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Summers: Not the average intern Stimulus battle not yet over MONDAY CLOSE-UP
Steven R. Hurst THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — One of President Barack Obama’s top economic advisers forecast Sunday a difficult struggle with Congress over Senate cuts of $40 billion for state and local governments from the administration’s massive spending and tax cut package to stimulate the failing economy. The $827 billion Senate version of the plan — designed to bring the economy out of the worst downward spiral since the Great Depression — was
See STIMULUS, A8 ∫ Economy: Recession sending students to community colleges, A4 Legislative intern, Roland Williams requests copies of bills that will be discussed in the coming week on Friday at the Capitol in Salt Lake City. “There is a great deal of tradition here that I find quite interesting,” Williams said.
STORY AND PHOTOS BY ASHLEY FRANSCELL
Springville tightens costs of new library with smaller design
Whether family, friends or strangers, one thing binds us together: Utah Valley is home. Here is the story of one of us, Roland Williams. n his first couple of weeks at the Capitol, Roland Williams, 61, has been mistaken for a Utah Representative and a new
Janice Peterson DAILY HERALD
studying pre-law or political science who get paid and university credit for their work. Not Williams. The time he puts in at the Capitol is all pro bono. Williams is the oldest intern Senator. this year by many years and When it happens, he laughs, he thinks he might be the flattered at the thought, but oldest ever. He admits to bethen introduces himself as ing a little slower and not as “Roland Williams, the world’s versed in the technology as the oldest intern.” others, but his spirit far outWilliams retired in 2006 weighs his shortcomings. after 32 years of teaching “I just really like being here history and government at and seeing how it all works,” Mountain View High School he said. and Timpanogos High School. Even after teaching the After campaigning this sumtopic for three decades and mer and fall for Represena master’s degree in history, tative Stephen Sandstrom, Williams has learned so much Williams was asked to be his in his first two weeks at the intern. legislature. “It has really been a treat,” “I knew the procedures,” he said Williams, who lives in said. “But now I can put a perSandstrom’s district in Orem. sonality to those procedures. I Most of the interns are Uni- get to meet the people behind versity of Utah or Brigham Young University students, See INTERN, A3
I
∫ Stimulus for education: Plan emerges to boost financial aid for college students, A4
Above: Legislative intern, Roland Williams makes a phone call to the state’s Republican office for Representative Stephen Sandstrom on Friday at the Capitol in Salt Lake City. Below: Roland rides the elevator with other legislative interns from BYU.
Springville City is tightening the budget set aside for its new library, but officials say residents won’t see a difference in the quality of the new building. Pam Vaughn, library director, said the budget for the library has shrunk from $14 million to $11 million at the urging of city officials seeking to cut costs. Residents voted for a $9.8 million bond in November to build the library, with the city furnishing the rest of the costs. Most of the difference in cost will likely be in the size of the building,
See LIBRARY, A3
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Ivins police declined to release any details about SALT LAKE CITY — Police Bugden’s arrest. say a Salt Lake City attorney A telephone message left who defended polygamous at Bugden’s office Sunday by sect leader Warren Jeffs in a The Associated Press was not 2007 criminal trial has been ar- immediately returned. rested in southern Utah. Jeffs is head of the southPurgatory Correctional Faern-Utah based Fundamentalcility booking records show ist Church of Jesus Christ of Walter “Wally” Bugden was Latter Day Saints. In 2007 a arrested at 1:38 a.m. Saturday 5th District Court jury convictby police in Ivins on suspicion ed the church leader on two of public intoxication. counts of rape as an accomBugden, 58, was released plice for his role in the marfrom the Washington County riage of underage follower to jail in Hurricane after posting her cousin. He was sentenced a $182 bond. to two terms of five years to THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
life in the Utah State Prison. Bugden and his legal partner Tara Isaacson, of Salt Lake City and Las Vegas attorney Richard Wright are also representing Jeffs in his appeal. Jeffs is currently in an Arizona jail awaiting trials on other charges related to the underage marriages of FLDS girls. In Texas, where the sect has outpost, Jeffs has also been charged with an alleged sexual assault involving a 12-year-old girl he reportedly took as a wife.
Woman charged in vehicle death Negligent homicide is a class A misdemeanor. VERNAL — Uintah County prosecutors Prosecutors say Uintah High School softball have charged a Vernal woman with negligent coach Claye Robb was out for an evening homicide for the November car accident that walk Nov. 21 when he was struck from behind killed a local softball coach. by a truck driven by Rowell. They say Rowell, Uintah County Attorney JoAnn Stringham 24, also hit a power pole after hitting Robb. filed the single count against Aimee Rowell The Utah State Court Web site shows Rowon Wednesday, according to story from the ell is scheduled for an arraignment in 8th DisVernal Express Web site. trict Court Monday. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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USU students earn ‘green’ marks THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SALT LAKE CITY — Four Utah State University interior design students will finish school with more than diplomas. They’ll also be “green” certified.
The students have passed a professional accreditation exam for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification. LEED sets nationally accepted standards for design, construction and operation of high-performance green buildings. The certification exam has
80 questions and a possible total score of 200. Students must earn a score of 170 or better to pass. USU Interior Design program director JoAnn Wilson says students who earn the certification will have a leg up on other designers when it comes to finding jobs.
Regular High Schools Teach Quadratic Equations
AP file
Walter Bugden
New book chronicles early polygamy among LDS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SALT LAKE CITY — If the past is a window to the present, then a new book about polygamy among early Mormons could be a portal to understanding where some contemporary Utah polygamists have found inspiration for their way of life. “Nauvoo Polygamy,” by George D. Smith illustrates the development of polygamy as it was first practiced in the 1840s by the members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints living in Nauvoo, Ill. Polygamy historian Martha Sontag Bradley says the book provides indisputable evidence that the scope of plural marriage was broader than most believe.
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Monday, February 9, 2009
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Anti-war lawmakers worry over Afghanistan plan Anne Flaherty
McGovern, a Massachusetts liberal who at one point wanted to cut off money for the Iraq war. WASHINGTON — After campaigning Added Wisconsin Democrat Sen. Russ on the promise to end one war, President Feingold, another fierce war opponent: Barack Obama is preparing to escalate “The idea of putting the troops in without another. having more clarity at least gives me Obama’s dual stance on the two wars pause.� is not lost on congressional Democrats, The Obama administration is in the many of whom also ran on anti-war plat- midst of a sweeping strategy review. The forms. In coming weeks, they expect to results of that assessment might not be have to consider tens of billions of dollars released for several weeks. In the meanneeded for combat, including a major time, the administration is expected to buildup of troops in Afghanistan. approve an immediate request from the While increasing the military’s focus top military commander in Afghanistan in Afghanistan was anticipated — it was for three more brigades, roughly 14,000 a cornerstone of Obama’s campaign — troops. many Democrats acknowledged in recent It is expected that more troops would interviews that they are skittish about follow, eventually doubling the presence sending more troops, even in small num- from 33,000 to 60,000. bers. The proposed buildup had been under The concern, they say, is that the miliconsideration by the Bush administratary could become further entrenched in tion as a means of dealing with an uptick an unwinnable war on their watch. in violent attacks. More than 130 U.S. “Before I support any more troops to personnel died in Afghanistan last year, Afghanistan, I want to see a strategy compared to 82 in 2007, according to a that includes an exit plan,� said Rep. Jim recent Pentagon report. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Library Continued from A1 which may now be 35,000 square feet instead of 45,000. “Right now, we’re looking at 35,000 unless we hear differently from the residents,� she said. The city is working with architects to come up with a design for the building, which could be completed in late 2010 if it is started by fall 2009. Several public meetings will be held in the meantime to discuss the budget and design of the building. “They’re anxious to hear what people think about this plan,� Vaughn said. Vaughn said the ideal size for the library would be one square foot per resident. In a survey conducted with the city’s residents, most said they would like a library that would still serve the community well for the next 20 years, she said. In order for the library to have one square foot per resident when the city is built out, Vaughn said it would need to be 55,000-60,000 square feet. The 35,000 square foot building that is currently in the plans is a far cry from 60,000 square feet, but it will still be able to
support growth in the city of only 30,000, Vaughn said. “Hopefully, you’re not building to your current population, because that’s pretty shortsighted,� she said. Vaughn said the library is a good idea for the city, despite the slumping economy. While proponents of the new library knew residents would want to tighten their belts instead of voting for a new bond, they also knew it would be a good time to build, she said. The new Springville city center was bid out at a substantially lower cost than expected, and it is possible the library will have the same results. “We are in a very competitive atmosphere, both for the building and materials,� she said. City Councilman Dean Olsen said original estimates for the building came in at $225 per square foot, and officials do not know yet if bids may come in lower when the time comes. The idea to reduce the budget was an effort to be more fiscally responsible in turbulent times, he said. “We had a meeting and kind of looked at the economy and decided we were biting off a little bit there,� he said. Olsen said officials want as
Vice President Joe Biden sought to lower lawmakers’ expectations in the war when he met recently with House Democrats at their party retreat in Williamsburg, Va. “The economic and security and social conditions there are daunting� and the nation has “geography, demography and history working against us,� he said. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said as much in congressional testimony last month, warning against aspiring to turn Afghanistan into a “Central Asian Valhalla,� referring to a haven of purity in Norse mythology. “Nobody in the world has that kind of time, patience or money, to be honest,� he told lawmakers. Indeed, Afghanistan poses a foreign policy challenge unlike no other. The country is one of the poorest in the world. Opium production has given way to Colombia-like drug cartels trafficking heroin. Corruption is rampant. Terrorist fighters move freely across the Pakistan border. European voters want their armies to leave.
much citizen involvement as possible in the process. The community voted to pay for the library, and they have the right to wonder what will happen with the library, he said. “I don’t want to make it like we’re changing horses in the middle of the stream,� he said. It’s hard to say how most of the public feels about the change, Olsen said, as only one person has had questions so far in a recent city council meeting. Hopefully, a lot of people will be involved in future meetings and will have input in the design and size of the building, he said. Even with a possible reduction in the size of the building, Olsen said the vast number of users at the current library will enjoy the change. “That’s about four times — plus — the size of our current library,� he said. The city is watching its spending closely, Olsen said. Hopefully it will get through the downturn OK, but the city will prepare for the worst, he said. “We don’t know how long this present economic situation is going to last,� he said. “It’s kind of ‘keep your dollars close to the chest.’ � Chantel Daines, a Springville resident, said she fre-
quents the library with her children of all ages. She has participated in family nights, mother-daughter nights and kid’s programs, she said. Daines said she is disappointed in the smaller budget for the library, but she can understand the situation. “I guess I’m a little conflicted,� she said. “I can understand why the city feels we need to cut back.� Despite problems in the economy, Daines said it is important to think about how short-term changes will affect the long-term result. As long as the city is spending $11 million, Daines said part of her wonders what harm $3 million more might do. “We’re already spending this much,� she said. “Why not make it the best library we can?� Daines said, however, that is it understandable that the city would want to save $3 million during such a hard time. There are still stylistic aspects of the new library that will be a big benefit. The new library will improve the look of Main Street, she said, and there will be more room for programs and private study areas. “I’m just grateful we’re getting a new library,� she said.
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Legislative intern, Roland Williams stands outside the House of Representatives chamber as teachers from around the state were honored for completing their national certification on Friday at the Capitol in Salt Lake City.
Intern Continued from A1 it all.� During the session, Williams sits outside the chamber watching the bills come up for their first, second and third readings. He listens to the debates and watches as bills get passed and as they fail. “I read the bills before they get to committee, but when it gets to the floor and you hear it, it really has some weight to it,� Williams said. Most of the mornings, Williams sits in the hallway and waits for a gesture from Representative Sandstrom letting him know that he needs him to do something. “Roland has been indispensable,� said Sandstrom. “I can give him basic info on issues and he does research for the bills.� Williams carries a notepad in his pocket, ready in a moment’s notice for the four or five things that Sandstrom usually has for him to do. It can vary from sending e-mails, organizing appointments with
“There is so much work that goes on up here that the public doesn’t know.� Roland Williams Legislative intern
constituents to giving advice on bills. He even brings a Diet Coke to Sandstrom’s desk every morning before the session starts. “It’s something that I can do to save him time,� he laughed. “There are only 33 working days in the session, which is why it’s so hectic.� Williams usually spends his days walking between the House and the Senate, maneuvering through all the tunnels underneath the Capitol as he makes the rounds for Sandstrom. “The first Monday I was in bed by 8:30 p.m.,� he said. “I was half dead. There is so much work that goes on up here that the public doesn’t know.�
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Monday, February 9, 2009
H E R A L D
ECONOMY AND EDUCATION
Enrollment spikes at community colleges Recession boom falls short of covering colleges’ costs David Tirrell-Wysocki THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CONCORD, N.H. — College freshman Elizabeth Hebert’s choice of a four-year school suddenly got too expensive. George Haseltine already has a business degree, but he concluded after several layoffs that he needed more training to get work. So, in the middle of this school year, both landed at New Hampshire Technical Institute, which like other community colleges across the country has suddenly grown a lot more crowded. The two-year schools are reporting unprecedented enrollment increases this semester, driven by students from traditional colleges seeking more bang for their buck and by laid-off older workers. But community colleges aren’t exactly cheering in this down economy: Tuition doesn’t come close to covering costs, and the state funds used to make up the difference are drying up. Final figures aren’t in for this semester, but a national group representing community colleges says the average increase from spring-to-spring is dramatic, and similar to what New Hampshire is reporting at its seven schools — a range of 4 percent to 19 percent. The figure is 20 percent in Maine and South Carolina. One school in Idaho has more than twice the number of students this spring over last. Last fall, Hebert, of Antrim, began her first semester at Eastern Nazarene
KEVIN WOLF/Associated Press
Then Education Secretary-designate Arne Duncan testifies Jan. 13 on Capitol Hill before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing on his nomination.
Stimulus plan would disperse billions to colleges and students JIM COLE/Associated Press
Students at New Hampshire Technical Institute walk to class in Concord, N.H., on Thursday. College in Massachusetts. But as the economy fell, she began rethinking the thousands of dollars in loans she was carrying — at age 18. “It was the realization of paying $30,000 a year for four years, and then to take that in loans, it was just way too much,” said Hebert, who is now paying $3,000 a semester at NHTI. Haseltine, 25, of Rochester, said he was tired of being laid off from various jobs, so he drives almost an hour for his two-year criminal justice program. He hopes to become a police officer. “The economy being in shambles pretty much; being constantly laid off; and not having lucrative job offers,” he said. “They are three reasons why.” Nationwide, the average annual cost of community college is $2,402, compared
to $6,585 in tuition and fees at in-state public four-year schools, according to the College Board. Average tuition and fees for private four-year schools: $25,143. Factoring in financial aid, the College Board estimates the average net cost at community colleges is only about $100. “We have seen it even more and more, mom and dad saying ‘Come back home, we can’t afford it,’ ” said Jim McCarthy, admissions director at Pennsylvania’s Northampton Community College, where spring enrollment is 10.4 percent higher than a year ago — and for the first time is higher than it was in the fall semester. New Hampshire is marketing the transfer trend. “I was going to a much larger school out of state and
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paying $45,000 a year to go there,” straight-A business major Elizabeth Leone says in a TV ad. “I am getting a better experience here at NHTI and it’s more affordable and closer to home.” Leone transferred last fall after racking up $20,000 in loans and putting $5,000 more on credit cards for her first year at college in Pennsylvania. She couldn’t imagine how much more she would have had to borrow to return. Going to a community college doesn’t require giving up on hopes for a bachelor’s degree, since credits often transfer to four-year schools. States including New Hampshire, Maryland and New Jersey have made it easier for students to begin their higher education at a community college and end it at a university.
Justin Pope
tific research. Students are big winners. Both the House and SenDURHAM, N.C. — The ate bills call for the largeststimulus plan emerging in ever funding increase for Pell Washington could offer an un- Grants, the government’s chief precedented, multibillion-dollar college aid program for lowboost in financial help for colincome students. lege students trying to pursue It will take much of the proa degree while they ride out posed $15.6 billion increase in the recession. the House version (slightly less It could also hand out billions in the Senate) just to erase the to the states to kick-start idled existing funding shortfall and campus construction projects meet the surging demand as and help prevent tuition inthe economy sours and more creases at a time when families students enroll. can least afford them. But the package would also But cuts of $40 billion for increase next year’s maximum state and local governments award by up to $500, to $5,350, in the Senate version were a starting July 1. That’s the bigbig disappointment for college gest increase in history and leaders. would cover three-quarters of House-Senate negotiathe cost of the average public tions will determine whether four-year college. education aid to the states is Most Pell recipients come relatively modest or massive from families earning less than — and how much gets directed $40,000. And supporters note to high-need institutions for the new Pell dollars would building projects, versus elite be spent almost immediately universities that would benefit — students can’t save them — if the final package spends while also paying off down the more of the money on scienroad. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Monday, February 9, 2009
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OBITUARIES
Ernest Lynn Helbing
Beth H. Shoell Beth H. Shoell was born to Arthur James and Ada Peterson Hutcheon in Neola, UT on January 13, 1923. She left this world peacefully at her home in Salem, UT surrounded by loved ones on February 4, 2009. Beth was raised in Neola, UT and graduated from Roosevelt High School. She moved to Provo to attend beauty school then she moved to Fillmore, UT to work as a beautician. There she met her husband, Ned. They were married for 63 years before he passed away, January 3, 2004. They were married in Evanston, WY on January 24, 1941. Their marriage was later solemnized in the Manti LDS temple. They were the parents of 3 children, Neil, Lynn and Diane. Beth lived in Neola with her two sons while Ned was overseas during World War II. Then they made their first home in Orem, UT. Later they moved to Springville, then 6 years ago they moved to Salem. She enjoyed her home in Salem. She had wonderful helpful neighbors that watched out for her after Ned passed away. Beth loved golf. She helped
Eleanor Kossmann
organize and was a member of the Ladies Hobble Creek Golf Assoc. for many years. She very proudly displayed her two “Hole in One” golf trophies. She enjoyed playing Bridge. She had many life long bridge friends. Ned and Beth traveled through out the country showing their Arabian horses. Her grandchildren and great grandchildren were the joy of her life. Spending time with them was what she enjoyed most. She is survived by her son, Lynn (Syd), daughter, Diane (Kenny) Bringhurst and daughterin-law, Reva Shoell; brothers, Max and Delane Hutcheon and sister, Reta Pavich. She is also survived by many grandchildren and great grandchildren. She is preceded in death by her husband; son, Neil; sister, Lois Leavitt and brother, Charles Hutcheon. Funeral services will be held on Monday, February 9, 2009 at 11 a.m. at Wheeler Mortuary, 211 E 200 S, Springville, UT. Friends may call at the mortuary, Sunday evening from 6 to 8 p.m. or Monday one hour prior to the services. Burial will be in the Evergreen Cemetery. The family would like to give a special thanks to Bonnie and Cami and A Plus Home Heath Care for the kind, loving care they gave Mom, Condolences may be sent at www.wheelermortuary.com.
Eleanor “Nana” Marie Uebelacker Kossmann, our beloved mother, grandmother and greatgrandmother, age 86, passed away peacefully on February 6, 2009 at her home in Provo, Utah. She was born on October 6, 1922 in Mount Vernon, New York to Matthew Michael and Alice Jetter Uebelacker. She married George Julius Kossmann II on September 24, 1950 in Mount Vernon, New York. He preceded her in death on May 27, 2007. She grew up in Mount Vernon and graduated from Davis High School in 1941. She worked for Eastman Kodak as a bookkeeper. She and George made their first home in Newport Beach, California where she loved the ocean and the beach. In 1967, they moved to Provo where she enjoyed her neighbors and friends. She was baptized in the LDS Church on June 23, 1970 with her daughter. She loved her ward and especially the children in primary. She
dedicated her life to her family and service in the church. She did service for others everyday of her life. She is survived by her two children: Lori Marie (Lynn) Davis, of Orem; George J. Kossmann III, of San Diego, California; 3 grandchildren; 4 great-grandchildren with one on the way. She was preceded in death by her two brothers: Frances Matthew Uebelacker and Robert Joseph Uebelacker. The family would like to thank everyone at Alpine Hospice for all their love and daily help. Funeral services will be held on Wednesday, February 11, 2009 at 11:00 a.m. at the Edgemont 8th Ward Chapel, 3050 Mojave Lane, Provo. Friends may call at the Berg Mortuary of Provo, 185 East Center, on Tuesday evening 6-8 P.M. or at the Ward Chapel on Wednesday one hour prior to services. Interment Timpanogos Memorial Gardens. Condolences may be sent to info@bergmortuary.com.
Ernest Lynn Helbing, known to all his friends as “Bing” passed away Thursday, February 5, 2009 at the age of 95. He was born November 7, 1913 in Hannibal, Missouri to Joseph Ernest and Ruby Marie Englehardt Helbing. In 1934 he married Jaunetta May Walker. They had a son, Lynn, and a daughter, Marilyn. While residing in Hannibal, he worked at the International Shoe Company as a shoe cutter, cutting leather parts to be made into ladies shoes. During WWII, he worked in a defense plant manufacturing tools for the war effort. Bing moved his family to San Bernardino, California in 1947 where he became a journeyman carpenter and used those skills to
build his own home. He was also a semi-professional photographer specializing in wedding photos. In 1973 he and his wife moved to Payson, Utah where he built his own home for the second time. He enjoyed beekeeping and annually tended a large garden. He was an active member in the LDS Church and served many years in the Provo Temple Baptistry. Bing is survived by his son, Ernest Lynn Helbing, Jr. of Chino, California, 7 grandchildren and 23 great grandchildren. He is preceded in death by his wife, Jaunetta, and his daughter, Marilyn Reynolds, of Provo. Funeral services will be Wednesday, February 11th at 11:00 am at the Payson West Stake Center, 730 West 500 South, where friends may call one hour prior to services. Interment, Payson City Cemetery, under the direction of Holladay-Brown Funeral Home, Santaquin. Condolences may be sent to the family at www.holladaybrown.com.
OBITUARY IN THE NEWS Pete Goering TOPEKA, Kan. — Pete Goering, an award-winning columnist and editor for The Topeka Capital-Journal, died Saturday. He was 60. The newspaper said he died at home surrounded by family. In a column in April 2007, Goering informed his readers he had lung cancer. In a career with the CapitalJournal that spanned nearly 40 years, Goering worked as a
photographer’s intern, sports writer, sports editor and columnist and executive editor. His peers voted him Kansas sports writer of the year five times. With a folksy, easy-to-read style and deft humorous touch, Goering chronicled Kansas in five Final Fours, reported twice on the Olympics and covered both of the Kansas City Royals’ appearances in the World Series, including their 1985 triumph over St. Louis.
Unemployed use time for hobbies, family Drugmakers’ push boosts ‘murky’ ailment Ryan J. Foley
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Matthew Perrone THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — Two drugmakers spent hundreds of millions of dollars last year to raise awareness of a murky illness, helping boost sales of pills recently approved as treatments and drowning out unresolved questions — including whether it’s a real disease at all. Key components of the industry-funded buzz over the pain-and-fatigue ailment fibromyalgia are grants — more than $6 million donated by drugmakers Eli Lilly and Pfizer in the first three quarters of 2008 — to nonprofit groups for medical conferences and educational campaigns, an Associated Press analysis found. That’s more than they gave for more accepted ailments such as diabetes and Alzheimer’s. Among grants tied to specific diseases, fibromyalgia ranked third for each company, behind only cancer and AIDS for Pfizer and cancer and depression for Lilly. Fibromyalgia draws skepticism for several reasons. The cause is unknown. There are no tests to confirm a diagnosis. Many patients also fit the criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome and other pain ailments. Experts don’t doubt the patients are in pain. They differ on what to call it and how to treat it. Many doctors and patients say the drugmakers are educating the medical establishment about a misunderstood illness, much as they did with depression in the 1980s. Those with fibromyalgia have often had to fight perceptions that they are hypochondriacs, or even faking their pain. But critics say the companies are hyping fibromyalgia along with their treatments, and that the grantmaking is a textbook example of how drugmakers unduly influence doctors and patients. “I think the purpose of most pharmaceutical company efforts is to do a little diseasemongering and to have people use their drugs,” said Dr. Frederick Wolfe, who was lead author of the guidelines defining fibromyalgia in 1990 but has since become one of its leading skeptics. Whatever the motive, the push has paid off. Between the first quarter of 2007 and the fourth quarter of 2008, sales rose from $395 million to $702 million for Pfizer’s Lyrica, and $442 million to $721 million for Lilly’s Cymbalta. Cymbalta, an antidepressant, won Food and Drug Administration approval as a treatment for fibromyalgia
“I think the purpose of most pharmaceutical company efforts is to do a little disease-mongering and to have people use their drugs.” Frederick Wolfe M.D.
in June. Lyrica, originally approved for epileptic seizures, was approved for fibromyalgia a year earlier. Drugmakers respond to skepticism by pointing out that fibromyalgia is recognized by medical societies, including the American College of Rheumatology. “I think what we’re seeing here is just the evolution of greater awareness about a condition that has generally been neglected or poorly managed,” said Steve Romano, a Pfizer vice president who oversees its neuroscience division. “And it’s mainly being facilitated by the fact the FDA has now approved effective compounds.” The FDA approved the drugs because they’ve been shown to reduce pain in fibromyalgia patients, though it’s not clear how. Some patients say the drugs can help, but the side effects include nausea, weight gain and drowsiness. Helen Arellanes of Los Angeles was diagnosed with fibromyalgia in September 2007 and later left her job to go on disability. She takes five medications for pain, including Lyrica and Cymbalta. “I call it my fibromyalgia fog, because I’m so medicated I go through the day feeling like I’m not really there,” Arellanes said. “But if for some reason I miss a dose of medication, I’m in so much pain.” A single mother of three, Arellanes sometimes struggles to afford all her medications. She said she is grateful that a local Pfizer sales representative occasionally gives her free samples of Lyrica “to carry me through the month.”
FOND DU LAC, Wis. — Jay Capelle would give anything to get back his factory job of 32 years. At the same time, he’s grateful to have extra time on his hands these days to care for his ailing wife, stay in shape and work on a longplanned baseball documentary. The unemployed are stressed out about unpaid bills, dashed retirement plans and the loss of workplace camaraderie. But many say life minus work also has its bittersweet upsides, including more time with family and friends, learning new skills, focusing on their health and pursuing hobbies. There is a wide range of opinions, of course, about just how sweet, or bitter, the experience has been. An idled auto worker in Wisconsin cherishes extra time with his kids, and his guitar. A former communications worker in Virginia finds time for hiking as a distraction from the job search. But two jobless friends in North Carolina who’ve played plenty of golf together say enough is enough: they’re ready again for the joy of earning a paycheck. All of these people said they would give up their newfound free time in a heartbeat if they could land jobs. And most spend hours each day trying. But as unemployment spells
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Jay Capelle, 60, sits in his Fond du Lac, Wis., home on Feb. 3. Capelle has been unable to find a job since losing his maintenance mechanic position at Mercury Marine in May 2008. drag on longer than anticipated, they have allowed themselves to enjoy activities not directly related to the job hunt without feeling guilty. Alex Swain, 36, of Leesburg, Va., said his fruitless search for work has been discouraging. Since losing his job last April at a wireless communications company, Swain has applied for more than 200 jobs, gone on 10 interviews and has not had a single offer. But rather than sulking in front of the television when he’s not searching online job postings, Swain forces himself to keep up with hobbies like playing music, painting and hiking.
“You can’t stay in the house all day or you’ll lose your mind,” he said. Others are spending time in the classroom. Andre Lovato, 55, of Waukesha, Wis., who was laid off from his job at a signmaking company in 2006, earned a degree in printing and publishing from a technical college in December. Lovato, who has applied for 35 jobs since then without any luck, devotes his free time to woodcarving, sketching and computer illustrations. But as his unemployment drags on, he longs for interaction with colleagues and get-
ting praise for a job well-done. “I miss showing my work and having people say, ‘Hey man, you did pretty good stuff,’ ” he said. Brad Palzkill, 39, was laid off from the General Motors plant in Janesville, Wis., last June. This means the family can’t afford to eat out as often, and the kids’ Christmas gifts were less extravagant last year. But he doesn’t miss installing hundreds of consoles in trucks every night, which took a toll on his knees and wrists; and it’s nice to have more free time to spend with family and strumming his guitar — when he’s not looking for work.
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D A I L Y
Monday, February 9, 2009
H E R A L D
EDITORIALS
EDITORIAL BOARD Rona Rahlf, President & Publisher Randy Wright, Executive Editor Jim Tynen, Editorial Page Editor
CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER
Urgency of pork
‘A
failure to act, and act now, will turn crisis into a catastrophe.” — President
just the waste, such as the $88.6 million for new construction for Milwaukee Public Schools, which, reports the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, have shrinking enrollment, 15 vacant schools and, quite Obama, Feb. 4. logically, no plans for new construction. Catastrophe, mind you. So much It’s the essential fraud of rushfor the president who in his inauing through a bill in which the gural address two weeks earlier normal rules (committee hearings, declared “we have chosen hope finding revenue to pay for the over fear.” Until, that is, you need programs) are suspended on the fear to pass a bill. grounds that a national emergency And so much for the promise to requires an immediate job-creating banish the money changers and in- stimulus — and then throwing fluence peddlers from the temple. into it hundreds of billions that An ostentatious executive order have nothing to do with stimulus, banning lobbyists was immediate- that Congress’s own budget office ly followed by the nomination of says won’t be spent until 2011 and at least a dozen current or former beyond, and that are little more lobbyists to high position. Followed than the back-scratching, specialby a Treasury secretary who alinterest, lobby-driven parochialism legedly couldn’t understand the that Obama came to Washington payroll tax provisions in his 1040. to abolish. He said. Followed by Tom Daschle, who Not just to abolish but to create had to fall on his sword according something new — a new politics to the new Washington rule that where the moneyed pork-barreling no Cabinet can have more than and corrupt logrolling of the past one tax delinquent. would give way to a bottom-up, The Daschle affair was more se- grass-roots participatory democrious because his offense involved racy. That is what made Obama so more than taxes. As Michael Kins- dazzling and new. Turns out the ley once observed, in Washington “fierce urgency of now” includes the real scandal isn’t what’s illegal, $150 million for livestock (and but what’s legal. Not paying taxes honeybee and farm-raised fish) is one thing. But what made this insurance. case intolerable was the perfectly The Age of Obama begins with legal dealings that amassed Dasch- perhaps the greatest frenzy of le $5.2 million in just two years. old-politics influence peddling He’d been getting $1 million per ever seen in Washington. By the year from a law firm. But he’s not time the stimulus bill reached the a lawyer, nor a registered lobbySenate, reports the Wall Street ist. You don’t get paid this kind of Journal, pharmaceutical and highmoney to instruct partners on the tech companies were lobbying Senate markup process. You get it furiously for a new plan to repatrifor picking up the phone and ped- ate overseas profits that would dling influence. yield major tax savings. California At least Tim Geithner, the taxwine growers and Florida citrus challenged Treasury secretary, producers were fighting to change had been working for years as a a single phrase in one provision. humble international civil servant Substituting “planted” for “ready earning non-stratospheric wages. to market” would mean a windfall Daschle, who had made another garnered from a new “bonus decool million a year (plus chauffeur preciation” incentive. and Caddy) for unspecified serAfter Obama’s miraculous 2008 vices to a pal’s private equity firm, presidential campaign, it was clear represented everything Obama that at some point the magical said he’d come to upend. mystery tour would have to end. And yet more damaging to The nation would rub its eyes and Obama’s image than all the hypoc- begin to emerge from its reverie. risies in the appointment process The hallucinatory Obama would is his signature bill: the stimulus give way to the mere mortal. The package. He inexplicably delgreat ethical transformations egated the writing to Nancy Pelosi promised would be seen as a fairy and the barons of the House. The tale that all presidents tell — and product, which inevitably carries that this president told better than Obama’s name, was not just bad, anyone. not just flawed, but a legislative I thought the awakening would abomination. take six months. It took two and a It’s not just pages and pages half weeks. of special-interest tax breaks, ∫ Charles Krauthammer is a giveaways and protections, one columnist with the Washington of which would set off a ruinous Post Writers Group. Smoot-Hawley trade war. It’s not
MEDIA VOICES
Don’t buy this idea From the San Diego UnionTribune, Wednesday, Feb. 4:
be U.S.-made. It also would require that uniforms for the more than 100,000 officers in the Department arlier this week, the Euroof Homeland Security be made pean aircraft maker Airbus in America. Some members of took itself out of competition Congress also want a $20 billion alto build a new fleet of planes to be location for computerizing medical designated as Air Force One for records to be directed exclusively the president of the United States. toward companies in the United That left Chicago-based Boeing States. as the only company in the world It is true that a clear majority capable of supplying the world’s of Americans are concerned with most photographed plane. global trade and manufacturing Americans may breathe a sigh jobs lost in this country. And, yes, of relief that the president will calls to “buy American” sound continue to fly on American-made patriotic. But the world is more planes, but we shouldn’t feel the complicated than that. Once the same way about efforts in ConUnited States throws up barriers gress to attach “made in America” to imports, our exports become provisions onto the massive stimu- targets of foreign governments. lus bill that just passed the House. And governments from Canada As currently written, the $816 to Brazil to China have warned billion stimulus bill would require the United States to refrain from that all iron and steel used in adopting such blatantly protectionstimulus-funded infrastructure bills ist measures.
E
DOONESBURY • Garry Trudeau
LOCAL OPINION
Clinton will restore the ‘American brand’ Bennion Spencer
T
he future of peace in the world depends on the strength of America. As the Bush administration comes to a close, we look to the future and peace on earth has real potential. The inauguration of Barack Obama on Jan. 20 brings with it new opportunity and focus. The United States of America is the greatest country in the world. The foundation of America’s greatness is secured by the Constitution. I, like many others, believe that the Constitution is a document that was written by men who were inspired of God. Because the Constitution is a heavenly-inspired framework for governance our people can be blessed. Our country has flourished because of the fundamental principles in the Constitution that serve as a moral compass and light for all of us. As secretary of state in the Obama Administration, Hillary Clinton will restore the respect, the vigor, and the strength of the “American brand” across the globe. Our Constitution has influenced the majority of democracies that stand in the world today. There is a reason why other nations have always looked to America as that shining city on the hill. The Declaration of Independence with its thundering affirmation that “All Men are Created Equal,” and our Bill of Rights, with guarantees to protect the individual from the state, has always been a beacon for hope in troubled parts of the world. There is no stronger advocate or defender of equality and protection of basic human rights under the law
than Hillary Clinton. Her commitment to renew these core values as our secretary of state will do much to affirm to the world that the United States is still the standard by which the world measures itself. She knows we are the beacon in the dark, that “land of the free, and the home of the brave.” The days of torture involving sexual humiliation, water boarding, and other things that can’t be printed in a family newspaper are gone, replaced by a new group of citizen-leaders who are willing to put their faith in the values that have defined American greatness for over two hundred years. That nation of promise, the United State of America — a nation governed by
inspired law — is returning. The world is still a very dangerous and complex community. Senator Clinton has indicated that as secretary of state she will endeavor to use all of what we are as a nation to make peace in the world, realizing that military power is not the first option in diplomacy. Hillary Clinton really does believe these words: “that we hold these truths to be self-evident . . . that all men are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights.” She believes everyone in the world should have the liberty and opportunity we have as Americans. There are those out there in the world who have wondered what happened to the America they always admired. Mrs. Clinton will use her new position to renew that promise of America. It will take time, but she believes in inherent goodness of man. Great things can happen when the countries of the world can see and believe that we in America want to be a part of the global community, committed to peace and growth. In time it will be safer for Americans to travel the world. Missionaries of all faiths and organizations that promote development in impoverished sectors will be able to get more done because confidence has been restored. President Obama will have his hands full guiding the country through the current economic challenge. Thankfully, he has chosen the right person to represent us on the world stage. ∫ Bennion Spencer was the Democratic candidate in the 2008 election for Utah’s 3rd Congressional District.
MALLARD FILLMORE • Bruce Tinsley
Monday, February 9, 2009
D A I L Y
H E R A L D
MORNING BRIEFING
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FAST FACT During the Great Depression in the U.S. devastating drought struck New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Colorado, an area known as the Dust Bowl. Source: Micropedia of World Facts
Compiled from Daily Herald wire services
The NATION Freeing grounded ship in Hawaii fails
HONOLULU — The Navy says its third attempt to free a $1 billion warship that ran aground off the coast of Hawaii has failed. Tugboats and a salvage ship tried unsuccessfully for four hours early Sunday to pull the USS Port Royal off a rock and sand shoal. The guided missile cruiser ran aground Thursday about a half-mile south of the Honolulu airport. Pacific Fleet spokeswoman Agnes Tauyan says the Navy is reassessing its options. The Navy had removed fuel, water and some personnel from the 9,600-ton vessel on Saturday in an effort to lighten it. The 15-year-old Port Royal ran aground as it was finishing the first day of sea trials following four months of routine maintenance at the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard. No one was injured and no contaminants leaked.
The WORLD
don’t know.” However, the reason the law hasn’t changed lo these many years has more to do with money than morals. The state’s liquor store lobby successfully fights off all attempts to change the law, an act they argue would create thousands of new competitors for liquor stores overnight.
Calif. octuplets set off ethical debate
CHICAGO — The thirtysomething patient knew what she wanted: seven frozen embryos transferred to her womb to maximize her chance of getting pregnant. But her doctor, Dr. David Cohen of the University of Chicago Medical Center, told her he wasn’t comfortable doing that. “It’s too dangerous,” he recalls saying. It wasn’t an easy conversation. The patient had tried several rounds of in vitro fertilization, unsuccessfully. She said she was running out of patience and money. And she promised she would Philadelphia owed “selectively reduce” some of $1B in unpaid bail the embryos — abort them in PHILADELPHIA — Court utero — if more than a few officials in Philadelphia say implanted successfully. people who are released on Cohen said he would bail but don’t show up for discuss the matter with coltheir trials owe the city more leagues, but he knew his than $1 billion. mind was already made up. Court officials compiled “The risks to the mom and their first ever tally of bail to the babies are huge when jumpers in the city at the you carry multiples,” he request of The Philadelphia said. “My obligation is to do Inquirer. what’s best for the mother Before the newspaper and the babies that might raised the issue, the magbe born, not to satisfy a panitude of the problem was tient’s desire.” unknown. Court officials Since a single, 33-year-old initially told the Inquirer that California woman gave birth only $2 million was owed. to octuplets late last month, A criminal defendant in people have been pondering Philadelphia is usually freed the ethics of assisted reproafter paying 10 percent of the duction. How far should bail. Defendants who show a doctor go in helping a up for trial get that money woman have a baby? When, back, minus a small fee. if ever, is it appropriate for People who don’t show a doctor to say “No, I can’t up forfeit the 10 percent and help you”? owe the remaining 90 percent, but the city has made GOP seeks to end ban little effort to collect that on donation limits money. WASHINGTON — Republicans are making another Flight 93 memorial plans move forward run at overturning a ban on unlimited “soft money” conSOMERSET, Pa. — The tributions. Their Democratic National Park Service exrivals say it is an attempt pects that a contract will to bring big money back be awarded by autumn for to politics because the GOP construction of the Flight 93 can’t keep up with President National Memorial in westBarack Obama’s fundraising ern Pennsylvania. machine. Park Service SuperintenThe Republican National dent Joanne Hanley gives Committee is suing to overthat estimate now that the turn part of a ban on unlimgovernment has reached a ited contributions passed by deal to acquire the 275-acre Congress in 2002 and upheld crash site. by the Supreme Court a year Hanley met Saturday with later. the joint Flight 93 Memorial The suit is against the Task Force and the Flight 93 Federal Elections CommisAdvisory Commission. sion, which enforces the law, Flight 93 was en route but the Democratic National from Newark, N.J., to San Committee and House DemoFrancisco on Sept. 11, 2001, crats campaign chief Rep. when it was diverted by Chris Van Hollen have asked hijackers. The official 9/11 the court to let them defend Commission report said the the law as well. The GOP is hijackers crashed the plane fighting to keep the Demowhile passengers tried to crats out of the courtroom take control of the cockpit. dispute. The goal is to have the The party positions are $58 million memorial and ironic, given how the law got national park ready for the its start. The law, known as 10th anniversary of the Sept. McCain-Feingold after the 11 attacks. senators who sponsored it, restricts donations by individKan. looks to legalize uals to $28,500 per year to the political parties and prohibits full-strength beer the parties from accepting TOPEKA, Kan. — Six deany corporate or labor union cades have passed since Pro- contributions. hibition ended in Kansas and Before the law was enacta century since Carry Nation ed, the two parties were raisswung her last tomahawk. ing hundreds of millions in But Kansans still can’t buy soft money, with rich individa full-strength beer at the uals, businesses and unions grocery store. giving a million or more. ExGrocers and convenience perts originally thought that store owners argue the time Democrats had the most to has come to change all that. lose under the ban since the And once again — as they Democrats relied more heavhave over the past 20 years ily on those contributions. — they’re asking Kansas But Obama’s presidential lawmakers to pass legislacampaign raised record tion to allow them to sell amounts of money under the most full-strength beer. limits, with nearly 4 million Current law limits them to donors giving about $750 selling what some derisively million to his effort. call “near beer” that’s no A week after Obama won more than 3.2 percent alcothe election, the Republican hol by weight. National Committee filed “Nobody wants to buy suit, even though its canit. Nobody wants to drink didate for president, John it,” Lenexa BP convenience McCain, was one of the austore owner Aaron Jacobs thors of the soft-money ban, complained about his store’s and Republican President 3.2 product. “The only people George W. Bush had signed who do are the ones who it into law.
LUIZ VASCONCELOS-FOLHA IMAGEM/Associated Press
Firefighters review a plane that crashed at the Manacapuru river, near Manaus, in the Brazilian state of Amazonas, on Sunday. A handful of survivors seated at the rear of a plane that crashed in a muddy Amazon jungle river managed to open an emergency door and swim to safety before the aircraft sank, dragging at least 24 others to their death.
After Brazil plane crash 24 dead, 4 survive SAO PAULO — Four people at the rear of a plane that crashed in a muddy Amazon river managed to open an emergency door and swim to safety as the aircraft sank, dragging at least 24 others to their death. Most victims were members of a single family that chartered the plane to travel to a birthday party. Seven children died. “It was all very fast. The plane sank very fast,” 21-yearold survivor Brenda Moraes told GloboNews TV. “We only had a chance because we were sitting in the last rows and could open the emergency door.” Divers recovered two dozen bodies from the twin turboprop plane that plunged into the Manacapuru river in a heavy rainstorm Saturday afternoon, firefighter Maj. Jair Ruas Braga said. Authorities said they would investigate whether the plane, with a capacity of 21, had too many passengers.
protest, has been in custody since the Dec. 14 outburst at Bush’s joint news conference with Prime Minister Nouri alMaliki. He had been due to stand trial in December but his defense team won a delay as it sought to reduce the charges to simply insulting Bush. However, court spokesman Abdul-Sattar Bayrkdar said an appellate court rejected the request and ordered the journalist to face trial on Feb. 19 on the original charge. He did not say when the appeals court issued its decision.
Former president will run in June vote in Iran
TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s former reformist president declared Sunday that he will run for president again in the country’s upcoming elections, posing a serious challenge to hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. There had been speculation for months that Mohammed Khatami would seek the presidency in the June 12 vote. The 65-year-old popular reformist is a powerful counterpoint to Military: 2 Gaza rockets Ahmadinejad, whose mixture of Western defiance and fiery hit southern Israel nationalism sharply contrasts JERUSALEM — Two rockKhatami’s tempered tones and ets fired by Palestinian miliappeals for global dialogue. tants struck southern Israel “I seriously announce on Sunday, Israel’s military my candidacy in the next said, violating an informal (presidential) election,” he truce even as Israel and Gaza’s announced Sunday during a Hamas rulers appeared to meeting with his supporters. hurry closer to a long-term Khatami said it was imposcease-fire deal two days before sible for someone like himself Israeli elections. who was interested in the The Gaza Strip’s strongman fate of Iran to remain silent. was in Syria, consulting with He said he decided to run behis Hamas bosses about the cause he was “attached to the truce talks, while Israel’s decountry’s greatness and the fense minister warned Israelis people’s right to have control they would have to pay a painful price as part of any deal. The flurry of activity came just two days before Israelis elect a new government expected to take a harder line in talks with the Palestinians. Israel unilaterally ended a blistering, three-week offensive in Gaza, meant to halt years of rocket fire on southern Israeli communities, last month. Some 1,300 Palestinians were killed, according to Gaza health officials, and the government said 13 Israelis also died. Vast areas of Gaza were destroyed or heavily damaged. Hamas announced its own cease-fire the same day.
over their own fate.” Khatami’s landslide presidential victory in 1997 defeated hard-liners who ruled Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. He is credited with relaxing some of Iran’s rigid restrictions on cultural and social activities, but he left office in 2005 widely discredited among his political base after hard-line clerics stifled the bulk of his reform program.
being aware that all this is out there because ... half of the world is light-polluted.” It’s estimated that about one fifth of the world’s population and more than two-thirds in the U.S. cannot see the Milky Way from their homes.
Sri Lanka: 15,000 civilians flee war zone
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — More than 15,000 civilians have fled Sri Lanka’s northern war New Zealand keeps zone over the last three days, town in the dark an official said Sunday, as TEKAPO, New Zealand — government forces appeared This little town is in the dark poised to crush the separatist and proud of it. Tamil Tigers. Where other places greet Meanwhile, attacks in the the night by lighting up their north killed at least 21 rebels streets and tourist attractions, over the weekend, according this one goes the other way to the military. — low-energy sodium lamps The military’s relentless ofare shielded from above, and fensive in recent months has household lights must face almost routed the rebels, virtudown, not up. ally ending their 25-year war The purpose: to bring out the for a separate Tamil nation in stars. the Sinhalese-majority country. The town of 830 people on But the United Nations and New Zealand’s South Island is aid agencies have expressed on a mission to protect the sight concern for the estimated of the night sky, even as it dis250,000 civilians trapped in the appears behind light and haze shrinking sliver of land still in many parts of the world. controlled by the Tigers. InterThe ultimate prize would be national organizations includUNESCO’s approval for the ing the Red Cross have urged first “starlight reserve,” and both sides to let the noncombaalready the “astro tourists” are tants out of the conflict zone. coming. “So far on Sunday, 4,600 A group of 25 are huddled at civilians have come to the midnight on a bare New Zeagovernment areas,” military land hilltop, their faces numbed spokesman Brig. Udaya by an icy wind as they gaze up Nanayakkara said. at the Milky Way. He said 5,600 fled the war “It’s awesome, I mean it’s zone on Saturday while anothlike beyond words,” says Sier 5,000 crossed over Friday, mon Venvoort, 46, a managebringing the total for the three ment consultant from Amster- days to 15,200. dam. “You see so much you The government accuses aren’t aware of.” the rebels of holding civilians “You know that two genera- as human shields, a charge the tions now are growing up not rebels deny.
Iraqi shoe thrower due in court BAGHDAD — The Iraqi journalist who threw his shoes at ex-President George W. Bush faces trial next week for allegedly assaulting a foreign leader after an appellate court refused to reduce the charge, a judicial official said Sunday. Muntadhar al-Zeidi, 30, who won folk hero status throughout the Arab world for his
FRASER GUNN/Associated Press
A stone chapel sits on the edge of Lake Tekapo under the sparkling sky in New Zealand’s South Island on Nov. 2, 2007. Tekapo’s town folk are on a mission to protect the vast starry blanket spanning their heavens, even as the night sky disappears behind light and air pollution around the globe.
A8
D A I L Y
Stimulus
expects Obama’s stimulus package to pass the Senate, but he warned that it could Continued from A1 damage the U.S. economy in expected to pass the Senate the future. on Tuesday. The House had A stark critic of Obama’s already passed its $819 billion approach to repairing the version of the measure. badly damaged economy, Lawmakers were likely Cornyn said he believes passto begin reconciling those ing the measure with minimal differences later this week, Republican support must be with Obama still pressing to a major disappointment to have the stimulus measure on Obama. He argued that the his desk for signing by midpresident’s stimulus package month. is loaded with pet Democratic But without the infusion of spending projects and is “just federal money to state and spending as far as the eye local governments, the coun- can see.” try may still face “a vicious Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., cycle of layoffs, falling home rejected Democratic criticism values, lower property taxes, that his fellow Republicans more layoffs,” said Lawrence were dragging out passage of Summers, chairman of the the bill. White House National Eco“It’ll pass this week, but nomic Council. we want some time to go Rep. Barney Frank, Dthrough it, we want some Mass., the chairman of the time for the American people Banking Committee, chided to be able to look at it,” EnRepublicans for ignoring the sign said. outcome of the November Republicans claim that election. Democrats have failed to “We had an election last learn the lessons of history, year which had pretty dearguing that an Obama-style cisive results in the White stimulus did not work in the House, the Senate and the 1930s, when President FrankHouse. And it did say that lin D. Roosevelt faced similar public spending for improved economic upheaval. infrastructure, to keep bridgSummers was blunt in rees from crumbling, to keep jecting the criticism. cops and firefighters working “Those who presided over is a good thing,” Frank said. the last eight years, eight The Senate measure was years that brought us to the pared back from more than point where we inherited $900 billion to entice a handtrillions of dollars in deficits, ful of necessary Republican an economy that’s collapsvotes in support of the legisla- ing more rapidly that in any tion. The House bill passed time in the last 50 years, don’t without a single Republican seem to be in a strong posivote in its favor, a rebuke to tion to lecture about the lesObama’s vow to take the desons of history,” he said. bilitating partisan heat out of “We need an approach Washington politics. that’s very different from the Republican Sen. John approach that brought us to Cornyn of Texas said he this point,” Summers said.
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Monday, February 9, 2009
H E R A L D
84 killed in deadliest-ever Australian wildfires Tanalee Smith
Wildfires burning since Friday
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
HEALESVILLE, Australia — Entire towns have been seared off the map by wildfires raging through southeastern Australia, burning people in their homes and cars and raising the death toll to 84 on Sunday in the deadliest blaze in the country’s history. Searing temperatures and wind blasts created a firestorm that swept across a swath of the country’s Victoria state, where at least 700 homes were destroyed and all of the victims died. More victims were expected to be found, officials said. “Hell in all its fury has visited the good people of Victoria,” Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said. “It’s an appalling tragedy for the nation.” The skies rained ash and trees exploded in the inferno, witnesses said, as temperatures of up 117ºF combined with blasting winds to create furnace-like conditions. The town of Marysville and several hamlets in the Kinglake district, both about 50 miles north of Melbourne, were utterly devastated. At Marysville, a winter tourism town that was home to about 800 people, up to 90 percent of buildings were in ruins, witnesses said. Police said two people died there. “Marysville is no more,” Senior Constable Brian Cross told the AP as he manned a checkpoint Sunday on a road leading into the town. At least 18 of the deaths were from the Kinglake area, where residents said the fire hit with barely any notice. Mandy Darkin said she was working at a restaurant “like nothing was going on” until they were suddenly told to go home. “I looked outside the window and said: ‘Whoa, we are out of here, this is going to be bad,’ ” Darkin said. “I could see it coming. I just remember the blackness and you could hear it, it sounded like a
Marysville
Melbourne
VICTORIA
Warragul
Yarram 0 0
50 mi
Tasman Sea
50 km
0 0
1,000 mi
Coral Sea
1,000 km
AUSTRALIA Brisbane Perth Canberra
Indian Ocean
Sydney
Pacific Ocean
Detail
SOURCE: ESRI, Australian Bureau of Meteorology, Fire Information for Resource Management System¬
AP
telling him, “You’re still here, mate.” Police said they were hampered from reaching burnedout areas to confirm details of deaths and property loss. At least 80 people were hospitalized with burns. On Sunday, temperatures in the area dropped to about 77ºF but along with cooler conditions came wind changes that officials said could push fires in unpredictable directions. Thousands of exhausted RICK RYCROFT/Associated Press volunteer firefighters were Firefighters work near Kinglake, northeast of Melbourne, battling about 30 uncontrolled Australia, on Sunday. Towering flames razed entire towns in fires Sunday night in Victoria, southeastern Australia and burned fleeing residents in their officials said, though condicars as the death toll rose to 84 on Sunday, making it the tions had eased considerably. country's deadliest fire disaster. It would be days before they were brought under control, even if temperatures stayed train.” filled their trucks from ponds down, they said. Only five houses were left and sprayed down spot fires. Residents were repeatedly standing out of about 40 in There were no other signs of advised on radio and televione neighborhood that an As- life. sion announcements to initiate sociated Press news crew flew From the air, the landscape their so-called “fire plan” — over. Street after street was was blackened as far as the whether it be staying in their lined by smoldering wrecks eye could see. Entire forests homes to battle the flames of homes, roofs collapsed inwere reduced to leafless, or to evacuate before the ward, iron roof sheets twisted charred trunks, farmland to roads became too dangerous. from the heat. The burned-out ashes. The Victoria Country But some of the deaths were hulks of cars dotted roads. A Fire Service said some 850 people who were apparently church was smoldering, only square miles were burned out. caught by the fire as they fled one wall with a giant cross Rudd, on a tour of the fire in their cars or killed when etched in it remained standing. zone, paused to comfort a man charred tree limbs fell on their Here and there, fire crews who wept on his shoulder, vehicles. :&"34 0' '"--*/( */ -07&
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LIFE&STYLE
PAGE 8
B
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2009
EDITOR | Elyssa Andrus • 344-2553 • eandrus@heraldextra.com
Setting the mood
with color
When choosing a color for your home, it’s worth considering the psychological effect a shade can have on your mood. Here is a list of colors and their emotional associations, some positive, others negative:
MATT ROURKE/Associated Press
A cable box sits on top of a television in Philadelphia in 2007.
Pay TV providers fret over pennypinching viewers Deborah Yao THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Yellow: cheerfulness, hope, energy, creativity, caution.
Purple: calm, uniqueness, meditation, bravery, royalty, spirituality.
Red: warmth, love, valor, glamour, celebration, danger.
White: cold, purity, cleanliness, goodness, austerity. COLOR MARKETING GROUP/Orlando Sentinel
Color affects mood, as every pop psychologist knows. Considering the pall of gloom cast by the dire economy, it's no wonder color-trend forecasters are predicting a bumper year for yellows and purples — the former to cheer us up, the latter to calm us down.
Yellows can help perk you up and purples can help mellow you out Jean Patteson
will be “mimosa yellow” — the golden-yellow of fluffy mimosa blossoms and the orange-based olor affects mood, champagne cocktail. as every pop psyMimosa reflects “the warmth chologist knows. and nurturing qualities of the sun, Considering properties we humans are drawn the pall of gloom to for reassurance,” says Eisecast by the dire man. “It’s also a hue that sparks economy, it’s no imagination and innovation.” wonder color-trend forecasters In other words, it’s well suited are predicting a bumper year for to a stalled economy in need of yellows and purples — the former bright ideas to spark a recovery. to cheer us up, the latter to calm Use mimosa yellow as an acus down. cent color — as paint on a single Not that everyone is rushing wall or pillows on a sofa, sugout to purchase paint or furnishgests Eiseman. “It’s marvelous ings in yellow and purple, just with gray or taupe. It gives them because those have been declared a lot more life.” the trendy colors for 2009. Yellow is also a top pick “No matter what the trends, of Debbie Zimmer, color and put colors in your home that you decorating expert at the Rohm feel good about,” advises Jack & Haas Paint Quality Institute in Fowler, an Orlando, Fla., interior Spring House, Pa. designer. “Take what the experts “But not school-bus yellow. A say, then adjust for your personal softer shade,” she says. taste.” “Yellow is a refreshing color. It With that in mind, here is what can brighten any interior space. a trio of color experts is saying: It’s terrific for sprucing up a Toast mimosa yellow. “Yellow house for potential resale. In an symbolizes sunshine, warmth, entrance hall, it’s really welcomoptimism and good cheer,” says ing.” Leatrice Eiseman, director of the Warm up to purple. Muted Pantone Color Institute in Seattle. shades of purple also will grow in She predicts the color of the year popularity and become one of the THE ORLANDO SENTINEL
C
year’s memorable colors, predicts Zimmer. “As we head toward a more difficult economy, we’ll see more conservative colors — dusty purple, lavender, violet,” she says. “The softer purple hues are soothing. The darkest hues provide a dramatic backdrop for brighter accent colors.” Americans are looking for something uplifting, says Patricia Call, an interior designer in New York and a board member of the Color Marketing Group in Alexandria, Va. And that translates to purple power. “Historically, purple is associated with royalty. Now it’s being used for everything from cooking ranges to washing machines,” says Call. “In a bad economy, it gives you a lift to feel royal in the kitchen or laundry. “It’s also a wonderful accent color. Purple Murano-glass sink stoppers bring glamour to a bathroom. Purple vases or pillows add an exciting pop of color to a living room, especially in combination with sophisticated neutrals like grays and browns,” she says. “And as a wall color, the softer shades (of purple) are fabulous with southern natural light.”
Black: opulence, sophistication, drama, gloom, dread.
Green: nature, nurturing, fertility, restfulness, luck, jealousy.
Blue: tranquility, mystery, freshness, uniqueness.
Orange: warmth, exoticism, excitement, sociability, change.
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PHILADELPHIA — Porter McConnell gave up on pay TV last summer after noticing that monthly rates kept creeping up. Now with no satellite or cable TV, she watches her trusty old TV set with an antenna or she goes online to catch her favorite programs. Once in a while, she buys shows from Apple Inc.’s iTunes service. McConnell also upped her subscription to Netflix Inc.’s movies-by-mail service so she gets two DVDs at a time instead of one, for $15 a month. “Part of it is, I’ve got to economize,” said the 30-year-old Washington, D.C., resident who works at a nonprofit. McConnell is the kind of consumer who makes cable and satellite TV operators lose sleep. While a weak economy invariably makes people pinch pennies, this is the first time that viewing shows online has become a viable competitor to pay TV, making cutting the cord easier. Cable operators are starting to notice. Glenn Britt, chief executive of Time Warner Cable Inc., voiced his concern Wednesday in a quarterly earnings discussion with analysts. “We are starting to see the beginning of cord cutting,” he said. “People will choose not to buy subscription video if they can get the same stuff for free.” It’s tough to pin down how many people actually have given up cable — most of the evidence remains anecdotal — and which customers moved to a competitor. Still, Time Warner Cable, the nation’s secondlargest cable operator, lost 119,000 basic video customers in the fourth quarter, even after excluding subscribers it gave up from the sale of some cable systems. The company also posted slower growth in new digital cable TV, Internet and phone subscribers. More details will emerge as other cable and satellite TV operators report earnings in the coming weeks. This is not to say that the cable business is in trouble. It’s a mixed picture in this economy. While there will be some people who will completely give up their pay TV service, many folks will keep the subscription but cut back instead on going out to the movies. They also might give up a movie channel or two and buy fewer pay-per-view shows. But pay TV providers are right to be alarmed. Not only has a flood of TV shows and movies become available online, but the video quality has gotten better. Netflix is expanding its service that lets subscribers stream movies and shows from the Internet at no additional cost. And more and more people have home broadband — 57 percent of American adults, according to the Pew Internet and American Life Project. Throw in the worst economic slowdown in nearly a century and people question whether they still want to pay for cable or satellite. As of January 2008, the average monthly home cable bill was $84.59, up 21 percent from two years earlier, according to the Federal Communications Commission. “You’ve got these factors aligning at the right time,” said Bobby Tulsiani, senior analyst at Forrester Research. “This time there is a real, viable alternative” to cable. To be sure, there can be drawbacks to canceling pay TV. Watching shows on a PC still isn’t as comfortable as watching TV while relaxing on a couch. The quality of Internet video, while improving, still isn’t as good, especially for live events, in which video and audio might not be in sync. While some game consoles, Blu-ray players and other devices enable video to be seamlessly delivered over the Internet to a TV, hooking up a computer to the TV to watch the full gamut of online shows on a big screen can take some technical savvy. These downsides mattered to 36-year-old Peter Tierney, who lost his job two weeks ago as a Web producer for a New York advertising agency. With a wife and son to support, he called Time Warner Cable to cut his premium Japanese channel and whittle down his $180 monthly cable bill. Tierney ended up saving nearly $70 a month, after Time Warner Cable gave him discounts good for two years and he canceled the premium channels. CDR
SPORTS
SECTION
B
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2009
SPORTS EDITOR | Darnell Dickson • 344-2555 • ddickson@heraldextra.com
UTAH JAZZ
One-on-One
NBA
Smacked down
With JASON FRANCHUK and NEIL K. WARNER
Warriors get big 2nd half in win over Jazz
NBA ABUZZ WITH TRADE RUMORS AS ALL-STAR BREAK NEARS
Greg Beacham THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
1
Trade rumors are flying as the season approaches the all-star break. What player would you like to see the Jazz go after?
∫ Warner: Amare Stoudamire is intriguing. Utah may only have him for a year and a half (he’s a free agent in 2010), but maybe Phoenix would do it for Carlos Boozer to get cap relief. ∫ Franchuk: Anyone that would actually like to play in Utah. You’d think that would be simple because of the allure of young talent, the right piece realizing an NBA title could be in play and a respected head coach. But the Jazz won’t go after anyone because it’s a team with a strong nucleus under contract which hasn’t had many opportunities to play together because of injuries. Utah will bide its time.
2
What do you think of the Lakers’ trade of Vladimir Radmanovic for Charlotte’s Adam Morrison? ∫ Warner: I think it’s a good trade for the Lakers. When you can give up a guy who is averaging 5.9 points per game for a player who was the third overall pick in the draft, it’s a pretty low risk move that has high potential. The deal also gives the Lakers some salarycap relief. Radmanovic is owed $6.5 million next season and $6.9 million a year later in a player option. ∫ Franchuk: I was a big Morrison fan in college, when he was the mustachioed star at Gonzaga. He’s just not much of a pro, though. He’s coming off a major knee injury and he seems to be one of those players whose never-ending emotion at the college level doesn’t equate to the much longer NBA season. Kind of like Chicago’s Joakim Noah (of two-time national champ Florida fame). The trade itself helps both teams, though, as the Lakers needed an outside scorer and Charlotte’s abyss of a franchise gets a little added depth.
3
What event at the NBA All-Star Weekend interests you the most? The 3-point shootout, the slam dunk contest or the actual all-star game?
See NBA 1-ON-1, B3
BEN MARGOT/Associated Press
Utah Jazz’s Mehmet Okur, left, has his shot blocked by Golden State Warriors’ Ronny Turiaf, cener, as the Warriors’ Stephen Jackson helps on defense during the first half Sunday in Oakland, Calif.
OAKLAND, Calif. — Corey Maggette scored 24 points and Stephen Jackson had 20 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists in the Golden State Warriors’ latest impressive home victory, 116-96 over the Utah Jazz on Sunday night. Kelenna Azubuike scored 16 points and C.J. Watson added 14 for the Warriors, who routed Phoenix four days earlier in Oakland behind Jackson’s first career triple-double. With Jackson again catalyzing the offense, Golden State rolled past the Jazz with a 38-point third quarter and a strong finish, eventually going ahead by 25 in the waning minutes. Ronny Turiaf had 13 points filling in for injured starting center Andris Biedrins, while Monta Ellis scored 12 and Jamal Crawford had 11 — all in the second half. Deron Williams had 31 points, 10 assists WARRIORS 116 and seven JAZZ 96 rebounds for the Jazz, who slipped back into ninth place behind the Suns in the Western Conference with their first loss in four games. Utah has lost 10 of 12 on the road heading into a five-game homestand. Mehmet Okur had 21 points and nine rebounds, and C.J. Miles scored 10 points in his return to the Utah lineup after missing two games with bronchitis. But the Jazz repeatedly failed to exploit the NBA’s worst defensive team by hitting open shots, leaving excitable coach Jerry Sloan riveted to the bench for most of the second half. Utah’s awful third quarter featured five turnovers and 8-for-21 shooting while Golden State repeatedly hit its open shots and went to the free-throw line 15 times. Golden State opened a 74-60 lead midway through the third with a 12-2 run highlighted by back-to-back 3-pointers by Crawford. Crawford hit both shots while falling onto his back with a defender in his face near the Golden State bench, thrilling the crowd. Turiaf was a solid replacement, and rookie Anthony Randolph added six points and five rebounds in just 11 minutes of relief.
NBA
UVU MEN’S BASKETBALL
Lakers hand Cavaliers first home loss of year
On the verge of history
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CLEVELAND — Kobe Bryant was sick. The Cleveland Cavaliers just looked it. With Bryant suffering from the flu, Lamar Odom scored a season-high 28 points — 15 in the third quarter— and Paul Gasol scored 18 as the streakbusting Los Angeles Lakers dominated the second half and handed Cleveland its first home loss this season, 101-91
Toolson shoots for 2,000-point mark against Lamar Neil K. Warner
on Sunday to complete a 6-0 road trip. Bryant was not himself. LAKERS 101 The suCAVALIERS 91 perstar vomited MARK DUNCAN/Associated Press before the game, shivered with L.A. Lakers’ Lamar Odom (7) dunks chills throughout and needed against the Cleveland Cavaliers See LAKERS, B3 on Sunday in Cleveland.
DAILY HERALD
The stage is set. Tonight, barring injury, sickness, a sudden case of amnesia or an offnight, history will be made. Utah Valley University guard Ryan Toolson needs just 12 points to become the first UVU player to reach 2,000 career points when UVU hosts Lamar tonight at 7 p.m. in the McKay Events Center. “To be completely honest
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UVU GAMEDAY Place: McKay Events Center, Time: 7 p.m. today Opponent: Lamar; Conference: Southland Radio: KSTAR 1400 AM with Steve Watts and Matt Petersen Records: UVU 11-9, Lamar 12-9 Leading scorers: UV, Ryan Toolson 24.6; Lamar, Kenny Dawkins 16.3 about it, wonderful, congratulations, but it’s like Ryan’s going to have something to eat after the game. It’s going to happen. He’s going to eat
his next meal. It’s just part of life. It’s just part of normal sequences that’s going to
See UVU, B2 BLJ
B2
D A I L Y
AMBRIEFING
Monday, February 9, 2009
H E R A L D
TUESDAY
TUESDAY
Boys prep hoops Orem at Provo 7 p.m.
Girls prep hoops Springville at Mtn. View, 5:15 p.m.
U TA H VA L L E Y
LOCAL COLLEGE SPORTS
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
ON THE AIR
UVU drops final two games at classic
ST. GEORGE — Utah Valley University’s softball team dropped its final two games at the Red Desert Classic on Sunday, falling 14-4 to San Jose State and 10-2 to the University of Utah. “We cannot make mistakes,” UVU head softball coach Todd Fairbourne said. “Utah had some big hits to drive in runs, but almost all of them came after we should have been out of those innings. Amber (Sackett) threw better than the final score indicates; we played well, and we are going to get better. I am also proud of our backups that came in today and did a nice job overall.” In the second game of the day, UVU’s Cherylyn McGraw hit a deep two-run blast off of Utah’s ace pitcher, Ashley Smuda, in the third inning to give UVU (2-3) a short-lived 2-1 lead. Utah (3-2) then answered back scoring four unearned runs of off the Wolverines starter, Sackett, to take the 5-2 lead. A costly error also helped the Utes, as they score five more runs to account for the final tally. The Wolverines also fell in the first game on the day to San Jose State (2-3) in a five-inning, eight-run rule affair. In the game against SJSU, the Wolverines scored first, scoring three runs in the top of the first inning, as Kylee Steadman, Sackett and Lauren Augino all had RBI. SJSU quickly took control, as the Wolverines’ pitchers struggled, allowing eight total walks and a number of wild pitches in the game.
∫ Cougars lost battle with USC: At Los Angeles, the BYU men’s volleyball team dropped its second match to No. 5 USC on Saturday. The Cougars
5
TOP
No. 5 Louisville uses tough ‘D’ to win
Television Men’s College Basketball West Virginia at Pittsburgh 5 p.m. Kansas at Missouri 7 p.m.
ESPN ESPN
NHL N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey 5 p.m.
Versus
Women’s College Basketball Duke at North Carolina 5:30 p.m. ESPN2
Radio Men’s College Basketball Lamar at UVU 7 p.m. 1400 AM
looked to be on the verge of victory after winning the second and third sets, but eventually fell 32-34, 35-33, 31-29, 23-30, 10-15 to the Trojans. Despite the loss, several players recorded career and season highs on the night in kills, hitting percentage and assists. Freshman Russell Lavaja shattered his previous career record of six kills, contributing 13 of the Cougars’ 79. Fellow freshman Futi Tavana also improved his career-high kills to 16. With the loss, the Cougars dropped to 5-6 on the season and 3-3 in MPSF play. BYU will take the week off before hosting UC San Diego on Feb. 20 and 21.
NEW YORK — Jerry Smith scored a season-high 21 points and No. 5 Louisville came up with another outstanding defensive effort in a 60-47 victory over St. John’s on Sunday. It certainly wasn’t a great offensive day for the Cardinals (18-4, 9-1 Big East), who were coming off their first conference loss of the season to No. 1 Connecticut. Smith had 19 points in the second half to match Louisville’s total in the first half, its lowest of the season.
Boys Hoops 1. Provo (17-0) Can Tigers stop the run?
2. Lone Peak (15-2) Dillon drilling the 3s
3. Timpview (11-6) Kaufusi leading Timpview charge
∫ For more Top 25 scores, see scoreboard on B3.
4. Orem (13-4)
NHL
Offense stuttering in region play
Penguins blank Red Wings PITTSBURGH — Pavel Datsyuk scored twice, Marian Hossa added a goal midway through the third period and Ty Conklin shut out his former Pittsburgh Penguins teammates, leading the Detroit Red Wings to a 3-0 victory Sunday. Datsyuk scored on a power play midway through the second period after the Penguins squandered three opportunities with the man advantage in the first. Conklin didn’t need much help after that, turning aside all 25 Pittsburgh shots. Datsyuk added his second of the game and 22nd of the season with 2:12 remaining. ∫ For more NHL scores, see scoreboard on B3.
5. Pl. Grove (12-6) Best six-loss team in the state?
Girls Hoops 1. Am. Fork (16-2) Starting to smell the playoffs
2. Springville (14-2) Win tomorrow puts Devils in great spot
3. Lone Peak (12-7)
Fitzgerald leads NFC over AFC Jaymes Song
Still can tie for second with some help
PRO BOWL
Fitzgerald also took home keys to a new Cadillac. “I’m just glad we won, that’s HONOLULU — With a huge field goals, and the NFC rallied the most important thing,” he red lei around his neck and to a 30-21 victory over the said. a wide grin that could have AFC. The Arizona Cardinals’ On a sweltering day, with 60 stretched across Oahu, Larry All-Pro receiver, coming off percent humidity, Kurt WarFitzgerald held up the gleama record-breaking postseason ner started for the NFC and ing, silver MVP trophy. It spar- and a spectacular Super Bowl played just one series before kled in the sunshine as much as in a loss to the Pittsburgh Steel- making way for Brees. Warhis game. ers, earned MVP honors. ner was just 1-of-2 for 8 yards. The only problem: It wasn’t But he said the victory over the Lombardi Trophy. the AFC, which featured three NFC wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald caught five passes members of the Steelers’ defor 81 yards and two touchfense, didn’t ease the pain from Fitzgerald, of the Arizona Cardinals, pulls in a touchdown downs, 44-year-old John Carthe Super Bowl. at the Pro Bowl on Sunday. ney kicked two fourth-quarter “No, not one bit,” he said.
4. Pl. Grove (11-7)
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Not as potent without Finau
5. Mtn. View (15-3) Big boost from Timpview victory
Wrestling 1. Payson RONEN ZILBERMAN/Associated Press
The Lions were tops in Region 7; can they do the same at state?
2. Springville
UVU
Cutting kilowatts: much easier than cutting calories.
For UVU fans, there will be more to watch than just Toolson shoot for history. There Continued from B1 are some other interesting stohappen with Ryan,” said Utah rylines, such as the continual Valley coach Dick Hunsaker. emergence of Tyray Petty, “Again, congratulations, but who recorded a double-double frankly it’s part of the season (10 points and 10 rebounds) in and part of his career.” just 21 minutes against AcadToolson averages 24.6 emy of Art. points per game and is the UVU faithful can also follow nation’s sixth-leading scorer. the comeback of senior point He currently holds the highest guard Josh Olsen, who continsingle-game scoring record in ues to play well after returning the NCAA this season with 63 from an ankle injury. Olsen points, and is also the second has averaged 15 points in the best free throw shooter in the past two games and is shooting country this year with a 92.8 58 percent from the field. free throw percentage. The Wolverines as a whole The milestone just won’t be have won two of their past the same for Toolson unless three games and have not UVU can post a win, and that dropped below .500 all season. will be a tough feat. Lamar It’s important to beat Lamar comes in with a 12-9 record because following Monday and includes a win over Texas night’s game, UVU embarks Tech. on its longest road trip of the Lamar is coming off a 59-57 year. The Wolverines will road win at Central Arkansas. play at New Jersey Institute Senior guard Kenny Dawkins of Technology and then travel leads the Cardinals, averaging to Savannah State in Georgia 16.3 points per game, and is fol- before crossing the country to lowed closely by senior guard play at San Jose State. Brandon McThay (13.8) and seThe game can be heard on nior forward Jay Brown (13.6). KSTAR 1400 AM.
Local sports schedule TODAY
BYU SPORTS
WOMEN’S GOLF at Northrup Grumman Regional Challenge Palos Verde, Calif.
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
WOMEN’S GOLF at Northrup Grumman Regional Challenge Palos Verde, Calif.
M BASKETBALL vs. Colorado St. 6 p.m. TV: The Mtn. Radio: 1160 AM (102.7 FM) W BASKETBALL at Colorado St. 7 p.m.
“ WE HAVE LOTS OF BRIGHT IDEAS FOR ENERGY EFFICIENCY.” Lowering your energy
WOMEN’S GOLF at Northrup Grumman Regional Challenge Palos Verde, Calif.
intake is easy and painless. Installing compact fluorescent light bulbs, turning down your thermostat, making simple home improvements – they all add up to lower electricity use. We also have programs and incentives to help you save even more. You’ll find all © 2009 Rocky Mountain Power
the answers at rockymountainpower.net.
UVU SPORTS
FLASH
JAZZ
MEN’S BASKETBALL vs. Lamar 7 p.m. TV: None Radio: 1400 AM
UTAH FLASH at Erie 5 p.m. TV: None Radio: None
UTAH FLASH at Fort Wayne 5 p.m. TV: None Radio: None
UTAH JAZZ vs. L.A. Lakers 7 p.m. TV: KJZZ Radio: 1320 AM
The Red Devils will really need to be at their best to challenge in 4A
3. Pleasant Grove The Vikings were dominant at region but have bigger goals in mind
4. Spanish Fork Dons got three individual titles at the Region 4 meet
5. Mountain View Fredrickson has to be one of the favorites in the 119-pound division
Watney hangs on to win Buick Invitational THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN DIEGO — Nick Watney appeared to be along for the ride Sunday until making two birdies over the final three holes to take advantage of a late collapse by John Rollins and win the Buick Invitational. Watney knocked in a 40-foot birdie putt from the fringe on the par-3 16th, then completed his five-shot rally with a two-putt birdie on the 18th hole. He closed with a 4-under 68 for his second career victory. Rollins let this one get away. He had a three-shot lead with five holes to play until making a bogey with a poor chip on the 14th, another bogey from a plugged lie in the bunker on the 16th, and failing to hit the green on the par-5 18th, leading to a par. He shot a 74. Watney finished at 11-under 277 — the same total Ryuji Imada had last year when he was runner-up by eight shots to Tiger Woods, who has not played since knee surgery after winning the U.S. Open in June at Torrey Pines.
Monday, February 9, 2009
D A I L Y
SCOREBOARD Prep schedule Tuesday BOYS BASKETBALL Region 7 Orem at Provo, 7 p.m. Timpview at Tooele, 7 p.m. GIRLS BASKETBALL Region 7 Orem at Provo, 5:15 p.m. Springville at Mountain View, 7 p.m. Timpview at Tooele, 5:15 p.m. Region 8 Emery at Salem Hills, 7 p.m. Region 14 ALA at North Summit, 7 p.m.
Wednesday BOYS BASKETBALL Region 4 American Fork at Pleasant Grove, 7 p.m. Lehi at Lone Peak, 7 p.m. Timpanogos at Spanish Fork, 7 p.m. Region 7 Springville at Mountain View, 7 p.m. Region 8 Salem Hills at North Sanpete, 7 p.m. Region 14 North Summit at ALA, 7 p.m. GIRLS BASKETBALL Region 4 American Fork at Pleasant Grove, 5:15 p.m. Lehi at Lone Peak, 5:15 p.m. Timpanogos at Spanish Fork, 5:15 p.m. WRESTLING State 4A, 5A meet at UVU
Thursday GIRLS BASKETBALL Region 8 Salem Hills at North Sanpete, 7 p.m. Region 14 South Summit at ALA, 7 p.m. WRESTLING State 4A, 5A meet at UVU
Friday BOYS BASKETBALL Region 7 Orem at Payson, 7 p.m. Provo at Timpview, 7 p.m. Tooele at Springville, 7 p.m. Region 8 Juan Diego at Salem Hills, 7 p.m. Region 14 ALA at South Summit, 7 p.m. GIRLS BASKETBALL Region 7 Orem at Payson, 5:15 p.m. Provo at Timpview, 5:15 p.m. Tooele at Springville, 5:15 p.m. WRESTLING State 4A, 5A meet at UVU SWIMMING State 5A meet at BYU, 5 p.m.
Saturday SWIMMING State 5A meet at BYU, noon
Golf PGA-Buick Invitational Sunday At San Diego Purse: $5.3 million South Course - Torrey Pines; 7,628-yards North Course - Torrey Pines; 6,915-yards Final Round Nick Watney, $954,000 69-69-71-68—277 John Rollins, $572,400 70-64-70-74—278 Lucas Glover, $307,400 69-73-69-68—279 Camilo Villegas, $307,400 63-70-74-72—279 Matt Jones, $212,000 70-73-74-64—281 Mathew Goggin, $190,800 69-70-73-70—282 Bubba Watson, $159,663 71-68-77-67—283 Ben Crane, $159,663 69-74-70-70—283 C. Hoffman, $159,663 71-66-74-72—283 Luke Donald, $159,663 70-69-71-73—283
NBA 1-on-1
Hunter Mahan, $108,650 Bill Haas, $108,650 Jeff Klauk, $108,650 J.J. Henry, $108,650 Aaron Baddeley, $108,650 Charles Warren, $108,650 N. Thompson, $82,150 Paul Goydos, $82,150 Webb Simpson, $64,236 Dustin Johnson, $64,236 Ryuji Imada, $64,236 Harrison Frazar, $64,236 Dean Wilson, $64,236 Scott Sterling, $48,760 P. Harrington, $48,760 Jonathan Kaye, $36,069 Jason Dufner, $36,069 Retief Goosen, $36,069 Robert Garrigus, $36,069 Ted Purdy, $36,069 Tommy Gainey, $36,069 Marc Leishman, $36,069 J.B. Holmes, $36,069 Tag Ridings, $36,069 Lee Janzen, $25,024 Aron Price, $25,024 Davis Love III, $25,024 Jason Day, $25,024 Kevin Sutherland, $25,024 Rod Pampling, $25,024 George McNeill, $25,024 Jesper Parnevik, $17,053 Brandt Snedeker, $17,053 Phil Mickelson, $17,053 Tom Pernice, Jr., $17,053 Jarrod Lyle, $17,053 Nathan Green, $17,053 Charles Howell III, $17,053 David Mathis, $17,053 Ben Curtis, $13,038 John Senden, $13,038 Carl Pettersson, $13,038 Ricky Barnes, $12,270 Bart Bryant, $12,270 Glen Day, $12,270 Arjun Atwal, $12,270 James Nitties, $11,713 Pat Perez, $11,713 Y.E. Yang, $11,713 Rick Price, $11,713 Stuart Appleby, $11,713 James Driscoll, $11,713 Fred Couples, $11,130
74-70-74-66—284 72-70-72-70—284 71-73-69-71—284 70-71-71-72—284 66-76-70-72—284 74-69-68-73—284 75-70-70-70—285 72-66-72-75—285 72-73-71-70—286 74-71-72-69—286 70-72-75-69—286 69-70-75-72—286 71-73-71-71—286 69-72-75-71—287 71-74-74-68—287 70-73-73-72—288 70-70-75-73—288 71-71-73-73—288 68-74-73-73—288 74-71-70-73—288 77-69-73-69—288 74-68-72-74—288 73-70-71-74—288 71-72-77-68—288 74-72-70-73—289 72-72-73-72—289 66-77-74-72—289 69-76-70-74—289 77-68-74-70—289 72-74-73-70—289 71-70-71-77—289 71-74-72-73—290 75-68-73-74—290 70-72-73-75—290 75-68-76-71—290 71-74-70-75—290 70-72-72-76—290 72-71-77-70—290 75-71-74-70—290 76-66-73-76—291 76-70-73-72—291 77-69-74-71—291 69-73-75-75—292 73-69-77-73—292 72-74-73-73—292 72-74-74-72—292 79-67-73-74—293 73-73-73-74—293 77-69-73-74—293 72-73-75-73—293 68-74-78-73—293 73-73-74-73—293 74-70-74-76—294
Kent Jones, $11,130 Jason Gore, $11,130 John Huston, $11,130 Matt Bettencourt, $11,130 Parker McLachlin, $10,759 D.A. Points, $10,759
∫ Warner: I have to say, the actual all-star game has become a bore to me. The dumb passes, the turnovers and the lack of effort on the defensive end has made the game a joke. I like the 3-point contest and last year was one of the better slam dunk contests in years.
∫ Franchuk: Anybody who’s shorter than me (6-2) and in the slam dunk contest will have me watching, though I yearn for the days of guys like Larry Bird, Mark Price and Craig Hodges firing from long range.
Final Round x-won on second playoff hole x-Vance Veazey $108,000 67-69-68-69—273 Garrett Willis $64,800 70-69-68-66—273 Jeff Gove $40,800 69-68-68-70—275 Henrik Bjornstad $26,400 69-67-71-69—276 Jim Herman $26,400 67-70-68-71—276 Rich Barcelo $19,425 69-69-71-68—277 Bryan DeCorso $19,425 73-68-66-70—277 Rafael Gomez $19,425 67-68-71-71—277 Len Mattiace $19,425 72-69-64-72—277 Scott Gardiner $15,000 69-71-73-65—278 John Riegger $15,000 72-68-70-68—278 Dustin Risdon $15,000 70-71-67-70—278 Skip Kendall $10,600 67-69-74-69—279 C. Carranza $10,600 67-76-67-69—279 Neal Lancaster $10,600 70-68-70-71—279 Justin Hicks $10,600 71-72-64-72—279 Chris Smith $10,600 68-70-68-73—279 Camilo Benedetti $10,600 68-69-68-74—279 Also D. Summerhays $2,055 74-69-71-72—286
Hockey NHL standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L OT Pts New Jersey 33 17 3 69 Philadelphia 28 15 9 65 N.Y. Rangers 29 19 5 63 Pittsburgh 26 24 5 57 N.Y. Islanders 16 31 5 37
Yes, they’re older. But that slow start by injuries hasn’t kept the Spurs from the hunt. And that “rest” will come in handy down the road. Of course, we don’t need to ∫ Warner: I think you have to mention their experience at like the Jazz to put together a winning. The team that’ll strong second half and perhaps fall apart like a Hollywood finish as high as third in the marriage is Atlanta, which is Western Conference. The team fourth in the East but is about that I think will fade is Phoeto embark on a six-game nix. The Suns are not a real western road trip which will patient team and are actively set the course for the rest of shopping most of the players the season. Pleasure knowing on their roster. They seem like you, Hot-lanta. a team that just wants to get The Jazz host the Lakers the season over with. on Wednesday. Are the Lakers Utah’s biggest ∫ Franchuk: This must come NBA rival? as somewhat of a surprise to NBA fans, but San Antonio ∫ Warner: No question. I will be the team to watch.
5
20 field-goal tries. “I missed a lot of easy looks that I usually make.” Continued from B1 The Cavaliers came in 23-0 intravenous fluids at halftime. at Quicken Loans Arena, but But Odom picked up the offen- were stopped by the Lakers, sive slack, helped contain LeB- who are gaining a reputation ron James on defense, and was for stopping streaks. the biggest factor in the Lakers outscoring the Cavaliers 50-30 ∫ Spurs 105, Celtics 99: At Bosafter halftime. ton, Roger Mason pulled up It’s been a tough few days and leaned into a 3-pointer with for Cleveland. First, guard Mo 20.4 seconds left, and Tim DunWilliams was bypassed for can scored 23 points with 13 the second time as an All-Star. rebounds to lead San Antonio. Then, James had his apparent historic triple-double in New ∫ Trail Blazers 109, Knicks 108: York downgraded by an NBA At Portland, Ore., Brandon review, and now, the Cavaliers Roy’s finger-roll at the buzzer have had their invincibility at gave Portland a victory. Trahome stripped by the roadvis Outlaw made a jumper weary Lakers. with 31.9 seconds left to pull “You have to give the LakPortland within one at 108-107, ers credit,” said James, who and Al Harrington missed a scored 16 but missed 15 of his layup on the other end for New
York. The Trail Blazers called a timeout with 4.3 seconds left before Roy took an inbound pass from Rudy Fernandez and drove for the winning layup.
NBA SCOREBOARD
3-Point Goals—New Jersey 5-14 (Harris 3-5, Hayes 1-3, Anderson 1-4, Dooling 0-2), Orlando 6-20 (Pietrus 4-5, Lewis 2-5, Turkoglu 0-1, Johnson 0-2, Lee 0-3, Redick 0-4). Fouled Out—Anderson. Rebounds—New Jersey 52 (Lopez 12), Orlando 56 (Howard 16). Assists—New Jersey 19 (Harris 12), Orlando 17 (Turkoglu 8). Total Fouls—New Jersey 24, Orlando 18. Technicals—New Jersey coach Frank, Johnson. Flagrant Foul—Harris. A—16,533 (17,461).
NBA standings
Utah Golden State GB — 15 17 ½ 19 ½ 23 GB — 9 11 19 27 ½ GB — 12 17 18 20 ½ GB — 3½ 4 4½ 20 ½ GB — 2½ 5½ 16 ½ 21 GB — 12 ½ 25 29 ½ 31
Sunday’s results San Antonio 105, Boston 99 L.A. Lakers 101, Cleveland 91 Orlando 101, New Jersey 84 Washington 119, Indiana 117 Miami 96, Charlotte 92 Portland 109, New York 108 Oklahoma City 116, Sacramento 113 New Orleans 101, Minnesota 97 Phoenix 107, Detroit 97 Golden State 116, Utah 96
Today’s games Phoenix at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Houston at Milwaukee, 6 p.m. New Orleans at Memphis, 6 p.m.
Sunday’s NBA boxes WARRIORS 116, JAZZ 96 UTAH (96) Brewer 3-6 0-2 6, Millsap 4-12 0-0 8, Okur 6-11 8-8 21, Miles 3-8 2-2 10, D.Williams 12-23 7-8 31, Korver 3-12 0-0 8, Harpring 2-6 0-0 4, Price 0-1 4-4 4, Koufos 0-0 3-4 3, Collins 0-0 0-0 0, Almond 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 33-79 25-30 96. GOLDEN STATE (116) Jackson 6-17 6-10 20, Azubuike 6-9 4-4 16, Turiaf 5-8 3-4 13, Crawford 2-6 5-5 11, Ellis 6-11 0-0 12, Maggette 9-14 6-7 24, Randolph 2-6 2-2 6, Watson 5-6 2-2 14, Morrow 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 41-79 28-34 116.
21 23
24 25
24 38
27 30
— 96 — 116
3-Point Goals—Utah 5-19 (Miles 2-3, Korver 2-8, Okur 1-2, Brewer 0-2, D.Williams 0-4), Golden State 6-13 (Watson 2-3, Jackson 2-4, Crawford 2-4, Maggette 0-1, Morrow 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Utah 54 (Okur 9), Golden State 41 (Jackson 10). Assists— Utah 20 (D.Williams 10), Golden State 24 (Jackson 8). Total Fouls—Utah 20, Golden State 24. A—19,174 (19,596). LAKERS 101, CAVALIERS 91 L.A. LAKERS (101) Walton 3-6 0-0 7, Odom 13-19 2-3 28, Gasol 6-15 6-8 18, Fisher 5-9 1-2 13, Bryant 8-17 3-3 19, Ariza 3-7 0-0 6, Farmar 1-7 0-0 2, Vujacic 2-4 0-0 4, Powell 2-4 0-0 4, Mihm 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 43-88 12-16 101. CLEVELAND (91) James 5-20 4-8 16, Wallace 1-4 0-0 2, Ilgauskas 9-16 4-6 22, Williams 7-19 2-2 19, Pavlovic 2-2 0-0 5, Varejao 2-6 2-2 6, Gibson 2-6 0-1 5, Szczerbiak 6-11 0-0 16, Hickson 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 34-87 12-19 91. L.A. Lakers Cleveland
30 32
21 29
31 16
19 14
— 101 — 91
3-Point Goals—L.A. Lakers 3-20 (Fisher 2-6, Walton 1-2, Odom 0-1, Ariza 0-2, Vujacic 0-2, Bryant 0-2, Farmar 0-5), Cleveland 11-23 (Szczerbiak 4-5, Williams 3-4, James 2-8, Pavlovic 1-1, Gibson 1-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—L.A. Lakers 56 (Odom 17), Cleveland 53 (Ilgauskas, Varejao 9). Assists—L.A. Lakers 25 (Gasol 6), Cleveland 22 (James 12). Total Fouls—L.A. Lakers 16, Cleveland 21. A—20,562 (20,562). SPURS 105, CELTICS 99 SAN ANTONIO (105) Finley 1-4 5-6 7, Duncan 9-16 5-5 23, Bonner 10-17 0-0 23, Parker 3-12 0-0 7, Mason 3-9 3-3 11, Ginobili 6-11 5-5 19, Thomas 3-5 0-0 6, Hill 3-3 1-2 7, Hairston 0-0 0-0 0, Bowen 0-2 0-0 0, Oberto 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 39-80 19-21 105. BOSTON (99) Pierce 9-17 1-2 19, Garnett 12-23 1-2 26, Perkins 5-5 0-0 10, Rondo 3-11 0-0 6, R.Allen 8-18 1-1 18, Powe 1-3 0-0 2, T.Allen 4-7 3-4 11, Davis 0-1 2-2 2, House 2-2 0-0 5. Totals 44-87 8-11 99. San Antonio Boston
22 23
38 29
14 24
31 23
— 105 — 99
3-Point Goals—San Antonio 8-21 (Bonner 3-6, Ginobili 2-4, Mason 2-6, Parker 1-3, Finley 0-1, Bowen 0-1), Boston 3-11 (House 1-1, Garnett 1-1, R.Allen 1-5, T.Allen 0-2, Pierce 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—San Antonio 46 (Duncan 13), Boston 43 (Garnett 12). Assists—San Antonio 21 (Parker 7), Boston 28 (Rondo 16). Total Fouls—San Antonio 19, Boston 20. A—18,624 (18,624). MAGIC 101, NETS 84 NEW JERSEY (84) Hassell 4-7 0-0 8, Anderson 1-5 0-0 3, Lopez 9-15 1-2 19, Harris 9-25 7-10 28, Hayes 6-15 0-1 13, Dooling 0-7 0-1 0, Boone 2-3 1-1 5, Douglas-Roberts 2-5 2-2 6, Williams 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 34-86 11-17 84. ORLANDO (101) Turkoglu 6-10 3-4 15, Lewis 4-12 4-5 14, Howard 9-13 12-18 30, Johnson 3-8 0-0 6, Pietrus 6-10 1-3 17, Lee 1-5 0-0 2, Redick 1-6 3-3 5, Gortat 2-4 0-0 4, Battie 3-5 0-2 6, Lue 0-0 2-2 2. Totals 35-73 25-37 101. New Jersey Orlando
18 32
27 27
20 20
19 22
— 84 — 101
∫ Suns 107, Pistons 97: At Auburn Hills, Mich., Steve Nash scored 15 and had a seasonhigh 21 assists, directing a balanced offense for Phoenix. ∫ Hornets 101, Timberwolves 97: At New Orleans, Sean Marks dunked with 7.8 seconds left to cap a career-high 18-point effort, and short-handed New Orleans overcame the ejection of David West. ∫ Magic 101, Nets 84: At Orlando, Fla., Dwight Howard had 30 points and 16 rebounds to lift the Orlando to a victory
WIZARDS 119, PACERS 117 INDIANA (117) Granger 9-15 7-7 29, Dunleavy 0-2 0-0 0, Murphy 6-12 5-5 18, Ford 7-11 9-10 23, Jack 4-8 6-6 16, Foster 1-2 1-2 3, Hibbert 2-3 0-0 4, Diener 0-3 0-0 0, Rush 4-10 1-1 11, Graham 1-2 0-0 2, Baston 4-4 1-1 9, Nesterovic 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 39-73 30-32 117. WASHINGTON (119) McGuire 1-1 0-2 2, Jamison 12-21 6-7 34, Songaila 4-6 5-5 13, James 3-7 0-0 8, Butler 12-24 9-10 35, McGee 1-5 1-2 3, Crittenton 1-3 0-0 2, Young 6-9 6-7 20, Dixon 0-0 0-0 0, Pecherov 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 41-80 27-33 119. Indiana Washington
37 29
26 32
31 31
23 27
— 117 — 119
3-Point Goals—Indiana 9-24 (Granger 4-7, Rush 2-4, Jack 2-4, Murphy 1-4, Foster 0-1, Graham 0-1, Dunleavy 0-1, Diener 0-2), Washington 10-17 (Jamison 4-7, Young 2-2, James 2-3, Butler 2-4, Pecherov 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Indiana 39 (Murphy 10), Washington 42 (Butler 13). Assists—Indiana 22 (Ford 7), Washington 24 (James 7). Total Fouls— Indiana 24, Washington 28. Technical—Indiana defensive three second. A—13,708 (20,173). TRAIL BLAZERS 109, KNICKS 108 NEW YORK (108) Harrington 7-15 3-3 19, Gallinari 2-3 0-0 6, Lee 10-15 9-9 29, Duhon 4-12 0-0 10, Chandler 2-6 0-0 4, Thomas 6-9 0-0 17, Robinson 8-16 0-0 19, Jeffries 1-2 0-0 2, Richardson 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 41-81 12-12 108. PORTLAND (109) Batum 2-3 0-0 4, Aldridge 8-15 0-2 16, Oden 7-11 3-5 17, Rodriguez 5-11 2-2 16, Roy 9-16 0-0 19, Przybilla 1-1 1-2 3, Bayless 1-2 2-2 5, Outlaw 8-16 5-6 23, Fernandez 2-5 1-2 6. Totals 43-80 14-21 109. New York Portland
27 36
23 23
32 23
26 27
— 108 — 109
3-Point Goals—New York 14-29 (Thomas 5-7, Robinson 3-8, Harrington 2-3, Gallinari 2-3, Duhon 2-7, Chandler 0-1), Portland 9-19 (Rodriguez 4-5, Outlaw 2-4, Bayless 1-1, Fernandez 1-4, Roy 1-4, Batum 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—New York 33 (Lee 11), Portland 51 (Oden 12). Assists—New York 27 (Duhon 10), Portland 24 (Roy 8). Total Fouls—New York 14, Portland 17. A—20,609 (19,980). HEAT 96, BOBCATS 92 CHARLOTTE (92) Howard 6-11 2-5 14, Diaw 4-8 0-0 10, Okafor 5-8 0-0 10, Felton 4-17 0-1 9, Augustin 10-19 1-2 27, Diop 4-6 0-0 8, Martin 1-2 1-2 3, Mohammed 1-4 0-0 2, Singletary 2-2 0-0 5, Ajinca 1-3 2-2 4. Totals 38-80 6-12 92. MIAMI (96) Marion 4-10 0-0 8, Haslem 6-8 2-2 14, Magloire 2-2 0-2 4, Chalmers 6-10 2-4 16, Wade 10-19 1-4 22, Anthony 2-3 0-0 4, Cook 6-10 0-0 16, Quinn 3-6 0-0 6, Beasley 2-4 0-0 4, Jones 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 42-75 5-12 96. Charlotte Miami
20 18
19 25
70-71-77-76—294 70-69-80-75—294 71-71-79-73—294 74-72-75-73—294 74-71-72-79—296 70-72-79-75—296
Sunday At Club de Golf de Panama Panama City Purse: $600,000 Yardage: 7,123; Par: 70
What team do you see coming on strong after the all-star break and what team do you see fading down the stretch?
Lakers
B3
Nationwide TourPanama Championship
4
Continued from B1
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Boston 42 11 .792 Philadelphia 25 24 .510 New Jersey 24 28 .462 New York 21 29 .420 Toronto 19 34 .358 Southeast Division W L Pct Orlando 38 12 .760 Atlanta 29 21 .580 Miami 27 23 .540 Charlotte 19 31 .380 Washington 11 40 .216 Central Division W L Pct Cleveland 39 10 .796 Detroit 27 22 .551 Milwaukee 24 29 .453 Chicago 22 29 .431 Indiana 20 32 .385 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct San Antonio 34 15 .694 New Orleans 30 18 .625 Houston 31 20 .608 Dallas 30 20 .600 Memphis 14 36 .280 Northwest Division W L Pct Denver 34 17 .667 Portland 31 19 .620 Utah 29 23 .558 Minnesota 17 33 .340 Oklahoma City 13 38 .255 Pacific Division W L Pct L.A. Lakers 41 9 .820 Phoenix 28 21 .571 Golden State 17 35 .327 L.A. Clippers 12 39 .235 Sacramento 11 41 .212
H E R A L D
22 26
31 27
— —
92 96
3-Point Goals—Charlotte 10-21 (Augustin 6-11, Diaw 2-3, Singletary 1-1, Felton 1-6), Miami 7-17 (Cook 4-7, Chalmers 2-4, Wade 1-2, Quinn 0-1, Marion 0-1, Jones
GF 165 167 135 167 128
GA 134 153 146 168 174
Northeast Division W L OT Pts 39 8 7 85 29 18 6 64 28 20 6 62 20 24 9 49 18 25 8 44 Southeast Division W L OT Pts Washington 34 16 4 72 Carolina 27 22 5 59 Florida 25 19 8 58 Tampa Bay 18 24 11 47 Atlanta 18 31 5 41 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division W L OT Pts Detroit 35 11 7 77 Chicago 29 14 8 66 Columbus 25 23 5 55 Nashville 25 25 3 53 St. Louis 22 24 6 50 Northwest Division W L OT Pts Calgary 30 18 4 64 Minnesota 27 22 3 57 Edmonton 26 23 4 56 Vancouver 24 20 8 56 Colorado 25 27 1 51 Pacific Division W L OT Pts San Jose 36 7 7 79 Anaheim 27 24 5 59 Dallas 26 19 7 59 Phoenix 24 25 5 53 Los Angeles 23 21 7 53 Boston Montreal Buffalo Toronto Ottawa
GF 188 162 161 157 122
GA 121 153 148 193 149
GF 178 142 146 134 153
GA 155 156 146 164 190
GF 199 172 142 128 150
GA 154 133 152 148 161
GF 161 134 146 154 146
GA 155 118 166 152 163
GF 172 156 162 136 134
GA 119 156 164 164 142
Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss or shootout loss. Sunday’s results Detroit 3, Pittsburgh 0 Philadelphia 3, Atlanta 2 Minnesota 3, Edmonton 2, SO Dallas 4, Nashville 1 Today’s games N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 5 p.m. Montreal at Calgary, 7 p.m. Tuesday’s games San Jose at Boston, 5 p.m. Colorado at Columbus, 5 p.m. Los Angeles at N.Y. Islanders, 5 p.m. Toronto at Florida, 5:30 p.m.
think if you polled Jazz fans and asked them what game they would want to see the most this season and what team they would want to beat the most, the Lakers would be the answer to both. There are always a thousand or more Laker fans that will be wearing Laker jerseys that always stir things up at the ESA. And of course, Jazz fans never miss out on a chance to boo Kobe. ∫ Franchuk: That’s the perception of the fans, and for good reason. Kobe, the comeand-go of Derek Fisher; glitz vs. hick. But the playoff series with Houston have been far more entertaining, and up-forgrabs.
against New Jersey, which played without Vince Carter. ∫ Heat 96, Bobcats 92: At Miami, Dwyane Wade shook off flu-like symptoms to score 22 points and regain the NBA scoring lead, rookie Mario Chalmers scored 16 and added a career-best 13 assists, and Miami held off Charlotte.
Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 5:30 p.m. Detroit at Nashville, 6 p.m. Vancouver at St. Louis, 6:30 p.m.
Football NFL playoffs schedule PRO BOWL Sunday, Feb. 8 At Honolulu NFC 30, AFC 21
No. 7 Stanford 76, Washington 54 No. 10 Texas A&M 86, Nebraska 43 No. 11 Florida 66, No. 12 Tennessee 57 Michigan State 52, No. 14 Ohio State 46 No. 15 Florida State 75, Miami 59 No. 16 Texas 77, Texas Tech 46 No. 17 Virginia 69, Virginia Tech 61 No. 19 Notre Dame 62, No. 25 DePaul 59 No. 20 Vanderbilt 72, Kentucky 62
Local women’s score Utah 64, Wyoming 57
Transactions
College hoops Men’s MWC standings Utah San Diego St. New Mexico BYU UNLV TCU Wyoming Colorado St. Air Force
Conference W L PCT 7 2 .778 7 2 .778 6 3 .667 5 3 .625 5 4 .556 4 5 .444 3 6 .333 3 6 .333 0 9 .000
All Games W L PCT 16 7 .696 17 5 .773 15 9 .625 17 5 .773 17 6 .739 13 10 .565 14 9 .609 8 15 .348 9 13 .409
Tuesday’s game TCU at UNLV, 8 p.m. (The Mtn.) Wednesday’s games Colorado State at BYU, 6 p.m. (The Mtn.) New Mexico at Air Force, 8 p.m. (CBS-C) San Diego State at Utah, 8 p.m. (The Mtn.)
Men’s Top 25 fared Sunday No. 5 Louisville 60, St. John’s 47 No. 7 Wake Forest 93, Boston College 76 No. 23 Illinois 66, No. 12 Purdue 48 No. 22 Washington 75, Stanford 68
Women’s Top 25 fared Sunday No. 2 Oklahoma 93, Oklahoma State 75 No. 3 California 77, Washington State 57 No. 6 Auburn 81, Alabama 54
◆CORALINE IN REAL 3D (PG) 11:45 2:15 4:45 7:15 9:45 ◆HE’S JUST NOT THAT INTO YOU (PG-13) 11:30 1:00 2:30 4:00 5:25 7:00 8:30 10:00 ◆PINK PANTHER 2 (PG) 11:40 12:50 2:00 3:10 4:20 5:30 6:40 7:50 9:00 10:15 ◆PUSH (PG-13) 12:05 4:10 7:30 10:10 ◆TAKEN (PG-13) 11:50 2:10 4:35 7:00 9:20 SLUMDOG MILLIONARE (R) 12:35 3:25 6:45 9:35 VALKYRIE (PG-13) 7:20 10:05
◆NEW IN TOWN (PG) 11:30 1:55 4:15 6:50 9:15 ◆UNINVITED (PG-13) 12:25 2:50 5:10 7:35 9:55 INKHEART (PG) 12:45 4:25 7:05 9:40 UNDERWORLD 3 (R) 12:10 2:35 4:55 7:25 9:50 PAUL BLART MALL COP (PG) 11:55 2:20 4:40 7:10 9:30 BRIDE WARS (PG) 11:35 1:50 4:30 6:55 9:10 GRAN TORINO (R) 12:20 3:30 6:25 9:05 BEDTIME STORIES (PG) 12:00 2:25 4:50
BEDTIME STORIES (PG) 1:55 4:25 BRIDE WARS (PG) 1:15 3:50 6:30 9:15 ◆CORALINE 3D (PG) 1:45 4:20 6:55 GRAN TORINO (R) 9:40 ◆HE’S JUST NOT THAT INTO YOU (PG-13) 1:05 4:05 7:05 10:05 HOTEL FOR DOGS (PG) 1:40 4:15 6:40 INKHEART (PG) 1:00 3:40 6:20 9:10
MALL COP (PG) 1:30 4:40 7:10 9:30 ◆PINK PANTHER 2 (PG) 2:15 4:45 7:15 9:45 ◆PUSH (PG-13) 2:00 4:50 7:30 10:15 TAKEN (PG-13) 12:30 2:55 5:15 7:35 9:55 UNDERWORLD 3 (R) 2:45 5:10 7:40 10:10 UNINVITED (PG-13) 2:35 4:55 7:45 10:00 VALKYRIE (PG-13) 7:25 10:15
Baseball American League KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Agreed to terms with INF-OF Mark Teahen on a one-year contract. National League PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Agreed to terms with 1B Ryan Howard on a three-year contract. WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Agreed to terms with LHP Scott Olsen on a one-year contract.
Basketball National Basketball Association CHARLOTTE BOBCATS—Signed F Cartier Martin to a second 10-day contract.
Hockey National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS—Assigned D Brendan Mikkelson to Iowa (AHL). COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS—Placed G Steve Mason on injured reserve, retroactive to Feb. 4. MINNESOTA WILD—Assigned D Kurtis Foster to Houston (AHL). American Hockey League GRAND RAPIDS GRIFFINS—Recalled D Brett Peterson from Phoenix (ECHL). WILKES-BARRE/SCRANTON PENGUINS— Recalled F Bryan Ewing from Wheeling (ECHL).
College INDIANA—Suspended junior men’s basketball G Devan Dumes indefinitely.
◆CORALINE 3D (PG) 11:00 12:05 1:35 2:45 4:10 5:25 6:45 8:05 9:25 ◆HE’S JUST NOT THAT INTO YOU (PG-13) 11:05 12:30 2:05 3:40 5:15 6:50 8:25 10:00 ◆PINK PANTHER 2 (PG) 12:00 2:25 4:50 7:30 10:05 ◆PUSH (PG-13) 11:00 1:45 4:30 7:05 9:50 BRIDE WARS (PG) 11:45 2:20 4:45 7:25 9:45 GRAN TORINO (R) 9:50
AUSTRALIA (PG-13) 3:15 6:50 10:25 DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL (PG-13) 4:30 7:05 9:40 MADAGASCAR 2 (PG) 2:25 3:05 4:40 5:25 7:00 7:45 9:35 10:20 QUANTUM OF SOLACE (PG-13) 2:20 7:15
INKHEART (PG) 11:05 1:45 4:25 7:15 ◆NEW IN TOWN (PG) 11:25 2:00 4:35 7:10 9:40 PAUL BLART MALL COP (PG) 11:30 1:55 4:55 7:35 9:55 ◆TAKEN (PG-13) 11:55 2:30 5:05 7:40 10:10 BENJAMIN BUTTON (PG-13) 11:00 2:40 6:35 10:10 ◆UNINVITED (PG-13) 12:30 2:55 5:20 7:45 10:15 UNDERWORLD 3 (R) 11:35 2:10 4:40 7:20 10:00
TALE OF DESPEREAUX
(G) 2:40 4:20 5:05 6:45
7:30 9:30 10:15 TRANSPORTER 3 (PG-13) 4:55 9:55 YES MAN (PG-13) 2:15 4:50 7:25 10:00
∫ Wizards 119, Pacers 117: At Washington, Caron Butler scored 15 straight points, including a game-winning 18-footer at the buzzer and Washington beat Indiana. ∫ Thunder 116, Kings 113: At Oklahoma City, Kevin Durant scored 39 points and the Oklahoma City Thunder held off Sacramento after blowing a 19-point second-quarter lead.
0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Charlotte 46 (Okafor 8), Miami 42 (Marion 10). Assists—Charlotte 26 (Felton 11), Miami 23 (Chalmers 13). Total Fouls— Charlotte 16, Miami 13. A—17,656 (19,600). HORNETS 101, TIMBERWOLVES 97 MINNESOTA (97) Gomes 8-14 0-0 21, Love 5-7 2-2 12, Jefferson 10-18 5-7 25, Telfair 5-11 3-5 14, Foye 4-15 2-2 10, Miller 2-6 2-3 7, Carney 2-7 1-2 6, Cardinal 0-3 0-0 0, McCants 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 37-84 15-21 97. NEW ORLEANS (101) Stojakovic 2-11 7-7 11, Bowen 2-3 0-0 4, West 4-7 1-2 9, Daniels 5-9 2-2 12, Butler 9-15 4-5 23, Posey 2-6 4-4 9, Marks 6-8 6-9 18, Brown 3-8 7-8 14, Wright 0-1 0-0 0, Armstrong 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 33-68 32-39 101. Minnesota New Orleans
31 24
21 25
28 27
17 25
— 97 — 101
3-Point Goals—Minnesota 8-27 (Gomes 5-6, Miller 1-4, Carney 1-4, Telfair 1-4, McCants 0-1, Cardinal 0-2, Foye 0-6), New Orleans 3-15 (Brown 1-1, Butler 1-3, Posey 1-4, Daniels 0-1, Stojakovic 0-6). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Minnesota 57 (Jefferson 14), New Orleans 38 (Butler 8). Assists—Minnesota 20 (Telfair 6), New Orleans 19 (Daniels 7). Total Fouls—Minnesota 26, New Orleans 19. Technical—Minnesota defensive three second. Flagrant Foul—West. Ejected—West. A—16,046 (17,188). THUNDER 116, KINGS 113 SACRAMENTO (113) Salmons 9-19 2-2 23, Thompson 3-7 0-1 6, Hawes 7-10 0-0 15, Udrih 11-14 3-4 29, Martin 7-16 7-7 23, Garcia 4-8 0-0 10, Williams 1-2 0-0 2, Brown 0-1 0-0 0, Moore 2-3 1-2 5. Totals 44-80 13-16 113. OKLAHOMA CITY (116) Durant 16-25 4-5 39, Green 6-13 3-4 15, Collison 5-5 5-7 15, Westbrook 3-14 5-7 11, Weaver 4-7 1-1 9, Watson 4-7 0-0 9, Krstic 6-10 2-2 14, Smith 1-4 2-2 4. Totals 45-85 22-28 116. Sacramento Oklahoma City
23 34
23 25
34 25
33 32
— 113 — 116
3-Point Goals—Sacramento 12-18 (Udrih 4-4, Salmons 3-6, Martin 2-3, Garcia 2-3, Hawes 1-1, Brown 0-1), Oklahoma City 4-11 (Durant 3-4, Watson 1-1, Weaver 0-1, Green 0-2, Westbrook 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Sacramento 39 (Thompson, Udrih, Hawes, Martin 6), Oklahoma City 46 (Westbrook, Green, Durant 7). Assists—Sacramento 23 (Salmons 11), Oklahoma City 23 (Westbrook 8). Total Fouls—Sacramento 22, Oklahoma City 15. Technical—Sacramento bench. A—18,271 (19,134). SUNS 107, PISTONS 97 PHOENIX (107) Hill 5-8 0-2 10, Stoudemire 7-13 4-5 18, O’Neal 7-16 6-8 20, Richardson 8-16 3-4 21, Nash 5-12 4-5 15, Amundson 0-1 4-6 4, Barbosa 8-11 0-0 17, Barnes 1-4 0-0 2, Dragic 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 41-83 21-30 107. DETROIT (97) Prince 5-9 0-0 11, Wallace 5-11 4-6 16, Brown 2-3 0-0 4, Iverson 8-22 9-12 25, Stuckey 4-8 0-0 8, McDyess 1-5 2-2 4, Maxiell 0-1 0-0 0, Hamilton 11-19 2-2 27, Afflalo 0-6 2-2 2, Johnson 0-1 0-0 0, Herrmann 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-85 19-24 97. Phoenix Detroit
29 29
33 21
21 24
24 23
— 107 — 97
3-Point Goals—Phoenix 4-11 (Richardson 2-5, Barbosa 1-2, Nash 1-2, Barnes 0-2), Detroit 6-16 (Hamilton 3-5, Wallace 2-6, Prince 1-3, Afflalo 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Phoenix 54 (O’Neal 10), Detroit 51 (McDyess 13). Assists—Phoenix 31 (Nash 21), Detroit 19 (Iverson 7). Total Fouls—Phoenix 21, Detroit 26. A—22,076 (22,076).
A D V E R T O R I A L
Local Doctors Restore Men’s Sex Life
Erectile Dysfunction Clinic Opens in Salt Lake City BY JEFF GOESTLER Men’s Health Consultant
4"-5 -",& $*5: t A team of local physicians are part of a new medical clinic that opened recently in Salt Lake City, specializing in only one unique, niche area – men’s sexual performance. Erectile dysfunction and premature ejaculation have long been a problem for millions of men nationwide. In spite of the popularity of recent medications such as Viagra, Levitra and Cialis, many men either are not helped by these medications or cannot take them due to medical conditions and adverse side effects. The Utah Male Performance Clinic employs several local physicians including Dr. James Overall and Dr. Paul Woodruff, both longtime local physicians in Salt Lake City. “We successfully help almost every patient we see here,” according to Steven Zak, Clinic Director, “and we’ve treated men from as young as twenty-one to as old as eighty-nine. Men with diabetes, heart conditions, bypass surgery, high blood
pressure, prostate problems and surgery, you name it and we’ve treated them. Regardless of age or medical condition, our results everyday are amazing.” All medications are FDA approved and no surgery is involved. “Our doctors can adjust the dosage for a man’s performance to 45-minutes, an hour, 90-minutes or longer,” according to Zak, “and we offer a simple guarantee: ‘If you don’t respond to our medication on the first visit, it’s free.” With that guarantee, local patients have nothing to lose. The clinic books appointments far in advance but occasionally can accommodate someone quickly. Saturday appointments are also available. Patients are assured of utmost privacy and professionalism with private waiting rooms and an all-male staff. Further information is available by calling (801) 265-1980. Out-of-towners can call Toll Free (800) 380-2990. Utah Male Performance Clinic, 4001 South 700 East, Suite 110, Salt Lake City. www.utahmaleclinic.com
B4
D A I L Y
Monday, February 9, 2009
H E R A L D
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
REQUEST FOR STATEMENTS OF QUALIFICATIONS - CONSULTING ENGINEERING SERVICES The North Fork Special Services District is requesting Statements of Qualifications (SOQs) from qualified consulting engineers interested in providing general engineering and technical services for water and wastewater projects. Work may include, but is not limited to, a 5-year Capital Improvements Plan (CIP) for the District s water system, continued upgrades to the wastewater treatment system, and various water distribution and storage projects.
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE The following described real property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, purchase price payable in lawful money of the United States of America at the time of sale, at the east main entrance of the Utah County Courthouse, a/k/a Fourth Judicial District Center, 125 North 100 West, Provo, Utah, on Friday, February 20, 2009, at the hour of 10:45 a.m. of that day for the purpose of foreclosing a deed of trust originally executed by Tony Joe Hansen, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., solely as nominee for lender, United Financial Mortgage Corp., its successors and/or assigns, covering real property located at approximately 4114 West Hayes Circle, Cedar Hills, Utah County, Utah, and more particularly described as:
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE The following described property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, payable in lawful money of the United States, at the front entrance of the Fourth District Courthouse, 125 North 100 West, Provo, Utah on Tuesday, March 2, 2009 at 3:30 p.m. of said day for the purpose of foreclosing the Deed of Trust dated October 30, 2006, executed by CRICKET ENTERPRISES, LLC, as Trustor, in favor of FAR WEST BANK, as Beneficiary, and FAR WEST BANK, as Trustee (the “Trust Deed�) and filed for recording on November 3, 2006 as Entry No. 148074:2006 of Official Records of Utah County, Utah. The Substitution of Trustee appointing Nathan S. Dorius as successor trustee was filed for recording with the Utah County Recorder on October 24, 2008 as Entry No. 115741:2008. The Notice of Default was recorded with the Utah County Recorder on October 24, 2008, as Entry No. 115742:2008. Trustee will sell at public auction to the highest bidder without covenant or warranty as to title, express or implied, possession, condition or encumbrances, including fees, charges, and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Trust Deed, to pay the remaining sums owing under the note secured by said Trust Deed, including delinquent property taxes, the real property situated in Utah County, Utah, described as follows:
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE The following described property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder at the South Main Entrance, Fourth Judicial District, American Fork Division, 75 East 80 North, American Fork, Utah, on February 20, 2009, at 2:00 pm of said day, for the purpose of foreclosing a trust deed originally executed on October 10, 2006 by Wade Stanton, as trustor, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for First Franklin, a division of National City Bank, its successors and assigns, covering the following real property purported to be located in Utah County at 644 West 300 South, Payson, UT 84651 (the undersigned disclaims liability for any error in the address), and more particularly described as: Commencing at the Southwest corner of Lot 1, Block 12, Plat “O�, Payson City Survey of Building Lots; thence North 188.571 feet; thence East 85 feet; thence South 188.571 feet; thence West 85 feet to the place of commencement. Together with all the improvements now or hereafter erected on the property, and all easements, appurtenances, and fixtures now or hereafter a part of the property. The current beneficiary of the trust deed is LaSalle Bank National Association, as Trustee and the record owner of the property as of the recording of the notice of default is Wade Stanton. The sale is subject to bankruptcy filing, payoff, reinstatement or any other circumstance that would affect the validity of the sale. If any such circumstance exists, the sale shall be void, the successful bidder s funds returned and the trustee and current beneficiary shall not be liable to the successful bidder for any damage. Bidders must tender to the trustee a $5,000.00 deposit at the sale and the balance of the purchase price by 12:00 noon the day following the sale. The deposit must be in the form of a cashier s check or bank official check payable to eTitle Insurance Agency. The balance must be in the form of a wire transfer, cashier s check, bank official check (credit union official checks are not accepted) or U.S. Postal money order payable to eTitle Insurance Agency. Cash payments are not accepted. A trustee s deed will be delivered to the successful bidder within three business days after receipt of the amount bid. DATED: January 19, 2009. eTitle Insurance Agency, Trustee 3269 South Main, #100 Salt Lake City, UT 84115 (801) 263-3400 Office Hours: 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. L&A Case No. 08-69844 ASH THIS COMMUNICATION IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT, AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Legal Notice 337767 Published in The Daily Herald January 26; February 2, 9, 2009.
AMENDED NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE The following described property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder at the South Main Entrance, Fourth Judicial District, American Fork Division, 75 East 80 North, American Fork, Utah, on February 20, 2009, at 2:00 p.m. of said day, for the purpose of foreclosing a trust deed originally executed on February 28, 2007 by Kaiulani W. Delgado, as trustor, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for First Franklin Financial Corp., an Op. Sub. Of MLB&T Co., FSB, its successors and assigns, covering the following real property purported to be located in Utah County at 537 East 1540 South, Lehi, UT 84043 (the undersigned disclaims liability for any error in the address), and more particularly described as: LOT 16, PLAT A, QUAIL RUN TOWN HOMES AT SPRING CREEK RANCH, RESIDENTIAL PLAN COMMUNITY, according to the official plat thereof recorded in the office of the Utah County Record Together with all the improvements now or hereafter erected on the property, and all easements, appurtenances, and fixtures now or hereafter a part of the property. The current beneficiary of the trust deed is LaSalle Bank National Association as Trustee and the record owner of the property as of the recording of the notice of default is Kaiulani W. Delgado. The sale is subject to bankruptcy filing, payoff, reinstatement or any other circumstance that would affect the validity of the sale. If any such circumstance exists, the sale shall be void, the successful bidder s funds returned and the trustee and current beneficiary shall not be liable to the successful bidder for any damage. Bidders must tender to the trustee a $5,000.00 deposit at the sale and the balance of the purchase price by 12:00 noon the day following the sale. The deposit must be in the form of a cashier s check or bank official check payable to eTitle Insurance Agency. The balance must be in the form of a wire transfer, cashier s check, bank official check (credit union official checks are not accepted) or U.S. Postal money order payable to eTitle Insurance Agency. Cash payments are not accepted. A trustee s deed will be delivered to the successful bidder within three business days after receipt of the amount bid. DATED: December 19, 2008. eTitle Insurance Agency, Trustee 3269 South Main, #100 Salt Lake City, UT 84115 (801) 263-3400 Office Hours: 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. L&A Case No. 08-68319 PT THIS COMMUNICATION IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT, AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Legal Notice 337771 Published in The Daily Herald January 26; February 2, 9, 2009.
The SOQ evaluation process implemented by the District shall be a “Qualification Based Selection�. The District reserves the right to make a selection directly from the proposal, or to require an interview of the top firms. Contract negotiations will proceed with the firm selected by the District. The District reserves the right to negotiate final contract, scope of work, schedule, and fee with the selected firm. The statements of qualifications must include the following: - Name of the firm and location of all offices; specify the location of the principal place of business. - Age of the firm and average number of employees over the past five years. - Experience, special technical capabilities and expertise of the firm, and available equipment necessary or useful for the types of work anticipated by the District. - Education, training, qualifications, and availability of employees of the firm, pertaining to the types of work anticipated by the District. - References from at least five clients, including two from preceding year. - List of the firm s insurance capacity. Requirements for submitting SOQs are as follows: - Statements of Qualifications must be signed in ink and sealed in an envelope. Mail or hand deliver Statements of Qualifications to: North Fork Special Service District 8838 North Alpine Loop Road RR 3 Box B1 Sundance, Utah 84064 The description, “Statement of Qualifications for Professional and Technical Services� and the Due Date must appear in the outside of the envelope. The name of each firm submitting their qualifications will be recorded by the District. The Statement of Qualifications should not exceed ten (10) pages, exclusive of covers, dividers and resumes. Please note: The District can reject any and all Statements of Qualifications. The District can waive any informality or technicality in any submittal received, if the District believes this waiver would serve the best interest of the District. A strong preference will be given to firms with: - A working knowledge of the District s water system, wastewater system and permitting needs. - A history of timeliness concerning schedules and product delivery. - Available personnel with direct experience in funding, permitting, and water and wastewater treatment. - A staff of professional Engineers. - All standard required insurances. The North Fork Special Service District is an equal opportunity employer. Six (6) copies of the proposal should be submitted by 4:00 pm on February 19, 2009. Questions may be submitted to: North Fork Special Service District Attn: Rashell Anderson (801) 225-7263 admin@nfssd.org Legal Notice 338545 Published in The Daily Herald February 9, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES \NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE The following described property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, payable in lawful money of the United States at the time of sale, at the Utah County Courthouse, 125 North 100 West, Provo, UT 84606, on March 5, 2009, at 12:00 noon of said day, for the purpose of foreclosing a trust deed dated March 28, 2006, and executed by ALEXIS M. HERNANDEZ AND ANA M. HERNANDEZ, as Trustors, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., as Beneficiary, which Trust Deed was recorded on March 29, 2006, as Entry No. 37784:2006, in the Official Records of Utah County, State of Utah covering real property purportedly located at 1661 South 350 East, Springville, Utah 84663 in Utah County, Utah, and more particularly described as: LOT 4, PLAT A, QUAIL HOLLOW SUBDIVISION, SPRINGVILLE, UTAH, ACCORDING TO THE OFFICIAL PLAT THEREOF AS RECORDED IN THE OFFICE OF THE UTAH COUNTY RECORDER, STATE OF UTAH. Tax ID: 50-014-0004 The current Beneficiary of the trust deed is MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., and the record owners of the property as of the recording of the Notice of Default are ALEXIS M. HERNANDEZ AND ANA M. HERNANDEZ. Bidders must tender to the trustee a $5,000.00 deposit at the sale and the balance of the purchase price by 2:00 p.m. the day following the sale. Both the deposit and the balance must be paid to Lincoln Title Insurance Agency in the form of a wire transfer, cashier's check or certified funds. Cash payments, personal checks or trust checks are not accepted. DATED: January 28, 2009. LINCOLN TITLE INSURANCE AGENCY /s/ Paula Maughan its: Vice President Telephone: (801) 476-0303 web site: www.smithknowles.com SK File No. 08-1444 Legal Notice 338128 Published in The Daily Herald February 2, 9, 16, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE Property located on 4261 W. 4550 S. Roy, UT 84067, Belongs to Jeremiah Hoopes. It is NOT Abandoned or Unclaimed. A letter questioning assets has been mailed to the trustee via certified mail No. 70072680000283238974. Trustee Taylor Bean & Whitaker has yet to respond. Legal Notice 338422 Published in The Daily Herald February 7, 8, 9, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE Property located on 4012 W. 4850 S. Roy, UT 84067, Belongs to Tammy Lewis. It is NOT Abandoned or Unclaimed. A letter questioning assets has been mailed to the trustee via certified mail No. 70072680000281615395. Trustee American Home Mortgage has yet to respond. Legal Notice 338426 Published in The Daily Herald February 7, 8, 9, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the Municipal Council of the City of Provo, Utah, will hold a public hearing at a meeting that will begin at 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, February 17, 2009, in the Municipal Council Chambers located at the Provo City Center, 351 West Center Street, Provo, to consider a resolution appropriating $150,000 in the Economic Development Capital Fund for engineering and geotechnical work and applying to the fiscal year ending June 30, 2009. Denise B Roy, Provo City Budget Office Legal Notice 338529 Published in The Daily Herald February 9, 2009.
UPAXLP
LOT 3, PLAT "D", THE CEDARS AT CEDAR HILLS SUBDIVISION, A PLANNED RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT, ACCORDING TO THE OFFICIAL PLAT THEREOF ON FILE AND OF RECORD IN THE UTAH COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE. TOGETHER WITH: (A) THE UNDIVIDED INTEREST IN SAID PROJECT'S COMMON AREAS AND FACILITIES, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ROADWAYS AND ACCESS WAYS, WHICH IS APPURTENANT TO SAID LOT; (B) THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE AND ENJOY EACH OF THE LIMITED COMMON AREAS WHICH IS APPURTENANT TO SAID LOT; AND (C)THE NON-EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE AND ENJOY THE COMMON AREAS AND FACILITIES INCLUDED IN SAID PROJECT (AS SA]D PROJECT MAY HEREAFTER BE EXPANDED) IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE DECLARATION AND SURVEY MAP FOR SAID PROJECT (AS SAID DECLARATION AND MAP MAY HEREAFTER BE AMENDED OR SUPPLEMENTED). 36-914-0003 The current beneficiary of the trust deed is Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., solely as nominee for lender, United Financial Mortgage Corp., its successors and/or assigns, and the record owner of the property as of the recording of the notice of default New Castle Holdings, LLC. The trustee's sale of the aforedescribed real property will be made without warranty as to title, possession, or encumbrances. Bidders must be prepared to tender $5,000.00 in certified funds at the sale and the balance of the purchase price in certified funds by 10:00 a.m. the following business day. The trustee reserves the right to void the effect of the trustee s sale after the sale based upon information unknown to the trustee at the time of the sale, such as a bankruptcy filing, a loan reinstatement, or an agreement between the trustor and beneficiary to postpone or cancel the sale. If so voided, the only recourse of the highest bidder is to receive a full refund of the money paid to the trustee. THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. DATED this 20th day of January, 2009 /s/ Marlon L. Bates, successor trustee Scalley Reading Bates Hansen & Rasmussen, P.C. 15 West South Temple, Ste. 600 Salt Lake City, Utah 84101 Telephone: (801) 531-7870 Business Hours: 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Trustee No. 94100-244 Legal Notice 337778 Published in The Daily Herald January 26; February 2, 9, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES REQUEST FOR SCOPING COMMENTS REQUEST FOR SCOPING COMMENTS All Seasons Adventures Outfitter and Guide Permit USDA Forest Service Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest Heber-Kamas Ranger District The Heber-Kamas Ranger District, Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest is proposing to issue a five year term Outfitter & Guide permit for cross country skiing, snowshoeing, hiking and mountain biking to All Seasons Adventures. Permitted activities will occur in T3S, R7E, Sections 12, 13, 22-28, 32-36; T3S, R8E, Sections 18, 19, 31-33; T4S, R7E Sections 2-5; and T2S, R12W Sections 3, 4, 9, 10, 15, 16, 21, 22, 27 SLM. In order to determine the scope of issues to be addressed in the analysis of this proposal, the Forest Service is seeking comment from Federal, State and local agencies, Native American Tribal Governments, and other individuals and organizations that may be interested in or affected by the proposed action. This serves as notification of the initiation of the scoping period. While your comments and concerns are welcome throughout the process, in order to be most useful in the identification of issues associated with the proposed action, comments must be received by March 11th, 2009. In the absence of extraordinary circumstances (CFR 36 220.6 (a)), it is expected that the project will be categorically excluded from documentation in an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement. The proposed action fits into category 3 (CFR 36 220.6 (e)(3)) Approval, modification, or continuation of minor special uses of NFS lands that require less than five contiguous acres of land. Please send comments to the Responsible Official for this project, John W. Campbell, Acting District Ranger, Heber-Kamas Ranger District, P.O. Box 190 Heber City, UT 84032435-654-7215; or you may hand deliver your comments to 2460 S. Hwy 40 during normal business hours from 8:00 am to 4:30 pm, Monday through Friday, excluding federal holidays. E-mail comments may be sent to comments-intermtn-uinta-heber@fs.fed.us. For additional information about this proposal, please contact Josh Jurgensen at 435-654-7215 or 435-783-8711. Legal Notice 338531 Published in The Daily Herald February 9, 2003
LEGAL NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE Property located on, 3799 W. 4535 S. West Haven, UT 84401, Belongs to Tammy Lewis. It is NOT Abandoned or Unclaimed. A letter questioning assets has been mailed to the trustee via certified mail No. 70072680000283238950. Trustee Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp. has yet to respond. Legal Notice 338424 Published in The Daily Herald February 7, 8, 9, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE Notice is hereby given that a Public Hearing will be held by the Planning Commission on February 24, 2009 at City Hall (5400 W. Civic Center Drive, Highland, Utah) for the purpose of Amending Chapter 3, Article 4.1 and 4.2, Highland City Development Code in part, for the purpose of considering Athletic Courts. Legal Notice 338542 Published in The Daily Herald February 9, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE Property located on 1753 Binford St. Ogden, UT 84401, Belongs to Tammy Lewis. It is NOT Abandoned or Unclaimed. A letter questioning assets has been mailed to the trustee via certified mail No. 70073020000307372982. Trustee ABN AMRO Mortgage Group has yet to respond Legal Notice 338544 Published in The Daily Herald February 9, 10, 11, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE Property located on 5275 S. 6300 W. Hooper UT 84315, Belongs to Jeremiah Hoopes. It is NOT Abandoned or Unclaimed. A letter questioning assets has been mailed to the trustee via certified mail No. 70073020000307372999. Trustee American Home Mortgage has yet to respond. Legal Notice 338543 Published in The Daily Herald February 9, 10, 11, 2009.
LOT 23, PLAT “A�, SILVER LEAFE COVE SUBDIVISION, MAPLETON, UTAH, according to the Official Plat thereof on file in the Office of the Recorder, Utah County, Utah (Parcel No. 66:131:0023) The sale is subject to a bankruptcy filing, a payoff, a reinstatement or any other condition of which the Trustee is not aware that would cause the cancellation of the sale. If any such condition exists, the sale shall be void, the successful bidder's funds returned and the Trustee and current beneficiary shall not be liable to the successful bidder for any damage. The address of the property is purported to be 681 West 550 South, Mapleton, Utah County, Utah. The undersigned disclaims liability for any error in the address. The current beneficiary of the Trust Deed is Far West Bank. The purported owner of the property as of the recording of the notice of default is Cricket Enterprises, LLC. Bidders must be prepared to tender to the trustee a $5,000.00 cashier's check at the sale and a cashier's check for the balance of the purchase price within 24 hours after the sale. THIS NOTICE IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. DATED: January 26, 2009. /s/ NATHAN S. DORIUS, Trustee Stucki Steele Pia Anderson 299 S. Main Street, Suite 2200 Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 (801) 961-1300 (M-F 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.) Legal Notice 338137 Published in The Daily Herald on February 2, 9, 16, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE The following described property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, payable in lawful money of the United States of America at the time of sale, at the main South entrance of the Utah County Courthouse located at 75 East 80 North, American Fork, Utah 84003, on Tuesday, March 4, 2009, at 2:30 p. m. of said day, for the purpose of foreclosing a trust deed originally executed by Brandon Malan, as Trustor, in favor of First Community Bank, as Trustee and as Beneficiary, recorded on April 25, 2007 as Entry No. 61049-2007 in the records of Utah County, State of Utah, covering real property located at approximately 5192 North Ravencrest Lane, Lehi, Utah 84043, and more particularly described as: Lot 219, Eagle Summit Phase 2, according to the official plat there on file and of record in the Utah County Recorder's Office. Tax Parcel No. 38-366-0219 The Trustee disclaims any responsibility for any error in the description of the physical address or legal description of the property. The sale of the property described herein will be made without any warranty, including warranties as to title, possession, encumbrances or bankruptcy status. Bidders must be prepared to tender $5,000.00 in certified funds at the sale and the balance of the purchase price in certified funds within twenty-four (24) hours of the sale. The sale also is subject to workout, reinstatement, payoff, sale cancellation or postponement, incorrect bidding instructions, bankruptcy, or any other circumstance of which the Trustee is unaware. In the event any of the foregoing apply, the sale will be void and the successful bidder's funds will be returned without any liability to the Trustee or Beneficiary for interest or any other damages. The current beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is FIRST COMMUNITY BANK and the record owner of the property as of the recording of the Notice of Default was BRANDON MALAN. The Trustee under the deed of trust is Matthew M. Boley. The Trustee's mailing address and the address of the Trustee's office is 111 E. Broadway, 11th Floor, Salt Lake City, UT 84111. The Trustee can be contact by telephone at (801) 363-4300 between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays. Legal Notice 338136 Published in The Daily Herald February 2, 9, 16, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
\NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE The following described property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, payable in lawful money of the United States at the time of sale, at the Utah County Courthouse, 125 North 100 West, Provo, UT 84606, on March 5, 2009, at 12:00 noon of said day, for the purpose of foreclosing a trust deed dated September 10, 2002, and executed by MICHAEL RASMUSSEN AND ELYN B. RASMUSSEN, as Trustors, in favor of NEW FREEDOM MORTGAGE CORPORATION as Beneficiary, which Trust Deed was recorded on September 17, 2002, as Entry No. 108834:2002, in the Official Records of Utah County, State of Utah covering real property purportedly located at 215 North Pfeifferhorn Drive, Alpine, Utah 84004 in Utah County, Utah, and more particularly described as:
REQUEST FOR SCOPING COMMENTS
LOT 40, PHASE IV, WESTFIELD OAKS, ALPINE, UTAH, ACCORDING TO THE OFFICIAL PLAT THEREOF, ON FILE AND OF RECORD IN THE OFFICE OF THE UTAH COUNTY RECORDER. Tax ID: 55-373-0040 The current Beneficiary of the trust deed is CALIFORNIA BANK AND TRUST, and the record owners of the property as of the recording of the Notice of Default are MICHAEL RASMUSSEN AND ELYN B. RASMUSSEN. Bidders must tender to the trustee a $5,000.00 deposit at the sale and the balance of the purchase price by 2:00 p.m. the day following the sale. Both the deposit and the balance must be paid to Lincoln Title Insurance Agency in the form of a wire transfer, cashier's check or certified funds. Cash payments, personal checks or trust checks are not accepted. DATED: January 28, 2009. LINCOLN TITLE INSURANCE AGENCY /s/ Paula Maughan its: Vice President Telephone: (801) 476-0303 web site: www.smithknowles.com SK File No. 08-1444 Legal Notice 338134 Published in The Daily Herald February 2, 9, 16, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE Property located on 4157 W. 4550 S. West Haven, UT 84401, Belongs to Jeremiah Hoopes. It is NOT Abandoned or Unclaimed. A letter questioning assets has been mailed to the trustee via certified mail No. 70072680000283238967. Trustee Taylor Bean & Whitaker has yet to respond. Legal Notice 338423 Published in The Daily Herald February 7, 8, 9, 2009.
REQUEST FOR SCOPING COMMENTS
LEGAL NOTICES
REQUEST FOR SCOPING COMMENTS All Seasons Adventures Outfitter and Guide Permit USDA Forest Service Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest Heber-Kamas Ranger District
PUBLIC NOTICE Property located on 12462 S. Homeland Drive, Herriman, UT 84096. Belongs to Jeremiah Hoopes. It is NOT Abandoned or Unclaimed. A letter questioning assets has been mailed to the trustee via certified mail No. 70072680000281615432. Trustee GreenPoint Mortgage Funding has yet to respond. Legal Notice 338422 Published in The Daily Herald February 7, 8, 9, 2009.
The Heber-Kamas Ranger District, Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest is proposing to issue a five year term permit with priority use to Daniels Summit Lodge for the following non-motorized guided activities: horseback riding and snowmobiling. Permitted activities will occur within the following legal description: T6S, R6E, T1S, R12W, T2S, R12W, T3S, R12W, T4S, R12W, T5S, R12W, T1N, R11W, T1S, R11W, T2S, R11W, T3S, R11W, and T4S, R11W, SLM. In order to determine the scope of issues to be addressed in the analysis of this proposal, the Forest Service is seeking comment from Federal, State and local agencies, Native American Tribal Governments, and other individuals and organizations that may be interested in or affected by the proposed action. This serves as notification of the initiation of the scoping period. While your comments and concerns are welcome throughout the process, in order to be most useful in the identification of issues associated with the proposed action, comments must be received by March 11th, 2009. In the absence of extraordinary circumstances (CFR 36 220.6 (a)), it is expected that the project will be categorically excluded from documentation in an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement. The proposed action fits into category 3 (CFR 36 220.6 (e)(3)) Approval, modification, or continuation of minor special uses of NFS lands that require less than five contiguous acres of land. Please send comments to the Responsible Official for this project, John W. Campbell, Acting District Ranger, Heber-Kamas Ranger District, P.O. Box 190 Heber City, UT 84032435-654-7215; or you may hand deliver your comments to 2460 S. Hwy 40 during normal business hours from 8:00 am to 4:30 pm, Monday through Friday, excluding federal holidays. E-mail comments may be sent to comments-intermtn-uinta-heber@fs.fed.us. For additional information about this proposal, please contact Josh Jurgensen at 435-654-7215 or 435-783-8711. Legal Notice 338532 Published in The Daily Herald February 9, 2003
REQUEST FOR SCOPING COMMENTS All Seasons Adventures Outfitter and Guide Permit USDA Forest Service Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest Heber-Kamas Ranger District The Heber-Kamas Ranger District, Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest is proposing to construct a 1/5 mile long trail to provide direct access to the Crystal Lake Trailhead from the Crystal Lake Horse Transfer Station. The location of the proposed action is within the developed area southwest of Washington Lake and Spring Canyon Road on the Heber-Kamas Ranger District at T2S, R8E, Section 6 SLM. In order to determine the scope of issues to be addressed in the analysis of this proposal, the Forest Service is seeking comment from Federal, State and local agencies, Native American Tribal Governments, and other individuals and organizations that may be interested in or affected by the proposed action. This serves as notification of the initiation of the scoping period. While your comments and concerns are welcome throughout the process, in order to be most useful in the identification of issues associated with the proposed action, comments must be received by March 11th, 2009. In the absence of extraordinary circumstances (CFR 36 220.6 (a)), it is expected that the project will be categorically excluded from documentation in an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement. The proposed action fits into category 1 (CFR 36 220.6 (e)(1)) Construction and reconstruction of trails. Please send comments to the Responsible Official for this project, John W. Campbell, Acting District Ranger, Heber-Kamas Ranger District, P.O. Box 190 Heber City, UT 84032435-654-7215; or you may hand deliver your comments to 2460 S. Hwy 40 during normal business hours from 8:00 am to 4:30 pm, Monday through Friday, excluding federal holidays. E-mail comments may be sent to comments-intermtn-uinta-heber@fs.fed.us. For additional information about this proposal, please contact Josh Jurgensen at 435-654-7215 or 435-783-8711. Legal Notice 338534 Published in The Daily Herald February 9, 2003
LEGAL NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE Property located on 12954 S. Wild Mare Way Riverton, UT 84065, Belongs to Tammy Lewis. It is NOT Abandoned or Unclaimed. A letter questioning assets has been mailed to the trustee via certified mail No. 70072680000281615371. Trustee GreenPoint Mortgage Funding has yet to respond. Legal Notice 338428 Published in The Daily Herald February 7, 8, 9, 2009.
LEGAL NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE Property located on 456 N. 400 W. Brigham City UT, 84302, Belongs to Jeremiah Hoopes. It is NOT Abandoned or Unclaimed. A letter questioning assets has been mailed to the trustee via certified mail No. 70072680000281615388. Trustee First Magnus Financial Corporation has yet to respond. Legal Notice 338425 Published in The Daily Herald February 7, 8, 9, 2009.
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Monday, February 9, 2009 H E R A L D
Crossword Puzzle on A2 and more comics on B6 DENNIS THE MENACE
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D A I L Y
WEATHER World cities TODAY
Utah & The West
Cloudy with snow showers; chilly
38 22
WEDNESDAY
Rather cloudy
UTAH COUNTY
THURSDAY
38 25
Extremes
STATEWIDE
REGIONAL
ALLEY OOP
State forecast
MARY WORTH
BUCKLES CRANKSHAFT
39 23
Cloudy
YESTERDAY TODAY CITY
Hi/Lo ALPINE Albany 45/38 39/21 Albuquerque 62/41 SUNDANCE Anchorage 14/3 Atlanta 70/45 PLEASANT 41/22 AMERICAN Yesterday Normal Yesterday Month February Season Normal Atlantic City 67/38 GROVE FORK High/Low High/Low Precip. To Date Normal To Date To Date* Austin 75/58 41/25 42/24 Baltimore 66/38 Provo - BYU 48/29 44/25 Trace 0.32 0.56 8.34 8.16 Billings 48/26 Provo - Airport 39/27 42/22 Trace 0.21 0.34 3.28 5.29 PROVO Birmingham 73/48 40/23 Salt Lake City 43/28 41/24 0.01 0.02 0.33 6.26 5.90 OREM Bismarck 36/11 43/24 SPRINGVILLE Boise 41/28 Ogden 45/31 41/21 0.01 0.10 0.32 7.45 6.02 Boston 51/40 Heber City 39/29 40/13 0.00 0.22 0.51 6.11 6.88 41/22 Brownsville 78/67 Orem - Utah Lake 40/32 42/23 0.09 0.25 0.32 6.75 4.85 SPANISH Buffalo 37/34 FORK Spanish Fork 47/31 42/23 0.00 0.06 0.56 9.71 8.58 Burlington 42/35 42/25 37/13 Richfield 47/25 45/19 Trace Trace 0.16 1.04 2.87 MAPLETON Caribou 40/22 Casper 44/19 * Rainfall year: Oct. 1st to Sept. 30th Chattanooga 71/38 Cheyenne 41/24 Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. PAYSON Chicago 43/30 43/25 GENOLA Cincinnati 53/44 43/24 UTAH Cleveland 40/34 LOGAN SANTAQUIN High: 56 at Moab Dallas 73/56 32/20 42/23 Low: 14 at Randolph Denver 48/25 TREMONTON Des Moines 43/27 NATI ONAL 33/21 BRIGHAM CITY For the 48 contiguous states. Detroit 43/34 38/22 Duluth 36/13 High: 81 at Falfurrias, TX OGDEN El Paso 66/49 Low: -7 at Stanley, ID MORGAN 37/24 Eugene 49/32 37/20 Evansville 58/47 COALVILLE Fairbanks 0/-16 COEUR D’ALENE FLAMING SALT LAKE CITY 40/21 Fargo 33/8 39/27 GORGE 41/27 Flagstaff 31/27 40/17 WENDOVER PARK CITY Fresno 58/48 37/26 DINOSAUR TOOELE 35/12 Grand Junction 55/34 SALMON 41/19 41/23 VERNAL Grand Rapids 40/31 HEBER CITY 37/19 Great Falls 49/28 ROOSEVELT 39/20 41/22 Green Bay 37/22 42/18 SEE IDAHO FALLS Harrisburg 61/39 BOISE DETAIL FRUITLAND 35/18 Helena 43/20 38/27 ABOVE JACKSON 36/16 EUREKA DUCHESNE Honolulu 80/68 TWIN FALLS 33/10 CASPER 40/18 40/17 Houston 75/53 SOLDIER 47/21 WINNEMUCCA 35/25 Indianapolis 50/34 POCATELLO SUMMIT HELPER 38/17 Jacksonville 73/35 38/24 32/14 38/18 CHEYENNE LARAMIE RENO Juneau 37/32 NEPHI 48/25 39/17 EVANSTON 40/18 DELTA Kansas City 47/30 ELKO GREEN 41/21 EPHRAIM 28/16 44/20 Las Vegas 54/43 34/16 RIVER PRICE 41/19 DENVER Little Rock 74/48 39/16 ASPEN 35/20 ELY
Regional almanac
38 24
Snow showers possible
HIGHLAND LEHI 44/26 42/25
W pc c r sh c s s sn c sh sh r c pc pc pc pc pc sh s pc c pc r c c sh r r s pc s pc pc sh c t sf pc r sh r sn c pc 50/21 s CARSON CITY MANTI 34/10 37/18 38/16 CRESCENT s GRAND 40/19 JUNCTION MESQUITE pc JUNCTION SALINA 42/26 57/34 FILLMORE pc 39/26 DURANGO 43/21 PUEBLO 38/23 43/21 pc FREMONT GREEN LAS VEGAS ARCHES 54/24 pc JUNCTION RIVER 56/37 47/26 s 36/15 47/26 SANTA FE RICHFIELD FLAGSTAFF s 47/27 43/20 32/24 MOAB c COVE FORT SEVIER 44/29 s 43/20 PHOENIX 41/18 s ALBUQUERQUE 62/47 CANYONLANDS 52/32 pc HANKSVILLE 41/25 r TUCSON 42/26 JUNCTION BEAVER LAS CRUCES pc 63/45 40/17 40/18 59/41 s MONTICELLO c 37/19 r PANGUITCH CEDAR CITY PAROWAN c 36/14 39/18 37/20 s GLEN CANYON ESCALANTE t 44/26 40/20 Rain and snow today with s more snow in the north ZION NP t BLUFF MT. CARMEL JCT. and central parts and main38/19 pc 42/26 40/20 MEXICAN HAT ly plain rain in the south. pc ST. GEORGE 43/28 Snow will accumulate 2-4 KANAB r 51/34 43/23 inches in most places with pc c 4-8 inches in the northwest Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2009 pc expected. sn r s sh sh
FRIDAY
Across the U.S. CITY
PROS AND CONS
FRANK & ERNEST
ROSE IS ROSE
Hi/Lo Algiers 64/46 Amsterdam 43/36 Athens 55/47 Auckland 79/72 Baghdad 74/56 Bangkok 94/76 Beijing 52/35 Belgrade 37/27 Berlin 33/28 Bermuda 64/56 Bogota 66/46 Brussels 40/39 Budapest 41/24 Buenos Aires 84/71 Cabo San Lucas 73/48 Cairo 79/50 Calgary 37/20 Cancun 83/65 Caracas 89/73 Casablanca 68/47 Copenhagen 35/34 Damascus 75/49 Dakar 84/70 Dublin 43/35 Edinburgh 39/30 Edmonton 24/16 Fiji 82/75 Frankfurt 43/42 Geneva 37/36 Grand Cayman 83/69 Guadalajara 82/38 Havana 80/62 Helsinki 29/26 Hong Kong 79/66 Istanbul 58/46 Jerusalem 81/49 Johannesburg 74/57 Kabul 40/27 Karachi 81/64 Kiev 45/31 Lima 82/68 Lisbon 61/52 London 37/36 Madrid 45/43 Managua 90/71 Martinique 84/73 Mazatlan 77/52 Melbourne 68/47 Mexico City 79/41 Milan 49/35 Montego Bay 82/75 Monterrey 83/60 Montreal 18/10 Nairobi 84/61 Nassau 79/68 New Delhi 82/51 Nice 61/44 Osaka 47/37 Oslo 23/17 Ottawa 25/14 Panama City 91/73 Paris 40/39 Prague 30/27 Quebec City 14/0 Quito 67/49 Recife 68/61 Rio de Janeiro 90/77 Rome 55/43 Santiago 80/55 Santo Domingo 81/67 Seoul 43/24 Shanghai 58/43 Singapore 87/77 St. Petersburg 34/22 St. Thomas 82/72 Stockholm 31/23 Sydney 71/69 Tahiti 85/76
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GET FUZZY
CITY
TUESDAY
TODAY
Snow accumulating 2-4 inches
Monday, February 9, 2009
H E R A L D
Pr. 0.03 tr
tr
tr 0.01 0.02 0.02
0.02 tr 0.01 tr 0.01
tr tr tr 0.55 tr
tr 0.01
Hi/Lo W 33/19 s 52/32 pc 12/4 c 68/47 pc 50/31 s 78/56 t 49/33 s 49/27 pc 72/54 pc 34/26 sn 38/27 sn 32/25 s 82/67 s 39/31 s 22/13 s 13/-6 s 47/21 c 70/47 pc 48/25 c 52/47 c 61/44 pc 46/41 pc 74/54 t 50/21 pc 59/39 r 44/38 pc 34/31 i 62/42 pc 44/32 r 67/54 c -5/-25 sf 38/28 i 32/24 sn 50/33 sh 39/26 r 45/38 c 42/21 s 39/32 c 44/32 s 41/20 sn 80/69 t 74/62 t 61/49 c 72/46 s 31/24 sf 66/43 t 56/37 sh 65/55 t
YESTERDAY TODAY Hi/Lo 60/51 39/25 49/28 71/51 69/56 41/29 37/16 75/47 77/39 73/54 75/56 59/42 73/47 68/53 43/23 74/45 62/38 61/49 48/38 31/17 55/36 51/23 45/28 50/29 72/45 40/28 56/38 49/33 77/55 60/50 56/44 57/41 83/71 56/34 44/32 74/46 40/21 42/33 66/48 40/35 73/34 75/47 43/33 56/45 72/57 67/42 70/55 63/46
Los Angeles Madison, WI Medford, OR Memphis Midland Milwaukee Minneapolis Mobile Montgomery Nashville New Orleans New York Norfolk Okla. City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Pocatello Providence Prtlnd, ME Prtlnd, OR Reno Richmond Rockford Sacramento Salem, OR San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose San Juan Santa Fe Seattle Shreveport Sioux City Sprngfld, IL Sprngfld, MO Syracuse Tallahassee Tampa Toledo, OH Tucson Tulsa Wash, DC Wichita Falls Yuma
Pr. tr
Hi/Lo W 56/42 sh 48/39 i 42/29 c 74/57 c 68/42 s 43/39 c 42/36 i 71/57 pc 74/47 pc 69/53 pc 76/60 pc 44/35 s 52/36 s 70/43 t 56/36 r 75/54 s 47/33 s 62/47 sh 51/39 pc 38/24 sn 37/21 s 29/14 s 45/34 r 40/18 sf 55/40 s 48/42 r 52/33 c 43/33 r 79/59 t 58/48 sh 52/40 sh 52/37 sh 82/71 r 47/27 pc 40/33 c 69/58 t 53/33 r 63/51 t 63/47 t 34/25 s 73/43 s 77/55 s 47/41 pc 63/45 pc 67/50 t 56/38 s 75/45 s 64/48 pc
0.01
tr 0.04
0.58
0.04 tr tr
tr 0.03 tr 0.40 0.02 tr
tr tr
0.36 tr 0.10
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries,sn-snow, i-ice, tr-trace. -10s
-0s
0s
10s
Whitehorse 8/-6
20s
30s
40s
50s
60s
70s
80s
90s 100s 110s
Iqaluit -14/-27
Yellowknife -12/-21 Churchill 10/2
St. John's 33/14
Vancouver 44/32 Seattle 40/33
Calgary 37/20
Saskatoon 31/13 Winnipeg 31/30
Halifax 17/0
Toronto Minneapolis 33/31 42/36 Chicago 52/47 Detroit 44/38 Denver 50/21 Washington 56/38
Billings 49/27 San Francisco 52/40 Los Angeles 56/42
El Paso 62/42 Houston Chihuahua 74/62 68/32 La Paz Monterrey 75/46 83/60
Montreal 18/10 New York 44/35
Cold Front
Atlanta 68/47
National forecast
Warm Front Stationary Front Miami 77/63
Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice
A storm system will spread thunderstorms across the central and southern Plains today, while rain and an icy mix falls to the north. A mix of rain and mountain snow will spread across the West.
Monday, February 9, 2009
HOROSCOPE
D A I L Y
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Today is Monday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 2009. There are 325 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: Feb. 9, 1943, the World War II battle of Guadalcanal in the southwest Pacific ended with an Allied victory over Japanese forces. On this date: 1773, the ninth president of the United States, William Henry Harrison, was born in Charles City County, Virginia Colony. 1825, the House of Representatives elected John Quincy Adams president after no candidate had received a majority of electoral votes. 1861, Jefferson Davis was elected the provisional president of the Confederate States of America. 1870, the U.S. Weather Bureau was established. 1933, the Oxford Union Society approved, 275-153, a motion “that
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-ONDAY %VENING 4ELEVISION
EUGENIA LAST, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2009
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Stand behind your beliefs and don’t let anyone push you around. Uncertainty regarding work and future direction can lead to all sorts of variations that will help you build a stronger base. Don’t rely on others to drum up business. 5 stars TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t give in to pressure or let stubbornness be your downfall. Taking on too much or being too indulgent or melodramatic can lead to challenges that will cost you time and money. Get as much done on your own as possible. 2 stars GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Doors are opening and the time to talk about your plans is now. Your Gemini charm will entice others to do things for you and will attract romantic interaction. A playful approach to everything you do will seal the deal personally and professionally. 4 stars CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don’t let an incident cause you to miss out on an opportunity for monetary help. Being pushy or clingy will hold you back. You need a change of scenery to rethink where you feel you should be heading. 3 stars LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You have plenty to contribute to any group. A partnership is apparent and can change your world professionally, personally or both. Don’t back away when all you have to do is take what you want. 3 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Change is on the horizon but you have to push a little harder to get things to fall into place. Don’t let your emotions hold you back when you have so much to gain by taking a strong position and sticking to your schedule. 3 stars LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Spread the word regarding what you want and how you see things unfolding. You cannot let a negative influence in your life stifle your plans or make you feel unsure. Take advantage of the opportunity you have. 4 stars SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Don’t give in to bullying or to someone trying to get you to do too much. Underhandedness is apparent, so do not fall for the false information being given. Ask questions and go to the source if you want a true assessment. 2 stars SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Love is all around you and a lot can be accomplished with the people you are closest to. A few alterations regarding your vocation are looking positive. The information or skill you acquire should lead to more personal freedom. 5 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You may end up saddled with a problem someone brings with him or her. A contract will be riddled with problems that must be adjusted before you can agree to sign. Loss is apparent if you let your emotions rule. 3 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emotions are high and the ability to change your personal life is looking very positive. Speak up about your plans for the future and the interest someone has in you will grow. Now is a great time to make changes. 3 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Don’t let someone take over or do your work for you. If you aren’t in the loop, you will lose out. You cannot trust anyone to do what’s best for you. Uncertainty within a relationship must be handled carefully. 3 stars
H E R A L D
.EWS . ##
%NTERTAINMENT 4O 4HE "IG "ANG NIGHT . S ## 4HEORY . S ## 460' 460'
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4WO AND A (ALF -EN S ## 46
+546
+468
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,ATE 3HOW 7ITH $AVID ,ETTER 4HE ,ATE ,ATE 3HOW 7ITH MAN .AOMI 7ATTS $ANNY -C"RIDE #RAIG &ERGUSON . S ## 46 . S ## 460'
4HE "ACHELOR *ASON VISITS THE HOMETOWNS OF THE FINAL FOUR BACHELORETTES . S ##
4RUE "EAUTY #ONTESTANTS ARE JUDGED .EWS . ON THEIR HONESTY AND THE FIRST IMPRES SIONS THEY MAKE 46
.IGHTLINE !CCESS . ## 46' (OLLYWOOD . ## 460'
%XTRA . *IMMY S ## 460' +IMMEL ,IVE S ## 46
-EDIUM 4HINGS TO $O IN 0HOENIX .EWS . ## 7HEN 9OU RE $EAD . S ## 46
4HE 4ONIGHT 3HOW 7ITH *AY ,ENO . S ## 46
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+3,
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#HUCK #HUCK VERSUS THE #OUGARS 4HE AGENTS MUST PREVENT THE SALE OF WEAPON PLANS ## 460'
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!NTIQUES 2OADSHOW $ALLAS S 0ART OF ## 46' !MERICAN %XPERIENCE 4HE !SSASSINATION OF !BRAHAM ,INCOLN 3OME SEVEN !MERICAN %XPERIENCE 4HE !SSASSINATION OF !BRAHAM ,INCOLN 3OME SEVEN MILLION BID AN EMOTIONAL FAREWELL TO !MERICA S FIRST ASSASSINATED PRESIDENT S MILLION BID AN EMOTIONAL FAREWELL TO !MERICA S FIRST ASSASSINATED PRESIDENT S ## $63 460' ## $63 460'
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+345
4HE 3IMPSONS S 3EINFELD 4HE (OUSE 5NFAITHFUL (OUSE CONFRONTS $AY 0- 0- $UBAKU .EWS . ## ## 460' FIRST EPISODES 4HIRTEEN AND &OREMAN ABOUT THEIR THREATENS THE FIRST FAMILY . S 0! 460' RELATIONSHIP . ## 46 ## 46
+8)6 +*:: +5#7 +508 +0.: +4-7
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7ORLD "USINESS S ## 46'
(EROES 4RUST AND "LOOD -ATT S PAINTINGS REVEAL THE TRAGIC FATE OF SOMEONE CLOSE TO HIM . 46
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'OSSIP 'IRL S ## 46 %2 .O 0LACE TO (IDE ## 460' ! 1UE NO 0UEDES /RIGINS -ANNA &EST
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3CRUBS S 3CRUBS S %NTERTAINMENT ## 46 ## 46 4ONIGHT 460'
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0ARANORMAL 3TATE 0ARANORMAL 3TATE 0ARANORMAL 3TATE 0ARANORMAL 3TATE )NTERVENTION 3YLVIA ## 46 . 46 460' 460' 460'
)NTERVENTION !NGELINA ## 46
0ARANORMAL 3TATE 46
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0ARAGUAY &AMILY 'UY ## &AMILY 'UY ## #RIBS S #RIBS S /RIGINALS 7ESTMINSTER $OG 3HOW $AILY 3HOW *ON 3TEWART
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7EATHER %VENING %DITION ##
7EATHER %VENING %DITION ## 7HEN 7EATHER #HANGED (ISTORY #APITAL .EWS 4ODAY #ASH #AB 46' #ASH #AB $ARK (OW )T S -ADE (OW )T S -ADE $ESTROYED $ESTROYED /NE 7AY /UT /NE 7AY /UT 4HE 2EPLACEMENTS 4HE 2EPLACEMENTS 4HE 3UITE ,IFE OF 4HE 3UITE ,IFE OF 4HE 3UITE ,IFE OF (ANNAH -ONTANA @4WITCHES 4IA -OWRY 4AMERA -OWRY 2EUNITED TWINS 0HINEAS S 46' S 46' :ACK #ODY :ACK #ODY :ACK #ODY ## 46' USE MAGIC AGAINST EVIL &ANTASY ## AND &ERB 46'
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TODAY IN HISTORY this House will in no circumstances Five years ago: President George W. Today’s Birthdays: Television jourBuckley (TV: “CSI: NYâ€?) is 32. Rock fight for its King and Country,â€? a Bush and Democratic front-runner nalist Roger Mudd is 81. Actress musician Richard On (O.A.R.) is stand that was widely denounced. John Kerry sparred over the presiJanet Suzman is 70. Actress30. Actress Ziyi Zhang is 30. Actor The Associated Press (On this date in 1983, the Oxford dent’s economic leadership, while politician Sheila James Kuehl David Gallagher is 24. Actress Union Society rejected, 416-187, a Kerry’s rivals sought to slow his (“The Many Loves of Dobie Gillisâ€?) Marina Malota is 21. Actress motion “that this House would not brisk pace. is 68. Singer-songwriter Carole Camille Winbush (“The Bernie Mac DLP Digital CinemaÂŽ fight for Queen and Country.â€?) King is 67. Actor Joe Pesci is 66. Showâ€?) is 19. in all Auditoriums One year ago: Democrat Barack Singer Barbara Lewis is 66. Author Thought for Today: “Modesty is 1942, daylight-saving “War Timeâ€? Obama swept the Louisiana priAlice Walker is 65. Actress Mia went into effect in the United mary and caucuses in Nebraska the conscience of the body.â€? — 4925 NORTH EDGEWOOD DRIVE • 801-764-0009 Farrow is 64. Singer Joe Ely is 62. States, with clocks turned one hour and Washington state; Republican Honore de Balzac, French author FIRST SHOWTIME IS A SUPER BARGAIN MATINEE $5.25 Actress Judith Light is 60. Rhythmforward. Mike Huckabee outpolled John and dramatist (1799-1850). and-blues musician Dennis “DTâ€? CORALINE 3D PG • 1:30 4:15 7:20 9:50 McCain in the Kansas caucuses 1950, in a speech in Wheeling, Thomas (Kool & the Gang) is 58. PINK PANTHER 2 PG • 1:00 3:15 5:30 7:45 and Louisiana primary, while W.Va., Sen. Joseph McCarthy, Actor Charles Shaughnessy is 54. 10:00 McCain won the Washington R-Wis., charged the State PUSH PG13 • 1:15 4:00 7:00 9:50 Country singer Travis Tritt is 46. caucuses. Space shuttle Atlantis, Department was riddled with TAKEN PG13 • 1:30 4:20 7:05 9:30 Actress Julie Warner is 44. Country carrying a European-built science Communists. NEW IN TOWN R • 1:15 4:15 7:00 9:30 1-866-578-4636 singer Danni Leigh is 39. Actor lab, docked with the international UNINVITED PG13 • 1:00 3:30 7:30 10:00 1971, the crew of Apollo 14 returned Jason George is 37. Actor-producer space station. INKHEART PG • 1:00 4:00 7:00 9:40 Box Offi ce opens at 12:30pm to Earth after man’s third landing Charlie Day is 33. Actor A.J. MALL COP PG • 1:10 4:10 7:00 10:00 *PINK PANTHER 2 [PG] (12:30 2:45 5:00) on the moon. 7:15 9:30 FOREVER STRONG PG • 1:00 4:00 7:00 *HE’S JUST NOT THAT INTO YOU [PG13] 10:00 Ten years ago: The Senate began (1:10 4:05) 7:05 9:55 BRIDE WARS PG • 1:15 3:45 7:00 9:45 closed-door deliberations in *CORALINE [PG] (1:05 3:50) 6:25 9:10 SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE R • 1:00 4:00 *PUSH [PG13] (2:00 4:50) 7:35 10:10 President Bill Clinton’s impeach7:00 10:00 NEW IN TOWN [PG13] (1:45 4:25) 6:45 9:00 Newly Remodeled Lobby ment trial, even though members TAKEN [PG13] (12:55 3:25 5:45) 8:00 10:15 HE’S JUST NOT THAT INTO YOU PG13 • 1:00 & Xango Grand Theater INKHEART [PG] (1:30 3:55) 6:35 from both parties acknowledged 4:00 7:00 10:00 PG HOTEL FOR DOGS: [PG] (12:45 3:00 5:20) 7:45 MALL COP Shaded titles indicate no passes. that the two-thirds margin for con10:05 Daily - 3:45 6:45 9:00 Sat Mat - 1:30 Shaded times indicate an opening Friday show time only. SHOW TIME # 465-8500 viction could not be attained. GRAN TORINO [R] 9:20 www.fandango.com
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