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Calendar
FRIDAY, OCT. 1
ART WALK
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When: 5-8 p.m. Where: Ormond Beach MainStreet Arts District, 128 W. Granada Blvd. Details: Join Ocean Art Gallery, Frame of Mind, Arts on Granada, Thays Art Gallery and Studio, Culture Period Hair Salon and Neighborhood Shop on the first Saturday of each month for art openings and art events. Free.
‘CHURCHILL’ STARRING DAVID PAYNE
When: 6 p.m. Where: Lighthouse Christ Presbyterian Church, 1035 W. Granada Blvd. Details: Attend a live stage performance of “Churchill” by David Payne in the sanctuary of Lighthouse Christ Presbyterian. Tickets not needed; a freewill offering will be received.
FREE FAMILY ART NIGHT
When: 6-7:30 p.m. Where: Parish Hall at St. James Episcopal Church, 38 S. Halifax Drive Details: Ormond Memorial Art Museum’s free family art night returns to an in-person format. Create a Van Gogh-inspired sunflower with art teacher Linda King. All art supplies will be provided. Masks are required, regardless of vaccination status.
MOVIES ON THE HALIFAX
When: 7 p.m. Where: Rockefeller Gardens, 26 Riverside Drive Details: Bring a chair or blanket and enjoy a showing of 2019’s “The Addams Family”, rated PG. Movies are weather-sensitive. Call 386-676-3216 for rainout information.
SATURDAY, OCT. 2
11TH-ANNUAL MUTT STRUTT
When: 8 a.m. Where: Daytona Beach Bandshell, 70 Boardwalk Details: Join the Halifax Humane Society for this annual 5K fun run/walk. Leashed and wellbehaved pets are welcome to join too. General admission costs $5. Registered participants at $25 a person will receive a complimentary drink ticket, raffle ticket, and a T-shirt. Register at hhsmuttstrutt.org
SUNDAY, OCT. 3
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS PANCAKE BREAKFAST
When: 8 a.m. to noon Where: Social Hall at St. Brendan Catholic Church, 1000 Ocean Shore Blvd. Details: The Father Eamonn Gill Council 13018 Knights of Columbus’s meal includes all the pancakes you can eat, scrambled eggs, a sausage link, orange juice and coffee. Costs $5 for adults; children under 12 eat free. All are welcome.
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 6
PARKS AND RECREATION MASTER PLAN PUBLIC MEETING
When: 6 p.m. Where: South Ormond Neighborhood Center, 176 Division Ave. Details: Share your thoughts and ideas about the future of parks and recreation in the city of Ormond Beach. A virtual attendance option will also be available. Call 386-676-3250.
CROSSWORD
LET'S DO THE TIME WARP AGAIN by Rebecca Goldstein; Edited by David Steinberg
©2021 Universal Uclick ACROSS 1 "Nomadland" director Chloe 5 Spanish for "bull" 9 Sharpen 13 Receded 18 Mothers' helper? 19 Elaborate ruse 20 Songwriter Tori 21 The Bell Centre, for one 22 Surgery requirement (Theme hint: In this clue's answer, unscramble letters 7 to 12) 25 Climbs without help 26 Nimble 27 Like some threats 28 Munch Museum's European capital 29 Ashkenazic or Sephardic 30 Number of musketeers 32 Speck in the sea 33 "It ___ me!" ("I'm innocent!") 34 Word before "cream" or "ale" 35 Starbucks' Skittles Frappuccino, e.g. (... letters 6 to 11) 40 "There was no other choice!" 42 Aunt, in Argentina 43 Observe 44 Hits with snowballs 45 "Cheers!" (... letters 4 to 7) 49 They may pop up 51 Statistical average 52 Job connections 53 Supporter of the LGBTQ+ community 54 "___ Mubarak!" 56 They're far from basic 58 Soundtrack part 60 "Thx" counterpart 61 Beyonce's "___... Sasha Fierce" 62 Fort worth a fortune 63 Comply without resistance (... letters 14 to 16) 70 Adept 71 Bother big-time 72 Airbnb opening in '20? 73 Slimy pest 75 Wonder Woman's rope 77 ___ choy 78 Regarding 80 Tiny projectile in a food fight 81 Doesn't lose in musical chairs 82 "Work in Progress" network, briefly 84 Certain dumbbells (... letters 4 to 7) 89 Author Jong 91 Wong of "Tuca & Bertie" 93 Diamondbacks, on a scoreboard 94 Move convulsively 95 Where to see a room with a view (... letters 9 to 13) 99 Digs up dirt? 100 Showed on TV 101 Japanese honorific 102 Hexagon, for one 104 Act that restricts free speech 106 Uninspiring 107 School near the 97-Down 108 Hazel or Violet 112 Speedy Bolt 113 Opportunity to make firstround picks? (... letters 5 to 8) 116 Scorpion's defense 117 Painter Magritte 118 Born's partner 119 Like washed-out jeans 120 Gate joint 121 Must pay the piper 122 Treasures 123 Strong animals

HANNAH ASHTON
SEABREEZE SANDCRABS BURNTWOOD TAVERN ATHLETE OF the WEEK
All Honorees pictured above: bring this photo into Burntwood Tavern to redeem for a FREE meal! Burntwood Tavern Trails Shopping Center www.burntwoodtavern.com | 386-492-6550
DOWN 1 Region 2 Blow forcefully 3 Huge pile of work 4 Rowing stick 5 "A Black Lady Sketch Show" creator Robin 6 Tons and tons 7 "RuPaul's Drag ___" 8 Kitchen gizmo brand 9 Major inconvenience 10 Eggy dishes 11 Something prohibited 12 Superlative suffix 13 Relaxes 14 Amateur bakers' packaged purchases 15 Caused to feel small 16 Actress Mireille 17 Bit of seasoning 18 "___ I do that?" 23 Reflect 24 "Salt Fat Acid Heat" author Samin 29 MLK Day's month 31 Rwandan people 32 Without warmth 33 Dandelion, for one 34 Declines an invitation 36 And other authors (Abbr.) 37 Knight's drink 38 Incoming flight stats 39 AOL rival 40 "Indeed!" 41 Oscar nomination, e.g. 46 Cut in two 47 If not 48 ___, shoulders, knees and toes 50 Japanese TV brand 55 Small demon 57 Fish in tacos 59 Barrier that may be "shattered" 60 Tennis shirts, often 61 Sign, as a contract 62 Punch sound 64 Sixteen-oz. units 65 Where Katie Ledecky won four golds 66 Torah holders 67 Low-calorie, on a beer can 68 Pack leaders 69 Tunes for two 74 Deep cut 75 Italy's former currency 76 Up to one's old tricks 77 Neckwear with Native roots 78 Brother of Moses 79 Fat-free milk variety 81 Stitch 83 Like boozy seltzer 85 "Very funny" 86 Gas whose formula is C2H6 87 Waffle House alternative 88 Cost associated with pollution 90 Organize, as flowers 92 Treadmill setting 96 Not many 97 River through London 98 Respect highly 103 Clutches 104 Spew 105 Spumante source 106 Cold ___ coffee 107 Bronte heroine Jane 109 Assistant 110 Faucet brand 111 Eternity's lack 113 Expert 114 Longtime "notorious" justice, for short 115 Money-minded exec
CELEBRITY CIPHER
By Luis Campos Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands for another. "UCN'H DAN GN NKGH VPZ: G OXT'N KPFC P RXXO VXSJ CNKGL. G KPFC P SCPU LPHAPU SCUPNGXTHKGD VGNK KXASH."
BPTCPTC RPSXIPUX
Puzzle One Clues F equals V
"Y'U P CGUPZ, PZN Y'U UGWEYNYUTZIYKZPW. YL Y API ECT JTFLTHE LKFU KL PZDECYZM, Y'N XT XKFYZM." CPWITD
Puzzle Two Clue H equals C
© 2021 NEA, Inc.
SUDOKU
Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

SEPTEMBER 30, 2021
SPORTS

Buccaneer Luke Hagan picks up a spare as he bowls a 188 in his second game of the match against Seabreeze.
Ready, aim, roll
Seabreeze girls and Mainland boys bowling teams continue to dominate in high school competition
MICHELE MEYERS
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Fresh from a weekend tournament win at the Kegel High School Challenge where they placed third overall, the Lady Sandcrabs continued their streak against the Lady Buccaneers at Ormond Lanes on Monday, Sept. 27, finishing with an 8-1 overall record.
Kara Beissel led Seabreeze with a solid 227 first score, giving her and the team the high scratch games of the match. The Sandcrabs included a 199 for their second Baker game and three bowlers with additional high scratch games: Madison Kuenning-179, Madelyn Sniffen-175, and Stacey Spaulding-174. Buccaneer Catie Todd scored the Mainland girl’s top game with a 170.
Mainland boys dominated the match against Seabreeze and placed first overall, edging out DeLand High School by 28 points. After losing their first Baker game to the ’Crabs, the Bucs rallied to win the remaining two games.
This is Mainland High School coach Adam Rosenberg’s second season coaching the team. In his first year, he took his team to the State Championships, where



Photos by Michele Meyers Above: Sandcrab Spencer Mosher had the high scratch game of 216 for the boys.
Left: Sofia Allem and Kara Beissel

they placed second. He has a lot of return bowlers and with a current 8-1 overall record, he knows they are definitely competitive.
“It was a little stressful in the middle there,”
Rosenberg said.
“I got them to calm down to be more consistent and try not to do too much. I trust all of them as bowlers so once they got comfortable and started to figure it out, I knew they had it.”
Two-handed bowlers Walther Lents and Coltan Hagan shined with Mainland’s top scratch series of 395 and 385, respectively.
“We figured it out the second game,” Lents said. “We didn’t lose hope. We stayed consistent like a train. That’s how we got the W.”
Buccaneer Coltan Hagan winds up with a two-handed delivery.

Photo by Michele Meyers Seabreeze quarterback Blake Boda has thrown seven touchdown passes and rushed for three more through five games.
BRAGGING RIGHTS
Seabreeze looks to end Mainland’s dominance in rivalry football game
BRENT WORONOFF
STAFF WRITER
Can this year be a different story for Seabreeze in its football rivalry with Mainland?
You can’t overstate the Bucs’ dominance in recent years: n Mainland has shut out the Sandcrabs in each of the past four years, averaging 38.75 points in those games. n The Bucs have won 10 in a row over Seabreeze and have held the Sandcrabs to under 10 points each time. n Mainland has scored 40 or more points five times in the past six games against the ’Crabs. In 2016, the Bucs won 70-7.
Seabreeze and Mainland will meet at 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 1, at Daytona Stadium.
The Bucs, who are trying to stretch their playoff streak to 28 consecutive years, have not been dominant so far this season. For the first time since 2010, they have a 1-3 record. They are coming off a 27-13 loss to reigning Class 8A state champ Sanford Seminole.
Seabreeze, meanwhile, continues to improve. The Sandcrabs are 2-3, but two of their losses went down to the wire, including a 20-14 loss to DeLand on Sept. 24.
“We’re two teams basically trying to put it together right now. Both teams are struggling in the trenches right now,” said Seabreeze coach Pat Brown.
Last year the Bucs won 24-0, but they did not take the lead until kicking a field goal on the final play of the first half.
This will be Travis Roland’s first Mainland-Seabreeze game as the Bucs’ head coach, but he certainly isn’t a stranger to the rivalry, having played for the Bucs in 200003.
Brown, in his third year as the Sandcrabs’ head coach, is a relative newcomer. But he was in town in 2010 as a senior transfer at Bethune-Cookman when Seabreeze last defeated Mainland.
“We won’t have to give too many motivational speeches this week,” Brown said. “... This game is for bragging rights every year.”