Thursday - Extras for The Ukiah Daily Journal

Transcription

Thursday - Extras for The Ukiah Daily Journal
Weekend
entertainment
Thursday
.............Page 3
Aug. 7, 2008
INSIDE
The Ukiah
World briefly
..........Page 2
7
58551 69301
0
50 cents tax included
SPORTS
Local triathlete triumphs
...................................Page 6
Mendocino County’s
local newspaper
DAILY JOURNAL
ukiahdailyjournal.com
16 pages, Volume 150 Number 120
Friday: Mostly sunny
H 87º L 54º
Saturday: Partly
sunny; H 88º L 52º
email: udj@pacific.net
Coast struck
with 40 acts
of vandalism
‘TIMELESS MAGIC’ AT THE REDWOOD EMPIRE FAIR
Fair events
frequently
offered free
By BEN BROWN
The Daily Journal
The Fort Bragg Police Department is
offering a reward to anyone with information that would lead to the arrest of people
responsible for 40 acts of vandalism that
occurred early this week.
According to police reports, several
structures, including the restrooms at
Bainbridge Park, a local church and some
private property were vandalized on
Monday. Much of the graffiti was red and
appeared to be gang related, according to
police reports.
“It is a total disregard for our community when overt acts like this occur,” said
FBPD Chief Mark Puthuff. “The suspects
are cowards that hide behind their pathetic
painted scrawl. Cowards beware, our community is fed up with your antics and we
are tracking you as we speak.”
Officers with the FBPD have increased
patrols in the areas where the graffiti
appeared and are asking for the public’s
help to find the suspects. A $500 reward
has been offered by the department to anyone who provides information about the
suspects that leads to a successful prosecution.
Anyone with information is asked to
contact FBPD Officer Oscar Lopez at 9612800, extension 165.
By SARA HOUSE
for The Daily Journal
T
he Redwood Empire Fair, which opens
today at the Ukiah fairgrounds, is filled
with fun events, a lot of them free.
Besides the carnival rides, games and
concession stands, there are attractions
that are free of charge and fun to attend.
The fair runs through Sunday, and one of its
free attraction is a reptile museum set up in one of
the buildings. Brad’s World of Reptiles, based in
Oregon, travels to events and fairs with various
reptiles for people to touch and learn about. The
reptile handlers talk about the species while letting
guests touch and even hold them. This year’s
exhibit is bigger than most with about 40 different
kinds of snakes, lizards, spiders and other similar
species.
“This is so people can be exposed to reptiles they
See FAIR, Page 15
Ben Brown can be reached at udjbb@pacific.net.
4-H’er Ryan LaCount, 8, holds
his rabbit, Zack,
while waiting
for his turn to
show his handling skills to
judges, Wednesday afternoon at the fairgrounds.
Where there’s
fire, there will
also be smoke
The Daily Journal
Sarah Baldik/The Daily Journal
Brad Turnquist, of Brad’s World of Reptiles, holds Good Girl, a 3-yearold albino Burmese python Wednesday afternoon at the Redwood
Empire Fairgrounds. The fair opens today for a four-day run.
Katlyn Long’s life remembered, honored
Fort Bragg Advocate-News staff
Last Sunday, Aug. 3, a memorial gathering
honoring Katlyn Long of Fort Bragg was held at
Blues Beach where friends and relatives shared
stories and memories of their times with Katlyn.
The 22-year-old daughter of John and Linda
Long died suddenly May 29 at her parents’
home. The county Sheriff’s Office is investigating her death as suspicious in nature (see related story).
Sunday’s beach gathering was large with
some people traveling long distances to share
poems, pictures, music, memories and grief.
Memorials in many forms are taking shape.
Katlyn’s family plans to make molded concrete
benches to be placed around the community in
her honor. If an individual or business wants to
sponsor or help with the project, they can call
the Long Family at 707-357-2439.
The first of what will become an annual fundraising dinner to benefit the Katlyn Long
Memorial Scholarship Fund will be held on
Aug. 29 at Bayview Café in Mendocino, where
she had worked as a waitress. Proceeds will go
to a deserving College of the Redwoods student.
The exact time and details are pending.
Anyone who would like to contribute a raffle
prize for the dinner can call the above number or
write to: The Long Family, P.O. Box 478, Fort
Bragg, CA 95437.
If you would like to contribute to future
memorials or the scholarship fund in her name,
go to the Fort Bragg Credit Union at 120 N.
Franklin St. in Fort Bragg and tell them you are
contributing to the Katlyn Long Memorial
Fund.
Sheriff’s investigation continues
By TONY REED
Fort Bragg Advocate-News
It has been more than two months since
the death of 22-year-old Katlyn Long of Fort
Bragg. Authorities say they are still waiting
for test results to return from the lab to tell
them what caused her death, which they consider suspicious.
Sheriff’s Detective Sgt. Greg Van Patten
said Tuesday that the department is at the
mercy of the forensic pathologist conducting
the tests.
Long was pronounced dead at Mendocino
Coast District Hospital May 29, the cause
unknown. The Sheriff’s Department report
issued May 30 said Long had been transported by ambulance from her parents’ home
early that morning.
Purple and blue satin ribbons to wear, as well
as small laminated cards bearing Katlyn’s photograph and the following message are being
distributed by her family:
“In loving memory of Katlyn Long, daughter
of John and Linda, sister to Adrienne, and auntie Tiki to Eben.
“She was our ray of sunshine. Her good character and the kindness of her heart won the
affection of all.
“Katlyn’s love of horses had an influence on
The report said an unidentified male subject, known by Long, was the last known
person to have been with her at the time of
her death.
An autopsy was conducted but results
were not released.
Weeks later, the newspaper made another
request for information. Sheriff’s Lt. Rusty
Noe said at the time that results of lab tests
had not been received.
According to Sgt. Van Patten, the
California Forensic Medical Group in
Sonoma County is conducting the toxicology report. He said evidence was also collected at her parents’ home where she was staying and other locations. However, that eviSee SHERIFF, Page 15
the wonderful person she had become. She had
a deep love and respect for animals and the outdoors that carried through into her beautiful artwork. She was a gentle soul who embraced life
and knew no boundaries.
“We will miss her beautiful smile, her warm
brown eyes, her kindness, and her sense of
humor. Our time with her was cherished. She
lived life to the fullest and she will be missed by
all who had the privilege to have known her.
She will always be in our hearts.”
Fire season started early in the valley
this year, and since June 21 when the
forests were hit by lightning storms,
smoke from almost 1,000 fires has been
choking the valley.
Many fires create smoky conditions
which can last a long time, creating shortterm air quality issues. The smoke may
drift many miles away from the fire itself,
so smoke from the fire does not necessarily reflect the exact location of the fire. It
often looks much closer than it is.
According to Mendocino National
Forest Forest Fuels and Fire Planner Tom
Caves, the majority of fires are monitored
for smoke output. It is expected that the
current Yolla Bolly complex of fires will
not be contained until Aug. 15 at the earliest, so fire managers have installed remote
air quality monitoring stations to maintain
close watch on smoke output. This monitoring station is located in Covelo, and
data from it can be found on the Web at
www.satguard.com.
Why is the valley experiencing so much
smoke? “It’s kind of a double-edged
sword,” states Caves. “During periods of
stable air, the smoke settles and doesn’t
move around. While this is good for the
rate of the spread of fire, it makes aerial
suppression almost impossible and it can
cause serious smoke issues.” He went on
to explain that “during unstable air conditions, the smoky air vents and moves out,
causing fewer smoke problems, but also
increasing the rate of fire spread and causing fire suppression activities to become
even more intense and dangerous.”
Caves urges residents and visitors alike
to use common sense during times like
these. “If it looks smoky outside, it’s probably not a good time to do extensive yard
work or train for a marathon.” Fire managers are currently working with local air
quality districts to determine impacts from
smoke and provide an efficient information flow between the agencies.
See SMOKE, Page 15
2 – THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008
DAILY DIGEST
Editor: Jody Martinez, 468-3517
udj@pacific.net
The Ukiah Daily Journal
FUNERAL NOTICES
[\
SHEAR, EMMA ROSE
96 of Hopland,
California, passed away on
August 1, 2008. Emma was
born on January
19, 1912 in Willits,
California to Margharita
and Giovanni Chiossi. She
was the baby sister of Peter and Phillip
Chiossi. Emma lived
the majority of her life in
Hopland. As a young
girl, she lived in “Old
Hopland” and spent
summers swimming with
her brothers in the
Russian River. She graduated from Hopland
High School. As a young
woman she was a
nanny to several Hopland
families, she picked
prunes and cut grapes and
was a waitress at
Duncan Springs Resort.
She had a green
thumb, loved flowers and
always enjoyed
working in the yard. Emma
was a hard worker
her entire life, helping her
husband Brad to
cut fire wood and run several businesses, in-
cluding the “Keg”, for
many years. Up until
moving to Valley View
Hospital in Ukiah, CA,
she walked every day and
danced every
weekend. She was a fierce
bingo player and
enjoyed her time at the
Senior Center of
Ukiah. After the death of
her husband Brad,
she spent many years volunteering as a
Teacher’s Assistant/Foster
Grandmother for
Hopland Elementary
School and Oak Manor
Elementary in Ukiah.
Emma was preceded in
death by her late husband
Brad Shear, Sr.,
stepson Brad Shear Jr. and
grandsons, Gary,
Jerry and Rick Simmons.
She leaves behind
her beloved daughters,
Nancy Harpe-Loring
(Jerry) Ukiah, CA,
Barbara Shephard (Larry)
Healdsburg, CA, grandson
Frankie Potter (
Deanne) Quincy, CA ,
granddaughters Courtney Shephard of Santa
Rosa, CA and Hillary
Shephard of San Francisco,
CA and four
great-granddaughters.
Emma’s family would
like to extend their heartfelt gratitude to the
wonderful staff at Valley
View Hospital in
Ukiah, CA for the kindness, care and respect
they showed our mother
during the last five
years of her life. Emma will
be remembered
always for her warm smile,
her love of life and
her strength.
A graveside service will
be held on Saturday,
August 9th at 11:00 am at
Hopland Cemetery
in Hopland, CA.
Arrangements entrusted to
Eversole Mortuary, Ukiah,
CA.
[\
GALVIN, BARBARA HADLEY
Barbara Hadley Galvin
of Ukiah passed away
at her home Saturday,
August 2, 2008.
Barbara was a graduate
of Pasadena Junior
College, and was graduated
from the Pasadena Hospital School of
Nursing in 1935.
On July 27, 1935,
Barbara married Keith
Bernhardt Galvin.
Barbara was an active
member of the Ukiah
Women’s Golf Club for
many years. She also
was an avid fisherwoman,
who seemed to effortlessly catch steelhead
fish along the Russian River and at Lake
Pillsbury Resort.
Barbara also was an
accomplished pianist,
and even dabbled with guitar playing.
She equally enjoyed
horse race betting at the
Sonoma County Fair.
Barbara worked for
years as a registered
nurse for the area’s former
Hillside Community Hospital after relocating
to Ukiah with her
family from Southern
California in the early
1960s.
Barbara will be remembered most for her
compassionate way with
everyone she met
and an uncanny ability to
look into people’s
hearts and make friends
instantly. She was
able to make a stranger or
acquaintance feel
like an old friend within
minutes after an initial
encounter. Barbara had a
zest for living that
radiated in every social situation she entered.
Not only was she the life of
any party, but was
herself known by friends as
a gracious hostess, especially of festive
annual July Fourth
parties at her home, where
there was always
a “front row” hillside seat
for viewing dazzling
evening fireworks at the
Ukiah fairgrounds.
A stickler for proper
manners and language,
Barbara was quick to correct friends and acquaintances on inaccurate
English usage, including family members,
and was most adamant about maintaining
good posture.
Above all, Barbara loved
her family, traveling
often particularly with son
Robert to New
York, New England, San
Francisco, and Oregon, and attending operas,
symphony concerts and ballets with him.
She enjoyed a
happy marriage to husband
Keith B. Galvin,
who owned Galvin’s
Chevrolet, Oldsmobile
and Toyota in Ukiah for
several decades.
Barbara was a superb
homemaker, hostess
and cook, often preparing
gourmet dishes for
her guests. She knew how
to have fun, laugh,
and make anyone feel he or
she had something special to offer to the
world. Her friendliness, warmth, and love for
all people was infectious.
Barbara often summarized her bright and
positive attitude about life
by saying: “Today
is a special day, and there
will never be another one like it.”
Barbara is survived by
sons Bruce Galvin and
wife Letecia of Davis, Ca.,
and Robert Galvin
of Oregon City, Oregon,
daughter Pat Munson of Tigard, Oregon, and
grandchild Denise
Wienke wife of Carl
Wienke, Sacramento, Ca.
A visitation will be held
on Thursday, August
7, 2008 from 12-5 pm and
6-8 pm at the Eversole Mortuary. A funeral
service will be held
on Friday, August 8, 2008
at 10:00 AM at the
Eversole Mortuary with
Father Ray Maloney
officiating.
Burial will be at the
Ukiah Cemetery.
Arrangements are under
the direction of the
Eversole Mortuary
[\
JOHN W. AUGUSTINE, SR.
John W. Augustine, Sr.
passed away on August 3, 2008 at the age of
98. He was born in
Colorado and raised in
Oregon. When the depression came, he traveled
around looking for
work and settled in
Richmond, CA. He met
and married his wife Lois
in December of 1943, and
they moved to Chester, CA
to raise their family of 4
children. In 1965 John took
a promotion with the Forest
Service and moved
to Covelo, where he retired
in 1972. He was
an avid fisherman who
knew all the rivers in
Northern California and
Oregon. John was
preceded in death by his
wife of 49 years; his
parents, Charles & Augusta
Augustine, and 3
brothers. He is survived by
his daughters, Becky &
Earl Bissonnette of
Roseburg, OR; Diane &
Phil Short of Willits; Susan
& Robert Betts of Potter
Valley; his son, John
Augustine & Debi of
Redwood Valley; 9 grandchildren, Christopher,
Glenn, Maudie, Troy, Michelle, Jennifer, Melissa,
Scott & Colby; and
10 great-grandchildren,
Christopher, Rainy,
Natalie, Cody, Brandon,
Emilia, Jerry, Jazmyn, Abigail and John
Dylan. Donations may
be made to the Covelo
Volunteer Fire Department in Johns name.
Arrangements under the
care and direction of
Anker-Lucier Mortuary,
Willits, CA.
Please sign the guest book at www.ukiahdailyjournal.com. Funeral notices are paid announcements. For information on how to place a paid funeral notice or make corrections to funeral notices
please call our classified department at 468-3529.
Death notices are free for Mendocino County residents. Death notices are limited to name of deceased, hometown, age, date of death, date, time, and place of services and the funeral home
handling the arrangements. For information on how to place a free death notice please call our editorial department at 468-3500.
POLICE REPORTS
The following were
compiled from reports
prepared by the Ukiah
Police Department. To
anonymously
report
crime information, call
463-6205.
ARREST
-Corey
Garman, 25, of Ukiah, was
arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence in the
200 block of East Standley
Street at 10:15 p.m. Tuesday.
Garman was released after
being cited.
ARREST
-Vidal
Martinez Guadarrama, 26, of
Porterville, was arrested on
suspicion of driving under the
influence in the 700 block of
South State Street at 10:53
p.m. Tuesday.
SHERIFF’S REPORTS
The following were
compiled from reports
prepared by the Mendocino County Sheriff’s
Office:
BOOKED -- Ashleigh
Isreal Weston, 22, of Ukiah,
was booked into jail on suspicion of transportation of a
controlled substance for sale,
possession of a controlled
substance for sale, driving
with suspended privileges,
reckless driving and possession of drug paraphernalia by
the Willits Police Department
at 4:52 p.m. Tuesday.
BOOKED -- Noel August
Wickstrom, 40, of Willits, was
booked into jail on suspicion
of battery and driving under
the influence by the Willits
Police Department at 6:17
p.m. Tuesday.
BOOKED -- David Reed
Desilva, 45, of Fort Bragg,
was booked into jail on suspicion of cultivation of marijuana by the Mendocino County
Sheriff’s Office at 8:43 p.m.
Tuesday.
Those arrested by law enforcement
officers are innocent until proven guilty.
People reported as having been arrested may contact the Daily Journal once
their case has been concluded so the
results can be reported. Those who feel
the information is in error should con-
tact the appropriate agency. In the case
of those arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of an intoxicant: all DUI cases reported by law
enforcement agencies are reported by
the newspaper. The Daily Journal makes
no exceptions.
CORRECTIONS
The Ukiah Daily Journal reserves this
space to correct errors or make clarifications
to news articles. Significant errors in obituary notices or birth announcements will
result in reprinting the entire article. Errors
may be reported to the editor, 468-3526.
LOTTERY NUMBERS
DAILY 3: night: 5, 9, 0.
afternoon: 0, 1, 5.
DAILY 4: 0, 4, 7, 1.
FANTASY 5: 1, 2, 12,
22, 30.
DAILY DERBY: 1st
Place: 06, Whirl Win.
2nd Place: 03, Hot Shot.
3rd Place: 05, California
Classic.
Race time: 1:49.44.
LOTTO: 06-11-17-3841.
Meganumber: 25.
Jackpot: $7 million.
The world briefly
Justice Department says Ivins Guantanamo verdict shows
solely responsible for 2001
plan for war-crimes trials:
anthrax attacks
secret testimony, quick verdicts
WASHINGTON (AP) — Bruce Ivins, a
brilliant yet deeply troubled Army scientist,
was solely responsible for the anthrax attacks
that killed five and rattled the nation in 2001,
the government declared Wednesday, alleging
he had custody of the lethal spores involved
and access to the distinctive envelopes used to
mail them. Ivins, who committed suicide last
week, submitted false anthrax samples to the
FBI to throw investigators off his trail and was
unable to provide “an adequate explanation for
his late laboratory work hours” around the time
of the attacks, according to documents that
officials made public to support their case.
Investigators also said he sought to frame
unnamed co-workers and had immunized himself against anthrax and yellow fever in early
September 2001.
The Eversole Mortuary
Serving Ukiah Since 1893
Evergreen Memorial Gardens & Crematory
The Eversole Mortuary, serving families for over 114 years,
have come to realize the importance of planning ahead for a
love one or for one’s self. Planning ahead reduces family stress
at an already emotional time. Planning ahead is intended to
help you and your family recognize the many decisions that
must be made when a death occurs and make those decisions
together before the need arises.
Visit our web site at ukiahdailyjournal.com
email us at udj@pacific.net
One Earth Clay and Glass
Studio, Gallery and Gift Shop
DETAIL CENTER
At the Eversole Mortuary should you decide to pre-fund your
arrangements we guarantee your family will never have to pay
more for our goods and services. The Eversole Mortuary,
Evergreen Memorial Gardens & Crematory is Ukiah’s only
Mortuary & Crematory at one site.
Providing personal services 24 hours a day 7 days a week.
Jewelry, pottery, paintings,
fused glass, fine art and more
from artists around the country
Express Detail
$100
(3 Hours)
The Eversole Mortuary was constructed as a funeral home,
mausoleum, columbarium & crematory and can accommodate
each family’s every need in services and cremation.
ONE EARTH GIFT SHOP
859 N. State Street
(707) 462-4472
GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba
(AP) — The conviction of Osama bin Laden’s
driver by a U.S. military court after a 10-day trial
provides an indication of what to expect as
dozens more Guantanamo prisoners go to court:
shifting charges, secret testimony — and quick
verdicts.
Salim Hamdan held his head in his hands and
appeared to weep Wednesday as the six-member
military jury declared the Yemeni guilty of aiding
terrorism, which could bring a maximum life
sentence. But in a split decision, the jury in
America’s first war-crimes trial since the aftermath of World War II cleared Hamdan of two
charges of conspiracy. Deputy White House
spokesman Tony Fratto applauded what he called
“a fair trial” and said prosecutors will now proceed with other war crimes trials.
141 Low Gap Rd. • Ukiah • 462-2206
467-0200 • www.oneearthclay.com
How to reach us
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Sat-Sun............................Closed
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LOCALLY OPERATED MEMBER
FD-24
©2008, MediaNews Group.
Published Daily by The Ukiah Daily Journal at 590 S. School St., Ukiah, Mendocino County, CA.
Phone: (707) 468-3500. Court Decree No. 9267 Periodicals Postage Paid at Ukiah, CA. To report a
missed newspaper, call the Circulation Department between 5 and 6:30 p.m. Monday through
Friday, or between 7 and 9 a.m. weekends. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Ukiah
Daily Journal, Post Office Box 749, Ukiah, CA. 95482. Subscription rates for home delivery as of
January 22, 2007 are 13 weeks for $33.68; and 52 weeks for $123.59.
All prices do not include sales tax.
Publication # (USPS-646-920).
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Editor: Richard Rosier, 468-3520
THE THEATRE IN REVIEW
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SECOND FRIDAY DANCE JAM -- Drop-in community
freestyle barefoot dance; Yoga Mendocino; 206A Mason
St., Ukiah; 7:30 to 9 p.m.; Self-selected fee.
‘INTO THE WOODS’ -- Musical theater performance;
1000 Hensley Creek Rd., Ukiah; 8 p.m.; $15 senior/student, $18 general; 462-9226.
MAKA -- Reggae, dub, ska music; Ukiah Brewing
Company; 101 S. State St., Ukiah; 9 p.m.; $5 cover; 4685898.
BYRON SPACE CIRCUS -- Lounge funk; Shanachie
Pub; 50 S. Main St., Willits; 9 p.m.; $4 cover; 459-9194.
DJ DANCE MUSIC -- DJ dance music with BTAKA;
Perkins Street Lounge; 228 E. Perkins St., Ukiah; 10 p.m.
SATURDAY
TAIKO DRUMMERS -- SPACE Yokayo Taiko
Drummers, Oyster cooking, Councilman Benj Thomas
hosting a children’s story reading, at the Farmers’ Market;
Alex Thomas Plaza; Ukiah; 8:30 a.m. to noon.
JOHN MATERN -- Live music; dig! Music; 362 N. State
St., Ukiah; 10:30 a.m. to noon.;free; 463-8444.
CONTRA DANCE -- Swedish folk dance with live fiddle
music; Ukiah Methodist Church; 206 N. Pine, back enterance; 7 p.m.; $8 for 18 and older, $6 for 12 to 18; 4670311
‘INTO THE WOODS’ -- Musical theater performance;
1000 Hensley Creek Rd., Ukiah; 8 p.m.; $15 senior/student, $18 general; 462-9226.
JOHN MATERN BAND -- Original blues jazz; Acoustic
Cafe; 745 N State St., Ukiah; 6 p.m.; $10 admission donation; 462-8863.
COUNTRY GENTS BAND -- Country dance music;
Bartlett Hall; 495 Leslie St., Ukiah; dance 7 to 10 p.m.; $9
cover; all adults welcome.
AMOR LOCO -- Live music; Shanachie Pub; 50 S.
Main St., Willits; 9 p.m.; $5 cover; 459-9194.
SOME OF THE TRUEST -- Hip-hop; Ukiah Brewing
Company; 101 S. State St., Ukiah; 9:30 p.m.; $7 cover;
468-5898.
DJ DANCE MUSIC -- DJ dance music with Jose;
Perkins Street Lounge; 228 E. Perkins St., Ukiah; 10 p.m.
SUNDAY
KATHARINE COLE & TAMARA ENGLE -- Americana
folk music; Jones Streety Yard Concert; 308 Jones Street,
Ukiah; 4 p.m. potluck, 5 p.m. concert; $20 requested
donation for artists.
WILLITS OPEN READING -- Open reading for all written arts; Mendonesia Cafe; 1 S. Main St., Willits; 6 p.m.;
Free; 459-3390.
‘INTO THE WOODS’ -- Musical theater performance;
1000 Hensley Creek Rd., Ukiah; 2 p.m.; $12 senior/student, $15 general; 462-9226.
MONDAY
MICROPHONE NIGHT -- Sing or play an instrument;
Club 711; 711 S. State St., Ukiah; 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; 4627111.
TUESDAY
KARAOKE -- Karaoke and DJ dancing; Perkins Street
Lounge; 228 E. Perkins St., Ukiah; 8 p.m.; free.
TAHITIAN DANCE -- Every Tuesday night; Mendocino
Ballet Studio; 205 S. State St.; Ukiah; ages 11 to 99; 5:30
to 6:30 p.m.; $8 to $11.
WEDNESDAY
OPEN MIC NIGHT -- Open Mic; Ukiah Brewing Co.;
102 S. State St., Ukiah; 8:30 p.m.; free; 468-5898.
Third Mummy movie good
if you like the other two
Rick O’Connell (Brenden
Frasier) and his family are
back in this new adventure
that includes another mummy
and a whirlwind of problems.
Many
years
before
Emperor Han was cursed by a
woman while he was getting
help from Zi Juan to search
for Shangri-La and a fountain
there that will give whoever
who drinks from it immortality.
When she curses the
Emperor and his army she
sends them to their death as
statues to await someone who
will free them again and they
will be able to fight.
In the far east, many years
later, Rick’s son Alex (Luke
Ford) unearths the Emperor
Han’s body along with his terracotta army who’s plans to
not only take over China, but
also the world in quick pase.
Now a retired Rick and
Evelyn
(Maria
Bello),
Jonathan a night club owner
FOCUS
ON FILM
By Shelby White
in China (John Hannah), Ale a
drop out college student, and
some new friends on they’re
way to deliver an artifact to
See FILM, Page 9
udj@pacific.net
The Ukiah Daily Journal
What’s Playing
‘MEET THE WINEMAKERS’ -- John Chiarito, of
Chiarito Vineyards; Tiera -- art, garden, wine; 312 N.
School St., Ukiah; 468-7936.
‘INTO THE WOODS’ -- Musical theater performance;
1000 Hensley Creek Rd., Ukiah; 7 p.m.; $12 senior/student, $15 general; 462-9226.
KIM MANNING BAND & RIGHT ON JOHN -- Blues,
rock, and more; Shanachie Pub; 50 S. Main St., Willits; 9
p.m.; $5 cover; 459-9194.
MIKE ZARKOWSKI -- Live music; Ukiah Brewing
Company; 101 S. State St., Ukiah; 10 p.m.; No cover; 4685898.
DJ DANCING -- With DJ ‘Lil Cris’; Perkins Street
Lounge; 228 E. Perkins St., Ukiah; 10 p.m.
THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008 – 3
‘Into the Woods’ a thoughtful comedy
By NATASHA YIM
Special for the Journal
Ukiah Players Theatre and
Mendocino College’s collaboration of Stephen
Sondheim’s Tony-award winning musical, “Into the
Woods,” is a campy journey
through a fairy tale land peppered with familiar, albeit
more darkly flawed, characters like dim-witted giant
killer, Jack (of Beanstalk
fame), an emotionally dysfunctional Rapunzel (presumably due to being locked in a
tower for years), two adulterous Prince Charmings, a
Little Red Riding Hood with
bite, and Cinderella.
It most certainly is not
your Mother’s fairy tale. It is,
however, as one theater-goer
said, “the goofiest thing I
have ever seen.” In a good
way.
“Into the Woods” tells the
story of a Baker and his Wife
who are cursed with childlessness by a witch. To break
the spell, they must obtain
certain items possessed by
several characters: a milky
white cow from Jack, Red
Riding Hood’s blood red
cape, Rapunzel’s hair of yellow corn, and a slipper as
pure as gold from Cinderella.
Once these objects have
been acquired through whatever means at hand, (deceit
and manipulation, a gift of
gratitude, even brute force),
the characters must face the
consequences of their actions
and in the end learn a lesson
about greed and revenge, and
the need for community and
family to stick together if
they are to achieve their
Happily Ever After.
In spite of opening day
glitches, such as microphones
turned off when they were
supposed to be on, leading to
inconsistencies in sound quality that made it occasionally
difficult to hear some of the
actors, and microphones
turned on when they were
supposed to be off, inviting
the audience in to backstage
murmurs, the overall performance was such raucous fun
that the distractions were
only a minor annoyance like
The wolf (Justin Pyne) pursues Little Red Riding Hood (Laura Bartlett) in “Into The
Woods.” The musical co-production by UPT and Mendocino College continues at
the Mendocino College Center Theatre through Aug. 10.
swatting away a pesky fly.
mance in the Disney movie,
“Into the Woods” continKeith Aisner leads a veter- “Enchanted.”
ues through Aug. 10.
an and competent cast as the
Some especially delightful Thursday evening’s perforBaker. Those of you who saw moments to watch out for are mance begins at 7 p.m.
Keith in his deliciously
the “Agony” duets by the
Friday and Saturday evening
wicked performance as the
Prince Charmings, two broth- performances begin at 8 p.m.
satanic Fistula in “The
ers pining for their princessThe Sunday matinee closing
Temptation” will appreciate
es, and “Your Fault,” a lively performance begins at 2 p.m.
his versatility. In only his sec- and witty ensemble piece in
All performances are at the
ond career musical, Keith
which Jack, the Baker,
Mendocino College Center
impresses with strong, if not
Cinderella, Red Riding Hood, Theatre at 1000 Hensley
exceptional, vocals.
and the Witch, debate who is
Creek Road in Ukiah.
KC Dill turns in yet anoth- responsible for bringing the
Thursday and Sunday perer solid performance as the
giant to their land. Jake
formance tickets are $12 each
independently-minded
Stoepler, an up and coming
for seniors or students, and
Baker’s Wife. Jack is played
theatrical talent, pleasantly
$15 for adults. Friday and
by the always entertaining
surprises in what is probably
Saturday performance tickets
Ian Parmenter, who infuses
the strongest vocal perforare $15 each for seniors or
the giant-killer with a lovmance among the male cast.
students, and $18 for adults.
able, quirky charm.
With lines like, “I was
All seats for the first
Ian is no newbie to musiraised to be charming, not
Thursday preview perforcal theater having previously
sincere,” spoken by
mance on July 31 are $8
starred in “Grease” and
Cinderella’s prince after a
each. Child (age 12 and
“Fiddler on the Roof” and he romantic interlude with the
under) tickets are $5 each for
more than holds his own in
Baker’s Wife, Sondheim’s
all performances.
this medium. Amie Shapiro, a musical can be as humorous
Tickets are available at
recent transplant to Ukiah, is
as it is thought-provoking,
Mendocino Book Company
ideally cast as Cinderella. Her and the cast of this producon School Street in Ukiah,
touch of genteel innocence,
tion has proven to be not only and through the Ukiah
befitting a fairy tale princess, adequately up to the task, but Players Theatre box office at
recalls Amy Adams’ perforhaving a lot of fun doing it.
462-9226.
BILLBOARD
Blue Sky Band to perform
at Humane Society benefit on Aug. 16
The Blue Sky Band will perform at the Humane Society benefit set for 2 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 16, at the Clubhouse. The
event’s organizers are asking for a $15 donation at the door,
which will be going to help support the Humane Society.
The Clubhouse is located at 107 S. Oak St., Ukiah. For more
information, call Kat Avery at 485-1674.
Art by Amanda Norton on display
at Mendo Lake Credit Union’s lobby
The public is invited to view artwork by Amanda Norton on
display in the Lobby of the Mendo Lake Credit Union for the
month of August. The MLCU is located at 526 S. State St.,
Ukiah. Lobby hours are Monday through Thursday, 9 a.m. to 5
p.m., and until 6 p.m. on Fridays.
Art at the banks for the
month of August
The following artists are have work displayed at local banks:
Wanda Bennett, at Savings Bank of Mendocino County, 904
N. State St., Ukiah; Don Pagano, at Savings Bank of
Mendocino County, East Road, Redwood Valley; Jane Covella,
at Savings Bank of Mendocino County, Pear Tree Center,
Ukiah; Hiroko Mattsson, at Savings Bank of Mendocino
County, 1100 Airport Park Blvd., Ukiah; and Barbara Osborn,
at West America Bank, 319 E. Perkins, Ukiah.
the house band for the Mendocino English Country Dances.
No special dress is required, but participants are asked to
wear non-marking shoes. For more information, call 964-4826.
Next Ukiah Contra
Dance set for Saturday
The next Ukiah Contra Dance will feature Swedish dancing
on Saturday, Aug. 9, beginning at 7 p.m. for all levels. Different
dances will be taught throughout the evening. The dance will be
held at the Methodist Church, 207 North Pine Street (back
entrance) in Ukiah.
This dance will teach Swedish “mixers” (dancers change
partners during the dance) as well as traditional Swedish couple
dances, including “Snoa,” “Schottish” and “Hambo.” Couples
are invited to participate, though there is no need to bring a
partner.
Dances will be taught by Scandinavian dance teacher Toby
Blome. Janette Duncan will accompany on fiddle. This dance is
suitable for ages 12 and up. Admission $8 for 18 years and
above, $6 for 12 to 18.
Participants are asked to bring non-alcoholic beverage or
dessert to share. For more information, call Ulla Rand at 4670311.
Portrait sculpture lecture
and demonstration set for Aug. 16
Shirley Schrank will lecture on sculpture, and demonstrate
sculpting a portrait head in clay on Saturday, Aug. 16.
Sponsored by the Mendocino County Art Association, this presentation will be taking place at the Grace Hudson Meeting
Room at 10:15 a.m.
For more information, call Rosalind O’Neal at 463-2268,
Rose at 485-1172, or e-mail myers@saber.net.
Hot August Classic Car
Show set for Aug. 17
McNab Second Saturday
tasting set for Saturday
The annual Hot August Classic Car Show will take place at
the Ukiah Elks’ Lodge on Sunday, Aug. 17, at 3 p.m. The event
will include a barbecue tri-tip dinner at 5 p.m., awards for the
cars on display at 6 p.m.
Registration will be $5 per car, and dinner will be $10.
The Elks’ Lodge is located at 1200 Hastings Rd.
“McNab’s Second Saturday # 7” is scheduled for Aug. 9. The
McNab Ridge Tasting Room in downtown Hopland will feature
their gold medal winning 2007 sauvignon blanc, paired with a
creamy dill and avocado shrimp salad. This and other selected
pairings will be offered from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The featured
wine will be 30 percent off bottles and/or cases from through
Aug. 12. To coincide with the Winery’s “Second Saturday
Series,” they have announced an artist reception and artist
exhibit featuring local artist Willow La Land-Yeilding.
Willow’s current “interpretive works” are primarily oil on canvas and are abstract in their approach. The public is invited to
meet and visit with Willow on Saturday, Aug. 9 from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. Willow’s Art will be on display at the McNab Ridge
Tasting Room through September. For more information, call
744-1986.
Mendocino English country
dance set for Aug. 16
The next Mendocino English country dance in Caspar is
scheduled for Aug. 16, at 8 p.m. A newcomer instruction period
will take place at 7:30 p.m. Admission to the dances, which take
place at the Caspar Community Center, is $10. Music is provided by the “Take A Dance” English country dance orchestra,
4 – THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008
FORUM
Editor: K.C. Meadows, 468-3526
From the desk of...
Letters from our readers
The other side
of global warming
To the Editor:
Here’s the other side of Mr.
Rorabaugh’s anti-global warming data (as
presented in his letter the editor of July
15, 2008), which is primarily a decade
old or more, according to the Web site he
lists (the “Global Warming Petition
Project”). Go to
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/Gl
obalWarmingQ&A for an up to date presentation/summary of the current scientific data on the topic. Even though this site
has many climatologists and earth scientists represented, it is by no means the
sole scientific Web site devoted to the
topic.
What harm would it do to begin conservation efforts now, rather than at a
later time when the consequences of not
doing so very likely will be irreversible
harm to the planet, if what the earth scientists, climatologists and paleoclimatologists and all the rest who maintain upto-date data on this phenomenon are saying will likely occur, and in fact may
have already occurred? Who will benefit
if we don’t take action now? Certainly
the oil companies. Certainly the coal
mining and atomic power interests.
Perhaps even the automobile companies;
however it seems as though the public in
other countries has already decided that
issue, and drivers in the United States,
while slower than drivers in the rest of
the world to catch on, are still far ahead
of the warming-deniers and our current
administration in Washington. Certainly
the folks who supply corn to ethanol
manufacturers will benefit, especially the
huge agribusinesses like Archer Daniels
Midland, a large donor to president Bush
and the Republican party. The president’s
other favored alternative, hydrogen, is
way down the list because it doesn’t
occur naturally and must be separated
using other sources of energy (usually
fossil fuels) in order to be liberated for
combustion. And there is currently no
infrastructure to support supplying it
nationwide should it ever become available. It, too, has presidential support
from the industry which wants to make it
and which donates money to the president and his party (an industry which
would certainly not refuse government
subsidies and tax money for aiding production).
Corn-based ethanol as a gasoline additive is also counter-productive, since it
requires an enormous amount of water
and fossil fuels to grow the corn in the
form of fertilizers, diesel fuels for tractors and transportation, and, as has been
already shown this year, removes a crucial food source for human use. There are
other crops which provide far more
“bang for the buck:” miscanthus, switchgrass, hemp, sugar cane (heavily used in
some countries in S.A.), and palm oil.
Another source is used cooking oil,
which will not remain cheap as the
demand for it increases, however. It is
what the Frenchman Rudolph Diesel
designed his namesake engine to run on.
All of these alternative fuels, or biofuels,
act as additives to gasoline or as the sole
fuel.
So, continuing to deny the by-now
overwhelming evidence that GW is a
real, verifiable, human-caused phenomenon seems very like those folks who
deny that the Holocaust occurred, or who
continue to maintain that the earth is flat,
or that astrology yields a valid, predictable explanation of individual fates,
or that the earth is only six thousand
years old: asinine at best and very dangerous at worst.
William Mattsson
Ukiah
LETTER POLICY
The Daily Journal welcomes letters to the
editor. All letters must include a clear name,
signature, return address and phone number.
Letters chosen for publication are generally
published in the order they are received, but
shorter, concise letters are given preference.We publish most of the letters we
receive, but we cannot guarantee publication. Names will not be withheld for any
reason. If we are aware that you are connected to a local organization or are an
elected official writing about the organization or body on which you serve, that will
be included in your signature. If you want to
make it clear you are not speaking for that
organization, you should do so in your letter.All letters are subject to editing without
notice. Editing is generally limited to
removing statements that are potentially
libelous or are not suitable for a family
newspaper. Form letters that are clearly part
of a write-in campaign will not be published. You may drop letters off at our office
at 590 S. School St., or fax letters to 4683544, mail to Letters to the Editor, P.O. Box
749, Ukiah, 95482 or e-mail them to
udj@pacific.net. E-mail letters should also
include hometown and a phone number.
ON EDITORIALS
Daily Journal editorials are written by
Editor K.C. Meadows with the concurrence
of Publisher Kevin McConnell.
udj@pacific.net
The Ukiah Daily Journal
EJ DIONNE JR.
Playing the race
card in the
upcoming elections
Other opinions
From around the nation
Vail (Colo.) Daily
On federal
marijuana laws
Why this country allows
its citizens to consume alcohol, but not marijuana, is a
bit of a mystery.
Both substances have
mind-altering capabilities.
Both substances, if abused,
can destroy the lives of the
user and anyone who crosses
the user’s path.
But both substances can
be used responsibly and
moderately, according to
Rep. Barney Frank, a
Massachusetts Democrat.
And perhaps most importantly, our government
spends an inordinate amount
of time and money arresting
and prosecuting pot users -about 12 million citizens
have been arrested on a marijuana-related charge since
1965, according to NORML,
an organization that wants
marijuana use to be legalized.
Frank announced recently
that he would introduce a
bill that would decriminalize
the possession of less than a
quarter-pound of marijuana.
Advocates
argue
that
because alcohol is a legal
substance, marijuana should
be, too. Instead, marijuana
should be regulated in the
same way as alcohol, and the
threat of arrest should be
limited for only those whose
use affects someone else,
such as in the case of driving
while intoxicated by the
drug. ...
It would be nice if Frank’s
proposal sparked an honest
debate about the effectiveness of the war on pot, especially in a nation grappling
with the war on terror, wars
in Afghanistan and Iraq and
facing the largest deficit in
its history.
Pensacola (Fla.)
News Journal
On the electoral
process and
the next elections
Barack Obama’s request
that all Florida and
Michigan delegates be
counted in the Democratic
convention is a gracious gesture, if basically meaningless because he already has
clinched the nomination.
It’s also clever politics,
because the Republican
Party has yet to call off the
restrictions that allow only
half of Florida’s delegates to
count toward the equally
secure nomination of John
McCain.
Score one for the more
nimble Obama campaign.
From here, it is important
for both parties to get a handle on the nomination
process. When both major
parties are at war with their
own state parties and delegates, it’s hard to say they
need to be kinder to the
opposition.
Worse, it is an unhealthy
distraction from the what
should be paramount: nominating presidential candidates. Combined with recent
problems with elections
themselves in a number of
states, including Florida,
there is a growing lack of
confidence in the electoral
process itself. That is supposed to happen in banana
republics, not here. ...
Chicago
Sun-Times
On the presidential
election and race
If and when Sen. Barack
Obama is elected president
of the United States, we
hope he will pull a greenback from his wallet, wave it
in the air and say with pride,
“I don’t look like all those
other presidents on the dollar bills!”
But not now. Not yet.
To say so then will be an
expression of pride in all
America. We as a nation will
have beaten back bigotry to
the point that a black man -judged by the content of his
character, not by the color of
his skin -- has been elected
president.
But to say so now is to
play on race rather than rise
above it, intentionally or not.
Sen. John McCain, though
he has said some silly things
about Obama of late, calls it
playing the race card, and
that’s a fair complaint. ...
We’re also pretty sure
McCain has been sounding
desperate, mocking Obama
as a “celebrity” like Paris
Hilton and as a biblical
prophet like Moses.
But Obama really should
retire that “dollar bill”
schtick.
The first debate between
the candidates -- when we
can hope they will spar on
matters of substance -- is
scheduled for Sept. 26.
It can’t come soon
enough. ...
El Paso
(Texas) Times
On Congress’
time off
Federal lawmakers in
both houses of Congress and
on both sides of the aisle
have been outspoken, particularly toward the end of last
week, about how this donothing Congress accomplished little, but is still
eager to take its August
recess.
WHERE TO WRITE
President George Bush: The White
House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, D.C. 20500; (202) 456-1111, FAX
(202)456-2461.
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger: State Capitol, Sacramento, 95814.
(916) 445-2841; FAX (916)445-4633
Sen. Barbara Boxer: 112 Hart Senate Office Bldg., Washington, D.C. 20510;
(202)224-3553; San Francisco, (415) 4030100 FAX (415) 956-6701
Sen. Dianne Feinstein: 331 Hart
Senate Office Bldg., Washington, D.C.
20510. (202)224-3841 FAX (202) 2283954; San Francisco (415) 393-0707; senator@feinstein.senate.gov
Congressman Mike Thompson:
1st District, 231 Cannon Office Bldg,
Washington, D.C. 20515. (202) 225-3311;
FAX (202)225-4335. Fort Bragg district
office, 430 N. Franklin St., PO Box 2208,
Fort Bragg 95437; 962-0933,FAX 9620934;
www.house.gov/write rep
Assemblywoman Patty Berg: State
Assembly District 1, Capitol, Rm. 4146,
Sacramento, 95814. (916) 319-2001;
Berg's Ukiah field representative is Ruth
Valenzuela. Ukiah office located at 311 N.
State St, Ukiah, 95482, 463-5770. The
office’s fax number is 463-5773. For email
go to web site: assembly.ca.gov/Berg
Senator Pat Wiggins: State Senate
District 2, Capitol Building, Room 5100,
Sacramento, 95814. (916) 445-3375
Email: senator.wiggins@sen.ca.gov. In
Ukiah: Kathy Kelley at 200 S. School St,
468-8914, email: kathy.kelley@sen.ca.gov
Mendocino County Supervisors:
Michael Delbar, 1st District; Jim Wattenburger, 2nd District; John Pinches, 3rd
District; Kendall Smith, 4th District;
David Colfax, 5th District. All can be
reached by writing to 501 Low Gap Road,
Room 1090, Ukiah, 95482, 463-4221,
FAX 463-4245. bos@co.mendocino.ca.us
Visit our web site at ukiahdailyjournal.com
email us at udj@pacific.net
Will the race issue go back into the closet for the rest
of the presidential campaign? Of course not, so where
do we go from here?
Last week’s dust-up over race between John McCain
and Barack Obama was entirely disappointing. Obama
spoke first about how his opponents would try to “make
you scared of me,” noting that he “doesn’t look like all
those other presidents” on our currency. What Obama
said was true, but he made the tactical mistake of suggesting that McCain was complicit in overtly racial politics.
That gave Rick Davis, McCain’s campaign manager,
the excuse to offer the preposterous charge that Obama
had “played the race card, and he played it from the bottom of the deck.”
Davis’ use of a dreadful cliche brought to mind
George Orwell’s observation that there exists “a huge
dump of worn-out metaphors which have lost all evocative power and are merely used because they save people the trouble of inventing phrases for themselves.”
Nonetheless, the Obama camp was caught short and
the candidate backed off a critique of McCain on race.
McCain largely left the matter to his surrogates. Both
candidates are wary of racial politics. Obama knows that
whites and Latinos will constitute the vast majority of
November’s electorate, and McCain knows that many
swing voters will be turned off by explicit racism. But
the episode was a good example of how indirect and
misleading political talk can be. Like it or not, Obama’s
race is an issue, just as John F. Kennedy’s religion was
an issue in 1960 -- and racism runs deeper in our history than anti-Catholicism.
There is no doubt that two keys to this election are:
How many white and Latino votes will Obama lose
because of his race that a white Democrat would have
won? And how much will African-American turnout
grow, given the opportunity to elect our nation’s first
black president?
Let’s dispose of the canard that there is something
wrong with black people voting in overwhelming numbers for one of their own. Minorities in the U.S. always
turn out in a big way for the candidate breaking barriers
on their behalf.
The most obvious example is John Kennedy, who
won roughly 80 percent of the Catholic vote in 1960,
about 30 percentage points greater than the Catholic
share won four years earlier by Democrat Adlai
Stevenson. Proportionately, Kennedy’s gain among
Catholics was far greater than Obama’s likely pickup
over John Kerry’s 2004 vote among African-Americans,
judging by the current polls.
More broadly, the race issue is used less overtly now
than it used to be. When Democrats were the party of
Jim Crow in the post-Civil War period, many in their
ranks ran ugly, blatantly racist campaigns. Beginning in
1968 with Richard Nixon’s Southern strategy,
Republicans have been far more subtle in playing to
white reaction on race.
Often, the appeal to white unease over race is overlaid with a populist rhetoric against “liberal elitists” who
side with blacks while not understanding the struggles of
the white working class.
William Connolly, a left-of-center political theorist,
wrote an essay in 1981 that brilliantly captured why so
many white working-class voters came to reject liberal
programs.
Connolly argued that such voters saw the welfare
state as turning on them, undermining the values they
espoused and denigrating their efforts at self-reliance.
They saw mandatory school busing as robbing them of
their chance to secure a better education for their children by moving into better school districts. Especially
among lower-income white men, affirmative action
seemed to treat “everyone else” as “meritorious or as
unjustly closed out from the ranks of the meritorious.”
When liberals dismissed such concerns as purely
racist, Connolly noted, “these vulnerable constituencies
did not need too much political coaxing to bite the hand
that had slapped them in the face.”
The great opportunity this year for less scrupulous
Republican strategists is that Obama is both black and a
Columbia-Harvard-educated former professor who
lived in the intellectually rarified precincts of Hyde Park
in Chicago, Manhattan’s Upper West Side and
Cambridge, Mass. They can go after him subtly on race
and overtly on elitism. They can turn the facts of
Obama’s life into mutually reinforcing liabilities.
Is this unfair? Yes it is. But if our nation is to cast off
the shackles of race this year, Obama will have to grapple more than he’d like with the burdens that our history and the past travails of liberalism have forced him to
bear.
E.J. Dionne Jr. began his twice-weekly oped column for The Washington Post in 1993.
In 1996, it was syndicated by The
Washington Post Writers Group, and he now
appears in more than 90 newspapers in the
US and abroad.
The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
Publisher: Kevin McConnell
Editor: K.C. Meadows
Office manager: Yvonne Bell
Retail ad manager: Sue Whitman
Member
Audit Bureau
Of Circulations
Member California
Newspaper Publishers
Association
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
ARTS & E NTERTAINMENT
THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008 – 5
Beijing looking to shine in
the Olympics on NBC TV
By TIM RILEY
Special for the Journal
Second rock band
concert set for this Friday
The Daily Journal
This Friday at 8 p.m. the
Ukiah Music Center will be
hosting their second Rock
Camp’s band concert on the
Acoustic Café stage.
The Rock Camp “headliners” ages 7 to 12, have been
practicing all week for this fun
and entertaining evening of
vintage rock by some of the
finer young rockers in the
area. Admission is free and
the concert will be about an
hour long.
The band is currently in
creative negotiations with
their perspective managers
about their band name….to be
decided. We will be doing
everything we can to keep the
paparazzi from crashing the
event as there may be many
rabid fans in the audience.
“Rock Camp” sessions are for
young musicians and is a five-
BILLBOARD
Hopland Volunteer Fire
Department annual barbecue
and dance set for Aug. 30
The community is invited to the Hopland
Volunteer Fire Department’s annual barbecue
and street dance, scheduled for Saturday, Aug.
30, at 5 p.m. Set to take place at Center Street
in Hopland, the event will feature both food
and music. Proceeds from the event go to support the Hopland Volunteer Fire Department.
Argentine tango workshops
set for Saturday and Sunday
Ernest Williams and Maricela Wilson, tango
instructors visiting from Chicago, will be in
Elk, Aug. 9 and 10, giving workshops on various aspects of Argentine tango.
The workshops build on each other, so in
order to not miss out on any of the intended
outcomes, attendees should plan to take the
workshops according to their level in
sequence. Saturday will be for dancers of all
levels, beginning to advanced. Sunday will
start out with a review of the main dances
learned on Saturday. The classes following this
will be fore the more experienced dancers of
tango.
Arriving to the class with partners is not
necessary but encouraged. Extra men are
always in demand for the classes. Class size is
limited. Pre-registration will be necessary so
that a gender balance as close as possible may
be achieved.
Ernest and Maricela are available for private
lessons starting Sunday. For more information,
call Ernest at 773-726-9492.
Mendocino Art Center
featured artists for August
The 77 artists showcased in Larry Wagner’s
“Artists of the Mendocino Coast,” a coffee
table photo book of the artists and their work,
will have their own art show that is taking
place through Aug. 30 at the Mendocino Art
Center.
“There has been so much enthusiasm for the
book, which captures the personalities and best
work of the artists all in one place, that a show
all their own was a natural follow-up,” said
Larry Wagner, who has helped plan the show.
“As of the moment we have 76 of the 77 artists
signed up for the show and the 77th is out of
town.”
A meet-the-artist reception will be held during Saturday, Aug. 9, from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at
the Art Center, 45200 Little Lake Road in
Mendocino Village.
Copies of Wagner’s book will be on sale at
the artist reception. “It will be an opportunity
to meet the artists and get their autograph on
their pages in the book,” said Wagner.
Wagner is already working on a second volume of the series with 57 additional artists featured. “Artists of the Mendocino Coast Volume
II” will be introduced at the Arts Fair at the
Mendocino Art Center on Thanksgiving weekend.
Sell It Fast
With
Ukiah
Daily
Journal
Classifieds
day camp designed to teach
each rocker two new rock
songs a day and how to be in a
functioning band. The camp
instructor is Katherine Cole or
“Kitty Rose,” as her fans
know her.
For more information,
contact the Ukiah Music
Center at 462-8863 or go to
the
Web
site
at
ukiahmusic.com and check
out current info on the camps.
Paul Bunyan Days set
for Labor Day weekend
The 69th annual Paul Bunyan Days, the celebration of Fort Bragg’s logging heritage, will
be held on Labor Day weekend, Aug. 29
through Sept. 1 with a parade, barbecue, beer
festival, logging show, gem and mineral show,
fireman’s ball, classic car show and ugly dog
contest.
Except for the beer and barbecue, all events
will be free. For a daily event schedule, visit
paulbunyandays.com.
Community Concert
Association Membership
Campaign continues
Al Bellon, chair of the membership drive
has announced that the following people of the
greater Ukiah area are working to obtain new
members as well as renew current memberships. Bellon suggests, “Don’t wait for a worker to come to you if you are interested in finding out more about joining Community
Concerts. If you recognize a name on the
workers list, you can just give him or her a call
to get a brochure about the coming season and
to find out more about subscribing to the local
group that has brought live, world-class performers to Ukiah for the past 62 years!”
The four concerts of the 2008 -- 2009 season will be: PianaFiddle, A Tribute to Benny
Goodman and Peggy Lee, Maya, and
MackMcCray.
Anne Creekmore, who is chair of organizing
all of the workers has announced the following
list of volunteers: Al Bellon, Virginia
Williams, Dr. Geoff Rice, Terri Burrell, Ed
Phillips, Irene MacFarland, Dr. Steve
Pasternak, Dr. Dave Crew, Susan Janssen,
Charlene Light, Wyatt Shook, Stephanie
Young, Maggie Cooper, Lawren Giles, Diana
Marshall, Rick Allen, Barbara Curtis, Emma
Eldridge, George Husaruk, Marilynne
Tollefsen, Francine Bearden, Beverly Gates,
Coralee Nelson, Barbara Osborn, Diana
Thomas, Maggie Graham, Jeff Smith, Dick
Graham, Kay Sause, Myrl Harpe, Gertrude
Soeth, Joyce Murray, Carol Hester, Elena
Casanova, Arleen Shippey, Virginia Fitch, Lee
Sandelin, April Parry, Vonna Myers, Frances
Stevens, Nancy Bracewell, Ann Cuff, Sherry
Chase, Barbara Chapman, Kathy O’Rourke,
Lillian Kimmel, Pat Hildebrand, Gladys
Telschow, Norma Burton, Ethel Bean and
Bernadette McKeon.
Piano keyboard
classes offered
at Ukiah Senior Center
The Ukiah Senior Center now has a room
dedicated to learning and creative activities,
including a new series of beginner piano classes, using the cord method.
The classes are held on Monday mornings,
and are a half-hour in length. Keyboards will
be provided for the class, or participants may
bring their own if they prefer.
Become a member of Ukiah Senior Center
and pay $5 per month for class materials. For
more information call the instructor, Dolores
Carrick at 463-0846.
Can you identify countries like Nauru, Palau
and Tuvalu, much less locate them on a map?
The International Olympic Committee lists
them among a record 205 member nations recognized for competition at the 2008 Beijing
Summer Olympic Games, coming to you soon
by way of NBC Universal and its many networks. I always thought some of these obscure
nations had little value beyond creating some
nice postage stamps for philatelists to enjoy,
but they are sending athletes into competition.
Now is the time to brush up on geography.
Speaking by way of satellite to a gathering
of the nation’s TV critics recently, Dick
Ebersol, chairman of NBC Universal Sports &
Olympics, announced that he’s “awed by the
enormity of what’s going on” in Beijing, particularly because the NBC family will provide
a record 3,600 hours of coverage, at least 2,900
hours of it live. Considering that NBC paid
$894 million as the rights fee for broadcast
coverage in the United States, one would hope
that Ebersol is enthusiastic about the 17 days
and nights of what he calls “unscripted
drama.”
You may ask how NBC can provide 3,600
hours of coverage. It’s a fair question in light
of the fact that it would take 90 weeks at a regular 9 to 5 job to watch everything. I don’t
think I can spare that much time, but it works
for NBC Universal, because they will run coverage on NBC, USA, CNBC, MSNBC, and
Telemundo. Of course, NBC’s primetime coverage will focus on the prime traditional sports
of swimming, diving, gymnastics and beach
volleyball, with Bob Costas again acting as the
primetime host. I am not kidding about this,
but even the Oxygen network will carry nightly programming on gymnastics, plus synchronized swimming and the equestrian category.
Only the Sci-Fi Channel is not getting into the
act.
Even with more than a half-dozen networks
and cable outlets, NBC Universal doesn’t have
enough hours in the day to become the most
ambitious single media project in history. So
this is where NBCOlympics.com comes into
the picture, providing additional competition
footage but also being the venue for more
information about the schedules, listings,
news, and biographies of the athletes. This
Internet destination will take every sport and
offer it on-demand, while also offering the best
of daily TV coverage as encores.
There is a 12 hour time difference between
Beijing and New York. As you know, in the
media world, New York is the center of the
A Simple
Way to
Help
Your
Child's
Education
universe, so the folks at NBC somehow finagled commitments from the International
Olympic Committee to secure certain finals at
9 or 10 in the morning in China so that they
would go on primetime live in New York. Dick
Ebersol told the TV critics that prime coverage
would be live on the East Coast and in the
Central time zone, leaving the rest of us out
here on the left coast to get our Olympics on a
time delay.
“Historically, we have always shown the
Olympics on tape on the West Coast,” said
Ebersol, noting that roughly 81 to 82 percent of
all households in the United States are in the
Central and Eastern time zones. California
may be the largest state in the union (we have
the electoral votes to prove it), but we don’t
matter as much to the network bigwigs.
Actually, they are taking us for granted,
because as Ebersol noted, people on the West
Coast “love sports so much, and they know
when they want to watch it, and that’s in
primetime.” After extensive research, he figured out most of us are employed and can’t get
home in time to watch something at 4 o’clock.
The NBC executives obviously have high
hopes for the Beijing Olympics. Noting that
the Chinese were second to the Americans on
the gold medal chart in Athens in 2004, NBC
host Bob Costas told the TV critics that “when
Yao Ming leads the Chinese (basketball) team
against the Americans in their very first game
in the second day of competition of the
Olympics, this is going to be like a Super Bowl
atmosphere.” Sensing that he might be succumbing to hype that often afflicts sports
announcers, Costas followed up by saying
“that is not an overstatement.”
On the other hand, Ebersol seems to have
picked up the hyperbolic fever. He thinks the
Chinese curiosity about the Games is not just
about sports. “China’s new to the world in
terms of any level of openness,” he claims, and
then goes on to say that in the seven years
NBC has been in business with Chinese he
“clearly sees change.” Ironically, an AP news
report claims the Chinese are backtracking on
a promise of open press coverage, and that they
have placed blocks on Internet sites in the
Main Press Center and venues where reporters
will work. Hoping or thinking change is afoot
in China is one thing, but it’s a hard notion to
sell in a repressive society.
Politics aside, let’s hope we can share Bob
Costas’ belief and fervent wish that the
Opening Ceremonies, based on what he has
been told by people privileged to have seen the
early plans, will be “uber-spectacular.”
Curiosity will probably take hold of me on
Aug. 8.
To help battle the high cost of education,
use the newspaper as a simple answer to
many questions. From social studies, to the
arts and sciences, the newspaper is an
inexpensive way to diversify the daily
curriculum.
The advantages of Newspapers In Education
(NIE) are many:
• Affordable. Special student rates make
newspapers affordable textbooks covering a
variety of subjects.
• Improves reading skills. Evidence has
shown there is a correlation between
knowledge and achievement among
students who read the newspaper.
• Up-to-date. The newspaper is a current
source of information which gives students a
realistic look at events.
• High interest rates. Students have a high
interest in the newspaper because of the
variety of subjects covered. There’s
something for everyone.
For information on how you can become involved in
NIE, call (468-3500) today.
590 S. School St., Ukiah • 468-3500
6 – THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008
SPORTS
Editor: Anthony Dion, 468-3518
udjsports@pacific.net
TRIATHLON | 2008 VINEMAN
Local triathlete wins women’s division of “Vineman” contest
By ANTHONY DION
The Daily Journal
The ironman contest, testing an individual’s mental as
well as physical endurance at
almost unparalleled levels, is
one of great prestige throughout the world. Obviously, it is
also one of the most trying
challenges on the human body
that sport has to offer.
This
past
Saturday,
Sonoma County’s “Vineman”
Ironman contest took place
with many local athletes in
attendance along with their
friends
and
family.
Mendocino County in fact,
had a rather high-profile representation.
Former Ukiah High School
graduate from the class of
1998, Whitney Henderson
(formerly Whitney Garcia),
raced to a time of 10 hours, 44
minutes and 42 seconds that
resulted in the fastest time
among the approxiamate 120
women participants. In just
her second ironman race,
Henderson ran “the best race
I’ve ever done” in front of
family and friends in the
Sonoma County Triathlon.
The triathlon comprised of
a 2.4 mile swim in the Russian
River to begin, followed with
an immediate transition to a
112 mile bike ride through the
beautiful
landscape
of
Healdsburg wine country
across the largely hilly terrain
and concluded with a straight
marathon (26.2 miles) run.
There were roughly 500 participants for the race which
began at 6:45 in the morning
and ended at 11 p.m. the same
day.
The bike portion alone
climbs nearly 4,000 feet in
elevation thru Russian River,
Dry Creek, Alexander Valley
and Chalk Hill. Upon finishing the 112 mile bike course,
the athletes begin their
marathon run on a course that
loops thru Healdsburg.
Talk about fatigue. I’m
tired just writing all of that
down.
“To win the overall
women’s division was amazing,” said Henderson. “This
triathlon doesn’t garner too
many professionals because
it’s more of a local race, not as
prestigious as some of the bigger ones, so it gives the average triathlete the chance to
compete and do well.”
Established in 1990 as an
independent and local ironman
competition,
the
“Vineman” has consistently
grown and tested the triathletes that come to test its
strength.
From the website: “In 1990
the Vineman was designed to
be ‘the people’s ironman distance event’ with an emphasis
on making the average athlete’s experience of completing the classic distance the
most enjoyable and personalized as possible. While the
sport of triathlon has changed
See VINEMAN, Page 7
photo courtesy Vineman
Whitney Henderson crosses the finish-line during Saturday’s Vineman race. The
time above her isn’t official and about 10 minutes slow due to the women starting
out after the men.
GIANTS 3 | BRAVES 2
Lincecum leads Giants
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) and that was the biggest part,”
— Aaron Rowand says any Lincecum said. “But that’s
talk about the National just way too many walks for
League Cy Young Award me, especially when I’m talkshould begin and end with ing about trying to be efficient
San Francisco teammate Tim with my pitches. Those are
Lincecum.
going to kill you.”
“All you have to do is take
At 12-3, Lincecum will
a look at his numbers,” the likely get a long look from the
Giants’ center fielder said. Cy Young voters. He leads the
“With the exception of one, majors with 175 strikeouts, is
maybe two starts, all season second in the NL with a 2.69
long he’s been dominating. ERA and improved to 11-2 in
You talk to guys on the other 19 starts this season following
team that have to face him and a Giants’ loss.
“It’s still early, we’ve got a
all of them are pretty
lot of baseball left,
impressed with the
but at this point he’s
way that he’s develthrowing the ball as
oped, not only with
well as anybody in
his pitches but his
the game,” San
maturity and learning
Francisco manager
how to pitch. He’s
Bruce Bochy said.
not a thrower.”
“There’s no question
Lincecum proved
he’s going to get real
that on a day he didDodgers
strong (Cy Young)
n’t have his best
consideration.”
stuff.
at Giants
Lincecum
was
San Francisco’s
Friday, 7:15 p.m.
TV: FSN
effective
but
far
hard-throwing rightRadio: 680 AM,
from
dominant,
hander pitched eight
96.7 FM
walking four while
innings for his first
pitching with runwin in more than
three weeks, Rowand home- ners on base in every inning
red and drove in three runs but two. But after giving up an
and the Giants beat the RBI groundout to Mark
Atlanta Braves 3-2 on Kotsay in the sixth, the 24year-old starter didn’t allow a
Wednesday.
Lincecum allowed five hits runner past second base and
and struck out eight to earn struck out the side in the
his first win since July 13 and eighth to finish his afternoon.
He benefited from a fouronly his second in his past six
starts. In his three previous pitch third inning and got
outings, the San Francisco ace some help from the Giants
had a loss and two no-deci- defense. Left fielder Fred
Lewis threw out Casey
sions.
“I felt like this outing wasn’t that bad. We got the win
See GIANTS, Page 7
ON TAP
File Photo
Giants pitcher Tim Lincecum delivers during a start in May. Lincecum pitched 8 innings Wednesday against
the Braves as he earned his first win in three starts.
PGA TOUR | PGA CHAMPIONSHIP
The final test might be the toughest at PGA
By DOUG FERGUSON
Associated Press
BLOOMFIELD
TOWNSHIP,
Mich. — Rich Beem stood over his
tee shot on the 18th hole during his
final practice session for the PGA
Championship, trained his eye down
the narrow fairway squeezed
between bunkers, waggled his driver
and then backed off.
“This is the hardest hole I’ve ever
played,” he said Wednesday.
Then he smoked his tee shot with
the slightest draw and saw it hop to
the left on a canted fairway and disappear into the bunker.
“And it just got harder,” he said
before walking off.
That was just the 498-yard closing
hole at Oakland Hills.
Beem and the rest of the field at
the final major of the year haven’t
found other parts of the course to be
much easier.
INSIDE:
Indeed, “The Monster” is more
than a nickname at this PGA
Championship,
which
starts
Thursday.
“This is as tough of a setup as I’ve
ever seen,” Steve Stricker said.
The PGA Championship has been
getting positive reviews over the last
several years as the most fair of all
the majors, particularly among the
three in the United States. Phil
Mickelson last week described the
PGA as the major without an ego.
Now, the toughest test in golf
could be the last one.
“The usual setup for the PGA is
more like a tough U.S. tour event,”
British Open champion Padraig
Harrington said. “It’s nearly more
U.S. Open-type that the U.S. Open is
at the moment, if that makes any
sense. It’s actually like they switched
the two of them around this year.”
What makes it so difficult?
It starts with sheer length. The
course has been stretched 318 yards
since the 2004 Ryder Cup, measuring 7,395 yards, the longest in major
championship history for a par 70.
Two of the par 3s are over 235 yards,
so long they have fairways.
“This little pitch-and-putt?” Chad
Campbell said, rolling his eyes. “It’s
brutal. The added length is very difficult.”
But length is nothing new at
majors, for just about every course is
longer than it was. The trouble at
Oakland Hills is the shape of the
greens, which only look large. The
Donald Ross design — since worked
on by Robert Trent Jones for the
1951 U.S. Open and most recently
by Rees Jones — have more contours than just about any course,
including Augusta National. George
McNeill hit putts on the 18th green
that tracked in the shape of a parabo-
la.
And on the way to the green is
uniform rough that doesn’t look that
terrifying until a ball lands in it and
sinks to the bottom. The great mystery this week are the rakes — players have spotted course workers raking the grass toward the tee, making
it stand up like a fresh crew cut on a
Marine recruit.
“It doesn’t seem long because
you’ve just come from Birkdale,”
Geoff Ogilvy said, referring to the
site of the British Open. “But it’s 4
inches, and thick enough. If you’re
more than 100 yards, you’re not
going to get to the green from too
many lies.”
Rocco Mediate was playing the
18th early Wednesday — his only
nine holes of practice — when one of
his tee shots strayed to the right. His
caddie went looking for it, and when
he finally found it, picked it up and
said, “No good over here. Make a
note of that.”
Predicting a score is pointless
because no one knows how the PGA
of America will set it up when scores
start counting Thursday. But wherever they put the tees and pins, Oakland
Hills has gotten the players’ attention.
“The whole golf course really
feels and plays like a major should,”
Ernie Els said before going out for
one last look. “So I think we’re in for
a tough week. But a very fair week.”
Els is among those trying to make
sure his season does not end without
a major. He finally won again in the
United States at the Honda Classic,
but hasn’t done much since and is
hopeful his recent work with Butch
Harmon starts to take hold.
Harmon is a popular man these
days. He also is working with
See PGA, Page 7
Raiders’ Bush excited for
1st exhibition game
Pac-10 College
Football Preview
Blue Jays deliver A’s their
ninth straight loss
Scoreboard &
Transactions
........................Page 7
..............Page 8
..........................Page 8
...........Page 8
Reno McQueen first in
COMMUNITY
DIGEST county to drug test athletes
Softball Benefit
Tournament
Friends of Friends Benefit
Tournament, August 23 and 24
2008, Cloverdale City Park,
Unlimited home runs, all association
bats may be used. (except Senior
Softball), Contact Damien 707-9728122. All proceeds will go to the
assistance of a Cloverdale community member in need.
UHS Water Polo Team
The Ukiah High School boys and
girls water polo team will hold its first
practice on Monday August 18th at
8:00 am at the UHSl pool. Practices
will be from 8 - 10:30 a.m., and from
3:30-6 p.m. daily during the week
prior to school. A team information
packet can be picked up at the
Ukiah High Administration Building
or at the Student Activities Office.
This includes an athletic physical
form which must be completed
before the student is allowed to
practice.
You can call Coach Rick Cleland at
463-1551 or come to the Ukiah High
School pool on Monday, Tuesday or
Thursday between 3-5 p.m. the last
week of July for more information.
UHS Overnight Football
Camp
UHS is holding their 4th annual
overnight football camp from August
17th-20th for all Freshmen thru
Seniors who want to come out for
football. Players must have physicals in prior to the beginning of
camp to participate (the physical
packets are available at the high
school).
Meals will be provided for during
camp by catering. For additional
information call Coach Craig Morris
621-0935 or Coach Bernie Sapp
621-1300 or Russ Tow at 489-0963.
Hopland Bears Bocce
tournament
The Hopland Bears youth football
program is hosting its 1st annual
bocce tournament on Sunday,
August 17th at 10 a.m. at the
Brutocao School House Plaza.
The entry fee is $20 per player or
$60 per 4-person team, families are
encouraged! All proceeds go directly to the benefit of the football
teams. There will also be a silent
auction and a bake sale.
for more information or to sign-up
call Rick at (707) 291-9457.
Ukiah Valley Youth
Soccer Coaching
License
UVYSL is holding classes for
Soccer Coaches to get their E
License.
Friday Aug 15, 6pm-9pm and
Aug 16 & 17, 8am-5pm. Coaches
must attend all three days.
The class is held at Nokomis
Elementary Room 15. For further
information please visit our website
at www.uvysl.org or call our hotline
467-9797.
North Ukiah Little
League Fall Ball
NULL fall ball league starts August
23 and runs thru Nov.1. This league
is open to players ages 9-12yrs.
Sign-ups end August 8th For information contact: Sonny Garza 707
338-5913.
The Ukiah Host Lions and Ryan
Rones Dickey Memorial Soccer
Fund are sponsoring a six-a-side
soccer tournament for High School
age boys and girls on Saturday,
August 16 at the Pomolita Middle
School track . Games begin at 8
a.m. and will end about 5 p.m. Entry
fee is $150 per team. Applications
can be picked up at 601 N State St,
via email at pronescpa@pacific.net
or call 468-5711. Applications are
due by August 1.
Cross Country Class
There will be a Cross Country
class open to boys and girls ages
12-17. The class will meet at the
Lake Mendocino Chakota Trail on
Tuesdays and Thursdays, and at the
Ukiah High track on Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Fridays. All classes will meet a 6pm. All level Runners
are welcome and runners will have
indivitualzed running workouts. The
class will run from Monday, August
4th through Friday, August 22nd.
There is no fee for this class, but all
participants must register with the
City of Ukiah at 411 West Clay St.
For more information please call
462-5977.
Support Ukiah High
Football
We are asking the community and
parents to support Ukiah High football teams this year by purchasing
an ad to be placed in the Football
Program that will be sold at the
games.
The
prices
range
from$25.00 (business card), $50
(1/4 page), $75 (1/2 page), $125
(whole page), and $150 (inside and
back covers). You may send your
business card or ad to Mary Morris,
P.O. Box 177, Ukiah, CA 95482
(together with your check).
Any questions call Mary Morris at
621-1543. Thank you for supporting
the football teams. GO WILDCATS!
Men’s Adult Softball
Tournament
Men’s Adult softball Tournament
August 9th and 10th at Big League
Dreams Redding. There will be
three different divisions of play;
wood bat, metal bat and Senior.
Players may play in more than one
division. Players with no teams will
be assigned to free agent teams.
For more information contact
Richard Marks at (707) 445-3432 or
at SoftballTournaments.com.
RENO, Nev. (AP) —
Reno’s
McQueen
High
School will become the first
in Washoe County to randomly test its football players for
drugs after county school
board trustees unanimously
approved a pilot program to
begin this fall.
“If it has the potential to
help some kids, even one kid,
then I’m all for it,” trustee
Jody Ruggiero said.
Southern Nevada’s Green
Valley High tested athletes
late year and about a halfdozen schools in Clark
County plan to do so in the
coming season, said Ken
Cass, director of student services for the Washoe County
School District.
At McQueen, urine samples will be tested during the
15-week football season that
begins Aug. 29.
Each week, 12 players —
seven varsity, three junior varsity and two freshmen — will
be selected randomly for a test
that screens for 14 drugs
including alcohol, marijuana
and anabolic steroids.
Each test by national testing company Sport Safe costs
$37 and will be paid by the
McQueen football program.
Some school board members said their support was
strengthened because the
McQueen community was
behind it.
“The possibility of getting
caught is a pretty good deterrent, as far as I’m concerned,”
Trustee Dan Carne said. “I’d
like to see us support the parents and coaches of McQueen
who say they’d like to try
this.”
Hayes said that any player
testing positive would receive
intervention within a week.
Players must adhere to
their Nevada Interscholastic
Activities Association contract which prohibits the use
or possession of drugs, alcohol and tobacco. A first violation results in a suspension of
six competitive weeks of play.
A second violation brings a
90-day suspension, a substance abuse evaluation and a
substance abuse intervention
program. A third violation
makes them ineligible for the
rest of their high school
careers.
Giants
park and not only that, it’s
hard to score with their pitchers, so you’ve got to take
advantage of everything you
can get.”
Continued from Page 6
Kotchman at the plate to end
the first after Kotchman
walked and took second.
Omar Infante then lined a
sharp single off Lincecum but
the throw home from Lewis
beat Kotchman by several
feet.
“(Lincecum’s) got some of
the best stuff in the game, if
not the best,” said Atlanta
catcher Brian McCann, who
had three of the Braves’ five
hits. “He’s throwing a changeup that acts as a split. It’s like
88 mph. If he’s got that going,
he’s tough to hit.”
Randy Winn added four
hits including the 1,500th of
his career and scored twice for
the Giants, who won for the
fourth time in six games after
going 4-8 following the AllStar break.
Brian Wilson pitched a perfect ninth for his NL-leading
32nd save in 34 chances.
San Francisco did all of its
damage
early
against
Atlanta’s Chuck James (2-5),
who was making his second
start since being called up
from the minors last week.
Rowand’s homer to leftcenter was his 10th of the season and made the Giants the
last team this season to have a
player reach double digits in
home runs. Rowand drove in
another run in the second with
a sacrifice fly off James to
make it 3-0.
Atlanta scored its runs on
Yunel Escobar’s RBI groundout in the fifth and Kotsay’s
groundout in the sixth. But the
Braves couldn’t get their
offense going and had only
three hits over the final eight
innings.
“You’ve got to score,”
manager Bobby Cox said.
“It’s hard to score in this ball-
PGA
Continued from Page 6
Mickelson, the No. 2 player in
the world and the betting
favorite. And he spent
Wednesday morning with
Adam Scott, who has slipped
to No. 8 in the world and is
starting to feel the heat for
never having seriously challenged in a major.
“I can see some good
scores,” Scott said. “But I can
see it going the other way,
too.”
The last time over par won
a PGA Championship was in
1976 (Dave Stockton at
Congressional), giving it the
longest streak of winner at par
or better of any major. Over
par has won at all the other
majors within the last two
years.
Might
the
PGA
Championship join them?
“This has the potential to
play as the hardest major,”
Mike Weir said. “And that’s
never the case. Usually of the
four majors, if you played
your best, you could score
here. Now you could play
NOTEBOOK: Giants
activate reliever
Keiichi Yabu from
DL
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
— The Giants activated righthanded reliever Keiichi Yabu
from the 15-day disabled list
Wednesday and recalled
righty Billy Sadler from
Triple-A Fresno.
To make room on the roster, San Francisco optioned
reliever Osiris Matos to
Fresno and designated righthander Sergio Romo for
assignment.
The Giants plan to send
Romo to Fresno if he clears
trade waivers. According to
major league rules, he can’t be
optioned while on trade
waivers, the team said.
Yabu was 3-4 with a 3.64
ERA in 40 appearances before
going on the DL on July 20
with a strained middle finger
on his pitching hand. He
threw a bullpen session this
week and the Giants wanted
to see how he responded
before making a move.
“He threw a pretty good
bullpen the other day and
those guys were fresh in the
’pen so we decided it would
be better to give him another
day,” manager Bruce Bochy
said. “Matos and Romo have
done a good job. It was more
of a case that Yabu was ready
to come off the DL and
Sadler’s been throwing very
well.”
Sadler struggled during a
19-game stint with the Giants
earlier this season but most
recently was 1-0 with a 1.09
ERA in 22 games for Fresno.
great and 70 might be awesome.”
Scott is among four players
in the top 10 in the world
without a major — the others
are Sergio Garcia (No. 6),
Stewart Cink (No. 9) and
Stricker (No. 10). The PGA
Championship is known as
“Glory’s Last Shot,” and what
gives this major even more of
a sense of urgency is that
players have to wait seven
months until the next one.
Tiger Woods likely will be
in the field for the Masters, so
this also might be the last time
not having to worry about
him. Woods is the two-time
defending champion of the
PGA Championship, winning
last year by three shots over
Woody Austin at Southern
Hills.
“It’s an opportunity for a
lot of guys,” Els said. “You
look at guys who have not
won majors, who at my age
(38) or even past my age who
are playing well this year.
They can break through.
There’s a lot of guys playing
very good golf.”
From what they’ve seen
this week, they better be playing great.a
NFL | RAIDERS CAMP
Bush excited for Raiders exhibition opener
By JOSH DUBOW
Associated Press
NAPA — Michael Bush is
tired of watching after spending nearly two years on the
sideline while his teammates
got to play football.
Bush has not played in any
game since breaking his right
leg in the season opener of his
final college season at
Louisville in 2006. He missed
the rest of that college season
and all of his rookie campaign
with the Oakland Raiders in
the NFL, putting special
meaning on his exhibition
opener against San Francisco
on Friday night.
“I didn’t think it’d be this
long,” Bush said. “I was told
six months, seven months. It
turned out to be two years
now. So I’m just ready to get
out there and get it going
again.”
Bush was considered one
of the top running backs in the
country before breaking his
leg against Kentucky on Sept.
3, 2006. He was coming off a
junior season in which he ran
for 1,143 yards and an
NCAA-leading 23 touchdowns, and was being projected as a possible first-round
pick in the 2007 NFL draft.
Instead he began a long
rehabilitation process that has
taken far longer than he
expected. The leg didn’t heal
quickly enough from the original operation, leading to a
second surgery about a month
before the draft. That helped
lead to Bush’s slide into the
fourth round, where the
Raiders were happy to take a
chance on a talented player.
He originally hoped to be
ready for training camp last
year but instead started off on
the physically unable to perform list, where he remained
once the season started.
Bush said he felt ready to
return a few weeks into the
season but never got the
chance as the Raiders eventually placed him on injured
reserve because they had too
many other running backs in
Justin Fargas, LaMont Jordan
Vineman
Continued from Page 6
dramatically over the past
decade and a half, the soul of
the Vineman remains the
same.”
Its name derives from the
breathtaking scenery that
envelops the entire course as
competitors swim, bike and
and Dominic Rhodes.
Bush got to practice with
his teammates for a few weeks
last year before being placed
on injured reserve. He admitted it was tough watching his
teammates play football while
he could only work on back
fields, but hopes it pays off
this season.
“It was like I was training,
basically, to one day get on
the field,” he said. “There
weren’t any low points. I was
out there basically focusing
on my conditioning, just trying to get right in every aspect
of the game as far as quick
speed. And still I was in the
meeting rooms as well. Just
being in locker room with the
guys as well was pretty cool
as well.”
Bush is now part of a
crowded
backfield
in
Oakland, which includes a
1,000-yard rusher in Fargas
and heralded rookie Darren
McFadden. Bush believes he
has shown the coaches he is
100 percent by the way he can
run and cut in drills.
He got coach Lane Kiffin
especially excited in a drill
early in training camp, when
he lowered his shoulders into
the pile in a full-pad goal-line
drill. Kiffin wants to see more
of the same in the game
against the 49ers on Friday as
he hopes that Bush can be the
short-yardage back this season.
“He’s 246 pounds, don’t
run like a 200 pounder, and
see what we have,” Kiffin
said. “We got a glimpse of
him in the goal line situation,
and hopefully that’s who he is
and that’s who he needs to be
to be able to play for us. He’s
the one big guy we have, and
if he can do what we hope he
can do I think we’re in a real
good position there.
Bush got singled out for
praise by Kiffin after
Wednesday’s practice for
picking up Gibril Wilson on a
blitz and running physical.
Bush knows he will need to
show more of those skills in
order to get on the field this
run through Sonoma County’s
wine country
Henderson said she trained
for a full year in preparation
for the race and has only raced
in one other ironman competition before -- the popular
Hawaii Ironman in 2005.
____
For more information on
the Vineman or to just see
photos of this year’s race go
to www.vineman.com.
Jewelry
by
David
Full Service
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season.
“That’s not a problem for
me. I can be a bruiser if I need
to be. I just basically play the
game, I’ve been playing it for
a long time. I’ll drop my
shoulders if I need to, if not, I
won’t,” he said. “In goal line
and stuff like that, you need to
run like a big guy. You need,
third and short yardage, you
need to lean forward and get
your head down. That’s what
you need to do as a running
back, big or small.”
Favre trade talk
heating up as
Packers move on
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)
— Green Bay Packers general
manager Ted Thompson was
not
seen
at
practice
Wednesday morning, and his
scheduled early afternoon
media availability was postponed — one of several signs
a trade involving Brett Favre
might be brewing.
Favre’s Mississippi-based
agent, James “Bus” Cook,
told the Jackson (Miss.)
Clarion-Ledger Wednesday
morning that a trade, either to
Tampa Bay or the New York
Jets, might happen as soon as
this morning.
“Brett’s ready to go play,”
Cook told the paper at 11:25
a.m. EDT. “It looks like it’s
going to be New York or
Tampa Bay. We’re waiting to
find out and we could learn in
the next hour or so.”
Tampa Bay coach Jon
Gruden refused to address
speculation that the team was
on the verge of a deal for
Favre.
Meanwhile, Packers coach
Mike McCarthy said he was
happy the rest of his players
were getting a chance to move
on.
“It’s time for it to be over,”
cornerback Charles Woodson
said Tuesday. “It’s gone on
long enough.”
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8 – THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008
COLLEGE FOOTBALL | PAC-10 PREVIEW
Southern California once
again favorite in Pac-10
By JOSH DUBOW
Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — The
Pac-10 has long been a conference known for its talented
quarterbacks and high-powered offenses.
That’s what makes the
uncertainty at quarterback so
many teams are facing at the
start of fall practice so unsettling to many teams.
Only
Arizona
State,
Arizona and Washington
opened fall practice with
returning starters at quarterback entrenched in their jobs.
Everyone else is either
breaking in a new starter such
as Mark Sanchez at Southern
California, challenging a former one like the competition
between Nate Longshore and
Kevin Riley at California, or
hoping a young one will take
the job like Nate Costa at
Oregon.
“I would say that the team
with the experience at quarterback probably has the lead
going in because the experience at that position is so
important,” Cal coach Jeff
Tedford said. “When you’re
breaking in a new quarterback, there’s always a growing process.”
USC figures to be an
exception to that rule.
The Trojans have done well
with first-year starters at quarterback in the past under Pete
Carroll, winning a share of the
national title with Matt
Leinart in 2003 and finishing
fourth overall in the country
with John David Booty in
2006.
Sanchez has made only
three career starts, winning
two of them while Booty was
hurt last season, and has
thrown just seven touchdown
passes to six interceptions.
But he has the most talented roster in the league surrounding him, including linebacker Rey Maualuga, running back Joe McKnight, and
receiver Patrick Turner, and
the confidence of his teammates.
“He’s a playmaker from the
quarterback position,” USC
linebacker Brian Cushing
said. “Mark will be a lot better
this year. He knows it’s his
time. The year of maturity
where he’s had a little experience means a lot.”
The team best positioned to
challenge the Trojans this season could be Arizona State
because of the experience of
Rudy Carpenter at quarterback.
Carpenter has made 31
straight starts for the Sun
Devils, throwing 25 touchdown passes last season to
help Arizona State tie the
Trojans for the regular season
title.
Washington coach Tyrone
Willingham and Arizona
coach Mike Stoops have similar feelings about their own
returning starters in Huskies
sophomore Jake Locker and
Wildcats
senior
Willie
Tuitama.
The rest of the teams know
it will be a growing process at
quarterback.
“You’ve got to have support people because the quarterback can’t do it on their
own,” Oregon coach Mike
Bellotti said. “It’s a dogfight
and you have to protect your
players and be healthy.”
A capsule look at the teams
in predicted order of finish:
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA — Key players: LB Rey
Maualuga, Sr.; FS Taylor
Mays, Jr.; RB Joe McKnight,
Soph.; DL Fili Moala, Sr.
Returning starters: 4 offense,
7 defense.
Notes: Offensive line features four new starters but talented backfield of McKnight,
C.J. Gable and Stafon
Johnson should make transition easier. ... Strength of the
defense is in the back seven,
led by Maualuga, Mays,
Cushing, and S Kevin Ellison.
... Home game against Ohio
State on Sept. 13 highlights
nonconference slate and could
play big role in determining
who makes BCS title game.
ARIZONA STATE — Key
players: QB Rudy Carpenter,
Sr.; RB Keegan Herring, Sr.;
DE Dexter Davis, Jr.; K-P
Thomas
Weber,
Soph.
Returning starters: 7 offense,
7 defense.
Notes: Mike Jones (10 TDs
last season) and Chris
McGaha (61 catches) lead a
talented receiving corps. ...
Weber made 24 of 25 field
goals as a freshman and won
the Lou Groza Award as
nation’s top kicker. ... A home
win over Georgia on Sept. 20
could vault Sun Devils into
national title picture.
CALIFORNIA — Key
players: C Alex Mack, Sr.; LB
Zach Follett, Sr.; RB Jahvid
Best, Soph.; DL Rulon Davis,
Sr. Returning starters: 5
offense, 7 defense.
Notes: Expectations are
down after Golden Bears lost
six of final seven games after
having a chance to become
No. 1 in the nation last year. ...
Best (7.6 ypc) showed flashes
of brilliance as a freshman but
must recover from a hip
injury. ... Florida transfer
Nyan Boateng will be counted
on at receiver after talented
trio of DeSean Jackson,
Lavelle Hawkins and Robert
Jordan left for NFL.
OREGON — Key players:
S Patrick Chung, Sr.; DE Nick
Reed, Sr.; C Max Unger, Sr.;
RB Jeremiah Johnson, Sr.
Returning starters: 6 offense,
7 defense.
Notes: Loss of QB Dennis
Dixon and RB Jonathan
Stewart leaves big holes on an
offense that led conference in
scoring. ... Junior college
transfer RB LaGarrette Blount
could make an immediate
impact.
ARIZONA — Key players:
QB Willie Tuitama, Sr.; TE
Rob Gronkowski, Soph.; WR
Mike Thomas, Sr.; OT Eben
Britton, Jr. Returning starters:
10 offense, 3 defense.
Notes: Coach Mike Stoops
has not had a winning season
in four years at Tucson and
could be on his way out if he
can’t reverse that trend and
lead the Wildcats to their first
bowl game in 10 years. ...
Offense is set with Tuitama,
Gronkowski and Thomas, but
defense must figure out how
to replace eight starters,
including star CB Antoine
Cason.
UCLA — Key players: RB
Kahlil Bell, Sr.; K Kai
Forbath, Soph.; LB Reggie
Carter, Jr. Returning starters:
5 offense, 5 defense.
Notes:
Coach
Rick
Neuheisel returns to the head
coaching ranks at his alma
mater and brings heralded former USC offensive coordinator Norm Chow with him. ...
Ben Olson could be challenged for starting QB job by
junior college transfer Kevin
Craft.
OREGON STATE — Key
players:
WR
Sammie
Stroughter, Sr.; CB Brandon
Hughes, Sr.; OT Andy
Levitre, Sr. Returning starters:
7 offense, 3 defense.
Notes: Beavers have been
slow starters and fast finishers
in recent years. With road
games at Stanford and Penn
State to open the schedule,
Oregon State will need to be
sharp early. .... Stroughter was
limited to three games last
year because of a kidney
injury, but was granted a medical hardship to come back.
WASHINGTON — Key players: QB Jake Locker, Soph.;
LB E.J. Savannah. Jr.; S
Mesphin
Forrester,
Sr.
Returning starters: 7 offense,
6 defense.
Notes: The pressure is on
coach Tyrone Willingham
after posting only 11 wins in
his first three seasons. A brutal
nonconference schedule that
features Oklahoma, BYU and
Notre
Dame
makes
Willingham’s job even more
difficult. ... Locker is the leading returning rusher in the
league at 82.2 yards per game.
STANFORD — Key players: WR Richard Sherman, Jr.;
LB Clinton Snyder, Jr.; C
Alex Fletcher, Sr.; DL Pannel
Egboh, Sr. Returning starters:
7 offense, 9 defense.
Notes:
Coach
Jim
Harbaugh tries to build off a
debut season highlighted by
big wins over USC and Cal. ...
Tavita Pritchard, who engineered the win over the
Trojans, is competing for
starting QB job with Alex
Loukas and Jason Forcier.
Stewart.
WASHINGTON STATE —
Key players: WR Brandon
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
SPORTS
BLUE JAYS 4 | A’S 3
Mench, Blue Jays beat Athletics in ninth
TORONTO (AP) — Kevin
Mench singled in the winning
run with two outs in the ninth
inning and the Toronto Blue
Jays extended the Athletics’
season-long losing streak to
eight games, beating Oakland
4-3 on Tuesday night.
Toronto trailed 3-2 heading
into the bottom of the ninth
against Oakland closer Huston
Street. Alex Rios led off with
a single and scored one out
later when Rod Barajas doubled over the head of left
fielder Ryan Sweeney.
Adam Lind was walked
intentionally and Scott Rolen
advanced both runners with an
infield chopper before Mench
lined the first pitch he saw
into the left-center field alley,
scoring Barajas.
Street (2-5) blew his sixth
save of the season.
Jesse Carlson (4-1) got two
outs to earn the victory.
Carlos Gonzalez had a
career-high four hits for the
Athletics, who have lost six
straight road games and are a
major league worst 2-15 since
the All-Star break.
Oakland rookie reliever
Brad Ziegler worked two
shutout innings, extending his
scoreless innings streak to 34.
It’s the longest scoreless
streak to begin a career in
modern major league history
(since 1900), and just four
inning shy of the Oakland
team record of 37 scoreless
innings, set by Mike Torres in
1976.
The Athletics took a 1-0
lead in the second when
Gonzalez doubled and scored
on a single by Mark Ellis, but
Toronto tied it in the bottom
half when Barajas singled and
came around on Lind’s triple.
A two-out, two-run triple
by Bobby Crosby gave
Oakland a 3-1 lead in the
fourth, but Toronto got one
back in the fifth on Marco
Scutaro’s RBI single.
Seeking an insurance run,
Oakland loaded the bases
against reliever Brandon
League with nobody out in the
eighth, but came up empty
when
shortstop
John
McDonald made a diving
catch on Ellis’ liner, then
threw from his knees to double up pinch runner Emil
Brown off second base. Jack
Hannahan ended the inning by
grounding out.
Oakland left-hander Greg
Smith allowed two runs and
four hits in six innings.
Making his second start of
the season, Blue Jays righthander Scott Richmond
allowed three runs and seven
hits in 5 2-3 innings.
Oakland’s Jack Cust made
the defensive play of the
game, leaping against the wall
in left to snare a liner from
Barajas for the final out of the
sixth.
NOTEBOOK: A’s add
LHP Gonzalez, send RHP
Gallagher for MRI
TORONTO (AP) — The
Oakland Athletics purchased
the contract of left-hander Gio
Gonzalez from Triple-A
Sacramento, promoting him in
time to make his major league
debut Wednesday night
against the Toronto Blue Jays.
The Athletics began the day
with an eight-game losing
streak.
Infielder Gregorio Petit
was optioned to Triple-A to
make room for Gonzalez.
Third baseman Eric Chavez,
who will undergo season-ending shoulder surgery next
week, was transferred from
the 15-day disabled list to the
60-day DL.
The A’s also said right-hander Sean Gallagher, acquired
from the Chicago Cubs last
month, returned to California
this week for an MRI exam
because of irritation in his
right shoulder.
The 22-year-old Gonzalez
was 8-7 with a 4.24 ERA at
Triple-A, where he struck out
128 in 123 innings. He
pitched eight shutout innings
last Friday in a victory over
Nashville.
Manager Bob Geren said
Gallagher’s condition is considered minor, and said he will
not need to go on the disabled
list.
SCOREBOARD
MLB
AL
East Division
Tampa Bay
Boston
New York
Toronto
Baltimore
Central Division
Chicago
Minnesota
Detroit
Kansas City
Cleveland
West Division
Los Angeles
Texas
Oakland
Seattle
NL
East Division
Philadelphia
Florida
New York
Atlanta
Washington
Central Division
Chicago
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Houston
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
West Division
Arizona
Los Angeles
Colorado
San Francisco
San Diego
W
68
65
61
57
54
L
45
49
52
56
58
Pct GB
.602
—
.570 3 1/2
.540
7
.504
11
.48213 1/2
W
62
62
55
53
49
L
49
51
57
61
64
Pct GB
.559
—
.549
1
.491 7 1/2
.46510 1/2
.434
14
W
70
60
53
44
L
43
54
59
69
Pct GB
.619
—
.52610 1/2
.47316 1/2
.389
26
W
61
60
59
52
42
L
51
53
53
61
71
Pct GB
.545
—
.531 1 1/2
.527
2
.460 9 1/2
.37219 1/2
W
68
64
63
54
52
51
L
46
51
52
58
63
62
Pct GB
.596
—
.557 4 1/2
.548 5 1/2
.482
13
.45216 1/2
.45116 1/2
W
59
56
52
47
43
L
54
56
63
65
70
Pct GB
.522
—
.500 2 1/2
.452
8
.42011 1/2
.381
16
AL
Tuesday’s Games
Toronto 4, Oakland 3
Tampa Bay 8, Cleveland 4
Texas 8, N.Y. Yankees 6
Boston 8, Kansas City 2
Chicago White Sox 10, Detroit 8, 14 innings
Baltimore 3, L.A. Angels 0
Seattle 8, Minnesota 7
Wednesday’s Games
Tampa Bay 10, Cleveland 7
L.A. Angels 9, Baltimore 4
Minnesota 7, Seattle 3
Oakland at Toronto, 4:07 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Texas, 5:05 p.m.
Boston at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m.
Detroit at Chicago White Sox, 5:11 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Oakland (Duchscherer 10-7) at Toronto (Burnett
13-9), 4:07 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Mussina 14-7) at Texas (Feldman
4-4), 5:05 p.m.
Detroit (Miner 5-4) at Chicago White Sox
(Vazquez 8-9), 5:11 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Sonnanstine 11-6) at Seattle
(F.Hernandez 7-7), 7:10 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Oakland at Detroit, 4:05 p.m.
Texas at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Toronto, 4:07 p.m.
Minnesota at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m.
Boston at Chicago White Sox, 5:11 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Seattle, 710 p.m.
NL
Tuesday’s Games
Chicago Cubs 11, Houston 7
Florida 8, Philadelphia 2
N.Y. Mets 6, San Diego 5
Milwaukee 8, Cincinnati 1
St. Louis 6, L.A. Dodgers 4, 11 innings
Colorado 8, Washington 2
Arizona 3, Pittsburgh 1
Atlanta 11, San Francisco 4
Wednesday’s Games
Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 3
Houston at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Arizona, 3:40 p.m.
Atlanta at San Francisco, 3:45 p.m.
Florida at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
San Diego at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Washington at Colorado, 9:05 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
San Diego (Banks 3-4) at N.Y. Mets (J.Santana 97), 9:10 a.m.
Florida (Volstad 2-2) at Philadelphia (Hamels 97), 10:05 a.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 1-3) at St. Louis (Lohse
13-3), 11:15 a.m.
Washington (Bergmann 1-8) at Colorado
(Jimenez 8-9), 12:05 p.m.
Houston (Oswalt 8-8) at Cincinnati (Fogg 2-3),
4:10 p.m.
Atlanta (Morton 2-5) at Arizona (Petit 1-2), 6:40
p.m.
Friday’s Games
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m.
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m.
Florida at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m.
Houston at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m.
Washington at Milwaukee, 5:05 p.m.
San Diego at Colorado, 6:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Arizona, 6:40 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco, 7:15 p.m.
MLS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L
New England
10 4
Columbus
9 6
Chicago
8 5
D.C. United
8 8
Toronto FC
6 8
Kansas City
5 6
New York
5 6
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L
Real Salt Lake
7 6
Houston
6 4
FC Dallas
6 6
Los Angeles
6 8
CD Chivas USA
6 7
Colorado
6 9
San Jose
4 9
T Pts GF GA
3 33 25 19
4 31 29 27
5 29 25 14
1 25 30 28
4 22 20 24
7 22 17 23
7 22 19 27
T Pts GF GA
6 27 22 20
8 26 21 19
7 25 27 24
5 23 38 40
4 22 22 22
3 21 27 25
6 18 15 25
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
———
Saturday’s Games
Toronto FC at Colorado, 4 p.m.
Chicago at New England, 7:30 p.m.
CD Chivas USA at Kansas City, 8 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
D.C. United at New York, 5 p.m.
Thursday, Aug. 14
Los Angeles at CD Chivas USA, 11 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 16
FC Dallas at Columbus, 7:30 p.m.
D.C. United at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Real Salt Lake at Houston, 8:30 p.m.
Kansas City at Colorado, 9:30 p.m.
New England at San Jose, 10 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 17
Toronto FC at New York, 5 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
National League
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS—Activated RHP
Keiichi Yabu from the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP
Billy Sadler from Fresno (PCL). Optioned RHP
Osiris Matos to Fresno. Assigned RHP Sergio
Romo to Fresno.
Midwest League
QUAD CITIES RIVER BANDITS—Assigned RHP
Pete Parise and OF Aaron Luna to Palm Beach
(FSL). Announced RHP Jameson Maj and OF
Jon Edwards were assigned to the team from
Batavia (NYP).
American Association
GRAND PRAIRIE AIRHOGS—Signed C
Cameron McGuire.
WICHITA WINGNUTS—Released RHP David
Rider.
Can-Am League
BROCKTON ROX—Signed INF Eduardo Rios.
NASHUA PRIDE—Signed RHP Matt OBrien.
NEW JERSEY JACKALS—Signed INF David
Urias.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
MONTREAL CANADIENS—Signed D Chad
Anderson to a one-year contract.
ECHL
PHOENIX ROADRUNNERS—Agreed to terms
with C Peder Skinner and C Gino Guyer on oneyear contracts.
Eastern Professional Hockey League
EPHL—Named Eugene Binda supervisor of officials.
COLLEGE
LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY—Named Kyle
Robinson volleyball coach.
OBERLIN—Named Nicole Trott women’s assistant basketball coach.
OTTERBEIN—Named Michael Caravana men’s
lacrosse coach.
RHODE ISLAND COLLEGE—Announced the
resignation of Denis Chartier, women’s soccer
and lacrosse coach. Named Jessica Knobel
women’s interim soccer coach.
SHORTER—Named Jennifer Colley women’s
assistant soccer coach and Ciaran Traquair men’s
soccer graduate assistant coach.
THE CITADEL—Named Todd Stephens director
of basketball operations.
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
ARTS & E NTERTAINMENT
THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008 – 9
John Mattern to perform 4th Acoustic
Local band
competition held Café at the Ukiah Music Center
to benefit Boys
& Girls Club
The Daily Journal
The Daily Journal
Area businesses and musicians joining together for an
event to raise needed funds
for Boys And Girls Club of
Ukiah.
Rising
Stars
Competition is a multi-band,
multi-genre competition in
which musicians from Lake
and Mendocino Counties will
be competing for prizes
donated by area merchants.
This daylong event on
Sept. 27 will encompass as
many musical genres as possible showcasing the oftenunheard talents of musicians
of all ages. Event organizers,
Cherie Sheraque and Mary
Chadwick have partnered
with Russian River Records to
provide a venue for these
musicians to play and bring
the public in to enjoy the talents in our communities.
Bands from all genres are
encouraged to enter this competition by going to the Web
site
at
http://www.risingstarscompetition.com and
submitting their entry. Entry
forms can also be obtained
from Ukiah Music Center and
Dig Music in Ukiah. Bands
will be placed in divisions
according to their genre of
music and be judged on an
individual basis with each
judge scoring individual acts
on stage performance and
presence, talent and audience
reaction.
Prizes will be awarded to
the winners in each genre with
overall winners receiving the
grand prize of studio time at
Russian River Records. Bands
are also encouraged to add
themselves to the competition
Myspace at myspace.com/risingstarscompetition.
Businesses and groups are
needed to sponsor this event
through various levels of
sponsorship opportunities.
For sponsoring this event,
businesses will receive promotional advertising on
Kwine/ Max Radio and other
radio stations, newspapers
and printed fliers placed
throughout the two counties.
Businesses will receive higher
Film
Continued from Page 3
China must rid this country of
this evil mummy before it gets
powerful and can’t be
stopped.
I really thought this film
for a sequel had a great storyline, however I felt that it definitely needed a bit of work on
progression of characters and
a change of cast.
First off I do not think
under any circumstances “The
Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon
Emperor” should not have
been shot without Rachel
Weisz. She is such a great
actress and has been with the
last two films so much that I
don’t think it was right, even
with her having too many projects for her to take this project on, I think that Maria
Bello just wasn’t the right person. If she would have been
playing this part from the
beginning it would have been
fine, but all I could see when
watching this film was Weisz
playing the character and was
disappointed to see anyone
different.
Then as time went on it
seemed as if Bello, instead of
levels of promotion based
upon the level of donation.
Sponsors will also be recognized through banners at
the event. Sponsorships and
donations of prizes are gratefully accepted. Those interested in sponsoring this event
can learn more about sponsorship by visiting the website at
http://www.risingstarscompetition.com
or
emailing
info@risingstarscompetition.com
The venue for this event is
provided by Russian River
Records. Ken Ingels, owner of
Russian River Records and
long-time supporter of The
Boys and Girls Club of Ukiah
has built a brand new venue in
Ukiah and has graciously
donated the use of his facility
for this event. The public is
invited to attend this event for
a suggested donation of $5 for
the Boys & Girls Club.
Limited food vending
spaces are available for rent to
groups or businesses wishing
to rent them. Inquiries about
booth spaces may be directed
to info@risingstarscompetition.com
Local musicians, II Big and
Faded At Four will also provide entertainment during this
competition. Though both
bands will not be competing,
they will be lending their support to this fund-raiser when
II Big plays for the crowd during the afternoon and Faded
At Four performs before the
winners are announced.
This showcase of talent is
an effort to promote awareness of all of the musical talent in the area along with
helping the Boys & Girls Club
of Ukiah continue their muchneeded program for the youth.
Musicians, businesses and
organizations are encouraged
to participate in some way to
help keep the music alive and
keep the doors of the Boys &
Girls Club of Ukiah opened.
Information can be obtained
at the website, through email
or through calling Mary at
272-6514.
This Saturday the Ukiah Music
Center is presenting one of the most
eclectic, artistic and innovative musicians and educators in Northern
California John Mattern with his new
ensemble at the ‘Acoustic Café’ concert
stage. The gates open at 6 p.m. with the
music beginning around 7 p.m. at the
Ukiah Music Center located at 745 N.
State St. in Ukiah.
This will be a bit of a journey back to
his roots, playing folk, blues, country
and western guitar picking, with a dash
of jazz blues and Count Basie swing on
saxophone, as well as a bit of Earl
Scruggs on banjo. The evening will feature a handful of new compositions by
one of Ukiah’s local favorite musicians
Mattern on vocals-guitar and piano, as
well as some covers ranging from
Johnny Cash to Count Basie and Muddy
Waters.
On piano will be Lee Bloom, San
Francisco pianist, and long time collaborator with Mattern. Lee was the featured
pianist on Mattern’s debut Jazz Album
“Afrosano” released in 2004. On Bass
and drums will be Matt Davis and Eric
Ehrenpfort respectively. Two very versatile rhythm section players with many
years of jazz, blues and country-blues
experience. On guitar and pedal steel
guitar and banjo will be Lake County
great, Pat Ickes. An incredibly versatile
musician with a very strong background
in blues and country and western styles.
“Pedal steel guitar is one of my favorite
instruments, it is so expressive and fluid,
and Pat is an amazing musician. A real
local gem of a musician,” says Mattern.
Mattern has the unique ability to
interpret styles from Gershwin to
Coltrane, J. S. Bach to Dexter Gordon
and even the folk styles of banjo innovator, Earl Scruggs. John grew up in Ukiah
California, initially developing his musical skills playing the five-string banjo.
He is also an aspiring singer-songwriterguitarist. Ten years as a music educator
in the Ukiah area, Mattern is now the
John Mattern
director of music at Redwood High in
Larkspur Calif.
Donation seating is $10 and you can
get tickets at the Ukiah Music Center or
online at ukiahmusic.com. Since this is a
small space, seating will fill quickly, so
be sure to show up early enough to get a
seat. For more information on the series,
please go to Ukiahmusic.com or call
462-8863.
To sumbit information for the Arts & Entertainment
pages, email udjfeatures@pacific.net
or fax 468-3544
making this part her own,
acted just as Weisz would play
it and it just did not fit her
image. It reminded me of her
playing a peppy version of a
‘50s style “Meet the
Cleavers” mom where the
world is perfect and fake. It
just wasn’t the same.
Among small pieces in the
film it generally had a great
plot and interesting set up.
Special effects were really
good and did a good job being
put together.
Time framing was kind of
odd for having the last film
about seven years ago and
basically jumping about 10
years making the son over 18
and in college.
I definitely think they
could have made the story
better and even funnier if Alex
was younger.
In conclusion I recommend
this movie to anyone who
loved the first two films, but
keep in mind it is quite different and if going to see it, as
long as there is not too much
anticipation on it being the
same as the first two, it will be
liked.
Rating: PG-13
Running Time: 112 min.
Find Real Estate bargains in
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ON THE MARKET
Ukiah Daily Journal
Publication Dates:
The Ukiah Daily Journal
Aug 24, 2008
Journal Sampler
Aug 26, 2008
The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
Call your Ukiah Daily Journal
representative to reserve your space
online at ukiahdailyjournal.com
Advertising Space & Materials Deadline:
Aug 14, 2008 • 3:00pm
468-3500
10 – THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008
TIME OUT
Editor: Chris McCartney, 468-3524
udj@pacific.net
The Ukiah Daily Journal
by Charles M. Schulz
PEANUTS
by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
ZITS
by Scott Adams
DILBERT
by Art and Chip Sansom
THE BORN LOSER
BLONDIE
by Dean Young and Jim Raymond
by Bob Thaves
FRANK AND ERNEST
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
by Lynn Johnson
BEETLE BAILEY
by Mort Walker
DOONESBURY
by Gary Trudeau
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
by Dik Browne
Datebook: Thursday, Aug. 7, 2008
Today is the 220th day of 2008 and the
48th day of summer.
TODAY’S HISTORY: In 1958, Arthur
Miller won an appeal against his conviction
of contempt of Congress for refusing to
name names in his House Un-American
Activities Committee (HUAC) testimony.
In 1964, Congress passed the Gulf of
Tonkin resolution, giving President Lyndon
Johnson wide discretionary power in
responding to reported Vietnamese attacks.
In 1998, U.S. embassies in Tanzania and
Kenya were bombed.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS: Ralph Bunche
ASTROGRAPH
By Bernice Bede Osol
Friday, Aug. 8, 2008
Life is never optimal, so
don’t expect everything to go
perfectly in the year ahead.
However, if you roll with the
punches, you’ll make fewer
waves and things will run
much smoother than they
would otherwise.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -It’s marvelous to be able to
operate in a free and independent manner, but this isn’t
always possible if you are a
responsible individual. This
might be one of those times
when duty calls.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) -- Should you have to
deal with someone who
recently made you bitter
about something, don’t be
your own worse enemy and
let this past incident hamper
your thinking. Put it behind
you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
-- Steer clear of people who
have been known to make
demands of your time and
money. Nothing will have
changed, and you could once
again be maneuvered into an
all-give-and-no-get position.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Gratify your ambitions, but only in a manner in
which you would be proud to
talk about later. The end must
always justify the means; it’s
not the other way around.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- Methods and
procedures that have proven
to be unproductive in the past
will hammer out zeros once
(1904-1971),
activist/Nobel
laureate;
Garrison Keillor (1942-), entertainer, is 66;
David Duchovny (1960-), actor, is 48;
Charlize Theron (1975-), actress, is 33;
Sidney Crosby (1987-), hockey player, is
21.
TODAY’S SPORTS: In 2007, Barry
Bonds of the San Francisco Giants hit his
756th career home run, surpassing the
record set by Hank Aaron.
again. It’s time to learn from
your past mistakes, not to
repeat them.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- Be merely an
observer rather than an eager
participant in the complex
affairs of another who is having a difficult time. Stand
back from this person’s troubles; don’t invite complications into your life.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 19) -- Unusual stress in
a relationship might be
something you could have to
deal with. If someone opposes you without reason, keep
your cool and be tolerant, not
feisty.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Trouble at work could
arise if your way of doing
TODAY’S QUOTE: “Heads are wisest
when they are cool, and hearts are strongest
when they beat in response to noble ideas.”
-- Ralph Bunche
TODAY’S FACT: Ronald Reagan quoted
Thomas Jefferson during his HUAC testimony, which he gave in 1947.
TODAY’S MOON: Between new moon
(Aug. 1) and first quarter (Aug. 8).
something is totally different
from that of your boss. Stop
and think twice before biting
the hand that signs your paycheck.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -- You have a tendency to
allow your emotions to prevail over your common sense
and waste money on frivolous activities. Break this
pattern now.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- There is a strong
chance that a favorite activity
could be in conflict with your
mate’s plans, so check with
him or her first before you
take it upon yourself to move
on it.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) -- You’re an observant
person, but if you use your
sharp eye to focus only on
the negative aspects of others, you are not likely to be
very popular. Leave your
black cloud at home.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- You can plan on ending
with far less than you start if
you insist upon mismanaging
your resources. All the
excuses in the world won’t
make up for this wastefulness.
Know where to look for
romance and you’ll find it.
The
Astro-Graph
Matchmaker
instantly
reveals which signs are
romantically perfect for you.
Mail $3 to Astro-Graph, P.O.
Box 167, Wickliffe, OH
44092-0167.
Cruise
On
In
TO THE CLASSIFIEDS
THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008 – 11
TIME OUT
Editor: Chris McCartney, 468-3524
udj@pacific.net
The Ukiah Daily Journal
Puzzlers
THE LEARNING
CHALLENGER
by Robert Barnett
DIRECTIONS:
A. Using each "Chaos Grid" number with its
letter one time, arrange the numbers with
their letters for the "Order Grid" so each
vertical column, horizontal row, and two
diagonals each ADD to numbers inside
thick lined cells.
B. Some correct numbers with their letters
have been put into the "Order Grid" to
get you started. Also, above the "Order
Grid" is a "Decoded Message" clue.
C. After you have solved the "Order Grid"
doing as direction "A" says, put the letters from horizontal rows, from left to
right, under "Decoded Message" and
make words to form the answer.
CHAOS GRID
46
M
38
U
58
R
37
U
45
N
57
A
58
S
25
D
24
L
59
B
23
A
11
T
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by Mike Argirion and Jeff Knurek
3
M
5
E
13
R
26
N
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
KHYAS
CLUE: BONES
ORDER GRID
132
132
132
37
U
45
N
132
RAOAM
132
24
L
132
©2008 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
13
R
132
132
132
132
8/7/2008
DECODED MESSAGE:
YOUCTH
ANSWERS IN NEXT EDITION
© 2008 Robert Barnett
www.jumble.com
MEEGUL
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
Answers to Previous
Learning Challenger
KAILUA AND WAHIAWA
-1
A
39
A
18
W
76
A
-12
I
51
A
24
A
69
W
63
L
30
N
52
H
-13
A
Answer:
Yesterday’s
8/6/2008
-
82
K
12
U
38
D
0
I
(Answers tomorrow)
EXODUS
HANDED
Jumbles: FAITH VAPOR
Answer: The owner didn’t repair the roof because it
was — OVER HIS HEAD
Woman is trying to find trust for her husband of many years
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
Dear Annie: I have been married more
than 30 years. I’ve worked hard to keep
myself attractive for my husband, but he has
told me repeatedly I am not what he wants
sexually, even though he expects me to be
available to him at all times.
There have been a couple of infidelities. At
a time when I needed to rebuild my trust, I
discovered quite a bit of porn on our computer and visits to websites where you can meet
others for sex. I told my husband this undermined my attempts to trust him and he agreed
to stop. After several months of not finding
anything, I quit checking until last week
when I discovered he’s again viewing online
porn and bringing up profiles of women in
our area who are advertising sex.
This sickens me. I feel betrayed. I may be
a bit of a prude by today’s standards, but I do
enjoy sex. I also know men like to look at
porn and view it differently than women. But
I also wonder if that is why my husband is
dissatisfied with me. I don’t live up to his
By Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar
sexual expectations. He once asked me to sit
naked in a chair so he could stare at me. It
made me feel as if I were being displayed on
one of his porn sites. This bothers me and
also feels wrong spiritually. Am I being too
rigid? -- No Name or State
Dear No Name: What two consenting
adults do in the privacy of their own home is
entirely up to them. The real problem is that
your husband doesn’t respect you. Please ask
him to come with you for counseling. A counselor will help you consider the benefits of
being more sexually adventurous, and will
work with your husband on recognizing that
his demeaning attitude undermines every
THURSDAY EVENING
8/7/08
6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00
aspect of your relationship. As always, if he
won’t go, go without him.
Dear Annie: Several years ago, I took out
a huge loan to pay for my daughter’s college
tuition. She is now working full time and
making a good salary.
The problem is, due to some financial setbacks, I could really use her help to pay back
the loan. Would I be wrong to ask her? She
has never offered to help and we are not the
best of friends. -- Stuck in Debt
Dear Stuck: It can’t hurt to ask, as long as
you can accept “no” for an answer. We realize this doesn’t seem fair, but paying for a
child’s college tuition is generally a parent’s
choice and you didn’t stipulate any repayment. The fact that you don’t have a good
relationship with your daughter makes it
more difficult for her to want to bail you out
now, especially if those “financial setbacks”
are of your own making. But we hope she
will come through.
Dear Annie: My life partner, “Michelle,”
is going through an emotionally painful time
in her life. We are in a same-sex relationship.
My family is loving and supportive.
Michelle’s family is a different story.
She came out to them a few months ago
because she was tired of lying and not being
able to share her partner and adopted son
with her family. She wanted the baby to know
his grandparents and relatives. It didn’t go
over well. Her mother is hateful and vindictive. Her father, with whom she was very
close, told her to pretend it never happened
and that she is never to mention me or the
baby to him. Her brother and his wife make
excuses to keep her from visiting their children.
Michelle has been playing by these rules
for a few months and I can’t bear to see her
in so much pain. She is a caring, beautiful
soul who deserves so much more. I was
raised to believe family is a gift from God to
be treasured. Please print my letter so they
will wake up -- West Virginia
Dear West Va.: This is heartbreaking, and
unfortunately, there is no magic potion to
knock some sense into her family members.
Thank goodness she has such a loving and
supportive partner. We hope, in time, her
family will come around.
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210...Business Opportunities 470...Antiques
710...Real Estate Wanted
215...Businesses for Sale
475...Computers
720...Mobile Homes for Sale
220...Money to Loan
480...Miscellaneous for Sale
730...Mobile Homes with Land
230...Money Wanted
490...Auctions
740...Income Property
240...Investments
590...Garage Sales
750...Ranches
250...Business Rentals
760...Lots/Acerage
Farm-Garden-Pets
770...Real Estate
Rentals
500...Pets & Supplies
800 JUST LISTED!
300...Apartments Unfurnished
539-08
7-31,8-7,14/08
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE TS No. 0759263 Title Order No. 3535463 Investor/Insurer No. 1000392729 APN No. 162-273-0300 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED
OF TRUST, DATED 12/16/2004. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING
AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A
LAWYER." Notice is hereby given that RECONTRUST COMPANY, as duly appointed
trustee pursuant to the Deed of Trust executed by ALMA A. ROMAN-SHEARD AND
ROGER G. SHEARD, WIFE AND HUSBAND.
AS JOINT TENANTS, dated 12/16/2004 and
recorded 01/05/05, as Instrument No. 200500232, of Official Records in the office of the
County Recorder of Mendocino County, State
of California, will sell on 08/20/2008 at
10:00AM, At the main entrance to the Mendocino County Courthouse, 100 North State
Street, Ukiah, CA. at public auction, to the
highest bidder for cash or check as described
below, payable in full at time of sale, all right,
title, and interest conveyed to and now held
by it under said Deed of Trust, in the property
situated in said County and State and as
more fully described in the above referenced
Deed of Trust. The street address and other
common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 541
ELLEN LYNN ST, REDWOOD VALLEY, CA,
95470. The undersigned Trustee disclaims
any liability for any incorrectness of the street
address and other common designation, if
any, shown herein. The total amount of the
unpaid balance with interest thereon of the
obligation secured by the property to be sold
plus reasonable estimated costs, expenses
and advances at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale is $314,898.09. It is
possible that at the time of sale the opening
bid may be less than the total indebtedness
due. In addition to cash, the Trustee will accept cashier's checks drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state
or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in
Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state. Said sale
will be made, in an ''AS IS'' condition, but
without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances, to satisfy the indebtedness secured
by said Deed of Trust, advances thereunder,
with interest as provided, and the unpaid principal of the Note secured by said Deed of
Trust with interest thereon as provided in said
Note, plus fees, charges and expenses of the
Trustee and of the trusts created by said
Deed of Trust. DATED: 03/12/2008 RECONTRUST COMPANY 1757 TAPO CANYON
ROAD, SVW-88 SIMI VALLEY, CA 93063
Phone: (800) 281 8219, Sale Information
(626) 927-4399 By: - Trustee's Sale Officer
RECONTRUST COMPANY is a debt collector
attempting to collect a debt. Any information
obtained will be used for that purpose.
ASAP# 2833158 07/31/2008, 08/07/2008,
08/14/2008
PUBLIC NOTICE
533-08
7-24,31,8-7,14/08
FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 2008-F0460
THE
FOLLOWING
PERSON(S)
IS
(ARE) DOING BUSINESS AS:
VINEYARD
BUSINESS SERVICES
8621 Uva Drive
Redwood Valley, CA
95470
Carolyn Ann Smith
8621 Uva Drive
Redwood Valley, CA
95470
This business is conducted by an Individual. The registrant
commenced to transact business under
the fictitious business
name or names listed
above on February
1, 2001. EndorsedFiled on July 23,
2008 at the Mendocino County Clerks Office.
/s/Carolyn A. Smith
CAROLYN A. SMITH
534-08
7-24,31,8-7,14/08
FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 2008-F0459
THE
FOLLOWING
PERSON(S)
IS
(ARE) DOING BUSINESS AS:
BC BUILDERS
8621 Uva Drive
Redwood Valley, CA
95470
William
Joseph
Smith
8621 Uva Drive
Redwood Valley, CA
95470
Carolyn Ann Smith
8621 Uva Drive
Redwood Valley, CA
95470
This business is conducted by Husband
& Wife. The registrants commenced to
transact business under the fictitious business name or names
listed above on September 22, 1989. Endorsed-Filed on July
23, 2008 at the Mendocino County Clerks
Office.
/s/William J. Smith
WILLIAM J. SMITH
Let us feature your
ad in this space on
the first day of insertion
$
Only
7-24,31,8-7,14/08
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
Case No. SCUK CVPT ‘0851971
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF MENDOCINO, Court House,
Ukiah, CA 95482
IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION
OF: Panagis Dionysios Evangelatos
THE COURT FINDS that Petitioner(s) Panagis Dionysios Evangelatos has/have filed a
Petition for Change of Applicant(s)’ name
FROM Panagis Dionysios Evangelatos
TO Malik Ali
THE COURT ORDERS All people interested
in this matter appear before this court to show
cause why this application for change of
name should not be granted on:
HEARING DATE: 8/29/08 at 9:30 a.m. in
Dept E, located at Court House, 100 N.
State Street, Ukiah, California 95482
Dated: July 22, 2008
/s/ John A Behnke
JOHN A BEHNKE
Judge of the Superior Court
550-08
7-31,8-7,14,21/08
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
Case No. SCUK CVPT ‘0851947
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF MENDOCINO, Court House,
Ukiah, CA 95482
IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION
OF: Krysteen Marie Zinn
THE COURT FINDS that Petitioner(s) Krysteen Marie Zinn has/have filed a Petition for
Change of Applicant(s)’ name FROM Klayten
Scott Schmitt
TO Klayten Scott Zinn
THE COURT ORDERS All people interested
in this matter appear before this court to show
cause why this application for change of
name should not be granted on:
HEARING DATE: 8/29/08 at 9:30 a.m. in
Dept E, located at Court House, 100 N.
State Street, Ukiah, California 95482
Dated: 7/18/08
/s/ John A. Behnke
JOHN A. BEHNKE
Judge of the Superior Court
NEWSPAPER
ADVERTISING
With so many advertising
mediums dividing the attention of
potential customers, newspapers
remain the most effective source
for reaching consumers. Why?
Simply put, newspapers reach
more people, more often. Highly
portable and highly visible,
newspaper ads go with people
and stay with them.
That means your business is more
likely to be on their minds when
they’re in the market for related
products or services. When it
comes to spending your
advertising dollars, make the
choice that’s tried and true:
Newspaper advertising works
harder for you.
To advertise, call today
707-468-3500!
10
*Does not include price of ad
527-08
gets read. gets remembered.
gets results!
00*
PUBLIC NOTICE
10
NOTICES
30
LOST &
FOUND
four - families
encouraged!
535-08
7-25,8-1,8,15/08
FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 2008-F0435
THE
FOLLOWING
PERSON(S)
IS
(ARE) DOING BUSINESS AS:
MENDOCARS
182 E Gobbi St Unit
D
Ukiah, CA 95482
Jacob Klee
1601 Road B
Redwood Valley, CA
95470
This business is conducted by an Individual. The registrant
commenced to transact business under
the fictitious business
name or names listed
above on July 10,
2008. Endorsed-Filed
on July 10, 2008 at
the Mendocino County Clerks Office.
/s/Jacob Klee
JACOB KLEE
10
NOTICES
HOPLAND
BEARS
SIGNUPS
for football &
cheerleading.
Boys and girls
ages 7 through
15. 2nd through
8th grade.
For more
information
contact Rick
707-291-9457 or
707-272-3971
hoplandbears@
comcast.net
●❍●❍●❍●❍●❍●
BOCCE
Tournament
Hopland Bears
Youth Football
1st Annual
Bocce Tournament
Sun. Aug. 17th
10am to ??
Brutocao School
House Plaza
All tournament
proceeds go directly
to the needs of the
football teams.
$20 per player or
$60 per team of
For more information
or to sign-up, please
call Rick at 707-2919457 or email us at
hoplandbears@
comcast.net
▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲
Dont miss the
delicious tri-tip
sandwiches, drinks
and homemade
desserts for sale.
▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼
Check out our
SILENT AUCTION
featuring
VALUABLE
SPORTS
MEMORABILIA
Come out to have
a great time and help
a good cause!
Interested in
Playing Football or
Cheerleading?
Applications are
available by calling
Rick at 707-291-9457
or emailing
Hopland Bears Youth
Football at
hoplandbears@
comcast.net
●❍●❍●❍●❍●❍●
30
LOST &
FOUND
$1000
REWARD
LOST DOGGIE
Teacup Poodle/
Maltese, very small.
Black, straight fluffy
hair. Lost vic. of logging Rd. and Eel
River Bridge Ptr. Vly.
Sat. 7/19. Answers to
Twinkle. 489-0022
+
Free Adult Barn
Cats
So many barns, too
many mice.
Adopt a barn cat
and life will be nice.
Shots, spayed or
neutered, not aggressive, just shy.
Call A.V. Rescue
and give it a try.
489-5207 or
468-5218
30
LOST &
FOUND
MISSING 7/29
REWARD for
Tan Chihuahua pup.
“Rascal”
Any info please call
707-468-5077
Adoptions
Kittens, Cats, Dogs &
Puppies for adoption.
Ever y Tuesday at
Mendocino County
Farm Supply on Talmage Rd. 11:30-2:30
Anderson Valley Animal Rescue-Cher yl
895-3785 or Charlene 468-5218.
Found near Friedman
Bros. VW key-fob.
Was turned in to the
customer
ser vice
desk. Call Friedman’s
at 468-7811
Found: Plain black
wallet w/snap, found
in vicinity of Wal-Mart
in June. Call to identify name. 468-5044
I am the oldest dog
that came to the
Ukiah Shelter on 8/5.
I was found near Old
River Rd in Talmage.
I am about 9 years
old and am a tri-colored Aussie mix. Older dogs have trouble
being adopted, so I
am hoping my people
will find me or an loving person will open
their heart and adopt
me on 8/9. Call Sage
467-6453
I am the youngest
dog brought to the
Ukiah Shelter on 8/5.
I am a 4 month old
male Shep X. I was
found on Talmage Rd
near the bridge. If my
people do not find me
I will be up for adoption on 8/11. Call
Sage if you know me
467-6453 or come to
298 Plant Rd.
KEYS FOUND
Set of keys found on
Woodlake Drive in
Deerwood. Please
call 272-9586
to identifyl
120
HELP
WANTED
2 FT Integrated
Science Teachers
Math & academic
support. Health &
academic support
Potter Vly. Jr. Hi./Hi.
School 743-2101
4- Attorney. Ukiah
Law Firm seeks FT
receptionist/bookkeeper. Fax resume
to 462-7839 or mail
to C&M, LLP at PO
Box 1709 Ukiah CA
95482
Accounting Position
F/T Accounting
position avail.
w/busy Property
Mgt. company.
Must be computer
literate, detail
oriented, able to
multi-task & possess strong organizational skills.
At least 2 yrs. previous accounting experience required.
Following benefits
available: 401k,
health insurance,
paid vacation,
holidays & more.
Salary DOE.
Please submit
resume' & cover
letter to sisrael@
selzerrealty.com
or mail to
Realty World
Selzer Realty
Property
Management at
350 E. Gobbi St.
Ukiah, CA 95482.
Please No
Phone Calls!
ADMIN/SALES
ASST Exc com skills.
MS Office, sales, invoicing, shipping
expr. FT w/bene
info@ntech
industries.com
ASSISTANT
HOUSEKEEPER
Wed-Sat 9-4 $12/hr
Call 462-6277
CAREER &
TRANSFER CTR
SPECIALIST
Ukiah Campus
MENDOCINO
COLLEGE
www.mendocino.edu
468-3024
120
HELP
WANTED
CAREGIVER
WANTED- Happy
80 yr. old lady. Free
rent + $1000/mo.
Live in/Full time.
Potter Valley house.
760/402-9191
CNA’S Work/Holiday
on the coast. Will
provide Vacation accommodations. Call
Sherwood Oaks Convalescent Hospital.
(707)964-6333
Come join the
table games
expansion team
at Shodakai
Casino. Seeking
candidates who
have Blackjack
exp. Desired with
Poker pref. Great
employees, benefits & happy
environment.
Also seeking
● RETAIL GIFT ●
SHOP CLERK P/T
Cash handling
& register exp. pref.
Hours. 5-9
Coyote Valley
Shodakai Casino
7751 N. State St.
Redwood Valley
M-F 9-5 EOE
707-467-4752
COMMERCIAL
DRIVER
Class A or B Lic
req’d. FT + benefits.
Job description and
app available at 351
Franklin Ave in Willits
CONTROLLER
$60K - $80K
Mendocino
Community Health
Clinic seeks a
Controller to provide
daily management
of all accounting
functions & staff.
Requires B.S. in
Business Administration, 5+ yrs. exp.
Healthcare exp.
preferred. Excellent
comp/bfts pkg. Send
resume w/cover
letter to: Email:
dakka@mchcinc.org
Fax: (707) 468-0793
RN Care Manager,
80% FTE in Clearlake working with
seniors. PHN preferred. Exc. Bens.
Resume to CCMC:
14642-C Lakeshore
Dr., Clearlake, CA
95422.. See
communitycare
707.com for job desc.
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
120
HELP
WANTED
Division manager/
job developer. Lakeport area. Find jobs
for disabled adults. 25 yrs. job development in voc. rehab or
social service & supervison. F/T. $40K
per yr. + full benefits.
incl. 401k.Auto ins.
CPR, FA req.
ctmi-inc.org Apply on
line or call HR
(858)467-0600 x 341
FT ADMIN
ASSISTANT pos.
avail in busy Real
Estate office. Must
be comp literate.
Salary neg. Real
Estate Lic. req’d.
Deliver resume to
350 E. Gobbi St
Ukiah CA
HARVEST
POSITIONS
FETZER
VINEYARDS
We are looking for
enthusiastic, motivated individuals to join
our team for the 2008
harvest. Work starts
mid to late august for
approximately three
months. Positions are
available in the following areas
• Cellar Worker
• Barrel Room
• Sugar Testers
• Lab Tech
• Scale House
• Truck Drivers
(Class A CDL)
• Data Entry
Must be able to work
flexible schedules &
O/T as required.
Must pass pre-employment
drug
screen. Apply at Fetzer Vineyards, Administration Building,
12901 Old River
Road, Hopland or
email fetzerhr@b-f.
com or fax (707)7447606.
AA/EOE
M/F/D/V
Linkages Social
Work/Care Manager, for non-profit
agency helping elderly & disabled adults
avoid nursing homes.
MSW or BSW pref.
Part time, exc. ben.
Resume, cover letter
to Community Care,
301 S. State St.,
Ukiah CA 95482
707-468-9347
communitycare707.com
Live in caregiver in
Comptche. Reliability/compassion/
honesty essential.
937-2275 after 5 p.m.
TLC Child &
Family Services
seeks 2 additional
homes for Shelter
Care program
Applicants need to
have at least 1 spare
bdrm to house a child
for up to 30 days.
Guaranteed monthly
allotment. Generous
increase upon placement. Income tax-exempt. Exp. with children req. Parents will
receive training, + Social Worker, in-home
support & respite.
Need 1 or 2-parent
homes, with 1 parent
home full time. Home
with no more than 1
biological child considered. Retirees invited
to apply. Contact TLC
707-463-1100
Lic#236800809
120
HELP
WANTED
MAKE A
DIFFERENCE IN
THE LIFE OF A
CHILD! JOIN THE
TRINITY TEAM!
Trinity Youth
Services-Ukiah
A social ser vice
agency
ser ving
abused & neglected
youth in a Residential Treatment Campus is looking for
CHILD CARE
WORKERS.
CCW is responsible
for the daily care &
supervision of clients & living conditions. Swing &
Night shifts available. Star ting at
$9.40/hr. On-call
$9/hr. Must be 21
yrs old. Excellent
benefits, including
medical, dental, vision, tuition reimbursement & FREE
co-op child care.
Must pass pre-employment physical,
drug test & background check.
APPLY AT
915 W. Church St.
Ukiah or fax
resume
877-382-7617
www.trinityys.org
EOE
Motosports of Ukiah
looking for sales people. Hrly + commission. Must be 18.
Looking for outgoing,
optimistic indiv. who
is able to multi-task.
p/u app @ 1850 N.
State Ukiah see Gloria. No calls please!
NCO RCCC Lower Lake
CC Subsidy
Specialist I. Enroll
families, AA degree
in child dev or rel’td
fld pref. Exc math +
comm skills req.
Computer + human
svs exp. Bilingual
Pref. $12.10/hr. 40
hr/wk & full bene.
Must submit NCO
app: 467-3200 x302
or www.ncoinc.org
Closes: 5 pm 8/15
(postmark not accepted). EOE
NUESTRA CASA,
a Latino Family
Resource Center in
Ukiah, has a position
open as a
Community Civic
Engagement
Coordinator.
Performs direct Civic
Engagement, community convening,
training and education to the Latino
community. $35,m
annual + benefits.
Applications & more
info available at:
Nuestra Casa, 487 N.
State St. Ukiah CA
95482 (707)463-8181
OFFICE ASST.
COUNSELING
16 hr/wk.
Ukiah Campus
MENDOCINO
COLLEGE
www.mendocino.edu
468-3024
P-T COMPUTER
SCIENCE INSTR
Ukiah Campus
MENDOCINO
COLLEGE
Ukiah Campus
www.mendocino.edu
468-3024
Our
OFFICE MANAGER
is retiring!
Do you have
the following background?
3-years office manager
experience.
Customer service oriented.
A/P, A/R, H/R, Payroll.
Type 45 wpm, 10-key exp.
PC expertise a must,
MAC exp. helpful.
Excellent EXCEL skills. Strong
Accounting/Finance/
Budget background.
IT/LAN knowledge helpful.
Fast-paced office environment.
Send resume
ume to:
Fort Bragg Advocate-News
PO Box 1188
Fort Bragg, CA 95437-1188
Or email to:
fbmgr@mcn.org
or Apply in person
450 N. Franklin Street
Fort Bragg, CA 95437
Background check and drug test
required. EOE
THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008 -13
120
HELP
WANTED
People to work with
developmentally
disabled adults 1 on
1 in their own home.
All shifts avail. Mary
468-9326 or come
by &PU app. 182
Thomas St. Ukiah
POSICIONES PARA
LA MOLIDA
120
HELP
WANTED
Ukiah residential
childrens facility
is looking for caring,
responsible individuals to join our team.
Some exp. pref. but
not nec.. Will provide
on the job trainng.
Starting sal. $12.12
hr. 403B, great benefits, & vac. pkg. Fax
resume 707-463-6957
FETZER
VINEYARDS
Estamos buscando
individuos entusiatas
y motivados para que
se unan a nuestro
equipo para la molida
del 2008. El trabajo
comienza a mediados o fines de agosto
por
aproximadamente tres meses.
Hay posiciones disponiblcs en las siguicntes áraes:
• Trabajador de la
Bodega
• Cuarto de Barriles
• Persona para examinar el nivel de
azúcar
• Técnico de Laboratorio
• Operador de la estación de peso/escala
• Conductor de Camión (Clase A CDL)
• Registro de Datos
Debe poder trabajar
horarios flexibles y
tiempo extra cuando
sea necesario. Debe
pasar un examen de
detección de drogas
antes de iniciar el
empleo. Aplicar en
Fetzer
Vineyards,
Administration Building, 12901 Old River
Road, Hopland o correo electrónico fetzerhr@b-f.com o por
fax (707) 744-7606.
AA/EOE M/F/D/V
Post Office
Now Hiring!
Avg Pay $20/ hr, $57
K/yr, incl. Fed ben, OT.
Placed by adSource not
USPS who hires.
1-866-292-1387
PROGRAM
SPECIALIST
Special Education
Local Plan Area
(SELPA)
Coast
$68,003 - $87,259
(pro-rated for part-time)
Approx. 20 hrs/
week, or 96-8 hr
days, 11 mos/year.
Valid CA Spec. Ed.
cred or or equiv, 3
yrs. exp in CA K-12
schools.
Mendocino
County Office
of Education
www.mcoe.us/d/hr/jobs
707-467-5012
hr@mcoe.us
DEADLINE: 8/14/08
RDA NEEDED with
exp. & leadership
qualities. Please submit resume to 702 S.
Dora St., Ukiah CA
95482
RECEPTIONIST:
Ukiah
Law
Firm
seeks receptionist
with excellent phone
skills to answer calls
and handle clerical
duties. Client interaction/occasional driving required. Position
also requires basic
computer knowledge
and typing skills. Salar y DOE. Fax resume along with valid
California Drivers License to (707) 4680453.
Seeking dependable
person for F-T
Records Clerk
position. Job description available at
No. Circle Indian
Hsg Authority
694 Pinoleville Dr.,
Ukiah - 468-1336.
Applications will be
accepted until 5:00
p.m. on 8/12/08.
Indian Pref. applies.
TEACHER
P/T Elem. Indep.
Study Coord. 5-10
hrs per wk. $25 per
hr. Cred. req. Indep.
Study & Waldorf exp.
pref. LaVida Charter
School 459-6344
TEACHER
Careers
with Children
Temporary Leave
Replacement at
Ukiah High
$28.82-47.98/hr
Mendocino
County Office of
Education
www.mcoe.
us/d/hr/jobs
call 467-5012 or
email hr@mcoe.us
DEADLINE: 8/14/08
WAITRESS/
HOUSEKEEPER
5-6 days per week.
Some exp. working
with the elderly a
plus. 1199 S. Dora
St. for app & info.
VALLEY VIEW
is looking for
RN’s LVN’s
days & p.m. shifts
avail. great work
environment, competitive wages &
benefits. Hire-on
bonus. 462-1436.
VALLEY VIEW
is looking for
CNA’s
days & p.m. shifts
avail. great work
environment, competitive wages &
benefits. Hire-on
bonus. 462-1436.
220
MONEY
TO LOAN
REAL ESTATE
LOANS If you need a
real estate loan and
have credit or income
problems we may be
able to help. Private
money investor loans
available for residential, commercial and
bare land properties.
Call Phil at First
Equity
1-800-698-0708
Real Estate broker licensed
by California Department of
Real Estate 01052852
250
BUSINESS
RENTALS
FOR RENT
Vintage Office Bldg
1200 sf. $1800/mo.
516 S. State Ukiah
Call Terry 463-1463
Free mo 171 Brush
ample pkng. Xlnt loc.
comm/lgt ind. Unit B1800 sq ft. a/c office,
music, dance $1000
mo. Unit E 1875 sq ft.
a/c, offices, $950 mo.
468-5176
LEE KRAEMER
Real Estate Broker
GOBBI STREET
OFFICE SPACE
600+/- sq. ft. w/pkg.
BRAND NEW!
BUILD TO SUIT
Office or Medical
Will divide
1974+- sq. ft. w/pkg.
DOWNTOWN
OFFICE RETAIL
Hi-traffic Location
2500+- sq. ft. w/pkg.
OFFICE SPACES
2nd Floor, State St.
Elevator/pkg.
MED. OFFICE or
RETAIL
South Orchard
3400+/- sq. ft. w/pkng
468-8951
Office/shop/retail
2181 S.State, Ukiah
1000 sq ft. $550/mo
+ sec. 462-8273
OFFICES FOR RENT
1 room $395. 1 room.
$240. 2 rooms. $485.
485-1196 or
485-8206
300
APARTMENTS
UNFURNISHED
1BD, 1BA $550 +
$1000 SD Apply @
Jack Cox & Assoc.
455 E. Gobbi St.
462-6060
1bd. Upstairs.
No pets. $675/mo.
+ dep. S. Ukiah.
Avail. now. 357-5575
1bd. W/D. Wtr. Garb.
pd. 1st & sec.
$800/mo.
707-391-7755
1st mo. 1/2 off!
2 BD, DW/Garage +
Pool Alderwood
Apartments 1450 S.
State St $885$925mo. 463-2325
2 APARTMENTS
AVAIL Now. N/P,
Credit report & score
a must. 485-0841
Deluxe 3bd 1 ba.
Hdwd./tile flrs.
downstairs. $1000/
mo. Pool, lndry, carport.463-2134
Lg. 2bd1ba. New
carpet & paint. N/S/P.
Wtr/gar/sew pd. $825
+ sec. 462-5159
PARK PLACE
1 bd. $800. 2 bd.
$910. T.H. $1050.
Pool, Garg. 462-5009
Spacious 2bd. Pool.
H20, trash pd. $850.
Also 1bd. $725. Ht.
AC Pd. N/P. 462-6075
Se habla espanol.
TRIPLEX In Willits
2bd 1.5 bath, water &
garbage pd. $800 +
dep 468-0716
320
DUPLEXES
3bd/1.5bth
Ukiah
tnhse w/ fireplace,
w/d hkup, garage,
$1200/mo $1600dep
707/433-6688
330
HOMES
FOR RENT
1BD + sm off. Remod, lg 1/2 ac fncd
yd, crprt, in RV. n/s/p
$1200/mo 485-0104
2bd, 1ba W/Side
$1200 mo + dep.
Refs req’d. Avail. 9/1
w/d hkups 462-6339
2bd1ba near golf
course. No/S/P/D.
$975 + $1100 dep.
707-367-4373
3 Bed Only $368/mo!
Buy Foreclosure! (4%
dwn 20 yrs @8.5%)
For Listings Call 800379-5067 ext. 1788
3BD, 2BA quiet Rogina Heights N/S/P
$1500/mo. sec. dep
& gd ref’s req’d. Avail
now. 468-8648
or 489-9350
3bd1ba $1400/mo.
Rwd. Vly. Horse pasture. Private, encl
porch. 485-1848
3bd2ba (Uk) Pets ok
RV parking. $1600
mo + dep. Cnt. HT. &
AC. Avl. 9/1. 391-7423
3bd2ba. Lg. Clean
Quiet. W/side. Ukiah
N/S/P.
$1575
+
dep.209-482-3983
3bdrm.1ba. 1000sf.
Nice little cottage in
the country. $1800 +
dep. Credit check.
485-1961
4bd.2ba. Potter Vly.
N/S/D. Pet neg.
Room for lrg. animal.
Avail 9/1. $1450
391-3715
BEAUTIFUL
W/Side house 3bd,
1ba $1350mo. + dep
Avail 9/1 467-0371
Country setting/Near
town 3BD, 2BA Cntrl
H/A
New
Paint
$1700/mo $1700/dep
707-489-6742
Great view Willits
$1400/mo. 3bd2 ba.
W/D, deck & more!
N/S 486-7193
LUCERNE- 2bd, 1ba.
remod, nr lake, lndry
rm, H/A, fncd, gar/wk
$895/mo. 688-0670
330
HOMES
FOR RENT
Small 1 bd. single
wide mobile home.
Country setting. S.
Ukiah. $550/mo. Incl.
some utils. Good
credit required.
E. Fine RE 272-4057
Thomas St. 3bd2Ba
hse w/lg 900sf shop.
Avl. 8/15. $1300mo.
Also for sale. 1st &
dep. lv msg. 462-7116
370
WANTED
TO RENT
Prof. couple seeks
sm living spc w/private ent., close to
dwntwn. N/S/P. $800
max 917-710-2682
380
WANTED TO
SHARE RENT
$400 -$600/mo. +
dep. Lg common
areas in newer hm.
Fem. pref. Call 4800514 for interview
$550/mo for 1 br,
share home
w/2 others, utilities
separate (approx
$90/mo., or less).
Must be responsible
(pay bills ON TIME)
& neat. No dogs or
cats. 1st/last/$100
security deposit =
$1200. 972-4282
$800 2 rooms, shr kit,
ba, 1/2 util. First &
last $100 dep. N/s/d,
pet ok. 391-3023
FURN rm for res.
wrkg indiv. cbl/frg
$485 + $485 util incl.
N/S/P/D 462-9225
Lrg. rm. in Ukiah
$490 + $25 for utils.
+ 490 dep. Call for
details 707-718-2110
420
BOATS
SKI Centurian, Escalade. ‘03, w/Avalanch
pkg. V-Drive (loaded), stereo, all gear
240 hrs. Professionally maint. $34K/offer. Days 462-9088,
eves 463-1325
440
FURNITURE
460
APPLIANCES
USED
APPLIANCES
& FURNITURE.
Guaranteed. 485-1216
480
MISC.
FOR SALE
FINAL SALE
Valenas Ceramic
Greenware 60% off
Paints Ceram. 75%
Paints Duncan 50%
Molds $1 ea or
$5000 all.
2 tables 4x8 $25 ea.
Brushes 30% off
Lite kits 50% off
Bisque 40% off
Accessaries 50%.
1 pouring table $100
680 School Way
Rdwd. Vly
707-485-7075
Bring Boxes
Tues/Sat 10-4.
For Sale
Nice SouthWest furn,
exc bike, treadmill,
comp desk, etc.
call 485-6511
From old Ukiahibrass doors, handmade ceramic blocks
& oak flooring. Dining
set, old table saw &
radial arm saw. Kenmore W/D gd cond.
Much misc. 485-5164
The Outlet Store is
going out of business! Now until Sunday 8/10, 50% off everything. Furn, tools,
food, toys, clths, &
more. 479 N. State St
We recycle & pay cash
for junk batteries, copper brass & aluminum.
707-467-1959
500
PETS &
SUPPLIES
Baby Cornsnakes
5 mice included.
Born 7/12. $30 ea.
391-9164/391-5391
LONG & SHORT
HAIRED Tea Cup
Chihuahua’s, male,
female. Father 2.5
lbs AKC Champ.
$450+ 707-513-8520
510
BLUE & WHITE tile
concrete table with
bench seats bought
at Bravo Barbs
$300 513-8085
LIVESTOCK
OAT HAY!
$12 per bale, 60
bales or more. $14
single 621-3897
590
GARAGE
SALES
289 Freitas Ave Sat
9-1 New/used wmns
cloth Chng Tbl hshld.
misc.
350 El Rio Ct.
Sat. & Sun. 8-2
FREE GARAGE
SALE SIGNS.
Realty World Selzer
Realty. 350 E. Gobbi
Fri 8-4 & Sat 8-1
X-Box 360 w/games,
IPod Nano, wdn doll
hse w/furn & more
880 E. Gobbi St
Garage Sale
Fri & Sat 9-2
9440 West Rd.
LOTS of stuff!!
Garage sale Sat 8-3
243 Oak Knoll Rd.
Hsehld, furn, dolls,
clths, & misc.
HUGE
MOVING
SALE. SAT. 9TH.
8AM-3PM 775A YOSEMITE DR UKIAH.
VCR&MOVIES,
CLOTHES, COFFEE
&
CAPPUCCINO
MAKER,
FURNITURE,
TABLES
LOTS OF STUFF
L (●)(●)K
ESTATE
YARD SALE
Sat. Aug. 9th
8am-2pm
Antique couch &
chair, bookcases,
household, lots of
books, toys,
collectables, sewing
machine, brass
glass top coffee
table, dressers,
many unusual &
unique items!
TOO MUCH
TO LIST!!!
Come see at
135 Marlene St.,
Ukiah.
No earlier please!!
MOVING-Dbl. bed,
dresser, recliner, etc.
830 Malaga Dr.
Fri. 2-5
590
GARAGE
SALES
Multi Family!
Sat. & Sun. 9-3
No early birds!
2351 Rancheria Rd.
R.V. Quality & vintage furn. Wt. bench,
Xta Lrg. Dogloo, Keg
cooler w/tap, qual.
clothes. 2-2XL.
Garden shredder.
Lots of quality &
junk stuff!
Multi-Family Sale
Sat ONLY 9-4
100 Thompson St.
off of Church St.
Sat. 8-1. 3840 East
Side Calpella Rd.
Knick Knacks,
clothes, dishes, used
redwood decking
material & more
Sat. only!
8am - 1pm
701 W. Clay St.
Yard sale
8087 Uva Dr.
Sat & Sun 9-4.
Lots of misc items.
620
MOTORCYCLES
Honda CR 250 ‘06
Good cond.
$3200.
707-272-3211
Suzuki DR 350S
Dual Sport. Dirt &
Road. Great shape.
$1400bo 485-0050
630
AUTO PARTS &
ACCESSORIES
Reconds. batteries.
$15&up w/exchange.
12 mo. replacement
free. 467-1959
680
CARS
FOR SALE
$$CASH FOR YOUR
USED CARS $$$ For
your old used cars!
FREE pick up in
Ukiah area! Lost title
ok. Steel drop boxes
for scrap metal also
available upon request, call 707-5467553!!!!
1993 Honda Accord
LX Only $700! Buy
Police Impounds! For
Listings
800-3686118
Honda Accord Coupe
EX-L 2008. V6, fully
loaded, less than
2000 mi. 462-8439
Volvo ‘80 GLE
Needs repair, or
great for parts.
$500obo. 489-6501
710
REAL ESTATE
WANTED
LOOKING for hunting lease for deer,
pigs, turkey, quail.
Prefer large acreage.
Willing to pay $$$.
Call 489-5664
770
REAL ESTATE
4bed/2bath Foreclosure! ONLY
$38,900!!!! BankOwned! For Listings
Call 1-800-379-5067
ext. 1789
I’m still doing
mortgage loans,
purchasing & refin.
Rates below 6%
Larry Wright
Golden Bear Mortgage
707-239-8080
650
4X4'S
FOR SALE
FORD F250 XLT
1994
$2500 obo
462-7941
FORD RANGER ‘85
4x4 pickup, with
camper shl. $3500
obo. 489-6501
Nissan Pathfinder
SE 2007 38K tow
pkg excl cond $25K
462-9146
680
CARS
FOR SALE
Chr ysler Seabring
1999 conv. Xlnt cond.
85k mi. $6200 4855164
Read All
About It!
The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
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The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
468-3500
14- THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
SERVICE DIRECTORY
WE DO IT ALL
A/C SERVICE
“EXPERT SERVICE
WHEN YOU NEED IT”
• Service & Repair
on all Brands
• Residential
& Commercial
Available Mon - Sat
Call the professionals
Antonio Alvarez Jr
Owner
Phone:
(707) 972-8633
Felipe’s Home
Repairs
Redwood Valley
Free Estimates
Days 489-8441
Eves. 485-0731
Lic # 6178 • Insured
TERMITE BUSINESS
Thorough & Sensitive
Deep Tissue & Sports Massage
My work is to reduce your pain,
improve your ability to do your
work, and allow you to play harder
and sleep better.
From Covelo to
Gualala the most
trusted name in the
Termite Business!
Call for
appointment
485-7829
1st Visit Special
2 Hrs/$65
485-1881
COUNTERTOPS
HANDYMAN
License #OPR9138
By appointment 8am to 6:30pm, M-F
2485 N. State St. • Ukiah
Bill & Craig
707.467.3969
License #624806 C27
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
Complete Landscape Installation
• Concrete & Masonry • Retaining Walls
• Irrigation & Drip Sprinklers
• Drainage Systems • Consulting & Design
• Bobcat Grading • Tractor Service
Excavating & Deer Fencing
Joe Morales
(707) 744-1912
(707) 318-4480 cell
TREE SERVICE
Oakie Tree
Service
15 Years Experience
SOLID SURFACE &
LAMINATE COUNTERTOPS
LANDSCAPING
Stay
Informed
with Yard Maintenance
Tree Trimming & Dump Runs
on Local
We’ll Beat
Anybody’s Price
Issues
(707) 972-5412
Cell (707) 621-2552
Cell (707) 354-4860
All types of home repair
including termite damage,
bathrooms, windows, doors,
plumbing, electrical, taping,
painting, tile work, flooring,
fencing, decks and roofs.
Work Guaranteed
(707) 485-0810
or (707) 367-4098
Non-licensed contractor
HEATING • COOLING
CREEKSIDE
LANDSCAPE
Massage
(707) 472-0934
(707) 621-1400
40 years experience
Fast, friendly service
Free estimates
Senior discounts
#460812
Oolah Boudreau-Taylor
• Fences • Drive Ways
• Painting • Decks
• Pavers
• And
• Tile
More...
Escobar Services
Residential • Commercial
**To original owner.
MASSAGE THERAPY
Residential
Commercial
JOHNSON
CONSTRUCTION
Since 1964
HOME REPAIRS
HANDYMAN
Carpentry - Painting - Plumbing
Electrical Work - Tile Work
Cement Work - Landscape
Installation & Design
462-2468
Serving Our Community
Lic/Bonded 292494
PAINTING
HOME REPAIRS
Full Service Tree Care
Licensed • Insured
The Ukiah
• Service & Repair
• Preventative Maintenance
• Commercial • Residential
• State Certified HERS Rater
Since 1978
707-462-8802
Call For Appointment
EXCAVATING
Terra Firma Exc.
All Terrain Excavation
& Utilities Specialist
• Gas • Power
• Water • Telephone
• Earthwork/
Site Development
• Site Clearing & Preparation
• Demolition
• Traffic Control
• Concrete/Site Curbs & Walks
• Erosion Control
• Foundation/Excavation
Office: 485-7536 • Cell: 477-6221
Gen. Engineering Contractor • Lic.#878612
CL 856023
4531 N. State Street
Ukiah, CA 95482
CLEANING
CONSTRUCTION
NOTICE TO READERS
Foundation to finish
We do not affirm the status of advertisers. We
recommend that you check your contractors
status at www.cslb.ca.gov or call 800-321CSLB(2752) 24/7.
The Ukiah Daily Journal publishes
advertisements from companies and
individuals who have been licensed by the
State of California and we also publish
advertisements from unlicensed companies
and individuals.
All licensed contractors are required by State
Law to list their license number in
advertisements offering their services. The law
also states contractors performing work of
improvements totaling $500 or more must be
licensed by the State of California.
Advertisements appearing in these columns
without a licensed number indicate that the
contractor or individuals are not licensed.
707-456-9355
All Star
Cleaning
Service
COMMERCIAL AND
RESIDENTIAL CLEANING
Specializing in
• Move in/out
• Post Construction
• Extensive cleaning projects
• Windows
10% DISCOUNT
ON ANY SERVICE THROUGH JUNE
707-463-1657
707-391-9618
Homes • Additions
• Kitchens • Decks
Lic. #580504
707.485.8954
707.367.4040 cell
DAILY JOURNAL
Ukiah Daily
Journal
Delivered
to Your
Door
468-0123
Looking for the best coverage of the
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You’ll find it in the
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DAILY JOURNAL
Your ONLY Local
News Source.
Call
468-3533
to subscribe
WEATHER
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008 – 15
.
3-DAY FORECAST
SUN AND MOON
REGIONAL WEATHER
Shown is today s weather. Temperatures are today s highs
and tonight s lows.
TODAY
88°
Mostly sunny
TONIGHT
CALIFORNIA CITIES
Sunrise today ............. 6:19 a.m.
Sunset tonight ............ 8:18 p.m.
Moonrise today .......... 1:08 p.m.
Moonset today ......... 11:18 p.m.
MOON PHASES
First
Full
Last
New
Rockport
67/53
Laytonville
87/51
Covelo
89/54
Westport
72/52
55°
Aug. 8 Aug. 16 Aug. 23 Aug. 30
Clear
ALMANAC
FRIDAY
87°
54°
Mostly sunny
SATURDAY
88°
52°
Partly sunny
Ukiah through 2 p.m. Wednesday
Temperature
High .............................................. 93
Low .............................................. 61
Normal high .................................. 91
Normal low .................................... 55
Record high .................. 111 in 1978
Record low ...................... 42 in 1917
Precipitation
24 hrs to 2 p.m. Wed. ................ 0.00"
Month to date ............................ 0.00"
Normal month to date ................ 0.03"
Season to date .......................... 0.00"
Last season to date .................. 0.12"
Normal season to date .............. 0.08"
Fort Bragg
67/52
Elk
62/52
Willows
94/62
Willits
85/52
UKIAH
88/55
Philo
80/53
Redwood Valley
87/55
Lakeport
89/56
Lucerne
90/56
Boonville
82/54
Gualala
66/53
Clearlake
91/57
Cloverdale
86/55
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. 2008
City
Today
Hi/Lo/W
Fri.
Hi/Lo/W
City
Today
Hi/Lo/W
Fri.
Hi/Lo/W
Anaheim
Antioch
Arroyo Grande
Atascadero
Auburn
Barstow
Big Sur
Bishop
Blythe
Burbank
California City
Carpinteria
Catalina
Chico
Crescent City
Death Valley
Downey
Encinitas
Escondido
Eureka
Fort Bragg
Fresno
Gilroy
Indio
Irvine
Hollywood
Lake Arrowhead
Lodi
Lompoc
Long Beach
Los Angeles
Mammoth
Marysville
Modesto
Monrovia
Monterey
Morro Bay
85/66/s
83/57/s
75/55/pc
87/56/pc
93/64/s
105/76/pc
74/52/pc
99/60/t
105/86/t
90/67/s
99/72/s
70/59/pc
70/62/pc
94/64/s
61/54/pc
120/88/t
84/65/pc
77/65/pc
87/66/pc
60/52/pc
67/52/pc
100/71/s
85/53/pc
107/80/pc
79/66/pc
85/66/pc
88/60/t
94/59/s
69/56/pc
81/66/pc
86/66/pc
76/50/t
94/62/s
95/64/s
91/67/s
65/55/pc
65/57/pc
85/66/pc
83/57/s
76/51/pc
88/54/pc
91/62/s
104/77/s
73/55/pc
99/57/s
105/85/pc
90/66/s
99/66/s
70/58/pc
70/57/pc
92/61/s
61/52/pc
118/85/s
84/65/pc
76/65/pc
87/64/pc
61/50/pc
66/51/pc
100/68/s
86/54/s
106/81/s
78/66/pc
85/64/s
86/53/s
92/58/s
68/58/pc
81/66/pc
84/66/pc
74/45/s
92/57/s
92/62/s
90/67/s
66/55/pc
66/55/pc
Napa
Needles
Oakland
Ontario
Orange
Oxnard
Palm Springs
Pasadena
Pomona
Potter Valley
Redding
Riverside
Sacramento
Salinas
San Bernardino
San Diego
San Fernando
San Francisco
San Jose
San Luis Obispo
San Rafael
Santa Ana
Santa Barbara
Santa Cruz
Santa Monica
Santa Rosa
S. Lake Tahoe
Stockton
Tahoe Valley
Torrance
Vacaville
Vallejo
Van Nuys
Visalia
Willits
Yosemite Valley
Yreka
79/54/pc
108/85/t
67/56/pc
96/66/s
85/65/s
74/60/pc
108/81/s
87/65/s
94/65/s
88/55/s
98/66/s
96/67/s
91/58/s
68/57/pc
97/66/s
75/69/pc
93/65/s
68/56/pc
77/58/pc
77/55/pc
73/54/pc
79/66/pc
73/58/pc
70/56/pc
75/65/pc
80/53/pc
82/48/t
94/59/s
82/48/t
80/64/pc
92/60/s
75/55/pc
90/66/s
96/66/s
85/52/s
99/59/t
94/57/s
78/53/pc
107/85/pc
66/57/pc
96/66/s
85/64/pc
71/60/pc
106/82/s
87/67/s
92/62/s
86/54/s
96/62/s
98/66/s
89/58/s
67/55/pc
97/66/s
75/68/pc
92/64/s
69/57/pc
78/57/pc
76/55/pc
73/55/pc
78/66/pc
74/56/pc
71/54/pc
74/64/pc
79/50/s
80/42/s
91/58/s
80/42/s
80/65/pc
91/58/s
74/54/pc
89/65/s
95/64/s
83/52/s
99/57/s
91/53/s
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, rrain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Lake Mendocino – Lake level: 730.49 feet; Storage: 57,056 acre-feet (Maximum storage 122,500 acre-feet) Inflow: 226 cfs Outflow: 218 cfs
Air quality – Ozone: .009 ppm (State standard .090 ppm) Carbon monoxide: .55 ppm (20.0 ppm) Nitrogen dioxide: .012 ppm (.25 ppm)
Nine missing, feared dead in fire helicopter crash
Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — Nine people are presumed dead in the crash of
a helicopter that was carrying firefighters over the Shasta-Trinity
National Forest, officials said
Wednesday.
The crash happened Tuesday
night just after the helicopter picked
up firefighters, who had been battling a blaze north of Junction City,
from a clearing in a remote, rugged
region of the forest, said Jennifer
Rabuck, spokeswoman for the U.S.
Forest Service.
The helicopter was carrying 11
firefighters and two crew members
when it went down, according to the
Federal Aviation Administration and
National Transportation Safety
Board. Four people were airlifted to
hospitals with severe burns, according to the Forest Service.
FAA spokesman Ian Gregor said
the Sikorsky S-61N chopper was
destroyed by fire after crashing
“under unknown circumstances.”
The NTSB, which is leading the
investigation, was headed to the
scene, about 215 miles northwest of
Sacramento.
Firefighters who were waiting to
be picked up helped rescue the four
injured people after the helicopter
crashed around 7:45 p.m. and caught
fire, Rabuck said. About three dozen
firefighters had to spend the night on
the mountain because it became too
dark for other helicopters to land, she
said.
Nine people — a co-pilot and
eight firefighters — were still missing in the wreckage and presumably
killed. Recovery efforts have been
complicated by the crash site’s
remote location, and the wreckage is
still burning, Rabuck said.
“It’s difficult to access,” she said.
“It’s very remote, very steep and
heavily forested.”
The firefighters had been working
at the north end of a more than 27square-mile fire burning in the
Shasta-Trinity National Forest, part
of a larger complex of blazes that
total 135 square miles. The complex
was about 87 percent contained.
“We are praying for the swift
recovery of all the victims, and our
hearts go out to their loved ones,”
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said
Wednesday.
Some of the firefighters, including
those in the hospital, were employed
by firefighting contractor Grayback
Forestry, based in Merlin, Ore. Mike
Wheelock, Grayback’s founder and
owner, would not confirm any
deaths.
Grayback firefighters Michael
Brown, 20, and Jonathan Frohreich,
18, as well as a co-pilot of the helicopter, were being treated at UC
Davis
Medical
Center
in
Sacramento, according to the contractor. Brown was upgraded to fair
condition late Wednesday and
Frohreich remained in critical condition, according to the hospital and
fire officials.
A spokesman said the hospital
also was treating a crash victim in
critical condition named William
Coultas, but could not confirm
whether the patient was the helicopter’s co-pilot.
Leora
Frohreich,
Jonathan
Frohreich’s grandmother, said this
was the young man’s first time working as a wildland firefighter and that
the experience had persuaded him to
further his education. He planned to
attend a mechanics school this fall.
He had worked on a fire near
Williams, Ore., for three weeks and
then was on the Shasta-Trinity fire
for four days, the grandmother said.
His crew was being flown out for
some rest when the helicopter
crashed, she said.
“I’m so thankful because he’s just
lucky to be alive,” Frohreich said,
adding that the firefighter’s parents,
sister and girlfriend had gone to
Sacramento to be with him. “You
can’t be in a crash like that and not
hurt.”
Another Grayback employee,
identified as Rick Schoeder, 42, was
in serious but stable condition at
Mercy Medical Center in Redding,
officials said.
The helicopter was owned and
operated by Carson Helicopters Inc.,
Fair
a Pennsylvania company whose firefighting operations are based in
Grants Pass, Ore. All 12 of the company’s helicopters are being used for
firefighting
in
Oregon
and
California, said Bob Madden,
Carson’s director of corporate
affairs.
Madden said the helicopter’s two
co-pilots were Carson employees —
one was hospitalized and the other
was among the missing. The company would not release their names
until officials confirmed their identities and notified family members.
Meanwhile, fire crews were busy
containing a series of fires sparked
by an electrical storm that generated
an estimated 2,000 lightning strikes
in Northern California, southern
Oregon and western Nevada on
Tuesday and Wednesday, said Basil
Newmerzhycky, a Forest Service
meteorologist in Redding.
The lightning storm set off at least
a “few dozen” small fires across the
region, none of which had grown
into major blazes so far,
Newmerzhycky said. By contrast, a
massive lightning storm on June 21
generated about 8,000 strikes that
sparked more 2,000 fires that
became the largest fire event in
California history.
The storm stoked a complex of
blazes in rural Butte County that
threatened about 70 homes. It more
than doubled in size to 4 square
Sheriff
Continued from Page 1
Continued from Page 1
wouldn’t normally see,” said Jennifer Seward,
Redwood Empire Fairgrounds CEO and fair
manager.
Brad’s World of Reptiles is even featuring a 7foot long albino python named “Good Girl” for
people to hold on their shoulders if they choose.
For those who prefer to not touch reptiles,
there is a free petting zoo complete with furry
friendly animals such as goats, baby deer, sheep,
a small pig, a donkey, a llama, ducks and chickens. These fuzzy farm animals come straight
from a private farm in Oregon, which also runs a
public petting zoo called “The Farm.” Emily
Owen of The Farm brought these animals from
Oregon to participate in the petting zoo and also
provided the animals for this year’s GASCAR
animal races, where goats, sheep and other animals will race while attached to little carts.
Other free attractions are the kids’ arts and
crafts tables, where different crafts will be available to do and the children will have something to
take home. There will also be a magician appearing to not only perform magic tricks, but teach
them to children in the audience as well. Along
with the magician, a clown duo known as
“Mouse and Daisy” will be performing various
times throughout the weekend, and “Safari
Sadie” will be taking kids on a free jungle safari,
right at the fairgrounds.
A “diaper derby” will also be held for those
with babies who are still crawling and not yet
walking to participate in a crawling race. There
will be a few different heats and the winner takes
home a brand new washing machine.
There are also the regular free events that are
one of the key attractions in fairs: the animal
shows and judging. This year, there is a rabbit
show where young children can show their rabbits for a judging and prizes.
“I had some good rabbits so I wanted to show
dence cannot be processed
until the test results come
back.
“We can’t move forward
until we have a cause of
death,” he said.
Asked if this case has generated any extra level of
miles after firefighters were forced to
briefly retreat from unpredictable
winds unleashed by passing thunderclouds, state fire officials said. That
fire was about 20 percent contained
Wednesday.
A wildfire outside Yosemite
National Park that was started July
25 by a person taking target shooting
practice was completely contained
by Wednesday morning, after
destroying 30 homes and consuming
about 53 square miles in Mariposa
County. Officials revised their count
of homes destroyed again — up from
28 — after surveying the damage.
Schwarzenegger also declared a
state of emergency in Humboldt
County on Wednesday because of the
unhealthy air quality caused by fires
there. It’s one of 13 county emergency declarations the governor has
declared this year due to the blazes.
Before Tuesday’s helicopter
crash, three firefighters had been
killed while on duty in California
this year, including one firefighter
also assigned to battle the ShastaTrinity blazes who was killed late
last month by a falling tree.
On July 2, a volunteer firefighter
in Mendocino County died of heart
attack on the fire line. Another firefighter from Washington state was
killed July 26 in Siskiyou County
when he was burned while scouting a
fire.
forensic investigation, Van
Patten said a standard series
of steps are typically taken by
pathologists in their investigations. No arrests have been
made, but detectives are
investigating Long’s death as
suspicious in nature.
Anyone with information is
urged to contact Sheriff’s
Detective J.D. Comer at 9612692.
Oakland woman rescued
after fall on Mount Shasta
Associated Press
Sarah Baldik/The Daily Journal
This little piggy is one of the many animals at the petting zoo, which also
includes two fawns, a variety of goats,
chickens, ducks and a llama. All animals accept petting and love for free at
the Redwood Empire Fair.
them. I get to learn a lot of stuff too,” said 8-yearold Ryan Lacount, showing his rabbit Zack. This
is Ryan’s first year showing rabbits in the fair.
This year’s fair has many events and attractions, so everyone can find something enjoyable
there. “The most challenging part of this is
putting together the vision of what the fair is
going to be and sharing it to provide something
for everyone, and this year something is here for
everyone,” Seward said.
Fair admission costs $7 for adults, and $4 for
juniors and seniors 65 and over.
REDDING — A 35-yearold Oakland woman remains
in serious condition after tumbling into a fissure on a
Mount Shasta ice field over
the weekend.
Olga
Teslenko
told
Siskiyou County sheriff’s
authorities that she was climbing the 14,162-foot mountain
on Saturday when she slipped
into a crevasse.
She crawled out a few
hours later despite head and
neck injuries but was unable
to descend the mountain.
On Monday night, she
called for help from a Boy
Scout troop, which helped her
until rescuers arrived. By that
time, it was 3 a.m. Tuesday.
Sheriff’s spokeswoman
Susan Gravenkamp says the
hiker was stranded at about .
the 6,500 foot level and was
disoriented when rescued.
Teslenko remained in serious
condition Wednesday at
Redding’s Mercy Medical
Center.
Gravenkamp says the 15member Explorer troop was
from Maryland and continued
its climb on Wednesday.
Smoke
Continued from Page 1
Forest officials suggest that
residents pay attention to
local air quality reports and
help monitor friends and family members with heart and
lung diseases for signs of
added respiratory stress.
When smoke is heavy for a
prolonged period of time, fine
particles can build up indoors
even though you may not be
able to see them. Help keep
particle levels inside your
home lower. Avoid burning
candles or using gas stoves.
Avoid vacuuming, which stirs
up particles already inside
your home.
Helpful
Web
sites:
www.airnow.gov, www.inciweb.org, www.epa.gov.
For more information on
smoke,
contact
Fire
Information at (530) 9343316.
Watch Repair
Need a watch battery
or watch band?
Stop By today...
D. William Jewelers
Pear Tree Center
462-4636
Adv. Tix on Sale STAR WARS: THE CLONE WARS (PG) ★
PINEAPPLE EXPRESS (R) - ID REQ'D
(1055 140 425)
720 1020
MAMMA MIA (PG-13)
(1120 155 430) 710 1000
THE MUMMY: TOMB OF THE DRAGON
EMPEROR (PG-13) ★
(1050 130 415) 730 1015
THE DARK KNIGHT (PG-13)
(1210 325) 645 1005
SWING VOTE (PG-13)
(1100 145 435) 725 1010
STEP BROTHERS (R) - ID REQ'D (1125 200 440) 715 950
Times For 8/7
©2008
16- THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2008
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL

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