-01-11
Heidi Zemach | For The LOG
1
Wolfgang Kurtz | The Seward Phoenix LOG
Former Mount Marathon Race record holder Bill Spencer and new champion Eric Strabel
swap stories at the finish line after running the 2013 race. Strabel ran the course in 42
minutes 55 seconds, topping Spencer’s time of 43 minutes 21 seconds which had been
the Mens division record for the past 32 years.
more competitive. Novakovich suffered from cramping that put him off
his pace and ended up in a respectable 11th place.
Two criteria appeared to be crucial
to placing in the top tier in the race,
training and familiarity with the
mountain. Historically and in this
race, skiers been strong competitors
overwhelmingly taking top spots in
the Womens, Mens and Junior divisions. Locally, the Barnwell family
is know for their avid pursuit of the
winter activity.
Allison Barnwell, 21, ran with her
sister McKenzie, 18, in the adult race,
while their other sister Isabel, 17, did
the junior race. Allison, won the 2008
junior race among the girl finishers. This year she finished second
in the Womens Race with a time of
55 minutes 11 seconds. Allison, who
placed fourth last year, kept in shape
running cross-country at Claremont
■ See Race, Page 6
Tali Novakovich, 7, of Anchorage, celebrates her birthday victory with some
oranges after finishing the race.
Below, parents hold their breath,
cross their fingers or silently pray as
they wait for their children to return
unharmed. They’re so relieved and
proud of them when it’s done.
“I was going to put my hands up
in the air but I didn’t,” said frecklefaced red-headed Tali Novakovich of
Anchorage after arriving at the finish
line to hugs and kisses. The smallest, youngest racer celebrated her
seventh birthday by racing this year,
along with siblings Liz and Josh. Was
it fun? Tali nods vigorously, “It was
super hard!” The hardest part, she
said, was running to the finish line.
“Because I was running super-fast –
really, really fast!”
“I’m so proud of her that she
finished the whole thing smiling.
She loved it,” said her mother Tiffanie Novakovich. “Safety was our
number one concern. So yes, it was
awesome to see her keep moving
hard and keep running fast,” said
her father Matt Novakovich, the 2012
Mens Race champion. Tali’s father
took her up the mountain seven or
eight times before the race, and a few
people were stationed at the most
challenging places to make sure she
Seward Little League hosts the
first inter-league games in five
years this weekend. Teams of
Minor and Major division players are coming to town to play
some “real” Little League games.
Tonight is a a mass Minors and
Majors practice at 6 p.m. Organizers are encouraging all local
players to attend.
Minors play Valdez at 6 p.m.
Friday and Majors play Valdez at
8 p.m. Friday. There will be hot
dogs, chips and drinks for everyone between the games. Organizers want to show Seward’s
hospitality to the teams who
come from so far to play. Everyone is welcome and encouraged
to bring a salad, dessert or other
food to share.
On Saturday, Minors play at
10 a.m. and Majors at 12:30 p.m.
All players should be hearing
from their coaches but questions
may be posted to the Seward
Little League Facebook page.
Troopers
bust
underage
party
Wolfgang Kurtz | The Seward Phoenix LOG
2013 Mount Marathon Race rookie Christy Marvin flies down the final stretch to
take first place in the Womens division
with time of 53 minutes 20 seconds. The
first newcomer to win since 2004, Marvin
was followed in quick succession by race
veteran and Sewardite Allison Barnwell.
Mount Marathon is in their blood
Youngsters
run in Mini
Mount
Marathon
54159 00001
LOG Staff
Wolfgang Kurtz
LOG Editor
Page 12
8
Vol. 47, No. 47 | July 11, 2013
www.TheSewardPhoenixLOG.com
Little
League
makes
big
play
made it through safely. Still, the rain
concerned them, Matt said.
“Not every seven year old should
be doing the race,” said Jackie Marshall, who has trained young runners
for years. Her 16-year-old son Michael, the second-place Boys finisher,
began racing Mount Marathon at age
seven, only after his parents took him
up 10 times, and were confident in
his abilities. “The greatest challenge
for the smallest kids is finding a good
hand hold on the rocks going up
since their bodies are so small. But in
the same breath I think they’re at an
advantage because they’re just out
there having fun and kind of getting
into it.”
Lyon Kopsack, a determined 17
year old from Palmer, handily took
first place this year well ahead of his
friend and rival Michael. “I knew I
was in good shape. That’s what I do
all summer,” said Marshall, whose
father Dan Marshall is his track
and cross-country coach at Seward
High School. “But I knew Lyon has
been training super hard and really
wanted it.”
■ See Juniors, Page 6
LOG Staff
Friday, Alaska State Troopers
issued citations to seven underage drinkers and arrested two
others on charges related to underage consumption of alcohol.
Another 20-year-old man was
arrested for an outstanding warrant and providing a false report
after he lied to officers about his
name to evade the warrant. The
ages of the revelers ranged from
17 to 20 and there were reportedly no Sewardites present with
most of them hailing from the
Soldotna area.
While on foot patrol, officers
were drawn to the scene in the
Old Exit Glacier Road neighborhood by loud noises and made
contact with the group just after
3 a.m. The area often draws
nuisance complaints by residents
as it is a hodgepodge of land historically used for unsupervised
camping. The land is managed
by two different state agencies
or owned by Cook Inlet Region,
Inc.
After organizing efforts and
local meetings over winter,
public concern over the upcoming camping season resulted in
commitments by AST and other
agencies to exercise more active
management of the area.
Page 2 • July 11, 2013 • The Seward Phoenix LOG
Opinion & Ideas
The following is from the editorial page of the July 10, 1986 Seward Phoenix
Rocking Access” plan was unveiled.
DANGEROUS SITUATION... Last week, a young man fell into Lowell Creek.
LOG.
the Boat He was swept through the diversion tunnel and drowned.
WELCOME SAILORS... We’re glad you’re back, and we hope that Navy visits
A rock and concrete dike, some 20 feet high, channels the creek into the tunnel
will become as much a Seward tradition as the Marathon Race and Salmon Derby.
near the foot of Mount Marathon, a popular hiking and climbing spot.
Last year, your colleagues aboard the minesweepers USS Pledge and the USS Esteem
Photographers, sightseers and, frequently, curious youngsters climb up to have a look at
thought Seward was “the best Alaska has to offer,” according to Captain Ed Hunt of the
the rushing stream as it funnels into the tunnel.
USS Pledge. “Here, we were made part of the town.”
A chain-link fence runs along the dike top for short distance from the tunnel entrance,
We hope Seward will again turn out in force to make you feel at home, be it at a baseball
but it’s easy for the adventurous to get behind the fence. And from there, it’s not hard to
game, a Chamber or American Legion luncheon, or along the streets of Seward. We hope
slip and fall in.
you’ll receive many invitations to hike our trails, visit our homes and fish our bay.
No warning signs are posted, but they should be.
And when you leave, we hope you take along happy memories.
The fence should be extended along the entire dike. At its upper end, gravel banks sepaVIGILANCE REWARDED... Last week, we learned that a proposed “Basic Access” plan
rate the steep dike from the stream. The water is shallower. If someone fell in, they’d have
for ferry operations might drop Seward as a port of call for the Tustumena.
Hats off to Governor Bill Sheffield, who jumped to our defense as he has many times be- a chance of getting out.
Not every tragedy can be averted. But the cost of installing safeguards would be money
fore. The governor stated that as long as he hold office, Seward will never loose the Tusty.
well spent, if a life were saved.
Thanks also to Ray Gillespie, the governor’s chief of staff. He apprised Mr. Sheffield of
GEAR UP FOR SALMON DERBY... Get involved with the biggest salmon-nabbing,
what was happening. Defending the Seward ferry service is nothing new for Mr. Gillespie.
prize-winning, fish-story-telling event in Alaska. A carnival spirit reigns down at the boat
When he lived in Seward and served as chamber of commerce president, Ray travelled to
harbor, and Derby is a great time to volunteer.
Juneau to stave off a similar crisis.
Call the Chamber of Commerce. They’ll find you a fun job where you can meet everyone
Finally, we compliment Ron Garzini, city manager, for having the good sense to send a
in town.
staff member to the Alaska Marine Highway System’s policy meeting, where the “Basic
Civil union:
Pursuit of happiness without government interference
Not too long ago, I had the honor of
nominating an Alaskan family as Angels in
Adoption, a celebration of the selflessness
shown by foster care families and those who
adopt children. They arrived in Washington,
D.C., a military family who had opened
their doors to not one child but four siblings
to make sure that these sisters and brother
had the simplest gift you can give a child: a
home together. We had lunch together, and
they shared their stories with me. All the
while, the children politely ate lunch and
giggled as content youngsters do. Given my
daily hectic Senate schedule, it’s not often
that I get to sit down with such a happy
family during a workday – and I think of
them often, as everything our nation should
encourage.
I bring them up because the partners were
two women who had first made the decision to open their home to provide foster
care to the eldest child in 2007. Years later
– and after a deployment abroad with the
Alaska National Guard for one of them –
they embraced the joy and sacrifice of four
adopted children living under the same roof,
with smiles, laughter, movie nights, parentteacher conferences and runny noses.
Yet despite signing up and volunteering to
give themselves fully to these four adorable
children, our government does not meet this
family halfway and allow them to be legally
recognized as spouses. After their years of
sleepless nights, after-school pickups and
birthday cakes, if one of them gets sick or
injured and needs critical care, the other
would not be allowed to visit them in the
emergency room – and the children could
possibly be taken away from the healthy
partner. They do not get considered for
household health care benefit coverage like
spouses nationwide. This first-class Alaskan
family still lives a second-class existence.
The Supreme Court is set to make a pair of
decisions on the topic of marriage equality
shortly, and the national conversation on this
issue is picking back up. This is a significant
moment for our nation when it comes to rethinking our society’s priorities and the role
of government in Americans’ private lives
Publishing the news of the Eastern Kenai
Peninsula since 1966
E-mail
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232 Fourth Ave.
Mail
The Seward Phoenix Log
P.O. Box 103
Seward, AK 99664
and decisions, so I want to be
I hear from more and more
absolutely clear with Alaskans.
Alaskans especially our
I am a life-long Republican
younger generations. Like the
because I believe in promotmajority of Alaskans, I suping freedom and limiting the
ported a constitutional amendreach of government. When
ment in 1998 defining margovernment does act, I believe
riage as only between a man
it should encourage family
and a woman, but my thinking
values. I support the right of all
has evolved as America has
Americans to marry the person
witnessed a clear cultural shift.
they love and choose because
Fifteen years after that vote,
I believe doing so promotes
I find that when one looks
Op-Ed
both values: it keeps politicians
closer at the issue, you quickly
Lisa
out of the most private and
realize that same sex unions or
Murkowski
personal aspects of peoples’
civil marriages are consistent
U.S. Senator
lives, while also encouraging
with the independent mindset
more families to form and
of our state – and they deserve
more adults to make a lifetime commitment
a hands-off approach from our federal polito one another. While my support for same
cies.
sex civil marriage is something I believe in, I
First, this is a personal liberty issue and
am equally committed to guaranteeing that
has to do with the most important personal
religious freedoms remain inviolate, so that
decision that any human makes. I believe
churches and other religious institutions
that, as Americans, our freedoms come from
can continue to determine and practice their
God and not government, and include the
own definition of marriage.
rights enumerated in the Declaration of
With the notion of marriage – an excluIndependence: life, liberty and the pursuit of
sive, emotional, binding ‘til death do you
happiness. What could be more important
part tie – becoming more and more an
to the pursuit of happiness than the right to
exception to the rule given a rise in cohabita- choose your spouse without asking a Washtion and high rates of divorce, why should
ington politician for permission? If there is
the federal government be telling adults
one belief that unifies most Alaskans – our
who love one another that they cannot get
true north – it is less government and more
married, simply because they happen to be
freedom. We don’t want the government in
gay? I believe when there are so many forces
our pockets or our bedrooms; we certainly
pulling our society apart, we need more
don’t need it in our families.
commitment to marriage, not less.
Secondly, civil marriage also touches the
foundation of our national culture: safe,
This thinking is consistent with what
healthy families and robust community life.
In so many ways, sound families are the
foundation of our society. Any efforts or
opportunity to expand the civil bonds and
rights to anyone that wants to build a stable,
happy household should be promoted.
Thirdly, by focusing on civil marriage –
but also reserving to religious institutions
the right to define marriage as they see fit
– this approach respects religious liberty by
stopping at the church door. As a Catholic,
I see marriage as a valued sacrament that
exists exclusively between a man and a
woman. Other faiths and belief systems feel
differently about this issue – and they have
every right to. Churches must be allowed
to define marriage and conduct ceremonies
according to their rules, but the government
should not tell people who they have a right
to marry through a civil ceremony.
I recently read an interview where Ronald
Reagan’s daughter said that she believes he
would have supported same-sex marriage,
that he would think “What difference does it
make to anybody else’s life? I also think because he wanted government out of peoples’
lives, he would not understand the intrusion
of government banning such a thing. This
is not what he would have thought government should be doing.”
Like Reagan, Alaskans believe that government works best when it gets out of the
way. Countless Alaskans and Americans
want to give themselves to one another and
create a home together. I support marriage
equality and support the government getting out of the way to let that happen.
Letters to the Editor
Corrections
The Seward Phoenix LOG welcomes letters to the editor.
General interest letters should be no more than 300 words. Thank you letters should be no more than
150 words.
All letters must include the writer’s name, address and daytime telephone number. Only the writer’s
name, and city or village of residency is published. Every letter requires the name of a person for the
signiture. The LOG reserves the right to edit letters for content, length, clarity, grammar and taste.
Submit letters before 5 p.m. on the Friday before publication for consideration in the next week’s newspaper. Meeting the deadline does not guarantee that a letter will be published.
Letter writers are encouraged to send letters by e-mail to [email protected]. Letters
delivered by FAX, mail and hand are also accepted.
Opinions expressed on this page are not necessarily those of The Seward Phoenix LOG owners or staff.
Publisher
Annette Shacklett
[email protected]
Editor
Wolfgang Kurtz
[email protected]
Advertising
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[email protected]
Deadlines
Letters to the editor & commentaries
5 p.m. Friday
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Published every Thursday by
The Seward Phoenix LOG
P.O. Box 103
Seward, AK 99664
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Seward Phoenix LOG, P.O. Box 103, Seward, AK
99664
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In the July 4 edition of the LOG, the caption for “Sewardites join petition ranks“
stated that the recall referendum for Senate
Bill 21 may appear on a ballot this fall.
However, if the recall petition is certified,
the question will be not be put to Alaska
voters until August 2014.
The publisher reserves the right to reject or edit
any advertisement, news or opinion submitted.
No part of this publication may be reproduced
by any means without the express permission of
the publisher.
© 2013
The Seward Phoenix Log
All rights reserved.
The Seward Phoenix LOG • July 11, 2013 • Page 3
Council meets in shadow of 4th of July
Wolfgang Kurtz
LOG Editor
All the results aren’t in but City of
Seward administration reported at Monday’s city council meeting that city campgrounds and parking were operating at
capacity over the 4th of July holiday. This
year’s holiday campers were mostly wellbehaved, resulting in significantly fewer
incidents of staff contact with disorderly or
rowdy campers. Seward Police Chief Tom
Clemons said that there were comparatively
few arrests over the holiday and he commended his staff, noting the competency of
the reformulated dispatch center.
The meeting, featuring all the elected representatives, was told that the city’s quarry
checked out favorably and that production
of rock for the new Seward Marine Industrial Center breakwater could begin. In conjunction with the quarry survey, geologic
testing and dredge sampling for the SMIC
breakwater is underway, setting the stage
for the major project to begin depending on
the test results.
On June 28, the city was served with a
notice of violation by the Alaska Department of Conservation for activities occurring at SMIC on the Seward Ship’s Drydock
leasehold. Arising from violations noted
in an April 10 inspection of SSD, the notice
sets out a compliance schedule for filing
reports. SSD will be expected to file reports
on a timely basis and use best management
practices. DEC is expected to issue a report
on the City of Seward’s boatyard soon.
Controversy erupted when a harbor
customer took issue with the Harbormaster’s Office policy on accepting checks for
payment. The customer complained about
the staff’s handling of the situation after
which Harbormaster Mack Funk reviewed
video records of the exchange. Analysis of
the video record took place with Funk and
AVTEC construction
closes gym
LOG Staff
The changing hours and restrictions
regarding AVTEC Gym usage have become
a moot point as the facility is closed until
late August for construction. Staff also said
that efforts are begin made to address the
lack of public access on weekends before
cold weather sets in. They hope to make
arrangements for some openings to provide
indoor weekend activities for Sewardites
thid winter.
In the meantime, crews are stripping
the frayed wall covering and replacing it
with finished panels. The lighting is being
converted to high efficiency fluorescents
which will shed more light on gym activities. Later, in the fall, plans have been made
to replace the bleachers with new ones. The
goal is to have the gym renovations completed by Aug. 19 the first day of AVTEC’s
fall classes.
Next door, construction on the new
AVTEC dorms continues with Sewardbound building modules due to leave
Idaho today. The 38 or so modules will be
assembled onsite in mid-August at a rate
of around seven a day. The connecting
building is almost framed in and work will
move indoors throughout the construction
site over the fall and winter with occupancy
expected by Jan. 1.
There is a high resolution webcam
overseeing the construction project which is
linked to at AVTEC’s Facebook page.
and upgrades for major systems in the
city’s finance department and at the Community Library Museum and Harbormaster’s Office had taxed available manpower.
A lengthy list of MIS responsibilities
included in the city manager’s report
City Manager Jim Hunt and resulted in a
no-fault ruling for the harbor staff member.
The Harbormaster’s Office does accept
personal checks.
In support of administration’s request to
hire a temporary MIS worker, Mike Meeks,
who heads up the city’s two-man computer
services department, said that maintenance
■ See Council, Page 15
Redistricting board
hammers out new plan
Annette Shacklett
Publisher
A U.S. Supreme Court decision on
June 25 voided the obligation that the
Alaska submit voting district maps to the
U.S. Department of Justice for approval.
The justices voted 5-4 for the change.
Since the 1965 passage of the Voting
Rights Act, DOJ could regulate elections
in states with a history of voting discrimination against minorities. Until last
month, Alaska was one of the states because at one time language requirements
affected Native voting eligibility.
The decision came as Alaska’s Redistricting Board had again started redrawing the state’s legislative maps, following
state Supreme Court instructions to do
so.
As elections drew near last year,
the state Supreme Court ordered, and
reiterated this spring, the board to make
changes to the district maps so that they
meet the guidelines of the Hickel Process
and without regard for the VRA. With
the VRA requirement gone, the board
only needs to meet state requirements.
To that end, the board drafted seven
plans and held public hearings by teleconference in Anchorage, Fairbanks and
Juneau.
On Sunday, the board adopted a conceptual plan and meets again on July 14
to adopt a final plan.
The final plan is turned over to the Division of Elections and barring objections
filed in court, the new districts go into
effect for the 2014 elections.
With the proposed map, Seward
and the Eastern Kenai Peninsula are
no longer in the same senate district as
South Anchorage. Instead, the area is
in the same senate district as Kenai and
Soldotna.
The plans and maps are online at
www.akredistricting.org. Contact the
board at [email protected], 411
West 4th Ave., Suite 302, Anchorage, Ak
99501, 907-269-7402, FAX 907-269-6691.
City Calendar
SEWARD CITY COUNCIL
REGULAR MEETING ACTION AGENDA
Monday, July 8, 2013
The following ordinance had a public hearing
and was enacted:
Ordinance 2013-010, Amending Portions Of Seward
City Code 15.25. Floodplain Management To Adopt
The Digital Floodplain Rate Maps (DFIRM) And The
Flood Insurance Study (FIS) Dated September 27,
2013 As Established By FEMA And Update Portions Of
Chapter 15.25 To Minimum FEMA Requirements.
The following resolutions were approved:
Resolution 2013-053, Authorizing A Five Year Contract
In An Annual Amount Starting At $655,470.00 With
The State Of Alaska, Department Of Corrections, To
Provide For Operating The Seward Community Jail
And Housing Prisoners Charged And/Or Sentenced
Under Alaska Statutes, And Appropriating Funds.
Resolution 2013-054, Authorizing The City Manager
To Enter Into A Contract With North Star Paving
& Construction Inc. For The Z-Float/North East
Harbor Upland Paving Improvements In The Amount
Of $214,000.00 Plus A 10% Contingency, And
Appropriating Funds.
Resolution 2013-055, Authorizing The City Manager
To Enter Into A Design Build Contract With Harmon
Construction For Harbor Restrooms Improvements In
The Amount Of $105,000 And Appropriating Funds.
Resolution 2013-057, Stating An Intent To Fund
$500,000 For The Maple Street Water Line Project
Subject To Receiving A Loan In That Amount,
Authorizing A Loan Application With The Alaska
Drinking Water Fund And Authorizing The City
Manager To Enter Into A Loan Agreement With The
Alaska Drinking Water Fund With Annual Payments
Not To Exceed $55,000, And Subject To Annual
Appropriation.
The following resolution was postponed to the
July 22, 2013 meeting:
Resolution 2012-058, Stating An Intent To Fund
$400,000 For The Maple Street Sewer Line Project
Subject To Receiving A Loan In That Amount,
Authorizing A Loan Application With The Alaska
Clean Water Fund And Authorizing The City Manager
To Enter Into A Loan Agreement With The Alaska
Drinking Clean Water Fund With Annual Payments
Not To Exceed $24,000, And Subject To Annual
Appropriation. (Clerk’s Note: This resolution was
originally approved on July 23, 2012. It is coming before
council tonight in order to correct a term in the title which
has a substantially different definition, and it should be
noted that it includes a new agenda statement.)
PO 103343-00
The following resolution failed:
Resolution 2013-056, Authorizing The City Manager
To Purchase A Used Truck For A Cash Amount After
Trade-In Consideration Of The Subaru Forester Not To
Exceed $31,000, And Appropriating Funds.
PORT AND COMMERCE ADVISORY
BOARD
MEETING AGENDA
Wednesday, July 10, 2013 at 12:00 p.m.
City Council Chambers
SPECIAL ORDERS, PRESENTATIONS AND
REPORTS
A. AKRR Representative - Louis Bencardino
B. Harbormaster Report – Mack Funk
C. Chamber of Commerce Report - Cindy Clock
D. Administration Report - Ron Long
INFORMATIONAL ITEMS, REPORTS AND
PRESENTATIONS
A. SMIC/CVRF update
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
A. PACAB Resolution 2013-01, Recommending The
Revision Of The 2013 Harbor Tariff To Eliminate The
Requirement For Passenger Fees For Students That
Are Part Of A Classroom Group. (Tabled from earlier
meeting)
B. Review of Small Boat Harbor Management Plan.
PLANNING AND ZONING
COMMISSION
SPECIAL MEETING AGENDA
Tuesday, July 16, 2013 at 7:00 p.m.
City Council Chambers
SPECIAL REPORTS & PRESENTATIONS
1. City Administration Report
NEW BUSINESS
Resolution 2013-13, Of The Planning And Zoning
Commission Of The City Of Seward, Alaska, Providing
Recommendations To City Council Regarding The
Parcel Legally Known As The West ½ Of Lots 19 And
20, Block 30, Original Townsite Of Seward, Located At
408 Madison.
Discussion and direction for the regularly scheduled
August 6, 2013 Planning and Zoning Commission
meeting.
Approval of the June 4, 2013 Regular Meeting
Minutes.
INFORMATIONAL ITEMS AND REPORTS
1. 2013 Planning & Zoning Meeting Schedule.
2. FEMA Region X Newsletters for June and July.
SEWARD HISTORIC PRESERVATION
COMMISSION
MEETING AGENDA
Wednesday, July 17, 2013 at 6:30 pm..
City Council Chambers
SPECIAL REPORTS
A. City Administration Report
B. National Park Service Presentation On Multi- Modal
Trail To Exit Glacier
C. Other Reports, Announcements & Presentations
NEW BUSINESS
A. Discuss coordination of August 28, 2013 Seward
Founder’s Day activities.
B. Draft 2013 Founder’s Day Proclamation for City
Council.
*C. Approve June 19, 2013 Regular Meeting Minutes
HISTORIC PRESERVATION
COMMISSION
NOTICE OF VACANCY
The City Council is seeking applications from those
interested in serving on the Historic Preservation
Commission. Membership on the Commission is open
to residents of Seward and the surrounding area. The
Historic Preservation Commission meets at least twice
a year in the City Council Chambers and at such other
times as may be requested by the Commission Chair
or the Administration. Each commissioner serves for
a (3) year term. There are currently two seats vacant,
with one term expiring in May, 2016 and one term
expiring in May, 2017. Application forms are available
in the office of the City Clerk. Completed applications
must be filed with the office of the City Clerk.
PLANNING AND ZONING
COMMISSION
NOTICE OF VACANCY
The City Council is seeking applications from city
residents interested in volunteering to serve on the
Seward Planning and Zoning Commission. There is
currently one seat available, with a term expiring in
February 2016. Planning and Zoning (P&Z) holds
regular meetings on the 1st Tuesday of every month
and work sessions the 3rd Tuesday of every month, or
at other times as needed if requested by the Chair.
PORT AND COMMERCE ADVISORY
BOARD
NOTICE OF VACANCY
The City Council is seeking applications from citizens
of Seward and the surrounding area, interested in
serving on the Port and Commerce Advisory Board
(PACAB). There are two seats available with terms
expiring in July 2016.
PACAB meets on the first and third Wednesday of
each month during the lunch hour from 12:00 to
1:00 pm., or at other times as needed, if requested
by the Chair.
Application forms are available in the office of the City
Clerk. Completed application forms must be filed with
the clerk no later than 5:00 p.m., Friday, July 12, 2013.
Applicants will be invited to speak to the City
Council at its July 22, 2013 meeting regarding their
qualifications and interest in serving on the Board.
Later that evening the City Council will vote for two
applicants to serve for terms that will expire July 2016.
UPCOMING MEETINGS
Port And Commerce Advisory Board Meeting
Wednesday, July 10, 2013 at 12:00 p.m.
City Council Chambers
Rescheduled from July 3, 2013.
Planning And Zoning Commission Meeting
Tuesday, July 16, 2013 at 7:00 p.m.
City Council Chambers
Port And Commerce Advisory Board Work
Session
Wednesday, July 17, 2013 at 12:00 p.m.
City Council Chambers
Topic: Small Boat Harbor Management Plan
Seward Recreation Committee Meeting
A Special Ad Hoc Citizen Advisory Committee
Wednesday, July 17, 2013 at 6:00 p.m.
The Hangar at 2102 Airport Road (Lucky’s)
LOCATION CHANGE FOR THIS MEETING ONLY!
City Council Meeting
Monday, July 22, 2012 at 7:00 p.m.
City Council Chambers
Interested in receiving a copy of this Seward city
calendar via e-mail? Contact the city clerk at clerk@
cityofseward.net or call 224-4045. Check out your
city’s website at www.cityofseward.us. We have future
plans and ideas, but we welcome your ideas also! Send
any comments or future suggestions about the website
to [email protected].
Publish: July 11, 2013
Page 4 • July 11, 2013 • The Seward Phoenix LOG
Assembly repeals fish protection regulations
The Kenai Peninsula Borough assembly met on July 2 for its only meeting this
month. The meeting lasted almost as long
as the previous one, which is to say that it
was much longer than usual. The assembly
had nine ordinances for public hearing,
one ordinance carried over from the last
meeting to discuss and vote on, and also
one resolution to discuss and vote upon. In
public presentations, the assembly heard a
10-minute presentation from citizen James
Price on the initiative process.
Ordinance 2013-18, which repeals provisions of KPB Ordinance 2011-12, and adopts
the amendments suggested by the Anadromous Fish Protection Task Force, consumed
the bulk of the meeting time. At the June
18 meeting the assembly defeated, by a
6-3 vote, a repeal of 2011-12. The assembly
received around five hours of public testimony at that meeting on both the repeal
ordinance and Ordinance 2013-18, but ran
out of time to discuss and vote. It was decided at that meeting to postpone the vote
to the July 2 meeting, without further public
testimony.
Several attempts by Assembly Member
Kelly Wolf, first to allow more public hearing, then to postpone further, then to have a
two-year sunset clause, were defeated. The
latter two were turned down by a 7-2 vote
after an hour of discussion overall. Ordinance 2013-18 was passed by a 6-3 vote,
those proposals were accepted,
with Wolf, Charlie Pierce, and
7-2 and 6-3. The assembly will
Ray Tauriainen voting no.
take up Ordinance 2013-20
Next, the assembly voted to
again at the Aug. 6 meeting,
postpone Resolution 2013-056,
with the proper wording for
sponsored by Brent Johnson
the ballot language.
and also carried over from the
Two land sale ordinances
June 18 meeting, which would
were unanimously approved.
provide for an advisory vote
Ordinance 2013-23, moving the
on defunding the Central Area
final money, $1673, in the abolRural Transit System. It will be
ished Lowell Point Fire Service
heard at the Aug. 6 meeting.
Area account to the general
The nine ordinances that
KPB
was approved unaniwere scheduled for hearing
Assembly fund
mously. Also, an ordinance
were then addressed. Ordireducing the interest rate and
nance 2013-19-01, accepting
Report
penalties for delinquent sales
a grant of $100,000 from the
SUE McClure
taxes was passed unanimously.
state to do work at Jacob’s
For The LOG
Ladder Drive, was postponed
The KPB Assembly into the Aug. 20 meeting as antroduced nine ordinances
other site is being considered
for public hearing on Aug
for repair. Ordinance 2013-20 sponsored by
6. Among those is Ordinance 2013-19-06
Hal Smalley, which would repeal the curwhich accepts $1 million from the state for
rent two-term limit for assembly members,
the Seward Bear Creek Flood Service Area
received some testimony and then several
for flood mitigation projects. Ordinance
amendments.
2013-28 presents a General Obligation
Wolf proposed an amendment that would Bond proposal for the October election,
make it not apply to current members
not to exceed nearly $23 million, for Phase
which was defeated 7-2. Smalley moved
II of the school roof replacement project.
to postpone which was defeated 7-2. Then
This will involve a 70 percent forgiveness
President Murphy proposed to put it to an
from the state, similar to the Phase I bond
advisory vote of the public in the October
proposal. Ordinance 2013-29, sponsored
election, and then postpone the assembly
by Mayor Mike Navarre and myself,
vote on that to the Aug. 6 meeting. Both of
will adopt the FEMA flood maps for the
Seward area, and also repeal the sunset
clause for the Seward Mapped Flood Data
Area.
There were also several resolutions
passed on the consent agenda. One, resolution 2013-054, supports the final municipal
land entitlement selections. This is the
result of a long process of public input,
which now will be presented to the state,
requesting the Kenai Peninsula Borough’s
final 27,000 acres of entitled land.
The assembly approved five reappointments to the Borough Planning Commission including Sandra Holsten for the East
Peninsula representative.
The next meeting of the Kenai Peninsula
Borough Assembly is Aug. 6 and we have
another busy agenda. In addition to those
ordinances mentioned above there is a public hearing scheduled on Ordinance 2013-24,
amending code to provide that members on
service area boards to fill vacancies must be
appointed by the mayor and confirmed by
the assembly. I will have an amendment to
that allowing for a list of suggested names
to first be presented to the mayor.
As always the KPB assembly meetings are
broadcast on KDLL Kenai at 91.9 FM and, in
Seward on 88.1 FM. I can be reached at 2246784 or [email protected]. The
borough’s website is www.borough.kenai.ak.us.
The Seward Annex office in Seaview Plaza is a
source of information as well.
for Business
Being open for business means that Seward merchants are open for the
widest variety of whims and circumstance. Whether shopping for edible
fare or ducking out of the clouds in contemplation of suitable clothing
or in waiting for fairer weather, local shops have you covered. Whether
on a mission or by mishap, finding the end of the road in Seward is a
Husband and wife team Hugh and Iris Darling have long held down
the fort at the family business, iconic Brown & Hawkins at 205
Fourth Ave. Open from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m., the department store
offers greats lines of outdoor clothing and footwear for the entire
family, Alaskan made gifts, hand dipped chocolates, candies, saltwater taffy, homemade gelato and espresso, too. 224-3011.
happy circumstance. The local Chamber welcomes visitors to a feast for
the eyes and the gourmand. Other destinations just don’t come as highly
anticipated or recommended and Seward’s businesses want you to check
it out and never leave.
Exit Glacier Guides get you to recreational hot spots in the Seward
area. Owners Ryan Fisher and Brendan Ryan outfit expeditions
ranging from rugged to relaxing including tours of Exit Glacier including ice hiking and ice climbing. Open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
7 days a week at 405 Fourth Ave., Jane Mulcahy is also happy to
take your phone call at 224-5569.
Softly Silk is one of Seward’s foremost galleries offering original
fine art including print and cards by Kerry Cline and other Alaska
artists. Owner Kerry Cline is customarily the first face you’ll see at
416 Fourth Ave. during her business hours, 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Softly Silk is closed Mondays, but their website is always open at
www.softlysilk.com. 224-6088.
Photos by Leon Youngblood
To be included in the next installment of Open for Business, email [email protected]
Announce your New Arrival
in the newspaper!
Most Birth, Engagement, Wedding and
Anniversay Announcements
are free in The LOG.
Call or stop in to submit your announcement.
The Seward Phoenix LOG
[email protected]
907-224-4888
The Seward Phoenix LOG • July 11, 2013 • Page 5
Author illustrates the power of change
Heidi Zemach
For The LOG
Her book is as light as a feather and her
simple prose a breeze to read, but its subject
is as heavy as a gourd filled with water carried by a girl in the hot desert sun.
Years ago Linda Sue Park, an acclaimed
young people’s author visiting Alaska from
Rochester, New York, met Salva Dut when
her husband introduced them. Dut is one of
the Sudanese refugees, known as the “Lost
Boys,” who came to America.
His story touched and amazed her so
much that she decided to share it with the
world through her latest young people’s
book, “A Long Walk To Water, Based on a
True Story.” It tells how her new friend fled
into the bush, away from his family and
village, in 1985 at age 11, to escape the violence of his war-torn country and wound
up in a refugee camp in Ethiopia for the
next 10 years.
Park blends Salva’s narrative with that of
an 11-year-old girl called Nya from southern Sudan, set in 2008, who walks eight
hours a day to fetch water for her family.
Nya is fictitious character, but she is based
on the lives of children and families in the
grips of a real water crisis in that part of the
world.
Park’s direct and honest way of telling
the stories brought home the message to
the 14 children and 12 adults who attended
a presentation last week at Seward Community Library Museum, eliciting looks of
amazement, disbelief and laughter, too. Her
latest young-adult novel, written for middle
school level, has even moved some readers
to action.
Park asked those who were the oldest
girls in their families to raise their hands.
“Your job is to walk to the water hole and
get water for the family,” she told those
with their hands in the air, adding that it
takes them approximately two hours to get
there, and two hours to get home on the
hot, thorny sand, with a heavy bucket of
water balancing on their head. After grab-
Heidi Zemach | For The LOG
Linda Sue Park, acclaimed author of A Single Shard, and new young people’s novel, “A Walk to Water,”
gives a presentation about her books, pictured behind her, at the Seward Community Library Museum.
bing a bite for lunch, you have to walk all
the way back again and fetch some more,
she said, having them calculate the math.
She asked the oldest boy in the family to
raise their hand. At age seven or eight, you
have the job of bringing the family’s cattle
to the nearest water hole, and then you get
to hang around and watch them all day, she
said. You’re lucky because you only have
to make the trip once a day. When your
younger brother is old enough he might
inherit your job, and you might be able to
go to school.
She had the second oldest daughters
raised their hands. “It’s your job to go
along with your sister to get the water,”
she said, adding, “You can’t go to school.”
Why? Because the more people there are in
a family, the more water they need in order
to survive,” she said. So the girls don’t even
get a chance for schooling. That’s why the
illiteracy rate in Sudan is 98 percent, almost
the highest in the world.
Park showed her audience photographs
of the muddy, almost-empty, clay-filled water hole near where the family in her book
camps after the rainy season ends as well
as another picture of a man drinking brown
water that could make him sick. People say
he should boil the water to make it safe, she
said, but what happens to water when it
boils? It evaporates. But there’s not enough
water seeping through the clay hole all day
for the family to drink, so they can’t boil it,
she explained. They just have to drink the
brown, unhealthy water.
At age 11 her friend Salva had to take a
walk, equaling more than the distance from
Seward to Fairbanks and back, to escape
the fighting in his village. As they travelled,
the group was beset by wild animals like
crocodiles and fierce lions.
Recently Salva gave up his comfortable
American lifestyle and moved back to
Sudan, where he works to help bring water
to the villages by drilling community wells,
thus enabling the people to drink clear
healthy water from their own village. Once
a well is in place, schools are soon built, and
all of the children go to school, and begin to
lift themselves out of poverty. In her book
she writes about how the strange drilling
equipment arrived in Nya’s village one day
and how the villagers helped establish their
well.
It costs only $15,000 to bring in a steady
supply of fresh water to a village in Sudan,
she said. Salva’s organization has drilled
170 wells bringing dramatic improvements
to half a million Sudanese villagers. As a
result of reading her new book, schoolchildren in America also have raised funds for
Salva’s project and the newly drilled wells
often carry their school’s names on them.
Asked by a young Seward girl how to
become an author, Park minced no words
about the difficulty of making a living that
way. She suggested the girl be very nice
to her parents so she can continue to live
at home and write, even when grown up.
Other ideas were marry a very rich man,
win the lottery, or at least get another good
job that will let one earn a living as they
write.
As an acclaimed author who won the
2002 Newbery Medal for her book “A Single Shard,” she even held a second full-time
job as a teacher, Park said. And now she has
to tour, taking her books on the road making presentations like these.
Whatever the case, Park advised the girl,
read all the time and never stop writing.
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Page 6 • July 11, 2013 • The Seward Phoenix LOG
Race
From Page 1
Wolfgang Kurtz | The Seward Phoenix Log
2013 Mount Marathon Race rookie Rickey Gates picks himself up following a tumble while taking the
turn out of the chute. After popping his dislocated shoulder back into place while on the run, Gates
continued to break Bill Spencer’s 32-year-old record for the second time during the race. Gates’ second place showing of 43 minutes 4 seconds was bested by Eric Strabel’s winning 42 minute 55 second
time but still fast enough to break the 1981 43 minute 21 second record.
McKenna College in southern California.
She later admitted that she doesn’t
divulge much about the extreme mountain
race at home in Seward to her running
coaches in California because they might
not understand or approve of her participating because of its risks. But she’s not
the only Seward-based college athlete who
can’t resist the lure of the mountain race.
At one point, Barnwell felt so cold from
the wind and blowing rain, that she started
feeling ill and considered borrowing somebody’s jacket. Touching her legs, she was
surprised at how icy and clammy her hands
felt. She had to talk herself out of the negative thinking that slowed her down, telling
herself if she was cold, it must be because
she was not working hard enough.
“Once I got out of the trees, you get
that second wind,” Allison said. Hearing
her name announced on the loudspeakers
below, and cheers rising from her friends
and spectators was an irresistible ego boost.
About three-quarters of the way up the
mountain, she heard her father Bob Barnwell’s voice shouting just the right words to
help power her up to the top.
“Downhill was super fun. The scree was
very soft. Just a fun time to basically fall
down that mountain,” Barnwell said. “I describe it as just a controlled fall. I don’t feel
it’s the same as running. You’re letting your
legs do what they will to get you down.
They’re doing their own thing.”
Barnwell was only outpaced by Christy
Marvin, a veteran marathoner in her first
attempt at the Mount Marathon Race.
Marvin, a mother of three based in Palmer,
placed first in the Womens division with a
time of 53 minutes 20 seconds. The overall
record for the Womens race is 50 minutes
and 30 seconds set by Nancy Pease in 1990,
a record that has only been approached by
Pease in 1993 and Holly Brooks and Cedar
Bourgeois in 2010.
Another local runner and skier, Junior
Race champion Miles Knotek of Moose
Pass, aged into the adult division this year.
Knotek, 18, who is heading off to college at
Montana State, raced to ninth place in his
first Mens Mount Marathon Race. Sewardite and race veteran Erik Johnson, 36,
placed sixth heading up the ranks of local
Mens runners.
Heidi Zemach contributed to this article.
Wolfgang Kurtz | The Seward Phoenix LOG
Heidi Zemach | For the LOG
2013 Mount Marathon Race rookie Wylie Mangelsdorf’s feet don’t touch the ground as he sprints out of Lowell Canyon past applauding onlookers. The
Palmer native finished third on the downhill after trading the lead on the battle up the mountain with first and second finishers Eric Strabel and Rickey
Gates as well as last year’s champion, Matt Novakovich.
Allison Barnwell, 21, sprints off the base of
Mount Marathon, to come in second place in the
2013 race.
Juniors
From Page 1
This summer Michael is focused on his
cross-country running but he also attended
a basketball camp and open gyms. Marshall
runs early in the mornings before work or
in the evenings when it’s peaceful on the
Heidi Zemach | For the LOG
Michael Marshall, 16, sprints down Jefferson
Street, on the way to his second-place finish in
the Junior Race.
trails. It’s difficult to balance training for the
race along with all the sports he loves while
also working at the Fish House, he said.
After the hot June weather the race
conditions took him by surprise. “It was so
slippery. I was all over the place, trying to
grab onto everything I could – the trees or
anything else I could find.” Marshall wore a
jersey and arm sleeves but still felt the cold.
He loved the descent, however.
“Lyon was (already) way, way ahead of
me. I felt really good because I looked behind me and there was nobody there. I only
have one year left of the junior race, and I
was hearing everybody calling my name, so
I just tried to enjoy it and savor it.”
Paul Butera of Anchorage was almost a
minute behind, finishing third to Marshall’s
30 minutes 32 seconds. Nicholas Zweifel,
Tannen Berry and Michael Moore were the
next top finishers for local boys, coming in
at 10th, 12th and 13th respectively.
Fleet-footed Girls junior champion Allison Ostrander of Soldotna, 16, finished first
in the girls division and sixth overall completing the course in 31 minutes 40 seconds
for her fifth consecutive win. Ostrander
was followed by Palmer’s Kopsack sisters,
Alyson and Jocelyn, in second and third
place for the girls division. Isabel Barnwell,
a 17 year old SHS Seahawks team swimmer,
finished ninth in the girls division of the
Junior Race leading the field of local girls.
Ruby Lindquist, of Moose Pass, and Meret
Beutler, of Seward, followed her.
Heidi Zemach | For the LOG
Miles Knotek, 18, who aged out of the Junior Race this year, finishes ninth in the Senior Race.
Wolfgang Kurtz | The Seward Phoenix LOG
Bill Spencer hands Eric Strabel his first place award for the 2013 Mount Marathon Race at the awards
ceremony the evening of the 4th of July. Strabel broke Spencer’s 32-year record time to win the race.
The Seward Phoenix LOG • July 11, 2013 • Page 7
2013 Mens Mount Marathon Race Results
Place
BIB
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
8
170
75
3
6
17
7
5
66
10
1
9
12
4
18
23
21
42
14
149
20
30
29
74
16
26
24
11
27
15
38
39
37
171
32
157
143
31
73
47
50
49
424
34
391
45
25
116
138
63
405
148
344
43
375
35
72
119
120
403
464
55
315
384
82
57
144
425
40
163
65
460
53
67
314
80
158
465
168
128
312
446
365
151
437
377
146
101
413
456
19
91
382
162
127
398
467
432
First Name
Eric
Ricky
Wylie
Matias
Brenton
Erik
Mark
Tor
Miles
Barney
Matthew
Rory
John
Benjamin P
A William
Erik
Harlow
Pyper
Jens
Alex
William
Peter
Darin
Rex
Brad
Corey
Todd
Ryan
Nicholas
Patrick
Todd
Brandon
Alexander
Forrest
Solomon
Josh
Joseph
Karl
Kipp
Vin
David
Timothy
Ryan
Dan
John
Spencer
John
Lance
Troy
Lucas
Chris
Eric
Russell
Conor
Daniel
Bixler
Karl
Andrew
Peter
Craig
Brett
Brandon
Travis
Nicholas
Thomas
Josiah
Jason
Patrick
Jonathan
Michael
Troy
Davis
Marten
Ivan David
Walter
David
Daniel
Shane
Joshua
Mike
Bret
Mark
Mike
Kegan
Ryan
Joe
David
Chris
Brian
Casey
Steve
Robert
Matt
Keith
Kris
Bryan
Samuel
Spencer
Last Name
AGE
DIV
DIV
Strabel
Gates
Mangelsdorf
Saari
Knight
Johnson
Iverson
Christopherson
Knotek
Griffith
Novakovich
Egelus
Novak
Ward
Stoll
Mundahl
Robinson
Dixon
Beck
Alonso
Ross
Mamrol
Markwardt
Shields
Benter
Kline
Bethard
Cox
Swann
Conway
Lowery
Rinner
Babos
Mahlen
D\’ Amico
Thomas
Nyholm
Romig
Dixon
Robinson
Apperson
Blake
Beckett
Marshall
Kogl
Jonas
Klein
Kopsack
Larson
Schlemme
Held
Lawson
Devries
Deal
Kane
McClure
Mechtenberg
Duenow
McEnaney
Taylor
Vadla
King
Harrington
Brunger
Coolidge
Martin
Hogge
Wallace
Harvey
Craytor
Walters
Dunlap
Martensen
Isaacs
Bombeck
Rebischke
Linkhart
Topf
Allely
Heatwole
Connor
Chase
Brock
Storjohann
Lewis
Dougherty
Peterson
Clifford
Pautzke
Volk
Gilles
Butera
Grubb
Weinhold
Burnett
Hardy
Dougherty
Litzenberger
31
32
21
42
29
36
31
31
18
55
39
26
20
38
33
26
46
22
43
40
24
19
32
24
46
35
39
23
27
36
43
38
20
20
29
32
21
55
24
42
25
46
28
52
42
21
19
48
44
18
46
34
42
20
28
27
33
48
48
35
20
18
25
21
62
18
35
28
30
30
18
21
44
18
27
63
35
20
34
46
36
23
35
20
26
25
25
52
32
21
55
55
22
40
47
37
20
27
M 30-39
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 30-39
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 60-69
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 60-69
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
1
2
1
1
2
3
4
5
3
1
6
4
5
7
8
6
2
7
3
4
8
9
9
10
5
10
11
11
12
12
6
13
13
14
15
14
16
2
17
7
18
8
19
3
9
20
21
10
11
22
12
15
13
23
24
25
16
14
15
17
26
27
28
29
1
30
18
31
19
20
32
33
16
34
35
2
21
36
22
17
23
37
24
38
39
40
41
4
25
42
5
6
43
18
19
26
44
45
ST
UPHILL
Anchorage
San Francisco
Palmer
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Moose Pass
Anchorage
Anchorage
Palmer
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Palmer
Springville
Anchorage
Boulder
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Seward
Seward
Cooper Landing
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Eagle River
Girdwood
Anchorage
Palmer
Anchorage
Anchorage
Fairbanks
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Seward
Anchorage
Eagle River
Eagle River
Soldotna
Palmer
Palmer
Anchorage
Anchorage
Kenai
Wasilla
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Palmer
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Seward
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
CITY
AK
CA
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
UT
AK
CO
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
Coeur De’ Alene
Palmer
Fairbanks
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Indian
Anchorage
Sterling
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Soldotna
ID
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
32:19
31:48
31:57
33:20
33:04
33:21
34:09
34:42
35:32
34:47
33:46
36:50
35:53
36:07
35:36
36:56
37:30
37:56
36:24
37:36
36:59
37:43
37:39
37:25
39:08
37:10
38:10
40:10
39:45
38:04
38:26
39:08
40:07
38:34
40:26
39:44
41:25
40:57
41:09
40:26
40:52
41:11
39:37
42:31
42:29
39:26
41:58
43:10
42:25
41:32
41:57
42:26
42:04
43:25
40:51
42:26
43:41
40:26
42:04
44:10
44:25
44:48
43:40
44:01
43:41
46:08
44:27
44:54
44:07
44:19
44:36
43:55
45:57
44:50
46:30
45:15
46:10
44:39
45:11
45:08
45:25
46:12
42:47
46:07
46:10
45:07
45:57
45:38
46:10
48:20
46:05
45:11
47:17
47:07
48:13
47:07
47:34
48:04
DOWN
10:36
11:16
12:12
11:33
12:01
12:07
12:27
12:47
12:40
13:28
14:38
11:53
12:54
13:34
14:13
13:14
12:46
12:26
14:07
13:04
13:48
13:28
13:53
14:21
12:40
15:00
14:03
12:18
12:55
14:41
14:21
13:54
12:57
14:55
13:06
14:22
13:19
13:50
13:41
14:25
14:21
14:12
16:07
13:22
13:35
16:45
14:29
13:32
14:21
15:25
15:03
14:34
15:12
14:08
17:00
15:37
14:38
17:56
16:22
14:18
14:16
13:58
15:17
14:58
15:32
13:13
14:56
14:51
15:39
15:33
15:18
16:27
14:40
16:03
14:36
15:54
15:08
16:40
16:09
16:13
15:57
15:24
19:02
15:46
15:51
16:55
16:08
16:37
16:07
13:59
16:17
17:27
15:43
16:18
15:15
16:31
16:13
15:46
TIME
42:55
43:04
44:09
44:53
45:05
45:28
46:37
47:29
48:12
48:15
48:24
48:43
48:47
49:41
49:49
50:10
50:16
50:22
50:32
50:41
50:48
51:12
51:33
51:46
51:49
52:10
52:13
52:29
52:41
52:45
52:48
53:03
53:04
53:30
53:33
54:06
54:45
54:48
54:51
54:52
55:14
55:24
55:44
55:53
56:05
56:12
56:27
56:42
56:46
56:57
57:00
57:01
57:17
57:34
57:52
58:04
58:20
58:22
58:27
58:28
58:42
58:47
58:58
58:59
59:14
59:21
59:23
59:46
59:46
59:52
59:55
1:00:23
1:00:38
1:00:54
1:01:06
1:01:09
1:01:19
1:01:19
1:01:20
1:01:22
1:01:23
1:01:36
1:01:50
1:01:54
1:02:02
1:02:03
1:02:05
1:02:15
1:02:17
1:02:19
1:02:22
1:02:39
1:03:01
1:03:26
1:03:28
1:03:38
1:03:48
1:03:51
LAST NAME
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
301
302
304
316
303
1
424
430
313
309
306
311
308
396
312
405
319
314
320
415
307
323
432
321
Lyon
Michael
Paul
Fintan
David
Allison
David
Derek
Jack
Nicholas
Keegan
Tannen
Matthew
Lane
Brandon
Roan
Christopher
Thomas
Camden
Jonathan
Dylan
John
Keith
Kelemen
Kopsack
Marshall
Butera
Nakada
Spencer
Ostrander
McPhetres
Steele
Martensen
Zweifel
Crow
Berry
Moore
Reed
Moore
Hall
Kirk
Zweifel
Benter
Burgess
Gillespie
Cosgrave
Ivy
Legate
25
26
27
28
328
343
327
2
Luke
Gage
Bjorn
Alyson
Martensen
Jarvis
Nilsson
Kopsack
BIB
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
444
142
88
449
61
429
409
104
147
64
90
408
62
58
451
442
462
411
85
96
473
378
335
60
81
423
165
89
169
418
117
41
129
139
113
434
386
107
461
366
105
474
412
383
448
145
51
445
160
471
469
99
404
396
414
452
431
428
483
433
52
361
367
152
161
426
458
360
76
436
83
106
87
388
402
77
308
443
134
363
167
440
379
343
421
78
166
44
98
86
79
100
48
126
374
395
84
392
400
122
154
First Name
Joey
John
Braun
Blake
Bryce
Walter
Michea
Christopher
Phillip
Cole
Flip
Michael
Jeff
Kyle
Jeremy
Nicholas
Connor
Patrick
John
Michael
Joshua
Sean
James
Stephen
William
Jerome
Ryan
Steve
Paul
Aaron
John
Andrew
Ronald
Steve
Brian
Michael
Sean
David
Zachary
Graham
Duwayne
Hugh
Robert
Neil
Marcel
Chad
Bill
Gregory
Brad
Evan
Cameron
Darin
Cameron
Daniel
Westley
Kenneth
Thomas
Kerry
Michael
William
Jeffrey
Jamie
Ryan
Anthony
Carson
Aaron
Connor
Ian
Fred
Christopher
Rod
Robert
Michael
Mark
Kevin
Roger
Jim
Brett
Tim
Todd
Jeremiah
Levi
Jeffrey
Curtis
Michael
Clarence
Jason
Fred
Mark
Tab
David
Jerry
Ivan
Alec
Jacob
Shawn
Robert
Edward
Ted
Steve
Rick
PLACE BIB FIRST NAME
2013 Junior Mount Marathon Race Results
PLACE BIB FIRST NAME
Place
CITY
ST
AGE
SEX
DIV
DIVPL
DIVT
SEXPL
Palmer
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Soldotna
Chugiak
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Eagle River
Moose Pass
Seward
Wasilla
Seward
Eagle River
Eagle River
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Seward
Cooper
Landing
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Palmer
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
17
16
16
14
12
16
17
15
15
17
16
17
17
17
16
15
16
15
11
17
16
14
15
12
M
M
M
M
M
F
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 12-14
M 12-14
F 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 00-11
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 12-14
M 15-17
M 12-14
1
2
3
1
2
1
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
1
16
17
3
18
4
37
37
37
45
45
47
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
26
37
37
45
37
45
1
2
3
4
5
1
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
TIME
27:03
30:32
31:19
31:36
31:38
31:40
32:26
33:23
33:42
33:43
34:50
35:34
35:40
35:54
36:16
36:37
36:38
36:49
37:19
37:24
37:29
37:29
37:30
37:31
AK
AK
AK
AK
13
13
11
13
M
M
M
F
M 12-14
M 12-14
M 00-11
F 12-14
5
6
2
1
45
45
26
34
24
25
26
2
37:54
37:58
38:13
38:22
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
310
7
6
24
402
3
413
73
351
335
12
346
408
Paxson
Jocelyn
Hannah
Annie
Dax
Laura
Charlie
Lydia
Ben
Cole
Tatjana
Max
Shane
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
5
17
411
10
322
324
111
34
19
339
9
13
332
412
347
434
345
23
Kayla
Isabel
Timo
Brook
Ryan
Josh
Ruby
Heidi
Meret
Joseph
Sarah
Cheyenne
Jerry
Logan
Samuel
Neil
Nathan
Kaylee
Last Name
AGE
DIV
DIV
Klecka
Heimerl
Kopsack
Huppert
Rodgers
Moore
Westbrook
Morton
Hart
Deal
Foldager
Bourdukofsky
Buchanan
Willard
Weller
Whitmore
Sperry
Stinson
Williams
Tranel
Eavis
Gerhardt
Nelson
Wescott
English
Herrmann
Bandy
Nimmo
Miranda
Medlock
Clark
Buchanan
Quinton
Parrish
Stoecker
Montague
Casey
Kochendorfer
Shellabarger
Stewart
Ruzicka
Cosgrave
Milby
Gotschall IV
Krenzelok
Moore
Spencer
Bombeck
Carrell
Atchley
Johnson
Marin
Reitmeier
Willman
Dahlgren
Bombeck
Schultz
Klauder
Wheatall
Brooks
Johnson
Cawood
Kangas
Uriarte
Lerch
Dickson
Vincent
Autrey
Moore
Beegle
Anderson
Forgit
Koropp
Fineman
Chartier
Kemppel
Benkert
Ekstrand
Lebling
Stull
Simono
Sutton
Levin
Schmidt
Rubeo
Pautzke
Moore
Thomas
Jacobsen
Ballantine
Aquino
Cosgrave
Chikigak-Steadman
Kay
Gano
Cange
Huppert
Hartman
Paprocki
Walters
Hansen
24
32
56
23
18
27
33
52
37
18
56
34
18
18
22
24
21
33
58
54
19
24
49
18
62
28
30
56
25
30
48
20
46
43
49
26
20
51
21
33
51
19
32
22
23
34
57
24
67
19
20
52
35
40
31
22
27
27
52
26
56
36
32
33
21
28
21
37
73
26
60
51
58
43
44
71
50
24
45
36
28
24
22
43
28
67
33
58
53
58
65
52
30
47
28
44
60
41
35
47
40
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 50-59
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 60-69
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 60-69
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 30-39
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 30-39
M 30-39
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 70-79
M 18-29
M 60-69
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 70-79
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 60-69
M 30-39
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 60-69
M 50-59
M 30-39
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 60-69
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 40-49
M 40-49
46
27
7
47
48
49
28
8
29
50
9
30
51
52
53
54
55
31
10
11
56
57
20
58
3
59
32
12
60
33
21
61
22
23
24
62
63
13
64
34
14
65
35
66
67
36
15
68
4
69
70
16
37
25
38
71
72
73
17
74
18
39
40
41
75
76
77
42
1
78
5
19
20
26
27
2
21
79
28
43
80
81
82
29
83
6
44
22
23
24
7
25
45
30
84
31
8
32
46
33
34
LAST NAME
Berry
Kopsack
Booher
Connelly
Cvancara
Arnold
Latimer
Blanchet
Martensen
Burnett
Spaic
Pfeiffenberger
Piscoya/shellabarger
Rowe
Barnwell
Rieder
Wedin
Maxwell
Novakovich
Lindquist
Booher
Beutler
Kincaid
Cosgrave
Applegate
Swanson
Dudinsky
Koster
Lindquist
Sperry
Heck
ST
UPHILL
TIME
Place
BIB
First Name
Eagle River
Anchorage
Palmer
Wasilla
Anchorage
Seward
Eagle River
Anchorage
Boise
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Palmer
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Palmer
Skagway
Seward
Jber
West Hartford
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Fayetteville
Anchorage
Denver
Palmer
Seward
Mukilteo
Anchorage
Anchorage
Girdwood
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Palmer
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Eagle River
Redmond
Kenai
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Palmer
CITY
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
ID
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
CT
AK
AK
AK
AK
AR
AK
CO
AK
AK
WA
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
OR
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Eagle River
Eagle River
Phoenix
Anchorage
Seward
Palmer
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Soldotna
Anchorage
Soldotna
Wasilla
Anchorage
Kenai
Meeteetse
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Wasilla
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AZ
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
WY
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
48:55
47:52
49:43
48:23
48:57
49:08
47:42
46:06
47:09
49:19
46:21
48:28
47:34
47:55
49:51
48:04
49:31
47:28
49:00
49:25
50:26
49:15
50:15
51:26
47:57
49:26
49:40
48:45
49:27
49:14
48:49
48:56
50:55
49:44
50:26
52:37
50:55
49:35
51:24
49:06
51:23
51:57
51:22
51:50
49:17
51:57
52:11
52:19
52:22
50:49
52:34
50:28
52:44
52:54
49:35
52:18
52:07
51:24
49:31
52:41
50:45
53:29
51:59
53:19
53:08
52:43
53:12
51:02
52:43
52:31
53:01
52:24
50:38
53:36
55:25
52:14
50:46
56:56
53:54
55:17
57:02
56:35
54:08
54:26
56:19
53:12
53:11
52:18
53:57
53:18
54:34
54:35
52:26
57:09
52:34
55:07
56:04
57:02
54:05
57:36
57:14
DOWN
14:57
16:01
14:21
15:43
15:16
15:08
16:59
18:38
17:44
15:34
18:38
17:07
18:04
17:44
15:52
17:40
16:36
18:40
17:18
17:01
16:08
17:22
16:26
15:21
18:54
17:26
17:17
18:13
17:34
17:47
18:25
18:23
16:43
17:59
17:46
15:49
17:41
19:03
17:21
19:41
17:29
16:59
17:43
17:17
19:55
17:40
17:32
17:27
17:47
19:21
17:39
19:55
17:41
17:39
21:01
18:21
18:39
19:24
21:25
18:33
20:33
17:50
19:23
18:05
18:17
18:47
18:21
20:31
19:04
19:19
19:01
19:40
21:44
19:02
17:25
20:37
22:25
16:41
19:47
18:29
17:03
17:45
20:16
20:02
18:30
21:38
21:56
22:53
21:21
22:17
21:09
21:15
23:25
18:51
23:47
21:24
20:39
19:42
22:55
19:26
20:03
1:03:53
1:03:54
1:04:04
1:04:07
1:04:14
1:04:17
1:04:41
1:04:45
1:04:53
1:04:54
1:05:00
1:05:36
1:05:38
1:05:40
1:05:44
1:05:44
1:06:07
1:06:09
1:06:19
1:06:26
1:06:35
1:06:38
1:06:42
1:06:47
1:06:52
1:06:53
1:06:57
1:06:59
1:07:01
1:07:02
1:07:15
1:07:19
1:07:38
1:07:43
1:08:13
1:08:26
1:08:36
1:08:39
1:08:46
1:08:47
1:08:53
1:08:57
1:09:05
1:09:08
1:09:12
1:09:37
1:09:43
1:09:47
1:10:10
1:10:11
1:10:14
1:10:24
1:10:26
1:10:33
1:10:37
1:10:39
1:10:46
1:10:49
1:10:57
1:11:14
1:11:18
1:11:19
1:11:23
1:11:25
1:11:25
1:11:31
1:11:33
1:11:33
1:11:48
1:11:51
1:12:02
1:12:04
1:12:22
1:12:38
1:12:50
1:12:51
1:13:12
1:13:37
1:13:42
1:13:46
1:14:05
1:14:20
1:14:25
1:14:29
1:14:49
1:14:50
1:15:07
1:15:11
1:15:19
1:15:35
1:15:43
1:15:51
1:15:52
1:16:00
1:16:22
1:16:32
1:16:43
1:16:45
1:17:01
1:17:02
1:17:18
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
92
466
137
347
394
313
422
369
390
453
121
118
323
132
94
103
140
415
455
93
419
59
125
95
309
130
472
355
135
354
401
380
479
124
348
70
123
110
131
352
334
470
153
108
406
441
150
71
372
320
155
109
353
306
328
416
480
311
387
156
463
115
357
481
351
342
368
56
133
322
350
359
302
159
325
307
326
321
417
482
68
337
450
376
457
301
410
371
54
393
476
316
475
339
373
331
304
381
407
Thomas
Turner
Michael
Daniel
Peter
Wayne
Matt
Shawn
Andrew
William
Curtis
Scott
William
Michael
Thomas
Steven
John
David
Tyler
Michael
David M
Shane
Chris
James T
Everett
Joseph
Jens
Brian
Eric
Kyle
Adam
Justin
David
David
Ben
Ronald
Russell
Glen
Gregory
Clint
Daniel
Keenan
Zane
Steve
Kalvin
Kevin
Bennett
Allen
Justin
Norm
Randall
James
Larry
Timothy
Bob
Bill
James
Dirk
Andrew
Justin
Harold
Roger
Chad
Michael
Mark
David
Paul
Vandaz
Michael L
Kneeland
Joshua
Evan
Mark
Jubal
David
Trent
Barry
Brian
Corbin
Norman Anthony
Timothy
Scott
Kristofer
Herbert
Daniel
Michael
Christopher
Steven
Cody
James
John
Conner
Thomas
Zachary
Byron
Paul
Dennis
Corbin
Kurt
TIME
CITY
ST
AGE
SEX
DIV
DIVPL
DIVT
SEXPL
Moose Pass
Palmer
Chugiak
Chugiak
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Palmer
Seward
Anchorage
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
15
16
15
15
15
17
13
16
12
12
16
10
14
M
F
F
F
M
F
M
F
M
M
F
M
M
M 15-17
F 15-17
F 15-17
F 15-17
M 15-17
F 15-17
M 12-14
F 15-17
M 12-14
M 12-14
F 15-17
M 00-11
M 12-14
19
2
3
4
20
5
7
6
8
9
7
3
10
37
47
47
47
37
47
45
47
45
45
47
26
45
27
3
4
5
28
6
29
7
30
31
8
32
33
38:31
38:39
39:06
39:25
39:36
39:50
39:53
40:14
40:17
40:19
40:36
41:04
41:06
Anchorage
Seward
Seward
Mora
Palmer
Anchorage
Moose Pass
Chugiak
Seward
Palmer
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Eagle River
Seward
Moose Pass
Eagle River
Anchorage
AK
AK
AK
MN
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
17
17
12
14
17
12
13
13
16
14
16
16
17
12
10
10
14
13
F
F
M
F
M
M
F
F
F
M
F
F
M
M
M
M
M
F
F 15-17
F 15-17
M 12-14
F 12-14
M 15-17
M 12-14
F 12-14
F 12-14
F 15-17
M 12-14
F 15-17
F 15-17
M 15-17
M 12-14
M 00-11
M 00-11
M 12-14
F 12-14
8
9
11
2
21
12
3
4
10
13
11
12
22
14
4
5
15
5
47
47
45
34
37
45
34
34
47
45
47
47
37
45
26
26
45
34
9
10
34
11
35
36
12
13
14
37
15
16
38
39
40
41
42
17
41:10
41:13
41:21
41:23
41:27
41:32
41:39
41:50
41:50
42:32
42:35
43:08
43:18
43:18
43:25
43:48
43:54
43:55
PLACE BIB FIRST NAME
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
14
20
404
128
317
433
379
431
8
371
352
16
422
344
373
47
338
427
399
21
378
331
367
428
28
118
27
341
368
101
25
Josephine
Katherine
Riley
Sadie
Liam
Francis
Mark
Zach
Brooklyn
Gabe
Michael
Moriah
Craig
Maximilion
Cole
Jania
Hunter
Nate
Case
Liz
Norris
Michael A
Kristopher
Kurtis
Tracie
Bailey
Megan
Billy
Marshall
Summer
Sasha
Last Name
Swann
Rodgers
Valantas
Smith
Adams
Humbert
Hemry
Naber
Johnson
Wright
Holler
Babos
Thompson
Johnson
Conley
Isaacs
Browne
Martin
Greensfelder
Squires
Lorring
Larue
Carswell
Rodgers
Billingslea
Hawkins
Bombeck
Meacham
Carl
Kelley
Hollon
Jay
Dickson
Brown
Burrough
Nelson
Storjohann
Anderson
Lincoln
Farr
Morton
Brownsberger
Shanklin
Carroll
Young
Talens
Lee
Clendaniel
Mack
Johnson
Sultz
Conley
Deboard
McDonald
McEnaney
Wamsganz
Conant
Brodish
Lessig
Greer
Faust
Bates
Helgeson
Chard
Snowden
Maurice
Hemming
Madison
Stangel
Taylor
Howes
Steinhauser
Tuovinen
Bryant
Holtorf
Boggs
Bruninga
McMahon
Stirling
Adams
Samuelson
Waltier
Squires
Harry
Conetta
Davidson
Booth
More
Chard
Carlsen
Frost
Ferrin
Meacham
Kile
Givens
Mordini
Long
Jones
Ulatowski
LAST NAME
Braun
Weddleton
Martin
Lindquist
Whiteman
Starling
Connelly
Burns
Kopsack
Martin
Connelly
Flynn
Lott
Helgeson
MacKie
Tumey
Kratz
Graves
Estes
Novakovich
Paxson
Stangel
Heck
Brumbaugh
Haan
Meier
Pitzman
Ballantine
Vest
Frazier
Hamner
AGE
DIV
DIV
55
20
44
42
40
33
44
31
42
22
48
48
62
45
54
52
43
30
21
55
29
18
47
54
52
46
19
38
44
39
35
22
54
47
42
40
47
49
45
40
49
19
54
51
48
24
44
35
30
68
43
50
40
55
54
54
58
52
18
41
59
48
37
59
40
44
31
18
45
65
41
50
50
57
59
51
58
68
29
48
68
47
22
26
56
66
35
36
18
43
67
23
70
46
29
52
59
22
48
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 60-69
M 40-49
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 30-39
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 30-39
M 60-69
M 40-49
M 50-59
M 40-49
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 50-59
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 50-59
M 40-49
M 40-49
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 60-69
M 40-49
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 60-69
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 60-69
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 60-69
M 30-39
M 30-39
M 18-29
M 40-49
M 60-69
M 18-29
M 70-79
M 40-49
M 18-29
M 50-59
M 50-59
M 18-29
M 40-49
26
85
35
36
37
47
38
48
39
86
40
41
9
42
27
28
43
49
87
29
88
89
44
30
31
45
90
50
46
51
52
91
32
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
92
33
34
55
93
56
53
54
10
57
35
58
36
37
38
39
40
94
59
41
60
55
42
61
62
56
95
63
11
64
43
44
45
46
47
48
12
96
65
13
66
97
98
49
14
57
58
99
67
15
100
3
68
101
50
51
102
69
CITY
ST
AGE
Seward
AK
15
Anchorage
AK
17
Anchorage
AK
15
Moose Pass AK
12
Eagle River AK
16
Anchorage
AK
15
Chugiak
AK
13
Soldotna
AK
11
Palmer
AK
11
Anchorage
AK
12
Chugiak
AK
11
Anchorage
AK
17
Soldotna
AK
16
Anchorage
AK
12
Anchorage
AK
12
Anchorage
AK
13
Seward
AK
14
Seward
AK
15
Moose Pass AK
13
Anchorage
AK
10
Eagle River AK
14
Kenai
AK
17
Anchorage
AK
16
Anchorage
AK
11
Palmer
AK
17
Palmer
AK
17
Homer
AK
14
Anchorage
AK
17
Soldotna
AK
16
Eagle River AK
14
Seward
AK
16
Continues on page 10.
ST
UPHILL
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Redondo Beach
Anchorage
Wasilla
Anchorage
Anchorage
Salt Lake City
Chugiak
Anchorage
Palmer
Kenai
Fairbanks
Anchorage
Soldotna
Palmer
Kent
Anchorage
Seattle
Palmer
Eagle River
Los Angeles
Eagle River
Girdwood
Anchorage
Eagle River
Palmer
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seattle
Anthem
Seward
Bethel
Juneau
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
CITY
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
CA
AK
AK
AK
AK
UT
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
WA
AK
WA
AK
AK
CA
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
WA
AZ
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Chugiak
Seward
Seward
Woodbury
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Asheville
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Montclair
Anchorage
Anchorage
Kenai
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Cannon Falls
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Eagle River
Anchorage
Edmonds
Anchorage
Anchorage
Kenai
Green River
Edina
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Austin
Warner Robins
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
MN
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
NC
AK
AK
AK
NJ
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
MN
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
WA
AK
AK
AK
WY
MN
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
TX
GA
AK
AK
AK
AK
1:00:44
58:54
56:10
55:27
1:00:38
59:33
57:09
55:55
55:25
57:35
57:14
59:57
58:00
57:06
58:22
57:05
58:52
57:55
59:57
55:58
1:01:13
56:59
57:50
56:50
59:21
55:38
56:31
56:19
1:00:28
56:21
59:37
57:53
1:00:23
57:05
1:00:02
1:00:20
1:04:35
1:04:09
1:02:53
1:01:13
1:00:34
1:01:51
1:02:45
1:03:48
1:04:31
1:04:28
1:03:59
1:02:28
1:06:20
1:03:52
1:07:12
1:08:47
1:05:37
1:10:04
58:02
1:05:56
1:07:45
1:06:34
1:01:26
1:09:21
1:08:53
1:04:54
1:07:30
1:07:46
1:07:32
1:07:39
1:06:41
1:08:20
1:10:26
1:07:06
1:08:10
1:13:01
1:10:04
1:11:36
1:09:11
1:18:15
1:08:08
1:08:02
1:18:55
1:18:21
1:16:53
1:18:30
1:18:35
1:17:28
1:13:18
1:22:29
1:18:25
1:25:55
1:21:58
1:19:38
1:17:58
1:25:32
1:20:37
1:22:27
1:21:53
1:27:36
1:28:17
1:36:44
1:45:17
DOWN
16:36
18:26
21:11
22:03
16:53
18:19
20:43
22:07
22:55
21:06
21:31
18:57
20:58
21:56
20:48
22:10
20:26
21:31
19:38
23:39
18:28
22:43
21:53
23:02
20:49
24:32
23:45
24:11
20:06
24:32
21:25
23:17
21:02
25:46
23:24
23:08
19:27
20:03
21:29
23:23
24:39
23:33
23:07
22:05
22:09
24:02
24:34
26:17
22:31
25:12
22:20
21:00
24:11
19:47
32:04
24:32
22:52
24:23
29:49
21:56
22:34
26:55
25:58
26:05
26:24
26:55
27:56
27:16
25:30
29:06
29:06
26:26
30:23
29:20
32:04
25:22
35:52
36:52
26:16
28:35
30:41
29:46
29:45
30:53
36:10
28:19
32:55
25:39
29:50
33:26
36:07
30:50
37:26
36:59
38:16
46:37
50:46
42:33
46:22
1:17:20
1:17:20
1:17:22
1:17:30
1:17:31
1:17:52
1:17:53
1:18:03
1:18:21
1:18:41
1:18:45
1:18:55
1:18:59
1:19:03
1:19:11
1:19:16
1:19:18
1:19:27
1:19:36
1:19:38
1:19:41
1:19:43
1:19:44
1:19:53
1:20:10
1:20:11
1:20:16
1:20:31
1:20:34
1:20:54
1:21:02
1:21:11
1:21:25
1:22:51
1:23:27
1:23:29
1:24:03
1:24:13
1:24:23
1:24:36
1:25:13
1:25:24
1:25:53
1:25:53
1:26:40
1:28:30
1:28:34
1:28:46
1:28:52
1:29:05
1:29:33
1:29:48
1:29:48
1:29:51
1:30:06
1:30:28
1:30:38
1:30:57
1:31:15
1:31:17
1:31:27
1:31:49
1:33:28
1:33:52
1:33:56
1:34:35
1:34:37
1:35:36
1:35:56
1:36:13
1:37:16
1:39:28
1:40:28
1:40:57
1:41:16
1:43:37
1:44:01
1:44:55
1:45:12
1:46:57
1:47:34
1:48:17
1:48:21
1:48:21
1:49:28
1:50:48
1:51:21
1:51:35
1:51:49
1:53:04
1:54:05
1:56:22
1:58:03
1:59:27
2:00:10
2:14:14
2:19:03
2:19:18
2:31:40
TIME
SEX
DIV
DIVPL
DIVT
SEXPL
TIME
F
F
M
F
M
M
M
M
F
M
M
F
M
M
M
F
M
M
M
F
M
M
M
M
F
F
F
M
M
F
F
F 15-17
F 15-17
M 15-17
F 12-14
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 12-14
M 00-11
F 00-11
M 12-14
M 00-11
F 15-17
M 15-17
M 12-14
M 12-14
F 12-14
M 12-14
M 15-17
M 12-14
F 00-11
M 12-14
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 00-11
F 15-17
F 15-17
F 12-14
M 15-17
M 15-17
F 12-14
F 15-17
13
14
23
6
24
25
16
6
1
17
7
15
26
18
19
7
20
27
21
2
22
28
29
8
16
17
8
30
31
9
18
47
47
37
34
37
37
45
26
22
45
26
47
37
45
45
34
45
37
45
22
45
37
37
26
47
47
34
37
37
34
47
18
19
43
20
44
45
46
47
21
48
49
22
50
51
52
23
53
54
55
24
56
57
58
59
25
26
27
60
61
28
29
44:21
44:25
44:29
44:30
44:33
44:35
44:54
45:27
45:28
45:28
45:36
45:46
47:04
47:05
47:07
47:07
47:08
47:11
47:26
47:27
47:28
47:52
47:56
48:04
48:52
48:53
48:54
49:01
49:02
49:05
49:33
Page 8 • July 11, 2013 • The Seward Phoenix LOG
The Seward Phoenix LOG • July 11, 2013 • Page 9
Racing and Recreation,
Mountains and Merriment
Framed by crowds and a carnival atmosphere, for several hours the 2013 Mount Marathon Race eclipsed all other 4th of
July activities in Seward. Side streets were full of vendors and colorful sights and smells of outdoor cooking. The preceding
evening’s fireworks display down at the small boat harbor came before the early morning drizzle that by late afternoon was in
full retreat. Some patches in the sky could have been called almost blue.
Faces familiar to Sewardites graced the finish line as competitors were welcomed to the circle of fellow comrades in running
shoes. Finishers joked and gossiped among themselves and with family and friends along the barricades. Cheering on the racers, throngs of onlookers lined the streets, walling in the race course along Fourth Avenue and Jefferson Street all the way up
into Lowell Canyon.
Photos by Wolfgang Kurtz, Leon Youngblood and Annette Shacklett
The Seward Phoenix LOG
Page 10 • July 11, 2013 • The Seward Phoenix LOG
Place BIB
2013 Womens Mount Marathon Race Results
Place BIB
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
148
4
54
2
143
5
7
43
6
55
21
35
16
10
9
12
164
24
36
15
42
48
173
29
13
11
161
22
31
30
33
26
17
32
391
165
145
175
172
437
38
50
41
39
18
49
452
71
388
168
118
40
444
78
105
121
439
132
45
47
422
51
328
176
162
127
163
171
322
91
398
108
139
423
83
433
407
467
153
409
94
101
124
360
First Name
Christy
Allison
Ann
Lauren
Kristen
Rachel
Sheryl
Aubrey
Denali
Tsaina
Wendy
Jennifer
Anne
Alisa
Greta
Mira
Taylor
Sarah
Mackenzie
Tiffanie
Paula
Kelsey
Judy
Lauren
Karol
Arianne
Erin
Kate
Christine
Leah
Margaret
Shani
Ellyn
Gina
Tara
Allison
Karen
Emily
Bronwen
Marion
Patricia
Jennifer
Rachel
Emily
Angelica
Susan
Jasmine
Cheryl
Rachelle
Rebecca
Deana
Patricia
Tracy
Cheryl
Jennifer
Carolyn
Amber
Krystal
Teresa
Carolyn
Justine
Elizabeth
Rebecca
Stephanie
Kelly
Stacey
Mary
Sadie
Christy
Cynthia
Kimberly
Deb
Charlotte
Dyann
Veronica
Kristen
Stacy
Sable
Jordin
Robin
Binget
Heidi
Kelly
Timeri
Last Name
Marvin
Barnwell
Spencer
Fritz
Sieminski
Dow
Loan
Smith
Foldager
Mahlen
Sailors
Barnard
Liotta
Kincaid
Anderson
Hopkins
Ostrander
Glaser
Barnwell
Novakovich
Westbrook
Coolidge
Kanady
Spinelli
Fink
Massengale
Hamilton
Backstrum
Bennett
Legate
Cunningham
Rinner
Brown
Robinson
Swanson
Ross
Williams
Golick
Nicholls
Glaser
Kopp
Uriarte
Russell
Rhodes
Pollock
Forbes
Hatton
Ess
Kanady
Mamrol
Watson
Foldager
Pitts
Shellabarger
Frazier
Boone
St Amand
Nelson
Russell
Roush
Pechuzal
Butera
Hanscam
Wright
Paldanius
Kolstad
O’Reilly
Ulman
Phillips
Martensen
Riggs
Essex
Edmondson
Hardy
Vania
Lessard
Schaffer
Hodson
Thompson
Ace
Nilsson
Conway
Smith
Noren
AGE
DIV
DIV
32
21
18
25
34
34
54
33
23
18
44
39
20
39
21
19
19
24
19
36
33
25
53
34
45
29
35
21
41
48
54
39
60
42
21
20
52
37
25
29
48
36
19
45
24
51
25
58
23
21
42
55
27
52
44
42
29
40
47
51
33
55
19
27
24
41
24
31
32
47
37
44
39
32
50
20
35
22
26
35
46
45
41
39
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 50-59
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 50-59
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 50-59
W 30-39
W 60-69
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 50-59
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 50-59
W 18-29
W 50-59
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 50-59
W 18-29
W 50-59
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 50-59
W 30-39
W 50-59
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 50-59
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 30-39
1
1
2
3
2
3
1
4
4
5
1
5
6
6
7
8
9
10
11
7
8
12
2
9
2
13
10
14
3
4
3
11
1
5
15
16
4
12
17
18
6
13
19
7
20
5
21
6
22
23
8
7
24
8
9
10
25
11
12
9
14
10
26
27
28
13
29
15
16
14
17
15
18
19
11
30
20
31
32
21
16
17
18
22
ST
UPHILL
Palmer
Seward
Anchorage
Chugiak
Seward
Seward
Eagle River
Seward
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Palmer
Anchorage
Anchorage
Soldotna
Seward
Seward
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Chugiak
Cooper Landing
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
CITY
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Seward
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Kaunakakai
Anchorage
Sutton
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Soldotna
Anchorage
Eagle River
Chugiak
Seward
Anchorage
Eagle River
Kasilof
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Sultan
Eagle River
Palmer
Eagle River
Seward
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Girdwood
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Chugiak
Seward
Anchorage
Eagle River
Wasilla
Seward
Anchorage
Bellevue
Eagle River
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
HI
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
WA
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
WA
AK
39:52
41:17
41:26
42:47
45:29
45:28
41:41
44:50
48:05
44:42
46:48
44:35
46:35
47:09
45:51
46:20
46:53
47:16
50:27
48:03
47:21
48:42
45:33
46:57
50:03
48:25
48:27
45:02
49:41
48:52
47:52
49:06
50:42
50:12
52:48
49:53
49:06
51:31
51:47
50:40
52:02
52:08
53:35
51:41
51:20
46:46
52:04
52:25
54:51
54:41
53:21
55:41
54:44
55:27
54:34
54:25
58:48
55:46
53:44
53:42
1:00:34
55:29
56:42
56:19
56:24
54:13
54:04
54:46
56:04
57:23
55:14
55:44
58:20
56:30
57:54
1:00:46
58:26
1:00:09
56:56
56:31
59:36
57:46
1:00:03
1:00:28
DOWN
13:27
13:54
14:48
15:10
15:27
15:37
19:30
16:24
13:57
17:22
15:25
17:42
15:51
15:32
17:00
16:54
17:19
17:18
14:14
16:39
17:34
16:15
19:46
18:43
15:53
17:38
18:43
22:12
18:08
19:06
20:16
19:13
18:13
19:06
16:33
19:33
20:22
18:33
18:38
19:47
18:31
18:31
17:06
19:01
19:23
24:44
20:01
19:42
17:47
19:03
20:48
18:30
20:10
19:55
20:59
21:26
17:35
21:05
23:08
23:11
16:39
21:50
20:46
21:09
21:08
23:27
23:38
23:12
22:07
20:53
23:03
22:43
20:10
22:13
20:52
18:10
20:40
18:57
22:18
22:47
19:42
21:32
19:48
19:23
TIME
53:20
55:11
56:15
57:57
1:00:56
1:01:05
1:01:12
1:01:14
1:02:02
1:02:05
1:02:14
1:02:18
1:02:27
1:02:41
1:02:52
1:03:15
1:04:13
1:04:35
1:04:42
1:04:42
1:04:55
1:04:57
1:05:20
1:05:40
1:05:57
1:06:03
1:07:11
1:07:15
1:07:50
1:07:59
1:08:08
1:08:19
1:08:55
1:09:19
1:09:21
1:09:27
1:09:28
1:10:05
1:10:26
1:10:27
1:10:33
1:10:40
1:10:42
1:10:42
1:10:43
1:11:31
1:12:06
1:12:08
1:12:39
1:13:44
1:14:10
1:14:12
1:14:54
1:15:22
1:15:34
1:15:52
1:16:24
1:16:51
1:16:53
1:16:53
1:17:13
1:17:20
1:17:28
1:17:28
1:17:32
1:17:40
1:17:43
1:17:58
1:18:11
1:18:17
1:18:17
1:18:28
1:18:31
1:18:43
1:18:47
1:18:57
1:19:06
1:19:06
1:19:15
1:19:18
1:19:18
1:19:19
1:19:51
1:19:52
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
342
30
18
333
37
406
11
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
355
381
358
357
359
386
89
106
15
29
120
370
353
32
403
398
361
113
114
337
362
350
397
426
119
117
42
39
377
54
401
372
Hunter
Jojo
Yana
Hunter
Sydney
Austin
Ana
(mariana)
Jacob
Roman
Joshua
Alexander
Jaiden
Logan
Emily
Emily
Ruby
Leah
Julie
Basil
Connor
Ashlee
Michael
Daniel
Ian
Danica
Shane
Joshua
Sebastian
Karl
Conner
Andrew
Corey
Hannah
Anne
Brooke
Brooks
Emmalee
Dylan
Christopher
LAST NAME
CITY
Continued from Page 8.
ST
AGE SEX
431
371
102
119
331
115
27
112
420
325
95
103
144
130
419
412
432
457
404
77
92
138
136
304
396
426
427
353
448
393
384
310
389
125
450
434
84
466
319
66
52
385
97
87
156
458
74
454
99
117
318
455
451
149
131
430
65
69
400
397
57
303
111
86
390
169
126
453
114
58
411
449
469
421
429
456
160
140
133
123
459
62
116
76
56
307
89
First Name
Jasper
Jessica
Teresa
Megan
Hannah
Joey
Aurora
Amber
Amara
Samantha
Darcy
Dawn
Letty
Denise
Laura
Desiree
Gwendolynn
Emily
Catherine
Gretchen
Jill
Andrea
Amy
Tiffany
Renee
Bridgette
Bethanne
Michelle
Whitney
Susan
Diana
Angela
Hope
Frances
Lauren
Melissa
Denise
Leslie
Kara
Nancy J
Autumn
Diana
Wendy
Mary Beth
Samantha
Sarah
Cinthia
Kayli
Kris
Heather
Stacy
Erika
Kelley
Eileen
Kathryn
Rebecca
Pamela
Billie Jo
Tracy
Amy
Alexandra
Nancy
Mary
Shirl
Rebekah
Emilie
Valerie
Renee
Charlotte
Bethany
Alea
Yereth
Brynn
Tina
Cathern
Kalysta
Mari
Holly
Jennifer
Kathleen
Kelsey
Issa
Heidi
Jean
Sarah
Debra
Katrina
PLACE BIB FIRST NAME
2013 Junior Mount Marathon Race Results
PLACE BIB FIRST NAME
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
DIV
DIVPL
DIVT
SEXPL
Hollingsworth
Fleischman
Camm
Sulte
Sulte
Weller
Jager
Seward
Anchorage
Granby
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
AK
AK
CO
AK
AK
AK
AK
11
16
11
11
17
14
16
M
F
F
M
F
M
F
M 00-11
F 15-17
F 00-11
M 00-11
F 15-17
M 12-14
F 15-17
9
19
3
10
20
23
21
26
47
22
26
47
45
47
62
30
31
63
32
64
33
TIME
49:34
49:42
49:44
50:18
50:18
50:34
50:35
Lestina
Hamner
Dela Cruz
Carl
Hogge
Rachow
Evans
Cusick
Woodings
Hopkins
Litchfield
Kaiakokonok
Spanos
Weller
Gasaway
Casey
Beals
Cutter
Cutter
Hawkins
Kratz
Pfeiffenberger
Lowe
West
Frazier
Seidl
Woodings
Estes
Berry
Moore
Miller
Kingsland
Eagle River
Seward
Seward
Eagle River
Wasilla
Jber
Anchorage
Anchorage
Palmer
Anchorage
Soldotna
Seward
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Seward
Edmond
Edmond
Palmer
Seward
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Palmer
Moose Pass
Moose Pass
Seward
Anchorage
Seward
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
OK
OK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
10
14
9
10
9
14
16
17
14
15
17
12
11
15
13
13
12
13
13
17
17
12
10
17
13
17
17
17
13
13
13
12
M
M
M
M
M
M
F
F
F
F
F
M
M
F
M
M
M
F
F
M
M
M
M
M
F
F
F
F
M
F
M
M
M 00-11
M 12-14
M 00-11
M 00-11
M 00-11
M 12-14
F 15-17
F 15-17
F 12-14
F 15-17
F 15-17
M 12-14
M 00-11
F 15-17
M 12-14
M 12-14
M 12-14
F 12-14
F 12-14
M 15-17
M 15-17
M 12-14
M 00-11
M 15-17
F 12-14
F 15-17
F 15-17
F 15-17
M 12-14
F 12-14
M 12-14
M 12-14
11
24
12
13
14
25
22
23
10
24
25
26
15
26
27
28
29
11
12
32
33
30
16
34
13
27
28
29
31
14
32
33
26
45
26
26
26
45
47
47
34
47
47
45
26
47
45
45
45
34
34
37
37
45
26
37
34
47
47
47
45
34
45
45
65
66
67
68
69
70
34
35
36
37
38
71
72
39
73
74
75
40
41
76
77
78
79
80
42
43
44
45
81
46
82
83
50:44
50:46
50:55
51:14
51:54
52:00
52:01
52:25
52:27
52:28
52:30
52:32
52:38
52:42
52:59
53:00
53:16
53:17
53:18
53:18
53:27
53:30
53:39
53:44
53:47
54:05
54:22
54:28
54:40
54:46
55:01
55:09
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
376
380
123
435
374
45
348
410
38
41
420
129
130
33
354
40
22
70
127
62
71
49
100
364
72
108
336
423
43
360
429
59
36
109
334
122
61
74
44
67
116
94
92
Riley
Jared
Laura
Cody
Elias
Brenna
Landon
Rico
Alexandria
Alison
Ian
Aliann
Danica
Kiana
Isaac
Maille
Hannah
Lauren
Ava
Mystery
Sadie
Iris
Jessica
Kaleb
Rebekah
Taral
Cole
Luke
Skyler
Dylan
Cole
Jennessa
Deana
Izabelle
Vincent
Isabella
Masha
Taylor
Katlin
Ashley
Savannah
Kaitlyn
Samantha
Last Name
AGE
DIV
DIV
Wallace
Heinrich
Ostrander
Olson
Beutler
Eski
Agee
Sheffield
Liggett
Calderwood
Waddell
Dinwoodie
Swanson
Brown Robinson
McGinley
Alvarez
Gabbert
Veenstra
Bodry
Hopkins
McLeod
Snowden
Brumbaugh
Hall
Millard
Evermann
Clary
Dickson
Hitchcock
Stone
Burbank
Kuest
Basinger
Evarts
Bassler
Templin
Deal
Rawson
Moore
Osborne
Sperry
Hill
Bryden
Koster
Bassler
Bosch
Ritchie
Janigo
Kile
Shank
Strouse
Lewis
Sefton
Audette
Jacobsen
Coolidge
Skogstad
Kopsack
Corneliussen
Hollon
Okeson
Schierhorn
Vollendorf
Kendall
Ziegman
Springer
Mays
Francisco
Coots
Lee
Kappel
Rosen
O’Hara
Buxbaum
Zweifel
Schmidt
Eaton
Stynsberg
Dougherty
Way
Tranel
Forrest
Valantas
Labonte
Rawson
Burdick-Hinton
Cain
30
33
45
42
18
43
33
43
29
25
46
45
53
41
33
35
29
24
36
52
47
39
40
31
37
31
35
43
26
38
30
38
23
41
20
19
50
22
33
62
18
24
45
48
21
24
54
25
45
42
33
25
20
19
40
30
59
60
37
37
18
53
43
49
22
35
41
25
43
18
35
54
29
33
19
24
44
39
40
42
24
47
42
53
18
45
47
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 50-59
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 50-59
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 50-59
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 60-69
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 50-59
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 50-59
W 60-69
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 50-59
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 50-59
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 50-59
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 40-49
23
24
19
20
33
21
25
22
34
35
23
24
12
25
26
27
36
37
28
13
26
29
27
30
31
32
33
28
38
34
35
36
39
29
40
41
14
42
37
2
43
44
30
31
45
46
15
47
32
33
38
48
49
50
34
39
16
3
40
41
51
17
35
36
52
42
37
53
38
54
43
18
55
44
56
57
39
45
40
41
58
42
43
19
59
44
45
CITY
ST
AGE
SEX
DIV
Eagle River
Palmer
Moose Pass
Moose Pass
Seward
Homer
Anchorage
Seward
Seward
Homer
Wasilla
Soldotna
Soldotna
Anchorage
Palmer
Seward
Eagle River
Homer
Anchorage
Palmer
Anchorage
Seward
Seward
Anchorage
Palmer
Anchorage
Seward
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Granby
Homer
North Pole
Eagle River
Seward
Dutch Harbor
Anchorage
Soldotna
Anchorage
Eagle River
Cooper
Landing
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
CO
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
13
13
16
10
13
12
14
17
11
12
10
12
12
11
11
13
15
14
17
13
8
15
15
17
17
17
13
11
10
13
11
11
12
14
14
13
16
13
15
17
17
9
8
M
M
F
M
M
F
M
M
F
F
M
F
F
F
M
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
M
F
F
M
M
F
M
M
F
F
F
M
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
M 12-14
M 12-14
F 15-17
M 00-11
M 12-14
F 12-14
M 12-14
M 15-17
F 00-11
F 12-14
M 00-11
F 12-14
F 12-14
F 00-11
M 00-11
F 12-14
F 15-17
F 12-14
F 15-17
F 12-14
F 00-11
F 15-17
F 15-17
M 15-17
F 15-17
F 15-17
M 12-14
M 00-11
F 00-11
M 12-14
M 00-11
F 00-11
F 12-14
F 12-14
M 12-14
F 12-14
F 15-17
F 12-14
F 15-17
F 15-17
F 15-17
F 00-11
F 00-11
LAST NAME
Murphy
Hawkins
Kromrey
Bryden
Davis
McCarron
Way
Stiebner
Toloff
McCarron
Millard
Schmidt
Schmidt
Trupp
Kincaid
Moriarty
Russell
Evarts
Harren
Showalter
Benter
Dougherty
Degnan
Desjarlais
Diotte
Clayton
Norcross
Momblow
Helgeson
Duffield
Valantas
Labonte
Camm
Hagge
Fontana
Watsjold
Hart
Holman
Flynn
Landess
Green
Kogl
Legate-Smith
ST
UPHILL
Anchorage
Anchorage
Soldotna
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Poulsbo
Anchorage
Kenai
Kennewick
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Boulder
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Wasilla
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Kenai
Port Orchard
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Homer
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Seward
Eagle River
Seattle
Moose Pass
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Madison
Coeur D Alene
Seward
Seward
Anchorage
Fairbanks
Hope
Palmer
Wasilla
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Wasilla
Anchorage
Healy
Homer
Eagle River
Anchorage
Kenai
Anchorage
Wasilla
Anchorage
Anchorage
Fairbanks
Seward
Anchorage
CITY
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
WA
AK
AK
WA
AK
AK
AK
CO
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
WA
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
WA
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
WI
ID
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
Anacortes
Frostburg
Seattle
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Kenai
Seward
Anchorage
WA
MD
WA
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
59:08
56:34
57:59
58:29
1:02:13
58:36
59:54
1:00:11
1:00:24
58:33
1:01:14
58:56
59:55
1:02:57
59:16
57:50
59:15
1:00:43
1:00:56
58:39
1:00:16
1:01:11
1:02:13
57:08
59:21
1:01:39
59:26
58:39
1:02:10
1:00:37
1:02:27
1:02:08
1:02:30
1:01:36
1:04:40
1:02:06
1:00:23
1:01:01
1:05:34
59:07
1:03:14
1:04:38
1:03:53
1:03:37
1:01:35
1:04:20
59:35
1:04:41
1:01:43
1:03:41
1:02:49
1:03:24
1:03:23
1:05:39
1:00:09
1:05:33
1:04:31
1:05:20
1:05:33
1:04:44
1:03:53
1:02:17
1:06:05
1:07:16
1:07:12
1:04:56
1:05:41
1:03:35
1:08:39
1:06:41
1:03:04
1:03:50
1:05:06
1:05:35
1:09:55
1:07:07
1:06:40
1:05:26
1:07:07
1:07:13
1:07:33
1:09:21
1:08:29
1:07:31
1:08:59
1:10:43
1:07:41
DOWN
20:45
23:23
22:08
21:49
18:19
22:03
21:07
21:00
20:48
22:41
20:07
22:27
21:39
19:26
23:16
25:16
23:55
22:28
22:18
24:42
23:27
22:44
21:58
27:04
24:53
22:49
25:16
26:02
22:38
24:11
22:28
22:53
22:46
23:44
21:03
23:45
25:31
24:55
20:29
26:57
23:07
21:53
22:50
23:11
25:14
22:32
27:36
22:37
25:36
23:51
24:45
24:25
24:38
22:24
28:05
22:43
23:54
23:19
23:16
24:12
25:36
27:14
23:59
22:48
22:53
25:13
24:33
27:03
22:00
24:03
27:43
27:27
26:22
26:00
21:47
24:47
25:15
26:41
25:11
25:40
25:22
24:08
25:02
26:08
24:51
23:09
26:20
1:19:53
1:19:58
1:20:07
1:20:18
1:20:33
1:20:39
1:21:01
1:21:12
1:21:12
1:21:15
1:21:22
1:21:23
1:21:35
1:22:24
1:22:33
1:23:07
1:23:11
1:23:12
1:23:14
1:23:21
1:23:44
1:23:56
1:24:12
1:24:12
1:24:15
1:24:28
1:24:42
1:24:42
1:24:49
1:24:49
1:24:56
1:25:02
1:25:17
1:25:21
1:25:43
1:25:51
1:25:55
1:25:57
1:26:03
1:26:04
1:26:22
1:26:31
1:26:43
1:26:49
1:26:49
1:26:52
1:27:12
1:27:19
1:27:19
1:27:32
1:27:34
1:27:50
1:28:02
1:28:04
1:28:15
1:28:17
1:28:26
1:28:40
1:28:49
1:28:57
1:29:29
1:29:31
1:30:04
1:30:04
1:30:06
1:30:09
1:30:15
1:30:39
1:30:40
1:30:44
1:30:47
1:31:17
1:31:28
1:31:35
1:31:42
1:31:55
1:31:55
1:32:07
1:32:18
1:32:53
1:32:56
1:33:30
1:33:31
1:33:39
1:33:50
1:33:53
1:34:01
TIME
DIVPL
DIVT
SEXPL
TIME
34
35
30
17
36
15
37
35
4
16
18
17
18
5
19
19
31
20
32
21
6
33
34
36
35
36
38
20
7
39
21
8
22
23
40
24
37
25
38
39
40
9
10
45
45
47
26
45
34
45
37
22
34
26
34
34
22
26
34
47
34
47
34
22
47
47
37
47
47
45
26
22
45
26
22
34
34
45
34
47
34
47
47
47
22
22
84
85
47
86
87
48
88
89
49
50
90
51
52
53
91
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
92
62
63
93
94
64
95
96
65
66
67
97
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
55:09
55:22
56:05
56:08
56:14
56:14
56:32
56:39
56:40
56:51
56:57
57:11
57:25
57:36
57:41
58:00
58:08
58:20
58:21
58:43
59:18
59:33
59:40
59:54
59:55
59:55
1:00:00
1:00:04
1:00:10
1:00:50
1:00:57
1:01:02
1:01:33
1:01:45
1:01:55
1:02:21
1:02:30
1:03:32
1:03:39
1:03:49
1:04:28
1:06:32
1:06:37
Place BIB
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
73
403
338
358
174
323
417
158
150
424
395
67
88
100
98
316
464
415
351
152
134
110
147
109
72
428
365
442
416
321
122
93
141
63
376
309
399
406
82
350
305
465
441
324
382
317
440
344
343
347
346
159
369
436
468
463
370
311
157
377
361
315
366
327
380
443
154
381
367
151
155
374
357
330
368
335
386
332
394
339
373
355
First Name
Patricia
Kathleen
Susan
Marieke
Arika
Sherry
Natasha
Kimberly
Clarice
Kimberly
Kelly
Joan
Julie
Leslie
Michelle
Kim
Meghan
Josephine
Erin
Jamie
Amber
Jeannie
Kendra
Katherine
Cynthia
Kimberley
Amber
Breanna
Natalie
Christina
Lanara
Alesia
Willow
Cynthia
Lerin
Margaret
Julie
Nancy
Lela
Amy
Holly
Holly
Janet
Erica
Courtney
Holly
Sidney K
Lisa
Jenna
Bonnie
Carren
Michelle
Moorea
Michelle
Deborah
Jennifer
Adrienne
Tara
Mellissa
Allison
Ann
Sarah
Amanda
Sheri
Carlene
Stephanie
Sherri
Katelyn
Rhyanna
Dawn
Sharie
Joyce
Mary Lee
Jozey
Erin
Sandy
Sharya
Millie
Annie
Addie
Eileen
Kambe
PLACE BIB FIRST NAME
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
52
369
425
26
419
366
115
124
48
57
340
93
112
363
65
50
63
75
60
68
105
90
35
69
365
96
Rachel
Eldon
Michael
Mckenzie
Blaise
Brayden
Brenna
Brianna
Elsa
Sonora
Darius
Lauren
Sophie
Nicholas
Keturah
Jenny
Shelby
Ainsley
Jessica
Brynn
Brenna
Tali
Zoee
Sarah
James W
Rain
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
383
385
409
98
58
436
66
104
84
83
103
95
87
Keaton
Bryce
Jed
Olive
Ashley
Noah
Khristin
Miracle
Megan
Brooke
Christyna
Maya
Mckinlee
Last Name
Ricker
Morrison
Skvorc
Heatwole
Browne
Trumpower
Liebig
Lowe
Dickess
Van Sickle
Schwarz
Antonson
Hegeberg
Dickson
Hensel
Kersten
O’Leary
Reagle
Graves
Parsley
Vacha
MacKie
Booth
Heim
Kupczynski
Graham
Hays
Dodson
Sook
Lindh
Forgit
Thon
Hetrick
Cruz
Fairbanks
Griffin
Garcia
Murphy
Benson
George
Holman
Peterson
Ponder-Sutphin
Rowe
Olson
Willman
Billingslea
Decora
Friese
Moore
Walters
Buchanan
Efird
Wilson
Wilmoth
Babos
Dahlgren
Smith
Smith
Hillen
Quinn
Reed
Delight
Boggs
Allen
Steele
Warnke
Christensen
Krueger
Talbott
Morton
Hudson
Garcia
Saindon
Boehme
Johnson
Krause
Spezialy
Luck
McEwen
Fisher
Padgett
AGE
DIV
DIV
54
36
54
40
31
49
34
41
50
32
38
61
48
45
45
34
22
20
43
46
40
44
36
44
54
31
34
27
34
32
42
46
28
46
29
43
37
53
50
44
49
22
55
51
26
33
54
47
47
30
45
23
33
29
28
22
33
37
22
28
37
35
33
51
26
27
48
26
33
42
52
30
41
18
33
69
24
75
53
53
31
41
W 50-59
W 30-39
W 50-59
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 50-59
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 60-69
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 50-59
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 50-59
W 50-59
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 50-59
W 50-59
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 50-59
W 40-49
W 40-49
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 30-39
W 50-59
W 18-29
W 18-29
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 50-59
W 30-39
W 40-49
W 18-29
W 30-39
W 60-69
W 18-29
W 70-79
W 50-59
W 50-59
W 30-39
W 40-49
20
46
21
46
47
47
48
48
22
49
50
4
49
50
51
51
60
61
52
53
54
55
52
56
23
53
54
62
55
56
57
58
63
59
64
60
57
24
25
61
62
65
26
27
66
58
28
63
64
59
65
67
60
68
69
70
61
62
71
72
63
64
65
29
73
74
66
75
66
67
30
67
68
76
68
5
77
1
31
32
69
69
CITY
Wasilla
Beaverton
Wasilla
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Tampa
Anchorage
Eagle River
Kasilof
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Redmond
Oakdale
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Wasilla
Seward
Paia
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seattle
Anchorage
Soldotna
Lynnwood
Eagle River
Anchorage
Soldotna
Dutch Harbor
Wasilla
Eagle River
San Diego
Raeford
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Wasilla
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Seward
Bothell
Anchorage
Eagle River
Anchorage
Homer
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Moyock
Anchorage
Eagle River
Sterling
Anchorage
Eagle River
Girdwood
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Fairbanks
Anchorage
Nikiski
Kalispell
Eagle River
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Fairbanks
Wasilla
ST
UPHILL
AK
OR
AK
AK
AK
AK
FL
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
OR
MN
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
HI
AK
AK
AK
AK
WA
AK
AK
WA
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
CA
NC
AK
AK
AK
AR
AK
AK
AK
AK
WA
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
NC
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
MT
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
1:08:25
1:11:34
1:02:22
1:10:02
DOWN
25:59
22:54
32:17
24:43
1:05:39
1:05:44
1:09:55
1:05:38
1:11:23
1:09:59
1:07:23
1:09:44
1:13:31
1:13:57
1:07:29
1:13:49
1:10:33
1:09:52
1:09:02
1:05:48
1:11:18
1:06:42
1:12:56
1:11:56
1:10:11
1:17:06
1:15:04
1:10:13
1:11:32
1:18:59
1:16:35
1:14:56
1:17:08
1:12:16
1:13:37
1:11:22
1:13:05
1:16:43
1:15:44
1:11:29
1:22:06
1:16:58
1:18:29
1:15:47
1:17:50
1:14:53
1:17:14
1:17:57
1:12:42
1:17:52
1:15:43
1:18:49
1:25:59
1:17:19
1:19:18
1:09:54
1:19:22
1:27:37
1:26:25
1:20:22
1:20:16
1:18:50
1:25:23
1:24:46
1:29:12
1:28:12
1:27:48
1:18:29
1:25:59
1:23:26
1:23:29
1:26:40
1:32:12
1:37:19
1:26:35
1:33:14
1:39:06
1:47:03
29:12
29:08
25:06
30:00
24:18
25:52
28:51
27:10
23:32
23:21
29:51
23:56
27:13
28:09
29:27
33:20
28:43
33:25
27:54
29:12
31:09
24:16
26:26
31:17
30:14
22:54
25:35
27:42
26:35
32:23
31:15
34:18
33:05
29:29
31:09
35:25
26:08
31:33
30:23
34:09
32:11
35:08
33:27
32:59
38:30
34:08
36:47
34:18
27:21
36:19
34:35
44:17
35:38
28:29
29:51
36:07
36:16
37:46
33:19
34:02
29:52
31:34
32:22
43:14
37:49
40:53
43:55
41:51
42:17
39:06
51:44
53:21
47:35
43:41
1:58:33
1:57:37
44:57
47:19
TIME
1:34:25
1:34:29
1:34:40
1:34:45
1:34:48
1:34:52
1:34:53
1:35:01
1:35:38
1:35:42
1:35:51
1:36:14
1:36:55
1:37:03
1:37:18
1:37:20
1:37:45
1:37:46
1:38:01
1:38:29
1:39:08
1:40:01
1:40:07
1:40:50
1:41:09
1:41:21
1:41:22
1:41:31
1:41:31
1:41:47
1:41:54
1:42:11
1:42:39
1:43:44
1:44:39
1:44:52
1:45:40
1:46:11
1:46:12
1:46:54
1:46:54
1:48:14
1:48:31
1:48:53
1:49:56
1:50:02
1:50:02
1:50:41
1:50:56
1:51:13
1:52:00
1:52:30
1:53:08
1:53:20
1:53:38
1:53:54
1:54:11
1:55:00
1:56:06
1:56:16
1:56:30
1:56:33
1:56:37
1:58:42
1:58:49
1:59:04
1:59:46
2:00:10
2:01:44
2:03:48
2:04:20
2:07:25
2:08:31
2:14:30
2:16:25
2:18:19
2:26:36
2:26:42
2:30:45
2:37:39
2:43:31
2:44:57
LAST NAME
CITY
ST
AGE
SEX
DIV
DIVPL
DIVT
SEXPL
TIME
Ambacher
Zinis
Moriarty
Allen-Charmley
Rinner
Rachow
Evarts
Hansen
O\’Neill
Martin
Martin
Sulte
Callahan
Chard
Costello
Sheasley
Nevada
Rinner
Clifford
Sulte
Petrie
Novakovich
Beiergrohslein
Warnke
Carlsen
Spotted Eagle
-Wong
Reed
Desjarlais
Christenson
Heatwole
Clifford
Pack
Nida
Fontana
Calloway
Satathite
Nyholm
Callahan
Ford
Valdez
Seward
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Jber
Homer
Anchorage
Seward
Kenai
Kenai
Anchorage
New Ipswich
Anchorage
Kenai
Anchorage
Palmer
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Anchorage
Eagle River
Eagle River
Seward
Kenai
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
NH
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
13
12
11
12
7
12
17
11
10
10
11
8
11
11
17
17
12
9
15
14
14
7
9
12
16
10
F
M
M
F
M
M
F
F
F
F
M
F
F
M
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
M
F
F 12-14
M 12-14
M 00-11
F 12-14
M 00-11
M 12-14
F 15-17
F 00-11
F 00-11
F 00-11
M 00-11
F 00-11
F 00-11
M 00-11
F 15-17
F 15-17
F 12-14
F 00-11
F 15-17
F 12-14
F 12-14
F 00-11
F 00-11
F 12-14
M 15-17
F 00-11
26
41
22
27
23
42
41
11
12
13
24
14
15
25
42
43
28
16
44
29
30
17
18
31
37
19
34
45
26
34
26
45
47
22
22
22
26
22
22
26
47
47
34
22
47
34
34
22
22
34
37
22
76
98
99
77
100
101
78
79
80
81
102
82
83
103
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
104
94
1:06:55
1:08:06
1:08:40
1:09:21
1:09:47
1:10:11
1:11:03
1:12:00
1:12:07
1:12:45
1:12:51
1:12:54
1:13:06
1:13:34
1:13:37
1:13:49
1:15:05
1:15:33
1:16:27
1:17:00
1:17:01
1:17:09
1:17:25
1:17:42
1:17:47
1:19:07
Moyock
Anchorage
Seward
Anchorage
Anchorage
Seward
Willow
North Pole
Kenai
Soldotna
Anchorage
New Ipswich
Tenino
NC
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
AK
NH
WA
13
14
13
10
17
8
17
10
12
12
14
9
16
M
M
M
F
F
M
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
M 12-14
M 12-14
M 12-14
F 00-11
F 15-17
M 00-11
F 15-17
F 00-11
F 12-14
F 12-14
F 12-14
F 00-11
F 15-17
43
44
45
20
45
26
46
21
32
33
34
22
47
45
45
45
22
47
26
47
22
34
34
34
22
47
105
106
107
95
96
108
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
1:20:06
1:20:14
1:21:37
1:21:48
1:21:52
1:22:17
1:22:44
1:22:48
1:22:51
1:22:51
1:23:50
1:26:50
1:27:05
The Seward Phoenix LOG • July 11, 2013 • Page 11
Out & About
Tri-Harder-Thon race
registration is open
The Tri-Harder-Thon includes a kayak
portion, trail run and concluding bicycle
race. The race is open to first paid participants. No same day registrations, no
exceptions. Online registration and payments are accepted until Thursday, July 25
or until event is full, whichever comes first.
Register at tinyurl.com/2013trihardthon or
call Melanie Hauze at 224-4011.
Tour of new community
center site set
The Bear Creek Fire Service Area is
hosting a site visit for volunteers and the
public, providing an update and tour of the
construction of the new Bear Creek Community Center. The event is this evening
at 7 p.m. at the Bear Creek Volunteer Fire
Department.
Flood Service Area board
meeting set
The Seward/Bear Creek Flood Service
Area board will hold a regular meeting
7 p.m. July 15 at the KPB Annex office in
Seaview Plaza, 302 Railway, Suite 122.
Agendas are available at the SBCFSA Office
between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m., Monday thru
Thursday or on the SBCFSA Website at
www.sewardbearcreekfloodservicearea.org
Entertainer comes to town
Chelsea Berry will be playing a show at 7
p.m., July 12 at Resurrect Art Coffee House.
Born and raised in Alaska, she is a singer/
songwriter and now makes her home on
Boston’s North Shore. She is touring in
support of her latest release, “Devil and the
Deep Blue Sea.” For information contact
Resurrect Arts at 224-7161.
Trail run registration open
pete in the 2013 Balto 48 Hour Challenge by
creating a five minute short film using three
prompts during a two day window. The
prompts will be announced at the Seward
Community Library at 7 p.m. on Friday, July
26, and will be posted at the same time at
baltofilmfest.net. Contact the Friends of the
Jesse Lee Home at 224-3080 for information.
Interactive musician comes
to library
Award-winning New Mexico children’s
musician Andy Mason brings his educational, interactive and fun musical performance to the Seward Community Library
Museum at 2 p.m., July 13. Mason will have
the audience dancing and singing along
to his songs about pizza, burritos, sharks,
pirates, owees and hand washing.
Grants are available from
Holland America
Applications are now being accepted by
the Holland America Line Inc. Community
Advisory Board for grants to local service
and nonprofit groups in Seward. For information contact Kathy Newman at 264-8028
or [email protected]. Applications are due in Anchorage by the close of
business on Thursday, Aug. 15.
Chugach Arts Council
announces exhibit
A virtual gallery supporting and encouraging the arts and artists in the areas
around the Chugach National Forest will
feature a different body of work each
month. To view the gallery visit www.
ChugachArtsCouncil.org and click on
Programs. All artists are invited to join and
submit an idea for an upcoming show.
Community Coupon books
are available
Two different race courses are available for the Bookin’ for Books Trail Run
set for 11 a.m., July 14. Registration forms
are at Apex Gym, Rez Fitness, Progressive
Chiropractic and Seward Parks & Rec. A
minimum donation of $30 is requested
and proceeds benefit the Seward/Moose
Pass Imagination Library. Information
and online registration is at www.tinyurl.
com/2013bookinrun.
TYC coupon books are now available at
City Hall Utilities Counter, Harbormaster,
Seward Plumbing, Salmon Bake, Ressurect
Art Coffee House, Major Marine, Brass Lantern Bears Den Chamber and Community
Parking, TYC and TYC council members.
With over $5,200 in savings, the purchase of
the coupon books supports TYC programs
and Seward youth. For information call 2245472 or email [email protected].
Balto Film Festival nears
Send listings for Out & About to editor@
heSewardPhoenixLOG.com.
Teams of Alaskan filmmakers will com-
Thursday, July 11
Calendar
6:30 to 7:30 p.m., Narcotics Anonymous, Church of
the Nazarene, Fourth and C, 362-6623.
7 to 8 p.m., Bear Creek Volunteer Fire Department
meeting, Bear Creek Fire Station, 13105 Seward
Highway (Mile 5), 224-3345.
Friday, July 12
10:30 to 11:30 a.m., Seward Community Story
Time, Seward Community Library Museum, Children’s Room, 239 Sixth, 224-4082.
Noon to 1 p.m., Community Tai Chi, pavilion by the
water, free and open to all, Hosted by Sue Cornwell, Angela Brown, Sadie Miller and Julie Rosier,
[email protected] for information.
7 to 9 p.m., Seward Elks Club, Seward Elks Lodge
#1773, 419 Fifth, 224-3158, sewardflotilla@gmail.
com.
Saturday, July 13
6:30 to 7:30 p.m., Narcotics Anonymous, Resurrection Lutheran, 400 Third, 224-3628.
Monday, July 15
6 to 9 p.m., Bingo, American Legion, Fifth and Jefferson, 224-5440.
Tuesday, July 16
Noon to 1 p.m., Rotary Club meeting, Breeze Inn,
Marathon Meeting Room, 1306 Seward Highway.
Noon to 1 p.m., Lowell Point Community Council
meeting, Penny Hardy Community Center, 17319
Lowell Point Road, [email protected].
6:30 to 10 p.m., City of Seward Planning & Zoning
Commission work session, City Council Chambers,
City Hall, 410 Adams, 224-4076.
7 to 8:30 p.m., Boy Scout Troop 568, Seward Elks
Club, 419 Fifth, 283-1699, www.scoutingalaska.org.
Wednesday, July 17
Noon to 2 p.m., Port and Commerce Advisory Board
(PACAB) work session, City Council Chambers, 410
Adams, 224-4046.
6 p.m., Seward Recreation Committee, Seward Community Library, 239 Sixth, Karin Sturdy, 224-5053.
6:30 to 10 p.m., Historic Preservation Committee
meeting, City Council Chambers, 410 Adams, 2244076.
7 p.m., Emblem Club, Seward Elks Lodge #1773,
419 Fifth, 224-3158, [email protected].
Alcoholics Anonymous
8 to 9 p.m., 7 days a week, Church of the Nazarene,
Fourth and C, 224-3843.
12:10 to 1:10 p.m., 7 days a week, Resurrection
Lutheran, 400 Third, 224-3843.
Seward Community Library Museum
Seward Community Library Museum is at 239 Sixth.
The library is open 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday, Friday
and Saturday, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, closed Sunday. In addition to
books and recordings, the library offers copying, fax,
notary, passport, audio visual services and meeting
rooms. The museum is open 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday, 11
a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday,
and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday. 2244082.
Seward Senior Center
Seward Senior Center serves seniors, 60 and older,
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays on the third floor
at 336 Third with transportation available. Lunch is
served each weekday at noon. Meals-on-Wheels is
available. Weekly shopping trips are scheduled. Recreation and health activities are regularly scheduled,
as well as, speakers and field trips. Information
is available by calling 224-5604, e-mailing ssc@
seward.net or visiting www.sewardsenior.org.
Legislative Information Office
The Seward Legislative Information Office (LIO) is
open daily from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in Seaview
Plaza at 302 Railway, 224-5066. The LIO makes
teleconferences with legislators available to local
citizens at the office. A list of upcoming teleconferences is at tinyurl.com/74xd5j4. Through the LIO
citizens can contact legislators or find answers to
matters of Alaska state government. Also available
at the LIO are copies of legislative bills and a pocket
guide to state government. Permanent Fund applications can be gotten at the LIO and the staff can
verify passports and birth certificates for Permanent
Fund applicants.
To add or change a non-profit or free regular meeting
or event on The LOG’s Calendar, e-mail adminassist@
TheSewardPhoenixLOG.com or phone 224-4888.
Obituaries
Wayne Glenn Tressler
Former Seward resident Wayne Glenn
Tressler died June 18, 2013 in Sacramento,
Calif. after an extended period of post polio
syndrome. He was 68.
Wayne was born Oct. 13, 1944 in Danville, Pa. to Raymond and Isabel Tressler.
In 1946 his family moved to Seward where
they purchased and operated the Bear Lake
Sawmill for many years.
He attended grade school and high
school in Seward, and then earned his
bachelor’s degree in accounting at Sacramento State. After a career with the State of
California, he retired to Rancho Cordova,
Calif.
Way is survived by his daughter Victoria
Jensen of Staples, Minn., son Glenn Tressler
of Rancho Cordova, Calif., brothers Tom
Tressler of Seward, Forrest Tressler of Kenai, and numerous nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his wife
Easter and brother Budd Tressler Sr.
Wayne made friends with everyone he
met. He will be sadly missed.
Kelly Brent Seeley
Kelly Brent Seeley, 52, died June 26, 2013,
in Seward.
The son of Norman and Margaret (Smith)
Seeley, he was born July 18, 1960, in Long
Beach, Calif.
Kelly grew up in southern California,
where he attended Huntington Beach High
School and focused his energies on pottery,
punk music, surfing and skateboarding.
He moved to Seward in 1980 and worked
in the Young Adults Conservation Corps.
His other jobs included cannery worker,
deckhand, longshoreman, handyman and
security guard.
Kelly was happiest living in his cabin
along Salmon Creek. He loved fishing,
smoking salmon, the outdoors, reading and
gardening.
After a long battle with cancer at the
Providence Cancer Center in Anchorage,
where he received excellent care, Kelly chose
to return home to Seward to be near friends.
His family, none of whom now live in
Alaska, are grateful to the kindness showed
to Kelly by many Alaskans, both before and
after he became ill. Additionally, they wish
to thank those who extended their hospitality to family members who traveled north to
be with Kelly.
Kelly is survived by his mother, Margaret
Ann Seeley, of Long Beach, Calif.; a brother,
Daniel Scott Seeley, of Truth or Consequences, N.M.; a sister, Nancy Lee Orth, of
Greenfield, Mass.; a sister-in-law, Mary Lynn
Seeley of Truth or Consequences, N.M.; a
brother-in-law, Adam Daniel Orth of Greenfield, Mass.; two nieces, Spirit Leanne Seeley
Photo by Elsie Dillewaard
of Las Vegas, Nev., and Abrah Nicole Orth
of Springfield, Mass.; a great-niece, Morgan
Codi Seeley-McQuiston of Las Vegas, Nev.
Memorial services will be at 3:30 p.m.
Wednesday, July 17, in Raven Lodge at
Providence Seward Mountain Haven, 2203
Oak St., Seward.
Kelly’s friends in Seward held a memorial
gathering celebrating his life on July 2. Kelly
will be cremated and his remains scattered
at sea. In remembrance, his family plans to
gather along the coast of California where he
loved to surf.
Memorial donations may be made to
Providence Seward Mountain Haven, 2203
Oak St., Seward, AK 99664; Providence Cancer Center, 3851 Piper St., Anchorage, AK
99508; The American Cancer Society, 3851
Piper St., Ste U240, Anchorage, AK 99508.
ChurCh
DireCtory
St. Peter’S
We invite you to join us
SewArD City ChurCh
ePiSCoPAL ChurCh
Pastor Max Ingalls
2nd Avenue & Adams Street • 224-3975
Meeting at Seward Middle School
Sunday .......................................................10:00 a.m.
304 Sea Lion Ave. • 907-301-1046
Wednesday ........................................................Noon
Childrens Class .........................................10:00 a.m.
www.stpeters-seward.org
Sunday Service ..........................................10:00 a.m.
The Episcopal Church Welcomes You
New BegiNNiNgS BAPtiSt ChurCh
eAgLeS NeSt ChriStiAN
Meeting at The Breeze Inn • 491-0316
FeLLowShiP, Ag
[email protected]
Pastor Dana Goodwater
Sunday School (for kids and adults) .......... 10 a.m.
224-5635 • 2nd Avenue & Madison Street
Sunday Service ..........................................10:00 a.m. Sunday Worship ............................................ 11 a.m.
Wednesday Prayer Meeting ......................6:00 p.m. Sunday Bible Study ......................................... 6 p.m.
Sunday School and Bible Study offered for kids
Seward House of Prayer call 224-5635 for
and adults
schedule
ChurCh oF ChriSt
SACreD heArt
Paul Stone • 491-1170
CAthoLiC ChurCh
Evangelist Jessie Killgore • 491-1327
Fr. Richard D. Tero, Pastor
433 4th Ave. • 491-1327
Deacon Walter E. Corrigan
Sunday Bible Classes ................................10:00 a.m.
5th Avenue & Jefferson Street • 224-5414
Worship ......................................................11:00 a.m.
MASS SCHEDULE
Sunday Evening...........................................6:00 p.m.
Tues.-Fri. ............................................................Noon Wednesday Bible Classes ..........................7:00 p.m.
Saturday .......................................................5:30 p.m.
Personal Bible Study available
Sunday ..........................................................9:30 a.m. Truth in Love - Sundays @ 8:30 a.m. KYES Ch. 5
CooPer LANDiNg
reSurreCtioN BAy BAPtiSt
Sunday ....................................................... 12:30 p.m.
ChurCh
SewArD ChurCh oF the NAZAreNe
Mile 5.5 Seward Highway
Rev. Dr. Blair Rorabaugh, Pastor
Sunday School.............................................9:45 a.m.
We invite you to join us
Sunday Worship .......................................11:00 a.m.
4th Avenue & “C” Street • 224-5617
Sunday Evening...........................................6:00 p.m.
Sunday Worship ......................................11:00 a.m. Wednesday Bible Study .............................7:00 p.m.
Sunday School...........................................10:00 a.m.
Free transportation • 224-7777
Page 12 • July 11, 2013 • The Seward Phoenix LOG
Back When...
SS Alameda
brought in
serum for Nome
Photo courtesy of Lee Poleske
The SS Alameda and Seward played a part
in the famous 1925 Serum Run to combat
an outbreak of diphtheria in Nome.
The initial serum was obtained at the
Railroad Hospital in Anchorage, taken by
train to Nenana and to Nome by a relay
dog teams. Realizing that the serum from
Anchorage would not be sufficient, the territorial health commissioner cabled to Seattle to have more serum sent north. It arrived in Seward on the SS Alameda on Feb.
6, 1925 and was taken to Nenana by train
and then again by a relay of dog teams to
Nome, arriving on Feb. 14, 1925.
The steamship Alameda was built in 1883
and purchased by Alaska Steam in 1910. It
burned in 1931.
(Send your “Back when...” photo to the LOG
for publication, [email protected].)
Turn Back the Pages
July 8, 1976
The Seward Phoenix LOG
Spencer Takes Home Trophy – Scattered showers during the afternoon
failed to damper the holiday spirits of
hundreds of Sewardites and visitors of all
ages who thronged the downtown area
during Seward’s Bicentennial 4th of July
celebration. Once again Seward’s July 4th
festivities were a complete success, made
possible by the hard work and dedication
of the Jaycees. The dedication of the Benny
Benson memorial was the highlight of the
morning’s events.
The big event of the day was the annual
Mount Marathon Race. Winner for the
Junior Race was Scott Taylor. Bill Spencer won the senior division for the third
consecutive year, taking home the perpetual trophy with a time of 44 minutes, 21
seconds.
Impact Funds Assured – The Coastal
Zone Management Act, S586, passed the
House on July 1. Under the provisions
originally put in the bill by U.S. Senator
Ted Stevens $1.2 billion in forgivable loans
and formula grants would be issued to
deal with energy-related impacts in the
coastal zone. The authorized funds can
be used for schools, education, highways,
docks, navigation aids, fire and police
protection, water supply, water collection
and treatment, hospitals and health care,
among other projects. The funds are meant
to prepare coastal states and municipalities
for OCS oil and gas development impacts.
Liberty Theatre – Now showing: John
Wayne in”Brannigan” and “The Wild McCollochs.” Coming next: “The Revengers”
and “Hard Times.”
This Week in City Hall – Information
received last week indicates the DeWayne
Brothers Circus will play in Seward on
July 10. The chamber of commerce will
welcome exchange students from Obihiro,
Japan at their July 15 meeting.
Alaska Railroad – Port Activities: The
NML Barge Tazlina will arrive
at 7 a.m., July 8.
Fletcher Speaks on Motivation – Local businessman
W.E.”Skip” Fletcher, whose
commercial interests include
the Liberty Theatre and
Laundromat, and KRXA
radio in Seward, in addition
to theaters elsewhere, was
the guest speaker at the July
1 chamber of commerce
luncheon. “To begin, I
want to compliment those
merchants who in the past
have worked so hard to
improve the appearance
of their establishment.
They have been, and
will continue to be, good diplomats for
the business community. More recently
many of these good people have given
their establishments a face lift – The New
Seward Hotel and Gift Shop, John Smith’s
Breeze Inn and new motel, the Elks Club,
Kawabe’s, Dreamland Bowl and Harbor
Dinner Club are to be commended for improving the appearance of our town,” said
Fletcher. “Seward is entering a new era of
expansion and growth such as we have
not seen since the war days of the ‘40s. The
question I find perplexing, and perhaps
many of you wonder as well, what steps
should be taken to offset the impact upon
the community that economic growth is
sure to produce?”
Urbach’s – What’s cool at Urbach’s?
Tank Tops and Short Sleeved Shirts for
men and boys in fun patterns, prints and
solid colors.
Halibut Quota Reaches Half – The International Pacific Halibut Commission
announced that landings of halibut reported
through June 30 were
about 12 million pounds
or nearly 50 percent of
this year’s catch limit of
25 million pounds.
Terry’s Chevron
Service – Open 8 a.m. to
9 p.m., 7 days a week to
serve you. Repairs and
Service.
Overharvesting Fish
Worries Hammond – Gov.
Jay Hammond expressed
his hope that press accounts indicating Japanese
and Russian opposition to
the United States 200-mile
fisheries limit indicated only preliminary
thinking on the part of those nations.
Seward Fisheries – Processing Icicle &
Viking Brand Seafoods.
New Chugach Forest Cabin – Newly
constructed Romig Cabin in Chugach National Forrest is available for reservations
beginning July 12 for $5 per night.
City of Seward Notice –The City of
Seward and Seward General Hospital
have no Liability Insurance. As usual,
precautions are being taken to provide the
residents and visitors a safe community.
The current liability insurance expires on
July 1, 1976. The insuring company has
declined to provide liability insurance and
no other insurance market has been found.
The search is continuing.
ARR Users May Have More Say –
Consumer-users of the Alaska Railroad
would have greater representation on the
railroad’s board, under language added to
the Transportation Appropriations Committee report by U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens.
The language accepted to the bill directs
the Federal Railroad Administration to
develop plans to bring about added participation by Alaskans to the ARR Board of
Directors.
Tony’s Bar – The “fun” place in Seward!
Cape Jellison Report – About 6 a.m. on
July 5, the Cape Jillison responded to a
call for assistance from the fishing vessel
Pacific Sea, which went aground in Sunny
Cove at Renard Island. The Cape Jellison
was able to reach the scene and safely
refloat the vessel, and then escorted it to
Seward.
Fish House – Yes, we have hooligan
nets.
LOG Note – The Seward Community
Library is featuring a special summer film
program at 3 p.m. every day on Benny
Benson and Alaska’s flag as its part in
the celebration of the bicentennial. The
15-minute slide show was produced locally by Eileen Kulin, narrated by Gene
Skinner and Jim Filip.
The First NationalBank of Anchorage –
It’s a date... Make payday... savings day.
More Activiites Added For Summer
Fun – Dog Show: A special attration has
been added to the dog show – Lonnie and
Chad Lockwood have offered to bring
their obedience-trained doges and demonstrate what a well trained dog really is.
Businesses & Services
Who wants
a free ad?
Bring your business card
to
The Seward Phoenix LOG
232 Fourth Ave.,
for a
FREE AD (7 weeks)
in the
Business & Service
Directory.
Your ad here
13 weeks
26 weeks
52 weeks
$40 per week $35 per week $30 per week
Daily
Luncheon
Specials
Homestyle
Bakery &
Unique Gifts
Tuesday - Saturday
9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
228 Fourth Ave., Downtown
224-2228
The Seward Phoenix LOG • July 11, 2013 • Page 13
The following is from the journals of the Seward
Police Department. Those who have been arrested or summoned are presumed innocent
until found guilty in a court of law.
June 27
01:26 - 911 caller requested an ambulance
to Bayside Apartments for a male who cut his
hand. SVAC and SVFD dispatched.
02:40 - Officer responded to a request for
a welfare check on a man who said he was
going to commit suicide after his wife told him
she wanted a divorce. At 13:08 his employer
reported that he was OK and going to SeaView
for a meeting.
03:56 - Officer responded to a request from
PSMCC about the injuries of a woman they were
treating. Officer then went to Seward Resort to
speak with the woman’s husband and a witness. Officer would be forwarding DV Assault
IV charges to the district attorney for review.
08:40 - Individual turned in a blue bike found
at the culvert.
08:50 - Officer responded to a report of a theft
at an office in the Small Boat Harbor.
08:53 - 911 caller requested an ambulance
to Seward Mountain Haven, Fireweed Lodge,
for a male with a head laceration. SVFD/SVAC
dispatched.
11:00 - Harbor Department turned in a Nokia
T-Mobile cell phone that was turned over to
them the day before.
11:45 - Officer requested case number for DV
Assault IV at Bayside Apartments.
12:30 - Individual reported that his son ran
away from home. At 13:06, an officer made
contact with the juvenile and returned him to
his parents.
17:18 - Citation for running a stop sign issued
to Luis Granire at First and Madison.
17:29 - Officer responded to a report that
someone in a white mini van was parked in the
street and acting suspicious. Officer found that
the subject was not acting suspicious.
17:37 - 911 caller requested an ambulance to
the base of Mount Marathon for a young male.
SVAC/SVFD was dispatched, but the caller went
to the emergency room at PSMCC and the call
was cancelled.
17:47 - 911 caller requested an ambulance to
Dimond Boulevard for a male who fell. SVAC/
SVFD dispatched.
18:54 - Verbal warning for lights not working
given at Third and Washington.
18:55 - Individual reported her daughter lost
a black 32G iPod Touch.
18:56 - Individual reported a blue pickup with
kayaks was speeding, swerving and creating
dangerous road conditions. Officer arrested
Thomas Meyer on Lowell Point Road for DUI.
(PBT .134)
19:42 - Individual reported his wife called him
and said she was stuck at the top of Mount
Marathon. SVFD/SVAC dispatched. She then
reported to AST that hikers were helping her
down. SVFD/SVAC call cancelled.
19:57 - Officer responded to a report of a man
who was drinking and drove from the skate park
in a white truck. Officer was unable to locate
the vehicle.
20:41 - 911 caller reported smelling gas and
requested MPVFD to her home on Seward
Highway. MPVFD dispatched.
22:53 - Individual at the Breeze Inn lounge confiscated an Alaska driver’s license that a female
was trying to use to purchase alcohol. Officer
responded but the minor had left the premises.
Officer took possession of the license.
22:58 - Pedestrian flagged down an officer to
give him a toiletry bag found in the Chevron
bathroom.
23:45 - Verbal warning for crossing over center
line given at Seward Highway and Sea Lion.
June 28
01:38 - Officer advised a group hanging around
Alaska SeaLife Center that the area was closed
for the evening and they needed to leave.
01:51 - Night watchman at Icicle Seafoods tent
city requested an officer regarding domestic
violence. Officer spoke with the victim who
reported that Richard Carlyle assaulted her.
Officers arrested Carlyle, who resisted, for assaulting an officer and damaging property, and
transported him to SCJ
‘Captain’s Mast’
05:08 - Officer responded to a SAST request for
a welfare check on Eagle Lane. Officer provided
transportation for one person to City Express.
05:37 - Trooper arrested Vennard Lahti Jr. for
DUI and false report, and transported him
to SCJ.
08:46 - SVFD/SVAC dispatched to the cruise
ship Millenium for a female with back pain.
09:20 - Individual reported a dog loose on
Seward Highway by Metco.
12:49 - 911 misdial.
13:26 - Officer responded to a request from
Harborview Inn about guests who damaged a
room, left and did not pay.
14:19 - Verbal warning for parking on the road
given by the middle school.
15:34 - Burn permit issued to Leif Olsen at
airport.
15:36 - 911 misdial.
15:50 - Jesse Atherton turned himself in to
SCJ for SAST warrants. FTA, OC Theft III, $100.
16:06 - Hotel Edgewater reported they got
complaints of dogs barking next door.
17:34 - 911 caller complained of a blue truck
parked on Fourth near the boat harbor in a no
parking area blocking traffic. Officer was unable
to locate a truck obstructing traffic.
19:12 - Caller requested help from the harbormaster to fish his keys out of the water.
20:33 - Horse reported loose on Dairy Hill.
23:57 - 911 caller requested a fire patrol to
Marathon Drive. Reporting party’s smoke alarm
went off, and there were no visible flames but a
light haze and smell of smoke/electrical. Caller
did not want SFD toned out just someone to
verify all was OK. Fire chief responded and after
inspection with gas detector/thermal imager
cause of haze was unfounded.
June 29
00:15 - Citation for speed issued to Mark
Anderson at Third and Jefferson.
00:46 - 911 pocket dial.
01:30 - 911 caller requested an ambulance to
William H. Seward Yacht Club for an intoxicated
female, age unknown, who fell, was breathing
and in/out of consciousness. No visible signs
of bleeding/injury. SVAC/SVFD dispatched.
01:56 - Verbal warning for inoperative taillight given to Anna Hall at Seward Highway
and Aspen.
02:18 - Verbal warning for speed given to Cathern Zweifel at Seward Highway and Iron Drive.
06:15 - 911 pocket dial.
07:31 - 911 misdial.
09:39 - Individual reported a large RV was
parked all night at a day-use area on Ballaine.
12:08 - Individual reported his Motorola X
was stolen from his vehicle in the Safeway
parking lot.
12:29 - 911 misdial.
13:09 - Individual reported horses were out
on Dairy Hill.
13:23 - Individual reported he lost a GPS. It
was last seen by the base of Mount Marathon.
14:54 - 911 misdial.
15:33 - Individual reported a vehicle was
swerving and acting drunk. Officer contacted
the subject and reported she was not intoxicated.
15:34 - Verbal warning for speed given to
Seward Highway and Van Buren.
16:00 - Citation for open container issued to
Travis Richbourg. (PBT .049 and passed FST)
17:01 - Individual reported a grey Ford King
Ranch parked illegally in front of GCI. Officer
found the vehicle parked partially in the roadway. The owners moved the vehicle. At 17:20
officer gave them a verbal warning for parking
Fourth and Van Buren.
17:22 - Verbal warning for failure to use turn
signal given at Fourth and South Harbor.
17:27 - 911 caller reported that a male in a
green Saturn, repeatedly drove by her yelling
threats in the parking lot near Saltwater Safari. Officer spoke with the reporting party and
determined the who the suspect was. Officer
contacted the suspect at Fourth and Monroe,
and gave him a verbal warning to stay away
from the reporting party who did not wish to
press charges.
17:30 - SAST advised SPD of a call from
someone who reported he could see smoke
coming from up Davis Creek on Mile 37 Sterling
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Highway. MPVFD advised and an on duty fire
officer responded. No smoke was found.
19:14 - 911 caller reported an unattended
fire in a burn barrel at home on Second. Fire
officers contacted the responsible party, who
was advised not to leave their fire unattended.
19:21 - Individual reported his 9-millimeter
stainless steel pistol was stolen from his
home on Ash.
June 30
00:04 - Verbal warning for speed given at
Safeway parking lot.
00:22 - Verbal warning for speed given at Mile
1 Seward Highway.
00:34 - Verbal warning for speed given at
Fourth and Madison.
00:42 - Citation for speed issued to Baltazar
Ontiveros on the Seward Highway at the airport.
00:57 - Verbal warning for speed given at
Seward Highway and Coolidge.
01:22 - Verbal warning for non functioning taillights given at Seward Highway and Iron Drive.
Officer advised driver to use his hazard lights
and take the vehicle straight home.
01:36 - Verbal warning for speed given at Third
and Jefferson.
02:13 - Hughie Wilder III arrested for DUI at
Chevron. Verbal warning issued for speed.
Wilder transported to SCJ. (PBT .156)
02:51 - Officer responded to a request from
the manager of Bear Mountain Apartments for
a report of a person drinking in a vacant apartment. Officer found the apartment unoccupied.
03:18 - 911 caller requested SVAC/BCVFD to
Seward Windsong Lodge for someone with a
stomach ailment.
09:22 - 911 requested an ambulance to Alaska
Railroad dock for a male having a seizure.
SVAC/SVFD responded.
10:14 - AST reported a blue pickup, heading
south on the Seward Highway around Mile 13.5,
was driving recklessly, swerving and possibly
intoxicated. Officer was unable to locate vehicle.
11:30 - Individual reported a blue LG Smart
phone was missing. It was last seen at Essential
One or by the Russian River fishing area.
11:34 - Caller reported two dogs in one kennel
in the rain in a red pickup parked across from
Lighthouse Inn.
12:33 - 911 misdial.
13:52 - Officer responded to a report of an
illegally parked truck that made it difficult
for the shuttle to maneuver at Fourth and
Washington. Officer contacted the driver who
moved the vehicle.
14:03 - 911 misdial.
15:03 - 911 caller reported her husband was
leaving her at Resurrection camping area and
taking their baby. While still on the call, she
reported she no longer needed an officer.
Officers contacted the couple who agreed to
separate for awhile and cool off.
16:15 - Officer advised a vehicle owner that she
was parked in a no parking zone and instructed
her to move the vehicle.
16:40 - Dispatch received an automated call
advising, “Water tank 1, Lowell Canyon.”
16:57 - 911 caller requested an officer to
Safeway parking lot for a motor vehicle accident. Caller reported there were no injuries and
only requested an officer to file a police report.
17:15 - Individual reported that she had a
purse and cell phone that was left at her store.
19:46 - Officer responded to a request about
a person who had was at a home on First. The
subject was an unwanted guest and had been
asked to leave, but refused to.
20:00 - Officer responded to a request for a
welfare check on a young boy in a dark grey coat
and blue jeans standing outside of the Yukon
Bar. Reporting party said the boy’s mother was
inside the bar drinking and occasionally came
out to check on him. Officer contacted the child
and his parents. The family was outside of the
bar waiting for a cab. All was OK.
21:46 - Individual reported that a RV in Resurrection Campgrounds was playing loud music.
22:03 - Verbal warning for speed given at
Third and C.
July 1
00:10 - Citation for speed issued to Dylan Gillespie at Seward Highway and Sea Lion. Verbal
warning given for driving left of center fog line
and driving with a provisional license.
00:40 - Verbal warning for improperly displayed
tags, one taillight and operating without a
proper endorsement given at Seward Highway.
00:54 - Citation for inoperable taillight issued
to Brandon McGrew, at Safeway parking lot.
Verbal warning given for failure to stop at a
stop sign.
08:47 - 911 misdial.
08:50 - Individual reported that Stephen
Hoffman III tried breaking into Gateway Apartment with a crowbar. Officer responded and
later arrested for DV Assault IV and Criminal
Mischief III.
11:06 - 911 - Seward Mountain Haven conducted a fire drill.
11:49 - Parking warning for parking against flow
traffic given at Resurrect Art Gallery.
11:57 - 911 caller from the senior center called
about a for possible ambulance request for
person who slipped out of their chair. Senior
center reported that the person refused to be
seen and didn’t want an ambulance.
13:22 - SVFD/SVAC dispatched for sprinkler
activation at SCCC.
13:23 - Individual reported his red mountain
bike was stolen from his campsite.
15:29 - Street-closed signs put up on Adams
from City Hall alley to Liberty Theater alley
16:53 - 911 misdial
17:29 - 911 abandoned call.
17:41 - Citation for speed issued to Priscilla
Peabody at Fourth and Madison.
23:33 - Individual reported a fire alarm going
off on the tug Chahunta on Z Float Slip 3.
22:38 - Individual reported a woman in the
bushes in the 500 block of Ballaine. Officer
contacted the woman and she was reunited
with her husband.
23:17 - 911 misdial.
July 2
01:47 - Verbal warning for speeding, and crossing the center line given to Fletcher Woodsat at
Seward Highway and Hemlock.
04:53 - 911 caller requested an ambulance
to Seward Mountain Haven. SVAC/SVFD
dispatched.
06:48 - Individual reported that an intoxicated
person in a red jeep purchased coffee at
the Coffee Cup. the jeep left northbound on
Seward Highway. Officer contacted the subject
at Bay View Trailer Court and instructed him
not to drive.
09:44 - Individual reported that on June 15
her white iPhone 4S in a red case was stolen
at Holiday Inn Express. Reporting party said
that her finder app showed the phone was in
Anchorage. She said she contacted the Anchorage Police Department and was told that she
needed to report the theft to SPD first.
10:09 - 911 misdial.
11:26 - Officer responded to a request for a civil
standby at Glacier View Apartments.
11:27 - 911 misdial.
11:50 - Individual reported her powder blue
mountain bike with black seat and tire splash
guards was taken from a campsite at Resurrection South Campground.
11:54 - 911 caller reported a male in a white
Chevy cargo van slammed on his brakes at the
three bridges, then got out and assaulted the
reporting party. He then travelled south into
Seward. Officers responded.
14:35 - SVFD/SVAC dispatched to Seward
Mountain Haven Eagle Lodge for female with
altered status.
14:51 - Individual reported her iPhone stolen
from her vehicle at the Fish House and she saw
her phone at the playground by the ball field.
Officer responded.
15:37 - Individual turned in medications for
destruction.
16:15 - Verbal warning for failure to yield
immediately given at Dieckgraeff Road and
Seward Highway.
18:02 - 911 misdial.
18:30 - Individual requested that Lowell Point
Road be graded before the Fourth of July.
19:15 - 911 caller reported a dispute in
progress between a male and female at Resurrection tent camping. The male sprayed lighter
fluid on the tent before both subjects sped off
in a tan Toyota 4Runner northbound on Ballaine.
Two other callers reported the same incident.
Officer stopped the vehicle at Safeway and
contacted Keimo Clayton and Pamela Apangalook with PTB .119. Apangalook was arrested
for probation violation and transported to SCJ.
At SCJ Apangalook was charged with promoting contraband. Clayton was trespassed from
Resurrection Campgrounds indefinitely.
19:23 - 911 caller wanted to report a theft.
Caller asked to call back on the non emergency
line. He reported that he left his rental vehicle
in William’s tent camping. Upon his return, he
found $30 worth of smoked salmon missing,
bratwurst missing and a scratch on the side of
the rental car. Officer responded.
19:45 - Earthquake: magnitude 5.6, 135
miles southeast of Nikolsk, depth 19 miles. No
tsunami was expected.
19:52 - Earthquake: magnitude 5.6, 110
miles southeast of Nikolsk, depth 19 miles. No
tsunami was expected.
21:44 - 911 caller reported that the driver of
a vehicle might be driving drunk. Officer was
unable to locate the vehicle.
22:02 - Officer advised Keimo Clayton that he
was trespassed from all Seward campgrounds.
17:11 - Individual reported a loose horse on
Phoenix Road.
23:55 - Officers responded to a request for
an officer to the alley side of Apollo for an
intoxicated male. Officers assisted the subject,
who was staying in the building, back inside.
July 3
01:00 - Individual reported a group of possibly intoxicated individuals getting into a
dark colored F150. They were Kimberly Court
Apartments parking log. Officer was unable to
locate them. At 02:33 an individual reported
there had been a verbal altercation with the
group along with harassment. At 03:04, officer
contacted Ryan Pruitt and cited him with minor
consuming. (PBT .106)
01:17 - SPD officers assisted a SAST trooper
locating the owner of a vehicle reportedly used
during a pursuit in Lost Lake Subdivision. Driver
ditched the vehicle and fled into the woods.
09:46 - 911 misdial.
09:55 - 911 misdial.
10:08 - Officer responded to a report of a black
bear eating trash at home on Benson.
10:18 - Officer responded to a report of theft
at Ray’s Reusables.
10:39 - Individual turned in a New York driver’s
license found at Fifth and Monroe.
10:40 - Officer responded to a report of theft
of an iPhone at Icicle Seafoods.
11:05 - Officer requested a case for an abandoned vehicle at Fourth and Madison.
11:08 - Individual reported his Northrock
mountain bike was stolen at Resurrection North
Campground.
11:40 - Individual reported a child was left unattended in an Oldsmobile Bravada at the Bus
Depot lot. Trooper on scene advised all was OK.
12:17 - SVAC dispatched for a request from
PSMCC for an ambulance to transport a patient
from the ER to Seward Mountain Haven.
13:39 - Public Works advised that street-closed
signs were up on Fourth Washington to Jefferson
and up Lowell Canyon.
13:54 - 911 caller reported a black bear in their
trash at Great Bear Circle. Officer responded.
14:26 - Individual turned in expired medication
to be destroyed.
15:10 - 911 caller reported an intoxicated male
who was stumbling in the road at Ballaine and
Railway. Officer contacted the person who was
not intoxicated.
15:35 - Officer responded to a report of a
moose in the culvert and tourists were trying
to feed it. Officer found the moose at Red’s
and guided the it to a more secluded location.
16:32 - 911 caller reported an unattended
brush fire at Bear Paw Drive. BCVFD investigated.
16:38 - Housing Manager for Major Marine
Tours requested an officer to the bunkhouse
at Second and D about two children running
around the property. Officer contacted two
children who were visiting their grandparent
next door.
■ See ‘Captain’s Mast,’ Page 14
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Page 14 • July 11, 2013 • The Seward Phoenix LOG
‘Captain’s Mast’
From Page 13
contacted the party and advised them of the
open container law. They were too drunk to
move the vehicle at the time and would move
it in the morning.
17:11 - A vendor requested an officer to Fourth
and Washington after another vendor ran into
his food cart. Officer responded and reported
the accident was minor and resolved by the
involved parties.
17:24 - Officer provided an escort to Wells
Fargo bank for an office attendant.
17:29 - Individual reported a camper in a
pullout somewhere between Miles 3 and 4
Nash Road had a campfire. SVFD investigated
the scene and found nothing wrong.
18:28 - Individual reported that a woman with
dark curly hair driving a Glacier Taxi vehicle ran
over his foot as it sped up the alley near Fourth
between Washington and Adams. Officer spoke
with reporting party and driver.
19:02 - Dispatch received an automated call
advising, “Water Tank 1, Lowell Canyon.”
19:46 - Officer responded to a report about
older children causing problems at the playground near the skate park. Officer found
everything to be OK.
20:14 - 911 misdial.
20:44 - Individual reported a man in a bluishgreen ‘90s Honda Accord was driving drunk and
hit a parked vehicle in a vacant lot on Third. The
suspect, described as wearing a black shirt and
baseball cap, then drove down the alley towards
the Yukon. Officer stopped the suspected vehicle on Seward Highway just north of Chevron
and arrested James Swartz for DUI and leaving
the scene. Swartz was transported to SCJ.
21:09 - Verbal warning for passing in a no
passing lane given on Seward Highway near
Resurrection.
21:12 - Officer responded to a report of a car
parked illegally on Second. Officer found no
traffic hazard.
21:26 - Trooper arrested Jose Afaro Jr. for probation violation and Curtis Lewis on an Anchorage
AST warrant at Mile 33 Seward Highway, and
transported them to SCJ.
22:28 - 911 misdial.
22:47 - Officer advised a subject and his
friends that they were not to enter any more
bars for the night.
22:54 - Verbal warning for failure to come to
a complete stop and failure to use turn signal
given at Sixth and Monroe
23:05 - Verbal warning for driving without
headlights illuminated after sunset given at
Third and A.
23:14 - Officer advised a person that he is not
be drinking or in any area where alcohol is sold
or consumed.
23:20 - Off duty officer reported that a camper
was on the new jetty and had been advised it
was a no-camping area. They had not left the
area. The off-duty officer reported people were
seen taking alcohol to the camper. An officer
July 4
23:52 - Verbal warning for driving with no lights
on given at Third and B.
23:49 - AST arrested David Hargreaves for DUI
and transported him to SCJ.
00:07 - Verbal warning for discharging fireworks
inside city limits given Fifth and Madison.
00:13 - 911 caller requested FIRE/EMS to
M/V The Star of the Northwest at Float E for
a male who fell about 20 feet off a boat and
onto his head. SVAC/SFD responded to the
Major Marine bunkhouse. Subject refused
medical treatment.
00:40 - AST arrested Randall Vogt for DUI and
transported him to SCJ.
00:49 - Officer responded to a report of a male
passed out in the baseball dugout across from
Bayside Apartments. Officer advised the subject
to leave the area.
00:52 - Officer issued a citation to Aliina
Ryden-Selk for minor consuming and issued
her a summons for minor operating a vehicle
after consumption at Fourth and Van Buren.
01:19 - Verbal warning given to two people for
riding in the back of a pickup. Both were given
transportation to Kenai Fjords bunkhouse.
01:25 - Officer contacted a female who seemed
distraught. Officer provided her transportation
to her boyfriend at Seward Alehouse. A sober
person to care for her was not available. She
was placed into protective custody.
01:37 - Verbal warning given for urinating in
public. (PBT .145)
01:47 - 911 caller requested an ambulance
to Fourth for a 50-year-old who possibly had
alcohol poisoning. The woman refused treatment. She was placed into protective custody
and transported to SCJ.
02:28 - Citation for speed issued to Jhomar
Carreon at Seward Highway and Sea Lion.
Verbal warning given for driving with expired
license.
02:48 - SAST arrested Jacob Tuttle for disorderly conduct at Exit Glacier. Subject remanded
to SCJ. (PBT .155)
02:48 - SAST arrested Michael Lee for driving
while license revoked and probation violation
at Cooper Landing. Subject remanded to SCJ.
03:23 - Verbal warning for driving with out
headlights on given at Fourth and J Dock.
03:43 - Verbal warning for speed given at
Seward Highway and Iron Drive.
03:52 - Individual requested an officer to a
home on Third for a visitor who refused to leave.
04:08 - Officer requested Glacier Towing to
downtown to remove two vehicles parked in a
parking prohibited area.
04:25 - Citation for driving with an expired
license issued to Christopher Ozella at Seward
Highway and Air Force Rec Camp. Verbal warn-
68. News _____
69. French lake
70. The third canonical
hour
71. Polio vaccine
developer
72. Shakespearean verb
ending
14:29 - Two 911 open-line calls.
14:45 - Individual reported her two dogs ran
into the highway near Crown Point. Before she
could get them, a man in a truck stopped and
took the dogs. She said one dog was a Jagdterrier and the other a Boxer/Lab mix.
15:23 - 911 open-line call.
15:41 - Officer contacted an intoxicated
subject in the 400 block of Adams. The officer
removed him from the vehicle and united him
with friends.
16:07 - Individual reported a burglary just
happened at Hotel Seward. Suspect stole
several items from an office. Witness said the
suspect had short black hair, red jacket, hat,
baggy blue jeans and a white shirt. Suspect
smelled of alcohol and was last seen headed
north on Fifth. At 16:29, a 911 caller (a witness) reported that he found the suspect and
was following him northbound on Fifth. Caller
met with an officer and continued the pursuit.
The suspect was lost and last spotted headed
east on Sixth toward Ballaine. Officers searched
the area on foot. The suspect was contacted
at the end of Jefferson and Ballaine. William
Cole arrested for Burglary II and transported
to SCJ. At 17:29, Cole arrested on Anchorage
AST judicial warrants.
17:01 - Individual reported two bicycles were
dumped in the creek next to Harbor View Condos. Officer put the bikes into lost and found.
18:04 - 911 caller reported two people, who
had been drinking, appeared to be planning
to drive. Caller said they were jump starting a
vehicle. Officer contacted two subjects near the
Orca Building. Citation for MCA issued to Blaine
Bronga. (PBT .107)
19:23 - Officer requested a case number for a
found weed whacker, belt sander and a metal
treble clef.
20:35 - Individual turned in a red 12MP Olympus Stylus digital camera that he found at the
playground near the skate park.
20:56 - Officer contacted three individuals at
2nd Lake and advised them the area closes
at 23:00.
21:09 - Verbal warning for speed given at
Seward Highway and South Harbor.
21:16 - Several callers reported a fight in progress at the Yukon. The fight ended before officers
arrived. A reporting party said that an involved
female wearing a green shirt with white writing
was headed north on Fourth. Officer contacted
Kimberly Dolchok, Lorne Smagge and Siniva
Odahlen. All three were trespassed from the
Yukon Bar indefinitely. Odahlen arrested for
Assault IV and Smagge arrested for two counts
of Assault IV. Both were transported to SCJ.
Officers also contacted the victims.
22:57 - Officer warned two subjects, who were
on the railroad bridge across from Metco, to
stay off of the railroad tracks.
23:04 - Citation for failure to carry proof of insurance issued to Carla Copenhaver at Seward
Highway and North Harbor. Verbal warnings
given for speed, passing in a no passing zone
and failure to carry license.
23:15 - Individual reported a large oil slick in
the harbor near the south boat launch.
23:21 - Trooper arrested Elisa Shuravloff-Gisler
on a Soldotna AST warrant and transported
her to SCJ.
Abbreviations: SPD, Seward Police Department; SFD, Seward Fire Department; SVFD,
Seward Volunteer Fire Department; SVAC,
Seward Volunteer Ambulance Corps; SCJ,
Seward Community Jail; ACO, Animal Control
Officer; BCVFD, Bear Creek Volunteer Fire
Department; MPVFD, Moose Pass Volunteer
Fire Department SAST, Soldotna Alaska State
Troopers; AST, Alaska State Troopers; PSMCC,
Providence Seward Medical & Care Center;
SCCC, Spring Creek Correctional Center;
USCG, United States Coast Guard; SMIC,
Seward Marine Industrial Center; PBT, Portable
Breathalyzer Test.; BTR, Breath Test Refusal;
DWLR, Drove While License Revoked; DWLS,
Drove While License Suspended; DUI, Drove
Under Influence; MICS, Misconduct Involving a
Controlled Substance; DV, Domestic Violence;
FTA, Failure To Appear; MCA, Minor Consuming
Alcohol.
Tundra
Puzzles
THE FORTIES
ACROSS
1. American Mennonite
6. Woolen cap of Scottish
origin
9. Mountain lake formed
by glaciers
13. Buckwheat dish
14. Back then
15. It sometimes follows
nausea
16. Irritate or bother
17. *Betty Grable was
known for one and
the other
18. Historical period
19. *1940s Bomb type
21. Dissimilar
23. Message in a bottle?
24. *Eastern group
25. Digital audiotape
28. Dry riverbed
30. Knickknack
35. Applications
37. Fusses or stirs
39. Gibson garnish
40. Actress Sorvino
41. *Japanese-Americans
from this state were
interned, abbr.
43. Ghana money
44. Sinbad the Sailor’s
home
46. Past times
47. Aquarium organism
48. Iroquois tribe
50. Understands
52. *Month when Pearl
Harbor was attcked
53. Go to and fro
55. One who plays for the
University of Utah
57. *Chinese MarxistLeninist
60. *New Middle Eastern
country
63. Hue perception
64. H+, e.g.
66. Be of use
ing given for speed.
04:43 - USCG advised the Marine Channel
16 was down. USCG requested if distress
was heard on the channel to call by phone
for assistance.
06:14 - Verbal warning for passing in a no
passing zone given at Seward Highway and
Essential One.
06:45 - Citation for parking in a no parking zone
issued to ABC Motor Home Rentals at North
Harbor and Breeze Inn Hotel. Officer contacted
the renters at the Breeze Inn Hotel who said they
would move motor home.
07:11 - Verbal warning for speed given on the
Seward Highway at the food bank.
08:03 - Verbal warning for speed given at
Safeway.
08:30 - 911 caller reported a bear in their yard
in 100 block of Second. Officer responded.
09:03 - Officer contacted two males in a vehicle
at the south side of SMIC for illegal camping
and advised they were moving.
09:41 - Two 911 callers requested an ambulance to First and Adams for a male who was
bleeding from head and arms from a fall. SVFD/
SVAC dispatched.
10:28 - Citation for parking on roadway issued
at Fourth and Monroe.
11:48 - Officer spoke with an individual who
reported a male who did not have a license
was driving a beat up red Dodge pickup on
Bear Drive.
12:53 - Individual reported his brown/white
hound was missing.
13:03 - 911 caller requested an ambulance to
Windsong Lodge for a female with chest pains.
BCVFD/SVAC dispatched.
13:21 - Two 911 misdials.
13:51 - Citation for improper parking issued at
Hotel Edgewater.
14:03 - SFD Engine 2 advised they would be
assisting an individual who was feeling ill at the
American Legion.
14:16 - 911 open-line call.
14:19 - 911 open-line call.
73. Portfolio content
DOWN
1. Also known as
2. Supernatural life force
3. Negative contraction
4. Drives away
5. Barn loft
6. Barber’s supply
7. Sensitive subject?
8. Ski bump
9. Serengeti antelope
10. Every which way
11. Usually served brown
or white
12. To the ___ degree
15. *Fastening invention
20. Newton or Stern, e.g.
22. “Just kidding!”
24. Science of living
organisms
25. *Disney’s unlikely flyer
26. From the East
27. To the point
29. *June 6, 1944
31. Ancient Peruvian
32. *Where Jackie played,
Ebbets _____
33. Elks’ hangout
34. *Widely considered
first computer
36. Delhi dress
38. Your majesty
42. Unborn vertebrate
45. Gather on the surface,
in chemistry
49. Grass bristle
51. Layers
54. Like a gymnast
56. Roof overhang, pl.
57. “Nana” author
58. Twelfth month of
Jewish civil year
59. Jerk
60. Mark of a ruler
61. Listening devices
62. Bloodsucking
parasites
63. *Murrow covered WWII
for it
65. ___meal for breakfast
67. Tennis do-over
Solutions to previous puzzles
The Seward Phoenix LOG • July 11, 2013 • Page 15
SSC supports low income
seniors
The
Safe & Fear-Free Environment
Board of Directors announces recruitment for
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Seward Senior Center
The Seward Senior Center now has Alaska Farmer’s Market coupons for seniors 60 and
older, who are income eligible. Eligibility for a single-member household is set at $2,213 a
month or lower and for a two-person household at $2,988 month or less. The $25 Farmer’s
Market Coupons are redeemable at the Grazing Moose Market across the street from city
hall.
Senior Care Benefits, sponsored by the State of Alaska, provide low income seniors, 65
and older, monthly cash assistance. Individual monthly income eligibility is $1,984 and for
a married couple the monthly income limit is $2,680. Senior citizen lunch (60 and older) is
served 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. weekdays and is a free will donation program sponsored by the
City of Seward, Older Americans Act, State of Alaska, the Kenai Peninsula Borough and
community donations.
Contact the Seward Senior Center at 224-5604 for information.
Council
From Page 3
outlined the many computers and other
devices that Meeks and technician Joshua
Estes are expected to service. Meeks alluded
to possibly dire situations arising from
routine or atypical hardware or software
problems in view of the existing backlog of
trouble tickets and service requests.
Councilor Ristine Casagranda suggested
that administration look into a contract
worker rather than taking on the responsibility of another employee, albeit a temp.
Meeks replied that a contractor would
increase the budgetary impact because a
temporary worker could be hired at a less
expensive rate and that, under the proposal,
a temporary worker would only be employed up to the nine-month threshold after
which benefits would be mandatory.
Councilor Bob Valdatta, citing an interim
hire by the Electric Department that didn’t
turn out as advertised, was skeptical. Discussion on the agenda item wound down
with a recommendation to administration to develop options for the council to
consider.
S.A.F.E.’s Mission is to provide individual and system advocacy that prevents,
reduces, and eliminates interpersonal violence in Bristol Bay.
ABOUT THE PROGRAM
S.A.F.E. is a membership organization; incorporated in 1981 as a private non-profit
agency supported and guided by people who share a common goal of ending all
forms of interpersonal violence. The program is dynamic throughout Bristol Bay,
operating in close synergy with School Districts, Health, Tribal, and Social Service
organizations. Services include immediate safety and shelter including a residential
16 bed shelter in Dillingham and a 4 bed shelter in King Salmon; safe home
networks; alternative emergency housing; transportation, a Sexual Assault
Response Team and Nitiput Child Advocacy Center; coordination of medical, law
enforcement, prosecution and advocacy response to adult and child victims of sexual
assault for immediate safety and intervention; Legal Assistance; 24 hour
Crisis line; Counseling and Referral; MySpace Youth Wellness Center;
comprehensive children’s outreach, education, and support programs.
For more information and to apply contact Business Manager 842-2320
or visit safebristolbay.org and link to Executive Director recruitment.
Open until filled.
www.TheSeward Phoenix LOG.com
Classified Ads & Public Notices
Rates: 55 cents per word, minimum $5.50 per ad. • Deadline: Noon, Monday for Thursday publication • [email protected] • 907-224-4888
The LOG does not evaluate or endorse the
representations made by these advertisers.
For possible information, contact the Better
Business Bureau at 562-0704 or the Alaska
Department of Labor at 907-269-4900.
Work
Commercial fishing
12-inch brass hydro pot hauler. 907-3477311, leave message. 907-520-5446.
(7/11-18)
Garage Sales
Moving sale. 10am-2pm, Friday and Saturday, Kimberly Court, B2.
(7/11)
WORK
Hope Community Resources, Inc. is a nonprofit agency committed to enhancing the
lives of both the individuals we support and
our employees. Hope is currently hiring caring people with a can-do attitude for an Individual Support Specialist position at one of
our group homes in Seward. The Individual
Support Specialist supports and assists
individuals who experience developmental
and physical disabilities with daily living
skills and activities in the community. Hope
provides paid training and ongoing professional development. Rate of pay is $15.00
per hour.
Hope offers an excellent benefit package.
Starting package includes Medical Insurance, Sick & Vacation Leave, Paid Holidays
& Life Insurance (Term & Dependent Life).
Benefits increase with longevity. For more
information regarding our benefits, please
visit our website listed below.
To learn more about this and other positions
in Anchorage, Kenai and Soldotna or to apply, visit our website at www.hopealaska.org.
For any further questions please call 1-800478-0078 or e-mail [email protected].
(7/4-11)
Bay View
apartments
214 6th Avenue | Seward Alaska
Affordable Family Living
accepting applications For:
1 & 2 Bedroom
Scenic Ocean View
Laundry Facilities On-Site
Government Subsidy Available for
Eligible Households
Rent Based on 30% Gross Income
For more information contact
907-244-9507
[email protected]
Hearing Impaired Call
1-800-770-8973
This institution is an
equal opportunity provider
Accounts Receivable Technician
• Data Entry
• Customer Service
• Accounts Receivable
• Must be a team player
For more information and to apply please
visit:
www.shoresidepetroleum.com
(7/4-7/11)
Personals
For Domestic Violence or Sexual Assault
questions, concerns or assistance, call 2245257 or the 24-hour crisis line at 224-3027
provided by SeaView Community Services.
(tfn)
Public Notices
INVITATION TO BID
SEWARD HIGH SCHOOL
WELDING SHOP IMPROVEMENTS
The Kenai Peninsula Borough Capital Projects Department hereby invites qualified
firms to submit a firm price for acceptance
by the Borough for improvements to the
Seward High School welding shop. The project consists of the following:
The contractor is to provide welding booths,
ductwork and duct accessories, ventilation
van and necessary electrical connections
at booths. Installation of a step-down transformer and panel is also included.
This contract is subject to the provision of
State of Alaska, Title 36, Minimum Wage
Gateway
apartments
Is now accepting applications
for affordable,
spacious 1 & 2 bedroom
apartments.
Rent based on income.
Onsite laundry.
Dishwashers
CheCk us Out
For rental information
Call 907-224-3901
1801 Phoenix Road
Seward, AK 99664
[email protected]
TDD # 1-800-770-8973
This institution is an
Equal Opportunity Provider
Public Notices
Public Notices
Public Notices
Rates. The subsequent contract will require
certificates of insurance and may require
performance and payment bonds.
Bid documents may be obtained beginning
July 10, 2013 at the Capital Projects Department, 47140 East Poppy Lane, Soldotna, AK
99669, 907-262-9657 for a non-refundable
fee of $35.00 for each set of documents,
$50.00 for any that require shipping and
handling. Bid documents may also be downloaded from the web at:
http://purchasing.borough.kenai.ak.us/
Opportunities.aspx
One (1) complete set of the bid package
is to be submitted to the Kenai Peninsula
Borough, Purchasing and Contracting Department at 144 North Binkley Street, Soldotna, Alaska 99669. These forms must
be enclosed in a sealed envelope with the
bidder’s name on the outside and clearly
marked:
BID: Seward High School
Welding Shop Improvements
DUE DATE: July 23, 2013, no later than 2:00
PM
Kenai Peninsula Borough
Pub: July 11, 2013
City/State/Zip: Unknown
has been abandoned at Mile 2 Nash Road,
Seward Alaska since September 2010
and incurred monthly storage charges of
$300.00 per month totaling $9,600.00 as
of June 1, 2013.
W. Harry McDonald., intends to take ownership of the motor vehicle under A.S.
28.11.025 unless arrangements are made
to reclaim the motor vehicle within 30 days
of this notice.
Roy Longacre, Attorney for
W. Harry McDonald
425 G Street, Suite 910
Anchorage, Alaska 99501
907-276-6354
Pub: June 27, July 4, 11 & 18, 2013
of this notice.
Roy Longacre, Attorney for
W. Harry McDonald
425 G Street, Suite 910
Anchorage, Alaska 99501
907-276-6354
Pub: June 27, July 4, 11 & 18, 2013
NOTICE TO OWNERS AND LIENHOLDERS
PURSUANT TO A.S. 28.11.040
Notice is hereby given that the motor vehicle
described as:
License Plate Number: EJG371
State: Alaska
Serial Number (VIN): 1FBJS31L4VHB91119
Year: 1997
Make: Ford
Model:
Body Style: Van
Color: White
Registered Owner: Ultimate Tours, LLC
Address: PO Box 28038
City/State/Zip: Scottsdale, AZ 85255
Lienholder: Unknown
Address: Unknown
BAYSIDE APARTMENTS
1011 4th Ave. Seward, AK 99664
907-224-5767 • 1-800-770-8973 TTD
NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS!!!
• Section 8 government housing
• Rent based on your income
• One, two and three bedrooms
• Onsite laundry facility
• Family environment • Great location
• School bus route • Utilities included
Housing with Pride.
Life with Dignity
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
NOTICE TO OWNERS AND LIENHOLDERS
PURSUANT TO A.S. 28.11.040
Notice is hereby given that the motor vehicle
described as:
License Plate Number: M 77636
State: Arizona
Serial Number (VIN): 70067
Year: 1984
Make: Kentucky
Model:
Body Style: Van
Color: Blue
Registered Owner: James Lyman Cork (believed)
Address: PO Box 2711
City/State/Zip: Seward, AK
Lienholder: Unknown
Address: Unknown
City/State/Zip: Unknown
has been abandoned at Mile 2 Nash Road,
Seward Alaska since September 2010
and incurred monthly storage charges of
$300.00 per month totaling $9,600.00 as
of June 1, 2013.
W. Harry McDonald., intends to take ownership of the motor vehicle under A.S.
28.11.025 unless arrangements are made
to reclaim the motor vehicle within 30 days
NOTICE TO OWNERS AND LIENHOLDERS
PURSUANT TO A.S. 28.11.040
Notice is hereby given that the motor vehicle
described as:
License Plate Number: None
State: N/A
Serial Number (VIN): 796141
Year: 1998
Make: Kenworth
Model: T-2000
Body Style: Tractor
Color: Blue
Registered Owner: Godwin Glacier Tours,
LLC (believed)
Address: PO Box 2711
City/State/Zip: Seward, AK 99664
Lienholder: Unknown
Address: Unknown
City/State/Zip: Unknown
has been abandoned at Mile 2 Nash Road,
Seward Alaska since September 2010
and incurred monthly storage charges of
$300.00 per month totaling $9,600.00 as
of June 1, 2013.
W. Harry McDonald., intends to take ownership of the motor vehicle under A.S.
28.11.025 unless arrangements are made
to reclaim the motor vehicle within 30 days
of this notice.
Roy Longacre, Attorney for
W. Harry McDonald
425 G Street, Suite 910
Anchorage, Alaska 99501
907-276-6354
Pub: June 27, July 4, 11 & 18, 2013
Classified Ads are your
Community Marketplace
Place your ad at
[email protected]
232 Fourth Ave. • Seward
Page 16 • July 11, 2013 • The Seward Phoenix LOG
Youngsters run Mini Mount Marathon
5-year-old Girls: 1) Olivia Tidlow-Tranel,
Skagway; 2) Addison Bailey, Anchorage; 3)
Callie Williams, Anchorage.
4-year-old Boys: 1) Alexander Green, Anchorage; 2) Miles Tressler, Seward; 3) Brody
Linton, Kasilof.
4-year-old Girls: 1) Ava Napey, Seward;
2) Brianna Bailey, Anchorage; 3) Grace
Fleming, Seward.
3-year-old Boys: 1) Konor O’Brien, Anchorage; 2) Unknown; 3) James Dammeyer,
Soldotna.
3-year-old Girls: 1) Alivia Bailey, Anchorage; 2) Lucy Olson, Anchorage; 3) Caitlin
Walters, Anchorage.
2-year-old Boys: 1) Carter Ivy, Seward;
2) Jack Ennis, Seward; 3) Brycen Turner,
Soldotna.
2-year-old Girls: 1) Erica Travis, Seward;
2) Ruby Willman, Anchorage; 3) Ryah
Thrall, Seward.
Support
YUKON BAR
224-3063
Wolfgang Kurtz | The Seward Phoenix LOG
Seward’s 2013 Mini Mount Marathon Race pitted youngsters from around Alaska against a tough course between the official race starting line and the
Seward Fire Department. The boys and girls, between 2 and 6 years old, showed their determination to be champions in five age divisions. Scheduled inbetween the Womens and Mens races, the competition took place before a cheering crowd of onlookers.
Children, ages 2 to 6, ran a the Mini
Mount Marathon on July 4. The youth ran
about a block along Fourth Avenue.
LIVE MUSIC
There is never a cover charge at the Yukon Bar!
Monday, 9pm
Every Sunday
Karaoke
with
KJ Josh
Tuesday, all day
Hobo Jim
Fri. & Sat., July 12 & 13
Beer
Money
Free Pool
Mini Mount Marathon Results
Tuesday, 9pm
Open Jam
6-year-old Boys: 1) Kamali Miller, Anchorage; 2) Noah Robinson, Anchorage; 3)
Gus Olson, Anchorage.
6-year-old Girls: 1) Kaija Backus, Wasilla;
2) Viviana Mendoza, Chugiak; 3) Abigail
Tidlow-Tranel , Skagway.
5-year-old Boys: 1) Tristan Stewart, Anchorage; 2) Landan MacSwain, Anchorage;
3) Vail Coots, Nikiski.
Wednesday, 9pm
Karaoke
with
KJ Rachel
Thursday, 9pm
DJ Dance
Party
Fri. & Sat., July 19 & 20
Wasteland
Hope
Showtimes are 9 o'clock unless otherwise stated.
Let’s enjoy our summer with
Home Towners specials
You make Seward a special place to work,
let us help make it an even more special place to live!
Bring your I.D. or proof of employment to any Home Towner businesses below, and
you (and your guests) will receive their special, and
are eligible for special Home Towner packages and promotions.
2 for 1
on Full Day
& 3- to 4-Hour
Rez Bay
Paddles!
12820 Old Exit Glacier Road
Local residents
ride free
with paying guest
Limit one local per guest.
(907) 224-8607
Call 224-2600
Exit Glacier Road
20% Off Kayak
Rental, Lessons
FREE RIDE
Leaving downtown nightly, 11pm-2am
(for 3 or more people)
to the
PIT BAR
Open 8am-5am daily
Mile 3.5 Seward Highway • 224-3006
To participate in
Home Towners
Specials
contact J.W. Frye
484-560-9911 • 907-224-4888
[email protected]
All participating Home Towner businesses offer these specials at their own discretion regarding eligibility for the specials and the time their specials begin and end.
EAT!
PADDLE!
HIKE!
FISH!
DRINK!
FLY!
CRUISE!