90 / 58 Burley upends Canyon Ridge In other football action: Nampa 28, Twin Falls 14 Burley 28, Canyon Ridge 14 Buhl 46, Wood River 0 Minico 10, Columbia 7 Kimberly 30, American Falls 0 Partly cloudy. Middleton 27,Jerome 20 See all the results: SPORTS 1 BUSINESS 4 JOBLESSNESS DECLINES IN TWIN FALLS >>> Idaho’s unemployment holds steady in August, BUSINESS 1

SATURDAY 75 CENTS September 5, 2009

MagicValley.com Idaho Guard alerted to possible deployment alerted Idaho Gov. C.L. “Butch” the brigade will actually be Larry Lafrenz, Idaho’s adjutant Guard units in other states have 2,400 Idahoans may Otter on Friday that the 116th deployed, said Idaho Army general, announced in February seen as much as nine months’ time Cavalry Brigade Combat Team may National Guard spokesman Lt. Col. that the 116th had been given addi- between their alert and their actual be headed to Iraq be mobilized, likely to replace cur- Tim Marsano. tional personnel and funding to orders, Marsano said, though rently deployed units in Iraq, “This is merely a heads-up,if you train as if it would be deployed. there’s no firm timeframe for the By Nate Poppino according to a press release. will, that they should start thinking The battalion was deployed in 116th. Regardless of what comes, he Times-News writer The Idaho Army National Guard about how to prepare themselves, Iraq for 18 months in 2004 and said, the brigade’s soldiers are pre- has armories in 27 communities, how to get their affairs in order, for 2005, experience that could give pared to return to duty. More than 3,500 Army National and its 116th Brigade Special Troops the possibility of a deployment that the soldiers an advantage in this “It’s no surprise to any soldier in Guard soldiers in three states could Battalion is based out of the Twin lasts a year,” Marsano told the deployment, Marsano said. Unlike the 116th that this is coming down possibly be headed back to Iraq, Falls armory. The 116th also Times-News. the past tour, any mobilization next today,”he said. including 2,400 Guardsmen across includes soldiers in Montana and The announcement wasn’t the year would be for a one-year peri- Idaho. Oregon. first sign that the Guardsmen might od, he said, and would include two The Associated Press con- The U.S. Department of Defense The alert isn’t confirmation that be called up next year. Maj. Gen. months of training. tributed to this report. LITTLE GOAT, BIG WORLD T.F., Kimberly Pygmy goats are no small part of T.F.County Fair races see old By Ben Botkin Times-News writer and new faces In the world of pygmy Times-News town businessman. goats, less is more. Lanting was elected in At the Twin Falls County Four people have filed to 2005 in a tight race against Fair, pygmy goat owners on run for a single seat on the David E. Johnson, who was Friday showed their crea- Twin Falls City Council later appointed to replace tures: miniature versions of while two other incum- Dennis Maughan. their regular-sized relatives. bents remain unchal- City elections are held The pygmy goat, which lenged. Nov. 3. The filing deadline can weigh 50 to 75 pounds, Mayor Lance Clow, a for all city council candi- isn’t necessarily the most council member since dates was Friday afternoon. ill-tempered creature on 1993, is unopposed, as is In Kimberly, incumbents earth. council member Don Hall, will face challengers, too. “They’re pretty easygo- who was elected in 2005. George Plew and Warren ing,” said Crystal Taggart of Clow, who recently retired Wade are running for re- Nampa, who brought along from his private financial election. 24 pygmy goats from the practice, has served as They will face challengers 60-member Diamond T mayor for nearly half his Van Parker, Brandon Kids herd with her to the time on council. Hoobler, Jesse Harrell and Twin Falls County Fair. Council member Greg Burke Richman. The top At 26, Taggart has spent Lanting faces three chal- two vote recipients of the half her life tending pygmy lengers: Chris Talkington, a six individuals are elected to goats; she started at age 13. former mayor and council the council. Pygmy goats, Taggart said, member; Jim Schouten, a In another race for a can bond to you like a pet planning and zoning com- two-year term, Council- dog if you spend enough missioner since December; man Kedrick Wills is run- time with them. and Steve Garner, a down- ning unopposed. Another plus: pygmy goats can be housebroken as kids and trained to walk with a leash. The pygmy goats were dwarfed by nearby goats that Judge wants trial weighed 150 pounds or more — lumbering giants com- pared with the little pygmy. in election lawsuit Due to their size, pygmy goats are ideal for young sides for summary judg- children learning to work Decision could ment. with animals, though Last year, the Idaho they’re sometimes over- affect Legislative Republican Party sued the looked amid the mix of show DREW GODLESKI/Times-News state, specifically Secretary horses and cattle. Ella Fischer, 6, nuzzles her pygmy goat before having it judged during a National Pygmy Goat Association of State Ben Ysursa, seeking Elizabeth Daley, 20, of showing Friday at the Twin Falls County Fair in Filer. The fair runs through Monday. session, primary to close the primary elec- Jerome, began working with tions. Idaho has had an pygmy goats at age 7. Daley, By Rebecca Boone open primary for the past who brought six of them, TODAY’S SCHEDULE Associated Press writer 36 years, though there have been previous efforts to FAIR See , Main 2 TWIN FALLS COUNTY FAIR show ring BOISE — A federal judge close it. At Twin Falls County Fairgrounds, Filer 1 p.m. – 4-H/FFA district dairy goats, goat show says a lawsuit between the The decision could affect 8 a.m. – All-breed horse show, ZeBarth Arena; ring; antique tractor pull, Shouse Arena Idaho Republican Party and the 2010 Legislative session Magicvalley.com 4-H/FFA dog show, dog show ring 4 p.m. – 4-H/FFA pygmy goat showmanship and the state can’t be decided and the primary election in 9 a.m. – 4-H/FFA sheep showmanship, McCoy quality, goat show ring WATCH humor until a trial, or at least a May, so Winmill said he sheep show ring 6 p.m. – Magic Valley dairy heifer sale, Twin Falls columnist Steve hearing, is held on the mat- would move the case for- 9:30 a.m. – Open to the World steer show, County Fair sale barn Crump visit ter. U.S. District Judge B. ward as quickly as possible. Southwick beef show ring 7:30 p.m. – PRCA rodeo, Shouse Arena ($14 famous food spots Lynn Winmill ruled Friday 10 a.m. – Magic Valley dairy heifer show, dairy reserved seats, $11 general seats) PRIMARY at the fair. against requests from both See , Main 2 Twin Falls County Fair inks deal with Coke sponsor the fair in exchange “All the board could do is the fair this year and is also One vendor says for the exclusive right to sell recommend to vendors they including Coke. He said fair- its products at the fair. The sell the (Coke) products,”Pitz goers tend to have a prefer- fairgoers prefer agreement was reached after said. ence for Pepsi, adding that the fair put out a request for Next year, the agreement Sugar Shack will be at the fair sponsor proposals. with Coca-Cola is expected next year,regardless of which Pepsi by 3-to-1 For Pepsi lovers, the good to apply to all vendors. drink they’ll have to sell. By Ben Botkin news is that the rival soft Pitz said that 70 to 75 per- “We have sold three to one Times-News writer drink will still be around at cent of vendors agreed to Pepsi over Coke,” Gumm this year’s fair. carry Coke products this said. “They want their One feature at this year’s Because of the timing, the year. Along with future Pepsi.” Twin Falls County Fair will fair had already signed con- exclusivity, Coke is providing Pitz said he doesn’t believe be hard to find next year: tracts with food vendors a rebate for each case of that Coke’s future domi- Pepsi drinks. before the Coca-Cola deal product that’s sold at the fair, nance will change the experi- Twin Falls County Fair was finalized, which means Pitz said. ence at the fair. DREW GODLESKI/Times-News officials recently signed a the vendors are free to sell the Arnie Gumm, a partner of “I think when you’re eat- A Coca-Cola bucket holding bottled water is seen on the counter at El deal with Coca-Cola in products they wish this year, Sugar Shack based in Boise, ing fair food, a drink’s a Sombrero as employee Fred Hernandez rings up an order Friday at the which the company will said Fair Manager John Pitz. is selling Pepsi products at drink,”Pitz said. Twin Falls County Fair in Filer.

Comics...... Business 3 Crossword ...... Classifieds 8 Obituaries ...... Religion 4 Commodities ...... Business 2 Dear Abby...... Classifieds 3 Opinion ...... Main 6 TAKING ON THE ‘ME’ SOCIETY Community ...... Sports 7 Garage sales....Classifieds 4 Sudoku ...... Classifieds 9 Seminarians part of bold experiment > RELIGION 1 MORNINGMORNINGMain 2 Saturday, September 5, 2009 BRIEFINGBRIEF- TN Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho

Pat’s Picks TODAY’S HAPPENINGS Three things to do today ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT al 4-H, FFA and livestock events, a carnival, 3 p.m., Hollister City Park, Hollister, 208- Holesinsky Winery Grand Opening, includes entertainment on the free stage, exhibits in 655-4354. Pat Marcantonio wine, beer, appetizers and entertainment, the merchants buildings, all day, Twin Falls 3 to 9 p.m., 4477 Valley Steppe Drive, Buhl, County Fairgrounds, Filer, fair admission: $7 MARKETS/ANTIQUES • Sure they’re creepy and action starts at 8 a.m. $25 at the door, 543-6940. adults, $6 seniors 65 and over, $3 children crawly, but they can be • For a different kind of 6-12 (no cost for children age 5 and under); Ketchum Art and Antique Show, 9 a.m. to Barbecue and Wah-Hoo Revue, with come- 5 p.m., nexStage Theatre, 120 S. Main St., interesting. Creepy Crawly Wild West, the Wild West dy, singing, dancing and audience involve- Professional Rodeo Cowboys Associations Day, an educational event Motocross Races start at rodeo, 7:30 p.m., Shouse Arena, fair- Ketchum, www.visitsunvalley.com. ment; 6:30 p.m. dinner; 7:30 p.m. show, Wagon Days Antique Show, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., about reptiles and other 9 a.m. with practice at the Sun Valley Resort Opera House, barbecue grounds, rodeo tickets: $14 reserved seats exotic pets, will be held Minidoka County Fair- and $11 general admission (prices include Forest Service Park, at First and Washington and show tickets: $40 adults, $35 senior streets, Ketchum, www.visitsunvalley.com. from 1 to 5 p.m. at the grounds in Rupert. citizens, $30 children ages 12 and under; fair admission, before sales tax), 326-4398 Herrett Center on the north Tickets start at $8 for or tfcfair.com. Hailey’s Antique Market, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., show-only tickets: $20 adults, $15 senior Roberta McKercher Park, 350 W. Cedar St., side of the College of adults. It also takes place citizens, $15 children ages 12 and under, Wagon Days celebration continues with sev- Southern Idaho campus in on Sunday. eral events: Papoose Club Flapjack Hailey, www.haileyidaho.com. 888-622-2108 or seats.sunvalley.com. Hailey’s Main Street Antique and Art Show, Twin Falls. There’s no cost. Sun Valley Ice Show figure skating, Melissa Breakfast, live musical performances, • It’s big doings in Have your own pick you 8 a.m. to noon, Town Plaza, cost: $8 adults, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., at 730 N. Main St., Hailey, Gregory and Denis Petukhov, four-time U.S. www.haileyidaho.com. Ketchum with Wagon Days want to share? Something silver medalist in performance, 9:15 p.m., $7 senior citizens 65 and older, $7 youth running today with a that is unique to the area Sun Valley Ice Rink, tickets: $32 to $52 13-18, $5 children 4-12 years, no cost for parade, food, live music, and that may take people by bleacher seats, $62 dessert buffet and ice children 3 and under; Silver Car Auction, MUSEUMS car auction, bareback riders surprise? E-mail me at show, seats.sunvalley.com, 622-2135 or cars displayed and auctioned off beginning Annual Creepy Crawly Day, teaching kids and more celebration. The [email protected]. 888-622-2108. at 10:30 a.m., 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., Sun Valley about reptiles and other exotic pets, hosted Resort, 800-255-4485 or by Herrett Center for the Arts and Science CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS silverauctions.com; children’s carnival, and Idaho Herpetological Society, 1 to 5 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Giacobbi Square, Fourth p.m., Herrett Center, north side of campus Christian Men’s Fellowship and no-host and Washington streets, unlimited all-ride of College of Southern Idaho, Twin Falls, no Primary breakfast, 7 to 8:30 a.m., Depot Grill, Twin pass: $10; Eh-Capa Bareback Riders, 10:30 cost, open to the public, 732-6655. Falls, no cost, 733-5501. a.m., Performance Festival Meadows, Sun Continued from Main 1 Faulkner Planetarium “WSKY: Radio Station in Idaho, and whether and to Valley Road; Blackjack Ketchum Shoot-Out of the Stars/Live Sky Tour” at 2 p.m.; Members of the what extent the threat of EXHIBITS Gang, 12:15 p.m., Main Street, in front of “More Than Meets the Eye/Live Sky Tour” Republican Party’s conserva- such crossover voting affects Pioneer Saloon; Big Hitch Parade, 1 p.m.; Showcase of new works by local artists, at 4 p.m.; and “Bad Astronomy: Myths and tive wing maintain that the message of IRP and its Damphools with bluegrass and country folk Misconceptions” at 7 p.m., Herrett Center, crossover voting by candidates,’’Winmill said. Shoshone artist Ann Parker with Western music, following the parade, The Casino, no sculptures; Beverly Bray with mixed-media $4.50 for adults, $3.50 for senior citizens, Democrats and independents Semanko said he is pleased cover; and tour of the ore wagons, with local $2.50 for students, no cost for children is diluting the party’s role in the judge opted to go forward drawings and pencil renderings of Western historian Ivan Swaner, 4 p.m., outside the places, people and animals, 10 a.m. to under age 2 and a special price package for selecting candidates, altering with the case. Ore Wagon Museum, Ketchum, www.visit- families with five children or less; and Rock candidates’ campaign mes- “We simply ask, and have a 2 p.m., Lion’s Gate Gallery, 229 Main St., sunvalley.com. Filer, free admission and refreshments; reg- Entertainment Show: “Lynyrd Skynyrd: Fly sages and helps elect more right to expect, that mem- On Free Bird,” 8:15 p.m., Herrett Center, moderate Republicans. bers of the Democratic Party ister to win a Western print. “Modern Parallels: Mary Henry and Helen HEALTH AND WELLNESS north end of the College of Southern Idaho The Idaho GOP has also or other political parties will campus, Twin Falls, $4.50, 732-6655. argued that the open primary not choose our candidates for Lundeberg” exhibition, 40-plus paintings, SilverSneakers Fitness Program at Curves of system violates the First us,’’Semanko said in a state- drawings and lithographs of West Coast Twin Falls, complete cardio and circuit Amendment right to free ment. “The court’s decision artists, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sun Valley Center training with resistance, state-of-the-art SPORTS association because it forces today gets us closer to mak- for the Arts, 191 Fifth St. E., Ketchum, no equipment and “Curves Smart” personal- Jerome Gun Club sporting clays shoot, 100- Republican Party members ing that a reality.’’ cost, 726-9491 or sunvalleycenter.org. ized coaching, 7 to 11 a.m., Twin Falls target event, 9 a.m. sign up and 10 a.m. to associate with nonmem- Rod Beck, an Idaho “The Container Show - Installation Two,” Curves, 690 Blue Lakes Blvd. N., no cost for start, 11 miles north of junction of U.S. ber voters. Republican Party activist with featured artists Jan Cox, Amanda Humana Gold- insured or AARP provided by Highway 93 and Interstate 84 at mile mark- But the state, joined by who has pushed to close the Hamilton, Megan Murphy and Angela Tsai, Secure Horizons, 734-7300. er 64, $20 adults and $14 juniors ($5 extra groups representing inde- primary, said he had not yet presented by Sun Valley Center for the Arts, for non-members), first 50 targets free for pendent voters, contends had a chance to closely read 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., in storage containers on HOME AND GARDEN newcomers, 539-4814. that the Republicans haven’t Winmill’s ruling, but said he the center’s new property, corner of Second Wild West Motocross Races, 9 a.m., Minidoka Avenue and Fourth Street, Ketchum, no Mini-Cassia Farmers Market, 9 a.m. to proven the alleged crossover felt it was a “big loss for the 1 p.m., Gossner Cheese Factory, U.S. County Fairgrounds, Rupert, 208-436-9748. voting has hurt or even influ- state.’’ cost, sunvalleycenter.org or 726-9491. “Ginny Blakeslee Breen’s art exhibition,” Highway 30 and Seventh Street, (Interstate enced outcomes at the ballot It appeared the judge “was 84 exit 211 and two miles south), Heyburn, To have an event listed, please submit the box. cognizant of the fact that 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Magic Valley Arts Council’s name of the event, a brief description, time, La Galeria Pequena, 132 Main Ave. S., Main 678-8408. Ysursa has also argued that there’s a 2010 legislative ses- Twin Falls Farmers Market, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., place, cost and contact number to Suzanne it’s a political rather than sion coming up ... that clear- Street Plaza, Twin Falls, free admission, Browne by e-mail at sbrowne@magicval- 734-2787 or magicvalleyartscouncil.org. College of Southern Idaho Community legal matter, that election ly would be a recognition that Garden site, North College Road, across ley.com; by fax, 734-5538; or by mail, laws don’t infringe on any- this would impact the pri- from Eldon Evans Expo building, Twin Falls, Times-News, P.O.Box 548, Twin Falls, ID one’s right to free association mary elections,’’Beck said. FESTIVALS AND FAIRS 543-4582. 83303-0548. Deadline is noon, four days in and the U.S. Constitution But Harry Kresky, the New Twin Falls County Fair continues, with sever- Salmon Tract Farmers Market, 11 a.m. to advance of the event. authorizes state legislatures York-based attorney repre- to set the time, place and senting the Independent manner of holding elections. groups who intervened in the In 2008, just before the law- case, said he was pleased suit was filed, Idaho law- with Winmill’s ruling, makers declined to pass a bill because it means that the Fair that would have closed the Idaho Republican Party will Continued from Main 1 primaries. be held to a higher standard There simply wasn’t of proof if they want to win says the creatures’ small size enough evidence available the case. make them easier to work yet for a ruling, Winmill said. “I think what’s significant with. “In fact, the record before about the decision is that the In the end, though, one this court is quite undevel- position the Republican must still remember that a oped,’’he noted. Party took in this litigation is pygmy goat is still a goat. Though the Idaho that the mere existence of an They can still butt their Republican Party’s current open primary in and of itself heads — but can’t reach chairman, Norm Semanko, violates their rights. What quite as high or hit as hard. testified that every the judge is saying is, ‘Until “They all have that atti- Republican on the primary you can come forward with tude,”Taggart said. “They’ll ballot since 1988 has modi- some actual proof that hit in the shin stead of a fied his or her political mes- you’ve been harmed by the kneecap.” sage or ideology because of open primary in Idaho, I’m the threat of crossover vot- not going to grant that,’’’ DREW GODLESKI/Times-News Ben Botkin may be ing, Semanko acknowledged Kresky said. From left, Sheila McClure, Elizabeth Daley, Shelle Farnsworth, Alycia Stirling and Brittney Stirling line up reached at bbotkin@magic- that he couldn’t say if Idaho Secretary of State for judging during a National Pygmy Goat Association showing Friday at the Twin Falls County Fair in valley.com or 208-735- crossover voting has ever Ben Ysursa said he hopes the Filer. 3238. affected the ultimate out- court can resolve the issue come of any particular pri- quickly to avoid any conflict mary, Winmill noted. with next year’s primaries. “Therefore, based on the “The longer this goes, the current record before this more likely the next primary court, genuine issues of will be an open primary, and Make-A-Wish gives Declo boy treehouse material fact remain — main- that’s what we’re concerned ly whether and to what about, the next primary,’’ By Laurie Welch extent crossover voting exists Ysursa said. Times-News writer

DECLO — It was hard to tell who CORRECTIONS was more excited Friday, 5-year-old Trey Andersen, who was the recipi- Location of music Christian singles ent of a new treehouse, or his broth- er, Tyler Andersen, 7, as Make-A- club recital incorrect meet at pizzeria Wish Foundation of Idaho made the The location of a meeting The location of the Magic Declo kindergartner’s greatest dream of the Twin Falls Music Club Valley Christian singles come true. on Sept. 12, and the accom- weekly gathering was incor- “It’s unreal,” said Trey’s grand- panying concert, “‘Rhap- rect in the Sept. 3 Today’s mother Bonnie Holman. “It’s phe- sody in Blue’ with Susan and Happenings. nomenal. I was so thrilled to hear the Sue,” was incorrect in The group meets at 6 p.m. news that this little guy was going to Friday’s Entertainment sec- Thursdays at Idaho Pizza get this. He’s going to have so much tion. Company, 1859 Kimberly fun in it, as well as his brother.” The correct location is Road, Twin Falls. Trey and Tyler were led through a Welch Music Recital Hall, The Times-News regrets gauntlet of family and friends who LAURIE WELCH/Times-News 837 Pole Line Road. the errors. gathered in the family’s backyard to Five-year-old Trey Andersen, center right, and his brother, Tyler Andersen, 7, get a first look at watch Trey’s reaction to the custom- Trey’s new treehouse Friday in Declo, which was provided by Make-A-Wish Foundation. built treehouse, constructed by CIRCULATION Brook Langston of Custom functional. Trey will eventually need as they neared the family’s home so All delivery areas ...... 733-0931, ext 1 Playhouses of Shelley. a heart transplant, however, his Trey couldn’t see the treehouse that ...... or 1-800-658-3883 “I wanted it to be one of a kind father said. was under construction in his back- Circulation director Laura Stewart . . . .735-3327 PUBLISHER Circulation phones open 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. because he’s a one-of-a-kind kid,” “He has had two (hospital) trips in yard until it was unveiled. Brad Hurd ...... 735-3345 daily and 6 to 10 a.m. on weekends for ques- Langston said. “It has a special look- the last six weeks and he deals with “It drove him crazy all day,” said NEWSROOM tions about delivery, new subscriptions and vaca- out hatch so he can make sure spies adversity unlike anyone I’ve ever Trey’s mother, Robbie Andersen. Editor James G. Wright ...... 735-3255 tion stops. If you don’t receive your paper by or parents aren’t coming.” seen,”Ben said. Make-A-Wish Foundation of Idaho 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. Langston even crafted the tree, Ben said other than his medical Regional Manager Julie Thomas said Letters to the editor ...... 735-3266 MAIL INFORMATION which was made out of fiberglass, to condition, Trey is a typical 5-year-old wish children are recommended for Newsroom fax ...... 734-5538 The Times-News (UPS 631-080) is published daily serve as support for the structure. who loves basketball and riding his the nonprofit program by their physi- 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. “Inside he’s really excited,” said bike. Whenever he knows he will be cians after they receive a diagnosis of a Obituaries ...... 735-3266 Periodicals paid at Twin Falls by The Times-News. Ben Andersen, Trey’s father. “He’s active, Trey straps on a backpack that life-threatening condition. Official city and county newspaper pursuant to ADVERTISING Section 6C-108 of the Idaho Code. Thursday is been counting down the days, and has his oxygen tank in it and heads off The foundation granted 68 wishes Advertising director John Pfeifer . . . . .735-3354 hereby designated as the day of the week on today he’s been counting the hours.” to play. last year. The average cost of a wish is CLASSIFIEDS which legal notices will be published. Postmaster, Ben said Trey was born with the After a five-month wait for his wish $6,500. Customer service ...... 733-0931, ext. 2 please send change of address form to: P.O. Box left side of his heart underdeveloped to come true, Trey’s grandmother Anyone who would like to volunteer Classifieds manager Christy Haszier . .735-3267 548, Twin Falls, Idaho 83303. and has endured three open-heart Norma Andersen picked him up from or make a donation to Make-A-Wish ONLINE Copyright © 2009 Magic Valley Newspapers Inc. Online sales Jason Woodside ...... 735-3207 Vol. 104, No. 248 surgeries to repair his heart so it is school on Friday and blindfolded him can call Thomas, 208-238-9474. Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho LOCAL/IDAHO Saturday, September 5, 2009 Main 3 Gooding Co. Wendell,PSI hashing out terms of deal searches for By Blair Koch over the contract. While the Councilman Jason Houser labor disputes.” office administration costs Times-News correspondent city is pleased with the said the city should be “That’s their problem,” and some road mainte- missing man decrease of 26 cents per allowed out of the contract if Cowen said. nance. Times-News WENDELL — PSI household per month in the PSI fails to uphold the The contract goes into In other city news, Gem Environmental Systems bid cost, the council will go agreement. effect Oct. 1 and the city will Team Chairwoman Marilyn The Gooding County won the bid to handle resi- back to PSI with a few items “We need to leave the see a 26-cents-per-house- Neal reported that she has Sheriff’s Department is dential garbage service for it would like to see in the right to exit the contract,” hold decrease for the serv- applied for a $1,500 grant for seeking information the city of Wendell in July final agreement. Houser said,“if it’s not met.” ice, which costs residents $7 the city’s cemetery park, about a but the two parties are still “There aren’t any major The city will also discuss a month, billed by the city. which is being renovated. Gooding hashing out details of the things within the contract, removing language from the Residents will not see the “The money is there for man who new contract. none so big we can’t ham- contract allowing PSI to not savings passed to them, us, they just want to see the has been During Thursday’s coun- mer them out,” said Mayor pick up garbage in the event however, as the sanitation blueprints for what we want missing cil meeting city officials read Rick Cowen. of, “strikes, lockouts and charges also help pay for to do,”Neal said. since Sunday. Chester King, 29, King is 6 feet, 1 inch tall, City of Hagerman dealing with plugged pumps 200 pounds and has brown hair and brown By Kimberly Williams-Brackett water system. actually terminates the end assessment to determine traffic signals.’” eyes. Times-News correspondent “They are still having of January 2011. the highest priority needs With numerous recom- He was last seen by problems with flushing of Debbie Dane with for community improve- mendations for an action family members on HAGERMAN — While heavy towels,” said city Southern Idaho Tourism ments in the Hagerman plan, Dane said work on Sunday. municipal budgets are tak- Superintendent Casey presented the results of a area. The survey gave area establishing a wildlife He drives a 1986 ing a dive across the valley Kelley. Councilman Hagerman community residents an opportunity to viewing area at the rest area Chevrolet pickup with during the coming fiscal Douglas Wickham suggest- tourism asset inventory participate in the process of south of Hagerman is under Idaho license plates 2T year, something’s refusing ed officially informing resi- survey completed in May. A suggesting and prioritizing way. If a grant can be P4393. to fall in Hagerman. dents of the problem. coalition of Southern Idaho needed projects. received, the project will be If you have seen or had City officials asked citi- In other business, Mayor Tourism, the Hagerman One of the questions on funded by March 2010. contact with King, zens not to flush sanitary Jake Rice Jr. withdrew Valley Chamber of the survey was “What one please contact the napkins at Wednesday’s request for proposals for Commerce, Hagerman thing do you enjoy the most Kimberly Williams- Gooding County Hagerman City Council solid waste disposal Improvement Development about living in Hagerman?” Brackett may be reached at Sheriff’s Office, 208- Meeting, as pump failure at because the city’s five-year Education Appreciation, “There were a variety of [email protected]. 934-4421. a city lift station continues contract with PSI Inc., and the city of responses,”said Dane. to plague the city’s waste- Environmental Systems Hagerman conducted the “But my favorite was ‘No

2,000-plus sick with swine Jerome may require inspections flu at WSU of all vacant rental properties PULLMAN,Wash.(AP) — Washington State By John Plestina only in the talking stage at He said fees for inspections University officials say more Times-News writer this time. could fund additional than 2,000 students have “When a building is employees to staff the pro- been sickened by swine flu JEROME — In an attempt vacated the city is obligated gram. during the first two weeks of to impede slumlords from to inspect the building “I have no way of know- classes on the Pullman renting substandard hous- before it is occupied again,” ing how much this would campus. ing in Jerome, a municipal he said of the law in effect cost. The cost would be But Saturday’s football official is looking into a in numerous cities around minimal to the owner of the game between Stanford and future city ordinance that the nation. “This is mainly building,”he said. Washington State will go on would mandate inspections to protect against slum- Austin spoke briefly as scheduled. every time a house or lords.” about the possible future School officials say there apartment becomes The program would tar- ordinance during a recent have been no deaths and no vacant. get rentals to ensure prop- Jerome City Council meet- students have required hos- Jerome Assistant City erties are safe and health ing. pitalization. Administrator Micah standards are met. “This is just a proposal. Dr. Dennis Garcia says Austin said an ordinance in “We’re not trying to It’s something we need to most students suffer three an Indiana city he previ- hamstring anybody or tie discuss and research,” he to five days of discomfort. ously worked in successful- down any of our local busi- said.“We’re not even sure if The school is handing out ly thwarted rentals of hous- nesses or the housing mar- something like this would free flu kits including a ther- ing that fell below health ket here,”he said. be appropriate for Jerome mometer, painkillers, throat and safety standards. Currently, the city does by state law. This is lozenges, sport drinks, hand Austin said any such not have adequate staff for research we will have to sanitizer and tissues. ordinance for Jerome is the program, Austin said. conduct.” GRAND OPENING OF OUR NEW BOISE STORE! $25 SAVINGS COUPON SunRiver Good @ the Twin Falls & Boise Locations FACTORY DIRECT SAVINGS! The Real Wood Furniture REAL WOOD ALDER & PINE Occassional Table Sets NO PARTICLEBOARD BOOKCASE BED NEW NEW Sofa, Coffee & 2 End Tables NO FURNITURE FROM CHINA TWIN $350 SUN RIVER EXCLUSIVE! FULL $450 $420 MADE IN BOISE, IDAHO QUEEN $480 Solid Rustic Alder 15 Finish Color Choices Dovetail Drawers Metal Glides Beds Underbed Drawers Trundle & Chest Beds Nightstands Chest of Drawers Dressers & Mirrors Occassional Tables Bookcases & Desks Toy Chests TV Stands NIGHTSTANDS STARTING @ $119

Casa $625 Lions $545 Polo $465 Alder $545

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LOCATIONS $ Boise, Idaho Twin Falls, Idaho COUPON SAVE 25 Monday-Saturday 10 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday 10 a.m.-6:30 p.m. COUPON SAVE $25 Sunday Noon-5 p.m. Sunday Noon-5 p.m. On your next purchase On your next purchase @ the Twin Falls & Boise Locations 1 Block South of Costco Off Blue Lakes Blvd. Good at both the Twin Falls and Boise locations expires August 31, 2009 2230 S. Cole Road Suite 150 In the WinCo Shopping Center expires September 30, 2009 389-9946 734-3243 Sun River products are backed by our guarantee of 100% satisfaction. Our dedication to quality and service guarantees that you will be happy with your purchase. We will gladly exchange or refund any purchase in its original condition within (14 days from its purchase date). Should any manufacturer’s defect arise we will gladly repair or replace, at our option, any merchandise purchased form Sun River Furniture. hese returns/exchanges are subject to the following exceptions: Sized or altered merchandise is non-refundable and should be viewed as a final sale. Clearance or “As Is” merchandise is a final sale. To return an item, please provide your name and Sales Order number with a brief explanation of why you wish to return your order. Our customer service representatives will be happy to assist you with any questions that you have regarding our policy. All refunds for purchases made by cash or check will be made by check within 10 days of receipt of returned merchandise. Sun River understands that some furniture purchases are made with cash, however the procedure of returned merchandise verification requires that we issue a check. his refund check may be picked up at our store or mailed to your home or place of business. Credit card refunds will be credited to the card used at the time of purchase and made within a 24-hour period Main 4 Saturday, September 5, 2009 LOCAL TN Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho 5TH DISTRICT COURT NEWS

TWIN FALLS COUNTY CIVIL FILING under the influence; dismissed by pros- Tanna Ray Draper, 30, driving without years probation, three years prison Pete L. Guzman, 64, resisting or DRIVING UNDER THE Jennie Botts-Larkin and Charles R. ecutor. privileges, guilty, $200 fine, $125.50 determinate, seven indeterminate, 2 obstructing officers, $1,000 fine, $800 INFLUENCE SENTENCINGS Larkin vs. Tom Botts and Joann Botts. costs, driver’s license suspended 180 days credited; probation violation, 30 suspended, $75.50 costs, 24 months Gene D. Schaeffer, 53, Twin Falls; driving Seeking judgment for damages as a CASSIA COUNTY days, 12 months probation, 60 days days jail, 28 credited; two counts pro- probation, 180 days jail, 179 suspend- under the influence; $700 fine, $400 result of breach of contract in the FELONY SENTENCINGS jail, 58 suspended. bation violation, retained jurisdiction. ed, 1 credited. suspended; $132.50 costs; $75 public amount of at least $250,000; attor- Kalob Wyth Morrison, 21, criminal con- David R. Arausa Jr., 26, resisting or Mandy Lee Beecher, 31, possession of Maria G. Gonzalez-Herrera, 25, driving defender fee; 90 days jail, 80 suspend- ney’s fees and costs. spiracy part 2 persistent violator, dis- obstructing officers, guilty, $200 fine, controlled substance, $115.50 costs, without privileges amended to driver’s ed, credit for two days served, eight missed on motion of prosecutor; carry- $110.50 costs, 12 months probation, $547.22 restitution, five years proba- license violation, $100 fine, $110 costs. days house arrest; driving privileges CHILD SUPPORT CASES ing things to prisoner to aid escape, 90 days jail, 89 suspended, 1 credited. tion, four years prison determinate, Marc Andrew Sayles, 17,attempt to suspended 90 days; 12 months proba- The State of Idaho, Department of guilty, $600.50 costs, two years, six Timothy Cody Pena, 20, fail to provide eight indeterminate, 238 days credited; elude a police officer, case type trans- tion; no alcohol. Health and Welfare, Child Support months prison determinate , two years proof of insurance, dismissed on probation violation, retained jurisdic- fer; driver’s license violation, dismissed Jose V. Gonzalez, 27,Jerome; one count Services has filed claims against the six months indeterminate, 259 days motion of prosecutor; driving without tion. by prosecutor. driving under the influence, second following: credited, retained jurisdiction, peniten- privileges, guilty, $500 fine, $125.50 Jon Curtis May, 22, possession of forged Courtenay D. Wielkiewicz, 27,driving offense; $1,000 fine, $500 suspended; Robert Cano. Seeking establishment of tiary suspended. costs, driver’s license suspended 180 check, $1,000 fine, $97.50 costs, without privileges (second offense) $132.50 costs; $75 public defender paternity; $174 monthly support plus Justin Jennings, 20, delivery of con- days, 12 months probation, 90 jail, 83 $6,147.71 restitution, four years proba- amended to driver’s license violation, fee; 365 days jail, 355 suspended, 45 percent of medical expenses not trolled substance, guilty, $610.50 suspended, 2 credited, must report to tion, three years prison determinate, $200 fine, $110.50 costs, 12 months credit for two days served; driving priv- covered by insurance; provide medical costs, $850 restitution, three years jail for five days at 6 p.m. Aug. 8, 2009. seven indeterminate, 90 days credited, probation, 90 days jail, 88 suspended, ileges suspended 365 days; 24 months insurance; $522 for public assistance probation, 20 days jail, one year prison Nicole N. Cantu, 19, driving without priv- retained jurisdiction; possession of 2 credited. probation; no alcohol; one count driv- and child support costs. determinate , three years, six months ileges, guilty, $200 fine, $125.50 costs, forged check, dismissed by prosecutor; Mario Cardenas, 24, resisting or ing without privileges dismissed. Amanda M. Hernandez. Seeking estab- indeterminate, penitentiary suspended. driver’s license suspended 90 days, 12 burglary, dismissed by prosecutor; pro- obstructing officers, $1,000 fine, $700 lishment of paternity; $179 monthly Brian Howard Greenwell, 22, burglary, months probation, 90 days jail, 88 sus- bation violation, guilty. suspended, $125.50 costs, 24 months MISDEMEANOR SENTENCINGS support plus 100 percent of medical disposition withheld; resisting or pended, 2 credited, must report to jail Jon Curtis May, 22, burglary amended to probation, 365 days jail suspended, 2 Aleksandr V. Gelever, 25, Buhl; failure to expenses not covered by insurance; obstructing officers, guilty, disposition for two days at 6 p.m. Aug. 10, 2009. attempted burglary, $1,000 fine, credited, 30 days community service, provide insurance; $1,000 fine, $700 provide medical insurance; $467.71 for withheld; carry concealed weapon Shawn N. Koski, 21, possession of con- $97.50 costs, four years probation, 24 suspended. suspended; $87.50 costs; 90 days jail, foster care and child support costs. without a license, dismissed on motion trolled substance, guilty, $200 fine, three years prison determinate, two Brian Lee Garcia, 21, unlawful entry, 90 80 suspended, eight days credit for Robert V. Burkhardt. Seeking establish- of prosecutor. $85.50 costs; use or possess drug indeterminate, 80 days credited, days jail, 3 jail in lieu of fines/costs; time served. 12 months probation. ment of paternity; $227 monthly sup- Robert Ray Hernandez, 31, trafficking in paraphernalia with intent to use, dis- retained jurisdiction; probation viola- assault, guilty. Justin C. Hightower, 29, Kimberly; driv- port plus 46 percent of medical marijuana, guilty, $5,000 fine, $110.50 missed on motion of prosecutor. tion, guilty. Obdulio Fernandez, 37,driver’s license ing without privileges; $500 fine, expenses not covered by insurance; costs, one year prison determinate, Daniel Michel, 61, exceed maximum Mandy Lee Beecher, 31, burglary, $97.50 violation, $300 fine, $75.50 costs, 18 $90.50 costs; 365 days jail, two days provide medical insurance. nine indeterminate speed limit (infraction) amended to costs, $2,217.14 restitution, five years months probation, 180 days jail, 175 credit for time served; driving privi- Jessica L Phillips. Seeking establish- Marie Elizabeth Gerhardt, 36, aggravat- driving offense by owner or person probation, five years prison determi- suspended, 3 credited; operating vehi- leges suspended 730 days. ment of paternity; $199 monthly sup- ed battery cause great bodily harm, controlling vehicle (misdemeanor), nate, five indeterminate; grand theft, cle without liability insurance, $125 Thomas L. Kuder, 44, Kimberly: one port plus 70 percent of medical guilty, $600.50 costs, $519.16 restitu- guilty, $64.50 fine, $78.50 costs. four years prison determinate, 10 inde- fine, $75.50 costs; failure to appear for count driving without privileges; 180 expenses not covered by insurance; tion, five years prison indeterminate, Goldie M. Paz, 43, reckless driving, with- terminate, 203 days credited; proba- misdemeanor citation, $100 fine, days jail, one day credit for time provide medical insurance, $199 for 156 days credited. held disposition. tion violation, retained jurisdiction. $87.50 costs, 180 days jail suspended; served; driving privileges suspended public assistance and child support Landon E. Hyde, 19, burglary, two counts Julio Miranda-Cesar, 19, fail to pur- Robert Lewis Gomez, 22, burglary, providing false information to an offi- 365 days. one count failure to maintain costs. treatment diversion. chase/invalid driver’s license, guilty, $1,000 fine suspended, $100.50 costs, cer, $100 fine, $75.50 costs, 180 days insurance; 10 days jail, one day credit $100 fine, $75.50 costs. $107.04 restitution, three years proba- jail suspended. for time served. DIVORCES FILED MISDEMEANOR SENTENCINGS Maciel Casiano, 30, fail to wear seat belt tion, four years prison determinate, Juan Angel Avila-Gomez, 19, driver’s Isidro F. Melo-Romero, 31, Twin Falls; Aaron L. Sinks vs. Deanice Sinks Mario Amet, 25, petit theft, guilty, $212 in commercial vehicle amended to fail four indeterminate, 203 days credited; license violation, $200 fine, $122.50 fish, hunt or trap without a license; Christopher S. Jordan vs. Cheryl M. fine, $98.50 costs, $300 forfeited to use seatbelt, guilty, $10 fine, $3 probation violation, 237 days credited, costs, 12 months probation, 30 days $500 fine, $300 suspended; $95 Jordan bonds, 12 months probation, 180 days costs, amended sentence. retained jurisdiction. jail, 29 suspended, 1 credited. costs; 30 days jail suspended; 16 Haley E. Kimmett vs. James A. Kimmett jail, 134 suspended, 46 credited. Robert Scott Tamcke, 18, inattentive or Renee Dawn Koyle, 45, possession of Trevor J. Darrington, 19, driving without hours community service, 12 months Breann T.Titus vs. Johnathan B. Titus Kenneth Edward Swearingen, 55, inde- careless driving, guilty, $88 fine, forged check, $500 fine, $100.50 privileges, $300 fine, $104.50 costs, probation. Angie L. Lewis vs. Kenneth C. Lewis cent exposure, guilty, $700 fine sus- $87.50 costs. costs, $875.16 restitution, three years driver’s license suspended 365 days, Almador G. Maldonado, 25, Twin Falls; James A. Lowe vs. Debra A. Lowe pended, 24 months probation, 180 Clinton J. Allen, 23, resisting or obstruct- probation, two years prison determi- 18 months probation, 30 days jail, 28 fish, hunt or trap without a license; Ramiz Lilie vs. Emina Lilie days jail, 113 credited, 78 to serve (jail ing officers, guilty, $88 fine, $87.50 nate, six indeterminate; probation vio- suspended, 1 credited; inattentive or $500 fine, $300 suspended; $95 and fines). costs, 12 months probation, 30 days lation, 30 days jail as term of proba- careless driving, $150 fine, $87.50 costs; 30 days jail suspended; 16 CITY OF TWIN FALLS Victor Manuel Garcia Jr., 17,driving with- jail suspended. tion. costs, 30 days jail suspended; alcohol hours community service, 12 months DRIVING UNDER THE out privileges, guilty, $500 fine, $300 Robert Travis Perry, 26, reckless driving, Eugene Ray Reid, 60, driving under the violation by a minor, $150 fine, $117.50 probation. INFLUENCE SENTENCINGS suspended, $125.50 costs, driver’s guilty, $498 fine, $300 suspended, influence, $115.50 costs, driver’s costs. Jose A. Luna-Orozoco, 39, Twin Falls; Alan R. Fish, 24, Twin Falls; driving under license suspended 180 days, 12 $87.50 costs, 6 months probation, 10 license suspended 3 years, two years Saul Arteaga, 41, vicious dog violations, fish, hunt or trap without a license; the influence; $700 fine, $400 sus- months probation, 90 days jail, 88 sus- days jail suspended. prison determinate, six indeterminate, $100 fine, $87.50 costs; two counts $500 fine, $300 suspended; $95 pended; $132.50 costs; $75 public pended, 1 credited, 2 days community Allen J. Hunt, 55, weight exceeds regis- 18 days credited. dogs running at large, $50 fine, $41.50 costs; 30 days jail, 30 suspended; 16 defender fee; 90 days jail, 80 suspend- service in lieu of jail. tered gross weight, guilty, $243 fine, costs; dog license required, $100 fine, hours community service, 12 months ed, credit for three served, seven days Lionel Naranjo, 20, petit theft, guilty, $87.50 costs. FELONY DISMISSALS $41.50 costs. probation. house arrest; driving privileges sus- $200 fine, $110.50 costs, $60 restitu- Roberto Santos, 39, weight exceeds reg- Carlos Hernandez, 27,possession of Jeremy L. Sibbett, 26, driver’s license Rhonda M. Higginbotham, 30, Kimberly; pended 90 days; 12 months probation; tion, 12 months probation, 90 days jail, istered gross weight, guilty, $257 fine, controlled substance, dismissed by violation, $125 fine, $87.50 costs. malicious injury to property; $500 no alcohol. 88 suspended. $87.50 costs. court; possession of drug parapherna- Matthew M. Mendoza, 20, driver’s fine, $300 suspended; $75.50 costs; David R. Torres, 17,Twin Falls; driving Alexandro Barajas Guerrero, 20, resist- Alonzo Vantassell, 32, commercial, non- lia w/intent to use, dismissed by court. license violation, 20, $125 fine, $87.50 90 days jail, 88 suspended; 16 hours under the influence, under age 21; ing or obstructing officers, dismissed commercial and farm vehicle annual Cynthia Quiroz, 25, two counts posses- costs. community service, 12 months proba- $500 fine, $300 suspended; $132.50 on motion of prosecutor; possession of registration, guilty, $212 fine, $87.50 sion of controlled substance, dismissed Esteban Vargas-Villanueva, 21, driving tion. costs; $75 public defender fee; driving controlled substance, guilty, $300 fine, costs. by court; possession of drug parapher- without privileges (second offense) Derrick R. Lingnaw, 44, Filer; violation of privileges suspended 365 days; 12 $123.50 costs, 12 months probation, Carlos Manuel Gonzales, 36, fail to stop nalia w/intent to use, dismissed by amended to driving without privileges, no-contact order; $1,000 fine, $600 months probation; no alcohol. 180 days jail, 175 suspended, 3 credit- at checking station as required, guilty, court. $400 fine suspended, $152.50 costs, suspended; $117.50 costs; 180 days Guillermo Ruiz-Juarez, 24, Hailey; driv- ed. $106.50 fine, $87.50 costs. driver’s license suspended 180 days, jail, 170 suspended, one day credit for ing under the influence; $700 fine, Gerald Wayne Larson, 44, unlawful MISDEMEANOR SENTENCINGS 24 months probation, 180 days jail, 169 time served; 12 months probation. $400 suspended; $90.50 costs; $75 transport of alcoholic beverage open MISDEMEANOR DISMISSALS Jose Antonio Soto, 38, battery-domestic suspended, 11 credited. Brody M. Trout, 19, Twin Falls; posses- public defender fee; 90 days jail, 80 container, guilty, $100 fine, $75.50 Gaylin Ted Patterson, 39, driving without violence amended to battery, $200 sion of drug paraphernalia; $500 fine suspended, credit for one served, nine costs. privileges, dismissed on motion of fine, $414.50 costs, 12 months proba- suspended; 90 days jail, 80 suspend- days house arrest; driving privileges Efrain Vergara, 18, possession/con- prosecutor. tion, 120 days jail, 118 suspended, 2 ed, one day credit for time served; 12 suspended 90 days; 12 months proba- sumption of alcohol by minor, guilty, Daniel Naranjo, 29, violation of no-con- credited; contempt of court, dismissed WANTED months probation; no alcohol. tion; no alcohol. $100 fine, $75.50 costs, driver’s tact order, dismissed on motion of by court; probation violation, 12 in the Magic Valley license suspended 90 days, 12 months prosecutor. months probation. FELONY SENTENCINGS MISDEMEANOR SENTENCINGS probation, 30 days jail, 28 suspended, Nancy F. Kloer, 52, battery, dismissed on Martin Isaac Silva, 20, driving without Bryan T.Allen, 32, Twin Falls; forgery; Shayla L. Summers, 19, Twin Falls; driv- 100 hours community service sus- motion of prosecutor. privileges amended to failure to pur- Jesse Elieve seven years penitentiary; three deter- ing without privileges; $500 fine, $300 pended. Edwin E. Kearsley, 62, indecent expo- chase/invalid driver’s license, $150 Stewart minate; four indeterminate; judge suspended; $90.50 costs; 90 days jail, Manuela Ramirez, 36, fail to sure, dismissed on motion of prosecu- fine, $460.50 costs, 18 months proba- granted retained jurisdiction; sen- 88 suspended, two days work detail; purchase/invalid driver’s license, guilty, tor. tion, 30 days jail suspended; probation Age: 26 tenced to 180 days to be served at the driving privileges suspended 180 days; $68.50 fine, $110.50 costs. Jose J. Juarez, 26, possess/consume/ violation, 30 hours community service; Description: 5 Idaho State Board of Corrections; 12 months probation. Juan Pablo Barajas-Torres, 27,carry con- purchase alcoholic beverage by minor, contempt of court, $50 fine. foot, 11 inch- $1,000 fine; $100.50 costs; $205 Amee J. Shipp, 34, Filer; possession of cealed weapon without license, guilty, dismissed on motion of prosecutor; fail Jodey Lee Marshall, 32, disturbing the es; 175 court compliance costs; $203 restitu- drug paraphernalia; $100 fine; $85.50 $300 fine, $100 suspended, $87.50 to appear for misdemeanor citation, peace, $200 fine, $110.50 costs, 12 tion; $200 public defender fee. costs; $75 public defender fee; 61 days costs, 12 months probation, 90 days dismissed on motion of prosecutor. months probation, 90 days jail, 88 sus- pounds; Marlo Church, 39, Hailey; possession of jail, credit for time served. jail, 85 suspended, 5 credited. Justin Lee Tourtilott, 27,fail to pur- pended, 1 credited, 30 hours communi- brown hair; a controlled substance; six years peni- Tawnie J. Share, 20, Buhl; provide false Weston R. Andersen, 31, domestic vio- chase/invalid driver’s license, dis- ty service, 2 days community service in brown eyes tentiary; three determinate; three information to officer; withheld judg- lence, no traumatic injury, dismissed missed on motion of prosecutor; fail to lieu of jail. Wanted for: indeterminate; judge granted retained ment granted; $500 fine, $300 sus- on motion of prosecutor; resisting or appear for misdemeanor citation, dis- David W.Vogel, 38, driving without privi- Probation violation; original jurisdiction; sentenced to 180 days to pended; $75.50 costs, $75 public obstructing officers, guilty, $300 fine, missed on motion of prosecutor. leges, $300 fine, $200 suspended, charge two counts forgery; be served at the Idaho State Board of defender fee; 30 days jail, 28 suspend- $90.50 costs, 12 months probation, 90 Miguel Angel Alamillo, 19, racing on pub- $90.50 costs, driver’s license suspend- Corrections; $1,000 fine; $110.50 ed, two days work detail; six months days jail, 2 credited. lic highway amended to public distur- ed 180 days, 9 months probation, 10 $150,000 bond costs; $166 court compliance costs, probation. Tony S. Adams, 41, weight exceeds bance, dismissed on motion of prose- days jail, 8 suspended, 16 hours com- The Twin Falls County $853.53 restitution and $750 public Marsha CX. Straub, 37,Twin Falls; driving allowable gross loads, guilty, $243 fine, cutor, $100 fine. munity service, 2 days community Sheriff’s Office asks anyone defender fee. without privileges; $500 fine, $400 $87.50 costs. Martin Romero Vasquez, 32, fail to pur- service in lieu of jail; probation viola- with information pertaining Bryan T.Allen, 32, Twin Falls; one count suspended; $102.50 costs; 90 days Timothy Louis Salazar, 34, fail to wear chase/invalid driver’s license, dis- tion, guilty. to Stewart to call 208-735- possession of a controlled substance; jail, 88 suspended, credit for time seat belt in commercial vehicle, guilty, missed on motion of prosecutor. John C. McKnight, 19, driving without 1911, or Crime Stoppers, at seven years penitentiary; three deter- served; driving privileges suspended $31.50 fine, $87.50 costs. Curtis Frank Blauer, 18, fail to carry privileges, $300 fine, $296.50 costs, minate; four indeterminate; judge 180 days; 12 months probation. Kevin Frederick Reiman, 29, motor carri- wildlife license on person or exhibit on driver’s license suspended 180 days, 4 208-732-5387,where tip- granted retained jurisdiction; sen- Cecelia M. Guisasola, 42, Hailey; resist- er logbook violations, guilty. request, dismissed on motion of prose- months probation, 60 days jail, 58 sus- sters can remain anony- tenced to 180 days to be served at the ing officers; $300 fine, $100 suspend- Alloen Lee Washington, 31, fail to wear cutor. pended, 2 credited; probation violation, mous and may be eligible Idaho State Board of Corrections; ed; $75 public defender fee; 30 days seat belt in commercial vehicle, guilty, Juan Garza Jr., 43, fail to provide proof guilty; probation violation, dismissed for a cash reward. $1,000 fine; $110.50 costs, $798.99 jailsuspended, credit for time served; $31.50 fine, $87.50 costs. of insurance, dismissed by court; fail to by court. restitution; $200 public defender fees; 12 months probation; failure to pur- Alvin Wayne Choitz, 57,fail to wear seat carry license on person, dismissed by one count forgery; five years peniten- chase driver’s license; $100 fine, $100 belt in commercial vehicle, guilty, court. tiary indeterminate; judge granted suspended; $75.50 costs; 10 days jail, $31.50 fine, $87.50 costs. retained jurisdiction; sentenced to 180 9 suspended, credit for one day time Jose Antonio Lara, 29, fail to stop at DRIVING UNDER THE days to be served at the Idaho State served;12 months probation. checking station as required, guilty, INFLUENCE SENTENCINGS Board of Corrections; $2,000 fine; Francisco M. Parreria, 18, Twin Falls; pos- $106.50 fine, $87.50 costs. Oscar Morin, 18, driving without privi- $100.50 costs, $1,477.80 restitution session of controlled substance; $500 Emanuel Onuta, 39, fail to stop at check- leges (second offense), guilty, $800 and $200 public defender fees. fine, $300 suspended; 90 days jail, 85 ing station as required, guilty, $106.50 fine suspended, driver’s license sus- 3 Room Special Kenneth P.Worth, 19, Gooding; aiding suspended; 12 months probation; alco- fine, $87.50 costs. pended 365 days, 12 months proba- 500sq or less. $ Furniture moving and abetting burglary; 10 years peni- holic beverage purchase; $500 fine, Don J. Allen, 63, weight exceeds allow- tion, 180 days jail, 157 suspended, 3 additional. tentiary; five determinate; five indeter- $400 suspended; $117.50 costs; driv- able gross loads, guilty, $511 fine, credited, 10 days community service 99 minate; suspended; three years proba- ing privileges suspended 180 days; 12 $87.50 costs. suspended; driving under the influ- tion; $1,000 fine, $750 suspended; months probation. No alcohol. Richard R. Ebersole, 20, possession of ence, guilty, $1,000 fine, $700 sus- 24-Hour $100.50 costs; $500 public defender Catherine M. Luper, 26, Jerome; viola- controlled substance, guilty, $400 fine pended, $90.50 costs, driver’s license Carpet & Upholstery fee; shall not possess or consume any tion of protection order; $85.50 costs suspended, 1 month probation, 90 suspended 365 days, 12 months proba- Emergency Service alcoholic beverages or frequent any waived; 180 days jail, credit for 67 days days jail, 80 suspended, 10 credited; tion, 180 days jail, 157 suspended, 3 Cleaning Disaster establishment where alcohol is the served; no contact with victim. use or possess drug paraphernalia with credited, 10 days community service (208) 734-2222 Restoration main source of income; 60 hours com- Israel A. Justo, 35, Twin Falls: failure to intent to use, guilty, 12 months proba- suspended. munity service. purchase drivers license; $500 fine, tion, 30 days jail suspended; fail to Jamie A. Woodland, 34, driving under William L. Greager III, 36, Twin Falls; $500 suspended; $85.50 costs appear for misdemeanor sentencing, the influence, guilty, $1,000 fine, $700 possession of a controlled substance; waived; 90 days jail, 84 suspended, six guilty, 12 months probation. suspended, $90.50 costs, driver’s seven years penitentiary; three deter- days credit for time served; 12 months Ashley M. Boulter, 21, driving without license suspended 90 days, 12 months minate; four indeterminate; judge probation. privileges, guilty, $200 fine, $90.50 probation, 180 days jail, 178 suspend- granted retained jurisdiction; sen- Rachelle J. Fuller, 18, Twin Falls; false costs, driver’s license suspended 180 ed, 2 credited. tenced to 180 days to be served at the information provided to officer; $500 days, 30 days jail, 28 suspended. Jeffrey Dean Peck, 51, driving under the Idaho State Board of Corrections; fine, $300 suspended; $87.50 costs; Robert M. Bach, 41, driving without privi- influence, disposition withheld. $1,500 fine; $110.50 costs; $627.53 $75 public defender; 30 days jail, 25 leges amended to fail to Robert C. Blacker, 28, driving under the restitution; $500 public defender fee. suspended, four days credit for time purchase/invalid driver’s license, guilty, influence, guilty, $30 fine, $140.50 Andrea Garcia, 33, Jerome; forgery; served; six months probation. $200 fine, $75.50 costs. costs, driver’s license suspended 90 nine years penitentiary; three and one Francisco M. Parreria, 18, Twin Falls; Zane A. McKnight, 20, driving without days, 12 months probation, 90 days half determinate; five and one half minor consumption of alcohol; $800 privileges, guilty, driver’s license sus- jail, 88 suspended, 2 credited. indeterminate; judge granted retained fine, $500 suspended; $117.50 costs; pended 180 days, 12 months probation, jurisdiction; sentenced to 180 days to driving privileges suspended 90 days; 90 days jail, 79 suspended, 2 credited, MINIDOKA COUNTY be served at the Idaho State Board of 12 months probation. No alcohol. 9 to serve for fines and costs. FELONY SENTENCINGS Corrections; $2,000 fine; $100.50 Jo Ann Masoner, 60, unlawful overtaking April Dawn Alves, 27,lewd conduct with costs; $762.63 restitution; $400 pub- MISDEMEANOR DISMISSAL and passing school bus, guilty, $100 a child under 16 amended to injury to a lic defender fee. Conner A. Lee, 18, Twin Falls; driving fine, $75.50 costs. child, $500 fine, $101.50 costs, four

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FUN 20% to DRAWINGS 60% OFF GAMES Wed, Thurs, Fri, & Sat Charlotte’s Sept. 2, 3, 4, & 5 Web Ends Sat. 208.431.2436 Sept. 12th Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10:30-5:00 1259 Overland Ave. Burley 8788942 Sat. 10:30-3:00 www.keepsake-n-memories.blogspot.com Watch for our new location announcement www.facebook.com/keepsakecottage Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho NATION/WORLD Saturday, September 5, 2009 Main 5 U.S. jobless rate hits 9.7 percent Critics march against Chavez BOGOTA (AP) — The Honduras march was Thousands of opponents of led by Roberto Micheletti, WASHINGTON (AP) — At At the same time, many increased spending con- Hugo Chavez marched who became president when least it’s not all bad any- INSIDE analysts say the economy tributed to the improve- against the Venezuelan Chavez ally Manuel Zelaya more. T.F. area sees improvement should grow by a healthy 3 to ment, along with the popu- president across Latin was ousted in a June coup. The nation’s unemploy- in unemployment rate. 4 percent in the third quar- lar Cash for Clunkers pro- America on Friday, accusing “Any politician who tries ment rate climbed last ter, pulling the United States gram. The clunkers program him of everything from to stay in power by hitching month to 9.7 percent — the See Business 1 out of the longest recession provided up to $4,500 in authoritarianism to interna- up with a dictator like Hugo highest in nearly a genera- since World War II. rebates to consumers who tional meddling. Chavez, he won’t achieve tion — but the number of job That was 9,000 fewer than Most of that improve- traded in old gas-guzzlers The protests, coordinated it,’’ Micheletti said. “We’ll losses was less than expect- expected but a far cry from ment, though, stems from for newer models. through Twitter and stop him.’’ ed and the smallest monthly the job creation required to auto companies and other An $8,000 tax credit for Facebook, drew more than Chavez, who was travel- total in a year. rejuvenate the economy: manufacturers refilling their first-time home buyers has 5,000 people in Bogota, and ing in Syria, ridiculed the “It’s good to see the rate of about 125,000 new jobs each depleted stockpiles. Those also helped boost housing thousands more in the capi- protests, likening Micheletti job losses slow down,’’ said month just to keep the inventories had plummeted sales and stabilize prices, tals of Venezuela and to a gorilla and saying: Nigel Gault, chief U.S. econ- unemployment rate from as factories and retailers after years of declines. Honduras. Smaller demon- “Those who want to march, omist at IHS Global Insight. increasing. sought to bring goods more Yet economists worry that strations were held in other march with ‘Goriletti,’ the But with unemployment The unemployment rate in line with reduced sales none of that will be enough to Latin American capitals, as dictators, the extreme rising, “there isn’t the rose three-tenths of a per- during the recession. sustain an economic recovery well as New York and Madrid. right.’’ underlying fuel there for centage point since July, Without stepped-up once the government’s strong consumer spending reaching its highest level demand from consumers, efforts fade. As job losses growth,’’which is vital for a since 1983, when it was 10.1 any current economy persist and the unemploy- See us at theair strong recovery. percent. Economists predict growth might not last. ment rate climbs,even people TF County FFair Employers shed 216,000 that the jobless rate will peak The Obama administra- with jobs will remain anxious Bldg.2, Sept. 2-7 jobs in August, the Labor above 10 percent by the tion’s $787 billion stimulus about losing them and about Department said Friday. middle of next year. package of tax cuts and spending too much. NO-HASSLE REMODELING! With Kitchen Tune-Up’s economical Cabinet Negotiator Reconditioning or Refacing, you can enjoy NATO bombs tankers; a dramatic kitchen facelift in only 1 to 4 days! promises Big 736-1036 Big Mess kitchentuneup.com Expense health care Afghans say 70 killed Call today for your free consultation Kitchen Tune-Up is a system of over 300 independently owned and operated franchises.

KUNDUZ, Afghanistan bill ‘soon’ (AP) — A U.S. jet dropped look who’s “18” 500-pound bombs on two WASHINGTON (AP) — tanker trucks hijacked by House liberals pleaded the Taliban before dawn with President Obama on Friday, triggering a huge Friday to push for creation explosion that Afghan offi- of a government-run cials said killed more than health care program as the 70 people, including insur- Senate’s chief negotiator gents and some civilians said he won’t wait much who had swarmed around longer for Republicans to the vehicles to siphon off compromise amid dwin- fuel. dling chances for a bipar- Germany, whose troops Joshua Griffi th tisan bill. called in the 2:30 a.m. strike We are so proud of you. Finance Committee in the northern province of Chairman Max Baucus, Kunduz, said it feared the Love, Mom, Dad, Grandma & D-Mont., held a nearly hijackers would use the two-hour teleconference trucks to carry out a suicide AP photo Grandpa with his small group of attack against its military Afghan security forces stand guard near a burnt fuel tanker in negotiators, who call base nearby. Kunduz, Afghanistan, Friday. A NATO jet blasted two fuel tankers that themselves the “Bipartisan The airstrike took place as were hijacked by the Taliban, setting off a huge fireball Friday that Six.’’ Afterward, Baucus the U.S. wrestles with the killed more than 70 people, Afghan officials said. was careful to leave the level of its troop commit- door open to a long- ment here and despite Yawar said police found civilian casualties.Last June, sought deal, but he clearly efforts by the top U.S. gen- pieces of dozens of weapons the NATO commander,Gen. signaled the time has come eral to curb use of air power scattered around the site. He Stanley McChrystal, ord- for him to move ahead. and reduce civilian casual- estimated that more than 70 ered curbs on airstrikes “I am committed to get- ties, which have strained people were killed, at least where noncombatants are at ting health care reform relations between the NATO 45 of them militants. risk. done — done soon and force and the Afghan gov- Investigators were trying to In Washington, Defense done right,’’Baucus said in ernment. Hours earlier, the account for the others, he Department press secretary a statement. He is consid- top Pentagon officer, Adm. said. Geoff Morrell said Friday ering making a formal Mike Mullen, said civilian The local governor, that McChrystal’s new proposal to the group of casualties had recently been Mohammad Omar, said 72 orders have started to reduce negotiators. greatly reduced in were killed and 15 wounded. civilian casualties, but that Obama, meanwhile, Afghanistan. He said about 30 of the dead the effort is “a process’’ as tried to placate disgrun- Germany said about 50 were identified as insur- opposed to something tled House liberals who fighters were killed and no gents, including four instantly achieved. fear he is too eager to com- civilians were believed in the Chechens and a local A large number of civilian promise with Republicans area at the time. NATO chief Taliban commander. The casualties in Friday’s attack and conservative Anders Fogh Rasmussen, rest were probably fighters could also stoke opposition Democrats to get a bill.In a however, acknowledged or their relatives, he said. in Germany to the Afghan phone call from the Camp some civilians may have Many of the bodies were mission ahead of the Sept.27 David, Md., presidential died, and the U.S.-led coali- burned beyond recognition, German national elections. retreat, Obama spoke to tion and the Afghan govern- and villagers buried some in There are 4,050 German leaders of the ment announced a joint a mass grave. soldiers in Afghanistan, and Congressional Progressive investigation. Despite the uncertainties, polls show a majority of Caucus and other liberal- Local government the attack is likely to intensi- Germans oppose their pres- leaning House groups. spokesman Mohammad fy Afghan public anger over ence here. Love all the Durfee Gang

Man who called 911 SEC report shows repeated charged with deaths bungling of BRUNSWICK, Ga. (AP) — He had been briefly A man who told authorities released on bond related to Madoff probe “My whole family’s dead!’’ the lesser charges and in a frantic 911 call was arrested again later Friday. WASHINGTON (AP) — charged Friday with killing He was being held at the The official at the the eight people attacked in county detention center. Securities and Exchange his family’s Georgia mobile “It’s my understanding Commission who later home. that there was physi- would marry Bernard Guy Heinze Jr., cal and testimonial Madoff’s niece told 22, was arrested evidence,’’said Glynn investigators this year Friday on eight County police that if he had carefully counts of first- spokeswoman reviewed a complaint degree murder in Candice Temple,who about the disgraced the slayings last declined further financier’s business, he weekend at a comment. would have investigated mobile home park a Guy Heinze Jr. Authorities were more deeply, a new report few miles north of holding a news con- shows. Brunswick. Among those ference later Friday night. The admission by Eric New Holland introduces the NEW T8000 Series tractors, offering higher killed were seven of Heinze’s The dead included the Swanson, who was an power, higher speeds and higher productivity. With five models up to relatives. suspect’s father, Guy Heinze SEC attorney and inspec- 270 PTO hp and offering up to 75-gallons-per-minute hydraulic flow, the In the call to emergency Sr., 45; his uncle, Rusty tions official during a new T8000 tractors handle the most advanced seeders and specialty dispatchers early Aug. 29, Toler Sr., 44; and his aunt 2003-04 exam of equipment on the market. Push your efficiency higher! Heinze said he’d come home Brenda Gail Falagan, 49. Madoff’s operations, is to find the bodies and that it Also slain were Toler Sr.’s among a trove of revela- BIODIESEL APPROVED – FOR USE WITH UP TO B100! appeared the victims had four children — Chrissy tions in the report by SEC INCREASED PULLING POWER – POWER GROWTH UP TO 44 HP been beaten to death. Seven Toler, 22; Russell D. Toler Jr., inspector general David NEW 19X4 POWERSHIFT – 31-MPH TRANSPORT SPEED were found dead at the 20; Michael Toler, 19; and Kotz. INTELLISTEER™ AUTO STEERING SYSTEM – ACCURACY AS PRECISE AS +/- 1 INCH scene, an eighth died at a Michelle Toler, 15. The 477-page docu- hospital, and the attack’s Chrissy Toler’s boyfriend, ment, released Friday only survivor remained hos- Joseph L. West, 30, was also evening, paints in excru- pitalized after being critical- killed. ciating detail how the ly injured. A phone message left for SEC probes of Madoff Police haven’t released Heinze Jr.’s attorney, Ron were bungled over 16 causes of death for the vic- Harrison, was not immedi- years — with disputes TWIN FALLS TRACTOR NORTHSIDE tims. ately returned. among agency inspection Hours after the bodies were Clint Rowe, who has been staffers over the findings, found, Heinze was charged acting as a spokesman for lack of communication & IMPLEMENT CO. IMPLEMENT CO. with evidence tampering, the family, said he learned of among SEC offices in var- lying to police and drug pos- the arrests while at a public ious cities, and repeated 1935 Kimberly Rd. Twin Falls 7338687 1922 S. Lincoln Jerome 3242904 session. But police didn’t say visitation for the victims, failures to act on credible, 800 293-9359 www.twinfallstractorimp.com 800 933-2904 until Friday that they sus- saying it was “definitely a specific complaints that pected him of the killings. surprise.’’ formed a sea of red flags. © 2009 CNH America LLC. New Holland is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC. MAIN 6 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 OPINION EDITOR STEVE CRUMP: (208) 735-3223 [email protected] QUOTABLE “Nobody seems to know what he's going to be talking about.” OPINION — Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican, on President Obama's planned address to students A welcome budgetary change at T.F.Courthouse CHEERS: To the Twin Falls recognizing that. while a 25-hour-a-week 6.8 percent holdback,”Bell County commissioners, for JEERS: We have a sugges- employee would pay $302.50. said. “There are agencies you following up last year’s tion for what should be That’s going to hurt, and can’t cut that much more 9 percent budget increase House Bill 1 or Senate Bill 1 in the Statehouse shouldn’t be without changing statutes with a 1.8 percent decrease the next legislative session: exempt from the pain. and eliminating responsibili- for 2010. Legislation requiring law- CHEERS: To Rep. Maxine ties.’’ Commissioners on makers to pay the same Bell, co-chairwoman of the Bell wants to use some of Wednesday adopted a health insurance premiums Legislature’s budget commit- the state’s $274 million in $36.9 million budget for the as other part-time state tee, for suggesting that savings, combined with a fiscal year that starts Oct. 1. employees. say they’d be amenable to spending holdbacks alone 3.5 percent holdback. They said the decrease would Earlier this year, the part-timers’ coverage. can’t close the state’s widen- We also like state Rep. have been nearly 4 percent if Department of Last spring, Department of ing deficit. Wendy Jaquet’s idea of tar- not for a 25 percent spike in Administration announced Administration Director Mike Because of the recession, geting the budget cuts — not indigent health care costs. plans to require part-timers Gwartney decided to increase Idaho will have 6.8 percent trimming across the board — Especially gratifying was to pay more for coverage in insurance premiums for less to spend for the rest of and Sen. Kate Kelly’s propos- that the sheriff’s office — an effort to save $10 million. about 1,700 part-time state the fiscal year than lawmak- al to discuss ending some which got a 17 percent bump But lawmakers won’t see employees. In the private ers budgeted last spring. sales tax exemptions. last year under then-Sheriff their benefits change, despite sector, part-time workers Bell, a Republican from Whatever means the state Wayne Tousley — will get by their routine pitch that they routinely pay more for insur- Jerome, says it’s not realistic uses to come up with with just 1.8 percent more work as a citizen Legislature ance. to ask state agencies to take $151 million will be difficult. under Sheriff Tom Carter. that meets just three months If this plan goes into effect that much of a hit, and that But most agencies have been Times are tough and tax- of the year. in November, a state employ- Idaho needs to tap its rainy- pared to essentials already; payers are struggling. Good To be fair, some legislators ee working 30 hours a week day reserves. let’s keep them functioning for the commissioners for participating in the state plan would pay $166.25 a month, “I don’t think you can do a properly.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR Downtown restoration the community center. Folks travel from all over is possible with California to walk the help from everyone streets of Exeter (popula- tion 9,964). In the mid- Without vision and pas- ’90s the city of Exeter had a sion the people perish! single mural painted on a Steve Crump’s article on decaying brick wall down- Sunday (Aug. 30), “Going town. Pride, passion and downtown,”focused on renovations small and large how the successful rede- took off — all eventually velopment of the stale and bringing people and then declining city center of business downtown. The Helena, Mont., was inspir- downtown attraction I have ing for Twin Falls. Crump’s witnessed in so many other demographic comparison small cities is the charm of of Twin and Helena points old architecture, the public to the feasibility of our own art and relaxing surround- downtown restoration. It ings with pleasant land- takes a community. With scape. pride and passion we can When we think down- do so much. town, we think business. While living and working Downtown is so much downtown over the past more; we live downtown, 20 years, I have walked and we play downtown, we biked every square foot of gather downtown. Bring downtown Twin Falls. In the people downtown and the “old days,”I recall Mr. the business will follow. Faulkner outside every Shared vision, commit- morning sweeping the ment and works will fuel an sidewalks and cleaning the outcome we can all enjoy. It alley behind The Paris. is daunting to try to draw in Today, I enjoy First Fridays, big investment money people strolling from the before we as a community Full Moon Gallery to have a vision. While we We love the government Jensen’s, then to Rudy’s for might not yet have devel- gourmet treats and music, opers clamoring to erect a off to Hands-On Pottery downtown hotel with a and a chance to watch small convention center or ceramic creation. We enjoy we might not yet be ready outdoor concerts, the quilt to enjoy an amphitheater part of our health care walk, the parades, the fes- on the edge of Rock Creek, tivals, stargazing on the each of us can take a lesson ere’s a paradox. al trend in every area but percent more likely to corner of Shoshone and from Mr. Faulkner: Pick up Health care one: health care. receive recommended care Main, outdoor movies at the trash, fix broken Hreform may be The truth is that govern- than Americans as a whole. City Park, the horse-drawn upstairs windows and bro- defeated this year in part ment, for all its flaws, man- “If other health care carriage, historic plaques ken tile, fix a damaged because so many Americans ages to do some things providers followed the V.A.’s on old buildings, the hang- sidewalk, paint, trim trees, believe the government Nicholas right, so that today few lead, it would be a major ing plants and so much add little landscape touch- can’t do anything right and Kristof people doubt the wisdom of step toward improving the more. es, take the 1960s alu- fear that a doctor will come public police or firefighters. quality of care across the I have traveled through- minum siding off the to resemble an IRS agent Until the mid-19th cen- And the government has a U.S. health care system,” out the United States and excellent old brick build- with a scalpel. Yet the part tury, firefighting was left particularly good record in Rand reported. have been inspired by what ings — let the music play! of America’s health care mostly to a mishmash of medical care. As for the other big gov- other small cities have ART HOAG system that consumers like volunteer crews and private Take the hospital system ernment-run health care done to bring life back into Twin Falls best is the government-run fire insurance companies. run by the Department of system, Medicare spends part. So almost every country Veterans Affairs, the largest perhaps one-sixth as much Fifty-six to 60 percent of moved to what today’s integrated health system in on administration as private Tell us what you think people in government-run health insurance lobbyists the United States. It is fully health insurers, although Medicare rate it a 9 or 10 on might label “socialized fire- government run, much the comparison is imperfect ONLINE: Register at Magicvalley.com, and respond to any of a 10-point scale. In con- fighting.”In effect, we have more “socialized medicine” and controversial. the local opinions or stories in today’s edition. trast, only 40 percent of a single-payer system of than is Canadian health care But the biggest weakness ON PAPER: The Times-News welcomes letters from readers on those enrolled in private public fire departments. with its private doctors and of private industry is not subjects of public interest. Please limit letters to 300 words. insurance rank their plans We have the same for hospitals. And the system inefficiency but unfairness. Include your signature, mailing address and phone number. that high. policing. If the security for veterans is by all The business model of pri- Writers who sign letters with false names will be permanently Multiple surveys back guard business were as accounts one of the best- vate insurance has become, barred from publication. Letters may be brought to our Twin that up. For example, powerful as the health performing and most cost- in part, to collect premiums Falls office; mailed to P.O. Box 548, Twin Falls, ID 83303; faxed 68 percent of those in insurance industry, then it effective elements in the from healthy people and to (208) 734-5538; or e-mailed to [email protected]. Medicare feel that their own would be denouncing “gov- American medical estab- reject those likely to get JOIN THE DISCUSSION: Voice your opinion with local blog- interests are the priority, ernment takeovers” and lishment. sick. gers: Progressive Voice, Conservative Corner and In the compared with only 48 per- “socialized police work.” A study by the Rand Let’s hope we won’t miss Middle. On the opinion page at Magicvalley.com. cent of those enrolled in Throughout the industri- Corp. concluded that this chance. A public role in private insurance. alized world, there are a Americans treated in veter- health care shouldn’t be any In truth, despite the handful of these areas ans hospitals “received con- scarier or more repugnant deeply ingrained American where governments fill sistently better care across than a public fire depart- conviction that government needs better than free mar- the board, including screen- ment. is bumbling when it is not kets: fire protection, police ing, diagnosis, treatment Brad Hurd . . . . publisher Steve Crump . ...Opinion editor evil, government interven- work, education, postal and follow-up.”The differ- Nicholas Kristof is a The members of the editorial board and writers of tion has been a step up in service, libraries, health ence was particularly large columnist for The New editorials are Brad Hurd, James G. Wright, some areas from the private care. The United States goes in preventive medicine: York Times. Write to him at Steve Crump, Bill Bitzenburg and Mary Lou Panatopoulos. sector. along with this internation- Veterans were nearly 50 [email protected].

T HE LIGHTER SIDE OF POLITICS Doonesbury By Garry Trudeau Mallard Fillmore By Bruce Tinsley Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho OPINION Saturday, September 5, 2009 Main 7 Doing the public’s business publicly at Kimberly R&E s superintendent of comes from many entities and typically this informa- aimed at showing the agri- in trade magazines, news- the University of including federal and state tion eventually becomes cultural and non-agricul- papers and on the Internet. AIdaho Kimberly READER agencies, most of Idaho’s public. The primary reason tural public some of the The one thing we do not Research and Extension COMMENT agricultural commodity why some research may not research and extension want to do is give the public Center, I am writing in groups and private industry. be readily available to the projects we are doing. Each the impression that response to an article pub- Don The commodity groups public is because it has not winter, much of the research conducted at the lished Sunday, Aug. 30, Morishita represent alfalfa, bean, yet been completed. Even research conducted at UI R&E Centers is secretive. concerning the UI College potato, sugar beet, wheat then, the public is often Kimberly also is presented As part of a public institu- of Agricultural and Life vate companies keep most and barley growers, as well shown ‘research in at conferences, workshops tion, our mission is to con- Sciences stakeholder meet- outsiders, well, outside.” as beef and dairy cattle pro- progress’ at field days to and seminars held at vari- duct basic and applied ing. I feel it is important to As the article points out, ducers. give stakeholders and others ous locations across south- research to support Idaho’s provide some clarification nearly all of the research Nearly all of the informa- an idea of how research ern Idaho that are all open and the nation’s agricultural to Joshua Palmer’s article, conducted at the UI tion from research conduct- projects may be progress- to the public. Plus, com- resources and to improve particularly in the para- Research and Extension ed at Kimberly is made ing. pleted research is typically the life for all citizens. graph where he wrote, “It’s Centers, including the public. A small percentage, We host a variety of field presented at professional not widely known to the Kimberly R&E Center, is probably less than 5 per- days at Kimberly each year society meetings or pub- Don Morishita of Twin public what kind of research funded from outside cent, is conducted under that have focused on bean, lished in refereed journals Falls is the superintendent is conducted inside the sources, excluding faculty confidentiality agreements forage crop, weed science, that represent the scien- University of Idaho state’s research Extension and some staff salaries. signed between the and organic crops research. tists’ expertise. Less techni- Kimberly Research and centers — millions of dollars Funding for research at the researcher, University of We also host a Twilight cal explanations of our Extension Center and a pro- in trade secrets held by pri- Kimberly R&E Center Idaho and research partner Tour held biennially that is research also are published fessor of weed science.

In fact, we would be bet- tional debt (you want to That’s not good, but it’s ter off if governments were subtract off inflation) will within a range that has his- The truth about that willing to run even larger probably be around 1 per- torically proved manageable deficits over the next year or cent of GDP, or 5 percent of for advanced countries, two. The official White federal revenue. That does- even those with relatively Paul House forecast shows a n’t sound like an over- weak governments ‘$9 trillion’ debt Krugman nation stuck in purgatory whelming burden. So is there anything to for a prolonged period, with Now, this assumes the worry about? Yes, but the o new budget projec- The only real reason for in the process and will high unemployment per- U.S. government’s credit dangers are political, not tions show a cumula- concern is political. The eventually get at least part sisting for years. If that’s at will remain good so that it’s economic. Stive deficit of $9 tril- United States can deal with of its money back. all correct — and I fear that able to borrow at relatively So don’t fret about this lion over the next decade. its debts if politicians of What this tells us is that it will be — we should be low interest rates. So far, year’s deficit; we actually According to many com- both parties are willing to right now it’s good to run a doing more, not less, to that’s still true. Despite the need to run up federal debt mentators, that’s a terrify- show at least a bit of matu- deficit. Consider what support the economy. prospect of big deficits, the right now and need to keep ing number, requiring dras- rity. Need I say more? would have happened if the But what about all that government is able to bor- doing it until the economy is tic action — in particular, of Let’s start with the effects U.S. government and its debt we’re incurring? That’s row money long-term at an on a solid path to recovery. course, canceling efforts to of this year’s deficit. counterparts around the a bad thing, but it’s impor- interest rate of less than 3.5 And the extra debt should boost the economy and call- There are two main rea- world had tried to balance tant to have some perspec- percent, which is low by be manageable. If we face a ing off health care reform. sons for the surge in red ink. their budgets as they did in tive. Economists normally historical standards. People potential problem, it’s not The truth is more compli- First, the recession has led the early 1930s. It’s a scary assess the sustainability of making bets with real because the economy can’t cated and less frightening. both to a sharp drop in tax thought. If governments debt by looking at the ratio money don’t seem to be handle the extra debt. Right now deficits are actu- receipts and to increased had raised taxes or slashed of debt to gross domestic worried about U.S. solven- Instead, it’s the politics, ally helping the economy. In spending on unemployment spending in the face of the product. And while $9 tril- cy. stupid. fact, deficits here and in insurance and other safety- slump, if they had refused to lion is a huge sum, we also The numbers tell you other major economies net programs. Second, there rescue distressed financial have a huge economy. why. According to the White Paul Krugman is a colum- saved the world from a have been large outlays on institutions, we could all too Here’s one way to look at House projections, by 2019, nist for The New York much deeper slump. The financial rescues. These are easily have seen a full replay it: We’re looking at a rise in net federal debt will be Times. Write to him at longer-term outlook is wor- counted as part of the of the Great Depression. the debt/GDP ratio of about around 70 percent of GDP. [email protected]. rying, but it’s not cata- deficit, although the gov- As I said, deficits saved 40 percentage points. The strophic. ernment is acquiring assets the world. real interest on that addi- Hourly employees and blue-collar workers are entitled to LETTERS TO THE EDITOR overtime pay Thoughts about system, hold or cut costs, Churchwide Assembly met president. Delegates were If you work more than 40 hours provide for all of us and reg- Aug. 17-23. The actions of encouraged to support our Jerome football, ulate fraudulent waste. I am the highest legislative body military and to “care for per week you are entitled to politics and more not sure how Obama’s pre- included a favorable vote to returning veterans.” overtime pay. It’s the law. Get Jerome highlights: J-town vious work on stimulus and have full communion with Delegates also approved is alive and well as football other things will work out the United Methodist reform of our nation’s immi- the money you worked hard for! season has opened, with the but health care reform is a Church. A positive vote was gration program and sus- Jerome Tigers indicating a must. As a conservative who made to raise $10 million to pension of immigration raids second run at a state title did not vote for him, I give fight HIV/AIDS as well as until reforms are enacted. A Call Thomsen Stephens Law Offices could be a possibility. him credit in this area. I can malaria in the world; and a social statement, “Justice for for more information. Capacity crowds at games remember as far back as reception of three ELCA Women,”will be forthcom- (208) 522-1230 are indicating high expecta- 1970 when I heard a profes- pastors who bicycled the ing for congregational input. tions. If you have not been sor at Indiana University tell USA raising more than STAN HOOBING at a game yet, you will find it the class that health care $250,000 to fight world Twin Falls THOMSEN STEPHENS invigorating and exciting. reform was coming, headed hunger; 244 videos on the (Editor’s note: Stan Much school spirit has been by Ted Kennedy. theme, “God’s Work, Our Hoobing is the interim pas- LAW OFFICES shown by the players, band, Well, that was a long time Hands” were shared. Carlos tor at Our Savior Lutheran 2635 Channing Way ᇾ Idaho Falls, ID 83404 cheerleaders, students, par- ago. Listening to TV com- Pena was re-elected vice Church in Twin Falls.) S254STE0604 ents and alumni. mentators give their spin on Speaking of Jerome, I see health reform does none any that Councilman John Shine good. I simply watch some is considering a run at the C-SPAN, listen to the presi- position of mayor. Mr. Shine dent and compare these has a vested interest in issues with my own experi- community service and ence. We need citizens who Thank you! should be a worthy candi- think for themselves and are date. I am glad to see Carla, better informed. We do not Air St. Luke’s is training first the service department lady need talking heads to shape responders in your community, at Con Paulos, return to our opinions. work after a bout with can- DAVE DAVIS thanks to our members. cer. Lots of good things go Jerome on in Jerome. The car show Air St. Luke’s membership is a double was super. Lutheran assembly benefit. Not only does it cover you in Speaking of politics, we should know soon about the made many decisions case of medically necessary transport, it health reform movement in The 1,045 delegates to the also provides valuable training for local Congress. I sure hope they Evangelical Lutheran first responders. devise ways to make a better Church in America Thanks to membership support, Air St. Luke’s recently completed training for 22 first responders in Wendell, Bliss, and Hagerman. Your local emergency personnel trained on SimMan, a realistic patient simulator with interactive technology that allows learners to practice emergency procedures in trauma scenarios.

Air St. Luke’s cannot save lives alone. We count on those who are first on the scene, such as paramedics, EMTs, firefighters, and local volunteers, to help get patients ready for transport. These men and women are the critical first steps in the fight to save a sick or injured patient. Bliss

At Air St. Luke’s, 100 percent of membership fees are used to teach others how to save lives through our Regional Education and Simulation Lab (REAL). If you are an Air St. Luke’s member – Thank you! If not, please consider becoming a member, and help save lives in your community.

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Please visit stlukesonline.org or call 800-822-1616 or (208) 706-1000. Gift memberships are available. INVESTIGATORS WORK TO BUILD MURDER CASE IN DEADLY WILDFIRE, BUSINESS 4 B Stocks and commodities, Business 2 / Comics, Business 3 / Weather, Business 4 Dow Jones Industrial ▲ 96.66 | Nasdaq composite ▲ 35.58 | S&P 500 ▲ 13.16 | Russell 2000 ▲ 8.01 Business SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 BUSINESS EDITOR JOSH PALMER: (208) 735-3231 [email protected] Unemployment in T.F.declines for first time since April — meaning that unemploy- cent as 3,200 workers ment could rise again in the dropped out of the labor Idaho’s August unemployment holds at 8.8 percent region when the jobs expire. force. In August 2008, the Twin That contraction, second By Joshua Palmer Labor’s unemployment point compared to July to 6.8 the busy time of year with Falls micropolitan area only to the 6,600 labor force Times-News writer report for August. percent unemployment. harvest time in full swing reported an unemployment drop in January, reflected The department reported However, the Burley and schools trying to fill rate of 4.2 percent, while the employer reluctance to Agriculture and education that the unemployment rate micropolitan area reported positions for things like bus Burley area reported that 5.4 expand payrolls during are being credited for lower- for the Twin Falls micropoli- that it’s unemployment rate drivers,” said Jan Roeser, percent of its workforce was August and essentially no ing unemployment in the tan area, which includes increased two-tenths of a regional economist with unemployed. job growth from July for the Twin Falls area for the first surrounding communities percentage point to 6.9 per- Idaho Department of Labor. Idaho’s seasonally adjust- first time since 1987. time since April, according such as Jerome, declined cent. However, she added that ed unemployment rate held to Idaho Department of six-tenths of a percentage “This has typically been the jobs are mostly seasonal steady in August at 8.8 per- See JOBS, Business 2 Mortgage rates down, still above record lows By Alan Zibel Asssociated Press writer

WASHINGTON — Rates for 30-year home loans edged down this week, remaining close to record lows reached over the spring. The average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage was 5.08 percent,down from 5.14 percent a week earlier, mortgage company Freddie Mac said Thursday. Rates, while above the record low of 4.78 percent hit in the spring, are still at attractive levels for people looking to buy a home or refinance. “Low mortgage rates are helping to keep housing very affordable,” Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac’s chief economist, said in a statement. To revive the economy, the Federal Reserve is spending $1.25 trillion on mort- gage-backed securities, which has driven down rates on home loans. That money is set to run out by winter, though some ana- lysts expect the central bank to gradually

See MORTGAGE, Business 2

MEAGAN THOMPSON/Times-News Caleb Drake speaks with a customer in the service department at Advantage Archery. Caleb and Danielle Drake bought the business in April — turning a passion Gold stays hot, for bowhunting into a career. reaching nearly New owner of archery store turns passion $1,000 an ounce By Tom Petruno into business, focuses on specialty equipment Los Angeles Times The price of gold surged this week, just By Joshua Palmer dream come true. the larger stores don’t carry,”he falling short of the $1,000-an-ounce Times-News writer But getting there was a bit of said. “It’s specialized stuff that mark. challenge for the soft-spoken the larger stores don’t deal Near-term futures in New York rallied Caleb Drake was simply tired outdoorsman. with, which is good for me $19.20, or 2 percent, to $995.80 an ounce of being a mechanic and tired of “It was a little difficult to get because I can’t compete with after gaining $21.90 Wednesday. working for someone else. started because lenders see them.” In the past two years gold typically has So earlier this year he decided (bowhunting) as a luxury item He said a bow package can attracted heavy interest when the dollar to take a risk and turn his pas- that people will cut back on cost between $375 and $1,300. has slumped or when the stock market has sion for bowhunting into a when the economy is bad,” he Drake said business has tanked, although the metal dived with vir- career. said. “But it’s different here in increased since he bought the tually all other assets in last fall’s global “I worked here off and on Idaho — being in the outdoors store — likely the result of meltdown. while I was a mechanic, but it and hunting is our heritage.” changes in inventory. But he On Thursday, however, stocks rallied was something I wanted to do Drake managed to secure the added that most customers are modestly and the dollar was little changed full-time,”Drake said. financing he needed to buy the return clients, who are familiar against other major currencies. In April, Caleb and Danielle business, and has since been with the archery store. Advantage Archery, which So, why a big gold rally this week — after Drake bought Advantage working to turn over his inven- “Downtown is a good place to has been in downtown for six the metal’s price has treaded water since Archery located at 251 Main tory. be because there is usually ade- year, also offers indoor ranges, mid-August? Ave. East in Downtown Twin “I’m focusing on high-end quate parking, but it’s definitely as well as a virtual range simula- Falls — effectively making a bows and equipment, stuff that a destination spot,” he said. tor. See GOLD, Business 2 Dads create platform for children’s books on iPhone By Alex Pham “But we always felt guilty about months, working in their spare FrogDogMedia, now has six titles. software is built, publishing a book Los Angeles Times doing that,” said Sears, a 31-year- time, to start their business from Four are in the top 100 book apps. costs an incremental $1,000 to old father of two who lives in Los scratch in January to launching And with another 40 books wait- $1,500 per title. Like most parents who find Angeles. their first app in April, a 99-cent ing in the wings,the Santa Barbara, “It’s a great platform for devel- themselves juggling fussy tots and So Sears and Farrar came up book called “Binky the Pink Calif., publisher is on track to add a opers,” Sears said. “Apple takes multiple chores and errands, with iStoryTime, a platform for Elephant.” title a week, Sears said. care of the transactions so we can Woody Sears and Graham Farrar creating children’s books for the Readers can choose either an The revenue is split among focus on the books. Content is king have surrendered their mobile iPhone that can entertain their kids adult or child narrator, whose authors, artists and again.” phones to distract their toddlers. It during shopping trips, airplane voices were professionally record- FrogDogMedia, which plows its But the best part about wasn’t just the buttons and beeps hops or long car rides. They ed for each book. So far, “Binky” share back into building new fea- iStoryTime? on those devices that attracted recruited Peter Kyriacou to help has sold more than 2,000 copies tures for its iStoryTime platform, “Our kids love the books,”Sears their kids — it was also the music them develop the software, and and ranks in the top 30 books sold such as highlighting text as the said. “It’s really exciting when we and video clips that turned the pooled $10,000 from their savings. on Apple’s iTunes app store. narrator reads it to help kids make can show them the books. That’s phones into instant toys. It took the three partners four The self-funded startup, the connection. Now that the core the best reward.”

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST COMMODITIES For more see Business 2 Con Agra 20.72 ▲ .70 Dell Inc. 15.69 ▲ .44 Idacorp 28.21 ▲ .12 Int. Bancorp 2.00 ▼ .05 Live cattle 86.65 ▼ .07 Oct. Oil 68.02 ▲ .06 Lithia Mo. 13.14 ▲ .78 McDonalds 56.14 ▲ .57 Micron 7.35 ▲ .18 Supervalu 14.38 ▲ .05 Sept. Gold 994.90 ▼ .90 Sept. Silver 16.26 ▼ .005

Monday in business Labor Day. Markets closed. Business 2 Saturday, September 5, 2009 BUSINESS Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho MARKET SUMMARY TODAY ON WALL STREET

NYSE AMEX NASDAQ Sept. 4, 2009 10,000 The Dow rose 96.66, or 1 percent, to 9,441.27.The Standard & Poor’s 500 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) 9,000 &QY,QPGU index rose 13.16, or 1.3 percent, to Name Vol(00) Last Chg Name Vol(00) Last Chg Name Vol(00) Last Chg KPFWUVTKCNU 8,000 1,016.40, while the Nasdaq composite Citigrp 5369006 4.85 +.08 Sinovac 104886 9.14 -.25 PwShs QQQ638027 40.36 +.85 7,000 index added 35.58, or 1.8 percent, to FannieMae 2005375 1.77 +.13 KodiakO g 88879 1.74 +.37 Intel 464426 19.64 +.22 +96.66 BkofAm 1657386 17.09 +.25 EldorGld g 69383 11.21 +.10 Microsoft 445399 24.62 +.51 6,000 2,018.78. SPDR 1182731 102.06 +1.41 AntaresP 48996 1.05 +.12 ETrade 434585 1.55 +.04 9,441.27 M J J A S Four stocks rose for every one that fell on FredMac 837059 1.97 +.10 GoldStr g 35032 3.17 +.05 Comcast 287709 16.33 +.85 Pct. change from previous: +1.03% High 9,445.72 Low 9,321.63 the New York Stock Exchange, where GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) volume came to a relatively low 1.1 bil- Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Sept. 4, 2009 2,000 lion shares, compared with 1.2 billion FredM pfN 2.91 +.51 +21.3 TiensBio 4.05 +1.07 +35.9 FacetBio n 15.38 +6.56 +74.4 1,800 Thursday. Esterline 36.41 +5.91 +19.4 PhrmAth 3.87 +.37 +10.6 TierOne 3.13 +.97 +44.9 0CUFCS For the week, the Dow lost 103 points, or Metrogas 2.00 +.30 +17.6 IEC Elec n 5.02 +.38 +8.2 JazzPhrm 9.27 +2.26 +32.2 1,600 FelCor 3.94 +.51 +14.9 EngySvcs 3.02 +.22 +7.9 PSB Hldg 3.95 +.70 +21.5 EQORQUKVG 1,400 1.1 percent. The S&P 500 index lost 1.2 PzenaInv 7.23 +.75 +11.6 Lannett 8.00 +.58 +7.8 UltaSalon 15.00 +2.51 +20.1 +35.58 1,200 percent and the Nasdaq slipped 0.5 per- 1,000 cent. OSERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) ($2 OR MORE) L L LOSERS 2,018.78 M J J A S Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg In other trading, the dollar was mixed Quiksilvr 2.36 -.50 -17.5 Velocity rs 2.40 -.20 -7.7 ArrayBio 2.90 -.88 -23.3 Pct. change from previous: +1.79% High2,018.92 Low 1,982.05 against other major currencies, while BrdgptEd n 15.57 -2.66 -14.6 MinesMgt 2.30 -.18 -7.3 ReadgIntB 6.00 -1.78 -22.9 gold prices retreated after hitting a six- FstPfd pfA 6.51 -.76 -10.5 Ballanty 2.67 -.20 -7.0 PeopEduc 2.47 -.56 -18.5 Sept. 4, 2009 1,200 month high of near $1,000. HiShearT 9.85 -.57 -5.5 SevenArts n 3.25 -.50 -13.3 Clay Bond 44.40 -4.59 -9.4 1,100 PrUShCh25 9.85 -.78 -7.3 OpkoHlth 2.61 -.15 -5.4 ImperInds 2.08 -.31 -13.0 The Russell 2000 index of smaller com- 5VCPFCTF 1,000 panies rose 8.01, or 1.4 percent, to DIARY DIARY DIARY 2QQT¶U 900 800 570.50. Advanced 354 Advanced 2,461 Advanced 1,992 700 Overseas, Britain’s FTSE 100 rose 1.2 Declined 598 Declined 156 Declined 675 +13.16 600 percent, Germany’s DAX index rose 1.6 Unchanged 79 Unchanged 63 Unchanged 137 1,016.40 M J J A S Total issues 3,138 Total issues 573 Total issues 2,804 percent, and France’s CAC-40 added 1.3 New Highs 98 New Highs 25 New Highs 32 Pct. change from previous: +1.31% High 1,016.48 Low 1,001.65 percent. Japan’s Nikkei stock average New Lows 1 New Lows 2 New Lows 5 fell 0.3 percent. Volume 4,117,735,083 Volume 142,865,502 Volume 1,693,486,460 SOURCE: SunGard AP

INDEXES 11,790.17 6,469.95 Dow Jones Industrials 9,441.27 +96.66 +1.03 +7.58 -15.86 BUSINESS BRIEFS 5,259.34 2,134.21 Dow Jones Transportation 3,762.88 +73.97 +2.01 +6.38 -23.03 480.60 288.66 Dow Jones Utilities 369.62 +.94 +.26 -.31 -17.59 8,434.90 4,181.75 NYSE Composite 6,637.13 +90.53 +1.38 +15.29 -17.38 Agriculture futures fall, Chicago Mercantile Exchange. about 24 percent in July, compared 2,079.77 1,130.47 Amex Index 1,719.69 +29.10 +1.72 +23.05 -10.84 October live cattle was slightly to a year ago. 2,413.11 1,265.52 Nasdaq Composite 2,018.78 +35.58 +1.79 +28.01 -10.51 livestock prices mixed 1,303.04 666.79 S&P 500 1,016.40 +13.16 +1.31 +12.53 -18.18 lower by 0.02 cent at 86.7 cents a July is traditionally one of 13,324.87 6,772.29 Wilshire 5000 10,477.70 +139.28 +1.35 +15.30 -17.52 CHICAGO — Agriculture pound; October feeder cattle Jackson’s strongest months for 761.78 342.59 Russell 2000 570.50 +8.01 +1.42 +14.23 -20.64 futures fell Friday on the Chicago gained 0.18 cent to 98.55 cents a tourism spending. Board of Trade. pound; October lean hogs fell 0.07 Jackson received about $1.2 mil- TOCKS OF OCAL NTEREST S L I Wheat for December delivery cent to 49.7 cents a pound; and lion from its share of July sales tax. AlliantEgy 1.50 13 26.07 +.06 -10.7 Kaman .56 15 20.63 +.57 +13.8 slipped 0.25 cent to $4.785 a February pork bellies rose 2 cents to The town took in about $1.59 mil- AlliantTch ... 15 73.75 -.86 -14.0 Keycorp .04 ... 6.22 +.27 -27.0 AmCasino .42 ... 16.84 +.28 +94.9 LeeEnt h ...... 1.75 +.08 +326.8 bushel, while December corn fell 5 82.87 cents a pound. lion in sales tax revenue for the Aon Corp .60 22 41.89 +.39 -8.3 MicronT ...... 7.35 +.18 +178.4 cents to $3.1075 a bushel and same month last year and about BallardPw ...... 1.72 -.02 +52.2 OfficeMax ...... 11.58 +.29 +51.6 November soybeans lost 5.5 cents Jackson sales tax $1.4 million in 2007. BkofAm .04 46 17.09 +.25 +21.4 RockTen .40 10 49.32 +1.30 +44.3 to $9.36 a bushel. Oats for Town Administrator Bob ConAgra .76 10 20.72 +.70 +25.6 Sensient .76 14 26.63 +.27 +11.5 Costco .72 22 55.47 +.48 +5.7 SkyWest .16 10 15.80 +.59 -15.1 December delivery fell 3.5 cents to revenue down in July McLaurin says town leaders may Diebold 1.04 25 30.92 +.23 +10.1 Teradyn ...... 8.12 +.33 +92.4 $2.055 a bushel. JACKSON, Wyo. — The town of have to make more budget cuts if DukeEngy .96f 16 15.52 +.21 +3.4 Tuppwre .88 16 37.76 +.33 +66.3 Meanwhile, beef and pork Jackson in northwest Wyoming sales tax revenue continues to fall. DukeRlty .68 45 10.69 +.15 -2.5 US Bancrp .20 26 21.45 +.50 -14.2 Fastenal .74f 24 37.16 +.77 +6.6 Valhi .40 ... 9.61 -.24 -10.2 futures traded mixed on the saw its sales tax collections drop — Wire reports Heinz 1.68 13 37.80 +.04 +.5 WalMart 1.09 15 51.68 -.06 -7.8 HewlettP .32 14 45.10 +.65 +24.3 WashFed .20 ... 14.38 +.12 -3.9 HomeDp .90 20 27.03 +.13 +17.4 WellsFargo .20 35 26.91 ... -8.7 Idacorp 1.20 12 28.21 +.12 -4.2 ZionBcp .04m ... 16.74 +.35 -31.7 Regulators shut down banks in Mo., Ill., Iowa HOW TO READ THE REPORT By Stephen Bernard assets and $199 million in will be assumed by MB Financial Associated Press writer Name: Stocks are listed alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbrevia- deposits. Bank in Chicago. Some brokered tion). Company names made up of initials appear at the beginning of each letters’ list. The FDIC also shut down Sioux deposits will not be assumed by Div: Current annual dividend rate paid on stock, based on latest quarterly or semiannu- al declaration, unless otherwise footnoted. NEW YORK — Regulators on City, Iowa-based Vantus Bank MB Financial Bank. InBank’s Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. Friday shut down banks in with $458 million in assets and three branches will reopen Chg: Loss or gain for the day. No change indicated by ... mark. Missouri, Illinois and Iowa, push- $368 million in deposits; and Saturday as branches of MB Fund Name: Name of mutual fund and family. ing to 88 the number of banks that Platinum Community Bank, Financial Bank. Sell: Net asset value, or price at which fund could be sold. Chg: Daily net change in the NAV. have failed this year under the based in Rolling Meadows, Ill., Vantus Bank’s deposits will be weight of the soured economy with $346 million in assets and assumed by Great Southern Bank Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. d – New 52-wk low during trading day. g – Dividend in Canadian $. Stock price in U.S.$. n – New issue in and rising loan defaults. $305 million in deposits. in Springfield Mo. All 15 of Vantus past 52 wks. q – Closed-end mutual fund; no PE calculated. s – Split or stock dividend of The Federal Deposit Insurance The agency said First Bank of Bank’s branches will reopen 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 Corp. took over First Bank of Kansas City’s deposits will be Saturday as branches of Great rates are annual disbursements based on last declaration. pf – Preferred. pp – Holder Kansas City, based in Kansas City, assumed by Great American Bank Southern Bank. owes installment(s) of purchase price. rt – Rights. un – Units. wd – When distributed. wi – When issued. wt – Warrants. ww – With warrants. xw – Without warrants. Mo., with $16 million in assets based in De Soto, Kan. Its sole In addition, the FDIC agreed to 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 and $15 million in deposits and branch will reopen Saturday as a share with Great Southern Bank on last declaration. i – Declared or paid after stock dividend or split. j – Paid this year, divi- seized Oak Forest, Ill.-based branch of Great American Bank. losses on about $338 million of 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- InBank, with $212 million in Nearly all of InBank’s deposits Vantus Bank’s assets. tion. p – Init div, annual rate unknown. r – Declared or paid in preceding 12 mos plus 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 - Jobs 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- Continued from Business 1 ers eligible for unem- cash dividend. The 8.8 percent job- ployment checks have 5RGPFKPICPFWPGORNQ[OGPVTKUG Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial. Analysts are trying to predict which way the nation’s economy will go, less rate forecasted for exhausted their regular meanwhile consumer spending accounts for more than 70 percent of August is well above the state benefits and moved the gross domestic product and unemployment continues to rise. 5.2 percent rate for over to extended federal- Consumer spending as a percentage of GDP Q2 2009 72 percent 71.3% Quarterly, seasonally adjusted COMMODITIES REPORT August 2008 and the ly financed benefits that Recession 70 OGDEN — White wheat 4.30 (steady); 11.5 percent winter 4.03 highest since July 1983. Congress authorized last period C LOSING FUTURES (down 9); 14 percent spring 4.62 (down 8); Barley 5.25 (steady) 68 PORTLAND — White wheat 4.70 (down 10); 11.5 percent winter Idaho’s record unem- year after the recession 4.75-5.23 (down 16 to down 4); 14 percent spring 5.91 (steady) 66 Mon Commodity High Low Close Change NAMPA — White wheat cwt 6.33 (down 9): bushel 3.80 (down ployment rate was 9.4 began. Oct Live cattle 86.92 86.45 86.65 - 08 5) 64 Dec Live cattle 86.80 86.35 86.68 — percent from October Idaho paid out $22.2 Sep Feeder cattle 99.00 98.35 98.95 + .45 1982 through February million in regular state 62 Oct Feeder cattle 98.68 98.10 98.55 + .18 HEESE 60 Nov Feeder cattle 99.35 98.85 99.28 + .42 C 1983. benefits during August Oct Lean hogs 50.55 49.60 50.50 + .73 Nationally, the unem- and another $21.6 mil- Unemployment rate, monthly Dec Lean hogs 48.60 47.70 48.45 + .80 Cheddar cheese prices on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange 12 Aug. Feb Pork belly 82.88 82.88 82.88 + 2.00 Barrels: $1.2475, - .0075: Blocks: $1.2700, - .0100 ployment rate spiked lion extended and sup- 10 9.7% Mar Pork belly 82.70 xx.xx 82.70 + 2.00 Sep Wheat 449.00 446.00 444.00 - 7.25 three-tenths of a point plemental federal bene- 8 Dec Wheat 478.75 471.75 471.75 - 7.00 OTATOES 6 Sep KC Wheat 482.00 478.00 477.00 - 6.75 P to 9.7 percent as fits to over 38,000 idled Dec KC Wheat 498.00 490.00 490.25 - 9.25 employers shed another workers. Less than $15 4 Sep MPS Wheat 488.00 487.75 483.50 - 8.25 2 Dec MPS Wheat 505.00 496.25 498.50 - 7.25 CHICAGO (AP) — USDA — Major potato markets FOB shipping 216,000 jobs. The million in benefits was points Thursday. 0 Sep Corn 308.50 300.25 300.50 - 10.50 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s ’09 Dec Corn 312.50 306.00 306.25 - 9.50 Russet Burbanks Idaho 50-lb cartons 70 count: 100 count. national rate was 6.2 paid to jobless workers in Sep Soybeans 975.00 965.00 961.00 - 21.00 Baled 5-10 lb film bags (non Size A). percent in August 2008. August 2008. Nov Soybeans 940.00 921.00 922.00 - 19.50 Russet Norkotahs Idaho 50-lb cartons 70 count: 100 count. SOURCES: Bureau of Economic Analysis; Bureau of Economic Research; AP Aug BFP Milk 12.20 12.13 12.16 - .03 Baled 5-10 film bags (non Size A). Bureau of Labor Statistics Russets Norkotahs Wisconsin 50-lb cartons: 100 count. Over 66,000 Idaho Since May 2007, when Sep BFP Milk 12.44 12.11 12.21 - .19 Baled 5-10 lb film bags (non Size A). workers were still off the the unemployment rate cent, unchanged from The highest was 15.9 Oct BFP Milk 13.24 12.80 12.87 - .29 Russet Norkotahs Washington 50-lb cartons 70 count 7.00- Nov BFP Milk 13.34 13.15 13.20 - .12 8.00: 100 count 7.00-8.00. job during August, and was at a record low 2.8 March to April 2009 at 7 percent in Adams Dec BFP Milk 13.47 13.31 13.42 - .15 Baled 5-10 lb film bags (non Size A) 5.00-5.50. Oct Sugar 23.64 20.50 21.60 - 1.54 Wisconsin Norkotahs 50-lb cartons 70 count 8.00: 100 count 15 of the 44 counties percent, Idaho’s unem- percent and unchanged County. Jan Sugar xx.xx xx.xx 22.53 - 1.55 7.00-8.00. Sep B-Pound 1.6412 1.6285 1.6396 + .0076 Baled 5-10 lb film bags (non Size A) 6.00. posted double-digit job- ployment rate has risen in August from July Dec B-Pound 1.6410 1.6287 1.6392 + .0073 Round Reds 50-lb sacks Size A Wisconsin. 9.00-9.50. less rates, the most steadily with only three 2009 at 8.8 percent. Joshua Palmer may be Sep J-Yen 1.0838 1.0723 1.0750 - .0056 Round Reds 50-lb cartons Size A Minnesota N. Dakota. Dec J-Yen 1.0844 1.0730 1.0756 - .0057 Round Whites 50-lb sacks size A Wisconsin 9.00-9.50. counties at or above 10 breaks. It was The lowest unem- reached at 208-735-3231 Sep Euro-currency 1.4330 1.4191 1.4305 - .0056 Dec Euro-currency 1.4329 1.4192 1.4303 - .0053 percent since April 1987. unchanged from July to ployment rate was 4 per- or at jpalmer@magic- Sep Canada dollar .9240 .9060 .9207 + .0147 IVESTOCK Dec Canada dollar .9241 .9063 .9210+ .0149 L Nearly half the work- August 2007 at 3 per- cent in Owyhee County. valley.com Sep U.S. dollar 78.76 78.04 78.21 - .31 Oct Comex gold 998.4 987.0 993.5 - 4.2 POCATELLO(AP) — Idaho Farm Bureau Intermountain Dec Comex gold 997.0 985.8 991.8 - 4.5 Livestock Report on Friday. Sep Comex silver 16.30 15.83 16.23 - .04 LIVESTOCK AUCTION — Twin Falls Livestock Commission on Dec Comex silver 16.41 15.85 16.26 - .30 Wednesday Utility and commercial cows 38.00-49.00; canner Sep Treasury bond 121.29 120.11 120.12 - 1.17 and cutters n/a; heavy feeder steers 87.50-97.50; light feeder Mortgage Gold Dec Treasury bond 120.23 119.00 119.10 - 1.21 steers 97.00-104.75; stocker steers 107.50-115.50; heavy hol- Sep Coffee 120.40 119.50 122.85 + 3.05 stein feeder steers n/a; light holstein feeder steers 66.75; Continued from Business 1 Continued from Business 1 rency debasement and infla- Dec Coffee 124.80 120.60 124.10 + 3.30 heavy feeder heifers 88.00-91.50; light feeder heifers 90.75- Sep Cocoa 1882 1859 1860 - 20 92.50; stocker heifers 99.50-112.00; slaughter bulls 50.25-57.75; scale back its purchases, allowing the Matt Zeman, a metals trad- tion. Dec Cocoa 1906 1885 1887 + 20 Remarks: No comments Oct Cotton 57.59 56.72 57.53 + .38 program to last longer. er at LaSalle Futures Group in “It could be less about the Dec Cotton 59.74 58.41 59.63 + .39 Despite government efforts to prop Chicago, says one theory is dollar than that investors are Oct Crude oil 68.78 67.12 67.78 - .18 M ETALS/MONEY Oct Unleaded gas 1.8036 1.7447 1.7660 - .0268 up the mortgage market, qualifying for that gold buyers are expecting fed up with all currencies,” Oct Heating oil 1.7450 1.7018 1.7135 - .0215 CURRENCY EXCHANGE a loan is still tough. Lenders have a big downdraft in the dollar, said Alan Ruskin, foreign- Oct Natural gas 2.744 2.409 2.739 + .231 NEW YORK (AP) — Key currency exchange rates Friday, com- Quotations from Sinclair & Co. pared with late Thursday in New York: tightened their standards dramatically, which conceivably could hap- exchange strategist at RBS 733-6013 or (800) 635-0821 Dollar vs: Exch. Rate Pvs Day Yen 93.02 92.57 so the best rates are available to those pen if faith in an economic Securities in Stamford, Conn. Euro $1.4309 $1.4251 with solid credit and a 20 percent recovery were to evaporate. Or, some traders might just B EANS Pound $1.6397 $1.6320 Swiss franc 1.0605 1.0626 down payment. “There are a lot of big bets be trying to see if they can Valley Beans Canadian dollar 1.0862 1.1039 Freddie Mac collects mortgage rates being made on the dollar get- push gold decisively over the Prices are net to growers, 100 pounds, U.S. No. 1 beans, less Mexican peso 13.3815 13.5975 Idaho bean tax and storage charges. Prices subject to change on Monday through Wednesday of ting weaker,”Zeman said. $1,000 mark — which could without notice. Producers desiring more recent price informa- GOLD tion should contact dealers. Selected world gold prices, Friday. each week from lenders around the It might not be coincidence attract a new wave of investor Pintos, no quote, new crop great northerns, no quote; pinks, London morning fixing: 987.25 up $4.25. no quote, new crop; small reds, no quote, new crop. Prices are London afternoon fixing: $989.00 up $6.00. country. Rates often fluctuate signifi- that gold was flying just before interest at a time when indus- given by Rangens in Buhl. Prices current Sept. 4. NY Handy & Harman: $989.00 up $6.00. cantly, even within a given day. the August employment trial and jewelry demand Other Idaho bean prices are collected weekly by Bean Market NY Handy & Harman fabricated: $1068.12 up $6.48. News, U.S. Department of Agriculture; Pintos, not established; NY Engelhard: $991.33 up $6.01. The average rate on a 15-year fixed- report, which is due from the remains depressed. great northerns, not established; small whites, not estab- NY Engelhard fabricated: $1065.68 up $6.46. lished; pinks, not established; small reds, not established. NY Merc. gold Sept. Fri. $994.90 off $0.90. rate mortgage fell to 4.54 percent, from Labor Department on Friday. The $1,000 level has been a Quotes current Sept. 2. NY HSBC Bank USA 4 p.m. Fri. $995.00 off $1.00. 4.58 percent last week, according to Economists expect a net loss ceiling for gold since the metal SILVER NEW YORK (AP) — Handy & Harman silver Friday $16.225 up Freddie Mac. of about 230,000 jobs for the first crossed it in March 2008. G RAINS $0.300. H&H fabricated $19.470 up $ Rates on five-year, adjustable-rate month; a much bigger number The price quickly fell back The morning bullion price for silver in London $15.950 up mortgages averaged 4.59 percent, could stoke new worries about after that rally. Valley Grains $0.220. Prices for wheat per bushel: mixed grain, oats, corn and beans Engelhard $16.100 up $0.330. down from 4.67 percent a week earlier. the economy. In February gold again per hundred weight. Prices subject to change without notice. Engelhard fabricated $19.320 up $0.396. Rates on one-year, adjustable-rate Some analysts say gold topped $1,000 and again Soft white wheat, $3.77; barley, $6.20; oats, $6.50; corn, $6.90 NY Merc silver spot month Friday $16.263 off $0.005. (15 percent moisture). Prices are given daily by Rangens in mortgages fell to 4.62 percent from might be benefiting not just quickly retreated. Buhl. Prices current Sept. 4. NONFERROUS METALS Barley, $5.50 (48-lb. minimum) spot delivery in Twin Falls and NEW YORK (AP) — Spot nonferrous metal prices Frida 4.69 percent. from concern about the dol- “Maybe the third time is the Gooding: corn, no quote (Twin Falls only). Prices quoted by Aluminum -$0.8570 per lb., N.Y. Merc spot Fri. Land O’Lakes Inc. in Twin Falls. Prices current Sept. 4. Copper -$2.8835 Cathode full plate, U.S. destinations. The rates do not include add-on fees lar’s outlook but also from charm,”Zeman said. Copper $2.8435 N.Y. Merc spot Fri. known as points. The nationwide fee investor jitters about the Silver, meanwhile, zoomed POCATELLO (AP) — Idaho Farm Bureau Intermountain Grain Lead - $2217.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Report on Friday. Zinc - $0.8781 per lb., delivered. for all loans in Freddie Mac’s survey future value of all paper cur- 93 cents, or 6 percent, to POCATELLO — White wheat 4.10 (down 10); 11.5 percent winter Gold - $989.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). 3.77 (down 9); 14 percent spring 4.52 (down 7); Barley 5.20 Gold - $994.90 troy oz., NY Merc spot Fri. averaged 0.7 point for 30-year loans rencies, as central banks $16.27 an ounce — a 52-week (steady) Silver - $15.225 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). BURLEY — White wheat 4.10 (steady); 11.5 percent winter 3.90 Silver - $16.263 troy oz., N.-. Merc spot Fri. and 0.6 point for 15-year, five-year and pump money into the finan- high — in futures trading (down 9); 14 percent spring 4.53 (up 13); Barley 4.75 (steady) Mercury - $640.00 per 76 lb flask, N.Y. one-year loans. cial system — a recipe for cur- Thursday. Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho COMICS Saturday, September 5, 2009 Business 3

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 4 Saturday, September 5, 2009 Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho

BURLEY/RUPERT FORECAST TWIN FALLS FIVE-DAY FORECAST Yesterday’s Weather Today: Thunderstorm chances are slim. Highs low to Today Tonight Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday City Hi Lo Prcp middle 80s. Boise 90 56 0.00" Tonight: Partly to mostly cloudy. Lows low 50s. Challis 88 48 0.00" Coeur d’ Alene 75 41 0.00" Idaho Falls 90 46 0.00" Tomorrow: Perhaps a distant rumble of thunder. Highs low Jerome 83 55 Trace Lewiston 86 49 0.00" 80s. Lowell 85 49 0.00" Malad City not available Malta not available ALMANAC - BURLEY Partly cloudy and Increasing clouds Rain chances are Cooling off Comfortable Sunny and dry Pocatello 90 47 0.00" warm slim to none sunshine Rexburg 87 47 0.00" Temperature Precipitation Salmon 84 46 0.00" Stanley 80 36 0.00" Sun Valley 83 44 0.00" Yesterday’s High 82 Yesterday’s 0.00" High 90 Low 58 82 / 51 75 / 47 73 / 47 76 / 53 Yesterday’s Low 50 Month to Date 0.00" Normal High / Low 81 / 47 Avg. Month to Date 0.08" ALMANAC - TWIN FALLS Record High 97 in 1998 Water Year to Date 12.11" Record Low 33 in 1965 Avg. Water Year to Date 9.76" Barometric Sunrise and Pollen Temperature Precipitation Humidity Pressure Sunset Count IDAHO’S FORECAST Yesterday’s High 86 Yesterday’s 0.00" Yesterday High 42% 5 p.m. Yesterday 30.00 in. Today Sunrise: 7:07 AM Sunset: 8:05 PM TF pollen count yesterday: Yesterday’s Low 60 Month to Date 0.00" Yesterday Low 25% Sunday Sunrise: 7:08 AM Sunset: 8:03 PM 74 (High) Sagebrush, Kochia SUN VALLEY, SURROUNDING MTS. Normal High / Low 80 / 47 Avg. Month to Date 0.08" Today’s Forecast High 31% Monday Sunrise: 7:09 AM Sunset: 8:01 PM Cooler temperatures and cloudy periods are expected Record High 94 in 2007 Water Year to Date 13.04" Today’s Forecast Low 16% Tuesday Sunrise: 7:10 AM Sunset: 7:59 PM Mold: 7652 (High) this holiday weekend. Although a chance of rain Record Low 35 in 1989 Avg. Water Year to Date10.52" A water year runs from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 Wednesday Sunrise: 7:12 AM Sunset: 7:58 PM Cladosporium, Smuts, Alternaria exists, not all areas will get wet. 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 72 to 78 Tonight’s Lows 39 to 49 and Moonset Forecasts and maps prepared by: Today looks to be very warm and Today Moonrise: 8:15 PM Moonset: 8:13 AM 82 / 51 BOISE 7 partly sunny. Temperatures will Sunday Moonrise: 8:37 PM Moonset: 9:18 AM Last New First Full The higher the index the Cheyenne, Wyoming trend cooler Sunday through Monday Sept. 12 Sept. 18 Sept. 26 Oct. 4 Moonrise: 9:02 PM Moonset: 10:24 AM more sun protection needed www.dayweather.com Monday. At this time, not much in the way of rain is likely. REGIONAL FORECAST NATIONAL FORECAST WORLD FORECAST Lewiston Today Tomorrow Monday Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow 95 / 60 Today Highs/Lows 90 to 95/54 to 59 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 92 56 pc 77 46 pc 73 44 pc Atlanta 86 65 pc 85 65 th Orlando 91 74 th 89 75 th Acapulco 88 79 sh 89 77 pc Moscow 72 57 pc 65 56 sh Grangeville NORTHERN Bonners Ferry 87 51 sh 63 45 sh 62 38 mc Atlantic City 84 70 pc 84 70 pc Philadelphia 87 64 pc 84 65 pc Athens 91 75 su 89 69 su Nairobi 66 53 r 71 49 r The weekend will be cooler, Burley 84 53 pc 81 47 pc 71 42 pc Baltimore 87 61 pc 83 63 pc Phoenix 95 81 th 97 81 th Auckland 55 36 pc 58 38 pc Oslo 61 45 sh 58 44 pc 85 / 47 yet still very pleasant. A Challis 86 53 mc 75 45 th 70 43 mc Billings 96 59 th 94 58 th Portland, ME 73 51 pc 66 50 su Bangkok 89 77 th 82 77 sh Paris 65 46 pc 71 51 pc Coeur d’ Alene 82 51 mc 61 45 sh 60 42 mc Birmingham 86 67 pc 83 66 th Raleigh 86 61 pc 85 64 pc Beijing 79 56 sh 65 56 r Prague 59 48 r 65 43 pc distant rumble of thunder is Elko, NV 87 51 th 80 41 pc 73 37 pc Boston 77 60 pc 68 56 pc Rapid City 86 58 pc 88 59 pc Berlin 62 54 r 64 48 r Rio de Jane 77 66 sh 76 70 r possible each afternoon. Eugene, OR 69 47 r 65 44 sh 71 43 sh Charleston, SC 87 69 pc 84 70 th Reno 86 56 pc 81 51 pc Buenos Aires 66 53 pc 69 45 pc Rome 83 67 pc 85 64 pc McCall Gooding 85 57 pc 79 49 pc 71 44 pc Charleston, WV 81 59 pc 83 60 sh Sacramento 85 57 pc 83 58 su Cairo 95 66 pc 96 68 pc Santiago 59 46 r 52 40 sh Grace 85 55 pc 82 47 pc 72 42 pc Chicago 76 59 su 80 61 su St. Louis 81 63 th 80 64 th Dhahran 109 88 pc 109 85 pc Seoul 79 66 pc 77 64 pc Salmon 81 / 45 Hagerman 92 57 pc 83 51 pc 76 46 pc Cleveland 78 57 pc 80 59 pc St.Paul 76 58 pc 79 61 pc Geneva 58 41 pc 66 46 pc Sydney 67 46 pc 64 51 pc 87 / 48 Hailey 80 53 mc 73 45 th 67 43 mc Denver 82 55 pc 83 55 th 90 70 th 92 72 th Hong Kong 86 83 th 86 83 sh Tel Aviv 83 79 pc 82 80 th Idaho Falls 82 53 pc 80 48 pc 70 41 pc Des Moines 79 56 pc 79 58 pc San Diego 82 68 su 79 67 su Jerusalem 92 68 pc 89 66 pc Tokyo 82 67 pc 82 66 pc Kalispell, MT 88 50 pc 64 43 sh 61 41 sh Detroit 79 59 pc 80 61 pc San Francisco 67 56 pc 67 56 pc Johannesburg 81 51 pc 77 48 pc Vienna 64 50 pc 66 48 pc Jerome 87 58 pc 80 49 pc 73 45 pc El Paso 92 66 th 93 66 th Seattle 66 55 r 61 53 sh Kuwait City 112 88 pc 110 86 pc Warsaw 59 54 sh 59 52 pc Lewiston 95 60 pc 73 54 sh 72 51 mc Fairbanks 70 45 su 64 46 pc Tucson 91 71 th 92 69 th London 63 49 pc 67 60 pc Winnipeg 84 64 pc 88 67 pc Caldwell Malad City 89 56 pc 86 50 pc 77 42 pc Fargo 82 59 pc 82 60 pc Washington, DC 89 64 pc 84 64 pc Mexico City 60 51 sh 60 49 sh Zurich 54 32 pc 61 37 pc 92 / 57 Idaho Falls Malta 88 54 pc 83 48 pc 73 42 pc Honolulu 87 76 sh 87 75 sh McCall 81 45 mc 63 36 th 61 33 mc Houston 91 72 th 91 72 th Boise Sun Valley 82 / 53 Missoula, MT 89 50 pc 69 43 sh 64 41 sh Indianapolis 82 59 pc 82 62 pc TODAY’S NATIONAL MAP 92 / 56 72 / 48 Pocatello 91 56 pc 88 51 pc 79 44 pc Jacksonville 87 72 th 88 72 th 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 Portland, OR 69 56 r 65 55 sh 70 49 sh Kansas City 78 60 pc 80 62 pc Pocatello Rupert 88 55 pc 84 49 pc 74 43 pc Las Vegas 101 79 th 99 74 pc Rupert 91 / 56 Rexburg 80 51 pc 78 45 pc 67 39 pc Little Rock 84 66 th 83 66 th H Mountain Home 88 / 55 L 91 / 59 Richland, WA 82 56 sh 73 51 pc 70 49 pc Los Angeles 76 62 su 75 62 su Rogerson 79 49 pc 76 42 pc 69 39 pc Memphis 86 68 th 83 68 th Burley Salmon 87 48 mc 81 44 th 71 37 mc Miami 89 77 th 88 76 th Twin Falls Salt Lake City, UT 88 68 th 88 65 th 85 60 pc Milwaukee 72 57 su 73 57 su 84 / 53 Fronts 90 / 58 Spokane, WA 82 62 th 82 61 th 82 63 th Nashville 86 66 pc 84 63 th Stanley 77 42 mc 62 34 th 62 33 mc New Orleans 86 74 th 87 74 th Yesterday’s State Extremes - High: 92 at Mountain Home Low: 33 at Sun Valley 72 48 mc 64 41 th 60 38 mc New York 80 64 pc 76 62 r Cold Yellowstone, MT 74 41 pc 70 38 mc 60 31 sh Oklahoma City 83 64 th 86 65 pc weather key: su-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, mc-mostly cloudy, c-cloudy, Omaha 78 58 pc 80 62 pc th-thunderstorms, sh-showers,r-rain, sn-snow, fl-flurries, w-wind, m-missing Warm CANADIAN FORECAST H Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow Stationary City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Calgary 71 45 pc 65 46 pc Saskatoon 81 63 pc 85 59 th GREGG MIDDLEKAUFF’S QUOTE OF THE DAY Cranbrook 74 40 pc 40 pc 53 Toronto 74 52 pc 71 51 pc Valid to 6 p.m. today Edmonton 74 55 pc 75 49 sh Vancouver 58 50 r 56 50 sh Occluded Kelowna 60 41 r 50 37 sh Victoria 61 53 sh 60 50 sh Yesterday’s National Extremes: The bad news is time fl ies. The good Lethbridge 88 55 pc 73 49 pc Winnipeg 84 64 pc 88 67 pc High: 115 at Death Valley, Calif. news is you’re the pilot. Regina 86 66 pc 93 60 pc Low: 27 at Polebridge, Mont. More Magic Valley weather at www.magicvalley.com/weather ~Michael Altshuler Get up-to-date highway information at the Idaho Transportation Department’s Web site at 511.idaho.gov or call 888-432-7623. Spokesman dismisses critics Dinosaur fossil on block in Vegas LAS VEGAS (AP) — the Venetian hotel-casino “This represents the pin- Museums and high-rolling in Las Vegas. nacle of paleontology,’’ of Obama education speech natural history buffs will A similar T. rex fossil sold Lindgren told The get a crack at buying a fos- in 1997 for $8.3 million and Associated Press on Friday. WASHINGTON (AP) — Some conservative critics United States of America to silized Tyrannosaurus rex is now housed at the Field “Most of the major The White House on Friday say Obama is trying to pro- use his bully pulpit to talk to next month at a Las Vegas Museum in Chicago. That museums in the world have dismissed as pointless the mote a political agenda and kids about the importance of Strip auction. dinosaur, named “Sue,’’ is casts of T. rexes,’’ as furor over President Barack overstepping his bounds, education and to help Experts say the 170 bones 42 feet long and has more opposed to the real thing, Obama’s plan to deliver a taking the federal govern- inspire kids,’’ she said on discovered about 17 years than 200 fossilized bones. he said. “Bidding on this T. televised back-to-school ment too far into public “The John Gambling Show’’ ago in South Dakota repre- Tom Lindgren, a natural rex is not going to be a gam- speech to the nation’s stu- school business. on radio station WOR sent more than half the history specialist for ble, it’s going to be the dents. Republican Gov. Tim NewsTalk Radio 710 in New skeleton of a 40-foot-long, Bonhams & Butterfields, opportunity of a lifetime to “I think we’ve reached a Pawlenty of Minnesota, a York. 7.5 ton dinosaur that lived said “Samson’’ is the third whoever gets it.’’ little bit of the silly season potential presidential con- Gibbs said former 66 million years ago. most complete T. rex skele- The female dinosaur’s when the president of the tender in 2012, said Obama’s Republican presidents Auctioneer Bonhams & ton ever discovered, and lower jaw was found by the United States can’t tell kids speech is “uninvited’’ and Ronald Reagan and George Butterfields is hoping that one of only 42 specimens son of a rancher in 1987 and in school to study hard and that the president’s move H.W. Bush delivered simi- bids for the T. rex dubbed discovered in the last 100 the rest of its bones were stay in school,’’ presidential raises questions of content lar speeches to students. “Samson’’ will top $6 mil- years with more than 10 excavated in 1992, Lindgren spokesman Robert Gibbs and motive. He said Obama’s speech lion when it is sold Oct. 3 at percent of the bones. said. told reporters. “I think both Many school districts will not be partisan but political parties agree that have decided not to show rather a chance for chil- the dropout rate is some- Obama’s speech,to be deliv- dren to get “a little encour- Lawn & Garden Center Tour thing that threatens our ered at 10 a.m. MDT agement as they start the long-term economic suc- Tuesday, partly in response school year.’’ cess.’’ to concerns from parents. The White House Obama’s planned address Randi Weingarten, presi- spokesman said he couldn’t 2 to students has prompted a dent of the American speak to the motivations of surprising push-back from Federation of Teachers, on some school districts. some quarters over what the Friday defended Obama’s “Look, there are some 3 White House sees as an plan to address students. school districts that won’t important but innocuous “The bottom line is we let you read ‘Huckleberry 1 topic. need the president of the Finn,’“ Gibbs said.

Teen who Investigators work 2 3 If you’ve been fled state Call pondering a landscape to build murder case project, sprinkler repair, done with 733-0931 fall trimming or cleanup from deadly wildfire CALLCALL chemo LOS ANGELES (AP) — and whose investigators to Kimberly Investigators worked worked through the night Nurseries MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A around-the-clock Friday at into Friday.“We are consid- Minnesota teenager who a charred hillside as they ering it a murder investiga- advertise 733-2717 once fled the state to avoid sought to build a murder tion.’’ We appreciate chemotherapy has finished case stemming from a huge Gallagher said as many as your business! his chemo treatments. wildfire that claimed the 14 investigators would be in this Thirteen-year-old Daniel lives of two firefighters. on hand to help with the Visit us at at Hauser received the last of Authorities blocked probe over the weekend. his chemo access to the crime scene, a “We are in the early 705 Blue Lakes Blvd. section! Thursday at scorched area of scrub and stages,just beginning to put Landscape & Irrigation Children’s trees off the side of the things together,’’ he said. 2862 Addison Ave. E Twin Falls Hospital in Angeles Crest Highway, as “Firefighters losing their Minn- they analyzed clues includ- lives in the line of duty is an eapolis. ing incendiary material added incentive, but we His moth- reported to have been work every case to the 1 er says the found there. Authorities fullest.’’ family is Hauser say the fire was arson, but Arson investigators have happy that are still trying to find a cul- plenty of experience to treatment is prit and understand how it draw upon as they try to Country Greenhouse done. was set. figure out who ignited a fire Daniel was diagnosed “We are going to find out that torched more than with Hodgkin’s lymphoma what we can and present it 230-square-miles of the in January and had to the D.A.,’’ said Los Angeles National Forest on chemotherapy once. But he Angeles County sheriff’s the edge of Los Angeles and Rose Trees and Peony Trees 50% off stopped because it made Lt. Liam Gallagher, who is burned more than 60 him sick. Daniel and his heading the homicide probe homes. family prefer natural reme- Roses 40% off Trees 35% off dies. The issue became a child ESPRIT CONSTRUCTION protection case because www.garagesbyesprit.com doctors have said Daniel’s Redwood Furniture: Benches, Chairs, cancer is highly curable with Garage with CHEVRON Swings, Planters, Picnic Tables, Bridges… Upper Floor Located TO chemotherapy. TWIN FALLS X Plus: Bark, Peat Moss, Potting soil, Soil Pep, ½ mile BURLEY AVE. X

Daniel and his mother CASTLEFORD RD. X LES SCHWAB TIRES Top Soil, Steer Manure. fled the state in May to avoid 3CAR 2CAR southwest RIDLEY'S court-ordered chemo. But $ $ of Buhl on Gift Certificates Available! Daniel’s been getting the 14,800 11,900 Castleford Monday thru Saturday 9:00 am - 5:00 pm treatment since they Since 1987 Subject to local Rd. returned, with alternative License #RCE-25045 $15,800 building codes Closed Sundays therapies to ease side COUNTRY CALL NOW: 208-731-1397 TO CASTLEFORD GREENHOUSE effects. COMPLETELY BUILT ON YOUR LEVEL LOT INCLUDING CONCRETE AND LABOR 543-6166 SATURDAY FIND OUT WHAT COACHES AND PLAYERS ARE PREDICTING FOR IDAHO, ISU AND BYU S SEE SPORTS 5 Local sports, Sports 2 & 4 / Scoreboard, Sports 3 / MLB, NFL & U.S. Open, Sports 6 / Community, Sports 7-8 Sports SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 SPORTS EDITOR MIKE CHRISTENSEN: (208) 735-3239 [email protected] Blount’s actions SITTING IN FRONT cloud Bobcats beat Riverhawks, take early lead in GBC BSU win

By Ryan Howe Oregon tailback Times-News writer suspended for BURLEY — Canyon Ridge’s inaugural season rest of season couldn’t have started off any better as the OISE — Oregon Riverhawks’ first play from cracked down on scrimmage went for a B taiback LeGarrette touchdown. Blount Friday, suspend- The rest of the night, ing the senior for the rest however, belonged to the of the season, including a Burley Bobcats. potential bowl game, for Jake Mills completed 26 his strike to the face of of 43 passes for 346 yards Boise State defensive end and Branson Handy ran for Byron Hout. three touchdowns in Burley’s 28-14 win. “If we can keep the run- ning game and passing game going how we did Dustin tonight, we’ll be able to win most of the rest of our Lapray games,”said Handy. “I just hope we can keep it up.” There are obvious Burley matched its win issues with what Blount total from last season with did, and Hout as well, for this key Great Basin taunting the 6-foot-2, Conference victory. For the 240-pound back. Hout is time being, the Bobcats sit 6-foot, 241 pounds. It atop the league standings would have been an even — a fact not lost on the boxing match, if Hout Burley players, who gave had seen it coming. coach Eugene Kramer an It’s a shame the punch ice water bath as time was thrown, especially expired. RYAN HOWE/Times-News when Blount was one of “This is a huge win for Burley Jaram Jones runs after making a catch as Canyon Ridge’s Chase Joslin pursues dur- Friday night the 30 players who shook us,”said Mills. “One-and- ing Friday’s game at Burley High School. hands before the game in oh in conference, that’s football scores a gesture of sportsman- pretty big. Win one more ship. and we’ve got playoffs. It’s “This is a huge win Canyon Ridge 28, Burley 14 “It was something that huge because now we’ve Magicvalley.com Nampa 28, Twin Falls 14 I shouldn’t have done,” for us. One-and-oh Minico 10, Columbia 7 got fan support back, WATCH a video of the Burley-Canyon Ridge game. Blount said. “I lost my everybody’s not like, in conference, Middleton 27, Jerome 20 head.” ‘Season’s going to be over, Richfield 42, Camas County 16 Hout was jumping up same as last year.’” that’s pretty big.” Carey 40, North Gem 14 and down, slapped a hand In an eerie repeat of next possession, going 62 “We have a really good — Burley Declo 51, Aberdeen 8 on Blount’s shoulder pad Dietrich 50, Murtaugh 32 Burley’s loss to Century yards in six plays, capped passing game going, but I Jake Mills and said “something.” last week, the Bobcats by Handy’s 2-yard TD. think what put our points Glenns Ferry 54, Gooding 16 Blount landed an over- again stumbled out of the Handy scored on a 19-yard up there was we actually touchdown to Chase Joslin Buhl 46, Wood River 0 hand right, connecting gates. Burley fumbled away scamper on Burley’s next found our running game. to tie the score 14-14. Sugar-Salem 27, Filer 18 across Hout’s right jaw, the opening kickoff and drive. It’s good stuff.” Just before the half, Mills Kimberly 30, American Falls 0 dropping him to his Canyon Ridge quarterback Burley totaled 128 rush- Canyon Ridge proved it threw a 16-yard touch- Castleford 32, Raft River 22 knees. Blount then Tyler Myers found Derek ing yards from its spread was willing to pull out all down strike to Bo Hawker. Oakley 50, Hagerman 0 shoved teammate Garrett Bastion on the first play offense. the stops by going for it on Handy added another 2- Lighthouse Christian 56, Embry before going from scrimmage for a 25- “Our offensive line really fourth down several times yard TD run in the fourth Hansen 10 berserk on the sideline, yard touchdown just 15 picked it up and I’m glad during the game. The first quarter on a drive that Challis 20, Shoshone 6 going after fans, getting seconds into the game. we found our running time, it worked out nicely, Wendell 14, Valley 12, OT physical with Boise City Burley answered on its game early,” said Handy. as Myers tossed a 74-yard See BURLEY, Sports 2 Rockland 54, Jackpot, Nev. 8 police and security guards. BSU head coach Chris Petersen confronted Hout Wendell’s immediately before the Luke Visser hit, lifted the sophomore Middleton runs carries the to his feet and calmed ball during a him down. While Blount scoreless is off the team for the season, but still on schol- first half arship, Hout’s punish- over Jerome against ment will be dealt with in Valley in house. Petersen said he By David Bashore scoring on Coombs’ first Hazelton on “will spend time with Times-News writer touchdown, but then the Friday. Hout this week to help Tigers bounced back with a Wendell won him learn from what hap- MIDDLETON — The 36-yard scoring run from 14-12 in pened.” Jerome football team might Ross Hiller and a 20-yard I get a feeling that overtime. be having nightmares touchdown pass from learning process will about the double wing Cameron Stauffer to Gus MEAGAN involve a lot of sprints. offense after Friday night. Callen. THOMPSON/ Petersen issued this Middleton, running the Stauffer would hook up Times-News statement Friday after- same offense employed by with Billy Wight for a 59- noon: “The event that Hillcrest in last yard strike in took place last night fol- year’s Class 4A the fourth lowing our game between championship quarter, but 79 Byron and Oregon run- win over of his 99 pass- Trojans triumph over ning back LeGarrette Jerome, piled ing yards came Blount was very unfortu- up 351 yards on on those two nate and we do not con- 69 rushes as plays. He fin- done Byron’s action,” the Vikings ran ished 8-for-16 Petersen said. “There will around, through and over with two touchdowns and Vikings in overtime be disciplinary conse- the No. 2 Tigers in a 27-20 was picked off on Jerome’s quences for Bryon as a nonconference victory. final drive, after which By Bradley Guire Martin and Ryan Slade each “For an opener, the kids result of the incident last The Vikings (1-0) ran Middleton knelt three Times-News writer rushed for five yards on the pulled together,” Ayers said. night and they will be roughly twice as many times to salt the remaining Trojans’ OT possession, “But mistakes cost us in the handled internally.” plays as did Jerome, 77 to time off the clock. HAZELTON — Wendell with Slade crossing the goal end. This is a learning All this fallout over- 39, and picked up 378 total Middleton led 21-20 in opened the 2008 season line to tie the game at 12-12. process. We’ll get better shadows a mammoth yards to 241 for the Tigers the late stages when Bobby with a blowout of Valley. Slade converted the 2-point week to week.” win for the Broncos, one (1-1). Skinner plunged into the This year’s game was the try for the victory. He car- The teams battled that gives them a 65-2 “We know we can run end zone from 2 yards out polar opposite. ried 10 times for 81 yards in throughout the game but home record since 1999. this offense. This was just with a little more than two The Trojans lined up on regulation. both offenses stalled over Yes, the punch is big about attitude, and we’ve minutes on the clock. the 10-yard line for their The Vikings got the ball and over through three- news. But the win is big- worked hard and bought Skinner finished with 63 first overtime attempt first in overtime and scored and-a-half quarters. ger. Boise State is 1-0. into it,” said Middleton yards on 13 rushes, while Friday, with the Vikings in two plays. Although the Opportunity after opportu- Oregon is 0-1. That’s running back Dean K.J. Herbert added 81 yards ahead by six. Three plays second play nearly fell apart, nity was missed by each brass tacks. Coombs, who scored on a and Weston Volpei piled up later, Wendell claimed a 14- quarterback Brogen Reed side, resulting in a scoreless Blount’s melee stole the pair of 14-yard runs and led 92 yards and a touchdown. 12 victory in Hazelton. scrambled to find the end game until the 7:02 mark of attention from BSU’s the Vikings with 116 yards Hillier finished with 93 “Every time we thought, zone from 10 yards out to the fourth quarter, when defense, which held on 19 carries. “We’ve got yards on 11 carries and ‘Here we go,’ something put his team up 12-6. The Valley was able to complete a Blount to minus (-5) our offensive linemen Jerome ran 23 times for 142 would happen,” Wendell attempted 2-point conver- scoring drive. yards on eight carries. washing guys as hard as yards, a stat the Tigers have head coach Brad Neuendorf sion failed, which left the The Vikings started on The defense dominated they can, and we know worked to improve over last said. “A penalty, a fumble. It Vikings vulnerable. their 32-yard line with 10 Oregon across the board, they’ll make the holes for season. On Friday,however, was a constant struggle. As head coach Brian Ayers minutes to go in the game making the Ducks look us to run through.” “They never quit.” said, it was one of many Middleton opened the See JEROME, Sports 2 Wendell tailbacks Ty missed opportunities. See WENDELL, Sports 2 See BSU, Sports 5 Sports 2 Saturday, September 5, 2009 SPORTS Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Buhl beats up on Wolverines Twin Falls fades By John Derr recording a pair of sacks. Stilling, in his first season at Times-News writer “I guess I was just in the the helm, said his team in loss at Nampa right place at the right time,” needs to get more physical. HAILEY — Little went said Hamilton. “It was good “We started with 19 play- people in the stands don’t wrong for Buhl. Little went defensive game. Our goal ers and ended with 17.When Bulldogs use know that and they take it right for Wood River. every week is to get the goose you play against Buhl you out on the quarterback. The Indians scored at will egg.” know where you stand. We steady dose of “He threw to the spot and didn’t allow the The closest Wood River have lots of things we need where they were supposed Wolverine offense to get on Harris connected with J.D. came to a first down in the to get better at,” said run game to win to be and they just weren’t track as Buhl left Hailey with Leckenby for the final 30 first half was on the fake Stilling. there.” a 46-0 nonconference foot- yards and the first score of punt by Tyler Peters that The Wolverines continue The final three intercep- ball victory Friday night. the night. came up inches short. Peters with Class 3A competition season opener tions all came in the sec- Isaac McCreery led the A short punt put Buhl had to leave the game with a as they face Wendell and ond half, including one in Indian offensive attack with deep in the Wood River ter- concussion. Chauncey Gooding, the only team they By Phil Dailey the red zone. 192 yards on 16 carries while ritory, where it would also McGraw was also injured beat last year, in the next Idaho Press Tribune In total, both teams finding the end zone four start the next three drives. and didn’t play the second two weeks. combined for eight times. McCreery made it 12-0 at half. The Indians keep playing NAMPA — It was a stark turnovers — a sloppy game “It was a good game. We the end of the first quarter The Wolverines finally got up against 4A squads with contrast in styles at to say the least. had good blocking, got the with a 1-yard touchdown a big play in the third as Juan Burley and Canyon Ridge Bulldog Bowl as “That was momentum and wanted to run. Martinez hooked up with next on the schedule. Nampa and your normal take it to the house,” said A fumble led to another Kevin Jensen for a 37-yard Twin Falls tan- first of the year McCreery. “It was a good short McCreery run. He pass play, but they could not Buhl 46, Wood River 0 gled Friday game, luckily, Wood River 0 0 0 0 — 0 start, but we need to get bet- would stretch it out from turn it into points. A late Buhl 12 21 6 7 — 46 night in the our defense did- First Quarter ter.” there with runs of 15 and 68 drive also fell short. Buhl — JD Leckenby 30 pass from Scott Harris (kick season opener n’t have a let- failed) 6:31 After the Wolverines went yards to end the half. Blake Finney and Evan B — Isaac McCreery 1 run (pass failed) 0:48 for both teams. down,” Woold- three-and-out on their first The Wolverine offense Wray added touchdowns for Second Quarter Nampa went ridge said. B — McCreery 2 run (Armando Arroyo kick) 9:31 series, the Indians quickly wasn’t able to pick up a first the Indians in the second B — McCreery 15 run (Arroyo kick) 6:31 with its zone-option Nampa’s passing game B — McCreery 68 run (Arroyo kick) 3:01 marched down the field. down through the first two half as the reserves took the Third Quarter rushing game while Twin was nearly non-existent. B — Blake Finney 1 run (kick failed) 8:57 McCreery tallied 31 yards quarters. Buhl’s Matt field. Fourth Quarter Falls took to the air with its Wright was making only while quarterback Scott Hamilton did his part, Wood River coach Kevin B — Evan Wray 4 run (Arroyo kick) 10:53 new passing attack. his third career start as the In the end, the Bulldogs team’s QB and after the wore down the Bruins with game Wooldridge admit- 319 rushing yards and ted he still has a ways to go made key interceptions to with the passing game. win the game 28-14. Three of Wright’s first five Nampa’s Mo Bostrom passes were picked off. led the ground game with “Like I said, he’s a young 162 yards while quarter- quarterback,” Wooldridge Rodeo back Hayden Wright said of the junior. “He’s action at added 87. The duo com- had two varsity games the Magic bined for 37 of the team’s (prior to Friday).” 55 rushes. Abandoning the passing Valley “Mo ran the ball well,” game was a smart move, Stampede Nampa coach Scott according to Reynolds. PRCA rodeo Wooldridge said. “I’m “I thought our defense continues at pleased with our effort played their hearts out, 7:30 p.m. overall — our kids came they were just on the field today at the out, they worked hard.” too much the second half,” Twin Falls As for Twin Falls, it was he said. implementing a new The Bulldogs play at County offense, one that was Caldwell next week in the Fairgrounds. focused more on the pass- state’s oldest rivalry. ing of quarterback T.J. Caldwell beat Mountain Ellis. The junior threw for Home on Friday night. nearly 200 yards (193), but Twin Falls visits Skyline also had four interceptions on Thursday night. — the first of which was MEAGAN picked off by A.J. Mininni, Nampa 28, Twin Falls 14 THOMPSON/ Twin Falls 0 14 0 0 — 14 who scooted 29 yards to Nampa 0 14 14 0 — 28 Times-News Second Quarter the end zone to give Nampa — A.J. Mininni 29 interception return (Chase Wangen kick) Nampa an early 7-0 edge Twin Falls — Brady McNew 53 pass from TJ Ellis in the first quarter. (kick good) Nampa — Josh Seward 95 kickoff return (Wangen “A couple of intercep- kick good) Twin Falls — Brett Hardman 3 run (kick good) Wright brothers shine at Stampede tions were wrong routes,” Third Quarter Nampa — Ruban Martinez 2 run (Wangen kick) Twin Falls coach Allyn Nampa — Aaron Esparza 3 run (Wangen kick) Brown, Rock Hill, S.C. and Martin Lucero, Stephenville, By Diane Philbin for 80 points and Cody riding, scoring 81 points on Texas, 5.7; 3. Steve Young, Goshen, Utah and Zane Reynolds said, “and the Times-News writer Wright earned 75 on Eagle Boss. College of Southern Dansie, Herriman, Utah, 6.2; 4. Charly Crawford, Prineville, Ore. and Russell Cardoza, Farmington, Eye at the PRCA event. Idaho cowboy Zack Elliott Calif., 11.3. Saddle bronc: 1. Jesse Wright, Milford, Utah, 88 points FILER — All three Sherry Cervi of Marana, of Thatcher, Utah, rode on Wild Hope; 2. Justin Arnold, Santa Margarita, Calif., For the Best Wright brothers, Cody, Ariz., had the best time of 87; 3. Jesse James Kirby, Dodge City, Kan., 85; 4. Sam Hot Diggity for 63 points. Spreadborough, Snyder, Texas;, 84; 5. Rusty Allen, Alex and Jesse competed in 17.49 seconds in barrel rac- Rodeo action concludes Eagle Mountain, Utah, 82; 6. Alex Wright, Hagerman, PIZZA & PASTA Idaho, 80; 7. Cody Wright, Milford, Utah, 75: 8. Brock saddle bronc Friday night ing, while Megan McLeod today with a 7:30 p.m. Winn, Ferron, Utah, 70; 9. Kurtis Koeppen, Tendoy, in all the Magic Valley ~ at the Magic Valley from Star was second with Idaho, 66. Tie-down roping: 1. Dirk Olsen, Neola, Utah, 11.0 sec- Plus Sandwiches and Salad Bar Stampede and all made a 17.68. Magic Valley Stampede onds; 2. Justin Truman, Huntington, Utah, 19.0; 3. Cole Friday results Wilson, Lehi, Utah, 19.5. qualified 8-second rides. Timi Lickley of Jerome (Times/scores provided by PRCA secretary) Barrel racing: 1. Sherry Cervi, Marana, Ariz., 17.49 sec- Jesse Wright scored 88 had a run of 18.22 for the Bareback riding: 1. Jason Havens, Prineville, Ore., 84 onds; 2. Megan McLeod, Star, Idaho, 17.68; 3. Carolee points on Eagle Feathers. Rex, Woodruff, Utah, 17.70; 4. Julie Herman, Bluffdale, Buy 1 Medium points on Wild Hope for eighth-best time of the Steer wrestling: 1. Tom Lewis, Lehi, Utah, 4.6 seconds; Utah, 17.80; 5. Terri Wood Gates, West Jordan, Utah, Enjoy Our Party Room! 2. Trevor Carson, American Fork, Utah, 5.0; 3. Matt 17.91; 6. Raelyn Blair Robinson, Stockton, Utah, 17.98, PizzaP for $12 & the highest marked ride of night. Cupp, Marsing, Idaho, 14.2; 4. Tanner Stanger, 7. Toni Janssen, Rexburg, Idaho, 18.02; 8. Timi Lickley, 170 Blue Lakes Blvd. Murtaugh, Idaho, 14.7; 5. Bryan Hooley. Eagle Jerome, Idaho, 18.22; 9. Amy Dalton, Lehi, Utah, 18.29; the night at the Twin Falls Luke Haught of Mountain, Utah, 15.0; 6. Blaine Healy, Deweyville, 10. Jody Stark, South Weber, Utah, 18.30. getg a 2nd for $5 Twin Falls, ID County Fairgrounds. Alex Weatherford, Texas, had Utah, 16.2. Bull riding: 1. Luke Haught, Weatherford, Texas, 81 Team roping: 1. Travis Tryan, Billings, Mont., and points on Boss; 2. Michael Serr, Taylorsville, Utah, 71; 733-3963 Wright rode Blazing Saddle the highest mark in bull Jimmie Cooper, Monument, N.M., 5.4 seconds; 2. Luke 3. Zack Elliott, Thatcher, Utah, 63. Golden Valley Warehouses, Inc. Burley Commercial & Custom Processors Continued from Sports 1 tions, plus a Burley fumble that a Great Basin) is at Jerome and Burley started at Burley’s own 2-yard line Riverhawk pounced on but couldn’t (1-1, 1-0) hosts Buhl next week. of Seed and Beans Myers completed five of his first hold on to, would have made a dif- eight passes, but struggled later, ference. Burley 28, Canyon Ridge 14 Burley 14 7 0 7 – 28 To All Mini-Cassia Athletes finishing 9 of 30 for 190 yards. “We’ve got some growing pains,” Canyon Ridge 14 0 0 0 – 14 First quarter The Riverhawks only gained 40 said Riverhawks head coach Bill Canyon Ridge – Derek Bastion 25 pass from Tyler Myers (Chase Joslin Best of Luck on a Winning Season! kick) 11:45 yards rushing, but for their first Hicks. “We had some great individ- Burley – Branson Handy 2 run (Alex Greener kick) 10:23 outing, they had several impressive ual effort, but we weren’t consis- B – Handy 19 run (Greener kick) 7:43 CR – Joslin 74 pass from Myers (Joslin kick) 5:13 1000 S 468 W • Burley • 678-7324 moments, and could have just as tent in anything we did. We’re a Second quarter B – Bo Hawker 16 pass from Jake Mills (Greener kick) 0:55 easily come away victorious. But young team and we’ll be OK.” Fourth quarter two dropped would-be intercep- Canyon Ridge (0-1 overall, 0-1 B – Handy 2 run (Greener kick) 8:58 BUTTE IRRIGATION Jerome Wendell Continued from Sports 1 week. Jerome, meanwhile, Continued from Sports 1 on him, he bobbled the Your Local it seemed to unsettle the will try to regroup for next and drove down the field ball around. Receiver vaunted passing attack, with week’s Great Basin in five plays, highlighted Cayden Williams came players never really seeming Conference opener, when by Derek Gerratt’s 40- down with it. to be on the same wave- the Tigers host debutant yard reception. He fin- “I saw it pop up, and I Dealer length. Canyon Ridge. ished with 110 yards on just snagged it out of the “We couldn’t really get in “It starts (today),” Hillier seven catches. Reed com- air,”Williams said. a rhythm in the passing said. pleted 7 of 10 for 97 “It’s a lucky grab, but it 116 S. 600 W., Paul • 438-8103 game, and I think they did “This is something we can yards. was a game-changing play off each other,” Hillier learn from, but we don’t Wendell chewed up the play right there.” said, referring to the run intend to lose a conference final three minutes of the Wendell (1-0) will host game. “We’re used to pass- game. We don’t intend to fourth to head 64 yards Wood River on Friday for EATON DRILLING ing 50 times a game, so we’re lose again, period.” downfield. A pass inter- homecoming, while not used to that kind of ference call on Valley on a Valley (0-1) travels to & PUMP SERVICE rhythm. But we started slug- Middleton 27, Jerome 20 Trojan fourth down kept Gooding. Jerome 0 14 0 6 – 20 Serving The Magic Valley Since 1907 gish in both halves. We Middleton 0 9 12 6 – 27 the final drive alive. Second quarter couldn’t get it going because Middleton – Dean Coombs 14 run (run failed) 11:52 Quarterback Cody Wendell 14, Valley 12, OT Jerome – Ross Hiller 36 run (Caleb Zuniga kick) 6:58 Wendell 0 0 0 6 8 – 14 Don’t get stuck we didn’t bring the intensity J – Gus Callen 20 pass from Cameron Stauffer (Zuniga Wilhelm, after throwing Valley 0 0 0 6 6 – 12 we needed.” kick) 3:17 four straight incomplete Fourth quarter M – Jared Hicks 22 FG 0:06 Valley – Brogen Reed 4 run (Reed kick failed) Middleton will look to Third quarter passes, tried to connect 7:02 without water M – Weston Volpei 48 run (pass failed) 6:37 Wendell – Cayden Williams 5 pass from Cody 485 South Idaho – Wendell claim another top scalp in M – Coombs 14 run (pass failed) 0:11 with John Campbell in Wilhelm (Ryan Lewis kick failed) 0:49 Fourth quarter Overtime the Class 4A ranks when it J – Billy Wight 59 pass from Stauffer (kick failed) 8:48 the right side of the end Valley – Reed 10 run (Reed run failed) 536-2223 travels to Sandpoint next M – Bobby Skinner 2 run (kick failed) 2:02 zone, but with defenders Wendell – Ryan Slade 5 run (Slade run) Heating • Air Conditioning • Commercial Refrigeration STANDARD PRINTING 140 2nd Ave. North • Twin Falls • 733.1449 • [email protected] We Can Do It All For You We Support Our Local Sports Teams! Business Cards Scale Tickets Graphics Kris Peterson We Do It Right the 1st Time Co-Owner, GRI, CRS Letterhead Brochures Screen Printing Business dvantage 1 Envelopes Labels Direct Mailings (208) 677-Home (4663) A Cell (208) 431-1458 Realty Forms Color Copies Variable Data 208.655.4122 Fax (208) 677-4929 Mon-Fri 8am - 5pm Newsletters Stamps Bulk Mailings 633 East Main Street • Burley, ID 83318 -SOLUTIONS- Callen Commercial Refrigeration Website: kris-peterson.com. Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Saturday, September 5, 2009 Sports 3 SCOREBOARD

J.Wright L,1-5 H,10 11-3 1 2 2 3 1 Philadelphia 1 3 0 .250 100 120 Janice Moodie 71-65—136 -6 BASEBALL Bale 0 0 0 0 0 0 Washington 1 3 0 .250 58 87 Yani Tseng 69-67—136 -6 R.Colon BS,3-3 12-3 1 0 0 2 0 SOUTH W L T Pct PF PA Jiyai Shin 72-65—137 -5 American League WP—Tejeda. GGAAMMEE PPLLAANN Sophie Gustafson 69-68—137 -5 All Times MDT Umpires—Home, Tom Hallion; First, Phil Cuzzi; Second, Brian New Orleans 3 1 0 .750 107 38 In-Kyung Kim 69-68—137 -5 EAST W L Pct GB O’Nora; Third, Jerry Crawford. Atlanta 2 2 0 .500 76 84 Karrie Webb 69-68—137 -5 T—3:13. A—17,447 (38,177). Tampa Bay 1 3 0 .250 70 87 Anna Rawson 64-73—137 -5 New York 86 49 .637 — FSN — San Jose St. at Southern Cal Carolina 0 4 0 .000 57 89 Boston 78 56 .582 7½ LOCAL Kristy Mcpherson 71-67—138 -4 INDIANS 5, TWINS 2 NBC — Nevada at Notre Dame NORTH W L T Pct PF PA Ai Miyazato 69-69—138 -4 Tampa Bay 72 62 .537 13½ COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL Chella Choi 68-71—139 -3 Toronto 60 74 .448 25½ Minnesota Cleveland 5 p.m. Minnesota 3 1 0 .750 78 61 Stacy Prammanasudh 68-71—139 -3 Baltimore 54 81 .400 32 ab r h bi ab r h bi CSI at Yavapai Invitational, Prescott, ESPN — BYU vs. Oklahoma, at Chicago 3 1 0 .750 90 70 Anna Nordqvist 68-71—139 -3 CENTRAL W L Pct GB Span lf 4 0 0 0 Brantly cf 5 1 2 1 Ariz. Detroit 3 1 0 .750 72 76 Katie Futcher 68-71—139 -3 OCarer ss 4 1 2 0 JCarrll lf 5 0 3 0 Arlington, Texas Green Bay 3 1 0 .750 105 85 Momoko Ueda 67-72—139 -3 Detroit 73 61 .545 — Mauer c 4 0 1 0 Crowe lf 0 0 0 0 HIGH SCHOOL BOYS SOCCER Minnesota 67 67 .500 6 6 p.m. WEST W L T Pct PF PA Hye Jung Choi 72-68—140 -2 Mornea 1b 3 0 0 1 ACarer ss 4 2 0 0 11 a.m. Sandra Gal 71-69—140 -2 Chicago 67 69 .493 7 Kubel dh 3 1 1 0 JhPerlt 3b 4 1 2 2 KTID — Idaho at New Mexico State Seattle 4 0 0 1.000 92 58 Cleveland 59 75 .440 14 Amy Yang 70-70—140 -2 Cuddyr rf 4 0 0 0 Hafner dh 2 0 1 1 Preston at Burley ABC — Alabama vs. Virginia Tech, at San Francisco 3 0 0 1.000 58 49 Paula Creamer 69-71—140 -2 Kansas City 51 83 .381 22 BHarrs 3b 3 0 1 1 LaPort rf 3 0 0 0 St. Louis 3 1 0 .750 77 70 Hee Young Park 68-72—140 -2 WEST W L Pct GB Gomez cf 3 0 1 0 Valuen 2b 4 1 1 0 Wood River at Highland Atlanta Arizona 0 4 0 .000 53 100 Thursday’s Games Stacy Lewis 68-72—140 -2 Los Angeles 79 54 .594 — ACasill 2b 3 0 0 0 AMarte 1b 4 0 0 0 11:30 a.m. 8 p.m. Joo Mi Kim 67-73—140 -2 Shppch c 4 0 0 0 Detroit 17, Buffalo 6 Il Mi Chung 67-73—140 -2 Texas 76 58 .567 3½ Totals 31 2 6 2 Totals 35 5 9 4 Middleton at Jerome ESPN2 — Maryland at California N.Y. Jets 38, Philadelphia 27 Seattle 71 64 .526 9 HIGH SCHOOL CROSS COUNTRY Baltimore 20, Atlanta 3 Oakland 59 75 .440 20½ Minnesota 000 011 000 — 2 8:30 p.m. Cleveland 003 001 10x — 5 Jerome at Soda Springs Invitational Cincinnati 38, Indianapolis 7 Champions Tour Walmart Thursday’s Games E—O.Cabrera (20), Morneau (3), B.Harris 2 (10). DP— ESPN — LSU at Washington New England 38, N.Y. Giants 27 Detroit 4, Cleveland 3, 10 innings HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS SOCCER Jacksonville 24, Washington 17 First Tee Open Chicago White Sox 5, Chicago Cubs 0 Cleveland 1. LOB—Minnesota 4, Cleveland 9. 2B—Kubel (26), GOLF J.Carroll (8), Jh.Peralta (30). SB—J.Carroll (2). SF—Morneau. 10 a.m. Chicago 26, Cleveland 23 Friday N.Y. Yankees 10, Toronto 5 IP H R ER BB SO 6 a.m. Tennessee 27, Green Bay 13 Pebble Beach Golf Links, Par 72 (36-36), 6,837 Yards Boston 6, Tampa Bay 3 Middleton at Jerome St. Louis 17, Kansas City 9 Del Monte Golf Course, Par 72 (36-36), 7,192 Yards Seattle 7, Oakland 4 Minnesota TGC — European PGA Tour, Pavano L,11-11 6 8 4 3 2 6 11 a.m. Miami 10, New Orleans 7 Pebble Beach, Calif. Friday’s Games Mahay 1-3 1 1 0 0 0 European Masters, third round, at Pittsburgh 21, Carolina 10 Purse: $2.1 Million Cleveland 5, Minnesota 2 Highland at Wood River Denver 19, Arizona 0 First Round Texas 5, Baltimore 1 Crain 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 Crans-sur-Sierre, Switzerland Keppel 1 0 0 0 0 0 HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL Seattle 31, Oakland 21 Jeff Sluman 33-32—65 -7 Toronto 6, N.Y. Yankees 0 Cleveland 1 p.m. Friday’s Games Olin Browne 33-33—66 -6 Detroit 4, Tampa Bay 3 Sowers W,6-9 6 6 2 2 0 1 Canyon Ridge, Filer, Twin Falls, Wood Houston 27, Tampa Bay 20 Loren Roberts 35-31—66 -6 L.A. Angels 2, Kansas City 1 TGC — PGA Tour, Deutsche Bank Dallas 35, Minnesota 31 Tom Kite 32-35—67 -5 Chicago White Sox 12, Boston 2 Veras H,5 1 0 0 0 0 1 River at Peg Peterson Invitational, Sipp H,8 1 0 0 0 0 2 Championship, second round San Francisco at San Diego, late Mark O’Meara 32-35—67 -5 Seattle at Oakland, late K.Wood S,18-23 1 0 0 0 0 0 Pocatello End of Preseason Scott Simpson 34-34—68 -4 Saturday’s Games HBP—by Sowers (Kubel). 4:30 p.m. Mark Mcnulty 30-38—68 -4 N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 12-6) at Toronto (Cecil 6-3), 11:07 a.m. Umpires—Home, Larry Vanover; First, Rick Reed; Second, Nick Price 33-35—68 -4 Boston (Wakefield 11-3) at Chicago White Sox (G.Floyd 10-9), TGC — Champions Tour, First Tee Friday’s College Scores David Eger 34-34—68 -4 2:10 p.m. Sam Holbrook; Third, Dan Iassogna. EAST T—2:43. A—24,402 (45,199). TV SCHEDULE Open, second round Bentley 43, Curry 17 John Cook 34-34—68 -4 Minnesota (S.Baker 12-7) at Cleveland (Masterson 4-6), Gene Jones 33-35—68 -4 2:10 p.m. 9:30 p.m. Delware 35, West Chester 0 AUTO RACING Westfield St. 33, Nichols 13 Andy North 35-34—69 -3 Texas (Millwood 10-8) at Baltimore (Matusz 3-2), 2:10 p.m. BLUE JAYS 6, YANKEES 0 TGC — LPGA, Canadian Women’s Gary Hallberg 34-35—69 -3 Detroit (Galarraga 6-10) at Tampa Bay (J.Shields 9-10), 12:30 p.m. SOUTH New York Toronto Tulsa 37, Tulane 13 Fred Funk 36-33—69 -3 5:08 p.m. ab r h bi ab r h bi SPEED — NASCAR, Nationwide Open, third round Greg Norman 34-35—69 -3 L.A. Angels (Lackey 9-7) at Kansas City (Greinke 13-8), Damon lf 4 0 0 0 Scutaro ss 3 0 1 1 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Bob Gilder 34-35—69 -3 5:10 p.m. Hinske rf 3 0 0 0 A.Hill 2b 5 1 2 2 Series, pole qualifying for Degree Today’s College Schedule Michael Allen 33-36—69 -3 Seattle (French 4-4) at Oakland (Bre.Anderson 7-10), Teixeir 1b 3 0 0 0 Lind dh 4 1 3 1 V12 300 2 p.m. EAST Mike Reid 34-35—69 -3 7:05 p.m. ARdrgz 3b 4 0 0 0 Millar 1b 5 0 0 0 FOX — Regional coverage, Boston at Akron at Penn St., Noon Tom Watson 33-37—70 -2 HMatsu dh 3 0 0 0 V.Wells cf 4 1 1 0 2:30 p.m. Minnesota at Syracuse, Noon Chip Beck 35-35—70 -2 National League Posada c 2 0 0 0 Barajs c 4 1 1 0 SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole Chicago White Sox, Minnesota at Liberty at West Virginia, Noon Keith Fergus 34-36—70 -2 Cervelli c 0 0 0 0 Snider rf 3 0 0 0 Youngstown St. at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. Brad Bryant 34-36—70 -2 All Times MDT qualifying for Pep Boys Auto 500 Cleveland, or San Francisco at EAST W L Pct GB Cano 2b 3 0 0 0 Inglett lf 3 1 2 1 Fordham at Rhode Island, 1 p.m. Mark Wiebe 32-38—70 -2 MeCarr cf 3 0 0 0 JMcDnl 3b 3 1 0 0 5 p.m. Milwaukee Northeastern at Boston College, 2 p.m. Keith Clearwater 36-34—70 -2 Philadelphia 77 55 .583 — R.Pena ss 3 0 1 0 7:05 p.m. SOUTH Allen Doyle 36-35—71 -1 Florida 71 64 .526 7½ Totals 28 0 1 0 Totals 34 610 5 ESPN2 — NASCAR, Nationwide Appalachian St. at East Carolina, Noon Mike Goodes 36-35—71 -1 Atlanta 70 65 .519 8½ New York 000 000 000 — 0 Series, Degree V12 300 FSN — Seattle at Oakland W. Kentucky at Tennessee, Noon Tim Simpson 34-37—71 -1 New York 61 74 .452 17½ Toronto 201 010 20x — 6 MOTORSPORTS Jacksonville St. at Georgia Tech, 1 p.m. Tom Lehman 35-36—71 -1 Washington 46 89 .341 32½ E—R.Pena (4). DP—New York 1. LOB—New York 4, Toronto 13. 8 p.m. Jackson St. at Mississippi St., 3:30 p.m. Jim Chancey 37-34—71 -1 CENTRAL W L Pct GB 2B—R.Pena (6), A.Hill 2 (28), Lind (45), Inglett (3). SPEED — NASCAR, Truck Series, 5:30 p.m. Baylor at Wake Forest, 3:30 p.m. Sandy Lyle 38-33—71 -1 IP H R ER BB SO Rice at UAB, 4 p.m. John Harris 35-36—71 -1 St. Louis 80 56 .588 — New York Lucas Oil 200 SPEED — AMA Pro Racing, at S. Illinois at Marshall, 4:30 p.m. Bruce Fleisher 37-34—71 -1 Chicago 67 66 .504 11½ Chamberlain L,8-5 3 6 3 2 2 2 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Millville, N.J. (same-day tape) Middle Tennessee at Clemson, 6 p.m. R.W. Eaks 36-35—71 -1 Milwaukee 65 69 .485 14 Melancon 2 2 1 1 1 0 Delaware St. at Florida A&M, 6 p.m. Jerry Pate 32-39—71 -1 Houston 64 70 .478 15 Albaladejo 1 1 0 0 0 0 10 a.m. SOCCER The Citadel at North Carolina, 6 p.m. Cincinnati 61 73 .455 18 Dunn 2-3 0 2 2 3 0 ESPN — Navy at Ohio St. 6 p.m. William & Mary at Virginia, 6 p.m. Pittsburgh 53 80 .398 25½ E.Ramirez 11-3 1 0 0 1 2 Louisiana Tech at Auburn, 7 p.m. WEST W L Pct GB Toronto ESPN2 — Minnesota at Syracuse ESPN CLASSIC — Men’s national Richmond at Duke, 7 p.m. TENNIS Halladay W,14-8 9 1 0 0 3 9 1:30 p.m. teams, World Cup qualifier, El Charleston Southern at Florida, 7 p.m. Los Angeles 80 55 .593 — HBP—by Chamberlain (V.Wells), by Melancon (Jo.McDonald). Wofford at South Florida, 7 p.m. U.S. Open Colorado 74 60 .552 5½ Umpires—Home, Jeff Nelson; First, Tim Tschida; Second, Bob ABC —Georgia at Oklahoma St. Salvador vs. U.S., at Salt Lake City Alcorn St. at Southern Miss., 7 p.m. Friday San Francisco 74 61 .548 6 Davidson; Third, Scott Barry. ESPN — Missouri vs. Illinois, at St. TENNIS Indiana St. at Louisville, 7:30 p.m. At The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center Arizona 61 74 .452 19 T—2:37. A—22,179 (49,539). Samford at UCF, 7:30 p.m. New York San Diego 59 76 .437 21 Louis 9 a.m. W. Carolina at Vanderbilt, 7:30 p.m. Purse: $21.6 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Thursday’s Games RANGERS 5, ORIOLES 1 ESPN2 —W. Michigan at Michigan CBS — U.S. Open, third round Alabama vs. Virginia Tech at Atlanta, 8 p.m. Milwaukee 4, St. Louis 3 MIDWEST Singles Chicago White Sox 5, Chicago Cubs 0 Texas Baltimore Kentucky vs. Miami (Ohio) at Cincinnati, Noon Men N.Y. Mets 8, Colorado 3 ab r h bi ab r h bi Montana St. at Michigan St., Noon Second Round Philadelphia 2, San Francisco 1 Borbon dh 5 0 0 0 Pie cf 3 0 0 0 Cincinnati 7, Atlanta 7. 2B—B.Phillips (25), Balentien (5). 3B— Howry 11-3 1 0 0 1 1 Towson at Northwestern, Noon Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (7), France, def. Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, Florida 8, Atlanta 3 Andrus ss 3 1 2 0 Reimld lf 4 0 1 0 Balentien (1). HR—Gomes (17), McLouth (16). SB—B.Phillips Runzler 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Navy at Ohio St., Noon 7-5, 6-3, 6-4. L.A. Dodgers 4, Arizona 2 Kinsler 2b 3 0 0 0 BRorts 2b 3 0 1 1 (23). S—C.Miller. Medders W,4-1 12-3 1 0 0 1 1 Toledo at Purdue, Noon Julien Benneteau, France, def. Viktor Troicki (30), Serbia, 6-1, Friday’s Games M.Byrd cf 4 0 2 1 Markks rf 4 0 0 0 IP H R ER BB SO Affeldt H,28 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 N. Iowa at Iowa, 12:05 p.m. 3-6, 6-1, 6-0. Florida 9, Washington 6 DvMrp lf 4 1 0 0 Scott dh 4 0 0 0 Cincinnati Br.Wilson S,33-39 1 1 0 0 0 0 W. Michigan at Michigan, 3:30 p.m. Marin Cilic (16), Croatia, def. Jesse Levine, U.S., 4-6, 2-6, 6-0, St. Louis 14, Pittsburgh 7 N.Cruz rf 3 2 1 1 Wieters c 4 0 1 0 Arroyo W,12-12 7 6 1 1 3 4 Milwaukee Nevada at Notre Dame, 3:30 p.m. 6-3, 6-0. N.Y. Mets 6, Chicago Cubs 2 IRdrgz c 4 1 1 1 Mora 3b 3 0 1 0 Rhodes H,22 1 0 0 0 0 0 Suppan 52-3 2 2 0 4 3 Missouri vs. Illinois at St. Louis, 3:40 p.m. Juan Carlos Ferrero (24), Spain, def. Philipp Petzschner, Cincinnati 3, Atlanta 1 C.Davis 1b 4 0 1 2 Aubrey 1b 3 0 0 0 Cordero S,31-33 1 0 0 0 1 0 DiFelice 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Grand View at Drake, 7 p.m. Germany, 1-6, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2, 6-4. Houston 7, Philadelphia 0 Vizquel 3b 3 0 1 0 CIzturs ss 1 1 0 0 Atlanta Coffey L,4-4 2 1 1 1 0 0 Army at E. Michigan, 7 p.m. Juan Martin del Potro (6), Argentina, def. Jurgen Melzer, San Francisco 3, Milwaukee 2 Wggntn ph 1 0 0 0 D.Lowe L,13-9 7 7 3 3 2 5 Villanueva 1 1 0 0 0 1 N. Colorado at Kansas, 7 p.m. Austria, 7-6 (6), 6-3, 6-3. Arizona at Colorado, late Andino ss 0 0 0 0 Moylan 1 1 0 0 1 1 HBP—by Suppan (Rowand). WP—Suppan. Florida Atlantic at Nebraska, 7 p.m. Tomas Berdych (17), Czech Republic, def. Horacio Zeballos, San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, late Totals 33 5 8 5 Totals 30 1 4 1 Kawakami 1 0 0 0 0 1 Umpires—Home, Mike DiMuro; First, Dale Scott; Second, Rob Connecticut at Ohio, 7 p.m. Argentina, 6-3, 6-7 (3), 7-6 (2), 6-2. Saturday’s Games Texas 100 301 000 — 5 PB—C.Miller. Drake; Third, Jerry Meals. N. Illinois at Wisconsin, 7 p.m. Gilles Simon (9), France, def. Thomaz Bellucci, Brazil, 6-3, 6-2, Chicago Cubs (Harden 8-8) at N.Y. Mets (Figueroa 2-3), Baltimore 000 001 000 — 1 Umpires—Home, Brian Gorman; First, Chris Guccione; T—3:27. A—37,511 (41,900). Massachusetts at Kansas St., 7:10 p.m. 6-4. 11:10 a.m. E—C.Davis (3). DP—Texas 1, Baltimore 1. LOB—Texas 5, Second, Jerry Layne; Third, Tony Randazzo. SOUTHWEST Daniel Koellerer, Austria, def. Pablo Cuevas, Uruguay, 3-6, 6- San Francisco (Cain 12-4) at Milwaukee (Gallardo 12-10), Baltimore 5. 2B—C.Davis (11). HR—N.Cruz (31). SB—Borbon T—2:25. A—24,219 (49,743). CARDINALS 14, PIRATES 7 Georgia at Oklahoma St., 3:30 p.m. 2, 6-1, 6-4. 2:10 p.m. (12). CS—M.Byrd (3), B.Roberts (7). Ark.-Monticello at Ark.-Pine Bluff, 5 p.m. Andy Murray (2), Britain, def. Paul Capdeville, Chile, 6-2, 3-6, Florida (Jo.Johnson 13-4) at Washington (Li.Hernandez 7-9), IP H R ER BB SO MARLINS 9, NATIONALS 6 St. Louis Pittsburgh Northwestern St. at Houston, 5 p.m. 6-0, 6-2. 5:05 p.m. Texas ab r h bi ab r h bi Missouri St. vs. Arkansas at Little Rock, Ark., 7 p.m. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, def. Nicolas Lapentti, Ecuador, 2-6, Philadelphia (Blanton 9-6) at Houston (Oswalt 8-5), 5:05 p.m. Feldman W,15-4 62-3 4 1 1 2 2 Florida Washington Schmkr 2b-lf 4 2 1 0 AMcCt cf 4 1 1 0 BYU vs. Oklahoma at Arlington, Texas, 7 p.m. 6-4, 4-6, 7-5, 7-6 (4). St. Louis (M.Boggs 2-2) at Pittsburgh (Ohlendorf 11-9), 5:05 N.Feliz S,2-2 21-3 0 0 0 0 2 ab r h bi ab r h bi Rasms cf 6 2 1 0 DlwYn 2b 4 1 0 0 Louisiana-Monroe at Texas, 7 p.m. Nicolas Almagro (32), Spain, def. Robby Ginepri, U.S., 6-7 (7), p.m. Baltimore Coghln lf 4 2 2 0 Maxwll cf 4 0 1 0 Pujols 1b 4 3 2 3 GJones 1b 5 1 2 1 New Mexico at Texas A&M, 7 p.m. 6-2, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4. Cincinnati (K.Wells 0-3) at Atlanta (Jurrjens 10-9), 5:10 p.m. Tillman L,1-3 6 7 5 5 3 4 NJhnsn 1b 5 1 2 1 Orr ph-2b 1 0 0 0 Lugo ph-2b 1 0 0 0 Milledg lf 3 1 2 1 North Dakota at Texas Tech, 7 p.m. Gael Monfils (13), France, def. Andreas Beck, Germany, 6-3, 7- Arizona (D.Davis 7-11) at Colorado (Contreras 0-0), 6:10 p.m. A.Castillo 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Lndstr p 0 0 0 0 CGzmn ss 5 0 0 0 Hollidy lf 5 2 2 1 Doumit c 5 1 3 0 MVSU at Arkansas St., 7:05 p.m. 5, 6-3. San Diego (Latos 4-4) at L.A. Dodgers (Wolf 9-6), 8:10 p.m. Meredith 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 Pinto p 0 0 0 0 MacDgl p 0 0 0 0 Glaus ph-1b 1 0 0 0 AnLRc 3b 4 1 2 2 Stephen F.Austin at SMU, 8 p.m. Fernando Gonzalez (11), Chile, def. Josselin Ouanna, France, Albers 2 0 0 0 0 2 LNunez p 0 0 0 0 Zmrmn 3b 4 1 2 1 Ludwck rf 5 3 5 5 Moss rf 5 1 1 2 Buffalo at UTEP, 9 p.m. 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-4. AL Boxes HBP—by Feldman (B.Roberts). HRmrz ss 3 2 2 2 Dunn 1b 4 2 3 1 DeRosa 3b 5 2 3 1 Cedeno ss 3 0 1 0 FAR WEST Jose Acasuso, Argentina, def. David Ferrer (18), Spain, 6-3, 3- Umpires—Home, Paul Schrieber; First, Paul Nauert; Second, Cantu 3b-1b 4 2 2 2 Wlngh lf 5 1 2 2 YMolin c 2 0 1 0 K.Hart p 3 0 0 0 Nicholls St. at Air Force, 2 p.m. 6, 1-6, 6-3, 6-2. WHITE SOX 12, RED SOX 2 Joe West; Third, Ed Rapuano. JoBakr c 5 1 3 4 Dukes rf 3 1 2 0 BrRyan ss 5 0 1 2 DBatst p 0 0 0 0 Portland St. at Oregon St., 2:30 p.m. Taylor Dent, U.S., def. Ivan Navarro, Spain, 6-4, 5-7, 6-7 (1), 7- Boston Chicago T—2:47. A—15,557 (48,290). Uggla 2b 3 0 1 0 J.Bard c 5 0 0 0 Wnwrg p 2 0 0 0 Hanrhn p 0 0 0 0 Western St.,Colo. at Montana, 3 p.m. 5, 7-6 (9). ab r h bi ab r h bi C.Ross rf 5 0 0 0 AlGnzlz 2b-ss 5 1 2 2 Thurstn ph 1 0 0 0 Dumtrt p 0 0 0 0 Weber St. at Wyoming, 3 p.m. Women Ellsury cf 3 0 0 0 Pdsdnk lf 6 0 1 2 Thursday’s AL Late Box Maybin cf 5 1 1 0 Mock p 1 0 0 0 DReyes p 0 0 0 0 SJcksn p 0 0 0 0 W. Oregon at E. Washington, 3:05 p.m. Third Round BrAndr cf 1 0 0 0 Bckhm 3b 4 1 1 0 West p 1 0 0 0 SRiver p 1 0 0 0 KGreen ph 0 0 0 0 RVazqz ph 1 0 1 0 San Jose St. at Southern Cal, 3:30 p.m. Flavia Pennetta (10), Italy, def. Aleksandra Wozniak, Canada, Pedroia 2b 2 1 1 0 J.Nix 3b 2 0 0 0 MARINERS 7, ATHLETICS 4 Hayes ph 1 0 0 0 Brgmn p 0 0 0 0 McCllln p 0 0 0 0 Btchck p 0 0 0 0 San Diego St. at UCLA, 7:30 p.m. 6-1, 6-1. Badnhp p 1 0 0 0 Morse ph 1 0 0 0 Ankiel ph 1 0 1 1 Idaho at New Mexico St., 8 p.m. Daniela Hantuchova (22), Slovakia, def. Vania King, U.S., 6-2, NGreen 3b 2 0 1 0 Przyns c 4 2 3 1 Seattle Oakland AnGnzl ph 1 0 0 0 Sosa p 0 0 0 0 Motte p 000 0 6-2. VMrtnz 1b 1 0 1 0 Flowrs c 1 0 0 0 ab r h bi ab r h bi Stanford at Washington St., 8 p.m. Ktchm 1b 2 0 0 0 Konerk 1b 3 3 2 0 Calero p 0 0 0 0 Clipprd p 0 0 0 0 Wllmyr p 0 0 0 0 San Diego at Azusa Pacific, 9:30 p.m. Serena Williams (2), U.S., def. Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez, ISuzuki rf 4 1 1 0 Kenndy 3b 5 1 2 0 Helms 3b 1 0 0 0 WHarrs ph-cf 1 0 1 0 Totals 42 14 17 13 Totals 37 7 13 6 Cent. Michigan at Arizona, 10 p.m. Spain, 6-3, 7-5. Youkils 3b 2 0 1 1 Wise rf 1 0 1 0 FGtrrz cf 4 1 1 3 RDavis cf 4 1 2 0 Totals 39 9 13 9 Totals 40 6 13 6 Wdwrd 2b 2 0 0 0 Kotsay rf-1b 4 3 3 3 St. Louis 202 013 240 — 14 Idaho St. at Arizona St., 10 p.m. Francesca Schiavone (26), Italy, def. Victoria Azarenka (8), JoLopz 2b 5 0 0 0 RSwny rf 5 1 1 0 Florida 312 012 000 — 9 Pittsburgh 000 060 100 — 7 Maryland at California, 10 p.m. Belarus, 4-6, 6-2, 6-2. D.Ortiz dh 3 0 1 0 Quentin dh 3 0 1 1 GrffyJr dh 4 0 0 0 Cust dh 4 0 0 0 Washington 023 000 010 — 6 E—Schumaker 2 (10), Doumit (2). DP—St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1. Vera Zvonareva (7), Russia, def. Elena Vesnina (31), Russia, 6- Baldelli ph 1 0 0 0 Fields ph-dh 1 0 0 0 Beltre 3b 4 1 1 0 KSuzuk c 5 0 2 2 UC Davis at Fresno St., 10 p.m. Bay lf 2 0 0 0 Getz 2b 5 2 4 2 E—N.Johnson (11). DP—Florida 1. LOB—Florida 9, Washington LOB—St. Louis 8, Pittsburgh 9. 2B—Schumaker (32), Ludwick 2 Sacramento St. at UNLV, 10 p.m. 2, 6-4. Hall lf 4 2 2 2 M.Ellis 2b 4 0 0 0 11. 2B—Ha.Ramirez (38). 3B—Maybin (2), Zimmerman (3), (18), DeRosa (5), Milledge (7). 3B—Moss (3). HR—Pujols (43), LSU at Washington, 10:30 p.m. Li Na (18), China, def. Maria Kirilenko, Russia, 6-4, 6-2. Gthrght lf 2 1 1 0 AlRmrz ss 3 1 2 3 Carp 1b 4 0 2 0 EPtrsn lf 3 0 0 0 Alb.Gonzalez (3). HR—Cantu (14), Jo.Baker (9), Willingham Holliday (11), Ludwick 2 (20). SB—Y.Molina (8). CS— Kim Clijsters, Belgium, def. Kirsten Flipkens, Belgium, 6-0, 6- J.Drew rf 2 0 1 0 Lillirdg ss 2 0 0 0 Hannhn pr-1b0 1 0 0 DBartn 1b 4 1 2 1 (22). SF—Ha.Ramirez. A.McCutchen (4). S—Y.Molina. SF—Milledge. 2. Reddck rf 1 0 0 0 Rios cf 5 0 2 0 Johjim c 3 1 2 2 Pnngtn ss 3 0 0 0 IP H R ER BB SO IP H R ER BB SO GOLF Venus Williams (3), U.S., def. Magdalena Rybarikova, Varitek c 2 0 0 0 JaWlsn ss 3 0 1 0 Florida St. Louis Slovakia, 6-2, 7-5. Kottars c 2 0 1 1 Totals 35 7 10 7 Totals 37 4 9 3 West 3 7 5 5 1 4 Wainwright W,17-7 5 9 6 6 2 5 PGA Tour Deutsche Bank AlGnzlz ss 4 0 1 0 Seattle 400 200 001 — 7 Badenhop W,6-4 3 1 0 0 1 2 D.Reyes H,17 1 0 0 0 1 2 Totals 34 2 9 2 Totals 44 1220 12 Oakland 210 000 010 — 4 Calero 1 1 0 0 2 3 McClellan 1 3 1 1 0 0 Championship TRANSACTIONS Boston 000 100 001 — 2 E—Ja.Wilson (2), Jo.Lopez (15). DP—Seattle 1. LOB—Seattle 5, Lindstrom 2-3 3 1 1 0 0 Friday Chicago 025 500 00x — 12 Motte 1 10 00 1 BASEBALL Oakland 10. 2B—Beltre (22), Carp (1). HR—F.Gutierrez (15), Hall Pinto H,11 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Wellemeyer 1 0 0 0 2 1 At Tpc Boston American League E—N.Green (16), J.Nix (13). DP—Chicago 1. LOB—Boston 7, (1), Johjima (7), D.Barton (2). SB—K.Suzuki (6), Pennington L.Nunez S,18-23 1 1 0 0 0 1 Pittsburgh Norton, Mass. Chicago 11. 2B—Kottaras (11), Pierzynski (21), Konerko (25), (5). S—F.Gutierrez, Ja.Wilson. Washington Purse: $7.5 Million MINNESOTA TWINS—Recalled INF Matt Tolbert from Getz (18). 3B—Beckham (1). HR—Kotsay (2). SB—Getz (20). K.Hart L,4-5 52-3 9 7 5 3 3 Rochester (IL). IP H R ER BB SO Mock L,3-7 3 7 6 6 1 3 D.Bautista BS,1-1 2-3 3 3 3 0 0 Yardage: 7,202 - Par: 71 (36-35) NEW YORK YANKEES—Recalled RHP Jonathan Albaladejo SF—Quentin. Seattle S.Rivera 22-3 6 3 3 1 1 First Round IP H R ER BB SO Hanrahan 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 from Scranton-Wilkes Barre (IL). Snell W,4-1 5 7 3 2 4 4 Bergmann 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Dumatrait 1-3 3 4 4 2 1 Steve Stricker 32-31—63 -8 OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Recalled RHP Clayton Mortensen Boston Jakubauskas H,3 2 1 0 0 0 3 Sosa 12-3 0 0 0 2 1 Jim Furyk 31-32—63 -8 P.Byrd L,1-1 21-3 10 7 7 0 3 S.Jackson 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 from Sacramento (PCL). M.Lowe H,24 1 1 1 1 0 2 Clippard 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Bootcheck 1 0 0 0 0 1 Scott Verplank 31-34—65 -6 TEXAS RANGERS—Recalled RHP Willie Eyre from Oklahoma Tazawa 32-3 7 5 5 1 1 Aardsma S,34-38 1 0 0 0 0 1 MacDougal 1 0 0 0 1 2 WP—K.Hart. Angel Cabrera 34-31—65 -6 Delcarmen 1 1 0 0 1 3 City (PCL). Oakland WP—West, S.Rivera. Umpires—Home, Lance Barksdale; First, Marvin Hudson; Justin Leonard 33-32—65 -6 National League Saito 1 2 0 0 0 1 Tomko L,3-3 52-3 8 6 6 1 2 Umpires—Home, Brian Knight; First, Tim McClelland; Second, Matt Kuchar 34-31—65 -6 Chicago Second, Angel Hernandez; Third, Randy Marsh. ATLANTA BRAVES—Activated OF Nate McLouth from the 15- Ziegler 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 Andy Fletcher; Third, Greg Gibson. T—3:17. A—15,258 (38,362). Retief Goosen 33-32—65 -6 day DL. Garcia W,1-2 6 7 1 1 1 5 Breslow 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—3:45. A—16,364 (41,888). Jerry Kelly 32-34—66 -5 D.Hudson 2 0 0 0 0 1 CHICAGO CUBS—Claimed RHP Thomas Diamond off waivers Gray 1 2 1 1 1 1 Thursday’s NL Late Box Troy Matteson 32-34—66 -5 from Texas (AL) and assigned him to Iowa (PCL). Recalled INF J.Nunez 1 2 1 1 0 2 WP—Tomko. ASTROS 7, PHILLIES 0 Sean O’hair 33-33—66 -5 HBP—by D.Hudson (Reddick). Umpires—Home, Bill Welke; First, James Hoye; Second, Ted DODGERS 4, DIAMONDBACKS 2 Geoff Ogilvy 34-32—66 -5 Bobby Scales from Iowa. Umpires—Home, Bruce Dreckman; First, Paul Emmel; Barrett; Third, Jim Reynolds. Philadelphia Houston Jason Dufner 35-31—66 -5 PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Activated RHP Brett Myers from Second, Gary Darling; Third, Mark Carlson. T—2:47. A—10,297 (35,067). ab r h bi ab r h bi Arizona Los Angeles Stephen Ames 36-31—67 -4 the 15-day DL. Sent RHP Joe Bisenius and RHP Steven T—2:58. A—28,839 (40,615). Rollins ss 4 0 1 0 Bourn cf 4 0 1 0 ab r h bi ab r h bi Greg Chalmers 33-34—67 -4 Register outright to Lehigh Valley (IL) and C Joel Naughton TWalkr p 0 0 0 0 KMatsu 2b 5 0 2 2 S.Drew ss 4 2 2 1 Furcal ss 4 0 0 0 Scott Piercy 33-34—67 -4 outright to Clearwater (FSL). TIGERS 4, RAYS 3 NL Boxes Tschnr p 0 0 0 0 Brkmn 1b 4 0 1 0 RRorts 2b 4 0 1 0 Kemp cf 4 0 0 0 David Toms 34-33—67 -4 WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Added LHP Victor Garate to the METS 6, CUBS 2 Victorn cf 4 0 1 0 Ca.Lee lf 4 1 2 1 Agnstn p 0 0 0 0 Ethier rf 3 0 0 0 Padraig Harrington 35-32—67 -4 roster. Activated C Jesus Flores from the 15-day DL. Detroit Tampa Bay Utley 2b 3 0 1 0 Tejada ss 4 1 1 0 Monter c 3 0 1 0 MRmrz lf 3 2 1 1 Bryce Molder 34-33—67 -4 BASKETBALL ab r h bi ab r h bi Chicago New York Howard 1b 4 0 0 0 Pence rf 3 2 2 2 Rynlds 3b 4 0 1 1 Repko lf 0 0 0 0 Woody Austin 34-33—67 -4 National Basketball Association Grndrs cf 5 0 1 1 Bartlett ss 2 1 0 0 ab r h bi ab r h bi Werth rf 4 0 1 0 Kppngr 3b 3 1 1 0 Allen 1b 4 0 0 0 Blake 3b 4 1 3 0 Daniel Chopra 36-31—67 -4 MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES—Signed G Ramon Sessions to Polanc 2b 4 0 1 1 Crwfrd lf 3 1 0 0 Fukdm cf 5 0 0 0 Pagan cf 5 0 1 0 BFrncs lf 4 0 1 0 Maysnt 3b 1 0 0 0 GParra lf 4 0 1 0 Loney 1b 4 1 2 0 Brian Davis 33-34—67 -4 an offer sheet. Thoms rf 4 0 0 0 Zobrist 2b 4 0 0 0 Theriot ss 5 0 1 0 LCastill 2b 4 1 2 0 P.Feliz 3b 4 0 0 0 Quinter c 4 1 1 0 CYoung cf 3 0 0 0 Bellird 2b 3 0 2 3 Jonathan Byrd 33-34—67 -4 Women’s National Basketball Association MiCarr 1b 4 1 2 1 C.Pena 1b 4 1 3 1 Bradly rf 5 1 2 1 DWrght 3b 4 1 1 0 C.Ruiz c 4 0 3 0 WRdrg p 3 1 1 2 ARomr rf 2 0 0 0 RMartn c 3 0 1 0 Vijay Singh 33-34—67 -4 SACRAMENTO MONARCHS—Signed G Lisa Willis to seven-day A.Huff dh 3 0 2 0 Burrell dh 4 0 0 0 ArRmr 3b 5 0 0 0 DnMrp 1b 3 0 0 0 Cl.Lee p 1 0 0 0 Byrdak p 0 0 0 0 Ryal ph-2b 1 0 0 0 Garlnd p 2 0 0 0 Richard S. Johnson 34-34—68 -3 contract. Ordonz ph-dh1 0 0 0 Longori 3b 4 0 2 2 MHffpr 1b 4 0 0 0 Tatis ph-1b 1 1 1 1 Moyer p 1 0 0 0 Boone ph 0 0 0 0 Bucknr p 2 0 0 0 Pierre ph 1 0 0 0 Bubba Watson 33-35—68 -3 FOOTBALL CGuilln lf 2 0 1 0 Gross rf 3 0 0 0 J.Fox ph 1 0 0 0 Francr rf 3 1 0 0 Cairo ph-ss 1 0 0 0 Brocail p 0 0 0 0 Mulvey p 0 0 0 0 Sherrill p 0 0 0 0 Jason Day 33-35—68 -3 Raburn ph-lf 0 1 0 0 WAyar ph 1 0 0 0 JeBakr 2b 3 0 3 1 Sullivn lf 2 2 2 2 Totals 34 0 8 0 Totals 35 7 12 7 J.Upton ph-rf 1 0 1 0 Broxtn p 0 0 0 0 Mike Weir 33-35—68 -3 NFL—Fined Minnesota QB Brett Favre $10,000 for his crack- Inge 3b 4 0 0 0 Navarr c 3 0 0 0 Soto c 3 0 1 0 Santos c 4 0 1 2 Philadelphia 000 000 000 — 0 Totals 32 2 7 2 Totals 31 4 9 4 Kevin Sutherland 34-34—68 -3 back block on Houston DB Eugene Wilson during an Aug. 31 Laird c 3 0 0 0 FPerez cf 3 0 1 0 Fuld lf 2 1 1 0 AHrndz ss 4 0 1 1 Houston 042 010 00x — 7 Arizona 101 000 000 — 2 Michael Letzig 34-34—68 -3 game. Thams ph 0 0 0 0 Zamrn p 2 0 0 0 Parnell p 2 0 0 0 DP—Houston 1. LOB—Philadelphia 9, Houston 7. 2B—Victorino Los Angeles 010 201 00x — 4 Boo Weekley 33-35—68 -3 ARIZONA CARDINALS—Released TE Leonard Pope, S Aaron WRmrz pr 0 1 0 0 Fontent ph 1 0 0 0 Reed ph 1 0 0 0 (32), K.Matsui (17), W.Rodriguez (3). HR—Ca.Lee (23), Pence E—Reynolds (22). DP—Arizona 1, Los Angeles 2. LOB—Arizona Charles Howell III 34-34—68 -3 Francisco, OT Oliver Ross, CB Wilrey Fontenot, QB Tyler Avila c 0 0 0 0 AGzmn p 0 0 0 0 Stokes p 0 0 0 0 (21). 4, Los Angeles 5. 2B—J.Upton (27), Blake (25). HR—S.Drew (12), Zach Johnson 34-34—68 -3 Palko, WR Steve Sanders, WR Ed Gant, RB Chris Vincent, CB Everett ss 4 1 1 1 Gregg p 0 0 0 0 FrRdrg p 0 0 0 0 IP H R ER BB SO M.Ramirez (16). CS—Ethier (4). Dustin Johnson 36-32—68 -3 Jameel Dowling, FB Reagan Maui’a, FB Tim Castille, C Melvin Totals 34 4 8 4 Totals 31 3 6 3 Grabow p 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO Nathan Green 34-34—68 -3 Fowler, LB Victor Hobson, G Trevor Canfield, G Carlton Detroit 000 001 003 — 4 Berg p 0 0 0 0 Cl.Lee L,5-2 3 9 6 6 0 3 Arizona Bill Haas 34-35—69 -2 Medder, DE Alex Field, DT Keilen Dykes, WR Onrea Jones, DT Tampa Bay 010 000 002 — 3 Scales ph 1 0 1 0 Moyer 3 11 11 2 Buckner L,2-6 6 8 4 4 1 4 John Senden 36-33—69 -2 Rodney Leisle, LB Chase Bullock and LB David Holloway. LOB—Detroit 8, Tampa Bay 4. 2B—A.Huff 2 (28), C.Pena (25), Totals 37 2 9 2 Totals 33 6 9 6 T.Walker 12-3 0 0 0 0 1 Mulvey 1 0 0 0 0 1 Charley Hoffman 36-33—69 -2 —Released S Eric Brock, CB Glenn Sharpe, Longoria 2 (40). HR—Mi.Cabrera (28). CS—Bartlett (6), F.Perez Chicago 000 000 011 — 2 Taschner 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Augenstein 1 1 0 0 0 0 Lucas Glover 34-35—69 -2 OT Adam Speer, G Ryan Stanchek, CB Tony Tiller, C Ben (1). SF—Polanco. New York 010 000 05x — 6 Houston Los Angeles Kevin Na 34-35—69 -2 Wilkerson and WR Chandler Williams. IP H R ER BB SO E—Ar.Ramirez (7), Fuld (1), Tatis (3). LOB—Chicago 12, New W.Rodriguez W,13-9 7 7 0 0 0 7 Garland W,9-11 7 5 2 2 1 6 Heath Slocum 35-34—69 -2 —Fired Turk Schonert. Detroit York 8. 2B—Bradley (17), Je.Baker (10). HR—Sullivan (1). S— Byrdak 1 0 0 0 0 2 Sherrill H,8 1 1 0 0 0 0 Jeff Overton 34-35—69 -2 —Released DL Matthias Askew, G Kory Verlander W,16-7 8 4 1 1 1 7 Stokes. Brocail 1 1 0 0 0 0 Broxton S,31-36 1 1 0 0 0 2 D.A. Points 34-35—69 -2 Lichtensteiger, QB Ingle Martin, CB Rashod Moulton, T Clint Rodney S,32-33 1 2 2 2 2 2 IP H R ER BB SO HBP—by Moyer (Bourn), by T.Walker (Boone), by Byrdak HBP—by Buckner (Ethier). WP—Buckner. Greg Owen 33-36—69 -2 Oldenburg, DL Carlton Powell, LB Lee Robinson, WR Nate Tampa Bay Chicago (Utley), by W.Rodriguez (Cairo). Umpires—Home, Todd Tichenor; First, Bruce Dreckman; Davis Love Iii 35-34—69 -2 Swift and RB Marcus Thomas. Placed G Matt McChesney on Niemann 72-3 6 1 1 2 6 Zambrano 6 3 1 1 3 7 Umpires—Home, Chad Fairchild; First, Mike Winters; Second, Second, Paul Emmel; Third, Gary Darling. Luke Donald 36-33—69 -2 the reserve/injured list. Howell L,7-5 2-3 1 3 3 2 2 A.Guzman 1 0 0 0 0 0 Wally Bell; Third, Kerwin Danley. T—2:31. A—45,365 (56,000). Kenny Perry 35-34—69 -2 DETROIT LIONS—Acquired S Ko Simpson from Buffalo for an Choate 0 1 0 0 0 0 Gregg L,5-6 0 2 2 2 0 0 T—2:35. A—30,043 (40,976). Justin Rose 35-34—69 -2 undisclosed 2010 draft choice. Released DE Orion Martin. Springer 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Grabow 0 4 3 3 1 0 FOOTBALL John Merrick 38-32—70 -1 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS—Released FB Jed Collins, CB Travis Choate pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. Berg 1 00 00 1 GIANTS 3, BREWERS 2 Sergio Garcia 36-34—70 -1 Daniels, CB Londen Fryar, C Eric Ghiaciuc, OT Damion Umpires—Home, Mike Reilly; First, Chuck Meriwether; New York NFL Preseason Mark Wilson 36-34—70 -1 McIntosh, LB Corey Smith, OT Herb Taylor and G Tavares Second, Laz Diaz; Third, Eric Cooper. Parnell 7 5 0 0 3 7 San Francisco Milwaukee Fredrik Jacobson 35-35—70 -1 Washington. T—2:59. A—18,596 (36,973). Stokes W,2-4 BS,2-2 11-3 4 2 2 1 1 ab r h bi ab r h bi All Times MDT —Released LB Vinny Ciurciu, WR AMERICAN Brian Gay 37-33—70 -1 ANGELS 2, ROYALS 1 Fr.Rodriguez S,29-34 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Velez lf 5 0 1 0 FLopez 2b 3 0 1 0 Steve Marino 34-36—70 -1 Robert Ortiz, S Roderick Rogers, QB Andrew Walter, DL Gregg pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. BrWlsn p 0 0 0 0 Bourgs rf 2 1 0 0 EAST W L T Pct PF PA Tim Clark 35-35—70 -1 Stephen Williams and G Billy Yates. Los Angeles Kansas City Grabow pitched to 5 batters in the 8th. Renteri ss 4 1 0 0 Gerut ph-rf 2 0 0 0 PHILADELPHIA EAGLES—Released TE Eugene Bright, LB ab r h bi ab r h bi Miami 4 0 0 1.000 59 39 Tiger Woods 36-34—70 -1 WP—Zambrano, Grabow. Sandovl 3b 3 0 0 0 Braun lf 3 1 1 0 Brett Quigley 37-33—70 -1 Curtis Gatewood and DT Willie Williams. Figgins 3b 2 1 0 0 DeJess lf 4 0 1 0 Umpires—Home, Adrian Johnson; First, Gary Cederstrom; BMolin c 4 1 1 1 Fielder 1b 3 0 0 1 New England 3 1 0 .750 98 83 HOCKEY MIzturs 2b 3 1 1 0 Maier rf 4 0 1 0 N.Y. Jets 2 2 0 .500 108 99 Camilo Villegas 36-34—70 -1 Second, Fieldin Culbreth; Third, Jim Wolf. Uribe 2b 3 1 0 0 McGeh 3b 4 0 0 0 Marc Leishman 36-34—70 -1 National Hockey League BAreu rf 2 0 0 0 Butler 1b 4 0 0 0 T—2:42. A—37,953 (41,800). Schrhlt rf 3 0 0 0 MCmrn cf 4 0 1 1 Buffalo 1 4 0 .200 72 106 ANAHEIM DUCKS—Signed D Steve Eminger to a two-year Guerrr dh 4 0 1 2 Jacobs dh 4 1 3 0 SOUTH W L T Pct PF PA Kevin Streelman 35-35—70 -1 Rownd cf 3 0 1 1 Kendall c 2 0 1 0 Scott Mccarron 36-34—70 -1 contract. TrHntr cf 3 0 0 0 Callasp 2b 4 0 2 1 REDS 3, BRAVES 1 Ishikaw 1b 4 0 1 0 AEscor ss 3 0 1 0 BOSTON BRUINS—Agreed terms with coach Claude Julien on KMorls 1b 3 0 0 0 Teahen 3b 3 0 2 0 Zito p 1 0 0 0 Suppan p 2 0 0 0 Tennessee 3 2 0 .600 102 104 Bob Estes 35-35—70 -1 a multiyear contract extension. JRiver lf 4 0 1 0 J.Buck c 3 0 0 0 Cincinnati Atlanta FLewis ph 1 0 0 0 DiFelic p 0 0 0 0 Houston 2 2 0 .500 67 85 Pat Perez 35-35—70 -1 COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS—Signed C Derick Brassard to a Napoli c 4 0 0 0 Blmqst ph 1 0 1 0 ab r h bi ab r h bi JMiller p 0 0 0 0 Catlntt ph 1 0 0 0 Indianapolis 1 3 0 .250 49 84 Brandt Snedeker 34-36—70 -1 four-year contract extension through 2013-14. EAyar ss 3 0 0 0 YBtncr ss 4 0 1 0 Stubbs cf 5 0 1 0 M.Diaz rf-lf 3 0 2 0 Howry p 0 0 0 0 Coffey p 0 0 0 0 Jacksonville 1 3 0 .250 89 85 John Rollins 35-35—70 -1 EDMONTON OILERS—Signed C Rob Schremp to a one-year JAndrs cf 3 0 0 0 Janish ss 4 0 0 0 Prado 2b 4 0 1 0 Runzler p 0 0 0 0 Counsll ph 1 0 1 0 NORTH W L T Pct PF PA contract. B.Pena ph 1 0 0 0 Votto 1b 2 1 0 0 C.Jones 3b 3 0 0 0 Bowker ph 1 0 0 0 Villanv p 0 0 0 0 Baltimore 4 0 0 1.000 84 39 LPGA Tour Canadian Open OTTAWA SENATORS—Acquired RW Jason Bailey from Totals 28 2 3 2 Totals 35 1 11 1 BPhllps 2b 3 1 2 1 McCnn c 4 0 0 0 Meddrs p 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 3 1 0 .750 71 37 Friday Anaheim for LW Shawn Weller. Los Angeles 000 000 020 — 2 Rolen 3b 4 0 1 1 AdLRc 1b 4 0 0 0 Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati 2 2 0 .500 73 54 At Priddis Greens Gc COLLEGE Kansas City 000 100 000 — 1 Gomes lf 4 1 2 1 YEscor ss 1 0 0 0 Winn ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Cleveland 2 2 0 .500 73 70 Calgary, Alberta GREENSBORO—Named Matt Aker baseball coach. DP—Los Angeles 2, Kansas City 2. LOB—Los Angeles 7, Kansas Rhodes p 0 0 0 0 McLoth cf 1 1 1 1 Totals 33 3 4 2 Totals 30 2 6 2 Purse: $2.75 Million NEW YORK U.—Named Nicole Lubell women’s assistant vol- City 8. 2B—Jacobs (14), Y.Betancourt (16). 3B—Callaspo (6). Corder p 0 0 0 0 Church cf-rf 4 0 1 0 San Francisco 000 002 010 — 3 WEST W L T Pct PF PA Yardage: 6,427 - Par 71 leyball coach. SB—M.Izturis (12). CS—K.Morales (5). Balentn rf 4 0 2 0 Infante lf-ss 4 0 0 0 Milwaukee 200 000 000 — 2 San Diego 1 2 0 .333 55 53 Second Round OREGON—Suspended RB LeGarrette Blount for the remain- IP H R ER BB SO CMiller c 3 0 0 0 D.Lowe p 2 0 1 0 E—Uribe (8), Suppan (1), M.Cameron (4), A.Escobar (4). DP— Denver 1 3 0 .250 65 71 A-Denotes Amateur der of the season for throwing a punch at Boise State DE Los Angeles Arroyo p 3 0 0 0 KJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 San Francisco 1. LOB—San Francisco 8, Milwaukee 12. 3B— Oakland 1 3 0 .250 79 107 Song-Hee Kim 71-62—133 -9 Byron Hout following a Sept. 3 game. Jer.Weaver W,14-5 7 9 1 1 1 6 DMcDn lf 1 0 0 0 Moylan p 0 0 0 0 Velez (3). HR—B.Molina (17). SB—Bourgeois 2 (2), Braun (13). Kansas City 0 4 0 .000 42 64 Suzann Pettersen 65-68—133 -9 WEBER STATE—Announced the resignation of athletic direc- Jepsen H,11 1 1 0 0 0 2 Kawkm p 0 0 0 0 CS—Kendall (2). S—A.Escobar. NATIONAL Catriona Matthew 68-66—134 -8 tor Jerry Graybeal. Announced assistant vice president for Fuentes S,38-43 1 1 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 3 8 3 Totals 31 1 6 1 IP H R ER BB SO Lorena Ochoa 66-68—134 -8 administrative support Jerry Bovee will serve as interim ath- Kansas City Cincinnati 010 002 000 — 3 San Francisco EAST W L T Pct PF PA Angela Stanford 70-65—135 -7 letic director. Tejeda 51-3 1 0 0 2 6 Atlanta 000 001 000 — 1 Zito 4 3 2 2 5 5 Dallas 2 2 0 .500 88 92 Sun Young Yoo 69-66—135 -7 WIDENER—Named Todd Allebach graduate assistant sports Farnsworth H,3 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 E—Votto (9), C.Jones (18). DP—Cincinnati 2, Atlanta 2. LOB— J.Miller 1-3 0 0 0 3 1 N.Y. Giants 1 3 0 .250 79 99 M.J. Hur 68-67—135 -7 information director. Gem State Welders is Agricultural • Residential • Commercial • Small Industrial Proud to Support High Declo Raft School Football River

225 W. North St. CHUCK & DIANE COLLINS Albion, ID 83311 Mobile: (208) 280-0317 420 5th Ave. W GEM STATE Local People Local Solutions 208.673.5335 Oi ce: (208) 733-4422 P.O. Box 1024 Home: (208) 324-7933 Twin Falls, ID 83301 WELDER’S SUPPLY Just a phone call away. www.atcnet.net Email: [email protected] URL: www/argus-electric.com 1440 Kimberly Road • Twin Falls • 733-9553 Sports 4 Saturday, September 5, 2009 SPORTS Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho G.F.Pilots pound Gooding Senators Times-News for 103 yards and two Rumble: Utah versus touchdowns, while Idaho. Phillip Owsley completed Antonio Gamino had 108 Minico 10, Columbia 7 CSI volleyball wins 8 for 12 passes for 272 yards yards and an 84-yard score Minico 0 3 0 7 — 10 Columbia 0 0 7 0 — 7 and three touchdowns, and for Carey (2-0, 1-0). Trevor Second quarter Glenns Ferry intercepted Peck added 81 rushing Minico — FG Colton Johnson 30 Third quarter Gooding five times in a 54- yards and two TDs. Columbia — Joseph Hinojos 47 pass from Zach two in Arizona Littlefield (Joey Matinez kick) 16 home win on Friday. Carey coach Lane Fourth quarter Mike Crane caught two Kirkland praised his M — Mark Leon 12 run (Johnson kick) Times-News Brochado kills. Jessica touchdown passes and ran defense, which halted Peacock and Amanda for another, while Ross North Gem’s spread SUGAR-SALEM 27,FILER 18 The 14th-ranked Filiaga added to the offense Arellano hauled in a 75-yard offense. Peck, Gamino and Filer lost a hard-fought College of Southern Idaho with 11 and 10 kills, scoring pass and had a 95- Dillon Simpson had 11 game at Sugar-Salem, volleyball team picked up respectively. Hathorn had yard interception return. tackles apiece, with Peck falling 27-18 Friday after two wins Friday at the 12 digs. Arellano had four picks, adding an interception. giving up an interception Roughrider Volleyball Without overwhelming while Rory Hance added Carey hosts Murtaugh and several untimely Tournament in Prescott, competition, CSI head another. Crane recorded next Friday. penalties. Ariz. coach Heidi Cartisser said two sacks. For Filer, quarterback With freshman Barbara she tried new players in Carey 40, North Gem 14 “We threw the ball really Carey 6 8 6 20 — 40 Colton Baratti threw two Alcantara setting up class- new spots on Friday. North Gem 8 6 0 0 — 14 well, and we ran the ball (Carey scoring only) WENDY MORRISON/For the Times-News touchdowns, a 65-yarder to mate Elisa Brochado, the “Everybody that came in pretty successfully,” said First quarter Cassidy Babb and an 8- 5-1 Golden Eagles rolled to did a good job,”she said. Carey — Gonzalo Zarate run (pass failed) Oakley senior Payson Bedke car- Glenns Ferry coach Rob Second quarter yard pass to Ryan Orr. wins over Arizona schools CSI concludes its stay in C — Trevor Peck run (Zarate run) ries the ball against Hagerman Spriggs. “Defensively, we Third quarter Tyler Kreft scored Filer’s Glendale Community Prescott today with a 10 C — Gonzalo Zarate run (run failed) on Friday. had five picks and that’s just Fourth quarter other touchdown on a College and Chandler- a.m. semifinal match huge in any game.” C — Trevor Peck run (run failed) four-yard run. Gilbert CC. against Casper (Wyo.) C — Antonio Gamino run (Wacey Barg pass from Peck) Kris Erickson and C — Caleb Cenarrusa run (run failed) foe, the Red Devils, at CSI swept Glendale 26- College. A win puts the Sugar-Salem 27, Filer 18 Brayden Urrutia scored for Murtaugh Friday. Sugar-Salem 8 6 13 0 — 27 24, 25-17, 25-12 as Golden Eagles in the 4 Filer 6 6 0 6 — 18 Gooding (0-1), while Derek Dietrich’s Dion Norman (Complete box score unavailable.) Alcantara had 34 assists p.m.championship match, Christianson had 14 tack- CHALLIS 20, SHOSHONE 6 rushed for 250 yards and and Brochado delivered 13 while a loss means a 4 p.m. les. The Senators host Challis used a dominat- scored six touchdowns. kills. Libero Britani consolation contest. Valley next Friday. Glenns ing run game to earn a 20- Kolten Hubert and Brant Boys soccer Hathorn chipped in nine “We’re going to have to Ferry (2-0) travels to New 6 road win over Snake McDaniel each racked up digs. perform,”said Cartisser. Plymouth. River Conference oppo- 13 tackles for the Blue JEROME 7,MINICO 1 The 25-21, 19-25, 25-14, The Golden Eagles travel nent Shoshone on Friday. Devils, and Alex The combination of 25-17 win over Chandler- to Pasadena, Texas, next Glenns Ferry 54, Gooding 16 Gooding 0 8 0 8 — 16 Trailing 14-0 in the first Heimerdinger had one Fermin Martinez to Gabriel Gilbert featured 46 week for the two-day San Glenns Ferry 19 14 14 7 — 54 First quarter quarter, the Indians got interception. Pulido worked many times Alcantara assists and 17 Jacinto Tournament. Glenns Ferry — Terry Jacobsen 4 run (kick failed) 8:06 their lone score on a 35- For Murtaugh, Manny in the Jerome boys soccer GF — Mike Crane 13 pass fro Phillip Owsley (run failed) 6:51 yard touchdown toss from Pacheco scored four team’s 7-1 victory over GF — Crane 1 run (Gabe Arevelo kick) 1:47 Good Luck To All The Second quarter Josh Olsen to Justin touchdowns, and Derrick Great Basin Conference foe GF — Ross Arellano 75 pass from Owsley (Arevelo kick) Mini-Cassia 6:20 Santana. Bates passed for three Minico. Gooding — Kris Erickson 35 pass from Jake Davis (run Shoshone (0-2, 0-1) touchdowns. The duo scored three good) 1:57 Athletic Teams! GF — Owsley 3 run (Arevelo kick) 0:40 travels to Castleford next times during the first 21 Third quarter Dietrich 50, Murtaugh 32 GF — Arevelo 17 run (Arevelo kick) 6:55 Friday. Dietrich 8 8 26 8 — 50 minutes, and Sergio GF — Crane 60 pass from Owsley (Arevelo kick) 0:02 Murtaugh 12 0 8 12 — 32 Madrigal had a solo goal to Fourth quarter Challis 20, Shoshone 6 (Complete box score unavailable.) GF — Ross Arellano 95 interception return (Arevelo Challis 14 0 6 0 — 20 give the Tigers a 4-0 first- kick) 5:49 Shoshone 6 0 0 0 — 6 G — Brayden Urrutia 43 run (run good) 0:51 First quarter ROCKLAND 54, JACKPOT, NEV., 8 half lead. Madrigal added a Challis — Moen 65 run (Crane pass from Helm) 10:37 The Jackpot (Nev.) second-half goal as did C — Latimer 6 pass from Helm (run failed) 6:37 Shoshone — Justin Santana 35 pass from Josh Olsen Jaguars struggled through Salvador Mercado and (run failed) 4:00 KIMBERLY 30,AMERICAN FALLS 0 Third quarter the first Sawtooth Fermin Martinez. 218 West Kimberly’s defense C — Helm 3 run (run failed) 6:51 Conference game of the “Our defense played very Highway 30 Burley • 678-9431 pitched a shutout, while LIGHTHOUSE CHRISTIAN 56, season with Rockland well except for one little Nicola Schmid hauled in HANSEN 10 Friday, falling 54-8. slip,” said Jerome coach two touchdown passes Aaron Borchardt had Coach Carlos Perez said Robert Garcia. from Nick Dame as the eight carries for 156 yards the Jaguars displayed a lot The Spartans put the Bulldogs opened the season and three touchdowns, and of heart but with several only goal on the board at %XIEQ]SYGERVIP]SR with a 30-0 win at Evan Ardema completed 3 players sidelined, the the 10-minute mark in the American Falls. of 6 passes for 93 yards and defense wasn’t there. second half. +3,]HUZ)HURPZWYV\K[VZ\WWVY[ Kimberly coach Kirby two touchdowns in Michael Avila threw a Jerome (5-0-0) hosts 4PUP*HZZPH/PNO:JOVVSMVV[IHSS Bright praised his defense, Lighthouse Christian’s 56- 45-yard pass to Ben Middleton this morning. which kept its shutout 10 win over Snake River Messmer in the second intact with a goal-line Conference foe Hansen quarter for Jackpot’s only GOODING 5, BLISS 3 stand. The Bulldog D also Friday. touchdown. Avila ran in The Gooding boys soccer had a safety. Lighthouse Christian the 2-point conversion. team’s three second-half Dame scored on a QB relied heavily on a running Perez said he expects goals were enough to break ZZZGOHYDQVFRP sneak, while Cody game, though Zane Jesser several sidelined players a halftime tie with Bliss and ALBION BOISE BURLEY HAILEY IDAHO FALLS JEROME KETCHUM MERIDIAN NAMPA POCATELLO RUPERT TWIN FALLS Casperson added a 2-yard had two catches for 52 to return for the game put the Senators up 5-3 scoring run. yards and one touchdown. with Richfield next Friday. Friday in High Desert No box score was avail- The box score was Soccer Conference action. able Friday night. Lighthouse Christian 56, unavailable. “Gooding came out Hansen 10 Kimberly (1-0) travels to Lighthouse Christian 21 13 22 x — 56 ready to play,” said Bliss SOLD BY Hansen 0 10 0 x — 10 Declo next Friday. First quarter OAKLEY 50, HAGERMAN 0 coach Daniel Knapp. “This Lighthouse Christian — Kevin McCullough 18 run (Scott Oakley moved to 2-0 was one of the better Marvis Brice, CRS 633 East Main kick) Associate Broker CASTLEFORD 32, RAFT RIVER 22 LC — Aaron Borchardt 37 fumble return (Scott kick) overall and 1-0 in the Gooding teams. It was a Burley, ID 83318 LC — Kasey Andreasen 49 run (Scott kick) (208) 677-4663 Castleford shut out Raft Second quarter Snake River Conference pretty intense game.” (208) 431-4663 Hansen — safety River for three quarters and H — Gerrit Peters 40 run (2-point conversion good with a 50-0 road victory Alex Cortez scored the www.marvisbrice.com held on for a 32-22 Snake Simpson to Stanger) over Hagerman. first Bliss goal on an assist LC — Borchardt 77 run (Scott kick) River Conference win on LC — Evan Aardema 20 run (kick failed) “We still have a lot of from Luis Cortez with Cole Third quarter Friday. LC — Zane Jesser 39 pass from Aardema (Scott kick) football to play,” said Erkins and Luis Cortez also LC — safety The Wolves led 20-0 at LC — McCullough 41 pass from Aardema (Scott kick) Hagerman coach Ed scoring for Bliss (3-1-0, 2- Have a Winning Season! halftime after Nick Howard LC —Borchardt 26 run (end of game, mercy rule) Pringer. “We just need to 1-0). hit Adam Machado and learn from this experience Bliss plays Community Kale Weekes for long scor- RICHFIELD 42, CAMAS COUNTY 16 and go on. The kids were School on Tuesday. ing passes, while Houston Richfield opened the obviously disappointed, Horner added a 30-yard TD Sawtooth Conference with but we are all going to try Girls soccer jaunt. a 42-16 win over Camas to stay positive and get Raft River rallied as County Friday. ready for Raft River next BLISS 4, GOODING 0 Nelson Manning ran for two No stats were available. week.” Linsay James scored two scores and passed to H.D. Next week, Richfield (2- No other details were goals as Bliss blanked High Tuckett for another, but 0, 1-0) travels to Jackpot, available. Desert Soccer Conference fourth-quarter scores for Nev., and Camas County Hagerman (0-2, 0-1) opponent Gooding 4-0 on Horner and Ethan Tverdy (0-2, 0-1) is on the road at travels to Raft River, and Friday at home. Irlanda 385 N. Overland Ave., Burley kept Castleford in front. North Gem. Oakley is at Hansen next Diaz and Estaphanie “Our offensive line did an Friday. Altamirano also scored for 677-4709 awful good job,” said DECLO 51,ABERDEEN 8 the Bears, with Demsie Castleford coach Tracy With an explosive offense MINICO 10, COLUMBIA 7 Butler earning an assist. Vulgamore. “They gave our and no turnovers for the The Minico Spartans Alma Rosales had five quarterback time to pass, season opener, the Declo faced their second Treasure saves for Bliss. and they picked up blitzing Hornets easily beat Valley foe of the season linebackers.” Aberdeen 51-8 Friday. Both Friday, but this time they Volleyball Best of Luck Castleford (2-0, 1-0) teams were ranked No. 2 by came away with a 10-7 vic- hosts Shoshone next Friday, the Idaho media. tory over Columbia in MVCS 3, TFCA 2 for a Great while Raft River (0-1, 0-1) Jeremy Jenkins threw 12 Nampa. Magic Valley Christian Season! hosts Hagerman. times for 10 completions to Minico rushed 51 times School rallied for a 22-25, six receivers for 268 yards for 223 yards with Brady 20-25, 25-16, 25-12, 15-10 Castleford 32, Raft River 22 Raft River 0 0 0 22 — 22 and two touchdowns. May picking up 99 yards on win at Twin Faalls Castleford 6 14 0 12 — 32 Phone: (208) 436-3332 First quarter The Hornets rushed for 23 carries. Mark Leon Christian Academy on Castleford — Adam Machado 35 pass Nick Howard (pass 34 yards in the first quarter, added 74 yards on 16 Friday. 243 N. 300 E. Fax: (208) 436-1289 failed) Second quarter 41 in the second, 27 in the attempts. His 12-yard Megan Fenderson had Rupert, ID 83350 www.valleyvista.org C — Kale Weekes 40 pass from Nick Howard (run failed) C — Houston Horner 30 run (Ethan Tverdy pass from third and 18 in the fourth. rushing touchdown came eight aces for TFCA, while Howard) Fourth quarter Coach Kelly Kidd credit- during the fourth quarter. Hanna Glaze had 10 kills Raft River —Nelson Manning 2 run (pass Nelson to ed his team with between On defense, David and Jessica Irvin added Tuckett) RR — Manning 42 run (Michael Carr run) 350 and 400 yards of total Griffin had two of the four eight kills and nine assists. Picture Framing C —Tverdy 45 pass from Howard (run failed) C —Horner 10 run (pass failed) offense. Spartan interceptions. For MVCS, Kristina RR — H.D. Tuckett 63 pass from Manning (run failed) “We played well,” said Reitsma had 11 kills, Emily 0:37 Declo 51, Aberdeen 8 Done Right Matters... Declo 14 22 8 7 — 51 Minico assistant coach Kuka recorded 17 digs and Right Design • Right Time • Right Price Aberdeen 0 8 0 0 — 8 CAREY 40, NORTH GEM 14 (Complete box score unavailable.) Jerry Diehl. “We finally got Jordan Edwards had 14 Three fourth-quarter our running game and put service points, including an Certifi ed Professional 36 Years — Thank You Magic Valley! touchdowns helped Carey DIETRICH 50, MURTAUGH 32 one in the end zone.” ace. pull away from host North An explosive 26-point Minico (1-1) travels to TFCA (1-2) hosts ISDB on Professional Frame Gem for a 40-14 Sawtooth third quarter paced the Pocatello Saturday, Sept. Tuesday. MCVS travels to RONALD E. HICKS Conference win on Friday. Dietrich Blue Devils to a 50- 12, to play Bear River, Utah, Camas County on 132 MAIN AVE. SOUTH • 733-3293 Gonzalo Zarate rushed 32 win over their Sawtooth in Rocky Mountain Tuesday. 20% DISCOUNT WITH THIS COUPON!

“Since 1989” In House Lab Ark Animal Hospital William Fulcher, D.V.M. 750 21st Street • Heyburn, ID 83336 (208) 678-1177 “We have warm hearts for cold noses” • Dentistry • Surgery • Boarding Mon-Fri 8 to 6 • Sat 8 to 1 • 24 Hour Emergency Service Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho SPORTS Saturday, September 5, 2009 Sports 5 Vandals hope for ISU football opens season better beginning against Pac-10 foe Arizona State Idaho visits By Mark Liptak start,” said Zamberlin. game that we can possibly Times-News correspondent “They’ve got a new quar- play and I’m extremely terback (Danny Sullivan) serious when I say that we WAC foe NMSU POCATELLO — It’s an and have gone to a spread as a team think we can win interesting way to start offense this season. Their the game.” By Josh Wright Idaho at the season, give that to offensive line isn’t the Erickson seems to be Times-News correspondent Idaho State. The Bengals most experienced and that ISU at more concerned with his visit Pac-10 foe Arizona may be something we can club than the Bengals. A year ago, the Idaho New Mexico State State tonight (8 p.m., Fox try to take advantage of.” Arizona State “We have a pretty good 6 p.m., MDT Vandals started their season Sports Arizona) to open For Idaho State they’ve 8 p.m. idea of what they have done TV: KTID (Channel 58) in the worst imaginable way the 2009 campaign. It’s got a new starting quar- TV: Fox Sports Arizona in the past, and now we are Radio: 1310 AM — with a 70-0 thumping at the first meeting between terback themselves in Kyle Radio: 1270 AM KTFI going to have to deal with the hands of Arizona. the two schools. Blum. Protecting Blum what they do,” said Nothing went right that The game was sched- against a good ASU Erickson. “As I said, my night in the desert, and it streak, which prompted the uled a few years ago when defense, keyed by all-con- Oklahoma. But don’t concern is our football didn’t get much better dismissal of Hal Mumme Pocatello native and for- ference defensive end expect Zamberlin to make team, not our opponent — through the season. and hiring of former UCLA mer ISU player Dirk Dexter Davis, will be one excuses. us being ready to play, us So what has Idaho done assistant DeWayne Walker. Koetter was the Sun Devils of the keys to the game. “The situation today in going out playing as well as differently to prepare for its The Vandals, meanwhile, coach. Koetter is gone Burley High graduate college sports is that you we can and as hard as we season opener this time? hope use last year’s 20-14 now, replaced by Dennis Braeden Clayson starts at need to have some revenue, can, and see what hap- “Last year’s stuff … has victory over NMSU — an Erickson. Erickson faced left tackle, protecting we understand that and pens.” been burned up,” Idaho outcome that clearly didn’t ISU when he was the head Blum’s blind side and that’s why we’re playing The game kicks off coach Robb Akey said with a help Mumme’s cause — as a coach at Idaho, as recently Zamberlin knows that it’s these games,”he said. “But shortly after 8PM Saturday laugh. “I couldn’t tell you springboard for today’s 6 as 2006, so he knows going to be a tough at the same time I’m telling night and can be seen on what we did. There’s noth- p.m. contest. Akey said he’s something about the pro- matchup for him. the players that it’s an Fox Sports Arizona for ing in similarity to what we not as focused on last year’s gram. “We’ll devise ways to opportunity. We’re prepar- satellite owners or heard did last year.” win as “working on the As far as the Bengals help him from time to ing hard to play the best locally on KTFI radio. Instead of opening against mindset” of his players. take on the Sun Devils, time,” he said. “Maybe a staunch Pac-10 foe, the “We need to be expecting ISU head coach John keep a back in to block or Vandals will take on a to win,”Akey said. Zamberlin expects a fired use a tight end. We’re not Western Athletic Confer- This is Idaho’s 11th con- up ASU squad. just going to leave him out ence opponent in New secutive season starting “They went 5-7 last year there on an island and Mexico State,a team that has away from the Kibbie Dome. and I know that’s not the expect him to be able to had its own share of strug- The Vandals haven’t won season they wanted to just handle things by him- gles since joining the WAC. their opener since 1999, have, so I expect them to self.” The Aggies finished 2008 which was their last winning come out and play hard Things only get harder on a seven-game losing campaign. early to get off on the right next week as ISU travels to No. 3 Oklahoma, No. 20 BYU open in Cowboys Stadium 1407 E. Main Burley 8789398 ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Bob Stoops and the Top 25 Schedule Family Physical Therapy Oklahoma Sooners know all All Times MDT & Sports Medicine Clinic about riding down Saturday, Sept. 5 Interstate 35 to play a big No. 1 Florida vs. Charleston game in the Dallas area Southern, 5 p.m. Helping Athletes Stay Active against a ranked opponent. No. 2 Texas vs. Louisiana- Never like this, though. Monroe, 5 p.m. Six weeks before their No. 3 Oklahoma vs. No. 20 Dave Little, PT annual matchup with Texas BYU at Arlington, Texas, 27 Years Experience at the Cotton Bowl, Stoops Associated Physical Therapists 5 p.m. Gabe Ostyn, PT and the No. 3 Sooners open No. 4 Southern Cal vs. San 733-3900 their season Saturday night Jose State, 1:30 p.m. 834 Falls Avenue, Suite 1250 Blue Lakes Office Park Twin Falls against No. 20 BYU in the No. 5 Alabama vs. No. 7 new home of the Dallas AP file photos Virginia Tech at Atlanta, Cowboys, the $1.15 billion BYU quarterback Max Hall, left, will lead the Cougars against quarter- 6 p.m. Cowboys Stadium. back Sam Bradford, right, and the rest of the Oklahoma squad today at No. 6 Ohio State vs. Navy, Good Luck Teams! “That’s kind of cool,”said the Dallas Cowboys’ new stadium in Arlington, Texas. 10 a.m.. OU defensive tackle Adrian No. 9 Oklahoma State vs. No. Taylor, who is from nearby 13 Georgia, 1:30 p.m. Mansfield. Oklahoma vs. BYU championship, then said No. 9 Penn State vs. Akron, This will be the first col- farewell to four starters on 5 p.m., ESPN 10 a.m.. lege football game played in the offensive line and three No. 11 LSU at Washington, the stadium already known of their top receivers. 8:30 p.m. for its 60-yard long, 90- The new line includes a No. 12 California vs. Maryland, foot high video boards. It will be an intriguing excep- converted tight end at cen- 8 p.m. also will be the building’s tion: former Cowboys ter, while their linebacker No. 15 Georgia Tech vs. 379 West Addison Twin Falls first football game in which quarterback Danny White, corps is filled with guys Jacksonville State, 11 a.m. the score actually matters; whose nephew is BYU coming back from knee No. 21 North Carolina vs. The the two games the Cowboys quarterback Max Hall. injuries and is missing Citadel, 4 p.m. have played there were “I hope (BYU) plays in a another in an eligibility No. 22 Iowa vs. Northern Iowa, merely preseason. manner equal to, or even battle with the NCAA. 10:05 a.m. “Man, it’s going to be exceeding, the stage they With uncertainty at piv- No. 23 Notre Dame vs. great,” Oklahoma corner- are on,” Cougars coach RECYLCE! otal spots, Oklahoma prob- Nevada, 1:30 p.m. back Dominique Franks Bronco Mendenhall said. ably could use an opener No. 24 Nebraska vs. Florida said. “I’m excited to see it “And that would be saying against a patsy but that’s Atlantic, 5 p.m. Bring your cans to us on Friday or Saturday, something considering it is not what they’re getting. No. 25 Kansas vs. Northern whenever we go on walk- the eighth wonder of the BYU is coming off a third Colorado, 5 p.m. Save the through. I’m going to need world, which I think some straight 10-win season and to be able to see that big are calling it.” has a big-time quarterback screen before we actually The showcase venue is a of its own in Hall. Plus, the said. “I don’t think we’re Environment! start warming up so I can splashy way for Oklahoma Cougars have spent all off- quite there yet, but this will 114 Market St. Twin Falls 7339690 get it out of my mind and quarterback Sam Bradford season targeting this game, obviously help our chances get used to it.” to kick off his bid for a sec- thinking about it “in every to be known as one of the A sellout crowd of around ond straight Heisman rep, in every lift and every best in the country.” 80,000 is expected, includ- Trophy and for the team to sprint we ran,”Hall said. Like Bradford, Hall is LADRO ing some paying $25 to start its bid for a return trip “To win a big game like coming back from a huge BOW ME stand and watch. The to the national title game. this one I think definitely season with questions majority will be rooting for The Sooners lost to could help us get into that about his blockers and introducesintroducess NEWNEW Oklahoma, although there Florida in last season’s top tier of programs,” he receivers. FOOTBALL LEAGUE BSU Pick Your Favorite Team Continued from Sports 1 field goals or Kellen Moore’s dent happened in the park- Hout’s knees). Two, Boise 3 PersonPerson TTeamseams disorganized and immature. efficient game, we have to ing lot, he would probably State accomplished its first First game Sunday, Blount said he didn’t even talk about a sucker-punch. be in Ada County Jail. goal and set its program on Sept. 13th 1pm hear what Hout said. He felt It’d be great to talk about So in the end, we have course for another dream Points: someone touch him and Michael Choate’s 2-point two results. season. Football Team Wins 1 pt. $10/ reacted. I’ve met Hout. I conversions, the one that One, Blount may never 2 Games Bowling 2 pt. person don’t think he said any- worked and the one that play football again (his draft The Associated Press 733-0639 thing obscene. It’s not in his didn’t. Or the rushing status went down with contributed to this report. nature. He just looked attack that slugged Oregon www.teambowladrome.com excited. where it really hurt with 59 The real finger of blame carries fo 164 yards and 42 for Blount’s anger is the minutes of offensive pos- BSU defense, which made session time. Health Insurance See the Beauty of Summer! his night miserable from It felt like the Broncos Now is the time to replace your doors & windows. start to embarrassing finish. could have easily scored 30 For Families. So today, instead of nit- points, but the mistakes picking the game, dissect- blared: fumbles, penalties Call us today. Estimates ing six fourth-down con- and failures on special back to you in version attempts, six com- teams. 48 Hrs. bined turnovers, 14 penal- There will be no compla- ties, a slew of Bronco mis- cency at BSU, not after they cues in the red zone, Kyle look at the tape. 1637 Addison Avenue East 7343342 % Brotzman’s two missed As for Blount, if the inci- 40 Off m.s.r.p. Windows Peoples Quality Packing by PlyGem New & Improved Low E Custom Cutting Beef and Pork Masonite Exterior Doors 125 South 125 West Rupert 4364557 1029 Overland Avenue Burley Mechanical & Crane Service 678-1459 FEDERAL TAX CREDIT FOR ENERGY EFFICENCY “Good Luck Athletes” Paul 4388108 Extended to 2010 New Stimulus Bill Sports 6 Saturday, September 5, 2009 SPORTS Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Stricker takes early lead at Deutsche Bank Favre’s Vikings backups

NORTON, Mass. — Steve in Oregon, shot a 68 to Stricker birdied his first two match Kim at 9 under at unimpressive vs. Dallas holes, and Tiger Woods Tiger Woods, Priddis Greens. could see what was coming. left, and Top-ranked Lorena MINNEAPOLIS — The was fined $10,000 by the Walking to the next tee Steve Ochoa (68) and Women’s ’ pre- NFL for his crack-back Friday at the TPC Boston, Stricker British Open winner season finale Friday night block on Houston defen- Woods said to his caddie, shake hands Catriona Matthew (66) were did nothing to help coach sive back Eugene Wilson in “He’s going to shoot 62.” on the No. 9 a stroke back, and Hur (67), Brad Childress clear up his a preseason game. Woods’ instincts were off Angela Stanford (65) and murky backup quarter- The play happened on hole after by one. Stricker shot 63. Sun Young Yoo (66) were 7 back situation. Monday night at Houston With superb command of finishing the under. First-round leader Tarvaris Jackson played in Favre’s first extensive his driver and his typical first round of Anna Rawson followed her well but only attempted action since he signed dose of great putting, the Deutsche opening 64 with a 73 to fin- four passes, and Sage with the Vikings on Aug. Stricker ran off five straight Bank ish at 5 under.Wie was 3 over Rosenfels threw an ugly 18. birdies and only once came Champion- after a 69. She shot a 76 interception in a 35-31 loss close to a bogey to share the ship golf Thursday. to the Dallas Cowboys. TEXANS 27,BUCCANEERS 20 first-round lead with Jim Jackson, Rosenfels and TAMPA, Fla. — Former tournament Furyk in the Deutsche Bank SLUMAN IN FRONT AT John David Booty are likely starter Rex Championship. in Norton, WALMART FIRST TEE OPEN competing for two spots Grossman threw two Furyk,without a victory in Mass., Friday. PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — behind Brett Favre, with touchdown passes and more than two years, shot Defending champion Jeff final cuts due Saturday. also produced a pair of his 8-under 63 in the after- AP photo Sluman shot a bogey-free 7- Jackson led two touch- field goals, pacing noon. He had five birdies in In a reversal, it was Woods Mickelson continued to under 65 at Del Monte Golf down drives and was 2 for Houston’s 27-20 victory his opening six holes, settled who had the best seat for a sputter. He three-putted his Course to take a one-stroke 4 for 42 yards, including a over Tampa Bay and possi- in for a diet of pars, then great round. The world’s No. first hole and four-putted over lead Loren Roberts and 36-yard TD pass to Jeff bly earning a backup job closed with consecutive 1 player hit ordinary shots to the ninth to offset three Olin Browne in the Dugan. behind and birdies for his lowest round the green, hit one tee shot birdies in his round of 71. Champions Tour’s Walmart Rosenfels went 7 for 15 Dan Orlovsky. of the year. into the bushes for a penalty First Tee Open. for 115 yards with an inter- On a night when most They were two shots clear shot and failed to convert KIM LEADS CANADIAN Sluman has five top-10 ception returned for a starters on both teams of a group that included five birdie chances he had WOMEN’S OPEN finishes this season, but has- touchdown. rested, Grossman returned Masters champion Angel inside 12 feet. He wound up PRIDDIS, Alberta — n’t won since his Walmart Cowboys coach Wade after missing more than Cabrera, Justin Leonard, with a 70. South Korea’s Song-Hee victory last year. He won six Phillips rested Tony Romo two weeks with a ham- Retief Goosen and Scott “I didn’t really do much of Kim shot a tournament- times on the PGA Tour. and most of his regular string injury. His only Verplank, who had dinner anything positive today,” record 9-under 62 for a Browne and Roberts shot starters, and it showed. work during the preseason with Stricker on Thursday Woods said. “I didn’t feel share of the second-round 66s at Del Monte. Tom Kite, Dallas turned over the ball had been one pass attempt night and had a minor bout good over any shot today. lead in the Canadian who also played at Del four times, leading to 21 in the Texans’ opener. of food poisoning. Didn’t drive it very good, hit Women’s Open with Suzann Monte, and Mark O’Meara, Minnesota points. Stricker felt fine, and my irons worse and didn’t Pettersen, while Michelle who had the low score at Earlier in the day, Favre — The Associated Press looked even better. make any putts. Other than Wie missed her first cut of Pebble Beach, had 67s. Tom “To get off to a birdie- that, it was a good day.” the season. Watson, celebrating his birdie start just kind of got Padraig Harrington put Pettersen, coming off a 60th birthday, opened with the day started in the right together another solid round playoff loss to M.J. Hur last a 70 at Del Monte. direction,”Stricker said. with a 67, while Phil week in the Safeway Classic — The Associated Press Williams sisters reach Halladay pitches Blue 4th round at U.S. Open Jays past Yankees NEW YORK (AP) — TORONTO — Roy Finished with a mostly mat- Halladay pitched a one- ter-of-fact victory in the hitter to snap a three-start U.S. Open’s third round losing streak and the Friday, defending champion Toronto Blue Jays beat the Have a Serena Williams switched Yankees 6-0 Friday night, into a yellow T-shirt with ending New York’s win- NATIONAL LEAGUE this bit of wisdom in blue ning streak at seven CARDINALS 14, PIRATES 7 Rewarding Season! script: “Can’t spell dynasty games. PITTSBURGH — Ryan without nasty.” Aaron Hill doubled Ludwick homered twice, Asked about it, Williams twice and had two RBIs Adam Wainwright became took the chance to push a and Adam Lind had three the majors’ first 17-game sponsor’s new clothing line. hits for the Blue Jays, who winner, and the St. Louis Moments later, she found won for the first time in Cardinals beat the Open Sundays 11am-9pm • Weekdays 10am-10pm herself discussing her auto- five games. Pittsburgh Pirates 14-7 on 680 Blue Lakes Blvd. N. • Twin Falls, ID biography, though she Friday night for their 10th refrained from shouting: RANGERS 5, ORIOLES 1 win in 12 games. “Available at a bookstore AP photo BALTIMORE — Scott near you!” Venus Williams reacts after Feldman matched the ASTROS 7, PHILLIES 0 About the only thing defeating Magdalena Rybarikova Texas club record for road HOUSTON — Wandy Williams doesn’t need to sell 6-2, 7-5 during the third round of wins in a season, earning Rodriguez struck out anyone on is the quality of the U.S. Open tennis tournament No. 11 with a dominant seven in seven innings and her tennis, particularly at in New York, Friday. performance that carried drove in two runs with a Grand Slam tournaments. the Rangers past double to lead Houston By beating serve-and-vol- for the first time since win- Baltimore. over Philadelphia. leying Spaniard Maria Jose ning it in 2005. Chaparral & Co. Martinez Sanchez 6-3, 7-5 “She was a great champi- TIGERS 4, RAYS 3 REDS 3, BRAVES 1 on Friday, Williams on,” Venus Williams said. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. ATLANTA — Bronson improved to 28-1 over the “She still is.” — Justin Verlander picked Arroyo gave up one run in 2179 East 1850 South Malta • 645-2409 past five majors. No. 1 Dinara Safina made up his 16th win, Adam seven innings and The secret to her success? it to Saturday’s third round, Everett hit a tiebreaking Cincinnati beat Atlanta for “You can never underes- but barely. She needed more RBI single during a three- its fifth straight win, timate anyone. Some peo- than 4½ hours to get run ninth and AL Central- matching a season high. Rain for Rent ple, some days, they have through two three-set vic- leading Detroit beat great days,” said the No. 2- tories. Tampa Bay. METS 6, CUBS 2 Pumps • Pipes • Irrigation Systems seeded Williams, whose sis- “Nothing’s a given. NEW YORK — Cory ter Venus also won Friday.“I Everyone comes out, they INDIANS 5, TWINS 2 Sullivan homered and Sales • Service • Installation just go and look at every play well — if you aren’t the CLEVELAND — Jeremy made a diving catch in left 600 W. 134 S. Hwy 27, Paul, ID opponent as the best player better player that day,you’re Sowers pitched six strong field to help New York, (208) 438-5065 in the world.” going home. That’s just how innings, rookie Michael boosted by Bobby Parnell’s Perhaps some of her col- it is,” Venus Williams said. Brantley had two hits and stellar start, beat Chicago. leagues should take that “There is depth on the his first career RBI, and Pinch-hitter Fernando approach, as well. women’s tour, definitely.” Cleveland took advantage Tatis came through with a This has been a topsy- The best men have faced of Minnesota’s season- tiebreaking single that turvy U.S. Open for the no such problems. high four errors. triggered a five-run eighth women: No. 8 Victoria Friday’s winners included inning. Sullivan Azarenka’s 4-6, 6-2, 6-2 No. 2 Andy Murray, No. 6 ANGELS 2, ROYALS 1 loss to No. 26 Francesca Juan Martin del Potro, No. 7 KANSAS CITY, Mo. — MARLINS 9, NATIONALS 6 Schiavone on Friday came a Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and No. Jered Weaver allowed one WASHINGTON — John day after No. 4 Elena 9 Gilles Simon. None of the run over seven innings and Baker homered and Dementieva and No. 5 Jelena top 10 men had dropped a Vladimir Guerrero hit a matched a career high Jankovic were upset. All single set — much less lost — two-run single in the with four RBIs, Jorge told, 11 of the 20 highest- until 2008 runner-up eighth inning off Kansas Cantu also connected and , P.A. seeded women are gone, and Murray’s little slip in his 6-2, City’s beleaguered Florida beat Washington, the third round is only 3-6, 6-0, 6-2 win over bullpen, lifting the Los dealing the Nationals their halfway done. 87th-ranked Paul Angeles Angels to a win. seventh consecutive loss. “Now there is not a lot of Capdeville of Chile. difference between players,” Capdeville and Murray WHITE SOX 12, RED SOX 2 GIANTS 3, BREWERS 2 733-4515 886-2723 837-4167 Sanchez Martinez said. “I know each other from way CHICAGO — Mark MILWAUKEE — Bengie think anyone can win any back, when both trained in Kotsay homered and had Molina homered on the match.” Spain. Capdeville has seen three RBIs against his for- first pitch of the eighth No. 3 Venus Williams, the Murray develop from a kid mer team, Chris Getz went inning to rally San 2000-01 Open champion, who would lose focus to a 4 for 5 and the Chicago Francisco over Milwaukee avoided adding to the list of major title contender. White Sox collected 20 and keep up the pressure stunning results when she “Five years ago, he was a hits Friday night to rout in the NL wild-card race. got past 46th-ranked little young,” Capdeville the Boston Red Sox 12-2. — The Associated Press Magdalena Rybarikova of said. “Now he’s a man.” Slovakia 6-2, 7-5. Next up Murray now faces Taylor for the elder Williams: a Dent, a wild-card entry Check out what’s new online at 719 Overland Ave. fourth-round match against from Newport Beach, Calif., Kim Clijsters, who recently who used to be ranked 21st came out of retirement and but missed two years after www.magicvalley.com Burley, ID • 678-4632 is playing in the tournament surgery and now is 195th. The Lord & St. Vincent De Paul Loves your Leftovers! Thank you for your generosity. Searle’s 244 Main Ave. S. • 734-9143

COMPLETE LINE OF AUTO & TRUCK PARTS Gas, Grub & Goodies RUPERT • BURLEY • HEYBURN 120 N. Center • Oakley, Idaho • 862-7887 SECTION EDITOR ERIC LARSEN: (208) 735-3220 [email protected] SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2009 SPORTS 7 Mini-CasMini-Cassiasia Covering the communities of Acequia, COMMUNITY Albion, Burley, Declo, Heyburn, Malta, Minidoka, Oakley, Paul, Rupert Pie man Practice Pie man good driving habits; ditch the bad ones he other day I heard something T still amazes me, POLICEMAN even though I’ve heard it DAN several times before. A driver, pulled over for Dan Bristol speeding, felt he didn’t have to obey a new speed HAVE A QUESTION FOR limit because he didn’t agree with it. This person POLICEMAN DAN? said he didn’t agree with the new law because it was E-mail your questions to dumb — or some argument [email protected]. to that effect — and since it’s too hard to get used to a good to get complacent new speed limit, a speed- during your commute. ing ticket shouldn’t have Humans are creatures of been issued. habit, though, and not all By the way,the “new” of them are bad. Making speed limit was posted seat belt use something more than two months ago. you never stray from is a Now I know none of us good habit, as is looking at like to have our driving all road signs, even if habits disrupted, but you’ve glanced their way Photo illustration by infringement of your per- before. Also, regularly LAURIE WELCH and sonal preference isn’t a checking your rear-view LAVAR HAMBLIN/Times-News good enough reason to mirror is a helpful habit, John Dockter assembles a pizza change the law. And if you especially if I’m behind in his open kitchen at Doc’s Pizza on can’t adapt to a new speed you with my patrol car’s the Rupert Square. limit, how will you fare lights flashing. when a child is unexpect- Doc celebrates 30 years of pizza making edly in the road? It’s never See DRIVING, Sports 8 By Laurie Welch they were married Schab’s portion of the busi- COMMUNITY NEWS Times-News writer walking and bring ness when he moved away in into a fancy their own 1987. Child find held in 7 to 8:30 p.m., the second RUPERT — Thirty years restaurant, children in Dockter said his employ- Thursday of each month, ago the vision of the perfect he said. And “I’m still here here.” ees have been crucial to the Cassia County September through May, pizza and a willingness to people don’t sit Dockter success of his business and The Cassia County starting Thursday. take a risk launched a man stiffly in chairs because said when Doc he keeps a sign on the back School District will host a Classes are held at Cassia the community knows sim- but gather around & Dan’s Pizza of his office door reminding child find on Sept. 18. Regional Medical Center ply as Doc straight into the a small table and I still opened in 1979, he himself to thank them. Parents of children ages and Minidoka Memorial dough. share a slice from a insisted on keeping Dockter celebrated the 3-4 with physical or mental Hospital. Part philosopher, part communal pizza. love the kitchen open to business’ 30th anniversary difficulties are encouraged Classes at Cassia expert pizza maker and a “It’s a family-gather- the dining area. on Sept. 1, with drawings for to contact the district to Regional will be in the machinist by trade, John ing type of food,”Dockter it.” “My suppliers told prizes, 30 percent off all arrange participation in a Evergreen Room, 1501 Dockter opened what’s now said. “I’ve seen people me I was making a big food and 30-cent Pepsis in a free screening to determine Hiland Ave., Burley. Doc’s Pizza on the Rupert from the community during mistake. They said ‘Put take-home glass. if their child is eligible for Classes at Minidoka Square in the old Dick’s Bar their happiest times and I’ve your pizza-making behind “You know I can’t com- the district’s special educa- Memorial will be in the building in 1979 with his seen them during their sad- closed doors,’”Dockter said. pete with the $5 pizza. But if tion preschool program or conference Room, 1224 partner, Dan Schab. dest times. That’s what I like “But I wanted to be up front you walk out of here feeling other special education Eighth St., Rupert. Dockter said if you ask about a small community. I and I wanted my crew in like you got value for your services that may be free of Thursday (Minidoka): people what they like about get to be a part of it all.” front of people. Now the fly- dollar then I’ve done some- charge. Meal planning made easy pizza they will say things like Dockter said customers ing pies do it all the time. But thing right,” Dockter said. Appointments are using the Idaho plate “the crust,” “the toppings,” often tell him that the first it wasn’t done back then. I “It’s been a good ride. You required and may be made method with dietician or “it’s good for breakfast the thing their grown children was bucking the trend a little have to love it. You know the by calling 878-6627 Wendy Seamons. next day.” say when they come home bit.” people on the fence, they ext. 101 between 8 a.m. and Oct. 8 (Cassia): Physical But he says what they for a visit is that they want to Dockter said he and his don’t last. I’m still here 4 p.m. weekdays. therapist Curtis Mason on really like is a little less tangi- go to Doc’s for pizza. wife, LaNette, who went because I still love it.” exercise and diabetes. ble. “I’ve watched a lot of kids into false labor with their Diabetes classes Nov. 12 (Minidoka): People walking in the grow up. They come in here second child on opening day Laurie Welch may be Optometrist Todd Slusser front door of a pizza parlor with their parents and later and by the afternoon was reached at lwelch@magic- offered in M-C answers eyecare questions. receive a different type of come in on dates,” Dockter back in the pizza parlor valley.com or 208-677- Diabetes education greeting than they would if said. “Eventually they get rolling dough, took over 8767. classes will be offered from See COMMUNITY, Sports 8

The Burley High School Class of 1954 held its 55th reunion Aug. 14, at the Best Western Burley Inn. Pictured are (top BHS CLASS OF 1954 REUNITED row) Larry Winks, Jim Easton, Charles Falk, Robert Brady, Carl Young, Bill Mai, Bob Bischoff, Dale Clark, Kent Church, Glen Larson, Paul Wixom, Kenneth Wells, Denis Kidd, Albert Alvarez, Gerald Whitesides; (third row) Shirley (Starley) Hatch, Janet (Groesbeck) Calkins, Shirlene (Hurst) Wrigley, Lou Ann (Teeples) Horn, Sidney (Pace) Reynolds, Amaryllis (Hatch) Winn, Kaye (Hatch) Titensor, Carol Ann (Maggart) Wilson, Clara (Korb) Despain, Arlene (Peacock) Burton, Beverly (Dayley) Neiwert, Verna (Blauer) Price, Anita (Lind) Frazier, Nadyne (Welch) Sundberg, Linda (Wrigley) Durfee, Sharon (Horne) Smith; (second row) Cheryl (Simmons) McCall, Berniece (Patterson) Tegan, Betty (Vansant) Lane, Lorraine (Moseley) Genzmer, Kay (Charles) Holmes, Donna (Gaskill) Tremayne, Lorna (Banner) Gillette, Joyce (Knopp) Maier, Gladys (Bunn) Wright, Marva (Wrigley) Christensen, Yvonne (Krieger) Weimer, Gena (Schlecht) Mills, Joan (Ward) Wayment, Ruth (Bench) Stimpson, Shawnie (Hansen) Jensen; (bottom row) Monte Hobson, Neil Anderson, Garth Wilson, Bryce Gochnour, Don Clark, Bill Jackson, Gary Carson, Rex Gerratt, Jay Christopherson. Is drinking red wine really that heart healthy? DEAR DR. GOTT: The wine within a 90-minute so much alcohol and the from a professional like you reveal red wine isn’t supe- issue I need your opinion period before dinner, on an amount of calories he is might validate what I’ve rior to beer, white wine or on is one that possibly ASK empty stomach. When I try consuming. He doesn’t been warning him about. liquor for heart health. Still many other families are DR. GOTT to reason with him about seem to care. I hate being a DEAR READER: The other studies tout the ben- dealing with. My husband using moderation and hav- nagging wife, and he acts benefits of red wine share efits of the consumption of and I are retired and read Dr. Peter Gott ing “too much of a good as if he doesn’t hear me. mixed reviews. Studies minimal amounts of alco- many magazines with arti- thing,”he refuses to listen I would truly appreciate have indicated that resver- hol for heart health. It’s cles on the topic of health to consume a whole 750 ml or to stop pouring. it if you could print this atrol and other antioxi- plain to see that further benefits from drinking red bottle of red wine and then He has had high blood letter so I can give him dants in red wine might research is critical before wine. My husband has proceeds to open a second pressure for many years. some convincing informa- prevent heart disease and definitive statements can taken this idea “to heart” in bottle and serves himself He’s overweight and has an tion or statistics to help arterial damage, while be made. the extreme sense. Almost another one to two glasses. enlarged belly. I warn him him understand the risks increasing levels of good every evening, he manages Often, he drinks all the about the adverse effects of he is taking. Hearing it cholesterol. Other studies See DR. GOTT, Sports 8 Sports 8 Saturday, September 5, 2009 COMMUNITY Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho 2 radio towers in Washington state toppled By Tim Klass health and environmental Jason Crawford said in the e- said he knew of no persons of they didn’t get killed,’’ who claimed to be involved Associated Press writer concerns, according to an e- mail. interest, a term often used in Skotdal said. but received some e-mail mail from the North The ELF is a loose collec- law enforcement for individ- The ELF’s Web site fea- from what appear to be locals SEATTLE — Two radio American ELF Press Office, tion of radical environmen- uals being sought in a case tured a picture of one of the who support the action. station towers north of which has represented the talists that has claimed but not necessarily as sus- towers lying on its site with The towers belonging to Seattle were toppled early shadowy group in the past. responsibility for dozens of pects. the caption “Earth KRKO — a family-owned Friday, a banner left nearby “We have to weigh our attacks since the 1990s. The The towers apparently Liberation Front Topples station in Everett, about 25 bore the initials of the Earth priorities, and the local FBI has taken over as lead were taken down with a Two Radio Station Towers in miles north of Seattle — have Liberation Front and an FBI ecosystem in Everett, along investigator in Friday’s inci- piece of heavy construction Snohomish County, WA,’’ prompted complaints from spokesman said authorities with the local residents, do dent. equipment that was already followed by the words: neighbors of interference haven’t found any evidence not need additional sports Andy Skotdal, the sta- on the site, Prewett said. “Details coming soon.’’ from radio signals on home that other individuals or news radio station towers tion’s general manager, said Skotdal said part of the tower Crawford told the AP by telephone and intercom groups besides the ELF were that come at the expense of investigators “have some fell onto the equipment and telephone he believed more lines. The site for the towers involved. reduced property values and persons of interest’’ but damaged the scoop mecha- than one person was is in the town of Snohomish, The towers for KRKO-AM harmful radio waves,’’ ELF would not be more specific. nism. involved. He said he had not about eight miles southeast were torn down because of press office spokesman FBI Agent Marty Prewett “Whoever did it is lucky spoken directly with anyone of Everett.

D E M ARY L IBRARY B OOK N OTES Driving Here are the most recent taker at an ATV park. blamed Delia for the acci- Continued from Sports 7 response if they’re called for you make it again. book notes from the When the two cases begin dent but soon puts the safe Another good habit I hope an emergency or a danger- DeMary Memorial Library to converge, J.P. and delivery of his grandchild you all stick to is reading this ous situation. This allows a Officer down in Rupert. Joanna are again drawn above his resentments, or column every Saturday so high-level officer to quickly Fiction into the same orbit, ignit- so Delia believed. maybe you’ll be safer and respond to an emergency Please put these officers, “Fire and Ice” by J.A. ing memories of the past Nonfiction have a better understanding without making a stop at the killed in the line of duty, and Jance and concerns for the “The Five Thousand of law enforcement. police department to pick up their families in your J.P. Beaumont and his future. Year Leap” by W. Cleon Q: Why do some officers his or her patrol vehicle. prayers. God bless them all. homicide investigation “Delia’s Gift” by V.C. Skousen, “Unfinished drive their police vehicles The same is true for • Deputy Christopher team are working a series Andrews Business: What the Dead while off duty? Isn’t this a detectives and county Johnson, Platte County of murders of six young After a boating tragedy Can Teach us About Life” waste of taxpayer dollars? deputies. Sheriff, Nebraska women. ends her romance with by James Van Praagh A: The simplest, best Off-duty officers may also • Deputy Christopher At the same time, Adan, Delia discovers that Youth fiction answer I can give you is, no. be taking their patrol vehicle Ray, Southampton County Joanna Brady’s sheriff’s she is carrying his child. “Spartan Quest” 1-3 by Officers drive their patrol to get worked on, or may be Sheriff, Virginia department is investigat- She has no choice but to Michael Curtis Ford, vehicles for while off duty headed to a training event • Patrolman Chad Spicer, ing the Cochise County live under the watchful eye “Ranger’s Apprentice” 4 for many valid reasons that somewhere. Georgetown Police, murder of an elderly care- of Adan’s father, who and 5 by John Flanagan not only help the public, but Delaware could also end up saving Thought of Be safe, I’ll be back next somebody’s life. week. E-mail questions to Off-duty administrators the month [email protected]. drive their typically Experience is a wonder- unmarked patrol vehicles in ful thing. It enables you to Dan Bristol is the Heyburn Shop on order to provide immediate recognize a mistake when chief of police. Community Us Continued from Sports 7 Ruth Behr,music and speak- Tuesdays at the Rupert $ December: No classes. er Sheryl Harris. Elks. For partners and Win a 25 gift certifi cate Jan. 14, 2010 (Cassia): Reservations: Lila Hart, more information: Steve to any of these stores Alice Schenk introduces 438-5376. Sams, 878-3997, or Vera participants to tai chi. Mai, 436-4163. Feb. 11, 2010 (Minidoka): United Way picnic Tips for feeling better and Burley library FEATURED BUSINESS staying healthy with dia- held in Heyburn betes educator Tennille A free United Way pic- has new items Houston. nic lunch will be held New items at the Burley March 11, 2010 (Cassia): from noon to 1 p.m. Sept. Public Library include: Licensed counselor Julie 24, at the Mini-Cassia Adult fiction MOVING SALE Williams speaks on depres- Chamber of Commerce “The Return” by Ben sion and diabetes. Office, 1177 Seventh St., Bova, “A Princess of April 8, 2010 (Minidoka): Heyburn. Landover” by Terry Brooks, Medications with pharma- Participants will learn “Dying for Mercy” by Mary 20% to 60% OFF cist Tony Rost. more about United Way Jane Clark, “South of Broad” May 13, 2010 (Cassia): support of local nonprofits by Pat Conroy, “The White Licensed marriage and fami- and how they can help in Queen” by Philippa Gregory, ly therapist Brent Blaisdale, community issues. “Blindman’s Bluff” Faye Charlotte’s Web from Intermountain Kellerman, “Rhino Ranch” Healthcare in Utah, pres- BJ bridge by Larry McMurtry 208.431.2436 ents: “Celebrate What’s announces winners Adult nonfiction Ends Sat. Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10:30-5:00 Right with the World.” “Flat Belly Diet! Sept. 12th Information: Cassia The BJ Duplicate Bridge Cookbook” by Liz Sat. 10:30-3:00 Regional, 677-6288, or Club in Rupert announced Vaccariello, “Abraham Watch for our new location announcement Minidoka Memorial, 436- the results of play for Sept 1. Lincoln: God’s Humble 0481. North-South: 1. Joe Instrument” by Ron L. Blackford and Edna Pierson, Andersen, “Ring of Fire: The PRIZES Ladies Lifeline 2. Sheila Hubsmith and Johnny Cash Reader” by Mildred Wolf, 3. Steve Sams Michael Streissguth SAVINGS luncheon nears and Kent Gillespie, 4. Bill Large print You Are Ladies Lifeline Fellow- Goodman and Chuck “The Sweetgum Ladies The ship, a nondenominational Hunter Knit for Love” by Beth FUN organization, will host a East-West: 1. Dot Creason Pattillo, “Scrapping Plans” DRAWINGS luncheon from noon to and Jackie Brown 2. Vera Mai by Rebeca Seitz, Winner! 2 p.m. Wednesday at and Barbara Carney, 3. “Sometimes a Light GAMES Wed, Thurs, Fri, & Sat to Kathy Connor’s Cafe in Heyburn. 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By Eric Gorski Associated Press writer

The top-selling Bible in North America will undergo its first revision in 25 years, modernizing the language in some sections and promising to reopen a contentious Seminarian Joseph Toledo holds his Bible debate about changing gender terms in the during the morning Mass at the sacred text. Redemptoris Mater Archdiocesan The New International Version, the Bible Missionary Seminary in Denver. of choice for conservative evangelicals, will AP photo be revised to reflect changes in English usage and advances in Biblical scholarship, it was announced Tuesday. The revision is scheduled to be completed late next year and CATHOLIC SEMINARIANS published in 2011. “We want to reach English speakers across the globe with a Bible that is accurate, acces- EMBRACE STRICT RULES sible and that speaks to its readers in a language they can under- By Eric Gorski Redemptoris Mater is a new of the U.S. priesthood. Their Denver, Redemptoris Mater stand,” said Keith Danby, global president Associated Press writer experiment in molding greater ethnic diversity and seminaries have opened in and CEO of Biblica, a Colorado Springs, Catholic priests who are faith- hunger to show fidelity to the Boston, Dallas, Newark, New Colorado-based Christian ministry that DENVER — The seminari- ful to church teaching and church are hallmarks of the Jersey, and Washington) has holds the NIV copyright. ans’ wallets are empty, except authority, and zealous in their coming generation of priests, attracted notice in important But past attempts to remake the NIV for for driver’s licenses and insur- desire to lead other Catholics according to a study released places. contemporary audiences in different edi- ance cards. To buy cigarettes or down that same road. this month by the National When a Vatican office sum- tions have been plagued by controversies clothes or anything else, they On the one hand, the rules Religious Vocation Conference, marized a 2005-2006 study of about gender language that have pitted the- must ask their superiors for are a throwback to 50 years ago, an organization of Catholic U.S.seminaries seeking answers ological conservatives against each other. money — an exercise in obedi- when would-be priests led reg- vocation directors. to the clergy sex abuse scandal, The changes did not ence and a reminder that mate- imented existences apart from In other ways, Redemptoris it recommended that seminar- make all men “people” rial things aren’t important. the rest of the world. But Mater seminarians stand apart ies make their rules more or remove male refer- They have virtually no time Redemptoris Mater men also from their peers. demanding so men shed a ences to God, but alone, on or off campus, and are teach the faith at parishes and The seminary is not the “worldly style of life” — and it instead involved drop- required to travel in pairs, “two spend two years on mission province of a religious order or suggested Redemptoris Mater ping gender-specific by two,” like Jesus’ disciples. trips, knocking on doors look- a diocese headed by priests and seminaries were examples terms when translators They live in a world without cell ing for Catholics in Bronx bishops. Instead, Redemptoris worth following. On the Net judged that the original phones or personal computers, housing projects or Mater seminarians and the http//www.NIVBible text didn’t intend it. So and their evenings end prompt- Minneapolis suburbs. priests who oversee them come 2011.com in some verses, refer- ly at 10. The rules “are difficult to get from Neocatechumenal Way ences to “sons of God” No Roman Catholic semi- used to, but it’s because we communities, groups of 20 to The Redemptoris Mater became “children of God,”for example. nary is a resort. But few men come from this very individual- 50 who bond over intense study House of Formation sits in a Supporters say gender-inclusive changes who study for the priesthood istic society,where it’s just me,” and an evangelism foreign to leafy residential neighborhood are more accurate and make the Bible more endure the sort of rules that says seminarian Joseph Toledo. most Catholics. in southeast Denver, on a accessible, but critics contend they twist govern life at the Redemptoris “Those things have to be torn The Way, an international RULES meaning or smack of political correctness. Mater House of Formation. down. But it isn’t like we’re liv- movement largely run by See , Religion 2 Acknowledging past missteps, the NIV’s ing in a bubble, either.” Catholic lay people, is contro- overseers are promising that this time, the Toledo is the 29-year-old son versial; some critics say it is revision process will be more transparent of a Puerto Rican cab driver, separatist and causes and that they will actively promote what and is one of the few division in parishes, they describe as a long-held practice of American-born semi- though its defenders inviting input from scholars and readers. narians on the rolls in deny it. The NIV was first published in 1978 and 2008-2009. All told, The group’s more than 300 million NIV Bibles are in there are 33 students approach to discipline print worldwide; its publishers and distrib- from 14 coun- at the seminaries it utors say the translation accounts for 30 tries. operates in the percent of Bibles sold in North America. In this, they United States The Committee on Bible Translation, an reflect the (besides independent group of conservative scholars changing face and translators formed in 1965 to create and revise the NIV, will oversee the new revi- sion. An effort earlier this decade to create a separate version of the NIV that used more gender-inclusive language in an attempt to reach a younger audience fell flat with groups that felt it crossed the line. That edition, Today’s New International Version, will cease publication once the new-look NIV is released,said Moe Girkins, president of Grand Rapids, Mich.-based Zondervan, its North American publisher. AP photo Seminarians Joseph Toledo, right, and Carlos Wilson, left, attend a class taught by Fr. Jorge Rodriguez, center, April 22 at the Redemptoris Mater Archdiocesan See BIBLE, Religion 2 Missionary Seminary in Denver.

FACING THEIR FAITH Of roughly 250 million users on Facebook, more than 150 million Soul-searching on Facebook have entered something into the little box in their profile titled By William Wan asking for his core beliefs, it migrates online. purpose, the existence of the “Religious Views.”The following is a list of the 10 most popular The Washington Post stopped him short. Of its 250 million users divine and the meaning of faiths expressed on the Web site: “It’s Facebook. The whole worldwide, Facebook says, life itself. 1. Christian… 6. Buddhism For the longest time, the point is to keep it light and more than 150 million people Some emerge from the 2. Islam 7.Jewish question just sat there on his playful, you know?” said choose to write something in experience with serious 3. atheist 8. Spiritual screen. Cursor blinking. Heim, 27, a college student the religious views box. answers. George Mason 4. agnostic 9. Sikh Waiting quietly, like a from Dumfries, Va. “But a Amid the endless triviali- University student Travis 5. Hindu 10. Jedi patient priest in a confes- question like that kind of ties of social networking Hammill, 19, spent several sor’s box. makes you think.” sites — the quotes from days distilling his beliefs into Because “Christian” and the various denominations associated Religious Views: _____. Such public proclama- Monty Python, the Stephen this sentence: “Love God, with it are so dominant, Facebook combined within “Christian” the Creating a Facebook pro- tions of beliefs used to Colbert for Prez groups, the Love Others, Change the following categories: “Catholic,”“Protestant,”“Episcopalian,” file for the first time, Eric require a baptism in water, goofy-but-calculatingly- World.” “Methodist,”“Presbyterian,”“LDS” and “Mormon” Heim hadn’t expected or a circumcision, or learn- attractive profile pics — the Others try to deflect the Source: Facebook something so serious. He ing the five pillars of Islam. tiny box has become a sur- question with humor. had whipped through the Now Facebook users prisingly meaningful pit stop “Pastafarian,” typed wit and truth: “Agnostic, but an evangelical mother and a social network Web site’s announce their spiritual for philosophical inquiry. Maddy Gillis, 20, of accepting offers.” “I barely fundamentalist grandmoth- questionnaire about his identity with the stroke of a Millions have plumbed Kensington, Md., invoking a believe I exist.” er. There was no space to interests, favorite movies few keys. And what they are their innermost thoughts, popular pseudo-religion For Heim, the space limit- describe the terror he felt and relationship status, typ- typing into the open-ended struggling to sum up their that venerates a “Flying ed to 100 characters left him after learning of heaven and ing witty replies wherever box offers a revealing peek beliefs in roughly 10 words Spaghetti Monster.” no room to go into his child- hell. Or how the hell part possible. But when he into modern faith and what or less. For many,it has led to A good many, however, hood experiences growing reached the little blank box happens to that faith as it age-old questions about tread the fine line between up with an agnostic father, See SOUL, Religion 3 Religion 2 Saturday, September 5, 2009 RELIGION Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Black woman sues Billy Memoir about becoming Buddhist Graham group over race monk, then quitting By Mike Baker ther comment Thursday. By Michael Hill Associated Press writer Mark Demoss, a Associated Press writer THE BOOK spokesman for the Graham RALEIGH, N.C. — A organization, declined to Far from home and strung black woman is suing the talk about McCallum’s job. out on morphine, Stephen Billy Graham Evangelistic But he said he has frequent- Schettini was saved from his Association, saying she was ly seen the association go to skid when a friend showed abruptly fired after com- great effort to increase black up at his hovel in Pakistan to plaining that the organiza- participation and noted that force him to clean up and tion was not reaching out to two prominent black pas- move on. The young African-American church- tors from the Minneapolis Englishman traveled around es. area recently led an associa- India and immersed himself A spokesman for the tion event there. in Buddhist teaching. He organization didn’t com- “That’s a preposterous became a monk, shaved his ment on the firing, but said claim that the organization head and donned traditional the association does exten- would deliberately bypass robes. He logged a lot of sive outreach and works African-American partici- mountain time, first in extensively with African- pation,” Demoss said. “In Switzerland and later at a ‘The Novice: Why I Became a American and other diverse fact, the opposite is quite remote Tibetan monastery. Buddhist Monk, Why I Quit churches. true.” Then, disillusioned after and What I Learned’ Kimberly McCallum said The association was eight years, Schettini exited (Greenleaf Book Group, 346 in the lawsuit that was founded by Billy Graham in back into Western culture. pages, $24.95), by Stephen moved into a federal court 1950 and is now headed by Schettini, now middle- Schettini. (AP Wednesday that she was the Graham’s son, Franklin. aged, takes an introspective Photo/Greenleaf Book Group only black employee work- Billy Graham, 90, has look at his geographical and Press) ing in the executive offices recently battled a range of spiritual journey back in the in Charlotte when she health problems and largely ’70s in “The Novice.” Taliban Afghanistan provide started in February 2007. spends time at his North Thankfully, this is not one of some of the book’s most fas- She complained to her Carolina home. those stories about well-to- cinating passages. His superiors later that year Though he began his do Westerners claiming to account of the towering when she was asked to ministry when segregation feel oppressed by material- Buddhas of Bamiyan before recruit congregations to a was still accepted, Graham ism before they jet off to their 2001 destruction by the camp program but found later integrated his crusades Dharamsala. Schettini is too Taliban is especially that a list of 635 prospective and made efforts to draw hard-core for that. poignant. churches had only three diverse crowds to his U.S. He grew up in Manchester, The larger story here is memberships that were pri- rallies. England, the son of restaura- Schettini’s circuitous search marily black. AP photo Michael O. Emerson, a teurs and a bit of a misfit. He for spiritual enlightenment. McCallum said it was Rev. Billy Graham is shown speaking on a six-city evangelistic tour, Rice University sociologist bristled at the rigid In his words, he wanted to apparent that black church- Oct. 1980, Tokyo, Japan. who has done extensive Catholicism of his boyhood “unravel my own mind.” es were excluded. research on race and reli- and was distant from his par- Writings about spiritual A week after raising her McCallum said she tried not been downsized and gion, said the association ents. He was a kleptomaniac, journeys have the potential to concerns, McCallum said to get other jobs at the asso- that the only job that was has long emphasized trying loathed himself and, like read like deadly dull navel- she was told her job with ciation, based in eliminated there was the to increase its diversity even others before him, sought a gazing. This book is not like global offices was cut Minneapolis, but that she one occupied by the plain- though churches remain geographic cure. that. Schettini is a keen because of downsizing. Her was blocked from other tiff,” the lawsuit says. She deeply segregated. Schettini hitchhiked from observer of what’s around boss never raised concerns positions and had a later job wants a job reinstated, back “Although I don’t think western Europe to India.This him and what’s going on about the quality of her offer revoked. pay and damages for what they’ve been as successful is not strictly a travel book, inside him. He has obviously work, according to the law- “Subsequent to her dis- she describes as discrimina- as they would like, they have but his descriptions of his spent decades mulling over suit filed in June in a local charge, plaintiff learned tion because of her race. worked very hard at it,” journey through Turkey,pre- the material and has a nice, court. that the global offices had McCallum declined fur- Emerson said. revolutionary Iran and pre- self-aware style.

Rules Continued from Religion 1 fessor of theology at John ’You protect them too Spanish mission-style cam- Carroll University in much,’”says Colautti, who is pus called the John Paul II Cleveland. from Argentina. Center for the New “Before, secular life was “It’s important to have a Evangelization. The campus looked at with great suspi- time in your life in which you is also home to a larger semi- cion,”says Cozzens, a former experience that it’s possible nary, St. John Vianney, or seminary rector. “With the to live without TV, that you SJV,which trains men mostly Second Vatican Council, the don’t need the Internet. It’s from Colorado and the world is God’s creation. So possible to overcome temp- Midwest for the Denver our task then was to train tation, to have a celibate life, archdiocese. seminarians to be in the a chaste life. The society Seminarians from the two world, to know it, but not to presents you these things as institutions receive the same be of it any profound secular impossible. So if they’re education in the same class- sense.” impossible, you don’t even es, grounded in reverence for Some Catholics, particu- fight it, you say, ‘What the traditional Catholic teach- larly conservatives, believe heck?’ The culture is always ing. Neither is an institution vocations to the priesthood pressing, pressing.” for questioning the church dropped drastically post- on contraception or the mer- Vatican II in part because its of the celibate, male-only seminaries allowed too much priesthood. freedom, resulting in dissent Some seminarians, like But SJV mirrors contem- and short-lived vocations. Garcia, follow a twisting porary seminary life. The Others point to societal path to the priesthood. men take notes on laptops, AP photo changes, including much Others seem preordained. carry Blackberries, live in Joseph Toledo, left, and other seminarians hold a morning service May 14 at the Redemptoris Mater smaller Catholic families Toledo, who arrived a few single rooms, gather for TV- Archdiocesan Missionary Seminary in Denver. that shrink the candidate months after Garcia in 1999, watching in a common room, pool. started dressing like a priest maintain their own blogs and on, like a brother. Being pen- heard what he believed was Wednesday, the men chant- The reasons for decline for Halloween when he was 3 spread news about snow- niless and depending on oth- the call to the priesthood.But ed psalms accompanied by may be in dispute, but the growing up in Bridgeport, cancelled classes on ers was a lesson in humility — he didn’t heed it immediate- Spanish guitar, gathered numbers are not: The num- Conn. He pretended to say Facebook. Basically, that’s God would provide. ly, instead going to work for a around an altar draped in ber of priests in the U.S. has Mass at a desk in his room. the rule when it comes to “If you see the rules as pharmaceutical company white cloth and covered with dropped from 58,000 in 1965 Why the priesthood? contemporary Catholic sem- something that limits you before answering the call. fresh flowers. to 40,000 today. The last “It’s really hard to answer,” inary life in the U.S. from doing something, it “I think the Lord, he is “The Lord is passing by decade has seen an uptick in Toledo says.“There is no one The men of Redemptoris becomes a heavy burden,” always a gentleman,” Garcia again,”says the Rev. Federico ordinations; this year’s class reason. When God calls, you Mater — the name is Latin for Garcia said. “We see it as a says. “He called me that Colautti, the vice rector. “He is 472, up from 442 in 2000. know, why not? I’m defi- “Mother of the Redeemer”— way to help because our time, but he knew I was new, wants us to come with him. But it’s still not enough to nitely not in it for the money take notes on steno pads, vocation, the same as mar- in a way, rediscovering my Are you ready to go? Are you replenish the priesthood’s or because I want to become must seek permission before riage, is a daily fight.“ faith. He didn’t push me.” ready to go with him? aging ranks. a bishop. I’m not in it for the hanging anything on their As a teenager Garcia drift- Like the others, Garcia Because if you don’t, you Colautti, the Redemptoris popularity because it’s not residence hall walls and share ed away from the church. He received his seminary remain empty.” Mater vice rector, says the always popular to be a priest. everything, down to a single dated off and on. He went to assignment by lottery. His seminary’s prohibitions on The ‘why’ is that people are e-mail address on a second- college. Then his father per- name was plucked from a television, the off-campus suffering. People need the floor computer. suaded him to attend Mass basket and matched to buddy system and other rules church, the sacraments. Jose de Jesus Garcia arrived one Sunday, when someone Denver. Here, he took up a Most U.S. seminaries are meant to foster com- People need to be baptized. at Redemptoris Mater a from the Neocatechumenal life structured around prayer loosened their rules after the munion, or togetherness. The sick need to be visited. decade ago from Veracruz, Way was speaking. and school. Bells ring in the Second Vatican Council of Especially at an international There is a need.” Mexico. Although he was The message was standard hallway at 6 a.m., and a half- the 1960s, which brought a seminary, where structure used to living on his own, he — Jesus loves you as you are hour later the men gather in a shift in how the Catholic provides safe harbor for new Missionary says, he quickly came to and doesn’t care about your small chapel for morning church perceived its place in arrivals, many of whom appreciate the rules. past — but it touched some- prayer. the world, says the Rev. come from poor countries Brian Christiansen Traveling two-by-two thing in Garcia. He returned It’s like a Mass set to a fla- Donald Cozzens, writer in and suffer culture shock. gave him someone to depend to the church and eventually menco soundtrack. On one residence and adjunct pro- “Some people will say, called

Bible Continued from Religion 1 masculine terms in the for the revisions.” said. “We have a genuine, said. “But we’re open and “Whatever its strengths, original should not be tam- Danby said that freezing authentic review process ... anxious to see what they the TNIV has become an pered with. Some warned the NIV in its 1984 state was Everything is on the table.” come up with and we’re emblem of division in the that changing singular gen- also a mistake, however. He One of the most vocal really going to be reserving evangelical Christian der references to plural ones emphasized that in the critics of gender-inclusive judgment.” world,”Girkins said. alters what the Bible says revision, about 90 percent translations, Randy Stinson Most changes will have It was the TNIV that ush- about God’s relationships of the NIV will be of the Louisville, Kentucky- nothing to do with gender ered in changes from “sons with individuals. unchanged. based Council on Biblical inclusivity, Moo said. And of God” to “children of The Southern Baptist Douglas Moo, a professor Manhood and Woman- the TNIV provides a Brian Christiansen left God,” or “brothers” to Convention passed a reso- at Wheaton College and hood, said the group sup- glimpse of likely changes: In Aug.  to serve in the “brothers and sisters.” In lution saying the edition chairman of the Committee ports updating the NIV. He the ’’84 NIV, Mary is “with New Mexico Albuquerque Genesis I, God created “has gone beyond accept- on Bible Translation, said credited organizers for their child,” but in the TNIV she mission. “human beings” in his own able translation standards.” the group is committed to openness. is “pregnant.” In the NIV He is son of Ramon and image instead of “man.” “We fell short of the trust “a complete review of every “We’re still probably version of Psalm 146:9, JoEllyn Christiansen of Many prominent pastors that has been placed in us,” gender related change.” going to differ on the way “The Lord watches over the Rupert, and a member of and scholars endorsed the said Danby, of Biblica. “We “I am not sure how it’s they handle some of the alien.”The TNIV used “for- changes. But critics said failed to make a clear case going to come out,” Moo gender language,” Stinson eigner” instead of “alien.” Rupert th Ward. Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho RELIGION Saturday, September 5, 2009 Religion 3 Soul CHURCH NEWS Continued from Religion 1 wanted. It proved so popu- Church hosts from 11 a.m. to noon in the church on the corner of tank, Bingo, and music. A weighed especially heavily lar that Facebook later made sanctuary. Fourth Avenue and Salmon side dish is requested. after he was caught break- its political views box free- anniversary Nursery care will be pro- Street in Hagerman. The The church is located at ing into a neighbor’s home text as well. The Centro Oracion y vided during all sessions. social hour will be from 3 to 2055 Filer Ave. E. in Twin at age 7. Since then, Facebook’s Alabanza will hold a second Everyone is welcome. The 4 p.m. and will include reg- Falls. Information: 733- He couldn’t convey the beliefs box has generated a Congress and anniversary chancel choir will sing istration and other activities. 7820. profound faith and forgive- staggering number of from 5:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. “Come to the Table of Historical displays with ness he found in junior high entries. So exactly how and at 7 p.m. today and from Grace” and organist Sarah pictures and a DVD will be Attend cowboy after hearing the tear-filled many users put down 5:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 6 Benton will play “Go for set up in the Fellowship Hall. sermons of a charismatic “beer” as their religion? p.m. Sunday at the church. Baroque” music for worship. A cookbook, “Recipes and church at T.F. Fair Baptist minister. Or the How many “Catholic“? Everyone is welcome. There The Home Communion Remembrances” will be A Cowboy Church spon- eventual dulling of that What correlations exist will be free food both days. teams will take communion available for $10. sored by Champion’s Group faith in college by alcohol. between religion and num- The church is located at to the homebound after the The worship service will will be held at 9 a.m. Sunday And he couldn’t fully ber of friends? 259 Main Ave. E. in Twin service. The church is locat- begin at 4 p.m. with speaker at the Twin Falls County Fair explain the slow reforma- Company spokeswoman Falls. Questions: 735-2249. ed at 360 Shoshone Street Bishop Robert Hoshibata on the free stage. Everyone is tion of that faith, now that Meredith Chin declined to East in Twin Falls. of the Oregon/Idaho welcome. he has abandoned the hol- answer, citing user privacy, ‘Worship with an Information: 733-5872 or Conference; the Handbell Information: 423-4182. lowness of his old party life. but agreed to compile a list www.tffumc.com. Choir and combined “How the heck do you fit of the most popular reli- Edge’ at New Life Hagerman/Wendell choir Ministry luncheon all of that into a box?” asked gious identities. New Life Saturday Night Lutheran church will provide special music. Heim, who sometimes The most popular faith “Worship with an Edge” will Dinner will be served after scheduled attends a Lutheran church. professed is “Christian” be today at 7 p.m., featuring holds communion the service in the Fellowship The Agape Interfaith So rather than type in a and the various denomina- Rev. Randy Gardner. Music Our Savior Lutheran Hall. The regular Sunday Ministry luncheon will be specific denomination or a tions associated with it. The will be provided by Eugene Church of Twin Falls will service for Sept. 13 will not 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sept. pithy, amusing answer, category is so dominant Moreno and the Solid Rock hold a service of Holy be held. 15, at the Lincoln Inn, 413 Heim entered this non- that for this list, Facebook’s Praise Band. Sunday morn- Communion at 9:30 a.m. Main St. in Gooding. Tracy sequitur: “Colorless green statisticians insisted on ing service will be at 10:30 Sunday.The Call Committee Effect Radio Hills, of Jerome, will present ideas sleep furiously.” combining such other des- a.m., and will feature Pastor will share an announcement “God’s Children Transcend Linguistic philosopher ignations as “Protestant,” Gardner. and Interim Pastor Stan presents concert Continents.” Tracy is the Noam Chomsky wrote the “Catholic” and “Mormon” Meetings are open to the Hoobing will preach on “A Effect Radio will present founder of a school and phrase to demonstrate how under the “Christian” label. public. New Life Assembly Double Dare: To Listen and the concert Ruth “Back to orphanage in Malawi, a sentence can be grammat- The second most popular of God Church is at 254 Hwy. To Speak” based on Mark the Five Tour” with High Africa. ically logical and yet have no entry on the list is “Islam,” 24 (north of Cycle City), 7:24-37.The church is locat- Flight Society, A Rotterdam Make reservations for meaning — how things that followed by “Atheist.” Rupert. Information: Pastor ed at 464 Carriage Lane N. November, and Ashes lunch by calling Leona seem so right at first can “Jedi,” interestingly Gary Clark at 431-6615 or Information: 208-733- Remain at 7 p.m. Sept. 12. Patterson at 934-5356 on or crumble under scrutiny. enough, makes an appear- Pastor Gardner at 650-0247. 3774, 733-8845 or The doors open at 6:30 p.m. before Sept. 13. Cost of the “It represents my faith,” ance at No. 10. www.osltf.org. at the River Christian lunch is $8.50. The program Heim said, “how it some- The complete catalogue T.F. Baptist church Fellowship at the corner of begins at noon. There is no times makes sense to me of entries easily numbers in United Methodist Falls Avenue East and the charge for the program. and sometimes doesn’t.” the thousands, Chin said. honors Labor Day road to Shoshone Falls in Everyone is welcome. The religious views box But even offbeat answers In honor of Labor Day Women’s rummage Twin Falls. Questions: June Peterson at debuted in 2006, two years like “Seguidor del weekend, the Twin Falls Admission is $7 at the 208-366-2974 or after Facebook’s launch. Wiccanismo” and “Heavy First Baptist Church will sale scheduled door, or $6 per person for [email protected]. Before that, users who Metal” garner more than hold a 9:30 a.m. worship The United Methodist groups of 10 or more. talked about faith did so 2,000 users each. There is service Sunday instead of Women’s rummage sale will Information: 734-2049 or Jerome church mostly in the “About Me” also, Chin noted with a the traditional 11 a.m. serv- held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. effectradio.com. area. laugh, a surprising number ice. The theme of the service Friday and from 9 a.m. to 2 celebrates centennial The company had tried a of people online who iden- is “Rally in the Alley” and p.m. on Sept. 12. The Christian Music The Jerome United political views box with a tify themselves as Amish. will be held in the shady area church is located at 360 Methodist Church will cele- drop-down menu of limited of the churches northeast Shoshone Street East in Festival next week brate its centennial Sept. choices. The religious views Staff writer Jenna parking lot. Those who Twin Falls. The 9th annual Christian 18-20. box had a key difference: a Johnson and staff attend are asked to bring Information: 733-5872 or Music Festival will be held A number of events are free-text format that let researcher Meg Smith con- their lawn chairs. No Sunday www.tffumc.com. Sept. 12-13 in the Shoshone planned for the occasion, users type in whatever they tributed to this report. school classes are scheduled City Park. More than 10 dif- including a cornerstone for Sunday. Hansen church seeks ferent music groups from service, prayer vigil, soda Idaho and Montana will per- fountain and pie social on Bikers to visit First volunteers form. Activities for children Sept. 18; an open house from RELIGION LETTER The Hansen Baptist both days. On Saturday 1-5 p.m., a social hour from Assembly of God Church, which holds servic- music will start at 12:30 p.m. 5-6 p.m., and banquet on A dangerous course taking the stance that the Twin Falls First Assembly es in the Hansen to 7:30 p.m. On Sunday a Sept. 19; and a special wor- This letter is in Bible is not the word of of God will hold worship Community Center at 340 free community breakfast ship service at 10:30 a.m., response to the recent two God and is setting itself services at 8 a.m. and 10:30 Main St. in Hansen, will not will be held at 8 a.m., fol- followed by a potluck on the articles about the ELCA. up as God. This is a dan- a.m. Sunday. The THUG host its monthly Clothes lowed by a community church lawn and a commun- While the Evangelical gerous course for any (Through His Undying Closet in September. The church service. Music will ion service on Sept. 20. Church in America has church to take because it Grace) bikers will share how next time the closet will be start at 12:30 p.m. and end at Some former ministers of the word “Lutheran” in its replaces the desires of God has transformed their held is the second weekend 7:30 p.m. the church are expected to name, it certainly does God with the desires of lives. There will be an infor- in October. This is a free event and is attend the celebrations. not represent traditional man. mal “Shine and Show” bike The church is seeking vol- open to the public. The church has made cen- Lutheran teaching. DUWAYNE KRAUSE parking area for those who unteers to help with the Donations are welcome. tennial booklets for mem- To paraphrase the ELCA Twin Falls ride to church. There will closet, a community-ori- Questions: Sheryl Ann bers who’d like to have a representative, they no also be Bible study classes at ented program that gives Mason at 208-886-7159 or copy for a keepsake. longer believe in the Bible The Times-News wel- 9:30 a.m. and nursery for away free clothing to area 208-420-1155. For more information, as the source of truth to comes letters on religious infants to 24 months, during needy. If you’d like to help including dinner tickets: be followed. Traditional topics of 300 words or less all services. Kiddie Korner out with the charity event or Immanuel Lutheran Maxine Palmer at 324-5455 Lutheran churches, such from readers. Letters for ages 2 to 4 years and Kids for more information: Eileen or 324-2198. as the Lutheran Church- should include the writer’s Church for grades K-6 are Pyron at 423-6937 or 420- holds extravaganza Missouri Synod, still signature, mailing address held during the 10:30 a.m. 1320. Immanuel Lutheran The Times-News wel- believe in the Bible as the and telephone number. service. Church will hold a Parking comes news of church inspired work of God that Letters considered The church is located at Hagerman church Lot Extravaganza at the events. Send information to is without error. libelous, obscene or in bad 189 Locust St. N., north of church and school parking Ellen Thomason at Since it no longer taste will be rejected, and Addison Avenue East, (the marks anniversary lot from 4 to 7 p.m. on Sept. [email protected]. believes the Bible should the Times-News reserves church behind the Burger Hagerman United 13. There will be food, fun, Deadline is 5 p.m. be followed, the ELCA is the right to edit all letters. Stop). Information: 208- Methodist Church will hold fellowship, a bounce house, Wednesday for publication 733-5349. a 100th anniversary celebra- cars for children to ride, a on the Saturday religion tion at 3 p.m. Sept. 12 at the pie-eating contest, dunk page. Methodist church RELIGION BRIEFS begins new schedule The First United Magic Valley References to God Mich. church enlists Methodist Church of Twin OK in some Ky. Satan in advertising Falls will begin a new sched- ule Sunday. The informal state documents campaign “family style” worship will Places of Worship FRANKFORT, Ky. — An TRENTON, Mich. — A be from 9:15 to 10:15 a.m. in atheist group that won a Michigan church is enlisting the upstairs chapel. recent court victory to have Satan in a bid to drum up Christian education classes a reference to “Almighty attendance at services. for adults will also meet at God” stricken from Metro South Church in that time. A community fel- Kentucky’s homeland the Detroit suburb of lowship time with coffee and security law doesn’t con- Trenton is posting signs refreshments will be from template legal challenges saying the non-denomina- 10:15 to 11 a.m. in Buhl against more than 30 other tional Christian congrega- the Friendship Room. divine mentions in state tion “sucks”and “makes me Traditional worship and First documents. sick.”The ads are signed by classes for all ages will be Christian Edwin Kagin, national Satan. Church legal director for American The campaign even has a A Friendly Church Where The Atheists Inc., said the Web site explaining why Jesus Is group will mount chal- Satan hates the church. The Answer Sunday Worship Service 10am Bible Is Believed And Taught lenges only in cases it Youth Pastor Adam Fellowship following worship Small Groups Sunday School 9:30am believes it can clearly win. Dorband tells WJBK-TV the SMILE GOD Available during the week Sunday Worship 10:45am The latest Kentucky case, church is trying to reach out LOVES Pastor Phil Price Sunday Bible Study 6:00pm he said, is one of those, to people and cut through YOU twinfallsfpc.org [email protected] though its final disposition the “noise.” 1005 Poplar St. First Presbyterian Church Buhl, Idaho 83316 could ultimately be decid- Dorband said Jesus PROVERBS 19:22 209 5th Ave. N. 208-543-4102 ed by an appeals court. “wants us to be creative and Twin Falls,ID 83301 Starting September 16th! www.fccbuhl.com The attorney general’s he wants us to ... use what- “A Smile Is A Gift 733-7023 Pastor Art Freund office is considering ever it takes to reach people.” Anyone Can Give.” Ages 3 yrs old to appealing the decision. J.C.H.T.M.R.K. New Covenant 6th grade Franklin Circuit Judge — Wire reports United Reformed Church 6:16pm to 8:00pm Thomas Wingate ruled Every Wednesday that references to a BEGINNING SEPT. 6TH dependence on God in a Meeting in Bible Memorization law that created the SundaySanctuary Worship Sunday Revised Schedule 9:15am & 6pm Teaching & Games Kentucky Office of Sun. Worship To enhance our time together in Sunday School Homeland Security is akin 9:15am & 6pm Worship, Study And Building Community 10:45 am to establishing a religion, Sunday School which the government is “We implore you on Christ’s behalf, be 9:15 am – 10:15 am reconciled11-12 to God. For Noon He made Him prohibited from doing who knew no sin to be sin for us, that Magic Valley Bible Church we“Grace might become alone, the Faith righteousness alone, of under the state and nation- Family Style Informal Worship – in Chapel GodChrist in Him.” alone, - 2 Cor. To 5:20b-21 the Meeting at First Christian Church Glory of God alone.” 601 Shoshone North, Twin Falls al constitutions. The ruling Christian Education (Adult) Rev. Christopher Folkerts Offi ce at 421 Washington North Offi ciating: prompted an outcry from 733-5248 10:15 am - 11:00 am Pastor Chistopher735-8285 Folkerts Christian activists. 1708539-3455 Heyburn Ave. E. Call Today! Community Fellowship Twin Falls, ID 83301 Wingate said some 32 www.newcovenanturc.com1708 Heyburn Ave. E. Twin Falls, ID 83301 mentions of God in the 11:00 am - 12:00 noon state constitution, various laws and regulations don’t Traditional Style Worship pose the same kind of Christian Education (All Ages) problem as does the one in the court case he presided 360 Shoshone St. E . over. To advertise your church services and events, call Karen at 735-3270 or e-mail: [email protected] Religion 4 Saturday, September 5, 2009 OBITUARIES/IDAHO/WEST Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Mel Meyer Martha Jane (Perry) Turner HAZELTON — family, watching BOISE — Martha Martha is sur- Calif. kidnap case Mel Meyer, beloved NASCAR races, as Jane (Perry) Turner vived by her hus- husband, father, well as our local passed away Tues- band, Ron; brother, papa, brother and races, and he espe- day, Sept. 1, 2009. Loyal (Monica) prompts look son, passed away cially loved country She was born in Perry; sister, Ann unexpectedly at music. He was con- Twin Falls, Idaho, on (Roger) Graefe; home on Wednes- stantly finding new March 31, 1939, to daughter, Patty (Pat) day, Sept. 2, 2009. songs to share with Loyal and Mary Cooper; son, John back at cold cases He was only 52 years others and made Helen Perry. Martha (Alicia) Turner; old. CDs for anyone that he knew was the youngest of three. daughter, Kathi (Chris) By Martin Griffith Calif., and Garrido fathered He was born on June 9, would enjoy them. Martha was raised and edu- Connell; son, Steve (Diane) and Scott Sonner two children with Dugard. 1957,as the youngest child to Mel became a grandfather cated in Twin Falls, Idaho. Turner; and son, Mark Associated Press writers Both Garridos are being Albert and Elma Meyer. He in February 2006 and his life She enjoyed skiing in Sun Turner. She had 14 grand- held without bail. joined siblings Bonnie,Millie was forever changed when Valley and was an avid children, Cole, Drew, Zach, RENO, Nev. — Police are Another unsolved Reno and Alvin. When Mel was a he held Olivia Lynn. His swimmer and lifeguard. Cheyenne, Emily, Kylie, scouring old records of case under review involves child, his family moved “Livi Lou” was the sunshine Martha attended Marquette Dalton, Spencer, Cameron, major unsolved cases in 7-year-old Monica around and he lived in places in his life and she in turn University in Wisconsin, Kaitlyn, Isabella, Jade, Jenna northern Nevada to deter- DaSilva, who was snatched such as St. Anthony, loved her Papa with all her where she earned a bache- and Abygail; and numerous mine if any match the pro- from her bedroom as she Hazelton and Tendoy before heart. There wasn’t a thing lor’s degree in elementary nieces and nephews. Martha file of the man charged in slept in 1990. Her remains the family settled in that little girl couldn’t get education. was preceded in death by her the abduction and assault were found three weeks Murtaugh. He graduated from him, and he could often Martha moved to Boise to parents, Loyal and Mary of a California girl 18 years later east of Reno. Her killer from Murtaugh High School be found driving her around begin a teaching position in Helen Perry. ago. has never been identified. in 1975. on a four-wheeler, going 1961. She soon met Ron Martha had one regret The cold cases include Whan noted the disap- He married the love of his anywhere she pointed for Turner, and they were mar- during her lifetime. She was the 1989 murders of two pearances of DaSilva, the life, Tracy Lynn Coulson, on him to go. He knew that ried on Sept. 22, 1962. They never able to know her Reno children who van- Chias and Dugard occurred June 5, 1976, and they cele- when Olivia looked at him were blessed with five chil- father. He was in the Navy ished near their school bus in the same general time brated 33 years of marriage with her big eyes and said “I dren. Martha was a devoted and stationed overseas for stop. frame and area after this year. They built their love you, Papa” he would be wife, mother and home- several years before being Investigators are looking Garrido’s parole. Garrido homestead south of at her mercy. maker. killed in World War II, when for similarities between admittedly had a process of Hazelton, where they He is survived by his lov- She worked as a substitute she was 6. Ironically, he died numerous cases and Phillip finding females and com- resided during their entire ing wife, Tracy; daughters, teacher for several years and on the last day of the war. Garrido’s method of opera- mitting sex acts with them, time together. They could Krystal Meyer and Lacy then began working at Boise Finally, Martha will get her tion in the case of Jaycee he said. always be found together Albertson; granddaughter, State University in the wish to see her father again. Dugard, Reno police Lt. “During that time period and still went to breakfast Olivia; and his best friend, Registrar’s Office, where she A special thank you to Mike Whan said. Dugard we had those child abduc- together every weekend. son-in-law, Josh Albertson. worked until she retired in Harrison’s Hope Hospice, resurfaced last week in tion cases and since then They went on regular camp- He is also survived by his June 1999. Emerson House and California after being we haven’t had any,’’Whan ing trips and scenic drives siblings, Bonnie Wiseman Martha loved her Catholic Caldwell Care Center for snatched near her school said. “Kind of interesting.’’ and were truly soul mates. of Soldotna, Alaska, Millie faith and was actively their loving care over the bus stop in South Lake Hall said Garrido told her Mel and Tracy had their Meyer of Idaho Falls and involved in many church past year. Tahoe, Calif., in 1991 at the the night she was repeated- first daughter,Krystal Dawn, Alvin (Vivian) Meyer of activities at St. Mark’s. She A vigil will be held at 7 age of 11. ly raped in 1976 that he had in 1979.Lacy Lynn joined the Pocatello, as well as enjoyed reading, cross- p.m. Monday, Sept. 7, at St. “There might not be any come to Lake Tahoe specif- family nearly three years numerous nieces, nephews, stitch and spending time Mark’s Catholic Church. link between the cases and ically for the purpose of later in 1982. Mel worked cousins, aunts and uncles. with her family. She was a Funeral Mass will be cele- him, but we’d be crazy not abducting a girl. very hard to take care of his He was preceded in death by very nurturing and caring brated at 11 a.m. Tuesday, to look at the possibility,’’ “The whole scheme was girls and raised them to his parents, Elma Meyer in woman with a lively sense of Sept. 8, at St. Mark’s he said. planned for weeks,’’ she always do the right thing, no 1976, Al Meyer in 1994; and humor. In retirement, Catholic Church, 7960 W. Jennifer and Charles said he told her. matter if it was the hardest mother-in-law, Dorothy Martha continued her vol- Northview in Boise. Burial Chia were kidnapped on A federal prosecutor tes- thing to do. He raised his Matsen in 2009. unteer work with the will be at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday the 100-yard walk from the tified at Garrido’s 1977 trial daughters to be honest, kind Dad, we love you so much church, gardening in her at Morris Hill Cemetery. bus stop to their home, that Garrido had tried and hardworking. He was and will miss you every sec- yard and traveling with Ron. Services are under the direc- Whan said. The remains of unsuccessfully to kidnap agentle giant, a man of few ond of every day. We will Martha particularly loved tion of Accent Funeral Home the 6- and 7-year-old sib- yet another woman just an words, but a man with a carry you with us always and to spend time with her in Meridian. Condolences lings were found nine hour before he approached heart of gold. we all know that we will see grandchildren who have may be left online for the months later near Hall. Mel was always known for you again in Heaven. We many special memories of family at www.accentfuner- Blairsden, Calif., about 60 Garrido was sentenced to his incredible work ethic, praise Him for the time He Grandma playing with them al.com miles northwest of Reno. 50 years in federal prison and it was important to him let us have you but we can- for hours at a time. She had a Memorials may be made He said the cases under but was paroled after serv- that his family was raised not wait to see your sweet gift for living in the moment to the St. Mark’s Food Bank, review either occurred ing less than 11 years. He with the same values that he face again. and giving her focus to 7960 W. Northview, Boise, around 1976, when Garrido was arrested and jailed was. He began working as a A viewing will be held whomever she was with at ID 83704,or a charity of your kidnapped and sexually from April 4, 1993 until farm hand, when he was a from 5 until 7 p.m. Monday, the time. choice. assaulted a 25-year-old May 10, 1993 for violating teenager and continued Sept. 7, at White Mortuary woman while living in parole terms, said U.S working on local farms for “Chapel by the Park.” The Reno, or in the several years Parole Commission vice several years. He began funeral will be held at 11 a.m. DEATH NOTICES after Garrido was paroled chairman Cranston working for Longview Fibre Tuesday, Sept. 8, at White from a Nevada prison in Mitchell. Garrido was then in September 1984. He Mortuary, with burial fol- will be held at a later date 1988. confined to his home until started out as a laborer and lowing at Sunset Memorial Helen P.Anderson (Parke’s Magic Valley The 1976 victim — Aug. 31, 1993, and because of his strong work Park. In lieu of flowers, ALBION — Helen Poulsen Funeral Home of Twin Katherine Callaway Hall — remained on federal parole ethic and intelligence, please consider donating to a Anderson, 93, of Albion, Falls). told police after that attack until March 1999. quickly advanced in the trust fund for Mel’s grand- died Thursday, Sept. 3, that Garrido said he had Mitchell declined to dis- company to shipping fore- daughter, Olivia Albertson. 2009, at the Countryside abducted two other girls, cuss the details of the vio- man, a position he held until Donations can be given at Care and Rehabilitation Lola M. Crawford one from the San Francisco lations except to call them February 2009. any First Federal location Center in Rupert. SHOSHONE — Lola M. Bay area and one possibly “minor.’’ He was a man with a great under Mel’s name, or given The funeral will be held at Crawford, 79, of Shoshone, from Las Vegas. Garrido’s parole file sense of humor and a laugh to funeral staff. 1 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 8, at died Friday,Sept. 4, 2009, at “Anything is possible shows that Garrido was that was unmistakable. He Those wishing to offer a the Albion LDS Church; vis- her home. with this guy,’’ Whan said. convicted in state court of enjoyed great jokes, great condolence to Melvin’s fam- itation from 6 to 8 p.m. Arrangements will be “This guy would be a better marijuana possession in races and great friends. He ily or sign the guestbook, Monday at Rasmussen announced by Demaray suspect than others based 1970 and 1973 and was sen- loved to go camping, four please go the Funeral Home, 1350 E. 16th Funeral Service, Gooding on the prior crimes he has tenced to probation both wheeling with friends and www.Mem,com. St. in Burley, and noon to Chapel. committed. times, Mitchell said. 12:45 p.m. Tuesday at the Garrido, 58, and his All police agencies in the church. wife, 54-year-old Nancy Reno-Tahoe area are exam- John Sanford Garrido, have pleaded not ining open cases for any SERVICES KING HILL — John guilty to 29 counts of kid- links to Garrido, Nevada Verna Lucy Reddington Twin Falls, funeral at 4 p.m. Thelma Eberlein Sanford, 80, of King Hill, napping, rape and false Department of Public Olson, funeral at 10 a.m. today at River Christian BOISE — Thelma died Friday,Sept. 4, 2009, at imprisonment in Dugard’s Safety spokeswoman Gail today at the Clifton LDS 2nd Fellowship, 4002 N. 3300 E. Eberlein, 94, of Boise and his home. disappearance. Powell said. FBI spokesman Ward Chapel in Clifton; vis- in Twin Falls (Parke’s Magic formerly of Twin Falls, died Arrangements will be Police say the Garridos David Staretz said his itation from 9 to 9:45 a.m. Valley Funeral Home in Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2009, announced by Rost Funeral held Dugard captive in a agency is working with today at the church (Webb Twin Falls). at a Boise care facility. Home, McMurtrey Chapel backyard encampment of local police on the cold Mortuary in Preston). A private family service in Mountain Home. tents and sheds in Antioch, cases. Larry Dean Church of Patricia Ann Mills Cahoon Woodland, Calif., and for- of Albion, funeral at 11 a.m. merly of Twin Falls, cele- today at the Albion LDS bration of life from noon to AROUND THE STATE Ward Chapel, 889 S. Main 3 p.m. Sunday at the Yolo St.; visitation one hour Fliers Golf and Country OISE ing death of his stepson. Eilers had threatened to kill Board of Education earlier before the funeral today at Club in Woodland, Calif. B A jury deliberated about Malec and moved toward this year, did not return tele- the church (Hansen-Payne Idaho cab driver eight hours Thursday before him before Malec shot Eilers phone messages left by the Mortuary in Burley). Lee E. Chojnacky of convicting 48-year-old once in the chest. Associated Press Friday. Jerome, funeral Mass at 11 charged with rape James Malec of killing “Never lose sight of the Civil protection orders are Lester “Ed” Joslin of Twin a.m. Monday at St. Jerome’s Police in Boise have 30-year-old Justin Eilers last fact that Justin tried to make issued by a judge based on Falls, memorial service at 11 Catholic Church, 216 arrested a 39-year-old cab December. a living by pummeling peo- evidence provided by the a.m. today at the Immanuel Second Ave. E. in Jerome; driver after a female passen- Malec faces up to 15 years ple into submission,’’ Petrie petitioner. Lutheran Church, 2055 Filer vigil service at 7 p.m., with ger said she was sexually in prison and a $15,000 fine. said. Ave.E.,in Twin Falls (Parke’s visitation at 6 p.m., Sunday assaulted in the back of his A sentencing date hasn’t COEUR D’A LENE Magic Valley Funeral Home at the church; graveside taxi. been set. Police investigating in Twin Falls). committal service at 9 a.m. Patrick D. Ellinger, of The defense argued that Vandals causing Tuesday at the Jerome Garden City, is being held in Malec properly used his for- prominent state Kathryn Ann Lynes of Cemetery, 900 W. Ave. I in the Ada County Jail on sus- mer police training to stop a high-dollar damage Boise, graveside service at 11 Jerome. (Farnsworth picion of felony rape. deadly threat when he killed Republican activist a.m. today at the Pleasant Mortuary in Jerome). Boise police were called his wife’s son, a professional Idaho Falls police are to forests View Cemetery, 1645 E. 16th about 1:30 a.m. Friday and martial arts fighter. investigating criminal alle- Officials with the Idaho St. in Burley; visitation from Michael Gail Thurston of found Ellinger standing out- But prosecutors told the gations filed against Blake Panhandle National Forest 9 to 10:30 a.m. today at the Burley, celebration of life at side the cab, which was jury that Malec’s choice to Hall, a prominent say vandalism has caused Rasmussen Funeral Home, 2 p.m. Monday at Emerald parked in the street, and a shoot Eilers was deliberate, Republican party activist some expensive damage to 1350 E. 16th St. in Burley. Lake, Freddy’s Pond, in female inside. unnecessary and unlawful. and former trustee on the popular recreation areas in Heyburn (Rasmussen The Idaho Statesman They had sought a more state Board of Education. the region. Edwin (Ed) Lee Kimball Jr. Funeral Home in Burley). reports that the woman told severe second-degree mur- The Post Register also Coeur d’Alene River of Twin Falls, service at 1 police she had been at a local der conviction, while the reports that a temporary District Ranger Randy Swick p.m. today at the Lighthouse Adeline Haag of bar earlier that night and defense had argued for civil protection order has says forest managers are Christian Fellowship in Twin Heyburn, funeral at 11 a.m. took a taxi home to avoid acquittal based on self- been filed against Hall. The urging anyone who sees Falls (Parke’s Magic Valley Tuesday at the Hansen driving. She told police at defense. order was sought by an vandalism to report it as Funeral Home in Twin Falls). Mortuary Rupert Chapel, some time during the trip, Gwen Moore is Malec’s unidentified woman and soon as possible. 710 Sixth St.; visitation one the cab driver got in the back wife and the mother of the requires Hall to stay at least Recent damage includes a Marjorie Pearl (Stone) hour before the service of the cab and raped her. shooting victim. 900 feet from the woman destroyed outhouses, dam- (Gill) Clark, formerly of Tuesday at the church. “Everyone asked me what and her residence. aged foundations and bro- Gooding, funeral at 1 p.m. Southwest Idaho justice I wanted,’’ she said Idaho Falls Police Chief ken windows at Glidden today at Demaray Funeral Etta Mae Reynolds of before weeping into her sis- Steve Roos says the investi- Lakes, Elsie Lake and Chapel, Gooding Chapel on Burley, funeral Mass at 11 man convicted of ter’s arms. “I want my son gation began this week and Shoshone Park. Swick says it Main Street. a.m. Tuesday at St. back, that’s what I want. should be complete next costs about $15,000 each to Nicholas Catholic Church, killing stepson And I’m not going to get week. He declined to dis- replace the damaged vault Robert K. Brulotte of 802 F St. in Rupert; rosary A southwestern Idaho that.’’ close details or the nature of toilets, The Spokesman- American Falls, celebration at 6:30 p.m., with vigil man has been convicted of Defense attorney Gordon the investigation. Review reported. of life at 2 p.m. today at St. service at 7 p.m., Monday at voluntary manslaughter in Petrie reminded jurors that Hall, a lawyer who John’s Lutheran Church, 656 the church; visitation one the Christmas night shoot- Malec had testified that stepped down from the — The Associated Press Tyhee St. in American Falls hour before the rosary (Davis Mortuary in Monday and one hour American Falls). before the funeral Tuesday. 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