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FRIDAY 75 CENTS August 7, 2009

MagicValley.com Nuke developer says he may move outside Elmore Co. SPLASH DOGS State disputes statements in CEO’s announcement By Nate Poppino Times-News writer

The developer of a proposed nuclear power plant in Elmore County said Thursday he is considering moving his project elsewhere in the state. But Idaho officials quickly disputed a press release from Alternate Energy Holdings Inc. claiming that the state “offered” land for its planned 1,600- megawatt commercial power plant. In a press release and a conversation with the Times-News on Thursday morn- ing, AEHI CEO Don Gillispie said delays in the permitting process in Elmore County prompted the state of Idaho and several counties to step forward and offer alter- nate sites. His company, he said, is now looking at two additional sites outside the county where the permitting process

See NUKE, Main 2

ASHLEY SMITH/Times-News Sotomayor OK’d Aspen, a 6-year-old black Labrador, practices jumping Wednesday with Toby Heywood at the Splash Dogs pool at the Jerome County Fair. Events continue for high court today at the exhibition with a super vertical event starting at 6 p.m. in historic vote New Jerome County Fair event is wet and wild By Julie Hirschfeld Davis By Nichole Carnell “People think they are out here to see a Associated Press writer Times-News writer dog show,”said David Drake, canine sports Magicvalley.com production specialist, “but it’s a competi- WATCH a video of the Splash Dogs. WASHINGTON — Sonia Sotomayor JEROME — This is not your average dog tion.” won confirmation Thursday as the nation’s show. The Splash Dogs crew of professional first Hispanic Supreme Court justice, a Splash Dogs, a new event at the Jerome dog trainers travels around the country history-making Senate County Fair, doesn’t care how pretty your promoting their sport and getting local competition Saturday night, Drake said. vote that capped a sum- dog is — all it wants to know if how far it dogs involved as well. The vertical jump competition is held at mer-long debate heavy can splash. “Our whole entire sport is dependent on 6 p.m. today. with ethnic politics and Splash Dogs is a national touring com- local people,”said Drake. Splash Dogs will continue throughout hints of high court fights pany that features a long-distance dog Local and traveling dogs compete in the fair, offering training time before and to come. jumping sport and is appearing for only the both vertical and horizontal jumping. Each between competitions beginning at noon. The third woman in second time in Idaho, in Jerome this week. horizontal jump is measured by electronic Three competitions a day, at 1:30 p.m., court history, she’ll be Basically, Splash Dogs is the ultimate measuring equipment that records the 4 p.m. and 6 p.m., will give all types of sworn in Saturday as the game of fetch. Enticed by a thrown toy, length when the base of the dog’s tail hits dogs a chance to compete. 111th justice and the first Sotomayor dogs run and jump off a dock approxi- the water, he said. Trainers will be available every day, nominated by a Democrat mately 6 feet above the ground and into a Owners of the 24 longest horizontal in 15 years. rectangular pool. jumps this week will compete in the final See SPLASH, Main 2 The Senate vote was 68-31 to confirm Sotomayor, President Obama’s first Supreme Court nominee, with Democrats unanimously behind her but most Republicans lining up in a show of opposi- Decision likely in Sept. on Leon’s competency tion both for her and for the president’s standards for a justice. By John Plestina sible outcome. Defense attorney Stacey Leon’s competency for Sept. 3. Idaho Senators Mike Crapo and Jim Times-News writer Leon was declared not men- Gosnell-Taylor said her client is Leon, who turns 74 next Risch both voted against Sotomayor. tally fit to stand trial last August scheduled to return to the Idaho week, was charged with one The 55-year-old daughter of Puerto JEROME — While it remained and the case has been stalled in Department of Health and count of first-degree murder Rican parents was raised in a South Bronx unknown Thursday whether the court system since. Welfare’s State Hospital South in and one count of aggravated housing project and educated in the Ivy Fortino Leon is legally compe- “We recently received a report Nampa next week. battery and assault in July 2008, League before rising to the highest legal tent to stand trial for first- from State Hospital South that Walker ordered Jerome following the murder of Javier echelons, spending the past 17 years as a degree murder and aggravated he may now be fit to stand trial,” County in June to pay for the Zavala-Paniagua, 22, and the federal judge. She watched the vote on TV battery and assault, Jerome Walker said during a status con- most recent psychological eval- nonfatal shooting of his now County 5th District Court Judge ference on Leon’s competency uation. See SOTOMAYOR, Main 2 Jason Walker gave hint of a pos- Thursday. He set a review hearing on See LEON, Main 2 Administration announces overhaul of immigration detention system By Suzanne Gamboa immigration enforcement, T. Don Hutto Residential track of them. Associated Press writer however, questioned Center in Taylor, Texas, The decision was among whether the administration which has held 400 people, several first steps that WASHINGTON — The was returning to policies would end immediately. Morton said eventually Obama administration’s that allow immigrants to Some families would go to would “lead to ... creation of plan to stop holding immi- disappear. And even those a facility in Pennsylvania, a system that is marked by grant families at a former who liked the changes said but it has only 85 beds and and driven by the civil central Texas prison was the government needs to go Morton said other alterna- detention philosophy.’’ He cheered Thursday by the further and write detention tives would be considered. said these changes can be immigrants’ supporters and standards into law. These could include com- made while still detaining AP photo some in Congress as a need- John Morton, munity homes, often run by immigrants who are crimi- Marcos Antonio Marquez, 48, and his son, Marcos Marquez Solano, 10, ed change in inhumane and Immigration and Customs nonprofit or religious nals or dangerous. sometimes deadly deten- Enforcement director, told groups, where the immi- “We are going to continue are shown at Casa Marianella, an immigrant shelter, Thursday, in tions. reporters Thursday that grants can come and go, but Austin, Texas. They are immigrants from El Salvador who have been Supporters of tougher detentions of families at the federal officials can still keep See DETENTION, Main 2 granted amnesty.

Comics...... Business 5 Crossword ...... Classifieds 6 Obituaries ...... Sports 6 Commodities ...... Business 2 Dear Abby ...... Classifieds 7 Opinion ...... Main 6 NEW HOME CONSTRUCTION UP FOR 2ND MONTH Community ...... Business 3 Movies ...... Entertainment 2 Sudoku ...... Classifieds 5 S-C Idaho seeing more demand > Business 1 MORNINGMORNINGMain 2 Friday, August 7, 2009 BRIEFINGBRIEF- TN Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho

Pat’s Picks TODAY’S HAPPENINGS Three things to do today ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT For detailed coverage of today’s Herrett Center for the Arts and Science, north arts and entertainment all around end of the College of Southern Idaho campus, Pat Marcantonio The Disabled American Veterans Auxiliary pub- south-central Idaho, check out our Twin Falls, $4.50, 732-6655. lic dance, 8 p.m., DAV Hall, 459 Shoup Ave., Events Calendar in the Entertainment Sawtooth Forum and Lecture Series, Wolves of • It’s a busy first Friday, folk art show, horse Twin Falls, $2 donation, 734-5208. the Past, Present and Future, 5 p.m., Stanley with an artists reception parade, pioneer breakfast, section of today’s edition! museum, and campfire presentation, 8:30 and gallery opening fea- entertainment and more. BENEFITS AND FUNDRAISERS p.m., Redfish Lake Amphitheater, Sawtooth turing new artwork and Information: 366-7345 or a.m.,Ageless Senior Citizens, Inc., 310 Main St. National Recreation area, five miles south of live music from 7 to 9 p.m. glennsferryidaho.org. First Friday Dinner a buffet-style, traditional N., Kimberly, no cost, 737-5988. Stanley, no cost, 608-8741 or vjlawson@ at Full Moon Gallery of • Meanwhile, you can Basque meal featuring lamb and chicken, SilverSneakers Fitness Program, 10:30 to 11:30 gmail.com. Fine Art and learn more about the world sponsored by the Gooding Basque Association, a.m.,Jerome Senior Center, 212 First Ave. E. no Contemporary Craft, 132 of fossils with a program 6 to 8 p.m., Basque Cultural Center, 285 cost for Humana Gold Choice members, $1 for SPORTS Main Ave. S., Twin Falls. starting at 10 a.m. today Euskadi Lane (intersection of U. S. Highway 26 non-Humana members, 324-5642. There’s no cost. If you and at 10:30 a.m. Saturday and Idaho Highway 46), general donation of Fit and Fall Proof Exercise Class, 11 to 11:45 Active seniors pickleball group, group of pickle- walk up Main Avenue, at the Hagerman Fossil $14, $12 seniors and $6 for children, 208-308- a.m., Oakley Fire Station, 315 E. Main St., ball enthusiasts willing to teach newcomers, 8 there will be more music, Beds Visitor Center. You’ll 5051. Oakley, no cost, 737-5988. a.m., Harmon Park tennis courts, Locust free food tasting and cook- learn about the methods Fit and Fall Proof Exercise Class, 1:30 p.m., front Avenue,Twin Falls, no cost, 734-0622 or ssac- ing demos from 6 to 9 p.m. and tools used for finding, CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS lounge,Woodstone Assisted Living Facility, 491 [email protected] (learn about the sport: at Rudy’s – A Cook’s cleaning, identifying and USAPA.org). Burley Lions Club, noon, Morey’s Steakhouse, Caswell Ave.W.,Twin Falls, no cost, 737-5988. Paradise, 147 Main Ave. W. preserving fossils. 219 E.Third St. N., 878-7235. Celebrate Recovery, based on the 12 steps and • There will be plenty of eight biblical principles, 7 p.m., Cafe Agape, TODAY’S DEADLINE activities at the Three Have your own pick you Lighthouse Christian Fellowship, 960 Eastland Reservation deadline for Aug. 8 Twin Falls Bank Island Crossing event want to share? Something GOVERNMENT Drive,Twin Falls, 737-4667. & Trust employees meeting and no-host lunch, today through Sunday at that is unique to the area Twin Falls County commissioners, 8:30 a.m., Celebrate Recovery, a place to learn life-affirm- Three Island Crossing and that may take people courthouse, 425 Shoshone St. N., 736-4068. ing, healthy behaviors, 7 p.m., Fireside Room of all former Bank & Trust employees and friends State Park near Glenns by surprise? E-mail me at the Nazarene Fellowship Hall at Yakima Avenue are invited to attend, 1 p.m., Loong Hing Ferry. Highlights include a [email protected]. HEALTH AND WELLNESS and Main Street, Filer, 734-0557. Restaurant, 1719 Kimberly Road,Twin Falls, Al-Anon/Alateen family groups, to bring help 423-5493 or 420-4418. SilverSneakers Fitness Program at Curves of and hope to families and friends of alcoholics, Reminder for Aug. 10 Wendell School District Twin Falls, complete cardio and circuit training hotline: 866-592-3198. kindergarten screening and registration, noon with resistance, state-of-the-art equipment and to 6 p.m., 536-2418 for appointment. Nuke “Curves Smart”personalized coaching, 5:30 Continued from Main 1 was the best choice. a.m. to 7 p.m.,Twin Falls Curves, 690 Blue MUSEUMS AND PARKS To have an event listed, please submit the might move more quickly, “(It’s) nothing that could- Lakes Blvd. N., no cost for Humana Gold- Faulkner Planetarium “Here Comes the Sun” at name of the event, a brief description, time, and has an application for n’t be done in a month,” he insured or AARP provided by Secure Horizons, 2 p.m. and “Two Small Pieces of Glass/Live place, cost and contact number to Suzanne state land filled out and said of the state’s process. 734-7300. Sky Tour” at 7 p.m., $4.50 for adults, $3.50 for Browne by e-mail at sbrowne@magicvalley. standing by. But Bacon said his depart- Fit and Fall Proof Exercise Class, 10 to 11 a.m., senior citizens, $2.50 for students, no cost for com; by fax, 734-5538; or by mail,Times- “We’re just waiting to pick ment follows a strict process Blaine County Senior Connection, 721 S.Third children under age 2 and a special price pack- News, P.O.Box 548,Twin Falls, ID 83303-0548. the land and submit it,” for permits on state endow- Ave., Hailey, no cost, 737-5988. age for families with five children or less; Deadline is noon, four days in advance of the Gillispie said, adding that all ment lands. For an unusual Fit and Fall Proof Exercise Class, 10:30 to 11:30 “Lynyrd Skynyrd: Fly On Free Bird,” 8:15 p.m., event. the new interests had request like a nuclear plant, assured him his company the agency may need a few could receive a permit by the months just to complete the end of the year. initial analysis — examining Gillispie declined to iden- the applicants’ finances, Leon tify the interested counties business plan and other fac- Continued from Main 1 Leon’s lover. According to He received neither in a News’ attorney, Fritz other than saying they are tors such as environmental ex-wife, Maria Abigail court documents they divorce settlement in June Haemmerle, filed a motion outside of southwest Idaho, risks. More studies, county Leon, 41. Fortino Leon is lived together. that followed 18 years of to unseal the records. arguing that he didn’t want coordination and other steps alleged to have shot both Fortino Leon filed for marriage. Walker rejected the them harassed by critics of would follow that, he said. victims outside 221 Fifth divorce about two months The case has taken some motion. his plant until a site is “It could take many Ave. E. in Jerome in front before the shooting. legal twists. He has unsealed only picked. But he said the Idaho months,” Bacon said of the of 5- and 6-year-old chil- He sought child support In April, Walker barred court minutes. Department of Lands also overall process. dren who were riding their for a 14-year-old son the public from a status offered him “state lands Alan Christy, Elmore bicycles past the house. and possession of the hearing for Leon and John Plestina may be anywhere in the state,” fol- County’s new Growth and Zavala-Paniagua is house he had owned with sealed court records. reached at jplestina@ lowing a directive from Gov. Development director, said alleged to have been Maria his wife. In May, the Times- magicvalley.com. C.L. “Butch” Otter’s office. on his first day of work That was news to both the Thursday that he hadn’t department and Otter’s heard AEHI was looking office. Lands Director elsewhere. The county is Sotomayor George Bacon said Gillispie moving ahead with process- Continued from Main 1 Senators took the rare contacted his office some ing the company’s applica- at a federal courthouse in step of assembling at their time ago wondering if state tion after county commis- New York City, among desks for the vote, rising land might be available for a sioners referred it back to the friends and colleagues. from their seats to call out plant. Department staff Planning and Zoning Republicans argued she’d “aye’’ or “nay.’’ The wasn’t sure what such a Commission, he said. The bring personal bias and a longest-serving senator, plant needed, but employees P&Z directed staff at a liberal agenda to the bench. 91-year-old Robert Byrd of in its southwest office Wednesday evening meeting But Democrats praised West Virginia who has been helped Gillispie look through to work on an extensive Sotomayor as an extraordi- in frail health following a some parcels and filled him comprehensive-plan analy- narily qualified mainstream long hospitalization, was in on how the application sis and staff report, a project moderate and touted her brought in in a wheelchair process would go, Bacon with no set time frame at the elevation to the court as a to vote in Sotomayor’s AP photo said. moment. milestone in the nation’s favor. Edward Kennedy, D- Judge Faviola A. Soto, foreground right, and others at LatinoJustice Jon Hanian, Otter’s AEHI has already moved journey toward greater Mass., suffering from brain in New York watch as the U.S. Senate confirms Sonia Sotomayor as spokesman, said the only its proposed site once, leav- equality and a reaffirmation cancer,was the only senator the first Hispanic justice on the Supreme Court, Thursday. thing the governor asked ing Owyhee County in early of the American dream. absent. Lands to do was fill AEHI in 2008 for the Elmore site. Obama, the nation’s first Sotomayor replaces In the final tally, nine Sotomayor as the embodi- on how the process works Gillispie was ready to pack black president, praised the retiring Justice David Republicans joined majori- ment of an inappropriate and that the company has up and try proposing his Senate’s vote as “breaking Souter, a liberal named by a ty Democrats and the standard that would let a “not been offered state plant in Colorado if the another barrier and moving Republican president, and Senate’s two independents judge bring her personal sites.” Elmore site fell through, he us yet another step closer to she is not expected to alter to support Sotomayor’s whims and prejudices to the The State Board of Land said. a more perfect union.’’ He the court’s ideological split. confirmation. They includ- bench. Commissioners would have Gillispie said he issued planned to welcome Still, Republicans and ed the Senate’s few GOP Her writings and speech- final say over permitting a Thursday’s announcement Sotomayor at the White Democrats were deeply at moderates and its lone es “reflect a belief not just nuclear plant on state land, because word was starting to House next week. odds over confirming Hispanic Republican, retir- that impartiality is not pos- something Gillispie talked spread and his company Minutes before the vote, Sotomayor, and the battle ing Sen. Mel Martinez of sible, but that it’s not even up as a plus for developing wanted to report it to the Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., over her nomination high- Florida, as well as conser- worth the effort,’’said Sen. his plant there. He even U.S. Securities and the Judiciary Committee lighted profound philo- vative Sens. Lindsey Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., looked briefly at state land in Exchange Commission, chairman, called it one for sophical disagreements Graham of South Carolina the minority leader. “In Elmore County, he said, possible stock buyers and the ages. “Years from now that will shape future fights and Lamar Alexander of Judge Sotomayor’s court, before concluding the pri- the rest of the public. AEHI ... we will remember this over the court’s makeup as Tennessee, the party’s groups that didn’t make the vate farmland he submitted stock closed at 10 cents a time when we crossed paths Obama looks to another third-ranking leader. cut of preferred groups to the county for a rezone share on Thursday. with the quintessentially likely vacancy — perhaps GOP critics decried often found that they ended American journey of Sonia more than one — while he’s Obama’s call for “empa- up on the short end of the Splash Sotomayor.’’ in the White House. thy’’ in a justice, painting empathy standard.’’ Continued from Main 1 have local dogs come out.” Drake said, offering Splash Practice on Saturday will Detention Dog training for $10 per day. be reserved for those com- Continued from Main 1 ed the facility. immigrants has risen classroom instruction and Competition costs are peting in the final competi- to detain on a large scale,’’ ACLU of Texas Legal sharply in recent years and was never forcibly separat- $20, but entrants’ first $10 tion Saturday. he said. “This is about how Director Lisa Graybill said the detention system has ed from his father at the training fee will go toward Visit www.splashdogs. we detain.’’ her group is “overjoyed’’ not kept pace in ensuring center. their first competition costs, com for more information or Homeland Security the administration recog- humane conditions, proper The detention system Drake said. stop by the Splash Dogs pool Secretary Janet Napolitano nized holding children in medical treatment, or expanded after the Sept. 11, Junior competitors, ages 6 at the Jerome County Fair said more changes are com- the facility is “inhumane basic legal protections, 2001, terrorist attacks as through 16, will be able to located west of the DePew ing in what she called a and un-American.’’But she Lieberman said. the Bush administration train and compete this week Arena. major overhaul that DHS said the “victory does not Marcos Marquez, a stepped up immigration for $10 per day. officials acknowledge will eclipse’’ the fact the federal Salvadoran who took trains enforcement and ended a “We are definitely looking Nichole Carnell may be take years. government spends hun- and hitchhiked his way policy of releasing illegal for more dogs to compete,” reached at ncarnell@magic- “There are a number of dreds of millions of dollars through Central America, immigrants into the coun- said Drake. valley.com or 208-735- issues that need to be cor- to detain immigrants when spent eight months in try to await deportation “It’s really important to 3376. rected,’’Napolitano said.“If less expensive alternatives Hutto. Marquez said it was hearings — a practice people are going to be held are available. hard to hear children at the known as “catch and ... we have an obligation The annual cost of detention center asking to release.’’ CIRCULATION that they be held safely in a detaining immigrants has go to the store, although the Texas Rep. Lamar Smith, All delivery areas ...... 733-0931, ext 1 clean, healthy environ- reached $1.7 billion, conditions were the best the ranking Republican on ...... or 1-800-658-3883 ment.’’ according to ICE. he’d ever lived in. the House Judiciary Circulation director Laura Stewart . . . .735-3327 PUBLISHER Circulation phones open 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. At the Texas facility,fam- Other advocates said “The mom would say, Committee, praised Brad Hurd ...... 735-3345 daily and 6 to 10 a.m. on weekends for ques- ilies were locked in cells Congress must write immi- ‘No, we’re not allowed to attempts treat immigration NEWSROOM tions about delivery, new subscriptions and vaca- equipped with bunk beds gration detention standards leave’ and the kids would detainees more humanely. Editor James G. Wright ...... 735-3255 tion stops. If you don’t receive your paper by and a toilet. Immigration into law to make them say, ‘We’re in jail aren’t we, But he said he’s concerned News tips before 5 p.m...... 735-3246 6:30 a.m., call the number for your area before News tips after 5 p.m...... 735-3220 10 a.m. for redelivery. advocates considered the enforceable. Mom?’’’ Marquez said. families may be broken up Letters to the editor ...... 735-3266 MAIL INFORMATION site a symbol of inhumanity Separate bills have been “That was really heart- and the government will Newsroom fax ...... 734-5538 The Times-News (UPS 631-080) is published daily in the country’s immigra- filed by Sens. Bob breaking, to hear the kids, return to “catch and Mini-Cassia newsroom fax ...... 677-4543 at 132 Fairfield St. W., Twin Falls, by Lee Wood River and Lincoln Co. Bureau . . .788-3475 Publications Inc., a subsidiary of Lee Enterprises. tion detention. Menendez, D-N.J., and Joe because the kids would release.’’ Obituaries ...... 735-3266 Periodicals paid at Twin Falls by The Times-News. A lawsuit filed by the Lieberman, I-Conn., who then cry, then the moms “I hope that the Obama Official city and county newspaper pursuant to ADVERTISING Section 6C-108 of the Idaho Code. Thursday is American Civil Liberties chairs the Homeland would cry.’’ administration will not Advertising director John Pfeifer . . . . .735-3354 hereby designated as the day of the week on Union forced changes to the Security and Government He added his 10-year-old repeat past mistakes and CLASSIFIEDS which legal notices will be published. Postmaster, facility, such as allowing Affairs committee, to son, also Marcos, didn’t return to a policy that puts Customer service ...... 733-0931, ext. 2 please send change of address form to: P.O. Box families to have more time improve detention condi- understand why they were more illegal immigrants on Classifieds manager Christy Haszier . .735-3267 548, Twin Falls, Idaho 83303. to eat and removing con- tions. in jail but played video the streets of American ONLINE Copyright © 2009 Magic Valley Newspapers Inc. Online sales Jason Woodside ...... 735-3207 Vol. 104, No. 219 certina wire that surround- The number of detained games, made friends, got communities,’’Smith said. Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho LOCAL Friday, August 7, 2009 Main 3 Judge asks Lincoln Co. to use collection agency

program keeps some out of of fines and fees collected jail. has increased each year Wood says Twin Falls County model is one to follow “It’s been very good for since. us because we don’t issue “In 2008, our collection By John Plestina Legislature approved the many people of credit score victim restitution and warrants for people not rate was up to 72 percent,” Times-News writer use of collection agencies damage. other fees that are more paying. We’re not clogging she said, adding that not all for overdue fines and court “We don’t have to ask than 30 days past due. up the system,” Glascock of those people were SHOSHONE — Fifth fees, Twin Falls County any further than Twin Falls The county receives 100 said. turned over to the collector. District Court Judge Barry signed a contract with County,” Wood said of the percent of what is owed “A lot of people will Some paid on time. Wood told the Lincoln Advanced Collection program that is a success in and the collection agency come in and pay when they Glascock went back to County Commission last Technology, of Twin Falls. Twin Falls. charges the person owing know it will be turned over 1989 and turned delin- week that it should consid- Wood approved that con- Twin Falls County Clerk the money an additional 33 to a collection agency quent fines and fees over to er adopting a program tract in 2004. Kristina Glascock touts the percent. Collected fines because they know it will the agency. Some of those using a collection agency “People tend to pay financial success the pro- and fees are paid to the go on their credit,”she said. have since been paid, she for overdue fines and court quickly when a collection gram has reaped for Twin county weekly. Twin Falls County’s col- said. fees that has reaped finan- agency becomes involved,” Falls County. While some people lection rate was 50 percent “I appreciate Judge cial rewards for Twin Falls Wood said. He attributed She said that the contract owing fines and court fees before adopting the pro- Wood’s support. He’s a County. the success of third-party with the collector allows might not like being called gram in 2004, according to firm believer that it does After the Idaho bill collectors to fears by the court to turn over fines, by a collection agency, the Glascock. The percentage work,”Glascock said. BLM: Commissioners consider new plan for Blaine Manor By Karen Bossick 25-bed skilled nursing Schoen also said that he taking in. And that’s been an override, she wants the Storm Times-News correspondent facility. Schoen said that is inclined to tap into a 3 the case for years,”he said. community to understand the county can no longer percent property tax that’s Costs have mounted, he that “it’s not that we don’t prompted HAILEY — Blaine afford to make up the dif- available to the county, said, because the county think Blaine Manor is County Commissioners on ference between the facili- reversing earlier state- added an administrator and important. Sometimes Tuesday approved a tenta- ty’s expenses and what it ments that he wanted to do added more programs people equate reduction several new tive budget of $22.7 million brings in through user fees everything in his power this demanding more staff, with something not having for the 2010 fiscal year, and donations. year not to ask taxpayers among other things. value,”she said. which begins Oct. 1. But The county has been for additional property “My view is we’re in a Schoen agreed and fire starts not before Commission supporting Blaine Manor taxes. very serious situation,” he pointed out that the care Chair Larry Schoen laid since 2000. Voters have Schoen said taking a 3 added. facility had gotten highest Times-News some concerns on the approved that the facility percent property tax Commissioner Tom ratings from the state. table. be sold with the proceeds increase is “nominal” in Bowman said he was not The proposed budget for Thunderstorms passing Schoen said he intends to going to the Croy Canyon terms of what needs to be ready to make a decision at 2010 fiscal year is about the through south-central put an override levy before Ranch Foundation, which done in the long run. this time. same as that of the $22.7 Idaho started a number of county residents in May is trying to raise funds to “We’re on an unsustain- Commissioner Angenie million budget approved wildfires on Wednesday 2010 to defray the costs of build a new multi-level able course where we’re McCleary said that if the last year for the 2009 fiscal evening, reported the U.S. supporting Blaine Manor, a care facility. spending more than we’re commissioners do ask for year. Bureau of Land Management’s Twin Falls District. Out of 17 reported fires 5TH DISTRICT the BLM responded to, 10 proved to be actual starts, T.F.County sheriff’s employees meet COURT NEWS the agency announced in a press release. Most stayed Twin Falls County very small, but three were Thursday arraignments with commissioners, discuss PERSI Romeo Rolando Trevino, 26, Twin notable: Falls; possession of controlled sub- • The Dove Springs Fire By Nichole Carnell along with Lt. Daron stance; $10,000 bond; grand theft covered 436 acres about 10 Times-News writer Magicvalley.com Brown, Haas and Sgt. Scott by receiving, possessing and or dis- miles south of Glenns Bishop. pensing of stolen property; Ferry and was contained at The Twin Falls County WATCH a video of the meeting. Commissioners said they $50,000 bond; public defender 4 a.m. Thursday morning. Sheriff’s Office Employee had concerns over PERSI’s appointed; Aug. 17 preliminary hearing. Control was expected at Association met with coun- the decision for this year is “I don’t think we can future rates, adding that Manuel Dean Allen Mejia, 19, Buhl; 7 p.m. that day. ty commissioners Thursday final, it is ready to begin afford that today,” said PERSI is fixed, and if costs driving under the influence, under • The Sugarloaf Fire morning to discuss a deci- communicating for next Commissioner Tom Mike- become too expensive, the age 21; driving without privileges; measured 30 acres in the sion last month by com- year to ensure the employ- sell, “that might change.” county may be forced to dip leaving the scene of an accident; area south of Hansen and missioners to reject the ees are informed. Currently, county em- into employees’ wages, a $1,000 bond; public defender was controlled at 11 p.m. adoption of the Public The decision was made ployees have retirement risk they said all employees appointed; Aug. 25 pretrial. Phillip Lamont Jenkins, 32, Twin Falls; Wednesday. Employee Retirement with little employee input, investments through were not willing to take. violation of protection order; • The Monument Fire System of Idaho. said Stephanie Haas, crimi- stock-market dependent “It’s a crystal ball,” said released on own recognizance; pub- spread across 25 acres Over the last two weeks, nal records supervisor; a Nationwide insurance. Mikesell, “and it’s pretty lic defender appointed; Aug. 25 pre- southeast of Fairfield. It the employee association decision the association Savings from the proposed dang muddy.” trial. was contained at noon has taken steps to both learn believes should have been switch allowed county Mikesell said his decision Thursday, with control about PERSI and the rejec- more openly communicat- employees to receive a 1 as a commissioner was expected at 6 p.m. that tion, and to educate col- ed. percent raise and the coun- based on what was best for OPEN day. leagues about the decision. Commissioners admitted ty to invest more into Twin Falls County, which SUNDAYS Rain helped firefighters Commissioners wel- to a lack of communication, retirement plans, Com- he admitted may not be the with their work, and crews comed members of the attributing the problem to missioner George Urie said. best for the county employ- monitored throughout association to discuss the bad timing and assump- Overall, commissioners ees. 10 TO 4 Thursday for any potential rejection and take steps to tions by commissioners agreed that their rejection Stewart said the associa- PENOFIN new starts that were open communication that elected officials relayed of PERSI was based on tion will continue to forge PROTECT & holdovers from the between the commission- the information, they said. financial uncertainty. ahead, realizing this year’s BEAUTIFY storm. ers’ office and county A reported $600,000 “My primary reason was decision is final. After a delayed start to employees. budget increase came with financial,”Urie told the four The association plans to WOOD the fire season, the release Lori Stewart, speaking as the introduction of PERSI association representatives gain more information FENCES & stated the agency is on a member of the associa- this year, commissioners at the meeting: Stewart, the about PERSI and educate DECKS alert and ready to respond tion, said that although the said; an increase the county public information officer other employees for next to future thunderstorms. association understands would not be able to handle. for the sheriff’s office, year. REG. $ 99 $36.99 31 Open house set for new behavioral health clinic By Ben Botkin have the comprehensive helping them with how tions about the clinic. Krengel’s Times-News writer TAKE PART mental health services we they relate to adolescent Hardware offer.” peers and function in Ben Botkin may be 628 Main Avenue South The open house is scheduled Twin Falls • 736-0080 A clinic that opened this The clinic’s staff has four school. reached at bbotkin@mag- STORE HOURS: MON.-SAT. 8 a.m.-6 p.m. for 11 a.m. to noon Monday at SUN. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. year in Twin Falls to pro- psychiatrists, two psychol- The clinic has 18 rooms icvalley.com. Magic Valley Behavioral FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL FOR vide behavioral health ogists, five licensed clinical for patients and two addi- BACK-TO-SCHOOL FOR Health Clinic, 1102 Eastland services will have an open social workers, and nursing tional testing rooms for Drive, Twin Falls. house for the public this and physician assistant psychological evaluations, SHOPSHOP Monday. employees. said Shana Stevens, the Magic Valley Behavioral “The reason the concept The clinic is available to office manager. at Nobles Health Clinic, a joint effort emerged was due to frag- patients of all ages, includ- “What we’ve done and by Family Health Services mentation in delivery of ing children. The services we’ve tried to build is a and St. Luke’s Magic Valley mental health services in provided include consid- facility that anyone would Medical Center, has the the Magic Valley,” said Dr. ering the context of each feel comfortable utilizing,” Smart goal of providing a variety James Tyson, director of patient’s life and helping Tyson said. of outpatient services in the clinic. “In many cases, them in related areas. For At the open house, the The Best Selection at the one location. The clinic it’s not feasible for smaller example, with teens, areas public can have a tour of opened in March. mental health clinics to of focus would include the building and ask ques- Lowest Prices, and you can find it in one place!

wheel chair last winter.”He fur- She asked her neighbor, a 76- and asked her for $300. ther stated that he sometimes year-old woman, if she heard a The woman said she didn’t have Law hears people yelling from the suspicious noise. The neighbor, $300, and the caller hung up. Hours: Thurs. 7 am to 6 pm road. according to the report, said she It’s unclear if the phone call 1320 Overland Avenue, Burley Fri. 10 am to 6 pm & According to the report, he also didn’t hear any noise but said a relates to the loud car. 208-878-8555 Sat. 10 am to 4 pm said “that tonight he was in the female called her that morning — Damon Hunzeker Disorder... house and he heard a loud bang- ing noise on his house. The Presents SUMMER SALE ... in Cassia County banging caused a picture to fall th off the wall. Someone was in the Joe MMama’s’ 11 Annual From July 24 police reports: roadway and yelled,‘Hey, (exple- ENDS SOON! Graffiti: tive).” A 57-year-old Burley man report- The man was told to call the JEROME CAR SHOW Membership ed that someone vandalized his police if anything similar hap- FREE ADMISSION • SAT., AUG. 22, 2009 garage door. pens again. $ Reg. $500 “On the door, there was writing in Information: Jerome City Park 9:30 a.m.-4:00 p.m. 200 black paint. It appeared to be A 62-year-old Burley woman told painted on with a spray can. The police, according to the report, Meet Superhero Meet (Plus Half Dues writing read, Your dead old man,” that “she heard a loud noise so Spiderman the report notes. Police asked she looked outside” and noticed V Live SPEED TV Star for Remainder of P the man if he had made any ene- a vehicle in her neighbor’s drive- Stacey David mies lately. way that “drove really slow 2009 Season) He said no, according to the northbound on Almo” and Offer Expires 8/31/2009 report, but “said that his locks “made a lot of noise … with an were superglued in the key hole unknown amount of persons Call for more information! PLEASANT VALLEY GOLF and someone had run over his inside.” Hosted by Magic Valley Early Iron 423-5800 Just 5 miles south of Kimberly. Main 4 Friday, August 7, 2009 LOCAL/NATION Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Bud Allen Motorcycle rally planned for Bergdahl

Times-News Pocatello, which will pick up 11:30 a.m. for Hailey, where it will local firefighters association. gave us riders at Loves Gas Station at arrive at about 1:30 p.m. Zaney’s owner Sue Martin, who Idaho motorcyclists plan to the Interstate 84 Exit 211 in The Wood River Fire and Rescue has acted as a liaison between rally for Bowe Bergdahl, the Heyburn at 9:45 a.m. It should Firefighters’ Association will Bergdahl’s family and the media, back our Hailey soldier captured by the arrive at the Flying J truck stop on then host a barbecue at Zaney’s said she thinks the event is a Taliban in Afghanistan, with a U.S. Highway 93 at about 10:45 Coffee House, at 208 N. River St., “wonderful show of support.” bike ride on Saturday. a.m. where Bergdahl worked as a “It’s important to keep Bowe in POW*MIA Riders from Organizers said the riders will barista. everybody’s hearts and minds heritage Pocatello will lead the group from leave the Flying J Truck Stop at Barbecue proceeds will go to a right now,”she said. e’s one Idahoan in a million and a H half. Eighty-year- old King Hill rancher Bud Allen invented the Three U.S. Postal Service might look for new revenue Island Crossing, retracing the perilous pioneer tra- By Randolf E. Schmid countries faced with the verse of the Snake River at Associated Press writer same dilemma have Glenns Ferry. The event will explored these areas.’’ end Saturday after 24 years. WASHINGTON — He suggested that Postmaster General John Congress allow the post Potter is trying to think office to consider some outside the mailbox. activities that have not tra- YOU DON’T “We have a network of ditionally been part of the SAY 37,000 retail outlets. post office, adding he America loves them and we assumed that would come Steve Crump want to keep as many open with limits or regulations. as possible, but we cannot “The real issue is about In 1986, Allen was the just sell stamps in them,’’he generating income from first man in more than a told a Senate hearing these facilities,’’Potter said. century to drive a wagon Thursday. While Congress votes and oxen across the river. The post office said money for free mail delivery He repeated the feat every Wednesday it has lost $4.7 for the blind and to offer August, eventually attract- billion so far this year and reduced rates to charities, ing 2,000 spectators a year. expects to be $7 billion in the post office does not The success of the cross- the red by the end of the fis- receive taxpayer funds for ing was partly responsible cal year because of the its operations for the creation of the recession and the move- The proposal to cut mail Oregon Trail History and ment of letters and bills to delivery to five days would Coeur d’Alene Press/AP file photo Education Center in 2002. e-mail. save millions, Potter told A motorist deposits mail in a mailbox in Coeur d’Alene in April 2008. Buffeted by the recession and the In between crossings, Several hundred offices the Senate federal services popularity of e-mail and electronic bill payment, the Postal Service lost $2.4 billion from April through Allen led a series of histori- are being studied for possi- subcommittee of the June, officials said Wednesday. cally authentic wagon ble closing and the agency Committee on Homeland trains on trek across south- has proposed other cost- Security and Governmental contribute more than $5 unrealistic 7 percent annual the annual payments could ern Idaho. saving moves including Affairs. billion annually to a fund to inflation in medical costs, be cut to $1.3 billion. Born in American Falls, cutting mail delivery to five But, he added, post prepay medical benefits for he said, while other busi- From about 803,000 he was herding a neighbor’s days a week. offices would be kept open retired workers. That is in nesses plan for 5 percent workers in 1999, the post cows by age 5 — for 5 cents The Postal Service has on Saturdays, since that is addition to $2 billion paid inflation. And they do not office has cut its staff to a day. sharply cut costs and the only day many people annually for benefits for take into account the about 630,000 and Potter By 14, Allen was herding staffing, Potter added, but are free to go to these facili- already retired employees. declining number of postal said the goal is about 17,000 cattle on the range also needs to look to addi- ties. Mail would still be Bills have been intro- employees. Williams said 550,000. scattered from Mountain tional sources of income. delivered to post-office duced to ease these pay- Home to Fairfield. He said in Australia peo- boxes on Saturdays, he said, ments at least temporarily. After a short railroad ple can renew driver’s and large customers could But Postal Inspector career, he returned to King licenses in post offices, pick up mail at post offices. General David C. Williams The Twin Falls Hill to work for rancher while Italians can do their While the Internet has told the senators that the Floyd Barnes. Allen also banking and other coun- taken away a lot of first- amount of the payments Farmers Market started a 13-year rodeo tries’ post offices handle class mail and the recession has no basis in need, but presents... career. insurance. sharply reduced advertising was set to make sure the After a three-year stretch The U.S. post office is not mail, even worse has been a post office did not make the A Canning Day with Master Preserver in the Army, he landed a job exploring these particular requirement imposed in federal deficit appear larger. at Mountain Home Air ideas, he said, but “other 2006 that the post office The payments assume an Force Base. By 1961, Allen Peggy Candy had bought land near King in honor of National Farmer’s Week Hill, built a house and Come and learn the pioneering art of canning and preserving started raising quarterhors- your own food. Find local growers who can supply the es and cattle. Jail: Polygamist leader’s health improving quantities you need for your canning projects. While riding fences all By Jennifer Dobner suffering from peripheral depression and attempted those years, he also became Associated Press writer edema — a swelling of the suicide by hanging. Long a cowboy poet. Here’s one extremities — caused by hours of prayer also once left he shared with freelance SALT LAKE CITY — malnutrition. Jeffs with ulcerated knees. Free Class writer Terrell Williams in Officials from an Arizona In addition to breakfast Utah physician and 2000: jail say polygamous church Thursday, Jeffs ate a sand- wilderness medicine expert 10 am leader Warren Jeffs remains wich and an orange early Colin Grissom has never th “The cold north wind on a feeding tube, but his Tuesday. A feeding tube treated Jeffs, nor seen his August 8 was blowin’ that late health appears to be remains in place and is pro- medical charts, but said the Market opens November day improving after eating a few viding liquid nutrition, church leader should recover 9:00 am When I hit upon the meals. Carter said. Staff is also from his current health mountain to try and find Mohave County sheriff’s forcing him to get up and problems. Door Prizes of Canning Equipment that stray. spokeswoman Trish Carter walk for 20 minutes every Based on the available He’s an ornery, pesky said Jeffs ate a breakfast of two hours, sometimes out- information, Grissom said Every 1/2 hour from 10-1pm yearlin’ that’s always on eggs, potatoes and fruit doors in an exercise yard, he believed the jail’s medical the go. Thursday morning. Jeffs she said. staff was justified in decid- Farmer’s Market North College Road ’Bout the time I started has refused most food and Jeffs is in the jail awaiting ing to force-feed Jeffs. Death For more information call 316-1292 ridin’, it commenced to liquids for more than a week trials on charges related to from starvation can occur spittin’ snow. as part of a self-imposed alleged underage marriages after several weeks when a (Bring a Lawn Chair) Now I’m way up on the religious fast. of polygamous sect girls. person is not eating, but mountain when I come “As of today, the medical Since coming to the jail in dehydration can result in across his track director did make a com- February 2008, Jeffs has kidney failure and death in a I’ll sell that ornery year- ment that it appears he is typically fasted for “a cou- shorter amount of time. lin’ if I ever get him back. getting better,’’ Carter said ple of days’’ every two I’m cold and kind of hun- Thursday. “We are moni- weeks, Carter said. During CENTURY STADIUM 5 gry as I track him to this toring his intake, and he is those periods, staff puts draw. cooperating on and off.’’ fruit and drinks in Jeffs’ 7- 678-7142 ’Tis there I see a hunter’s Medical staff at the by-12-foot cell. It’s unclear www.centurycinema5.com camp, a place where I can Kingman, Ariz., jail began how much he eats and thaw. force-feeding the 53-year- drinks during those fasts, Matinees On Friday Smoke’s comin’ from the old head of the she said. & Saturday! 99th Annual stovepipe so I know there’s Fundamentalist Church of Deeply religious, the tall Shows Nightly 7:20 & 9:35 someone here Jesus Christ of Latter Day and slender Jeffs has often Cassia County I’ll ask about my yearlin’, Saints last Friday after the engaged in lengthy religious Matinees Fri. & Sat. 2:00 & 4:15 tell him where to find a jail doctor said she feared fasts throughout his incar- G. I. Joe PG-13 deer. Jeffs’ death could be ceration, which began fol- RISE OF COBRA Fair In Digital Cinema This guy comes out as I “imminent’’ without med- lowing an August 2006 A Great Action/Adventure Movie In Digital Cinema ride up and invited me ical intervention. arrest near Las Vegas. In P N S V & Rodeo inside. In a letter to a Mohave Utah, where he was tried Shows Nightly 7:15 & 9:15 He said, ‘I’ll make some County Superior Court and convicted on two *Free Stage Gazebo Matinees Fri. & Sat. 2:00 & 4:00 Tues. Aug. 11th 1 pm - Queen & Princess coffee while you sit and judge, Dr. Kirsten counts of rape as an accom- 6:30-10 pm - Exhibit buildings PG Horsemanship warm your hide.’ Mortenson said Jeffs’ vital plice in 2007, he lost some G-Force open In Digital 3-D 2-4 pm - 4-H Bowl 6:30-10 pm - Commercial Now he puts on this pot signs were poor and he was 30 pounds, suffered serious A Fun Animated 3-D Adventure 3 - 5 - 7 pm - Hypnotist, building open of coffee and while we wait P N S V Kendrick Lester 5 pm - Turkey Fitting, Showing for it to boil Admission Prices on 3D Movies 8 pm - PRCA Rodeo He asks me would I care Adults $8.50 Kids & Seniors $6.00 & Quality 8:30 pm - John Anderson Concert for a shot of Aimin’ Oil. Matinees $6.00 (includes 3D Glasses) Well I just look kind of Burley Golf Shows Nightly 7:30 & 9:30 Fri. Aug. 14th Matinees Fri. & Sat. 2:00 & 4:00 8:30 am - Beef Fitting & Showing puzzled and he started to Wed. Aug. 12th 9 am - Swine Fitting & Showing explain: The Ugly Truth R 9am-10pm (daily)- Course 1:30 pm - Pari-Mutual Horse Racing Katherine Heigl in A Fun Romantic Comedy Exhibit buildings open If your drink enough of 2-7 pm - Entertainment 10:30 am - Parade this stuff, it will really help P N S V *Free Stage Gazebo 1-10 pm - Commercial buildings open your aim. 878-9807 Shows Nightly 7:00 & 9:45 2 pm - Round Robin 1-7 pm - Entertainment 8 pm - PRCA Rodeo He said, ‘I’ve been Matinees Fri. & Sat. 1:30 & 4:15 *Free Stage Gazebo * PLAY UNLIMITED GOLF “Are You Tough Enough To Wear Pink” huntin’ for a lot of years Harry Potter PG 1 pm - Sheep Fitting & Showing and never had no luck (FOR THE REST OF THE YEAR) AND THE HALF BLOOD PRINCE 5:30 pm - Rabbit Fitting, Showing Then I bought this jug of The Adventure Continues & Quality Sat. Aug. 15th Aimin’ Oil and I finally P N S V 7 pm - Team Ranch Sorting 8 am - 4-H/FFA Livestock Sale downed my buck. 2009 Half Season Shows Nightly 7:20 & 9:10 10:30 am - Dutch Oven Cookoff Now his horns were kind Matinees Fri. & Sat. 2:00 & 4:00 Thurs. Aug. 13th Registration Golf Pass On Sale! 1:30 pm - Pari-Mutual Horse Racing of puny so I didn’t save his Aliens in the Attic PG 8:30 am - Beef Breeding & Quality head, Available August 1 A Family Comedy Adventure 9 am - Swine Quality & Breeding 8 pm - PRCA Rodeo And while most deer are $ 00 $ 50 P N S V 11am-10pm (daily) buckskin, his hide was solid 225 Adult 352 Couple BURLEY THEATRE Commercial buildings open 1-7 pm - Entertainment red.’ $ 00 $ 50 678-5631 Well I just set there sip- 175 Adult (Limited) 47 Student All Seats $2.00 Everynight pin’ Aimin’ Oil, tryin’ to Open Fri. Tues. each week * unlimited golf based on ShowsShows Fri.Fri. thru Tues. Tues. “ figure out a way available t-times & weather NightlyNightly atat 7:30, 9:30 9:30 Imagine Today, I could tell this mighty NightRace at to the Witch Museum Mountain 2 PG hunter that his buck had Funny Adventure for the Whole Family Harvest Tomorrow” been my stray ...” P N S V Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho NATION Friday, August 7, 2009 Main 5 Husband denies wife’s alcoholism in New York wrong-way crash

By Frank Eltman Police interviewed him Jay Schuler, Daniel Associated Press writer once last week. Schuler’s sister-in-law, Barbara said Diane who said she and Diane GARDEN CITY, N.Y. — Schuler was once diag- were “best friends,’’ said She couldn’t have been nosed with gestational dia- she never hesitated to leave drunk and stoned. Her hus- betes — which usually goes her own child in Schuler’s band had never seen her away after childbirth — had care. Schuler had been a intoxicated before. And an undiagnosed lump on nanny before becoming an there were absolutely no her leg and was suffering executive with marital problems that could from an abscessed tooth for Cablevision, she said. have sent her over the edge. nearly two months. It was “She loved children, her In an anguished, some- not clear how any of those nieces were her girls,’’ Jay AP photo times angry news confer- maladies would prompt Schuler said. “There is no Daniel Schuler’s eyes fill with tears during a press conference in Garden City, N.Y., Thursday. Schuler’s wife, ence, Daniel Schuler someone to become intoxi- way she would ever jeop- Diane, was drunk and high on marijuana when she drove the wrong way for almost two miles on a highway refused to accept an autop- cated. ardize her children.’’ before smashing head-on into an SUV, killing herself and seven others, a prosecutor has said. sy report that showed his Barbara — a divorce The Schulers’ 5-year- wife had the equivalent of attorney who frequently old son survived. His 10 drinks and smoked mar- appears on Howard Stern’s father said the little boy is ijuana within an hour of the radio show and who has still hospitalized, but his wrong-way highway crash represented Joey condition is improving. that killed her and seven Buttafuoco, actress Lindsey Daniel Schuler said the Experts: Women are drinking other people. Lohan’s father Michael and couple went through a “I never saw her drunk Victoria Gotti — suggested normal routine on the since the day I met her,’’ some sort of stroke may Sunday before he last saw more, DUIs are up Daniel Schuler told have led Diane Schuler to her at a campsite in upstate reporters at a press confer- act irrationally. He noted New York. ence outside his attorney’s witnesses who saw Schuler “She was fine,’’ he said. By Lisa A. Flam arrested was 7.5 percent office. “She was not a on the highway reported “We had a cup of coffee in Associated Press writer lower, according to FBI drinker. She was not an that she was driving errati- the morning, we packed figures that cover about 56 alcoholic.’’ cally, moving in and out of the cars up like we always NEW YORK — It percent of the country. He suggested anything lanes, honking her horn and do and we headed out.’’ seemed too horrendous (Despite the incomplete from a stroke to gestational flashing her headlights. The family has not even to imagine. But the sample, Alfred Blumstein, diabetes to even an “This is not the actions of decided whether to seek case of the mother who a Carnegie Mellon abscessed tooth could have a person who is drunk. another autopsy and is caused a deadly wrong- University criminologist, caused his wife to act irra- Something happened,’’ awaiting more information way crash while drunk and said the trend probably tionally in the hours before Barbara said. “And I think from the county’s autopsy stoned is part of a disturb- holds true for the country her death. something happened to her report, Barbara said. ing trend: Women in the as a whole.) Daniel Schuler also dis- brain.’’ The attorney declined U.S. are drinking more, “Women are picking up puted reports that prob- He said he couldn’t to allow Daniel Schuler and drunken-driving some of the dangerously lems with their marriage explain the alcohol or mari- to answer any questions arrests among women are bad habits of men,’’ said drove her to the bottle, call- juana in her system. regarding the marijuana rising rapidly while falling Chuck Hurley, CEO of ing her “a perfect wife’’ and A substance abuse expert allegations, citing among men. Mothers Against Drunk saying he “would marry her said Thursday that close his client’s job as a secur- And some of those Driving. again tomorrow’’ if he family are sometimes the ity officer for Nassau women, as in the New In New York’s could. last to know about a loved County. York case, are getting Westchester County, Diane Schuler, 36, drove one’s problem. Daniel Schuler, 37, began behind the wheel with where Diane Schuler’s the wrong way for nearly “Families are often in to break down emotionally kids in the back. crash killed her and seven two miles on the Taconic denial and can’t deal with as the press conference Men still drink more other people last month, State Parkway and struck a the reality that a family ended. than women and are the number of women the ride, and once they got sport utility vehicle. The member has a problem,’’ “I go to bed every night responsible for more arrested for drunken driv- home, they jumped out of July 26 crash killed her 2- said Marc Galanter, director knowing my heart is clear,’’ drunken-driving cases. ing is up 2 percent this the car, ran to a neighbor’s year-old daughter, three of the Division of he said. “She did not drink. But the gap is narrowing, year, and officers said they house and told an adult, young nieces and three men Alcoholism and Substance She is not an alcoholic. and among the reasons are noticing more women who called police. The in the SUV. Abuse at New York Something medically had cited are that women are with children in the back mother lay passed out in A broken 1.75-liter bottle University. to happen.’’ feeling greater pressures seat. the car, and police said her of Absolut vodka was found at work and home, they “We realized for the last blood alcohol level was in her wrecked minivan, are driving more, and they two to three years, the 0.27 percent — more than police said. are behaving more reck- pattern of more female three times the legal limit. Family of the men in the lessly. drivers, particularly In California, based on SUV had questioned how “Younger women feel mothers with kids in their the same FBI figures, Schuler’s family could have more empowered, more cars, getting arrested for women accounted for 18.8 been oblivious to an alcohol equal to men, and have drunk driving,’’ said Tom percent of all DUI arrests abuse problem and sug- been beginning to exhibit Meier, director of Drug in 2007, up from 13.5 per- gested criminal charges the same uninhibited Prevention and Stop DWI cent in 1998, according to were possible. An attorney behaviors as men,’’ said for the county. the California Office of for the victims’ family did- Chris Cochran of the In one case there, a Traffic Safety. n’t return calls Thursday. California Office of woman out clubbing with Nearly 250 youngsters A preliminary autopsy of Traffic Safety. her teenage daughter was were killed in alcohol- Diane Schuler ruled out a Another possible reason sent to prison for causing related crashes in the U.S. stroke, heart attack, or cited for the rising arrests: a wrong-way crash that in 2007, and most of them aneurysm, Westchester Police are less likely to let killed her daughter’s were passengers in the car County officials said. The women off the hook these friend. with the impaired driver, medical examiner said days. Another woman was according to the National Thursday that he stood by Nationwide, the num- charged with driving Highway Safety his report that found her ber of women arrested for drunk after witnesses said Administration. blood-alcohol level was driving under the influ- she had been drinking all “Drunk drivers often more than twice the state’s ence or alcohol or drugs day before going to pick carry their kids with legal limit, she still had was 28.8 percent higher in up her children at school. them,’’ said MADD’s undigested alcohol in her 2007 than it was in 1998, Authorities said the chil- Hurley. “It’s the ultimate stomach, and she had high while the number of men dren were scared during form of child abuse.’’ levels of the key ingredient in marijuana in her system. Police said Thursday that Daniel Schuler wasn’t cooperating with their investigation. Officers that came to Long Island “for a Floral Park Police Department/AP photo prearranged interview’’ This undated photo shows Warren and Jackie Hance of Floral Park, were not allowed to ques- N.Y., with their daughters, from left, Alyson, 7, Kate, 5, and Emma, 8. tion him. Schuler’s attorney, The Hance children were among the eight people killed in a fiery crash Dominic Barbara, didn’t say on July 26 when their aunt, Diane Schuler, plowed into an SUV while when Schuler would be driving the wrong way on the Taconic Parkway in Westchester County, available for an interview. N.Y.

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LOWEST PRICES!! Get MORE = SAVE MORE Patio Covers Carports Screen Rooms Sunrooms Family Owned and Operated Serving the Treasure Valley since 1993 Serving the Magic Valley Since 2001 (208) 7336522 www.patiocoversunlimited.com Previous Sunday’s edition, while supplies last MAIN 6 FRIDAY,AUGUST 7,2009 OPINION EDITOR STEVE CRUMP: (208) 735-3223 [email protected] QUOTABLE “There’s been no significant finding against her,there’s been no public uprising against her.I will support her.” — Sen. Kit Bond of Missouri on OPINION Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor

EDITORIAL After underwhelming first term, Otter will get a second chance ill C.L. “Butch” Otter still be governor of Idaho in 2011? Can if he wants to. None of the seven candidates so far declared for governor in 2010W can get elected. No mainstream Idaho Republican will challenge Otter, and the only Democrat who would be competitive — 1st District Congressman Walt Minnick — doesn’t want to be governor. So does Otter want another Our view: round? Probably. He recently hired veteran GOP operative Cecil Andrus Brenda Maynard to be his cam- and Robert paign field director, and he raised more than $102,000 in Smylie were campaign donations in the first better sec- six months of 2009. ond-term Yet in the most Republican state in America, this is an governors elected official who gets just a than they 47 percent approval rating, were in their according to a June survey by Cash for clunkers could GOP pollster Greg Smith. first terms. One of the mysteries of Idaho How about politics is how a public official of Otter’s charm, backed by an Butch overwhelmingly Republican Otter? turn out to be a lemon Legislature, has accomplished so little. He’s floundered and been outmaneuvered on s a political ploy, transportation and other issues, and has too often the “Cash for As a meaningful stimulus, AClunkers” program conceded the political initiative to the Legislature. has been a rare and imme- So why would Otter want a second term, especially diate success. As a stimu- the CARS program is itself when he would be 68 years old when he took his sec- lus, its more like a shiny Loren ond oath of office? sports car with four flat Steffy something of a clunker. That would make him the oldest second-term tires it looks great, but it governor in Idaho history. By contrast, former Gov. may not get very far. guzzlers that are traded in gage companies to renego- to a backdoor bailout. Dirk Kempthorne was 51 when he was reelected. John Officially known as the must be destroyed. tiate several hundred thou- Given what taxpayers Evans was 57,Cecil Andrus 43 and Robert Smylie 44. Car Allowance Rebate So after months of sand loans, but the number have invested in them, we Otter’s motivation, no doubt, is building his legacy. System, or CARS, the pro- bailouts and handouts, we has done little to check the need GM and Chrysler to Andrus and Smylie achieved that in their second gram offers motorists as finally have a stimulus that rising national foreclosure innovate. That may not much as $4,500 to seemingly works. rate. happen as quickly as it terms; Evans and Kempthorne not so much. exchange older vehicles for The problem is the The clunker program, by should if they see sales of Kempthorne, easily rolled by the Legislature dur- new, more fuel efficient clunker program isn’t the comparison, has lured tens their current models pick- ing his first term, stiffened his spine in his second. He ones. It began last month sort of broad-based stimu- of thousands of consumers ing up. After all, it was the vetoed frequently and launched initiatives with and was supposed to run lus we need to get the to dealer lots. But once automakers’ reluctance to decidedly mixed results for Idaho. through November but sputtering economy run- those consumers buy the innovate their fixation on His oversold Connecting Idaho enterprise — pay- proved so popular that it ning smoothly. new car, then what? large, profitable gas-guz- ing for ambitious road construction projects by bor- apparently sopped up the Stimulating auto sales They leave with, in many zling SUVs that left them rowing money against future federal highway pay- $1 billion Congress had certainly provides an eco- cases, fresh debt that will vulnerable. ments — is a shadow of its former self, and much of allocated for it in a matter nomic boost, but it’s a lim- — or at least should if the So while the clunker the money has been spent in the Treasure Valley. of days. ited one. It lacks the long- past nine months has program may be getting Legislative resentment of the Idaho Transportation On Monday, Ford attrib- term benefit that, say, taught them anything — people to buy cars, it’s not uted a 1.6 percent rise in modifying mortgages make them all the more doing much to encourage Department rooted in Connecting Idaho made it July sales to the program, would have. A car is a one- tight-fisted when it comes Detroit to build better impossible for Otter to secure enough highway repair and local dealerships have time purchase. A refi- to other expenses. ones. money. been packed with prospec- nanced mortgage, however, Nor is the clunker Congress is debating And with the help of his handpicked president of tive clunker swappers. frees cash for the house- exchange the economic whether to allocate anoth- the Idaho State Board of Education, Kempthorne in In other words, the pro- hold budget.Mortgage boon it may seem for car er $2 billion to the pro- 2003 launched a full-scale assault on the powers of gram has done what most modifications are the companies. It brings a bit- gram. With so few stimu- the only Democratic statewide public official, other federal initiatives stimulus that keeps on giv- ter icing to the bailout cake lus efforts working, law- Superintendent of Public Instruction Marilyn such as those for mort- ing. the government has been makers hope to rally Howard. That backfired badly when the ed board gages, banking and small Yet Congress’ efforts on baking for General Motors around the one that is. couldn’t handle the added responsibilities and made businesses have failed to the that front have been far and Chrysler since last But as a meaningful do. It’s generated economic less successful. Last year’s year. stimulus, the CARS pro- a string of expensive mistakes. activity. It’s gotten people Hope for Homeowners bill First came the capital gram is itself something of By contrast, Democrat Andrus and Republican spending money, making garnered just a few hun- infusions that began in a clunker. It’s providing the Smylie in their second terms reached out to members purchases that benefit dred applications for loan December and were most stimulus where its of the other party and achieved many of their goals. local employers. modifications in the first replenished in the spring. needed least. The political landscape has shifted since then, but It also purports to help three months. The Obama Then came the quickie even GOP governors don’t accomplish much without the environment by administration allocated bankruptcies fraught with Loren Steffy is a colum- building coalitions. In his second term, Otter could improving the overall fuel $75 billion for a revamped government meddling. nist for the Houston use his bully pulpit to promote causes such as early efficiency of vehicles on program after it took Now, we get the clunker Chronicle. Write to him at childhood education and better mental health serv- the road because the gas office, and its gotten mort- program in what amounts [email protected] . ices. Or he could hunker down and feud with the Legislature. It’s been more than 80 years since the stars aligned so favorably for a Republican governor of Tell us what you think Idaho. Between 1919 and 1930, Govs. D.W.Davis, ONLINE: Register at Magicvalley.com, and respond to any of the local opinions or stories in today’s edition. Charles Moore and H.C. Baldridge enjoyed massive ON PAPER: The Times-News welcomes letters from readers on subjects of public interest. Please limit letters legislative majorities and overwhelming public sup- port. But they didn’t accomplish much, leaving to 300 words. Include your signature, mailing address and phone number. Writers who sign letters with false Idaho’s economy weaker at the beginning of the names will be permanently barred from publication. Letters may be brought to our Twin Falls office; mailed to Great Depression than it was when they inherited it P.O. Box 548, Twin Falls, ID 83303; faxed to (208) 734-5538; or e-mailed to [email protected]. from Democrat Moses Alexander at the end of World War I. There’s no reason Butch Otter can’t learn from mistakes — his own and those of others. But will he? JOIN THE DISCUSSION Voice your opinion with local bloggers: Progressive Voice,

Brad Hurd . . . . publisher Steve Crump . ...Opinion editor Conservative Corner and In the Middle. The members of the editorial board and writers of editorials are Brad Hurd, James G. Wright, On the opinion page at Magicvalley.com. Steve Crump, Bill Bitzenburg and Ruth S. Pierce.

T HE LIGHTER SIDE OF POLITICS Doonesbury By Garry Trudeau Mallard Fillmore By Bruce Tinsley Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho OPINION Friday, August 7, 2009 Main 7 California’s reckoning — and ours

Have gun, ASHINGTON — highest in the country, were gap is smaller — 2.9 percent California’s raised. So were motor vehi- versus 2.3 percent — and Wbudget debacle cle registration fees. much of the state’s advan- holds a lesson for America, Spending cuts approved in tage reflects the unsustain- but one we will probably February and July are deep. able housing boom, of ignore. It’s easy to attribute Robert Together, the cuts equal which California was the will travel the state’s protracted budget Samuelson almost 30 percent of the epicenter. stalemate, now temporarily general revenue fund and On paper, the state could laxico Burress, the resolved with about $26 bil- port. For years, state leaders will affect schools, prisons, solve its budget problems by former football star, lion of spending cuts and papered over the contradic- colleges and welfare. raising taxes further. But in Pappeared before a accounting gimmicks, to the tion with loans and modest The state’s liberal estab- practice, that might backfire grand jury in New York this deep recession and changes. By overwhelming lishment is in mourning. by weakening the economy week to explain how he Gail California’s peculiar poli- these expedients, the reces- California’s student-teacher and tax base. California came to carry a concealed tics. Up to a point, that’s sion triggered an inevitable ratio, now about a third scores poorly in state ratings weapon into a nightclub. Collins true. Representing an eighth reckoning. above the national average, of business climate. In a Burress had cannily of the U.S. economy, Here’s the national les- will probably go even higher. CNBC survey, it ranked tucked his loaded pistol into able cargo around the coun- California has been harder son. There’s a collision The University of California 32nd overall but last in “cost the waistband of his sweat- try. Maybe, in turn, the hit than most states. between high and rising system lost 20 percent of its of business” and 49th in pants when he went out for other side would be a little Unemployment, now 11.6 demands for government state payments. It’s raising “business friendliness.”IT a night on the town. The more rational about regulat- percent (national average: services and the capacity of tuition and student fees 9.3 and biotechnology remain gun started to slip, as ing weapons sales at gun 9.5 percent), could top 13 the economy to produce the percent, imposing salary strengths, but some tradi- objects in waistbands are shows. percent in 2010, says econo- income and tax revenues to reductions of 4 percent to 10 tional industries are strug- wont to do. When he One barrier is the mist Eduardo Martinez of pay for those demands. percent on more than gling. High costs and tax grabbed it, he accidentally National Rifle Association, Moody’s Economy.com. That’s true of California, 100,000 workers, and breaks from other states shot himself in the thigh. which is dedicated to the Meanwhile, the requirement where poor immigrants and delaying faculty hires. have caused movie studios This is what is known as a cause of making everybody that any tax increase muster their children have National parallels again to shift production from bad plan. as loony as possible on the a two-thirds vote in the increased pressures for seem apparent. Federal California. In 1996, feature The reason I am bringing subject. Another is the sus- Legislature promotes paral- more government services. budget deficits predate the films involved 14,500 pro- all this up is that Burress’ picion on the part of gun ysis. Democrats prefer tax It’s also true of the nation, recession and, as baby duction days in the Los spokespeople keep pointing owners that people who hikes to spending cuts, and where an aging population boomers retire, will survive Angeles area, says FilmL.A.; out that he DID have a per- favor gun control look down Republicans can block high- raises Social Security and any recovery. Amazingly, the 2008 figure was half mit to carry a handgun in on them. er taxes. Medicare spending. the Obama administration that. Florida. (It was expired, but In that Senate debate, All this produced the California is leading the would worsen the long- So California is stretched as the waistband business opponents of loosening the recent drama: plunging tax transformation of politics term outlook by expanding between a precarious econ- demonstrates, this guy does current laws did get a tad revenues and the state’s into a form of collective tor- federal health insurance omy and a strong popular not excel in attention to carried away, particularly resulting huge budget ture: pay more (higher coverage. desire for government. The detail.) when they kept equating deficits; endless negotia- taxes), get less (lower serv- California has pioneered state’s wrenching experi- So the story gives us an carrying a concealed tions between Gov. ices). this sort of delusion. The ence suggests we should excellent entry into the weapon with being a mass Schwarzenegger and leg- Make no mistake: The presumption was that a begin to pare back govern- question of whether states murderer. Sen. Robert islative leaders; the deadlock spending cuts and tax dynamic economy would ment’s future commitments should be required to recog- Menendez of New Jersey that led the state to issue increases the state enacted pay for expansive govern- to avoid a similar fate. But nize other states’ gun carry claimed that the newly scrip (in effect, IOUs) to pay to bridge its budget deficits ment. But California’s rela- California’s experience also permits. empowered gun owners bills; and a final agreement are not cosmetic. In tive economic performance suggests we’ll remain in The Senate recently held a coming into his state would on a 2009-10 budget. But February, the Legislature has actually deteriorated. In denial until the fateful reck- debate on just such a pro- be “like Richard Poplawski, there is also a bigger story agreed to a penny increase the 1980s, the state’s econ- oning arrives sometime in posal, during which the the white supremacist, with national implications. in the state sales tax, bring- omy grew much faster than the unimagined future. sponsor, John Thune of armed with an AK-47,who California has reached a tip- ing the total — including the national economy; South Dakota, said that if allegedly murdered three ping point. Its government local sales taxes — to about annual growth averaged 5.1 Newsweek columnist people from his state were Pittsburgh police officers on made more promises than 9 cents or more. Top income percent versus 3.1 percent. Robert Samuelson writes able to go to New York and his front porch.“ its economy can easily sup- tax rates, already among the In the present decade, the about economics. visit tourist attractions Perhaps Menendez was while carrying their con- having a bad day, what with cealed weapons, “Central a large chunk of the New Park would be a much safer Jersey Democratic Party place.“ teetering on the verge of Turns out Central Park is indictment. But given the Sex, drugs and rocking chairs way safer than South fact that nearly half the Dakota. There were no mur- householders in America ore than 30 years teenager’s mother wonder- ate” or “offense.” ders and three serious have guns, it doesn’t make ago, in Arkansas, ing what’s going on in there. There may be an “ick” assaults in Central Park in sense to suggest that they’re Ma sociologist pro- I recently had a resident factor when we think about 2008, compared with five all homicidal or that only posed to a group of nursing referred to me for mastur- elders having sex. But a murders and 341 assaults in good gun owners are the home operators that they bating in front of an aide University of Chicago sur- Sioux Falls, S.D., alone. hunters. There are an esti- set aside “privacy rooms” Ira who walked into the room. vey,“A Study of Sexuality The vote on the Thune mated 250 million guns in for their residents to do Rosofsky Why did she walk in with- and Health Among Older amendment was 58-39 in America. whatever it is that consent- out knocking? Well,you Adults in the United States,” favor, which, of course, in Jim Kessler of the Third ing adults do in private. the institution to maintain can’t knock on an always concluded old people — the Senate world means that Way, a nonpartisan think Professor Eddie Hargrove an environment in which open door. And in your given the opportunity — are it was defeated. But it will be tank, noted that if the non- maintained that hand- each resident can “attain room — typically shared as likely to be sexually active back. These days, whenever criminals only used them holding, kissing and petting and maintain his or her with a total stranger — you as the young, and well into Congress feels the yen for a for hunting, “there wouldn’t “probably would go further highest practicable physical, have only a curtain for pri- their 70s and 80s. But not in good old-fashioned debate be a varmint left in the than a little medication at mental and psychosocial vacy. nursing homes. about a hot-button social country.“ 10 o’clock at night,”accord- well-being.” When I’m having a ses- It’s easy to slip into the issue, it goes for guns. This Gun advocates tend to ing to The New York Times. In addition to specifying sion with a resident in a mind-set that because these year, we have already been think of themselves as rep- The nursing home opera- that certified nursing homes nursing home — even with people are in institutions, blessed with legislation giv- resentatives of small-town tors all rejected this idea provide basic services, the the door closed — it’s quite this gives us free rein to ing people the right to carry or rural values. But their then, and it apparently has law also contains a common for an aide to walk decide what’s best for them. concealed weapons in worldview is dark. Thune not gained ground since. Residents’ Bill of Rights that in and start making up the But people in nursing homes national parks. Maybe soon said he was worried that his Flash forward a genera- includes the right to privacy bed. The custodian might retain the same rights as the there will also be a Plaxico’s daughter might have to tion, and an advocate for and the accommodation of appear next with a mop, fol- rest of us to mess up or Law, affirming that a gun drive home from college medical marijuana asked me personal needs. lowed by the cable guy fid- enhance their lives with sex. permit, once granted, is through states that would recently if — in my role as a Many states have fol- dling with the TV. I sometimes think of good for a lifetime, just like not allow her the protection psychologist in long-term lowed up with a further Unless you’re into exhibi- aging — particularly in Social Security numbers. of a pistol in the glove com- care facilities — I had ever enumeration of individual tionism, it’s hard to imagine nursing homes — as child- I like to think this gun partment. Sen. Jim Webb of seen it used in nursing rights in long-term care. In consenting adult residents hood in reverse: going from obsession is progress of a Virginia fretted about his homes. I could only lamely California, the Welfare and having sex under these con- independence to depend- sort, since it has almost elderly father checking into reply,“That’s about as likely Institutions Code specifies ditions. One nursing home ence and paternalistic con- completely replaced the a motel without a loaded as sex.” residents have the right “to — the Hebrew Home at trol. As my baby boomer offering of divisive gotcha gun to keep the criminals at I’m no expert on sex, and live in an environment that Riverdale in New York — generation starts to fill up amendments on abortion or bay. I’m not a lawyer, but where enhances personal dignity, established, in 1995, a policy these institutions over the gay rights. In New York, I have never is the law that says you for- maintains independence recognizing the right to next couple of decades, I Given the fact that law- heard a single parent say feit your rights and liberties and encourages self-deter- “sexual expression,”and it’s hope we continue to insist makers yelling about assault they were afraid their kid at the nursing home door? mination,”and “to partici- often trotted out as the pro- on our cherished rights of rifles and Glocks very sel- couldn’t make it home from There is none that I know pate in activities that meet gressive example. But in the self-expression. In the dom feel compelled to quote school unarmed. However, of. In fact, the law says you individual physical, intellec- dozens of nursing homes meantime, does it makes from the Bible, you’d think we do worry a little bit retain the right to a sex life tual, social and spiritual I’ve visited, I’ve heard lip sense that it’s easier to get a we could work toward a about idiots wandering into wherever you reside. needs.” service to privacy but little conjugal visit in a jail than in sensible national consensus nightclubs with Glocks The federal government Then why is it so hard to action. My colleagues in a nursing home? on guns. Sen. Charles tucked in their sweats. — which pays for most remain sexually active in a other states confirm my Schumer of New York long-term care — enacted nursing home? impressions. Ira Rosofsky is a psychol- offered to work on a com- Gail Collins is a columnist the Nursing Home Reform First, it’s hard to find pri- In the typical nursing ogist and the author of promise concealed-weapon for The New York Times. Act of 1987,mandating that vacy. Doors are always open; home, it’s rare to hear the “Nasty, Brutish, and Long: bill that would only apply to Write to her at gcollins@ continued federal funding a closed one is viewed with word “sex” without it being Adventures in Old Age and truck drivers who haul valu- nytimes.com. for a nursing home required the suspicious eyes of a modified by “inappropri- the World of Eldercare.” Jarbidge Centennial Celebration 1909 - 2009 Join us for We have the food, fun, music, games, dancing & LOWEST EVERYDAY PRICES! much more!

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Business 3 B Stocks and commodities, Business 2 / Somebody needs you, Business 4 / Comics, Business 5 / Weather, Business 6 Dow Jones Industrial ▼ 24.71 | Nasdaq composite ▼ 19.89 | S&P 500 ▼ 5.64 | Russell 2000 ▼ 8.37 Business FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 2009 BUSINESS EDITOR JOSH PALMER: (208) 735-3231 [email protected] IDACORP earnings rise on base rate increases

to $17.7 million in 2008. of IDACORP, Inc. and the Idaho Idaho and Oregon public utilities Energy demand declines as According to the company’s Power Company. “Our focus on commissions,”Keen said. performance summary, an the fundamentals such as The full impact of increased increase in the base rate paid by enhanced cost management, revenues from recent regulatory hydroelectric generation increases customers and improved reservoir timely recovery of infrastructure decisions was partially offset by levels for hydroelectric generation investment and positive regulato- declining demand. By Joshua Palmer Company, reported a second helped boost net income. ry outcomes resulted in improved Darrel Anderson, IDACORP and Times-News writer quarter net income in 2009 of In a conference call Thursday, earnings.” Idaho Power Senior Vice President $27.5 million, or 58 cents per share, the company said hydroelectric He said IDACORP is continuing of Administrative Services and Favorable regulatory decisions compared to $17.5 million or 39 generation was 22 percent higher to make infrastructure invest- CFO, said total energy bills for res- and above average reservoir levels cents per share for the second than the previous year. ments to strengthen reliability and idential customer declined 8 per- boosted the bottom line of Idaho’s quarter ending on June 30. “We were able to deliver ensure adequate future energy cent compared to 2008. largest utility during the second Idaho Power Company, improved financial results over supplies. quarter of 2008. IDACORP’s principal subsidiary, last year despite the current eco- “Additionally, we remain active Joshua Palmer may be reached IDACORP, Inc., the holding reported second quarter net nomic environment,” said J. on the regulatory front with at 208-735-3231 or at company for the Idaho Power income of $26.3 million compared LaMont Keen, president and CEO strategic filings before both the [email protected] New home Senate votes construction to fill up rises again in S-C Idaho

By Joshua Palmer Custom Homes, said the Times-News writer company’s newest subdivi- sion, South Estates, on New home construction Orchard Drive, has seen in south-central Idaho strong sales this summer increased for the second because of lower prices. consecutive month as “We priced the homes in builders rushed to fill the that area around $150,000, ‘cash for clunkers’ demand for lower priced and that seems to be what homes. people are looking for,” he The city of Twin Falls said. “We sold all the homes Analysts approved 20 construction that are built, and we still permits for new homes in have 20 starts that are ready July — a nearly 40 percent to go.” increase compared to the However, real estate say vehicle same month last year. agents say that the new The city of Jerome issued home construction is leaving seven permits for new-home a glut of existing homes on prices are construction, compared to the market — particularly four permits in July 2008. higher priced homes. The city of Burley issued Jeff Duggan, president and rising as one permit for new home CEO of the Greater Twin construction. Falls Association of Realtors, New-home construction said that homes that are permits are an indicator of priced above $150,000 are inventories the number of new homes sitting on the market for six that will enter the market in months, or more. coming months. The median price of a new shrink Builders say it’s too soon to home permit that was say if residential construc- approved in Jerome was By David Espo tion in the region is rebound- about $120,000, while the Associated Press writer AP photo ing from the worst slump on median price in Twin Falls Mark Henderson puts a 1988 Lincoln Town Car, a car traded in as part of the federal government’s ‘cash record, but they say there is was $162,000. WASHINGTON — Pedal for clunkers’ program, into the crusher at Pearl Road Auto Parts in Cleveland. Pressing colleagues to an obvious increase in buyers to the metal, Congress sent replenish the program, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid warned lawmakers they might miss their seeking homes between Joshua Palmer may be President Obama legislation August vacation takeoff plans Friday if they don’t quickly pass the $2 billion measure. $130,000 to $150,000. reached at 208-735-3231 Thursday night with an Monte Jones, director of or at jpalmer@magicval- additional $2 billion for out in only 10 days. The The Senate’s action that if we change the bill, it sales and marketing for TKO ley.com “cash for clunkers,” the House voted last week to capped an unusually swift will die,” Senate Majority economy-boosting rebate keep alive the program, response by lawmakers, Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., program that caught the which gives consumers up who were informed scarcely told reporters a few hours fancy of car buyers and to $4,500 in subsidies if they a week ago that the program before debate began. “We instantly increased sales for trade in cars for new, more was quickly running short are going to do everything Sluggish July sales show an auto industry long mired energy-efficient models. of money. we can to stop that.” in recession. Without action, lawmak- In advance of the final Among the proposed The Senate approved the ers risked a wave of voter vote, the bill’s supporters changes was one to place tight-fisted consumers money on a 60-37 vote after discontent as they left the worked to defeat numerous the car-buying subsidies administration officials said Capitol for a monthlong proposed modifications to By Anne D’Innocenzio 4GVCKNUCNGU an initial $1 billion had run vacation. the program. “We all know See CLUNKERS, Business 2 Associated Press writer Same-store sales fell in July as shoppers worried about job NEW YORK — Shoppers security. Percent change in major retailers’ sales remained tight-fisted in compared to July 2008: July, resulting in sluggish July 2009 New jobless claims drop more than expected sales for many merchants Big Lots Inc. -2.4% and raising concern about Stein Mart Inc. -5.5 By Christopher S. Rugaber vey by Thomson Reuters. the back-to-school shop- Associated Press writer The four-week average of Target Corp. -6.5 ping season’s health. claims, which smooths out As merchants reported Costco Wholesale -7.0 WASHINGTON — The fluctuations, dropped to their sales figures Thursday, Limited Brands Inc. -7.0 number of newly-laid off 555,250, its lowest level mall-based chains continue Macy’s Inc. -10.7 workers seeking unemploy- since late January. to be hit hardest as con- Dillard’s Inc. -12.0 ment insurance fell last The tally of people con-

sumers focus on necessities. NOTE: Sales include those from stores week, the government said tinuing to claim benefits Among the disappointments opened for at least one year. Reporting Thursday, fresh evidence rose, however, by 69,000 to were Macy’s Inc. and teen periods vary slightly. that layoffs are easing. 6.3 million, the department retailers Abercrombie & AP The Labor Department said, after dropping for Fitch Co. and Wet Seal Inc. said that initial claims for three straight weeks. The Among the few bright Perkins, president of retail jobless benefits dropped to a continuing claims data lags spots was discounter TJX consulting firm Retail seasonally adjusted 550,000 initial claims by a week. Cos., operator of the T.J. Metrics. “Back-to-school for the week ending Aug. 1, Many economists expect Maxx and Marshalls chains, shopping season is going to down from an upwardly initial claims to continue to AP photo which reported a sales gain be very late.” revised figure of 588,000 in decline this year. that exceeded Wall Street Shoppers’ worries about People looking for work search on computers at a Worksource office the previous week. “Claims should fall over estimates. job security, retirement in Portland, Ore. The number of newly-laid off workers seeking unem- That’s much lower than the next few months, as the “The consumer is stressed ployment insurance fell last week, the government said Thursday, analysts’ estimates of JOBLESS and depressed,” said Ken See SALES, Business 2 fresh evidence that layoffs are easing. 580,000,according to a sur- See , Business 2

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST COMMODITIES For more see Business 2 Con Agra 19.60 ▼ .05 Dell Inc. 13.16 ▼ .47 Idacorp 27.79 ▼ .01 Int. Bancorp 2.95 ▼ .15 Live cattle 83.20 ▼ .82 Sept. Oil 71.94 ▼ .03 Lithia Mo. 12.83 ▼ .09 McDonalds 54.84 ▼ .25 Micron 6.79 ▲ .05 Supervalu 15.18 ▲ .18 Aug. Gold 960.70 ▼ 3.50 Aug. Silver 14.64 ▼ .12

Today in business WASHINGTON — Labor Department releases employment data for July. WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve releases consumer credit data for June. Business 2 Friday, August 7, 2009 BUSINESS Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho MARKET SUMMARY TODAY ON WALL STREET

NYSE AMEX NASDAQ August 6, 2009 9,500 The Dow fell 24.71, or 0.3 percent, to 9,256.26. The Standard & Poor’s 500 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) &QY,QPGU 9,000 index lost 5.64, or 0.6 percent, to 997.08, Name Vol(00) Last Chg Name Vol(00) Last Chg Name Vol(00) Last Chg KPFWUVTKCNU 8,500 its first finish below 1,000 since Friday. Citigrp 12044418 3.80 +.22 PSCrudeDL 84195 4.93 -.05 PwShs QQQ1079770 39.38 -.35 8,000 The Nasdaq composite index fell 19.89, or BkofAm 4473401 16.70 +.04 InovioBio 48460 2.25 -.24 Cisco 808730 22.31 +.14 -24.71 1 percent, to 1,973.16. SPDR Fncl 2211500 13.98 -.10 Hemisphrx 34297 2.12 -.04 Intel 656162 18.70 -.16 7,500 CIT Gp 2154808 1.62 +.23 EldorGld g 31502 10.88 +.20 Microsoft 589775 23.46 -.35 9,256.26 A M J J A About three stocks fell for every two that SPDR 1739152 99.89 -.52 CFCda g 26064 12.10 -.19 ETrade 416382 1.43 -.02 rose on the New York Stock Exchange Pct. change from previous: -0.27% High 9,325.11 Low 9,208.80 where volume came to 1.4 billion shares GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) compared with 1.9 billion traded Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg August 6, 2009 2,000 Wednesday. Ambac2-03 6.91 +2.19 +46.3 DeerfCap rs 8.60 +2.30 +36.5 CentrlBcp 9.00 +3.40 +60.7 Ambac3-03n 6.92 +2.18 +46.0 SagaCm rs 8.78 +2.22 +33.8 MS Ns100 10 12.03 +2.69 +28.7 0CUFCS 1,900 In other trading, the Russell 2000 index of CIT pfA 3.85 +1.10 +40.0 AlphaPro 3.69 +.67 +22.2 Innotrac 3.23 +.70 +27.6 EQORQUKVG 1,800 smaller companies fell 8.37,or 1.5 percent, FredM pfG 2.24 +.49 +28.0 IndiaGC un 2.05 +.35 +20.6 SXC Hlth 37.53 +7.83 +26.3 to 557.62. FredM pfT 2.32 +.49 +26.8 ChinaEd n 6.10 +.75 +14.1 US AutoPts 5.49 +1.12 +25.6 1,700 -19.89 Bond prices were mixed. The yield on the 1,600 LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose to 1,973.16 A M J J A Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg 3.77 percent from 3.75 percent late MetroPCS 8.99 -3.70 -29.2 HealthFit n 5.50 -2.17 -28.3 Orthovta 4.98 -1.62 -24.5 Pct. change from previous: -1% High2,004.37 Low 1,967.68 Wednesday. GaGulf rs 29.38 -7.12 -19.5 InvCapHld 2.10 -.41 -16.3 ClevBioL h 4.75 -1.33 -21.9 The dollar was mixed against other major InovioBio 2.25 -.24 -9.6 OCharleys 9.25 -2.06 -18.2 GnCable 34.71 -7.79 -18.3 August 6, 2009 1,000 currencies, while gold prices fell. Brinker 15.12 -3.21 -17.5 SalisbryBc 24.25 -2.29 -8.6 PVF Cap 2.48 -.52 -17.3 KKR Fn 2.52 -.48 -16.0 UnivTrav n 14.43 -1.36 -8.6 CDC Cp A 2.76 -.57 -17.1 950 Light, sweet crude fell 3 cents to settle at 5VCPFCTF $71.94 a barrel on the New York DIARY DIARY DIARY 2QQT¶U 900 Mercantile Exchange. Advanced 1,170 Advanced 222 Advanced 839 850 Overseas, Britain’s FTSE 100 rose 0.9 per- -5.64 Declined 1,895 Declined 305 Declined 1,831 cent, Germany’s DAX index added 0.3 per- Unchanged 100 Unchanged 66 800 Unchanged 144 A M J J A Total issues 3,165 Total issues 593 Total issues 2,814 997.08 cent, and France’s CAC-40 rose 0.6 per- New Highs 124 New Highs 17 New Highs 37 Pct. change from previous: -0.56% High 1,008.00 Low 992.49 cent. Japan’s Nikkei stock average rose 1.3 New Lows 2 New Lows ... New Lows 7 percent. Volume 6,783,728,159 Volume 123,229,663 Volume 2,376,331,568 SOURCE: SunGard AP

INDEXES 11,867.11 6,469.95 Dow Jones Industrials 9,256.26 -24.71 -.27 +5.47 -19.03 5,293.41 2,134.21 Dow Jones Transportation 3,604.99 -39.23 -1.08 +1.92 -28.12 BUSINESS BRIEFS 486.64 288.66 Dow Jones Utilities 367.65 +.21 +.06 -.84 -20.82 8,524.20 4,181.75 NYSE Composite 6,517.67 -40.52 -.62 +13.21 -21.84 Fannie Mae seeks accounting scandal earlier this by the Small Business 2,161.55 1,130.47 Amex Index 1,696.04 -22.92 -1.33 +21.36 -19.26 decade at AIG that led to Administration. 2,473.20 1,265.52 Nasdaq Composite 1,973.16 -19.89 -1.00 +25.12 -16.24 1,313.15 666.79 S&P 500 997.08 -5.64 -.56 +10.39 -21.25 $10.7 billion in U.S. Greenberg’s ouster in 2005. The The Term Asset-Backed 13,382.96 6,772.29 Wilshire 5000 10,268.49 -75.01 -.73 +13.00 -20.43 following year, AIG paid more than Securities Loan Facility, or TALF, 764.38 342.59 Russell 2000 557.62 -8.37 -1.48 +11.65 -21.84 aid after 2Q loss $1.6 billion to settle charges of started in March and figures WASHINGTON — Fannie Mae improper accounting. prominently in efforts by the Fed TOCKS OF OCAL NTEREST S L I says it needs an additional $10.7 The case is unrelated to the gov- and the Obama administration to AlliantEgy 1.50 11 25.45 -.72 -12.8 Kaman .56 15 18.83 -.34 +3.9 billion in government aid after ernment bailout of AIG, which is in ease credit problems. It has the AlliantTch ... 18 80.94 +1.96 -5.6 Keycorp .04 ... 6.57 +.16 -22.9 AmCasino .42 ... 18.25 +.34 +111.2 LeeEnt h ...... 1.64 -.02 +300.0 posting a loss of $15.2 billion in the the process of trying to sell off potential to generate up to a $1 Aon Corp .60 21 40.16 +.02 -12.1 MicronT ...... 6.79 +.05 +157.2 second quarter as the taxpayer bill assets to pay off the $182.5 billion in trillion in lending. BallardPw ...... 1.83 ... +61.9 OfficeMax ...... 9.99 -.06 +30.8 from the housing market bust loans it has received since last BkofAm .04 45 16.70 +.04 +18.6 RockTen .40 10 45.73 -.10 +33.8 keeps growing. September. ConAgra .76 9 19.60 -.05 +18.8 Sensient .76 13 25.16 -.21 +5.4 AIG Director Golub Costco .72 19 48.75 -.31 -7.1 SkyWest .16 8 13.49 +.15 -27.5 The mortgage finance company, The SEC said AIG’s former chief Diebold 1.04 25 30.90 +.24 +10.0 Teradyn ...... 8.11 -.09 +92.2 seized by federal regulators last financial officer, Howard Smith, will replace Liddy as DukeEngy .96f 16 15.45 +.12 +2.9 Tuppwre .88 13 31.93 -1.06 +40.7 September, posted a quarterly loss will pay a $1.5 million fine tied to DukeRlty .68m 48 11.47 +.91 +4.7 US Bancrp .20 27 22.40 -.39 -10.4 company chairman Fastenal .74f 24 36.78 +.21 +5.5 Valhi .40 ... 11.34 -.65 +6.0 of $2.67 per share. That compares the investigation. Heinz 1.68f 13 37.79 -.27 +.5 WalMart 1.09 14 48.98 -.22 -12.6 with a loss of $2.6 billion, or $2.54 NEW YORK — AIG says HewlettP .32 13 42.21 -1.05 +16.3 WashFed .20 ... 14.78 -.11 -1.2 per share, in the year-ago period. Director Harvey Golub on HomeDp .90 19 26.54 +.21 +15.3 WellsFargo .20 36 27.97 -.05 -5.1 Demand rises for Idacorp 1.20 13 27.79 -.01 -5.6 ZionBcp .04m ... 15.51 +.31 -36.7 The results were driven by $18.8 Monday will become its non- billion in credit losses due to government consumer executive chairman, replacing declining housing market condi- retiring Chairman Edward M. HOW TO READ THE REPORT tions. The request for federal aid is credit program Liddy. Name: Stocks are listed alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbrevia- Washington-based Fannie Mae’s WASHINGTON — Investors’ Golub, 70, was elected to the tion). Company names made up of initials appear at the beginning of each letters’ list. third since the takeover. It has appetite picked up this month for AIG board in May 2009. He was Div: Current annual dividend rate paid on stock, based on latest quarterly or semiannu- al declaration, unless otherwise footnoted. received about $34 billion so far. a government program aimed at chairman and CEO of American Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. spurring lending to consumers Express Co. from 1993 to 2001. Chg: Loss or gain for the day. No change indicated by ... mark. SEC: Ex-AIG CEO and small businesses at lower New York-based American Fund Name: Name of mutual fund and family. rates. International Group Inc. Sell: Net asset value, or price at which fund could be sold. Chg: Daily net change in the NAV. Greenberg settles The Federal Reserve Bank of announced in May that Liddy, New York said Thursday that who took over the insurer in Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. d – New 52-wk low fraud charges during trading day. g – Dividend in Canadian $. Stock price in U.S.$. n – New issue in investors requested $6.9 billion September, would step down as past 52 wks. q – Closed-end mutual fund; no PE calculated. s – Split or stock dividend of NEW YORK — The Securities worth of loans. That tally is up soon as a search for a replace- 25 pct or more in last 52 wks. Div begins with date of split or stock dividend. u – New 52- wk high during trading day. v – Trading halted on primary market. Unless noted, dividend and Exchange Commission said from $5.4 billion worth of loans ment was complete. rates are annual disbursements based on last declaration. pf – Preferred. pp – Holder Thursday that former American requested last month. AIG’s annual shareholder owes installment(s) of purchase price. rt – Rights. un – Units. wd – When distributed. wi – When issued. wt – Warrants. ww – With warrants. xw – Without warrants. International Group Inc. CEO Investors use the money to buy meeting is June 30. At that time, Dividend Footnotes: a – Also extra or extras. b – Annual rate plus stock dividend. c – Liquidating dividend. e – Declared or paid in preceding 12 mos. f – Annual rate, increased Maurice “Hank” Greenberg agreed newly issued securities backed by, investors will vote on a slate of on last declaration. i – Declared or paid after stock dividend or split. j – Paid this year, divi- to pay a $15 million fine to settle among other things, auto and stu- new independent directors. dend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last meeting. k – Declared or paid this year, accumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m – Annual rate, reduced on last declara- fraud charges. dent loans, credit cards, business tion. p – Init div, annual rate unknown. r – Declared or paid in preceding 12 mos plus The charges are tied to an equipment and loans guaranteed — Wire reports stock dividend. t – Paid in stock in last 12 mos, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or distribution date. x – Ex-dividend or ex-rights. y – Ex-dividend and sales in full. z – Sales in full. vj – In bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such companies. • Most active stocks above must be worth $1 and gainers/losers $2. Mutual Fund Footnotes: e – Ex-capital gains distribution. f – Previous day’s quote. n - back-to-school shopping as No-load fund. p – Fund assets used to pay distribution costs. r – Redemption fee or con- tingent deferred sales load may apply. s – Stock dividend or split. t – Both p and r. x – Ex- consumers shift available cash cash dividend. Sales to car payments. Jobless Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial. Continued from Business 1 A monthly compilation of Continued from Business 1 accounts and slumping home more than 50 retailers’results by economy appears more or less to have prices have made them focus on The International Council of stabilized,” Ian Shepherdson, chief COMMODITIES REPORT necessities like food and other Shopping Centers and Goldman U.S. economist at High Frequency basics. But stores are also grap- Sachs showed overall same- Economics, said in a note to clients B EANS C HEESE pling with a newly adopted fru- store sales fell 5.0 percent in July before the department’s report. Cheddar cheese prices on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange gality as consumers — even compared with the year-ago When emergency extensions of Valley Beans Barrels: $1.2700, + .0100: Blocks: $1.2900, + .0200 those with secure jobs — learn period. Same-store sales are unemployment are included, the total Prices are net to growers, 100 pounds, U.S. No. 1 beans, less Idaho bean tax and storage charges. Prices subject to change how to save money and stick to a sales at stores open at least a rolls climbed to a record 9.35 million without notice. Producers desiring more recent price informa- L IVESTOCK tion should contact dealers. budget. year and are considered a key for the week ending July 18, the most Pintos, no quote, new crop; great northerns, no quote; pinks, no quote, new crop; small reds, no quote, new crop. Prices are JEROME — Producers Livestock Marketing Association in A number of special factors indicator of a retailer’s health. recent data available. Congress has given by Rangens in Buhl. Prices current Aug. 5. Jerome reports the following prices from the dairy sale held also depressed July’s sales July’s pace was in line with the added up to 53 extra weeks of benefits Other Idaho bean prices are collected weekly by Bean Market Wednesday, Aug. 5. News, U.S. Department of Agriculture: Pintos, not established; Top springer: $1,500 head results. Lean inventories left 5.1 percent drop in June and on top of the 26 typically provided by great northerns, not established; small whites, not estab- Top 10 springers: $1,470 head lished; pinks, not established; small reds, not established. Top 50 springers: $1,400 head fewer clearance options for bar- worse than the 4.5 percent the states. Quotes current Aug. 5. Top 150 springers: $1,200 head Fresh heifers: $1,100 to $1,135 head gain hunters, as stores wanted to decline averaged since February, The increase in the number of peo- Advance consignment sale, Tuesday, Aug. 11: protect themselves from getting the beginning of retailers’ fiscal ple continuing to claim benefits is a RAINS 100 head choice 700 to 800 lbs. steers: 80 head choice 700 to G 800 lbs. steers and heifers stuck with piles of leftovers. The calendar. sign that jobs remain scarce and the Intermountain Livestock shift of the sales-tax holidays July’s decline marks the 11th unemployed are having difficulty Valley Grains LIVESTOCK AUCTION — Idaho Livestock Auction in Idaho Falls Prices for wheat per bushel: mixed grain, oats, corn and beans on Wednesday Utility and commercial cows 44.00-54.00 from July to August in most of consecutive monthly drop when finding new work. per hundred weight. Prices subject to change without notice. canner & cutters 32.00-50.00; heavy feeder steers 87.00- the 14 states that have them excluding Wal-Mart results — Despite the improvement, weekly Soft white wheat, no quote barley, $6.20 oats, 96.00; light feeder steers n/a; stocker steers n/a; heavy hol- $6.50 corn, $6.90 (15 percent moisture). Prices are stein feeder steers 54.00-66.00; light holstein feeder steers because of a late Labor Day which had buoyed the industry jobless claims remain far above the given daily by Rangens in Buhl. Prices current Aug. 5. n/a; heavy feeder heifers 85.00-90.00; light feeder heifers Barley, $5.75 (48-lb. minimum) spot delivery in Twin Falls and 87.00-95.00; stocker heifers n/a; slaughter bulls 52.00-63.00 weekend also stole momentum in the spring before it stopped 300,000 to 350,000 that analysts say Gooding: corn, no quote (Twin Falls only). Prices quoted by baby calves n/a; stock cows n/a; stock cow/calf pairs n/a Land O’Lakes Inc. in Twin Falls. Prices current Aug. 5. feeder lambs 85.00-89.00; weaner pigs n/a. Remarks: All from July. reporting monthly numbers. is consistent with a healthy economy. classes strong. Frank Badillo, senior econo- Merchants are seeing indica- New claims last fell below 300,000 in Intermountain Grain POCATELLO (AP) — Idaho Farm Bureau Intermountain Grain mist at consulting group TNS tions that sales decreases are early 2007. and Livestock Report on Thursday. P OTATOES POCATELLO — White wheat 4.50 (down 20); 11.5 percent winter Retail Forward, and other ana- easing. However, business The recession, which began in 4.56 (down 16); 14 percent spring 5.26 (down 28); Barley 5.52 (steady) lysts have also noted that the remains weak even amid signs of December 2007 and is the longest BURLEY — White wheat 4.10 (down 5); 11.5 percent winter 4.44 Potatoes uptick in car buying spurred by economic stabilization. since World War II, has eliminated a (down 26); 14 percent spring 5.26 (down 28); Barley 5.25 CHICAGO (AP) — USDA — Major potato markets FOB shipping (steady) points Wednesday. the government’s “cash for A worrisome sign for mer- net total of 6.5 million jobs.The unem- OGDEN — White wheat 4.50 (down 15); 11.5 percent winter 4.52 Russet Burbanks Idaho 50-lb cartons 70 count 13.00: 100 (down 27); 14 percent spring 5.24 (down 28); Barley 5.00 count 7.00. clunkers” program might chants — and the broader econ- ployment rate is expected to rise to 9.6 (down 25) Baled 5-10 lb film bags (Size A) 3.25-3.50. PORTLAND — White wheat 4.95 (down 5); 11.5 percent winter Russet Norkotahs Washington 50-lb cartons 70 count 13.00- siphon sales from other cate- omy of which consumer spend- percent when the July figure is report- 5.49-5.59 (down 21 to 26); 14 percent spring 6.61 (down 28), 15.00: 100 count 9.00-10.00. gories like clothing and home ing makes up 70 percent — is a ed Friday. The jobless rate of 9.5 per- barley n/a Baled 5-10 lb film bags (Size A) 4.50-5.00. NAMPA — White wheat cwt 6.83 (down 29): bushel 4.10 (down 17) Round Reds 50-lb cartons Size A Minnesota 11.00-11.25. furnishings. That could hurt 1.2 percent decline in consumer cent in June marked a 26-year high. Auction Clunkers h rough Continued from Business 1 and to require the govern- cles. Administration offi- There are similar guide- August th off-limits to the wealthy. ment to sell its stake in cials estimate the extra lines for SUVs and pickup SATURDAY, AUG , :am TUESDAY AUG , :am As the program stands, General Motors Co. and funding will last into Labor trucks. Taz LLC, Am. Dream, Heyburn Microsoft founder Bill Gates Chrysler Group LLC. Day. Dealers are barred from Public Auto Auction,TF Trucks • Trailers • Backhoes can get $4,500 to buy a new The program began 10 Under the program, pas- reselling the old models, and Cars • Trailers • Boats • RVs Equipment • Pickups • Trucks Skid Steers • Vehicles • Boat car, said Sen. Tom Harkin, days ago with $1 billion, senger car owners are eligible are charged with assuring Times-News Phone 734-2548 • Fax 735-8175 Ad: 8-9 D-Iowa. “You have to ask, is designed to help automobile for a voucher worth $3,500 if their destruction. US AUCTION this a wise way to spend makers and consumers they trade in a vehicle getting Jeremy Anwyl, CEO of the HUNTS AUTO AUCTION www.us-auctioneers.com limited amounts of while contributing to a 18 miles per gallon or less for auto Web site SATURDAY, AUG , :pm money?” cleaner environment. The a new car getting at least 22 Edmunds.com, said the SATURDAY AUG , :am Auction, Twin Falls Republicans readied government said mpg. Vouchers of $4,500 are unintended result is that Jack Lintelmann Estate, TF Furniture • Appliances • Tools amendments to terminate Wednesday that more than available for owners who vehicle prices are climbing. Appliances • Entertainment the Troubled Assets Relief $775 million of the original trade in a passenger car get- “What we’ve created now Collectibles • Garden Items Excercise • Furniture • Music Instr. Times-News Ad: 8-13 Program that has spent bil- funds has been spent, ting 18 mpg or less for a is a shortage for key models,” Phone 734-2548 • Fax 735-8175 HUNT BROS. AUCTIONS MASTERS AUCTION lions bailing out banks and accounting for the sale of model that gets at least 28 he said. “Prices are going up www.mastersauction.com other financial institutions, nearly 185,000 new vehi- mpg. dramatically.” MONDAY, AUG , :pm WEDNESDAY AUG , :am General Merchandise, TF Anderson Trucking, Heyburn Furniture • Household • Tools Semi Trucks • Trailers • Beds Collectibles • Consignments Welcome Backhoes • Vehicles • Farm Eq 734-1635 • 731-4567 Times-News Ad: 8-16 Check out what’s new online at www.magicvalley.com IDAHO AUCTION BARN US AUCTION www.idahoauctionbarn.com www.us-auctioneers.com SECTION EDITOR ERIC LARSEN: (208) 735-3220 [email protected] FRIDAY,AUGUST 7,2009 BUSINESS 3 TTwinwin FFallsalls Covering the communities of Buhl, Castleford, Filer, Hansen, COMMUNITY Hollister, Kimberly, Murtaugh, Rogerson, Twin Falls Mud races return T.F. Co. to Castleford

Dedication By Blair Koch Fair honors TAKE PART Times-News correspondent THE BUHL BUNCH CASTLEFORD — For the CLUB CAR SHOW Masters, fifth annual Shakin’ the Rock JEAN’S PARK, CASTLEFORD mud races at the Buhl Bunch SATURDAY EVENTS Car Show in Castleford, 8 a.m. – Park opens, car show coordinator Cliff Lockhart registration, display begins Brown wanted to bring in something 10:30 a.m. – Burn-outs on honored special for the wildly popular strip, west end of park sport. 11:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. – “This year we’ve got a spe- Shakin’ the Rock mud races By John E. Swayze cial attraction — we’ve got Noon to 4:30 p.m. – Poker Times-News correspondent Lil’ Camino coming,” run, beginning at Jean’s Park Lockhart said. “This is a full- 5:30 p.m. – Burn-out finals FILER — His civic- bore alcohol mud racer.” 9 p.m. – Street dance on Main minded generosity and The car, owned and raced Street auctioneering skill have by Carl Erickson of Soda SUNDAY EVENTS benefited countless events Springs, will likely tear 8:30 a.m. – Church in the park and organizations around through the 150-foot mud pit 9 a.m. – Park opens, horse- the Magic Valley. in under two seconds, said shoe tournament registra- On Monday, the Twin Lockhart. tion, mud races begin Falls County Fair Board rec- “This will be special,” 10 a.m. – Horseshoe tourna- ognized Buhl resident Lyle Lockhart said. ment Masters for five decades of The car is just one of 100 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. – Car show service by naming the fair- expected at this year’s mud vehicle judging ground’s sale barn and races, held Saturday and Noon – Fire hose competition arena in his honor. Sunday in the field just west 2:30 p.m. – Awards and prizes “Not often does one man of Jean’s Park in Castleford. announced come around who donates Lockhart said the races, his time so unselfishly to his part of the Dirty Idaho Racing community,” said Twin Toys (DIRT) circuit, are 11:30 a.m. Saturday, followed Falls County Fair Board pulling drivers from across by the national anthem and Chairman Ralph Denton. Photos by JOHN E. SWAYZE/For the Times-News the state and beyond. color guard ceremony. The “The board saw it very fit- The Twin Falls County Fair Board honored longtime fair supporter and past board member Lyle Masters DIRT was developed by races will start around noon. ting to dedicate the sale Monday by dedicating the sale barn in his name. They are, from left to right, board members Eric Lee, Ted Lockhart this year; In addition to mud flying in arena to Lyle Masters.” Cornie, Fair Manager John Pitz, honoree Lyle Masters, board members Tara Balkley, Paul Holcomb, Board Castleford is just one stop Castleford, events also Masters was part of FFA along the circuit, which include the show-and-shine in high school and achieved Chair Ralph Denton, Jim Barker and Gretchen Clelland. includes Richfield, Bliss, car shoe, burn outs, street distinction as a state Payette and Mountain Home. dance and fireworks. farmer, but admits he was- chutes were built for “The center was one of Twin Falls County 4-H and “We just keep bringing in Buhl Bunch Car Club Car n’t too involved with fair Shouse Arena and a canvas the first things I was con- FFA Junior Market Animal bigger motors,” Lockhart Show Coordinator Mindy activities. Since then, he top was installed over one fronted with when I came Sale Program’s fat stock said. Snyder said another popular served eight years, 1996- of the smaller animal show on the board,”he said. “I’ve sale. He also keeps the The mud races, which cost event for show attendees is 2003, as a member of the rings. Around 1997 the always felt bad that we action moving during the $35 to enter, begin with a fair board and has always board began work on plans haven’t been able to get it Magic Valley Dairy Heifer mandatory driver meeting at See MUD, Business 4 been willing to help in other to build an event center on passed, because it would be Program auction held every areas. fairground property,but the a great asset to the commu- Saturday during the fair. During his tenure, which bond to finance construc- nity.” “I love the fair and have included three years as tion has yet to win voter Masters has also contin- been a supporter all my board chairman, new rodeo approval. ued as auctioneer for the adult life,”he said. “I made COMMUNITY NEWS a lot of friends on the board from all over the Magic Chess exhibition Pothier, the son of Beverly Valley and miss working Pothier of Twin Falls, gradu- with such a great bunch of draws 22 contenders ated from Macalester College people who works so hard Idaho State Chess in St. Paul, Minn., during the to make it a success every Champion Garrett Reynolds college’s 120th commence- year.” of Boise won 19 games, lost ment exercises on May 16. Fair Board members also one and drew two at the He was also named to the presented the family of simultaneous chess exhibi- college dean’s list for aca- Wallace Brown, who passed tion held Aug. 1 in down- demic achievement during away in March, with a cer- town Twin Falls. the spring semester of the tificate of appreciation for The only player to beat 2008-09 school year. his contributions to the fair Reynolds was Armando De la Presa-Pothier and 4-H beef program. Arambula of Twin Falls. received a liberal arts degree Brown was honored in 2007 Chris Viveros, of Twin Falls, in cognitive and neuro- by having his name placed and Andrew Crist, of Filer, science studies and psychol- on the sale barn and arena. played the champion to ogy. He is a graduate of This year the board and draws. Twin Falls High School. members of the Brown Exhibition organizers family agreed that it would thank the businesses, public Area students be more appropriate to officials and chess players transfer his name to the who made the event possi- excel at Vermont fairground’s 4-H and FFA ble. Nicole Sabsook, of Twin Beef Barn. Getting the beef Falls, has been named to the The Twin Falls County Fair Board dedicated the 4-H FFA Beef Barn in honor of past board member barn’s electrical wiring Pothier earns degree dean’s list for the spring Wallace Brown. Pictured, from left to right, are board members Eric Lee, Ted Cornie, Tara Balkley, Paul upgraded was among the 2009 semester at the Holcomb, Jeanie Brown, Dakota Brown, board members Jim Barker, Gretchen Clelland and Fair Manager in neuroscience See COMMUNITY, Business 4 John Pitz. See HONORED, Business 4 Martin de la Presa-

T WIN F ALLS L IONS DONATE

Courtesy photos Ken Easton, left, of the Twin Falls Monarch Lions Club, recently presented a check for $1,000 to Maj. Ed Twin Falls Monarch Lions Club members Irene and Ken Easton present a check for $250 to Sharon Patterson, right, of the Salvation Army. Breshears, center, director of Valley House. These recurring nasal polyps were not so benign DEAR DR. GOTT: In the ty. They were growing back polyps know about this asthmatics or other people cent of all cases. late 1970s to early 1980s, I every time they were condition. who experience frequent or Approximately 70 percent had symptoms of nasal ASK chopped off. I had to have DEAR READER: Most chronic nasal/sinus prob- of SPs are classified as IPs, polyps. I had to have them DR. GOTT facial surgery in 1986 to nasal polyps are benign lems. They are not cancer- which means that approxi- removed three times over a remove the tumor. growths that cause few, if ous and are rarely the result mately one out of every period of eight years. After Dr. Peter Gott I have been fine ever any, symptoms. Larger of nasal tumors. 100,000 people has the the third removal, the doc- since. I know of three other polyps can block the sinus- Inverting papillomas condition, making it very tor sent out a biopsy. was a tumor the size of a people at my workplace es, causing breathing diffi- (IPs) are the most common rare. The growth was deter- golf ball in my left maxil- who had similar ailments. culties, frequent sinus form of a rare set of nasal At this time, surgery is mined to be an inverting lary sinus cavity. I was told They all had surgery, but infections, allergy-like tumors known as sinonasal the primary treatment papilloma. My doctor then that the “polyps” were its they died as results of their symptoms and a loss of papillomas (SPs). Of all option for these types of sent me to get an X-ray, roots that were being sent tumors, so please let other smell. They are most com- primary nasal tumors, SPs and it was found that there out through my nasal cavi- people with recurring mon in allergy sufferers, comprise up to only 4 per- See DR. GOTT, Business 4 Business 4 Friday, August 7, 2009 COMMUNITY Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Job’s Daughters help area youth Due to a philanthropic project created for mem- bers of Job’s Daughters, a Masonic youth organiza- tion for girls, 3-year-old Rhett Scott of Buhl will be able to continue hearing the sounds of the world. Hearing Impaired Kids Courtesy photo Endowment Fund has cho- Buhl Basque Dancers, led by Jennifer Zamora, performed Basque sen Rhett as one of this dances in costumes for the Buhl Public Library’s Summer Reading year’s recipients for assis- Program. The dancers were Zoey Wonenberg, Kayanna Zamora, tance for new hearing aids. Rhett, the son of Shannon Taylor Zamora and Ellie Harshbargen. and Stacy Wilson of Buhl and Tregg Scott of Twin Falls, has sensorineural Buhl library reading hearing loss in the inner ears. There is no cure. Members of the Twin Falls Job’s Daughters, program wraps up Bethels 43 and 56 awarded Courtesy photo the family a check for The Summer Reading carnival, homemade root $3,000 to help defray Pictured from left, front, Chazarae Shoup, Hope Eskridge, Madison Collins, Honored Queen Bethel 43 Haley Program at the Buhl Public beer and hot dogs. expenses for the hearing Peterson, Rhett Scott, Shannon Wilson, Honored Queen Bethel 56 Nicole Petersen, Kaylynn Whitted, Alex Library offered participants Guest readers included: aids. Hudson; back row, Chelsea Bonnett, Kaitlyn Hager, Hanna Dishaw, Kailee Hudson and Ariel Brim. a variety of experiences. library board member Ellen Events included Ensign Asay, teachers Judy Juker Blue and his Theremin, and Dottie Henkelman, and who showed the children Louise Nofziger. how to play the instrument After-school book club F ILER LIBRARY HAS NEW MATERIALS without touching it; Cheryl members were: Madison Recent additions at the Filer Diana Palmer, “White” by Ted Predicts the Future” by Megan B Jones is Captain Field Day” by Bruce and her daughter Somer, Carlee Finney, Keri Public Library include: Dekker,“Red” by Ted Dekker, McDonald, Judy Moody M.D. Barbara Park, “Garfield Christina from the Twin and David Harker, Trey Books “Right Next Door” by Debbie The Doctor is In!” by Megan Worldwide” by Jim Davis, Falls Creative Arts Center Barger, Drake Christensen, “Twilight”by Stephenie Meyer, Macomber “Sign Language McDonald, “Judy Moody “Garfield Food for Thought” by taught how to make origa- Garrett and Morgan “Masquerade Blue Bloods” by Made Simple” by Edgar D. Declares Independence” by Jim Davis, “Garfield Chews the mi cranes and hats that Montgomery and Jackson Melissa DeLa Cruz, My Sisters Lawrence, “American Sign Megan McDonald, “Revenge of Fat” by Jim Davis were displayed in the park and Alison Hauser. Keeper”,by Jodi Picoult, “Finger Language” by David A. Stewart, the Wannabes” by Lisi Harrison, DVDs at the mini-art show held Volunteers included: Kari Lickin’ Fifteen” by Janet “50 Golf Jokes for (Almost) all “Saint John Bosco and Saint “Open Water,”“Happily Never on the Fourth of July; Kaster, Judy Pike, Ruth Ann Evanovich, “Guardian of Lies” Occasions” by Franklin Dominic Savio” by Catherine After,”“Eraser,”“Thomas and Jeanne Bunch and her Harker, Jennifer Okleberry Steve Martini, “Killer Summer” Dohanyos, “Mother Teresa 1910- Beebe, “Midnight for Charle the Magic Railroad,”The handmade puppets per- and Melody Young. by Ridley Pearson, “Black Hills” 1997” by Joana Hurley “Judy Bone” by Jenny Nimmo, “Charle Madness of King George,”“MIB: formed a play using the Area businesses and by Nora Roberts, “The Pagan Moody” by Megan McDonald, Bone and the Time Twister” by Men In Black 2,”“Super Size characters she created. service clubs donated Sign Stone of Seven” by Nora “Judy Moody Gets Famous!” by Jenny Nimmo, “Just Imagine Me,”“3 Ninjas,”“Tommy Boy,” Participants were also money and goods to the Roberts, “Swimsuit” by James Megan McDonald, “Judy Moody with Barney” by Mary Shrode, “Wild Hogs,” “The Forbidden entertained by the Buhl program so that every child Patterson, “Just Breathe” by Saves the World!” by Megan “Junie B, First Grader: Toothless Kingdom,”“Extreme Ops,”“Eight Basque Dancers, who per- that attended received a Susan Wiggs, “Fearless” by McDonald, “Judy Moody Wonder” by Barbara Park, “Junie Below” formed Basque dances in book and those who could costumes. The library fin- not attend received a book ished the program with a from the outreach efforts.

SOMEBODY NEEDS YOU drive and the game is a lot of fun, too,”Snyder said. Volunteers — Hospice Visions needs WANT TO HELP? tion, needs volunteers in Twin Falls, Mud On Sunday,in Jean’s Park, volunteers for office work, patient Buhl, Kimberly and Filer to assist indi- Continued from Business 3 there is a fire hose competi- assistance, fundraising, grocery shop- viduals with transportation, home- the poker run, slated to be tion and horseshoe tourna- ping, yard work (both at Hospice Home This public service column is designed to maker services, visiting and monitor- match needs in the Magic Valley with volun- longer than in years past. ment scheduled, as well as and at the office) and grant writing. ing, respite and other tasks. Mileage The riding tour/card an early-morning commu- Information: Flo, 735-0121. teer help. If you need a volunteer, contact the reimbursement is available. game will take participants nity church service. Wheelchairs — LINC needs good, Retired and Senior Volunteer Program Information: Karen, 733-6333. used wheelchairs, preferably with foot (RSVP) at 736-4764, before noon Volunteers —The Senior Health from Castleford to Buhl and Castleford Mayor Richard rests. The nonprofit group takes used Wednesday for Friday publication. RSVP is a Insurance Benefits Advisors program back with stops at Balanced Schlund praised the event medical equipment and gives or loans United Way-sponsored agency at the College needs volunteers willing to counsel Rock, Magic Water and is looking forward to it to people in need of assistance. To of Southern Idaho. Medicare beneficiaries in all aspects of Reservoir, Miracle Hot this weekend. donate: Julie, 733-1712. Medicare benefits. Full training will be Springs, Black Bear Tavern, “The show is a real boon Volunteers — Idaho Home Health Mentors — Retired and Senior provided. Information: Tamara or Mimi’s Flower’s and Gifts, to Castleford. All the people and Hospice needs volunteers to help in Volunteer Program needs volunteers in Nora, 736-4713. Blue Rock Winery and that come in to our little the office, provide respite care, be Twin Falls and Jerome counties to Volunteers — St. Luke’s Magic Nunes Family Dairy. town for the show, it’s companions and read to patients in the mentor children with a parent in Valley Medical Center has several vol- “People like to go for the great,”Schlund said. Twin Falls, Gooding, Wendell, Jerome, prison. Volunteers must undergo a unteer positions available on a regular Burley, Rupert and Buhl areas. complete FBI background check and be or project basis. Information: Kim, Volunteers are also needed to hold willing to mentor a child for a mini- 737-2006, [email protected]; or positions on the Friends of Hospice mum of four hours each month for one Linda, 933-4844, lindat@ mvrmc.org. line that something serious Board of Directors. Friends of Hospice year. Information: Ken, 736-2122, ext. Volunteers — St. Luke’s Volunteer could have been prevented is a nonprofit organization that pro- 2394, or [email protected]. Services needs volunteer golf cart driv- Dr. Gott or caught early. vides grants to hospice patients and Volunteers/donations — The ers to shuttle patients to and from the Continued from Business 3 I am printing your letter their families. Information: Nichole, College of Southern Idaho Refugee parking lot at St. Luke’s Magic Valley tumors. Radiation therapy as a reminder to my readers 734-4061, ext. 117, or nichole@idaho- Center needs volunteers to befriend Medical Center. Flexible hours. is considered only for those to seek out medical help and homehealth.com. newly arrived refugee families and pro- Information: Kim, 737-2006, kimpa@ with advanced and aggres- testing for persistent or Drivers —Twin Falls Senior Citizens vide English tutoring, transportation mvrmc.org; or Linda, 933-4844, lin- sive tumors or for those at recurring medical condi- Center needs drivers to deliver hot for grocery shopping and visits. The dat@ mvrmc.org. meals to the homebound. Volunteers center also needs donations of twin or Volunteers — St. Luke’s Volunteer too great a risk for surgery. tions (such as nasal polyps) can drive one day a week or more. double beds and frames, kitchen tables Services needs accomplished musi- Depending on the type of to ensure that something Information: Karen, 734-5084. and chairs, fans, children’s and adult cians willing to volunteer time and tal- surgical removal performed, more sinister is not the Volunteers — Retired and Senior bicycles, vacuums, and washers and ent to bring comfort and entertain- up to 78 percent of sufferers cause. Thank you for shar- Volunteer Program needs volunteer dryers. Donated items can be taken to ment to patients and their families at may have experienced ing your experience. drivers, age 55 and older, in the Mini- the center,8 a.m. to 5 p.m. (closed noon St.Luke’s Magic Valley Medical Center. recurrence of the lesions. To provide related infor- Cassia area to take senior citizens to to 1 p.m.), Monday through Friday, at Two pianos are available,and the group Some recurrences may mation, I am sending you medical appointments and for grocery 1526 Highland Ave. E., Twin Falls. is open to other musical options. occur within the first two copies of my Health Reports shopping. Volunteers are reimbursed Information: Michelle, 736-2166. Information: Kim, 737-2006, kimpa@ years after removal, but “Medical Specialists” and mileage and covered by excess insurance. Volunteers — Interfaith Volunteer mvrmc.org; or Linda, 933-4844, lin- most are seen five to 10 “An Informed Approach to Information: Kitty,677-4872, ext. 2. Caregivers, a local nonprofit organiza- dat@ mvrmc.org. years after the initial treat- Surgery.”Other readers who ment, so follow-up moni- would like copies should toring is vital. send a self-addressed In general, the tumors are stamped No. 10 envelope harmless but if they grow and a check or money order too large, facial deformities for $2 per report to Honored may result. If the tumor Newsletter, P.O. Box 167, Continued from Business 3 competitions and the county “The certificate is some- Falls County 4-H program begins to grow backward Wickliffe, OH 44092. Be fair projects he was instru- fair at age 8. For many years, thing that Wallace had and the Twin Falls County toward the brain, other sure to mention the title(s). mental in seeing to comple- he ran cattle on Bureau of never seen, never got,” Fair.” complications may occur. tion. Land Management range in Denton said. “It’s for Because of the nature of the Readers who would like Brown grew up around the South Hills and was the appreciation for 31 years of John E. Swayze may be tumor and the tissue from to contact Dr. Peter Gott, cattle on a family farm and leader of the South Hills outstanding service and reached at swayzef@ which it arises, there is a they may send their mail started showing steers in 4-H Sidekicks 4-H Club. dedication to the Twin aol.com or 208-326-7212. chance for malignancy,so directly to Dr. Gott c/o getting appropriate medical United Media, 200 help and testing is impor- Madison Ave., 4th fl., New tant. York, NY 10016. However, People with recurring if readers want to request a nasal polyps should request newsletter, they should Community a biopsy to determine why write to the Ohio address. Continued from Business 3 Amanda Richardson, of 2009 semester at the tive grade-point average the lesions continue to University of Vermont in Twin Falls, received a Master University of San Francisco. must be 3.5 or better. return. In most cases, the Foot Clinic Burlington, Vt. Sabsook is a of Science in Community To be eli- Filas completed her junior cause is harmless, but it has Arch / Heel Pain Toe / Joint Pain senior political science Development and Applied gible, a stu- year in the Dual Degree in always been my opinion Ingrown Toenails Toenail Problems major in the university’s Economics, and Nicole dent must be Teacher Education program that it is better to pay for a Corns / Calluses Other Foot Problems College of Arts and Sciences. Sabsook received a Bachelor enrolled in 12 and will complete her bach- test that turns out false than Timothy G. Tomlinson, DPM To be named to the dean’s of Arts in Political Science. units or more elor’s degree in the spring of it is to discover down the 1120 Montana Gooding 9348829 lists, students must have a of course 2010. She will earn her grade-point average of 3.0 or Filas on dean’s list work and Masters of Arts in Teaching better and rank in the top 20 achieve a 3.5 in the spring of 2011. percent of their class in their at San Francisco grade-point Filas She is the daughter of respective college or school. Laura Filas of Twin Falls average for Louis and Eva Filas of Twin Churches. . . Area students also earned has been named to the the semester. In addition, Falls and a 2006 graduate of degrees at the university. dean’s list for the spring the student’s USF cumula- Twin Falls High School. Advertise your special programs or daily ¢ services in the 5 Bonus! h e family of Times-News. Inform On Aluminum Cans! William “Wimpy” Spain the community about invites you to celebrate his what is happening in your church. th Birthday, August th Bring in this coupon for an extra 5 cents  per pound. No grocery bags. Twin Falls Church of the Nazarene Cans must be clean, dry & free of trash. Sawtooth Room,  Washington Cannot combine with any other offer or coupon. Expires 09-30-09 Street North, :-: pm. No Call your advertising consultant today for special rates. 114 Market St. Twin Falls git s please, just your presence. Karen at 2087353270 email: [email protected] 733-9690 P.O. Box 548 132 Fairfi eld St. W. Twin Falls, ID 83301 Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho COMICS Friday, August 7, 2009 Business 5

B.C. By Johnny Hart Baby Blues By Rick Kirkman & Jerry Scott

Beetle Bailey By Mort Walker Blondie By Dean Young & Stan Drake

Dilbert By Scott Adams The Elderberries By Phil Frank and Joe Troise

For Better or For Worse By Lynn Johnston Frank and Ernest By Bob Thaves

Garfield By Jim Davis Hagar the Horrible By Chris Browne

Hi and Lois By Chance Browne Luann By Greg Evans

Classic Peanuts By Charles M. Schulz Pearls Before Swine By Stephan Pastis

Pickles By Brian Crane Rose is Rose By Pat Brady

Non Sequitur By Wiley Dennis the Menace By Hank Ketcham The Wizard of Id By Brant Parker & Johnny Hart

Zits By Jim Borgman and Jerry Scott

Use this space to advertise for as little as 50 per day! For more details, phone 733-0931, ext. 4 and ask about the Comics Page ad space. Business 6 Friday, August 7, 2009 Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho

BURLEY/RUPERT FORECAST TWIN FALLS FIVE-DAY FORECAST Yesterday’s Weather Today: Gusty thunderstorms and isolated showers possible. Today Tonight Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday City Hi Lo Prcp Highs middle to upper 60s. Boise 71 62 0.76" Tonight: Chance of rain. Lows upper 40s. Challis 82 55 0.05" Coeur d’ Alene 82 61 0.00" Idaho Falls 91 56 0.03" Tomorrow: Isolated thunderstorm activity. Highs near 70. Jerome 80 58 Trace Lewiston 83 68 0.00" Lowell 83 63 0.36" Malad City not available Malta 91 55 n/a ALMANAC - BURLEY Cool withC/ rain and Rain chances Mostly cloudy, then Warmer Pleasant with A mix of sun and Pocatello 95 54 0.00" thunder press on clearing sunny periods clouds Rexburg 87 57 0.10" Temperature Precipitation Salmon 75 57 0.27" Stanley 65 49 0.33" Sun Valley 79 52 0.00" Yesterday’s High 88 Yesterday’s 0.04" High 67 Low 48 74 / 51 82 / 55 88 / 58 89 / 57 Yesterday’s Low 56 Month to Date 0.04" Normal High / Low 89 / 53 Avg. Month to Date 0.08" ALMANAC - TWIN FALLS Record High 103 in 1998 Water Year to Date 11.28" Record Low 36 in 1950 Avg. Water Year to Date 9.30" Barometric Sunrise and Pollen Temperature Precipitation Humidity Pressure Sunset Count IDAHO’S FORECAST Yesterday’s High 82 Yesterday’s Trace Yesterday High 69% 5 p.m. Yesterday 29.80 in. Today Sunrise: 6:36 AM Sunset: 8:50 PM TF pollen count yesterday: Yesterday’s Low 55 Month to Date 0.01" Yesterday Low 34% Saturday Sunrise: 6:37 AM Sunset: 8:49 PM 29 (Mod.) Kochia, Russian SUN VALLEY, SURROUNDING MTS. Normal High / Low 87 / 53 Avg. Month to Date 0.07" Today’s Forecast High 77% Sunday Sunrise: 6:39 AM Sunset: 8:47 PM Thistle Cool with showers likely and a few thunderstorms Record High 95 in 2005 Water Year to Date 12.92" Today’s Forecast Low 44% Monday Sunrise: 6:40 AM Sunset: 8:46 PM Mold: 6600 (High) possible today. Becoming less likely to rain on Record Low 43 in 1969 Avg. Water Year to Date10.09" A water year runs from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 Tuesday Sunrise: 6:41 AM Sunset: 8:45 PM Cladosporium,Smuts Saturday. Drier and warmer by Sunday. Temperature and precipitation valid through 5 p.m. Courtesy of Asthma and Allergy of Idaho U. V. INDEX Dr.’s Kadlec and Henry Coeur d’ Moon Phases Moonrise Low Moderate High Alene Today Highs 52 to 60 Tonight’s Lows 31 to 40 and Moonset Forecasts and maps prepared by: Scattered showers and Today Moonrise: 9:28 PM Moonset: 8:16 AM 64 / 54 BOISE 4 thunderstorms are likely to put a Saturday Moonrise: 9:48 PM Moonset: 9:18 AM Last New First Full The higher the index the Cheyenne, Wyoming dent in any outdoor plans today. Aug. 13 Aug. 20 Aug. 27 Sept. 4 Sunday Moonrise: 10:09 PM Moonset: 10:21 AM more sun protection needed www.dayweather.com The chance for rain will fade away on Saturday. It'll be dry and warm REGIONAL FORECAST NATIONAL FORECAST WORLD FORECAST by Sunday. Lewiston Today Tomorrow Sunday Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow 72 / 60 Today Highs/Lows 63 to 68/45 to 50 City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Hi Lo W City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Boise 65 47 th 74 51 mc 83 55 pc Atlanta 94 69 pc 92 71 pc Orlando 92 75 th 94 76 th Acapulco 85 76 r 89 77 th Moscow 65 46 pc 59 51 pc Grangeville NORTHERN UTAH Bonners Ferry 70 54 th 75 53 mc 82 54 pc Atlantic City 81 66 pc 81 66 pc Philadelphia 85 64 pc 86 67 th Athens 89 73 su 89 73 su Nairobi 70 54 sh 69 52 r Comfortably cool with Burley 66 47 th 70 48 th 78 52 pc Baltimore 84 65 pc 88 72 th Phoenix 103 77 su 103 80 su Auckland 58 44 pc 56 41 pc Oslo 75 56 sh 72 59 sh 62 / 49 isolated showers and Challis 65 47 th 70 48 mc 79 51 pc Billings 77 57 th 80 54 th Portland, ME 69 54 th 66 58 pc Bangkok 82 76 th 79 76 r Paris 80 52 sh 75 61 pc Coeur d’ Alene 64 54 th 74 52 mc 79 54 pc Birmingham 95 68 su 95 72 su Raleigh 90 67 pc 97 74 th Beijing 92 67 pc 93 67 sh Prague 79 54 pc 80 55 pc thunderstorms possible Elko, NV 64 38 th 69 40 th 80 44 pc Boston 80 62 pc 75 61 pc Rapid City 87 61 th 85 57 th Berlin 84 64 pc 84 65 sh Rio de Jane 77 63 sh 80 60 pc today and again on Eugene, OR 72 55 mc 80 55 pc 80 55 pc Charleston, SC 89 75 pc 91 76 pc Reno 76 52 pc 85 55 su Buenos Aires 55 44 pc 58 39 pc Rome 89 73 pc 88 73 pc McCall Saturday. Gooding 63 46 th 70 48 sh 79 53 pc Charleston, WV 81 63 pc 87 67 th Sacramento 84 57 su 91 57 su Cairo 101 71 pc 99 68 pc Santiago 53 37 pc 63 38 pc Grace 69 45 th 66 44 th 75 50 pc Chicago 81 72 th 93 80 th St. Louis 89 74 th 96 77 pc Dhahran 110 93 pc 112 91 pc Seoul 72 67 sh 77 67 pc Salmon 54 / 40 Hagerman 70 49 th 77 51 pc 86 54 pc Cleveland 78 67 th 85 72 th St.Paul 77 70 th 87 71 th Geneva 76 47 th 72 49 th Sydney 70 48 pc 59 49 sh 68 / 48 Hailey 62 44 th 66 45 mc 74 49 pc Denver 92 60 th 89 59 pc Salt Lake City 101 77 pc 100 77 pc Hong Kong 86 83 th 85 83 th Tel Aviv 83 80 pc 83 80 pc Idaho Falls 69 48 th 66 47 th 74 50 pc Des Moines 83 74 th 95 75 pc San Diego 72 64 pc 72 64 pc Jerusalem 95 69 pc 95 69 pc Tokyo 87 74 sh 83 72 sh Kalispell, MT 66 50 sh 69 47 sh 79 51 pc Detroit 78 67 pc 81 73 th San Francisco 62 53 su 65 54 su Johannesburg 67 46 pc 65 44 pc Vienna 82 59 pc 84 57 pc MC/TH Jerome 65 48 th 72 50 pc 81 54 pc El Paso 98 72 th 98 72 th Seattle 67 54 mc 67 56 mc Kuwait City 113 90 pc 114 90 pc Warsaw 79 57 pc 76 52 pc Lewiston 72 60 th 84 59 mc 88 61 pc Fairbanks 73 54 mc 75 54 pc Tucson 101 73 pc 101 72 su London 71 51 pc 73 52 pc Winnipeg 76 60 pc 68 57 th Caldwell Malad City 73 47 th 69 46 th 77 51 pc Fargo 72 61 th 77 61 th Washington, DC 85 67 pc 90 74 th Mexico City 70 45 sh 73 49 sh Zurich 75 51 pc 65 46 th 67 / 52 Idaho Falls Malta 71 45 th 72 45 th 80 50 pc Honolulu 87 76 sh 88 75 sh McCall 54 40 th 63 40 mc 70 43 pc Houston 97 77 th 95 76 th Boise Sun Valley 69 / 48 Missoula, MT 67 49 sh 69 47 sh 80 49 pc Indianapolis 86 69 pc 91 72 pc TODAY’S NATIONAL MAP 65 / 47 54 / 38 Pocatello 71 49 th 71 48 th 79 52 pc Jacksonville 93 73 th 91 74 th 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 Portland, OR 71 57 mc 74 58 mc 77 56 sh Kansas City 95 78 pc 98 76 su Pocatello Rupert 68 48 th 73 48 th 81 52 pc Las Vegas 91 72 su 96 76 su Rupert 71 / 49 Rexburg 67 46 th 64 44 th 71 48 pc Little Rock 94 74 pc 95 74 pc Mountain Home 68 / 48 66 / 49 Richland, WA 76 54 th 83 56 pc 84 58 pc Los Angeles 73 63 su 74 64 su Rogerson 58 37 th 66 43 sh 73 48 pc Memphis 93 74 pc 95 76 pc Burley Salmon 68 48 th 67 42 mc 81 47 pc Miami 89 82 th 89 82 th Twin Falls Salt Lake City, UT 78 54 th 76 57 th 80 63 su Milwaukee 76 67 th 82 76 th 66 / 47 L Fronts 67 / 48 Spokane, WA 88 69 pc 93 72 pc 94 71 pc Nashville 92 71 pc 94 72 pc Stanley 57 34 th 62 35 mc 70 38 pc New Orleans 92 80 th 93 79 th Windy T-storms Yesterday’s State Extremes - High: 95 at Pocatello Low: 49 at Stanley Sun Valley 54 38 th 59 40 mc 66 44 pc New York 84 64 su 79 65 th Cold Yellowstone, MT 61 37 r 53 35 sh 63 36 sh Oklahoma City 100 75 su 97 75 su weather key: su-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, mc-mostly cloudy, c-cloudy, Omaha 96 77 pc 99 74 pc th-thunderstorms, sh-showers,r-rain, sn-snow, fl-flurries, w-wind, m-missing Warm CANADIAN FORECAST Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow Sunny Stationary GREGG MIDDLEKAUFF’S QUOTE OF THE DAY City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Hot Calgary 70 46 pc 76 53 pc Saskatoon 78 53 pc 83 58 pc “I expect to pass through this world but once. Any good Cranbrook 70 42 sh 42 sh 71 Toronto 70 49 pc 62 60 r Valid to 6 p.m. today Edmonton 77 50 pc 80 52 pc Vancouver 73 51 pc 60 51 pc Occluded therefore that I can do, or any kindness Kelowna 75 43 pc 75 42 pc Victoria 74 56 pc 64 54 pc Yesterday’s National Extremes: that I can show to any fellow creature, let Lethbridge 65 54 sh 78 57 sh Winnipeg 76 60 pc 68 57 th High: 114 at Bullhead City, Ariz. me do it now. Let me not defer or neglect Regina 70 57 r 75 54 pc Low: 18 at Bodie State Park, Calif. it, for I shall not pass this way again.” More Magic Valley weather at www.magicvalley.com/weather William Penn Get up-to-date highway information at the Idaho Transportation Department’s Web site at 511.idaho.gov or call 888-432-7623. AROUND THE WORLD N EW Y ORK G ERMANY obtained by the AP last ed Checkpoint Charlie in Stasi officials had security sion stunt to gauge Jackson week from the archives of the center of divided Berlin concerns. 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E The answer’s in the art of costuming, See Entertainment 4 Booksignings, Entertainment 2, 4 / Ketchum gallery walk, Entertainment 3 / Events calendar, Entertainment 6-8 Entertainment FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 2009 FEATURES EDITOR VIRGINIA HUTCHINS: (208) 735-3242 [email protected]

Courtesy photo Stretched out at the base of the mountains, the Sun Valley Center Arts and Crafts Festival lures dozens of artists and crafters to vend their wares. What: Sun Valley Center Arts and Crafts Festival When: 10 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday; 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday. Where: Atkinsons’ Park, Eighth Sun Valley Street and Second Avenue near Hemingway Elementary School in West Ketchum. Center art Admission: Free. Entertainment schedule Friday, Aug 7 fair thrives Noon to 1 p.m. — No Cheap Horses, country folk 1:30-2:30 p.m. — Half Bender, acoustic rock despite 3:30-4:30 p.m. — Cow Says Mooo, classic rock 5-6 p.m. — Bruce Innes Trio, economy acoustic folk 6:30-8 p.m. — The ToastPoints, By Karen Bossick eclectic original rock Times-News correspondent Saturday, Aug 8 Debbie Edgers Sturges will go 11 a.m. to noon — The Shims, anywhere in the world for a eclectic Americana

portrait sitting. GET YOUR ART ON 12:30-1:30 p.m. — Four Stroke Bus, The Hailey artist has spent a acoustic folk week on the beach in Katmai 2-3 p.m. — DJ MC, ambient/world National Park near Kodiak, 3:30-4:30 p.m. — The B-3 Side, Alaska, capturing the essence jazz of Alaska’s grizzlies with her 5-6 p.m. — Molly Venter, acoustic camera and paintbrush. She’s folk gone to the equator on the Courtesy photo African continent for portraits Patrons examine jewelry at a recent Sun Valley Center Arts and Crafts Festival. Also among the items for sale this year are Sunday, Aug 9 of elephants, cheetahs and paintings, sculptures and drums. 11:30 am-12:30 p.m. — Hat Trick, lions. acoustic rock And last fall she rode a tundra which resembled a string of came so close that she was Wonderland’s hole and pop- 1-2 p.m. — Loose Change, acoustic buggy — a huge snow coach sleeper cars wider than train warned not to hang over the ping up and seeing all these folk with wide wheels — to Hudson cars. And she spent daylight edge for fear they might grab magnificent animals who have 2:30-3:30 p.m. — Hickory Blue, Bay so she could create por- hours on an open deck next to her. adapted to snow and ice,” she acoustic folk traits of polar bears. her car photographing and “It was kind of magical. It 3:45-4:45 p.m. — Kim Stocking She slept in a tundra lodge, observing the bears, which was like going down Alice in See ART, Entertainment 2 Band, country/folk A fine day for bluegrass

By Coreen Hart Times-News correspondent Tonight, a free bluegrass jam session is open to HEYBURN — Heyburn’s musicians of all skill lev- Amphitheater Committee els and begins at 7 p.m. has pulled together a dandy at the amphitheater. afternoon for families: a Both the Bluegrass concert of bluegrass and Festival and jam session more that is totally free. are at Riverside Park, This is an ambitious group which is adjacent to the with dreams for expansion. Mini-Cassia Chamber of On Saturday afternoon at Commerce, near the Burley-Heyburn bridge. Photo courtesy of JOHN BERGLUND Riverside Park and Soles Rest treats an audience to toe-tapping bluegrass July 4. They will appear again Saturday at the Riverside Park in Heyburn, in a free Amphitheater, three groups Parking and restroom will perform beginning at facilities are available. Bluegrass Festival. 3:30, with Joshua Crosby BLUEGRASS JAM SESSION will be the Bluegrass country tenor voice and At 6:15 p.m., Soles Rest group’s forte, and be pre- and Lonesome Dove. There with your neighbors. Bring Festival’s master of cere- many original songs. His with Spike Erickson from pared to laugh at their silly will be food vendors, a lawn chairs or a blanket to monies. song “Feeling It” says it all: Idaho’s Soles Rest is back by jokes. bounce house for the kid- spread on the grass. Burley Joshua Crosby,scheduled “I’m doing things to open popular demand. Toe-tap- dies and a chance to visit talent manager Gary Bench for 3:30 p.m., has an edgy my own doors.” ping bluegrass is the See BLUE, Entertainment 2 Entertainment 2 Friday, August 7, 2009 ENTERTAINMENT Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Author shares her idea for ‘patient capital’ in Ketchum Times-News poverty. She now works as a venture capitalist, trying Part coming-of-age to make a difference in story, part blueprint for countries where the aver- effecting real change, age citizen lives on less Jacqueline Novogratz’s than $4 a day. She is book “The Blue Sweater: founder of the Acumen Bridging the Gap between Fund, a nonprofit global Rich and Poor in an venture fund that exem- Interconnected World” plifies a new form of phi- uses the unanticipated lanthropy called “patient international journey of capital,” which aims to one article of clothing to make people self-suffi- explore what it means to cient. live in a globally conscious Senator Bill Bradley (D- way. N.J.) is among the public The author and philan- figures who have praised thropist will talk about her Novogratz’s work and her KAREN BOSSICK/For the Times-News efforts to solve global book. “The stories she Hailey artist Debbie Edgers Sturges says bears are her favorite animals poverty at a book signing shares about the people to paint: ‘They’re huge. They’re intelligent. They exhibit a lot of non- on Monday at 6 p.m. at she has met show the verbal communication, which is fascinating to me. And they have so the Community Library in nobility of the human much personality.’ Ketchum. The talk is pre- spirit and the breadth of sented by the Sun Valley the desire to stop suffer- Center for the Arts and ing, to feed the hungry, to admission is free. Space is care for the sick, to Art limited. empower the poor — in Continued from Entertainment 1 with the number of appli- Novogratz’s global short, to make the world a said. “We saw arctic fox, cants. We thought we might awakening came about better place,” he said in a ptarmigan, snowy owls, be down this year, given the when she spotted a young Sun Valley Center press seals and, of course, the economy. But we had as boy in Africa wearing a release. polar bears, which are so many as ever,”she said. sweater she’d given to Sun Valley Center majestic and powerful.” Budding Picassos can try Goodwill eleven years ear- Director of Development Sturges will have many of their own hand at art in the lier, with her name still on Sally Boettger added that her animal portraits at the kid’s activity class open from the tag inside. Seeing her Novogratz is a good fit for 41st Sun Valley Center Arts 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. They can sweater in Rwanda was The Center because “we and Crafts Festival this make masks with Kathleen ample evidence of how we try to give the community weekend. The festival, Fergus on Friday, felt gar- are all connected and how ways to explore topics of named one of the top 100 dens with Beth Rogers on our actions touch people interest and relevance to outdoor juried festivals in Saturday and sun hats with across the globe even if we our times through the the nation by Art Fair Source Joni Cashman on Sunday. never know or meet them. varied lenses of visual Book, will be held Friday The colorful wide- She will share anec- arts, performing arts and through Sunday at brimmed hats are a fashion dotes from her travels in humanities programs.“ Atkinsons’ Park in Ketchum. statement among the kids. Africa, India and Pakistan Information: www. The park is located near Take it from Isabella Bourret on her quest to under- sunvalleycenter.org or Hemingway Elementary of Ketchum, who has been stand and address global 726-9491 ext. 10. School at Eighth Street and making them for a half- Third Avenue. dozen years — ever since she This year’s show will fea- was 4. ture everything from paint- “They’re the coolest thing ed tools to funky hats to on earth — well, one of the unique drums created by coolest things on earth,”she SV Symphony artists from across the said. nation. Parents and children alike The festival will also fea- can sit in on artist demon- inspires poems from ture the work of several strations 1-4 p.m. in the Wood River Valley artists: Artists’ Demonstration Sturges, Kary Kjesbo, Tent.Susan Ward of Boulder Michele Black and Terrance Mountain Clayworks will Ketchum woman Deemer, Jennifer Bellinger demonstrate ceramics on and Melissa Graves Brown. Friday, R.C. Hink, wood- By Karen Bossick Alasdair Neale. They were chosen from working on Saturday, and Times-News correspondent “...His hands are like hundreds of applicants, said Deb Gelet, fiber art on feathers as they glide Festival Director Britt Sunday. Sue McCollum is fond of through the air, caressing Udesen. Entertainment will be saying that one art form each note with great love “We were very pleased provided each day, as well. begets another. and care...”she writes. Hat-making And in this Ketchum Pictures of renowned woman’s case, the Sun glass artist Dale Chihuly’s for kids is one Valley Summer Symphony sculptures illustrate the of the hands- concerts have spawned a book. The photographs are on activities book of poetry. representative of the stages offered this “I’ve been writing about the symphony has gone year at the the symphony for 15 years through from that first Sun Valley and I decided this is the concert to the old sympho- Center Arts year to put it together in ny tent to the new pavilion. book form as my gift to the “Sun Valley Summer and Crafts community,” said Symphony” costs $16.95 at Festival. McCollum. Iconoclast Books, Ketchum Courtesy photo The poems reflect some Kitchens, the Sun Valley of Sue’s memories over the Lodge Gift Shop, Chapter symphony’s 25 years, One Bookstore, Atkinsons’ including the night a horn Markets, the Sun Valley player played a garden Summer Symphony and Blue hose, the vigorous violin online at www.suemccol- Continued from Entertainment 1 can have something going playing of Joshua Bell, the lum.com “They’ve got roughly two every weekend,” Berglund volunteers who usher Profits from the book hours,” said Chris James, said. “This will be a place to patrons to their seats, the will benefit McCollum’s committee chairman. go. Family oriented. We opening of the Sun Valley My Blue Dots cancer “Then Marcus Meek at 5:30 don’t do anything that your Pavilion and conductor research project. for half an hour. There will children can’t enjoy. That’s be a trio also that will play important. That the whole some gypsy jazz for a few family can sit on a blanket, minutes.” and have a picnic, and go J.D. Webb and the home and it’s free. In these Twin Falls dancer on MTV’s Downstate Wranglers, a hard times it’s a great thing Washington group, will to take your whole family ‘America’s Best Dance Crew’ wind it up, starting at 8:30 out to entertain them. p.m. Be sure to listen for Maybe you spend a few Times-News “Skookumchuck” for some bucks for a soft drink or a fancy picking and taco. You can’t go to the Twin Falls native Riquel Olander will “Kentucky Mandolin” to set movies for that.” compete on season four of MTV’s your feet tapping. James outlined some of “America’s Best Dance Crew.” Gossner’s Magic Valley next year’s dream. Olander and her dance crew, We Are Chalet will sell ice cream, “We hope to have kite fly- Heroes, will compete against eight other and Polo’s will be there with ing, movies in the park, crews from across the country. We Are the tacos and other foods melodramas and more con- Heroes is composed of five female Olander served at Polo’s Restaurant. certs,” he said. “We would dancers, including Olander. If the Fourth of July cele- like to turn the Bluegrass Olander and her sister Keesha, 25, live in Los Angeles bration put together by this Festival into a multiple-day and have danced for Tyrese, Kanye West, The Dream committee is any example, event, and move it to Labor and Jamie Foxx. this will be a lot of fun. Day with a 5k run and other “America’s Best Dance Crew” airs Sunday evening Committee members John activities.” on MTV. Check your listings for times. Berglund, James, Earl Andrew and Brian Duncan, Herrett Center The College of Southern Idaho 315 Falls Avenue Twin Falls and secretary Deb Hopkins, forfor AArtsrts andand SSciencecience Planetarium and gallery information: 7326655 have put in some long brain- Star Line Sky info. (208) 732MOON (7326666) storming sessions coming Faulkner Planetarium Adults . . .$4.50 Seniors . . . $3.50 up with ideas. Students . . . $2.50 children under 2 free FREE SOLAR VIEWING Entertainment shows -- All ages $4.50 Each Wednesday ...... 1:30 to 3:30pm Berglund remembered PLEASE CALL FOR FRI & SAT, AUG 7TH & 8TH SHOWS (Weather permitting) Heyburn’s Fourth of July SHOW SCHEDULE BEGINNING TUESDAY, AUGUST 11TH fondly. Sky Quest/Live Sky Tour ...... Tues., Thurs., & Sat. at 2 p.m. “I started photographing Here Comes the Sun...... Wed. & Fri. at 2 p.m. The Herrett as (Soles Rest) started More Than Meets the Eye/Live Sky Tour . . Sat. at 4 p.m. Two Small Pieces of Glass/Live Sky Tour . . . .Tues, Fri., & warming up, and as they Sat. at 7 p.m. played, more and more peo- Gift Shop Led Zeppelin: Maximum Volume 1...... Tues. at 8:15 p.m. ple came. They moved up Space Jammin’ ...... Fri. at 8:15 p.m. Gifts and handmade close to see them,” he Lynyrd Skynyrd: Fly On Free Bird ...... Sat. at 8:15 p.m. recalled. “Pretty soon there For more on the Twin Falls area and jewelry for all ages local lodging - call 1-866-TWIN FALLS and budgets were kids dancing. It was or visit www.twinfallschamber.com really cute.” HERRETT HOURS FREE ADMISSION TO ALL www.csi.edu/herrett The committee has Tues & Fri 9:30 am - 9:00 pm Wed & Thurs 9:30 am - 4:30 pm GALLERIES AND MUSEUM dreams for the future. Saturday 1:00 pm - 9:00 pm LOCATED AT CSI’S NORTH “I think it will grow if we Closed Sundays, Mondays, and holidays COLLEGE ROAD ENTRANCE Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho ENTERTAINMENT Friday, August 7, 2009 Entertainment 3 Gender-bending cowboys and spiritual showgirls headline Ketchum gallery walk

By Karen Bossick Times-News correspondent

Deborah Oropallo takes history and distorts it. She’s dressed iconic fig- ures like Napoleon Bonaparte in petticoats, aprons, corsets and other symbols of womanhood, then superimposed a women’s face on them as she’s elevated maids, nurses and the like to positions of nobility. Now the California artist has focused her art on cow- boys — the symbol of the American West. She’s erased the faces, creating an invisible man- like aura. And she’s layered fishnet stockings, lacy shawls and even brassieres over the chaps and rodeo clown outfits. Her “Wild Wild West Show,”as she calls it, is one of the focal points of tonight’s Gallery Walk in Ketchum. Oropallo will be present from 5 to 8 tonight as the exhibition opens at the Gail Severn Gallery, 400 1st Ave. N. She will take part in a Photo courtesy Friesen Gallery free Artist’s Chat at 10 a.m. LEFT: Called ‘Palomino 2/3’,this pigment print by Deborah Oropallo is 81 by 50 inches. Saturday at the Gallery. ABOVE; ‘Showgirl and Her Ladder’ is one of the paintings by Laura Sharp Wilson on display at Oropallo creates her art the Friesen Gallery in Ketchum. using the most contempo- rary “paintbrush” available Idaho, during the Israeli artist Yehouda Chaki. known for the weathered — the computer. She down- 1800s. The Will Caldwell barns and other landscapes loads dozens of images of And Angela Gallery, 400 E. Sun Valley he paints with egg tempera- boots, cowboy hats and Tsai will fill her Road, features the vivid egg yolk and dry pigment other cowboy paraphernalia storage container paintings of local landscapes The Toneri Hink Gallery, from the web, then manipu- Photo courtesy Gail Severn Gallery with 3,300 bells- and street scenes that the 400 Sun Valley Road, is fea- lates them digitally and lay- the approximate Ketchum artist captured this turing the whimsical ers them as she creates her paper feature teeny dots from 4 to 5 tonight at population of Ketchum. The winter in Mexico. barstools and other wood “paintings” on aluminum. amidst other detail. Like Friesen. bells will ring in unison Zantman Art Gallery, carvings of R.C. Hink, as The finished product Oropallo, Wilson will be at In addition to Oropallo, when someone pulls the 360 East Ave. N., is showing well as the personable foxes images, such as an invisible the Gallery Walk Friday the Gail Severn Gallery is lever of a paper seagull that the work of a variety of and other critters Lynn cowgirl in a pink bikini top night. And she will also give featuring “Summer Bird,” a was inspired by the novel artists, including Robert Toneri painted after visits to and pink Levis stepping an Artist’s Chat about her collection of birdlike sculp- “Jonathan Livingston Clark, an American master Yellowstone National Park. through a lasso, would have work 4-5 p.m. Friday at the tures by Jane Rosen, and Seagull.“ been difficult — even gallery. Brad Rude’s intriguing While there, check out impossible — using tradi- “You have to get up really sculptures of bison, horses, The Center’s exhibit, “The tional darkroom techniques. close to look at the detail,” coyotes and other animals Rural Vernacular,” in The “It’s perfect for this area said Friesen Gallery repre- mounted on wheels and Center at Fifth and because we’re living in the sentative Stacy Collins.“Her other objects. Laura Washington streets. Competion Team West,” said gallery owner work is amazing — and fun.” McPhee’s exhibition of Broschofsky Galleries, Gail Severn. “Clients come Kneeland Gallery, mean- large-scale photographs of 360 East Ave., is featuring Tryouts to Idaho because they want a while, plans on exhibiting fire in the Sawtooth fine art with a focus on the AUGUST 10TH taste of the West. Deborah works that haven’t even Mountains also will be on West, including 19th centu- 222 MAIN AVE. N., TWIN FALLS, ID. offers this while putting a been painted yet, according display. ry photographs of Native Jubilees: Age 4-7 very contemporary spin on to gallery director Carey Sun Valley Center for Americans taken by Edward Please contact for more info it. There aren’t many artists Molter. the Arts is putting on a sec- S. Curtis. Jubiletts: Age 7-11 3:30-5:00 p.m. who are using contemporary The gallery’s stable of ond container show across Gilman Contemporary, Juniors: Age 10-18 5:15-7:30 p.m. techniques to depict the artists, which includes the from the Ketchum Post 661 Sun Valley Road, is fea- Seniors: Age 13-18 5:15-8:00 p.m. West.” Magic Valley’s John Horejs, Office at Second Avenue and turing the work of painter While the Gail Severn have fanned out to paint on Fourth Street. Ashley Collins, whose many Jrs. & Srs. Come prepared with 20 second routine Gallery is showing off its site where the public can Jan Cox will install vene- horse paintings have caught Fall Registration Aug. 27th @ JDC Studio 3:30-7:30 p.m. cowgirls, the Friesen Gallery watch them. The artists will tianblind, a project shot over the eye of actor Robert Offer classes ages 3 and up Beginner to Advanced one block down the street at display the results tonight. a 24-hour period in Venice, Redford. Her works “convey Ballet, Modern, Lyrical, Hip Hop, Jazz, Tap, Musical Theater 320 First Ave. N. is showing To see them at work, call Italy. Amanda Hamilton will a sense of peace and tran- For more information: showgirls. 726-5512 for locations. show a 17-minute film, quility that many of us Owned & Operated Call 208-736-3998, “Spiritual showgirls,” to There is plenty of other art “Beautiful Terrible,” which attempt but few of us are by Michelle Williams-Smith email – [email protected], or visit www.JubilantDanceCo. com be exact. to see during tonight’s reenacts the sudden disap- able to achieve,”he says. The paintings are those of Gallery Walk: pearance of White Lake in Esmerald Gordon, 391 Laura Sharp Wilson, who Also showing her work Russia. She also will display First Ave. N., is featuring considers the costuming of at Friesen is sculptor Ann printed and framed stills jewelry and paintings by showgirls as a reflection of Mallory, whose work honors from the film. John Alexander and Ole You are cordially invited the divine, just as she the ceremonial needs of Megan Murphy will install Olofoson. believes blossoms on plants humans to have objects that three large glass panels with Gallery DeNovo, 320 to attend the 18th Annual reflect the divine. elevate the rituals of living. text and images depicting First Ave. N., is presenting The Olympia, Wash., She will participate with the massacre of three dozen 26 vibrant, impressionistic artist’s paintings on rice Sharp in the Artist’s Talk Chinese in Hells Canyon, landscapes of 70-year-old Stand up comedy at Canyon Crest Times-News was the winner of a STARZ Appetizers will be provid- Canyon Crest or any Oasis “Stand Up Now” Comedy ed and a no-host bar. Stop ’N Go locations. An all-ages stand-up Competition. Reserved seats are $15; Information: Canyon comedy show featuring Doors open at 6 p.m. general admission, $10. Crest Event Center, 733- Kermet Apio and Mike with the show starting at 7. Tickets are available at 9392. Anderson is set for Canyon Crest Dining and Event Saturday, September 12 Center on Aug. 27. 6:00 p.m. “These CASSIA COUNTY FAIR guys are Canyon Crest very funny,” said Canyon IN CONCERT Crest owner Wine Tasting Dan Willie August 11th in a press Apio Gourmet food presented by a variety release. 8:30 p.m. “There will of chefs from around the region be two great shows Tickets on Live Auction totaling an hour and a Sale Now! Dancing to the High Street Combo half of At the Fair Board Office entertain- 1101 Elba Ave. Burley Net proceeds fund local cancer care at ment. No Anderson one will be Regular office hours: 10am Mountain States Tumor Institute disappoint- 5pm ed.” Tickets also available at : Taco Bandido at St. Luke’s Magic Valley. Apio is a native Hawaiian in Burley, Horse Pro Shop in Rupert, who resides in Seattle. He and Corral West in Twin Falls has been featured on “Star For ticket information call 7372480 John Anderson $ 00 Search,” “Evening at the Grand Stand & Arena Seats 20 or visit Improv,” “The Mark & $ 00 Brian Show,” “Bob & Tom Bleachers 12 http://stlukesonline.org/magic_valley/ Show” and a score of oth- Open seating in the arena ways_to_give/epicurean.php ers. Anderson, who spent (bring your own chairs) six years as a television news reporter, has been For more information seen at the HBO Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen and call 6786385 Entertainment 4 Friday, August 7, 2009 ENTERTAINMENT Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Miners, nuns and a California Raisin: Costuming in the Magic Valley By Erica Littlefield Times-News correspondent

Whether they’re dressing a group of miners, a convent The California of nuns or even a California Raisin costume Raisin, the theater compa- is the newest nies in Southern Idaho addition to always manage to come up Jive’s costume with just the right costumes. stash. Costuming not just an integral part of any theatri- cal production — it’s also an opportunity for local seam- stresses to use their talents and creativity. Kathy Barrus, a board member of the Oakley Valley Arts Council, said putting her sewing skills to use making costumes for the OVAC productions has Carol Hill — the self-described ‘Costume Lady’ —organizes Jive’s costume stash been the perfect way for her Thursday in the basement of a downtown building in Twin Falls. to get involved with the shows. “It’s especially rewarding when the costuming really fits into the director’s vision Connor Root, 9, and Photos by MEAGAN for the show and makes the Matthew Sato, 10, at THOMPSON/ whole production come right, haul a bundle Times-News together,”Barrus said. of costumes from The costuming for a play Jive’s stash to the or musical usually starts basement of a when a costumer designer or coordinator sits down with downtown Twin Falls the director to talk about building Thursday their ideas for the show. afternoon. “It’s Carol Hill, a JuMP Company board member and volun- especially teer seamstress for the com- money and is building a rewarding pany, said the director and new costume and set shop costumer talk about every- musical “Paint Your When a show has a large behind Howells Opera when the thing from the time period Wagon,” some of the men cast, that means more cos- House. The new building of the show to any tricky playing miners wore their tumes. Barrus said she will have room for storage costuming costume changes. own jeans. sewed 18 nun’s habits for along with a sewing room really fits into “It involves a lot of When costumes have to OVAC’s production of “The and fitting rooms. Davis research before you ever sit be made from scratch or Sound of Music” a few years said they are looking for- the director’s down to sew,”said Hill, who altered significantly, theater ago. Hill said that with 82 ward to completing the vision for the designed the costumes for companies enlist the help of cast members and multiple building so they can move JuMP Company’s last show, volunteers like Hill, Barrus costume changes in “The all the costumes to a central show and “The Totally Awesome 80s and others to get the sewing Totally Awesome 80s location and organize them. Revue.” done. Barrus said sewing Revue,” there were more “It will be so great to makes Once the costumer has a theater costumes is different than 400 costumes to coor- have a place to go and the whole clear picture of what they’re than other types of sewing dinate. Hill sewed about 100 sew and work on what- looking for, the costumes because there are several of those from scratch, ever we need to do,” production themselves can come from a factors you have to keep in including a California Raisin Davis said. come variety of different sources. mind, like the fact that the costume. Hill said she and other cos- actors on stage might have to Storing old costumes can Erica Littlefield may be together.” tumers scour thrift stores, make a quick change. pose a challenge for theater reached at erica. — Kathy Barrus order pieces off the Internet, “You use a lot of Velcro,” companies. Jan Davis, histo- [email protected]. and borrow from other the- Barrus laughs. “You have to rian for OVAC, said although ater companies. Sometimes use fabric that’s comfortable keeping the costumes from cast members even bring in and not too hot under the all their shows gives them a their own clothes. Barrus lights on stage, and you have great resource to draw from, said that for OVAC’s most to make sure the costumes finding a place to keep them recent show, the Western really fit.” all is an issue. OVAC raised Tickets go on sale for spiritual film festival Times-News shown during the weekend box”; “Cowboy Yoga”; — films of all lengths and “Lucia Rijker: A Boxer, A The 5th Annual Sun genres including shorts, Buddhist”; “The Horse Valley Spiritual Film animation, documentaries Boy”; “Scenes from a Festival, scheduled Sept. and features. Parrish”; “The Unmistak- 18-20 at Sun Valley Opera The festival also will fea- en Child”; “The Human House, will feature two ture guest speakers includ- Experience”; and “Yous- dozen films from around ing Stephen Simon, co- sou N’Dour: I Bring What I the world that celebrate the founder of Spiritual Love.” human spirit, tell stories of Cinema Circle and produc- For more titles go to courage and hope, and er/director of such films as www.svspiritualfilmfesti- explore different spiritual “Conversations With val.org and click on Films. traditions, organizers say. God,” “Indigo,” “Some- Festival passes cost $80 BUNDLE UP & SAVE WATCHING YOUR BUDGET? FOR THE NEXT Tickets went on sale this where In Time” and the and include access to all * month online at www. Academy Award-winning films and related events. $ 24 MONTHS, YOU CAN COUNT ON THE SAME, svspiritualfilmfestival.org, “What Dreams May Tickets to single films and 99/MO. LOW PRICE. WE GUARANTEE IT! and at Chapter One Come.” Many of the inde- events will be sold at the Bookstore in Ketchum, pendent filmmakers also door at $8 per movie and Plus, there’s no extra equipment to lease or buy. 726-5425. will attend. $15 per special event. Of the more than 350 Films selected for this Information: 726-2777 . WHOLE-HOUSE STANDARD CABLE SERVICE films submitted for con- year’s festival include “Dr. or www.svspiritualfilm- Watch the most popular cable networks and local channels. sideration, about 25 will be Bronner’s Magic Soap- festival.org. Cable ONE offers something for everyone in the family. . STANDARD INTERNET THAT’S NEARLY 90X FASTER THAN DIAL-UP Enjoy a blazing fast connection and hassle-free online access Meet ‘Milton’ the moose at that’s always on, always fast, always easy. . CABLE ONE ECONOMY PHONE With unlimited local calling, you can talk as long as you like to SV author’s book signing friends and family without paying anything more. Times-News when The Community and lemonade. Library’s Children Library Eccles will donate the The man who has presents an artistic video $20 purchase price of the penned three books about and reading of the book, a book to the children’s some of the animals that book signing, a musical library, as he has done with inhabit Sun Valley has petting zoo and cookies his other books. another one out. So don’t wait! Call now M.C. Eccles, a part- time Sun Valley resident, & we’ll take care of everything! has written “Milton,” Picture Framing about a musical moose who yearns to join the Done Right Matters... 1-888-216-5524 Sun Valley Summer Right Design • Right Time • Right Price Symphony. www.cableone.net The book follows earlier Certifi ed Professional 36 Years — Thank You Magic Valley! children’s books about *Promotional rate quoted good for the first twenty-four months when you subscribe to our Standard Video, Standard Samantha the Swan, Professional Frame Internet and Economy Phone services bundle. Taxes and fees are not included in above rate. Offer is available through subscription to a 24 month agreement secured with a credit card or direct pay. Long distance service is defined as calls Franklin the Fox and RONALD E. HICKS made outside your local exchange area. Long distance calls within the continental US are provided at 10 cents per minute. Rates for calls outside the continental US vary. Guarantee does not include the cost of long distance calls, 411 Timothy Trout. 132 MAIN AVE. SOUTH • 733-3293 or other operator assisted calls. Other levels of service are available. Cable ONE manages speed and usage of Internet Eccles will unveil his 20% DISCOUNT WITH THIS COUPON! services to provide the best experience for all customers. Please read our Acceptable Use Policy for details. Call for book at 10 a.m. Saturday additional details and restrictions. Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho ENTERTAINMENT Friday, August 7, 2009 Entertainment 5 INSTANT Jarbidge, Nev., celebrates centennial Critic By Kimberly Williams-Brackett remote and “secret” places Times-News correspondent of the Jarbidge Mountains. Be sure to bid on the No. 1 32nd annual Northern JARBIDGE, NEV. — At Jarbidge centennial com- Rockies Folk Festival this year’s annual Jarbidge memorative medallion at Days,Aug.14 to 16,relive the auction. “A History of Seen Aug. 1 at Hop Porter the past by visiting a tent Jarbidge in Vaudeville Park, Hailey city, a replica of how Style” presented by Elko, Jarbidge may have looked in Nev.-based Silver Stage So much good 1909. Storytelling, poetry, Players is an old time melo- music, it all music, demonstrations, drama play. blended Dutch oven cooking, and On Friday and Saturday together into an costumes are scheduled for beginning at 4 p.m., visitors aural and visual the tent city. When gold can take a horse-drawn fog of rhythm was first discovered, the wagon tour of historic and melody. tent camp had crowded the Jarbidge, followed by a bar- The headliners rocked the banks of the Jarbidge River becue at the Outdoor Inn. house, while the so-called in the narrow canyon for The Jarbidge Arts Council “Tweeners,” who played over three miles. It was introduces Nevada’s own between main sets, should replaced by solid buildings country recording artist warrant more stage-time of log and lumber within Richard Elloyan in concert. next year! the first year. Wrap up the day with music Only drawback? The arts and crafts and dancing with a live Mosquitos — I should have exhibits will showcase band. brought bug spray. paintings, drawings, pho- The celebration closes on — Ariel Hansen, tography, needlework, KIMBERLY WILLIAMS-BRACKETT/For the Times-News Sunday with a chuck wagon Times-News Wood afghans, and jewelry from Just nine miles from the Idaho-Nevada border, Jarbidge, Nev. is celebrating its centennial, Aug. 14-16. The pancake breakfast spon- River Bureau Chief Jarbidge artists. Pat historic Jarbidge Community Hall is undergoing preservation. sored by Morning Star Henning, resident and co- Outfitters at 8:30 a.m., fol- chair of the Jarbidge currently at the county Stadstad said next year they niscent of days gone by will lowed by cowboy church Send us your own 50-word Community Association, courthouse in Elko, Nev., will celebrate the historic be held at Pioneer Park. with services by Reverend review about local arts and which is throwing the cele- 100 miles southwest of hall’s 100th anniversary. On Saturday, festivities Bo Lowe. entertainment. Include a bration, said homemade ice Jarbidge, will be relocated “It’s really been a labor of kick off with a celebration Raffle tickets for a new basic description of the per- cream will be served during to a permanent home at love and we just want peo- of the history of American 2008 Polaris 500 ATV are formance or artwork, such the exhibits at the Red Dog Jarbidge’s park. He said ple to enjoy the centennial,” Indian and Basque cultures $10 each or 11 for $100. The as location, date, title, Saloon. Elko County is delivering it said Stadstad. at 10:30 a.m. Idaho State drawing happens at 11:30 author or artist, then 50 of To commemorate the prior to the centennial. The official centennial University Associate a.m. on Sunday. your own words letting us centennial, historic photo Henning said parking will grand opening takes stage Professor Phil Homan will Most events are free, know what you thought. calendars and medallions be available outside city at the Jarbidge Community present a slide show on the although there is a charge Also, your name and a may be purchased. The fine limits. Horse-drawn wagon Hall at 1 p.m. on Friday, fol- Queen of Diamonds, Kittie for all meals. phone number where we silver coins were stamped at rides will transport visitors lowed by the centennial Wilkins, Horse Queen of To get to Jarbidge from can reach you during the the former United States from parking to the festivi- parade of Jarbidge’s old Idaho and the Wilkins Twin Falls, take U.S. day. No objectionable lan- Branch Mint in Carson City, ties. timers on Main Street. The Horse Company. Save your Highway 93 south to guage, please, or your Nev.“This coin is the first in A time capsule is being old timers will gather at the appetite for sloppy joes and Rogerson. Drive west 64 review will be deleted. a series of three,” said assembled for the next 100 big top tent to share their enjoy the progress parade. miles on the Three Creek Weekly deadline for sub- Henning. years. Henning said it closes pioneer legacy with stories Jarbidge explorer and pho- Highway to Jarbidge, Nev. missions is noon Mondays, The first coin features the in October and will be built of Jarbidge. An apron fash- tographer Bud Webber will The last 16 miles are to [email protected]. discovery of gold when the into the hall. Resident Mary ion show with stories remi- direct a slide show of the unpaved. rush began. It’s an engraved image of Jarbidge as a tent city. The second coin, which will be released in 2010, features “perma- nence” with an image of the historic Jarbidge Community Hall. To be released in 2011, the third coin features “owning the land” with engraved word- ing. President William Howard Taft declared Jarbidge a town site in 1911. The reverse side of all medallions features the original seal of the state of Nevada. Medallions are $50 each. Association President Howard Henning said the 30-foot-high statue of a shovel which bears thou- sands of supporters of the Jarbidge Shovel Brigade, LORRIE MORGAN GARY ALLAN Restaurant SEPTEMBER 13 6P AUG 21 8P & AUG 22 7P & 9P TICKETS START AT $35 introduces TICKETS START AT $30 OUTDOOR mystery dinner show Times-News

Canyon Crest Dining and Event Center plans to pres- ent interactive theater that pairs entertainment with a dinner prepared by chef Dave Haley. The original show “A Killer Musical,” created by David Gravatt of Dick Foster Productions of Las Vegas (executive producers Dick POCO and Lynne Foster are now CLASSIC COUNTRY BOB ZANY & residents of Twin Falls), will JAMBOREE feature guest star Danny FEATURING: JOHN CONLEE, OCTOBER 16 17 8P DREW HASTINGS Marona with an ensemble of JANIE FRICKE AND TG SHEPPARD TICKETS START AT $25 local performers who sing, dance and interact with P& 9P OCTOBER 23 24 8P SEP 25 8P & SEP 26 7P & 9P TICKETS START AT $15 guests in an attempt to clear TICKETS START AT $30 their names from the mur- der-suspect list. The characters are color- ful, and the comedy is hys- terical, promoters say. Choreography and a variety of recognizable music keep the audience engaged with Gala Showroom tickets include two free drinks. solving the improbable crime. “A portion of the profits derived from this event will be donated to the Danny Marona Performing Arts foundation,” Canyon Crest owner Dan Willie said in a press release from the Twin Falls restaurant. The Thursdays-only per- formances begin on Sept. 24, at 7 p.m. Canyon Crest did not announce how many weeks the show will continue. Tickets are $49.95 per person and include a choice Cactuspetes.com of entree. Make reservations at Canyon Crest or at any HWY 93 Jackpot, NV 775.755.2321 800.821.1103 Magic Valley Oasis Stop ’N All show times are Mountain Standard Time (MST). See hotel front desk for ticket information. Terms subject to change. Go location. Information: Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-522-4700. © 2009 Cactus Petes. 733-9392. Entertainment 6 Friday, August 7, 2009 ENTERTAINMENT Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho EVENTS CALENDAR Jonna Barnett, acrylics; Jim Concert House, 416 S. Ninth St. 7 O’Day, painting; and Saunie Doors open at 9 p.m. In addition to Kohntopp, glass bead/lamp work his popular comedy stage act, FRIDAY includes people’s choice “Artists’ Sinbad has appeared in both tele- Challenge”: interpretation of sun- vision and film, and developed his set photo by Jerry Kencke ($100 own television show, “Sinbad and First Friday/Twin Falls prize); and features demonstra- Friends All the Way Live...Almost.” Front Porch Flavor performs tions by Idaho Commission on the Tickets are $27 in advance at acoustic country, bluegrass, island Arts teaching artist Tom Bennick 800-965-4827, 466-8499, and rock, 6-9 p.m. at the First of Mountain Home, on the art of TicketWeb.com and Friday event at Rudy’s — A Cook’s producing fine handmade paper; KnittingFactory.com, or $30 at the Paradise, 147 Main Ave. W. Also and Twin Falls artist Al Cantu on door. features wine and beer by the painting, 2-8 p.m., on the lawn glass, food sampling and chef Joe and inside the building, Carmela Space programs/Boise Szerwo’s cooking demonstrations Winery, next to Three Island State Third annual Idaho Space in the Rudy’s kitchen. No cover. Park, Glenns Ferry, free admis- Days continues 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. at sion, presented by the Visual Arts The Discovery Center of Idaho, Gallery Opening/ Committee of the Mountain Home 131 Myrtle St., with space-related Twin Falls Arts Council. programs and demonstrations in As part of First Friday, the Full honor of NASA’s 50th anniversary Moon Gallery of Fine Art & Theater/Glenns Ferry and the 40th anniversary of the Contemporary Craft artists’ recep- Historic Opera Theatre pres- Apollo 11 moonwalk. Highlights: tion and gallery opening, 7-9 p.m. ents a comedy murder mystery, noon-2 p.m., NASA education at 132 Main Ave. S. with new “Let Him Sleep ‘Til It’s Time For specialist Tony Leavitt with “show works by member artists and spe- His Funeral,” at a dinner show at and tell” items and a live video cial guest artists: oil paintings by Courtesy photo the theater, 208 E. Idaho Ave. conference link with NASA plane- Ginny Blakeslee Breen and lamp- Stretched out at the base of the mountains, the Sun Valley Center Arts and Crafts Festival lures dozens of Dinner starts at 6:30 p.m.; show tary scientist Chris McKay dis- work glass beads by Sandy artists and crafters to vend their wares. at 7:45 p.m. Tickets are $22.50 cussing Mars; 3 p.m. Teen Club’s Wapinski. In Galeria Pequena will for dinner and show (choice of model rocket demonstration; and be “Beyond the Beaten Path,” fea- Fifth Ave. S. Starts at 9 p.m. No ings, woodworking and toys); kids steak or chicken), and show-only 7 p.m., retired NASA STS-113 turing oil paintings by John Pitts. cover. activity area, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., with tickets are $7 general admission, astronaut John Herrington talks Mary Grace and Jackson will sup- free art project (make masks with $6 for senior citizens and children. about his path to becoming an ply live music. Free and open to Country, rock/Twin Falls artist Kathleen Fergus); 1-4 p.m., Dinner reservations required; astronaut, at Boise State the public. Mixed Emotions, 8:30 p.m. to artist demonstration: Susan Ward 366-7408. University’s Special Events Center, 12:30 a.m. at Montana of Boulder Mountain Clayworks 1800 University Drive; free admis- Continued exhibit/ Steakhouse, 1826 Canyon Crest with ceramics; and entertainment: County fair/Carey sion. Daily activities: nightly star Twin Falls Drive. No cover. noon-1 p.m., No Cheap Horses, Blaine County Fair continues gazing at dusk, Magic Planet country folk; 1:30-2:30 p.m., Half at the Blaine County Fairgrounds. demonstration and live streaming As part of First Friday, contin- Bender, acoustic rock; 3:30-4:30 ued exhibit of work by Colleen Jazz/Twin Falls Highlights: 8:30 a.m., 4-H beef NASA TV. Admission is $6.50 for Great Riff Jazz combo,7- p.m., Cow Says Moo, classic rock; show; 9 a.m., open-class beef adults, $5.50 for seniors 60 and Robison, Chuck Manning and 5-6 p.m., Bruce Innes Trio, Marcus Washburn, open until 10 p.m. at Pandora’s restaurant, show, and exhibits open; 2 p.m., older, and $4 for children 3-17. 516 Hansen St. No cover. acoustic folk; and 6:30-8 p.m., 4-H round robin; 6-8 p.m., family Free for children 2 and under. 8 p.m. at Jensen Jewelers - The Toastpoints, original rock. Ringmaker’s, 109 Main Ave. E., barbecue (cost: $7 for adults, $5 343-9895 or www.scidaho.org. Picnics welcome; no dogs or glass for senior citizens and $4 for chil- www.jensen-jewelers.com/ Coffee house/Twin Falls containers allowed. Free admis- RingmakersGallery.php. CoffeeHouse Night at Hands dren under 10); 6:30-7:30 p.m. Lecture/Stanley sion. 726-9491 or www.sunvall- Saddle Strings with music and Sawtooth Forum and Lecture On/The Divine Grind from 8-10 eycenter.org. Movie/Twin Falls p.m. with live music by Laura poetry; and 8 p.m. little kids’ Series with a presentation by rodeo (tickets: $5 in advance from Shauna Baron, “Wolves of the Christian Movie Night, “The Taylor, coffee drink specials from Folk/Ketchum The Divine Grind, and studio-fee- Ireland Bank in Carey, or $5-$7 at Past, Present and Future,” 5 Ten Commandments Musical,” The Piers Lamb Project, a duo 7 p.m. at River Christian free painting at Hands On. No the gate). Free admission to the p.m. at Stanley Museum on Idaho cover. Hands On/The Divine Grind playing contemporary and original fair. Highway 75, followed by a camp- Fellowship, corner of Falls Avenue acoustic folk, 6:30-9:30 p.m. at East and Shoshone Falls Road. is located at 147 Shoshone St. N. fire talk at 8:30 p.m. at Redfish 736-4475. Papa Hemi’s Hideaway, 310 S. Lake Amphitheater, five miles Free admission. At 6 p.m., pizza Main St. No cover. and salad available for a donation. south of Stanley. An overview of 733-3133. County fair/Jerome the history of wolves in North Photo courtesy Gail Severn Gallery Jazz/Sun Valley America, exploring wolf evolution, Jerome County Fair continues By Deborah Oropallo, this pig- Joe Fos, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at behavior, communication and pre- Planetarium/Twin Falls at Jerome County Fairgrounds. dation, and a discussion on Idaho Highlights: 10 a.m., Open Beef ment print on alumninum is Duchin Lounge at Sun Valley Faulkner Planetarium at Lodge. No cover. 622-2145. wolf restoration and the future of Herrett Center for Arts and Show, Show Ring and Open called ‘Coy 1/3’,and is on display wolf management. Baron, a biolo- Science presents “Here Comes Poultry Show in the Livestock at the Gail Severn Gallery. Rock/Boise gist, studied large and small car- the Sun” at 2 p.m.; “Two Small Area; noon to 10 p.m., commer- Music/ Sun Valley MC Spice Train, with karaoke, “Ticket to Ride,” featuring nivore species, including wolves, Pieces of Glass” with live sky cial and food booths open; noon to bears, fisher and bobcat, and is a 10 p.m., cultural exhibits and 4-H Lodge, 412 E. 200 S. Open to the 9 p.m. at the Boiler Room at Sun “Hard Day’s Night” internation- tour at 7 p.m.; and “Lynyrd public; $5 per person or $9 per resident instructor for Yellowstone Skynyrd: Fly On Free Bird” at exhibits open in the Messersmith Valley Resort. No cover. 622- ally renowned Beatles tribute couple. Dinner available 6-9 p.m. 2148. band, at 8 p.m. at Egyptian Association Institute. Series pre- 8:15 p.m. Education-show tickets building; 2 p.m., Open Sheep sented by Sawtooth Interpretive are $4.50 for adults, $3.50 for Show, Show Ring; 4 p.m., Small Theatre, 700 W. Main St., with a Music/Buhl Music/Burley musical biography of the Beatles’ and Historical Association. Free seniors and $2.50 for students. Animal Round Robin, 2 -3 p.m., admission. Discoversawtooth.org. Tickets for the 8:15 p.m. enter- 4 p.m. to midnight, Inland Empire Live music, 7-11 p.m. at Kroakers DJ, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. story told through the eyes of tainment show are $4.50 for all Carnival open; 5 p.m., 4-H Large Mimi’s at the Saddle Horn Events at the Riverside, 197 W. U.S. manager Brian Epstein. At 11 a.m., the tribute band will hold a Music/Challis ages. Animal Round Robin; 5:30 p.m., Center, 289 Clear Lakes Road. No Highway 30. $2 cover. Open Swine Show at Swine Show cover. re-enactment of the Beatles’ first Braun Brothers Reunion ring; and 7:30 p.m.,Tough Enough Country, rock/Declo American press conference from Festival, 4:30 p.m. at the Challis Music/Twin Falls Movie/Bellevue Feb. 7, 1964. Their custom-tai- Community Stage. Features Wood Pianist Jordan Kezele plays To Wear Pink Pro Rodeo in the The Fugitives, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. DePew Arena. Hot Summer Nights Outdoor lored costumes, vintage instru- River Valley group The Kim dinner music, 6:30-8:30 p.m., and at Shakers, 826 Idaho Highway ments and Liverpudlian dialect Stocking Band; followed by Texas vocalist and guitarist Rick Kuhn Movies at Bellevue Memorial 81. No cover. Fundraiser/Jerome Park. Show starts at 9:20 p.m. recreate the magic and music of singers and songwriters The plays light rock, 9-11 p.m., at the Beatles. Frank Mendonca Gougers; Texas-born Doug Canyon Crest Dining and Event Jerome County Fair’s Babes with cartoon trailers. Bring lawn chairs. Made possible through a Festivity/Glenns Ferry plays Paul McCartney and Greg Moreland with western swing; Center, 330 Canyon Crest Drive. ’n Buckles fundraiser, 4 p.m. in The 24th annual Three Island Wilmot plays the role of Epstein. Randy Rogers Band (2009 No cover. Depew Arena at Jerome County grant from Hayward Family Foundation, and sponsored by Crossing events at Three Island Show directed by Danielle Palmer. Academy of Country Music nomi- Fairgrounds. A behind-the-scenes Crossing State Park. Begins with a The band has performed Beatle nee for Top Vocal Group); and look at rodeo; meet the cowboys, Hailey Chamber of Commerce and Music/Twin Falls Bellevue Council. Free admission; Fine Art and Folk Art Show, 2-8 tribute acts since 1997 in North Cross Canadian Ragweed, pio- Live music, 7-10 p.m. at bull riders, ropers, rodeo clowns p.m. at Carmela Vineyards; fol- America and Europe. Four Boise neers of the Oklahoma Red Dirt and announcers. The Tough bring a non-perishable food dona- Moxie Java Tuscany, 430 Blue tion for the Hunger Coalition. lowed by equestrian-only dancers Katie Ponozzo, Lesley music scene. Food and beverages Lakes Blvd. N., double punches, Enough to Wear Pink event raises parade at 7 p.m. (starts at Elmore Thompson, Lisa Whitwell and available. Bring low-back chairs; money for breast cancer aware- No cover. Arts, crafts/Ketchum County Fairgrounds and ends at Jennifer Waters play ensemble no coolers, dogs or outside food or ness. Cameras welcome.Advance the park); entertainment, 7:30- roles and perform a modern beverages allowed. Tickets for Dance/Twin Falls tickets are $50, at the fairgrounds The 41st Sun Valley Center 9:30 p.m. at the park; and artists, dance routine. Ponozzo, a Boise adults are $99.95 (three-day office or Jerome Recreation Arts and Crafts Festival, pre- craftsmen and food vendor booths State University dance instructor, combo); $74.95 (any two-day Disabled American Veterans District. Fee includes a pink T- sented by Sun Valley Center for Auxiliary’s public dance, 8 p.m. open noon to 9:30 p.m. No charge choreographed the Boise per- combo); and $39.95 (one-day); shirt, food and drinks, and rodeo the Arts, 10 a.m.-6:30 p.m. at to enter the state park for Friday’s formance. Thompson has per- and for children, $14.95 (ages 6- at the DAV Hall, 459 Shoup Ave.; admission. Information: Paula at Atkinson Park, corner of Eighth $2 donations requested. activities. No pets allowed for any formed and competed in dance, 12), at braunbrothersreunion.com 324-3389 or Kathleen at 324- Street and Second Avenue. of the events. Information: Glenns and now teaches at Elevated or at the gate. Children under 6 7209. Features art, music, artist demon- Music/Twin Falls Ferry Chamber of Commerce, Dance Project and Centre Stage admitted free. strations, family activities and 366-7345; Jean Allen, 366-2345; Studios, and master classes in Copperhead at Sidewinder Country/Jerome food from local vendors. or Dale Smith, 366-2710 or 590- Saloon, 233 Fifth Ave. S.; karaoke ballet and jazz around Idaho. Country Classics, 8 p.m. to Highlights: Artists displays of 4171; or glennsferryidaho.org. Whitwell’s dance career includes 8 at Woody’s; and DJ Joey Bravo in midnight at Snake River Elks handmade fine arts and crafts the Blue Room at Woody’s, 213 multiple years with American (glasswork, fiber, jewelry, paint- Art show/Glenns Ferry Festival Ballet, Opera Idaho and SATURDAY Art/Ketchum The 3rd annual Three Island Boise State University student shows. Waters has danced for 25 “The Container Show - Installation Crossing Art show, a no-fee Festivity/Twin Falls Two,” presented by Sun Valley Center for the exhibition of select Idaho artists: years and now teaches dance at sculptor Bob Gerdes and jewelry private schools. Tickets are $22 at The 20th annual Hispanic Arts, opens 5-8 p.m. today, in storage contain- Heritage Fiesta at Twin Falls City ers on the center’s new property (corner of maker Emmy Gerdes; Lee 387-1273, egyptiantheatre.net or Blackwell, horse hair hitching; brownpapertickets.com. Park. Highlights: 12:15 p.m., intro- Second Avenue and Fourth Street). Featured duction and welcome; 12:30 artists are Jan Cox, Amanda Hamilton, Megan Cynthia Hen-stock, watercolor; Sherrie Gregory, pottery; KC Murphy and Angela Tsai. Cox installed “vene- Comedy/Boise Calendar continued on Duerig, carving; Steve Gabriel, Comedian Sinbad performs at tianblind,” a version of a project shot over a Entertainment 7 24-hour period in Venice, Italy, in digital video, wood relief; Gertrude Hudson, oils; 9:30 p.m. at Knitting Factory digital stills and 35mm film. Hamilton will show a 17-minute film, “Beautiful Terrible,” which is a “sort of re-enactment” of the sud- local artist and former Michael’s teacher, on Steak House, 1826 Canyon den disappearance of White Lake in Russia in display 1-5 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, opens Crest Drive. No cover. 2005. Murphy installed three large glass pan- Saturday through AUG. 15 at Lion’s Gate Monthly Lone Wolf Entertain- els with text and images that depict Chinese Gallery, 229 Main St. Permanent collection ment, 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. at Massacre Cove in Hells Canyon. Inspired by with work by James Castle, Ed Pieters, Ray Pioneer Club,1519 Kimberly Richard Bach’s novel “Jonathan Livingston Owens,Archie Teater, Khteian-Keeton and oth- Karaoke Road. No cover. Seagull,” Tsai filled a container with 3,300 ers also on display. Free admission; refresh- PAUL bells (approximate population of Ketchum), ments. Information: Teddy Keeton at 543- Kroakers Karaoke, 9 p.m. which ring in unison when someone pulls the 5265. CORNER lever of a paper seagull. Exhibition continues to 1 a.m. at Red’s Bar, 6 E. through SEPT. 5. Containers are unlocked from Art/Ketchum Idaho St. No cover. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays and 11 a.m. to 5 “The Rural Vernacular” on display DAILY SATURDAYS p.m. Saturdays. Information: THURSDAYS sunvalleycenter.org or 726-9491. through Saturday at Sun Valley Center for the TWIN FALLS BURLEY Arts, 191 Fifth St. E. The Center stays open Karaoke, 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. Karaoke, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. TWIN FALLS Art/Twin Falls until 8 p.m. for Gallery Walk today. Regular exhibition hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday Fridays and Saturdays and 9 at the 610 Club, 1054 Lone Wolf Entertain- Ginny Blakeslee Breen’s art exhibition p.m. to 1 a.m. Sundays Overland Ave. No cover. ment, 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. at opens 7-9 p.m. today at Full Moon Gallery of through Friday, plus 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays. Free admission. Information: sun- through Thursdays, at RUPERT Pioneer Club,1519 Kimberly Fine Art and Contemporary Craft, 132 Main Klover Klub Lounge, 402 Kroakers Karaoke, 9 p.m. Road. No cover. Ave. S. in Main Street Plaza. Breen’s work has valleycenter.org or 726-9491, ext. 10. been featured in galleries in Ketchum, Sante Main Ave. N. No cover. until closing at the Blue Kroakers Karaoke, 8:30 Room, 613 Fremont Ave. No p.m. to 1 a.m. at Montana ONGOING EXHIBITIONS Fe and Seattle, and some of her work is on Art/Twin Falls display in Jackson Hole, Wyo., Boise and at “Idaho Landscape Different Point of DAILY cover. Steak House, 1826 Canyon the Body Buff in Hailey. On display through View” on display through AUG. 22 in the Jean DECLO Crest Drive. No cover. September 30. Gallery hours: noon-5 p.m. B. King Gallery at the Herrett Center for Arts (except Sundays) Miller Time Karaoke, 9 RUPERT Tuesday through Friday; and 11 a.m.-3 p.m. and Science. Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. TWIN FALLS p.m.to 1 a.m.at Big Kahuna, Kroakers Karaoke, 9 p.m. Saturday. Information: trinitymountain Tuesday and Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Karaoke, 9 p.m. to 12:30 9 E. Main St. No cover. until closing at the Blue gallery.com. Wednesday and Thursday, and 1-9 p.m. a.m. at Sidewinder Saloon, Room, 613 Fremont Ave. No Saturday. Free admission. Information: 732- 233 Fifth Ave. S. No cover. TUESDAYS cover. Art/Ketchum 6655. “Moments and Bliss” exhibition by con- temporary artist Ashley Collins on display FRIDAYS BURLEY Karaoke Corner, a through AUG. 28. Opening reception with the Art/Hailey Kroakers Karaoke, 9 p.m. roundup of regularly artist: 5-8 p.m. with the artist today at Gilman “Idaho’s Fences,” presented by Sun Valley BURLEY to 1 a.m. at Cheers, 163 W. scheduled karaoke, is pub- Contemporary, 661 Sun Valley Road. Center for the Arts, on display through AUG. 28 Karaoke, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. U.S. Highway 30. No cover. lished on the first Friday of Information: 726-7585 or gilmancontempo- at The Center, 314 S. Second Ave. Local pho- at the 610 Club, 1054 each month; one-time rary.com. tographers, illustrators, painters and print- Overland Ave. No cover. WEDNESDAYS karaoke events are in the makers present their views on fences. Hours: RUPERT main events calendar. Send Art/Filer noon to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Friday. Kroakers Karaoke, 9 p.m. TWIN FALLS submissions to Ramona New exhibit featuring work of Sharon Free admission. Information: sunvalleycen- to 1 a.m. at Melody Bar, 502 Kroakers Karaoke, 8:30 Jones at ramona@magic- McKenna, watercolors with lyrical quality by ter.org or 726-9491. Sixth St. No cover. p.m. to 1 a.m. at Montana valley.com. Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho ENTERTAINMENT Friday, August 7, 2009 Entertainment 7 EVENTS CALENDAR Calendar continued from solve global poverty, at 4 p.m. at Entertainment 6 the Community Library, 415 p.m., Miss Chiquitita pageant, Spruce Ave. Novogratz’s book duchess category (girls, ages 5- “The Blue Sweater: Bridging the 6); 1:15 p.m., Miss Chiquitita Gap between Rich and Poor in an pageant, princess (girls, ages 7- Interconnected World” uses the 8); 2:45 p.m., Miss Chiquitita unanticipated international jour- pageant, queen (girls, ages 9-10); ney of one article of clothing to 3:15 p.m, Mexico Lindo; 4 p.m., explore what it means to live in a Miss Chiquitita winners; 4:15 globally conscious way. She p.m., Mexico Lindo; 5 p.m., Aztec shares anecdotes from her trav- dancers; 5:45 and 6:45 p.m., els in Africa, India and Pakistan on entertainment; and 7:30 p.m. her quest to understand and dance with Sergio Jimenez/ address global poverty. Novogratz Banda SP. Free admission. works as a venture capitalist and is founder of the Acumen Fund, a nonprofit global venture fund that Crafts/Twin Falls exemplifies a new form of philan- Make-n-Take crafts, 10 a.m. thropy called “patient capital,” to 1 p.m. at Twin Falls Creative which aims to make people self- Arts Center, 249 Main Ave W. sufficient.The talk is presented by Show up between 10 a.m. and the Sun Valley Center for the Arts. 12:30 p.m. and make a fun craft Times-News file photo Free admission. Sunvalleycenter. in less than 30 minutes. Cost is org or 726-9491, ext. 10. $5; no registration required. Rodeo is always one of the primary draws to the Jerome County Fair, which continues this weekend at the Jerome County Fairgrounds. Tfcreativeartscenter.com or 737- 9111. Bluegrass/Heyburn free art project (make felt gardens ed. information: All Seasons Event folk; 2:30-3:30 p.m., Hickory 11 Snake River Bluegrass with artist Beth Rogers); 1-4 pm., Planning, 928-7117 or Blue, acoustic folk; and 3:45-4:45 Planetarium/Twin Falls Festival, 3:30 p.m. at the artist demonstration: R. C. Hink [email protected], p.m., Kim Stocking Band, coun- TUESDAY Faulkner Planetarium at Riverside Park and Amphitheater with woodworking; and entertain- or blainecountycdc.org. try/folk. Picnics welcome; no Herrett Center for Arts and (next to the Chamber of ment: 11 a.m.-noon, The Shims, dogs or glass containers allowed. Science presents “Sky Quest” Commerce building). Featured Americana; 12:30-1:30 p.m., Free admission. 726-9491 or Breakfast, art/Twin Falls with live sky tour at 2 p.m.; bands include Sole’s Rest, Four Stroke Bus, acoustic folk; 2- www.sunvalleycenter Breakfast and an art project, “More Than Meets the Eye” Marcus Meek Guitar Shop Band, 3 p.m., DJ MC, ambient/world; .org. 9-11 a.m. at Hands On, 147 with live sky tour at 4 p.m.; “Two Joshua Crosby & Lonesome 3:30-4:30 p.m., The B-3 Side, Shoshone St. N. Learn a new art Small Pieces of Glass” with live Dove, and J.D. Webb & the jazz; and 5-6 p.m., Molly Venter, and meet new friends. Cost is Downstate Ramblers. Summer acoustic folk. Picnics welcome; $20 (includes art supplies, sky tour at 7 p.m.; and “Pink no dogs or glass containers Floyd: The Wall” at 8:15 p.m. Concert Series presented by instruction and breakfast). Heyburn Amphitheater allowed. Free admission. 726- Preregister at Twin Falls Parks Education-show tickets are $4.50 9491 or and Recreation office, 136 for adults, $3.50 for seniors and Committee and city of Heyburn. Free admission. Information: www.sunvalleycenter.org. Maxwell, 736-2265. $2.50 for students. Tickets for the Chris James at 312-7157. 8:15 p.m. entertainment show Folk/Ketchum Planetarium/Twin Falls are $4.50 for all ages. Festivity/Glenns Ferry Cow Says Mooo, a trio playing Faulkner Planetarium at The 24th annual Three contemporary folk and acoustic Smokey Bear Herrett Center for Arts and Astronomy/Twin Falls Island Crossing events at Three indie rock, 6:30-9:30 p.m. at party/Stanley Science presents “Sky Quest” Star Party with telescope Island Crossing State Park. Papa Hemi’s Hideaway, 310 S. Redfish Lake Visitor Center with live sky tour at 2 p.m.; “Two viewing, 9:45 p.m. to midnight in Highlights: pioneer breakfast,7- Main St. No cover. hosts a birthday party for Small Pieces of Glass” with live the Centennial Observatory at the 10 a.m. (cost: $5 for adults, $4 for Smokey Bear at 1 p.m. Activities sky tour at 7 p.m.; and “Led Herrett Center for Arts and seniors and youth, 12-18, and $3 Jazz/Sun Valley include watching a Smokey Bear Zeppelin: Maximum Volume 1” Science. View Jupiter and waning for 11 and younger); opening Joe Fos, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at DVD and making several craft at 8:15 p.m. Education-show gibbous Moon. Free admission. ceremonies for crossing reen- Duchin Lounge at Sun Valley items honoring Smokey Bear. Gift tickets are $4.50 for adults, $3.50 actment at 9:30 a.m. at the river Lodge. No cover. 622-2145. bags and refreshments provided. for seniors and $2.50 for stu- Music/Twin Falls edge; followed by wagons going Free and open to the public. Turn- dents. Tickets for the 8:15 p.m. Copperhead at Sidewinder down to the river at 10 a.m., with Music/ Sun Valley off road to the visitor center is five Classical/Sun Valley entertainment show are $4.50 for Saloon, 233 Fifth Ave. S.; pole the actual river crossing at 11 MC Spice Train, with karaoke, miles south of Stanley on U.S. Sun Valley Summer all ages. dancing contest at Woody’s; and a.m. (this is the final crossing 9 p.m. at the Boiler Room at Sun Highway 75, then two miles to the Symphony, featuring Steven DJ Wade in the Blue Room at reenactment). Other activities: art, Valley Resort. No cover. 622- center. Information: visitor center Honigberg, cello, performs at County fair, concert/Burley Woody’s, 213 Fifth Ave. S. Starts craft and food vendors open 8 2148. at 774-3376 (9:30 a.m.-4:30 6:30 p.m. at the Sun Valley Cassia County Fair, “Imagine at 9 p.m. No cover. a.m.-3 p.m.; entertainment, p.m. weekends) or Stanley Pavilion at Sun Valley Resort. Today, Harvest Tomorrow,” begins noon-3 p.m.; and Fine Art and Figure skating/Sun Valley Ranger Station at 774-3000 (8:30 Doors open at 5:30 p.m. at the Cassia County Fairgrounds. Music/Twin Falls Folk Art Show, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. at a.m.- 4:30 p.m. weekdays). Honigberg performs Korngold’s Highlights: 11 a.m., 4-H/FFA Evan Lyscek, 2009 world Concerto for Cello in C Major Vocalist Robin Mingo per- Carmela Vineyards. Entrance cost champion and two-time U.S. gold dairy, fitting, showing and quality; forms easy listening music, 6:30- to Saturday’s activities: $5 for Music/Challis and Tchaikovsky’s Pezzo capric- 1 p.m., 4-H/FFA sheep quality and medalist, performs at the Sun cioso. Free admission. 8:30 p.m., and Front Porch adults (includes a souvenir collec- Valley Ice Show, 9:15 p.m. at the Braun Brothers Reunion carnival opens; 1-7 p.m., free Flavor with folk, country and light tor’s button); free for children 12 Festival, 1 p.m. at the Challis Svsummersymphony.org or 622- stage entertainment at gazebo; Sun Valley Ice Rink. Tickets are 5607. rock music, 9-11 p.m., at Canyon and under. No pets allowed for $32 to $52 for bleacher seats and Community Stage. Features local 6:30-10 p.m., exhibit and com- Crest Dining and Event Center, any of the events. Information: favorites Joshua Tree from Boise, mercial buildings open; 5 p.m., $62 for dessert buffet and ice Music/Sun Valley 330 Canyon Crest Drive. No Glenns Ferry Chamber of show, at seats.sunvalley.com, followed by singer/songwriter turkey fitting and showing; and cover. Commerce, 366-7345; Jean 622-2135 or 888-622-2108. Guitar Pull; Austin, Texas, favorite Pianist and singer Leana 8:30 p.m., country singer John Allen, 366-2345; or Dale Smith, George Devore; the entire Braun Leach, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. during Anderson in concert (tickets: $20 Country, rock/Twin Falls 366-2710 or 590-4171; or Classical/Sun Valley Family with stories and songs; Sunday brunch in the Lodge for stage front and grandstand Mixed Emotions, 8:30 p.m. to glennsferryidaho.org. Texas legend and honky-tonk Dining Room at Sun Valley Resort. seats, and $12 for bleacher seat- Sun Valley Summer No cover. 622-2800. ing, at the fairgrounds office, 678- 12:30 a.m. at Montana Symphony Pops Night at 6:30 king Dale Watson; and Austin- Steakhouse, 1826 Canyon Crest Art show/Glenns Ferry based group Reckless Kelly, led 9150). Free admission to the fair. p.m. at the Sun Valley Pavilion at Festivity/Glenns Ferry Drive. No cover. The 3rd annual Three Island Sun Valley Resort. Doors open at by Cody and Willy Braun, Muzzie Crossing Art show, a no-fee 5:30 p.m. Featuring guest con- and JoAnn’s two oldest sons. The 24th annual Three Comedy/Albion Jazz/Twin Falls exhibition of select Idaho artists: ductor Alasdair Neale and vocal- Food and beverages available. Island Crossing events con- Comedy Night, 7 p.m. at Sage Great Riff Jazz combo, 7-10 sculptor Bob Gerdes and jewelry ists Tiffany Haas, Chad Johnson Bring low-back chairs; no cool- clude at Three Island Crossing Mountain Grill, 251 N. St. Seating p.m. at Pandora’s restaurant, 516 maker Emmy Gerdes; Lee and Zachary Prince with a ers, dogs or outside food or bev- State Park, with a Community starts at 6:30 p.m. $10 cover. Hansen St. No cover. Blackwell, horse hair hitching; Leonard Bernstein tribute pro- erages allowed. Tickets for adults Worship Service at 10 a.m.; 673-6696. Cynthia Henstock, watercolor; gram. Free admission. svsum- are $99.95 (three-day combo); open to everyone at the park. No Canning day/Twin Falls Sherrie Gregory, pottery; KC mersymphony.org or 622-5607. $74.95 (any two-day combo); charge to enter the park for the Classical/Sun Valley Duerig, carving; Steve Gabriel, and $39.95 (one-day);and for service. No pets allowed. Sun Valley Summer Twin Falls Farmers Market wood relief; Gertrude Hudson, children, $14.95 (ages 6-12), at Information: Glenns Ferry will hold Canning Day in celebra- Space programs/Boise Symphony performs at 6:30 oils; Jonna Barnett, acrylics; Jim braunbrothersreunion.com or at Chamber of Commerce, 366- p.m. at the Sun Valley Pavilion at tion of National Farmers Market O’Day, painting; and Saunie Third annual Idaho Space the gate. Children under 6 admit- 7345; Jean Allen, 366-2345; or Week. Canning quantities of pro- Days concludes 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sun Valley Resort. Doors open at Kohntopp, glass bead/lamp work, ted free. Dale Smith, 366-2710 or 590- 5:30 p.m. Featuring violinist and duce available from vendors; includes people’s choice “Artists’ at The Discovery Center of Idaho, 4171; or glennsferryidaho.org. presentation by Master Food 131 Myrtle St., with space-relat- director Jeremy Constant, violin- Challenge “: interpretation of sun- 9 ists Juliana Athayde and Paul Preserver Peggy Candy at 10 set photo by Jerry Kencke ($100 ed programs and demonstrations Rock/Boise a.m.; and drawings for canning in honor of NASA’s 50th anniver- Brancato, and Adam Smyla, prize); and features demonstra- “Ticket to Ride,” featuring viola. Free admission. supplies and equipment every tions by Boise teaching artist Fred sary and the 40th anniversary of SUNDAY half hour from 10 a.m. - 1 p.m., at the Apollo 11 moonwalk. “Hard Day’s Night” internation- Svsummersymphony.org or 622- Choate on plein air landscape ally renowned Beatles tribute 5607. the TFFM Welcome Center on painting and Twin Falls artist Al Highlights: all day, Boise North College Road across from Astronomical Society with solar band, at 2:30 p.m. at Egyptian Cantu on painting, 10 a.m.-5 Festivity/Twin Falls Theatre, 700 W. Main St., with a the Expo Center. Bring lawn chair. p.m., on the lawn and inside the and telescope demonstrations; The 20th annual Hispanic Jazz/Sun Valley Information: Diane Stevens at noon-2 p.m., NASA Education musical biography of the Beatles’ Joe Fos, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at building, Carmela Winery, next to Heritage Fiesta continues at story told through the eyes of 316-1292. Three Island State Park, Glenns specialist Tony Leavitt with “show Twin Falls City Park. Highlights: Duchin Lounge at Sun Valley and tell” items; and 3 p.m., Teen manager Brian Epstein. Four Lodge. No cover. 622-2145. Ferry, free admission, presented noon-1 p.m., Miss Chiquitita and Boise dancers Katie Ponozzo, Car show, dance, by the Visual Arts Committee of Club’s model rocket demonstra- Talent Show; 1-2 p.m., band from tion. Admission is $6.50 for Lesley Thompson, Lisa Whitwell fireworks/Castleford the Mountain Home Arts Council. Salt Lake City; 2-2:30 p.m., and Jennifer Waters play ensem- Live music/Ketchum 5th Annual Buhl Bunch Car adults, $5.50 for seniors 60 and Payasito Teddy; 2:30-3:30 p.m., Ketch’em Alive free concert older, and $4 for children 3-17. ble roles and perform a modern Club Show and Shine in and Theater/Glenns Ferry Leos Musical; 3:30-4 p.m., dance routine. Tickets are $22 at and dance, 7 p.m. at Forest around Jean’s Park. Highlights: 8 Free for children 2 and under. Payasito Teddy; 4-5 p.m., Service Park, First Street and Historic Opera Theatre pres- 343-9895 or www.scidaho.org. 387-1273, egyptiantheatre.net or a.m., park opens for registration ents the melodrama “Blazing Diamantes Musical; 5-5:45 p.m., brownpapertickets.com. Washington Avenue. Local bands and car show display; 10:30 a.m., Guns at Roaring Gulch,” at a talent show; 6-7 p.m., Claudia warm up the crowd at 7 p.m. The burn outs on strip, west end of dinner show at the theater, 208 E. Rock/Boise Castrejon; and 7-8 p.m., Edgar Music/Stanley headliners, this week Dikki Du park; 11:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m., mud Idaho Ave. Dinner starts at 6:30 “Ticket to Ride,” featuring Guerrero. Free admission. and The Zydeco Krewe with “Hard Day’s Night” internation- Music From Stanley concert innovative zydeco, start playing at drags, in field west of park; noon- p.m.; show at 7:45 p.m. Tickets series, featuring Idaho musicians 4:30 p.m., poker run, beginning at are $22.50 for dinner and show ally renowned Beatles tribute Car show/Castleford 7:30 p.m. Picnics, low-back band, at 8 p.m. at Egyptian Johnny Shoes and Kayleigh chairs and blankets are welcome. the park; 5:30 p.m., burn out (choice of steak or chicken), and 5th Annual Buhl Bunch Car Jace, 4-8 p.m. at Redfish Lake finals; 9 p.m., free street dance show-only tickets are $7 general Theatre, 700 W. Main St., with a Club Show and Shine continues Drinks are sold at the park. musical biography of the Beatles’ Lodge. Free admission. Concert with Milestone, on Main Street; admission, $6 for senior citizens at Jean’s Park: 8:30 a.m., church recordings to be aired in radio and fireworks at dusk. Free and children under 12. Dinner story told through the eyes of in the park; 9 a.m., park opens for 12 manager Brian Epstein. Frank series on KBSU and KISU in the admission to events; $25 entry reservations required; 366-7408. car show, horseshoe tournament fall. musicfromstanley.com. fee to participate in car show Mendonca plays Paul McCartney registration and mud drags; 10 WEDNESDAY events. Information: Lisa Knutz, County fair/Carey and Greg Wilmot plays the role of a.m., horseshoe tournament; and vendor coordinator, 731-1702 or Epstein. Show directed by 11 a.m.-1 p.m., car show vehicle 10 Blaine County Fair continues Danielle Palmer. Four Boise 537-6678; Jerry Rhodes at 731- at the Blaine County Fairgrounds. judging. Free admission to Planetarium/Twin Falls 1240; or Mindy Snyder at 543- dancers Katie Ponozzo, Lesley events; $25 entry fee to partici- MONDAY Highlights: 9 a.m., open-class Thompson, Lisa Whitwell and Faulkner Planetarium at 5466. horse and mule show, and pate in car show events. Jennifer Waters play ensemble Information: Lisa Knutz, vendor Herrett Center for Arts and exhibits open; 11 a.m. cowboy roles and perform a modern Science presents “Here Comes County fair/Jerome poet Stan Tixier; noon, 4-H mar- coordinator, 731-1702 or 537- Music/Twin Falls dance routine. Ponozzo, a Boise 6678; Jerry Rhodes at 731-1240; the Sun” at 2 p.m. $4.50 for Jerome County Fair contin- ket animal buyers’ luncheon; 1 Red Stripe Reggae Night,9 adults, $3.50 for seniors and ues at Jerome County State University dance instructor, or Mindy Snyder at 543-5466. p.m. in the Blue Room at pm. Native American flutist Hovia choreographed the Boise per- $2.50 for students. Fairgrounds: Highlights: 8:30 a.m. Edwards; 1:30 p.m., market ani- Information: Lisa Knutz, vendor Woody’s, 213 Fifth Ave. S. No Stock Sale Buyer Appreciation formance. Tickets are $22 at coordinator, 731-1702 or 537- cover. mal sale: and 8 p.m. rodeo (tick- 387-1273, egyptiantheatre.net or Music/Twin Falls Breakfast; 10 a.m., Stock Sale for ets: $5 in advance from Ireland 6678; Jerry Rhodes at 731-1240; 4-H/FFA Market Animals; 11 a.m. brownpapertickets.com. or Mindy Snyder at 543-5466. Magic Valley Idol Contest, 10 Bank in Carey, or $5-$7 at the Jazz/Sun Valley p.m. at the Pioneer Club, 1519 Team Sorting Competition, Main gate). Free admission to the fair. Bruce Innes, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Arena; noon to 10 p.m., commer- Road rally/Ketchum Arts, crafts/Ketchum Kimberly Road. Contestants can at Duchin Lounge at Sun Valley sign up before performance time. cial and food booths open; noon Country, rock/Declo The Sun Valley Road Rally,a The 41st Sun Valley Center Lodge. No cover. 622-2145. benefit for the Blaine County $10 registration fee. Weekly con- to 10 p.m., cultural exhibits and The Fugitives, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Arts and Crafts Festival, pre- 4-H exhibits open in the Community Drug Coalition, will be sented by Sun Valley Center for test winners compete at semifi- at Shakers, 826 Idaho Highway held 9 a.m. to noon along State Lecture/Sun Valley nals Aug. 19-20. Finals competi- Messersmith building; 2 p.m. to 81. No cover. the Arts, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. at Summer Lecture Series, midnight, Inland Empire Carnival Highway 75 north of Ketchum at Atkinson Park, corner of Eighth tion is Aug. 26, with cash prizes. the Sawtooth National Recreation hosted by The Community School No cover. 733-9937. open; 7:30 p.m. Pro Rodeo in the Street and Second Avenue. and College of Idaho, at 7 p.m. at DePew Arena; and 10 p.m., Arts, crafts/Ketchum Area Headquarters. Traffic Features art, music, artist demon- The 41st Sun Valley Center through the area along the high- The Community School Theater, Music/Twin Falls release of all 4-H animals and strations, family activities and 181 Dollar Road. John Rember, projects.. Arts and Crafts Festival, pre- way and nearby bicycle trails will food from local vendors. Open Mic Night with Josh sented by Sun Valley Center for be restricted, with vehicular traf- writer-at-large, presents Summers, 9 p.m. in the Blue Highlights: Artists displays of “Reconstructing a Landscape of the Arts, 10 a.m.-6:30 p.m. at fic allowed every 15 minutes and handmade fine arts and crafts Room at Woody’s, 213 Fifth Ave. Rodeo/Burley Atkinson Park, corner of Eighth Hope,” followed by a question- Cassia County Fair’s Timed bicyclists shuttled through. (glasswork, fiber, jewelry, paint- S. No cover. Street and Second Avenue. Suggested donation for specta- and-answer session. Free admis- Event Rodeo with local cowboys ings, woodworking and toys); kids sion and open to the public. Features art, music, artist demon- tors ages 7 and up is $20, or a activity area, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., with County fair, parade/ and cowgirls, 7 p.m. at the Cassia strations, family activities and County Fairgrounds. Events family pack of four tickets for free art project (make sun hats Burley food from local vendors. $50. Spectators should arrive with artist Joni Cashman); 1-4 Lecture/Ketchum include calf roping, breakaway Highlights: Artists displays of Author and philanthropist Cassia County Fair, “Imagine roping, ribbon roping, barrel rac- before 8:30 a.m. to park and reg- pm., artist demonstration, Deb Today, Harvest Tomorrow,” con- handmade fine arts and crafts ister, and parking is limited so Gelet with fiber art. Jacqueline Novogratz discuss- ing and team roping. Entry fee is (glasswork, fiber, jewelry, paint- es “Patient Capital for an tinues at the Cassia County $50; must be 18 or older to par- carpooling is suggested. Water Entertainment: 11:30 a.m.-12:30 ings, woodworking and toys); kids and chairs will be provided; p.m., Hat Trick, acoustic rock; 1-2 Impatient World,” in a talk and Calendar continued on ticipate. Free admission. 678- activity area, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., with book signing about her efforts to 9150. closed-toed shoes recommend- p.m., Loose Change, acoustic Entertainment 8 Entertainment 8 Friday, August 7, 2009 ENTERTAINMENT Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho

p.m., free stage entertainment at Live music/Ketchum gazebo; 3, 5 and 7 p.m., shows Thursday Plaza Nights,a EVENTS CALENDAR with hypnotist Kendrick Lester; free concert series, 6 to 8 p.m. in and PRCA rodeo (tickets: $10 for Town Plaza across from Calendar continued from Folk/Ketchum silent auction gift packages. Raffle Herrett Center for Arts and grandstand seats and $8 for Atkinsons’ Market. Ice cream tickets are $10 for a chance to Science presents “Sky Quest” adults for bleacher seats. Kids and crepes will be for sale at Entertainment 7 Fred Crabtree plays Night: Free for kids under 12, and Americana and Idaho cowhand win: grand prize, Chamber Bailout with live sky tour at 2 p.m.; $4.50 Leroy’s Ice Cream booth, with Package (more than $5,000 in gift for adults, $3.50 for seniors and 4-H and FFA members in the part of the profits going to Wood Fairgrounds. Highlights: 10:30 folk music with guitar and har- bleachers). 678-9150. a.m. parade along Overland monica, 6:30-9:30 p.m. at Papa certificates for gasoline, groceries, $2.50 for students. River Valley nonprofit organiza- tions. Avenue and Main Street; 1 p.m., Hemi’s Hideaway, 310 S. Main St. restaurants, retail stores, goods Classical/Sun Valley 4-H/FFA sheep fitting and No cover. and services); second prize, Far Music/Twin Falls showing; 1-7 p.m., free stage Out Party (a private star party for Magic Valley Idol Contest, 10 Sun Valley Summer Music/Sun Valley entertainment at gazebo; 20 people at the Herrett Center for p.m. at the Pioneer Club, 1519 Symphony presents the Elkhorn Summer Concert Jazz/Sun Valley Musicians’ Choice Chamber 1-10 p.m., commercial build- Joe Fos, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at Arts and Science, with prime rib Kimberly Road. Contestants can Series, 6 p.m. in the Elkhorn ings open; 4:30 p.m., 4-H dog dinner); and third prize, Camp Out sign up before performance time. Music Concert, 6:30 p.m. at the Village Center, featuring The Duchin Lounge at Sun Valley Sun Valley Pavilion at Sun Valley show; 5:30 p.m. 4-H rabbit, Lodge. No cover. 622-2145. Package (camp table and chairs, $10 registration fee. No cover. Drive-By Truckers. Advance fitting, showing and quality; cooler, shade umbrella, flashlight, 733-9937. Resort. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. tickets are $37.50 plus tax, at and 7 p.m. team ranch sorting. first-aid kit and a cash card). Featuring violinists Kristin Atkinsons’ Market and The Free admission to the fair. 678- 13 Picnic tickets are $10 for adults County fair/Burley Ahlstrom and Stacy Markowitz; Market at Elkhorn Springs or 9150. and $7 for children 12 and Morris Jacob, viola; Anne elkhornconcerts.com. Tickets at Cassia County Fair, “Imagine Fagerburg, cello; William THURSDAY younger, at Twin Falls Area Today, Harvest Tomorrow,” contin- the gate are $47. Series tickets Chamber of Commerce office, VerMeulen and Tod Bowermaster, are $100 plus tax, online or 1- Music/Hailey ues at the Cassia County horns; Andrew McCandless, Mike Back Alley Parties, featuring 858 Blue Lakes Blvd. N., or 733- Fairgrounds. Highlights: 9 a.m., 4- 503-265-2270. Picnic, raffle, music/ 3974. Buy 12 raffle tickets and Tiscione and Jeff Biancalana, free live music, Wednesday H swine market quality and beef trumpets; James Market, trom- nights through AUG. 26 out- Twin Falls receive two picnic tickets free. quality; 11 a.m.-10 p.m., com- Jazz/Sun Valley bone; Peter Wahrhaftig, tuba; and Joe Fos, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at doors at The Wicked Spud on Hot August Nite, 5-9 p.m. at mercial buildings open; 1 p.m., pianist Peter Henderson. Free Main Street. Benefits a different Twin Falls City Park, with a picnic, Planetarium/Twin Falls queen and princess horseman- Duchin Lounge at Sun Valley Faulkner Planetarium at admission. svsummersymphony. Lodge. No cover. 622-2145. local nonprofit every week. live music, games, a raffle and ship; 2-4 p.m., 4-H Bowl; 1-7 org or 622-5607. twin falls U $ 50 DineYouYou could win our weekly drawing on fforor a giftgift certicertififi cate to one ooffs these fi ne restaurants.restaurants. JustJust fi ll out the entryentry formform below and mmail it in for your chance to win.   ENTRY FORM Come for Breakfast Restaurant ______

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S Magicvalley.com/sports MLB, Sports 2 / Scoreboard, Sports 3 / NASCAR, Sports 4 / Nation & World, Sports 5 / Obituaries, Sports 6 Sports FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 2009 SPORTS EDITOR MIKE CHRISTENSEN: (208) 735-3239 [email protected] Akey sees progress as Vandals open fall camp By Josh Wright going into his third season on the begin preparations for the 2009 years — it’s the results that have yet Vandal camp Times-News correspondent gridiron. season. to follow. Below are key dates in Akey insists there are no paral- Players report to campus today, “I feel great about the progress,” Idaho’s 2009 fall MOSCOW — There might not be lels. and the first practice of fall the former Washington State camp. All three a more die-hard follower of “You can’t flip football camp is Saturday after- defensive coordinator said. “Yeah, I scrimmages are University of Idaho men’s basket- overnight,” he said. “It’s noon at 3:30.Idaho opens want to see it happen quicker, and I open to the public. ball than Robb Akey. At just about much harder to do than the season on Sept. 5 at know our fans do because it’s been a Today: Players every home game last winter, the basketball. Just the num- New Mexico State. decade since they’ve (seen) a bowl report Vandals football coach and his two bers that come into play, If anything, Verlin’s game, a winning season. And I Saturday: First prac- sons watched gleefully from the the physicality of the foot- sudden transformation know that grates on our fans.” tice, 3:30 p.m. stands as Don Verlin reshaped the ball game.” of Idaho basketball has made One potential boost for the Aug. 14: Scrimmage, 2:30 p.m. moribund program into a postsea- Patience has become a buzzword Vandal fans hungrier for similar Vandals is that they enter fall camp Aug. 19: Scrimmage, 2:30 p.m. son participant. around Vandal football, and for success from the beleaguered foot- with the most continuity in years. Aug. 23: Scrimmage, 2:30 p.m. Just don’t bother drawing con- good reason. Akey holds a 3-21 ball program. Akey said last week at After becoming the third Idaho Sept. 5: Season opener at New clusions from what Verlin was able mark as Idaho coach and looks to the Western Athletic Conference coach in three years when he was Mexico State, 5 p.m. to achieve in his first year as coach have the bulk of a massive overhaul football preview that the ground- and what Akey has yet to muster still in front of him as the Vandals work has been laid in his first two See IDAHO, Sports 2 BSU QB ISU seeks hypes his H A N G I N ’ ON more wins receivers after 1-11 Moore confident in campaign his third fall camp By Mark Liptak By Dustin Lapray Times-News correspondent Times-News correspondent POCATELLO — The BOISE — Kellen Moore is 2009 Idaho State Bengals getting better. open fall camp today, and The Western Athletic players, coaches and staff Conference Freshman of the realize it’s an important year Year enters his third fall for the program, to say camp with none of the trap- nothing of the future of head pings of a coach John Zamberlin. ISU seeks progress after controversy. last year’s 1-11 The job is his. disaster. If “I’m feel- improve- ing more ment comfortable, trans- more used to lates Moore it,” said into a Moore who few more wins, it’s almost was one 32 certain Zamberlin will named to the 2009 Davey return next year. Winning O’Brien National early will be a challenge Quarterback Watch List this against a brutal September week. “I’m starting to get slate that includes road used to what to expect as far games at Arizona State, as the grind, the long days. Oklahoma and Weber State. (Wednesday) I was a little For the Bengals to make rusty, but I think (Thursday) strides, a new quarterback went very well.” will have to come through Moore lost his favorite and the defense simply must target in Jeremy Childs (72 play better. Photos by MEAGAN THOMPSON/Times-News receptions, seven TDs), but “This is still a process and out of the stable come Jerome County Fair hosts PRCA rodeo it’s only been going on for Austin Pettis (49 receptions, two years,” said Zamberlin, nine TDs) and Titus Young, Morgan Wilde is bucked off Ruby Red during the bareback riding competition Thursday night at the Jerome “but we’re making improve- the fastest receiver on BSU’s ments in our facilities, our roster. Young only played in County Fair PRCA rodeo. The rodeo continues today and Saturday, with action beginning at 7:30 p.m. each recruiting classes are better, three games last season day. Admission is $7 for adults, $5 for children and seniors and free for ages 6 and under. the attitude of the program is before a suspension ended better. I want to look back his season. He’s back, look- and say in Year 3 the founda- ing faster and stronger. tion kept getting built.” “(Young) re-tooled him- Magicvalley.com Kyle Blum takes over at self,” Moore said. “He’s WATCH a video interview with Jerome rodeo quarterback after playing in doing really well out there. announcer Al Parsons. seven games last year, start- He’s bringing that vertical ing the final two. He helped game.” lead ISU to its only win of the Tyler Shoemaker (6-1, 214 season, an overtime triumph pounds) should be Moore’s over Sacramento State last third receiver. He’s got the Dirk Tavenner wrestles a steer to the ground Thursday night November. speed to stretch the field and during the Jerome County Fair and Rodeo. Blum is big, has a strong the knack to get open. arm and can throw the ball “He’s that third guy for downfield. He has a good us,”Moore said. “You need a cast of receivers, considered few more than Austin and the strength of the offense. Titus. He’s gotten a lot faster Isaiah Burel and Jaron Taylor than when he got here. He’s Browns’ Stallworth: ‘I am truly sorry’ combined for 71 catches, starting to come into the seven scores and over 1,300 package.” The Associated Press clear that I exercised poor March 14, just a few hours yards last season. The offen- Mitch Burroughs (5-9, judgment and caused after drinking at a Miami sive line is solid with Burley 194) and Chris Potter (5-9, CLEVELAND — irreparable harm to Mario Beach club. alum Braeden Clayson figur- 165) are the wild cards. Both Suspended Browns wide Reyes, his family, ing to see a lot of action on it. are smaller, faster receivers. receiver Donte Stallworth the NFL, its own- CHIEFS ADD FORMER The running game is a Look for each to take part in feels he has done “irrepara- ers, coaches, ISU QB MATT concern as the only return- the trick plays BSU is famous ble harm” to the family of employees and to GUTIERREZ ing back with experience is for. the man he killed while my fellow players.” RIVER FALLS, Clint Knickrehm, who was “I know all five of them driving drunk and said he is Stallworth Wis. — The limited to eight games in really well,”Moore said. “All ready to accept whatever thanked Goodell Kansas City 2008 due to injury. Minico five were pretty comfortable ruling NFL commissioner for the opportuni- Chiefs have graduate Skylar “Poke” getting out there. They’ll all Roger Goodell makes on his ty to express his claimed quarterback Morgan could work his way rotate in there, get their future. remorse and said he will Matt Gutierrez off waivers into a role as a freshman. opportunities.” Stallworth, suspended AP file photo accept whatever punish- from New England. Defensively, ISU was not The BSU tight ends and indefinitely by the league Suspended Cleveland Browns ment Goodell hands down. Gutierrez appeared in only the worst defense in the tailbacks will also be viable for killing Mario Reyes wide receiver Donte Stallworth “Whatever he ultimately five games during two sea- Big Sky Conference but targets for Moore, a sopho- while driving drunk in says he respects Roger Goodell’s decides is the appropriate sons with the Patriots, among the worst in the more from Prosser, Wash. Miami, met with Goodell in authority and judgment and will discipline, I will accept completing his only pass nation in the FCS division. “I think we got a nice little New York on Wednesday accept whatever ruling the NFL knowing that I have pro- attempt for 15 yards. He Zamberlin and his staff diversity in our receiving about a possible reinstate- foundly affected the NFL signed the deal Thursday aimed to bring in more speed commissioner makes on his corps, with the tight ends ment. and its relationship with and joined the team for in the offseason, seeking a and receiving corps — tall, Stallworth was recently future. the fans of our game,” practice. consistent pass rusher and shorter, fast guys and big released from jail after Stallworth said. “I jeopard- An undrafted free agent good cover players in the guys like Austin,” Moore serving 24 days for the DUI ized the honor and privilege out of Idaho State in 2007, ISU said. “We got a good mix.” conviction. the high standard expected that I have been given to be Gutierrez will compete See , Sports 4 Pettis (6-3, 200) is a solid In a public statement of all NFL players.” an NFL player and to play with Brodie Croyle and No. 1 receiver.His height and released Thursday, “I recognize that there is for our fans. I am truly Tyler Thigpen as the back- reach let him get to balls Stallworth apologized for a difference between the sorry.” ups to starter Matt Cassel. INSIDE many receivers can’t reach. his actions and vowed to legal standard in my crimi- The league has given no The Chiefs released Ingle Idaho State’s complete “He’s a guy you can count conduct himself “in a man- nal case and the standard to indication when Goodell Martin on Wednesday to 2009 football schedule ner that more accurately which NFL players are will rule on Stallworth, who See MOORE, Sports 2 reflects who I am and meets held,”Stallworth said. “It is struck and killed Reyes on See NFL, Sports 4 See Sports 4 Sports 2 Friday, August 7, 2009 SPORTS Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Cabrera, Posada lead Yanks HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS TRYOUTS Following are high school and Boys soccer: Tryouts will be held Friday, Aug. 14, and will run from NEW YORK — Melky which fell two games behind middle school/junior high sports from 4 to 6 p.m., Monday, Aug. 8 to 10 a.m. and 3 to 5 p.m. at Cabrera and Jorge Posada hit Detroit in the AL Central. tryouts submitted to the Times- 10. Information: Bill Sweet at the practice field south of Bruin three-run homers and New News. 208-420-1585. Stadium. Information: Allyn York beat Boston for the first RANGERS 6,ATHLETICS 4 Volleyball: Tryouts are Friday, Aug. Reynolds at 539-3881. time in nine games this sea- OAKLAND, Calif. — HIGH SCHOOL 14, and Saturday, Aug. 15. Grades Soccer: Tryouts for boys soccer son,13-6 on Thursday night. Michael Young hit his 18th 10 through 12 are from 9 a.m. to will be held at 9 a.m. and 6:30 Johnny Damon and Mark homer of the season,Tommy Buhl noon and freshmen are 2 to 4 p.m., Monday, Aug. 10, through p.m. Information: Kristan Young Wednesday, Aug. 12, at Sunway Teixeira also connected for Hunter pitched seven solid Football: There will be a at 731-8954. Soccer Complex. The girls’ try- New York, which ended a innings and the Rangers player/parent meeting for this outs are at 5:30 p.m. those days, nine-game skid against avoided their first four-game fall’s high school players at 6 also at the complex. Boston dating to last season. sweep since April 2008. p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 11, in the high Kimberly Information: Jose Morales at It was the Yankees’ longest Hank Blalock added his school gym. Students who wish Cross country: Practice begins at 420-2352 (boys soccer), Katie drought in the rivalry since 21st homer, and David to participate must attend, and 7:30 a.m., Friday, Aug. 14, at the Kauffman at 410-2881 (girls they lost 17 straight from Murphy and Andrew Jones those who have yet to check out high school. There will also be a soccer). Oct. 3, 1911, to July 1, 1912. each drove in a run for the gear may do so at 5 p.m. that practice at 7 a.m., Monday, Aug. Volleyball: Tryouts are set for 8 to Damon’s third-inning Rangers. day. Information: Stacy Wilson at 17.All runners must have a cur- 10 a.m. and 4 to 6 p.m., Friday, shot was his third in three AP photo 308-6170. rent physical on file to partici- Aug. 14, and Saturday, Aug. 15, in days, Cabrera and Posada New York Yankees pitcher Joba NATIONAL LEAGUE Volleyball: A parent/player meet- pate. Information: Kelly Gibbons Baun Gymnasium. Information: went deep in New York’s Chamberlain reacts after pitching PHILLIES 3, ROCKIES 1 ing will be held at 6 p.m., at 423-6303. B.J. Price at 863-2518. eight-run fourth and out of a bind in the second inning PHILADELPHIA — Cliff Wednesday, Aug. 12, in the Football: Practices begin Friday, Teixeira delivered the final of the Yankees’ 13-6 victory over Lee pitched seven impressive school gym. Tryouts begin Friday, Aug. 14, at the field behind the blow with his 28th homer the Boston Red Sox at Yankee innings in his home debut, Aug. 14, with sessions from 8 to high school gym. Equipment Wendell leading off the seventh. Stadium in New York,Thursday. Paul Bako hit a tiebreaking 10 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. Tryouts checkout will be held from 7 to 9 Volleyball: Tryouts will be held on Despite a career-high homer and the Philadelphia continue from 8 to 10:30 a.m., a.m. and 7 to 9 p.m., Thursday, Wednesday, Aug. 12, and seven walks, Joba Phillies beat the Colorado Saturday, Aug. 15. Athletes must Aug. 13, at the old gym. Practice Thursday, Aug. 13, with the first Chamberlain (8-2) lasted base as Cleveland won for Rockies 3-1 on Thursday. have a current physical to partic- begins at 7 a.m., Friday. All play- practice on Friday, Aug.14. five innings to win his fourth the ninth time in 13 games. Lee (2-0) allowed one run ipate. Information: Denny ers must complete athletic phys- Information: Julie Lund at 536- consecutive start. The switch-hitting Crowe and six hits, striking out nine Moretto 308-4772. icals to participate. There will be 5590. has batted .375 with four in his first start at Citizens a player/parent meeting at 6 ROYALS 8, MARINERS 2 RBIs in six games since his Bank Park since the Phillies Burley p.m., Monday, Aug. 17,at the high KANSAS CITY, Mo. — recall from Triple-A acquired him from school gym. Two-a-day practices MIDDLE SCHOOL/ Football: The Burley High football Bruce Chen won in the major Columbus. Cleveland last week. will continue through the annual team will hold a mandatory par- leagues for the first time scrimmage and KHS Booster JUNIOR HIGH ent/player meeting at 7 a.m., since 2005 and Billy Butler TIGERS 7,ORIOLES 3 NATIONALS 12, MARLINS 8 Club Barbecue on Saturday, Aug. Aug. 10, in the school’s gym. Burley hit a two-run homer in a DETROIT — Brandon Inge WASHINGTON — Ryan 22. Information: Kirby Bright at Drug testing will follow at 7:30 Volleyball: Tryouts will be held five-run first inning for hit a two-run homer in a Zimmerman finished a dou- 423-6298 or 308-8520. a.m. and the Bobcats’ first prac- from 3-5 p.m., Friday, Aug. 14 and Kansas City. four-run second inning, and ble short of the cycle, and Volleyball: Tryouts for the 2009 tice at 8:30 a.m. All paperwork Saturday, Aug. 15 in the west Chen, who had lost his Rick Porcello didn’t give up a Ronnie Belliard’s tiebreaking team will begin at 9 a.m., Friday, must be turned in prior to prac- gym. All seventh-graders must past 13 decisions, earned his hit until the fifth for the single in the eighth inning Aug. 14, at the high school gym. tice. Information: coach Eugene have a physical prior to tryouts first victory since Oct. 2, Tigers. helped Washington rally Information: Lawrence Pfefferle Kramer at 431-3622. and eighth-graders must have 2005, while with Baltimore. Porcello (10-7) has from a six-run deficit. at 731-6623. Boys soccer: Tryouts will be held one on file. Information: Don Chen (1-6) held the Mariners allowed only three run in his at 7:45 a.m. and 6 p.m. on Terry at 677-2522. to two runs, despite giving last two starts after allowing DIAMONDBACKS 11, PIRATES 6, Monday, Aug. 10. Paperwork may Jerome up 10 hits and a walk in 6 2-3 19 runs in his previous four. 12 INNINGS be picked up Thursday and Football: The first football prac- innings, matching his He went 5 2-3 innings in this PITTSBURGH — Alex Filer Friday during school registration. tice is at 8 a.m., Monday, Aug. 10. longest outing this season. one, allowing only four hits. Romero’s two-run double Football: A parent meeting will be Information: Wes Nyblade at Students must have school dis- highlighted Arizona’s five- held at 6 p.m., Monday, Aug. 17, 208-677-3319. trict paperwork and a physical INDIANS 2,TWINS 1 ANGELS 9, WHITE SOX 5 run 12th inning and the in the middle school gym. Girls soccer: Tryouts will be held completed prior to the first prac- CLEVELAND — Trevor CHICAGO — Vladimir Diamondbacks won their Uniforms and equipment will be at 6:30 a.m., Monday, Aug. 10, tice. Information: Gary Krumm at Crowe hit a tiebreaking dou- Guerrero hit his first home fifth straight. handed out to players (grades 7- and Tuesday, Aug. 11. 731-3709 or Sid Gambles at 410- ble in the seventh inning for run in more than a month Romero’s fourth hit was a 8) at the meeting. The first prac- Information: Sarah Edwards at 2536. Cleveland. and Bobby Abreu, Jeff double to right-center off tice will be held from 6 to 8:30 208-380-5468. Volleyball: Tryouts will be held p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 18. Players Crowe’s slicing line drive Mathis and Erick Aybar also Steven Jackson (2-2) with the from 6 to 8 a.m. and 6 to 8 p.m., should wear helmets, shoulder into the left-center gap off went deep to lead the Angels. bases loaded and one out in Friday, Aug. 14, and from 7 to 9 Canyon Ridge pads, T-shirts and cleats. Nick Blackburn (8-6) scored Jayson Nix had a three- the 12th. a.m., Saturday, Aug. 15, at the Soccer: The boys team tryouts Each student must have a physi- Travis Hafner from second run homer for Chicago, —The Associated Press school gym. Players must have a run from 5:30 to 8:15 p.m. on cal and must pay a sports fee to physical and school district Monday, Aug. 10, and Tuesday, participate. Information: Coach paperwork completed prior to Aug. 11, at the Sunway Soccer Dong at 948-0390. tryouts. Information: Hannah Complex. The girls team will hold Clark at 208-404-9292. Studer, Anderson win senior tourney tryouts from 7:30 to 9 a.m. and O’Leary Times-News Glenn Blakeley, Burley 78-78—156 Men’s Third Flight 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. on Monday, Men’s First Flight Wayne Beck, Burley 66-65—131 Cross country: Practice beings at Stephan Portela, Montpelier 79-76—155 Jerry Kemp, Twin Falls 64-69—133 Aug. 10, and Tuesday, Aug. 11, at Minico 4 p.m., Friday, Aug. 14, behind Bo Isaak, Paul 82-74—156 Dick Jennings, Emmett 68-69—137 Sunway Soccer Complex. Football: The first day of practice Steve Studer and Jim Lee, Blackfoot 84-75—159 Thomas M Lang, Caldwell 70-68—138 the gym at Twin Falls High Richard Winterbottom, Grace 79-80—159 Irvin Patterson, Pocatello 70-69—139 Students must attend all ses- starts at 8 a.m., Aug. 10, and the Rosemary Anderson came Dan Wellard, Pocatello 81-80—161 Men’s Fourth Flight School. There will be practice out on top of the 2009 Men’s Second Flight Ron Roesner, Weiser 70-63—133 sions and bring cleats, shin first contest is against Bishop Bob Parish, Twin Falls 80-87—167 Ron Bench, Burley 70-65—135 each day the following week. Devon Bratsman, Rexburg 87-83—170 Bill Toner, Burley 70-69—139 guards, a ball and water. They Kelly on Aug. 29 in Boise. Idaho State Seniors Golf Football: Registration for the sev- Bob C Enyart, Eagle 86-86—172 Judson Moller, Boise 72-67—139 must have physical examinations Information: Tim Perrigot at 436- Championship, winning Bob Anderson, Gooding 86-87—173 Bill Trujillo, Jerome 73-68—141 enth- and eighth-grade football Dave Olson, Idaho Falls 88-89—177 Ladies Flight turned into the school or they 8899. the overall low gross cham- Men’s Third Flight Linda Cropper, Hailey 72-68—140 teams will be held from 8 a.m. to pionship flights at Burley Jerry Kemp, Twin Falls 82-87—169 Rosemary Anderson, Gooding 70-71—141 may be brought to practice to Boys soccer: The Minico boys Wayne Beck, Burley 86-85—171 Carole Bennett, Gooding 73-70—143 3 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 11, and Linda Fennen, Buhl 74-70—144 play. Parents/Guardians need to soccer program will hold tryouts Golf Course. Thomas M Lang, Caldwell 87-85—172 Wednesday, Aug. 12, at O’Leary Dick Jennings, Emmett 87-88—175 Donna Jennings, Emmett 73-76—149 sign releases before players can from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., Monday, Studer, of Rupert, shot a Bob Triplett, McCammon 87-92—179 Middle School. Irvin Patterson, Pocatello 90-89—179 try out. Information: Brian Aug 10, and Tuesday, Aug. 11, at two-day total of 142 with Men’s Fourth Flight LEE WINS MUNI EVENT Soccer: Tryouts will be held at 6 Ron Roesner, Weiser 92-85—177 Gillenwater (boys) at 871-7043 the soccer field at West Minico rounds of 73 and 69. Dave Patty Lee took first place p.m., Monday, Aug. 10, on the Bill Toner, Burley 91-90—181 and Christa Tackett (girls) at Middle School. Athletes need to Cropper was the runner up Judson Moller, Boise 93-88—181 Thursday at the Twin Falls O’Leary soccer field for both Ron Bench, Burley 94-89—183 404-4248. bring completed physical forms, at 147 strokes. Anderson, of Tom Chopski, Pocatello 93-91—184 Muni Ladies’ Rally for a boys and girls soccer. Please Gooding, shot 79 and 80 for Ladies Flight Cure event at Twin Falls soccer shoes, shin guards and Rosemary Anderson, Gooding 79-80—159 bring a No. 5 soccer ball and water. Information: Armando a total of 159, while Virginia Virginia Undhjem, Twin Falls 85-77—162 Municipal Golf Course. Castleford plenty of water. Linda Fennen, Buhl 84-80—164 Tapia at 219-0395. Undhjem (Twin Falls) Gayle Kemp, Twin Falls 96-91—187 Lee shot a gross score of Football: Practice will start Volleyball: Tryouts for the sev- Linda Cropper, Hailey 98-94—192 Girls soccer: Tryouts will be held came in second at 162. Net scores 88, Ilene Carey and Jan Hall Monday, Aug. 10, with two-a- enth- and eighth-grade teams Men’s Seniors 75 + Flight from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., Monday, Robert Fulton (Glenns tied for second with 91s, days. All athletes must have a are set for Friday, Aug. 14, and Ted Sanford, Paul 71-66—137 Aug. 10, and Tuesday, Aug. 11, at Ferry) and Ted Sanford Morgan Plant, Meridian 73-70—143 Barbara Frith took fourth current physical on file prior to Saturday, Aug. 15, at the Twin Wayne Finch, Boise 74-71—145 the Minico High School soccer (Paul) tied the Seniors 75- Robert Fulton, Glenns Ferry 75-72—147 with 92 and Dustie Becker practice. Information: Tracy Falls High School gym. Seventh- plus flight by carding 173. John P Cramer, Nampa 76-75—151 placed fifth with 93. In net fields. Players should bring Men’s Championship Flight Vulgamore at 208-308-0935. grade tryouts run from 10:30 cleats, shin guards, water and Bruce Draper, Burley 72-69—141 scores, Sondra Hill came in Volleyball: Practice will begin at 9 a.m. to noon, and eighth-grade 2009 Idaho State Seniors Dave Cropper, Hailey 71-70—141 the necessary paperwork. Doug Mackay, Buhl 71-70—141 first with 64, while a.m., Friday, Aug. 14, in the gym. tryouts run from 12:30 to 2 p.m. Golf Championship Steve Studer, Rupert 73-69—142 Charlotte Brunelli, Shirley Information: Dennis Haynes at Glenn Blakeley, Burley 73-73—146 All athletes must have a current Students must have physical At Burley Golf Course Men’s First Flight Kegan, and Barbara Short 208-436-1747. Gross scores physical on file prior to practice. forms on file at the school. Bo Isaak, Paul 70-62—132 Cross country: Practice starts at Men’s Seniors 75 + Flight Jim Lee, Blackfoot 72-63—135 tied for second with 65.Joan Information: Oscar Flores at Information: Skip McFarlin (soc- Robert Fulton, Glenns Ferry 88-85—173 Richard Winterbottom, Grace 67-68—135 4 p.m., Friday, Aug. 14, on the Ted Sanford, Paul 89-84—173 Stephan Portela, Montpelier 69-66—135 Tugaw finished with 67 for 208-316-0564. cer, football, volleyball) at 733- John P Cramer, Nampa 89-88—177 David Moller, Rupert 70-68—138 fifth place. Jan Hall was school track. Neal Dean, Filer 87-91—178 Duane Smith, Heyburn 67-71—138 2155, Coach Atkins (cross coun- Wayne Finch, Boise 95-92—187 Men’s Second Flight closest to the pin on No. 6 Men’s Championship Flight Bob Parish, Twin Falls 66-73—139 Declo try) at 736-8779. Steve Studer, Rupert 73-69—142 Devon Bratsman, Rexburg 72-68—140 and received a golf bag Shoshone Dave Cropper, Hailey 74-73—147 Bob Anderson, Gooding 71-72—143 Boys soccer: Practice begins Bruce Draper, Burley 76-73—149 Bob C Enyart, Eagle 72-72—144 courtesy of Rally for a Cure Football: Practice begins at 7 Doug Mackay, Buhl 78-77—155 Monday, Aug. 10, and will run Robert Stuart Dave Olson, Idaho Falls 72-73—145 Association. p.m., Monday, Aug. 10. from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. on the Football: A mandatory parents Volleyball: There is a mandatory high school fields. Incoming and players meeting will be held meeting at 7 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. freshmen and juniors must have at 6:30 p.m., Monday, Aug. 10, at enter his third year as start- bar high. This upcoming 11, in the high school gymnasi- current physicals to participate. Robert Stuart Gym. The meeting ing quarterback. The season, we’re going to shock um. Practice begins at 7 a.m., Idaho Players should bring soccer is for players entering grades 7- Vandals also have the most some people — that’s all I Friday, Aug. 14. Continued from Sports 1 cleats, shin guards and water. 8. Physicians will be on hand to depth they’ve enjoyed in can say.” All players must have a physical Information: Tim Henrickson at provide physicals for $10. hired in 2007,Akey has kept Akey’s tenure. Enderle was Akey must smile hearing completed before the first prac- 208-654-2611, 678-1131 or 312- Equipment checkout will start his staff mostly intact and legitimately pushed by jun- such comments. He wants tice. can rely on a stable of ior college transfer Brian his players to carry a bit of 4270. after the meeting. Information: upperclassmen who know Reader in spring camp, swagger and openly talk Jerod Sweesy at 208-539-5772. his system. while running back and about a bowl berth, even if Dietrich Twin Falls Soccer: The boys soccer team Cross country: First practices are Fourth-year junior safety wide receiver are two posi- Idaho has captured only one Football: Practice begins at 7:30 tryouts will be held from 5:30 to set for 6:30 a.m. and 3 p.m., Shiloh Keo is healthy after tions with a glut of available WAC victory in the last two a.m., Monday, Aug. 10. Players 8:15 p.m., Monday, Aug. 10, and Friday, Aug. 14, at Jerry Kleinkopf missing most of last season bodies. seasons. must bring all pertinent school Tuesday, Aug. 11, at Sunway Track (morning) and Centennial with a shoulder injury, and “Expectation levels are Said Akey: “I want them paperwork and complete physi- Soccer Complex. Students must Park (afternoon). Information: redshirt junior Nathan high,”defensive tackle Jonah thinking bowls, I want them cal forms. bring a ball, cleats and shin Marty Grindstaff at 733-2915. Enderle is the favorite to Sataraka said. “We set the talking bowls. Why not?” Volleyball: Practice begins at 8 guards. Physical examinations Football: Equipment checkout for a.m., Friday, Aug. 14. Players must be turned in to the school the football team will run from 6 must bring all pertinent school or they may be brought to the to 10 p.m., Monday, Aug. 10, and paperwork and complete physi- tryouts. Parents/Guardians need from 8 to 10 a.m. and 6 to 8 Moore cal forms. to sign releases before players Continued from Sports 1 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 11, at Baun can try out. Information: John Daily practice reports, insights and more. Gymnasium. Practice starts Bartlett at 420-6527. on, he makes some good Magicvalley.com/blogs/bsu Filer plays, he saves you some- Cross country: Practice begins at times on some balls and he offense has enough trouble place the offense looks. 9 a.m., Friday, Aug. 14, at the makes you look good,” trying to gain yardage in Moore said he is working on track. Information: Ken Young at Moore said. camp against the best sec- it. 731-8956. OVERSTOCKED! Moore ran an offense last ondary in the WAC. Quarterbacks get certain Football: Practices begin at 6:30 WIDE SELECTION season that started to look “They’re physical, they luxuries during football a.m., Monday, Aug. 10, at the old like the spread-shotgun sets get their hands on our wide- camp, including protection football field behind the elemen- AR15’s AND AR15’s tary school. Two-a-day practices much of the country outs,” Moore said of BSU’s from the defense. But this UPPER AND LOWER RECEIVERS employed. He said the team defenders. “It’s a thing our fall,the quarterbacks at BSU continue through the Red and plans to return to its wide-outs learn through fall have swapped the custom- White scrimmage on Friday, Aug. IN STOCK NOW defense-confusing origins. camp, how to get off jams ary red jerseys for black. 21. Information: Russell Burnum “We really want to get and collisions with corners.” “We thought the black at 521-7096 or 543-6249. BEST PRICE IN TOWN! back to that shift and Moore said he wants to was cool,”Moore said. “We motion stuff,”Moore said.“I lead this team, but admitted were just joking around in 203 5th Ave. South think there’s some huge he isn’t the most vocal guy the spring and we got it.” Twin Falls, ID 83301 advantages. Not too many out there. With only five Magicvalley.com/ teams do that. I think a lot of seniors on the roster, the Dustin Lapray covers 733-3546 teams do the no-huddle.” leadership has to come from BSU football for the Times- sports www.redstradingpost.com For now, Moore isn’t somewhere. The quarter- News. Read his blog at thinking about Oregon. His back is usually the first Magicvalley.com/blogs/bsu. Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Friday, August 7, 2009 Sports 3 SCOREBOARD

Seattle Villone 1-3 0 0 0 2 1 Soren Kjeldsen 35-37—72 +2 BASEBALL J.Vargas L,3-6 7 9 8 7 3 0 Bergmann 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Y.E. Yang 34-38—72 +2 Jakubauskas 1 0 0 0 0 1 Clippard 1 0 0 0 2 0 Anthony Kim 36-36—72 +2 American League Kansas City GGAAMMEE PPLLAANN S.Burnett 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Alvaro Quiros 36-36—72 +2 All Times MDT Chen W,1-6 62-3 10 2 2 1 4 Sosa W,1-0 12-3 1 0 0 0 0 Jim Furyk 35-38—73 +3 EAST W L Pct GB J.Wright 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 Clippard pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Graeme Mcdowell 35-38—73 +3 Waechter 1 1 0 0 0 0 WP—Kensing. Balk—Donnelly. Mathew Goggin 37-36—73 +3 New York 66 42 .611 — WP—Chen 2. TV SCHEDULE 4:30 p.m. Umpires—Home, Adrian Johnson; First, Jim Wolf; Stuart Appleby 36-37—73 +3 Boston 62 45 .579 3½ Umpires—Home, Andy Fletcher; First, Greg Gibson; TGC — PGA Tour, Reno-Tahoe Open, Second, Gary Cederstrom; Third, Fieldin Culbreth. Gregory Havret 38-35—73 +3 Tampa Bay 60 48 .556 6 Second, Tim McClelland; Third, Mike Estabrook. AUTO RACING T—3:29. A—23,691 (41,888). Anders Hansen 38-35—73 +3 Toronto 51 56 .477 14½ T—2:28. A—15,103 (38,177). second round Nathan Green 38-36—74 +4 Baltimore 45 63 .417 21 1 p.m. 8:10 p.m. K.J. Choi 36-38—74 +4 CENTRAL W L Pct GB Wednesday’s Late NL Box YANKEES 13, RED SOX 6 ESPN2 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole MLB BASEBALL Nick Watney 36-38—74 +4 Detroit 57 50 .533 — qualifying for Heluva Good! Sour BREWERS 4, DODGERS 1 Chih-Bing Lam 38-36—74 +4 Chicago 56 53 .514 2 Boston New York FSN — Tampa Bay at Seattle Shingo Katayama 36-38—74 +4 ab r h bi ab r h bi Cream Dips, at Watkins Glen, N.Y. Milwaukee Los Angeles Yuji Igarashi 38-36—74 +4 Minnesota 53 55 .491 4½ Ellsury cf 6 0 1 1 Jeter ss 5 0 1 1 SOCCER ab r h bi ab r h bi Cleveland 46 62 .426 11½ 6 p.m. FLopez 2b 4 2 3 0 Furcal ss 4 1 1 1 Brian Gay 37-38—75 +5 Kansas City 42 66 .389 15½ Pedroia 2b 4 1 3 2 Damon lf 5 3 3 1 5:30 p.m. Justin Rose 37-38—75 +5 VMrtnz c 3 1 0 0 Teixeir 1b 4 2 3 1 SPEED — Rolex Sports Car Series, Counsll ss-3b3 0 1 1 Pierre lf 3 0 1 0 Rory Mcilroy 37-38—75 +5 WEST W L Pct GB Youkils lf 2 0 0 0 ARdrgz 3b 4 1 1 0 ESPN — MLS, exhibition, Real Madrid Braun lf 5 0 2 2 Sherrill p 0 0 0 0 Crown Royal 200, at Watkins Glen, Fielder 1b 5 0 0 1 Loretta ph 1 0 0 0 Christian Cevaer 35-40—75 +5 Los Angeles 64 42 .604 — Reddck lf 1 0 0 0 Hinske rf 0 0 0 0 Marc Turnesa 39-37—76 +6 D.Ortiz dh 5 0 0 0 HMatsu dh 5 1 1 3 at Toronto FC McGeh 3b 4 0 0 0 Broxtn p 0 0 0 0 Texas 60 47 .561 4½ N.Y. (same-day tape) Coffey p 0 0 0 0 Ethier rf 4 0 0 0 Ben Curtis 37-40—77 +7 Seattle 56 52 .519 9 J.Drew rf 2 1 1 0 Posada c 5 2 3 3 TENNIS Lowell 3b 4 1 2 1 Cano 2b 4 1 2 1 BOXING Hoffmn p 0 0 0 0 Blake 3b 4 0 1 0 Oakland 47 61 .435 18 10 a.m. MCmrn cf 3 0 0 0 Loney 1b 3 0 1 0 Wednesday’s Games Ktchm 1b 4 2 1 2 Swisher rf 2 1 2 0 7 p.m. Legends Reno-Tahoe Open Lowrie ss 2 0 0 0 HrstnJr pr-rf-3b 0 1 0 0 Catlntt rf 4 1 2 0 Kemp cf 4 0 0 0 Thursday Detroit 4, Baltimore 2 ESPN2 — Middleweights, Alfredo ESPN2 — ATP,Legg Mason Classic, Gerut rf 0 0 0 0 RMartn c 3 0 0 0 At Montreaux G&CC Cleveland 8, Minnesota 1 NGreen ss 2 0 0 0 MeCarr cf 5 1 2 3 Totals 35 6 8 6 Totals 39 1318 13 quarterfina Kendall c 3 1 0 0 Hudson 2b 3 0 1 0 Reno, Nev. N.Y. Yankees 8, Toronto 4 Angulo (15-1-0) vs. Gabriel Rosado Looper p 3 0 1 0 Schmdt p 1 0 0 0 Purse: $3 Million Tampa Bay 6, Boston 4 Boston 001 210 002 — 6 5 p.m. New York 001 821 10x — 13 (12-3-0) Hardy ss 1 0 0 0 JMcDnl p 1 0 0 0 Yardage: 7,472 - Par 72 (36-36) Seattle 11, Kansas City 6 ESPN2 — ATP,Legg Mason Classic, Troncs p 0 0 0 0 First Round Chicago White Sox 6, L.A. Angels 2 E—N.Green (13). DP—Boston 1, New York 1. LOB— GOLF Boston 15, New York 8. 2B—Pedroia (32), J.Drew (23), MRmrz ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Rod Pampling 35-32—67 -5 Oakland 7, Texas 5 9:30 a.m. quarterfinal Totals 35 4 9 4 Totals 32 1 5 1 Jonathan Kaye 33-35—68 -4 Thursday’s Games Teixeira 2 (31), H.Matsui (19), Posada (16). HR—Pedroia (8), Kotchman (1), Damon (20), Teixeira (28), Posada 9 p.m. Milwaukee 001 300 000 — 4 Vaughn Taylor 34-34—68 -4 Cleveland 2, Minnesota 1 TGC — USGA, U.S. Women’s Amateur Los Angeles 100 000 000 — 1 Rich Barcelo 35-33—68 -4 Detroit 7, Baltimore 3 (14), Me.Cabrera (11). IP H R ER BB SO Championship, quarterfinal match- ESPN2 — WTA Tour, LA E—Fielder (6). LOB—Milwaukee 9, Los Angeles 6. 2B— Marc Leishman 35-33—68 -4 L.A. Angels 9, Chicago White Sox 5 Braun 2 (25). HR—Furcal (6). SB—Fielder (2), Steve Pate 34-34—68 -4 Texas 6, Oakland 4 Boston es Championships, quarterfinal Smoltz L,2-5 31-3 9 8 8 4 3 M.Cameron (6), Catalanotto (2). Grant Waite 34-34—68 -4 N.Y. Yankees 13, Boston 6 Noon 11 p.m. IP H R ER BB SO Spencer Levin 36-32—68 -4 Kansas City 8, Seattle 2 Traber 32-3 9 5 5 1 1 Saito 1 0 0 0 1 0 ESPN2 — WTA Tour, LA Milwaukee Shaun Micheel 35-34—69 -3 Friday’s Games TGC — PGA Tour/WGC, Bridgestone Looper W,10-5 62-3 4 1 1 2 4 Jeff Quinney 35-34—69 -3 Boston (Beckett 13-4) at N.Y. Yankees (A.Burnett 10-5), New York Chamberlain W,8-2 5 6 4 4 7 5 Invitational, second round Championships, quarterfinal Coffey H,19 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 James Nitties 35-34—69 -3 5:05 p.m. Hoffman S,25-27 1 1 0 0 0 2 Robert Garrigus 33-36—69 -3 Minnesota (Swarzak 3-4) at Detroit (Galarraga 5-10), D.Robertson 2-3 0 0 0 1 3 Coke 1 0 0 0 1 0 Los Angeles Paul Azinger 34-35—69 -3 5:05 p.m. Schmidt L,2-2 32-3 5 4 4 3 2 Ryan Palmer 34-35—69 -3 Baltimore (Berken 1-9) at Toronto (R.Romero 10-4), Melancon 11-3 0 0 0 1 1 Jo.Smith H,8 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 54 11 21 10 Totals 46 6 11 5 Claggett 1 2 2 2 2 1 Ja.McDonald 21-3 3 0 0 0 1 Parker Mclachlin 35-34—69 -3 5:07 p.m. K.Wood S,15-20 1 0 0 0 0 1 Arizona 001 011 210 005 — 11 Troncoso 1 0 0 0 0 1 Jonathan Byrd 37-32—69 -3 Oakland (Mazzaro 2-8) at Kansas City (Bannister 7-7), HBP—by Melancon (Pedroia). WP—D.Robertson. WP—Carmona. Pittsburgh 101 004 000 000 — 6 Umpires—Home, Derryl Cousins; First, Chad Fairchild; Sherrill 1 0 0 0 0 2 Steve Elkington 33-36—69 -3 6:10 p.m. Umpires—Home, Ted Barrett; First, James Hoye; E—Montero (8), S.Drew (7), Moss (2). DP—Arizona 1. Broxton 1 1 0 0 1 0 Rocco Mediate 35-35—70 -2 Cleveland (Sowers 3-7) at Chicago White Sox (Buehrle Second, Jim Joyce; Third, Bill Miller. Second, Sam Holbrook; Third, Larry Vanover. LOB—Arizona 13, Pittsburgh 11. 2B—A.Romero (5), T—3:52. A—49,005 (52,325). HBP—by Schmidt (Counsell). Wil Collins 35-35—70 -2 11-5), 6:11 p.m. T—2:37. A—21,657 (45,199). Reynolds (23), Montero (18), Ojeda (11), Snyder (7), Umpires—Home, Randy Marsh; First, Angel Hernandez; Troy Kelly 35-35—70 -2 Texas (Feldman 10-4) at L.A. Angels (J.Saunders 9-6), McCutchen (15), Milledge (2), Pearce (7). HR—S.Drew Second, Marvin Hudson; Third, Lance Barksdale. Carlos Franco 33-37—70 -2 8:05 p.m. TIGERS 7, ORIOLES 3 RANGERS 6, ATHLETICS 4 (8), Reynolds (33), Oeltjen (1). SB—A.Romero (2), T—2:57. A—50,276 (56,000). Joe Ogilvie 35-35—70 -2 Tampa Bay (Niemann 10-5) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 12- Oeltjen 2 (2), Milledge (2), J.Salazar (1). CS— Baltimore Detroit Texas Oakland Eric Axley 35-35—70 -2 4), 8:10 p.m. ab r h bi ab r h bi An.LaRoche (1). S—Scherzer. SF—Haren. John Rollins 35-35—70 -2 Saturday’s Games ab r h bi ab r h bi IP H R ER BB SO BASKETBALL Guy Boros 37-33—70 -2 BRorts 2b 5 1 1 0 Grndrs cf 3 2 2 2 Germn 2b 4 2 0 0 Kenndy 3b 3 1 0 0 Arizona Baltimore at Toronto, 11:07 a.m. Reimld lf 3 1 1 0 Polanc 2b 5 0 2 1 Troy Matteson 37-34—71 -1 Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 2:10 p.m. MYong 3b 5 1 2 2 RDavis cf 4 0 1 1 Scherzer 51-3 7 5 5 4 5 WNBA Mark Wilson 35-36—71 -1 Markks rf 3 0 0 0 Thoms lf-rf 3 0 1 1 DvMrp lf 5 1 2 1 Cust rf 3 1 0 0 J.Gutierrez 1-3 1 1 0 0 1 Texas at L.A. Angels, 2:10 p.m. A.Huff 1b 4 0 1 1 MiCarr 1b 4 0 0 0 All Times MDT Steve Flesch 35-36—71 -1 Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 5:05 p.m. AnJons dh 4 1 2 1 Grcprr dh 4 1 1 1 Schoeneweis 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 EASTERN W L Pct GB Patrick Sheehan 37-34—71 -1 Wggntn 3b 4 1 2 1 CGuilln dh 5 0 2 0 Hamltn rf 3 0 1 0 Everdg 1b 4 1 1 0 E.Vasquez 1 0 0 0 2 0 Minnesota at Detroit, 5:05 p.m. Scott dh 3 0 0 0 Ordonz rf 4 1 1 0 Kris Blanks 33-38—71 -1 Oakland at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Byrd cf 3 0 1 1 RSwny lf 3 0 0 0 Zavada 2 1 0 0 0 2 Indiana 16 4 .800 — Matt Jones 36-35—71 -1 Wieters c 4 0 1 0 Raburn lf 1 0 0 0 Blalock 1b 4 1 1 1 Hairstn ph 1 0 1 1 Rauch W,2-0 1 2 0 0 0 2 Connecticut 10 9 .526 5½ Tampa Bay at Seattle, 8:10 p.m. Pie cf 4 0 1 1 Inge 3b 4 2 2 2 Spike Mcroy 33-38—71 -1 Sltlmch c 0 0 0 0 Powell c 3 0 0 0 L.Rosales 1 0 0 0 0 1 Washington 10 9 .526 5½ Chez Reavie 36-35—71 -1 Andino ss 3 0 0 0 Avila c 4 1 2 1 Tegrdn ph-c 3 0 0 0 KSuzuk ph 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh Atlanta 11 10 .524 5½ National League Santiag ss 4 1 1 0 Kevin Na 34-37—71 -1 Vizquel ss 4 0 1 0 M.Ellis 2b 4 0 0 0 K.Hart 6 9 3 3 1 5 Chicago 10 11 .476 6½ Scott Piercy 34-37—71 -1 All Times MDT Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 37 713 7 Pnngtn ss 3 0 1 0 Karstens H,1 1-3 3 2 2 0 0 Detroit 7 10 .412 7½ EAST W L Pct GB Baltimore 000 011 010 — 3 Totals 35 6 10 6 Totals 32 4 5 3 J.Chavez BS,3-3 12-3 2 1 1 0 1 New York 6 13 .316 9½ Detroit 041 110 00x — 7 Texas 011 011 200 — 6 Capps 2 1 0 0 0 4 Philadelphia 61 45 .575 — DP—Detroit 1. LOB—Baltimore 7, Detroit 11. 2B— WESTERN W L Pct GB Atlanta 55 53 .509 7 Oakland 200 001 001 — 4 S.Jackson L,2-2 2 6 5 4 3 1 Wigginton (14), Wieters (7), Granderson (12), Thomas E—German (1), Saltalamacchia (7). DP—Texas 1. LOB— HBP—by Scherzer (Cedeno). WP—Scherzer, J.Chavez. Phoenix 16 6 .727 — TRANSACTIONS Florida 55 53 .509 7 (9), Avila (2). 3B—Santiago (2). HR—Inge (22). Texas 6, Oakland 4. 2B—Dav.Murphy (12), An.Jones Umpires—Home, Brian Knight; First, Hunter Seattle 12 8 .600 3 BASEBALL New York 51 56 .477 10½ IP H R ER BB SO (15), R.Davis (9), Garciaparra (6), Hairston (4). HR— Minnesota 10 10 .500 5 Washington 37 72 .339 25½ Baltimore Wendelstedt; Second, Dana DeMuth; Third, Doug MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL—Suspended St. Louis RHP M.Young (18), Blalock (21). SB—Hamilton (6), Kennedy Eddings. San Antonio 9 11 .450 6 Brad Thompson three games and fined him an undis- CENTRAL W L Pct GB Da.Hernandez L,6-8 3 7 5 5 2 1 (12). SF—Byrd. T—4:18. A—17,311 (38,362). Los Angeles 6 11 .353 7½ Bass 3 52 22 2 closed amount for intentionally throwing a pitch in the Chicago 57 49 .538 — IP H R ER BB SO Sacramento 5 16 .238 10½ Baez 1 0 0 0 1 0 Texas Wednesday’s Games head area of N.Y. Mets 3B David Wright during St. Louis 59 51 .536 — Ji.Johnson 1 1 0 0 0 1 PHILLIES 3, ROCKIES 1 Wednesday’s game. Suspended Washington minor Milwaukee 54 54 .500 4 Tom.Hunter W,4-2 7 3 3 2 2 4 Indiana 76, Chicago 67 Detroit F.Francisco H,4 1 0 0 0 0 0 Colorado Philadelphia Thursday’s Games league OF Edgardo Baez and SS Ofilio Castro Houston 53 55 .491 5 Porcello W,10-7 52-3 4 2 2 3 1 (Harrisburg-EL) 50 games for testing positive for an Cincinnati 46 61 .430 11½ C.Wilson S,14-17 1 2 1 1 1 2 ab r h bi ab r h bi Atlanta 92, San Antonio 84 Ni 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 Oakland Fowler cf 4 1 2 0 Rollins ss 4 2 3 0 Seattle at Los Angeles, late amphetamine in violation of the Minor League Drug Pittsburgh 45 63 .417 13 Seay 1-3 2 1 1 1 0 Prevention and Treatment Program. Cahill L,6-11 6 8 5 5 2 6 S.Smith lf 4 0 2 0 Victorn cf 4 0 0 1 Friday’s Games American League WEST W L Pct GB Lyon S,1-3 12-3 1 0 0 0 2 Springer 1 2 1 1 1 0 Helton 1b 3 0 1 1 Utley 2b 3 0 1 1 Detroit at Washington, 5 p.m. WP—Bass. BOSTON RED SOX—Placed OF Rocco Baldelli on the 15- Los Angeles 66 42 .611 — S.Casilla 1 0 0 0 0 2 Tlwtzk ss 4 0 1 0 Howard 1b 4 0 0 0 Connecticut at Minnesota, 6 p.m. day DL. Recalled OF Josh Reddick from Pawtucket (IL). San Francisco 60 48 .556 6 Umpires—Home, Scott Barry; First, C.B. Bucknor; Gray 1 0 0 0 0 1 GAtkns 3b 4 0 0 0 Ibanez lf 3 0 1 0 New York at Sacramento, 8 p.m. Second, Mike Everitt; Third, Brian Gorman. Cahill pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Splrghs rf 4 0 1 0 Werth rf 3 0 0 0 Saturday’s Games Designated INF Gil Velazquez for assignment. Colorado 59 49 .546 7 T—2:42. A—31,165 (41,255). CLEVELAND INDIANS—Announced LHP Mike Gosling Arizona 50 59 .459 16½ WP—Cahill. Iannett c 4 0 0 0 P.Feliz 3b 3 0 0 0 Chicago at Atlanta, 5 p.m. accepted assignment to Columbus (IL) and RHP San Diego 44 65 .404 22½ Umpires—Home, Jeff Nelson; First, Mark Carlson; Barmes 2b 3 0 0 0 Bako c 3 1 2 1 New York at Seattle, 8 p.m. Winston Abreu elected free agency after both were Wednesday’s Games ANGELS 9, WHITE SOX 5 Second, Tim Tschida; Third, Bob Davidson. Hawpe ph 1 0 1 0 Cl.Lee p 2 0 0 0 Indiana at Phoenix, 8 p.m. designated for assignment and cleared waivers. N.Y. Mets 9, St. Louis 0 Los Angeles Chicago T—2:33. A—17,214 (35,067). Cook p 2 0 0 0 BFrncs ph 0 0 0 0 KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Activated RHP Doug Waechter San Francisco 10, Houston 6 Daley p 0 0 0 0 Madson p 0 0 0 0 ab r h bi ab r h bi CGnzlz ph 0 0 0 0 Lidge p 0 0 0 0 from the 15-day DL. Placed RHP Juan Cruz on the 15- Atlanta 6, San Diego 2 Figgins 3b 4 1 0 0 Pdsdnk cf 3 0 0 0 Wednesday’s Late AL Box GOLF day DL. Arizona 4, Pittsburgh 3 FMorls p 0 0 0 0 EAyar ss 4 2 3 2 Wise ph 1 1 1 1 ATHLETICS 7, RANGERS 5 Stewart ph 1 0 0 0 NEW YORK YANKEES—Acquired RHP Chad Gaudin from Philadelphia 7, Colorado 0 BAreu rf 4 2 1 1 Bckhm 3b 3 1 0 0 WGC Bridgestone Invitational the San Diego Padres for a player to be named. Washington 5, Florida 4 Totals 34 1 8 1 Totals 29 3 7 3 Thursday Guerrr dh 4 2 1 1 Dye rf 5 0 0 0 Texas Oakland Colorado 100 000 000 — 1 OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Purchased the contract of RHP Cincinnati 4, Chicago Cubs 0 JRiver lf 4 0 2 1 Thome dh 4 0 1 0 ab r h bi ab r h bi At Firestone Country Club (South Course) Jeff Gray from Sacramento (PCL). Optioned RHP Chad Milwaukee 4, L.A. Dodgers 1 Philadelphia 100 020 00x — 3 Akron, Ohio KMorls 1b 4 0 1 1 Konerk 1b 2 1 0 0 Vizquel 2b 5 0 1 0 Kenndy 3b 4 1 1 2 E—Cl.Lee (1). DP—Colorado 1, Philadelphia 1. LOB— Reineke to Sacramento. Thursday’s Games HKndrc 2b 4 1 1 0 Kotsay lf 3 1 1 1 MYong 3b 3 1 1 0 RDavis cf 4 2 2 0 Purse: $8.5 Million TAMPA BAY RAYS—Signed RHP Winston Abreu to a Washington 12, Florida 8 Colorado 8, Philadelphia 4. 2B—Fowler (24), Rollins Yardage: 7,400 - Par: 70 (35-35) MthwsJ cf 3 0 0 0 J.Nix ss 3 1 1 3 DvMrp lf 4 2 2 3 Hairstn lf 3 1 1 3 (28). 3B—Rollins (3). HR—Bako (1). SF—Helton, Utley. minor league contract and assigned him to Durham Philadelphia 3, Colorado 1 JMaths c 4 1 2 2 Getz 2b 4 0 2 0 Byrd cf 4 0 1 0 Cust dh 4 0 0 0 First Round (IL). Arizona 11, Pittsburgh 6, 12 innings IP H R ER BB SO Padraig Harrington 31-33—64 -6 RCastr c 4 0 0 0 Blalock 1b 4 1 1 0 KSuzuk c 3 1 1 1 Colorado National League N.Y. Mets at San Diego, late Totals 35 9 11 8 Totals 32 5 6 5 AnJons dh 4 0 1 0 Everdg 1b 3 0 0 0 Prayad Marksaeng 35-31—66 -4 ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Placed OF Justin Upton on Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, late Los Angeles 231 010 101 — 9 Hamltn rf 3 1 2 1 RSwny rf 4 0 1 0 Cook L,10-4 5 7 3 3 0 0 Tim Clark 32-34—66 -4 the 15-day DL. Purchased the contract of OF Trent Friday’s Games Chicago 031 000 001 — 5 Tegrdn c 4 0 1 1 M.Ellis 2b 4 1 1 0 Daley 1 00 00 2 Scott Verplank 33-33—66 -4 Oeltjen from Reno (PCL). Arizona (Garland 6-10) at Washington (Balester 1-1), F.Morales 2 0 0 0 1 1 Steve Stricker 33-34—67 -3 E—J.Nix (7), Beckham (10). LOB—Los Angeles 5, Chicago Andrus ss 4 0 0 0 Pnngtn ss 3 1 1 1 Philadelphia NEW YORK METS—Placed LHP Jonathon Niese on the 5:05 p.m. 7. 2B—J.Rivera (17), Kotsay (3). HR—E.Aybar (4), Totals 35 5 10 5 Totals 32 7 8 7 Ian Poulter 33-34—67 -3 60-day DL. Purchased the contract of RHP Elmer St. Louis (C.Carpenter 10-3) at Pittsburgh (Maholm 6- Cl.Lee W,2-0 7 6 1 1 1 9 Zach Johnson 34-33—67 -3 B.Abreu (9), Guerrero (5), J.Mathis (5), Wise (2), J.Nix Texas 012 011 000 — 5 Madson H,17 1 1 0 0 0 1 Dessens from Buffalo (IL). 6), 5:05 p.m. (8). SB—Figgins 2 (33), E.Aybar (9), B.Abreu (23), Oakland 202 102 00x — 7 Hunter Mahan 32-36—68 -2 WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Traded INF Anderson Florida (Nolasco 7-7) at Philadelphia (Blanton 7-5), Lidge S,21-27 1 1 0 0 0 2 Robert Allenby 35-33—68 -2 Podsednik (17), Getz (18). CS—E.Aybar (4), Matthews Jr. E—Padilla (1), Andrus (14). DP—Oakland 1. LOB—Texas Umpires—Home, Tom Hallion; First, Brian O’Nora; Hernandez to the New York Mets for INF Greg Veloz. 5:35 p.m. (1), J.Mathis (2), Getz (2). SF—E.Aybar. 5, Oakland 5. 2B—Byrd (33), Blalock (18), Hamilton (8), Miguel A. Jimenez 32-36—68 -2 Recalled RHP Saul Rivera from Syracuse (IL). Milwaukee (Villanueva 2-8) at Houston (Norris 1-0), IP H R ER BB SO R.Davis (8), M.Ellis (12). HR—Dav.Murphy 2 (11), Second, Jerry Crawford; Third, Phil Cuzzi. Danny Lee 34-34—68 -2 BASKETBALL 6:05 p.m. Los Angeles Kennedy (9), Hairston (3), K.Suzuki (8), Pennington (1). T—2:22. A—45,316 (43,647). Tiger Woods 35-33—68 -2 National Basketball Association Chicago Cubs (Zambrano 7-4) at Colorado (Jimenez 8- E.Santana W,4-6 6 5 4 4 5 7 SB—R.Davis (18). SF—Hamilton, Hairston. Sergio Garcia 34-34—68 -2 NBA—Suspended Orlando F Rasard Lewis 10 games by 9), 7:10 p.m. Bulger 2 0 0 0 0 1 IP H R ER BB SO NATIONALS 12, MARLINS 8 David Toms 34-35—69 -1 testing positive for an elevated testosterone level. Lucas Glover 34-35—69 -1 N.Y. Mets (O.Perez 2-3) at San Diego (Correia 7-9), Jepsen 1 1 1 1 1 0 Texas Florida Washington FOOTBALL 8:05 p.m. Padilla L,8-6 52-3 7 6 6 2 4 Henrik Stenson 34-35—69 -1 National Football League Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi Sean O’Hair 34-35—69 -1 Atlanta (Jurrjens 9-8) at L.A. Dodgers (Billingsley 11- Danks L,9-8 61-3 9 7 6 3 5 N.Feliz 11-3 1 1 1 0 2 Coghln lf 5 2 2 1 Morgan cf 4 0 1 0 ARIZONA CARDINALS—Signed DE Alex Field to a one- 6), 8:10 p.m. O’Day 1 00 00 0 Boo Weekley 35-34—69 -1 Dotel 2-3 1 1 1 2 0 NJhnsn 1b 3 0 1 1 Bellird 2b-1b 4 2 2 1 Kenny Perry 34-35—69 -1 year contract. Placed DE Jason Banks on injured Cincinnati (H.Bailey 2-3) at San Francisco (Lincecum Williams 11-3 1 1 1 0 1 Oakland HRmrz ss 5 2 3 1 Zmrmn 3b 4 3 4 3 reserve. 12-3), 8:15 p.m. Reineke 5 7 4 4 0 1 Stewart Cink 33-36—69 -1 J.Nunez 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Cantu 3b 4 0 0 1 Dunn 1b 3 1 1 0 Woody Austin 35-34—69 -1 ATLANTA FALCONS—Signed WR Robert Ferguson. Saturday’s Games HBP—by E.Santana (Konerko). WP—Jepsen, Dotel. Breslow W,5-5 BS,2-2 1 1 1 1 0 0 Uggla 2b 4 0 2 0 WHarrs pr-2b0 1 0 0 CINCINNATI BENGALS—Signed TE Matt Sherry. Cincinnati at San Francisco, 2:05 p.m. Umpires—Home, Paul Schrieber; First, Paul Nauert; Springer H,7 1 1 0 0 0 1 Nick Dougherty 34-35—69 -1 HOUSTON TEXANS—Signed CB Deltha O’Neal and RB Ziegler H,8 1 1 0 0 0 1 JoBakr c 5 1 1 2 Wlngh lf 4 2 1 0 Lee Westwood 32-37—69 -1 Arizona at Washington, 5:05 p.m. Second, Joe West; Third, Ed Rapuano. C.Ross cf-rf 4 1 0 0 Dukes rf 4 2 3 4 Geoff Ogilvy 36-33—69 -1 back Andre Hall. Waived DT Jake Visser and RB Florida at Philadelphia, 5:05 p.m. T—2:59. A—27,487 (40,615). A.Bailey S,15-19 1 0 0 0 0 2 Jeremiah Johnson. HBP—by Padilla (K.Suzuki), by Reineke (M.Young). PB— Hermid rf 4 1 1 0 J.Bard c 4 0 1 1 Oliver Wilson 35-34—69 -1 Milwaukee at Houston, 5:05 p.m. Ayala p 0 0 0 0 AlGnzlz ss 4 0 1 2 Soren Hansen 33-36—69 -1 —Claimed QB Matt Gutierrez off St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 5:05 p.m. Teagarden. waivers from New England. INDIANS 2, TWINS 1 Umpires—Home, Bob Davidson; First, Jeff Nelson; Donnlly p 0 0 0 0 Sosa p 0 0 0 0 Jeev M. Singh 34-36—70 E Chicago Cubs at Colorado, 6:10 p.m. Gload ph 1 0 0 0 Stmmn p 0 0 0 0 Angel Cabrera 33-37—70 E —Signed FB Matt Quillen. Released N.Y. Mets at San Diego, 8:05 p.m. Minnesota Cleveland Second, Mark Carlson; Third, Tim Tschida. T—2:30. A—20,560 (35,067). Volstad p 2 1 1 0 Kensng p 2 0 0 0 Trevor Immelman 35-35—70 E FB Chris Brown. Annnounced OT SirVincent Rogers left Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, 8:10 p.m. ab r h bi ab r h bi T.Wood p 0 0 0 0 Villone p 0 0 0 0 Justin Leonard 37-33—70 E the team. Span cf-lf 4 0 0 0 Sizemr cf 4 0 1 0 JJhnsn ph 0 0 0 0 Brgmn p 0 0 0 0 Ross Fisher 35-35—70 E —Acquired DE Derrick OCarer ss 3 0 2 0 ACarer ss 4 1 2 0 Luke Donald 36-34—70 E Burgess from Oakland for undisclosed draft considera- AL Boxes Mauer dh 4 0 1 0 Choo rf 4 0 2 0 NL Boxes Sanchs p 0 0 0 0 JPadill ph 1 0 0 0 DIAMONDBACKS 11, PIRATES 6, 12 INNINGS Bonifac cf 0 0 0 0 Clipprd p 0 0 0 0 Vijay Singh 35-35—70 E tions. Released OL Al Johnson. ROYALS 8, MARINERS 2 Mornea 1b 3 0 0 0 JhPerlt 3b 3 0 0 1 SBurntt p 0 0 0 0 Phil Mickelson 32-38—70 E NEW ORLEANS SAINTS—Signed OL Joe McMahon. Kubel lf 4 0 1 0 Hafner dh 3 1 2 0 Arizona Pittsburgh Camilo Villegas 34-36—70 E Waived G Shawn Flanagan. Seattle Kansas City Gomez pr-cf0 0 0 0 Gimenz 1b 2 0 0 0 CGzmn ss 0 1 0 0 ab r h bi ab r h bi ab r h bi ab r h bi Totals 37 8 11 6 Totals 34 1214 11 Gonzalo F-Castano 33-37—70 E HOCKEY Cuddyr rf 3 1 2 0 Valuen 2b 2 0 0 0 S.Drew ss 6 2 1 1 McCtch cf 4 1 2 0 Florida 240 020 000 — 8 Dustin Johnson 36-34—70 E National Hockey League ISuzuki rf 5 0 2 0 DeJess lf 3 0 0 0 Crede 3b 4 0 1 0 Crowe lf 3 0 1 1 ARomr rf 7 2 4 3 Milledg lf 5 1 2 1 Pat Perez 33-37—70 E Branyn 1b 4 0 0 0 Blmqst 2b 4 1 0 0 Rdmnd c 4 0 0 0 Toregs c 3 0 0 0 Washington 000 340 14x — 12 CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Named Niklas Blomgren JoLopz 2b 4 0 0 0 Butler dh 3 2 2 2 GParra cf 6 2 4 0 GJones 1b 5 0 0 0 E—Cantu (8), J.Bard (5). DP—Florida 2. LOB—Florida 9, J.B. Holmes 34-36—70 E European amateur scout. ACasill 2b 3 0 0 0 Rynlds 3b 5 1 3 2 Doumit c 6 0 1 0 Carl Pettersson 34-36—70 E OTTAWA SENATORS—Signed D Drew Bannister to a MSwny dh 4 1 1 1 B.Pena c 4 2 2 0 BHarrs ph 1 0 0 0 Washington 7. 2B—Coghlan (14), Ha.Ramirez (30), Thongchai Jaidee 34-37—71 +1 Beltre 3b 4 1 4 0 Callasp 3b 4 2 2 1 Zavada p 0 0 0 0 DlwYn 2b 6 1 2 1 Uggla 2 (17), Willingham (23), Alb.Gonzalez (10). 3B— one-year contract. Totals 33 1 7 0 Totals 28 2 8 2 CYoung ph 0 0 0 0 Moss rf 5 1 0 0 Mike Weir 33-38—71 +1 SAN JOSE SHARKS—Announced the retirement of C FGtrrz cf 4 0 1 0 Teahen 1b 4 1 1 3 Minnesota 000 100 000 — 1 Rauch p 0 0 0 0 AnLRc 3b 6 0 1 0 Zimmerman (1). HR—Jo.Baker (8), Zimmerman (23), Rory Sabbatini 36-35—71 +1 JaWlsn ss 3 0 0 1 Maier cf 3 0 0 1 Cleveland 000 100 10x — 2 Haren ph 0 0 0 1 Cedeno ss 5 1 2 2 Dukes (7). SB—Ha.Ramirez 2 (18), Belliard (2). CS— Chad Campbell 36-35—71 +1 Jeremy Roenick. RJhnsn c 4 0 2 0 YBtncr ss 4 0 1 1 DP—Minnesota 2. LOB—Minnesota 9, Cleveland 5. 2B— LRosls p 0 0 0 0 K.Hart p 2 0 0 0 J.Bard (1). S—Morgan. SF—N.Johnson, Cantu, Dukes. Jerry Kelly 35-36—71 +1 ST. LOUIS BLUES—Named Ed Belfour goalie consultant. MSndrs lf 4 0 2 0 JAndrs rf 4 0 1 0 Cuddyer (22), Crede (15), A.Cabrera (27), Crowe (6). Monter c 7 0 2 2 Pearce ph 1 1 1 1 IP H R ER BB SO Charles Howell III 35-36—71 +1 COLLEGE Totals 36 2 12 2 Totals 33 8 9 8 SB—Cuddyer (5), A.Cabrera (12). S—O.Cabrera. SF— Tracy 1b-3b 7 0 1 0 Karstns p 0 0 0 0 Florida Ernie Els 33-38—71 +1 BRIDGEPORT—Named Leo Uzcategui women’s volley- Seattle 000 200 000 — 2 Jh.Peralta. Oeltjen lf 6 1 2 1 JChavz p 0 0 0 0 Volstad 41-3 9 7 4 2 3 Anthony Kang 37-34—71 +1 ball coach. Kansas City 500 030 00x — 8 IP H R ER BB SO Ojeda 2b 5 2 3 0 JSalazr ph 0 0 0 0 T.Wood 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Darren Clarke 35-36—71 +1 CUMBERLAND, TENN.—Named Kyle Herring women’s E—Branyan (10). DP—Kansas City 1. LOB—Seattle 9, Minnesota Scherzr p 2 0 0 0 Capps p 0 0 0 0 Sanches BS,2-2 11-3 1 1 1 3 2 Cameron Beckman 36-35—71 +1 assistant basketball coach. Kansas City 4. 2B—Ro.Johnson (16), B.Pena (6), Teahen Blackburn L,8-6 61-3 7 2 2 2 2 JGutrrz p 0 0 0 0 L.Cruz ph 1 0 0 0 Ayala L,0-2 1 2 4 4 2 1 Retief Goosen 36-35—71 +1 HIGH POINT—Named Tripp Pendergast director of (27), Y.Betancourt (12). HR—M.Sweeney (4), Butler (13). Guerrier 12-3 1 0 0 0 0 Schnws p 0 0 0 0 SJcksn p 0 0 0 0 Donnelly 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Richard Sterne 37-35—72 +2 men’s basketball operations. SB—Maier (5). CS—I.Suzuki (7), J.Anderson (3). SF— Cleveland Whitsll ph 1 0 0 0 Washington Martin Kaymer 36-36—72 +2 MANHATTAN—Named Mark Jones women’s volleyball Ja.Wilson. Carmona 6 6 1 1 3 2 EVasqz p 0 0 0 0 Stammen 12-3 6 6 5 1 2 Davis Love III 38-34—72 +2 coach. IP H R ER BB SO Sipp W,2-0 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 Snyder 1b 2 1 1 0 Kensing 31-3 3 2 2 0 1 Nick O’Hern 37-35—72 +2 MENLO—Named Ben Quinto assistant baseball coach. Timberwolves list of head coaching finalists quite varied MINNEAPOLIS — The three finalists for over-the-counter supplement late last sea- Wednesday, Aug. 12, at the Kimberly High the Minnesota Timberwolves coaching son that included a substance he did not real- School practice field. vacancy have distinctly different resumes. ize was banned by the NBA. Sports Shorts The camp is for players in grades 5 through No wonder it’s taking president David “First and foremost I take full responsibili- 8 and will run from 6 to 8 p.m.The cost is $20, Kahn a long time to make a decision. ty for the situation and accept the correspon- Sumbit and read local sports briefs at which includes a T-shirt, and registration Kahn has spent the past seven weeks ding penalty,” Lewis said. “I apologize to Magicvalley.com/sports begins at 5 p.m., Monday in the high school meticulously interviewing candidates and Magic fans, my teammates and this organiza- commons area. has settled on Lakers assistant Kurt Rambis, tion for not doing the research that should games. Players must also participate in at the Information: Kirby Bright at 423-6298 or ESPN analyst Mark Jackson and Houston come with good judgment.” Buhl Youth Soccer Association camp Friday, 308-8520. assistant Elston Turner. He will be suspended without pay for the Aug. 21, and Saturday, Aug. 22. The Timberwolves, who are coming off a first 10 regular-season games for which he is Students who wish to referee must attend CHRS boosters hold scramble 24-58 season and in the early stages of a sig- eligible and physically able to play. He will be a mandatory referees meeting at 1:30 p.m., nificant rebuild, are the only team in the docked about $1.6 million of his $18 million Saturday, Aug. 22. TWIN FALLS — The Canyon Ridge High league without a head coach. salary for the 2009-10 season. Information: Michelle at 543-5662, School Booster Club will hold a five-person Rambis is the longtime Lakers assistant Daniele at 731-9533 or Amy at 212-7866. golf scramble on Saturday, Aug. 15, at Twin and the only candidate with head coaching M AGIC V ALLEY Falls Municipal Golf Course. experience in the NBA. He coached the Funds sought for new JHS field The cost is $30 per participant plus green Lakers during the lockout-shortened 1998- BSU extravaganza today and cart fees. Lunch is included. Play begins 99 season and has filled in for Phil Jackson JEROME — Jerome High School senior with an 8 a.m. shotgun start. Forms are avail- several times over the years. TWIN FALLS — The Boise State Magic Mackenzie Ingraham leading a project to able at the Muni,Donnelley Sports at the cor- Two different reports said Thursday that Valley Alumni Chapter will host the Bronco raise money to install artificial turf at the ner of Second Avenue North and Gooding Rambis was on the brink of being offered and Extravaganza from 1:30 to 4 p.m.,today at the Tigers’ football stadium to benefit Jerome’s Street North or at the Twin Falls School accepting the job. But when asked by The Anchor Bistro (334 Blue Lakes Blvd.). Former football and soccer teams. Donations may be District on Main Avenue West. Associated Press if the two sides were getting BSU quarterback Bart Hendricks will be on made to the Jerome School District The scramble also needs sponsors. Those close to a deal,Kahn replied in a text message, hand along with assistant coach Viliami Foundation, Inc., P.O. Box 140, Jerome, ID, interested can sponsor a hole for $200 or “No.” Tuivai. The Bronco Shop trailer will be on 83338. Construction donations are also wel- become a corporate sponsor for $500. The Kahn said Wednesday that he is in a posi- hand, selling BSU gear and season tickets. come to keep costs down. deadline to register as a player or help sponsor tion to “do something within a week” and Information: Julie Davis at 208-329-0611 Information: E-mail ingraham2010@hot- is today. Information: Don Marzitelli at 735- would like one or two of the candidates to for the barbecue and Brad Larrondo at 208- mail.com. 1035 or [email protected]. meet with owner Glen Taylor before a deci- 426-3566 for the Bronco Extravaganza. sion is made. The Los Angeles Times first Filer holds soccer sign-ups Pro Rodeo boot camp set reported that Rambis had traveled to the Buhl holds soccer sign-ups Twin Cities on Wednesday night to meet FILER — Filer Community Recreation GOODING — The Gooding Pro Rodeo will with Wolves officials, but it was not immedi- BUHL — Buhl Youth Soccer Association District will hold registration for coed soccer hold a boot camp from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., ately clear if Mark Jackson or Turner would be will hold registration for the Fall Season from from 5 to 8 p.m., today at the Filer Fire Thursday,Aug. 20, at Andy James Arena. The asked to do the same. 9 to 11 a.m., Saturday at Broadway Java. Fees Station. The cost is $30 per player and the camp will feature a look behind the chutes of are $35 for the first child in the family and $20 league is open to boys and girls in grades K professional rodeo. A suggested donation of Magic’s Lewis fails drug test for any additional siblings (immediate family through 5. $30 will include admission to the camp, a only). All games will be played on Saturdays Information: Bob Hansing at 326-3327. ticket to the rodeo that night and lunch. NEW YORK — Orlando Magic forward between Aug. 29 and Oct. 17, with no games Proceeds go to the Gooding County Rashard Lewis tested positive for an elevated on Labor Day weekend. Registration for the Kimberly football camp nears Memorial Hospital‘s Mammography pro- testosterone level and was suspended boys and girls middle school teams will be gram via the Tough Enough to Wear Pink Thursday for 10 games. held on the same dates.Fees are $85 per play- KIMBERLY — The Bulldog Football Camp Campaign. Lewis said in a statement that he took an er and include uniforms and bussing to all will begin Monday, Aug. 10, and run through — staff and wire reports Sports 4 Friday, August 7, 2009 SPORTS Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho G OLF ROUNDUP Kahne wary as The Glen nears WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (AP) — Kasey Kahne sits sev- Sprint Cup qualifying enth in the Sprint Cup 1 p.m., ESPN2 standings and his first road course win is still fresh on his the standings are eligible to mind. compete for the Sprint Cup That should make Kahne title over the final 10 races of confident as the series shifts the season, and Biffle is one this week to the road course who can’t afford to make a at Watkins Glen. But he’s big blunder. He finished 15th only 79 points inside the top at Pocono on Monday, drop- 12 and just 11 ping a position in the stand- points ahead ings to 12th — just one point of Juan Pablo behind Roush Fenway Racing Montoya, so teammate Kenseth and 101 Kahne points ahead of Joe Gibbs remains wary Racing star Kyle Busch. with five Busch left Watkins Glen racesInternational a year ago Kahne remaining brimming with confidence before the after notching his eighth win cutoff for the Chase for the of the Cup season. He needs championship. a repeat performance this “You know, I don’t feel week to rekindle hopes of super confident, but I defi- making the 10-race Chase. AP photo nitely feel good where we’re “This is a track where I feel Padraig Harrington hits from the sand on the No. 6 hole during the first round of the Bridgestone Invitational golf tournament Thursday at sitting right now,” Kahne like we can make up some said. “I feel like if we keep it ground,” Busch said Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio. Harrington leads the tournament at 6-under par. up, we’re going to be in good Thursday on a conference shape.But things can happen call with reporters.“If we can so easily by your own error or get a good car like we had last just by racing situations. It’s year and maybe qualify up Harrington leads at Firestone just the way racing goes.” somewhat near the front, we No matter what’s at stake, can take a little bit of pit racing over the fast 11-turn, strategy and get up there a AKRON,Ohio — Padraig Harrington that documented Harrington’s inces- PAMPLING LEADS AT RENO-TAHOE OPEN 2.45-mile Watkins Glen road little bit further. We’ve got to never allowed himself to get down dur- sant swing changes. RENO, Nev. — Australia’s Rod course — one of only two on fight hard.” ing the worst of times, whether he was “I know he’s struggled a little bit, Pampling shot a 5-under 67 in swirling the Cup schedule — can Despite a disappointing missing five straight cuts or finishing and he’s probably gotten a little too mountain wind to take the lead in the bring out the worst in any- 16th at Pocono, his fourth toward the bottom of the leaderboard. much criticism for working on his Legends Reno-Tahoe Open, a stroke body — and often has.Toss in straight finish outside the top He didn’t act much differently game,” Verplank said. “But you know ahead of a group that included two- a handful of non-regular 10, Busch remains upbeat for Thursday after his best round of the what? He’s the only one that knows time winner Vaughn Taylor and former drivers (road course special- good reason. He has three year. what he needs to do. If today is any Nevada player Rich Barcelo. ists aiming for that break- top-10 finishes in four starts Harrington finally saw some results indication, then he’s doing something Two-time Reno runner-up Jonathan through victory) and a few at The Glen. after eight months of tinkering with his right.” Kaye, Steve Pate, Grant Waite, Spencer regular drivers who aren’t “We had a great race last swing, making a pivotal par save early Tiger Woods did enough right to Levin and rookie Marc Leishman having the season they had year, so there’s no reason we that sent him on his way to a 6-under open with a 68, the 11th straight time matched Taylor and Barcelo with 68s at hoped for, and Sunday’s can’t have another one this 64 and a two-shot lead in the he has broken par in the opening round Montreux Golf and Country Club on Heluva Good! Sour Cream year,” Busch said. “The Bridgestone Invitational. at Firestone. The world’s No. 1 player is the edge of the Sierra Nevada. Dips At The Glen becomes biggest thing that we fight is A boost of confidence? Not really. going for his seventh victory on this Former PGA Championship winners something of a wild card. the points deal. We can’t “Has no relevance in the overall tree-lined course, and he was only four Paul Azinger, Steve Elkington and “There’s opportunities for make a mistake going into a scheme of things,” Harrington said. shots behind. Shaun Micheel were another shot back guys to make mistakes in braking zone or getting a rear “It’s just one round of golf. That’s all it A week ago in the Buick Open, he at 69 along with Jeff Quinney, James those road races,”Greg Biffle wheel hop into Turn 1 and is. It doesn’t change the last six was tied for 95th after a 1-under 71 in Nitties, Robert Garrigus, Ryan Palmer said. “You don’t wish bad spinning out, or something months. It won’t change the next six the first round and wound up winning and Jonathan Byrd. luck on anybody, but the like that, late in the race and months. I wouldn’t put too much sig- by three shots. other guys we’re chasing for costing us a good finish.” nificance into it, because what if I went “We were 1-under par, and I think I TEENS MOVE ON AT U.S. WOMEN’S AMATEUR spots are good there, too. Good finishes at Watkins out there and shot 76? Would I let it was in 15th or 17th spot — a little differ- ST. LOUIS — Teen stars Alexis Kasey won at Sonoma (in Glen can be hard to come by, affect tomorrow? I think I would not ent than last week at 1-under par,” Thompson and Jessica Korda advanced June), and Juan Pablo runs even for the best. Jeff Gordon put much emphasis on the fact that I Woods said. “You don’t have to go to the U.S. Women’s Amateur quarter- good. Let’s face it, those are is tied with Tony Stewart for shot 64. I’m comfortable with it.” super low here, just kind of plod your finals, winning second- and third- the two guys I’m racing for a most victories with four, but What pleased him were the two late way along, make a few birdies here and round matches at Old Warson. spot, plus my teammate, since his last victory at The birdies — a 25-foot putt on the seventh there. And if you get on a little stretch The 14-year-old Thompson, the Matt Kenseth, who’s right Glen in 2001,Gordon has just hole, and one from about the same like I did — make two in a row — all of a 2008 U.S. Girls’ Junior champion from behind us.” one top 10 and four finishes range just short of the green at No. 8 — sudden you’re in eighth place. That’s Coral Springs, Fla., had a pair of 2- Only the top 12 drivers in of 20th or worse. that made a good round even better. what this golf course allows you to do.” and-1 victories, beating England’s Jodi It also put him atop the leaderboard Phil Mickelson opened with an Ewart in the morning and returning to for the first time all year, two shots even-par 70, along with defending top the Philippines’ Cyna Marie clear of Scott Verplank, Tim Clark and champion Vijay Singh. Rodriguez. Prayad Marksaeng of Thailand. The Lefty played for the first time since Korda — with her father,former ten- group at 67 included Steve Stricker and the U.S. Open and had a double bogey nis star Petr Korda, working as her National champion former Masters champion Zach on his second hole. He settled into his caddie — beat Aimee Neff of Carmel, Johnson. game on the back nine, however, pick- Ind., 6 and 5, and Erynne Lee of Verplank played with Harrington, ing up three birdies to salvage a decent Silverdale, Wash.,2 and 1. and he was well aware of the stories start. — The Associated Press Florida opens camp

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Florida quarterback Tim ISU NFL Tebow has a Heisman Continued from Sports 1 Continued from Sports 1 Trophy, four championship starters in a three-receiver forma- rings and more accolades defensive backfield. make room for Gutierrez. tion “if we had to go right today.” than most Sean Rutten may be the player to fill players could ever imagine. the pass-rush slot. Despite not start- 49ERS MUM ABOUT CRABTREE SITTING OUT Titans to wear No. 9 decal in He wants more. ing a game, his 34 tackles were second SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The San honor of McNair Tebow and the defending among all defensive linemen. He also Francisco 49ers won’t comment on The Tennessee Titans will honor national champions opened added 1.5 sacks, 2.5 tackles for loss, an online report Thursday that top slain former quarterback Steve fall practice Thursday with and a fumble recovery. Phillip Arias is draft choice Michael Crabtree is McNair by wearing a No. 9 decal on hopes of winning a third title the top returning tackler and anchors willing to hold out the entire season. their helmets this season, starting in four years, and they want the linebacker corps. Michael Wright ESPN.com quoted Crabtree’s with this weekend’s Hall of Fame this one to be special. returns to help stabilize the second- cousin and adviser, David Wells, as Game against the Buffalo Bills. The Gators are embracing AP photo ary. saying that Crabtree is prepared to NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy sky-high expectations that Florida coach Urban Meyer wipes As for special teams, punter Jon sit and re-enter the NFL draft next said Thursday the league found it come with returning nearly Vanderwielen was good enough to be year. appropriate to approve the team’s every starter and are openly his head as he leaves the practice tabbed a preseason all-conference The 49ers on Thursday released a 1¼-inch decal in memory of talking about wanting to field in Gainesville ,Fla., Thursday, pick and return man J.D. Ponciano statement saying that the team does McNair, who was killed July 4. become the first team in where the freshman football team may be the most dangerous player out not negotiate in the media. “In our McNair played 11 seasons with the school history to go unde- completed their first practice of of that spot in the Big Sky as well. view, there have been open and pos- Titans and led the team to its only feated. the season. ISU does play five of eight games at itive conversations on both sides,” Super Bowl appearance. “It’s something that we home after the brutal three-week the statement says. McCarthy said Titans coaches and want,”Tebow said,sporting a team that featured Matt stretch to open the season. And San Francisco took the wide sideline personnel also will have the full beard for the first prac- Leinart and Reggie Bush.The Zamberlin is respected by his team. receiver with the 10th overall pick option to wear a No. 9 lapel pin. tice. “That’s not our goal. Trojans stormed through the The former NFL linebacker has this year. We’re not writing that any- regular season, extending instilled discipline, dedication and a SANCHEZ OUTPLAYS CLEMENS where. We’re not posting their winning streak to 34 never-quit attitude into his players. FALCONS’ DOUGLAS LOST IN JETS’ SCRIMMAGE that. But obviously when we games, then lost in the title But talent wins out in the end, and FOR SEASON WITH KNEE INJURY CORTLAND, N.Y. — Mark step on the field, we’re going game to Vince Young and while that has improved the last two FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — The Sanchez has outplayed Kellen to want to win. That would Texas. years, it remains to be seen what that Atlanta Falcons’ depth chart at wide Clemens in the ’ be special, being the first Although Florida doesn’t means in the win column. receiver doesn’t look much like green-white scrimmage, possibly time in Florida history for want to look too far ahead, “When this season is over I want to coach Mike Smith planned. giving him the slight edge in the that. Obviously that is a goal especially with LSU, Georgia see continued progress,” said Smith confirmed Thursday that team’s closely contested quarter- and it’s something that I and Florida State on the Zamberlin. “I want to see our kids Harry Douglas will miss the season back competition. hope comes true.” schedule, players are bracing play hard, graduate, do the things with a knee injury. Pro Bowl receiver Sanchez, the fifth overall draft Talk of an undefeated sea- for each opponent’s best shot they are supposed to be doing.” Roddy White is in a contract hold- pick from Southern California, was son by the Gators is some- every week. Winning a few more games along out, and so suddenly the Falcons’ 9 of 15 — including four dropped thing coach Urban Meyer “We know the target’s on the way wouldn’t hurt either. three-receiver formation includes passes — for 70 yards Thursday would like to stop. our back and we’re ready,” Eric Weems, who has one career night in the team’s annual full-con- “The goal’s always been to linebacker Brandon Spikes Mark Liptak covers ISU football for catch, and Brian Finneran, who has- tact session. Clemens, a fourth-year go to Atlanta. That’s it.We’ve said. “Everybody’s been the Times-News. n’t started a game since 2005. veteran, was 5 of 7 for 26 yards. got to move on,”he said after looking forward to this day. Both Weems, who rooms with “It was like game day,” Sanchez the team’s late practice on ... It’s just like Christmas.” Douglas at the Falcons’ training said. “It was game mode. I put in the Thursday. “I look forward to The Gators opened prac- Bengals 2009 schedule camp, and Finneran, who missed iPod and just laid down for a little the day when (the players tice at 5:45 a.m., with about two seasons with knee injuries, said bit, relaxed my mind and came out are) off limits (to the media), 200 fans eagerly awaiting Sept. 5 at Arizona State 8 p.m. they felt pain for Douglas when he here and did a little work.” and that might be sooner their arrival. The early start Sept. 12 at Oklahoma 10 a.m. hurt his left knee in practice The quarterbacks have been about than you think. We’ve just was no surprise after Meyer Sept. 19 at Weber State 6:05 p.m. Wednesday. even in their competition through got to take care of our busi- promised to make summer Sept. 26 Central Washington 3:35 p.m. “The way he went down was a bad training camp, but Sanchez’s ness and practice hard. workouts and two-a-day Oct. 3 Eastern Washington 3:35 p.m. feeling, a bad feeling,”Finneran said. impressive performance against the That’s what counts. Not practices the toughest in his Oct.10 at Sacramento State 3:05 p.m. The teammates’ fears were real- first- and second-team defenses what people say.” five years. Oct. 17 Northern Colorado 3:35 p.m. ized when Smith said Douglas tore might have pushed him in front. But the Gators can’t help His rationale? For the most Oct. 24 atNorthern Arizona 4:05 p.m. his anterior cruciate ligament and is Wide receiver Paul Raymond took but realize they’re an over- part, Florida has the same Oct. 31 at Montana State 1:05 p.m. out for the year. a reverse into the end zone from 15 whelming favorite to repeat, team won the BCS title game Nov. 7 Montana 3:35 p.m. Smith said Michael Jenkins, yards out for the only score of the maybe even more so than the in Miami,and Meyer wants his Nov.14 Portland State 3:35 p.m. Finneran and Weems would be the scrimmage. 2005 Southern California players to avoid complacency. NATIONTIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO & WORLDFRIDAY,AUGUST 7,2009 SPORTS 5 White House advises Dems on Ouch! handling protests sentiment. He held up a Insurers, GOP piece of artificial turf dur- ing a session with activists accused reporters. “These are nothing more than destructive efforts to of mob tactics interrupt a debate that we should have, and are hav- AP photo By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar ing,’’ Reid said Thursday. Rielle Hunter leaves the Terry and Erica Werner “They are doing this Sanford Federal Building and Associated Press writers because they don’t have Courthouse in Raleigh, N.C., any better ideas. They have AP file photo Thursday. Former Sen. John WASHINGTON — Top no interest in letting the Dr. Joseph Ballinger White House officials negotiators, even though Edwards had an extramarital gives Marjorie Hill, a nurse at counseled Democratic few in number, negotiate. affair with Hunter that he says Montefiore Hospital in New York, the first senators Thursday on cop- It’s really simple: they’re ended in 2006. Asian flu vaccine shot in New York in August 1957. ing with disruptions at taking their cues from talk public events on health show hosts, Internet care this summer, officials rumor-mongerers ... and Edwards’ said, and promised the insurance rackets.’’ party and allies would Republicans answered ex-mistress respond with twice the back. Early flu shot season force if any individual law- “All the polls show there maker is criticized in tele- is serious concern, if not in court amid vision advertising. outright opposition, to the These officials also told president’s health care campaign skittish senators that fresh plan,’’said Antonia Ferrier, comes with three jabs polling suggests an spokeswoman for House emphasis on issues such as Republican Leader John investigation By Mike Stobbe flu vaccine, health care barring insurers from Boehner of Ohio. Associated Press writer /QTGHNWUJQVU workers and pregnant denying coverage on the “Democrats are ginning up By Alysia Patterson This year, three flu shots may be women are on the list but basis of pre-existing med- this cynical shell game.’’ Associated Press writer ATLANTA — Get ready to necessary to protect yourself – not older people, who seem ical conditions is a political Also Thursday, the AFL- one for the regular seasonal flu roll up your sleeve three and two for swine flu. to have some immunity to winner, able to increase CIO announced plans to RALEIGH, N.C. — The times for flu shots this fall. swine flu. support among independ- mobilize labor activists to Locations where ex-mistress of John That’s right, three times. people received their If all the flu shots were ents, women, seniors and attend town hall meetings Edwards spent much of This year’s flu season is flu shot, 2007 given at about the same rural voters. in 50 congressional dis- Thursday in a federal shaping up to be a very dif- time, it could mean a mash The officials spoke on tricts this month to count- courthouse in Raleigh ferent one. Most people will 5 Health of people, some of whom condition of anonymity, er the conservative pro- where a grand jury was need one shot for the regular 6 department should be among the first to saying they were not testers. meeting, at a time when seasonal flu and probably 10 get one shot and not the authorized to discuss White House aides federal investigators are two others to protect against Pharmacy other. details of the closed-door David Axelrod and Jim 13 examining the two-time the new swine flu. Other “I think it’s safe to say we session that took place Messina traveled to the presidential candidate’s Experts suggest you get expect some confusion,’’ hours before lawmakers Capitol for their presenta- 15 finances. that first shot as early as this Hospital said Kristine Sheedy, a CDC headed to their home states tion to Democratic sena- Rielle Hunter walked month — if you can find it. Workplace communications specialist. for a monthlong vacation. tors. Senators saw videos into the building in the “We’d like to get to Job 1 18 Then, there are safety In the week since the of disruptions at events morning through a back and get most of it done,’’said Clinic or questions. House began its own break, held by House members, health center entrance, holding a young Dr. William Schaffner, a Health officials are several town hall-style and were told to organize child and left with the Vanderbilt University flu 33% Doctor’s office haunted by the swine flu meetings have been dis- their events more carefully child about nine hours expert, referring to seasonal vaccine campaign in 1976, rupted by noisy demon- as well as work with labor

later. flu vaccinations. SOURCE: Centers for which was stopped after strators. These episodes unions and other friendly Neither Hunter nor her “Get it done before we Disease Control and unexpectedly high numbers have drawn widespread groups to generate enthu- attorney, Michael Critch- start to tackle Job 2,’’ the Prevention of patients suffered a para- media attention, and siasm. ley, answered reporters’ more complex task of swine AP lyzing condition called Republicans have seized on They also were urged to questions. flu vaccinations, he added. The reasons have to do Guillain-Barre Syndrome. them as well as polls show- use these events to stress Edwards adamantly The five vaccine manu- with logistics and caution. While it’s not clear the vac- ing a decline in support for insurance reforms such as denied during a confes- facturers that supply the Scientists believe the cine was to blame, health President Barack Obama a limit on out-of-pocket sional interview with ABC United States are finishing swine flu vaccine will be officials want to carefully and his agenda as evidence expenses for those covered News last summer that he up production of seasonal most effective if given in two monitor people who get the that public support is lack- by insurance, a ban on cov- had fathered a child with flu vaccine earlier than doses, about three weeks new swine flu vaccine for ing for his signature legis- erage cancellation for the Hunter, and he welcomed usual. Health officials say apart, although testing is any problems. lation. seriously ill and protec- a paternity test. His wife, they expect about half of the still under way to check Scientists are just begin- Pushing back, Demo- tions for small businesses. Elizabeth, has said while more than 120 million doses that. ning to test the safety and crats have accused Messina, the deputy promoting her book that of seasonal vaccine to be Combining swine flu and effectiveness of the new Republicans of sanctioning White House chief of staff, she doesn’t know if her available by the end of this seasonal flu in one shot is swine flu vaccine, work that mob tactics, and Senate also said any advertising husband is the father. month. Most of the rest are theoretically possible, but it is expected to take months. Majority Leader Harry attack would be met with a Former Edwards aide due out by the end of was too late to try it this year. If the seasonal flu and swine Reid,D-Nev.,accused pro- bigger response, these Andrew Young, who September. Some manufac- Decisions were made last flu vaccines were given at testers of trying to sabo- officials said. made a similar court- turers report that distribu- winter about what flu strains the same sitting and some tage the democratic “It’s a challenge, no house visit while the tors are quickly buying up to use in this year’s seasonal people developed health process. question about it, and grand jury was sitting last supplies. vaccine, and production was problems, it would be hard The Republican Party you’ve got to get out there month, said in 2007 he Those five companies — too far along by the time to single out which vaccine says it’s not behind the and make the case,’’ Sen. was the child’s father. including one that makes a swine flu hit in April to alter caused the problem, or protests, but Reid scoffed Chris Dodd, D-Conn., said Hunter said around the nasal spray version of flu the formula. whether it was the combi- at the notion that the pro- afterward. “This is not the same time that Young was vaccine — are the same ones So seasonal flu and swine nation of them. testers reflect grass-roots time for the faint-hearted.’’ the father and the birth making the new swine flu flu will have to be given as “How you’re going to sep- certificate does not list a vaccine. They are on track to separate doses, even if it’s arate that out — that’s a father’s name. start delivering the first during the same appoint- doozer,’’ said Dr. Samuel Hunter’s daughter, batches of that in ment. Katz, a Duke University vac- Frances Quinn Hunter, September, but the bulk of it But it’s not a matter of just cines expert, who was a was born Feb. 27, 2008, isn’t expected until late giving both to whoever developer of the measles but it was unclear if that October or November, comes in. Supplies are vaccine. was the child with her at health officials say. expected to be limited,so the So the government is the courthouse. That’s sparked questions federal Centers for Disease looking at three shots, Edwards has admitted about how all this is going to Control and Prevention has preferably over three visits. to an affair with Hunter work. two different lists for who That’s daunting. Over the that he says ended in Officials want to get as should be first to get the sea- years, the public hasn’t been 2006.That year,Edwards’ many people as possible sonal flu shot and who great about getting even one political action commit- vaccinated against both should be first to get the flu shot: Just one in three tee paid Hunter’s video forms of flu, but a lot of that swine flu shot. U.S. adults got flu shots last production firm depends on consumers and For the regular flu vaccine, year, CDC data indicate. $100,000 for work. Then how many trips they’ll be elderly people, health care “To come two or three AP photo the committee paid willing to make to get shots. workers and pregnant times? That’s expecting a Joan Korman, left, and Dawn Tabrizi, right, hold protest signs dur- another $14,086 on April Why can’t you get one shot women are among the pri- lot, of public response,’’said ing a rally protesting government managed health care in Saratoga 1, 2007. for all — or maybe just two? ority groups. For the swine Katz. Springs, N.Y., Thursday.

Western Dems Researchers identify cells that say ‘scratch me’ begin meeting in By Lauran Neergaard selves raw without relieving seri- involved in the new research. with a neurotoxin that seeks out Associated Press writer ous, daily itching triggered by a “This comprehensive study the GRPR receptor, sort of a northern Idaho variety of conditions, such as opens the field.’’ docking site. Over about two WORLEY (AP) — Democrats WASHINGTON — Got an itch certain cancers, chronic kidney Lead researcher Zhou-Feng weeks, the toxin killed about 80 from around the West are meeting to scratch? Scientists have pin- failure, and even use of certain Chen, a Washington University percent of the cells that harbored in northern Idaho for four days of pointed a key group of cells that narcotic pain relievers. associate professor of anesthesi- that gene. planning and strategy. sends itch-alerts to the brain. Indeed, pain and itch have been ology,in 2007 discovered the first Before those injections, the The Democratic National When researchers at difficult to separate. Previous gene related to itchiness, named mice scratched vigorously. But Committee’s Western Regional Washington University in St. research has found various nerve GRPR. They found that mice with after the itch cells were killed off, Conference started Thursday and Louis knocked out those cells in pathways that seem involved in an inactive version of the gene their scratching plummeted — in runs through Sunday, with most mice, it alleviated their itchiness both. scratched less when exposed to some cases stopped completely of the meetings scheduled for the without affecting their ability to But Thursday’s report in the itchy things than mice with an — when Chen introduced one Coeur d’Alene Casino Resort and sense pain — work that opens a journal Science is the first to active gene. after another itchy substance. Hotel. It is the first time that possible new target for creating identify itch-specific cells in the But that didn’t prove that the They weren’t simply numbed: Democratic delegates from the 13 better itch relievers. spinal cord, that highway that spinal cord neurons, or nerve Their motor function remained western states have convened in Don’t underestimate that delivers sensation to the brain. cells, that harbored this gene normal, and so did their response Idaho. need. The kind of itch caused by “It’s exciting,’’ said well- were itch-specific. They could to pain from heat and pressure in Organizers say the conference bug bites or allergies typically known itch specialist Dr. Gil also be important to genes related a series of common experiments will focus on some key policy goes away with a little scratching Yosipovitch of North Carolina’s to pain sensation. that show animals flick their tails issues, including alternative ener- or some antihistamines. But Wake Forest University Baptist So this time, Chen’s team or pull away their paws during gy, health care reform, the econo- some people can scratch them- Medical Center, who wasn’t injected the spinal cords of mice various stresses. my and education. Sports 6 Friday, August 7, 2009 OBITUARIES Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Dean Young SERVICES HEYBURN — Alva Dean Juanita Mae Hill Munk of Chapel, 2466 Addison Ave. Magic Valley Funeral Home, Monday at the Cascade Young, age 77, of Heyburn, Buhl, funeral at 10 a.m. E. in Twin Falls; visitation 2551 Kimberly Road in Twin Chapel of Sundberg-Olpin passed away peacefully today at the Buhl LDS from 4 to 7 p.m. today at the Falls, and at 10 a.m. Mortuary, 495 S. State St. in Wednesday evening, Aug. Church on Fair Avenue in mortuary. Saturday at the church; Orem, Utah; visitation one 5, 2009, at his home after a Buhl; visitation at 9 a.m. graveside services follows at hour before the service courageous battle with today at the church (Parke’s Harold Burton Bryant of Sunset Memorial Park. Monday at the church; cancer. Magic Valley Funeral Home Gooding, memorial service interment at noon Tuesday Dean was born Dec. 7, in Twin Falls). at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Pamela Hatch Aldrich at the Rupert Cemetery in 1931, in Mona, Juab LDS Church in Gooding Cavaliere of Burley,celebra- Rupert. County, Utah, the son of Lloyd Calvin Mitchell of (Demaray Funeral Service, tion of life at 11 a.m. Adolpha O. and Harriet Kennewick, Wash., and for- Gooding Chapel. Saturday at the Burley Dwight A. Ramsey of Bernice Swasey Young. He merly of Twin Falls, funeral Community Center, 1200 Rupert, memorial service at received his education in at 11 a.m. today at Parke’s Michael Eddward Oakley Avenue in Burley 11 a.m. Monday at the Burley, graduating from Magic Valley Funeral Home, Sizemore of Jerome, service (Ramussen Funeral Home in Apostle House of Prayer, 93 Burley High School. He 2551 Kimberly Road in Twin of remembrance at 11 a.m. Burley). E. Baseline in Rupert married Etta “Joy” Jones Falls. Saturday at the Valley (Hansen Mortuary Rupert on June 19, 1951, in Burley. Christian Center in Hoss Harrison of Twin Chapel). Dean worked for the Wallace (Wally) William Hazelton; luncheon will fol- Falls, gathering in honor of Amalgamated Sugar Smith of Chubbuck, funeral low (Parke’s Magic Valley Hoss from 11 a.m. to noon Bertha M. VanBuren Company during the har- at 2 p.m. today at Demaray Funeral Home in Twin Saturday at White Mortuary Wilson of Twin Falls, vest time, as a commercial Funeral Service, Gooding Falls). in Twin Falls; visitation at memorial service at 1 p.m. fisherman and retired from Chapel; visitation an hour Hoss and Sue’s home after Monday at White Mortuary the state of Idaho before the funeral today at Elsie Lea Arrington the gathering in Twin Falls. Department of Trans- the mortuary. Egbert of Twin Falls, service portation. He was a mem- at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Leland Lorenzo Daniel William O’Brien ber of the LDS Church and Paulino Rodriguez of Twin Falls Stake Center near Hugentobler of Orem, Utah, Jr. of Twin Falls, private served as a ward clerk, in Twin Falls, funeral at 7 p.m. the temple; visitation from and formerly of the Magic family gathering at 2 p.m. the high priest group, in today at Reynolds Funeral 6 to 8 p.m. today at Parke’s Valley area, funeral at 11 a.m. Saturday. the Cub Scouts, and as a Sunday school teacher. He enjoyed working, staying home, raising cattle, riding Young of Granada Hills, horses, visiting with Calif., and Vern (Suzanne) friends, relatives and Young of Walla Walla, 1980s teen flick director John strangers, and fishing. Wash. He was preceded in Dean was a loving hus- death by his parents; one band, supportive father son, Larry Young and his and grandfather, and a wife, Mary; and four sis- good brother. ters, Leora Fishburn, Joy Hughes dies in New York Survivors include his Young (an infant), Beth wife, Joy of Heyburn; three Borchardt and Carol NEW YORK (AP) — Hughes rose from ad writer Vacation,’’“Pretty in Pink,’’ children, Mike (LaNetta) Gilbert. Writer-director John to comedy writer to silver “Planes, Trains & Young of Syracuse, Utah, The funeral will be held Hughes, Hollywood’s youth screen champ with his Automobiles’’ and “Uncle Allen (Nancy) Young of at 11 a.m. Monday, Aug. 10, impresario of the 1980s and affectionate and idealized Buck.’’ McKinnon, Wyo., and Pam at the Paul LDS 3rd and 4th ‘90s who captured the teen portraits of teens, whether “I was a fan of both his (Jason) VanEvery of Ward Church, 300 S. 500 and preteen market with the romantic and sexual work and a fan of him as a Heyburn; 19 grandchil- W. of Heyburn, with such favorites as “The insecurity of “Sixteen person,’’ Culkin said. “The dren; 18 great-grandchil- Bishop Todd Wheeler offi- Breakfast Club,’’ “Ferris Candles,’’ or the J.D. world has lost not only a dren; and his siblings, ciating. Burial will follow Bueller’s Day Off’’ and Salinger-esque rebellion quintessential filmmaker Grant (Barbara) Young of in the Sunny Cedar Rest “Home Alone’’ died against conformity in “The whose influence will be felt Santa Maria, Calif., Bessie Cemetery in Almo, at 2:30 Thursday, a spokeswoman Breakfast Club.’’ for generations, but a great Halverson of Rupert, p.m. Friends may call from said. He was 59. Hughes’ ensemble come- and decent man.’’ LaMar (Betty) Young of 6 until 8 p.m. Sunday at Hughes died of a heart dies helped make stars out Devin Ratray, best known Covina, Calif., Carl (Vera) the Rasmussen Funeral attack during a morning of Molly Ringwald, for playing Culkin’s older Young of Heyburn, Home, 1350 E. 16th St. in walk in Manhattan, Anthony Michael Hall, Ally brother Buzz McCallister in Dorothy (John) Cantrell of Burley, and from 10 until Michelle Bega said. He was Sheedy and many other the “Home Alone’’ films, Boise, Fred Young of 10:45 a.m. Monday at the in New York to visit family. young performers. He also said he remained close to Burley, Kent (Veronica) church. Jake Bloom, Hughes’ scripted the phenomenally Hughes over the years. longtime attorney, said he popular “Home Alone,’’ “He changed my life for- AP file photo was “deeply saddened and which made little-known ever,’’ Ratray said. Director John Hughes is seen in Dorothy B. Stevenson in shock’’ to learn of the Macaulay Culkin a sensa- “Nineteen years later, peo- 1984. Hughes, who wrote and director’s death. tion as the 8-year-old acci- ple from all over the world directed ‘16 Candles,’‘The GOODING — band, Ken Steven- A native of Lansing, dentally abandoned by his contact me telling me how Breakfast Club,’and ‘Weird Dorothy B. son; daughter, Sue Mich., who later moved to vacationing family, and much ‘Home Alone’ meant Stevenson, 86, Ann Stevenson; suburban Chicago and set wrote or directed such hits to them, their families, and Science,’died in New York on recently of Gooding and a sister, Lucille much of his work there, as “National Lampoon’s their children.’’ Thursday. He was 59. and formerly of San Black. She is sur- Diego, Calif., died vived by a brother, Wednesday, Aug. 5, Richard (Celia) 2009, at Helping Berton of El Paso, Hands of Gooding. Texas; a brother- UK buries the infantryman of war to end all wars She was born Aug. 15, in-law, Philip M. Klauber COMBE DOWN, Cathedral, 20 miles to the wanted a simple service.’’ described Patch as an ordi- 1922, in Dallas, Texas, to of San Diego, Calif.; her England, (AP) — He was a southwest — a service The funeral, true to nary man, the plumber from Tom and Marie Berton. She son, Tom (Kim) Stevenson soldier, a survivor of the thrust on him by his late- Patch’s insistence that vic- Combe Down. moved to San Diego, Calif., of Gooding; her grand- trenches — and, in later blooming fame as one of the tims on all sides be honored, But he was also an at a very early age, living daughter, Isla (Chad) years, an advocate for peace. last witnesses to a war that included officials and sol- extraordinary man who there for more than 80 Nelson; and her grandson, Harry Patch, Britain’s last killed at least 8.5 million diers from France, Belgium produced a vivid memoir, years. She graduated from Sean E.M. Stevenson, all of known surviving World War soldiers. and Germany, the former “The Last Fighting San Diego High School in Boise; a great-grandson, I infantryman, was buried And then he was taken foe. Some 1,100 people Tommy,’’ a reference to the 1940. She married Kenneth Heath Nelson; numerous Thursday in this, his home home, where his memories filled the cathedral; hun- nickname for the era’s sol- A. Stevenson on Dec. 6, nephews and nieces; as village in western England, would haunt him no more. dreds more stood outside, diers. 1942, in the St. Francis well as great-nieces and as was his wish. He died last “All he wanted was following the service on a Ross said Patch described Chapel in Balboa Park in nephews; and a host of month at the age of 111. burial in Combe Down,’’ huge TV screen. his war experiences only San Diego, Calif. She friends. The burial followed a said Mike Wool, a neighbor Jim Ross, a friend who reluctantly, and only in his belonged to the ZLAC Cremation arrange- magnificent funeral in Wells of Patch’s stepson. “He spoke at the funeral, final years. Rowing Club and Thursday ments are planned under Club. She was also involved the direction of Demaray with several charities. She Funeral Service, Gooding enjoyed dridge and, in her Chapel. A celebration of younger days, some golf. life will be held at a later Hear better. She worked and managed date. You deserve it! Bo-Danica for more than A special thank you to 25 years. the fine care she received at She is preceded in death Helping Hands of TWO-DAY OPEN HOUSE SPECIAL EVENT by her parents; her hus- Gooding. Special Guest: Dr. Michael Ilif, President of the Colorado Academy of Audiology & Widex Hearing Aid Company Regional Representative DEATH NOTICES We’ll discuss how the latest in hearing aid technology can help enhance your hearing, understanding and quality of life. rosary at 7 p.m. Thursday, JoAnn Wilkins Aug. 13, at the Hansen RUPERT — JoAnn Edith Mortuary Rupert Chapel; Hearing Screening Wilkins, 72, of Rupert, died visitation from 6 to 8 p.m. Consultation Thursday, Aug. 6, 2009, at Thursday at the mortuary Live Hearing Aid Demonstration the Minidoka Memorial and one hour before the FREE Hospital in Rupert. funeral Friday at the The funeral will be held church. at 11 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 11, Wednesday, August 12th at the Paul LDS Stake Walter E. Wells Twin Falls Oice - 260 Falls Avenue, Suite A Center, 424 W. Ellis St. in Across from CSI Paul; visitation from 6 to 8 BUHL — Walter E. Wells, p.m. Monday, Aug. 10, at 92, of Buhl, died the Rasmussen Funeral Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2009, Thursday, August 13th Home, 1350 E. 16th St., at his residence. Burley Oice -1301 East 16th Street, Suite A Burley, and from 10 to Arrangements will be Fritz Kippes, HIS Inside Farmer’s Insurance 10:45 a.m. Tuesday at the announced by Farmer Hearing Instrument Specialist church. Funeral Chapel in Buhl. Space is limited and Louise Etcheverry Leslie A. Lewis reservations are required. RUPERT — Louise The Rev. Leslie A. Lewis, Etcheverry, 93, of Rupert, 87, of Twin Falls, died died Wednesday, Aug. 5, Thursday, Aug. 6, 2009, at Please call (208) 734-2900 to reserve your appointment for this special two-day event. 2009, in Pocatello. his home. The funeral will be held Arrangements will be Honest Service - Reasonable Priced Hearing Aids - Complete Hearing Healthcare at 11 a.m. Friday, Aug. 14, at announced by Reynolds St. Nicholas Catholic Funeral Chapel in Twin Church in Rupert; vigil and Falls. OPEN HOUSE SAVINGS

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