Rochester man struck, killed while biking Council
Transcription
Rochester man struck, killed while biking Council
T H U R S DAY ✩ Riverside Live lineup. D1 If it matters to you, it matters to us JULY 26, 2007 A young national title holder. C1 WWW.POSTBULLETIN.COM Carjacking chaos Rochester man is in custody By Janice Gregorson [email protected] Global positioning is just one of the hightech marvels being used in agriculture today. B1 UPDATING THE NEWS It’s not by the usual books Two boards, two meetings. A transition in leadership at Studio Academy has been a rocky one. A4 Attorney: Mom didn’t harm twin The attorney for the mother of twins who were born conjoined asks the court to dismiss charges that she abused one of the children. A4 r. A tractor that can drive itself? A man walking on a U.S. 52 on-ramp yanked a 63-year-old Rochester man from his car Wednesday afternoon and took off in it, Rochester police said. The car was later found, abandoned off Marion Road, after crashing into a house. Police Lt. Dan Muyres said a 26-year-old Rochester man is in custody at Saint Marys Hospital, where he is under police guard. Muyres said the man was believed to be high on drugs when he was caught about half a mile away from the abandoned car. The victim told police he had been driving north on U.S. 63 and took the on-ramp to U.S. 52 North. A man was walking in the middle of the ramp, so the driver stopped. The victim said the man opened the car door, pulled him out of the car, then took off in it. Authorities believe The car, with the suspect’s wallet Carjacking the suspect may have in it, was found in the 2400 block of N 63 backed up on the ramp, Parkview Lane Southeast. going the wrong way in Muyres said the suspect had driven 52 U.S. 52’s northbound into the backyard, crashed into a pine lanes. Muyres said wittree and shed, then backed up and nesses reported seeing hit the shed a second time. a car driving south in He allegedly backed up onto the the northbound lanes 33rd St. S.W. road, then into another yard nearby, for a short distance, then ood Lake D going through a 6-foot tall privacy cutting across the fence before coming back out and median to get into the crashing into the first home. southbound lanes. Muyres said damage to the car was 35th St. S.E. estimated at $25,000; other damage Muyres said that a short while later police estimates were not available. The 63got a call about a car P-B graphic year-old victim had a scrape and a being driven erratically torn shirt, but was not otherwise on Marion Road. Sheriff Sgt. Brian Howard injured, Muyres said. came upon a man running in the vicinity of Once out of the hospital, the suspect will be Marvale Avenue and Marion Road. He was taken to the Olmsted County jail and likely face stopped and identified by the victim as the car- a string of charges including robbery, car theft jacker. and damage to property, Muyres said. W SOUTHEAST MN 31st St. S.W. WHAT’S INSIDE 50¢ Rochester man struck, killed while biking Howard was ‘passionate’ about his family, cycling By Edie Grossfield [email protected] NEWS Bus driver facing charges A bus driver in the Hayfield School District is facing criminal sexual charges for allegedly performing a sexual act on a teenage boy who rode his school bus. A5 OUTDOORS At least it’s good for something The heat and dry weather may be wilting your garden and lawn, but it’s good for the pheasants, the DNR says. C5 WEB EXCLUSIVE Happy trails If you have a close encounter with a presidential hopeful or one of their well-known backers out on the campaign trail, tell the world and show the pictures. Go to www.postbulletin.com and the Campaign Trail blog to share your story and pictures. FACTOID Water, water everywhere Rochester set its water peak pumpage of 29.8 million gallons in one day on July 15, 2005. TODAY’S OBITUARIES Harvey Bergh, Lester Culbertson, James V. Harris, Rosemary Huiting, Nancy L. O’Connor, Frieda Seefeldt, Stephen Suby, Ruby Wiskow. B2 Photo courtesy Paul Howard family Paul Howard, right, of Rochester, was struck and killed Tuesday near Park Rapids, Minn., as he rode a bicycle. Howard and his wife Julianne, center, and children Andrew, left, Michelle and Evan vacationed in Rome earlier this year. Fitness, knew Howard for about 25 years. “He was a customer and a friend,” Hawkins said. “He was great, just always upbeat. Really passionate about cycling, passionate about his kids, really proud of his kids and what they were doing. He always had great stories to tell about cycling trips or traveling for work and things like that. A real positive guy.” While Howard didn’t compete on an amateur racing circuit, he did enter citizen events, such as the Rochester Centurion. The accident took place on the same road MS Tram bikers, more than 1,000 of them, would use. Howard was not taking part in the MS ride. He preferred to train on his own, often riding his bike in the wee hours of the morning to get some miles in before leaving for work. “He’s done a lot of cycling; more miles than I can imagine. I’ll bet some years he cycled 10,000 miles — very impressive,” Hawkins said. Said Andrew, “He just loved going out there. Every weekend, he’d be out doing a couple of hours of biking. Then, he just loved being with the family, too.” Council sticks with ‘Rah Rah’ firm Hiring prompts chamber members to ask what ‘happened to buy locally?’ By Jeff Kiger INDEX Business . . . . . A10 Classifieds . . . . . C6 Comics . . . . . . . . D6 Lottery results . A2 Obituaries . . . . . B2 When Paul Howard wasn’t working or spending time with his wife and children, he could often be seen zipping by on a bicycle. Bicycling was a longtime passion of the 51year-old Rochester man. It was what he was doing early Tuesday morning near Park Rapids, Minn., when a van hit him from behind, killing him. Howard had been on vacation with his wife, Julianne, and son, Evan, and was out taking one last bicycle ride before they headed home, said his son Andrew. A 42-year-old Detroit Park Lakes, Minn., woman was Rapids driving the van that struck Howard. She left the scene, and later the Minnesota State Patrol arrested her. Alcohol was detected in her system, according to the State Patrol. Funeral arrangements are pending with Macken Funeral Home in Rochester. He was an engineer who commuted every day to Seagate Technology in Bloomington, Minn. That’s about three hours of driving a day, yet he tried to make it to as many of his kids’ school and sports activities as he could, Andrew said. “He rarely missed my cross-country meets in high school, then in college (at Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter), and my sister’s band stuff, and my brother’s band stuff,” Andrew said. Matt Hawkins, owner of Rochester Cycling & [email protected] Puzzles . . . . . . . D7 Movie ads . . . . . B7 Sports . . . . . . . . C1 TV schedule . . . B7 Horoscope . . . . . D7 CORRECTIONS • A memorandum sent to Olmsted County attorneys concerning courtroom decorum, reported in a story on page B1 Tuesday, was written by district court judges and distributed by Court Administrator Chuck Kjos. • The adaptive floor hockey story on page D8 Saturday incorrectly spelled the name of Jillian Klingfuss. Also, the site of the camp was the Rochester Athletic Club. The Post-Bulletin is committed to publishing fair and accurate information, in print and online. If you find an error or have a concern, call Managing Editor Jay Furst at 285-7742 or e-mail [email protected]. The city of Rochester’s decision to hire a Milwaukee marketing firm to promote the proposed $75 million Mayo Civic Center expansion sparked loud complaints from those who wanted the city to “buy local.” The Rochester Area Chamber of Commerce was among those complaining. In view of the complaints, city officials took another look at the decision to hire Ellingsen Brady Advertising for $5,000, at the Rochester Convention and Visitors Bureau recommendation, said City Council President Dennis Hanson. But Hanson said this morning that Brady Ellingsen had started the campaign and it was too late to change the decision. “We’ll learn from this experience and move on,” Hanson said. Ellingsen Brady is same firm that created the “Rah Rah Rochester” campaign to promote the city. Hiring the out-of-state firm hit a nerve with the Chamber of Commerce, which is promoting its “Buy Rochester” campaign. The campaign asks Rochester businesses to increase their local purchases by at least 5 percent. About Post-Buletin file photo The same marketing company hired for the “Rah Rah Rochester” campaign has been hired to promote an expansion at the Mayo Civic Center. 250 local businesses, including the Rochester Convention and Visitor Bureau, have pledged to do that. “The Chamber of Commerce is very clear on this subject. We want every dollar possible to stay in our community,” chamber board chairman Jon Eckoff said Wednesday. While there was not a large number of complaints about the hiring of Ellingsen Brady, “it just was very vocal,” said Hanson. “I was just bombarded by some folks. I was kind of caught off guard,” he said. The owner of one Rochester marketing firm, MLT Group, says hiring local makes the most sense. “I think Rochester agencies have more of a PHOTO REPRINTS TODAY’S PUNCHLINE WEATHER CONTACT US To order reprints of any photo taken by a Post-Bulletin staff member, go to postbulletin.com/reprints or call 285-7737. … the Frenchman is remembered and the German forgotten since people have always put Descartes before derHorst. Joke on A2 Friday: Cooler. 83˚ | 59˚ News tips: 285-7700 Delivery: 285-7676 Sports: 285-7720 More: B8 pulse of Rochester than a Milwaukee agency,” said MLT owner Mike Pruett. Ellingsen Brady will be promoting the Mayo Civic Center expansion. To raise Rochester’s share of the project cost, the city plans to seek legislative approval for a 1 percent hotel-motel tax and a 1 percent food and beverage tax. Hanson says it is very important that residents, and legislators, understand this project. “We want to make sure it is well done,” he said of the presentation. Hanson added that he is a supporter of buying local and he understands the chamber’s position. However, “we, the city council, have to be a little bit cautious not to let the chamber nitpick everything” we do, he said. Rochester, Minn. Vol. 82, No. 178 40 pages © 2007 Post-Bulletin Co., LLC All rights reserved. A2 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com BACKTALK ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 XX FYI NEWSMAKERS Bourne vs. James Bond Would lack of a grocery store in a small town discourage you from moving there? Associated Press Matt Damon’s amnesiac assassin Jason Bourne shares initials with another notorious screen operative. But other than that, Damon doesn’t see any similarities between Bourne and James Bond. Bond is “an imperialist and he’s a misogynist. He kills people and laughs and sips martinis and wisecracks about it,” Damon, 36, said. D a m o n ’s new film, “The Bourne Ultimatum,” opens Aug. 3. “Bourne is this para- Damon noid guy. He’s on the run. He’s not the government. The government is after him. He’s a serial monogamist who’s in love with his dead girlfriend and can’t stop thinking about her,” Damon said. “He’s the opposite of James Bond.” The third movie in the series based on Robert Ludlum’s books sends Damon’s penitent killer back to his roots to uncover how he became such a perfect weapon and who was responsible. Damon said he bumped into former Bond star Pierce Brosnan in London and they chatted briefly. Brosnan told him the aesthetics and style of Bond can be updated “but fundamentally, what the character is is something from the 1960s,” Damon said. Paul Greengrass, Damon’s director on Universal’s “Bourne Ultimatum” and its 2004 predecessor, “The Bourne Supremacy,” agreed that Bond is a relic from a different era. Absolutely. Shopping locally is part of the appeal of small-town life. No. I tend to shop at big box super stores anyway. 68% 32% Percentages are rounded to whole numbers. Visit www.postbulletin.com to take today’s survey. MOST CLICKED The 10 most-read stories at postbulletin.com on Wednesday: 1. Eyota gets grocery store after 15 years. 2. Woman loses control of car, drives into cornfield. 3. Boyums building in Stewartville sold to Iowa company. 4. Motion seeks to dismiss shooting charges against Rochester man. 5. Golfers will “tee it up for the troops.” 6. Grant will help Mayo provide individualized care to patients. 7. Is a drug court in Olmsted County’s future? 8. Court supports parents in spanking. 9. Bethel MBA targets Rochester student. 10. Why vote against security? Associated Press Brian May performs during the VH1 Rock Honors concert in Las Vegas on May 25, 2006. Brian May to finish degree Associated Press Brian May is completing his doctorate in astrophysics, more than 30 years after he abandoned his studies to form the rock group Queen. The 60-year-old guitarist and songwriter said he plans to submit his thesis, “Radial Velocities in the Zodiacal Dust Cloud,” to supervisors at Imperial College London within the next two weeks. May was an astrophysics student at Imperial College when Queen, which included Freddie Mercury and Roger Taylor, was formed in 1970. He dropped his doctorate as the glam rock band became successful. Queen was one of Britain’s biggest music groups in the 1970s, with hits including “Bohemian Rhapsody” and “We Will Rock You.” After Mercury’s death in 1991, May recorded several solo albums, including 1998’s “Another World.” But his interest in astronomy continued, and he co-wrote “Bang! The Complete History of the Universe,” which was published last year. He was due to finish carrying out astronomical observations at an observatory on the island of La Palma, in Spain’s Canary Islands, on Tuesday, the observatory said. May told the British Broadcasting Corp. that he had always wanted to complete his degree. “It was unfinished business,” he said. “I didn’t want an honorary Ph.D. I wanted the real thing that I worked for.” WEB WATCH JOKE OF THE DAY Magic Johnson stands tall in civil rights The early 17th century German philosopher, Eberhardt derHorst, was able to sum up the Germanic utilitarian rational lifestyle in a simple phrase, “I am; therefore I think.” Unfortunately, he found himself upstaged by a French philosopher who had uttered a similar phrase for the existence of an individual, the oftrepeated, “I think; therefore I am.” It is not surprising that the Frenchman is remembered and the German forgotten, since people have always put Descartes before derHorst. — Submitted by Charles Jacobson, Rochester Share your yuks with us! Send e-mail to [email protected]. Include “joke” in the subject line and your name and city in the message. Most jokes are part of the public domain, but if it’s not your original work, attribute the joke to its author when possible. Associated Press • An annual whiffle ball tournament is being held in Hayfield. Read about the competitors who showed up with their plastic bats. • The Olmsted County Fair will feature some exciting entertainers. We’ll lay out the lineup for the fair, which starts Monday. • The Answer Man provides some insight into a popular popcorn stand in downtown Rochester that has long since closed. FAMILY TIME IT MATTERS TO US At the Post-Bulletin, “If it matters to you, it matters to us.” So we can best help, here’s how to reach us: • Administration: Publisher and Editor Robert L. 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Franklin and Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf. Franklin, 92, a chronicler of civil rights history, was part of a legal team from the The museum, on the site in Memphis, National Association for the Advancement Tenn., where Martin Luther King Jr. was of Colored People that helped develop the assassinated, will hand out the awards Oct. Brown v. Board of Education case. The case 23. It said it was honoring Johnson for his led to the U.S. Supreme Court decision outwork since leaving the NBA on promoting lawing racial segregation in public schools. economic development, improved health care and educational opportunities in low- Johnson Johnson-Sirleaf, 67, is president of Liberia. income urban neighborhoods and other Known as the “iron lady,” she is her “underserved communities.” country’s first elected female president. 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CALL 911.” When police broke through the door of the apartment where the note was found, they found Scott Tweed, 42, and his widowed mother, Charlotte Tweed, who was covered with cuts and bruises. “Oh my God, I am glad you Ken Hanson/Post-Bulletin Car crashes into Radisson A Rochester firefighter checks an SUV that hit a pillar Wednesday evening at the Radisson Plaza Hotel on South Broadway. No one was seriously injured in the accident. For all your Advertising Specialty Items Call Paul Schad • (507)-285-7730 [email protected] COMPLIMENTS OF THE CHEF Great meals are a part of the dining out scene in southeastern Minnesota. Holly Ebel gets the dish and recipes for success from the chefs who create those great meals. came,” Charlotte Tweed told the officers. Her son said she had fallen out of a rocking chair and down a stairway, but Charlotte Tweed told investigators that her only child had hit her, nearly suffocated her and held her captive for three days. “She had made some attempt, at least once, to get away from him, and when he realized that, he dragged her back forcefully,” said Blaine Police Chief Dave Johnson. “Because she’s hearingimpaired, her ability to communicate was limited. In some measure she put herself at risk by (writing the note). 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Visit http://www.charter.com/30day for full details on 30-day money back guarantee. Call for full details. EASEYWAYTOSAVE-3Play-DIG-Rev1 • • • • 0726502030EM 0726504019EM 30 Days Risk Free ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 U By Matt Russell were the result of trauma. Swenson said James and Heck have admitted to being the only two adults alone with the infant during the week. “We feel it narrows it down to those two,” she said. She told Chase that the doctors said the injuries were so significant that the child was in extreme pain, that even changing his diaper would have caused him to be “extremely agitated.” She said Heck and James, interviewed separately, said the injuries must have come from a car seat. Doctors said that was not possible, Swenson said. After hearing arguments from attorneys, Chase asked them for written briefs. He specifically asked that they address case law that supports charging multiple people with identical crimes without direct evidence that they were participants or if someone can be present when a crime is committed and be liable for the actions of another and charged as aiding and abetting the crime. “There is no direct evidence she hurt the child?” Chase asked. Swenson said there is not, and no direct evidence that Heck injured the child either. “But we know she was in the room; that bones were likely broken,” Chase said. “There’s an interesting question of law here.” Attorneys have until Aug. 13 to submit their briefs. Chase then will have 30 days to decide. Heck’s attorney, William Wright, has filed a similar motion to dismiss the charges against Heck, and it will be heard Sept. 19. Authorities seek cat that bit man’s hand Post-Bulletin staff Rochester animal control officers are investigating a cat bite that happened about 7 p.m. Saturday in the 5600 block of 25th Avenue Northwest. “The biting animal is a small cat, very young, gray in color with black spots. No collar was seen,” Capt. Brian Winters said in a statement. A man was bitten on the left hand and might have to undergo rabies shots if the cat isn’t located by Tuesday. If you recognize the cat’s description, call 328-6960. How to contact the Post-Bulletin The Post-Bulletin, a daily newspaper published Monday-Saturday, is published by Post-Bulletin Co. L.L.C., with editorial, advertising and circulation offices at 18 First Ave. S.E. in Rochester. Periodicals postage paid at Rochester, MN 55901. POSTMASTER: Send change of address to Post-Bulletin, Attn: Circulation, P.O. Box 6118, Rochester, MN 55903-6118. Rochester business hours are 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Phone: (507) 285-7600. 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Hill, 285-7602 Austin - 434-7340 [email protected] Newsroom Rochester newsroom: 285-7700 Newsroom fax: 285-7772 Main sports number: 285-7720 Sports fax: 285-7784 Austin newsroom: 434-7340 After 5 p.m.: (507) 285-7700 Newsroom fax: 437-3975 Main sports number: 434-7346 Sports fax: 437-3975 To advertise To place a classified ad call: 285-7777. To place a display ad call: 285-7716. To e-mail an ad: [email protected] UPDATING A contentious Studio Academy board meeting Wednesday was marked by controversy over the transition to a new board of directors. Highlighting recent tensions at the Rochester charter school, two Studio Academy school board meetings — to be held by different boards claiming to the school’s governing body — were scheduled for 7 p.m. on the same night. The first meeting, which was announced last week, was a “special/emergency meeting” to be held in the cafeteria by a board with four new members elected last month by teachers and parents. The election was held at a time when many at the school were expressing frustration with the decision to not renew the teaching contract of Kandice Mascotti, a school cofounder. The second meeting, which was announced Monday, was a closed-doors session in the school’s Fireside Room open only to the school’s previous board, some of whose members remain on the incoming board. Just one meeting was actually held at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Studio Academy: The incoming board gathered in the cafeteria in front of roughly 30 attendees. Four former school board members sub- mitted letters protesting last month’s elections. Complaints included board members not being allowed to vote and that a group unfairly influenced voters by handing out fliers outside the polls. A complaint from outgoing board member and former board chairwoman Susan Bergquist also said newly elected board members have not completed training and are not yet qualified as required by school bylaws. After seeking legal advice, Studio Academy sponsor Volunteers of America determined it would accept the authority of Studio Academy’s newly elected board of directors, whose first meeting had been set for Aug. 1. (State law requires charter schools, which are publicly funded, to have sponsor organizations oversee them.) Volunteers of America expressed frustration with the new board, saying in a written statement that “we are profoundly disappointed with the board’s actions to date.” Objections listed in the statement included that Wednesday’s emergency meeting was called to discuss a “legal/personnel matter,” but the board hadn’t briefed the school’s lead administrator, Eric Holsen, on the issue nor invited him THE NEWS Austin To place a classified ad: 434-7342 or 1-800-562-1758 To place a display ad: Call 434-7347 or 434-7348 Hiring of attorney was also a point of contention Board’s closed session also sparked complaints By Matt Russell [email protected] Tension over the transition to a new board wasn’t the only controversy Wednesday night at Studio Academy in Rochester. One point of contention at the charter school’s board meeting was the decision to hire a new attorney for Studio Academy, Steven T. Rizzi Jr. of Austin. Shane Weinand, a representative of Studio Academy sponsor Volunteers of America, alleged conflict of interest in the decision, saying some board members have sought advice from Rizzi’s firm in the past. Rizzi responded that confidentiality prevented him from saying whether his firm has given advice to Studio Academy board members. Board member Sue Foster said she contacted Rizzi to ask him if he was interested in representing the school after she got his name from the Minnesota School Board Association. Board member Katie Mel- gaard, who voted against hiring Rizzi, said later in the meeting that she was concerned that the board approved hiring the attorney without discussing how much the school would pay him. Also expressing concern was Justin Testerman of Volunteers of America. The decision apparently was made by some board members before the meeting, Testerman alleged in an interview after the meeting, possibly in violation of the state’s open meeting law. Another item on the agenda Wednesday was a closed-door session to discuss what was listed in the agenda as a “personnel matter.” Not attending the meeting was board member Kandice Mascotti, a Studio Academy cofounder whose teaching contract was recently not renewed. Mascotti has since threatened litigation against Studio Academy, and the school board rejected — with Mascotti abstaining — a settlement offer from Mascotti last month. The Studio Academy board didn’t give a public summary of the closed meeting after it was over, and Weinand objected to being barred from the session. Also objecting to Volunteers of America not being allowed in the meeting was board member Katie Melgaard, who complained that Studio Academy’s outgoing lead administrator, Eric Holsen, was not being allowed to attend the session. Joining Mascotti at Studio Academy on Wednesday was her attorney, Tammy Pust, who said Mascotti was one of the issues being discussed in the closed-door meeting. Another question that arose Wednesday night, though not in formal board discussion, is Mascotti’s board membership. When her teaching contract wasn’t renewed in June, Mascotti was told that she would immediately lose her board membership. The school’s previous attorney, however, decided that Mascotti could serve on the board until the original end date of her contract, which is July 31. On Wednesday, board secretary Scot Schwark said that he expected the board would select a new staff member to fill Mascotti’s position after July 31. Pust said, however, that she thinks Mascotti should retain her elected position on the board beyond the end of her teaching contract. According to state law, licensed teachers employed at a charter school must be a majority of the members on the school’s board of directors. The law allows only the state’s education commissioner to waive the teacher-majority requirement. The Studio Academy board is comprised of five teachers and four community members, with Mascotti filling one of the five teachers’ slots. Studio Academy directors are elected to two-year terms. See Brian for… See Terri for… • Auto Glass • Shower Door • Mirrors • Mirrored Walls • Auto Glass • Shower Doors • Mirrors • House Windows • Fireplace Glass • Glass Table Tops Locally Owned for 67 Years Auto • Home • Commercial Locally Owned for 67 Years Across from Graham Arena at 208 16th St. SE Open M-F 7-5:30, Sat. 9-1 the fairgrounds 289-3261 Auto • Home • Commercial Across from K&M GLASS Graham Arena at 208 16th St. SE the fairgrounds Open M-F 7-5:30, Sat. 9-1 289-3261 0607498852P K&M GLASS Dessert Bread? You Betcha! The helpful place. PAINT & STAIN EXPERTS! Dutch Apple Crunch Blueberry Vanilla • Cinnamon Chip To subscribe To subscribe, or if you didn't receive your paper or have other questions: call 285-7676 or 1-800-562-1758 Austin Customer Service: Faye Houghton, 434-7340 [email protected]. Saturday Only subscriptions include home delivery on the following Holiday Editions: Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day and New Year’s Day. HOME DELIVERY RATES Weekdays Saturday and Saturday only Miracle Mile • 16-17th Avenue NW • 289-7052 • www.breadbakercompany.com 288-7800 • 1717 41st St. NW 3 blocks East of Best Buy • www.carouselflowers.com Motor route delivery EZ Pay* .......$12.70/Month 15 weeks** ............... $49.90 ...$24.05 29 weeks*** .............. $96.40 ...$48.10 56 weeks**** ...........$187.80 ...$96.20 * EZ Pay automatically charged to credit card or debit checking account, monthly. ** Two weeks of vacation pack, 13 weeks home delivery. *** Three weeks of vacation pack, 26 weeks home delivery. **** Four weeks of vacation pack, 52 weeks home delivery. 0101485882P All subscriptions include access to Post-Bulletin online at www.postbulletin.com • Silver Lake Center Cub Foods Plaza Miracle Mile Center Byron 282-0095 292-6674 289-6674 775-6886 Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-8 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Want to make a lasting impression? Send Flowers! City carrier delivery EZ Pay* ...... $11.70/Month 15 weeks** ............... $44.20 ...$22.75 29 weeks*** .............. $83.40 ...$45.50 56 weeks**** ...........$161.80 ...$91.00 • to attend the meeting. “In general, these proceedings have been planned under a cloud of suspicion” that has resulted in stress and has been a distraction for school staff, the statement said. Pamela Captain, Studio Academy’s new board chairwoman, declined comment Wednesday on Volunteers of America’s objections, saying she needed more time to read the sponsor’s statement. So how did two separate meetings, with two different boards, get scheduled Wednesday night at Studio Academy? The first meeting was announced by board secretary Scot Schwark, who said he gave notice of the meeting in accordance with school by-laws after receiving written requests for the meeting from five members of the incoming board. Bergquist said she scheduled the second meeting because she heard Volunteers of America would support a meeting being held by the outgoing board. “They called a meeting for a board that’s dead — I don’t know what that’s all about,” Schwark said before the meeting Wednesday. Bergquist, who called the meeting “a joke,” said she was saddened by the recent direction the board has taken, calling it a “power play “ that wasn’t in the best interest of students. 0607498799P www.postbulletin.com • [email protected] 0426495134P Criminal charges against a woman accused of abusing her infant son should be dismissed, her attorney argued Wednesday. “There is no direct evidence anyone at any time did PDATING anything to cause the i n j u r i e s , ” THE NEWS Fred Suhler said in arguing for dismissal of the charges against Valerie Jean James, 20, of Mankato. She and Robert Lee Heck, 27, are each charged with firstdegree assault and aiding an offender/obstructing the investigation or prosecution. They are accused of causing numerous fractures to their son, Jordan, while staying at the Ronald McDonald House in Rochester in January. James gave birth to conjoined twins, Jacob and Jordan, in November at Rochester Methodist Hospital. The boys were separated immediately after birth. Jordan was released Jan. 3 and stayed at the Ronald McDonald House with his parents. Jacob was still in the hospital. The parents brought Jordan back to the hospital on Jan. 11 because of swelling. Doctors said they found 24 bone fractures. Suhler and co-defense attorney Pam King want the charges against James dismissed for lack of probable cause. Prosecutor Lisa Swenson said Mayo Clinic doctors treating the infant said the fractures occurred at two separate times — the leg fractures and rib fractures were done five to seven days apart and XX SIDEWALK SALE 0604499594P [email protected] Thursday, July 26, 2007 Sponsor criticizes new board Attorneys for twins’ mother seek dismissal of charges By Janice Gregorson POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com 0614498537P POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com 0602490843P A4 Car Club Enthusiasts The Post-Bulletin is collecting information to print a directory of all area car clubs in our weekly AUTOMOTION section. GOING ON NOW! This contact information should be sent to: [email protected] 7:00 AM SHARP!! YOU B E T H E R E !! ! • • Information Should include Car Club Name, Contact Name, Contact Number, Meetings, and other pertinent information. 0726503133P 0711502694P • • • XX POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 A5 Area school bus driver accused of misconduct By Heather J. Carlson [email protected] MANTORVILLE — A 49-year-old bus driver is facing criminal sexual charges for allegedly performing a sexual act on a teenage boy who rode his school bus. David Andrew Gerlach, of Brownsdale, was charged Wednesday in Dodge District Court with felony thirddegree criminal sexual conduct and third-degree attempted criminal sexual conduct, and a gross misdemeanor charge of contributing to the need for protection or services. Gerlach has been a bus driver for Wilson Transit in Dexter, which provides bus service for the Hayfield School District, said district Superintendent Ron Evjen. Evjen said he was caught off-guard by the criminal charges against Gerlach. “I am totally shocked,” he said. “He was just always there helping. He was a very giving person." According to the criminal complaint, Gerlach text-messaged the victim, who was at least 16 years old on July 15. In the messages, he offered to give the victim cigarettes, beer and apple schnapps. The teenager met Gerlach at his company’s school bus garage in Brownsdale. Gerlach gave the victim the promised items and then performed a sexual act on the victim. Dodge County Sheriff Gary Thompson said the case came to light because the victim’s mother discovered text messages between Gerlach and her son on his cell phone. She turned the phone over to investigators. On July 22, a sheriff’s investigator posed as the victim by using his phone and text-messaging Gerlach. During the messaging, Gerlach said he should buy the victim a phone and asked if they could get together the next day. The investigator arranged to meet Gerlach in the Hayfield School District’s parking lot. Gerlach was arrested at the scene. A new mobile phone with the receipt was found in the suspect’s car. The sheriff said that Gerlach doesn’t have a criminal record. Gerlach previously owned his own business, Gerlach Bus Co., which provided services to the Hayfield School District for several years along with two other bus companies, Evjen said. Gerlach became a bus driver for Wilson Transit and has worked as a bus driver in the district for the past four years. Kim Wilson, owner of Wilson Transit, could not be reached for comment Wednesday. Evjen said the district doesn’t perform its own background checks on bus drivers and expects the bus company to handle that. He said Gerlach will no longer be allowed to drive a school bus for the district. Gerlach has been released from the Steele County Detention Center after posting $20,000 bail. The conditions for release require he have no contact with the victim, the victim’s family Vets home negotiating for license renewal CascadeCareServices We Go We Care! 289-3114 0330493253P See Dennis for… See Brian for… • Auto Glass • Thermopanes • Screen Repair • Window Glass • Auto Glass • Heavy Glass Shower Doors • Mirrors ATTORNEY Personal Injury Wrongful Death 0623501334P www.mrrooter.com and click on the CaptureIt! logo to view photos taken by Locally Owned for 67 Years Auto • Home • Commercial Auto • Home • Commercial Across from Graham Arena at K&M GLASS the fairgrounds 208 16th St. SE Open M-F 7-5:30, Sat. 9-1 289-3261 0607498815P FAST SERVICE 24 HOURS A DAY... 7 DAYS A WEEK! Log on to www.postbulletin.com Locally Owned for 67 Years ASK ONE OF OUR EXPERTS @ AUTO SERVICE until its care problems are fixed. There are 45 vacancies in the nursing home portion, which can house 341 patients, with 342 people on the waiting list to get in. The home also has 61 beds in assisted living. Resident Bob Thomas, 86, said Wednesday that he wasn’t at all worried about the licensing issue. “This is a good place. I like it here,” said the WWII veteran. “The staff is good, most of them. They take good care of me, they feed me well and they give me 75 cents that I can lose when I play nickel-ante poker with my buddies. What the heck else could you want?” the Post-Bulletin at local sports events. Across from Graham Arena at 208 16th St. SE Open M-F 7-5:30, Sat. 9-1 the fairgrounds 289-3261 K&M GLASS 0607498801P EXPERTS.POSTBULLETIN.COM BANK/ COMMERCIAL ARBORICULTURE/ URBAN FORESTRY FINANCIAL ADVISOR CELL PHONES FITNESS EQUIPMENT Dave Nelson Clements Jim Suk Suk Law Firm Maier Forest and Tree Justin Mc Neilus Sterling State Bank Brewer Investment Group Bruce Wiskus Wireless Toys Total Health Fitness GARAGE DOOR/ OPENERS HEALTH & FITNESS HOME IMPROVEMENT HOMEBUILDING JEWELERS MORTGAGES CHIMNEYS Mathew Craft Mike Paradise Bigelow Homes Renee Smith Lasker Jewelers Executive Mortgage MN FLORIST PIANOS Jamie Friend Randy & Paulette Pehling Quality Overhead Doors Rochester Area Family Y LANDSCAPING Jay Maier Crafts Home Improvement HOT TUBS/ MATTRESSES Russ, Margaret, Megan & Travis Hinz Family Tree Landscape Nursery, Inc. MEDICAL/ URGENT CARE Gary Reeves Land-O-Dreams Jay Fotland JAY Clinic PHOTOGRAPHY PLUMBING Michael Cleary Michael Cleary Photography Adam Carlson Megan J. Hobson PSYCHOLOGY/ COUNSELING Dan Williams Dano’s Chimney Sweep DOORS/ RETRACTABLE AWNINGS Phil Schroeder Renning’s Flowers Ann & Larry Petit Petit Music Dr. Donald E. Williams Decision Point Behavioral Health Ryan Windows and Siding WINE & LIQUOR REALTOR/RESIDENTIAL SECURITY/ALARMS & HOME ELECTRONICS SKIN CARE WEIGHT LOSS Dave Frederixon Mr. Rooter Plumbing Mike, Tom, Doug & Kris Dan Groteboer Corey Kelly Kim Bentz DENTISTRY HOME STAGING AND DESIGN Andy’s Liquor Dr. Kirk Gentling Dr. Colin Gentling Dr. Ryan Henrichson Dr. Melissa McColloch Gentling Dental Care ARE YOU AN EXPERT? • Dave Nagel • RE/MAX of Rochester Home Technology Store Tim Mayer The Seller’s Edge Larson Siding And Windows Linda, Amanda, Deb & Kristina Consultant LA WEIGHT LOSS MODULAR/ MANUFACTURED HOME WINDOWS & SIDING Lori Metcalf Dan Ryan CANT FIND IT? TRY OUR ONLINE YELLOW PAGES LOCAL.ROCHESTERMN.COM GOT A QUESTION? DONT SETTLE FOR A HUNCH AND A GUESS, the extra mile! an outside consultant to monitor the home’s progress and report monthly to the Health Department. Chip Cox, interim executive director of the Veterans Home Board, said the situation is very serious. “We’re taking all due steps to make sure we’re meeting the requirements of the Department of Health.” The home is making “significant progress, steady but slow because we want to do it right,” Cox said. “Staff morale is always touchy, but people are working hard, and I think we’re holding our own.” The home stopped taking new admissions in January 0427496378 MINNEAPOLIS — The Minnesota Veterans Homes Board is negotiating with the state Health Department in an attempt to get the license renewed for the Minneapolis Veterans Home. The 402-bed state-owned home has been under scrutiny since problems in care were uncovered last year. While steps have been taken to correct the problems, state officials said Wednesday that they want more assurance that the cycle of violations will end. A state inspection in late 2006 found 34 violations of care standards and other regulations. Earlier this year, inspectors cited the home for medical errors connected to the deaths of three veterans at the home. The Veterans Home was fined $40,700 this year after many of the problems weren’t corrected. Nine of those fines were for $200 or more. Under state law, four fines of that size can cost a nursing home its license. While the home’s license expires Monday, it will continue in effect until an agreement is reached with the Veterans Homes Board, probably by early August, said Darcy Miner, who heads the Health Department inspectors. “We are concerned,” Miner said. “In a situation as serious as this, we will always use all the tools available to us.” The agreement being negotiated includes a provision that the home spend about $1 million over the next two years for POINT, CLICK, ASK! EXPERTS.POSTBULLETIN.COM Dennis Kieffer Homes of Harmony Contact Ron Hanson • Online Senior Account Executive • Phone: (507) 285-7741 • Fax: (507) 285-7666 • TollFree (800) 562-1758 • [email protected] • • • • • • 0701500741P Associated Press A6 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com XX Thursday, July 26, 2007 Governor asks Ag department to assess drought damage Associated Press ST. PAUL — Gov. Tim Pawlenty has asked the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Farm Service Agency to begin a formal assessment of drought damage to Minnesota’s farmland as a first step toward a possible disaster declaration. The governor and state agriculture officials will work with FSA offices in the state to review the county-by-county damage assessments and prepare a formal disaster declaration request if needed, Pawlenty said Wednesday. “We are hearing reports of significant problems with crops and forage production, especially in central Minnesota,” Pawlenty said in a news release. “We need to collect Ken Klotzbach/Post-Bulletin Cold thoughts, warm days Matt Jones, right, and David Benson think of colder days by practicing their cross country skiing on roller skis along West River Road in Rochester on Wednesday afternoon in 90-degree heat. Sunny and dry weather, with temperatures in the mid- to high 80s, is forecast into next week. 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Noon-4 Carpet • Ceramic Tile • Hardwoos Floors • Vinyl • Laminate Flooring • Area Rugs • • • • • 0721502237P *408 Apache Mall Shopping Ctr. 0726503125AS FREE DIGITAL PHOTO CLASSES XX POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Farm-state lawmakers could save subsidies New York Times News Service WASHINGTON — For the many critics of farm subsidies, including President Bush and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, this seemed like the ideal year for Congress to tackle the federal payments long criticized for enriching big farm interests, violating trade agreements and neglecting small family farms. Many crop prices are at or near record highs. Consternation over the country’s dependence on foreign oil has sent Pelosi demand for cornbased ethanol soaring. European wheat fields have been battered by too much rain. And market analysts are projecting continued boom years for American farmers into the foreseeable future. But as the latest farm bill heads to the House floor today, farm-state lawmakers seem likely to prevail in keeping Bush the old subsidies largely in place, drawing a veto threat from the White House on Wednesday. Faced with fierce opposition from members of the House Agriculture Committee, Pelosi and other Democratic leaders lowered their sights on reforms and are now backing the committee’s farm bill, in part to protect rural freshmen lawmakers who may be vulnerable in the 2008 elections. Instead, Pelosi helped to secure more modest changes, pushing the committee to provide $1.8 billion in new aid for fruit and vegetable growers, generating support from those farmers and deflating some of the opposition by lawmakers seeking reforms. At the same time, Pelosi pronounced the bill a “good first step to reform” by ending subsidies for the richest farmers — those earning more than $1 million a year — and closing a loophole that let some farmers exceed subsidy limits by owning partnerships in multiple farms. A group of dissident lawmakers led by Rep. Ron Kind, D-Wis., and Rep. Jeff Flake, RAriz., is still pushing a plan to sharply curtail the subsidies. 14 states paid at least $1 billion in aid The U.S. government’s crop subsidy program dispersed $34.8 billion to farmers from 2003 to 2005. Subsidies, 2003 to 2005 - $25 million 100 500 1 billion + Iowa farmers received $3.8 billion in crop subsidies, the highest for all states. D.C. Hawaii lowest: $3,046 SOURCE: Environment Working Group But they have been largely outmuscled by the Agriculture Committee, whose 46 members make up slightly more than 10 percent of districts in the House yet took home more than 40 percent of all farm subsidies between 2003 and 2005, according to a database compiled by the Environmental Working Group, which opposes the subsidies. Critics in Congress include fiscal conservatives who deride the payments as wasteful government spending and liberals AP who call them corporate welfare for agribusiness. All say the measure will simply perpetuate the overly generous subsidy system, at a point when American farmers are well-positioned to weather changes. The White House, in a strongly worded statement on Wednesday, said that Bush would veto the farm bill in its current form because it was too expensive and would require tax increases while not doing enough to fix subsidy programs. Reach Austin 0629501639P Call 1-888-562-1758 or 507-434-7347 for details! The top 10 freshmen Democratic districts by crop subsidy and amount received between 2003 and 2005. 1. Rep. Tim Walz, Minnesota — $900 million 2. Rep. David Loebsack, Iowa — $350 million 3. Rep. Brad Ellsworth, Indiana — $304.6 million 4. Rep. Nancy Boyda, Kansas — $224.6 million 5. Rep. Joe Donnelly, Indiana — $209.8 million 6. Rep. Steve Kagen, Wisconsin — $81.5 million 7. Rep. Zack Space, Ohio — $52.5 million 8. Rep. Michael Arcuri, New York — $32.7 million 9. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, Arizona — $27.2 million 10. Rep. Nick Lampson, Texas — $24.8 million A7 Don’t look for your next home … Find it! Source: The Environmental Working Group’s database of farm subsidies, compiled from information provided by the Agriculture Department. See Sean for… • Auto Glass • Commercial Storefronts & Doors Mower County & every household in every Saturday in the Freshmen Democrats and farm subsidies Thursday, July 26, 2007 Locally Owned for 67 Years 888-366-5811 0702501235EM Auto • Home • Commercial Across from Graham Arena at K&M GLASS the fairgrounds 208 16th St. SE Open M-F 7-5:30, Sat. 9-1 289-3261 0607498843P Sale Runs July 24th to August 4th With the purchase of any Pellet or Corn Stove, receive... • Free Horizontal Vent Kit works for most main floor applications • 1/2 Off Installation includes delivery, set-up & installation • 1/2 Ton of Pellets Free or • 3 Free Tons of Pellets & 12 MONTHS NO PAYMENTS NO INTEREST FINANCING Pellet Sale $179/Ton Fuel King Premium Wood Pellets Plus...Take $10 Off Per Ton with purchase of 3 Tons or More Sale is while supplies last, call to reserve. Friday’s Real Estate Marketplace 133 FOR 3 LOW FUEL PRICE GUARANTEE! 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You're just an empty h u m a n shell.” Bleyle, who told investigators he molested as many as half the children he treated in his 10 years working in the convalescent ward Bleyle at Rady Children’s Hospital, did not turn to look as a succession of weeping parents and family members spoke from the public gallery just behind him. Instead, he stared straight ahead or cast his eyes down at the table in front of him. Documents refute testimony 5 3 Federal agents raided 10 marijuana clinics in Los Angeles on Wednesday, the same day city leaders introduced a measure calling for an end to the crackdown on the dispensaries allowed under state law. The bust netted five arrests, large quantities of marijuana and cash, and was the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s second-largest since California voters approved medical marijuana sales in 1996. The drug remains illegal under federal law. The agency has maintained the clinics are distribution points for illegal drugs and earn their owners big profits. Those arrested Wednesday included clinic owners and managers, though no patients, for investigation of marijuana distribution. 2. WASHINGTON 4 1 9 6 10 11 Report compiled from news services 4. NEVADA 7. ILLINOIS 10. TEXAS Student charged for threats Teen birth rate is highest A cowboy returns to the Prunty Ranch house after rounding up cattle in the Copper Mountains near Jarbidge, Nev. Temperature increase noted Nevada is among the states with the most dramatic increase in average temperatures the last 30 years, according to a new study that examines the impact of global warming across the country. The average temperature in Reno from June through August last year was 75.6 degrees, almost 7 degrees above the 30-year average, the U.S. Public Interest Research Group reported. The gap was the biggest measured nationally. Las Vegas’ average temperature last summer was 3.6 degrees above the 30year average from 1971-2000, while Elko’s was 4 degrees above normal and Ely’s was 2.1 degrees hotter, the report said. “The scientific evidence of global warming is incontrovertible, and Nevada is feeling the heat more intensely than most of the rest of the U.S,” said Stephen M. Rowland, Professor of Geology at University of Nevada, Las Vegas. A college fraternity president and aspiring rapper who was accused of threatening a “murderous rampage” similar to April’s deadly shooting spree at Virginia Tech pleaded not guilty Wednesday. A gun dealer had alerted federal authorities about Olutosin Oduwole, saying he had s e e m e d overly anxious to get an online shipment of semiautomatic weapons, according to an affidavit filed in court by a police d e t e c t i v e . Oduwole The affidavit also said Oduwole was seen walking around campus wearing a bulletresistant vest in May. The Southern Illinois University student was arrested Friday after police said they found a handwritten note in his car demanding payment to a PayPal account, threatening that “if this account doesn’t reach $50,000 in the next 7 days then a murderous rampage similar to the VT shooting will occur at another highly populated university. THIS IS NOT A JOKE!” Oduwole, who turned 22 on Wednesday, was charged a day earlier with making a terrorist threat. He was being held on a total of $1.1 million bail. 5. MONTANA 8. MICHIGAN Retaining wall prompts suit Wildfires threaten homes Herbert and Shirley-Ann Leu were thinking landscaping, not politics, when they built an 85-foot-long concrete wall in their backyard. The Leus had just finished building the 4-foot-high wall in Blaine when they were visited earlier this year by the International Boundary Commission, a joint U.S.-Canadian agency that maintains the countries’ border. American commissioner Dennis Schornack told the Leus their retaining wall stuck about three feet into a 10-foot border buffer zone that had to remain free of obstruction. He said if the Leus didn’t tear their wall down, the commission would do it for them — and send them the bill. The Leus said they had done all their homework before putting in the wall, and none of the officials who issued building permits ever mentioned such a problem. So the Leus sued, with help from the Pacific Legal Foundation, which has an annual budget of about $9 million, versus less than $1.5 million for the Boundary Commission. Helicopters and air tankers joined firefighters working to save homes from a fast-moving brush fire in Montana as dozens of wildfires scorched the West on Wednesday. The fire in western Montana was about 5 square miles and threatened about 20 residents outside of Polson, said Rich Janssen, fire information officer for the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes. Two homes were temporarily evacuated, but residents were later allowed to return. Some 120 firefighters fought the blaze Wednesday. The National Interagency Coordination Center in Boise, Idaho, was tracking 48 large fires across the nation. Fires were burning in nine western states and the Florida panhandle. Softball player, 12, killed Fungus concerns foresters Coastal state forests are experiencing a resurgence in Swiss needle cast disease, a fungus that kills the evergreen needles on Douglas fir trees by interrupting photosynthesis. Aerial surveys conducted by the Oregon Department of Forestry show 338,543 acres infected by the disease — almost double the 2004 total. The fungus thrives in warm, wet conditions. The disease turns needles yellow before the tree “casts” them off. The fungus doesn’t kill the trees, but it reduces their growth rate by 20 percent to 50 percent. “The fact that we’re up almost as high as we were in 2000 is fairly concerning to me because in the last seven or eight years people have been doing a lot to manage the disease,” said Alan Kanaskie, a Department of Forestry pathologist. • 13 7 Herbert and Shirley-Ann Leu. 3. OREGON 12 8 DEA raids marijuana clinics • Thursday, July 26, 2007 6. UTAH 9/11 rescue dog dies A black Labrador that burrowed through smoking debris after Sept. 11 and flooded rubble after Hurricane Katrina in search of survivors has died of cancer. O w n e r Mary Flood had 12-yearold Jake put to sleep Wednesday after a last s t r o l l through the fields and a dip in the creek near their home in Oakley, Utah. Flood said Jake had been in Jake pain, shaking with a 105-degree fever as he lay on the lawn. No one can say whether the dog would have gotten sick if he hadn't been exposed to the toxic air at the World Trade Center, but cancer in dogs Jake’s age is common. • A 12-year-old softball player suffered a brain injury when she was hit in the head with a ball during practice, and died a day later, police and family said. Margaret R u t h “Maggie” Hilbrands was hit during a routine infield drill on Monday — a day after the death of a minor-league baseball coach who was struck by a line drive Hilbrands in Arkansas. The Grand Rapids girl died Tuesday at DeVos Children's Hospital. “She missed the ball. It appears it hit her in the wrong spot. She never regained consciousness,” her mother, Jan Hilbrands, said. 9. NEBRASKA Lighter starts apartment fire A 7-year-old boy playing with a lighter Wednesday started an apartment fire that killed two children and their baby sitter, officials said. Four other children escaped unharmed. “We are very confident that the fire was started by a child playing with a lighter inside of the home,” fire Lt. David Stukenholtz said. Police did not immediately release identities of victims. Neighbor Cecilia Carmona, 23, said three of the children who escaped were those of a woman who rented the apartment in Bellevue, an Omaha suburb. The fourth young survivor was Carmona’s own 4-month-old daughter. The dead children were both girls — one age 2 and the other 11 months. Carmona said they were the baby sitter’s nieces. • • Texas had the nation’s highest birth rate among teenagers ages 15 to 19 in 2004, according to a newly released study of children’s health. The Kids Count study, which is updated annually by the Annie E. Casey Foundation in Baltimore, said the Texas rate of 63 births per 1,000 teens remained the same from 2003 to 2004. Texas tied New Mexico and Mississippi for the top spot in 2003, but both of those states saw their rates decline in 2004. The average rate nationally was 41 births per 1,000 teens in 2004. Texas mirrored the rest of the nation in reporting a steep decline in teen births since at least 1990. “Texas has been showing improvement, but other states are showing more improvement,” said Frances Deviney, director of Texas Kids Count and a senior research associate for the Center for Public Policy Priorities in Austin. 11. FLORIDA Documents indicate eight congressional leaders were briefed about the Bush administration’s terrorist surveillance program on the eve of its expiration in 2004, contradicting sworn Senate testimony this week by Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. The documents underscore questions about Gonzales’ credibility as senators consider whether a perjury investigation should be opened into conflicting accounts about the program and a dramatic March 2004 confrontation leading up to its potentially illegal reauthorization. A Gonzales spokesman maintained Wednesday that the attorney general stands by his testi- Gonzales mony. At a heated Senate Judiciary Committee hearing Tuesday, Gonzales repeatedly testified that the issue at hand was not about the terrorist surveillance program, which allowed the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on suspects in the United States without receiving court approval. Contempt citations pass A House panel Wednesday slapped two of President Bush’s top advisers with contempt of Congress citations for refusing to give up evidence in the probe into the firings of nine U.S. attorneys. The Democratic-controlled House Judiciary Committee voted 22-to-17 along party lines to go after White House chief of staff Joshua Bolten and ex-Bush counsel Harriet Miers, a former Supreme Court nominee. “For our view, this is pathetic,” White House spokesman Tony Snow said after the vote. Bolten and Miers got the rare rebuke after invoking executive privilege to block subpoenas for their testimony in the inquiry into allegations the prosecutors were axed because they didn’t back the administration’s political agenda. Noriega to fight extradition Just weeks off, former Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega is fighting a French extradition request on money laundering charges. Noriega was expected today at a hearing where he was to be formally notified of the extradition request, prosecutors said. A decision on the request was not expected for weeks. Noriega, 71, was convicted in 1992 of drug and racketeering charges involving his acceptance of bribes from Colombia’s Medellin cartel to allow shipments of U.S.-bound cocaine through Panama. His 30-year prison term was reduced for good behavior, and he is scheduled to be released Sept. 9. He had intended to fly to Panama to fight a conviction in the slayings of two political opponents, his lawyers have said. 12. RHODE ISLAND Cat apparently senses death Oscar the cat seems to have an uncanny knack for predicting when nursing home patients are going to die, by curling up next to them during their final hours. His accuracy, observed in 25 cases, has led the staff to call family members once he has chosen someone. It usually means they have less than four hours to live. “He doesn’t make too many mistakes. He seems to understand when patients are about to die,” said Dr. David Dosa in an interview. He describes the phenomenon in a poignant essay in today’s issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. “ M a n y family members take some solace from it. They appreciate the companionship that the cat provides for their Oscar dying loved one,” said Dosa, a geriatrician and assistant professor of medicine at Brown University. The 2-year-old feline was adopted as a kitten and grew up in a thirdfloor dementia unit at the Steere House Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Providence. The facility treats people with Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s disease and other illnesses. • Democrats push Iraq pullout House Democrats have drafted new Iraq legislation they hope will appeal to Republicans fed up with the war: Start withdrawing troops in two months but leave it up to President Bush to decide when to complete the pullout. The vote will come next week, as members take up a $460 billion bill covering military spending for 2008. Another vote could come again in September, after Iraq commander Gen. David Petraeus delivers a long-anticipated assessment on the war and Congress considers a $142 billion measure needed to finance the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. “This is big time,” Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., said of the upcoming fall debate. “When you get to September, this is history. This is when we’re going to have a real confrontation with the president trying to work Murtha things out.” The House has passed similar antiwar measures in the past, but has been unable to push the legislation through the Senate, where Democrats hold a slimmer majority and Republicans have routinely blocked such bills from advancing. Rural kids better in science? Rural students perform better in science than their urban counterparts, and rural teachers are generally happy with their schools, a federal study says. While many education reports examine urban issues, this Education Department study provides a snapshot of what’s happening in rural schools. In all, about a third of U.S. public schools are located in rural areas. Generally, areas with fewer than 500 people per square mile are considered rural by the Census Bureau. When it comes to achievement, the report released Wednesday finds science is a strong subject for rural students. That could be because kids get their education in real-world settings as well as classrooms, says Marty Strange, policy director of the Rural School and Community Trust, an advocacy group. “Rural life is a little closer to nature,” he said. • • XX POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com 1. IRAQ Thursday, July 26, 2007 A9 13. INDONESIA Magnitude 7 quake Ternate 4 10 7 14 0 100 km 1 5 6 2. LIBYA Children’s families outraged The families of the children infected with the AIDS virus in a Libyan hospital voiced outrage Wednesday at the pardon and release of six medics who were flown home to Bulgaria a day earlier. “We deeply condemn and are deeply disappointed at the absurdity and disrespect shown by the Bulgarian presidential pardon,” the Libyan Association for the Families of HIVInfected Children said in a statement faxed to the Associated Press. The five nurses and one doctor were flown to Bulgaria on Tuesday and immediately pardoned by Bulgarian President Georgi Parvanov. Their release was secured during a three-day trip to Libya by French first lady Cecilia Sarkozy and the European Union’s commissioner for foreign affairs, Benita FerreroWaldner. French President Nicolas Sarkozy was heading to Libya on Wednesday to renew France’s relations with Libya. 3. BRAZIL Defense minister replaced More than a week after Brazil’s deadliest air accident, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has begun shaking up his country’s troubled airtraffic system. Wednesday morning, he accepted the resignation of Waldir Pires, his embattled defense minister, and replaced him with Nelson Jobim, a former chief justice of the Supreme Court. Lula also fired the head of the country’s airport authority, Jose Carlos Pereira, according to a news report. Authority representatives couldn’t immediately confirm the report. Brazil’s Defense Ministry oversees civil aviation in the country, and Pires has been criticized for failing to resolve the air traffic mess, which began last September after a midair collision over the Amazon rain forest killed 154 people. Military-run flight controllers responded to the accident by limiting, without authorization, the number of flights they monitor simultaneously, causing widespread delays and cancellations in Latin America’s biggest country. 15 Pacific Ocean Detail 0 500 mi 12 3 0 500 km AUSTRALIA SOURCES: ESRI; USGS AP Tsunami warning lifted Report compiled from news services 5. PAKISTAN 8. CUBA 10. IRELAND More anti-terrorism efforts Culture clash of Travelers The Bush administration told Congress on Wednesday it is demanding Pakistan do more to counter terrorists in its frontier areas, and a senior defense official said U.S. special forces would strike an extremist target if they had urgent intelligence. While calling President Pervez Musharraf the “most indispensable partner” of the United States in fighting terror, Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that the administration wants a more sustained and effective effort by the Pakistani government against both al-Qaida and Taliban forces on Pakistani soil. An al-Qaida buildup in federally administered tribal areas underscores the need for Pakistan to “elevate its efforts to fight the enemy,” said Burns, the State Department’s point man for Pakistan and India. “Al-Qaida remains a potent force inside Pakistan, as is the Taliban,” he said. “Defeating these enemies is essential to our effort to defeat terrorism in South Asia and around the world.” It looks like a classy, glamorous pinup calendar -- and that’s the point. But behind the pretty faces in Ireland’s “Beauty has no Boundaries” calendar is a pointed social statement. The 12 young women featured are all Irish Travelers, members of a nomadic culture that has inhabited the island for centuries, nurturing a unique language and tradition on the outskirts of a leery society. The calendar is an attempt to depict Travelers as just like the rest of the Irish population — young, hopeful, undeserving of marginalization. According to the 2006 census, an estimated 22,435 Travelers currently live in Ireland. Their culture is fiercely clannish, committed strongly to family, tradition and oral history. While Travelers speak English with an identifying lilt, they have also kept alive their own language — Cant, or Gammon, which is a mixture of ancient Gaelic, English and other linguistic influences. And the Traveling community has traditionally gotten a bad rap. Non-Travelers — or “settled” people — blame Travelers for crime, scams and mayhem. Anyone who has seen Brad Pitt’s role in the movie “Snatch,” or has watched FX’s “The Riches,” about a family of Irish-American Travelers, has seen the worst of Traveler stereotypes: thieving, fighting, conning. Unbeknownst to most Americans, Traveler communities exist in the U.S., with large settlements in Texas and South Carolina -— presumably immigrants from Ireland’s mid-1800s potato famine. A man paints a sign on a street Wednesday in Camaguey, Cuba, that reads in Spanish "Long live 26" in reference to the anniversary of the Cuban Revolution. Cuba, Raul Castro celebrate Raul Castro’s provisional government is starting to gain an air of permanence. Cuba’s 76-year-old acting president and defense minister — not his elder brother, Fidel — will address cheering communists at Revolution Day festivities today in Camaguey, a provincial capital of narrow colonial streets southeast of Havana. Fidel Castro, who turns 81 next month, for decades gave hours-long speeches to mark Cuba’s top holiday. NDIA In 2006, he addressed crowds in two separate cities on Revolution Day. But five days later, he announced that First female inauguration emergency intestinal surgery was India’s first female president was forcing him to step aside in favor of his sworn in Wednesday, vowing to elim- younger brother. He has not been seen inate the practice of aborting female in public since. fetuses and to empower women, who are often APAN treated as second-class Gang leader, sumo extortion citizens. A former gang leader was among A whitethree people arrested Wednesday on clad, mounted suspicion of extorting money and honor guard goods from former sumo wrestler escorted PratKyokushuzan. ibha Patil’s limousine to It also has been learned that Parliament, Kyokushuzan, a Mongolian whose real where she name is Davaa Batbayar, was forced took the oath to retire from the sport last year due of office. The Patil to his relationship with the former ceremony was gang members. followed by a 21-gun salute Tokyo’s Metropolitan Police Departannouncing the inauguration of India’s ment is to investigate whether the 13th president. former gangsters were connected with Despite being touted as an impor- an incident in November in which an tant step for gender equality, Patil’s unmanned truck crashed into the election to the largely ceremonial post garage of Oshima sumo stable in has elicited only a lukewarm response Tokyo. At the time, Kyokushuzan was from many women who say it has a member of the stable. given them little more than a symbol Arrested are Naohiko Miyamoto, — not a leader who represents them. 62, a former gang leader affiliated with the Sumiyoshi-kai crime syndicate; Motomi Fujinami, 36, the head of another affiliate; and one other. Police ENMARK say Miyamoto and the other two suspects met Kyokushuzan three times in Tokyo between late October and early November. 6. I 9. J 7. D Leak contaminates tourism 4. NORWAY Santas and their helpers listen to a presentation at the annual Santa Congress Wednesday near Copenhagen. Jellyfish volunteers wanted Summer Santa convention Norwegian researchers are calling for bold, non-hairy humans to bare their arms and be stung by jellyfish in the name of science. Testing a new sun screen, aimed at protecting against jellyfish stings, the University of Oslo said it wants volunteers to be burned by jellyfish tentacles on both arms - one with ordinary sun block, the other with antijellyfish sun lotion. Only five people have registered for the test, to be held on Thursday, but Andersen said he was optimistic about getting a team of more than 10 people. "There's been a lot of interest in us doing this," he said. The compensation? Three bottles of anti-jellyfish sun screen, of course. Christmas might be months away, but that didn’t stop 150 international Santas and their little helpers from prancing about Wednesday in the Danish summer. Whether he’s called Papa Noel, St. Nick or Father Christmas, the iconic figure is needed everywhere, said Mack Fysh, a Canadian Santa. “We all see Santa as an anchor,” said Fysh, sporting a white, fake beard. The annual event, created 50 years ago to entertain children five months before Christmas, was held at the Bakken amusement park near the Danish capital of Copenhagen. During the years, it bloomed from a local summer festival to a gathering of Santas from around the world. • PHILIPPINES INDONESIA Jakarta 13 Blast subverts solidarity Two suicide car bombings struck soccer fans in Baghdad as they were celebrating Iraq’s victory in the Asian Cup semifinal on Wednesday, killing at least 50 people and wounding more than 100, officials said. The victims were among the thousands of revelers who took to the streets of the capital after the country’s national soccer team beat South Korea to reach the tournament’s final against Saudi Arabia on Sunday in Jakarta, Indonesia. The first attack took place about 6:30 p.m. when a bomber exploded in a crowd of people cheering near a well-known ice cream parlor in Baghdad’s western neighborhood of Mansour, according to police and hospital officials. At least 30 people were killed and 75 were wounded, an Interior Ministry official said. Another suicide car bomber detonated his payload about 45 minutes later in the midst of dozens of vehicles filled with revelers in the eastern district of Ghadeer, killing at least 20 people, including two soldiers, and wounding 61. South China Sea MALAYSIA 9 8 11 0 100 mi Equator 2 Iraqi soccer fans celebrate Wednesday in central Baghdad after the country's national soccer team beat South Korea in the Asian Cup to reach the tournament's final. • Sulawesi • Tourist spots in Niigata would normally be looking forward to the peak summer season at this time of year. Instead, many are bracing for the worst as visitors are staying away after reports of radiation leaks from a nuclear power plant in the prefecture. About 48,000 reservations for Japanese-style inns and hotels were canceled in the five days after an earthquake hit the area July 16, according to the prefectural association of city mayors and association of town and village mayors. These areas are likely to face hard times in the months ahead, despite the tourism industry asserting they are safe and the radioactive materials that leaked from the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant have no harmful effects on humans. According to the Kashiwazaki tourist association, about 1 million of the annual 3.8 million visitors to the city head to its beaches. Beach pavilions offering shade or selling food and drink are open as normal on the city’s 15 swimming beaches, but virtually nobody is visiting them. • • 11. VENEZUELA Chavez dismisses critics A report by an international anticorruption group, buried in an obscure part of the Organization of American States’ Web site, concluded that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez had done little to eliminate graft. O f f b u d g e t spending was soaring, too many government jobs were handed out without public postings and there were too many Chavez no-bid government contracts, according to Transparency International. But Venezuela’s harsh reaction to the report, activists say, underscores just how far the Chavez government will go to silence critical voices and how weak the 34-member hemispheric body can be at times. Venezuelan officials demanded that the OAS yank the report from the Web site. They objected to the report’s author, Berlin-based Transparency International, briefing an OAS panel. 12. EAST TIMOR Aid, with benefits elsewhere It looks like a pleasant place to conduct affairs of state: a broad, palmfringed compound by the side of the sea with reflecting pools, a rock garden and fluttering flags. It is the future Foreign Ministry of East Timor, and it is a gift from the Chinese government. China’s friendly stance is part of a broad diplomatic and economic policy throughout the region to which some people give the gentle description “soft power.” • A powerful earthquake rocked eastern Indonesia today, sending residents fleeing from swaying homes and hospitals, authorities and witnesses said. There were no immediate reports of damage. The quake, which had a magnitude of 6.9, triggered a tsunami warning but the alert was quickly lifted after it became clear no destructive waves had been generated, the country’s geophysics agency said. The earthquake struck under the Maluku Sea at a depth of 20 miles, the U.S. Geological Survey said on its Web site. The quake’s epicenter was more than 130 miles north of Ternate island. Indonesia, the world’s largest archipelago, is prone to seismic upheaval due to its location on the so-called Pacific “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanos and fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin. 14. GERMANY A sad farewell to U.S. Army Sixty-two years after they arrived in the medieval village of Buedingen — and 17 years after it ceased to be the front line in the Cold War — U.S. troops are leaving and preparing to hand their base back to the town. The 640 soldiers in the 1st Squadron of the U.S. Army’s 1st Cavalry Regiment will be gone by mid-August. Most have already left, the latest in a rush back to the States that’s seen American troop levels in Europe fall by about one-third since 2005. The U.S. also is shutting down bases this summer in Gelnhausen, Darmstadt and Hanau and a barracks in Mannheim. At a time when two-thirds of Germans view the U.S. unfavorably, it sounds like perfect timing. That’s not the view in Buedingen, however. “I can’t think of a negative thing to say about America,” said lifelong resident Ursula Schmueck, who helps run a 1950s museum in town. “I don’t know anyone who could. We all love America here. I think that’s because we know it. .. For decades after the war, we went to sleep every night thanking God the Americans were still here, because if they’d pulled back even a little ways, we would have been under Soviet influence.” 15. ETHIOPIA Without land in their holy land The promised land of the world’s Rastafarians can be found along a narrow highway in Ethiopia’s ancient Rift Valley, a landscape of scattered trees with boles the size of houses and fields of grain that shimmer in the sunlight like a bronze haze. The setting is beautiful — Edenic even. But as with the original Eden, it isn’t without its pitfalls. “We’ve been waiting a long, long time to become Ethiopians,” said Desmond Martin, a Jamaican pioneer who settled here more than 30 years ago on land donated by Emperor Haile Selassie. “We love Ethiopia. Ethiopia is our holy land. But we’re still not considered to be from this place.” Best known for their reggae music, dreadlocked hair, colorful clothes and copious marijuana smoking, the followers of the Rastafarian faith celebrated one of their major holidays Monday, the birthday of Selassie, the former Ethiopian ruler whom Rastas worship as a black messiah. But in Shashamane, a roadside town in Ethiopia that the Rastafarians consider their Jerusalem, the festivities were bittersweet. Almost half a century after the first 12 Caribbean settlers migrated here, advancing a Rastafarian dream that the world’s African diaspora must return to the spiritual motherland, few if any Rastas have been granted citizenship. Worse still, the pilgrims lost more than 95 percent of their imperial land grant during the 1970s, when a socialist Ethiopian regime confiscated all but 30 acres of their holdings. Throw in assorted famines, revolutions, official harassment, deep local skepticism about the divinity of Selassie and persistent suspicion of their religious “herb” smoking, and it is surprising that any still hang on. • • A10 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com The Dow High: Low: Close: Change: ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com 1,518.09 9,930.36 2,648.17 2,350.93 812.50 15,291.75 +7.05 +20.41 +8.31 +13.66 +.64 +47.68 Associated Press Regional stocks (9 a.m. quotes from Yahoo.com) Company Wednesday Benchmark (BHE) Celestica (CLS) Dover (DOV) Fastenal (FAST) HMN Financial (HMNF) Hormel (HRL) IBM (IBM) JC Penney (JCP) JDS Uniphase (JDSU) Oshkosh Truck (OSK) Rochester Medical (ROCM) Sears Hldgs Corp. (SHLD) SPSS Inc. (SPSSE) Target Corp. (TGT) U.S. Bancorp (USB) Wal-Mart (WMT) Wells Fargo (WFC) Western Digital (WDC) Zareba Systems (ZRBA) 23.94 5.90 51.79 46.8 34.71 36.62 115.91 71.7 14.99 59.08 13.73 149.578 45.45 65.11 31.18 48.33 34.43 22.71 7.214 Today 22.75 5.83 49.41 45.44 35.13 36.16 118.26 70.03 14.27 57.52 13.62 145.10 43.91 63.49 30.68 47.55 34.27 22.78 7.21 3M earnings rise 3.9 percent 3M Co., the manufacturer of products including Scotch tape and coatings for flatpanel televisions, said its second-quarter profit rose 3.9 percent on strong performance across its businesses. It raised its guidance for the full year. 3M shares rose $1.48, or 1.5 percent, to $91.10 in morning trading. 3M said it earned $917 million, or $1.25 per share, during the quarter that ended June 30, up from $882 million, or $1.15 a share during the same period last year. Revenue rose to $6.14 billion, up 7.9 percent from $5.69 billion a year ago. Analysts polled by Thomson Financial were expecting earnings of $1.18 per share on sales of $6.05 billion. 3M said it now expects to earn $5.40 to $5.60 per share for the full year including a gain of 60 cents to 70 cents for special items, up from its prior estimate of $5.20 to $5.45. Analysts were expecting $4.86 per share. Ford has best quarter in 2 years Job cuts, slimmer losses in North America and good sales overseas helped Ford Motor Co. post surprise second-quarter earnings today of $750 million, its first profitable quarter in two years. Ford’s second-quarter profit of 31 cents per share compares with a net loss of $317 million, or 17 cents per share, in the same quarter of last year. The positive earnings, though, surprised 15 analysts polled by Thomson Financial who expected the company to lose 35 cents per share excluding special items. The company attributed the gains to significant year-over-year improvement in all of its automotive operations, and to cost cuts due to restructuring and positive special items that totaled $443 million. That includes a $206 million gain related to sale of its Aston Martin unit. Even its struggling North American division showed progress. Exxon profit 4th-largest on record Exxon Mobil Corp., the world’s largest publicly traded oil company, said today its second-quarter profit fell 1 percent from a year ago as lower natural gas prices hurt results. Still, the company’s net income of $10.26 billion was the fourth-largest quarterly profit ever recorded by a publicly traded U.S. company. The latest profit compared with earnings of $10.36 billion in the second quarter of 2006. On a per-share basis, Irving, Texas-based Exxon Mobil reported earnings of $1.83 a share in the most-recent quarter, up from $1.72 from a year ago, reflecting fewer shares on the market because of an ongoing stock buyback program. Revenue dipped to $98.35 billion from $99.03 billion a year ago. Parking costs up for 4th year Finding a place to park your Pontiac is getting pricier. Parking costs have increased nationwide for the fourth year in a row, according to a new survey. Leading the U.S. for the most expensive parking was midtown Manhattan, where the median rate was $630 per month and the high a whopping $925 per month. Downtown Manhattan, Boston, San Francisco and Philadelphia, respectively, rounded out the top five in the seventh annual survey by real estate company Colliers International. Among the least expensive cities were Phoenix; Bakersfield, Calif.; and Reno, Nev. Parking prices in the U.S. paled in comparison with monthly rates in international cities such as London, where the average monthly rate rings up at $1,198, and Tokyo, at $702 per month, the study found. With tight supply and ever-increasing demand, “It’s highly unlikely that parking rates would come down,” said Ross Moore, director of market and economic research for Colliers International. “I don’t think there’s any relief in sight.” • • XX Areas of Ford plant might be contaminated 13,822.22 13,674.84 13,785.07 +68.12 Other Indexes Standard&Poors 500 Index: NYSE Index: Nasdaq Composite Index: American Stock Exchange Index: Russell 2000 Index: Wilshire 5000 Index: Thursday, July 26, 2007 Associated Press Robyn Satori tries out an Apple iMac on Tuesday at an Apple store in Palo Alto, Calif. iPhone? Computers still fuel Apple sales million, or 54 cents a share, in the year-ago quarter. By May Wong Associated Press SAN JOSE, Calif. — All eyes have recently been on the iPhone, Apple Inc.’s newest family member, but the company’s fiscal third-quarter results showed the elder Macintosh computer was still flexing its muscles, helping to drive record profits that blew past Wall Street’s expectations. Sales grew to $5.41 billion from $4.37 billion last year. Analysts polled by Thomson Financial expected Apple to report earnings of 72 cents per share on sales of $5.28 billion, while Apple itself had projected earnings of 66 cents per share on quarterly sales of $5.1 Apple shares surged more than 9 billion. percent in extended trading “We’re thrilled to report the highest Wednesday after the computer and June quarter revenue and profit in gadget maker reported that earnings Apple’s history, along with the highest grew 73 percent. quarterly Mac sales ever,” said Steve The company sold a record 1.76 Jobs, Apple’s chief executive. million Macintosh computers during For the quarter ending in Septhe quarter, up 33 percent from the tember, Apple issued what analysts year-ago period, far outpacing the industry’s growth rate. Mac sales and predicted was a typically conservative services accounted for more than 60 outlook. The Cupertino-based compercent of the quarter’s revenue, the pany said it expects to earn about 65 cents per share on revenue of about company said. $5.7 billion. Analysts were expecting “Our Mac business has tremendous earnings of 83 cents per share on momentum and has grown faster than sales of $6 billion. the industry for 11 consecutive quarThe gadget maker’s highly anticiters,” Apple’s chief financial officer Peter Oppenheimer said in a phone pated iPhone launched June 29 and sold out within days. Wall Street anainterview. lysts and investors have had lofty IPod music players remained a expectations for the multimedia cell strong contributor as well, growing phone, driving up Apple’s stock more 21 percent in unit sales to 9.8 mil- than 30 percent during the quarter. lion. “IPhone is off to a great start,” said The company also said it sold Jobs, who added that Apple hopes 270,000 iPhones in their first two days to have sold 1 million iPhones by the on the market — disappointing some end of the current quarter. who had loftier projections. The mulApple officials reiterated the comtimedia handset had little impact on the quarter’s results, however, pany’s target of selling 10 million because the company plans to iPhones in 2008 but declined to elabaccount for its sales as subscription orate on how much of a cut it will also be getting from exclusive service revenue over two years. provider AT&T Inc. under their mul“We’re still at the early stage of tiyear deal. the iPhone, but it looks like the other During the June quarter, revenue parts of Apple’s business are still growing strong,” said Caris & Co. ana- from iPhones and iPhone accessories totaled $5 million, Apple said. Shared lyst Shebly Seyrafi. revenue from AT&T was not Jane Snorek, a senior analyst with included, it said. Minneapolis-based First American Investors seemed uncertain at first Fund, said she thinks Apple could achieve 40 percent growth in Mac with how to react to Apple’s finansales next year. She boosted her earn- cial report. ings estimates for the current fiscal Before the results were announced, year from $4.75 to $5.25 per share Apple shares rose $2.37, or 1.8 perbased on the robust Mac perform- cent, to close at $137.26. Then in ance. heavy-volume trading after hours, “The only thing that kept people shares as fell as much as 6 percent from getting Macs before is that they before they rose $12.92, or 9.4 perthought it was expensive and you cent, to $150.18. couldn’t do some Windows programs “There was initially some disapon them,” Snorek said. “But they’ve pointment in the 270,000 iPhone units, taken down all those barriers, and but as people realized the gross marthat’s why you’ve seen it take off.” gins came in at 37 percent, they were For the quarter ended June 30, very encouraged by the profitability Apple’s profit rose to $818 million, of the company,” Seyrafi said. or 92 cents per share, up from $472 “Clearly, Apple is a growth story.” New job regrets are common Have you ever toiled to land a dream job, then dreamed of leaving after your first week? Many of us have regretted accepting a new job, but if your second thoughts persist for more than six months, it may not pay to stay. Sticking it out with a job you hate could cause your performance and attitude to suffer, damaging your reputation and future job prospects, according to John Challenger of employment consultants Challenger, Gray & Christmas. Some of the most common reasons Challenger cites for regrets over a new position are that the job differs from what the jobseeker expected, or the new employee doesn’t get along with co-workers or perform well. To avoid winding up in the wrong job, Challenger offered the following tips: Before starting your job search, identify “must have” and “like to have” characteristics of the position you hope to land. Once you receive an offer, evaluate how many of each would likely be fulfilled. Don’t compromise on “must haves.” Avoid rushing to accept. Most companies will give job candidates time to consider a job offer. Talk to friends and family about all aspects of the position and solicit their honest opinions. They know you better than the hiring manager who interviewed you. • cals that may have spilled or leaked. Amy Hadiaris, hydrogeologist for the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, said it’s too early to estimate how much the cleanup will cost or how extensive it will be. She said Ford has already started drilling soil borings and wells to test for pollutants in some of the more accessible areas of the property. Stefanie Denby, marketing and communications manager for Ford Land, the automaker’s real estate branch, said: “The bottom line from our perspective is that we are 100 percent committed to ensuring that the land is cleaned up.” Hadiaris said Ford will need to do field work in stages over the next couple of years, with more testing done inside and beneath the plant once it shuts down. “It’s very difficult to come up with a viable development plan when you don’t know what environmental issues you’re going to be up against,” Hadiaris said. Bedor said the city is moving forward with a fiscal analysis of land schemes, which favor mixed use redevelopment that would include housing, green space and commercial sites. Bedor said flexibility would be needed because contamination could alter a developer’s plans. The plant was built in 1923, and some of the work there took place before pollution laws and hazardous waste regulations existed. Murphy Oil plans major expansion Associated Press SUPERIOR, Wis. — Murphy Oil Refinery is looking to expand its 35,000 barrel-a-day operation to 235,000 barrels, more than 571 percent. “We don’t have enough refining capacity in this region,” refinery manager Dave Podratz said. “It’s one of the reasons you’re seeing some of the highest prices in the country in the Midwest right now.” Murphy’s plans are in the tentative stages in part because of high steel prices and a lack of skilled laborers. But Jeff Vito, Superior’s planning director, said the project would greatly benefit the city. “We’re talking a potential of $6.2 billion investment,” Vito said. “To put that in some perspective, the total value of the city of Superior is about a billion-and-a-half dollars.” Expanding the refinery could create 400 new jobs directly, and three times as many in the area. “These are the types of jobs that really help build a community, and help sustain a community for the long term, and really help elevate the quality of life,” Vito said. Another company, Hyperion Resources Inc. of Dallas, is considering an $8 billion, 400,000barrel a day refinery in South Dakota, but not everyone is so sure the region needs more refining capacity. “Is building a new mega refinery part of the direction we should really be going?” said Michael Noble, director of the renewable energy advocacy group Fresh Energy. “I think history will begin to raise the question, ’Wasn’t 2005, 2010 about the time we should be long moving toward a transition to better and smarter fuels to run our economy?”’ Akshay Rao, a marketing professor at the University of Minnesota, said higher gas prices might actually be better in the long run. “There is a fairly vocal and persuasive argument that perhaps that is a good thing, and perhaps the hidden costs of cheap gas are not being taken into account, including our defense budget and climate change,” Rao said. “And so the more expensive gas gets, the better off we are.” MARKETS CHICAGO GRAIN FUTURES Associated Press • FARM ST. PAUL — Dozens of areas at the Ford Motor Co. assembly plant in St. Paul need to be investigated for contamination and possibly cleaned up, according to a report by a consultant for the company. The plant will close next year, and the property is considered a prime area for redevelopment. The need for cleanup raises concerns about whether the land’s future use could be restricted. Cecile Bedor, director of the city’s planning and economic department, said cleanup is Ford’s responsibility. “I think everyone out there is assuming the site is highly contaminated,” she said. “I don’t think it will scare (developers). It will require significant resources.” The consultant’s report lists several sites on the 138-acre Ford property that need to be checked. Forty are listed as likely to have been contaminated with solvents and other industrial chemicals, 34 are areas of possible contamination, and seven sites that were once excavated to remove pollution may need additional cleanup. The sites include: a Little League baseball diamond on Cleveland Avenue that may have been used to dispose of battery casings; former sludge pits where paints and solvents were stored; and areas where storage tanks above and below ground held hazardous chemi- Close CHICAGO (AP) — Futures trading on the Chicago Board of Trade Wed.: Open High Low Settle Chg. WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum; cents per bushel Sep 636 1/2 643 1/4 630 1/4 634 — 8 Dec 653 1/4 659 646 652 1/2 —6 1/2 Mar 652 660 1/2 647 648 1/2 —9 1/2 May 634 1/2 640 630 630 — 8 Jul 578 582 1/2 574 577 —4 1/2 Sep 578 1/2 581 577 1/2 578 —2 1/2 Dec 580 584 579 579 1/2 —3 1/2 Jul 562 1/4 566 562 562 Dec 574 574 574 574 Jul 562 1/2 562 1/2 560 560 Tue.’s sales 74,813 Tue.’s open int 426,063, up 3,336 CORN 5,000 bu minimum; cents per bushel Sep 314 3/4 316 1/2 310 3/4 311 1/2 Dec 330 1/4 331 3/4 326 1/4 327 1/4 + 1/2 Mar 345 1/4 347 341 3/4 342 1/2 + 1/2 May 354 356 1/4 352 1/2 353 3/4 + 3/4 Jul 364 366 361 1/2 363 + 3/4 Sep 369 3/4 371 1/2 368 370 1/2 — 1/4 Dec 382 1/2 384 1/4 380 380 1/4 —1 1/4 Mar 388 390 387 387 —1 1/2 Jul 401 404 1/4 395 1/2 396 —2 1/2 Dec 395 1/2 398 1/2 394 1/2 395 1/4 —2 3/4 Mar 400 400 399 399 — 3 Jul 405 1/2 405 1/2 405 1/2 405 1/2 —2 1/2 Dec 399 399 1/2 397 1/2 398 —1 3/4 Tue.’s sales 167,021 Tue.’s open int 1,222,173 OATS 5,000 bu minimum; cents per bushel Sep 252 254 249 1/2 251 Dec 258 3/4 260 254 1/2 258 3/4 + 1 Mar 266 1/2 268 264 1/2 265 May 268 1/2 268 1/2 268 1/2 268 1/2 — 1 Jul 269 1/2 269 1/2 269 1/2 269 1/2 Sep 269 1/2 Dec 269 1/2 Mar 269 1/2 May 269 1/2 Jul 269 1/2 Sep 269 1/2 • Tue.’s sales 2,938 Tue.’s open int 14,042 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum; cents per bushel Aug 820 1/2 825 814 815 Sep 829 1/4 833 1/4 822 1/2 822 3/4 Nov 846 1/4 849 3/4 838 1/2 839 1/4 Jan 859 864 854 855 Mar 871 1/2 877 1/4 867 1/2 867 3/4 May 879 887 1/2 877 877 1/2 Jul 895 897 3/4 887 1/2 887 1/2 Aug 900 Sep 893 893 893 893 Nov 890 1/4 895 884 885 Jan 896 896 890 890 Jul 900 Nov 885 887 880 880 Tue.’s sales 105,992 Tue.’s open int 528,710 —5 1/4 — 6 —6 1/4 — 7 —5 1/4 — 6 —4 3/4 —4 1/2 —5 1/2 — 2 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) — Futures trading on Chicago Mercantile Exchange Wed: Open High Low Settle Chg. CATTLE 40,000 lbs.; cents per lb. Aug 92.00 92.85 91.62 92.05 — Oct 96.75 97.65 96.40 96.82 — Dec 98.80 99.35 98.50 99.07 — Feb 99.30 99.35 98.62 99.25 — Apr 99.20 99.50 99.00 99.27 — Jun 94.50 94.72 94.15 94.70 — Aug 92.70 93.10 92.60 92.60 — Est. sales 24,269. Tue.’s sales 22,776 Tue.’s open int 241,378, up 1,859 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.; cents per lb. Aug 115.80 116.60 115.30 115.85 — Sep 118.00 118.00 116.07 116.85 — Oct 117.60 117.87 116.40 117.02 — Nov 116.50 117.10 115.97 116.50 — Jan 114.95 114.95 113.75 114.30 — Mar 112.00 112.10 111.80 111.95 — Apr 112.50 112.60 112.40 112.60 — May 112.40 112.45 112.25 112.45 — Est. sales 3,521. Tue.’s sales 3,337 Tue.’s open int 31,124, up 352 HOGS,LEAN • the .57 .65 .28 .12 .30 .02 .10 .65 .72 .80 .70 .70 .85 .30 .50 • 40,000 lbs.; cents per lb. Aug 74.05 74.97 73.45 74.10 — Oct 72.00 72.67 70.55 72.05 + Dec 69.30 70.45 68.25 69.40 + Feb 70.95 72.20 69.95 71.10 + Apr 71.72 72.57 70.80 71.50 — May 75.60 75.60 74.60 75.20 — Jun 77.55 78.15 77.25 77.95 — Jul 76.17 76.75 75.80 76.75 + Aug 72.30 72.70 72.10 72.60 Est. sales 21,069. Tue.’s sales 25,367 Tue.’s open int 173,688 .05 .70 .35 .18 .05 .02 .22 .18 Wheat, beans end lower; livestock is mixed CHICAGO (AP) — Wheat and soybean futures fell Wednesday on the Chicago Board of Trade. Wheat for September delivery fell 8 cents to close at $6.34 a bushel; December corn rose 0.5 cent to $3.2725 a bushel; December oats rose 1 cent to settle at $2.5875 a bushel; November soybeans shed 6.25 cents to $8.3925 a bushel. Cattle and hog futures were mostly lower on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. August live cattle dropped 0.57 cent to 92.05 cents a pound; August feeder cattle decreased 0.65 cent to $1.1585 a pound; August lean hogs fell 0.5 cent to 74.1 cents a pound; August pork bellies finished flat at 90.15 cents per pound. • XX POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Xxxday, Xxx ##, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 A11 Member of the Small Newspaper Group, Kankakee, Ill. Len Robert Small, President & CEO Thomas P. Small, Senior Vice President Cordell J. Overgaard, Vice President Robert L. Hill, Vice President Post-Bulletin Company, L.L.C. Robert L. Hill, Editor, Publisher Greg Sellnow, Editorial Page Editor, 285-7703 EDITORIAL Ethanol can’t meet all our alternative fuel needs Seven years ago, there were 54 ethanol plants in America, with a production capacity of 1.7 billion gallons per year. Today, there are 119 plants nationwide, with another 86 under construction or being expanded. Annual production capacity could top 10 billion gallons next year. No matter how you crunch the numbers, that’s extraordinary growth for an industry that’s become the rising star in our national quest to “go green” with biofuels. Minnesota is right in the thick of things, with 20 corn-based plants in operation and more in the planning stage. But there’s a reckoning ahead. For decades, as better machinery, plant genetics and herbicides increased corn yields, farmers didn’t exactly cash in. Increasing supply while demand remained largely stagnant kept corn prices in the neighborhood of $2 per bushel as recently as December 2005. Thirteen months later, fueled by the ethanol market, prices topped $4, and farmers responded this year by planting nearly 93 million acres of corn, the most since 1944. Land values and cash rental rates for farmland are soaring, and many small communities near ethanol plants are experiencing an unprecedented economic boom. Some farmers, however, are feeling a financial pinch, and therein lies the problem. Beef cattle, dairy cattle, hogs, turkeys and chickens eat corn — as well as hay, soybeans and other agricultural products that are being squeezed off land in favor of corn. It takes time, but rising feed costs eventually translate into higher prices at the supermarket. Milk is a prime example, with some analysts predicting prices of $5 per gallon by September. Beef, pork and poultry prices aren’t rising quite as rapidly, but they’ll catch up. The corn needed to produce a market-ready hog today costs $20 more than it did three years ago, and a portion of that cost, if not all of it, eventually will be passed on to consumers. The trade-off of renewable fuel in exchange for higher food costs might be a fair deal, but only for the short term, and only as part of a much bigger effort to end America’s dependence on foreign oil and fossil fuels in general. The simple fact is, ethanol can’t do it alone. Even if every kernel of American-grown corn were turned into ethanol, it would provide less than 15 percent of our annual fuel consumption. Furthermore, raising corn year after year on the same land without crop rotation requires constant fertilization, which not only is expensive but also creates its own environmental concerns. Does this mean people shouldn’t feel good about driving E-85 vehicles? Not at all. Doing so demonstrates an awareness of the need to change. Still, the fact remains that other, more sustainable options such as hybrid technology, hydrogen fuel cells and super-efficient diesel engines should surpass ethanol in the race to have vehicles on America’s roadways go farther, use less energy and produce less pollution. At the moment it’s a one-horse race — and a corn-fed horse at that. Only time will tell if the ethanol industry will flourish or flounder on that diet. Associated Press Corn stands ready to be harvested in a field near the Mid-Missouri Energy ethanol plant near Malta Bend, Mo., in this Aug 23, 2006, file photo. Anonymous ‘occult hand’ in Iraq There’s need to cast a spell — Harry’s secret is safe with me Harry Potter dies in the new book. It’s tragic, really. Accidental cauldron explosion. Eye of newt and wing of bat everywhere. He gets impaled by a flying dragon snout. His last word is: “Rosebud.” OK, I made that up. Please stop shrieking now. And for heaven’s sake, don’t cancel your subscription. We only have 17 subscribers left and there’s a rumor that if we lose one more, it’ll be the end of free soap in the lavatories. For the record, as these words are written, the fate of the young wizard warrior remains a closely shrouded secret. Of course, by the time you read them, his fate might be on the Jumbotron in Times Square. Secrets are perishable these days. Blame an omnipresent and infotainmentbesotted media megaplex. Or blame so-called citizen journalists who don’t play by the same rules of non-disclosure that used to bind plain old journalists. Whoever you blame, just know that it is increasingly the case that one cannot choose not to know ... plotlines, scandals, infidelities, whatever. Assuming you don’t own a sensory deprivation tank, the knowledge will find you, whether you want it to or not. Here is the sum of my Harry Potter experience: I read half the first book and struggled to stay awake through the first movie. Yet somehow, without trying, without wanting to know, without visiting any Harry Potter Web sites, clicking any Harry Potter links or watching a single episode of “Access Hollywood,” I have learned that” Harry Potter and the ‘Deathly Hallows” is the seventh book in the series, it was released at a minute past midnight on Saturday, it’s the last book in the series and it’s expected to chronicle the deaths of two characters, one of whom may be Harry. I couldn’t even tell you where I learned all this, just that it’s been pounded into my disinterested head to the point where I feel like I’ve always known it. Such is life in the era of viral knowledge. My personal gag reflex was triggered when TOMORROW • a certain newspaper, which we’ll call The Miami Herald, published a piece, complete Leonard with quotes from worried mothers and the obligatory Pitts advice from talking heads, on how to help your children cope if Harry is killed. Beg pardon, but I seem to recall that a previous generation of children saw Bambi’s mother killed by the hunter without the need for grief counselors standing by. And if you think the point is, what prissy wimps we have become, well, yes. But it’s also this: Shouldn’t you be able to safely peruse the health section without being ambushed by Harry Potter “news”? You think I hate Harry, don’t you? To the contrary, I echo word nerds everywhere: Anything that gets young people reading and turns writers into billionaire rock stars is fine with me. What I hate is seeing Harry in the health section absent news that reading his books cures — or causes — disease. What I hate — OK, what I am mildly irked by — is that media, both traditional and “new,” have grown so inescapable that it’s almost impossible to opt out of undesired knowledge. And no one should be more upset about that than those who are wild about Harry. If it were still possible to opt out of knowledge, author J.K. Rowling would not have felt it necessary to ask people not to divulge the ending of her book and one of my co-workers would not have sent around the following e-note: “I BEG of you all, please do NOT spoil Harry Potter!” Remember when “The Crying Game” came out in 1992? Remember “The Sixth Sense” in 1999? Remember how those who had seen them conspired for weeks to keep their secrets safe for those who had not? It’s hard to imagine such things happening in the era of viral knowledge and that’s kind of sad. By the way, I checked, and sensory deprivation tanks start at $7,300. Just something to keep in mind. Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald. His e-mail address is [email protected]. So did you hear the one author’s identity. There’s always about American soldiers a chance, of course, that these playing with dead baby have some truth to them. Kathleen stories parts found in a mass grave Maybe a guy made an unkind in Iraq? remark about a poor woman’s Parker burned face. Maybe a dog got No wait, how about the run over. Maybe a grave was guy who loved to drive found and a soldier capped his Bradley armored vehicles head with a skull part. so he could knock down concrete barriers and mow down doggies sunning in the road? Stranger — and far worse — things have Or this one: American soldiers in a chow happened in war. But people who have served hall making fun of a woman whose face was in Iraq have raised enough questions about “more or less melted, along with all the hair these particular anecdotes that one is justified in questioning whether they are true. on that side of her head” from an IED. As just one example, it is unlikely that a These are but a few of the claims made by one “Scott Thomas,” otherwise known as the Bradley would be driven through concrete “Baghdad Diarist,” allegedly a soldier serving barriers just for fun, according to an Army in Iraq who has sent three dispatches to The JAG who e-mailed me. He explained that New Republic since January. He uses the people aren’t alone out there. Other vehicles, pseudonym “Scott Thomas,” say the maga- NCOs and officers would be around and Iraqis zine’s editors, so he can give honest reports would have made a claim for repairs, resulting in a JAG investigation. without fear of official reprisal. It may be that The New Republic editors But are they honest? Or has The New Republic (TNR) been “glassed” again? In the and others who believed Thomas’ journal 1990s, TNR Associate Editor Stephen Glass entries without skepticism are infected with Nifong Syndrome — the mind virus that causes was fired for fabricating stories. The conservative Weekly Standard began otherwise intelligent people to embrace likely questioning the reports last week. Bloggers falsehoods because they validate a preconhave joined in challenging the anecdotes, as ceived belief. Mike Nifong, the North Carolina prosecutor have military personnel who have served in Iraq and, in some cases, have eaten in the in the alleged Duke lacrosse team rape case, was able to convince a credulous community same chow hall mentioned. Thomas’ version of events in Iraq is looking of residents, academics and especially jourless and less credible and smacks of the nalists that the three falsely accused men had raped a black stripper despite compelling “occult hand.” The occult hand was an inside joke several evidence to the contrary. Why? Because the lies supported their own years ago among a group of journalists who conspired to see how often they could slip truths. In the case of Duke, that “truth” was the phrase — “It was as if an occult hand had that privileged white athletes are racist pigs ...” — into their copy. This went on for years who of course would rape a black woman to the great merriment of a few in the know. given half a chance and a bottle o’ beer. In the case of Scott Thomas, the “truth” that Looking back, it’s hard to imagine how a phrase as purple as “an occult hand” could American soldiers are woman-hating, doghave enjoyed such long play within the tribe killing, grave-robbing monsters confirms what of professional skeptics known as journalists. many among the anti-war left believe about the Similarly, one wonders how Thomas’ reports military, despite their protestations that they have appeared in the magazine without his “support the troops.” We tend to believe what we want to believe, in other words. editors saying, “Hey, wait just a minute.” Whether Scott Thomas is real and his When it comes to the playbook of anti-military clichés, Thomas seems guilty of plagia- reports true remains to be determined. In the rism. What could be more cliché, after all, meantime, it is tempting to wonder: What if we than American soldiers ridiculing a defaced believed in American honor and victory in woman, running over dogs or desecrating Iraq? What would those dispatches look like? babies’ remains? The New Republic editors say they’re invesKathleen Parker is a nationally syndicated columnist. tigating the reports, but refuse to reveal the Her e-mail address is [email protected]. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Food help available to seniors Keep firefighters up to date In Olmsted County, more and more seniors are shifting money from other areas of their budget to pay for their increased prescription costs. Some are choosing to cut down on heat or air, others on transportation costs. Many are reducing the amount of money they spend on food, limiting their ability to purchase the nutritional foods they need. If this situation describes you, consider the following: • Olmsted Community Action Program has friendly, experienced staff that will help you fill out the application form in your home and answer any questions. • Medical costs are deductible for those 60 years and older who apply for the Food Support Program. • Food Support benefits are issued through an Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) card. A second person can be authorized to receive the card and buy food for you. If you or someone you know would like more information on Food Support please contact me. Ginnie Westfall Food Support Outreach Coordinator Olmsted Community Action Program Hoorah for our firemen! I absolutely have to write on behalf of our firefighters to thank them for their excellent work in caring for all the residents of Northgate Plaza on Sunday morning, July 15. There was a fire in a third floor apartment about 8:30 a.m. These men are so well trained, so polite and knowledgeable, it makes me proud to be able to say they are our Rochester firefighters! These men helped us walk, they gave us blankets to wrap up in, as the wind was chilly. And when they asked us to move, they were so kind and considerate. Also, I’d like to mention that our Rochester firefighters are fully supplied with the very best and newest equipment. They all go about their duties with such efficiency. Let us never ever complain about the cost of keeping our up-to-date fire departments here in Rochester. Dory Nelson Rochester David Broder explains why most governors are holding back on their endorsements for president. • • • • • • • POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Crews battle two residential fires By Janice Gregorson [email protected] Fires at opposite ends of Rochester on Wednesday night resulted in extensive damage to a house and prompted an arson investigation into an apartment complex fire. Fire Marshal Vance Swisher said the fire calls came in within five minutes of each other, and every on-duty firefighter in Rochester was called out. The first fire was at a home at 3737 Gala Lane N.W. and resulted in an estimated $110,000 damage to the house, owned by Jim Ratz. The 42-year-old owner was home and was alerted to the fire by neighbors, who called 911 at 10:23 p.m. Swisher said that the fire was in the attic and that almost the entire ceiling had to be pulled out to get to the fire, believed caused by a faulty bathroom vent. One firefighter, Mike Bjoraker, suffered heat exhaustion and was taken to Saint Marys Hospital by ambulance. He was released early today. Because of the heat, firefighters rotated through a rehab trailer to cool down and for hydration. Crews remained at the scene for about two hours but had to return early today when the fire rekindled. At 10:26 p.m., firefighters were called to Trail Ridge Apartments at 875 21st Ave. S.E., where tenants discovered smoke in a third-floor apartment. Swisher said one or two tenants used fire extinguishers to keep the fire at bay until firefighters arrived. Swisher said the fire has been ruled an arson. It was found in a living room closet in unit 309. The apartment is vacant. The tenants who had been trying to put out the fire were not around when firefighters responded. Swisher said two used fire extinguishers were on the floor near the door to the apartment. A sprinkler had gone off in the living room. Swisher said that three sprinkler heads closest to the origin point of the fire were corroded and not working. Swisher said there was water damage to two apartments below the one where the fire occurred. Only one of those units is occupied. No loss estimate is available. MINNEAPOLIS — Two teenage brothers were reunited nearly two weeks after being severely injured in a cabin explosion that killed their mother. Colin Cline, 15, got in a wheelchair Tuesday and rolled from his room to his brother Ethan’s room just down the corridor at Hennepin County Medical Center. Colin reached out from his wheelchair, and from his hospital bed, Ethan gripped his brother’s hand. 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To get the Chuck and Joan O’Connor farm, which is at 13388 Fillmore County Road 9, to Spring Valley and go south on U.S. 63 for 10 miles, go left on Fillmore County Road 44 for 8.5 miles and left on county road 9; it’s the first place on the right. For more information call (507) 937-3396. Chatfield Chatfield Police Chief Jeff McCormick has submitted his resignation so he can take over as chief of the Cannon Falls Police Department. His last day is Aug. 2. He took over June 2004 after former chief Tony Pangal left to take a similar job north of the Twin Cities. McCormick left the Apple Valley (Minn.) Police Department where he was an officer for seven years. Previously, he was with the Steele County and Rushford departments. Zumbrota A five-year management plan for the Zumbro River Watershed will be unveiled during an event Saturday at the Covered Bridge Park in Zumbrota. The gathering, featuring music by the Benderheads, food and family activities, will celebrate what’s been accomplished in the past year and look ahead to the future. It will be from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. To RSVP, call 280-2850. The watershed includes more than 900,000 acres in Dodge, Goodhue, Olmsted Rice, Steele and Wabasha counties. Red Wing A golf event Aug. 3 at Red Wing Golf Club will honor the memory of two brothers and raise funds for scholarships and a program to increase awareness about depression. The Cam and Brandon Goetz Memorial Golf Outing will begin at 12:30 p.m. and includes 18 holes of golf, dinner and games and activities for non-golfers. Brandon Goetz was 17 when he died Oct. 10, 1997, in a traffic accident. The Brandon Goetz Memorial Scholarship was established in his memory and distributes scholarships to high seniors. His brother, Cameron, died Aug. 11, 2002, at age 20 after suffering from depression and committing suicide. A suicide prevention program, Yellow Ribbon, was formed in Red Wing schools following Cameron’s death. For more information about the Cam and Brandon Goetz Memorial Golf Outing, go to Postbulletin.com/weblinks. Dodge County Got any letters from World War II stashed in your attic? The Dodge County Historical Society may want to talk to you. The nonprofit is looking for residents with artifacts, letters or stories documenting their experience during World War II. The search comes as documentary is in the works for public TV station KSMQ. The documentary, called “Stories from the Homefront,” aims to show how World War II impacted the lives of everyday people in Southeast Minnesota and Northern Iowa. The Dodge County historical society is hoping to have county residents represented in the documentary. Anyone with artifacts can call the historical society at 635-5508 or send an e-mail to [email protected]. Originally developed for the military, GPS technology has been introduced into the agricultural industry By Janet Kubat Willette [email protected] ELGIN — A tractor that drove itself was the star of last week’s Zumbro Watershed Partnership field day. It was one of many new devices that reflect the rapid advance of technology-based precision agriculture in the past 10 years. Ag Leader Insight, which uses global positioning system technology to pinpoint its location, can be installed in four hours in any tractor with hydraulics. The first time a farmer drives the tractor over a field, the exact route is recorded in the system’s memory, said Travis Routh of L&D Ag Service. The system will remember the field from season to season and will follow the same path across the field from year to year. Auto-steer technology allows farmers to sit in the cab for longer hours with less fatigue, he said. They can eke out a few more hours a day. “We sell quite a few of them,” Routh said. The screen warns of sharp turns approaching and produces yield maps for each acre. The GPS that is essential for auto-steering and precision fertilizer application was developed by the government Janet Kubat Willette/Agri News The 10-year-old Cat Challenger, pictured above, uses a global positioning system and auto-steer technology. for national defense, said Ted Thisius of L&D Ag Service. Now, it’s available to everyone. The same technology that guides fishermen and hikers is guiding tractors and keeping track of yields and fertilizers to help farmers manage their fields more precisely. For instance, another new device at the field day was Greenseeker, which applies nitrogen fertilizer based on the readings of a plant’s chlorophyll. The sensors are placed on the boom of agricultural equipment, said Jack Gerhardt of Redball. As the boom passes over plants, the sensors take hundreds of readings per second, creating a boom average and adjusting the amount of nitrogen delivered. The chlorophyll readings determine if more nitrogen is needed. “Let’s let the plant be the barometer,” Gerhardt said. Gerhardt, who farms with his brother Dick near Fairmont, is in his third season of using Greenseeker. They sought out the technology to better utilize their hog manure in the face of rising commercial fertilizer prices. “We have a large number of hog buildings located around our farm operation, so we depend on hog manure,” Gerhardt said. Hog manure is the primary source of nitrogen on a number of their crop acres, and Greenseeker allows them to address the nitrogen variability that exists when using manure. Longtime Rochester Farmers Market vendor created sense of community By Matt Russell [email protected] With a combination of friendliness and flowers, Alberta Roberson helped create a sense of community in Rochester. A longtime vendor at the Downtown Rochester Farmers Market, Roberson had a warm smile and was a mentor to others at the market, said fellow vendor Deb Fendry. “She was kind of an icon at the market,” said former market manager Jennifer Nelson. ZUMBRO FALLS — With a sweet swing, Lindsay Krahn drove the softball between two Lake City outfielders who chased it toward the fence. Krahn dashed around the bases and was waved home from third — an in-the-park home run for the Zumbro Falls girls team. “That was a good hit,” Raymond Schwirtz yelled. Then the rural Hammond man watched the next hitter, yelling encouragement and advice. Between innings, he would swing his wheelchair around to talk with friends about sports or ATVs. Schwirtz was in his glory Monday watching the sport he loves, with his son, Brandon, umping, and many of the girls he coached when they were younger on the field for both teams. Such games are important for small towns, he said. It gives them identities. “It’s free entertainment, it don’t get much better than that,” Schwirtz said. “It’s better than going to the Twins, you don’t have that long drive. You have your own home town talent here.” But Schwirtz, 53, admits he’d love to still be on the field umping, running down the first-base line to call a close play. “I miss walking, I miss running the most,” he said. But he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis a few years ago and pretty much needs the chair to get around. He got to know many of the young women on the team, ages 19 to early 30s, when he coached at Hammond from 1982 to 1995. The team didn’t have enough boys or girls for separate teams, so they played co-ed. REMEMBRANCE Roberson, 77, of rural Zumbro Falls, died July 14 at her home. Alberta Jean Schultz was born March 27, 1930, in Minneapolis. She graduated from Lake City High School in 1947 before attending nursing school in Rochester and marrying David Roberson in Lake City in 1948. The couple farmed their entire married life in the Zumbro Falls area, working land that was in David Roberson’s family since before the Civil War, according to BACK Baird Roberson of rural Zumbro Falls, 51, one of the couple’s four children. The family also operated a business called Roberson Lime & Rock Inc. before Alberta built the small greenhouse that later took her to the farmers market. “Mother built a little greenhouse; she had these plants in the house, and she wanted to do more,” Baird Roberson recalled. “And so they built this little greenhouse, kind of dug a hole in the ground and put ROADS By John Weiss [email protected] John Weiss/Post-Bulletin Raymond Schwirtz of rural Hammond cheers on the Zumbro Falls girls softball team Monday evening. Though needing a wheelchair to get around, he still goes to games to see girls he once coached. “Sometimes we barely had enough to play,” he said. “Sometimes, you had to go and get them.” He coached and drove players to games, and even picked some up, because “otherwise, if you don’t do it, the kids get in trouble.” For him, it’s that simple. When he worked at Crenlo in Rochester, he began to feel exhausted by noon when it was hot. In 2003, he was diagnosed with MS. a roof on it.” Roberson said his mother and father loved to travel and went to several places in the U.S. before heading to destinations including Egypt, Europe, Israel, India, New Zealand, China and Mexico. “They knew people all around the world,” Roberson said. Back at home, Alberta Roberson was a person who was dedicated to her family. “Whatever she did was with love,” Baird Roberson said. “I think she just loved life, and loved being in a greenhouse, and loved being with my dad with all her heart.” “I didn’t even know how to spell multiple sclerosis,” Schwirtz said. He quit umpiring, letting his son take over, not that he’s happy about it. “I wish I was umping the game,” he said. “I’ve even thought about going out there in my wheelchair. A guy could get hurt but what’s the worst that could happen? You get hit on the head with a ball.” If his son couldn’t make it, Schwirtz said he’d wheel onto the field and ump. Brandon was there so his dad sat near the bleachers in his wheelchair, still coaching. “One out!,” he yelled. “Come on Mickel, good level swing,” he called out to Mickel Domke. When it was over, the Zumbro Falls team beat Lake City 14-8, and some Zumbro Falls players sat near Schwirtz, changing shoes, maybe sipping a beer. “Good game, girls,” he said. One was Katie Luhmann of Zumbro Falls who hit two homers. “It’s always nice to have fans to come and cheer us on in the good and bad moments,” she said. Schwirtz coached her in fastpitch at Lake City when she was in seventh and eighth grade. “He knows what he’s doing, that’s for sure,” she said. But does she listen to all the advice he calls out? “Most of the time,” she said. Staff writer John Weiss travels the region’s back roads looking for people, places and things of interest for this column. If you have ideas, call him at (507) 285-7749 or e-mail him at [email protected]. B2 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Stephen P. Suby — Rochester Harvey W. Bergh — Kenyon James V. Harris — Red Wing ROCHESTER — The funeral for Stephen P. Suby will be at 2 p.m. Friday at Ranfranz & Vine Funeral Homes Chapel in Rochester, with the Rev. Larry Orth officiating. Interment will be in Grandview Memorial Gardens. Stephen, 3 1⁄2 month-old son of Timothy J. and Angela A. Suby of Rochester, died of SIDS Tuesday (July 24, 2007). He was taken to Saint Marys Hospital. Stephen Paul Suby was born April 10, 2007, in Rochester. His family are members of Calvary Evangelical Free Church in Rochester. KENYON — The funeral for Harvey W. Bergh will be at 7 p.m. Sunday at First Evangelical Lutheran Church in Kenyon, with the Rev. Luther Mathsen officiating. Mr. Bergh, 85, a lifelong Kenyon resident and an important part of main street Kenyon for more than 40 years, died Tuesday (July 24, 2007) at his home. Harvey Wegner Bergh was born July 24, 1922, in Kenyon. He graduated from Kenyon High School, then attended St. Olaf College in Northfield. In 1942 he joined the Navy and served during World War II as a pharmacy mate. Discharged in 1945, he continued his education at the University of Minnesota, graduating with a pharmacy degree in 1949. He then joined his father at Bergh Drug Store in Kenyon and continued to serve the community until his retirement. He married Ilene “Rem” Remold. She was his partner in the drug store, which served RED WING — The funeral Mass for James V. Harris will be at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 2, at the Church of St. Joseph in Red Wing, with the Rev. Thomas M. Kommers officiating. Burial with military honors will be in Fort Snelling National Cemetery. Mr. Harris, 86, formerly of Red Wing, died Monday (July 23, 2007) at the Briar Cliff Health Center in Tyler, Texas. James Virgil Harris was born Oct. 25, 1920, in Trimbelle Township, Wis., and graduated from Red Wing Central High School in 1939. He enlisted in the Navy in February 1942, served during World War II, and was honorably discharged in July 1943. He attended Montgomery Wards business training and became a district manager for the company. On Sept. 22, 1943, he married Grace Nadeau at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church. During his career, they lived in seven different states until retiring to Red Wing in 1978. He was a member of the Church of St. Joseph, Burnson- In addition to his parents, he is survived by two brothers, Lance and Payton King, both at home; maternal grandparents, Ann and Steve Lansing of Rochester; paternal grandparents, Ruth and Paul Suby of Rochester; and a maternal grandmother, Carol Jo King of Rochester. Other survivors include three aunts, three uncles and 15 cousins. Visitation will be from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. today at Ranfranz & Vine Funeral Home, and an hour before the service Friday at the funeral home. Rosemary I. Huiting — Rochester ROCHESTER — Winona and Rosemary I. Chessie Huiting of Huiting, 47, of Rochester; her Rochester, died mother, Elizabeth Tuesday (July 24, Huiting; and three 2007) at Samaritan siblings, Bette, Tom Bethany Home on and Sue. She was Eighth. preceded in death by her father, NorRosemary Ilene bert Huiting; and a Huiting was born brother. Oct. 16, 1959, in Rochester. She Her body was enjoyed spending cremated. At her time with her dog, request, no services as well as arts and will be held. crafts. Mahn Family Funeral HomeSurvivors include three Rochester Chapel is assisting daughters, Tiffany Huiting of the family with arrangements. Minneapolis, Haley Huiting of Lester G. Culbertson — Wabasha WABASHA — A memorial service for Lester G. Culbertson will be at 1 p.m. Friday at the Wells Assembly of God Church in Wells, Minn., with the Rev. Merwin Miller officiating. Interment will be in Rose Hill Cemetery, Wells. Mr. Culbertson, 86, of Wabasha, formerly of Wells and Rochester, died Tuesday (July 24, 2007) at Saint Marys Hospital in Rochester. He was born Oct. 24, 1920, near Wells. He married Marcella Gaines on Oct. 25, 1944, in Blue Earth, Minn. The family lived in Wells until moving to Rochester in 1960; they moved to Wabasha in 1966. Mr. Culbertson worked as a butcher and truck driver. After moving to Wabasha he drove for Pepin (Wis.) Fisheries for two years, then was an overthe-road trucker for Bud Meyer Trucking of Lake City. He retired in 1996. He was a member of Wabasha American Legion Post 50 and enjoyed hunting, fishing and riding his motorcycle. Survivors include five sons, Bill (Monica) of Tacoma, Wash., Harold (Kathy) of Torrance, Calif., Randy (Julie) of Columbus, Ohio, Steven (Kathy Daniels) of Cannon Falls and Charles (Theresa) of Raleigh, N.C.; a daughter, Barbara (Larry) Hanson of Wabasha; 13 grandchildren; 13 greatgrandchildren; two brothers, Maynard (Connie) of Seattle and David (Jan) of Pequot Lakes, Minn.; and four sisters, Betty Fredericks of New Brighton, Minn., Bessie (Ed) Soost of Wells, Liliah (John) Scrabeck of Clarks Grove, Minn., and Bonnie (Maynard) Bakken of LaPorte, Minn. He was preceded in death by his wife on Dec. 26, 2006, a daughter and three brothers. Friends may call from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. today at Abbott Funeral Home in Wabasha, and an hour before the service Friday at the church. Memorials are preferred to St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center Cardiac Rehabilitation Center, 1200 5th Grant Blvd., Wabasha, MN 55981. Ruby E. Wiskow — St. Charles ST. CHARLES — The funeral for Ruby E. Wiskow will be at 11 a.m. Monday at Berea Moravian Church in rural St. Charles, with the Rev. David Sobek officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Ruby Wiskow, 90, of St. Charles, died Tuesday (July 24, 2007) at Whitewater Golden Living Center in St. Charles. Ruby Emgard Wiskow was born Jan. 27, 1917, in Elba. The youngest of 12 children, she attended the Elba school through eighth grade. She worked at Home Produce in St. Charles for several years, then worked as a nurses aid at Saint Marys Hospital in Rochester until retiring. She enjoyed making crafts and traveled to area shows to sell her crafts. In 1970 she traveled to Germany to visit her son. A lifetime member of Berea Moravian Church, she also enjoyed quilting, crocheting, embroidery, playing cards and reading. Survivors include a son, Gerald (Kathy) Wiskow of Port Washington, Wis.; and three grandchildren. She was preceded in death by five brothers and six sisters. Friends may call from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday at Hoff Funeral Home-St. Charles Chapel, and an hour before the service Monday at the church. as the main gathering spot in Kenyon for many years. Mr. Bergh was also a 60-year member of the American Legion, and was a member of the VFW, Color Guard, Lions Club, Masonic Lodge, Kenyon Commercial Club and First Lutheran Church. He was a regular walker and was a popular figure as he greeted people on his walks. Survivors include his wife; four daughters, Gretchen, Deb (Steve) Sviggum, Jackie (John) Mortensen and Sara Bergh (Pat Roth); two sons, Harvey R. (Candy) and Hans Paul (Sharon); and 11 grandchildren. He was preceded in death by a brother. Visitation will be from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday at Hanson Funeral Home in Kenyon. Memorials are preferred to Faribault Area Hospice, Kenyon Library or First Lutheran Church. Frieda Seefeldt — Plainview PLAINVIEW — The funeral for Frieda Seefeldt will be at 10 a.m. Saturday at I m m a n u e l Lutheran Church in Plainview, with the Rev. David Frederickson officiating. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery, Plainview. Mrs. Seefeldt, 86, of Plainview, died Wednesday (July 25, 2007) at her home, of cancer. Frieda Simonovski was born Oct. 7, 1920, in Wyttmanndorf, Germany, and came to the United States in 1922. On Sept. 25, 1940, she married Charles Seefeldt at Immanuel Lutheran Church in Plainview; Mr. Seefeldt preceded her in death in 1966. She was a homemaker for many years before going to work for Rush Products in Lewiston. She later worked for Lakeside Foods in Plainview, retiring in 1997. She was a member of the Priscilla Club, Hi Neighbors, Plainview Senior Citizens and Wabasha County Senior Citizens. Survivors include three sons, Henry of Lynn Haven, Fla., and Robert (Betty) and Kim, both of Plainview; four daughters, LaDonna (Allan) Camrud of Osceola, Wis., LaVonne (Dick) Bartz of Waseca, Minn., Charlene Bueltel of Blaine, Minn., and Sally (Tim) Schmulske of Glencoe, Minn.; 14 grandchildren; nine greatgrandchildren; and a sister, Ruby Zarling of Plainview. In addition to her husband, she was preceded in death by a son, a granddaughter, five brothers and two sisters. Friends may call from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Friday at Schad & Zabel Funeral Home in Plainview, and an hour before the service Saturday at the church. NOTICES OF DEATH Harvey Wegner Bergh, 85, of Kenyon, died Tuesday at his home. Hanson Funeral Home, Kenyon. Thelma Finseth, 86, of Kenyon, died Wednesday at the Kenyon Sunset Home. Hanson Funeral Home, Kenyon. James Virgil Harris, 86, formerly of Red Wing, died Monday at the Briar Cliff Health Center in Tyler, Texas. Mahn Family Funeral Home, Bodelson-Mahn Chapel, Red Wing. Paul Philip Howard, 51, of Rochester, died Tuesday in Park Rapids, Minn. Macken Funeral Home, Rochester. Rosemary Ilene Huiting, 47, of Rochester, died Tuesday at Samaritan Bethany Home on Eighth. Mahn Family Funeral Home-Rochester Chapel. Inez Kaplan, 88, of Blooming Prairie, died Thursday at Prairie Manor. Worlein Blooming Prairie Funeral Home, Blooming Prairie. Nancy Lou O’Connor, 68, of Harmony, formerly of Spring Grove, died Monday at Saint Marys Hospital in Rochester. Roble Funeral Home, Spring Grove. Vivian “Nina” Satre, 90, of LeRoy, died Thursday at Seasons Hospice in Rochester. Hindt Funeral Home, LeRoy. Frieda Seefeldt, 86, of Plainview, died Wednesday at her home. Schad & Zabel Funeral Home, Plainview. Stephen Paul Suby, 31⁄2-month-old son of Timothy J. and Angela A. Suby of Rochester, died of SIDS Tuesday. Ranfranz & Vine Funeral Homes, Rochester. Notices of death is a listing of all deaths submitted to the Post-Bulletin. OBITUARY INFORMATION The Post-Bulletin publishes death notices and basic obituaries at no cost. Information is provided by funeral directors and families. Send obituary information by e-mail to [email protected]. Send photos to [email protected]. Please call to confirm that we received the information, regardless of how you sent it. Additional information is included in some obituaries for a fee, at the request of families. For more information, call 1-800-562-1758, ext. 17791. Remains found in Idaho might be missing Minnesota hiker down. By Chris Williams remains. tity. Associated Press On Wednesday, she said Custer County authorities were trying to get to the scene to examine the remains, but severe thunderstorms in the area were slowing their progress. The search initially drew the “We’re hoping it’s Jon, but attention of the governors of we’re not sure,” she said. Idaho and Minnesota when Jon Francis was a counselor Custer County officials called at a Bible camp in the area off the search, a move the when he disappeared on July family called premature. 15, 2006. Prior to taking the The family continued to camp job, he was a youth minorganize searches, sometimes ister at Ascension Lutheran with professional guides. Church in Harrisville, Utah. Since Francis disappeared, Friends have said he told his co-workers that he planned to the family created the Jon Francis Foundation, aimed at climb the 9,733-foot Grand instructing hikers and climbers Mogul. in basic safety and survival Searchers said he made it to information. Plass is the execthe top and signed the log book, utive director of that foundabut he didn’t make it back tion. MINNEAPOLIS — Remains found earlier this week in the Sawtooth Mountains of Idaho may be those of Jon Francis of Stillwater, Minn., who disappeared a year ago while climbing. “We are hopeful that we’ve found him,” said Jocelyn Francis Plass, the missing man’s sister. “A deputy sheriff and a member of the coroner’s office are back on the mountain, but the weather is horrible,” she said. She said the remains were found Tuesday by mountain guides hired by the Francis family who rappelled down into crevices to search for the man’s Plass said the Custer County authorities were not letting the family near the remains, so all they could do was wait for an official confirmation of the iden- • • • • • Thursday, July 26, 2007 XX Lillyblad VFW Post 1218 and Leo C. Peterson American Legion Post 54, and was a lifelong member of Disabled American Veterans. He received his pilot’s license in 1965 and enjoyed fishing, gardening and making stained glass. Survivors include two daughters, Linda (John) Satterwhite of Mesquite, Texas, and Mary (Wayne) Jackson of Flint, Texas; five grandchildren; six greatgrandchildren; two sisters, Betty Freij of Red Wing and Joanne (Tom) Keute of Lake City; and two brothers, Tom (Rosie) of Ava, Mo., and John of Forsyth, Mo. He was preceded in death by his wife on Jan. 17, 2005, and a sister. Visitation will be an hour before the service at the church. Memorials are preferred to Alzheimer’s research. Mahn Family Funeral Home, Bodelson-Mahn Chapel in Red Wing is in charge of arrangements. Nancy L. O’Connor — Harmony HARMONY — The funeral for Nancy L. O’Connor will be at 10:30 a.m. Friday at Trinity Lutheran Church in Spring Grove. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Mrs. O’Connor, 68, of Harmony, formerly a longtime Spring Grove resident, died Monday (July 23, 2007) at Saint Marys Hospital in Rochester. Nancy Lou Kiehne was born Dec. 6, 1938, in the Big Springs area, rural Harmony. She was a 1956 graduate of Lanesboro High School. On April 18, 1959, she married Kenneth “Buzz” O’Connor at St. Columban Catholic Church in Preston. The couple farmed in Spring Grove for 30 years, and had lived in Harmony for the past six years. She was the Fillmore County Abstractor in Preston for many years and was the first female registered abstractor in Minnesota. She helped in the forming of Ye Olde Opera House in Spring Grove, and was also active in the Spring Grove Color Guard and Band Boosters. In June 1997 she became a heart transplant recipient. Over the next 10 years she was a dedicated advocate in the organ transplant community, and was one of the longest-living heart transplant survivors in Minnesota. She loved her grandchildren, watching football with her grandsons, gardening, and frequent phone updates with friends and family. Survivors include her husband; a son, Jeffrey (Trista Ingvalson) of Chatfield; two daughters, Tanya O’Connor (Jesse Fish) of Waukon, Iowa, and Bridget (Trevor) Case of Preston; eight grandchildren; two brothers, Dwaine (Beverly) Kiehne of Chatfield and Arlen (Dorothy) Kiehne of Lanesboro; and a sister, Bonnie (Lawrence) Shanahan of Rochester. She was preceded in death by a daughter in infancy. Friends may call from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. today at Roble Funeral Home in Spring Grove, and an hour before the service Friday at the church. Memorials may be made to the Gift of Life Transplant House in Rochester. Coleman: Don’t fund human rights group By Frederic J. Frommer Associated Press WASHINGTON — Sen. Norm Coleman is pushing for the United States to cut off funding for the U.N. Human Rights Council, saying the watchdog group’s focus on Israel and failure to investigate other countries made it a “disaster.” Coleman, a Minnesota Republican and congressional delegate to the United Nations, said Wednesday the council “has essentially one issue on its agenda — Israel. You’ve got countries like North Korea, Burma, Zimbabwe where you have state-sponsored brutality, and what we have is deafening silence.” A Senate Foreign Relations Committee panel will take up the Human Rights Council’s performance at a hearing Thursday. The committee last month approved legislation Coleman proposed to end U.S. funding of the council. The House last month approved similar legislation by Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla. Coleman, who along with Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., represents Congress in the U.S. delegation to the U.N., is a longtime critic of the U.N. Boxer also supported the funding cut off when the Foreign Relations Committee approved the bill. The council, based in Geneva, was created in March 2006 to replace the widely discredited Human Rights Commission. Last month, the new body angered the United States by continuing its scrutiny of Israel while halting investigations into Cuba and Belarus. A U.N. official declined to comment on the legislation. On the question of the council’s actions, he referred to a statement made last month by U.N. spokeswoman Michele Montas, who said Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was disappointed at the council’s decision to “single • • out only one specific regional item.” That was a reference to keeping Israel under investigation. Coleman conceded his bill was more about symbolism than pulling the plug on the council’s operations. The U.S. share of the council budget is only around $3 million, and the bill would allow the president to ignore the funding cut if he deemed it wasn’t in the national interest. “It’s not a lot of money,” he said. “This is a statement about the concerns we have about the Human Rights Council.” The State Department declined to comment on Coleman’s push to cut off U.S. financial support for the council. But Assistant Secretary of State Kristen Silverberg called the council’s first year “a grave disappointment. Member states abandoned their responsibility to defend suffering people in countries such as Sudan, Burma, Zimbabwe, and Cuba and instead devoted their energies to attacking Israel.” Coleman, who is Jewish, said that his religion did give him a greater sensitivity on the issue. “On the other hand, my colleagues who aren’t Jewish are concerned about this,” he said. “The American-Israel relationship is not of concern just to Jews. And the failure to focus on Burma, Belarus, North Korea and Zimbabwe is not a Jewish concern, it’s an international concern.” Coleman said his effort should not be construed as U.N.-bashing. “The fact that this passed unanimously in the Foreign Relations Committee would fly in the face of that,” he said. “I have always stated that we need the United Nations to be effective, we need it to be credible, we need it to be transparent.” • XX POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com MINNEAPOLIS — Things turned ugly the last time utilities strung high-voltage power lines across Minnesota in a major way. Protesters covered themselves with pig manure, armed themselves with baseball bats, put ammonia fertilizer on state troopers and lined up to get arrested. Fifteen transmission towers near Lowry and Sauk Centre were toppled in 1978. But the power lines went up anyway. A consortium made up of Xcel Energy Inc. and 10 other utilities in Minnesota, the Dakotas, Iowa and Wisconsin is preparing for what they hope will be a milder public reaction this time around. The group is mailing 73,000 letters this week to landowners that outline the first major power transmission project in Minnesota in more than 25 years. Called CapX 2020, it would crisscross Minnesota with about 650 miles of new high-voltage lines. “We’re designing this to be the most open process ever for a transmission project,” said Laura McCarten, an Xcel executive who is co-executive director of CapX 2020. It would cost $1.3 billion to $1.6 billion project and be completed in 2014, and would be the first of a number of power grid expansions that will cost billions more in the years ahead. George Crocker, who fought the project of the 1970s and is critic of the latest proposal, said he expects public opposition again — with a difference. “Instead of the tension being out in the field, the tension will be in the hearing room, in putting the facts on the table,” said Crocker, executive director of the North American Water Office, an environmental group based in Lake Elmo. “I think it’s a certainty that there won’t be the response that we had in 1978,” he said, adding, “We’ll see if the system is able to be fair.” Crocker said stringing lowervoltage lines short distances from wind turbines scattered across the state would be cheaper and simpler to implement. Xcel Energy officials dispute that. Consumer demand for electricity in Minnesota has doubled since 1980. The utilities say that in 2006, the average home had 26 electronic devices, from high-definition TVs and DVD players to digital cameras and cordless phones. In 1975, a typical home had two or fewer. The proposed transmission lines will add capacity to carry 4,000 to 6,000 more megawatts, enough electricity to power 4 million to 6 million homes. Peak demand now is about 20,000 megawatts. The utilities also argue that they need more transmission capacity to meet the demand in urban areas for alternative sources of energy, such as wind turbines on the breezy bluffs of southwestern Minnesota. They don’t expect the new lines will cross the property of all 73,000 landowners who receive notice. All owners of land within a dozen miles of potential routes will be notified, but exact routes won’t be set for months. Many opponents of transmission expansion in the 1970s were motivated by fears that electrical “leakage” from highvoltage power lines would hurt people or animals. However, a number of scientific studies found no link between the lines and illness. Some opponents were also motivated by property rights, opposing the seizure of land for transmission lines. But the utilities this time point to a 150-mile transmission line expansion underway in southwest Minnesota, where just eight of 390 parcels in the path of the lines have ended up in condemnation proceedings. “We expect to settle six,” Xcel spokeswoman Mary Sandok said. Landowners in the path usually receive a one-time payment in compensation. After the lines go up, livestock and farm equipment simply go around the towers, which are 120 to 150 feet high and spaced 600 to 1,000 feet apart. The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission will hold hearings over the next couple of years to decide if CapX2020 is needed, and the PUC must approve the proposed routes. The Minnesota Department of Commerce also will seek public comment and prepare an environmental report. BIRTH NOTICES METHODIST HOSPITAL Wednesday, July 25, 2007 Derek and Jill Berge of Kasson, a daughter. Bryan and Michele Krajicek of Kasson, a son. Jenny and Colin Sullivan of Rochester, a son. Thursday, July 26, 2007 Corey and Lisa Heimer of Byron, a son. Sarah and Ron McCargar of Rochester, a daughter. • Associated Press ROSEVILLE, Minn. — The Parker Hughes Cancer Center emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Wednesday as a federal judge approved the clinic’s plan to end several leases and repay its debts. The Roseville clinic filed for bankruptcy protection in January after it lost business as a result of an ongoing investigation by the Minnesota Board of Medical Practice, said Alan Eidsness, the clinic’s lawyer. The clinic, which has about 300 patients, remained open throughout the bankruptcy proceedings. The medical license of the clinic’s founder, Dr. Fatih Uckun, was suspended in January 2006 for what the Medical Board called unethical, unprofessional and “professionally incompetent” behavior. Uckun appealed, and an administrative law judge recommended lifting the suspension in May. That case, separate from the bankruptcy proceeding, is still pending. Power line debate A consortium of regional utilities has proposed CapX2020, an expansion of the highvoltage electrical transmission system in Minnesota and neighboring states. The first group of projects is made up of three proposed 345-kilovolt transmission lines, one 230-kV line and associated substations. These projects include: • A 230-mile, 345-kV line between the Brookings, S.D., area and the southeast Twin Cities. • A 250-mile, 345-kV line between Fargo, N.D., and Monticello, Minn. • A 150-mile, 345-kV line between the southeast Twin Cities and Rochester, continuing to La Crosse, Wis.. • A 68-mile, 230-kV line between Bemidji and Grand Rapids in north-central Minnesota. Along with Xcel Energy of Minneapolis; Great River Energy of Elk River, Minn., and Otter Tail Power Co. of Fergus Falls, Minn., utilities or groups that expect to participate in one or more of the CapX2020 projects include: • Dairyland Power Cooperative of La Crosse, Wis. • Midwest Municipal Transmission Group of Des Moines, Iowa. • Minnesota Power of Duluth. • Minnkota Power Cooperative of Grand Forks, N.D. • Missouri River Energy Services of Sioux Falls, S.D. • Rochester Public Utilities of Rochester. • Southern Minnesota Municipal Power Agency of Rochester. • Wisconsin Public Power Inc. of Sun Prairie, Wis. Adam and Amanda Rabe of Eyota, a son. Jesse and Jill Wooten of Rochester, a son. OLMSTED CENTER MEDICAL Wednesday, July 25, 2007 Wanda and Scott Gehl of Goodhue, a daughter. Man hospitalized after semi tips over Post-Bulletin staff Associated Press Beating the heat Tyler Brix, top, 14, gets a boost from four friends Wednesday while enjoying the cool waters of Middle Spunk Lake in Avon, Minn. 29 indicted after Duluth-area drug investigation Associated Press DULUTH — A two-year undercover operation in the Duluth area has resulted in the indictment of 29 people on federal cocaine trafficking charges, U.S. Attorney for Minnesota Rachel Paulose said Wednesday. The investigation was part of an effort to root out dealers who have fled big cities for more anonymous markets, Paulose said. Last month, 14 people were indicted in an alleged ring in the Faribault area. The two indictments signal that “drug dealers who think they can avoid federal prosecution by setting up shop in greater Minnesota are mistaken,” Paulose said. Paulose traveled to Duluth to stand alongside local officers for the announcement. She said that 25 of the 29 Duluth-area defendants named in last week’s indictment were taken into custody without incident Tuesday in a coordinated effort by about 100 officers from several agencies. Four still are being sought, and three of those are believed to be outside Minnesota, said Bernard Zapor, an agent with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. The defendants were to be arraigned this week in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis. Bernard Vann, 41, a downtown Duluth store owner who went by the nickname of “Mooch,” is accused in the 69count indictment of leading and supplying a drug ring that included more than 30 dealers. Officials estimated that the ring sold 40 to 60 kilograms of cocaine and crack cocaine in the area of Duluth and neighboring Superior, Wis., over the past three years, making it one of the largest illegal drug operations ever to be dismantled in the region. “It will have a huge ripple effect on the drug market in this area,” said Duluth Police Chief Gordon Ramsay, whose department supplied two of the three principal officers involved in breaking up the ring through controlled, undercover purchases of drugs. OLMSTED DISTRICT COURT Felony dispositions • Fifth-degree controlled substance crime — Laura Kathleen Horihan, 29, Minneapolis, sentenced July 12, 2007, by Judge Kevin Lund as a stay of imposition on condition she be on probation five years , pay $300, serve 180 days jail with credit for any time served, from an offense in November 2005. • Second-degree controlled substance crime — Keith Darnell Harris, 24, 13 11th Ave. N.E., No. 4, Rochester, sentenced July 12, 2007, by Judge Kevin Lund as a stay of imposition on condition he be on probation 25 years, serve 100 days in jail with credit for any time served, pay restitution of $550, from an offense in April 2006. • Financial transaction card fraud — Mark Joseph Ash, 27, 4131 22nd Ave. N.W., Rochester, sentenced July 12, 2007, by Judge Kevin Lund as a stay of imposition on condition he be on probation five years, serve 30 days in jail with credit for any time served, do 100 hours community work service, from an offense in March 2007. • Check forgery — Eric Valentino Benson, 27, Hayfield, sentenced July 12, 2007, by Judge Kevin Lund as a stay of imposition on condition he be on probation 10 years, comply with all terms of probation, pay $1,500, serve 33 days jail. The jail sentence has been satisfied. • Making terroristic threats — Jerry Edward Foster, 43, 1824 Deerhaven Lane N.E., No. 4, Rochester, sentenced July 12, 2007, by Judge Kevin Lund, who stayed execution of a 15month prison term on condition he be on probation five years, serve 63 days in jail with credit for any time served, do 150 hours community work service, from an offense in March 2007. The jail sentence has been satisfied. • Third-degree controlled substance crime — Richard Mayweathers II, 24, 857 W. Center St., No. 3, Rochester, sentenced July 12, 2007, by Judge Kevin Lund, to 27 months in prison and to pay $50, from an offense in November 2006. • Motor vehicle theft, theft, third-degree burglary — Theresa Ann Smith, 48, Faribault, Minn., sentenced July 12, 2007, by Judge Kevin Lund, to 26 months prison, on the motor vehicle theft, 26 months prison on the theft, 36 months prison on the burglary, to run concurrently. She also was given a concurrent 90-day jail sentence on a misdemeanor damage to property conviction. She was fined $50. The offenses occurred in April 2006. • Fifth-degree controlled substance crime — Tesfamichael Gebretensae Yifteralo, 22, 108 13th Ave. S.E., Rochester, sentenced July 12, 2007, by Judge Kevin Lund as a stay of imposition on condition he be on probation five years, serve 45 days jail with credit for any time served, do 80 hours community work service, from an offense in March 2005. Misdemeanor/gross misdemeanor dispositions • Gross misdemeanor driving while impaired with 0.08 blood-alcohol concentration within two hours of driving — Lee De Los Reyes Lumboy, 30, Lakeshore, Minn., sentenced July 12, 2007, to pay $900, serve 30 days in jail with credit for any time served, can do 224 hours community work service in lieu of 27 days jail. • Driving while impaired with 0.08 bloodalcohol concentration within two hours of driving — Adam Kenneth Mesenbring, 22, 1544 Sixth Ave. S.E., Rochester, sentenced July 12, 2007, to pay $607. • Driving without a valid license, no proof of insurance when driving, fifth-degree assault, disorderly conduct, fourth-degree damage to property — Aaron Patrick Bublitz, 29, Winona, sentenced July 12, 2007, to 90 days jail with credit for any time served, pay $92. TWIN LAKES, Minn. — The driver of a semi trailer was injured Wednesday when his rig tipped over, closing northbound Interstate 35 just north of the Iowa border. Wilfred J. Sobania, 59, of Clear Lake, Minn., is in good condition today at Saint Marys Hospital in Rochester, according to a Mayo Clinic spokeswoman. The Minnesota State Patrol said Sobania was driving north on the interstate about 3:50 a.m. Wednesday when the semi went off the road and tipped over. The lane was closed until about 9 a.m. while crews cleaned up. Woman allegedly left baby in hot car Associated Press ANDOVER, Minn. — A 25year-old Andover woman was arrested after leaving her baby locked in a minivan with the windows closed while she shopped at Target, Anoka County authorities said Wednesday. The sheriff’s office said another customer spotted the van with the child inside in the store’s parking lot in Andover and called authorities. The temperature was 90 degrees and authorities said the baby was sweating heavily when removed from the van. The baby was taken to a hospital, where initial exams indicated the child was stable, the sheriff’s office said. The store’s surveillance video indicated the baby had been inside the van for 30 minutes. The mother was found inside the store and arrested for child endangerment. She was booked and released. The Anoka County attorney’s office will determine whether she’ll be charged. Forest Service limits BWCA campfires Associated Press ELY, Minn. — The U.S. Forest Service is limiting campfires in the blowdown area of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness beginning Friday because of the hot, dry conditions. Campfires, charcoal or woodburning camp stoves will be allowed only between 7 p.m. and midnight in the area where a severe windstorm knocked down millions of trees in July 1999, leaving behind a lot of dead wood. Much of the area remains vulnerable to fire despite controlled burns and wildfires. The Forest Service says gas or propane camp stoves may be used at any time of day. Kelsey Durow of Mazeppa, a daughter. • • B3 Cancer center gets outs of bankruptcy with judge’s OK Letters explain proposed power line project Associated Press Thursday, July 26, 2007 • • • • • B4 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 XX Water rules up for comment Post-Bulletin staff A public hearing on proposed changes to rules governing Minnesota waters will begin at 2 p.m. Sept. 12 at the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency office, 18 Wood Lake Drive S.E., across from Fleet Farm. This is a formal hearing; an administrative law judge will take testimony about the agency’s plan to improve lakes and reservoirs by reducing nutrients and other pollutants coming into them. People may also submit comments in writing to Dave Maschwitz or Mark Tomasek, MPCA, 520 Lafayette Road N., St. Paul, 551554194. To read the proposed revisions, go to www.pca.state.mn.us/water/standards/rulechan ge.html. DAY IN HISTORY 1997 — Ten years ago Harrison Ford stars in “Air Force One,” now showing at the Galleria 6 and the Barclay Square Theater. Starting this summer, finalists for manufacturing jobs at IBM will be asked to produce their high school transcripts in an effort to convince students that the work they do in high school does matter. 1977 — 30 years ago The century-old Brown Hotel, a Rochester landmark and one of the city’s oldest businesses, will be demolished in August and paved over for use as a parking lot. The Brown Hotel was built about 1864 and was originally called the Norse Hotel. William Brown bought the hotel in 1902 and sold it in 1915. 1962 — 45 years ago American Airlines inaugurated its air-toground radio-telephone, or “skyphone,” today. Calls are limited to the New York-Chicago-St. Louis areas because there are no ground receiving stations elsewhere. Dr. Charles W. and Mrs. Mayo will leave soon for a two-month trip to New Zealand, Australia and New Guinea. During his trip Dr. Mayo will visit the sites of the hospitals he organized as an Army medical officer in New Guinea during World War II. Compiled by Loren Else, a Rochester freelance writer. Community calendar: Associated Press Cedar canoe J.J. Nieuwbeerta, right, paddles his birch canoe on Games Lake with his father, Jeff, near the family cabin in Montevideo, Minn. Nieuwbeerta made the cedar strip canoe as a special project during his senior year of high school. TODAY TO AUG. 5 TODAY AUG. 2 TO SUBMIT A CALENDAR ITEM Thursdays on First, First Avenue and Second Street SouthGo to www.postbulletin.com/calendar and click “submit west, Rochester. 424-2866. Until 8:30 p.m. Market and music fesan event.” Items can also be e-mailed to news@postbultival every Thursday until Aug. 30. Entertainment, art, crafts, food. letin.com or faxed to (507) 285-7772. Mantorville Area Welcome Center grand opening, 407 N. Main St., Mantorville. 635-4636. 6:30 p.m. Ribbon cutting, volunteer and donor recognition, and refreshments. Visitors may tour the no fishing experience. Participants should bring worms and/or corn; equipment provided. Parents are welcome. Reservations new welcome center. required; for information and reservations call (507) 932-3007 extension 0. Free; however, state park vehicle permits are FRIDAY required. Swing Your Birdie Golf Classic, Willow Creek Golf Course, Whitewater State Park naturalist programs, Whitewater State 1700 48th St. S.W., Rochester. 252-2195. 11 a.m. Five-person “best Park, near Altura. 9 a.m.-10 a.m. Tweets and Treats. Treats and ball” tournament benefits Ronald McDonald House of Rochester. conversation at the park visitor center’s feeding station. 11 a.m.Lunch at 11 a.m. Shotgun start at 12:30 p.m. Prizes, raffle drawing, noon. Snakes of the Bluffland. Slide show and live show on area silent auction. Fee is $100 per person. snakes. 2:30 p.m.-3:30 p.m. Go in Seine at the Beach. Use a seine Bingo, Elks Lodge, Hillcrest Shopping Center, Rochester. 282- (net) to search for creatures in the park’s waterways. 8 p.m.-9 6702. 6:30 p.m. Proceeds support community youth programs. p.m. Live Eagle Show. Mary Beth Garrigan of the National Eagle Public is invited. Every Friday. Center in Wabasha is the presenter. Programs are free; howMovies Under the Stars, Historic Stoppel Farmstead at Olmsted ever, state park vehicle permits are required. County History Center, 1195 West Circle Drive S.W., Rochester. Stream Walk, Forestville/Mystery Cave State Park, near Preston. 9:30 p.m. The History Center of Olmsted County presents “Star 10 a.m. Join a park naturalist to learn about species living in Wars: Episode IV” (1977). Bring chairs and blankets. In case of the park’s waterways. Wear shorts and shoes that can get wet. rain, screening will be inside. Supported by Charter Commu- Free; however, state park vehicle permits are required. For nications, Hirmann Insurors and Think Federal Credit Union. information call 507-937-3251. Free. Call 282-9447 or visit www.olmstedhistory.com. Artist exhibit, Civic Theatre Gallery, 20 Civic Center Drive SUNDAY S.E., Rochester. 282-8481. 10 a.m. Admission is free to the exhibit Litomysl Summer Festival, Holy Trinity Catholic Church, 8 of local artist Miriam Knuth. Abstract and realism art. miles south of Owatonna on County Road 45, then 2 miles east Fillmore County Relay for Life, Mabel Steam Engine Grounds, on County Road 4, Litomysl. Polka Mass at 10 a.m., outdoor activMabel. 886-6851. 5 p.m. Friday to 6 a.m. Saturday. Starts with a ities, food booths, silent auction, thousands of prizes, Big Ticket welcome and survivors’ first lap walk followed by all walkers. raffle, music. This annual fundraiser helps support St. Isidore’s, Food, entertainment, live and silent auctions. Luminaria lighting a preschool-through-fifth grade school. at 9 p.m. Artist exhibit, Civic Theatre Gallery, 20 Civic Center Drive Fillmore County SCS Survivors’ Tea, St. Olaf Catholic Church, S.E., Rochester. 282-8481. 10 a.m. Admission is free to the exhibit 114 N. Locust, Mabel. 886-2484. 4 p.m. Cancer survivors of Fill- of local artist Miriam Knuth. Abstract and realism art. more County are invited. Arleen Soltow of Mabel and KVIK Rochester Area Singles picnic, Oxbow Park, 5731 Olmsted radio station will speak. County Road 105 N.W., Byron. 775-2451. 11:30 a.m. Bring a dish Owl Prowl, Forestville/Mystery Cave State Park, near Preston. for the potluck, dishes, utensils, chairs and games to play. Coffee (507) 937-3251. 9 p.m. Join a park naturalist on this night hike. Bring and lemonade provided. RAS is a friendship and social club; a flashlight and wear hiking shoes. Free; however, state park for information write to RAS, P.O. Box 7531, Rochester, MN vehicle permits are required. 55903. SATURDAY MONDAY Bob’s Country Garden tour, 301 N. Adams St., Elkton. 11 a.m.4 p.m. Stroll through Bob Robert’s Country Garden. Donations go to the Jay C. Hormel Nature Center. ’50s Night in the Park, Chatfield City Park bandshell, U.S. 52, Chatfield. 867-3439. 6 p.m.-10 p.m. Burgers, hot dogs, malts, 1950s music, classic cars, the movie “Grease” shown on an outdoor screen. Classic cars welcome. Proceeds benefit the new playground project in Chatfield’s City Park. Artist exhibit, Civic Theatre Gallery, 20 Civic Center Drive S.E., Rochester. 282-8481. 10 a.m. Admission is free to the exhibit of local artist Miriam Knuth. Abstract and realism art. Zumbro Watershed Partnership celebration, Covered Bridge Park, Zumbrota. 280-2850. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Activities, food, music by the Benderheads. Fillmore County Relay for Life, Mabel Steam Engine Grounds, Mabel. 886-6851. Overnight event concludes at 6 a.m. Food, entertainment, live and silent auctions. Rochester Islamic Center open house, 17 N. Broadway. 5291478. 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Refreshments. There’s an open house on the last Saturday every month. For information, call 529-1478 or e-mail [email protected]. Downtown Farmers Market, Fourth Street and Fourth Avenue Southeast, Rochester. 273-8232. 7:30 a.m.-noon Produce, meats, honey, cheeses, baked goods. Master gardeners on site. Nature programs, Chester Woods Park, 8378 U.S. 14 E., Eyota. 287-2624. 8:30 p.m. Star Gazing. Astronomers Don Borland and Brian Cooper will lead an exploration of the skies. Recommended for ages 5 and older. 8:45 p.m. Moonlight Paddle. Bring watercraft and gear. Canceled if the weather’s bad. Youth fishing workshop, Whitewater State Park, near Altura. (507) 932-3007. A two-hour session for youngsters with little or • • • Thursdays on First, First Avenue and Second Street Southwest, Rochester. 424-2866. 11 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Market and music festival every Thursday until Aug. 30. Entertainment, art, crafts, food. Artist exhibit, Civic Theatre Gallery, 20 Civic Center Drive S.E., Rochester. 282-8481. 10 a.m. Admission is free to the exhibit of local artist Miriam Knuth. Abstract and realism art. Ice cream social, Mayo Clinic-Annenberg Plaza, Rochester. 255-7101. Noon-1 p.m. Celebrate the new Mayo Clinic Center for Translational Science Activities with free ice cream, live music and remarks from Mayor Ardell Brede and Mayo Clinic leaders. Community reception celebrating clinical research, Mayo ClinicPhillips Hall, Siebens Building, 100 Second Ave. S.W., Rochester. 255-7101. 5:30 p.m.-8 p.m. Mayo Clinic hosts this free event to honor people who participate in clinical research. Hors d’oeuvres, posters and presentations of Mayo Clinic research. Archibald Bush Leadership Fellows Program information meeting, Rochester Public Library, 101 Second St. S.E. 285-8000. 7 p.m. The Bush Leadership Fellows Program provides financial support for additional education or self-designed study for individuals at mid-career who want to prepare for greater leadership responsibilities. Certain restrictions apply. For more information visit www.bushfoundation.org. Rochester/Olmsted Community Housing Partnership homebuyer classes, 2122 Campus Drive S.E., suite 100, Rochester. 6:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. Advance registration, which includes a $25 fee, is required. To register call 281-7396. AUG. 3 Mayo High School class of 1987 reunion, Rochester. 824-2011. Events include a gathering at a local bar Friday night, dinner at Ramada on Saturday night, family picnic on Sunday. Contact Alicia at 824-2011 or e-mail [email protected]. Incognito at Striker’s Corner, Striker’s Corner, 101 10th St. N.W., Stewartville. 533-8330. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Photographing spirit workshop, Zumbrota and Wanamingo locations, Zumbrota. 5:45 p.m. Discuss and practice spirit photography, experiment with camera and video photography. Visit historical buildings and outdoor locations. For details and registration, visit Web site. Pre-registration required. Artist exhibit, Civic Theatre Gallery, 20 Civic Center Drive S.E., Rochester. 282-8481. 10 a.m. Admission is free to the exhibit of local artist Miriam Knuth. Abstract and realism art. Century Hockey Golf Tournament, Willow Creek Golf Course, 1700 48th St. S.W., Rochester. Noon. Four-person, best-shot scramble to benefit Rochester Century High School’s hockey program. Cost: $65 per person before July 30, $75 after July 30. Registration Aug. 3 begins at 11 a.m.; shotgun start at noon. Also a raffle and silent auction. For information, call Sue at 289-2227. Artist exhibit, Civic Theatre Gallery, 20 Civic Center Drive S.E., Rochester. 282-8481. 10 a.m. Admission is free to the exhibit of local artist Miriam Knuth. Abstract and realism art. Arc Southeastern Minnesota Golf Benefit, Somerby Golf Community, Byron. Noon. Four-person best-shot tournament. Entry fee $200 per golfer, includes 18 holes, cart, box lunch, banquet dinner, prizes, live auction, course events and options to bid on AUG. 4 a celebrity mulligan. Proceeds benefit ARC Southeastern MinDowntown Farmers Market, Fourth Street and Fourth Avenue nesota. For information call Ryan Gosch at 287-2032 or 1-888Southeast, Rochester. 273-8232. 7:30 a.m.-noon Produce, meats, 732-8520. honey, cheeses, baked goods. Master gardeners on site. Prairie restoration dinner, Eagle Bluff Environmental Learning TUESDAY Center, 28097 Goodview Drive, Lanesboro. (507) 467-2437. 5:30 Artist exhibit, Civic Theatre Gallery, 20 Civic Center Drive p.m. Guest speaker: Jesse Bennett, owner of Driftless Land StewS.E., Rochester. 282-8481. 10 a.m. Admission is free to the exhibit ardship. Cost is $18 per person. Reservations required. For of local artist Miriam Knuth. Abstract and realism art. information or reservations, call (507) 467-2437 or 1-888-800-9558. Bingo, Elks Lodge, Hillcrest Shopping Center, Rochester. 282Jessica Murray Memorial Run, Silver Lake Park, 400 Seventh 6702. 6:30 p.m. To support community youth programs. Public is St. N.E., Rochester. 252-1859. 9 a.m. This 5K road race and 2welcome. mile walk is a certified course for runners. $15 entry fee (includes T-shirt); track club members get $3 discount. Awards and refreshments follow. Trophies awarded to the top three male and female WEDNESDAY runners and oldest and youngest finishers. Proceeds go to the Artist exhibit, Civic Theatre Gallery, 20 Civic Center Drive Jessica Murray Memorial Scholarship. S.E., Rochester. 282-8481. 10 a.m. Admission is free to the exhibit Birds of Prey, Oxbow Park, Byron. 775-2451. 1 p.m. Learn about of local artist Miriam Knuth. Abstract and realism art. the characteristics of raptors and get a look at some of the birds Summer Program: Schiffelly Puppets! Rochester Public Library, at the zoo. Recommended for all ages. 101 Second St. S.E. 285-8000. 10 a.m. The puppets enact their wacky adaptation of “The Wizard of Oz.” AUG. 5 Film contest kickoff party, CineMagic Hollywood Theatre, 2170 Ice cream social, Dexter United Methodist Church, Dexter. 4 Superior Drive N.W., Rochester. 7 p.m. Kickoff for the 2007-08 Youth Short Film Contest. Watch last year’s winners and get p.m.-7 p.m. Featuring BBQ, potato salad, pies, and homemade ice cream. Everyone is welcome. information about this year’s contest. • • • • • XX POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 B5 Comedian Franken wants to be taken seriously By Patrick Condon Associated Press OTSEGO, Minn. — Al Franken’s campaign SUV is sitting in a long line of cars at a stoplight when his driver spots a Dairy Queen, one of the candidate’s favorite stops. Problem is, getting there quickly requires a right turn from the left lane of traffic. Franken sticks his head out the front passenger window to get the attention of the driver a car length behind his in the right lane. She rolls down her window, and her face breaks into a wide grin. “You’re Al Franken!” she shouts. “Can we get over?” Franken shouts in reply, and she happily waves him across. A few minutes later, snacking on a vanilla cone, Franken laughs as he refers to the incident as “the Al Franken advantage.” Al Franken is not your typical candidate for U.S. Senate. A full 16 months before the 2008 election, at a time when most challengers would still be struggling to build name recognition, the former “Saturday Night Live” performer is recognized everywhere he goes. But having a famous name and face cuts both ways for Franken. Even as his celebrity draws crowds and attention, he must convince Democratic activists in every corner of the state that he’s more than just a liberal funnyman — that he also has the seriousness and substance to successfully take on Republican Sen. Norm Coleman next year. To do that, Franken is going through the paces of any fledgling candidate, crisscrossing the state and schmoozing Democratic activists at as many party gatherings and parades as he can. Last Saturday, Franken was on the trail by 8:30 a.m., hitting a community parade in St. Paul, an academic conference, three Democratic picnics, and an open house for his new campaign headquarters in St. Paul, all in about 13 hours. Franken is trying to reach people like Gene Persha, a retired teacher from Edina, who said he’s leaning toward Mike Ciresi, Franken’s main rival for the Democratic endorsement. “He’s a comedian, and his background is only tangentially political,” said Persha, who watched Franken speak at an annual picnic of Democratic activists in the upperclass Minneapolis suburb of Edina. Ciresi, a lawyer who helmed Minnesota’s successful lawsuit against Big Tobacco nearly a decade ago, “has a better background for this kind of thing,” Persha said. But for every Persha, there’s a Deborah Foster. The Cottage Grove woman, who counsels underprivileged college students, chatted with Franken as he worked the St. Paul parade crowd. “I wanted to meet him because I loved Stuart Smalley,” Foster said, referring to Franken’s most memorable “Saturday Night Live” character, a pathetically needy selfhelp guru. “But you know, he seemed genuine and sincere and interested in me, too. And a sense of humor always helps.” Franken, who grew up in Minnesota and moved back in 2005 after living in New York for many years, can take heart that Minnesotans aren’t afraid to elect colorful celebrities, with former Gov. Jesse Ventura as Exhibit A. But Republicans have tried to hold some of Franken’s more barbed jokes against him, such as when he referred to Coleman as “one of the administration’s leading butt-boys,” or his prediction on David Letterman’s show that White House aides Karl Rove and Scooter Libby would be executed. “Most people get the joke, except for the people who are invested in not getting the joke,” Franken told the group of academics. “Because to not get a joke means they would have to give up the right to their indignation.” When he worked at “Saturday Night Live,” Franken said, he was often the go-to guy for political sketches. “I was a satirist,” Franken explained to Democrats at a picnic in Chaska, about 30 miles southwest of Minneapolis. “Let me tell you what a satirist does. A satirist points out hypocrisy, inconsistencies and absurdities, and reveals them. Let me tell you, Norm Coleman doesn’t want to debate me.” Indeed, Franken on the campaign trail seems unafraid to show his sarcastic side. At the parade in St. Paul, he told the Franken volunteer marchers: “If you have to go to the bathroom, use a Port-aPotty, please!” Later that day, at the party picnic in Otsego, a small town about 35 miles northwest of Minneapolis, the 56-year-old Franken laughed when an older Democratic-Farmer-Labor Others in the mix for Senate seat Associated Press U.S. Senate candidate Al Franken checks out “Eeyore” the Democratic donkey at a garden party in Otsego, Minn. last weekend. Even as his celebrity draws crowds and attention, Franken must convince Democratic activists in every corner of Minnesota that he’s more than just a funnyman. activist handed him a button that read, “DFL Senior Caucus.” “This is just the kind of youthful look I’m going for,” Franken told her as he pinned it to his shirt. A few minutes later, Franken noted his wife’s absence, which happened to be on the day that President Bush underwent a colonoscopy and temporarily transferred power to Dick Cheney. “She couldn’t be here today,” Franken said. “When Vice President Cheney was president for two hours, he had her arrested.” On the stump, Franken rarely talks about his Democratic rivals, which include Ciresi, as well as lawyer/activist Jim Cohen and perennial candidate Dick Franson. Instead he focuses his attacks on Coleman, who he portrays as a “lapdog” for the president. Al Franken may be the biggest name in the Democratic field, but he has some serious competition from these announced and potential candidates: Announced • Mike Ciresi: Trial lawyer who litigated Minnesota’s successful lawsuit against Big Tobacco in 1998. Announced his candidacy shortly after Franken. The two are seen as the top contenders for the Democratic Party endorsement. • Jim Cohen: Attorney, environmental activist and community organizer. Previous electoral experience is an unsuccessful run for Congress in Connecticut in 1986. • Dick Franson: Has ran underfunded races for most of Minnesota’s statewide posts at one point or another. Potential • Peter Agre: A 2003 Nobel laureate in chemistry. Administrator at Duke University. A Minnesota native, Agre is spending part of his summer in his home state gauging whether he can muster interest and support in a Senate candidacy. • Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer: Professor of peace and justice studies at the University of St. Thomas. — Associated Press Cullen Sheehan, spokesman for the Coleman campaign, rejected Franken’s contention that the senator has been too closely aligned with President Bush. “I think that, while the senator has a strong relationship with the president, he’s been a strong independent voice for Minnesota,” Sheehan said. “He’s not afraid to disagree with the president when it’s been in the best interest of the state.” Sheehan noted Coleman’s votes against oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge as one high-profile divergence with Bush. Between April and June, Franken raised $1.9 million, eclipsing Ciresi’s $750,000 and exceeding Coleman’s haul by more than $200,000. Coleman still holds a considerable lead in the amount of campaign money in the bank. Rochester’s BEST Pool Table Selection! www.familyfuncenter.com www.fam milyfuncenter.com FamilyFunCenter Family The Game Room Store With So Much More! 2207 7TH STREET NW • ROCHESTER ROCHESTER, MN • 507-282-7682 507 282 7682 • • 0718503077EM • 0726504014EM 0705501968P • • • • • B6 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 XX Plaque honoring victims added to crash-site memorial Associated Press SIOUX CITY, Iowa — On the 18th anniversary of the crash of United Airlines Flight 232, more than 200 people recently gathered at the Spirit of Siouxland Memorial. Mayor Craig Berenstein unveiled a plaque honoring the victims and commemorating those who responded to the crash. The plaque was donated by the Greater Sioux City Press Club. It was placed near the 7-foottall bronze statue made by South Dakota sculptor Dale Lamphere. The statue depicts then-Lt. Col. Dennis Nielsen of the 185th Fighter Wing, Iowa Air National Guard, carrying an unconscious 3-year-old Spencer Bailey of Colorado from the DC-10 wreckage on July 19, 1989. The statue is based on a photograph taken by former Sioux City Journal photographer Gary Anderson that was published around the world. The names of Lamphere, Nielsen, Bailey and Anderson were not previously noted at the memorial site — an oversight that needed to be corrected, according to Kristie VerMulm, KTIV-TV news co-anchor and former press club president. Eighteen years after the crash, many local residents and visitors do not know what took place in the aftermath or even that Bailey and Nielsen were real people. Not until she brought her own children to the memorial did she realize the need for the Armstrong joins RAGBRAI Above: RAGBRAI riders make the turn onto County Highway C51 on the way to Kesley, Iowa, on Wednesday morning. RAGBRAI is the annual cycling event that crisscrosses the state. At right: Seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong, right, rides with Democratic presidential hopeful John Edwards near Dumont, Iowa. Associated Press plaque. “My daughter, who was just 7 at the time, turned to me and said, ’Mommy, did that baby die?”’ said VerMulm, her voice breaking. “And in one of those parental moments, I explained to her, as much as you can to a 7-year-old, what had happened that day in 1989.” VerMulm said she’s aware of the photograph and story involving the 3-year-old child freed from his seat, carried out of the cornfield by a rescuer and handed off to a fighter pilot in the 185th. “But how many in this community don’t know the story?” she said. Spencer Bailey, now a 21year-old college student in Pennsylvania, is one of 184 who survived the crash. A total of 112 people died when United 232, en route from Denver to Chicago, crashed while trying to make an emergency landing at Sioux Gateway Airport. Press club members read letters from Nielsen, now living in North Carolina, and Bailey, who could not be on hand. But VerMulm emphasized that the plaque was not the idea of anyone involved in the crash or rescue efforts. “In fact, they want this community to understand that they are not seeking recognition of any kind,” she said. “But many from this community who played key roles in this event and the events that unfolded in 1989 felt it was time to put the names on this memorial.” “I got no response from my ad!” For all your Advertising Specialty Items In 90 minutes, learn the secrets to getting a dramatic response from your print ad the very next time it runs. Call Paul Schad • (507)-285-7730 [email protected] CORRECTION NOTICE FOR FB7-27 AD DOORBUSTERS 5-HOUR EVENT Absolutely free. 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EXCEPT SUNDAY • WWW.MICHAELSFINEDINING.COM STATE THEATRE 96 East 4th St. • Zumbrota, MN 507-732-5210 • www.zumbrotatheatre.com Show Times: Friday & Saturday, July 27 & 28: 7:15 and 9:30 Sunday, July 29: 2:30 and 7:15 Monday-Thursday, July 30-August 2: 7:15 nightly Friday, July 27 8:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. All Open Class Quilts & Sewing/Needlework Entries —Horticulture Building 9:00 a.m. - Noon FFA Large Construction Projects —Graham East July 27th & 28th Headliner-John Rathbone Playing at the State in Zumbrota begining Friday, July 27th: Ocean’s Thirteen Rated PG-13 Upcoming Features Include: Harry Potter 5 Die Hard 4 Chuck and Larry Hairspray Admission Price: $5; Matinees $3.50 • Popcorn: $3.50, $2, $1 • Candy: $1 • Soda Pop: $1.50 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. All 4-H NON-LIVESTOCK Entries —Graham Arena 2 9:00 a.m. - Noon 4-H Benches, Planters, Scarecrows —4-H Office in 4-H Building 9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Open Class Fine Arts Entries —4-H Building Sunday, July 29 10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Open Class Photography Entries —4-H Building Questions, call 282-9862 • www.olmstedcountyfair.com 0726503813P Saturday, July 28 Get up to 34 mpg in the city* with the first full-hybrid premium SUV in the world. 2008 MERCURY MARINER HYBRID Several in stock & available for immediate delivery. 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JOYCE ACOSTA ROBERT AFFELDT THOMAS ALBERG CAROLYNN ALLEN LORRAINE ALTHOFF NAOMI AMPEY JASON ANDROLI LAWRENCE ANKLAM DOROTHY ANSCHUTZ CONSTANCE ARCAND GARY ARENS ERIN BAKER MARY BASTIEN LORNA BELL ARNOLD BERG DELOS CISZAK LAWRENCE COLEMAN DONALD CORCORAN MARGIE CRAWFORD GARY CUMMINGS JOHN DAHL MARGARET DAHLHEIMER JOSEPHINE DAY JUNE DEMING JOEL DIXON RUTH DONAIS DAVID DUDERSTADT JILLIAN DUDLEY ANNE EADES IDA EKLUND CORRINE ERICKSON DOUGLAS EWING ARTHUR FALKANGER DENISE FERNANDEZ MARY FLATER AGNES FOX GARY FUCHS CAROL GAEBLER BESSIE GERMAN AMIE GOBLIRSCH LYNNE GRAVES GREGORY GROBERG JOHN GUERRA LINDA HAAS NORMA HALL DOREEN HANSON BERNARD HARRINGTON ROGER HAWKINSON KATHY HENDERSON ROSANNE HESSE RICHARD HILLYER ERMA HOLLAND BEN HONG TIMOTHY HUGLEN EUGENE HYLAND JOHN INDAHL THELMA IVINS JOHN JAY CARL JEUNE TERRY JOHNSON DARLENE JUDNICK RICHARD KADERA ANDRA KATULA S NANCY KESSLER GREGORY KISHEL MARY KNUTTILA STEPHANIE KOHL RONALD KOSCHAK KENKRATT IRENE KWOSEK STEVEN LAKEN DONALD LARSON DOLORES LEFTO JEAN LETTNER THOMAS LINDEN JOSEPH LOGAN DAVID LUCENTE AUDREY MACARTHUR OANN MAGNUSON J LEONARD MARSHALL GERALDINE MC CONNELL GEORGE MEKOLA JOHN MICKMAN IVER MOBERG JEOM MOON JANET MULLIN HERBERT NADLER VIOLET NELSON HARRIET NICODEMUS DAVID NORRIS MARY OCONNOR RONALD OLSON KELLY OSTREM SALLY PANIAN JEFFREY PEARSON CHARLENE PETER THINH PHAM MATTHEW PITTMAN RICHARDPLANA HARLAND POTTER MARYANN PROFT WILLIAM PUGLISI LOUIS RADICH ALTON RAYGOR WALTER RHODES MARCELLA ROBERTS JOYCE ROHINSON JAMES ROVANO LORINDA SAFARZ GREG SAVAGE MARJORIE SCHMITT JEFFREY SCHWAB ROBERT SEARLES HELEN SEPPALA BERNARD SHERMAN ROBERT SJOGREN KENNETH SLATTEN LAUISE SMITH DAVID SOGGE CHERYL SOUKKALA KAREN SPOONER GREGORY STELLER DAVID STOEBE KATHRYN STRATTON ALEDA SUNDEEN ALFRED SWENSON JOHN TAFT ALDEN TETLIE IRIS TILDEN FLOYD TROUMBLY YVONNE TURNER DALE VAN BECK MARTHA VON SCHRILTZ 651-296-2568 (TwinWATSON Cities Metro)HENRY 800-925-5668 (Outstate MNWELLS only) RALPH WALLIN DEANNA WEI HSUN JEAN DIANE WHITE CHRISTOPHER WILSON TAISTO WIRT MARY WOOD 0726503748EM DOROTHY www.gooniescomedy.com 7 - 2ND ST. SW ROCHESTER, MN 1st Runner-up: Rochester Magazine’s Best New Restaurant 2006 Minnesota’s Unclaimed Property Find your name and claim your cash from forgotten bank accounts, uncashed payroll checks, lost safe deposit boxes, old stock dividends, and more. Just check our website. It makes lots of sense and doesn’t cost a cent. www.commerce.state.mn.us Genuine, Authentic, Wholesome Pub Food! Happy Hour Mon.-Thur. 3-6pm 11 pm-1 am: 2 for 1 Any Beverage! Performing Thursday, August 2nd 8:30-11:30 1643 N. Broadway • 252-8800 • www.glynnerspub.com 0719503124P July 30 - August 5 288-8130 0726499948P CENTER STREET & BROADWAY 0726502168P * Pecan-Crusted Roughy with Orange Butter Sauce Celebrating * Grilled Pork Tenderloin with Raspberry Sauce 55 Years * New England Seafood Chowder with a Shrimp Caesar 0726499837P 8:00 P.M. to Midnight TOMORROW’S LUNCHEON * Swiss-Almond Chicken Florentine SPECIALS 0726499867P FAMILY TIME COUNTRY LADDS Lindy Lange wraps up all the events in and around Rochester that are aimed at kids and their parents. B8 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com WEATHER Friday POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com 9 a.m. 6 a.m. Noon 83° 65° 83° Mostly sunny and very warm. Winds: SSW 714 mph Avg. Humidity: 64% Partial sunshine. Winds: NNE 8-16 mph RealFeel: 95°/63° RealFeel: 86°/60° 71°, partly cloudy 79°, partly cloudy 83°, clear RealFeel: 72° RealFeel: 84° RealFeel: 86° RealFeel: 76° Sunday 60° 85° Partly sunny. Winds: ENE 6-12 mph 61° 87° Pine Island 84/56 Owatonna 85/59 ALMANAC COMFORT FACTORS RIVER LEVELS (From the Rochester & Austin airports for the 24-hour period ending yesterday) Heat Index Friday Mississippi River 83 81 78 Yesterday Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date 11/9 389/305 423/407 290/187 Precipitation 8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. An indication of how hot it feels based on temperature and humidity. 7 6 4 Air Quality Index Major Minor Major Minor 9:43 a.m. 3:29 a.m. 10:11 p.m. 3:57 p.m. 10:34 a.m. 4:20 a.m. 11:02 p.m. 4:48 p.m. SKY WATCH Last Aug 5 ft. ft. ft. ft. Moderate Moderate Moderate Main pollutant Spring Grove 84/58 101-150 110s 100s 90s 80s 70s 60s 50s 40s 30s 20s 10s 0s -0s -10s Saskatoon Winnipeg San Francisco 151+ Unhealthy Unhealthy (Sensitive) Salt Lake City Montreal Toronto Detroit New York Chicago Washington Denver Las Vegas Albuquerque Oklahoma City Los Angeles Particulates Minneapolis/ St. Paul Rapid City Portland Reno San Diego Phoenix El Paso Nashville New Orleans Houston Atlanta Showers T-storms Pollen Index New First Rain Wednesday's Reading Warm Front Aug 12 Aug 20 Rises Sets Sun Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus 5:52 a.m. 7:34 p.m. 4:25 a.m. 8:34 a.m. 1:00 a.m. 4:52 p.m. 7:42 a.m. 10:27 p.m. 8:40 p.m. 2:49 a.m. 7:33 p.m. 9:33 p.m. 3:28 p.m. 2:01 a.m. 9:42 p.m. 9:52 a.m. Molds NA Monterrey Snow Miami La Paz Ice Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. City Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W Albert Lea Brainerd Davenport, IA Decorah, IA Des Moines, IA Duluth Dubuque, IA Eau Claire, WI Fargo, ND Grand Marais Green Bay, WI Hibbing 84/61/pc 84/54/s 88/61/t 84/60/pc 86/65/t 80/53/s 88/61/t 86/55/pc 85/58/s 81/54/s 80/60/t 82/45/s Int'l Falls Iowa City, IA La Crosse, WI Madison, WI Mankato Mason City, IA Milwaukee, WI Minneapolis St. Cloud St. Paul Sioux Falls, SD Waterloo, IA 82/46/s 86/63/t 86/59/pc 86/60/t 83/61/pc 84/59/pc 76/65/t 87/66/pc 86/56/pc 87/63/pc 83/63/pc 88/61/t FRIDAY/NATION City Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Boston Charlotte, NC Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Dallas Denver Detroit Honolulu Indianapolis Jacksonville Las Vegas 91/67/t 71/56/s 92/71/t 90/68/pc 90/66/t 78/58/t 83/65/t 84/65/t 90/75/t 81/59/t 82/67/t 87/76/pc 86/66/t 90/72/t 103/80/pc Los Angeles Memphis Miami New Orleans New York Philadelphia Phoenix Rapid City St. Louis Salt Lake City San Francisco San Juan, PR Seattle Tucson Wash., DC 84/66/pc 94/76/pc 90/76/t 89/75/t 84/73/t 88/72/t 101/85/pc 84/60/c 90/73/t 93/69/pc 72/56/pc 90/78/s 76/56/pc 94/77/pc 86/72/t FRIDAY/WORLD Source: Mayo Clinic Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2007 City Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W Acapulco Amsterdam Baghdad Bangkok Beijing 90/77/pc 70/57/pc 111/83/s 91/79/t 92/79/pc Berlin Bogota Brasilia Buenos Aires Cairo 75/55/pc 67/42/pc 78/56/pc 48/34/pc 107/79/s Cancun Cape Town Caracas Dublin Guatemala 88/75/pc 56/46/r 84/68/t 66/54/c 77/61/t Havana Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg London 91/73/t 93/82/pc 93/70/s 60/33/s 73/59/pc Madrid Mexico City Mogadishu Moscow Nassau 95/70/s 73/55/t 86/75/pc 73/57/pc 87/75/t Oslo Paris Sydney Tokyo Toronto 64/54/r 73/63/c 67/48/pc 84/73/pc 81/64/t Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice 0726503344 Friday Stationary Flurries Chihuahua Cold Front Caledonia 84/58 Preston 84/57 FRIDAY/REGION Calgary Friday's Forecast Good Austin 84/59 Billings Today: 91 51-100 Spring Valley 83/59 Seattle Wednesday: 59 0-50 none -0.10 +0.03 -0.07 Anchorage 0-2 • Low 3-5 • Moderate 6-7 • High 8-10 • Very High 11+ • Extreme The higher the AccuWeather UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Pollen NA July 29 16 14 12 13 Grand Meadow 83/57 Chg. Source: Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Moon phases Full ft. ft. ft. ft. St. Charles 84/56 Rushford 85/58 FRIDAY'S FORECAST 1 1 SOLUNAR TABLE Saturday 6.00 1.60 7.00 5.50 Winona 87/60 Stewartville 83/59 Hayfield 83/57 Fairbanks Yesterday 0.00"/0.00" Month to date 0.72"/2.09" Normal month to date 3.71"/3.59" Year to date 14.57"/14.63" Normal year to date 17.82"/17.97" Friday Lake City Red Wing Wabasha Winona 5 8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. The solunar period indicates peak feeding times for fish and game. Blooming Prairie 83/59 Rochester Eyota 83/59 83/56 Chatfield 84/57 Flood Level stage 84 83 UV Index Friday Cooling Degree Days Kasson Byron 83/58 83/56 As of 7 a.m. Wednesday Temperature Plainview 84/56 Mantorville Oronoco 83/56 84/56 Dodge Center 83/58 RealFeel: 88°/61° Wabasha 86/56 Lake City 85/55 Zumbrota 84/56 63° Sunny. Winds: SW 6-12 mph RealFeel: 87°/59° Temperatures are tomorrow’s highs and tomorrow night’s lows. Red Wing 86/59 Monday Plenty of sunshine. Winds: S 6-12 mph RealFeel: 86°/58° 68 7 p.m. RealFeel: 63° The patented RealFeel Temperature® is AccuWeather’s exclusive index of the effects of temperature, wind, humidity, sunshine, precipitation and elevation on the human body. Shown are the highest and lowest values for each day. High yesterday 87°/84° Low yesterday 65°/63° Mean yesterday 76°/74° Highest heat index 91°/89° Record high 97°, 1931/92°, 1952 Record low 48°, 1920/45°, 1959 Normal high 80°/80° Normal low 61°/60° 3 p.m. 65°, thunderstorm Saturday 59° XX 78°, partly cloudy Kenyon 84/56 89° Thursday, July 26, 2007 FRIDAY'S REGIONAL FORECAST For school closings or more weather details, go to www.postbulletin.com. Today ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 • • • • • • • • Vikings report to training camp. C3 JULY 26, 2007 Twins swept out of Toronto. C3 THURSDAY POST-BULLETIN SPORTS SHORTS Douglas Trail Run Saturday The 32nd annual Douglas Trail Races (11-mile and two-mile fun run) will be run Saturday, starting at 8 a.m. from the Douglas Trail beginning and ending in Douglas. Early registration ($8 for Rochester Track Club member and $9 non-member) runs through Friday. Raceday registration ($9 RTC member and $10 non-member) starts at 7 a.m. Saturday on the race site. The 11-mile race is part of the Rochester Track Club Grand Prix. For further information, see www.rochestertrackclub.com or contact the race director, Paul Anderson at 282-7213. Century cheerleading camp Rochester Century is holding an instructional camp from noon to 2 p.m. Friday in the wrestling room at the school. The camp is open to all students in grades 9-12. ™ Contact Melissa Wendland at melissa. [email protected] for further information. • Fall sports registration is Aug. 8-9 and practice starts Aug. 13. Christina Paolucci/Post-Bulletin Honkers catcher Derek Norris is too late with the tag of T.J. Thompson of St. Cloud, who scored in the third inning of Wednesday night’s game at Mayo Field won by the River Bats, 5-4. Close, but no cigar — again BEST BETS Honkers suffer yet another one-run loss Patriots host Albert Lea By Jason Feldman The American Legion baseball regular season is rapidly drawing to a close. The Rochester Patriots host Albert Lea in a 5:30 p.m. doubleheader today at Hudson Field. Barry watch Fans can watch Barry Bonds continue his run toward Hank Aaron’s alltime career home runs record tonight. Bonds and the San Francisco Giants are at home against the Atlanta Braves. The game will be carried on TBS starting at 6 o’clock. THIS DAY IN HISTORY July 26 [email protected] As Brett Lindgren sat down to be interviewed after Wednesday’s game, he dropped his hat on a table, hung his head for a moment and ran a hand through his hair. He summed up his feelings with one word: frustration. The Rochester Honkers’ manager, and his players, were left scratching their heads again after a 5-4 Northwoods League loss to St. Cloud at Mayo Field. It was the Honkers’ second consecutive loss by one run and their 13th one-run loss in 51 games this season. “It’s been tough the past few games,” Lindgren said. “We’re bat- tling; we’re getting runners in scoring position, but we haven’t had that one hit to get us over the hump.” Rochester’s playoff hopes aren’t gone. But with 17 games left to make up a 3 1⁄2-game deficit to Duluth, the Honkers (7-10 second half, 25-26 overall) need to find more consistency in all aspects of the game. Tuesday’s game summed up that need for consistency. The Honkers were set down in order four times, they committed three errors, and their pitchers combined to walk nine batters and hit two. “We need to learn to come out and be ready to play right away,” Lindgren said. “We have to be mentally there for nine innings.” Despite some early troubles, the Honkers managed to remain in striking distance in the late innings. They trailed 5-1 going into the sev- enth inning, then rallied for three runs with two outs. Aaron Senne, who scored the Honkers’ first run in the sixth inning, worked out a bases-loaded walk after falling behind 0-2. That plated Derek Norris to cut St. Cloud’s lead to 5-2. Brian Spear followed with an opposite-field single, scoring Jacob Spaeth and Sam Testa. That’s when St. Cloud turned to Ryan Wrobel, its all-star closer. Wrobel shut the door on the Honkers, striking out four batters in two innings and not allowing a base runner. It was his 14th save of the season. “The guys are trying, they’re frustrated,” Lindgren said. “They’re not getting results for all of the work they’ve been putting in.” St. Cloud scored the game-winning run in the seventh when Steve Cochrane led off with a double, and 1952 — Bob Mathias wins his second Olympic decathlon in Helsinki, Finland. 1997 – Brett Favre, the two-time NFL MVP has signed a new seven-year deal, reportedly worth between $42 and $48 million with a $12 million signing bonus. 1998 — Three spectators are killed at the U.S. 500 — the first fan deaths at a major race in the United States in more than a decade — and six are injured by flying debris from the one-car crash at Michigan Speedway. 2005 — Greg Maddux records his 3,000th career strikeout against San Francisco, striking out Omar Vizquel in the third inning of a 3-2, 11-inning victory for the Giants. Moore back in the ring Former Rochester boxer has Friday fight in Miami By Penny Marshall [email protected] Fred Moore came to Minnesota by way of Philadelphia and for about 10 years, trained and fought in Rochester. VIKINGS TRAINING CAMP • What: Minnesota Vikings training camp • Where: Minnesota State University, Mankato campus • When: Friday through Aug. 15 (full schedule available at www.vikingstrainingcamp.com) • This weekend: The Vikings are scheduled to practice from 9-11:15 a.m. and 3-5 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and from 3-5 p.m. Sunday. • Note for fans: Alltel wireless is giving away 150 two-ticket packages to see the Vikings’ Aug. 30 preseason game against Dallas at the Metrodome. More information, see www.alltelmidwest.com/vikings. The 6-foot, 3-inch southpaw developed a solid fan base in the Midwest as he carved his name in the light heavyweight division. Three years ago, Moore moved to Miami as sparring partner for Glen Johnson and subsequently Bernard Hopkins, and he has been training and fighting out of South Beach ever since. Jerry Olson/Post-Bulletin Sam Stoll, 11, of Kasson, won a national wrestling title at 140 pounds at a recent tournament in Green Bay. Grappling with (early) success K-M wrestler already has five national titles By Luke Meyer [email protected] FROM THE STANDS What about Barry? TODAY’S QUESTION: Do you believe that San Francisco Giants slugger Barry Bonds knowingly used performanceenhancing steroids? • Yes. • No. To vote, head to www.postbulletin.com, click the “Sports” link and look for Today’s poll. Results will appear in this space Friday. A LOOK AHEAD Dylan Tonneson dropped down a sacrifice bunt. Cochrane moved to third base, then darted home when he saw the Honkers weren’t covering the plate. Relief pitcher Tim Radmacher was a bright spot for the Honkers. He threw three innings, allowing just one run. “Tim did a great job,” Lindgren said. “The run he gave up wasn’t even his fault. It was a mental error. Stuff just seems to happen to us at the wrong times.” Reyes Dorado (2-1) gave up four runs and walked seven to take the loss. St. Cloud’s Kurtis Frymier (1-2) earned the win. He lasted 6 2⁄3 innings, gave up four runs (one earned) and struck out eight. Rochester plays host to St. Cloud again today at 7:05 p.m. at Mayo Field. • Box score, standings, C3 With parents seemingly putting more and more pressure on their children to perform at a high level in youth athletics and children increasingly specializing in one sport, the Paul Stoll household has gone another direction. Stoll’s 11-year-old son, Sam, not only loves to compete, but does it in three sports — baseball, football and wrestling for KassonMantorville youth leagues. While Sam likes all sports he competes in, he is bound to have a favorite. For him, it’s wrestling. And it’s easy to see why. Sam has captured five national wrestling championships in the past few years, with Nos. 4 and 5 coming in early July at the ASICS Kids National Wrestling Tournament in Green Bay, Wis. He won the Greco Roman and Freestyle championships in the Novice Division at 140 pounds. The latter of the two came against Will Balow of Lake City. The two young wrestlers have faced off before, and Stoll was admittedly concerned before the match. “I was nervous about the freestyle title because another Minnesota kid was in my bracket. We’ve wrestled before and it’s always close.” He also enjoys wrestling because he can take out his aggression on the opponent. “It’s fun because I can beat up on people,” he said. “I can take out my anger.” Sam, who is coached by K-M varsity coach Paul Mann, also has a twin brother, Zach, who does not wrestle and is “a polar opposite,” according to his father. But if the two ever do decide to wrestle at home, they won’t have to look far for a referee. Their mother, Tere, is a USA Wrestling certified referee. Paul Stoll says he was a “B-squadder” when he wrestled in high school in New Jersey, but it’s easy to see how much the family is involved with wrestling. While Paul is certainly proud of his son’s achievements, he knows it’s up to Sam to continue to improve as a wrestler. “I’m just the bus driver,” he joked. “He does the work, and works out every day. It’s up to him. I just point the car in the right direction and go.” “It’s not home, though,’’ he said. “Minnesota is my home and I definitely plan to return to Rochester. I miss the beautiful country and most of all, the fine people.’’ Friday night in Miami, Moore comes off a two-year break from the ring to take on Johnson, the No. 1 light heavyweight in the world. Johnson (45-11-2) owns wins over Roy Jones Jr. and Antonio Tarver. “This is the toughest opponent I’ve ever had,’’ said Moore. “He brings the heat and makes you fight. He cuts the ring off and punches hard. My plan is to get his respect, good defense and a lot of movement.’’ Johnson’s manager, Henry Foster, had praise for Moore. “He is a crafty, battle-tested veteran with a big punch, ordinarily too strong of an opponent for a non-televised bout,’’ he said. “We anticipate seeing the finest Moore ever, recognizing the opportunity he has to upset the No. 1 light heavyweight in the world.’’ Moore (30-6, 27 KO’s) said he’s been training hard since last year, including three-hour jogs on the beach while wearing boots. “I’m 40 years old but it’s not about age, it’s about how good you take care of yourself and I’m in very good shape,’’ Moore said. “The result of this fight will be a good indicator of where I’m going to go and what I need to do next. I still have championship aspirations, but right now I’m concentrating on this fight. I’ll evaluate after that.’’ The 10-round bout will not be televised. Moore plans a trip to Rochester at the end of August. THE BIG WEEKEND AHEAD Honkers still have playoff hopes The Northwoods League second-half playoff hopes for the Rochester Honkers aren’t gone, but with only 17 games left they have to make up a 31⁄2-game deficit to Duluth. We’ll cover their 7 p.m. game today at Mayo Field against St. Cloud. • • Royals to honor Milene The Rochester Royals will honor former player, coach and general manager Jeff Milene in a special ceremony at 6 p.m. Friday at Mayo Field. At 7 p.m. the Royals host the Rochester A’s. Saturday in “Dugout • • Club Night,’’ the Royals entertain the Austin Greyhounds at 6 o’clock and Sunday it’s fan appreciation night when the Royals take on Lakeville. Tickets are $3 for adults and $1 for 18-under. • Honkers home On the tube The Rochester Honkers host St. Cloud at 7 p.m. today at Mayo Field. Then the Honkers don’t return home until Tuesday against Mankato. Tickets are $5 adults and $4 for seniors and children 4-12. The Twins are in Cleveland for a three-game series. Games are at 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday and noon Sunday. All will be televised on FSN North. Sunday’s game is on KMSP-TV (Twin Cities). • • • C2 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com CYCLING NEXT Tour leader taken out GOURETTE, France — One of its biggest stars is already gone, and now so is the leader of the Tour de France. Michael Rasmussen was removed from the race by his Rabobank team after winning Wednesday’s stage, a day after Alexandre Vinokourov and his team withdrew when the star cyclist tested positive for a banned blood transfusion. “Michael Rasmussen has been sent home for violating (the team’s) internal rules,” Rabobank spokesman Jacob Bergsma told The Associated Press by phone. The expulsion, which Bergsma said was ordered by the Dutch team’s sponsor, was linked to “incorrect” information that Rasmussen gave to the team’s sports director over his whereabouts last month. The Danish cyclist missed random drug tests May 8 and June 28, saying he was in Mexico. But a former rider, Davide Cassani, told Denmark’s Danmarks Radio on Wednesday that he had seen Rasmussen in Italy in mid-June. Only once before in the history of the 104-year-old Tour has the race leader been expelled. In 1978, Belgian rider Michel Pollentier, trying to evade doping controls after winning a stage at the Alpe d’Huez in the Alps, was caught with an intricate tube-andcontainer system that contained urine that was not his, said Tour historian Jean-Paul Brouchon. Rasmussen, who has led since July 15 and looked set to win the race which ends on Sunday in Paris, could not be reached for comment. BASEBALL Sheffield denies knowing chemist CHICAGO — Gary Sheffield denied knowing the chemist who said in a TV interview Tuesday night that the Tigers’ star had taken steroids. “We can all claim a lot of things. I claim a lot of things, too. But I don’t know this guy, never seen this guy,” Sheffield said Wednesday about chemist Patrick Arnold. “I certainly don’t know him. He may know of me.” The interview with Arnold was broadcast Tuesday night on HBO’s “Costas Now.” Arnold, who worked with the Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative and Victor Conte, spent much of the interview discussing his involvement with steroids and addressing San Francisco Giants outfielder Barry Bonds’ BALCO dealings. Host Bob Costas asked Arnold about the remarks Sheffield made about steroids in an interview with HBO’s “Real Sports” that aired July 17. Sheffield said in the “Real Sports” interview: “If I took what Barry Bonds took, why don’t I look like him?” Wednesday, Sheffield said he used a substance provided to him at a 2001 off-season workout with Bonds, “and that was it. I had no association with any of those people again.” Tuesday’s HBO interview was timed around Bonds, who is on the verge of breaking Hank Aaron’s homer mark. Sheffield felt he shouldn’t be lumped as a product of the steroid era. 3 HONKERS BASEBALL LYNX BASKETBALL Friday: at Cleveland, 6:05 p.m. (FSN) Saturday: at Cleveland, 6:05 p.m. (FSN) Sunday: at Cleveland, 12:05 p.m. (FSN) Today: St. Cloud, 7:05 p.m. Friday: at Thunder Bay, 7:05 p.m. Saturday: at Thunder Bay, 6:05 p.m. Friday: Los Angeles, 7 p.m. (no TV) Sunday: at Sacramento, 8 p.m. (no TV) Aug. 2: at New York, 6:30 p.m. (no TV) BASKETBALL Two sides to Vick Donaghy’s bookies identified Tour de France leader Michael Rasmussen celebrates after winning the NEW YORK — Two Catholic high 16th stage Wednesday. Rasmussen was later pulled out of the race by school friends of disgraced referee Tim Donaghy have been identified as his team sponsor, Rabobank. Hearst: Mitchell had names NEW YORK— Lawyers for Hearst Corp. claim prosecutors provided baseball steroids investigator George Mitchell the names of players implicated in drug use by former New York Mets employee Kirk Radomski. In a brief filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Central Islip, N.Y., Hearst said prosecutors attempted to “skirt the issue” when they said they did not give Mitchell a complete copy of a sworn statement signed by IRS Special Agent Jeff Novitzky. In the version made public, names of up to 23 players were blacked out. The Albany Times Union and San Francisco Chronicle, which are owned by Hearst, said in previous court papers that if prosecutors gave Mitchell the names, they must be made public. In the latest filing, Hearst said the government gave Mitchell the information without supplying the exact document. “These distinctions are without significance,” Hearst said. “The government has shared with Mitchell the names redacted in the search warrant affidavit and does not deny it.” Prosecutors say disclosing the names would jeopardize an ongoing investigation. The Major League Baseball Players Association also has fought the move to disclose names. Aaron ball value likely to drop NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Andrew Knuth, who owns the final home run baseball hit by Hank Aaron, calls it the “pre-steroid record ball.” With Barry Bonds about to break Aaron’s record of 755 home runs, Knuth admits his investment will likely go down in value. But not in his mind. “I think it’s going to be the presteroid record ball,” Knuth said. Bonds has 753 home runs, two away from tying Aaron’s record. Knuth, a 68-year-old Weston resident who runs Westport Asset Management, bought Aaron’s 755th home run ball for $650,000 at an auction in 1999. He learned of the sale from a colleague whose wife was Aaron’s secretary. HOCKEY Staals arrested in Minnesota MINNEAPOLIS — Carolina Hurricanes star Eric Staal and his brother, Jordan Staal of the Pittsburgh Penguins, were arrested for misdemeanor disorderly conduct and obstructing the legal process at Eric Staal’s bachelor party at a Minnesota resort. The Cook County Sheriff’s Office said the brothers were among 14 arrested last weekend after authorities received complaints about “screaming, yelling and playing loud music” at a resort in northeastern Minnesota, about two hours from the Staals’ hometown of Thunder Bay, Ontario. The sheriff said the group was warned multiple times before finally being ordered to leave the Lutsen Resort and Sea Villas in Lutsen, at which point the men gathered on a nearby highway and “began harassing motorists.” That’s when authorities arrested the group, around 4 a.m. Saturday. GOLF Wie looks to get on track EVIAN-LES-BAINS, France — Michele Wie hopes a return to the French Alps will get her game on track. The 17-year-old Wie is back at the Evian Masters with her game, confidence and reputation in disarray. A year ago, she closed with a 4-under 68 and finished in a tie for second. She hasn’t broken par anywhere since. “It’s so good to be back here,” she said. “It’s so nice, so beautiful, the people are so nice and I feel at home. It’s been a really tough year this year.” Wie has struggled with wrist injuries, and her last appearance was at the U.S. Women’s Open at Pine Needles four weeks ago, when she withdrew halfway through the second round. Earlier in the season, she withdrew from the Ginn Tribute, citing a wrist injury, but then was seen practicing over the weekend. She received strong rebukes from Annika Sorenstam and LPGA Tour commissioner Carolyn Bivens. XX The next 3 games for Minnesota teams TWINS BASEBALL Associated Press Thursday, July 26, 2007 NEWPORT NEWS, Va. — To prosecutors, Michael Vick is a ruthless participant in a dogfighting operation. To people living in the poor, crimeridden neighborhood where Vick grew up, he is a generous benefactor who provides school supplies and athletic uniforms to local kids and buys air conditioners for housing-project residents. “He’s a good person. He’s making a difference in the community,” Misha Brown said Tuesday as she dropped off her children at the same Boys & Girls Club where the 27-year-old Vick honed his athletic skills. Though Brown has never met the Atlanta Falcons quarterback, she sings his praises. Without his generosity, she said, her children and others in the East End neighborhood would not have had backpacks and other supplies for school last year Vick and three other men are to be arraigned today in federal court in Richmond, accused of a conspiracy involving competitive dogfighting, procuring and training pit bulls for fighting, and conducting the enterprise across state lines. The dogs fought at a property Vick owned in rural Surry County. the bookies in a gambling scandal rocking the NBA. But the two bet-takers apparently exaggerated their Mafia connections. “They’re nobodies,” a law enforcement source said. The mob wanna-bes attended Cardinal O’Hara High School in suburban Philadelphia with Donaghy, who was a varsity standout on the school’s basketball and baseball teams. Donaghy, 40, has become the focus of the federal investigation into bets he allegedly made on NBA games, including some he officiated. The veteran referee, who earned $260,000 a year for whistling fouls on the hardwood, allegedly gave the bookies advance word on officiating crews of games they planned to take action on, the source said. Donaghy is expected to surrender to the FBI by next week to plead guilty to gambling charges. Donaghy has been holed up inside his two-story home in Bradenton, Fla., refusing to make any statements and claiming to be “the butler” when reporters knock on his door. Known as a hothead, he apparently Harrington era to begin turned his lawn sprinklers on a freeATLANTA — The Atlanta Falcons lance photographer for The New York hired Bobby Petrino because they Times on Wednesday, drenching the thought he could turn Michael Vick shutterbug for getting too close to the into a complete quarterback. They hedges outside his house. signed Joey Harrington merely to serve as a backup. How things have changed. Harrington is now the starter by default, leaving Petrino and the Falcons without their most prominent Holmes to return to Chiefs player as they begin training camp KANSAS CITY, Mo. — It might be to today in Flowery Branch. How can the Falcons possibly cope put some pressure on Larry Johnson with the jarring change from Vick to in contract negotiations. It might be because the Chiefs are Harrington? Petrino can only talk convinced they can’t survive without bravely about a smooth transition. “I know Joey has been through some Johnson if his holdout is lengthy. Or it might be something as simple as the hard times. He’s been hit a lot. But Chiefs believing he can once again be he’s hung in there,” the coach said. “The thing that impresses me most is a premier running back. Whatever the reason, the Chiefs are his take-charge attitude.” Vick is barred from training camp welcoming back Priest Holmes. Almost two years after Holmes left while the NFL conducts its own investhe Chiefs because of a mysterious tigation into federal charges related to neck condition, he has been medically dogfighting. He wouldn’t have been at the first practice anyway; his cleared to play. arraignment in Richmgnd, Va., is set The Chiefs aren’t expecting Holmes for Thursday. until at least Saturday. Even after his arrival, Holmes may not initially practice with the full team until the Chiefs Items from Associated Press and McClatchy Newspapers determine he’s ready. FOOTBALL THE NUMBERS MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL AMERICAN LEAGUE Central Division W L Detroit 60 40 Cleveland 59 42 Minnesota 51 50 Chicago 45 56 Kansas City 43 57 East Division Boston 61 40 New York 54 46 Toronto 51 50 Baltimore 46 53 Tampa Bay 38 62 West Division Los Angeles 58 42 Seattle 54 45 Oakland 48 53 Texas 46 56 Pct .600 .584 .505 .446 .430 GB — 11⁄2 1 9 ⁄2 151⁄2 17 .604 .540 .505 .465 .380 — 61⁄2 10 14 221⁄2 .580 .545 .475 .451 — 1 3 ⁄2 101⁄2 13 WEDNESDAY Toronto 13, Minnesota 1 L.A. Angels ?, Oakland 6 Cleveland 1, Boston 0 Baltimore 6, Tampa Bay 1 N.Y. Yankees 7, Kansas City 1 Detroit 13, Chicago White Sox 9 Texas 7, Seattle 6 TODAY Tampa Bay (Jackson 2-9) at Baltimore (Trachsel 5-7), 11:35 1.m. Detroit (Verlander 11-3) at Chicago White Sox (Danks 6-7), 11:05 p.m. Boston (Gabbard 4-0) at Cleveland (Lee 5-7), 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Igawa 2-2) at Kansas City (De La Rosa 7-10), 7:10 p.m. Oakland (Haren 11-3) at Seattle (Weaver 28), 9:05 p.m. FRIDAY Minnesota at Cleveland, 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m., 1st game N.Y. Yankees 8, Baltimore 6, 2nd game, 71⁄2 innings, comp. of susp. game, 6:05 p.m. Boston at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Texas at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m. Toronto at Chicago White Sox, 7:11 p.m. Oakland at Seattle, 9:05 p.m. Detroit at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m. • NATIONAL LEAGUE Central Division W L Milwaukee 56 45 Chicago 53 46 St. Louis 45 52 Houston 44 57 Cincinnati 43 59 Pittsburgh 41 58 East Division New York 57 43 Atlanta 54 48 Philadelphia 52 48 Florida 48 54 Washington 42 58 West Division Los Angeles 56 46 San Diego 54 46 Arizona 55 48 Colorado 51 50 San Francisco 42 57 TELEVISION HIGHLIGHTS Pct .554 .535 .464 .436 .422 .414 GB — 2 9 12 1 13 ⁄2 14 .570 .529 .520 .471 .420 — 4 5 10 15 .549 .540 .534 .505 .424 — 1 11⁄2 41⁄2 121⁄2 WEDNESDAY Colorado 10, San Diego 2 Philadelphia 7, Washington 5, 14 innings N.Y. Mets 6, Pittsburgh 3 Cincinnati 7, Milwaukee 3 Houston 2, L.A. Dodgers 1 Chicago Cubs 7, St. Louis 1 Arizona 7, Florida 0 San Francisco 2, Atlanta 1 TODAY Pittsburgh (Maholm 6-12) at N.Y. Mets (O.Perez 9-6), 11:10 a.m. Milwaukee (Bush 8-8) at Cincinnati (Livingston 2-1), 11:35 a.m. Washington (Bacsik 3-6) at Philadelphia (Eaton 9-6), 12:05 p.m. Atlanta (Carlyle 5-2) at San Francisco (Lincecum 5-2), 6:05 p.m. San Diego (D.Wells 5-6) at Houston (Rodriguez 6-9), 7:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Marquis 7-5) at St. Louis (Looper 7-8), 7:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Penny 12-1) at Cglorado (Lopez 5-3), 8:05 p.m. Florida (Kim 5-5) at Arizona (Owings 5-5), 8:40 p.m. FRIDAY Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Mets, 6:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. San Diego at Houston, 7:05 p.m. Milwaukee at St. Louis, 7:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 8:05 p.m. Atlanta at Arizona, 8:40 p.m. Florida at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m. • • TODAY Major League Baseball Atlanta at San Francisco, 6 p.m. (TBS). Cycling Tour de France, Stage 17, Pau to Castelsarrasin, France, 7:30 a.m. (live); 11 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m., 11 p.m. (taped) (Versus). Pro Golf LPGA/Evian Masters, first round, from Evian Masters Club Club, France, 5:30 p.m. (Golf Channel). PGA/Canadian Open, first round, from Angus Glen Golf Club, Mrkham, Ontario, 2 p.m. (Golf Channel). Senior British Open, first round, from Muirfield Golf Links, Gullane, Scotland, 11 a.m. (TNT). PGA European Tour/Deutsche Bank Players Championship, first round, from Gut Kaden Golf Club, Alveslohe, Germany, 8:30 a.m. (Golf Channel). Nationwide Tour/Cox Classic, first round, from Chamions Run, Omaha, Neb., 11:30 a.m. (Golf Channel). Major League Lacrosse New Jersey at Philadelphia, 8 p.m., taped (ESPN2). Soccer MLS/CD Chivas USA at New York, 6 p.m. (ESPN2). FRIDAY Auto Racing NASCAR/Craftsman Truck Series, pole qualifying, Power Stroke Diesel 200, from Indianapolis, 3:30 p.m. (Speed Channel). NASCAR/Craftsman Truck Series, Power Stroke Diesel 200, from Indianapolis, 7 p.m. (Speed Channel). Pro Boxing Andre Berto vs. Cosme Rivera, welterweights, from Saratoga Springs, N.Y., 8 p.m. (ESPN2). Major League Baseball Minnesota at Cleveland, 6 p.m. (Fox Sports Net North). Atlanta at Arizona, 8:30 p.m. (TBS). Cycling Tour de France, Stage 18, Cahors to • Angouleme, France, 7:30 a.m. (live); 11 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m., 11 p.m. (taped) (Versus). Amateur Golf USGA/U.S. Junior Amateur, first round, from Augusta, Mo., 11 a.m., taped (Golf Channel). Pro Golf LPGA/Evian Masters, second round, from Evian Masters Club Club, France, 5:30 p.m. (Golf Channel). PGA/Canadian Open, second round, from Angus Glen Golf Club, Mrkham, Ontario, 2 p.m. (Golf Channel). Senior British Open, second round, from Muirfield Golf Links, Gullane, Scotland, 11 a.m. (TNT). PGA European Tour/Deutsche Bank Players Championship, second round, from Gut Kaden Golf Club, Alveslohe, Germany, 8:30 a.m. (Golf Channel). Nationwide Tour/Cox Classic, second round, from Chamions Run, Omaha, Neb., 11:30 a.m. (Golf Channel). Pan American Games Boxing, from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 10 p.m., taped (ESPN2). RADIO HIGHLIGHTS TODAY Northwoods League Baseball St. Cloud at Rochester Honkers, 7 p.m. (KOLM-AM 1520). FRIDAY Major League Baseball Minnesota at Cleveland, 5:35 p.m. (KROC-AM 1340; KAUS-AM 1480; KDHL-AM 920). Northwoods League Baseball Rochester Honkers at Thunder Bay, 7 p.m. (KOLM-AM 1520). BASKETBALL WNBA WESTERN CONFERENCE W San Antonio ....................15 Sacramento ......................13 Phoenix ............................14 Seattle..............................12 Los Angeles ......................8 Houston ............................7 Minnesota ........................5 • L 7 9 10 12 14 16 20 Pct GB .682 — .591 2 .583 2 .500 4 .364 7 1 .304 8 ⁄2 .200 111⁄2 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Detroit ..........................18 5 .783 — Indiana ..........................16 7 .696 2 Connecticut ..................12 12 .500 61⁄2 1 New York......................10 12 .455 7 ⁄2 Chicago ........................10 13 .435 8 Washington ..................10 13 .435 8 WEDNESDAY Phoenix 103, Minnesota 79 TODAY Indiana at Sacramento, 1:30 p.m. New York at Connecticut, 6 p.m. Chicago at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. FRIDAY Los Angeles at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Houston at San Antonio, 7 p.m. Phoenix at Chicago, 7:30 p.m. Indiana at Seattle, 9 p.m. CYCLING TOUR DE FRANCE Wednesday At Gourette, France 16TH STAGE, 135.8-MILE STAGE (Note: Michael Rasmussen has been removed by Rabobank.) 1. Michael Rasmussen, Denmark, Rabobank, 6 hours, 23 minutes, 21 seconds. 2. Levi Leipheimer, United States, Discovery Channel, 26 seconds behind. 3. Alberto Contador, Spain, Discovery Channel, :35. 4. Cadel Evans, Australia, Predictor-Lotto, :43. 5. Juan Mauricio Soler, Colombia, Barloworld, 1:25. 6. Haimar Zubeldia, Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi, 1:52. 7. Juan Jose Cobo, Spain, Saunier DuvalProdir, 1:54. 8. Carlos Sastre, Spain, Team CSC, 2:12. 9. Oscar Pereiro, Spain, Caisse d’Epargne, 2:27. 10. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Caisse d’Epargne, same time. Other U.S. riders 20. Christopher Horner, United States, Predictor-Lotto, same time. 33. Christian Vandevelde, United States, Team CSC, 10:11. 36. George Hincapie, United States, Discovery Channel, 17:08. OVERALL STANDINGS (After 16 stages) 1. x-Michael Rasmussen, Denmark, Rabobank, 76:15:15. 2. Alberto Contador, Spain, Discovery Channel, 3:10. 3. Cadel Evans, Australia, Predictor-Lotto, 5:03. 4. Levi Leipheimer, United States, Discovery Channel, 5:59. 5. Carlos Sastre, Spain, Team CSC, 9:12. 6. Haimar Zubeldia, Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi, 9:39. 7. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Caisse d’Epargne, 13:28. • • 8. Kim Kirchen, Luxembourg, T-Mobile, 14:46. 9. Yaroslav Popovych, Ukraine, Discovery Channel, 16:00. 10. Juan Mauricio Soler, Colombia, Barloworld, 16:41. GOLF PGA TOUR STATISTICS Scoring Average 1, Tiger Woods, 68.60. 2, Vijay Singh, 69.12. 3, Jim Furyk, 69.40. 4, Ernie Els, 69.41. 5, Justin Rose, 69.43. 6, Phil Mickelson, 69.56. 7, Sergio Garcia, 69.60. 8 (tie), David Toms and Steve Stricker, 69.64. 10, K.J. Choi, 69.71. Driving Distance 1, Bubba Watson, 315.0. 2, J.B. Holmes, 312.4. 3, Robert Garrigus, 310.7. 4, John Daly, 310.4. 5, Scott Gutschewski, 304.2. 6, Harrison Frazar, 302.7. 7, Steve Allan, 302.1. 8, Charles Warren, 301.1. 9, Steve Marino, 301.0. 10, 2 tied with Matt Hendrix, 300.9. Driving Accuracy Percentage 1, Jose Coceres, 76.30%. 2, Jim Furyk, 74.62%. 3, Fred Funk, 74.45%. 4, Zach Johnson, 73.58%3. 5, Chris Riley, 72.32%. 6, Joe Durant, 71.54%. 7, Mark Brooks, 71.00%. 8, Michael Boyd, 70.93%. 9, John Cook, 70.51%. 10, Heath Slocum, 70.29%. Total Driving 1, Charles Warren, 55. 2, Mathew Goggin, 64. 3, Hunter Mahan, 66. 4, Sean O’Hair, 78. 5, Kenny Perry, 89. 6, Briny Baird, 105. 7, Peter Lonard, 106. 8, Nick Watney, 107. 9, D.J. Trahan, 111. 10, Jason Gore, 112. Putting Average 1, Fredrik Jacobson, 1.730. 2, Jonathan Byrd, 1.731. 3, Nathan Green, 1.740. 4, Padraig Harrington, 1.741. 5, Bob Estes, 1.742. 6, Rocco Mediate, 1.743. 7, Jesper Parnevik, 1.746. 8, Phil Mickelson, 1.748. 9, Brian Gay, 1.749. 10, Joe Ogilvie, 1.752. All-Around Ranking 1, Vijay Singh, 284. 2, Tiger Woods, 343. 3, Anthony Kim, 347. 4, Bubba Watson, 389. 5, John Rollins, 398. 6, Phil Mickelson, 403. 7, K.J. Choi, 425. 8, Justin Rose, 428. 9, Lucas Glover, 446. 10, Heath Slocum, 459. PGA Tour Official Money Leaders 1, Tiger Woods, (11), $5,214,385. 2, Phil Mickelson, (16), $4,120,588. 3, Vijay Singh, (20), $3,887,916. 4, K.J. Choi, (19), $3,438,492. 5, Zach Johnson, (17), $3,072,288. 6, Sergio Garcia, (13), $2,959,916. 7, Jim Furyk, (17), $2,898,266. 8, Rory Sabbatini, (17), $2,820,390. 9, Adam Scott, (13), $2,562,218. 10, Charles Howell III, (19), $2,521,999. FedEx Cup Points Leaders 1. Tiger Woods 20, 392; 2. Vijay Singh 16,370; 3. Phil Mickelson 15,818; 4. K.J. Choi 14,359; 5. Zach Johnson 12, 737; 6. Jim Furyk 12,191; 7. Charles Howell III 11,922; 8. Rory Sabbatini 11,238; 9. Adam Scott 10,544; 10. Steve Stricker 10,300; 11. Sergio Garcia 10,219; 12. John Rollins 9,548; 13. Scott Verplank 9,214; 14. Aaron Baddeley 9,074; 15. Boo Weekley 8,689. • XX POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Royals pitchers allow just four hits in win VIKINGS 3rd-round pick among reportees By Post-Bulletin staff Associated Press MANKATO, Minn. — Steve Hutchinson remembers his first training camp with Seattle, when being signed with the team for its first practice allowed him to be a starter as a rookie. “Training camp, for the young guys, is huge,” the Pro Bowl guard said. “A lot of stuff gets thrown at you, and it’s hard to catch up if you miss something.” The Minnesota Vikings reported to Mankato on Wednesday for the 42nd training camp at Minnesota State University, Mankato, and rookies Adrian Peterson and Sidney Rice, the team’s firstand second-round draft picks, were noticeably absent. However, third-round draft choice, cornerback Marcus McCauley, had agreed to a contract and reported, taking a bus from the Twin Cities along with several other rookies. “Being a third-rounder, I never thought about (being a holdout),” McCauley said. “I’d always heard about firstrounders not being here. I knew Associated Press Vikings wide receiver Troy Williamson, right, signs autographs after reporting for the football team’s training camp Wednesday at Minnesota State University, Mankato. my agent would get it done. I wasn’t concerned about it.” McCauley is expected to compete for the nickel-back spot. “They didn’t draft me in the third round if they didn’t want me to do something,” he said. “I like my chances to play a lot this season.” Veteran linebacker E.J. Henderson reported to training camp early Wednesday, then was excused to take care of a family matter. He’s expected to return by Thursday night and participate in the team’s first practices Friday. Second-year quarterback Tarvaris Jackson was one of the first to arrive Wednesday, excited about the opportunity he’s been given to be the starter. that struggled last season. But Jackson said he’s become accustomed to people doubting his abilities. “When people doubt you, that’s extra motivation,” he said. “No matter what you do, people will talk. It’s not a big dead.” “I know what to expect,” he said. “My role’s different, and Other than that, it was a typI’ll get a chance to get more reps. I’m excited that I have a ical move-in day for the players. greater chance of playing.” “It’s like Groundhog Day,” said safety Darren Sharper, an The national expectations for the Vikings are low, in part due 11-year veteran. “I’ve seen it to an inexperienced quarter- before.” • Camp schedule, C1 back that is leading an offense Taylor says Peterson will add RB depth By Jason Feldman [email protected] Chester Taylor insists he wasn’t upset when the Minnesota Vikings made their first-round selection in the NFL Draft in April. “No, not at all,” Taylor said. “This gives us more depth at running back and will take some of the workload off me.” Taylor ran for 1,216 yards and six touchdowns last season, his first in a Vikings uniform. He battled injuries late in the season, though, showing Taylor the effects of his first year as a full-time rusher after spending four years in Baltimore behind Jamal Lewis. So, when the Vikings nabbed Oklahoma University star Adrian Peterson with the No. 7 overall pick in the draft, Taylor was surprisingly pleased. The Vikings reported for training camp Wednesday and will hold their first practices of the new season Friday morning and afternoon. Taylor will be there; Peterson may not be, as he had yet to sign a contract with the Vikings as of Wednesday night. “We won’t have to depend on me as much as we did last year,” said Taylor, who was in Rochester earlier this week, “and we’ll have some packages where both (Peterson) and myself will be in the backfield. One of us may split out wide, or be used to catch the ball. “There are a lot of things we can do with the two of us.” Taylor said it took some time to jell with new teammates last season. Two of the Blue Jays scorch Twins for 11-run 6th inning Associated Press TORONTO — Gregg Zaun homered and drove in four runs, and the Toronto Blue Jays tied a franchise record with an 11-run sixth inning in a 13-1 victory over the Minnesota Twins on Wednesday that completed a three-game sweep. Toronto (51-50) has won a season-high five straight to move over .500 for the first time since June 27, when it was 3938. Minnesota (51-50) lost its fourth straight, matching a season worst. Zaun singled and scored in the fifth, then added both an RBI double and a three-run homer in the sixth. He finished 3-for-4, scored three runs and came within a triple of the cycle. Jesse Litsch (3-4) allowed one run and five hits over seven innings, walking one and striking out four. The Twins opened the scoring in the fourth when Luis Castillo doubled and scored on a two-out single by Justin Morneau. Lyle Overbay put Toronto in front with a two-run double in the fifth before the Blue Jays broke open the game in the sixth. Carlos Silva, Dennys Reyes, Juan Rincon and Matt Guerrier all worked in the 14-batter inning. Silva lost for the first time in three starts, and Reyes allowed an earned run for the first time in 18 appearances since coming off the disabled list June 14. offensive linemen he ran behind — Pro Bowl left guard Steve Hutchinson and right guard Artis Hicks — were also new to the Vikings. “We had pretty good success running the ball last year,” Taylor said. “It was the first year playing together for a lot of us. Now it’s our second year together, so things will only get better.” The Vikings will likely rely heavily on their running game to pace an offense that is expected to be led by second-year quarterback Tarvaris Jackson out of Alabama State. Jackson is speedy and has a strong arm, but is still trying to grasp a complex pro offense. “Tarvaris, he’s still young,” Taylor said. “It’s just his second year, and it’s very hard to be a quarterback in the NFL. When you’re young like he is, there’s a lot to learn. That’s why I have to do what I can to help take the pressure off him.” BLUE JAYS 13, TWINS 1 MINNESOTA TORONTO ab r hbi ab r hbi LCstillo 2b 3 1 2 0 HClark 3b 30 00 Tyner rf 4 0 0 0 Glaus 3b 21 11 Rdmnd c 4 0 0 0 Ovrbay 1b 41 12 Mrneau dh 3 0 2 1 Rios rf 51 21 McDonald ph 1 0 1 0 VWells cf 41 10 THnter cf 2 0 0 0 Thmas dh 21 12 LFord cf 2 0 0 0 Thgpen dh 10 00 Kubel lf 4 0 1 0 Stairs lf 52 21 Cirillo 1b 3 0 0 0 AHill 2b 51 10 LRdrgz 3b 3 0 0 0 Zaun c 43 34 Punto ss 3 0 1 0 JMcDld ss 42 22 Totals 32 1 7 1 Totals 3913 14 13 Minnesota ..............000 100 000 — 1 Toronto ....................00002(11) 00x — 13 E—Cirillo (3), LRodriguez (3). DP—Minnesota 1, Toronto 1. LOB—Minnesota 5, Toronto 6. 2B—LCastillo 2 (11), Overbay (17), Stairs (11), Zaun (10), JMcDonald (11). 3B—JMcDonald (1). HR—Zaun (5). CS—Punto (5). IP H R ER BB SO Minnesota CSilva L,8-11........5 1-3 8 6 5 2 1 DReyes ........................0 1 2 2 1 0 JRincon ........................0 3 4 4 1 0 Guerrier ....................2-3 1 1 1 0 0 ROrtiz ..........................1 0 0 0 0 1 Nathan ........................1 1 0 0 0 2 Toronto Litsch W,3-4 ................7 5 1 1 1 4 Tallet ............................1 1 0 0 0 1 Wolfe ..........................1 1 0 0 0 1 DReyes pitched to 2 batters in the 6th, JRincon pitched to 4 batters in the 6th. Umpires—Home, Tim Tschida; First, Jim Joyce; Second, Jim Wolf; Third, Rob Drake. T—2:39. A—37,342 (48,900). Twins demote McDonald Associated Press TORONTO — The Minnesota Twins demoted outfielder Darnell McDonald to Triple-A Rochester on Wednesday following a 13-1 loss to the Toronto Blue Jays. The Twins did not immediately announce a replacement, but manager Ron Gardenhire hinted the team will call up third baseman Brian Buscher before beginning a three-game series in Cleveland on Friday. Buscher, 26, was batting .319 with six home runs and 20 RBIs in 34 games at Rochester. Selected by San Francisco in the third round of the June 2003 draft, Buscher was taken by the Twins in the December 2006 Rule V draft. Lynx lose again, frustration builds Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS — This season just keeps getting more difficult for the Minnesota Lynx. Penny Taylor had 30 points and eight rebounds Wednesday as the Phoenix Mercury handed the Lynx a franchise recordtying 10th consecutive loss, 10379. Diana Taurasi added 19 points, six assists and five rebounds, and the Mercury extended their WNBA record by scoring 100 points for the fifth time this season. “It does get frustrating,” said Minnesota guard Noelle Quinn, who finished with nine points and six assists. “We were in there in the fourth quarter. It just got away.” Phoenix won for the third time in four games and moved into a tie with Sacramento for second place in the Western Conference, two games behind San Antonio. Tiffany Stansbury had 13 points and 10 rebounds for the Lynx. Minnesota, the WNBA’s youngest team with an average age of 23.6 years, fell to a WNBA-worst 5-20. • C3 Thursday, July 26, 2007 The Lynx also lost 10 straight when they dropped the final three games of 2006 and the first seven this season. “We missed a lot of open looks,” said Minnesota coach Don Zierden, whose team shot 38.5 percent from the field. “And we would have liked to have a lot of players play better defense on Penny Taylor.” Seimone Augustus scored 13 points — 11 in the second half — for the Lynx. Things were looking brighter for Minnesota earlier in the season. After losing their first seven games, the Lynx won five of their next eight, including three straight at Target Center. Since losing rookie guard Lindsey Harding — the first pick in the 2007 WNBA draft — to a year-ending left knee injury July 10 at Washington, though, Minnesota has struggled again. Harding, a former Duke University standout, was averaging 11.7 points per game. The Lynx, who are 0-10 in July, haven’t won since June 29 at San Antonio. They lost 106-93 to the Mercury on Sunday in Phoenix. • • What can Minnesota do to salvage something from this season? “Just keep working hard,” said center Nicole Ohlde, who scored only four points and shot 1-for-10 from the field. Phoenix (14-10), which boosted its league-best scoring average to 87.7 points per game, finished 25-for-28 at the freethrow line. Taylor was 9-for-10. Taylor, a 6-1 forward from Australia, is averaging 24.1 points in eight July games. “She is having a phenomenal season,” Ohlde said. “She has the ability to extend the range. She is quick off the dribble and has great footwork. She is able to do a lot of things.” The Mercury’s lead never got below nine points in the second half. Rochester native Kelly Miller scored eight points for Phoenix. She started the game and played 27 minutes, with five rebounds and eight assists. One bright spot for the Lynx: They drew a season-best crowd of 13,004 for their annual matinee game at Target Center. • FARIBAULT — Two Rochester Royals pitchers combined to throw a fourhitter as the Royals topped Faribault 5-2 in amateur baseball here Wednesday night. John Magee started on the mound and earned the win for the Royals. M a g e e pitched five innings, allowed one hit and no runs while striking out two batters. Joe Duda pitched the final four Magee innings, giving up three hits and no earned runs while striking out five hitters. AMATEUR BASEBALL Jim Strain and Joe Siple led the Royals’ 10-hit attack with three hits each. Jason Meyer took the loss for Faribault. He pitched all nine innings, gave up 10 hits and five runs with three walks and two strikeouts. The Royals will meet the Rochester A’s at 7 p.m. Friday at Mayo Field. Longtime Royals manager and player Jeff Milene will be honored before the game. ROYALS 5, FARIBAULT 2 Royals ..................200 000 102 — 5 10 2 Faribault ..............000 000 011 — 2 4 2 WP: John Magee 5 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 2 K, 3 HBP. SV: Joe Duda 4 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 5 K. LP: Jason Meyer 9 IP, 10 H, 5 R, 2 ER, 3 BB, 2 K. Report compiled by Jason Feldman. NORTHWOODS LEAGUE STANDINGS NORTH DIVISION W-L Duluth . . . . . .10-6 Alexandria . . . . .9-8 Rochester . . . .7-10 Brainerd . . . . . .7-9 Mankato . . . . .7-10 x-St. Cloud . . .7-10 Thunder Bay . . .5-12 Pct. GB .625 — .529 11⁄2 .412 31⁄2 .438 3 .412 31⁄2 .412 31⁄2 .294 531⁄2 O’all 30-20 27-24 25-26 18-32 24-27 28-23 18-33 SOUTH DIVISION Eau Claire . . . .13-3 .813 — Wisconsin . . . .13-4 .765 1⁄2 x-Green Bay . . .12-5 .706 11⁄2 Waterloo . . . . .9-8 .529 41⁄2 Madison . . . . . .9-8 .529 41⁄2 Battle Creek . . .5-11 .313 8 La Crosse . . . .4-13 .235 91⁄2 x-won first half WEDNESDAY St. Cloud 5, Rochester 4 Wisconsin 2, Battle Creek 1 Alexandria 6, Thunder Bay 4 Madison 7, Mankato 2 Eau Claire 3, Green Bay 0 Waterloo 7, La Crosse 4 TODAY Thunder Bay at Alexandria St. Cloud at Rochester, 7:05 p.m. Battle Creek at Wisconsin Madison at Mankato Green Bay at Eau Claire Waterloo at La Crosse Duluth at Brainerd, 12:35 p.m. Brainerd at Duluth, 7:35 p.m. 30-20 29-22 35-15 23-27 24-26 20-30 21-29 FRIDAY Alexandria at Duluth Rochester at Thunder Bay, 8:05 p.m. Eau Claire at St. Cloud Brainerd at La Crosse Battle Creek at Green Bay Wisconsin at Madison Mankato at Waterloo HONKERS BOX SCORE RIVER BATS 5, HONKERS 4 ST. CLOUD (5) ab Belfonte cf 3 Thompson 2b 3 Wheeler lf 4 Fanelli 1b 4 Hernandez 3b 3 Hulett rf 5 Cochrane dh 5 Tonneson c 2 Yaeger ss 2 ROCHESTER (4) ab Testa cf 4 Senne rf 3 Spear dh 5 Featherston 1b 3 Southers 1b 1 Flores 3b 4 Norris c 2 Lutes lf 3 Hoisington cf 0 Hansen ss4 0 Spaeth 2b 4 Totals 31 5 6 4 Totals 33 River Bats ..............012 010 100 — 5 Honkers ..................000 001 300 — 4 r 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 h bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 0 1 r h bi 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 4 6 4 6 2 6 3 E — STC, Fanelli, Thompson; ROC, Flores, Norris, Hansen. LOB — STC 13, ROC 8. 2B — STC, Hernandez, Cochrane, Tonneson. HR — STC, Hulett. HBP — STC, Tonneson 2; ROC, Norris. SB — STC, Belfonte, Wheeler, Yeager. CS — STC, Tonneson. IP H R ER BB SO St. Cloud 4 4 1 2 8 Frymier W, 1-2 . .62⁄3 Wideberg . . . . . .1⁄3 2 0 0 1 1 Wrobel Sv, 14 . . . .2 0 0 0 0 4 Rochester Dorado L, 2-1 . . . .5 4 4 2 7 4 Radmacher . . . . . .3 2 1 1 2 2 Woytek . . . . . . . .1 0 0 0 0 1 Time — 2:58. Attendance — 1,634. Eagles give Winona harsh Verdick WINONA — Andrew Verdick pitched a strong game LEGION BASEBALL to helep the Rochester Eagles beat Winona 7-4 in the first game of a Legion baseball doubleheader Wednesday. Verdick gave up five hits and three walks while striking out five in pitching all seven innings. His fielders had just one error and made some fine plays, coach Nate Smith said. All nine Eagles had at least one hit, with Jack Carr stroking two doubles and Derek Schoberel, Mike Glasenapp, Jake Duda, Ben Sparks and Tim Bestgen getting two each. The Eagles lost the second game 5-1. Dave Timmons got two of the team’s four hits, including a double. The Eagles (10-19) are scheduled for a doubleheader today at 5 p.m. at Austin. EAGLES 7, WINONA 4 First game Eagles ..................000 007 Winona................100 003 WP: Andrew Verdick. LP: WINONA 5, EAGLES 1 Second game Eagles ..................100 000 Winona................014 000 WP: Adam Lueck. LP: Luke 0 — 7 15 1 0 — 4 5 0 Jason Appicelli. 0 — 1 4 1 x — 5 11 3 Hendrickson. AREA LEGION Caledonia 15, Eyota 4 (6 inn.) Caledonia..............230172 — 15 21 1 Eyota ....................100030 — 4 6 3 Caledonia: Frank 4-5, 4 R, 2 2Bs; Hanson 4-5, 1 R, 2B; Meyer 3-4, 3 R; Augeldahl 3-5, 3 R. WP: Klug. Eyota: Benn Grenz 3-4, 2 R, 2B. LP: Benn Grenz Notes: Caledonia eliminates Eyota to advance to the next round of the East Subdistrict playoffs in St. Charles on Friday. LOCAL CALENDAR TODAY Legion Baseball Rochester A’s at Owatonna, 7 p.m. Rochester Eagles at Austin (Marcusen Park), 5 p.m. Albert Lea at Rochester Patriots (2), 5:30 p.m. Rochester Redhawks at Waseca, 6:30 p.m. FRIDAY Amateur Baseball Pine Island or Lake City at Rochester Blues (Blues). Legion Baseball Rochester Royals at Rochester A’s (Mayo Field), 7 p.m. Rochester Redhawks at Rochester Patriots, 6:30 p.m. SATURDAY Amateur Baseball Austin Greyhounds at Rochester Royals (Mayo Field), 6 p.m. PHOENIX (103) Pondexter 5-13 5-5 15, Taylor 9-14 9-10 30, Smith 3-7 1-1 8, Taurasi 7-13 1-1 19, K.Miller 3-6 2-2 8, Schumacher 1-2 3-4 5, Mazzante 2-4 3-3 8, Derevjanik 1-1 0-0 3, Snell 2-4 0-0 4, Lacy 1-1 1-2 3. Totals 3465 25-28 103. MINNESOTA (79) Abrosimova 4-12 2-2 12, Stansbury 6-10 12 13, Ohlde 1-10 2-2 4, Augustus 5-11 2-2 13, Quinn 4-7 0-0 9, Ress 1-6 1-2 3, Murphy 4-8 2-2 11, Mann 3-8 2-2 10, Jacobs 14 0-0 2, Raymond 0-0 0-0 0, Moore 1-2 00 2. Totals 30-78 12-14 79. Phoenix ................29 18 24 32 — 103 Minnesota ............21 14 24 20 — 79 3-Point Goals — Phoenix 10-27 (Taurasi 49, Taylor 3-5, Derevjanik 1-1, Mazzante 1-3, Smith 1-3, K.Miller 0-2, Snell 0-2, Pondexter 0-2), Minnesota 7-25 (Abrosimova 2-6, Mann 2-6, Augustus 1-2, Quinn 1-3, Murphy 1-4, Ress 0-1, Moore 0-1, Jacobs 0-2). Fouled Out — None. Rebounds — Phoenix 37 (Taylor 8), Minnesota 47 (Ohlde 11). Assists — Phoenix 26 (K.Miller 8), Minnesota 25 (Ohlde, Quinn 6). Total Fouls — Phoenix 15, Minnesota 23. A — 13,004. (11,380). ANSWER MAN The Master of Minutiae. The Titan of Trivia. The Sultan of Thought. No question is too big or small, obvious or obscure, silly or serious for the One Who Knows It All, the P-B’s Fount of Facts, the one and only Answer Man. 0712495158EM • • • • C4 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 making a move to NASCAR By Jill Erwin LapbyLap W hen Marcos Ambrose moved to the U.S. from Australia after success in that country’s V8 Supercar Series, he knew it wouldn’t be easy. He was older than most NASCAR rookies (29) and had never driven on an oval track. But the bug had bitten him, and his relationship with Ford connected him with Wood Brothers/JTG Racing for a Craftsman Truck ride last season. All was lined up for him to give it a shot. Until it came time to get into the ride. “I went out for driver intros, and then I went to get in and I got in the wrong side,” Ambrose said. “Everything’s so completely foreign with the way the races are run, the way the weekends are set up, all the venues, the way you talk to the media. It’s all very different.” Now, a season later, the “Tasmanian Devil” is in the Busch Series. It’s been a long road for him to get here, starting in his home country of Tasmania and moving across Europe before returning to Australia to have a go of it. He was runner-up in the Australian roadracing championships. He finished third and fifth in Europe. He won a mini-series in 1999 comprising all the European series. He ran five races in British Formula 3. Then, he went home to the touring series and was rookie of the year, then finished third, first, first and third before packing up and coming here to try NASCAR. He’d set himself up, having already announced he was not going to race in Australia next year. Ambrose held out hope that his affiliation with Ford would pay off and allow him a shot at the big time. He took matters into his hands a full two years earlier, however. “I came over on my own in 2003, rented an RV in Charlotte, drove to Bristol,” Ambrose said. “I wanted to go to Bristol to really get to the heart of NASCAR racing. It doesn’t get any gnarlier than Bristol, and I went there just to see what it was about, see if I could have any opportunity or any chance to see if I could have a go at it. I saw that, fell in love with it entirely in 2003 and just started working away at that.” He met up with Tad Geschickter, now a co-owner of Wood Brothers/JTG Racing, at Indy Raceway Park two summers ago. They met again in the Ford suite during a USAC race, and Ambrose stopped by Geschickter’s motor home to chat. “I read his résumé on the Internet, and he’s obviously an impressive guy to talk to. I invited him to fly back over a month later, we did three rounds of testing, a short track, Rockingham and Kentucky, just to see how he’d adapt to oval racing and test his communication skills.” Ambrose did enough, and he signed a deal with the team over the phone in late 2005. He had already impressed Dan Davis, the director of Ford Racing Technology. “Marcos had talent, there was no question about that,” Davis said. “But he also had a great personality that we thought would be a hit with fans over here, and most importantly, he had the desire and the commitment to come over here and make it work. He spent some time at races learning the sport; he moved his family to North Carolina; and he was willing to work his way up from the Truck Series to make it happen.” Ambrose said he told his family to give him three years to try to make it. Three years to race in the series he had followed for as long as he could remember. Three years to make his dreams come true. But there were plenty of questions. Ambrose’s popularity in Australia, he said, is comparable to a Greg Biffle or a POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com After a successful race career in Australia, Marcos Ambrose was determined to make it to the big time KROGER 200 Site: Indianapolis Schedule: Saturday, qualifying (ESPN2, 3:30 p.m.), race (ESPN2, 6:30 p.m.). Track: O’Reilly Raceway Park (oval, 0.686 miles, 12 degrees banking in turns). Race distance: 137.2 miles, 200 laps. Last race: Four races after switching crew chiefs and 61 after earning his previous Busch victory, Reed Sorenson avoided the pitfalls to win the caution-filled Gateway 250 at Madison, Ill. His previous • EDWARDS Kasey Kahne. The series is the fourth or fifth largest sport in the country, similar to NASCAR, he said. However, Australia is a tad bit smaller than the U.S. “I did a radio show there before Bristol, and it went to 78 stations across the country, probably had an audience of 25 to 30 million. That’s one and a half times the population of Australia,” Ambrose said with a smile. “I’m used to doing a radio show that has 1,000 [listeners]. I feel like I’m a pioneer. I’m an Aussie just coming across here, just having a good time.” Jill Erwin is a staff writer for the Richmond Times-Dispatch in Virginia. Busch Series 1. Jeff Gordon 2,911 2. Denny Hamlin 2,608 3. Matt Kenseth 2,565 4. Jeff Burton 2,491 5. Carl Edwards 2,473 6. Tony Stewart 2,429 7. Jimmie Johnson 2,423 8. Kevin Harvick 2,337 9. Kyle Busch 2,314 10. Clint Bowyer 2,281 11. Martin Truex Jr. 2,208 12. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 2,151 13. Ryan Newman 2,121 14. Kurt Busch 2,074 15. Jamie McMurray 2,040 16. Greg Biffle 1,966 17. Casey Mears 1,921 18. Mark Martin 1,895 19. J.J. Yeley 1,862 20. Juan Montoya 1,847 1. Carl Edwards 3,229 2. David Reutimann 2,377 3. Kevin Harvick 2,358 4. David Ragan 2,271 5. Jason Leffler 2,257 6. Dave Blaney 2,252 7. Bobby Hamilton Jr. 2,183 8. Stephen Leicht 2,094 9. Mike Wallace 2,055 10. Marcos Ambrose 2,048 11. Clint Bowyer 1,999 12. J.J. Yeley 1,966 13. Matt Kenseth 1,936 14. Greg Biffle 1,891 15. Scott Wimmer 1,869 16. Casey Mears 1,862 17. Regan Smith 1,820 18. Steve Wallace 1,782 19. Shane Huffman 1,727 20. Kyle Krisiloff 1,711 Racing this week Allstate 400 at the Brickyard ■ Where: Indianapolis Motor Speedway (Speedway, Ind.) ■ When: July 29, noon CST ■ On the air: ESPN ■ Distance: 160 laps, 400 miles ■ Track qualifying record: Tony Stewart, 182.960 mph, 2002 ■ Track race record: Bobby Labonte, 155.912 mph, Aug. 5, 2000 ■ 2006 winner: Jimmie Johnson Indianapolis Motor Speedway Turn 2 Tower Terrace Turn 4 Turn 1 ■ Track: 2.5-mile oval ■ Banking: 9 degrees Busch Series ■ Race: Kroger 200 (O’Reilly Raceway Park) ■ When: July 28, 6:30 p.m. EST ■ On the air: ESPN2 TrackTalk FABRICATOR: A team member who specializes in creating the sheet-metal body of a stock car. GREENHOUSE: The upper area of the race car that includes the pillars, glass and roof. GROOVE: The best route around a racetrack. The high groove takes a driver closer to the outside wall, while the low groove takes a car closer to the apron. victory came at the same track nearly two years ago to the date. Last year: Kevin Harvick passed polesitter Denny Hamlin on lap 84, built a lead of more than 2 seconds with 20 laps left and held off Sorenson in the Kroger 200, for his series-high fifth win of 2006. Fast facts: Points leader Carl Edwards was released early Monday from an Omaha, Neb., hospital after being injured Sunday night in a dirt track race in nearby Greenwood, a hospital spokeswoman said. Edwards’ younger brother, Kenny Edwards, told the Omaha World-Herald it could be a dislocated thumb, caught in the steering wheel during a crash. ... Scott Wimmer earned his first pole position in 136 races last weekend. ... The last five winners of this race started in the top 10. ... There has been a different pole winner in each of the last 10 years of the event. ... Greg Biffle has started in the top 10 in all four of his Busch starts at ORP and recorded a top-five finish each time. Next race: Montreal 200, Aug. 4 NASCAR CRAFTSMAN TRUCKS POWER STROKE DIESEL 200 Site: Indianapolis Schedule: Friday, qualifying (Speed Channel, 3:30 p.m.), race (Speed Channel, 6:30 p.m.). Track: O’Reilly Raceway Park (oval, 0.686 miles, 12 degrees banking in turns). Race distance: 137.2 miles, 200 laps. Last race: Mike Skinner completely dominated the Built Ford Tough 225 at Sparta, Ky., on July 14, leading 135 of 150 laps to earn his series-leading fourth victory of the season. Skinner, 50, became just the second driver 50 years or older to win a series race and set a record by leading his 13th consecutive race every one of the year. Last year: Rick Crawford took the lead in a tight four-truck battle with 32 laps remaining, then held on to beat Dennis Setzer by 10 truck lengths in the Power Stroke Diesel 200 Next race: Toyota Tundra 200, Aug. 11, Lebanon, Tenn. CHAMP CAR WORLD SERIES SAN JOSE GRAND PRIX Site: California Schedule: Friday, qualifying, 4 p.m.; Saturday, qualifying, 4 p.m.; Sunday, race (ESPN2, 5 p.m.). Track: Streets of San Jose (temporary road course, 1.448 miles, 11 turns). • GORDON Turn 3 THIS WEEK IN AUTO RACING NASCAR BUSCH NASCAR POINTS LEADERS Nextel Cup LapbyLap photo by Jason Smith/Getty Images ALLSTATE 400 AT THE BRICKYARD Site: Indianapolis Schedule: Saturday, qualifying (ESPN2, 9 a.m.); Sunday, race (ESPN, noon). Track: Indianapolis Motor Speedway (rectangular oval, 2.5 miles, 9 degrees banking in turns). Race distance: 400 miles, 160 laps. Last race: Tony Stewart won at Chicagoland Speedway on July 15, breaking a 20-race winless streak that dated to last season and turning around what had otherwise been a tumultuous week for the two-time series champion. The win came a day after a brief but intense lecture from Joe Gibbs about his rift with teammate Denny Hamlin. Last year: Jimmie Johnson pulled off a gritty win at Indianapolis, battling back from an early tire problem to take the lead, only to see it evaporate when a late debris caution bunched up the field. It dropped him from first to eighth and forced him to slice his way to the front in the final 14 laps. But he did it with ease and pulled away for his second major victory of 2006. Fast facts: After 19 of 36 races this season, Jeff Gordon has four wins — tied with teammate Johnson for the most in the series — 12 top fives, 17 top 10s and has been leading the points since Bristol, the fifth race of the season. ... Ginn Racing has replaced Sterling Marlin in its No. 14 Chevrolet with 23-year-old rookie Regan Smith, and released veteran Joe Nemechek. ... Hendrick cars have been shut out of victory lane for the past five races after taking 10 of the first 14. ... Matt Kenseth has four top-five finishes in seven career starts at Indianapolis, but no victories. ... Thirteen different drivers have won this season. Next race: Pennsylvania 500, Aug. 5, Long Pond, Pa. XX Just the Stats Marcos Ambrose, now in NASCAR’s Busch Series, began his racing career in Australia, where he was runner-up in the roadracing championships. He also won a European mini-series in 1999, and then back in Australia he was rookie of the year going on to finish third, first, first and third. NASCAR NEXTEL CUP Thursday, July 26, 2007 • Race distance: 1 hour, 45 minutes. Last race: Sebastien Bourdais won for the first time in four races and regained control of the title chase, driving away with the Rexall Grand Prix of Edmonton. He won on Edmonton’s City Centre Airport circuit for the second time in three tries. Last year: Bourdais raced to his fifth victory of 2006 and second win in a row on the downtown street course at the San Jose Grand Prix. Next race: Generac Grand Prix, Aug. 12, Elkhart Lake, Wis. NHRA FRAM AUTOLITE NATIONALS Site: Sonoma, Calif. Schedule: Friday, qualifying, 5 p.m.; Saturday, qualifying, 1:30 p.m. (ESPN2, 5 p.m., tape); Sunday, eliminations, 1 p.m. (ESPN2, 7 p.m., tape). Track: Infineon Raceway. Last event: Four-time champion Tony Schumacher beat Brandon Bernstein by 0.004 seconds to win the Top Fuel event at the rain-delayed Schuck’s Auto Supply Nationals at Pacific Raceways. Jack Beckman won the Funny Car event and Dave Connolly won Pro Stock. Last year: Top Fuel rookie J.R. Todd upset three-time series champion Tony Schumacher for the second time in three weeks, winning the Fram-Autolite Nationals. Eric Medlen, Jason Line and Chip Ellis won their divisions at Infineon Raceway. Fast facts: Five drivers became the first to clich berths in the Countdown to the Championship, which begins Labor Day weekend. Rod Fuller (Top Fuel) and Ron Capps (Funny Car) are in, as are Pro Stock’s Greg Anderson, Jeg Couohlin and Connolly. ... John Force’s car went up in flames during his final round loss to Beckman in a final round, but he escaped uninjured. Ashley Force crashed into a retaining wall during her second-round Funny Car clash with Kenny Bernstein. She was checked and released by track doctors. ... Andrew Hines turned in a national record performance in Pro Stock Motorcycle with a final run of 7.253 seconds at 186.46 mph during the 2005 event. Next event: Lucas Oil Nationals, Aug. 12, Brainerd, Minn. For more on all the racing organizations, go to postbulletin.com/weblinks. • Biffle airs candid views McClatchy Newspapers DETROIT — Greg Biffle is one of NASCAR’s toughest competitors. You don’t want to lean on the Roush Fenway Racing driver, particularly if you’ve committed some ontrack indiscretion, like bumpdrafting him in a turn or running him into a wall. He’s also one of the straightest shooters in the Nextel Cup Series, rarely backing down from a hard question, willing on most occasions to sit down and talk. And he has a fun side, a trait he demonstrated at the Super Car Wash on 12 Mile Road in Farmington Hills on Wednesday. Biffle, 38, was in town to promote the 3M Performance 400 Cup event at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn on Sunday, Aug. 19. He’ll drive the No. 16 3M Performance Ford Fusion in the race, the 23rd of 36 on the Cup schedule. Biffle let his feelings be known about Falcons quarterback Michael Vick, who is being investigated for dog fighting activities, before discussing racing matters and drying customers’ vehicles as they exited the car wash. One of the customers was the 300 Pound Cowboy, also known as Jason Raithel, a DJ from Lincoln Park. In fact, Raithel — screaming and hollering, wearing just a pair of black shorts — strapped himself to the hood of a Chevy S-10 pickup and • took the wash along with the vehicle, Biffle toweling down his goggles and face afterward. “Michael Vick? I just wish they’d put him in jail, put him in prison,” said Biffle, an animal lover who has formed the Greg Biffle Foundation for Animals and is involved in the production of the annual NASCAR pets calendar. As he heads to this weekend’s Allstate 400 at the Brickyard at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Biffle, who has 11 Cup victories, is 16th in points and likely to miss the Chase for the Championship for a second straight year after finishing runner-up in 2005. “We are certainly not going to give up (on the Chase),” Biffle said. “But I don’t see making it this year. It’s a long road back.” Biffle isn’t pointing fingers, but it’s no secret he hasn’t been happy with how the team has performed, from pit stops to preparation of the car. “It’s been pretty frustrating . . . and some of the problems we’ve had have been completely uncalled for,” Biffle said. But after a sixth-place finish in the Pepsi 400 at Daytona on July 7, he said there’s hope. “We feel we’re again moving in the right direction. But little things this season have added up into big deficits.” DEI-Ginn merger: Dale Earnhardt Inc. announced a merger with Ginn Racing, which means NASCAR veteran Mark Martin will drive • • for the organization that his old nemesis, the late Dale Earnhardt, founded. Under the new set up, Ginn teammates Martin and Aric Almirola will share a car, the No. 01 Army Chevrolet, and partner up for the remainder of the season with Martin Truex Jr., Paul Menard and Dale Earnhardt Jr., who will move to Hendrick Motorsports next year. “This merger is great for both companies,” said Max Siegel, president of global operations for DEI in a news release. “Our stated goals included an expansion to four cars as quickly as possible and, in order to do that, we had to acquire more shop space. This relationship with Bobby Ginn (team owner) and his company allows us to accomplish both, which makes this a perfect transaction.” ANSWER MAN The Master of Minutiae. The Titan of Trivia. The Sultan of Thought. No question is too big or small, obvious or obscure, silly or serious for the One Who Knows It All, the P-Bí s Fount of Facts, the one and only Answer Man. • XX POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 C5 Lead-free but pricey Non-toxic tackle is a tough sell GARRISON, Minn. — All 4year-old Ben Johnson wanted to do was play with the shiny, colorful jigs and weights. He didn’t want to talk about his love of fishing, especially northerns, or all the loons at Bay Lake where his family spends most summer weekends. He just kept going through the boxes of tackle on a table in front of a big sporting goods store at Garrison, Minn. But those jigs and weights could help keep the loons on the lake alive, and might be the kind of tackle he will use as he gets older. They are all nontoxic, made of tin, tungsten, glass, bismuth, or combinations of them, instead of the traditional lead. Lead from anglers, and hunters, has been linked to the death of many loons, as well as millions of waterfowl, eagles and other birds. Loons and waterfowl can pick up small lead tackle, or shotgun pellets, from the bottom of lakes or marshes and use it as grit to digest food (waterfowl hunters must use non-toxic shot but some remains available to birds). Even a few small pellets can kill a swan or loon. Also, if fish eat it and die, fisheating birds such as eagles or osprey can get the lead into their system. The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency and other groups are touting the virtues of nontoxic fishing tackle, and will even trade lead tackle for nontoxics at swaps, such as the one a week ago in Garrison. Which is why Tim Farnan, a source-reduction specialist, was sitting in the hot sun in front of Tutt’s last week with boxes of jigs and weights. When Ben John Weiss To learn more about lead-free tackle, go to postbulletin.com/weblinks. and his family from Lindstrom, Minn., drove up to buy minnows for their weekly fishing outing, Farnan asked them if they wanted to learn more about non-toxics, and even try some. His mother, Sara Johnson, said she hadn’t heard about the nontoxics but was interested. “It sounds good for the environment,” she said. They see lots of loons, the poster bird of lead’s toxicity, “all the time,” she said. As she talked, Ben just kept on looking. His father, Casey Johnson, agreed to try a sample of nontoxics. “We’ll give it a shot,” he said. “I think it’s worth it for the environment,” his wife said and they headed into Tutt’s for minnows. Farnan had another convert, or at least someone who’s willing to try non-toxics. The word is getting out to anglers with tackle swaps and advertising, he said. He and others collect from 40 to 100 pounds of lead per swap, but more important, give out the information. He figures about half the state’s anglers know about non-toxics, and more are beginning to use it. “People who are into hunting and fishing want to make sure the ecosystems are protected,” he said. While lead tackle comes in John Weiss/Post-Bulletin Ben Johnson, 4, of Lindstrom, Minn., examines non-toxic jigs and weights during a tackle exchange outside Tutt’s sporting goods store in Garrison, Minn. Anglers were invited to trade their lead tackle for lead-free tackle, such as the bullet sinkers at right, that pose no danger to loons, eagles and other birds. many sizes from tiny split shot to 4-ounce sinkers, the most critical ones to get out of tackle boxes are the small ones, a halfounce or less, said Barbara Skoglund, a MPCA spokeswoman. More manufacturers are making non-toxics each year, she said, but it’s not an easy sell. Tutt’s, a large sporting good store, only sells non-toxic weights, not jigs. Matt Scott, Tutt’s manager, explained why: “The price is the problem, the biggest one,” he said. Toby Hatzenpiller of Blaine, Minn., who also stopped to see Farnan’s display, agreed. “If it was the same price, I would swap in a second — if it fished the same.” That’s the rub. It often costs quite a bit more, though the price is dropping. And, admittedly, tin just doesn’t work well for split shot because it’s so light compared with lead. But some new items, such as bismuth/tin jigs, are nearly as heavy as lead. There is also a Pheasant outlook is promising By John Weiss [email protected] OUTDOORS NOTES Go & Do The heat that has been wilting gardens and grass is going to be good for pheasants. The birds love it, said Kurt Haroldson, a Department of Natural Resources biologist/researcher in Madelia. “As a general rule here in the humid part of the country, we get more moisture than is ideal for ground-nesting birds,” he said. “And as you go west, you get too little moisture.” If this region stays parched through early autumn, there could be some problems for birds; however, such desert-like conditions are very unusual, he said. The DNR begins its annual roadside counts next week to look for pheasants and other farmland wildlife. “I’m just expecting very good things,” Haroldson said. The spring count of pheasants was the highest in five years; “Things are actually looking darned good.” Most hens have already hatched their brood for the year, with the peak around June 5, but a few had nests wiped out and will renest, he said. “Pheasants are one of the most persistent renesters of all birds,” he said. Some roosters are still crowing, looking for hens to breed, and those hens could still begin laying eggs, he said. A few young are hatched in late August. That might make it hard for young birds that might not be large enough to survive if winter comes early, he said. But during hunting seasons, the young roosters might still lack full plumage and would be less likely to be shot. Last year’s bird numbers were quite good, at least by modern standards, the DNR has announced. It reported hunters shot 588,000 birds in Minnesota last fall, up 3,000 from 2005 and well above the 10-year average of 401,000. That, however, is far from the glory years about 50 years ago when hunters shot more than 1.5 million pheasants; in those years, hunters could shoot some hens. The 129,000 hunters averaged 4.9 birds last year, down a bit from the year before. NEW WMA DEDICATED: The Build a Wildlife Area partnership has raised more than $760,000 since beginning in 2004 and acquired six new wildlife management areas for state hunters. The newest will be dedicated at 10 a.m. Aug. 3 near Zumbrota in Goodhue County. The 159acre parcel will be called the What: Game Fair Where: Armstrong Ranch in Anoka County When: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Aug. 10-12 and Aug. 17-19 Web: www.gamefair.com. nifty new snap-on tungsten composite, as well as copper, stainless steel or bismuth slip sinkers and weights. That’s the message Farnan and others are pitching to families such as the Johnsons: there is an alternative and it works. If that doesn’t convince you, think about the loons. That’s the bottom line. John Weiss is the Post-Bulletin’s outdoors writer. If you have comments or story ideas, call him at 2857749. CATCH OF THE WEEK Jeff and Julia Tenhover of Columbia, S.C., won’t soon forget their recent visit to Rochester. During a canoe trip on the North Branch of the Root River, Julia cast a Rapala into a deep run and hooked this 20-inch, 41⁄2-pound smallmouth. The 8-year-old angler fought the fish for 15 minutes, after which her trophy was revived and released. Buck Family Memorial WMA. Pheasants Forever board member Toby Buck donated $100,000 to the partnership and the area will honor his father, Wayne Willis Buck of Goodhue, who died in 2005. To get to the site from Zumbrota, go north on Minnesota Highway 58 about 3 miles to Goodhue County Road 4 and go right about 2 miles, turning right on 210th Avenue. Go 1 mile and turn left on 440th Street for half a mile. TROUT STAMP JUDGING: The judging of entries for the 2008 Trout and Salmon stamp will be at 2 p.m. Aug. 9 at the fifth floor of the DNR building, 500 Lafayette Rd., St. Paul. Artists submit entries that are judged by a panel of experts. The DNR sells about 97,000 stamps, now costing $8.50 each annually. Money goes for trout/salmon habitat work. Send your Catch of the Week photos to Eric Atherton, outdoors editor, Post-Bulletin, 18 First Ave. S.E., Rochester, MN 55901. Include name (and age if child caught fish), hometown and phone number, and describe how and where the fish was caught. You can also e-mail information and digital images to [email protected]. If you would like the photo returned, include a selfaddressed, stamped envelope. Want to be a hero? Heed the call to take grandkids fishing Photo courtesy of Walter Scott • When children are a certain age, they think their father is the strongest, smartest, greatest guy in the whole world. Unfortunately, at that time in our lives, most fathers are so busy with many other things that we do not take full advantage of being a hero. A second chance comes when grandchildren pass through that magical age. I have lived long enough to have learned to take full advantage of any situation that makes me look good. When my grandsons come up to me and ask, “Grandpa, would you take us fishing?” I go fishing. It does not hurt anything that I usually want to go fishing anyway, but more importantly, I am again a hero. When the call came Saturday afternoon, it did not take much convincing to get everyone moving. We packed coolers with drinks, vegetables for the grill, and a watermelon. If we did not catch any fish, we might be vegetarians for the evening, but we would not starve. • • Walter Scott Fishing was pretty slow for quite a while. Boudreaux, the official fishing dog, sat staring at me as if to say, “What’s going on? You are supposed to catch fish for me to check out.” He, like the grandsons, is convinced I am a great fisherman. We were almost ready to give up, eat vegetables and go home when the fish started biting. We got into a school of crappies and caught enough for a meal in short order, including one caught by my wife that would make a meal by itself. Before long, the bass starting biting and the boys were getting excited. They • • each caught a few one- to two-pound fish that put up a really good fight, especially on a Snoopy fishing pole. No one had caught anything really big when Trevor tied into one that started spinning the boat around. He was afraid it was going to pull him in. The rest of the boats came up close while he fought the fish of a lifetime. Amanda, his mother, helped him land the fish. It weighed 6 pounds, 9 ounces. For a 6-year-old, it really was the fish of his short lifetime. Many adults have not caught a fish that size. Zane was awed by his brother’s fish, but more impressed with all the attention and picture taking. At 4 years old, the glory is as good as the getting. The next fish Zane caught will be preserved for posterity as the greatest fighter of the evening. We all gathered around and took pictures of his trophy, too. It was getting dark before we headed the boats toward shore. The boys ate • watermelon while the adults cleaned fish and set up the picnic table. The vegetables were well-done by the time we got the fish fried. We ate a delicious meal by lantern light at the side of the lake while we told each other fishing stories. It is amazing how even a young fisherman comes by telling fishing stories naturally. By the end of the evening, Trevor’s bass was almost as big as the boat and would have fed all of us for the winter if we had not turned it loose. Everyone had a great time fishing, eating, and enjoying the outdoors. The grandsons thought I was a special person who not only took them fishing but somehow got the fish to bite so they could catch them. Sometimes it is easy to be the hero — and really easy when a whole family helps out. Walter Scott is a freelance writer from Bloomfield, Iowa. • • C6 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 classifieds homes auto jobs page C6 200 jobs.postbulletin.com page C7 400 postbulletin.com stuff page C8 600 pbautomotion.com page C11 800 postbulletin.com www.postbulletin.com/placead • 507-285-7777 • 1-800-562-1758 • 1-800-533-1727 advertising policies CLASSIFIED DEADLINES: Tuesday - Saturday, deadline is 4:30 p.m. the day prior; Monday deadline is Friday at 5:00 p.m. for line ads. Display ads - deadline is two working days prior to publication. Deadlines do change for holidays. POST-BULLETIN ADVERTISING POLICIES The Post-Bulletin reserves the right to refuse to publish any advertisement and to delete objectionable words or phrases. Submission of an advertisement to a Post-Bulletin Sales representative does not constitute a commitment by the Post-Bulletin to publish the advertisement. Publication of an advertisement does not constitute an agreement for continued publication. The Post-Bulletin will not be liable for failure to publish an ad as requested for or for more than one incorrect insertion of an advertisement. In the event of any error or omission in printing or publication of an advertisement, the Post-BulletinÕs liability shall be limited to an adjustment for the cost of the space occupied by the error, with a maximum liability being cancellation of the cost of the first incorrect advertisement or republication of the corrected advertisement. Under no circumstances shall the Post-Bulletin be liable for consequential damages of any kind. 507-285-7600 200 jobs employment wanted NEED someone to watch your home/pets or children while you’re on vacation? Have summer openings. Refs avail. Reasonable rates. 507-269-0716. TRUCK driving job, part time, I have a Class A CDL license & excellent 20 year driving record. 507-753-4080 Work At Home LAID OFF?? Work from home. Be your own boss. FIRST call the Federal Trade Commission to find out how to spot work at home schemes. 1-877-FTC-HELP. A message from the Post-Bulletin and the FTC. happy ads part time employment full time employment HOUSEKEEPERS needed: part-time days, no weekends. Shirley’s Personal Touch In-Home Cleaning, 507-289-5877. 1ST Midwest Mortgage located in Rochester, MN is currently hiring part time phone consultants to call prospective clients in regards to their mortgages from the hours of 4:30 to 8:00 Monday - Thursday. Must be reliable with customer service experience. $100 sign-on bonus offered. Casual environment. Please contact Melissa to schedule an interview at 507-535-0500. ASSISTANT BOX OFFICE MANAGER/VOLUNTEER COORDINATOR P/T 10-15 hrs/wk position. Requires good communication and people skills, attention to detail, ability to work alone & basic computer skills. Hrs 9am-1pm, Wed-Fri and some night hrs. Application deadline Aug. 10. Send resume Rochester Repertory Theatre, 314 1/2 So. Bwy, Roch. 55904 or email: boxoffice@ rochesterrep.org (507)289-7800 BEST Kept Secret in Minnesota, $1000 - $2500 p/mo PT, much more FT. Call the Gavins (651)493-7768. AVAIL now: Recuperating Woman needs permanent, P/T, dependable Caregiver. Must have car. Leave message 507-272-9888 after 7pm. CHOSEN Valley Testing, inc. is seeking an individual for a part/full time technician position. This candidate should have a high school ‘education, good communication skills, good driving record, penmanship and basic math skills, and some computer experience. Experience preferred, but not req. Please send cover letter and resume to 1410 7th Street NW, Rochester, MN 55901. 507-281-0968 HELP WANTED to set up, operate & take down carnival for the Olmsted County Fair. Can also place ticket sellers. Apply at: The Carnival Office on the fairgrounds at noon during set up on Mon., Jul 30th ask for Jerry. PART-TIME/SEASONAL Positions available for: Ski & Snowboard Sales Clothing Sales Applications Available at full time employment AG Business/Millwright welding, concrete, mechanical, or Ag related exp. Year around work, full benefits, friendly environment. 1305 Frontage Road NW, Byron MN. APPLIANCE REPAIR PERSON needed Immediately. F/T position for someone with good people skills. 507-288-9047 AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN Immediate opening for inter1923 SW 2nd ST nal full time automotive techRELIABLE, friendly Serv- nician. Great working enviers: Flex hrs. Mr. Pizza ronment with competitive South, 1729 So. Broadway. wages. Vacation pay, holiday OR want to be a massage pay, 401K, Medical and Dentherapist? Call Healing tal Insurance available. Stop in or call Jeff Running for a Touch School. 507-536-4076 confidential interview. ROCHESTER ART CENRiverfront Ford Mercury TER is looking for a RedWing MN part-time administrative 651-385-2666, 800-816-4492 assistant, Wednesday Saturday 9:00-2:00 2 years receptionist, secretarial, bookkeeping and customer service experience required. Must have strong detail, organizational, customer relations, communication, computer and precise bookkeeping skills. Send resume to 40 Civic Center Drive SE, Rochester, MN 55904 WANT An International Experience? Place students from around the world in local high schools. Generous compensation and travel to Europe. Hosting opportunities available. Call 800-507-4316 or [email protected] BAKER/CHEF for busy Tea room in NE Iowa. 563-382-3795 or 563-382-1437. C N C OPERATOR/ PROGRAMMER 2nd shift, must be able to set up projects on milling & turning machines, Mazatrol programming a plus. Full-time with benefits. Send resume to: C & C MACHINE, INC. PO Box 2317 159 Buchner Place LaCrosse 54602-2317 F/T CARETAKER Cardinal of Minnesota position available at Luxury apt. complex in Rochester. Full-time position with duties to include: Cleaning of common areas, vacant apts., & general light maintenance. Generous compensation pkg. offers competitive wages, paid vacation, health insurance, & 401/K retirement plan. Apply in person at: Quarry Ridge Apartments 1823 Quarry Ridge Pl NW Residential services for individuals w/developmental disabilities. Variety of positions. EEO/AA. cardinalofminnesota.com LOOKING for mature or retired individual to live on-site. Front Desk and light housekeeping duties for free rent. Refs. 281-2815 full time employment part time employment part time employment PART-TIME PAINT LINE HELPERS P/T Teller Positions available at Sterling State Bank in Rochester. Previous teller or sales experience desired but no required. Excellent compensation and benefits package available to qualified candidates. If interested, please send resume to [email protected] PCA needed to care for adult male in Elba. Various part-time hrs. available. Please call Mike at 507-932-5385 EOE ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ PT Seasonal help for food concession trailer work to work at county fairs, city festivals, etc. Looking for immediate help. Please call 507-288-3610 happy ads LORI Look Who’s 50! Love - Mom & the Sisters 0726503542P • Crenlo, a metal fabricator of cabs for agricultural/construction equipment and enclosures for the electronics industry in Rochester, MN has an immediate need in production for Part-time Paint Line Helpers. Duties could include cleaning surfaces, masking, caulking, loading/unloading of production lines, etc. These are first shift positions and employees will work three hours per day. Application can be obtained at 2501 Valleyhigh Drive NW, Rochester, MN or send résumés to: Crenlo, LLC Attn: Human Resources 1600 4th Avenue NW Rochester MN 55901 EXP. PAINTER wanted. Nickelson Painting is currently taking applications. Quality work, attention to detail, good work ethic & valid Driver’s license a must. Prior work in new home construction preferred. Fax resume/ application to 507-280-0606 or E-mail humanresources@ nickelsonpainting.com include references. Experienced Section 8 Property Manager - to manage residential community in Austin. Responsibilities include operations, leasing, marketing, budgeting, reporting, and site staff management. Qualifications include min 2 years property management experience, excellent communication and decision making abilities. Send resume to: bhaack@ chafoulias.com, or mail to: Chafoulias Mgmt, Attn: B. Haack, 121 - 23rd Ave SW, Suite 105, Roch., MN 55902. EXPERIENCED Maintenance person for Apt. complex. Must know plumbing, electrical & have Class C boiler’s license. Drop off resume at 1515 3rd Ave NE. M-F 8-5. FREE DIET SAMPLES Lose up to 30 lbs in 30 days! Call 800-921-4471 www.BeThin4Life.com FULL - TIME ENTRY LEVEL WELDER position available. Please Apply at: 3121 40th Ave NW, Rochester, MN A Dover Company • ISO 9001:2000 / EOE www.crenlo.com • www.dovercorporation.com • full time employment HOLIDAY INN AUSTIN, MN PROFESSIONAL SALES POSITION. Jenni's Bridal is hiring F/T and P/T Bridal Consultants. Previous sales exp. w/ strong closing sales preferred. Organized, energetic, and fashion minded with an outgoing personality. Must have flexible hours. Competitive wage. Apply at Jenni's Bridal, Miracle Mile Shopping Center, Rochester, MN. APPLY NOW FOR: • F/T GUEST SERVICE (3PM-11PM) • P/T GUEST SERVICE 7am-3pm & 3pm-11pm • P/T NIGHT AUDITOR (11PM -7AM) • P/T SECURITY • F/T PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE • HOUSEKEEPING Apply within, fax or email resume to: 507-433-8749 [email protected] NEEDED F/T finish carpenter for Roch/area, exp. helpful. (507)367-4458 ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ AVIS RENTAL SALES FT customer service. Hourly wage + bonuses + benefits. Visit: aviswi.com for info & required application, or at Avis, Rochester Int’l Airport. EOE ROUTE SALES POSITION IMMEDIATE OPENING for Insulation Installer. Experience not necessary Needs to have a valid MN driver’s license on starting day. Monday-Friday starting at 7:00 a.m., some Saturdays Pay will vary with experience. Apply in person at: Citywide Insulation Just North of Rochester Airport on 11th Ave INSTALLERS Wanted: Seamless Gutters & Downspouts. Experience “required” and valid drivers license. 507-288-4964. JULY /AUG. OPENINGS $15.00 base-appt Immediate student openings, FT/PT, customer sales/svc, no exp nec, all ages 17 plus, cond. exist 507-288-5965 LEGAL Assistant/Paralegal needed for small law office. Strong computer and typing skills a must. Familiarity with transcription and QuickBooks preferred. Salary commensurate with experience. Immediate opening. Send resume to: Allen & Heim Law Office, 300 Third Ave S.E., Suite 402, Rochester, MN 55904. LOCAL well drilling company seeking a Helper to drill & service wells. Must have a CDL license. Benefits included after 90 days. Apply at: Peterson Well Drilling, 7210 Hwy 14 East, Rochester. 507-281-2840. LOCALLY OWNED Regional Headquarters interviewing self-motivated, enthusiastic, problem-solving women & men for our fast paced consulting/sales firm. Offering minimum FT pay at $625 weekly, plus sales bonuses & profit sharing. No experience necessary, rapid advancement available. All training provided. Schedule your interview today! 507-529-5028 EXPERIENCED CARPENTER NEEDED: Call Nick, 507-951-0362. FARM HAND 0726503969P • COMPUTER Help Wanted. Earn $25-$75/hour. PT/FT. Training provided. tblGlobal.com CONSTRUCTION Millwrights needed ASAP. Cutting & welding skills a plus but not req. Must have no fear of heights. Starting pay $14-$16 depending on experience. Please fax and/or E-mail brief work history to: 507-234-6951; [email protected] CUSTOMER SERVICE INSIDE SALES FISCO, a division of Elvin Safety, seeks an experienced Rep to join our team. Duties include customer service & inside sales. Strong communication skills, flexibility & organization are mandatory. Knowledge of the safety business is a plus. Resumes accepted via email or fax: [email protected] Fax: HR 952-829-2799 EOE Work with Beef Cows, Feed Lot, and Crops. CDL preferred. Please call (507)536-4030, evenings. Phone: (507) 287-3609 Fax: (507) 280-2350 E-Mail: [email protected] full time employment CLINIC ASSISTANT FT, 35 hrs/wk position available at Planned Parenthood’s Rochester family planning clinic. Duties: greet patients, answer multiple phone lines, chart prep and filing, data entry, insurance verification and posting, and fee collection. Required: High School degree/equivalent and 1-2 yrs experience working with youth, women or other high risk populations/related experience. Excellent customer service skills, computer skills, ability to accurately record data, ability to work with diverse populations, ability to maintain confidentiality, and ability to work in a fast-paced environment. Diverse candidates are encouraged to apply. Send cover letter and resume and refer to job number 3084. PPMNS, HR Dept. Email: [email protected] 220 Robert St. S, Ste 207 St. Paul, MN 55107 Fax: 651-696-5553 AA/EEO DEALERSHIP for Int’l trucks, seeking experienced Heavy-Duty Truck/Trailer Mechanic. Benefits: Paid vacation, health ins., Cafe plan, uniforms, tool allowance, 401K plan, incentives, cont. Education. Please apply at interstate Motor Trucks, Inc., 2729 Whynaught Court SE, Rochester, MN 55904. (507)289-2361 EARN $$$$ helping MD’s. Process medical claims from home. Call the Federal Trade Commission to find out how to spot medical billing scams. 1-877-FTC-HELP. A message from the Post-Bulletin and the FTC. P/T Finish Carpenter’s Helper, Roch/Pine Island area. May move to F/T position. Tim (507)450-2599. P/T Receptionist position available in Dover, exp. preferred. Call 507-272-8310, ask for Carla. Lordy • part time employment Full-time, 5 day week Guaranteed salary + commission. Furnished health insurance, uniforms, and vacation. Smoke free environment. Established customers. Home nights. Requires MN Driver’s License. Apply in person: Sampson Dairy Foods 1131 Valleyhigh Dr NW Rochester, MN ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ SEAMLESS gutter installer: 1 year exper. & drivers license required. Reliable. Good pay & bonuses. Call 507-259-1264. BUFFALO WILD WINGS is now hiring for fall season * Servers * Cashiers (mornings & nights) Apply to: [email protected] or 3458 - 55th St NW Top pay with experience Full & Part-time Exp. Line Cook Hostess (Nite & wk-end) 1705 SO. Broadway ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ MAINTENANCE person needed for 151 unit apt complex in NW Roch. Call (507)288-6559 or e-mail [email protected] NEED a mature dependable individual that has the ability to follow directions to work in an office. Good computer skills required. Must be an accurate typist & have a knowledge of Word & Excel. Good written & oral communication skills a must along with 2 years exp. working in a related field. To apply please call Becky (507)252-9844. PERMANENT FT overnight help for recuperating woman. Caregiver w/exper. or PCA. Need now. 507-280-6200 please lv msg. Room 534 Shelley. Personal care: P/T, Attendant for young lady. Flexible hrs. Non-smoker! 507-282-4217, lv msg. TRES Francoise Salon seeking experienced Stylist. Serious applicants only. Apply in person: 2650 S. Bdwy. #400 - 507-252-5225 • CDL CLASS A TRAINING No cost with 1 year commitment Next 5 week Session starts on: Aug. 27th Drive the Midwest Home Every week $47,000+ First year, Co. Paid Medical IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR Experienced Drivers 800-652-9064 MONSON TRUCKING INC. Duluth, Virginia & Red Wing, MN Mauston, WI sales employment $3K-$4K/WK income! No suits or commutes. Serious inquiries only! 800-434-9766 FT / PT NURSERY SALESPERSON Family Tree Landscape Nursery has 20 years exp in business and is looking to expand! Seeking nursery sales help. Exp. Preferred. Apply at: 1735 Hwy 30 SW, Rochester, MN. Virgil’s Auto Clinic A New Career Your Career Starts Here! RN/LPN STAFF NURSE * Administer & document resident care appropriately. *Conduct daily rounds on wings. *Provide clinical supervision to nursing assistants. Applicants for all positions must be MN licensed & CPR certified. Nursing home experience is a plus. BENEFITS OFFERED: * Experience Credit * * Competitive Wages * EOE * Paid Vacation* Paid Holidays * *Comprehensive Insurance Package * Please apply at: 120 NE Fourth Street Stewartville, MN 55976 ANNOUNCE. SELL. ADVERTISE. FIND. We’re looking for motivated, entrepreneurial individuals to join Minnesota’s #1 real estate team. We’ll provide the training and resources. You bring the desire for personal growth and financial stability. Together we’ll build your real estate career. Call today to set up an interview. Call Tim Huglen at 288-1234. 0619486230P 285-7777 Independently Owned And Operated By NRT, Inc. medical employment HHA/CNA 48-60 hrs. per 2 WKS 7 pm - 7 am in group home for elderly MUST be dependable 507-319-7110 1101 Second St. SW WANTED: Experienced automotive glass installer. We are willing to train appropriate person. Competitive wage, benefits, 401K, paid vacations. apply in person CITY AUTO GLASS 845 - 38th St. NW, Roch Orthodontic office looking for a RDA with excellent technical and personal skills. Call 507-281-1557 RECRUIT. AUTO TECHNICIAN F/T position (M-F) Top Salary for top candidate. 401K & Medical Ins. Must have own tools. Apply in person at medical employment Drivers *AFLAC *Health insurance *Paid Vacation VIRGIL’S, Inc. has an immediate for an LOOKING for a Federal or Postal Job? What looks like the ticket to a secure job might be a scam. For information, call the Federal Trade Commission, toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP. A message from the Post-Bulletin and the FTC. driver employment Post Bulletin Classifieds SUBSCRIBE TODAY! 507-285-7676 800-562-1758 You Know You Want to The Winona Sandwich Co. of Rochester & Uncle G’s Pizza is now hiring P/T & F/T delivery drivers & sandwich makers. Lunch time & evening hrs. avail. Bring your resume or apply with in. No exp. necessary. 3120 Wellner Dr. NE. driver employment DRIVER WANTED: Class A license, clean driving record & 2 yrs exp required. We offer excellent pay and benefit package. Please call Dawn at Elgin Milk Service 800-548-2553. • Take a look. Post-Bulletin CLASSIFIEDS Classification 430 • • POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com professional employment professional employment STEWARTVILLE Public Schools is seeking a Family Group Decision Making Facilitator 1.0 FTE Middle School Industrial Technology Teacher to work with students in Grades 6-8 beginning the 2007-08 school year. Please send resume, license, credentials, transcripts and application to: Stewartville Public Schools, Office of Superintendent, 500 - 4th St. S.W., Stewartville, MN 55976. Application can be downloaded at ssd.k12.mn.us Application deadline: Aug 7, 2007. ACCOUNTING CLERK A.B. Systems, Inc., a leading design/build construction company in Southern Minnesota, is seeking a full time Accounting Clerk. We are seeking a self motivated, detail oriented individual with experience in all aspects of accounting, including A/R, A/P, Billing and Payroll. Two year accounting degree and 3 years of experience preferred. A.B. Systems, Inc. is an employee owned company. We offer health insurance, 401(k), paid holidays and vacation. E-mail resume to [email protected], or send resume to: A.B. Systems, Inc. Attn: Controller 209 Wood Lake Dr. SE Rochester, MN 55987 Assistant Operations Manager Horizon Wind Energy seeking Asst. Operations Mgr for site in Grand Meadow, MN. BS preferred. 10-15 yrs exp in related industry. For details and to apply online www.horizonwind.com/c ompany/jobs.aspx JOB ID 220 LITERACY COORDINATORS AND VOLUNTEER COORDINATORS NEEDED FOR ROCHESTER PUBLIC SCHOOLS Serve for one year with Minnesota Reading Corps to help children in Grades K-3 to improve their literacy skills. Gain training and experience as a literacy tutor or volunteer coordinator in the Rochester Public Schools. Earn $860/month (full-time) or $430/month (part-time). In addition, you will receive an education award of $4,725 (full-time) or $2,362 (part-time). Positions are available throughout Minnesota, including Rochester. Learn more and apply at www.theMLC.org/ ReadingCorps or call Katie at 651-251-9151. CHILDRENS PLACE NURSERY SCHOOL IN ROCHESTER is hiring a P/T Lead teacher for our 4 year old classroom for the 2007-2008 school year. Comp pay and great working hours of Tues. & Thurs., 8am-12:30pm with Holidays and weekends off. If you are degreed, energetic and love working with children, please fax your resume to 507-536-7027 or mail to Childrens Place Nursery School, 3703 55th St NW Rochester, MN 55901 EOE Using a collaborative team approach, provides consultation to families with children at risk. Position requires a Bachelor’s degree, preferably in the social field. Ideal candidate will possess excellent communication, listening and organizational skills; knowledge of human services and family systems; and experience in the area of mediation and alternative dispute resolution. Requires reliable transportation and the flexibility to work days and evenings to respond to clients needs. Apply at: Family Service Rochester 1110 Sixth Street NW Rochester, MN 507-287-2010 EOE ELEMENTARY ART INSTRUCTOR This half-time position requires a MN VIsual Arts teaching license. Online application at www.generalasp.com/ desch/onlineapp with electronically-attached documents (resume, unofficial transcripts, etc) must be submitted by Fri. 8/3. Dover-Eyota Public Schools 507-545-2125 F/T infant & Preschool Teachers. If you enjoy working with children & being part of their growth and development call Endless Journey Childcare at 507-281-2142 for application information. Opening August 13, 2007! FOOD SERVICE DIRECTOR LTC Campus, Kenyon, MN, CDM preferred, must have experience in cost control, food production, supervision & clinical including MDS. Kris 763-591-0127 or fax resume: 763-862-2074 Now Hiring Full-Time Assistant Teachers Low child/teacher ratio. Excellent benefits pkg. Competitive wages. To apply call Deb at: 507-282-5368 or mail resume to: CIVIC LEAGUE DAY NURSERY 427 - 6TH AVE SW ROCHESTER, MN 55902 Applications being accepted through 07/27/07 EOE Kingsland Public Schools is now accepting applications for: Head Volleyball Coach, Head Girls Basketball Coach, H.S. Spanish (Long Term Substitute) and Elem./H.S. Art (Long Term Substitute). Please send letter of interest and resume to: Kingsland Public Schools, ATTN: District Office, 201 West Bartlett Street, Wykoff, MN 55990. 507-352-2731. Positions are open until filled. EOE business opportunity professional employment MARKETING DIRECTOR The Rochester Symphony Orchestra & Chorale (RSOC) in Rochester, MN is seeking an energetic & experienced marketing professional responsible for planning & executing all marketing programs in support of building audiences and funding for the RSOC. The ideal candidate will have a Bachelor’s Deg. & min. of 5 years experience in marketing, PR & fund raising, preferably in non-profit field. For full job description/qualifications, visit www.rochester symphony.com. To apply, email resume, cover letter, & references to: Roches [email protected] m or mail hard copies to: Rochester Symphony Orchestra & Chorale, 400 S. Bwy., Suite 100, Rochester, MN 55904. RSOC is an EOE PARALEGAL: Established Rochester law firm seeking a litigation paralegal. Paralegal degree or at least 2 years similar experience preferred. Health insurance available. Salary commensurate with experience. Immediate opening. Friendly and exciting work environment. Send resume to: Will Mahler Law Firm, 202 Ironwood Square, 300 3rd Ave SE, Rochester, MN 55904 or e-mail: [email protected] PARALEGAL: Established Rochester law firm seeking a litigation paralegal. Paralegal degree or at least 2 years similar experience preferred. Health insurance available. Salary commensurate with experience. Immediate opening. Friendly and exciting work environment. Send resume to: Will Mahler Law Firm, 202 Ironwood Square, 300 3rd Ave SE, Rochester, MN 55904 or e-mail: [email protected] TEACHERS New Dominion School in Austin, MN is a non-public school serving students grades 2-12, with emotional and behavioral disorders. New Dominion is a fully credited yr round school. All applicants must be over 21, be able to pass criminal, divers records and pre-employment physicals. Apply on-line www.nexustreatment.org. EOE Special Ed Teacher: MN. Special Ed. Licensure required, and experience preferred. Do assessments, IEP writing/meetings (complete due process requirements) & provide direct (Social Skills) instructions. Art Teacher: MN licensed required, and exp preferred. Grades 7-12. THIRD GRADE LONG TERM SUBSTITUTE TEACHING POSITION at St. Charles Elementary School for the 2007-2008 school year. Compensation is based upon a starting salary of $37,404. Please send credentials with letter of application and resume by August 3rd, 2007 to Allen Rasmussen, Elementary Principal, 925 Church Avenue, St. Charles, MN 55972. EOE. homes for sale ADVERTISE your Business Opportunity nationally to approximately 9 million households in North America’s best suburbs by placing your classified ad in nearly 900 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call the Post Bulletin Classified Department at 1-800-562-1758, ext. #17777. Need CASH? Deliver the homes for sale SELL YOUR HOUSE FAST! Don’t look for your next home … Earn money, learn responsibility and get paid to exercise! 2 Routes Available in NW Rochester 1 on 13th Ave 1 near Gage Elem. *Mon - Sat, no Sundays *Afternoon Delivery *No Collections *Free Subscription Call: BRAD for more details Find it! The Post-Bulletin Co., L.L.C. has an immediate opening for a Local News Editor. This position is part of a three-person editorial team that leads the local news report, working with reporters to produce the most timely, complete and relevant newS online and in print in Southeastern Minnesota. Concession Trailer Excellent small business venture. Proven profitable, MN HD approved, SS sinks, two serving windows, ready to go. 8500 or BO plus much equip for sale. 507-421-9043 PLAINVIEW e-mail [email protected] fax 507-285-7773 0716503113P Human Resources Local News Editor P.O. Box 6118 Rochester, MN 55903-6118 NEW TODAY ★ ★ Homes for Sale NW NEW TODAY ★ ★ Homes for Sale SE 45 MIN. PER DAY Mon - Saturday Afternoon Delivery $142,900CHARMING 3 bdrm, 2 bath, ranch style house, located in quiet neighborhood at 715 - 14th Street SE. Many updates! Call 507-398-6892, for a showing. 112 10th Ave. SE $148,900, 3 bdrm, 2 ba. CD Avail. Randy @ 507-536-4317 Elcor CONTRACT for deed. Low down pymt. 3 bdrm, 2 ba, fin. bsmt. 507-876-9994 ALL CASH Local Route: Kodak, Duracell, Bic. $17,900 required + van or truck. (800) 530-2561. ESTABLISHED restaurant business: Includes bldg and equipment. Call Karlene Tutewohl, ReMax of Rochester, at 507-287-7734. S. S. car wash in Wanamingo. Space to add mini storage or ? 651-380-8127 Homes for Sale Surounding Area 2002 - apprx. 3000 sf., 4 bdrm, 3 bath. 3 car gar. Stewartville. Only $263,500 Call (507)292-0881 Open: 7/25, 4-6 & 7/28, 1-4 Beautiful must see home! 3 bdrm on the same level. 2 baths, large lot, Byron. $170,000. Countryside RE 507-951-1728 3 bdrm Rambler attached garage. Basement with egress window. New updates. Appliances plus W/D. Built in 1991. 913 2nd St NW. Byron. $109,900 + $3000 floor allowance. 507-288-6114 or 507-990-2139 COUNTRY Living - lg. 5 bdrm, 3 1/2 ba, ranch w/barn, playhouse, 5 ac. on black top. 20 min. SW of Roch. $320K. 507-951-3400 FSBO - Stewartville 5 bdrm, 3 bath, family rm, big screen TV, rec rm w/slate pool table, AC, 2 car gar & storage shed. $195,000 (507)319-5788 NEW TODAY ★ ★ 2 Stry close to dwntwn: 3 bdrm, 2 ba, CD avail, $144,900. Elcor Realty, Randy 507-536-4317. FORECLOSURE? Know your rights. For free info. (651)305-1878 RANCH style in Lansing, MN. 3BR, 1 1/2 ba, wood FP, 2 decks, 2+ stall att gar. Set on 2 lots. Must see. 507-437-8544 Lv msg ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ SPLIT level 3 bdrm, car gar., LL fam Stewartville, CD $199,900. Elcor Randy, 507-536-4317. “Shouldn’t you love what you do?” Love every minute as a part of the Alltel Team with a Fortune 500 company that’s dedicated to your success. Friday’s Real Estate Marketplace Wireless Consultants focus on selling and explaining Alltel products and services to new and existing customers. They work directly with Alltel customers to meet their billing and service equipment needs. Successful Wireless Consultants can earn up to $40K+ per year! High school diploma or equivalent required plus six months to one year of retail sales, customer service or telecommunications experience. Candidates must be able to work flexible schedules including evening, weekend, and holiday hours. Working for Alltel, you’ll enjoy these great perks: Competitive Salary Plus Commission • Unique and Diverse Schedules • Quick-start Medical, Dental & Vision Benefits • Paid Training • 401(k) • Profit Sharing • Incentives • Tuition Reimbursement and more! Your Guide to Real Estate, Rentals and Commercial Properties Discover all there is to love about working with America’s largest wireless network. alltel.com/careers Choose: Search jobs; States: IA, MN, WI; Please look for specific locations online. C7 condos/ townhomes business sites/ buildings GOLFVIEW VILLAGE GAS station, restaurant, repair shop, Austin, MN. 2.9 acres, 5769 sq ft bldg. $399,900. Scott Ulland, Edina Realty. 507-434-4259 or 507-438-1012. MLS#2931438 New townhomes on golf course. 2 mi S of Roch airport. 2 stry, $115,900. Single level $159,900. 533-6627. GREEN MEADOWS townhouse located o the shore of Lake George. THis two story townhouse is every SPORTSMAN’S DREAM property, one of a kind in Rochester. Reduced to $219,000. Call David Gibson at Larson Realty for information, 507-288-2345 IMMACULATE 2 bdrm 2 ba T.H, built in 2002, fully applianced, gas fpl, spa tub, $129,900. (507)208-6095 ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ SECLUDED NE Townhome. Wooded, private. Updated, LL finished w/4th bdrm, family room w/frplc & wet bar. $229,900. CD avail. Elcor Realty, Randy, 507-536-4317. income property (2) 4-Plex’s - Crossroads area. $460,000 for both. Call 507-951-1729 O/A 16 plex, $290,000 OBO. See hammondapts.com or call (507)282-7414. DUPLEX: upper unit, 1 bdrm, $500. Lower unit, 3 bdrm, $600. Utils separate. 602 - 5th Ave SE. $109,900. Call (507)208-1583. HAVE 2 duplexes, 2 triplexes and one 6-plex; all make good investments. Also, have commercial building (1 apt & 1 beauty shop - tenants @ $79,800). 8 rental motel with 3 bdrm home, only $139,900. Buildings for sale or lease Rochester, Byron, Spring Valley, Pine Island. Development land: one million five hundred thousand, 119 acres on Highway 52 between Pine Island & Oronoco. 3 acres highway commercial on Highway 14 East @ $800,000. All owners say make an offer. Call Real Estate Investment Brokers @ Satisfaction Real Estate, (507)282-1262. 20-PLEX, Austin, MN. Good cond., mngmt & income in place, $985,000. Call Scott Ulland at Edina Realty 507-434-4259 or 507-438-1012. MLS#2929872 lake/river property LAKE CITY CONDOS Starting at $189,900. Phil St. Martin. 507-254-5572 or 800-447-8060, Elcor Realty 2 wooded acres near river, 3 br, 2 ba. Large master suite, $139,900. SolemKreye Realty, Lynda. 651-564-0553 2001 Canterbury Park Model. New furniture, C/A, large deck, awning, storage shed, seasonal lot, Beaver Point, Wabasha. 507-282-4758 or 507-421-7258 MUST Sell trailer in Pine Grove Resort on Bone Lake-Luck, Wi. 507-288-5229 lots & acreages 11+ Ac, Near Lake City. Panoramic views. D. Dose Realty $129,900. 507-281-8289 100 ACRE FARM - FSBO 6 miles SE of St. Charles, 55 acre tillable, 45 acre pasture, 5 acre home site. 1880 home w/4 bdrms, 2.5 ba, 1,996 sq ft renovated in 1992. 3 car attach gar., lg sunroom w/marble floors, custom cherry cabinets, CA, barn & large shop. $435,000. 507-932-3876. 100 YEAR OAKS - Walkout 6.5 acreage, 13 mi from Roch. 507-951-1728 or 1730 22.5 ACRES of PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND in NW Roch. Good site for a school, senior living center, office bldg. Currently zoned R1. John Woychick /Elcor Rlty. 507-254-475 3144 sqft rambler on 7 ac. near St. Charles w/40x68 bldg. $310K 507-932-3681 40 ACRES Oronco area. This is a buildable site, great location $258,900 CD Elcor Realty Geary O’Reilly, (507)990-2430 40 acres plus or minus. 3 bdrm ranch home w/horse barn & other outbuildings. Woods w/creek pasture, some tillable. Good hunting, lots of deer & turkey. All new in the past 10 yrs. Located in N. Central Iowa. Possible corporate retreat. Call (641)892-4467 5 ACRES 1/4 mile west of Mabel, certified well & good sewer. 3 acres tillable, could be used for organic. (507)493-5623. ACREAGE: Beautiful 11+ acre lot just 12 minutes SW of Downtown Rochester off County Road 15. Black top road, some trees, small stream, shared driveway, walkout. $190,000. Adam @ Edina 507-208-1583. CHAMPAGNE Hill, 18 lots in SW Pine Island. Mature trees, walkouts & cul-de-sac road. Call (507)951-2279 or see photos: www.champagnehill.com GORGEOUS 70 AC to build on. 50 AC till. 30X50 stl. bldg. Trees, river, wildlife. 21 mi S of Roch off hwy 63. Info: 507-536-0579. O/Agt. LOOKING for a small acreage? 3.7 Hobby farm. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 stry. Outbuildings. Contract for Deed available. $134,900. Call Randy 507-536-4317. 1A w/view of city park. Newer home, 8 min N of Roch. 4BR/3BA. $419,900 (below builders cost) Edina Rlty 507-358-6547- MIke ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ SOUTHERN Woods lots in SW Rochester: Country views, city views, golf course views, walk-outs. From $39,900 - $84,900. CD avail. Elcor Realty, Randy 507-536-4317. Every Friday in the Post-Bulletin SELLING unique 4 bdrm, 2 ba, 2 car gar. Vltd ceilings, oak flrs, great area, all appls., fnc’d yd. $159,900. O/A. (507)282-5507 Approximately 38 papers approximately $100 per month ★★ ★★ RANCH Style: 2 bdrm, 1 ba, fenced yard, fixer upper. Inspection done. CD avail. $59,900. Elcor Realty, Adrian 507-536-4309/Randy 507-536-4317. RANCH home w/4 bdrm, 3 ba in SW. Cherry cabinetry & trim. $299,900. CD avail. Elcor Realty, Randy 507 536-4317/Adrian 507-536-4309 VIEW Homes Online-Many styles, prices & pictures. www.RochesterArea Builders.com/NewHomes Post-Bulletin Co., L.L.C. NEED to sell? WE BUY HOUSES 507-319-5788 ★★ homes for sale Send resumé and clips to: Looking to buy or sell a home? Go to: www.homesinrochester.biz Manufactured home for sale: Ready to be moved. 1999 Dutch manufactured home. 28x70, 1764 sq ft. Excellent condition. 3 BR, 2 BA, wood fireplace, C/A, all appliances, $38,500. 507-269-7346 or 507-282-0315 6335 South Pointe Dr. SW $229,900 3 bdrm, 2 ba CD Avail. Randy @ 507-536-4317 Elcor CLASSY & clean, 3bd, 2 ba, fin. bsmt, roof, flooring kit, bath & siding all new. Move in & enjoy your private wooded backyard. Call now before it’s gone! $152,900 (507)536-7669 homes Application deadline: Friday, July 27, 2007. NEW TODAY ★ ★ Homes for Sale SW 400 This supervisory level position is full-time Monday-Friday, afternoon and evening hours. Occasional weekend and holiday hours. Comprehensive benefit package included. ★★ GREAT value for the dollar! Split level, 3 BR, 2 ba, 1/2 acre lot in SW Roch. CD avail. $224,900. Elcor Realty, Randy 507-536-4317 COUNTRY living about 1 mile from Century H.S., 5 BR, 3 BA, 1/2 acre +, 3,204 sq. ft. $299,900. Call: 507-282-6059, Mark Kieffer, Coldwell Banker A.Y.S. FOOT ROUTE Applicants should have a commitment to innovative journalism that gives readers news to talk about, looks out for their interests and is important to their lives. Applicants must be exceedingly well-organized and enjoy working in a fastmoving, high energy newsroom. Call Lori at 507-951-2066 Homes for Sale NE FARM related sales and service business, $1,400,000. Sales in 2006 - CEO earnings, $314,000. Great convenience-gas store located on 2 major highways - last year’s sales at $1,800,000. Gas sales alone showed $98,000 profit. How about a small town Bar & Grill @ only $97,300. Part-time job - Buy this storage facility at $239,900 - it’s 75% full now. Have 3 restaurants & 2 hair styling shops for sale. Great popular bar in Rochester available. Have 9-hole golf course. How about off-sale package liquor store doing 1 million in sales per year? Manufacturing & retail sales coming on - also Franchise store located at Apache Mall. We always have fresh listings. Call the Business Brokers at 507-282-1262. Jim, Rex and Todd Savage are here to serve you. Qualified candidates will have daily journalism experience as a writer and editor with a commitment to growing readership. Familiarity with Readership Institute research and recommendations is desired. Community involvement as well as online and multimedia expertise needed. We buy “As Is” Fast, Fair Offers Quick Close 1846 18 1/2 St. NW $134,900 3 bdrm, 3 ba, CD Avail. Randy @ 507-536-4317 Elcor VETERANS: I have several homes with zero down payments & are great buys. Call Phil St. Martin, 507-254-5572 or 1-800-447-8060 Elcor Realty. 281-7422 No collections. Call DIANE 507-285-7688 Local News Editor homes for sale Thursday, July 26, 2007 2 ba, 3 room, avail. Realty BEAUTIFUL. 4 bedroom, 3 bath home located outside Red Wing in country setting, master bath with Jacuzzi, large walk-in closet in master bedroom, vaulted ceilings,. Open staircase to family room with gas fireplace. 3 car garage. Nicely landscaped yard. Only $319,000. (651)388-5844. No agents. ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ FSBO - STEWARTVILLE: 4 bdrm, 2 ba, living, dining, & family room, A/C, 2 car gar., $190,000. (507)533-6648 condos/ townhomes 1100 20th St. NW $219,900 3 bdrm, 2 ba, T.H. CD avail. Randy @ 507-536-4317 Elcor ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ 2 bdrms, 2 bath townhomes in Rochester SW & NW. Starting at $129,900 $144,900. CD avail. Elcor Realty, Randy 507-536-4317/ Adrian 507-536-4309. 713 Woodhaven Ct. NE. T.H. $229,900 4 bdrm, 3 ba, CD avail. Randy @ 507-536-4317 Elcor 0718503180EM Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F/D/V. ★★ 0621500721P CLOSE TO HOME AFFORDABLE LAKE ESCAPE! Only 80 minutes east of Roch. 120 feet of nice swimming frontage on great recreational lake. Fantastic building site with huge pines and hardwoods. $124,850. Dave, Legacy Land Group. 715 205 4424. eagleslandingwabasha.com Luxuray waterfront 2 bdrm condos, 2 car indoor slip avail. $300K-$400K 651-565-3321 Marcourealty.net. FRENCH Lake in Faribault, 1999 Coachman trailer, leased land, 150 ft shore line, new dock & deck. $39,000 OBO. 507-765-4736 HAYWARD. WOW! Lovely 1 acre of large trees, 116 ft of sand frontage, western views on a wonderful recreational lake. Amazing location – just 9 miles from Hayward. Priced to sell immediately. $134,850. Dave, Legacy Land Group 715 205 4424 IOWA Great Lakes: 2 adj. waterfront lots loc. on Lower Gar, boat access to East/West Okoboji. 85+ lakeshore ft. ea 507-847-2498 Lake Pepin Retreat two+ bedroom home just 2 blocks off the Lake. Remodeled & new appliances. Big yard. Relax on deck to view lake. Walk to marina. Located in quaint Pepin, Wi. Only $104,900. Gordon Borner-Century 21 715-307-0653 LEECH Lake lots for sale. Lake shore lots: lake view & forest lots with deeded harbor slip. (218)654-5606 www.duckpointwoods.com business sites/ buildings 2.75 AC in Kasson, PUD Mantorville Ave $164,900. D. Dose Realty. 507-281-8289 3.4 Acres commercial on Hwy 61, Wabasha, MN. 4 br, 2 ba home. $149,900. Solem-Kreye Realty, Lynda. 651-564-0553 GREAT VALUE IN BYRON Business condos for sale/lease. Shared parking, large lot, backs up to Byron City Hall. Great location, low association. fee includes snow removal, ins, and grounds. 897 sq ft, $89,900. Adam @ Edina Realty. Call 507-208-1583. OFFICE Condominium for sale or rent: Top floor of Winona Waters bldng w/beautiful views. 2500 sq ft +/-. Located in Downtown Winona. 111 Market Street. Carol (507)452-2839 COMMERCIAL Lot: 55’ X 99’ Zoned B4, 1 block off South Bwy. 17th St SE. $69,900. Contact for Deed Avail. Tim at C21 271-2627 COMMERCIAL on Main St. downtown historic Wabasha. 2 fireplaces, courtyard. $175,000. SolemKreye Realty, Lynda. 651-564-0553 COUNTRY ACREAGES - 3 miles from Rochester: Woods, walk-outs, blacktop cul-de-sacs, well, great views. Natural gas & cable TV. 23 lots to choose from. No building time limit. From $69,900. Great time to build with a 30 year fixed at 6%. Lumber prices at a 5 year low. Choice of builder. (507)289-3215 farm & farm land 113 ACRES, hunters paradise, 44 acres tillable, 3 bd home, barn, stream, beautiful view for miles. $450,000 ELCOR Realty, Geary (507)990-2430 37.5 ACRES - Great building sites + tillable land. Serene stream. 18 mi. from Roch. 507-951-1728 or 1730 56 AC. FARM, 38 ac. tillable, woods, pasture, 2 stry, 4 bdrm, 1 ba,. $350K. Corky Buckingham, Edina Rlty. 507-951-2239 MLS 2932257 mobile homes $99 LOT Rent for 6 months! Loc. in Southern Hills. 1998 Redman, 3 bdrm, 2 ba, 16x80. Appox. $325/mo w/approved credit & $2700 down. (507)536-4574 11x50 older mobile home in good condition. $3,000 OBO. 507-273-7975 1999 14x70 Fairmont. 2 Bdrm, 2 ba, all appls stay, 8x10 shed, very clean, located in Zumbro Ridge #119, $25,000 OBO. 258-0159 2000 SCHULTE: 2 bdrm, 2 full baths, C/A, very good appls. Priced to sell - Estate Sale - Zumbro Ridge Estates. $16,000. 507-367-2224, eves, lv msg. ‘99 16x80, 3BR/2BA, carport, shed, exc cond. Must sell $33.5K/bo. 507-398-5440 DBL WIDE ROLLOHOME: 31x56, like new. LG Living/ dining area, kitchen w/lots of cupbrds. 3 bdr, 2 ba, util room. Fridge, stove, DW, WD, water softener, AC, 8x12 deck, 8x10 shed incl. Must See at 2013 Eagle Dr NW, Southern Hills, Stewartville. (507)252-6988 MOBILE Home for Scrap FREE - you take & clean up. Call (507)461-2820 - Janesville, MN. MOTIVATED Seller! 2000 16 x 80 Fairmont, 3 bdrm, 2 ba, very clean, all appls., Kasson. $27,000 507-259-3410 NICE home in a nice park, 83 14’ x 70’, 2-3 bdrm, 1 ba, 12x12 deck, 12x12 shed (insulated w/ pwr), WD. $7,500 OBO (507)250-2098 STEP up to this 2 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car gar - own your own land at the Gardens. Drive by 4315 Daffodil Ave. S.E. Get the entire package for $81,500, and then call Jim Savage @ Satisfaction Real Estate, 507-282-1262. This could be your home by Aug 1, 2007. real estate MARKETPLACE NEW TODAY ★ ★ CONDO: 3 bdrms, 3 ba, 3 levels. Priv setting. 2+ car gar. CD gar., CD avail, $219,900. Elcor Realty, Randy 507-536-4317. available every Friday in the Post-Bulletin Thursday, July 26, 2007 CLEAN 1 br: 2 blks to St Marys. 858 W Center, lndry $465/util+ elec 507-269-6170 3 Blocks to Clinic, 1 bdrm, all util. plus cable incl., clean. $575. 507-280-6863 CLINIC Suites - Currently has openings for 1 bdrm furnished starting at $950 all utils incl. Walking distance to Mayo Clinic. Short term leases avail. 507-280-4470. SPACIOUS 2 bdrm: Newly remodel, CA, WD, priv entry, parking. $700+utils. 507-280-9117 lv msg-Victoria 1 BDRM, main level, utils included, off St. park, W/D. 507-288-7624 1 BDRM, NE, heat paid, off St. Parking, on bus line. Exec. Home SW. Viking Realty (507)280-6109 1 BR, quiet area in Oronoco, avail now. $420/ mth. 507-367-4783, 244-0361 2 BDR apts Lg (approx 900 sf), pvt. patio, playground, garages avail., off st. park., sec entrance/cameras for your safety. Bear Creek Apts. 951-1015 besslermanagement.com 2 BDRM condo. 2215 - 3rd St SW, Roch. Main flr, gar, W/D, $625. (507)358-6114. WANTED: Roommate for August 1. Close to college and downtown. $350 per month. Call 210-8238 unfurnished apartments 1 & 2 bdrm income based apts in Stewartville. Clean, spacious, and FREE HEAT RGI 289-8000. Avail immed. EHO www.RGI-group.com ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ $425 - 1 bedroom, by government Center. Laundry facility. Call (507)282-8251. CLEAN, quiet, sunny 2 bdrm in nice NW 4-plex, A/C, DW, lndry, new carpet & appl. Off-street assigned parking. $595. Call: 507-289-2131 1 BDRM SE apt: www.jlpropertymanagement.com (507)282-2494. ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ 2 BDRM, Kasson: Includes heat, water, sewer. Avail 08/1. $445. 507-951-3809 ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ 3 bedroom near Mayo, NS, NP, off-street parking, $695/mo. 651-565-4205 1 & 2 Br, busline, near dwntwn, $450/$525 Background check, (507)365-8384 BEAUTIFUL 2 bd, NS, NP, $650, www.whitehallapartments.net, heat, WiFi pd, new kit & DW, 507-292-7701 Large efficiencies, studios, 1 & 2 bedrooms Starting at $450 Controlled Access Heat Included OUTDOOR POOL! Cats Welcome EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY NW location 0629501826P apartments to share unfurnished apartments ★★ BERKSHIRE VILLAGE 1& 2 bdrm Apts Starting at $559/mo. Heat , water & trash paid. Patios & Balconies Cats Welcome On City Bus Line, NW Loc. 507-289-3176 2 BD, 1 ba. New carpet & paint. Gar., sec. bldg., on site lndry $625. 507-433-6688 CARLSON RENTALS Positive rental exp through responsible property Management. Units Avail: 3 bdrm home near Rec Center; 2 bdrm apt near IBM; 2 bdrm Duplex in Kutzky park area. Contact Jeff or Chris at 507-289-7446 1 BDRM, parking garage, $465 includes utilities. NE (763)245-9876. SE 4-plex: 2 bdrm. Clean, quiet, heat pd. Lndry, gar. NS, N/P. 507-754-5404 or 273-3022. Beautiful & Spacious 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes Starting at $870 W/D, C/A, D/W, 1 1/2 baths, att. garage 281-0930 26th Ave & 55th St. NW [email protected] 507-288-1322 [email protected] NEW TODAY ★ ★ AVAIL 1 & 2 bd apts & 5 bd house. Call Deb at 507-271-3557. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 0628501829P WoodRidge Apartments unfurnished apartments CENTER Street Village: 620-632 East Center Street, 285-9469. Quality 2 bdrm apts near Mayo: Balcony/ patio, garage rental/ offstreet parking. DW, AC, WD in every apt. $600-$675. Lease reqd. Crime-free multi-housing. Shown by appointment only. SPACIOUS 2 BR on Cul-de-sac, $550+ elect, w/d on-site. RGI Mgmt, 289-8000 www.RGI-group.com. EHO 2804 2nd Street SW • (507) 252-0777 Sunset Trail Apartments 3639 41st Street NW • (507) 536-4000 • Heated Garage • In-Unit Washer/Dryer • Forced Air Heat/ Central Air • Community Room w/Big Screen TV & Kitchen • Complete Business Center Quarry Ridge Apartments • On-Site • Private Shuttle to Management Mayo Campus • 24-Hour • Clubhouse w/Big Maintenance Team Screen TV & Fully Equipped Kitchen • Pet Friendly 0702501249P Accounting ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS IN OUR SERVICE DIRECTORY REACH OVER 150,000 CURRENT AND POTENTIAL CUSTOMERS. GREAT RATESGREAT VALUE! Runs daily in the Post-Bulletin AND Money Saver. CALL CLASSIFIEDS TODAY 507-285-7777 800-562-1758 Asphalt JOLES ASPHALT PAVING Summer Special Residential, commercial, driveways, parking lots; also patching and seal coating Free Estimates 507-285-4985 Blacktopping SUPERIOR SEAL COATING For a quality product applied in a professional manner Call 507-421-1525 507-534-3527 Post-Bulletin CLASSIFIEDS 285-7777 Carpet Cleaning Handyperson MAYDAY & HOYER HANDYMAN Professional Carpet & Furniture Cleaning Serving Rochester since 1982 4 Room Special $119.95 New customers Save $10 24 hr. fire/water damage Toll free: 866-998-fire Call 507-287-9718 100% Customer Satisfaction Guarantee! Free Estimates Carpentry BUILDER/ CARPENTER Siding, Remodeling, Basements, Bathrooms, Gutters, Garages, Tile, Porches, Sheds, Decks, Doors, Windows,Chain Link & Fencing, Painting.. Will do those jobs you don’t have time for! Lawncare Clean-up Hauling Home Repair Fix-up Reasonable! Free Estimates! Call Anytime! Cell 507-202-4126 Home 507-289-0587 507-951-8215 or 507-951-8194 507-281-3962 or 507-208-0416 Cleaning Lawn Care Kelly’s Custom Cleaning Dependable, professional, detail oriented. Weekly, bi-weekly & monthly Or just one time. Specializing in residential & light commercial cleaning. 507-319-5235 LAWNCARE/ LANDSCAPING Retaining walls & Misc services No job Too small! Commercial or Residential Free estimates (507)288-9533 Free Estimates. Hasleylandscaping @hotmail.com Handyperson Siding ** HIRE A CREW ** Dad, 3 sons and several young men looking to help you with your projects. Moving, landscaping, gutter cleaning, install gutter tops, major and minor repairs, etc. We’ll even haul and dispose of your junk. Call us and we’ll put together a team to help you get your projects done. No job too small! Reasonable, reliable, references. *** 507-696-0578 *** Check with SE MN largest dealer for up to 50% off in-stock windows & siding, Factory over-runs and close-outs! Many different styles to choose from. Installation available. Larson Siding & Windows 507-288-7111 or 800-221-7111 duplex/twinplex Rent: $410/mth to $475/mth CLEAN Apartments: Fresh paint, washer/dryer on site. Efficiency, $285-400; 1 bdrm, $400-520; 2 bdrm, $500-600; 507-288-6773. 1 BDRM twinplex w/gar. No pets, $425/mo + utils. Avail Sept. 1. 507-289-1575 CONVENIENTLY located NW 1 & 2 bdrm apts. FREE HEAT, on bus line, Unbelievable price. Call today! RGI 289-8000. www.RGI-group.com. EHO LG 1 BDRM Townhouse. Avail Sept., W/D, C/A, porch. $575 - heat, water, sewer & garbage pd. Income limits apply. Call 507-533-9388. Call 507-288-1376 for appointment BYRON: 1 & 2 bdrm apts., rent based on income, starting from $415, not to exceed $532. Most utils. & major appls. incl. Call Todd 507-951-8147 besslermanagement.com Specials! eff, 2 & 3 br, path to Mayo, sec bldg, patio, a/c, lndry 507.271.9393 2-bedroom homes W/D in apt, D/W, garage, patio/balcony, vaulted ceilings, from $775 4811 16th Ave NW 507-285-9040 [email protected] OPPORTUNITY NW 2 bdrm: $550, $600 w/gar; 1 bdrm, $550 w/gar. SE 2 bdrm w/gar, $540. All apts - heat pd, A/C - you pay elec. 9am-7pm, Scott 288-9426, Tony, 288-6462. SE 1 or 2 bdrms avail, 4-plex. Secured building, garage w/ opener. A/C, heat pd, W/D facility. $475-$575. Pets ok. Scott, 507-289-0716 507-951-5411 SPACIOUS 2 bdrm apts util's paid, major appl., play ground, rent based on income, minimum of $425. Eastwood Apts. Plainview. 507-534-3969. www.besslermanagement.com SUNNY Clean 1 bdrm near hosp., parking, lndry, heat pd. Ref’s, dep. $425/mo. 608-574-5618 1275 Sq ft fin. town home, 2 bdrm, 2 ba, 2 car attach gar., deck, appls., Add’l 1275 sq ft unfin. w/o bsmt. Drive a little - Save a lot. $975. Chatfield. 507-358-5635 SUNWOOD Manor - 1 br. must be elderly (62 yrs old or older), disabled or handicapped. Community room, elevator, noon meals available by SEMCAC, activities, etc. Rents based on income starting at $435. besslermanagement.com 507-634-4688 SILVER LAKE APTS Furnished & Unfurnished Apartments Starting at $365 Office Hours M-F, 8a.m.-12p.m. & 1-5p.m. 0601499312P Finally a Community for you and your pet. GrandeVille at Cascade Lake EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Rochester’s Newest Apartment Community! 282-1256 [email protected] 1-4 bedroom apartment homes. Fitness Center, Free Tanning, Sauna, kids’ room, business center, pool, playground and much, much more. Short and Long Term Leases welcome. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY BEAUTIFUL park setting at dead end, 2 bd, 1700 sq ‘, w/fnshd bsmt. All new appl, WD, CA, off st pk, walk. dist. to St. Marys & Mayo, reference check, dep, NS, NP. $850. (507)367-4458 leave msg. 2 Bdrm lower, NW, pets o.k. $750 + sec. dep. 1516 4th Ave NW 507-292-9297. LG. 2 bdrm, very clean, convenient SW area, 1/2 bsmt, heat pd. N/S. $600. Call (507)280-5990 Avail. 8/1 condos & townhouses Affordable 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms Starting at $495. Controlled access, Downtown, Underground parking, Playground, Community room, Elevator and much more. 510 Third Ave. SE Rochester, MN 55904 (507)280-1935 [email protected] BYRON: Newer 2 & 3 bedroom townhomes for rent, attached 2-car garage, appliances include W/D, $800 + utilities. NP. Avail. 8/1 Contact Bryan or Lisa 952-892-7337 or lisajoritz@ mwjohnson.com ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ 2 BD TH: garage, WD, by park, pets ok. $725. 507-289-0322 2 BR, 2 ba, $695 + elec. D/W, appls, N/P, new carpet, clean. 1905 - 26th Ave NW. Call 773-301-3137. SEPT 1: NW, 3 level, 2 bdrm, 2 ba, pool, patio, free lndry. 1 year lease & refs. $700 + utils 507-288-2873 or 507-288-6838. GOLF course, 2 ba condo, like new, next to YMCA on river, CA, min. walk to clinic, off street parking, $695 mo (219)916-5973 or (507)289-1388. SPACIOUS SW 2 bdrm, 1.5 TH. D/W, W/D, gar avail., Starting at $650. Ask about our specials! RGI - MGMT 507-289-8000. EHO www. RGI-group.com NW: 2 bdrm, 2 ba. Newer appl & carpet, private, patio, gar, $795/mo. Call: Terry @ 507-252-0624. rooms for rent ROOMS: Day, week or month. Cable, TV & phone. 101 East Center St. 289-3343 BDRMS w/ AC.&TV, share bath/kit/lndry. Utils pd. $380/mo. $100/wk. 288-4060. ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ 6 bdrm walk-out ranch on very private country setting, close to Roch (2 1/2 mi), 4 bathrooms, AC, WD, 2 1/2 stall att. gar, lrg pasture for horses if desired. Avail. immed. $2000/mo + heat & elec 507-254-6358 Broadway & 31st St. NE 285-0388 0702501950P 3 bdrm, 2 ba, 9 miles South of Roch. Acreage & outblngs avai. Applis incl. $800+ utils. 507-288-1138. Stay Cool This Summer At 5 BDRM, 2+gar., $1500/ mth, PIne Island. Call (763)682-0413, (763)742-4459 The Brittany's ★★ Executive 2-3 bedroom townhomes was $1250 NOW $1050 Premium 3 bedroom townhomes was $1325 NOW $1150 Call Now! 2 bedroom apartments (507)280-8859 was $895 NOW $775 www.TheBrittanys.com NEW TODAY ★ ★ AVAIL 8/1., 2 bd, NE, WD, near busline, $675. Call Joe (507)358-1060. FURNISHED 4 Br, 4 ba, 2 car gar., deck, mature lot, SW loc. $1600+ utlls & dep. Non Smoker. (651)276-5974 5 bdrm, 2 ba, 2 story, close to downtown. Pets o.k., lg fenced yard. $1200 + utils. Avail Sep. 1. (507)210-1968. GOODHUE: Nice 2 bdrm rambler. $699/mo. Many updates. 651-457-3861 KASSON:Avail immed, 3 bdrm, 2 ba, 3 car gar. 1 yr lease min. $900/mo. Call Diane (507)269-6701. NW Byron, 2 BR, attached garage, $625 + utilities. Call: 507-951-1728 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 2015 41st St. NW • Rochester, MN 55901 CLEAN, 2-3 bd, fresh paint, off street parking, $750. Call (507)288-6773. SPACIOUS 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apartments, Starting at $549/month MOVE-IN SPECIALS • Close to IBM and the Mayo Clinic • 2 Tennis courts • State-of-the-Art • 2 Swimming pools laundry facilities • 24 Hour fitness center • Pet friendly Call Today • 507/288-2887 • www.RochesterVillage.com EYOTA: 4 bdrm, 2 ba., large garage, low traffic, NP, $850/mth. (507)753-2672 3 BDRM country home, all appls. incl 507-534-2554 $975 www.jacobhillestates.com NW / SE 4 bdrm 2 bath split, W/D, DW, 2 car attach gar., huge deck. Call for your private showing RGI 507-289-2000 EHO www.RGI-group.com. STEWARTVILLE: For rent or sale. 3 bdrm, 1 ba, w/2 car gar., $775/mo+utils. $1,150 dep. (507)867-9044 WINCHESTER APARTMENTS Call for Move-In Specials! 1&2 bedrooms, heat paid, A/C’s, dishwashers, courtyard with pool, on-site laundry, garages available. Rates as low as $575 Located 1/2 mile from IBM, 3908 19th Ave. NW 288-6559 12x18 GARAGE for Rent: Avail Sept, in Stewartville, w/remote, $50. 507-533-9388. 600 0702501949P business site rental BRAND new office condo space available, NW Roch. 1 office left. $425. Call Todd @ 507-269-2896, 507-398-9355 Elcor Realty. OFFICE or small retail, 750 sq’, 2nd St SW (507)951-4630 or 507-289-6872. PRIME Offices: 340-1250 sq ft, Retail, 1290 sq ft. 2130 So Bdwy, Roch. 2 blks N. of Walmart South. 281-4843 Wednesday 5 p.m. - 9 p.m. Eagles Classic Car and Motorcycle Show at the Eagles Club. 917 15th Ave. SE, Rochester. Public Welcome-food and beverages available. October 13: Fall Colorrun starts.1 p.m. sharp at the Bungalow. Twin Cities. Suburban Corvette Club of Minnesota. October 14: Fall Colorrun starts 9:45 a.m.. La Crosse. Suburban Corvette Club of Minnesota. October 14: 32nd Annual Fall Cruise and Fun Run hosted by the Drifters Car Club of SE MN. Registration 9 a.m. - 11 a.m. - WalMart North in Rochester. auto CAR SHOW CALENDAR As a service to car enthusiasts, the Post-Bulletin will run a daily listing of car shows and events which will be held. Every effort will be made to publish the calendar weekly, however if space does not permit, the calendar will be omitted, or the latest listings will be omitted. To submit an event for the calendar e-mail to: [email protected] July 21: Benefit car show/swap meet for Dave Marien. 10 a.m. - 3 pm. Lake City’s Sportsman Club. July 21: Sons of the American Legion 5th Annual Car & Motorcycle show. In conjunction with Le Roy Summerfest. Registration 10 a.m. Show 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. South Park on So. Broadway. July 28: Classic cars needed for a fun outdoor showing of Grease and fundraiser for new playground. 6:00 p.m. at Chatfield’s City Park on Hwy. 52. 507-867-3439. July 28: Timeless Classics Against Cancer. Hayfield, MN-downtown by the old fire hall. Registration 9:00 a.m. - Noon. Show 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. All car registration fees will go to cancer research. 13 classes. house for rent OLYMPIK VILLAGE OPPORTUNITY STORAGE - Hwy 14 E. 11’ x 27’ x12’ OH door. $65/mo, discounts avail. 507-753-2857 AVAIL immed. 2BR, NE main floor, W/D, trash pd, $595. Joe 507-358-1060 Sun & Swim Here! Spacious 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms with balcony or patio. Attractive courtyard features pool & tennis. Security building, heat paid, laundry on site. Garages available. Quiet, sound conditioned masonry construction. Luxury you deserve! NEW TODAY ★ ★ July 28: WCHS Car & Truck Show. West Concord. Museum grounds, 600 1st St. Registration at 9, awards at 2:30. All makes and models welcome. STEWARTVILLE Townhouse, 2 bedroom, quiet neighborhood, NP, near schools, deck, $750 + dep. & util. Call: 507-533-1104 Ready for Summer? EQUAL HOUSING ★★ 3 BDRM Townhome: NW. $690 + utils. 3 bdrm duplex: SE, garage, $750 + elec. C/A, DW, laundry in both. Credit check reqd. Call 9 am - 7 pm, Scott, 288-9426, Tony, 288-6462, home ph. EXECUTIVE TH: 4 bdrm, 3 ba, whirlpool tub, NW Roch. wooded lot. $1450 + dep. Rich (507)319-5005 507.289.8982 HAWKEYE SERVICES Handyman Service 1 BR APT. Specials 281-2929 $99 move in special * subject to credit approval - Eff & 1 br handicap access, Furn/unfurn. Util/cableTV! By Mayo 288-0178 Move in Special! 3 bdrm, 2 ba Condos, 1,180 sq ft. Starting @ $625/month. Landscaping Lawn Care, Landscaping, Bush Trimming, Decks, Concrete work/stamping, Patios, Driveways & Firepits,Tree & Stump Removal, Drain tile installation, Bobcat/Dozer/ Backhoe Services, Land clearing, Hauling, Snowplowing, Salting services, etc. 507-356-2213 3 BDRM, lg. 1400 sq ft, AC, lg. yd., W/D, quiet area, 2 car gar. w/pvt. drive, busline, 15 min from Mayo/dwtwn, appls., N/S, N/P. $850. Call 800-831-2590 CONVIENENT Civic Center Drive location. Remodeled 2 bdrm with FREE HEAT. Walking distance to Mayo, St Marys & new dwntwn University. At $550 these won’t last. RGI, 507-281-8000. www.RGI-group.com. EHO miscellaneous for rent furnished/ unfurnished apts. 2 years old Easy commute to Rochester Ridge Condos 0702501951P directory With: IT’S your lucky day! Spacious SE 2 BR at a fantastic price! Tons of space Free gar., lndry,only $550. Call today! RGI 289-8000 www.RGI-group.com EHO EQUAL HOUSING business service CONVENIENTLY located in Crossroads area. Spacious SW 1 bdrm. Free heat, laundry, off st prk, tons of space for only $495. RGI 289-8000. EHO www.RGI-group.com. HUNTERS mark WyndApartments 1823 Quarry Ridge Pl NW • (507) 289-0228 WALK TO WORK! Clean, quiet, 1 bdrm apts. Close to Mayo facilities. Laundry, heat paid, parking. Uptown Landing & Uptown Terrace apts. 507-990-5004 2 BR, walk to Clinic & St. Mary’s, garage, util incl, NS, NP. $695 refs., background check 507-288-7601 PETS allowed: Country living. Unique 1 bdrm lg apt. 10 min South of Roch. Garage/ deck/WD. $575 + util. 507-261-6739, Kevin. • In-Unit Washer • Swimming Pool/ & Dryer Whirlpool/Sauna • Heat Paid • Fitness Center/ Community Room • Cable TV & Internet Hookups • Elevator Pine Island Ridgeway Estates • Attached Garages • Playground • Add’lGarage Avail • Major appliances EFFICIENCY:Aug. 1, clean, quiet, SE, AC, shared gar., no pets, $325 + utils. Call (507)282-1110 1 bdrm & 2 bdrm apts: tri-plex, near Mayo, lndry, gar & heat incl, NS, NP, $650/$675. 507-254-8261. unfurnished apartments 2 & 3 Bedroom Town Homes CLEAN 2 bdrm St. Charles, close to college, rent between $438 - $458. N/P, Major appls furn., lndry, playground, off St. park., Call Terry today! 507-272-2385 besslermanagement.com DRIVE a little - save a lot! We have 2 bdrms in Elgin from $395 and Chatfield from $420. Clean, spacious, some with w/d. Call today! RGI, 289-8000. EHO www.RGI-group.com. unfurnished apartments 0712500520P unfurnished apartments 0702502127P furnished apartments 0702501952P POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com 0629501834P C8 July 28: 5th Annual Toys for Tots Car Show. Wal-Mart North, Rochester. 3:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m. Entry fee: New Toys for the Toys for Tots Program. Car, Truck & Motorcycle Show. Awards 8:00 p.m. October 15: Fall Colorrun. La Crosse. Last day. Suburban Corvette Club of Minnesota. cars '79 Triumph Spitfire Convertible Very good condition no rust, has both hard and soft tops, runs and drives great, fun collector car. $5000 or offers. 608-790-5287 1996 Nissan Sentra, Power All, Great year round Car $2,500 (507)993-2476 2000 Daewoo Nubira New tires, New radiator, New thermostat, 55,000 Miles needs head gasket. $1000.00 or best offer 507-261-6590 1994 Honda Accord EX, 4 door, 160K + miles, new exhaust, wheel bearings & brakes, good shape & runs great. $3950. 507-285-0278 2000 KIA Sophia 4 cyl., 5 spd, 126K mi., great gas milage, runs & drivers super, perfect for work car. $1,800. (507)951-7548 2004 Pontiac Grand Am SE Victory Red, V6, Power windows/locks, CD player, Spoiler, new brakes, Clean! Only 47K. $9850 OBO. 507-292-0785 2005 SCION TC. 22,000 mi., 5 speed, adult driven, excellent condition. $16,500. (507)280-9824. 95 CADILLAC DeVille, leather interior with no tears, lots of luxury for low price. Car in mint condition apart from light paint scratch. 111K miles. Asking $3,400. (507)261-9808 August 4: 4th Annual Historic Lanesboro, MN Classic Car and Truck Show. Reg. starts at 8 a.m. Show starts at 11:00 a.m. Judged event. Music and prizes. In conjunction with Buffalo Bill Day’s. August 4: Free Car Show hosted by Rochester Ford, Hwy. 52 No., Rochester MN. 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. Rain date August 11. Stewie Cruisers. August 11: 18th Annual Festival in the Park Car Show. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Veterans Memorial Park, Kasson MN. August 12: 9th Annual Chatfield Western Days Classic Car & Truck Show. 10 a.m 3:00 p.m. Free general admission. August 18: 1st Annual Free FORD Fun Day. All Ford and Ford powered vehicles. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Rochester Ford, Rochester. No entry fees. Trophies, food, beverages provided by SE MN Ford Club and Rochester Ford. August 26: 5th Annual Wheels of Italy Car & Motorcycle Show. Lake Calhoun Executive Center, Mnpls. Sunday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Free admission. Thru August: 6:30 p.m. 2nd and 4th Tuesdays of the month. Tune-Up Tuesday. Cruise around Rochester fun for the whole family. Ramada Hotel & Conference Center, Rochester MN. Stewie Cruisers. Thru Labor Day: Every Friday night at 5:30 p.m. Strikers Corner, Hwy. 63, Stewartville MN. Stewie Cruisers. September 22: Cruise to Cresco. Thru September 26: Last Wednesday of every month. Classic car nights at A&W and Long John Silver’s in Cresco, IA. from 5-8 p.m. Thru October 3: Every 1997 Buick Park Avenue: Burgundy, 3800 V6, sunroof, loaded, new tires, 30+ MPG, 97,000 miles. Exc cond. $5750. (507)282-6959 2001 Buick Century Sandstone, 3.1 V6, rebuilt trans, 185,000 miles, well maintained clean car, $3995 507-289-0819 2001 Buick LeSabre Custom: Bronze mist. Cloth seats, 90 k miles, well equip., including On-Star. PW, mirrors, seats, $5,995/OBO. (507)259-6728.t 2003 Buick Park Ave Ultra. Loaded, rare black beauty! 45,000 miles, warranty, $17,000. Call (507)289-5889 1998 Cadillac DeVille: 4 dr 56,000 actual miles, air, pwr moonroof, leather, full power. Looks and runs brand new! New cost today almost $50,000. Sale priced $9,900. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313 2001 CADILLAC de Vile, white, 74K mi., Asking $10,500. (507)533-8791 or Cell 507-259-2401 MUST SELL! 1991 Cadillac sedan de Vlle, lther, PS, PW, PL, cruise, Silver, good condition. $1950 OBO (507)282-2629 or 507-951-0973 ‘87 CORVETTE, automatic, black, leather seats, hardtop, stored winters, runs great. Very good cond! $5900 OBO. 507-244-1969 1991 CORVETTE ZR1, like new cond., 62K mi., Grand Sport striping, chrome, ZR1 wheels, Greenwood ground effects. $26,900. 507-259-9943/876/2396 Pics at www.musclemotorsllc.com 1995 CHEVY Camaro Z28, 6 spd, blue w/black top, all power, Bose CD, keyless entry, cruise, AC, 22,750 miles. Original owner. Like new cond. $10,500. (507)732-5869 1995 CHEVY Corsica, 4 dr, 4 cyl, auto, good tires, great gas mileage, 140K mi, very reliable $1750 obo(507)867-3237 after 6 pm leave message. 1996 CHEVY Corsica, 4 dr, 4 cyl, just detailed, good tires, great gas mileage 140K mi $1850 obo (507)867-3237 after 6 lv msg 1996 CHEVY Monte Carlo Sport Coupe, V6, stereo tape, tilt, cruise, velour, extra clean! $2750 OBO 507-261-1622 or 507-281-5062 ‘97 VW Jetta GLX VR6. Leather, sunroof, alum wheels & tires, Alpine CD, good condition. $3950. 507-259-2290 1998 Chevrolet Cavalier. Stereo C/D, tilt, cruise, AT/AC, local owner, great gas mileage! $3950 or Best. 507-261-1622 / 507-281-5062 BUICK 2005, LaCross CXS 4000K mi. SHARP! $12,500 (641)330-1353. 2001 - Chev Impala. 43,000 miles, maroon, AC, pwr seat, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, exc cond., $8,900. 507-289-3059 or 507-319-5360 UNDER July-August: Fridays. 5-8 p.m. Dairy Queen, Wabasha. Classic/tricked out car show. cars $7500 Look for the cars with the ‘check mark’ in front. These are all $7500 or under, great deals for that first or extra car! 2002 ACURA MDX: silver, loaded, navigation, hitch, leather, newer tires, clean, well maintained, 70K, $19,000. Call 507-358-5181. 2004 ACURA TL 3.2L, black/camel leather, loaded, rear spoiler, auto w/5 speed, great shape, 50,500 mi. $23,000. Nate at (507)269-8631 2006 ACURA RSX, fully loaded, 26K miles, silver, alloy wheels $17,500 OBO. (507)319-7037 or 732-742-9513 1998 AUDI Quattro, new brakes, new tires, very nice shape, runs great. 72k miles. $8,950. OBO. (507)358-8955 2001 Audi A6 2.8: Excellent condition inside & out. 48 K miles, Bose stereo, leather interior, pwr seats & wind., new tires, sunroof. $15,900. Call (507)289-6421. 1999 BMW Z3 Roadster Convertible. Green with tan top. 63000 miles. One owner. Excellent condition. $12,000. 507-867-4587 2003 BMW 325CI Convertible: White/Navy, New M3 rims, Harmon Karden stereo, 24,000 miles. Like new $28,500. Call 608-792-6725. 2003 BMW Z4, 3 L, 6 spd, 44K miles, $24,500. Call (507)533-8791 or 507-259-2401 1997 BUICK LeSabre. Excellent condition. 93,000 miles. New brakes. $4,000 507-271-3870 1997 Buick LeSabre Custom 3800 engine, excellent car, 28-30 MPG, 137 K miles, $3,550. Call (507)273-5074 2002 CHEVY Camaro Coupe, 35th Anniversary Edition, Bright Rally Red, T-Tops, 21,750 mi., stored winters, AT, V6, AC. $15,500 507-269-3939 [email protected] 2004 Chev Malibu Classic 34,000 miles,maroon,CD alloys,auto,2.2L 4cyl $8700 great gas mileage! 507-292-0959 2004 Chevy Monte Carlo SS Automatic Trans., pwr windows, locks sunroof, dual air, CD changer, XM radio, ipod wired, cruise, 18” Incubus rims w/black trim, red ext. w/grey cloths seats. 39,900 miles. $15,900. 507-932-5893. 2004 INDY Pace Car Edition: Chev Impala SS 29,000 miles, all options, book $19,200 $22,800 (507)285-0881., cell 272-3694. 06 CHEVY Monte Carlo LT, 3.9 ltr V6, 24K, On Star, tinted windows, remote start, sharp car, like new. $17,795 OBO (507)951-7822. 1977 CHEVY Nova, 4 dr, 250 6 cyl, no rust, new paint, runs good $1850. 507-273-5779. 2003 CHEVY Cavalier 79K, good cond, great mileage $5900. (507)624-0017 RUN UNTIL IT SELLS! $29.99 Picture of your vehicle and 5 lines of copy. Ad runs until it sells. $24.99 5 lines of ad copy; Ad runs until it sells. Additional lines $1.50 each. Private party only. For vehicles onlyrestrictions do apply. 507-285-7777 or 800-562-1758 POST BULLETIN Real Life Adventures / Wise and Aldrich POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 C9 cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars antique/classic SOLD!!! 2002 Rare DODGE RT, 27 mpg! 5 spd, sunroof, 77K mi., ex. cond. $6995 OBO. Call (507)533-8436 1993 FORD Escort $2500 OBO. 1987 Chevy Suburban - CA car. Best offer. (507)358-3109 1993 FORD Taurus station wagon, runs great, new battery & alternator, $1500 OBO. Moving. (507)319-5166 or 507-289-6546 2004 GT Mustang 40th Ann. Series. V8, 5 spd, 19K mi., Fire Red, lthr int., dual exhaust, keyless. Ex. cond. $16,500. (507)534-2809 2003 HONDA Civic EX Coupe , 59K mi, extra clean, SR, 37 mpg , $11,500 obo (507)272-1723. 1994 MAZDA 626 LX sedan, AT, 4 cyl., PW, PL, cruise, AC, good tires, 33 mpg. $2,450 OBO. 507-282-2629 or 507-951-0973 1990 Pontiac 6000 grey 4dr sedan. Runs excellent 3.1 V6 108,000 miles $1000 O/BO 507-206-3087 2001 Pontiac Grand Am GT, pwr moonroof, 4 dr., sharp! 102K mi., CD, dk grn, very cean, way below book at $5,950. (507)367-4310 1994 Ford Probe GT: Good condition. $1500. Call (507)534-2154 - evenings. 1994 FORD Taurus wagon, PW, PL, leather, roof rack, 3rd seat, 163K mi. runs great! $900. (507)990-1382 1995 Ford Taurus. Pwr windows, PL, new tires & new brakes w/receipts. AC doesn’t work. 116,800 miles. $1,900. (507)252-1512 91 FORD Taurus, 71k miles, PW, PL, CD, runs great. $3,000 OBO (507)951-3301 1996 Geo Prizm 92000 miles, $1900, White, no accidents, excellent interior condition, car well maintained. 4 cyl, power brakes/steering, Pioneer AM/FM/CD, bucket seats, 4 door, AC. 507-398-6016 1996 Olds Achieva SC: 3100, 2 door, spoiler, AT, AC, CC, PS, PL, no rust, new tires, brakes & rotors. 105,000 miles. $2,500. (507)951-7548. 1998 OLDS Aurora, 4L, A/C, leather, Moon-roof, chrome wheels, power seats, PW, PL, CD, Cruise, $4950 OBO. 507-282-2629 or 507-951-0973 2002 OLDS INTRIGUE GX: 4 DR, V6, ABS, AC, cruise, CD player, AT, gold, clean, 68K, $6,900. Moving, must sell. Call (507)280-0543. 1999 35th Anv. Ed. Mustang GT Convertible Green Body/Tan Top. Tan Interior w/ Leather Seats. V-8 5-speed Manual. Like new condition. Approx. 46000 miles. Asking $14,500. 507-272-8427 ‘01 Honda Accord, auto, 96K miles, runs good, 4 door, silver. $6,750. 507-202-2448 1991 HONDA Accord EX, moonroof, 185K, 2.2 eng., good cond. $2,900 obo. 507-273-2641 2001 Honda Accord LX, 4 speed, beige, A/C, CD, new tires, extra clean. $8000. Call: 507-358-7452 1992 HONDA Accord EX wagon, 169,500 mi., runs good, needs brake work, has some body damage. $1800 OBO. Call 507-529-0407 THE Post-Bulletin’s AUTOMOTION section is looking for information about car clubs, car shows, specialty car auctions. Send us your club or show’s details (name, dates, times, places) and we will include it in a special calendar of events geared towards drivers and collectors. This auto-related calendar will be published each Friday in AUTOMOTION, as well as online. Send information to: AUTOMOTION %Post Bulletin 18 1st Ave. SE Rochester MN 55901 or e-mail to: slovejoy@postbulletin. com 1991 BERETTA 4 cyl, 2.2 L, new muffler, battery, fly wheel, starter, 170,918 mi. - Full tank of gas. Sacrifice at $600. 2006 CHRYSLER 300C, Hemi , AWD, Warranty. Call: 507-261-9400, lv a msg. $31,000 ‘97 Chrysler Sebring, 2 door, black, 5 speed, 64K miles, excellent runner. $2450. 507-202-2448 ‘05 CHRYSLER PT Cruiser, touring edition, gold linen pearl, 32K, rem. fact. warr, exc. cond., $11,300. 507-886-2361 1997 CHRYSLER Sebring convertible. $6,895. White, 75K miles, very sharp! Car needs nothing! (507)876-2971 CHRYSLER 300 touring, 2006, new, 2500 mi. Jade, warranties. $24,000. Private party. (651)345-1214. 2000 DODGE Intrepid, 4 dr, V6, 108K, PW, PS, PL. Nice car - must see. Asking $4,595 obo. 507-289-4426 or 507-202-3104 2003 DODGE Intrepid ES, 4 dr, red, very good condition, 22K miles, $11,000. 507-398-4753 1997 DODGE Intrepid Sport. 3.3 V6, Stereo tape, tilt, cruise, pwr windows, locks, nice! Good mileage. $2275. 507-281-5062/261-1622 1996 DODGE Avenger ES Sport Coupe V6, stereo tape, sunroof, AT/AC, good mileage. $3150 or Best! 507-261-1622 / 281-5062 2000 FORD Focus SE, AT, 88K mi, tan, new tires, $4000 obo. 271-4502, 319-8939. 2000 Ford Mustang, V6, A/C, PS, PL, PW, power driver’s seat, AM/FM radio w/ CD & cassette, cruise, tilt, 4 new tires, new front & rear brakes, dark “Amazon Green” w/ silver mustang detailing. Southern car, no rust! Well maintained, mint condition! $5,995 obo. 507-271-5561 2001 Ford Taurus: Very nice, 1 owner, no dents or rust, always shedded, good gas mileage, 59Kmi, $8,999. 507-824-2450 eves 6-9 ★★ 1996 Infinity I30. Leather, moonroof, all options. ReExceptionally well cared for. Only $5980. 507-281-6333 www.kinsellas.com 2001 DODGE Intrepid Sport Sedan, V6, stereo tape, tilt, cruise, good mileage - extra nice! $3375 or Best! 507-261-1622/ 281-5062. 2005 Ford Focus 4dr, Sedan SE, Air, Tilt, Cruise, CD, PW, PL,Automatic...64,000 miles...8,250 via KBB Jason Murphy Cell 507-271-7234 ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ 1996 HONDA Accord, 4 cyl., AT, 4 dr., CD player, tail lights, projector headlights, clean, runs great, 164K mi., silver. Moving Must sell before June 23rd $3,000. 507-289-0507/271-1150 2004 Honda Civic EX 61k miles, Carbon Fiber Hood, Alloy Wheels, auto, nice clean car! $11,900. Call 701-403-7208. 2007 Honda SE-V6 6-Speed 3,500 Miles, every option and extras, black with black leather and carbon fiber interior. $26K. 507-254-3970 Honda Civic EX. 2002, 4 door, automatic, PW, PL, power moonroof, CD, cruise, 65K miles. Asking only $11,900, must sell! Please Call: 507-398-9142 1997 Hyundai Accent: 2 door, hatchback, 4 cyl., AT, new head job, tires & front brakes. 135,000 miles. Great gas mileage & runs great. $1900. 507-951-7548. 2004 HYUNDAI XG350, 51K mi., white, 4dr., full warranty, leather, sun roof, fully loaded.. Asking $12,395 OBO. x(507)649-0550 2005 LEXUS 330: All amenities. Below book. Low miles. Call (507)951-1729. 1991 LEXUS LS 400, loaded, moon roof, leather, pwr seats, PW, PL, CR, AC, auto, very nice car for $3950. (507)259-2290 2002 MUSTANG Coupe, flashy yellow, new tires, AT, PW, PL, air, tilt, cruise, CD, 58K mi. $7,900. (507)285-9235 after 5 pm. 2000 Honda Civic SI/SIR. 27K miles, tons of custom options; seats, stereo, body kit, security, eng. mod. & more. Electron blue, 5 spd. Dream Car! $13,200 OBO. Call (507)259-7479 2003 Mazda Protege5 Silver with auto. Power everything, leather, 6-disc CD, sunroof, 65K, Only $9900! Mike 732-4434 2006 Mazda 6 Sport Wagon: 9K miles, $20,700. Call (507)533-6476 99 MAZDA Miata convertible, 43K mi, 5 spd, AC, PS, cruise, black, new tires. $8500 507-319-8818 2005 Mercury Montego: AWD 4 door. Leather, air , full pwr, 30,000 actual miles, show floor new. Burgundy finish. Sale priced $18,900. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313 2007 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LS: 4 dr, 14,000 actual miles, leather, dual pwr seats, CD, full power, Ford program car. Sterling Silver finish. Like new throughout. Why pay over $30,000 for new? Sale price $18,900. Heffernan Ford, Lake CIty MN (651)345-5313 1994 MITSUBISHI Galant LS, 102K mi, loaded w/options, just detailed, great tires, $4950 obo (507)867-3237 after 6pm. Leave Message. 1996 Mitsubishi Eclipse GS Colorado car, no rust, no dents, original paint, 114k, 2.0L, AT, PS, PB, PW, cruise, sunroof, CD, new tires, looks/runs great, clean title, $4800 OBO 507-990-6243 or 282-1438 1997 LINCOLN Town Car, 4 dwr, V8, all pwr, cass. player, new plug wires, brakes, tires, 105Kmi $4,595 OBO. 507-289-4426 202-3104 1999 Lincoln Continental. Champagne color, 52,000 actual miles, Florida car. Nice shape, $8995 OBO. Call (651)345-9922. NEW TODAY ★ ★ 2003 FORD Mustang GT, 4.6L, 5 spd, Mach sound sysm, 20K mi., never driven in winter. Showroom new! Black on black lthr. $16,900. (507)743-8374 or 507-259-7274 Cell. 2003 Honda Civic EX: Low miles, silver, auto, sunroof, CD/stero, excellent condition, $12,850. Call (507)282-3036 2002 Lincoln LS: 4 door V8, pwr moonroof, leather hot seats, full power, air, gorgeous spoiler, pwr moon roof. Tuador red finish. 40,000 actual miles. Sale priced $15,900. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313. 2000 Nissan Xterra 4x4 SUV: 6 cyl., AT, PW, PL, alloy wheels. 82,000 miles. Only $8980. 507-281-6333 www.kinsellas.com 1995 Olds Aurora: Stereo C/D, full power, leather, real comfort! Loaded with extras! $2,950 or Best! 507-281-5062 or 507-261-1622 1993 PONTIAC Grand AM: New radiator, muffler, tires, brake system. Needs new transm. $800/obo. Great cond. Minimal rust. Great fixer upper or starter car. (507)202-5679. ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ 1993 PONTIAC Bonneville, 200K + miles, extremely clean. $1700. Call (507)533-6920 1993 PONTIAC Grand Am: 3.3L, auto, P/S, P/B, cruise, newer tires, new front brakes. $1850 OBO. Call (507)288-5017. 1995 PONTIAC Bonneville, 3800 V6, full power, 117K, luxury velour int., good mileage. $2950 or Best. 507-261-1622 or 281-5062 2002 Oldsmobile Alero GL: 2 dr, 4 cyl, AT, 56,000 low miles, PW, PL, clean! Now only $7,780. 507-281-6333 www.kinsellas.com tt 1995 Pontiac Grand Prix. New paint, head gasket, water pump, brakes & wheel bearing. $2500. Call (507)765-3389- Preston. 1995 Pontiac Sunfire: 2 door, sunroof, CD, air, cruise, auto, real clean, Run good. $2,250. (507)843-4725 lv msg. 1996 PONTIAC Grand AM GT: 118,000 miles, 6 cylinder, looks really good, runs great. Dark green. $2,950. (507)281-0504. 99 OLDS Intrigue: 4 dr, V6, AT, PW, PL, tilt, cruise, $3,480. www.kinsellas.com 507-281-6333 OLDSMOBILE Intrigue, 2001, white, 89K, $5,900 OBO. Call: 507-254-6266 1992 OLDS 3.8 eng, very little rust, exc runner, higher mileage, many extras . $1200. (507)582-3582 2004 Grand Prix GTP, 53K mi, AC, PW, PL, PS, CD, Airbags, ABS, Moon roof, spoiler, EXC Cond $14,500, can email pic. 507-951-6306. 1996 Pontiac Firebird. V6, 5 spd, red, 87,000 act miles. Clean & sharp! $4,980. www.kinsellas.com 507-281-6333 1999 PONTIAC Grand Am , blue, 4 dr, AT, all power, $3,500. (507)438-9665 ‘85 Pontiac Fiero, red, new motor, auto, runs good. $1,350. 507-202-2448 2004 PONTIAC Grand Prix GT2: black, sunroof, heated leather, CD, electric everything. Very sharp! 52k miles. $13,800. Call 507-951-8787. 1999 PONTIAC Grand Prix GT, 4dr, red, PW, PL, moonroof, leather, 169K mi, runs great. $3,500 OBO. (507)254-3485 2002 Pontiac Grand AM SE: 4 dr, 4 cyl, AT, AM/ FM/CD. 71,000 low miles. Only $7,480. 507-281-6333 www.kinsellas.com 2004 GRAND PRIX GTP, black leather interior, heated seats, controls on steering wheel, 3.8L supercharged motor. Excellent Condition. 88K miles. $10,800. 507-438-4893 2005 Pontiac Sunfire Blue, 14k miles, Auto, FM AM CD, Like New, Coupe 2D, 26/36 MPG, $10,500 507-536-4015 99 Grand AM - Silver, 2.4L, well-maintained. 177k. Water pump has small leak and bumper has two cracks. Brakes may need work. New exhaust, new tires. $2800 OBO 507-421-9356 2005 Saab 9-2x Aero 47K miles, black, 2.0L turbo, 5 speed, AWD, cold weather option package. One owner, great shape. $16000 507-250-0938 1995 Saturn SC2, stick shift, good body, needs a motor, $600 OBO. Call: 507-932-3067 1995 SATURN SC1, red, 5 spd, AC, SR, new tires, just detailed, runs exc, 170K mi great gas mileage, $2750 obo (507)867-3237 after 6 pm. Leave message. 2001 Saturn SL1 98,000 miles, power locks and windows, auto, air, CD. Runs great and gets good gas mileage. $4,500. 507-281-0219 s2001 SATURN SC2, Red, has 3rd door, leather int., CD, PB, PL, PW, AT, in ex. cond. 130K mile. $4,500. (507)273-3651 SOLD!!! 2001 SUBARU Outback Wagon, AT, AWD, seafoam grn w/tan lthr int., 2 sun roofs, 150K mostly hwy mi., $7,000. SUBARU Impreza WRX, 02, 59K mi, good cond, 5 spd, alloy wheels, bucket seats, silver, multi CD changer $14,000 507-261-1493 SAVE ON THE CAR NOW. SAVE ON THE GAS ALWAYS. $500 Customer Cash NEW 07 COROLLA 1 OR 3.9% APR financing for 36 months $29.48 per $1000 borrowed 2 OR LEASE A COROLLA LE 179 $ PER MONTH for 36 mo. with $2728 due at signing plus taxes and fees 3 1997 Volkswagen Cabrio Convertible: Grn metallic w/blk cloth top. PW, Locks, leather. $5,680. www.kinsellas.com 507-281-6333 1987 VW Cabriolet convertible, new top, white, nearly new rubber, 138K mi $2350 obo (507)259-8645 antique/classic 1967 CHEVELLE Malibu. new long block 250, 4 door, great condition, $5,000 OBO. (651)565-3695 1968 LINCOLN Continental: 462 motor, 105,000 mi, dual exhaust, 4 door, suicide doors, body excellent! $3,900/obo. Call 273-1222. 4 Sporty, fun-to-drive and a 41 MPG rating. WEST COAST MAZDA RX7, 1985, GSL-SE, Charcoal black, beautiful inside and out. $4,750 OBO. Call: 651-565-2659. YES, it’s worth it! 1932 CHEV Street Rod: Glass body, suicide doors, 307 auto, power windows, fancy wheels, $18,000. Call (507)391-0520. NEW 07 RAV4 1969 Cadillac Eldorado, needs restoration, $1,250. Stored inside Call (507)254-5558 or (507)374-6738. 1970 Chevelle Malibu, 4 dr., 56K actual miles, AC, AT, Texas car, excellent interior, ex. runner. $3500. Call (507)753-2520 1971 Cadillac Fleetwood factory limo: good interior, runs good, 57,500 miles, stored inside, $2,950. Call (507)254-5558 or (507)374-6738. 1974 Cadillac Elderado convertible, rust free body, needs restoration, $1,900. Stored inside. Call (507)254-5558 or (507)374-6738 1979 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme Brougham Very clean and straight. 110,000 miles on the body, 7,500 miles on rebuilt Olds 350. Too many additions to list here. Lots of pictures available on request. Many extra parts to go with. For more information and a test drive. Tod Musolf @ 507-398-8656 or [email protected] 1981 MERCEDES - 240D, good original condition, 5 spd, sun roof, $1,995. 507-421-5321 or (507)767-4575 1983 COUPE de Vile, maroon, 81K actual miles, non smoking, very clean, stored in garage. Collectors plates. (507)282-7046 Amazing that an SUV with a powerful 269-horsepower engine also gets an incredible 30 MPG rating.4 NEW 07 YARIS 1986 CHEVY Corvette Indy Pace Car. 61K mi., Ex. cond. Original Indy Pace Car stickers in GM boxes w/window sticker when new. Complete documentation and most repair bills. The car has nearly all options avail. Red on Red lthr. $13,900. 507-990-1363 1995 FORD Thunderbird LX, 40th anniv. ed, V8, auto, leather, moon roof, spoiler, black & silver, 31K mi. $8995 (507)534-3617 With a 40 MPG highway rating,4 the car you can afford to drive is finally the car you actually want to drive. ‘67 Ford Galaxie 500 Convertible: 390 auto. All original - including the owner! Must See! A steal at $9500. Call (507)583-7400. ROCHESTER TOYOTA “90” PONTIAC Sunbird convertible, red w/white top, AC, PW, no rust or putty, newer tires, looks & drives very good. $3,200. 507-438-9410 507-286-1200 866-507-6847 www.buyatoyota.com Offers end 7/31/07, cannot be combined, are subject to availability and may vary by region. See participating dealer for details. 1Cash back from Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc., on new 07 Corollas. 2 Annual Percentage Rate with approved credit through Toyota Financial Services on new 07 Corollas. 3Lease a new 2007 Corolla LE 5-dr. with 5-spd. automatic transmission for $179 a month for 36 months with $2728 due at signing, which includes first month’s payment, $1999 down payment, $0 security deposit and $550 acquisition fee. Does not include taxes, license, title fees, insurance and dealer charges. Closed-end lease. Example based on model #1822. Total Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price, including freight, $16,415. Monthly payments of $179 total $6444. Capitalized cost of $14,170 based on down payment and dealer participation, which may vary by dealer. Payment may vary depending on final transaction price. Lease-end purchase option $9050. Customer responsible for maintenance, excess wear and tear, and $0.15 per mile over 12,000 miles per year. To qualified Tier I+ customers through Toyota Financial Services. 42007 EPA highway estimate for Corolla with manual transmission (excludes XRS) 0726501642EV and 2WD 4-cyl. RAV4. 2007 EPA highway estimate for Yaris with manual transmission. Actual mileage may vary. ©2007 Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc. • • • • • • *restrictions & space limited 1991 CORVETTE ZR1, like new cond., 62K mi., Grand Sport striping, chrome, ZR1 wheels, Greenwood ground effects. $26,900. 507-259-9943/876/2396 Pics at www.musclemotorsllc.com COLLECTIBLE 1978 Chevy Impala, 44K original mi. Recent tune up, exhaust pipe, stereo, ready to go Crusin’. $3,500 OBO. (507)252-8139 NEW 2007 Mustang Shelby: Black w/silver stripes. V8, 5 spd, Shelby dash plaque signed by Carol Shelby #1024. Available for immed delivery. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313 NEW open wheel modified race car. Complete w/body & interior - many new parts incl. Too many to list. Call 507-884-6131 PLYMOUTH Valiant convertibles. 1963, 1964, & 1966. Call 507-259-9098 1976 MERCEDES Benz 450SL, rust free southern car, hard & soft top, full wire wheels, extra set of alloy wheels $7500 507-951-1085 • suv’s 1999 CHEVY TAHOE, red, 2 door, 126K miles, 4x4, AC, Cruise, PW, PL, CD, $2000 under book, asking $5395. John: 507-545-2447 2005 Suzuki XL-7 WOW! clean. A/T, 4WD. 4DR, CD, Custom leather interior, largo cargo space. 26,000 mi and transferable warrantee! Demo vehicle/one owner. $14,000 OBO. Call 507-251-0317 after 5 p.m. MERCEDES ML500 2003, auto, leather, sunroof, tinted windows, 46K mi, GPS system, brand new mats, $25,000. (507)271-4930. 1997 JEEP Grand Cherokee Laredo, loaded, 152K mi., financing available. Clean - good runner. Call (507)843-4345 Mike. $4995 1998 JEEP 4x4 Grand Cherokee, 120K miles. DYNOMITE! $3,900 (507)208-1583 1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee 100,000 miles, burgundy, CD, great looking vehicle! $8,000 OBO. 319-213-2310 ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ 2002 GMC Yukon XL, one owner, stored winters, ex. cond., 4WD, tow pkg., 4 captain’s chairs, 28K mi. $20,500. (507)282-1520 2002 Suzuki Grand Vitara 4 door 4x4 SUV: auto, air, leather, pwr moonroof, This one can be towed behind a motor home. Jet black finish, 70,000 actual miles. Sale priced $10,900. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313. 2004 CHEVY SUBURBAN LT Fully loaded, leather, DVD, OnStar, XM Satellite radio, towing package. Mint condition. 38,000 miles. $25,000. 507-281-2727 2004 DODGE Durango SLT, leather, fully loaded, 26K mi., $18,250. Call 507-421-5479 2004 FORD Explorer XLT, dark green., 3rd row seats, V6, 4WD, running boards, luggage rack, rear heat/air, power seats, warranty, 49K mi., $14,600. Call 507-421-7989 ‘99 Expedition, new transmission, 147K miles, $6900 obo. Call: 507-2699432 MINT - 1 owner! 2001 Chevy Suburban LT Black, loaded, 4 captains chairs, custom wheels, 82K, $15,700 507-254-4504 MUST SELL! 1999 Dodge Durango SLT. 3rd seat, PW, PL, Cruice, A/C, towing package, high miles but runs & drives good. $3950. 507-259-2290 1995 CHEVY Tahoe LT, 4x4, V8, black w/gray lthr int. , ex. cond. Well maint. Very clean, Pioneer AM/FM CD w/spks., AC. $5200 OBO. (507)412-1314 2002 Chevrolet Tahoe LS, 4x4, 5.3 flex fuel, dark blue, tow package. Excellent Condition. 120K miles. $12,500 OBO. 507-421-2962 2004 Chevy Tahoe 5.3 L V8, Burns E-85 and gets better gas mileage with it, Leather interior, Bose sound, 32,000 Miles, very sharp & clean, maroon, $26,999 Rick @ (507)-269-8624, bboynton3792yahoo.com ‘97 Suburban, Auto, 4WD, leather, loaded, very clean, runs good, 124K miles, $8000 641-732-5243, call after 4:00p.m. 1987 CHEVY Blazer, full size, 4x4, 350 EFI, tow package, new tires, great runner. $2,000. (507)440-3007 1995 CHEVY Suburban 2500 with leather and all. Excellent family hwy truck. $4500. (507)289-7466 1997 CHEV Tahoe LT, 4 WD, immaculate, white/ tan leather, loaded, $6495 obo. Call (507)288-7032. 1997 Chevrolet Suburban 1500 LS: 112 K miles, $6900. Call 507-261-4687. 1997 CHEVY BLAZER, 6 cyl, 2 dr, loaded, new brakes. 139K miles, great shape. $3250 obo. Call (507)288-7049. 1997 CHEVY Blazer LT package, loaded. 134K mi. Asking $4300. (507)438-3708. Leave message. 1999 Chevy Suburban: 4 door, 4x4, V8, Auto, leather, new rubber, red finish. Exceptionally clean throughout. Sale priced $8,995. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313 2000 Chevy Suburban. 5.3, good shape, $12,500. Call (507)223-5226. 2002 TAHOE LT, 4WD, fully equiped, moon roof, leather, tow package, Arizona vehicle, new radials. $15,750 OBO. 507-529-1411 2004 Chevy Tahoe Z71 Black/charcoal interior. Loaded: OnStar, XM radio, 6-disc Bose sys, heated leather, tow pkg, 5.3L Vortec-V8. $21,500 OBO. Yakima bike rack incl. 75,000 miles. [email protected] or 218-849-8896 2004 Chevy Tracker. 4 WD, red, 4 dr, PW, PL, cruise, tilt, Am/fm/cd. Asking $11,000 OBO. (507)440-5255 after 5 & week-ends. ‘98 CHEVROLET BLAZER 4x4, stereo, CD, V6, AT/AC full power, velour, lots of extras!! $4250 or Best! 507-261-1622 or 507-281-5062. 1993 SURBURBAN, gd cond, runs great, 50K mi GM motor warranty $4,295 obo 507-261-4439. • C10 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com suv’s vans 98 CHEVY Suburban, loaded, exc cond, $8000 obo (507)951-1052. 2005 DODGE Durango, black, 5.7L Hemi, running boards, rear heat/air, 6 disc CD, Infinity sound, tow pkg., DVD, 3rd seat, all pwr, tinted. $20,500. (507)533-1034 2004 Ford Expedition, Eddie Bauer, Elite pkg, Loaded, Excellent Condition, leather interior 5.4L V8, 3rd row power-fold seat, A/C, AT, ABS, in dash CD changer, captains chairs, DVD player, sliding sunroof, 38.5K miles, $22,900. Many more options. Call Gary for details: 563-547-5266 or 3247 Cresco, Iowa. 1996 Ford Explorer XLT: Red, 4x4, 4 door, pwr locks & windows, dual pwr seats. $4800 OBO. Call (651)345-9922 1998 Chevy Venture ext. Van LS. 3.4 auto trans. power everything. Rear heat & air. New tires. Exc. Cond. 130K miles. $3900 507-273-3651 1994 Chevy Lumina: 3800 engine, good runner, higer mileage, $1,350. Call 507-273-5074 1997 Ford Explorer XLT, AWD, 5.0 ltr V8, auto, loaded w/options, great tires, just detailed, 140K mi, $4750 obo (507)867-3237 after 6 pm. Leave message 1998 CHEVY Tahoe LT, leather, tow pkg., 4x4, new tires, new fuel pump, 136K mi, loaded, black. $5,999. Call (507)259-4476 1998 Ford Expedition: 4 door, 4x4, Eddie Bauer Edition. Leather, auto, air, red/gold finish. Exceptionally clean throughout. Looks & runs like new. Sale priced $8,995. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313 1999 Ford Explorer V6, 4x4, 4 door, CD, AC, Tow package, new front brakes, newer tires and shocks. 144,000 miles, good shape $3,500 OBO. 507-282-2677 2000 FORD Explorer XLT, AWD, 5.0 ltr, V8, auto, loaded w/options, 138K mi, detailed & serviced. $4950 obo (507)867-3237 after 6pm. Leave Message 2005 Ford Free Style Limited: All wheel drive, full power, air, 20,000 actual miles, drk blue finish. Ford programmed car. Sale priced $19,900. Heffernan Ford, Lake CIty MN (651)345-5313 1996 GMC Suburban, 149K, loaded, front & rear heat/air, cassette radio w/ CD player, plch int, red ext. Newer tires, 100% mech. $5500 obo. Must sell. 507-990-3772 Contact Barb. 03 GMC Envoy, black, heated leather seats, Bose stereo system, 58K mi $17,000. (507)251-2449 2001 Isuzu Trooper LS only 62k Miles, 5yr 125k mile warr., Loaded w/ climate cntrl & htd seats, moon roof, tow pkg. $11,500 507-634-6881 1988 Jeep Wrangler Newly rebuilt 6 cyl, 4 WD, 8 disc changer, speaker bar, hard/soft/bikini top. $2000 OBO. Call 507-292-0606 1996 Jeep Cherokee: 4x4, 4.0 6 cyl. Good cond., 140,000 miles. 3” suspension lift, new tires. $2,900. (507)867-3237, 507-208-1194. 2002 JEEP Liberty Sport: 4x4, Patriot Blue, PW, PL, CD player, 3.7 V6, 8,100 miles. $8,980. 507-281-6333 www.kinsellas.com 2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo. Your choice of two! 4x4, auto, air, economical, 6 cyl engine. Chrysler lease return. Like new throughout. 1 red, 1 green. Sale priced. $15,900/ea. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313. 96 JEEP Cherokee Sport, approx 106K mi, runs good, no rust, asking $3500 obo (507)951-2408 99 JEEP Cherokee Sport, new tires, tune up, shocks, brakes, 97K mi, black, grey interior. 507-261-9948 or (507)796-0127 1998 Lincoln Navigator. 4 door, 4x4, full pwr, air, leather, gorgeous silver finish. Running boards. Exceptionally clean throughout. New - over $50,000. Sale priced, $13,900. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313 2005 MERCURY Mountaineer AWD, V6, leather, sunroof, 3rd seat, PW, PL, rear heat/AC, 40K mi., $18,900. (507)269-0909 2006 NISSAN Armada SE 4x4, purchased new 10/06. 9,000 miles, 7 passenger SUV, gold, V8, leather, power lift gate, sun roof, loaded. $33,000. 507-356-8692 1999 Nissan Pathfinder 4WD SE. Excellent cond. 81K miles. New tires. AT/AC/PW/cruise. Moon roof. Heated leather seats. Silver $7750 (507)358-2097 ‘06 Saturn VUE, AWD, 14K miles, heated leather, chrome package, XM stereo, blue/grey. $23,500 obo. Call: 507-951-1036 2004 Saturn Vue V6 AWD Low mileage 30,000, power sunroof, premium sound, aluminum wheels, in great condition with clean vehicle history, asking $14,500 OBO. (507)252-8719 2004 SATURN Vue, black, AWD, factory hitch, 6 cyl, upgrade sound system, new tires, road ready. $10,900. (507)421-2502 vans 1995 CHEVY LUMINA LS mini van, 125K mi., 3.8 V6, one owner, trailer hitch, runs good! $2195 OBO 507-289-0884 after 5 / wknds 1996 CHEVY 1500 Express conversion van. PW, PL, CD/cass/radio, Capt. chairs, VCR/DVD, 110K mi., tow pkg., V8, 5.0L, runs & looks great! Nice van. $3800. (507)252-0014 2002 FORD WIndstar SE, TV, VCR, CD/cassette, 79,000 mi. Ford Factory warranty. $8,500. (507)282-3059. 1995 FORD Arrowstar 3.0 V6 loaded, new tires, brakes & altn, mechanically sound, dependable, no rust. $1875(507)391-0520 UNDER $7500 Look for the cars with the ‘check mark’ in front. These are all $7500 or under, great deals for that first or extra car! 1999 CHEV Astro: AWD, all power, leather seats, green/grey, excellent condition, 160,000 miles, $2,300. Call (507)824-2475. 2001 CHEV 1500 Cargo van (Comm.), AT, AC, 4.3L, runs good, needs some body work. $1800 firm. (507)269-1463 2002 Chevy Venture Warner Bros Edition minivan Air, pwr window/side door, rear windows and heat/ac. 6 disc CD changer w/DVD player. 96,000 miles. $9,250. 507-932-5893 Full size CHEVY conversion van, looks and drives like new, 350 VOTEC, boat hitch, no rust! $8,500. (507)438-9410 1995 CHEVY Lumina 3.1 V6, 2 child restraint seats, loaded, new tires, brakes, tow pkg, dependable, like new. $2275 (507)391-0520 1996 Chrysler Town & Country LXI. White w/tan leather interior, 160K miles, full maint. records. $3,500. Call (507)281-8967. Thursday, July 26, 2007 trucks 1987 CHEV 1500: 4x4, totally redone: $3,200 in body, w/receipt; 350, 4 spd, 3” susp lift, new tires, Cowl induction hood, many access, $7500/bo. 507-261-0689. 1988 Chevt 1/2 ton pick-up. 160K miles. Auto, $895 obo. Call: 507-843-2450 1989 Chevy Pickup - 3/4 ton, 30,000 miles on rebuilt motor. Good Tires, runs great. $1500 OBO. Call (507)421-6109 1997 CHEVY pick up, MDZL 1500WT, V6, Vortex engine, 5 spd., AM/FM, Clean, 224K mi. $2,950. Call (507)374-6346 for George evenings 507-374-6603 2001 FORD F150: 4x4, ext. cab, tow pkg, Black, Triton V8, all power, exc cond, $10,900 OBO. (507)269-9010. 2000 Dodge Grand Caravan SE: 103K miles, $5500. Call 507-261-4687. 1998 CHEVY Silverardo 4X4, ext cab w/Leer topper, 135K mi, 19 mpg, book $8800 asking $6200 (507)358-5636. 2000 CHEVY Silverado, ext. cab, 4 dr., custom wheels, remote start, CD player, dual exhaust, all power. $9,000 OBO (507)272-1754 2000 CHEVY S-10. Navy blue, good condition, for $7,500. Only 86K miles. Call: 507-358-8419 2002 Silverado LS 1500: Ext. cab, 4x4, 4 DR, 51k miles, 4.8L, AT, blue, sliding bed cover, tow package. $16,600. Call 507-250-6378. 2003 CHEVY HD 3/4 ton, 120K mi., leather seats, all power, loaded, great truck. $22,000. (507)259-0769 1998 Ford Windstar. V6, 3.8L, 130K miles, FWD, new tires & battery, rear air, auto start, $5000 OBO. 507-438-2196, leave msg 1994 FORD Waldoch conversion van 351 V8, stereo tape, power, 7 passenger, extra clean. $2650 or Best. 507-261-1622 or 507-281-5062 1998 FORD WindStar, 100K miles, no rust, very nice, AT, cold air, new tires,. PW, PL, cruise, $3,000 OBO. Call (507)398-2134 1999 FORD Econoline Conversion van, white, 103K mi, exc maint, 1 owner, $5900 OBO (507)753-2169. Leave message. 2000 Ford E250 cargo van. Complete w/tool bins, new tires, V8, front good. 160K mi on motor, 80K trans. $5,500 OBO. Call Mark at 507-273-6320. 2002 Ford 250 Econoline Ext Cargo Van: 118,000 miles. A/C, power windows & doors, auto, 5.4L eng., cloth captains chairs, tow pkg, Toreador red, chrome bumper, $7,500. 507-789-6115 2002 GMC Safari 7 Passenger Conversion Van. Great Family Van, rear entertainment system w/ 15 inch drop down screen. 68k miles, AWD, leather seats & all the extras a family needs. This is a must see... $9,995. 507-254-9865 2006 Mercury Monterey: Luxury Edition. Power sliding doors, factory DVD player. Quad captains chairs done in stunning leather. Only 13,000 actual miles. Steel blue finish. Ford programmed van. Why pay over $30,000 for new? Sale priced $20,900. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313 2001 Nissan Quest GXE V6 3.3 liter engine, 7 passenger, 48,315 mi, video system, remote start, includes warranty, excellent condition, $11,000. 507-285-1879 trucks 1996 CHEVY 3500 ext. cab, dually, black, 8’ box, good rubber, 6.5 turbo, 165k mi., newer engine. Runs good!! $5,000. (507)281-9618 2003 Ford Super Duty F250 4 dr, crew cab 4x4 pick-up w/ Power Stroke diesel. Long box, auto, AC, 70K miles, red finish, XLT, like new throughout. Sale priced $24,995. Heffernan Ford Lake City, MN 651-345-5313 2005 FORD F350, XLT, 4x4, 6 spd, diesel, fully loaded, 11Kmi, mint cond, $30,000. (507)254-4355 04 Colorado pickup. Org owner. Factory warranty. 33K mi., ext cab., folding seats, drk blue, auto, 25 mpg, $11,000. (507)433-4653 2000 Chevy Silverado Z71, 111K miles, Exc Cond, new tires, PW, PL, AC, cruise, AM/FM/CD, 3rd door. $10,500 obo. 507-993-0812 2004 SILVERADO LT 2500 HD 4WD Crew Cab, 56K, trailing pkg w/brake control, fully equip w/lthr, tonneau cover, $24,900. 507-536-2735 or 507-206-1409. ‘95 Chevy 1-Ton Dually, 88K miles, 454 engine, new tires, loaded & extra clean. $7500. 507-765-4517 96 Chevy Silverado 4x4 reg cab, short box, V8, AT, PW, PL, AC, 198K, new brakes, $4,500.00 obo. 507-534-2651 after 5:00 ‘97 Chevy Silverado 1/2 ton, 4x4, 5.7L, PW, PL, 178K miles, clean. $5500 OBO. Call: 507-282-7474 1978 Chev. 1/2 t PK 2wd 454eng,AT,Tilt,AC,Topper, Towing package,minor rust,runs&drives good,cheap tow rig,$1500.00 call 507-634-4249 Kasson 1982 Chevy Silverado. 4x4, Extended cab, 160,000 miles - 10,000 miles on new 350 motor. $2,500. Call 641-220-1945. 2002 Ford F-150 XLT Red, Extended Cab, 4X4, 57,000 miles, Moon Roof, Excellent Condition, Newer Tires, Tonneau cover, Rubber bed mat, Sharp! $16,500 call anytime 651-380-9363 or email for pics: [email protected] 2003 Ford F150 XLT Super Crew with FX4 Off Road Pkg., Pwr windows, seats, pedal adjust, am/fm/6 cd changer, custom matched Leer topper, 20’ chrome rims, 64,000 miles. $19,800. 507-932-5893. 2003 Ford F250 Super Duty: 4 door, crew cab, 4x4, POWER STROKE diesel. Long box, fiberglass topper, red finish. 70,000 actual miles. Like new throughout. Why pay $45,000 for new? Sale priced $24,900. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313 2007 Ford Explorer Sport Track Pickup: Limited Edition, leather, hot seats, pwr moonroof, hard box cover, full power. Jet black finish. Low miles. Show floor new! Sale priced $26,900. Heffernan Ford, Lake City MN (651)345-5313. 78 Ford F100: good condition, 70,000 miles, 6 cyl, 3 spd, AC, PS, topper, 2 WD, $1650 OBO. 507-281-8528. 94 E150 Cargo Van: PW, PL, AC, cruise, tilt, 217,000 hwy miles, new tires, white, very well maint. $2,700. 507-254-8993. 2003 CHEVY S-10 V6 pickup. Crew cab, white, AT, AC, keyless entry, CD, 4x4, 49,900 miles. Ex. cond. $13,400. (507)367-4948 2003 CHEVY Silverado K2500 ext. cab, 65K miles, Black, Bose stereo system, lots of extras, great cond. $20,500 OBO. (507)259-7662 2005 Chevy Colorado 59,000 miles, 4x4 Z71, 6-disc cd, 18-20mpg, 3.5L I-5 engine, rated at 270hp, tow package, silver, 4-door ext. cab, excellent maintenance, like new inside and out. bug and vent visors, chrome door handles, sound system negotiable. $15,750 call eves. and weekends. Jason (507)438-4070 or Amanda (612)490-8503 2006 CHEVY Silverado, ext. cab, log box, topper, low miles, great condition, loaded, leather 4WD. $23,500. (507)259-9088 91 CHEVY Silverado pickup, 2 dr, AT, 161,000K mi, 2 WD, cassette player, AC. $2,450 obo. Call after 3. (507)202-3104. 2002 FORD Windstar SEL, 93K mi, AT, loaded, blue, ex. condition. $7,800. Call 507-202-2470 motorcycles/ equipment recreation vehicles $$ $75-$7500 $$ Junkers & Repairables More if saleable Licensed MN Dealer www.oronocoautoparts.com 507-367-4315 800-369-4315 2001 HARLEY softtail std, 4500 mi, mint cond with extras. Home (507)289-6950. Cell: 507-254-0204. Coleman Pop-Up Camper WANTED: used cars and pickups, bought outright. Call us before you trade. Arrow Motors, Marion Rd SE, 289-4747, 1-800-908-4747. 1985 HONDA V65 MAGNA, 15k mi, black, lots of power. $2500 obo 2002 HONDA XR400, low hrs., improved suspension. $2500 obo 507-421-0391 1985 HONDA V65 Sabre, Honda’s First 150 MPH motorcycle. $2500. Call 507-421-5479 WANTED: Good running and condition Geo METRO or Chevy METRO, no junk. 641-749-5861 1987 GOLDWING GL 1200: Aspencade, 56,000 miles, CC, trunk rack, 40 MPG, $4,500. (507)206-1832. semi trucks/ tractor trailers 99 Chevy Silverado: extend cab. 57 V-8, 3rd door, 55K miles, bedliner. Extra set of tires, $9,000. Call (507)754-5037, (507)259-8768 97 FORD F250 XLT 7.3 Power Stroke Diesel Super Cab: 8’ bed. All options. MINT!! $13,000. 507-424-5189 or 507-951-9922/3 PM . 2002 Yellow Chevy Silverado extendacab 74,097 miles, chrome wheels, cool truck $13,500 Tom 507-269-1245 1998 Dodge Dakota SLT, red/silver, automatic, 103K miles. Tow package, keyless entry, remote start, power everything, Alpine CD player/speakers, bed liner. 5.2 L V8. $7499. Tony, 507-696-0307 1998 Dodge Ram Sport 4WD, Towing Pkg., Dee Zee Toolbox, Bedliner, 89,000 miles, $6,750 (507)259-1509 2000 Dodge Dakota Quad Cab SLT 4WD. Great Cond. 109K. PW/PL, AC, cruise, CD player. Topper incl. $7900. 507-292-0785 1988 1/2 ton Dodge: newer rims, tires, exhaust & more. Clean, runs good. Black & smoke gray. $2,000. Call (507)365-8440. 1992 DODGE DAKOTA P/U GRAY DAKOTA PICKUP WITH SLIDING CAB WINDOW 8 FT LONGBED WITH HARD TONNEAU COVER. V6 RUNS GOOD. RUST IN EXPECTED AREAS. 2 WHEEL DRIVE. GOT NEW VEHICLE SO DON'T NEED. $800 507-252-1336 (leave message) [email protected] 1997 DODGE Ram 1500 SLT Laraime, ext cab, 5.9 ltr V8, runs & drives exc, new tires, 140K mi, loaded w/options, very clean, $4500 obo. (507)867-3237 after 6. Leave message. 1998 DODGE 1500 SLT, 5.9L, quad cab, 4WD, PW, PL, cruise, AC, 55,400 mi., ex. cond. $10,900. (507)454-3501 1995 Ford F250 Extended Cab, 100K miles, $5500 OBO. Call: 507-263-4985 2001 FORD F-150 Super Crew 4x4 4-door pickup, 5.4 Triton V8, auto, pwr everything, leather, remote starter, like new, 112K miles. $12,800. 507-273-3651 1979 GMC HIgh Sierra: 4x4, short box, PW, tilt, 4” lift, 33” tires. Good cond., low mile. $2900. Call 507-867-3237 or 507-208-1194. 1988 GMC K1500 pickup, 4WD, great runner. $1500. Call (507)533-6566 or 651-270-1915 leave message. 2000 GMC SLE 1500, 4x4, reg. cab, Rhino liner, ladder rack, white/gold, 138K mi., AT, loaded. $7,500 OBO. (507)634-7963/951-1041 2005 HONDA Rencon 650: 3,000 0716 Warren wench, 5 ft Moose plow, $6400. Parts for 84 Jeep CJ 7 (507)251-8041. 2003 Ford Ranger 4x4 XLT Tan, V6 4L, Auto, ex cond 44,400mi w/ extras $13,600 obo. Jeremy 507-993-2265 1986 F150 4X4 TRUCK 13k MILES-NEW MARSHALL ENGINE. ORIG MILES 108K 3SPD+OVD AWESOME SHAPE. CAN EMAIL PIC'S. RECEIPTS FOR $5k OF UPDATES BRAKES TIRES CLUTCH INJECTORS ETC $3,995 507 458-7304 ‘89 VOLVO 48 in. sleeper, 204 wheel base, 8 new 24.5 low -pro on rear. All aluminum wheels, 13 spd. $12,000 507-932-4839 or 507-429-6219 OLDER Ford tractor w/blade, hydralics, 3. hitch mower, run exc, $3600 OBO (507)753-2169 lv msg. motorcycles/ equipment (2) Honda 100 XR’s: 1999, $900, 2003, $1300. $200, trailer. 507-281-3224 KAWASAKI 97 Vulcan Classic 1500, exc. bike. Only 8000 mi. Some extras. Reduced to: $4350. Call 507-281-5635, 507-280-0280. 05 HARLEY Davidson DYNA , 2200 K miles. $15,200 OBO Must Sell Due to Move 507-271-0435 1976 Harley Sportster, Purple/Silver. Lots of chrome, detachable windshield, very sharp,, kick start only. $3700 OBO. 507-545-1918 before 9pm 1984 Honda 700 Magna Great bike. New tires, fresh tune-up, new battery,windshield, 22,000 mi, Ride it away today! $1850 obo 507-421-0654 1986 Kawasaki Voyager. Full Dress. $2100. Call: 507-657-2449 or 507-440-3986 1994 SANTEE CUSTOM 1994 EVOLUTION 1340 MOTOR, Genuine HD Primary & Trans., Fatboy front & rear fenders, Fatboy front end & forward controls, ‘58-’84 tail section, FXR middle section, FL 12 inch chrome shocks, lowered rear end, genuine HD front brakes, Santee oil tank, 10 inch apes, chrome switch housings, S&S Shorty E carb, detach W/S & luggage rack, HD visors, brand new HD Signature Whitewalls, chrome chainguard, chrome sprocket, laced wheels. $22,000 invested, will sacrifice for $15,000. Call: 651-380-9063 1996 Harley FXD Dyna Super Glide-S&S Carb, Supertrapp exhaust, drag bars, bags, shield, extra parts, very clean. 17,600 miles. $9,200 OBO. 507-493-5707 91 ISUZU Trooper, 4 WD, runs great, $1200 obo (507)398-5816 2002 JEEP Wrangler, 4.0L. 6 cyl, 5spd, 46K mi, soft top w/tinted window, AC, AM/FM/CD, Sound bar, cruise, full spare tire. Great condition. $12500 (507)261-7634 ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ 1993 Toyota 4x4 pick-up, 85K miles, 5 spd manual trans, matching topper, regular cab, short box, 4 cyl engine, good condition, $4500 OBO. 507-775-6344 2002 TOYOTA Tacoma: Double cab, TRD off road, 4x4, leather, After Market stereo, 85,000 miles, $18,000/obo. (507)258-0513. 2002 Toyota Tundra 4w/d 85,000 Miles Red/tan leather interior Excellent Condition $15,800 507-367-4336 2001 Harley Low Rider, 3850 miles. Exc. Cond. Lots of Extras. $12,500. Call: 563-880-3561 2003 Honda Goldwing 1800, silver, new tires, CB radio, 29K miles, Excellent Condition! $14,500. 507-254-6101 2003 Honda Shadow Spirit 750cc, V-twin cruiser. Nice bike, ready to ride. $3800. Call: 507-696-5217 2005 HARLEY Super Glide FXD. 1300 miles, warranty, black, very clean, laced wheels, $11,000 OBO. Call (507)421-1975. 2005 YAMAHA R-6, 2400 miles, like new condition! $6500. 507-251-7124 2006 Yamaha V-Star Classic, w/ siverado package, 1100 CC, 4K miles, still under warranty, DD hard krome pipes & many extras. $7500. 507-289-1477 2007 SIKK 125 trail bike. Aluminum frame, disc brakes, only weighs 160 pounds! $1895. 507-367-4991 2004 KZ Sportsman. Living room/dinette w/ slideout Great Condition. 30 feet long, qn size bed, bunks, $18,000 OBO. 507-886-4032 1990 HONDA PC 800 CHEVY short bed box off 97 full size pick up, $450 or offer. Small utility trailer, $125. 507-288-3613 or 507-398-8059 FIBERGLASS topper, fits Dakota shortbox, sliding wdws, black $250 507-42-8664 NEW 275/60 R20 GOODYEAR WRANGLERS on Dodge 20” rims. $1200 or Best offer. 507-429-7861 04 DODGE dually factory box, red, no scratches, no dents $1800 obo 507-254-1462 trailers for sale 2000 Southern Classic Cargo trailer, alum delux wht int, halog lights, wired for AC welder, plumbed for air comp, elec winch top opens to deck. New brks & whl brgns, 28’ 6’ lighted storage. $14.5K OBO. Call Bob: 507-356-2125 or 507-261-3472. 1999 Suzuki GSXR 600 --Only 8900 miles, yoshimura pipe, new tires front and rear, new battery, yellow and black, minor scratches, fresh tune up, runs perfect. $3500 Call anytime 507-951-0707 2000 HONDA CBR 929, 14,400K mi, exhaust, flush mount lights, runs great, asking $4900 (507)421-2958. Leave msg 2001 Victory 92c, 1507 cc, under 7500 miles, custom windshield, Mustang seat, back rest & luggage rack, after market saddle bags, new cushion, sprockets, and belt. Adult rider. Very nice! $7,600. 651-565-0373 2001 YAMAHA R6, many extras, $2995. Tony at 507-696-0307 2002 HARLEY DAVIDSON ROAD KING CLASSIC: 29,500 miles, extras. Asking: $12,900 or best offer. Can E-mall photos. Call (507)288-3238. 2002 Harley Davidson Soft Tail, Injected Night Train 1550 1550 Cu IN Stage 2, Thunder Star Wheels, Wide tire kit. Perfect bike, only 6,000 miles. Priced to sell, only $12,000! 507-951-1164 2002 Harley VRSC V Rod, silver, screaming Eagle exhaust, touring detach. WS, braided lines, 7300 mi, chrome upper & lower final drive covers. $12,500 507-273-4453. 2003 1800 GOLDWING: Candy apple red trike (his & her) - Heated Corbin seat & grips, accent panels w/lites, wind deflectors, CC, rear arm rest, chrome thru out. This trike is exceptionally clean, w/ champion conversion. 40,000 miles. $25,650. (507)378-2080, (507)993-1155. 2003 HERITAGE Soft Tail Classic, 100 yr. Anniversary. Must sell. Below book value. $12,975. OBO. Call (507)645-6288 2003 KX85 KAWASAKI $1800. Call (507)533-9350 or 250-2067. 2003 Polini 50cc X3, good condition. $1100. 2006 Polini X1 50cc, good shape. $1400. 2001 660 Raptor Yamaha 4x4, good condition. $3500. 507-254-4927 2004 Harley Heritage Softail Red and silver. Fuel injected with factory security system. Spotless and well cared for. Nice ride. 7500 miles. $14,000. 507-534-6572 ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ 2004 Honda 1300 cc, lots of extra chrome, saddle bags, 5000 miles, dark blue, mint condition. $7800. 507-346-7807 or 507-272-8235 2005 Honda CR50F Well maintained, showroom condition. Perfect for the beginning rider. $1100. 507-251-3701 2005 RACING Go-Cart. Raced 3 times. 1 Feature win. Complete - ready to race! $1500. 507-884-6131 2006 Harley Sportster 883L, 31 actual miles, highway bars, deep red, mint condition. $6200. Also have 1986 Honda Rebel, 3940 mls, $1650. 507-273-1844 or 244-1187 local 2007 Honda CRF 100, 4 stroke, Red, only 1 hour of use. $1700. OBO 507-951-2024 AFTER market exhaust pipes for Honda VTX 1300 CC. $100. Call (507)843-5340 CUSTOM Shovelhead Stroker, looks good, and runs strong, 93 CI. $8,500. Call (507)529-0499 between 1 & 6 pm. Ducati Monster $2000 507-633-9150 NEW TODAY ★ ★ 1999 Harley Davidson Ultra Classic only 9,200 miles. Mint. Green & Black. $11,000. 507-867-4587 2000 M900 Dark. 5100 Miles, Fuel Inj. Carbon Exhaust. Great Shape, small dent in tank. All Maint up to date. New Tire. Bella! $4700 Matt 507-250-0178 8’ BOX for 2002 Dodge Dually. New condition. $1200. (507)273-7737 or (507)635-5064 ★★ 1991 Yamaha FZR 600, 1999 R-1 motor & plastic, $2000 OBO (660)651-0483 1996 Harley Davidson Low Rider: 16,000 mi, Excellent condition. Forward controls, detach saddle bags & windshield. Great look and ride. $10,800. (507)261-6786. MADE IN THE USA 2-Stoke Dirt Bike. Good condition, new top end. Comes with stand and helmet. Runs like new 06 YZ 450f low hours, excellent condition, gps suspension, $4650 507-421-9871 1500 Goldwing 1988-Excellent condition, fresh tune-up,Grey color,115k miles. $4500 507-202-1934 17’ ALUMACRAFT canoe, very good condition. $350. Call (507)433-7669 1972 HONDA CT70, 4,900 act. mi., $1,200 OBO. Call (507)288-9640 1979 HONDA CB750K, Vetter faring, $950. 507-421-5321 or (507)767-4575 FOR Rent: Pop-Up Camper, sleeps 6-8. Early reservation, reserve your date. Aug. dates avail. 507-932-4253/ 261-9990 1988 HONDA GoldWing, 6 cyl, 1500, 20K mi, loaded, new tires & battery $8,200 OBO (507)252-0624 -1998 ATK 260lq - car & truck accessories recreation vehicles ‘06 Salem River 27BHSS. Rear Bunks, Front Bedroom, 16’ Slide. Very llittle use. Receiver System Included. $16,000. 507-251-0592 1994 RM 250 Suzuki dirt bike, senior driven, never raced, new tires, very fast! $1500. Call: 507-289-2012 Jim 2001 Harley Fat-Boy, 33K miles, black, much chrome, cover, extra pipes, lady driven, like new. $11,850. 507-367-2852 2001 Ford Ranger (Edge) Black extended cab. 72k miles. V-6. Excellect condition, 2-wheel drive. CD Player, Bed liner, Bed extender and much more. Never driven in snow. Asking 6500.00 OBO. Phil at 507-213-8087 2004 IH 9900 IX 436K mi, loaded, including Carrier Comfort APU, 565 ISX, 18 spd. Also, 1999 Great Dane 53’ reffer. (507)456-1930. Serious inquiries only. 98 - Ford F150: 4x4, good cond., 80,000 miles, auto, cruise, tilt, PW, $7,500 OBO. Call (651)345-2938 2005 CHEVY Silverado, 2500 HD, 4x4, mint cond, black, tow pkg, crew cab, all terrain tires, soft tonneau cover, 28K mi, $25,500. (507) 398-6428. Yellow 2002 Silverado 1998 VOLVO VNL64T610 Detroit 11.1 350 hp, 10 spd, 797k mi., tandem, air ride, conv. cab, 60” sleeper. $16,000. (507)202-9263 YAMAHA 04, FZ1, 1000cc, 6500K mi, black & silver, jetted, piped & timing advance $5500. (507)254-0055 1995 Coleman Taos by Fleetwood pop-up camper. Ice box, heater & canopy/add-a-room. Good condition. Sleeps 6. $2,500 OBO 507-440-2344 After 5pm 1987 Harley Davidson 1100. Fat Bob Tank, new paint, saddle bags. Many extras redone in 06. 15,000 orginal miles, $3,400. (507)696-0421 Pacific Coast - low miles, excellent condition, shaft drive, liquid cooled, unique trunk $3800 507-529-1029 2000 Ford Ranger Ext. Cab 4x4: 81,000 miles. All pwr equip., CD, Alloy Wheels, Only $7680 507-281-6333 www.kinsellas.com 1998 CHEVROLET 2500 2WD, 5.7 Vortec V8, AT, AC, 8’ Knapheide Service Body, 117 K mi. Southern Truck. $4,550. 507-533-8313 1992 E-250 Ford Econoline Extended Van. Automatic, 6 cyl, 153,600 miles, A/C, 1 owner, good condition. $1500. 651-923-4970 motorcycles/ equipment 1975 Ford 9000, 14-15 yard box, $8000 OBO. Call: 507-269-3820 1995 Chevy Silverado 1500: Red 4x4, ext. cab. 134K miles, dual exhaust, CD player, service records. $5,500. Call (507)438-4238. NEW TODAY ★ ★ ‘94 DODGE Voyager, Silver metallic, 3.0, 92K miles, runs very nice. Car in exc cond. $1,950 OBO. 507-281-0504 1999 FORD F350 4x4, crew cab, long box, dually. 7.3 pwr stroke diesel, AT, OD, XLT, loaded! Ex. cond. $15,900. (507)743-8374 or Call 507-259-7274 wanted: vehicles 1994 CHEVY K1500 4x4, ext. cab, bedliner, $5250 OBO. (507)421-5479 2000 DODGE Caravan, Ice cold AC, silver, grey int., 169K mi., AT, cruise, runs good. No rust. $2,795. (507)271-7717 2002 Dodge Caravan Sport: 6 cyl. AT, PW, PL, P. mirrors, 66,000 low miles, quad seating. 507-281-6333 www.kinsellas.com 1997 FORD F-150, Supercab, 4x4, 137k mi, 4.6L V8, auto, white/gray custom paint, alloy wheels, fog lights, leather, stainless steel steps, fiberglas tonneau cover, bedliner, new exhaust, batt & ball joints $6,400 507-696-2432. 1992 Chevy 1/2 ton. Reg cab, long bed, 350 V-8 auto, 122,000 miles w/warranty. $3500 OBO. (507)421-1153 1999 DODGE Grand Caravan: PL, PW, rear air, quad seats, 115,000 miles, $4,200. 507-281-0219. ★★ trucks HONDA 03, VTX 1800R, 7200K mi, illusion blue, bags, power programmer, pipes & Cobra sissy bar $7000 (507)254-0055 1985 HONDA Magna 700, shaft drive, 19K mi, black, new battery & tires, wind shield & saddle bags, exc cond. $2600 (507)288-0894 2004 HONDA CBR 600 RR sportbike. Many extras included. $6,000 obo 507-433-1441 99 KAWASAKI ZX-6R, 8,100 miles, K& N, Yosh exhaust, minor scratches, runs great, way below book at $3200. (507)282-2120 HONDA Goldwing 1200, 67K miles, $2000. Call for more details (507)288-3711 or (507)358-5649. Bizarro / Dan Piraro 2004 Montana 5th wheel, Model 3295 RK, 3 slides, tan interior, excellent condition, 2007 seasonal site at Kieslers included. $30,500. Call: 507-775-6039 2005 LAREDO 5th wheel, model 29GR. 2 slides: dining and entertainment center. $18,000. Call: 507-753-2553 ‘07 Franklin Travel Trailer. 38 ft, LOADED! 3 slides, Ashley leather furniture, 2 A/C’s, W/D, dishwasher, walk-thru bath. Must sell this week! $26,750. 512-791-4434 11 FT. ELKHORN pickup camper. AC, bath, 18’ awning. $4500. H.D. GMC pickup avail. to RV buyer. (507)753-2857 1979 20’ Coachmen Motorhome. 350 Chevy engine, good tires. Brand new hot water heater. $4,000 OBO. Call (651)345-2106 after 4 pm. leave msg. 1993 SIERRA Cobra TT, 30’, front kitchen, rear queen, garden tub, ex. cond., few miles/was on permanent site. $6500. 507-374-9306 days, or (507)374-9310 eves. 1998 COLEMAN Santa Fe pop up camper w/heat, frig & canopy, 1 owner, used very little. You won’t find a cleaner one. Asking $3900. 507-867-3124 days or 507-867-4611 nights . 2005 Grand Surveyor GST 280 travel trailer, exc cond, 1 slide, sleeps 6, 2 TVs & hitch incl $16,000 obo. Stored inside winters. (507)383-9258 1999 80 SUZUKI Quad Sport. Ex. cond. $1,000. Please Call (507)356-2084 after 6:30 PM 2007 250 cc Sport ATV Camo, racks, lift kit, driven 5 hrs $1895. 2007 110cc youth ATV, camo, alarm, remote start, racks. Driven half an hour, $850 Call 507-932-4427 HOUSER QUAD w/fresh 426 Yamaha bored to 440, Elka susp., all updated, “Top of the Top”, over 20K invested. Ready to race. Quick! $5,000. 507-259-9038 2004 Georgetown motor home: Triple slide, Model TS359, 20K miles, air-ride, 2 TVs w/satellite, always shedded. $63,900. Exc condition. (563)547-3371 2005 Cherokee Lite 28', Excellent Condition, Slideout, AC, Awning, Fridge, Stove/Oven, Micro, Qn & Bunks, Sleeps 8, Light Weight, Must See, $13,800. 507-319-8998 03 LUND ANGLER 17' boat, 70hp 4 stroke jhnsn tiller, shorlander trlr, depthfinder, cover all ready for the water everything runs great used very little. $13500 OBO DEVIN (507)398-4957 14’ MONARCH aluminum boat, 5 hp Briggs & Stat, on Shorelander trlr, lights for nite fishing, deep batt. $1450 OBO. 507-402-6194 ATVs 1992 Class C 27’ Jamboree: Ford 460 engine, rear twin beds, generator, very good condition, $12,200 or best offer. Call (507)282-5921. 2004 15’ ALINER, SLEEPS 4, LIKE NEW, Asking $6,800. (507)272-0862 2004 Fleetwood Caravan: 28’, lightweight, excellent condition. Sleeps 6, 12’ slide, electric jack, tow pkg, $17,500. (507)282-2849 02' Lund 16 1/2' Explorer 1675 Explorer ss, 75Hp 4 stroke Merc. Clean, Two depth finders, 24V trolling motor w/ on board chargers. Marine radio six rod holders, Too much to list. $12,500 (507)529-3825 lv message 16’ SYLVAN Alum. Super Sportster Fish/Ski Open Bow w/85 HP Johnson. $1995 See craiglist.com boats 5/14 pics 507-288-5421 2006 YAMAHA 4 wheeler, yellow, New - used only 1 week. $7,000. Call (507)280-4438 EXCELLENT condition. Furnace, AC, awning, screened room, inside bathroom/shower, outside shower, 2 queen beds, 1 single bed, couch, fridge, grill. Sleeps 6-8, extended warrantee good until 2010. 25 minutes south of Rochester. $7500 507-261-6385 or marla.kassel@chsinc. com CLASSIC BOAT 1973 Marlin Gemini w/ 1986 115 hp Mariner. SS prop, fully updated, 18 gal tank, docking lights, $4250 OBO. Call: 507-634-6881 14’ SEARS flat bottom boat with 9 1/2 hp. Johnson, and trailer. $950. (507)273-7960 1990 ALLEGRO Class A motor home, 28’, good cond., stored inside, Honda gen., new batteries. $10,600. (507)289-0051 2003 Starcraft Gemini Pop-up Camper 2002 17 ft Four Winns boat and trailer, open bow, V6, very clean, low hours. $12,500. Call: 507-796-5103, leave message. Sunlite Fold Down Camper Like new cond. Always stored inside. 18' , sleeps 6. Stove, fridge, water, toilet. $5,500. 507-288-7549. 2004 Polaris Predator Troy Lee Edition. Road very little and in excellent condition. $3,500 OBO Call for details (507) 421-5818 2000AEROLITE Cub, 21’, sleeps 7, awning, AC, microwave, stereo, TV hookups, bath w/tub & shower, used 1-3 times/year. Ex. cond. Can pull w/mini van. $9,000. (507)282-9385 1998 Four Winds 20 ft, 200 hp, tubes, ropes, water skis, life jackets, $11,800. Mint Condition, 200 hrs. 651-353-6528 14’ JOHN BOAT, trolling motor, 3 1/2 hp gas motor & trailer. $900 OBO. (507)282-4829 1988 Excel 26’ camper trailer: Super clean, sleeps 5. Newer awning, carpet & water pump. $4,495 OBO. Call (507)528-2265 1992 Winnegbago Brave 33RQ 64K mi., no smokeor pets, good furnace & tires, new fridge, lthr flexsteel front seats, extras. $12,500. (507)282-8174 1993 5th-Wheel Camper Timbercreek by Play-mor. Excellent condition. Rear kitchen, shower, AC, microwave, refrig., lots of storage, etched glass, new big awning. Sleeps 6. Hitch and rails included. $6500. 507 324-5967, 507 259-4159 1993 INSBRUKE by Golf Stream, 31’ travel tlr., rear mstr. bdrm, shower, sleeps 6-8, ex. cond. $6500. (507)533-4941 or 507-951-4338 boats 05 ES 350 Honda 4 wheeler. 20,000 watt pto Winco generator. Call (563)547-4697. 2002 YAMAHA Blaster 200, excellent condition. $1600 (507)356-8406 snowmobiles ‘96 Artic Cat EXT 580, EFI, $1300. 2 place enclosed aluminum trailor $900. ‘96 Kitty Kat $600. 507-775-2025 2005 Arctic Cat F7 EFI Red/Black, 1300Mi. Extended warranty till 12/2008, ODS clutch kit, 170 studs, 9"Carbides, New Cond. 507/281-1834, [email protected] POLARIS Ultra 1996, new track, runs good, tuners,. $650. Call (507)261-3161 boats *********************** 5 HP Greenhead Johnson Outboard. Old but used very little. BEST OFFER. Call 507-282-7638. ************************ 19600 Aluminum 16ft Crestliner, w/ original top & side curtains, 2 deluxe swivel seats, new canvas cover, 1989 low hours 50 hp Evinrude, w/ power tilt. Trailer. All in good condition. Original owner. $3900 OBO. 507-433-2217 18' Glasstron. Very good condition w/recently overhauled 130 HP Volvo inboard. Very good deep V boat for fishing or skiing. All this on a EZ load trailer. $2,350 OBO. Call (507)634-7270 1961 Closed Bow 16’ Glasspar Avalon w/67’ 60 HP Johnson Super Seahorse motor on 98 EZ loader Trailer. Everything runs...needs owner w/time & patience to restore. Extras include new battery, anchor, 2 bumpers, 2 life jackets, 2-6 gal gas tanks, cover. $1,190. 507-932-5893. 1969 Chriscraft aqua home $4,500 OBO. (2) Bayliner trophies $7500 for both. (507)358-3109 1972 14’ Alumcraft boat. 9.9 HP 1976 Evinrud motor, and trailer, $1,500. Call 507-289-8532 1984 Alumacraft 16ft. fishing boat 35hp Evinrude motor, Minnkota trolling motor, Eagle fish finder, center console, Spartan roller trailer. Asking $1500. Call 507-289-6724, lv. Message. 1986 GLASTRON CVX17 speed/ski boat, 1989 135 hp. Mercury, 65+MPH, SS prop, ski tower. Sharp! $3850. (507)272-0501 1987 Bayliner 16' Boat and Trailer with 85 HP Force Outboard and Trolling Motor and acc. $2400 Phone 365 8480 1989 ALUMACRAFT Lunker16 16' aluminum fishing boat on a Spartan trailer. '89 Evinrude 40 hp, elec. start & tilt. Includes New trolling motor, new fish finder, new floor & carpet. Live well w/lot of storage. Must see $3500.00 of best offer 507-280-4291/208-1678 Chris 1989 Bayliner Bass Boat 18ft. 125 HP. New interior and paint job. New battery and trailer tires. 2 Live wells. Runs Good. Asking $3,500. Call (507) 446-8573 Jenn 1990 STRATUS 270 FISH & SKI, 17’ fiberglass, walk thru windshield, swim ladder, 140 hp Evinrude w/tilt, 74 lb. thrust Maxxum trolling motor, onboard charger, 2 live wells, fish finder, elec. anchor, 2 props, cover, & trailer. $5,000 OBO. (507)208-0034 1992 Four Winns 190 Horizon: 19’ open bow, 5.0 L V8, 230 hours. Boat in good cond., $9,900. 507-398-5048 1985 LUND 14 ft aluminum fishing boat on a Spartan trailer w/ 1991 30hp Evinrude outboard motor. Tiller style. Boat includes flooring, depth finder, new battery, covers for boat & motor. $1,600. 507-545-9932 or 507-398-7735 (cell) lv msg 1995 LOWE Big ‘V’ 16’, Shorelander Roller trlr, 50 hp. Johnson w/powertilt/trim, Fish finder, Auto/pilot trolling motor, livewell, console steering, many extras. $6000. Call (507)624-0022 1989 SKI boat (Centurion) V8, boom, cover, trailer, good cond. Call after 5pm $7995.00 (507)843-4375 1996 RINKER 21’, 4.3 inboard, low hours, perfect condition. $8,000 OBO. (507)280-7620 1991 - 20.5 Alum. Crestliner. Merc-Cruiser, I/O, V6, 8 ft beam, tamden axle, shorelander trailer, $8500. 507-951-1016 1998 RINKER 192 IO: 5.0 Merc cruiser, stereo, SS prop, depth gauge, Eagle trailer, exc condition, $13,000. Call 641-220-1945. 2005 COACHMAN Cascade DLX33FLS travel trailer, bumper pull, 2 slides, awning, rear QN, split bath, 2 rocking chairs. $12,995 OBO. (507)754-5259 2005 Jayco Jayflight 27BH excellent condition, AC, Awning, fridge, stove, micro, sleeps 7, surround sound, $12,500. 507-634-3159 2006 27’ GRAND Surveyor GS272: Dinette slideout, sleeps 6, immac cond., used 5 times. Added extras, stored winters, $20,750. Call(507)843-5133. 2006 Coachmen Captiva 280EX 29', sleeps 10, quad bunk, 2 slides, light weight, like new! $20,800 OBO 507-529-0667 2006 FOREST River Wildwood, 33’, w/14’ pwr slide out, mstr bdrm front, rear bunks, sleeps 8, like new. $15,500. (507)323-5027 2006 JAYCO 29' Jayflight Awning,SlideOut,Sleeps 4-5,Very Clean,Surround Sound, NADA-$25,000, Asking-$17,000 507-421-3005 94 26’ Damon Ultra Sport Class C Motorhome: new generator, air, cruise, sleeps 6-8. 460 V-8. $15,500. Call (507)288-361 or (507) 398-8059. MAKE THE SALE! ‘98 Winnebago adventure, 35 WP, Chevrolet Chassis, low mileage, new tires, slide out, Exc. Cond. $39,995 OBO. 507-373-3875 285-7777 Post-Bulletin CLASSIFIEDS POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com boats lost & found 2002 Larson 195hp i/o PAWS & Claws receives daily reports of Lost & Found animals in Olmsted Cty/SE MN. To report or claim a pet 507-288-7226. Excellent condition 8 passenger boat. Wintered indoors. Includes extra prop, adult and children skies, etc. Blue on white with matching trailer. $13,800.00 or B/O. appraised by Al's Specialty at $14,500.00 John or Angela 507-634-3441 2002 Vanguard Sunfish Sailboat - learn to sail & enjoy the water on the most popular boat ever produced. 14’ long w/4’ 1” beam. $2,000 (no trailer). 507-923-5893 - boat in Pepin Wi. 2003 RINKER : Open bow, Merc Cruiser 190 HP I/O, Liberty Edition low hrs, mint cond, Eagle Bunk trlr, $16,900. 507-536-7045. 2003 STARCRAFT 23’ open bow, 5.0 liter, fuel injected, Merc Cruiser, I/O, swim platform, mooring & cockpit covers, bunk trailer & more. Mint condition. $25,000. (651)565-3490 or (612)483-8472. 2004 Ranger FLW Tour Edition Boat 2004 Evinrude 200HO. Ultra clean, must see! $28,000 Jim 507-269-0466 2006 PONTOON: 24’ long with changing room, 40 HP, 4 stroke Mercury engine, 2 bikini tops, full all-weather top, Captains chairs, bench seating, $15,900. Call (507)367-4569. 33’ C&C MKII, 1985, sailboat, great cond. Yanmar diesel, Roller furling, brand new North sails late 2006, strong cradle, new winter cover, Lying Lake City, owner bought large boat. $49,500 OBO. (507)635-5496 ‘77 Crestliner in mint condition! 18’, IO 140 HP, top, cover, Spartan trailer. Ready for fun. $2900 or BO. 507-254-2377 or 651-258-4488 89 Grumman 20’ pontoon: New upholstery, 2 electric anchors, bimini top, 50 HP Mariner, SS prop., 01 Scissor trailer w/tandem axle. $4500. Call (507)259-7143. notices LOOKING for an olf friend. Jeff Wiebold. Call (507)280-5913 SEARCHING FOR ALUMNI The Mayo High School Class of 1987 is searching for alumni for the 20 Year Class Reunion. Events will be held the weekend of August 3-5, 2007 in Rochester. For more information, call Lisa at 507-824-2011 or email: mayoclassof87@ yahoo.com Reunion details can also be found on www.classreport.org livestock Boer Goats breeding stock (nannies and billies), both purebred and percentage goats. $100 to $400. (507)288-5492 For Sale Boer Goats 4 ABGA reg fullblood boer bucks 2 ABGA reg fullblood boer doelings. Excellent bloodlines, SA breeding, wormed and shots. After 4 pm or leave message. Call 507-438-7884. WHITE-FACED Ewe w/lamb at her side. $100/ea. Call (507)932-4713 BAYLINER 28 hp, runs good, Johnson outboard, great for fishing $1200 obo(507)398-5816 leave msg COBALT 18’ Open bow w/351 Ford inboard, EZ load trailer, lots of teak! Super “Excellent Condition”! Always covered. $4,000. Call (507)289-7466 GLASSTRON 17’ with 85 hp Johnson, cover, walk thru window, and trailer. $2,300. 507-273-7960 LUND Tyee 55, 18’ , 135 hp Merc, 4 cyl 9.9 Merc , elec trolling mtr, depth fndr, canvases, & trailer. $8,000 obo. Dexter 507-584-6766 LUND 16 ft. 6 ft beam, 40hp Evinrude, trolling motor, fish finder, live well, built in fuel tank, shorelander trailer, many extras. $2850. 507-753-2132 LUND Mr. Pike 16’ ft, 1981, 45 hp Mercury prof. tuned eng., console steering, live well, Ready for Water! $3300. 507-365-8516 / 259-3896 NORTHSTAR Blast 13’ 120 hp, Merc Sport Jet, 4-5 pass. jet boat. Used very little. Fun little boat w/cover & trailer. Exc cond $5500. (507)289-8288 1990 Regal 22.5 Sport Cuddy Valanti. Goes 55mph, mint condition $8900. (507)421-3666. 1971 STARCRAFT 16’ alum runabout w/ walk thru open-bow, inc trailer & 50 hp Johnson motor, exc cond $1500 (507)280-0364 eve 1975 NORDIC Crestliner 17’, full top, 85 Merc power tilt & trim, 6 hp Evenrude, easy load trailer & depth finder $2000 (507)282-5484 1992 21’ Thompson Calais 2100, deep-V, open bow, 5.7 ltr dual prop. Clean. $7500 obo (507)202-1934 2004 CRESTLINER Sport Fish 1850, 135 Mercury Optimax, E-Z loader trailer $23,000.(507)635-5655 25’ TRITOON: 2006 DEMO, G3 LX3, 150 Yamaha 4 stroke $28,500. Beautiful. Call Mark 1-651-380-2317 farm machinery 10’ OWATONNA swather w/hay crimper, Ford water cooled eng., pick up reel, towing hitch. $800 OBO. (507)269-4635 ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ COMBINE Gleaner F2 diesel w/ straw chopper, 4-row wide corn head, 15’ bean platform, exc cond. $5000. 507-288-0894 KELLY Ryan bagger 8 & 9 ft tunnel. 3 years old. Call: 507-534-2285 STEEL wheel wagon with box & side boards, stored $1500 obo (507)254-2249 USED Woods 15’ Bat Wing cutter: Model BW180, new blades, sharp! $8,500. Days, 1-800-972-0419, or evenings, 507-365-8901. 1968 CHEVY C50 350 V8, 4 spd w/2 speed axle, 37K mi, 15’ bed, steel floor w/ twin cly, Obeco wood sides w/cattle extensions, new tires, exc cond. 507-288-0894 farm miscellaneous CULVERTS: New, some used & overstocked, PVC, HDPE. Larger dia. Reasonable. For a quote: Nodine Culvert Sales. 1-800-367-7365, 507-643-6772. feeds, seeds & hay ATTENTION DISTRIBUTORS Flower Shops & Garden Centers. New Fall Decker Product. Mini Straw Bales 12” wide & 20” long. Display with pumpkins & they will sell! Only $2.50 per bale. Shrink wrapped on pallette (507)259-2639 PONTOON: 2006 G LX 22, 115 Yamaha 4 stroke, brand new $20,500. Call Mark 1-651-380-2317. GRASS, alfalfa, horse hay for sale. $2 per bale. (507)534-3735 23’ Larson Cabin Cruiser. Sleeps 4, toilet, shower, frig, stove, CD, w/ 10 speakers. $7500 OBO. Call: 507-634-6161 poultry & supplies 3600# Shore Station boat lift, 105”wide w/canopy $2200. (507)378-2410 NEW 1450 allwelded, flat bottom, V front, 15 h, Yamaha 4 stroke & trailer $4,650. (507)273-5074 1988 SUN RUNNER: 23’, sleeps 4, stove, Volvo motor, runs great, exc cond. Tune up each yr. 2001 tlr. $9,800 OBO. (507)202-2470. S16’ - 20” Lund w/20 HP Johnson motor & Spartan Trailer. Electric motor, many extras. $2,500. Call (507)289-7539. 800 stuff BABY Guineas for sale. $3 and up. (507)765-3695 CHICKENS & ducks, assorted breeds, 6 mths old, ducks/hens $5/a. Roosters, $3/ea. Call 507-867-9004. FOUND: Blue and white parakeet on Wednesday, July 18. Rural NW Rochester. Call (507)285-0342. FOUND: Large ring of keys at Barnes & Nobles downtown 7/23. Has Lexus car key. (507)288-3848 FOUND: Orange/Tan cat, N. of Essex park, Call (507)252-9781. LOST at Ponderosa Campground on July 4th. Black lab w/white chest. 2.5 yrs old. “Dude” Reward. Call 507-843-4244 or 507-271-1522. “Grandchildren’s dog they miss him” LOST: Long hair chihuahua, white & brown, around Millville. 7-3-07 after car accident. Sammy. Call Rudy or Sandra (507)767-4719. Reward. LOST: Gold braid bracelet - possibly on garden tour 7/19. Reward. (507)282-5568 LOST: male cat: East of Century HS. Solid black, no front claws. Reward. Call (507)288-6990. Reg. AQHA Appendix 6 yr old Two Eyed Jack mare, bay, 15h. shown in SEMSCA games, rodeo & NBHA barrels, overnite trail rides. Shoes, trail rides, trailers, etc. $2,500. 507-285-0246 or 507-269-3320 after 4:30. WELSH stud colt. $250 OBO. 507-251-0204 household (2) Love seats. Brown velvet. (2) end tables. Coffee table. $290 for all. (507)775-2427 1 KING PILLOWTOP Mattress set. New in pkg./warranty. Sell $210. 507-269-9069 21 CU. Ft. GE Freezer $65. Energy CT/yr. $46-$59. Manual defrost. (507)325-4567 Has book. AIR BED - New in pkg. Select-a-level. Dual controls. Warranty. Can deliver. $1499. 507-269-9007 AIR Conditioner: Sleeve type, remote, 1 yr old, 10,000 btu $250 (507)288-5898 APPLIANCES for sale: Stove, refrig, washer, dryer, freezer, $650 for all or will sell separate. 507-990-0369, 507-250-4170, see @ 1910 SW 2nd St-Roch. BRASS Etagere 75”H, glass doors, glass sides, lited w/4 glass shelves. Very Sharp! $115. (507)289-0078 CHINA Hutch - maple beautiful-like new. 3 doors w/glass, 3 wood doors, 1 lg. drawer. $250. (507)356-8919 CHINA Hutch - maple beautiful-like new. 3 doors w/glass, 3 wood doors, 1 lg. drawer. $250. (507)356-8919 COMPUTER desk: Large, light oak wood. $95. Call (507)533-9593. COUCH, dark teal, very comfy $300, queen Sealy pillowtop mattress & box spring $600, barely used. Moving (507)884-6406. CUSTOM Cushions, Lloyd Flanders. Fit wicker loveseat, rocker and 4 side chairs. Floral design, exc cond. $100. (507)288-0912. Dining Set Solid wood drop leaf table with queen anne legs, china hutch and 6 upholstered chairs (table pads also included). $800 [email protected] m or call 281-0500 before 9 pm DRAW leaf table - 29”x40” w/20” pull out leaves, 2 chairs. $250. 507-356-8919 DRESSER: 4 drawer, walnut color, excellent condition, $25. Call (507)288-1760. ELECTRICAL adjustable twin size bed. $250. Call (507)732-7227 Evenings EMERSON 27” TV w/remote, 1.5 yrs old, $110. Call (507)288-5898 FRIGIDAIRE Crown Series, exc cond, ice makes, white, 24.1 cu. ft. $175.00 OBO. 507-434-0914 FULL ORTHO MATTRESS SET: New & factory sealed. Only $140. Delivery available. Linda @ 507-269-9069 FULL size bed - Electric Adjustable head & foot w/massage for head/foot. Extra long, thick, firm mattress. Purchased new - used 12 mos. Will include sheet set. Asking $1,500/or reasonable offer. (507)282-2297 GE 8,000 BTU window air conditioner, little use. $50 OBO. (507)282-8513 GE refrig, $100; stove, $75; dishwasher, $5 (soap dispenser doesn’t work); Litton micro, above stove, $25. Call (507)289-2668. HANDCRAFTED oak corner hutch, 34x84. $235. Call (507)282-3707 after 6 pm HANDMADE Chinese rug 2’Wx3’L. Light blue w/floral border $150. (507)289-5830 HOTPOINT black ceramic cooktop stove used 2 yrs, self cleaning, ex. cond. $250. Lg. trampoline w/enclosure. $80. (507)358-2244 KENMORE stackable washer/dryer $250. (507)285-5182 KIMBALL console piano $900; whirlpool washer $250, dryer $250, fridge $500; 5 pc. bdrm set w/new mattress $550; cedar table w/4 chairs $175; wicker chair $75, ottoman $45, table $30, settee $150 & pads $; oak utility cupboards $125; round oak table & 4 chairs $675. 507-263-2481 or 612-961-7502 LIGHTED china hutch $300 OBO; Marcy by Impex weight machine $300 OBO. Electric reliner $500. 507-259-4358 1996 Steel Featherlite Econoline. 3 horse slant, gooseneck, saddle rack in rear, front dressing room. $2900. Call (507)824-2485 2 YR. Old Welsh/Shetland cross. $250 OBO. Call 507-251-0204 6 YR old bk, gaited gelding, gd broke $1200, 8 yr, reg, walking gelding, very sharp, exc trail horse $2200 (507)584-6496 (507)273-1972 8 yr old 15.1 hand bay black mule. Rides & drives, gentle enough for a beginner. Saddle that fits her, Britchen, breast collar, harness, two person cart & 4 person wagon that she pulls. All goes together for $3500. Moving must sell. Call (507)696-3647. at Easy Street Ranch. Starting at $175/month. www.jhmhorses.com 507-261-1103 Bomb Proof Mare For Sale Perfect Well Broke all around horse suitable for any rider, trail, show, reining, cutting, AQHA registered, 15H, sorrel, 4 white socks, loves to lope, $2500 BJ 507-254-1551 ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ FOR SALE: 10 year old red sorrel Belgiun mare, well broke, traffic safe. $700 507-365-8405 ILLINOIS Registered Miniature Horses: Class A & B, Appaloosa stallions. Buckskin family & other colors. Nice dispositions. $1,000 - $1,500 (563)569-8416. NEEDS A NEW HOME: Good color, pretty, 2 yr old Paint gelding. $650. Call (507)775-6922. PONY Wagon $250. (507)251-0204 Trail and cow horses 15yr. QH gelding, sorrel & 4yr. Paint mare, sorrel. Both have great manners! Asking $1,500 Ea. 1-507-273-3324 household MATTRESSES Mis-Match Close-Out All Sizes! Land O’ Dream 507-289-0313 ROUND 42” oak dining table, 4 chairs. Exc. condition. $250. (507)289-5483. Sharp 26" LCD TV For sale New technology Sharp 26" LCD wide screen TV, 800:1 contrast, 1366x768 resolution, 27"x20"x4" size, only 24lbs, like new! $485 2809383 SMALL IKEA entertainment cabinet: Excellent condition. Wood w/glass doors, $40. 507-252-0428. SOFA with recliner, blue, very good condition, $225 (507)287-0121 SOFA, Navy w/dk green leaf pattern, rust stripe, new cond $250 (507)289-9541 SOLID maple table w/8 chairs, primitive butcher block, mahogany china cabinet, oak dresser, piano/organ 1894, exc cond , 14 piece vintage metal cupboards, small vintage gas stove, walnut armoire, tiger oak armoire, large barn cupola 563-203-0900. UNDER the cabinet high end microwave still in box. Retails $499 - sell $300. Call 507-259-4868 VERY old & very beautiful oak buffet/sideboard w/ mirror. $200. 507-765-4924 VISCO-ELASTIC Memory foam mattress set. New in plastic/warr. Compare to Tempur-pedic. Value $2000. Sell $1,199. Can deliver. 507-269-9007 WASHER and electric dryer, both work good, $100 for pair. Call (507)254-0141. WHIRLPOOL washer 2 yrs. old. You move. $250. (507)282-5637 WHITE futon bunkbed: comes with both mattresses, great cond, $150 firm. Call (507)280-4144. WHITE make up vanity with chair and mirror, $25. Call (507)367-2233. WHITE WEDDING DRESS BEAUTIFUL MoriLee sz10, strapless, never been altered, veil, jewelry, headpiece incl. $800 OBO. leave msg 507-358-8360 WINDOW A/C, 5000 btu, works good. $45 Mantorville. Call (507)635-5820 YELLOW kitchen table: Seats 4, exc cond, $100/obo. Call (507)288-0833. medical supplies GOLDEN ALANT’E electric wheelchair. 5 yrs old, very good cond., New $4600. Sell - $2,195 OBO. (507)732-7531, (507)259-1799 USED Rascal scooter, newer batteries, $500. Call (507)287-8786 after 5pm. miscellaneous for sale (5) plate Franklin Mint “Fire Engine of the Past” in box. $50/all. 507-529-1892 07 HOT TUB - New in package, 6-7 person. 2 pumps, 42 jets, waterfall, cover, etc. Cost $7295; Sell $3900. Call 507-424-3788. 1998 Tiger River Sumatran 4 person HOT TUB. Newer cover and lift system. New pump, filter, jets, and stain. 120 Volt Unit. $1750 OBO. Call after 5 p.m. 507-635-5298 2001 8.5’ Western V-plow: like new, private use. $2,250 OBO. Call (507)634-7963, (507)951-1041. 3500 watt generator set, 6.5 hp, new in box $300. (507)272-4211. Ask for Mike 39 Farley Mowat books to single buyer. $1,200. Call (507)252-1127. 55 GALLON steel barrels and plastic barrels. Some with removable tops. Clean...nothing flammable or toxic. Call 507-206-0392 6 PERSON SPA: Gulf Coast Spa w/blue interior. 33 jets. 1 year old. Asking, $2,900 OBO. (507)282-2200. BANKRUPTCIES: Surplus, china cab, chest/drws, computers, sofas. Liquidation Store. 507-288-3429. BLACK DIRT: Pulverized. Pick up or deliver 507-251-8020/282-0994 CRAFTSMAN 2 HP, 26 gallon air compressor: $200. Used once. (507)261-6333. CRAFTSMAN air tools: stapler, brad nlr, fnsh nlr, $125. Call (507)261-6333. CRAFTSMAN table saw 10 1/2” $100. Good condition (507)288-5923 FREE ADS FOR MERCHANDISE VALUED AT horses & equipment Boarding Available lost & found horses & equipment $250 LOOKING FOR A GREAT BARGAIN? Check out the items in “Bargains Under $75” in today’s classified section! LOVESEAT, navy w/dk green leaf pattern, rust stripe $200 (507)289-9541 Moving Sale $10+ dining, living, study, bed room furn + misc 507-202-0311 or [email protected] MOVING Sale: 7 pc. solid oak dining rm set - Formica type top, dbl. pedestal 48x60x72x84 w/2 leaves, 6 high back chairs w/ upholstered seats $500 (new $1179); oak coffee table $50; lg. traditional sofa $100. (507)289-7784 OR LESS 1 ITEM PER AD 3 LINES PRICE MUST BE INCLUDED 888-755-5333 OR 507-252-1271 OR E-MAIL [email protected] Restrictions do apply. Private Party only. Minimum $5 value. Limit 3 ads per month. Merchandise only - no pets. GAS grill: Warm Warning RoyalMaster cast alum w/elec rotisserie, frnt/side shelves, $50. 507-289-5033. GE Glasstop, Convection Range $150. Call (218)371-6135. NEW & used washers, dryers, stoves, fridges & more Service/Warrty 507-259-4868 NORITAKE Virtue China, Complete Set. Exc. Cond. $150 Call: 507696-4376 LOOKING for a Hottub? Lap’s Got It! Used tubs starting at $700. Hottub dealer for over 25 years. Call 507-288-6289. Novell Wedding Band Ladies Tanzanite Ring mens 14K white gold, handmade, comfort fit, sz9, never been worn, $950 OBO 507-358-8360 leave msg QUEEN PILLOW TOP MATTRESS SET New in paper, w/ warranty. Must move. $170. Can Deliver Call 507-269-9069 QUEEN pillow top mattress, box spring and frame, $250. (507)993-3260. QUEEN size mattress/box spring Good condition. $75. 12” TV, VCR & stereo selling as a unit $75. Call (507)202-8269 Unique 1.37 CT Trillion cut, yellow gold on one side and white gold with 2 diamonds on other side. size 7 Paid 1,400.00 asking $950.00 Call 507-289-6283 LES Kouba signed, #’d, prints 27x35 “Sharp Tails at Harvest Time” & “Corn Pickin in the 1930’s”. $110 ea. 507-289-5830 ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ LOG Splitter, vertical & horizontal, 5.5 hp, Honda motor, $1,000. Very little use. (507)271-7717 Thursday, July 26, 2007 C11 miscellaneous for sale musical instruments pets pets pets Limestone Paver Stone PIANO: Young Chang, Korea model PF 116. Purchased new in 2004 for $5700. Asking $2500. 507-536-7121 AKC Brittany Puppies Four Females/Five Males $325/$300 Great hunting and family dogs! 507-438-6689 after 5pm/ anytime weekends AWESOME MALTESE PUPPIES 3 females and 5 male Maltese (12-16 weeks old). Males $550, Females $650 Current vaccinations, Genetic guarantee, dew claws removed, house training started and pre-loved. References available. We accept Paypal so you can use your credit card. Also available Coton De Tulear and Cavalier pups. Steve [email protected] or call 507-438-6283 Basset Hound puppies: Papers & shots. Ready to go! $250 each. Call (507)360-1717 or 507-360-4507 BEAGLE puppies, tri colored, males, APR, shots & wormed, $175 (507)259-8645 BEAUTIFUL spayed calico cat. Call vacs. current. Resuced stray. Very loving & perceptive. $25. (507)268-4940 or 612-229-8455 COCKAPOO PUPPIES: Quality males & females, buff & buff & white, vac., $200 & $250. (507)365-8516 or (507)259-3896. BI-POO, MALTI-POO, & TOY POODLES. Small, non-shedding, have parents. $350-$400. 563-535-7632 COCKER Spaniels, Black & buff. $300 & Silky Terrier pups $400. APR, shots, wormed, dews & tails. (507)333-5617 or 612-756-0156 2" thick honed limestone paving slabs. Cut 12" wide x various lengths from 12"-48". Beautiful variegation. Approx. 1000 SqFt. First $1000 takes all. 507-288-0603 MAKITA 16” circle saw new $400, DeWalt 12” compound miter saw $150, 12” dual miter saw $250, 4 Pasload nail guns $150 ea. Call (507)281-5792 NEW X-BOX Star Wars Game. $30. (507)285-5182 NEW, framed (33”x27”) picture “Everett’s Cottage” by Thomas Kinkade $150. (507)732-5186 OLYMPIC weight set, 300 lb. set. with or without Weider weight bench. Great shape! $125. (507)545-2489 SENCO Roof Pro 450 coil air nailer. 1/2 new price, in box, $150. (507)867-3143. SEWING machine, BERNINA, just serviced, exc cond, several design stitches $495 (507)287-0121 Snow Blower - Ranch King 8 HP 2-stage, used 2 seasons, $500.00 OBO; College bunk loft, $75.00 OBO. (507) 289-6120 TECHLINE modular office furn., grey, several units avail. Will sell sep. $50 per unit. & lrg steel workbenches $100. 507-289-8389 WANTED: Bunk beds $60 or less. For Sale: Air compressor 3 hp. $125; twin beds $40; push mower $40. 507-273-7960 WOOD PELLET SALE Fuel King Wood Pellets $179/ton. $169 per ton with purchase of 3 Tons or more! Sale is while supplies last. 6 Months Same As Cash available on purchases over $500. Warming Trends Onalaska, WI 608-783-6400 or Eyota, MN 507-545-9912 WOODEN swing set for sale: Slide and 4 swings. You take down and haul. $200/obo. (507)421-5479. ticket booth 4 TICKETS to Chicagoland Speedway for Sept. 8 & 9 racces. $200 for all 4 tickets. (507)280-6046 8 TICKETS for Chicagoland Speedway: ARCA Series & INDY Car Series, Sept 8 & 9, $72 ea for weekend - will sell for $50 ea. Great seats. 507-438-9323. VIKING Tickets for Sale Purchase a pre season game & you get a pick of a regular season game. $73 per ticket. 4 tickets available for all Viking home games. Call 507)285-9630 antiques & art goods ANTIQUE Furniture Sale Fri & Sat 7 am - 4 pm 3684 David Lane SW All Furniture Only Antique Bakers Cabinet metal top, bread cutting board, sugar and flour drawers and much more. Some wear. $500. 507-937-3583 anytime ANTIQUE claw foot bathtubs - very nice cond. $250 each. Call (507)272-4025 Antique wooden ice box excellent condition $500, 2 professionally restored antique white iron beds $250 each. 507 250-2494 ANTIQUES ORONOCO: 500 + furn. pcs. 1000’s of select smalls. (507)367-2220 APPROXIMATELY 150 yr. old hand hewed beams and timbers. (507)798-2367 William Polson WOODSMITH, Will Piens, furn. stripping, repair, refinish. Free est 507-285-9433 Moving must sell. Antique Kenmore sewing machine w/solid wood sewing desk. $350.00. 289-4342 PARLOR pump organ $100.00 507-535-2052 food market HIGH quality beef available by the quarter or half. Humanely grown by a local farmer. $1.75 hanging weight. (507)932-4489 evenings & weekends. musical instruments Antique Upright Pump Organ $200 old upright piano, needs refinishing $100 Linda 507-202-6446 CONN Trumpet w/case $200 firm. Yamaha Guitar. $40 firm. (507)285-5182 GETZEN 300 series Trumpet. Used for one year. $300. (507)433-1628 Grand Piano 5'9” long 1985 Chickering. High gloss Ebony Black finish. Beautiful condition. $4500. or best. 288-7404 GULBRANSEN upright piano, pecan finish with bench, in good cond., great value at $225. (507)282-6203 KAWAI black studio upright piano: Purchased new in 2001 for $7,000. Perfect condtion. $4500. (507)285-5860 LEFT handed guitar. It’s an Austin. 6 strings. With case. New , never used. 507-288-3307 or 358-4510 NAGOYA Quarter Size Cello: Purchased new in 2005 for $1,350. Perfect condition, $900. (507)285-5860 NEW - never used - full size student violin & bow with locking case. German made by Georg Herrmann, Markneukirchon 1993. Copy of Antonius Stradivarius. $950. Call Becky (507)289-5278 PEARL Export drum set. Newer heads. No Snare. $245. OBO. (507)990-6650 Pearl Export Select Drum set, Ebony Mist high gloss wood grain finish. 5 drums, 7 Zildjian cymbals. $900.00 507 356 8061 PIANO FOR SALE: Upright studio size, black, Young Chang, $1200. Great Condition! Call 507-280-7978 SPINET organ & bench good condition. Used for practice. $200. (507)433-9360 STEINWAY SHERATON MODEL 4510 UPRIGHT VERTICAL PIANO: 1982 model, one owner, current new price is $22,000, in mint condition, asking $12,500 firm. Call 507-635-5270. AKC Brittany Puppies WHITNEY-KIMBALL up right piano with bench $300 OBO Call (507)281-3006 Wurlitzer Piano with bench. Great condition. $650.00 507-356-8061 Great hunting background, 7 females $325 & 5 males $300. Available 8/2/07. Fast sellers, so feel free to pick yours out early!! (507)438-6689 after 5pm or anytime on weekends AKC Chocolate Pointing Lab puppies. Ready July 28, excellent pedigree. Shots, vet checked & health guarantee. Both parents exc hunters. Great family dogs. Females, $550 Males, $500. Call 507-753-2232, 507-269-7346 computer equip. & electronics AKC Golden retriever puppies & AKC Cocker Spaniels. Shots & wormed. Stud service also available. Austin, 507-437-7840 Complete Dell Pentium III System Dell Pentium III Desktop, 1.13Ghz 512MB Ram 40GB hd drive DVD/RW combo keyboard+mouse Windows XP Office XP load $125. 17" flat screen $35 507-280-9383 NATURAL KB Eilte Win 9X keyboard. Brand new in box. $35. Becky (507)289-5278 NEW Dell Laptop Inspiron (1501) 15” screen AMD TURION-64 MK36, 2 ghz processor, Rams 446MBs, Windows - Visa, $600. 507-288-0395 after 6pm. TV: RCA 20” Tru Flat, 2 yrs old. $90. Please Call: 507-536-9340 AKC Lab pups, fox red & yellow, shots, dews, vet ckd $300. Can email pics. Call after 4 pm. Red Wing (651)388-1747. AKC Lab Pups: all colors, 1st shots, health guaranteed, parents on site. $300-$500. Call 507-951-1506. AKC Reg. Yellow Lab Puppies. Born 6/16 ready 8/11. Females $350, Males $300. All shots. (507)440-3823 after 3pm . AKC Registered Cockers. Wonderful temperament, good with children, black/ tan female, 3 years old, house trained, all shots. $350. Black/tan Merle male, 6 months old, house trained, all shots. $250. White/buff party male, 9 years old, needs good home. $50. Call: 507-767-4504 www.indiancreekcockers.c om pets AKC Registered Lab Puppies 2 BROTHER kittens - must stay together. 1 girl kitten. Deliver to your responsible home. 507-896-7510 www.partytimedjs.org/cats Black labs, 7 weeks old. Great Blood line! Strong hunting background. Vet checked, Dew claws removed, 1st shots and wormed. Very kid friendly and social. They will be missed! $300. Kim or Curt 507-477-3809 2 FEMALE toy poodle pups, cream, 1 - 2 yr old male, cream AKC, registered parents $350 each. 507-252-5457 or 507-250-6466 2 YR. old. spayed Female Boxer. All shots, great dog, house broke, lots of energy. $300. Call 507-202-6401 6 - LAB PUPPIES: AKC reg., raised with children, black or yellow. Shots done. M: $250. (507)421-9249 ADOPT A HOMELESS PET! Austin’s Humane Society has a wide variety of animals available for adoption. Browse photos & descriptions at www.mowercountyhumanesociety.org Adorable Yellow Lab Pups Reg. w/papers. Dews. $100 Also 2 1/2 yr w/papers. Very good mother. Free to country home. 641-985-2514 or 641-590-2106 AKC yorkie pup Male, first shots, vet checked. Paper trained. $600.00 507-251-3702 American Cocker Spaniel puppies Parti and Tri Colors. Health Guarantee. Kid Friendly $400 each. Call 641-732-5617 or visit us at www.midwestcockers.com AQUARIUM stand, 55 gal. $50. Aquarium stand 38 gal. $20. (507)288-5923 AUSTRIALIAN Shepherd puppies: Blue Merle, 6 wks old, ready to go. Males & females. $50. Call (507)765-2537. BASSET hound male $150, Jack Russell, male $125, 2 Chihuahua pups $400 each, shots, dews & registered APR (507)360-0536 Bichon Frise Puppies born 5/11/07 - 5 females APR Registered own both parents 1st Shots and wormed. $450.00 ea 507-289-6283 BICHON/SHIH TZU - low shed, allergy friendly, litter box trained, pics. avail. Can meet. $250-$350. Cash. (641)847-2755 or 515-689-8615 BLUE Heeler female pups - purebred, shots, wormed, 8 wks., $150 each. Will meet. (563)586-2102 BOXER Puppies: born June 14th - ready Aug 1. Males: flashy brindle, flashy fawn, fawn/black mask. Vet checked, shots, wormed, tails, dew claws, $500. Call (507)259-6755. CANARIES 1 pr. orange/ red w/cage & access. $150. Cocketiels - pearls, pieds, geys. $50 & up. Chinchilla w/cage $100. (507)567-2212 CAVALIER Puppies: very small, excellent quality, $850 & up. Web: http:// welovepuppies.tripod.com (no www.) We will meet. Call (612)240-2610. Chi-Pin- Chihuahua Miniature Pinscher Puppies Chihuahua Miniature Pinscher Puppies for sale. 2 males and 1 female. Shots and dewormed. Ready to go now. Home raised. Will meet. AKC registered Pug puppy available now. 507-896-3337 CHIHUAHUA pups: AKC, vet checked, shots, wormed, family raised. $500. (507)526-3550 or (507)525-1062. CHOCOLATE Lab female 2 yrs. old, spayed, shots, house broke, great personality. $225. Call 952-200-2884 CKC Chihuahua puppies 2 F, 2 M-$350.00 ea CKC Yorkie-Male $700.00 ACA Yorkie-Female $700.00 5 parrotlets $65.00 ea 4 hand fed cockatiels$50.00 ea. Exercise bike $100.00 Cash only. 507-527-2298 COCKAPOO PUPS - shots, wormed, dews, tails, health guaranteed, $300. Delivery possible 507-724-5004 or email [email protected] COCKAPOO, female quality puppies, all shots, black, $250 each. 507-365-8516/507-259-3896 COCKER Spaniel APR pups: Buff, black. Males $250 & females $300. Shots, wormed. (507)455-0043 COCKER Spaniel puppies: AKC, chocolate & white parti females. Dews, tails, shots, wormed, family raised. Ready now! $325. 507-440-8214. ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ CORGI (Pembroke Welsh) APR, born 6/18, Males, females, vac, wormed, vet checked. $250. 507-658-3565 CUTE kittens - several colors - all males! Free to good home! Call (507)367-2198 DACHSHUND mix, 5 mo old female dapple. Housebroken, shots, wormed, very sweet! $150. Also, Dachshund male dapple, 4 yr old, housebroken, shots, wormed, very nice dog! $300. 651-345-6903 ENGLISH Mastiff AKC, vet chkd, family raised, gentle giants, $600 (218)750-1408 ENGLISH Springer Spaniel puppies, AKC, liver/white or blk/wht Males, guaranteed w/refs, parents on site, exc w/families/pheasants, $350. (641)330-0362. Close to Rochester. ENGLISH Springer Spaniels: AKC, vet work done, liver & white, have mother on site. $300/M, $350/F 507-754-6757. English Springers English Springers (2) looking for the right home. Marley is an incredible find for anyone wanting to train pups. Marley lives to hunt and loves to hunt birds. Marley was displaced and became a "city dog" when her owner married and Marley moved and became a "city dog" Paris is a 1 1/2 year old unspayed B/W female her name fits her as she is spoiled rotten. Paris was our Daughters "pick of the litter" and she chose well but our daughter is now in college and working and simply can't keep Paris any longer. Give us a call regarding Marley and Paris Leave a message at 507-696-7611 Marley is a real gem find for 50.00 and Paris needs a family that can spoil her rotten.. 100.00. Contact Dee 507-696-7611 leave msg GARAGE SALES NW garage sales NW garage sales SW garage sales SE garage sales 100 Outlaw Goose, herders ultimate duck, 75 misc decoys, 12 ft Lund ducker boat, layout blind, 3 & 5 hp outboards, TLNG motor, ice house, ice auger Saturday 7/28 ONLY 10-5 No Calls! 6147 Teal Lane NW SAT 8-2, Speed bike, teen clothes/stuff, ACT/SAT books, oak mantle, home furn, kit ware, magazines. 3322 8th Ln NW LARGE 5 family Sale. Kid to adult clothing w/lots of teen clothing. fabric, go-cart. LOTS of misc. 2-Vans. Fri., 7-5 & Sat., 7-4 /Most items 1/2 price Sat. 2650 Elmcroft Drive SW (3 blks W. of WalMart) MOVING SALE! Everything must go! Furniture, household, garage, tools, English saddle & misc! Fri 2-6pm & Sat 9-12 16 - 13th Ave SE MULTIFAMILY Sale: Kid & adult clothing, toys, furniture, dishes, books, much misc. 1367 - 8-1/2 Ave SE, Fri, 3-7, & Sat, 8 - 3. 2220 VIKING Dr. NW. Fri. 7-4 & Sat. 7-2. Men’s & women’s clothes, hsld items, electronics, furn., and much, much more!!! 723 2nd St. NW. Fri. 8-4 & Sat. 8-4. Punching bag, trampoline, patio table, clothes, hsld, lots of misc. Check this one out!! CABINET Clearance Sale Misc. cabinet doors & drawer fronts, misc. countertop pieces. 1207 2nd Ave NW. Thurs. & Fri. 8-4 FRI & Sat 8-4, + sz. clothing, Xmas decor, books, glassware, misc. 2412 NW 25th Street. FRI, Sun & Sun 8-4, crib, Pack & Play, booster seats, toys, girls clothes 3-5, bike trailer, table, hi chair, car seats, juke box, 1952 TV. 4340 57th St NW. FRIDAY & SAT. 8:30-12:30 5278 - 51st St. NW Lots of infant to toddler items, some furniture, books, clothes, misc items Friday 8-4 6369 Granite Dr NW Baby items, books, housewares, decor, CDs, movies, Name Brand Clothes including plus sizes. HUGE MOVING SALE!!! Fri 9-5 & Sat 9-12 5222 Gemstone Lane NW NE garage sales HUGE GARAGE SALE! Fri, 8-5 & Sat. 8-4 1011 & 1007 - 13th Ave NE 1225 - 10th St. NE Life time collection of fishing, hunting, railroad items, golf balls, electrical supplies, office equipment, PA systems, CB, furniture, antiques, Redwing stonewear, and general household MULTI-FAMILY SALE! PRICED TO SELL! 2546 Northern Hills Ct NE Furniture-sofa, desk, 3-way mirrow, etc. Sm. kchn appl-breadmaker, griddle, etc., Home decorbaskets, pictures, etc. Clothes preteen-adult name brand (AE, A/F, Gap), TVs, computer, books, & more! Fri 7/27 8-4 & Sat 7/28 8-4 MULTI-FAMILY SALE! Dorm room necessities, furniture, children & teen clothing, books, school supplies, lots more! Fri & Sat 8:00-2:00 2716 Viola Heights Dr. NE SAT, 8-NOON. Childrens toys, household items, misc furniture, guinea pig cage. No Clothing. 2633 Oakview Lane NE. THURS, FRI, SAT 8-5 2069 Rim Rock Lane NE (Century Hills) Kid’s clothes, toys, furniture, househol items, decorative items, adult clothing, scrapbooking/stamping items & misc! MAKE A REASONABLE OFFER SALE! Bunk beds, papasan chairs & funriture, camping & grill items, rafts, water tubes, large garage storage cabinet, up North decor, cooking items, blankets, & misc! 3726 David Lane SW Saturday 8:00 - Noon MULTIFAMILY SALE! 184 39TH ST SW. Thurs. 5-8, Fri.. 8-2. Lots of kids toys, games, play equipment & clothes plus hsld & misc. NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALE Kid’s Stuff Galore! Friday & Saturday 7 a.m. - 4 p.m. Hart Farm SW Rochester off 18th Ave ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ SW Forest Hills Dr. N'hood HUGE SALE! July 27-28 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM Furniture, organ, piano, exercise equipment, framed pictures, toys, tools, paper shredder, "coca cola" refrigerator TOYS, bedding, household, lawn & garden, speakers, fabric & frames. Fri., 7-4 & Sat., 8-2/half price sale. 1705 - 3rd Ave SW HUGE GARAGE SALE Household items, furniture & much more! Fri., 7 - 6 & Sat., 7 - ? 5031 - 51st St. NW SW garage sales WED., Thurs, Fri. 8-5. Stove, fridge, dishwasher, desk & chair & lots of misc. 1442 4th Ave SW HUGE MULTI-FAMILY SALE! 2505 - 59th St NW Friday 7-6, Saturday 7-? Baby clothes & equipment, S-L women’s clothes, HH, & misc! GARAGE SALE SE garage sales Household and some furniture. Friday, 8-6 MOVING/ GARAGE SALE EVERYTHING MUST GO! 807 - 6TH AVENUE NW 2906 Salem Meadows Dr. SW Announce Thursday, Friday and Saturday Sell 8:00 AM 6:00 PM Advertise Multi-family garage sale furniture, small kit applncs, new inf/tdlr clothes, pwr tools, H.O. trains, collectibles, misc sprtng gds, African violets Friday July 27: 8:00-4:30 Saturday July 28: 8:00-2:30 4837 Valley Drive NW Recruit Classifieds Work! 285-7777 2815 22nd ST SE Fri. 7-5 & Sat. 7-1 LOTS OF STUFF! FRI. & Sat., 7-3. (On Sat. at 10 am bag & make offer sale). 1115 - 1st Ave. SE Furniture, kitchen ware, & appliances, Comforter sets, area rugs, gas grill, bikes, clothing size 4 - plus, some antiques. Many misc. & free Items. FRI. 6PM-8PM, Sat. 8AM-4PM. 4 family sale. Infant-adult clothes; furniture; toys; computer games; 204 9th Ave. SE. ★★ NEW TODAY ★ ★ HUGE MOVING SALE Maytag washer/dryer set, dishes, new and slightly used catering supplies, and many more items Saturday July 28th 7-1 818 10th Ave SE HUGE Moving/Downsizing Sale! Fri & Sat. 8-4. Tools, furn., golf clubs, misc. hlsd., decor, & more. 1/2 price Sat. noon. 805 23rd St SE NEIGHBORHOOD SALE Sat 7/28 8-1 ONLY! Furniture, DVD player, collectibles, quilt frame, Blue Garland China, sporting goods, child, brand name teen & adult clothing, toys, books, & more! S. on Marion 3 mi. 4035 Countrywood Dr. SE NEIGHBORHOOD Sale! 3800 block of 25th St SE, Crestwood Ct., Countrywood Dr. Sat.. 7:30 - 2. (3 mi. So. on Marion Rd.) SAT. ONLY 8-1. Little Tikes playground & 8 in 1 climber $100 cash; dog kennel, assort. horse tack, back to school clothes, etc. THURS 8-4 & SAT 8-2 1407 Durand Court SE Toys, clothing, movies, household items, end tables & much misc! out-of-town sales BYRON - 12 9th ST NE. Fri. 9-5 & Sat. 8-4. Multifamily Sale! Infant & children’s name brand clothes (Gap, Gymbroee, Old Navy), toys, teachers supplies, various hsld items and much more! DAYCARE Closing & Misc Rummage Sale: Little Tikes, yard toys, vanity, Holiday decor, gas grill, lots of trucks, picnic table, clothes, doll toys, Pak-N-Plays, high chairs, arts & crafts, strollers, never used items, Rubbermaid totes, bike. Do Not Miss This Sale! Many items not listed. 215 - 2nd Ave NE, HAYFIELD, MN, Sat, July 28, 8 am - 4 pm, Sun, July 29, 8 am - 2 pm. FRI & Sat 7-3. Huge Sale!! Lots of kid clothes, tools, books, adult clothes & lots of misc, & free kittens to good homes. 804 Miller Lane SE, Stewartville FRI 5-8 & Sat 8-12, twin loft bunk bed set, toys, clothes 3T - plus size, hsld & dorm supplies & free stuff. 307 4th St. SE, Stewartville pets FREE 1 yr. old female cat - declawed, very cute & friendly. To good home only. Call (507)281-9122 FREE kittens to loving home: Call (507)252-0438. FREE Kittens: Orange or Tan, male & female. (507)775-6983 FREE TO GOOD HOME: 1 1/2 yr. old Black Lab/ Border Collie. (507)421-9290 C12 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 pets pets bicycles legals GERMAN Shepherd/Eskimo cross puppies - good pets, all tails curl. Dennis M. Swartzentruper, 36343 130th St., Canton, MN 55922 or call 563-379-5118 Males $150, Females $200. GOLDEN Doodle & Golden Oodle puppies: Black, red or cream. Family raised, beautiful pups w/personality plus. Vet checked, vac., wormed. Ready 8/10 $250 & up. (563)547-3389 will meet GOLDEN-DOODLE puppies, beautiful loving mother, smart athletic sire. Family farm raised, healthy and gorgeous. Ready July 21st. $800. 507-645-1600 GOLDEN-DOODLE puppies. Fantastic cream colored pups from AKC champion sire poodle & AKC dam golden retriever. Family raised & loved. Ready Aug. 1. $800 & $1000 includes vet check, shots, kennel. 507-269-0688 REGISTERED puggles & beagles. Puggles $325, Beagles $150, vet. ckd, shots. Will meet. Very small. (563)535-2849. ADAMS trail-a-bike $100, Child’s bicycle seat $35. (507)288-0733 SECOND ADDITION, IN THE CITY OF ROCHESTER, OLMSTED COUNTY, MINNESOTA. GREAT Dane puppies: AKC, Mantle & Merle, top quality. $600 & Up. Call (507)931-4280. ITALIAN greyhound pups, parents weigh 7 lbs., very lovable. Shots & wormed. $275. 641-732-5248 Jack Russell 3 Female puppies, tails and dews done $175. 1 1/2 year old male to good home. Andy - 507-398-5693 LOOKING for a “nice home” for our adult male cat: He is black with white markings, neutered, declawed. $15, includes Iams food, litter box, and litter. He needs companionship. Please call 507-285-1138. Maltese pups Born 4/26. 3f 3m from 2 moms same dad on site. APR registered, shots and wormed. Hypoallergenic nonshedding. Very playful and affectionate. Males $500, Females $600. Pics avail. 507-634-4727 MINATURE Schnauzer pups, AKC, black or black & silver, shots, wormed, natural ears. $500-$550. (563)586-2102 MINIATURE Schnauzer puppies, black & salt & pepper, reg., family raised. $400. (507)399-9353 MINIATURE Schnauzers, AKC, tails, dews, vet checked, shots, born 6/22, avail. 8/10. $400. Black/silver. 320-327-2236, lv msg NORWEGIAN Elk Hound, 10 mos, male, shots & neutered, friendly w/ kids & other dogs $100 OBO (507)259-8412 PERSIAN kittens - 6 wks, shots, champion lines, $300. Standard poodles - 10 wks., avail. now, shots, Champ parents $1000. 507-990-8088 Pigmy Goat Kids 3 males and 2 females ready to wean starting 6/30/07. $25 each. phone (507)421-7027 or email [email protected] Poodle Puppies AKC Toy Cafe o lait and Choc. factored apricot. Males. Also 3 Ch. bred male Apricots. Home raised. Vet checked /guaranteed. $250-$350. Linda Dinesen-507-381-0781 Publisher Note: It has recently been brought to our attention that a puppy scam is targeting animal lovers. Readers are asked to wire money to a seller who is either out of the country or out of state, with the promise that the seller will ship the animal once the wire transfer has been received. We at the Post-Bulletin take every precaution to protect our readers and ask that they look for red flags and consider the following when purchasing an animal: *Purchase locally. *Be wary of ads that do not list a telephone number but an e-mail address only. *Have the animal examined by a veterinarian before purchasing. *Never wire money or send a check. *Be sure to obtain the pet at the time of purchase. Classified Department 508-285-7777 800-562-1758 PUG pups: 6 weeks.Family raised. Vet checked. Dewormed. 1st shots. Fawn. 3 males, 2 females. Must see. $250. Call (507)765-9834. PUREBRED black lab puppies. Farm raised, wormed, shots, Ready to go $100 (507)440-0780 PUREBRED WHITE German Shepherd female puppies, great parents, great with kids, call now for first pick. $200/ea. 563-568-1312 RABBITS FOR SALE Mini Lops, Harlequin, & Magpies. 3 mos. old. $5 each. (507)545-1253 RAT Terrier puppies, small, males $125, females $125. Call (507)451-5834. REGISTERED AKC Norwegian Elkhound puppies. $250/ea. 507-876-2695 REGISTERED English Setter pups for sale. Excellent hunting/family dogs. $400. (507)533-6178. SAMOYED puppies: 10 weeks, shots, wormed, have bear faces, 1 male, 1 female. $400. (563)535-7632. SCHIPPERKE pups - shots, wormed, 9 weeks, $400. Will meet. (563)586-2102 SCHNAUZER, min, AKC, no shedding, dews, tails, vet ckd, born 6/14, ready in 2 wks. $500 females (1), $450 males (4) (507)653-4169 SCHNOODLE PUPPIES vet checked, shots up to date, Males, $200, Females $250. 641-228-6202 SCHNOODLE PUPPIES vet checked, shots up to date, Males, $200, Females $250. 641-228-6202 Sheltie F 5 yr. Sable white,shots.$75. Male sheltie pups also available $300. Ready now.Plainview 507 534-3948 SHIH TZU POODLE Cross, Poo-Bear, non shed, small, health guarantee. Rochester. $350-$500. (507)273-5774 SHIH TZU PUPPIES APRI registered, home raised and pre-spoiled Shih Tzu puppies. 1 male, 3 females. Vet checked, first shots and wormed. $350. Call 563-382-4856 SHIH Tzu Puppies: APR, Brown & white, cute & cuddly. Ready to go 7/30 $400 cash/deposit will hold. Call (507)202-1240 STAFFORDSHIRE Bull Terrier - 9 mo. old neutered male, black, shots, house broke, gentle. $200. Call 952-200-2884 CANNONDALE 12spd. commuter bike for 6’ +/person. $75. (507)990-1382 GIANT alcopolco mens mountain bike, many extras. $190. (507)282-5637 SCHWINN Stingray Orange County Chopper Cruiser bike, mini saddle bag, green. $50 or best offer. 507-951-8543. yard & garden 2-WHEEL yard trailer w/ dump box, $25. Call: 507-529-1892 ALLIS Chalmers C w/ like new Woods 60” belly mower. Looks & Runs great! $2,500 OBO. (507)346-9830 HONDA 1 spd mower -warranty - perfect cond. 2 yrs. old. $250. (507)289-3799 PATIO/LANDSCAPE pavers - Autumn Blend color, various sizes - approx. 120’ (purchased new $700) Selling for $200. (507)281-9033 Wood Chipper John Deere wood chipper/shredder for residential work. In very good condition $450 507-288-6832 WOOD shed 10 x 10, less than a year old. $500 (507)398-3236 (507)244-1486 YARDMAN straight shaft gas trimmer. $50. Please call: 507-529-1892 Zero turn mower 60" deck, Snapper, joy stick control, 22HP, 430 Hrs, $2800 (507) 533-4913 industrial equipment TEDDY Bear Puppies: Super Cute!!! No shed, health guarantee. $350 - $500. Call 507-273-5774 - Roch. TEDDY-BEAR hybrid pups very cute, shots & wormed $300. 641-732-5248 TOY Australian Shepard puppies, 8 wks old, b/w tries, blue merles, NSDR reg, shots, worming, dews $350 - $550. (507)867-3035 TRUE Teacup Chihuahua’s, under 3 lbs, litter box trained. Must sell, moving. Breeding pair w/ baby ready to go. Will sell together or separate. $1600 for all three. 507-206-0596 URGENTLY needs a home Male German Shepherd shorthair. We’re moving. Great for farm or hunter. Call (507)281-4228. YO-CHON puppies, ACHC registered. 6-8 lbs full grown. Rare, hard to find. $500. 507-438-8010 YORKIE MALE PUPPY: AKC, shots, family raised, $600. Call 712-472-2246 or 712-470-1954 YORKIE PUPPIES: 2 adorable pups, 1 male, 1 female, 10 wks, shots started. $500 & $700. Male 3 yr old Yorkie, not neutered, $500. 651-380-7142 please leave message. Yorkie/Maltese pup Sweet escape artist. Marks carpet, howls like a beagle! Looks like Toto. Not yet nuetered. Only 150.00 206-3295 YORKIE: M/F, registered, ACA, vet checked, 1st set of shots, family raised. Have parents $400-$500. Call: 507-374-8025 or 507-271-0205 Yorkies, AKC 11 weeks old $400, home-raised, vet & shots 641-394-3213 YORKIES, APR reg. Males & females, various ages. Some are housebroken. They make excellent pets. raised with kids. $400-$600 563-562-9025, leave message sporting goods WEIGHT set - Schwinn personal training set series 701, includes all weights $175. (507)282-8486 hunting/fishing Boat 4 Sale! 1990 18' Bayliner Capri w/ galvanized trailer (new tires and tabs). 90 Force outboard motor, runs great! New fish finder, seats eight, overall great boat. $3500 Justin @ 507-273-2631 GOLDEN Eagle predator bow, hard case, cobra rel. etc Mint! $150 507-765-4924 1985 Ford L9000 tri Axle Dump Truck. Truck is in good shape with Good tires all around and electric tarp. It has a Cummins Big Cam diesel engine with Low miles and a 8LL transmission. Asking 12,750.00 OBO. Call 507-458-2386 or email at [email protected] 99 JD 120 Excavator: quick attach, thumb, 2 buckets, $44,000. Will deal. Trade considered. 507-259-6866 BRIDGEPORT Series I Mill 1980 SN 213202, 2HP, Variable Speed Head, 9x42 Table, Power Feed, 230-460V 3 Phase. Good condition. Can email digital photos or view under power in Rochester. $3750 OBO. (507)884-6608 CONCRETE Contractor retiring - Snap ties, hardware, plyform, wire mesh, lumber, power trowel, concrete saw. $2,000. (507)285-9282 GARDNER Denver Industrial Air Compressor, 50 hp, 15,000 hrs, 3 phased, $3000 obo (507)689-4336 building materials RAFTER TRUSSES 7 - 16' Trusses 6/12-3/12 pitch. 1 - 16' Truss 6/12 pitch gabled end Brand new! Perfect to cover deck. Retail $590.00, Sell for $350.00 507-775-2830 WHITE oak boards, approx 600 ft, 1 inch rough cut with band saw, air dryed. $2.25/ft or $1200/all. Call: 507-867-4548 merchandise wanted BEAN BAG Chair - free or cheap, in good condition. 507-398-9142 - lv msg BUYING US silver coins: 8 - 9 times face value. Buying any coins - gold or silver Kuehl’s Coins. Fairmont. 507-235-3886, 10a-5:30. YOUR gently used American Girl dolls & accessories. Call (507)356-4916. PAYING cash for older Western saddles, preferably high back. And older western spurs. Pay up to $1000. 507-932-5024, lv msg COLOR HELPS YOU SELL! Classifieds Work. 285-7777 BARGAINS UNDER $ 2 - 5,000 BTU MAYTAG, 110V, window air cond., 1 yr old. $30. (218)371-6135. 2 small white eyelet covered pillows $5; fall dried flower arrangement in glass vase 26” high $7. (507)289-8059 AIR CONDITIONER $30; (507)289-8099 AIR Conditioner - GE 6500 BTU's 110 volt window unit. Works great! $45. Stewartville area. 952-297-6999 ANTIQUE rocking horse, $30; (507)289-8099 BARGAINS UNDER $75. Published everyday in the classifieds. Private party individuals can place their FREE merchandise ads priced under $75 by phoning 507-252-1271 or 888-755-5333; emailing [email protected]; or mailing ad to: Post Bulletin Classifieds 18 1st Ave. SE Rochester MN 55901 Each ad can run 7 days in print and 7 days online. Price of merchandise must be stated in the ad. Approx. 12 words per ad. *Restrictions do apply. 75 CAR top carrier. Sears. $10. (507)280-4131 or 507-269-0873 CHEST Freezer - 13 cu. ft., Kenmore, 1989, ex. cond. $75. (507)288-1760 COLLECTIBLE Longaberger tea basket w/maroon liner $45. (507)843-5340 COMPUTER DESK w/ adj. keyboard tray $20. 507-536-9340 DINING CHAIRS (4) wooded. $50 507-536-9340 DRESSER, $30. (507)289-8099 DRYER: Frigidaire, electric, clothes dryer. $50.00. 507-535-2052 ELECTRIC ball thrower $20. 507-285-5182 FABRIC pleated blinds, slate blue, 53 7/8”x38” $30. 507-289-9541 FRIGIDAIRE Upright: 11.6 cu ft Freezer. $75. Call (218)371-6135. GOLF clubs, bag and push cart, $35. Call (507)367-2494. HIDE-A-BED, Sealy mattress, excellent condition. $45.(507)288-1760 00 NEW in Box! Geo Mobile Printer Storage Cart. 25.5”W x 19” D x 22.9” H. Came from Staples. Was $60. Sell $20. (507)355-1569 QUILTED bedspread standard size - floral - soft colors $8. (507)289-8059 ROUND dining table with woven chairs $60. Call (507)282-3707 after 6 pm. SMALL computer desk on wheels, $22. Call (507)287-0121. THE new Mayo clinic cookbook, brand new. Sell for $20. Call (507)843-5340 TIRES: 265/75 R 16, 265/70 R16. $10/ea. Please call (507)867-3143. WOOD computer desk on wheels, slide out drawer, $15. Call (507)367-2233. WOODEN kitchen table w/4 chairs in good condition $75 OBO. (507)951-2066 legals legals legals legals part thereof; legals legals COUNTY IN WHICH PROPERTY IS LOCATED: Olmsted NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE THE RIGHT TO VERIFICATION OF THE DEBT AND IDENTITY OF THE ORIGINAL CREDITOR WITHIN THE TIME PROVIDED BY LAW IS NOT AFFECTED BY THIS ACTION. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that default has occurred in the conditions of the following described mortgage: DATE OF MORTGAGE: November 8, 2006 ORIGINAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF MORTGAGE: $125,000.00 MORTGAGOR(S): Kyle L. Ketterling, single MORTGAGEE: Savings Bank, fsb Eastern DATE AND PLACE OF FILING: Filed December 14, 2006, Olmsted County Recorder, Document No. A-1121248 LEGAL DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: Lot 15 and 16 in the First Addition to Cedar Beach Subdivision and Subdivision of the East 100 feet of Outlot 1, less the South 321 feet thereof; also Lots 25 and 26 in Cedar Beach Subdivision, together with a strip of land the same width as said Lots 25 and 26 extending from said lots to the property line of the City of Rochester at or near the water's edge in front of said lots (in the NE1/4, Section 14, Township 108, Range 14); and Lot 17, in the First Addition to Cedar Beach Subdivision and Subdivision of the East 100 feet of Outlot 1 less the South 321 feet thereof COUNTY IN WHICH PROPERTY IS LOCATED: Olmsted THE AMOUNT CLAIMED TO BE DUE ON THE MORTGAGE ON THE DATE OF THE NOTICE: $135,306.93 THAT all pre-foreclosure requirements have been complied with; that no action or proceeding has been instituted at law or otherwise to recover the debt secured by said mortgage, or any part thereof; PURSUANT, to the power of sale contained in said mortgage, the above described property will be sold by the Sheriff of said county as follows: DATE AND TIME OF SALE: August 22, 2007, 10:00am PLACE OF SALE: Sheriff's Main Office, 101 4th Street SE, Rochester, MN 55904 to pay the debt secured by said mortgage and taxes, if any, on said premises and the costs and disbursements, including attorneys fees allowed by law, subject to redemption within 6 months from the date of said sale by the mortgagor(s) the personal representatives or assigns. "THE TIME ALLOWED BY LAW FOR REDEMPTION BY THE MORTGAGOR, THE MORTGAGOR'S PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVES OR ASSIGNS, MAY BE REDUCED TO FIVE WEEKS IF A JUDICIAL ORDER IS ENTERED UNDER MINNESOTA STATUTES SECTION 582.032 DETERMINING, AMONG OTHER THINGS, THAT THE MORTGAGED PREMISES ARE IMPROVED WITH A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING OF LESS THAN 5 UNITS, ARE NOT PROPERTY USED FOR AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, AND ARE ABANDONED. • Dated: June 29, 2007 Eastern Savings Bank, fsb Mortgagee SHAPIRO, NORDMEYER & ZIELKE, LLP BY _________________ Lawrence P. Zielke – 152559 Diane F. Mach - 273788 Kristine M. Spiegelberg – 308845 Melissa L. Baldridge 0337778 Attorneys for Mortgagee 7300 Metro Blvd., Suite 390 Edina, MN 55439-2306 (952) 831-4060 PURSUANT TO THE FAIR DEBT COLLECTION PRACTICES ACT, YOU ARE ADVISED THAT THIS OFFICE IS DEEMED TO BE A DEBT COLLECTOR. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. This NOTICE is required by the provisions of the Fair Debt Collection PRACTICES Act and does not imply that we are attempting to COLLECT money from anyone who has discharged the debt UNDER the Bankruptcy Laws of the United States. (7/5, 7/12, 7/19, 7/26, 8/2, 8/9) NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that default has occurred in the conditions of the following described mortgage: DATE OF MORTGAGE: September 1, 2004 ORIGINAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF MORTGAGE: $118,400.00 MORTGAGOR(S): Sokun Kong and Kusol Kong, husband and wife MORTGAGEE: Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. DATE AND PLACE OF RECORDING: Recorded: September 13, 2004 Olmsted County Recorder Document #: A-1037219 LEGAL DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: LOT ONE (1), BLOCK TWO (2), ROLLING GREENS AMOUNT DUE AND CLAIMED TO BE DUE AS OF DATE OF NOTICE: $120,983.44 THAT all pre-foreclosure requirements have been complied with; that no action or proceeding has been instituted at law or otherwise to recover the debt secured by said mortgage, or any part thereof; PURSUANT to the power of sale contained in said mortgage, the above described property will be sold by the Sheriff of said county as follows: DATE AND TIME OF SALE: August 23, 2007 10:00 A.M. PLACE OF SALE: Sheriff's Main Office Civil Division 101 4th Street SE Rochester, MN to pay the debt secured by said mortgage and taxes, if any, on said premises and the costs and disbursements, including attorneys fees allowed by law, subject to redemption within 6 months from the date of said sale by the mortgagor(s), their personal representatives or assigns. Mortgagor(s) released from financial obligation: NONE THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. THE RIGHT TO VERIFICATION OF THE DEBT AND IDENTITY OF THE ORIGINAL CREDITOR WITHIN THE TIME PROVIDED BY LAW IS NOT AFFECTED BY THIS ACTION. THE TIME ALLOWED BY LAW FOR REDEMPTION BY THE MORTGAGOR, THE MORTGAGOR'S PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVES OR ASSIGNS, MAY BE REDUCED TO FIVE WEEKS IF A JUDICIAL ORDER IS ENTERED UNDER MINNESOTA STATUTES, SECTION 582.032, DETERMINING, AMONG OTHER THINGS, THAT THE MORTGAGED PREMISES ARE IMPROVED WITH A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING OF LESS THAN FIVE UNITS, ARE NOT PROPERTY USED IN AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, AND ARE ABANDONED. PURSUANT to the power of sale contained in said mortgage, the above described property will be sold by the Sheriff of said county as follows: DATE AND TIME OF SALE: August 16, 2007 10:00 A.M. PLACE OF SALE: Sheriff's Main Office Civil Division 101 4th Street SE Rochester, MN to pay the debt secured by said mortgage and taxes, if any, on said premises and the costs and disbursements, including attorneys fees allowed by law, subject to redemption within 6 months from the date of said sale by the mortgagor(s), their personal representatives or assigns. Mortgagor(s) released from financial obligation: NONE THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. THE RIGHT TO VERIFICATION OF THE DEBT AND IDENTITY OF THE ORIGINAL CREDITOR WITHIN THE TIME PROVIDED BY LAW IS NOT AFFECTED BY THIS ACTION. THE TIME ALLOWED BY LAW FOR REDEMPTION BY THE MORTGAGOR, THE MORTGAGOR'S PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVES OR ASSIGNS, MAY BE REDUCED TO FIVE WEEKS IF A JUDICIAL ORDER IS ENTERED UNDER MINNESOTA STATUTES, SECTION 582.032, DETERMINING, AMONG OTHER THINGS, THAT THE MORTGAGED PREMISES ARE IMPROVED WITH A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING OF LESS THAN FIVE UNITS, ARE NOT PROPERTY USED IN AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, AND ARE ABANDONED. Dated: June 28, 2007 Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. Mortgagee File ID: 23314 (7/5, 7/12, 7/19, 7/26, 8/2, 8/9) NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that default has occurred in the conditions of the following described mortgage: DATE OF MORTGAGE: February 1, 2006 ORIGINAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF MORTGAGE: $98,947.00 MORTGAGOR(S): Joshua R. Asfahl and Teren L. Asfahl, Husband and Wife MORTGAGEE: Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. DATE AND PLACE OF RECORDING: Recorded: February 28, 2006 Olmsted County Recorder Document #: A-1093005 LEGAL DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: Commencing at the Southeast corner of the Southwest 1/4 of Section 36, Township 108, Range 15, where the West line of the public road running North and South along the East line of said quarter section meets the North line of the public road running East and West along the South side of said quarter section and running thence West along the North side of said public road 125 feet for a place of beginning, thence North parallel with said North and South public road 143 feet, thence West 50 feet, thence South 143 feet, thence East 50 feet to the place of beginning, being in the Village of Douglas, Olmsted County, Minnesota. Subject to a private alley or driveway over the North 18 feet thereof together with the right of ingress and egress over the following described tract: Commencing at the intersectoin of the North line of the East and West public road with the West line of the North and South public road at the Southeast corner of the Southwest Quarter of Section 36, Township 108, Range 15, thence North 125 feet, thence West 125 feet for a place of beginning, thence East 125 feet to the West line of the public road, thence North along said road 18 feet, thence West 125 feet, thence South 18 feet to beginning. COUNTY IN WHICH PROPERTY IS LOCATED: Olmsted AMOUNT DUE AND CLAIMED TO BE DUE AS OF DATE OF NOTICE: $102,331.42 THAT all pre-foreclosure requirements have been complied with; that no action or proceeding has been instituted at law or otherwise to recover the debt secured by said mortgage, or any /s/ Sean J. Nixa (7/26, 7/27) AMENDMENT TO CERTIFICATE OF ASSUMED NAME MINNESOTA SECRETARY OF STATE Minnesota Statutes Chapter 333 1. State the exact assumed name under which the business is or will be conducted: Pougiales Properties 2. State the address of the principal place of business. % Realty Growth, Inc., 975 - 34th Ave. N.W. Rochester, MN 55901 3. List the name and complete street address of all persons conducting business under the above Assumed Name, OR if an entity, provide the legal corporate, LLC, or Limited Partnership name and registered office address. George F. Pougiales Revocable Trust, dated 7/20/94 6617 Dakota Trail Edina, MN 55430 Four Sisters LLC E7011 - 240th Avenue Menomonie, WI 54751 AMP Properties LLC 302 Juan de Fuca Road Post Townsend, WA 98368 4. This certificate is an amendment of Certificate of Assumed name number 025187 originally filed on May 7, 2003 under the name ------. 5. I certify that I am authorized to sign this certificate and I further certify that I understand that by signing this certificate, I am subject to the penalties of perjury as set forth in Minnesota Statutes section 609.48 as if I had signed this certificate under oath. /s/ Ann M. Pougiales, Ann M. Pougiales, AMP Properties LLC Chief Manager (7/26, 7/27) CITY OF ROCHESTER NOTICE OF BIDS File ID: 23898 (6/28, 7/5, 7/12, 7/19, 7/26, 8/2) Mortgagee Wilford & Geske Attorneys for Mortgagee Lawrence A. Wilford James A. Geske 7650 Currell Boulevard Suite 300 Woodbury, Minnesota 55125 (651)209-3300 Date: 6-10-07 Date: July 3, 2007 Wilford & Geske Attorneys for Mortgagee Lawrence A. Wilford James A. Geske 7650 Currell Boulevard Suite 300 Woodbury, Minnesota 55125 (651)209-3300 Dated: July 5, 2007 Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. tificate and I further certify that I understand that by signing this certificate, I am subject to the penalties of perjury as set forth in Minnesota Statutes section 609.48 as if I had signed this certificate under oath. NOTICE OF ALLEY VACATION HEARING NEW HAVEN TOWNSHIP OLMSTED COUNTY NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Town Board of New Haven Township, Olmsted County, Minnesota, will conduct a public hearing on the 7th day of August, 2007, at 7:30 P.M. at the New Haven Town Hall located at 9024 Co. Rd 3 NW, Oronoco, MN for the purpose of considering and acting upon a petition it received calling for the vacation of the following described road and alley: All of the ALLEY located south of Block 3, all within the PLAT OF SALLEY’S ADDITION TO DOUGLAS, according to the recorded plat thereof on file in the office of the Olmsted county recorder. All persons interested in this matter are encouraged to attend the hearing. The tracts of land through which said alley passes and the owners and occupants thereof, as nearly as we can determine, are as follows: Owners Description of Land Alvin M. Mathews S 1/2 Lot 1 & S 1/2 Lot 2 Block 3, Salley’s Addition to Douglas Village Section 36-108-015 Phyllis Miller Lot 3, Block 3, Salley’s Addition to Douglas Village Section 36-108-015 Michael Harms Brian D. Denny Lots 4, 5 & 6, Block 3, Salley’s Addition to Douglas Village, Section 36-108-015 Carol M. Denny Jeffery G. Eastman, Township Clerk (7/26, 8/2) AMENDMENT TO CERTIFICATE OF ASSUMED NAME MINNESOTA SECRETARY OF STATE Minnesota Statutes Chapter 333 1. State the exact assumed name under which the business is or will be conducted: Street Dreams 2. State the address of the principal place of business. 8342 - 70th Street SE Eyota, MN 55934 3. List the name and complete street address of all persons conducting business under the above Assumed Name, OR if an entity, provide the legal corporate, LLC, or Limited Partnership name and registered office address. Sean Nixa 8346 - 70th St SE Eyota, MN 55934 4. This certificate is an amendment of Certificate of Assumed name number 702088-2 originally filed on Nov. 25, 2003 under the name ------. 5. I certify that I am authorized to sign this cer- Notice is hereby given that bids will be received at the office of the City Clerk until 11:00 AM on August 14, 2007, for the construction of the following described local improvement, pursuant to Minnesota Statutes, Chapter 429, as amended, in accordance with the plans and specifications for the same which are on file in the Office of the City Clerk of said City: Project No. M4-58, J7738 Morris Hills Water Reservoir Immediately following expiration of the time for receiving bids, the City Clerk and two designated City officials will publicly open said bids in the City Hall. The Common Council will consider the bids in the Council/Board Chambers at the Government Center at 7:00 P.M. on August 20, 2007. Said construction generally consists of furnishing all materials, supplies, tools, equipment, labor, and incidentals for water storage improvements and related appurtenances. The work includes the following approximate quantities of work: 1 Million Gallon Welded Steel Reservoir with Aluminum Geodesic Dome Cover ...................1 Lump Sum Plan, Specifications and Contract Documents may be examined at the following locations: 1. Department of Public Works, 201 4th St. SE, Room 108, Rochester, MN 55904. 2. F.W. Dodge Group, 7600 Parklawn Ave., Suite 352, Minneapolis, MN 55435. 3. Builders Exchange of Rochester, 108 Elton Hills Lane NW, Rochester, MN 55901 (507) 282-6531 Plan, Specifications and Contract Documents may be obtained from the Department of Public Works, 201 4th St. SE, Room 108, Rochester, MN 55904-3740, (507) 328-2400. Each bid must be accompanied by a bid bond, cashier's check or a certified check payable to the City of Rochester, Minnesota, for at least five (5) percent of the amount of the bid, which amount shall be forfeited to the City of Rochester, Minnesota, as liquidated damages if the bidder, upon the letting of the contract to him shall fail to enter into the contract so let; the Common Council reserving the right to reject any and all bids. A Performance and Payment Bond for the full amount of the contract by a surety company authorized to do business in the State of Minnesota will be required with the contract. (Personal bonds will not be accepted.) All proposals must be addressed to Judy K. Scherr, CMC, City Clerk of the City of Rochester, Minnesota and shall have endorsed thereon: Project No. M4-58, J7738 Morris Hills Water Reservoir Dated at Rochester, Minnesota this 16 day of July 2007. JUDY K. SCHERR, CMC (7/20, 7/27) ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF OLMSTED, DISTRICT COURT, THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT In the matter of the Petition of JP Morgan Chase Bank, As Trustee Description of Land Owners No. 55-CV-07-5670 In relation to Certificate of Title No. 29793 issued for land in the County of Olmsted and State of Minnesota and legally described as follows: That part of Lots No’s Twenty-eight (28), Twenty-nine (29), and Thirty (30), Block Fourteen (14) Country Club Manor Second Addition, in the city of Rochester, Minnesota, described as follows: Commencing at the Southeasterly corner of said Lot Twenty-nine (29), thence Northerly along the Westerly line of 36th Avenue Northwest as platted for a distance of 72.48 feet to the point of beginning of the property to be described, thence continuing Northerly along the Westerly line of 36th Avenue Northwest for an arc distance of 53.0 feet, thence Southwesterly a distance of 124.03 feet to a point on the Westerly line of said Lot Thirty (30) which is 22.25 feet Northerly of the Southwesterly corner of said Lot Thirty (30), thence Southeasterly by a deflection angle to the left of 39 degrees 52 minutes 30 seconds for a distance of 54.11 feet to a point which is 103.0 feet Southwesterly of the point of beginning, thence Northeasterly 103.0 feet to the point of beginning, all according to the plat thereof on file and of record in the office of the Registrar of Titles in and for said County. To: Youness Bojji and Cheryl Bojji Upon receiving and filing the Report of the Examiner of Titles in the above-entitled matter, IT IS ORDERED, that you, and all persons interested, appear before this Court on August 13, 2007 at 3:30 p.m. in the Olmsted County Government Center and then, or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, show cause, if there is any, why this Court should not enter an Order as follows: That the Registrar of Titles, upon the filing with the Registrar of a certified copy of this Order, shall cancel Certificate of Title No. 29703 and enter a new Certificate of Title for the land therein described in favor of JP Morgan Chase Bank, as Trustee, subject to the memorial of document number T-4233, but free and clear of all other memorials now appearing on the present Certificate of Title, the last of which is document number T-115894, and free also from the memorial of this Order. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, that this Order to Show Cause be served: (a) at least ten (10) days before the hearing upon the above-named parties residing in the State in the manner provided by law for the service of a Summons in a civil action; (b) at least fourteen days before the hearing upon each of the above-named non-residents by sending a copy of this Order to the nonresident’s post office address, by Registered or Certified mail, return receipt requested; (c) upon each of the above-named parties who cannot be found by two weeks published notice and by sending a copy of this Order at least fourteen days before the hearing by first class mail to the last known address of the party and by sending another copy of this Order at least 14 days before the hearing by first class mail to the address of such party as stated on the Certificate of Title if an address is so stated. (d) upon a dissolved, withdrawn or revoked business entity governed by Minn. Stat. Chp. 302A, 303, 317A, 322A, 322B or 323 in the manner provided by Minn. Stat. § 5.25. (Note: return date on Order to Show Cause must be at least 30 days after date of mailing by the Secretary of State.) Dated: 7/8/07 Approved: By: /s/ William J. Ryan William J. Ryan Examiner of Titles By: /s/ Jodi Williamson Jodi Williamson Judge of District Court SHAPIRO, NORDMEYER & ZIELKE By: Kristine M. Spiegelberg, #308845 Attorney for Petitioner 7300 Metro Blvd Suite 390 Edina, MN 55439-2306 (952) 831-4734 (phone) (952) 831-4734 (fax) Attendance is required only by those who wish to object to the entry of the above-described Order. Brian D. Denny Lots 4, 5 & 6, Block 3, Salley’s Addition to Douglas Village, Section 36-108-015 Carol M. Denny Tammy J. Skyhawk Lots 1-6 Block 2, Salley’s Addition to Douglas Village, Section 36-108-015 Plus 84.6A in SW1/4 Sec 36-108-015 Jeffery G. Eastman, Township Clerk (7/26, 8/2) SEEKING QUOTES: The Dover-Eyota School District will accept quotes through noon on Friday, 8/3/07, for the installation of approx. 240 linear feet of drywall, interior doors and interior windows in its elementary school building. All work must be substantially completed by 8/24/07. Interested parties are asked to contact Chris at 507-545-2125 for further details. (7/26,7/27, 7/28) NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE THE RIGHT TO VERIFICATION OF THE DEBT AND IDENTITY OF THE ORIGINAL CREDITOR WITHIN THE TIME PROVIDED BY LAW IS NOT AFFECTED BY THIS ACTION. NOTICE GIVEN: IS HEREBY That default has occurred in the conditions of that certain Mortgage dated March 31, 2003, executed by Chad Jaminson Tufty, a single person, as Mortgagor, to Affinity Plus Federal Credit Union, as Mortgagee, filed for record in the Office of the County Recorder in and for Olmsted County, State of Minnesota, on April 30, 2003, and recorded as Document No. A-965723; that the Mortgage is not upon registered land; that the original principal amount secured by said Mortgage being One Hundred Two Thousand One Hundred Eighty-two and 00/100 Dollars ($102,182.00); that the Mortgagor has not been released from financial obligation on said Mortgage; that no action or proceeding has been instituted by law to recover the debt secured by said Mortgage, or any part thereof; that there is due and claimed to be due upon said Mortgage, including interest to the date hereof, and taxes, if any, the sum of One Hundred Six Thousand Eight Hundred Ninety-nine and 30/100 Dollars ($106,899.30); that all conditions precedent to foreclosure of the Mortgage and acceleration of the debt secured thereby have been fulfilled; and that pursuant to the power of sale therein contained, said Mortgage will be foreclosed and the tract of land lying and being in the County of Olmsted, State of Minnesota, described as follows, to-wit: Lot 3, Block 6, Summit Square Second Subdivision, City of Rochester, Olmsted County, Minnesota, will be sold by the Sheriff of said County at public auction on August 17, 2007, at 10:00 a.m., at the Olmsted County Sheriff's Office, Law Enforcement Center, 101 Fourth Street SE, Rochester, MN 55904, to pay the debt then secured by said Mortgage, and taxes, if any, on said premises, and the costs, attorneys' fees and disbursements allowed by law. The time allowed by law for redemption by the Mortgagor, Mortgagors' personal representatives or assigns is six (6) months from the date of said sale. THE TIME ALLOWED BY LAW FOR REDEMPTION BY THE MORTGAGOR, THE MORTGAGORS' PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVES OR ASSIGNS, MAY BE REDUCED TO FIVE WEEKS IF A JUDICIAL ORDER IS ENTERED UNDER MINNESOTA STATUTES, SECTION 582.032, DETERMINING, AMONG OTHER THINGS, THAT THE MORTGAGED PREMISES ARE IMPROVED WITH A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING OF LESS THAN FIVE UNITS, ARE NOT PROPERTY USED IN AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, AND ARE ABANDONED. Dated: June 27, 2007 MESSERLI & KRAMER P.A. ________________ Matthew A. Korogi (Lic. #031061X) Messerli & Kramer P.A. 1800 Fifth Street Towers 150 South Fifth Street Minneapolis, MN 55402-4218 (612) 672-3647 Attorney in Fact for Affinity Plus Federal Credit Union (7/5, 7/12, 7/19, 7/26, 8/2, 8/9) (7/26, 8/2) auctions NOTICE OF ROAD VACATION HEARING NEW HAVEN TOWNSHIP AUCTION/SALE Used commercial light fixtures, 2x4 Prismatic, 2x2 Parabolic, electronic ballasts & residential items. July 31, 5-8. 201 6th St. SE Stewartville, MN. (Go East at old Casey’s, go 2 blocks) OLMSTED COUNTY NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Town Board of New Haven Township, Olmsted County, Minnesota, will conduct a public hearing on the 7th day of August, 2007, at 7:30 P.M. at the New Haven Town Hall located at 9024 Co. Rd 3 NW, Oronoco, MN for the purpose of considering and acting upon a petition it received calling for the vacation of the following described road: All except the South 33 feet of OAK STREET, Blocks 2 & 3, within the PLAT OF SALLEY’S ADDITION TO DOUGLAS, according to the recorded plat thereof on file in the office of the Olmsted county recorder. All persons interested in this matter are encouraged to attend the hearing. The tracts of land through which said road passes and the owners and occupants thereof, as nearly as we can determine, are as follows: STARTING A BUSINESS? ADVERTISE IN OUR SERVICE DIRECTORY Classifieds Work! 285-7777 Take aim at ‘Annie Get Your Gun.’ D4 JULY 26, 2007 THURSDAY POST-BULLETIN ON THE SIDE Is it family friendly? The film is rated PG-13 for irreverent humor. 20th Century Fox photo Whatcha Think? How do you feel about the Simpsons movie? Are you a.) excited, b.) not interested, or c.) wishing they would have stuck with only the TV show? Let us know at [email protected] and we’ll print your responses in next Thursday’s Lifestyles section. Branson hits road to Austin Branson on the Road, a touring version of the country music and corny comedy so often performed in Branson, Mo., will be presented Aug. 3-4 at the Paramount Theatre in Austin. Debbie Horton, Donnie Wright and Brian Capps, who have played in numerous shows in Branson, are the featured performers. Horton played guitar with Johnny Cash and had her own show at the Box Car Willie Theatre in Branson. Wright has been a member of the Pine Mountain Jamboree and Ozark Jamboree. Capps sings in the style of Marty Robbins and Hank Williams. Tickets are $20, available at the Paramount box office, 434-0934. Concerts are at 7:30 p.m. both days. Branson on the Road will also appear at 5:30 p.m. Aug. 5 at Grandpa’s Garage in Cannon Falls. This is a dinner show. Tickets are $25; (877) 216-5144. To read more about Branson on the Road, visit post-bulletin.com/weblinks. Crossings hosts singer Acclaimed singer/songwriter JoAnna James will perform in concert at 8 p.m. Aug. 3 at the Crossings at Carnegie art center, 320 East Ave., Zumbrota. James began making music at age 7 when her grandfather bought her a violin. She later switched to guitar, eventually began playing for tips in coffee houses and now performs about 250 shows each year. Her latest CD is “Back of My Mind.” Tickets are $15 in advance, $17 at the door, and can be reserved by calling (507) 732-7616. A classic carillon concert Lisa Lonie, of Blue Bell, Pa., is the next guest performer on the Mayo Clinic Carillon atop the Plummer Building. She will perform at 7 p.m. Monday. The program features light and classical pieces, including “Raggin’ on the Classics,” selections from “The Sound of Music” and “When Jonny Comes Marching Home.” Lonie is the carillonneur at St. Thomas’ Church, Whitemarsh, Pa., and has been featured on several recordings, including “The Bells of Christmas.” Listeners are invited to greet Lonie following the concert at the great doors of the Plummer Building. Who are the stars? Will I learn anything? Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa and Maggie Simpson. Where’s it playing? You’ll learn everything. Chateau Theatre and Hollywood 12 in Rochester and the Cinemagic 7 in Austin. The buzz: What’s it about? No matter the plot, a Simpsons movie is sure to be the same as the Simpsons TV show: a satire of everything we all hold near and dear. To view a trailer: Finally, after all these years, the Simpsons make it to the big screen. postbulletin.com See also: Movie reviews on page D3 Written by: Tom Weber Rick Dahl / Post-Bulletin ‘Sundown’ at Riverside GO & DO Here is the complete 200708 Riverside Live concert series, announced today. Unless otherwise noted, all concerts are at 7:30 p.m. in Mayo Civic Center’s Presentation Hall. • Gordon Lightfoot, Sept. 21, Mayo Civic Center auditorium. • Boys of the Lough, Oct. 5. Celtic music. • Tiempo Libre, Nov. 10, auditorium. Salsa dance party. • Yule Fest, with Rochester Concert Band and Choir, Dec. 1. • Cantus, 4 p.m. Jan. 20. Vocal ensemble. • Rochester Concert Band and Choir, Feb. 9. Valentine concert with Rochester Music Men Barbershop Chorus. • Blind Boys of Alabama, Feb. 16. Gospel music. • Le Vent du Nord, March 8. Roots music from Quebec. • Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver, April 12. Bluegrass. • George Winston, April 24. Solo piano. TICKETS • Tickets for Lightfoot, Blind Boys of Alabama and Winston are $25 for adults, $24 for senior citizens. • Tickets for Boys of the Lough, Tiempo Libre, Yule Fest, Cantus and Lawson/Quicksilver are $20 for adults, $19 for senior citizens, $10 for youth (Yule Fest only). • Tickets for the Valentine concert and Le Vent du Nord are $15 for adults, $14 for seniors, $7.50 for youth. Tickets go on sale to Riverside Live season members Aug. 6 and to the general public Aug. 20. To request a season brochure or for ticket information, call 328-2200. Lightfoot headlines concert series By Tom Weber [email protected] A few Canadians, a Salsa dance party, a Celtic band, gospel music from the Deep South and bluegrass from the hills. The Riverside Live concert series will maintain its reputation for presenting an eclectic mix of cultures and music genres during the 200708 season announced today. “We pride ourselves on being able to offer a wide variety,” said Steven Schmidt, Riverside Concerts general manager. The season begins with a concert by Canadian folk/pop legend Gordon Lightfoot at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 21 at the Mayo Civic Center auditorium. Lightfoot has been composing and recording hit songs since the mid-’60s. Among songs he wrote that were hits either for himself or others are “Early Mornin’ Rain,” “If You Could Read My Mind,” “Sundown,” “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald” and the monumental “Canadian Railroad Trilogy.” The concert by Lightfoot will continue another Riverside Live tradition, presenting major folk music artists from the 1960s. Previous concerts in the series have featured Joan Baez, Janis Ian, Arlo Guthrie and Richie Havens, and each show has been either a sellout or a nearsellout. Submitted photo Gordon Lightfoot headlines an eclectic mix of acts during the Riverside Live concert series. Lightfoot performs Sept. 21 at the Mayo Civic Center auditorium. “I’m not surprised,” Schmidt said. “Our research showed there’s a demand for these types of artists here.” Indeed, as word has leaked out about the Lightfoot show, a buzz has already begun. “I was stopped at least a half dozen times in the park Sunday night (at Down by the Riverside) by people asking me when tickets would go on sale for Gordon Lightfoot,” Schmidt said. Other highlights of the new season are concerts by the Blind Boys of Alabama Feb. 16, and pianist George Winston April 24. “This season may not have as many big names, like last year when we had America and Aaron Neville,” Schmidt said, “but it’s a very well-balanced season, with something for everyone.” Also on tap during the Riverside Live concert series will be a performance by the Blind Boys of Alabama, a gospel group. Submitted photo For more information, visit postbulletin.com/weblinks. TIP OF THE DAY Heloise says When going to the beach or pool, put a safety pin on one corner of every beach towel. The safety pins really come in handy if a strap breaks, a zipper malfunctions, seams come loose, etc. Even if you’re not around the water and need a safety pin in a hurry, at least you know where to look for one. For more hints from Heloise, see Page D4. TOMORROW Summer reading Our story “Good Morning, Mr. President” continues. • • THE BIG WEEKEND AHEAD A tribute to the Fab Four The award-winning Beatles tribute band British Export will headline the Beatles Bash, which runs from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday in Mantorville. Also performing will be Lost Faculties, The Riot and Tres Femmes. The event also will feature Beatles memorabilia and a documentary film about George Harrison’s 1963 visit to Illinois. The film, “George Harrison: A Beatle in Benton, Ill.,” will be shown at 4 p.m. in the Mantorville Opera House. British Export will re-create the cover of the Beatles’ seminal “Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band” album at 6:30 p.m., a photo that anyone is allowed to pose in with the band. British Export’s set begins at 6:45 p.m. Tickets: $12 in advance, $15 at the gate, $5 for children 12 and younger. (507) 635-2331. • your own blankets and chairs; in case of • The Down by the inclement weather, Riverside summertime screening will be concert series conindoors. Free. tinues with a performance by the Rochester In the cities Concert Band at 7 p.m. • ZZ Top, Stray Cats Sunday at Mayo Park. Admission is free. and the Pretenders Mayo Park is located perform at 6 p.m. Satbehind the Rochester urday at the Xcel Art Center at 40 Civic Energy Center, 175 W. Kellogg Blvd., St. Paul. Center Dr. S.E. • An outdoor Tickets: $10.41 to $85. screening of “Star (651) 265-4800. Wars: Episode IV” will Calendar be shown at dusk • For a complete Friday at the History Center of Olmsted listing of upcoming County, 1195 West area events, go to Page Circle Drive S.W. Bring D2. Around town • • • • • D2 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Xxxday, Xxx ##, 2007 XX ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT CALENDAR Friday torville Opera House, Mantorville. (507) 635-5420. Mantorville Melodrama. 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets: $6 adults, $5 seniors and students. Ends Aug. 12. “As You Like It,” Rochester Civic Theatre, 20 Civic Center Drive S.E., Rochester. (507) 282-8481. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets: $17 adults, $14 senior citizens, students. Ends July 29. Comedy John Rathbone, Josh Alton, Goonie's Comedy Club, 7 Second St. S.W., Rochester. (507) 288-8130. Showtimes: 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. Tickets: $12 advance, $15 at the door. Dancing Latin Dance Night, Blue Moon Ballroom, 2030 U.S. 14 E., Rochester. (507) 288-0556. DJ Juio Conde and Martial Hangbe. Dance lesson 7:30 p.m. Dancing 8 p.m. to midnight. $10, $8 ages 17 and younger. USA Dance ballroom, swing, Latin dance, Rochester Senior Center, 121 N. Broadway, Rochester. (507) 281-1034. 8:30 p.m. Dance lesson at 7:30 p.m. No partner necessary. Admission: $6 USA Dance members, $8 non-members, $5 high school students. DJ, The Sand Trap, 3342 19th St. N.W., Rochester. (507) 536-7768. No cover. Ryan Herman Dance, Silvermoon Ballroom, Wisconsin Highway 35, Alma, Wis. (715) 694-2106. 7-11 p.m. Old time, country, big band, and variety music for listening and dancing. Sunday Music Meet Me Under the Bridge 2007 Summer Concert Series, under the bridge, at Heritage Park, Wabasha. 78:30 p.m. Featuring Ron Sacia & The Fat Daddys during Wabasha's Riverboat Days. Every Friday through Aug. 17. Presented by River Junctions Arts Council. Rumors, Daniel's Restaurant, 504 S. Mantorville Ave., Kasson. (507) 6347775. Shadow Stone, CJ's Midtown Lounge, 8 S. Broadway, Rochester. (507) 289-7478. The Chubs, Strikers Corner, U.S. 63 and 10th St. N.W., Stewartville. (507) 533-8330. Next 2 Nothing, North Star Bar, 503 N. Broadway, Rochester. (507) 2891091. Country Night/ Retro, Shar's Country Palace, 3925 Marion Road S.E., Rochester. (507) 289-9592. Concentual, Rookies Sports Bar & Grill, 1517 16th St. S.W., Rochester. (507) 252-5161. No cover. Ben Barna, Dunn Bros. Coffee North, 120 Elton Hills Drive N.W., Rochester. (507) 285-4991. 7-9:30 p.m. Acoustic rock. Bernard Allison, Whiskey Bones Roadhouse, 3820 N. Broadway, Rochester. (507) 280-7555. Blues. Fancy Bastard, Kathy's Pub, 307 Broadway S., Rochester. (507) 2528355. No cover. Special Events Savvy Singles Mingle/Happy Hour, Whistle Binkies on the Lake, 247 Wood Lake Dr. S.E., Rochester. 5:30-9:30 p.m. Bring your single, available friends to meet other like-minded singles. Average age is 28-48 but everyone is welcome. No cover charge. Full bar and Music Pop Machine, CJ's Midtown Lounge, 8 S. Broadway, Rochester. (507) 2897478. Dancing Swing Dance, Bluemoon Ballroom, 2030 U.S. 14 East, Rochester. (507) 288-0556. Dance lesson 7-7:30 p.m., dancing 7:30-10 p.m. Adults $8, ages 17 and younger $6. Music Submitted photo Bard fest finale Open Mic night, Goonie's Comedy Club, 7 Second St. S.W., Rochester. (507) 288-8130. 7:30 p.m. Free. Every Thursday. Performances Dancing “Over the Back Fence” , Commonweal Theatre, 208 Parkway Ave. N., Lanesboro. (507) 467-2525. 7 p.m. Live radio show on KFIL radio. Music, comedy, skits, talk. Admission $5. Every Sunday through Sept. 2. Polka Fest, Hilltop Ballroom, Fountain City, Wis. (608) 687-8739. Country Dance, Bluemoon Ballroom, 2030 U.S. 14 East, Rochester. (507) 288-0556. Lesson 7-7:30, dancing 7:30-10 pm. Adults $8, ages 17 and under $6. restaurant menu. For more information, visit www.whistlebinkiespub.com or www.savvysingle.net. Theater “No Sex Please, We're British,” Frank W. Bridges Theater, Riverland Community College, 1600 8th Ave. N.W., Austin. (507) 433-0595. 7:30 p.m. Comedy. Presented by Summerset Theatre. Tickets: $10. “As You Like It,” Rochester Civic Theatre, 20 Civic Center Drive S.E., Rochester. (507) 282-8481. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets: $17 adults, $14 senior citizens, students. Ends July 29. “Lend Me a Tenor,” Page Theatre, Saint Mary's University, Winona. (507) 285-1715. 7:30 p.m. Gilmore Creek Summer Theatre. Tickets: $15 adults, $12 senior citizens. Continues through Aug. 4. “Ratchatcher's Daughter,” Mantorville Opera House, Mantorville. (507) 635-5420. Mantorville Melodrama. 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets: $6 adults, $5 seniors and students. Ends Aug. 12. Saturday Comedy John Rathbone, Josh Alton, Goonie's Comedy Club, 7 Second St. S.W., Rochester. (507) 288-8130. Showtimes: 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. Tickets: $12 advance, $15 at the door. Dancing Old-Time Dance, Rochester Senior Beatles Bash 2007, Hubbell House parking lot, Mantorville. (507) 6352331. 2-10 p.m. British Export, Lost Faculties, The Riot, Tres Femmes. Tickets: $12 in advance, $15 at the gate, $5 for children 12 and younger. Theater The Great River Shakespeare Festival winds up this weekend with performances of “As You Like It” at 8 p.m. Friday, 3 p.m. Saturday and 4:30 p.m. Sunday, and “Macbeth” at 8 p.m. Saturday, all at the Performing Arts Center of Winona State University in Winona. Tickets: $20 to $35. (507) 474-7900. Center, 121 N. Broadway, Rochester. (507) 287-1469. 7-11 p.m. Polka, waltz, two-step and schottische. $7. Lisa Bailey and Ten Cent Biscuit, Blue Moon Ballroom, 2030 US 14 East, Rochester. (507) 288-0556. 7:30-11 p.m. New country, pop rock. Lesson at 7:30 p.m. with dancing from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. No partner needed. Admission: Adults $10, ages 13-17 are $8. Mark and Jesse Diedrich, Dunn Bros. Coffee North, 120 Elton Hills Drive N.W., Rochester. (507) 285-4991. 7-9:30 p.m. Folk/rock. Plan B, Whiskey Bones Roadhouse, 3820 N. Broadway, Rochester. (507) 280-7555. Blues. TBD Band, Kathy's Pub, 307 Broadway S., Rochester. (507) 252-8355. No cover. Music Special Events Original Bill Haley's Comets, Albert Lea Civic Theater, 147 N. Broadway, Albert Lea. (507) 377-4372. 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $15 adults, $10 senior citizens and students. Next 2 Nothing, North Star Bar, 503 N. Broadway, Rochester. (507) 2891091. Summit Avenue, Rookies Sports Bar & Grill, 1517 16th St. S.W., Rochester. (507) 252-5161. No cover. Three Days Later, The Sand Trap, 3342 19th St. N.W., Rochester. (507) 536-7768. 9 p.m. No cover. Shadow Stone, CJ's Midtown Lounge, 8 S. Broadway, Rochester. (507) 289-7478. Sloppy Donkey's, Boomer's Lounge, 3737 40th Ave. N.W., Rochester. (507) 424-3220. Southern rock. Jake Donze, Rochester Repertory Theatre, 314 1/2 S. Broadway, Rochester. (507) 289-1737. 8 p.m. Folk music. All proceeds will be used for new seats. Rumors, Daniel's Restaurant, 504 S. Mantorville Ave., Kasson. (507) 6347775. 19th Century Evening of Leisure, Forestville State Park, Preston. (507) 765-2785. 6:30-9 p.m. Live music, storytelling, games, refreshments. Admission: $5 adults, $4 senior citizens and college students, $3 children. 371-5600. 8 p.m. Dvorak Cello Concerto, Stravinsky “Firebird” Suite. Tickets: $16-$45. 0222. 7 p.m. Tickets: $17, $15. Vans Warped Tour, Metrodome parking lot, Minneapolis. (651) 989-5151. 11 a.m. Multiple stages. Bands include Bad Religion, New Found Glory, Hawthorne Heights, Amber Pacific, others. Extreme sports athletes, lifestyle displays. Tickets: $29.75. Andrew Litton, Orchestra Hall, 1111 Nicolet Mall, Minneapolis. (612) 3715600. 7 p.m. Andrew Litton, piano, members of Minnesota Orchestra. Chamber music. Tickets: $16. Theater “No Sex Please, We're British,” Frank W. Bridges Theater, Riverland Community College, 1600 8th Ave. N.W., Austin. (507) 433-0595. 7:30 p.m. Comedy. Presented by Summerset Theatre. Tickets: $10. Drops & Drama III, Historic Main Street Theatre, 255 Main St., Winona. (507) 459-8090. Dramatic readings from the classics in front of 1909 handpainted scenic backdrops. 1 pm. and 3 pm. Saturdays through July 28. Tickets: $5. “Showtune: Celebrating the Words and Music of Jerry Herman,” Page Theatre, Saint Mary's University, Winona. (507) 285-1715. 7:30 p.m. Gilmore Creek Summer Theatre. Tickets: $15 adults, $12 senior citizens. Ends Aug. 5. “Ratchatcher's Daughter,” Man- Thursday Rochester Concert Band, Mayo Park, Rochester. 7 p.m. Down by the Riverside concert. Free. ZenZen, Crystal Ballroom/Val A Lodge, 150 Highway 30 W., Chatfield. (507) 867-3066. 2-6 p.m. Special Events Films Movies Under the Stars, Historic Stoppel Farmstead at Olmsted County History Center, 1195 West Circle Dr. S.W., Rochester. 9 p.m. The History Center of Olmsted County presents “Star Wars: Episode IV” (1977). Film starts at dusk. Please bring your own chairs and blankets. In case of rain, screening will be inside. Wednesday “Ratchatcher's Daughter,” Mantorville Opera House, Mantorville. (507) 635-5420. Mantorville Melodrama. 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets: $6 adults, $5 seniors and students. Ends Aug. 12. “Lend Me a Tenor,” Page Theatre, Saint Mary's University, Winona. (507) 285-1715. 3 p.m. Gilmore Creek Summer Theatre. Tickets: $15 adults, $12 senior citizens. Continues through Aug. 4. “As You Like It,” Rochester Civic Theatre, 20 Civic Center Drive S.E., Rochester. (507) 282-8481. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets: $17 adults, $14 senior citizens, students. Ends July 29. Monday Dancing Latin Dance Lessons, Blue Moon Ballroom, 2030 U.S. 14 E., Rochester. (507) 288-0556. Beginners salsa 6-7 p.m., cardio salsa all levels 7-8 p.m. intermediate salsa 8-9 p.m. Music Carillon concert, Mayo Clinic Carillon, Rochester. 7 p.m. Performance by Lisa Lonie, of Blue Bell, Pa. Becky Schlegel Trio, Harwick Building Courtyard, Mayo Clinic, Rochester. 12:10-1 p.m. Bluegrass. Harmony for Mayo series. Free. Rain site: Lips Atrium, Charlton Building. Tuesday Comedy Music Mark Stary & the Whiskey Roses, Thursdays on First, First Avenue S.E., between Second and Third streets, Rochester. 6 p.m. Street market opens at 11 a.m. Opening act at 4:30 p.m. Free. Theater “Lend Me a Tenor,” Page Theatre, Saint Mary's University, Winona. (507) 285-1715. 7:30 p.m. Gilmore Creek Summer Theatre. Tickets: $15 adults, $12 senior citizens. Continues through Aug. 4. Ongoing Art Exhibits Rochester Civic Theatre, 20 Civic Center Drive S.E., Rochester. (507) 2828481. Miriam Knuth, abstract and realism art in lobby gallery through August 3. Rochester Art Center, Rochester Art Center, Mayo Park, Rochester. (507) 282-8629. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. TuesdayWednesday, Friday-Saturday; 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Thursday; noon- 5 p.m. Sunday. Admission: $3 adults, $2 senior citizens, free for students and members. Free on Thursdays. “Warren MacKenzie: Legacy of an American Potter,” May 19Aug. 26. “David Bowen: On Form and Growth” May 19-Aug. 27. Southeastern Minnesota Visual Arts Gallery, Peace Plaza, 16 First St. S.W., Rochester. (507) 281-4920. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Wednesday and Friday; 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Thursday; noon-4 p.m. Sunday. Cooperative gallery with works of 60 local artists. Austin Area Art Center , Austin Area Art Center, Oak Park Mall, Austin. 1-4 p.m. Hours: noon-4 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. Recent works by Shelley Aquino and Jim Wegner May 30 June 24. Dancing Theater ’50s and ’60s Dance, Blue Moon Ballroom, 2030 U.S. 14 E., Rochester. (507) 288-0556. Dance lesson 7 p.m. Dancing from 7:30-10 p.m. $8, $6 ages 17 and younger. Commonweal Theatre, Commonweal Theatre, 208 Parkway Ave. N., Lanesboro. (507) 467-2525. “The Mystery of Irma Vep” through Sept. 2. “Wait Until Dark” through Oct. 28. Tickets: $25. TWIN CITIES Friday Music Subdudes, Marcia Ball, Minnesota Zoo Amphitheatre, Apple Valley. (651) 989-5151. 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $40.50, $28. Erasure, First Avenue, 701 First Ave. N., Minneapolis. (612) 332-1775. 8 p.m. Tickets: $31.50. Paul Wall, Slim Thug, Myth, 3090 Southlawn Drive, St. Paul. (651) 7796984. 7 p.m. Tickets: $38. Minnesota Orchestra, Orchestra Hall, 1111 Nicolet Mall, Minneapolis. (612) 371-5600. 8 p.m. With Andre Watts, piano. Grieg Piano Concerto, Dvorak Symphony No. 8. Tickets: $16-$45. Theater “Spamalot,” Ordway Center, 345 Washington St., St. Paul. (651) 2244222. Times vary. Tickets: $50-$75. Ends Aug. 12. “Fools,” Theatre in the Round, 245 Cedar Ave., Minneapolis. (612) 3333010. 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. Ends Aug. 12. Tickets: $20. Saturday Music ZZ Top, Stray Cats, the Pretenders, Xcel Energy Center, 175 W. Kellogg Blvd., St. Paul. (651) 265-4800. 6 p.m. Tickets: $10.41 to $85. Jackie Greene, Storyhill, Minnesota Zoo Amphitheatre, Apple Valley. (651) 989-5151. 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $35.50, $23. Marc Broussard, Fine Line Music Cafe, 318 First Ave. N., Minneapolis. (612) 338-8100. 8 p.m. Tickets: $68, $16.50. Minnesota Orchestra, Orchestra Hall, 1111 Nicolet Mall, Minneapolis. (612) Theater “Spamalot,” Ordway Center, 345 Washington St., St. Paul. (651) 2244222. Times vary. Tickets: $50-$75. Ends Aug. 12. “Fools,” Theatre in the Round, 245 Cedar Ave., Minneapolis. (612) 3333010. 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. Ends Aug. 12. Tickets: $20. Sunday Music Richie Furay and Chris Hillman, Fine Line Music Cafe, 318 First Ave. N., Minneapolis. (612) 338-8100. 7 p.m. Tickets: $88, $34. The Fratellis, Varsity Theater, 1308 Fourth St. S.E., Minneapolis. (612) 604- Theater “Spamalot,” Ordway Center, 345 Washington St., St. Paul. (651) 2244222. Times vary. Tickets: $50-$75. Ends Aug. 12. “Fools,” Theatre in the Round, 245 Cedar Ave., Minneapolis. (612) 3333010. 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. Ends Aug. 12. Tickets: $20. Thursday Music Femi Kuti, the Waiters, Minnesota Zoo Amphitheatre, Apple Valley. (651) 989-5151. 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $49.50, $37. Aqueduct, First Avenue, 701 First Ave. N., Minneapolis. (612) 332-1775. 5 p.m. Tickets: $7.50. Theater “Spamalot,” Ordway Center, 345 Washington St., St. Paul. (651) 2244222. Times vary. Tickets: $50-$75. Ends Aug. 12. Ongoing Theater The Guthrie Theater, 818 S. Second St., Minneapolis. (612) 377-2224. “1776” June 23-Aug. 26. Times, ticket prices vary. Chanhassen Dinner Theatres, Chanhassen Dinner Theatres, 501 W. 78th St., Chanhassen. (800) 362-3515. “The Male Intellect: An Oxymoron?” ends Aug. 26. “Les Miserables” through Jan. 15, 2008. “RESPECT: A Musical Journey of Women” opens Aug. 10. “The Wonder Bread Years” opens Sept. 7. Times and ticket prices vary. “Triple Espresso,” Music Box Theatre, 1407 Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis. (612) 673-0404. Comedy. Times vary. Tickets: $31.50 to $42.50. “We Gotta Bingo,” The Lowry Theater, 16 W. Fifth St., St. Paul. (651) 290-2290. Times vary. Tickets: $66.50, $40. Continues through Oct. 28. “Church Basement Ladies,” Plymouth Playhouse, I-494 & Minnesota 55, Plymouth. (763) 553-1600. Through 2007. 1 and 8 p.m. Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday, 4 and 8 p.m. Saturday, 2 and 6 p.m. Sunday. Tickets: $18 to $35. QUICK SPINS Still much ado at Bard festival WINONA — The Great River Shakespeare Festival wraps up its fourth season this weekend. In addition to performances of “As You Like It” and “Macbeth,” the festival has special events planned. The festival’s Apprentice Acting Company will present “Julius Ceasar” at 3 p.m. Friday. Tickets are $15. Michael Gerson, Newsweek and Wahington Post columnist, will talk about “Great Causes of Our Time” in a Front Porch Conversation at 1 p.m. Sunday. Singer/songwriter Chris Koza will perform the final prelude concert at 6:30 p.m. Saturday. The final performance of “As You Like It” at 4:30 p.m. Sunday will be followed by reminiscences of the cast and crew and a meet-and-greet time for cast and audience members. All events take place at the Winona State University Performing Arts Center. For information and reservations, call (507) 474-7900. For more about the Great River Shakespeare Festival, go to postbulletin.com/weblinks. • • The Clientele “God Save the Clientele” (Merge) Britain’s top purveyors of melancholy retro-ness are back with a disc recorded in, of all places, Nashville. And yes, there is a pedal steel guitar on a couple of these songs, but that in no way dims the European gauze in which they come wrapped. Points of reference? The opener, “Here Comes the Phantom” borrows from “Penny Lane,” while “Isn’t Life Strange?” is a hauntingly beautiful dirge in a Lennon-meets-Harrison vein. The guitar solo on “Bookshop Casanova” is straight out of the Summer of Love. But songwriter/lead vocalist Alisdair MacLean’s vision and voice are all his own, where late-night walks through London lanes continue to mix with dreams of what might have been. That he and the Clientele have managed to make it all sound a wee bit brighter this time around does not in any way diminish the impact of their achingly bittersweet music. — Tom Weber Post-Bulletin • Raul Malo, “After Hours” (New Door Records) Aged Scotch, a fine cigar and the voice of Raul Malo all are acquired tastes. On “After Hours,” the former frontman of the late Mavericks blends some country, some jazz and a touch of pop into a mix that would go well in a smoky joint with a cold drink and a good friend. The songs — “Welcome to my World,” “Cold, Cold Heart” “For the Good Times” — are country chestnuts, but Malo makes them sophisticated country with a clarinet, saxes, a tinkly piano and hissing snares to accompany his soaring tenor in an often torchy sound. It’s largely a fine makeout album, but Malo swings on his rendition of Hank Williams’ “Cold, Cold Heart,” a la Louis Prima, and adds a Bakersfield sound with the Dwight Yoakam-Roger Miller tune “It Only Hurts Me When I Cry” — the closest he comes to the Latino-flavored country sounds of his Mavericks days. Buck Owens, the father of the Bakersfield sound, wrote “Crying Time” and Ray Charles owns it, but Malo adds a wonderful interpretation. — Tom Gardner Associated Press • • For the record Next week’s expected releases: • “Kidz Bop, Vol. 12,” Kidz Bop Kids • “Finding Forever,” Common • “The Archie Show: The Complete Series,” Archie Show • “Untitled,” Korn • “The Simpsons Movie,” Hans Zimmer • “Famous,” Puddle of Mudd • “Sean Kingston,” Sean Kingston • “True Beauty,” Mandisa Source: amazon.com • Finnish films will be featured MINNEAPOLIS — Three acclaimed films from Finland will be shown in August in conjunction with the Nordic Landscape Painting exhibition at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. “Tommy and the Wildcat” (1998), directed by Raimo Niemi, tells the story of a city boy who moves to the country and befriends a lynx. The film will be shown at noon Aug. 4. “Mosku” (2003), directed by Tapio Suominen, is about a legendary character in backwoods Finland. It will be shown at 2:15 p.m. Aug. 4. “Dog Nail Clipper” (2004), directed by Marku Pölönen, is about a young soldier returning from World War II. The film, which won five Finnish Oscars, will be shown at 2:15 p.m. Aug. 11. All films are shown in the Pillsbury Auditorium at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 2400 Third Ave. S. Admission is $6. For more information, call (612) 870-6323. For more about the Nordic landscape painting exhibit, go to postbulletin.com/weblinks. • • XX POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Xxxday, Xxx ##, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 D3 Funny, sassy and intelligent in that moronic Simpsons way The Simpsons are fairly surprised to find themselves in a movie; they can’t believe “anyone would pay to see what we did on TV for free.” But I suspect a lot of people will. Here is a feature-length version of what Time magazine, no less, called “the 20th century’s best television series.” That may say more about Time magazine and the 20th century than it does about the Simpsons, but never mind: The movie is funny, sassy and intelligent in that moronic Simpsons way. There is a plot, sort of, involving Homer’s role in polluting the lake in Springfield, which calls down the wrath of the federal bureaucracy and leads to dire consequences for his fellow citizens. The Simp- What’s your take? Here’s your chance to sound off about the movies. Tell us, in 30 words or less, what you like or don’t like about the movie being reviewed this week — or any other current release — and we’ll publish your comments in next Thursday’s Life section. Send your comments to lifestyle@ postbulletin.com. Roger Ebert sons’ guilt is counterbalanced by poor, idealistic Lisa, who goes door-to-door collecting signatures for her environmental crusade, only to get every door slammed in her face. One house even flees. This story allows room for the sorts of political asides the Simpsons are famous for; not broadsides, but sideswipes. When the feds finally succeed at something in the movie, they’re as surprised as everybody else. For me, the three biggest laughs in the movie (I won’t spoil them) were a plug for the Fox network, a skateboarding sequence inspired by “Austin Powers,” and a unique way to go fishing. Those, and the peculiar everyday lives of the closely knit Simpsons, fill in the gaps in the plot, along with a devout neighbor who, considering what Homer puts in his mailbox, is more sinned against than sinning. The movie sets some kind of record by crediting no less than 11 writers (James L. Brooks, Matt Groening, Al Jean, Ian Maxstone-Graham, George Meyer, David Mirkin, Mike Reiss, Mike Scully, Matt Selman, John Swartzwelder and Jon Vitti). That’s not the usual case of endless tinkering, but an Due next week “300” — The blueprint of this film was drawn from ancient Greece and a legendary and important conflict in history -- the Battle of Thermopylae. Though it looks like the world’s most sophisticated and expensive video game, “300” is the “Citizen Kane” of cinematic graphic novels. In this sweeping, epic adaptation of the classic graphic novel from master-of-the-genre Frank Miller, director Zack Snyder has created a jaw-dropping, surrealistic dreamscape filled with stunning images and battle sequences so ambitious you sometimes have to laugh at the sheer audacity of the whole thing. Rated R for graphic battle sequences throughout, some sexuality and nudity. Reviewed by Richard Roeper, Chicago Sun-TImes. Four stars. “Hot Fuzz” — A spoof of the very British mysteries loved by the BBC and the shoot-’em-up buddy cop movies loved by American moviegoers that is really quite funny, if you can get beyond the graphic gore and mind-numbing final 30 minutes. “Shaun of the Dead” stars Simon Pegg and Nick Frost team up again with director Edgar Wright. Rated R for violent content, 20th Century Fox photo Lots of adventures await the Simpsons in “The Simpsons Movie.” example of devotion; Variety says all 11 produced episodes for the TV show at one time or another. The genius of the series is that it has tapped some of the best offbeat comic talent instead of settling for the TV animation groove. Consider James L. Brooks and voice talent A. (for Albert) Brooks. These people work outside the box. I’m not generally a fan of movies spun off from TV animation. The Flintstones and Ninja Turtles moved me only marginally. But there’s something about the Simpsons that’s radical and simple at the same time, subversive and goodhearted, offensive without really meaning to be. It’s a nice balancing act. And it finally settles the controversy over what state Springfield is in; it is bordered, we learn, by Ohio, Nevada, Maine and Kentucky. So you can figure it out right there. If “The Simpsons” is indeed ★★★1⁄2 Pure fun, from the moment a roly-poly teenager named Tracy Turnblad (Nikki Blonsky) bounces out of bed and serenades the neighborhood with “Good Morning, Baltimore!” Circa 1962, she dreams of getting on the local TV teen dance show, but on her way there she gets indignant about how the show is all-white except for one day a month. Based on the 1988 movie and the 2002 Broadway musical; still fresh. With John Travolta, Michelle Pfeiffer, Queen Latifah, Brittany Snow, Christopher Walken. Language, some suggestive content and momentary teen smoking. Reviewed by Roger Ebert. www.hairspraymovie.com ‘Harry Potter and the Order of ★★1⁄2 the Phoenix’ (PG-13) including some graphic images. Reviewed by Mary Houli- images, sexuality and language. Reviewed by Billl Zweckhan, Chicago Sun-Times. Two and a half stars. er, Chicago Sun-Times. Two and a half stars. “Perfume: The Story of a Murder” — A macabre and fascinating film about a medieval murderer who has the most acute sense of smell in the world, and “The Host” — A horror thriller, a political satire, a lives to distill the scent of human life. With Ben Whishaw dysfunctional family comedy (think “Little Miss Sashi- as the unspeakable creature and Dustin Hoffmann as mi”) and a touching melodrama, Bong Joon-ho’s “The the Parisian perfumer who finds his art is inferior to Host” is also one heckuva monster movie. The creature that of his pupil. The film ventures fearlessly toward a is the most hideously beautiful movie monster since limited, terrifying, seductive dead end, and finds there H.R. Giger’s Alien, and the movie is wild, crazy, messy, a solution both sublime and horrifying. It took imagipreposterous -- and all the better for it. Rated R for nation to tell it, and from the audience it requires a creature violence and language. Reviewed by Jim Emer- brave curiosity about the peculiarity of obsession. Rated son of rogerebert.com. Three and a half stars. R for aberrant behavior, nudity, violence, sexuality and “The Number 23” — An animal control office (Jim disturbing images. Reviewed by Roger Ebert. Four stars. Carrey) identifies with a fictitious detective. A worthy, “Zodiac” — Adapted from two of the most popubut flawed attempt to take us on a psychological jour- lar books about a case that has consumed crime buffs ney in a thriller that is not edgy or shocking enough. for decades, “Zodiac” is a deliberately paced thriller With Virginia Madsen. Rated R for violence, disturbing that focuses more on the journalists and cops investi- Recently released ‘I Know Who Killed Me’ (R) throughout, nudity, language and drug references. ed tale of friendship, following one’s dreams and Reviewed by Bill Zwecker, Chicago Sun-Times. the art of French haute cuisine. The hero of the story is a tiny Parisian rat named Remy (voice by www.chuckandlarry.com Patton Oswalt), who one day finds himself in the kitchen of one of the world’s greatest chefs, where ★★★ he soon befriends the kitchen’s busboy Linguini If “Old School” and “She’s Having a Baby” (voice by Lou Romano). The two form a unique lined up 50 yards apart, sprinted at each other bond that affords Remy the chance to indulge in at full speed and collided in violently comedic-sex- his culinary artistry and Linguini the chance to ual fashion, spawning one film, the result would make something of himself. The computer-anibe “Knocked Up.” Half goofball guy-movie and mated visuals are stunning, the story is compelling, half sentimental chick-flick, it works on both lev- and the music will carry you away. The film is els, even if it does overstay its welcome. Sexual rated G, which stands for gloriously entertaining. content, drug use and language. Reviewed by Grownups will find this one irresistible. Oh yeah, Richard Roeper, Chicago Sun-Times. the kiddies will like it, too. Reviewed by Miriam www.knockedup.com DiNunzio, Chicago Sun-Times. http://disney.go.com/disneypictures/ 1 ★ ⁄2 ratatouille The best part of this movie comes fairly late, ★★★1⁄2 after you haven’t laughed nearly enough and long after you’ve decided you don’t care about the Michael Moore’s litany of horrors about the characters, not one bit. It’s when John Krasinski American health care system, which is run for punches Robin Williams in the face. Williams plays profit, and insurance companies, who pay bonusRev. Frank, a Robin Williams-like minister who es to employees who are successful in denying teaches a mandatory prep course for adults who coverage or claims. Moore tones down his usual want to be married in his church. The affable humor and seriously, sympathetically listens to such Krasinski and charming Mandy Moore play the people as a9⁄11 volunteer who can’t get the treathappy couple, who are put through the paces. ment she needs. Likely to strike home with anyDirector Ken Kwapis attempts to draw out humor one, liberal or conservative, who has had serious and ends up stepping into creepy. Sexual humor illness in the family. Brief strong language. Reviewed and language. Reviewed by Teresa Budasi, Chicaby Roger Ebert. go Sun-Times. www.sicko-themovie.com www.licensetowedthemovie.com ‘Knocked Up’ (R) ‘License to Wed’ (PG-13) Harry is convinced the evil Voldemort has returned, but no one will heed his warning, and the Ministry of Magic cracks down, imposing a fearsome new teacher (Imelda Staunton) at Hogwarts. Her name is Umbridge, and she takes plenty. Harry and friends hatch a plot to defend Headmaster Dumbledore from her ravages, in a movie that is darker, more solemn, less whimsical than we expect in the series. Sequences of fantasy violence and frightening images. Reviewed by Roger Ebert. www.harrypotterorderofthephoenix.com N/A An idyllic small town is rocked when Aubrey Fleming, a bright and promising young woman, is abducted and tortured by a sadistic serial killer. When she manages to escape, the traumatized girl who regains consciousness in the hospital insists that she is not who they think she is and that the real Aubrey Fleming is still in mortal danger. Starring Lindsay Lohan, Julia Ormond, Neal McDonough, Brian Geraghty and Garcelle Beauvais. Grisly violence including torture and disturbing gory images, and sexuality, nudity and language. Not reviewed. www.sonypictures.com/movies/iknowwho killedme/ ‘Sicko’ (PG-13) ‘Live Free of Die Hard’ (PG-13) ‘The Simpsons Movie’ (PG-13) Nearly two decades after creating one of the most iconic antihero cops in modern action-movie history, a lean and now bullet-headed Bruce Willis is in classic form as NYPD Det. John McClane, who is once again thrust into a cataclysmic emergency in which he is facing insurmountable odds. Two hours of pure adrenaline. Intense sequences of violence and action, language and a brief sexual situation. Reviewed by Richard Roeper, Chicago Sun-Times. www.livefreeordiehard.com • • cobut inevitably they’re drawn together, thanks partly to the matchmaking of her sister’s orphaned child (Abigail Breslin). Alas, the characters seem to feel more passion for food than for one another. Remake of the 2002 German film “Mostly Martha.” With Patricia Clarkson, Bob Balaban. Directed by Scott Hicks (“Shine”). Some sensuality and language. Reviewed by Roger Ebert. www.noreservationsmovie.com ‘Once’ (R) ★★★★ John Carney’s winning film, an unpretentious tale about two lonely souls in Dublin who connect through music, presents a new type of movie musical. One of the year’s best films thus far. Starring Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova. Language. Reviewed by Mary Houlihan, Chicago Sun-Times. www.oncethemovie.com ‘Ratatouille’ (G) ★★★ 1⁄2 Disney and Pixar deliver a marvelous animat- • • Summer concert features four bands Four local bands will play at one show this weekend at Mickey’s Summer Rendezvous. Opening the show at 4 p.m. Saturday will be Spindrift, followed by Fallen Phoenix and Chris “Brown” Lawrence. Headlining the outdoor concert will be Chester Bay. JSun Entertainment, a local DJ service, will provide entertainment between bands. There also will be games and prizes throughout the day. Immediately following the show at 11 p.m. Chester Bay and Chris Brown will hold a band session inside the bar. ‘Transformers’ (PG-13) ★★★ Shia LaBeouf stars as a high school student who gets a used Camaro that is part of an invasion by two groups of battling robots. The Transformers and Decepticons can twist, fold and double in upon themselves, like a Rubik’s Cube crossed with a contortionist. Opening scenes are exciting and funny, with a lot of stuff that blows up real good, but the grand finale, robots battling in special effects, goes on too long. Intense sequences of sci-fi action violence, brief sexual humor and language. Reviewed by Roger Ebert. www.transformersmovie.com ‘Waitress’ (PG-13) ★★★★ You’ll want to do one of three things after you see “Waitress”: eat a pie, bake a pie or sing a song about pie. Whichever way you go, you’ll have a spring in your step and a smile on your face. It’s this year’s “Little Miss Sunshine,” where instead of a van, a road trip, a mute son and a suicidal Proust scholar, we have a diner, an unplanned pregnancy, a fumbling doctor and a crabby old coot. Jenna (Keri Russell) is a pie genius who vents her frustrations baking pies in this bittersweet parable. Sexual content, language and thematic elements. Reviewed by Teresa Budasi. www.foxsearchlight.com/waitress/ • “We want to make this an annual event like our golf tournament,” said Shane Clark, of Mickey’s. “We want to do a big event every year outside.” Tickets are $10 advance, available at Mickey’s Irish Saloon, or $15 at the door. Doors open at 3:30 p.m. Bring your own lawn chair. No coolers allowed. Mickey’s is at 1605 Civic Center Drive N.W. in Rochester. Information: 5350557 or www.mickeysirish saloon.com. Record labels let you have your vinyl and MP3s, too McClatchy Newspapers A feature-length adventure starring America’s most dysfunctional family, which succeeds in the nearly fatal pollution of Springfield. That story is interspersed with a lot of political asides and a wickedly funny spoof of the most famous sequence in the Austin Powers movies. Irreverent humor throughout. Reviewed by Roger Ebert. www.simpsonsmovie.com • gating the crimes than on the methodology and madness of the Zodiac himself. Starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Robert Downey Jr., Mark Ruffalo and Anthony Edwards. Rated R for some strong killings, language, drug material and brief sexual images. Reviewed by Richard Roeper, Chicago Sun-Times. Four stars. By Ryan Peterson ★★★ ★★★ ‘I Now Pronounce You Chuck & ‘No Reservations’ (PG) ★★ Catherine Zeta-Jones and Aaron Eckhart ★★ Larry’ (PG-13) star as rival chefs; she hates him as a rival, Firefighter Kevin James saves his friend Adam Sandler from the collapse of a burning building, so Sandler grants his colleague “any favor.” Widower James decides that they should masquerade as domestic partners to ensure that James’ children will be entitled to his city benefits should he be killed in the line of duty. A funny premise turns into an uneven and choppy cinematic ride. The hearts of the filmmakers are in the right place; it’s a Biel shame they didn’t try harder to make this funny. With Jessica Biel, Steve Buscemi and Dan Aykroyd. Crude sexual content heard about, and got 81.4 percent perfect “10” votes. Only 4.5 percent voted “9.” That’s funny, since you’d think more people would consider it really good but not great. Do you suppose somehow the ballot box got stuffed by Simpsons fans who didn’t even need to see the movie to know it was a masterpiece? Doh. Classified: PG-13 for irreverent humor throughout. Rating: Three stars. NEW ON VIDEO AT THE MOVIE THEATERS ‘Hairspray’ (PG) the best television series of 100 years (almost half of them, to be sure, without television), I guess I shouldn’t be surprised to visit the Internet Movie Database and discover that the movie has been voted the 166th best film of all time, seven places above “The Grapes of Wrath” and 10 ahead of “Gone With the Wind.” That’s all the more remarkable because it was first screened for critics on July 24, has had no sneak previews I’ve Want the warmth of vinyl and the convenience of MP3s? Several independent record labels have started programs that allow customers who purchase vinyl LPs to download them for free as high-quality MP3 files via the label’s Web site. The MP3s can then be transferred to a portable music player or burned to a CD. Venerable Seattle label Sub Pop Records adopted the practice earlier this year with the much-acclaimed Shins album “Wincing The Night Away.” “It just seems like the fair thing to do,” said Andy Kotowitz, the label’s director of sales. “CD buyers can rip the album (with) no problem and LP buyers should have the same access. In addition, LP buyers are typically more serious listeners and I think there will be a demand for vinyl long after the CD has been eradicated.” The first label to adopt the practice was North Carolina’s Merge Records. Nebraska’s Saddle Creek Records, whose • roster includes artists such as Bright Eyes and Cursive, followed suit early in 2006. The cost to the consumer for CDs and LPs is usually the same. Saddle Creek’s manager Jason Kulbel said that while the service has led to increased vinyl sales relative to previous releases, it’s still mainly geared toward vinyl aficionados. CDs make up the lion’s share of sales (about 80 percent) for the record label, Kulbel said. Digital sales, such as those available at Apple’s iTunes store, account for 15 percent. Vinyl only makes up 3 to 5 percent of sales. “The market for vinyl is very small — it’s by far our least popular format,” Kulbel said. “Having it as an option is still very important for us.” Every record label is different. Those that have adopted this practice include: Merge, Sub Pop, Saddle Creek and Matador. Also, the service mainly applies to new and recent releases. Not every album in a label’s back catalog is available. • D4 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Xxxday, Xxx ##, 2007 XX Picture perfect laundry plan King Features Syndicate HINTS FROM HELOISE DEAR HELOISE: After a recent surgery, while I was not able to use the stairs, my husband and three boys were in charge of our laundry. To make sure the washer and dryer were set on the appropriate settings for each load, they would set the controls and then take a picture of the washer with our digital camera. The camera was brought to me to check out the settings, and then the picture was deleted. It was an easy way for me to check that each load had the right settings. — Ann, Lexington, Ky. DEAR HELOISE: When I paint, even if it’s my regular painting clothes, I turn the shirt inside out. That way, only the inside of the shirt is ruined, and you still might be able to use it again. — Rebecca, via e-mail DEAR HELOISE: I read the hint about reusing peanut-butter jars for leftovers, etc. Even after thorough washing, traces of peanut proteins could remain in the jar, resulting in cross-contamination of food that could be lethal for allergy sufferers. Just wanted to pass this along to keep in mind. — Kim G., RN, BSN, via e-mail Kim, thank you for the good advice, especially for people with peanut allergies. You can’t be too careful. — Heloise DEAR HELOISE: Here’s a quick home-safety hint for when you are away on vacation. Set several timers in the house, like on the TV, radio and light fixtures. This way, you have different machines going off in your house at different times, which can discourage burglars. — Lorena from San Antonio DEAR HELOISE: Use a dot of nail polish on the top of an appliance plug so you know which way is up. Many only fit one way, and this saves time. I put a dot above the right prong so it is easy to see. — Nancy Matlock, Benton, Ark. Send a money-saving or timesaving hint to Heloise, P.O. Box 795000, San Antonio, TX 782795000, or you can fax it to 1-210HELOISE or e-mail it to [email protected]. By Heloise Cruse Elizabeth Nida/Post-Bulletin The Stewartville Community Theatre’s production of “Annie Get Your Gun” includes Sarah Goodman, center, as Annie Oakley. Theater group takes shot with musical STEWARTVILLE — Stewartville Community Theatre’s celebration of Stewartville’s sesquicentennial continues with “Annie Get Your Gun.” The play, about cowgirl Annie Oakley, will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 3-4, and No Business Like Show Business,” “You Can’t Get a Man with a Gun” and “Anything You Can Do.” Tickets are $9 in advance, $10 at the door, and can be reserved by calling 5331432. Aug. 10-11, and 2 p.m. Aug. 12 at the Performing Arts Center of Stewartville High School. The western theme of the musical, written by Irving Berlin, includes the songs “Doin’ What Comes Natur’lly,” “There’s STEWARTVILLE COMMUNITY THEATRE PRESENTS “Annie Get Your Gun” To coincide with Stewartville’s Sesquicentennial Children tend to live up — or down — to labels DEAR ANNIE: I’m a single mother of a wonderful 12-yearold boy. He gets A’s in school, plays sports and reads voraciously. I am divorced from my son’s father, who lives nearby, and we share custody. My ex thinks our son is unmotivated because he doesn’t make extra effort in school and he’s losing interest in playing guitar, etc. Recently, my son told me his dad calls him lazy and this does not inspire him to work harder, but, rather, has the opposite effect. I told my ex this was counterproductive and hurtful. His response was, “Well, it’s true.” I said that regardless, he should not voice that opinion in front of our son. My ex declared, “It’s not my problem” and walked out. Now he’s not speaking to me. What can I say to my son about his father’s insensitive words? — Concerned Mom DEAR CONCERNED: Children have a tendency to live up — or down — to what others think of them. Parents who label their children can do particular damage. We don’t know how much more his father expects of a 12year-old boy. Losing interest in a musical instrument is fairly common and not an indication of laziness. Before your son becomes determined to prove his father right, we strongly urge all of you to get into family counseling. If your ex won’t go, go without him. DEAR ANNIE: My husband and I have some really annoying neighbors, “John and Alice.” They moved in two years ago. Alice is tolerable, although we don’t have much in common, but we don’t like John at all. He is really creepy. He stares at me and doesn’t talk. When we try to engage him in conversation, he rarely has anything to say, and when he does, it tends to be idiotic. He makes a joke out of everything and he is NOT funny. Other neighbors have met them and feel the same way we do. John and Alice constantly ask us over for dinner or to go to a movie, and I have turned them down at least 20 times. They just don’t get that we’re not interested. They have no friends, and I have never seen trained not to bite the baby a new home. the baby is old enough to Annie’s Mailbox is written by Annie’s until learn not to annoy the dogs. It Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, mailbox doesn’t matter that the dogs longtime editors of the Ann Landers were there first. When a dog column. Please e-mail your questions and a baby cannot learn to to anniesmailboxcomcast.net, or write coexist peacefully, it’s the dog — to: Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box any of their siblings, although I not the child — that has to find 118190, Chicago, IL 60611. know John has two brothers. I try to avoid them, but every Spiritual Wisdom On Health & Healing time they see me or my husDiscover spiritual keys to physical, emotional, mental and spiritual wellness. band doing yard work, they come over and ask us to dinner. Rochester Public Library Room A What do I do? — Annoyed Saturday, July 28th 11:00 am-12:30 pm. 101 2nd St. SE, Rochester MN DEAR ANNOYED: These are your neighbors, so it’s best to For more information contact call 507-282-7487 stay on polite terms, but you Sponsored by the Minnesota Satsang Society, don’t have to socialize. When a chartered affiliate of Eckankar, the Religion John and Alice invite you to of the Light & Sound of God. join them, all you need to say is, 0726503974P “Thanks, but we can’t make it.” Keep repeating it, no matter how many times they ask. DEAR ANNIE: So, “Second Fiddle” wants to banish her husband’s beloved dogs because one of them nipped her toddler? Kudos to her husband for his loyalty to his other family members. A nip from a female dog is more likely to be a correction to a smaller pack member than aggression. Was the child pulling her fur or her ears or climbing on her? Rather than accept responsibility for teaching a child how to interact properly with a family pet, Second Fiddle simply goes mommy-hysterical, blaming the dog (who was there first), and you back her up. A dog is a lifetime commitment, not a “thing” to be discarded when it’s inconvenient. — Pittsburgh, Pa. DEAR PITTSBURGH: Since a dog bite is so dangerous to a child, the dogs need to be August 3-4 & 10-12, 2007 • Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at 2:00 p.m. IN THE STEWARTVILLE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER Tickets $9.00 in advance, $10 at the door Call 533-1432 to reserve tickets “There’s NO Business Like Show Business!” 0726504105P 3rd Annual Birthday Bash Now thru July 31st 30% 10% off Purses, Candy & Jewelry Located at the West on Second Marketplace (Shopping center across from Tyrol Ski & Sports) Hours: Monday - Friday 10 a.m. – 8 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. & Sunday 12 p.m. - 5p.m. 0726504007P “Where have you been? You never call.” Tilly misses you. And if you’ve never been to Tilly’s Tavern, now’s the time — Stop by today and enjoy these great specials. Don’t let the road construction stop you — there’s easy access. Just follow the signs to the access road off Hwy 52. Hurry in! Offer expires August 15, 2007. ✁ Construction special! Buy one menu item and get ✁ See Chad for… • Auto Glass • Windshield Repairs • Sliding Back Glass • Door Glasses & CATERING Locally Owned for 67 Years Auto • Home • Commercial Across from K&M GLASS Graham Arena at 208 16th St. SE the fairgrounds Open M-F 7-5:30, Sat. 9-1 289-3261 0607498845P 1/2 off 2nd MENU ITEM Oronoco, MN 507-367-2800 DIR: Going South on 52, take Lake Shady Ave. South, turn right into Woodview and follow signs. Going North on 52 take Oronoco Exit & follow signs. Must present coupon. Limit of 4 orders per coupon. Not valid w/any other offer. Exp. 8/15/07 • Free 16 oz.Beer! of equal or lesser value. (11am-10pm) DIR: Going South on 52, take Lake Shady Ave. South, turn right into Woodview and follow signs. Going North on 52 take Oronoco Exit & follow signs. Oronoco, MN 507-367-2800 • Construction special! Oronoco, MN 507-367-2800 BAR ’N GRILL • off Regular priced items • • • Must present coupon. Limit 1 coupon per person. Not valid w/any other offer. Expires 8/15/07 • • 0726503575P Creators Syndicate Inc. 0726503374EM By Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar C4 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Thursday, July 12, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 D5 More artists taking credit for songs they didn’t write By Nekesa Mumbi Moody Associated Press Associated Press Singer-songwriter Chantal Kreviazuk’s comments about Avril Lavigne ignited a debate over songwriting credits. Usher, and has worked with Chris Brown, Ciara and others. Shropshire says that many artists will only allow songwriters to work on an album in return for song credit, and “if they do write, they ask for more publishing than they honestly contributed ... it is the way it is.” The practice has been prevalent for decades. Elvis Presley’s manager, Colonel Tom Parker, maneuvered to give the King songwriting credits on early hits like “Love Me Tender” even though he never wrote a word. James Brown was sued by an associate over song credits. Lauryn Hill settled a lawsuit by a group that claimed she improperly took sole production and writing credit on her Grammy-winning album “The music has long been scrutinized. Grammy-winning songwriter Dallas Austin says he’s had a manager rave about a song Austin wrote all by himself, and then tell him, “We wanna know if we can get a piece of the pie on it because (the artist) wants to feel like she has a part ownership on the song. “And I’ll say, ’In all fairness, no. ... If you want to work with me at least sit here and put something into it, instead of coming after I’ve done everything and try and claim percentages on it.”’ Gerson calls the practice unfair but says it’s “pretty prevalent in pop and R&B ... I think the way people now divide publishing splits is who was in the room. ’OK ... I changed the word “the” to “a,” and I deserve 10 percent of the publishing.”’ Sean Garrett, who has created smashes for Beyonce, Kelis, Fergie and others, says he gave up credit when he was just starting out, which is common for newcomers. “It bothered me but I knew it was just a price that I had to pay to continue my career and stay focused with the big prize,” he says. Ne-Yo, a true singer-songwriter who co-wrote Beyonce’s “Irreplaceable,” says early in his career he had to deal with the same thing. He says some artists feel they are doing a novice a favor by recording their song so they deserve a piece of the royalties. But now that songwriters like Warren, Garrett and Ne-Yo are established, they rarely find themselves taken advantage of any more. “I give other people credit where credit is due, like Beyonce really did vocally arrange (’Irreplaceable’),” Ne-Yo says. “So for someone to come in and take my credit because they are who they are? That doesn’t work for me. I don’t care who you are.” 0726499924P NEW YORK — Of all the names in music, Chantal Kreviazuk may be the least likely to appear in a headline. Though she recently released her own album, the songwriter usually stays behind the scenes to pen hits with artists such as Kelly Clarkson, Gwen Stefani and Avril Lavigne. But earlier this month, Kreviazuk rocked the pop music world by suggesting that Lavigne was a collaborator in name only. Although she quickly retracted her comments and others defended Lavigne, the flap illuminated a long-standing fraud that has become more prevalent than ever: “singersongwriters” who do much less songwriting than their publicists would have you believe. “It’s crazy!” exclaimed Grammy-winning songwriter Diane Warren, who has written for artists such as Whitney Houston, Celine Dion and Mary J. Blige. “How can someone look in the mirror and know they didn’t do something and their name is on it? For money? For credit? It’s a lie.” This being the music industry, money is of course a factor, since the writers of hit songs can earn more than the singer over the long term. But today’s singers also press for writing credit because it gives them more of a cachet, presenting them as more of a “real artist” in comparison with a star who doesn’t write a note. “It’s a practice that’s been going on but now it’s really prevalent in every situation,” says songwriter Adonis Shropshire, who helped pen the hit “My Boo” for Alicia Keys and Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.” And Diddy seemed to acknowledge claims that he wasn’t really writing his raps in the “Bad Boys for Life” song with the brushoff line: “Don’t worry if I write rhymes, I write checks!” The notion that serious artists have to write their own songs seems to have grown over the past two decades. Today, even the fluffiest of pop acts is credited as having written their own material. “We as an industry ... don’t look at someone who has an incredible voice as an artist, whereas having an incredible voice is artistry,” says Jody Gerson, an executive vice president of EMI Music Publishing. “I think people place more of a value on an artist if they write their own songs; it gives them credibility.” Indeed, Lavigne’s songwriting abilities have been touted since she broke out as a teen with the hit “Complicated.” But how much she contributed to her Bash 2007 0726501265EV Celebrate the 40th Anniversary of Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band and the Summer of Love… Featuring British Export Sunday, July 29th 2 p.m. - 10 p.m . (The greatest Beatles tribute band in the world) Lost Faculties, The Riot and Tres Femmes. As well as noted Beatles historian Robert Bartel! Tickets $12 in advance, $15 at door. Children 12 and under $5. Tickets may be purchased at the Hubbell House Restaurant (507) 635-2331 www.hubbellhouserestaurant.com Located in Historic Mantorville, MN 0719503153P it all happens here… schedule of events: July 27- August 4 July 27-29: Christian Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses District Convention July 29: Family Day… Down by the Riverside Celebration begins at 3:00 p.m. at Mayo Park. Free admission. Enjoy a fun-filled afternoon of physical activity and family togetherness before Chuck Blattner and the Concert Band & Choir begin their show at 7:00. Featuring music from Little Mermaid, Wizard of Oz, and The Lion King. August 4: KFSI Radio presents: “Twila Paris & World Vision Korea Children’s Choir” Concert begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Presentation Hall. Tickets on sale now. August 4: “Bob & Tom Comedy All-Stars” Tickets go on sale for November 2nd performance. mayociviccenter 0726502242EM The Rochester Fire’s inaugural season starts this fall and Mayo Civic Center’s Box Office is the only place to get your season tickets now! 0726499191EM Get Your Season Tickets! 30 Civic Center Dr. SE | ph: 507.281.6184 | email: [email protected] • • • • • • • • D6 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Xxxday, Xxx ##, 2007 For Better or For Worse / Lynn Johnston Baby Blues / Rick Kirkman and Jerry Scott Red & Rover/ Brian Basset Dilbert / Scott Adams Blondie / Dean Young and Denis Lebrun Zits / Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman Pickles / Brian Crane Wizard of Id / Brant Parker Stone Soup/ Jan Eliot Classic Peanuts / Charles Schulz Doonesbury / Garry Trudeau Frank & Ernest / Bob Thaves Garfield / Jim Davis Get Fuzzy/ Darby Conley Pearls Before Swine / Stephan Pastis Sally Forth / Steve Alaniz, Francesco Marciuliano, Craig Macintosh Family Circus / Bil Keane Marmaduke / Brad Anderson Luann / Greg Evans For For all all your your Advertising Advertising Specialty Specialty Items Items Call Paul Schad • (507)-285-7730 XX XX POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com ✩ Xxxday, Xxx ##, 2007 FUN & GAMES POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 D7 Welcome to the hotel California Crossword/ Thomas Joseph By Kevin McDonough United Feature Syndicate “Welcome to the Parker” (10 p.m., Bravo) offers a behind-the-scenes peek at a posh five-star hotel resort in Palm Springs, Calif. We meet the controlling manager whose business mantra is “obsession,” as well as his harried staff. In episode one, we encounter a food critic who gobbles her way through UNE IN TONIGHT thousands of dollars of tasting menus and a rowdy party of table tennis players. “Welcome” does a good job illustrating the difficulties of the high-end service industry, where you can get a thousand things right and still suffer for one glaring error. But it never quite demonstrates why we should care. There’s a hint of an entertaining show here, but “Welcome” goes out of its way to focus on high-strung drudgery rather than emphasize “The Love Boat” that it could be. • The new six-part series “Mind Control with Derren Brown” (9 p.m., Sci Fi) straddles the line between magic and conartistry. Brown guesses how much cash pedestrians have in their wallets just by looking at them. He sweet-talks three attractive models by “guessing” the kinds of pickup lines that melt their hearts and then proceeds to get perfect strangers to hand him their wallets, cell phones and other valuables. While not an illusionist, Brown uses the magic of television editing to good effect. After all, we never see how many guesses fail or how many strangers tell him to buzz off. Brown’s series debuts after the secondseason premiere of “Who Wants to be a Superhero?” (8 p.m., Sci Fi). Comic-book creator Stan Lee puts 10 costumed crime fighters through the paces in this highly entertaining game of skill, brazen exhibitionism and elimination. This year’s worthies include a dust- T When “Who Wants to be a Superhero? 2” premieres tonight, keep an eye on Mindset. He was the only contestant voted onto the show by fans. Plus, he comes from the future, so he must already know who wins. busting orphan named Hygena; Basura the bug wrangler; Braid, a martial artist who puts her hair extensions to good use; and Mr. Mitzvah, who employs a Star of David paddle to repel bullets and mete out justice. • The heartbreaking Oscar-winning documentary short “The Blood of Yingzhou District” (6 p.m., Cinemax) looks at a poor Chinese village where tainted needles have infected impoverished peasants who had resorted to selling their blood for money. This 40-minute film reveals peasants dying of AIDS in the grimmest conditions. But that pales in comparison to the scenes of their surviving children, left abandoned by their families and taunted by neighbors and classmates. “Blood” is a powerful, unspeakably sad film about the rawest human experiences and motivations: fear, ignorance and the LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Before you commit yourself to any decision, you like to figure out the exact cost. It’s not the dollar amount that matters, but the amount of life you must exchange for the thing in question. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). If there isn’t any urgency to get your needs met, there should be. You’re important, too, you know. Capricorn and Aries friends will help you stay strong. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Just when you think you can’t possibly do more, you do more. This only proves that it’s not a good time to guess how far you’ll go or what you’ll accomplish. It is, however, a good time to keep working. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’re already meeting a loved one in the middle. Further compromise could make you feel resentful. Explain your position. Chances are, the other person doesn’t realize what he or she is asking of you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Others need reassurance of your love. You have a way of making your significant ones feel even more significant — and you don’t even have to spend money to do this. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You like to think of the rules as mere guidelines. Everything is negotiable. When someone else you know takes the same liberty with your rules, you may start to feel a little differently. 2007 MODELS • 2 Nights of Camping CAMP-RESORT • 2 days Unlimited Apple River tubing 39 HOME OF THE APPLE RIVER TUBE TRIP APPLE RIVER GALLE 288-9050 Campers Pay One Price Box 67, Somerset, WI 54025 per person (limit 4) with this coupon Zumbro Watershed Celebration July 28th, 2007 RACLIG Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon. • • Special guests will discuss the future of the partnership, unveil the 5-year Zumbro River Watershed Management Plan and kick off the organization into action! There will be plenty of family activities, food and music by the Benderheads. All activities, food and music are free of charge. Timothy R. Melin Vice President/ Trust Officer 45 28th St. SE Rochester 507-282-2335 - (Answers tomorrow) WEDGE BANANA AWHILE Jumbles: IDIOT Answer: What the watchmaker decided to do as he got on in years — “WIND” DOWN It’s a Celebration! The Zumbro Watershed Partnership is celebrating past, present and future accomplishments with activities, food and music by the Benderheads at the Covered Bridge Park in Zumbrota from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 0108485824P Eastwood Trust may be the right size for you! www.jumble.com • CALL TOLL FREE Sometimes Bigger Isn’t Better GINPYT Yesterdayʼs 0712502642P 7180 Hwy 14 East Rochester, MN 55904 GUZAE 1-888-247-3305 mini vacations www.AppleRiver.com Not Camping? Come tubing for the day! Save $200 Rochester Harley-Davidson Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words. ©2007 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved. and watersliding. 95 $ From per person (Offer not good on special event days. Call for details) SPECIAL THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME Jumble/Arnold and Argirion by Henri Arnold and Mike Argirion Answer here: Series notes Come spend the afternoon on the banks of the Zumbro River with us as we celebrate. 1485 Industrial Drive NW, Rm. 102 Rochester, MN 55901 Phone: 507-280-2850 Some products purchased are not FDIC insured; are not deposits or other obligations of the financial institution; are not guaranteed by institution; involve investment risk; including possible loss of principal. • 0628501884P Sudoku/Universal Features • Jenna’s film opens on “30 Rock” (7:30 p.m., NBC, r, TV-14). • Michael overshadows Phyllis’s wedding on “The Office” (8 p.m., NBC, r, TV-14). • Meredith has a near-death experience on “Grey’s Anatomy” (8 p.m., ABC, r, TV-14). • Academy-award winner Forest Whitaker (“The Last King of Scotland”) guest stars on “ER” (9 p.m., NBC, r, TV14). • Peggy fends off several male suitors on “Mad Men” (9 p.m., AMC, TV-14). • Bill Kurtis narrates the documentary “The Execution of Michael Johnson” (10 p.m., A&E). • • • RSVP is requested, but not necessary call Angela or Jennifer at 507-280-2850 or visit www.zumbrowatershed.org • 0721503169EM Cryptoquote/King Features Other highlights Bridge/King Features Horoscope/Holiday Mathis FRIDAY, July 27, 2007 ARIES (March 21-April 19). Now you’re thinkin’. An entrepreneurial spirit takes hold. New, exciting ways to earn money enter your awareness. You do your best business with repeat customers. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Your communication style is bold and free. This has its benefits. However, be mindful. You don’t want to be wondering forever more — should I really have said that? GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Would you crumble without your defenses? Maybe not. It’s more likely that you’re holding on to a certain coping mechanism out of habit. Let go and you’ll become invulnerable. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ll be called on to entertain. If you can’t dazzle ’em with brilliance, baffle ’em with whatever comes off the top of your head. You’re captivating either way. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Hold your head up high so you can see over any obstacles that are currently standing between you and your perfect day. You don’t have to conquer anything in order to be happy — just walk around. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Flirtation spices up your day. You could meet someone sassy, or indulge in harmless games with an attractive co-worker. Keep it light. At least pretend that this is purely for fun. primal desire to protect yourself and your family from a killer in your midst. POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Thursday, July 26, 2007 POST-BULLETIN / www.postbulletin.com Xxxday, Xxx ##, 2007 XX and the present G2 A17 GAME S33 The fun and exciting Blackout Game where we’re giving away $ 1000 of Kwik Trip Gas!!! Here’s how it works: • GASUP Game cards will be distributed in the Post-Bulletin on Saturday, July 28th. • At least two numbers will be printed every Monday through Saturday in the Post-Bulletin. Watch for your GASUP Game Card in the Saturday, July 28th Post-Bulletin • Cut out the daily numbers and if it matches a number on your GASUP card, tape or glue that number to the game card. • The first person to completely cover their card and deliver it, or call it in, to the Post-Bulletin, will win a $500 Kwik Trip Gas Card. • After the contest ends, the Post-Bulletin will select five additional winners of $100 Kwik Trip cards from remaining completed cards. U51 P65 No purchase is necessary to win. Game cards and numbers will be available at the front counter of the Post-Bulletin after 4 p.m. the day they are published, while quantities last. Only one card or daily published numbers per person per day. Win A Kwik Trip Gas Card Use the daily game pieces to fill your game board and you may be one of the lucky winners! Plus A24 U59 Five lucky G11 wwinners will S40 To receive home delivery call 507-285-7676. • • • • • receive a $ 100 Kwik Trip Gas Card! 0718502965P D8 If it matters to you, it matters to us! • • •