The Ukiah - Extras for The Ukiah Daily Journal

Transcription

The Ukiah - Extras for The Ukiah Daily Journal
Your health:
Ask Dr. Gott
..............Page 3
Community
sports digest
.............Page 6
INSIDE
The Ukiah
World briefly
..........Page 2
7
58551 69301
0
50 cents tax included
LOCAL
Hopland man arrested in stabbing
.....................................Page 1
Mendocino County’s
local newspaper
DAILY JOURNAL
ukiahdailyjournal.com
16 pages, Volume 146 Number 212
Tomorrow: Partly
cloudy, showers
TUESDAY
Nov. 7, 2006
email: [email protected]
Ukiah secretary shot
Thompson
hopes for
turnover
Says he’ll be able to do
more for rural area if
House goes Democrat
By KATIE MINTZ
The Daily Journal
Ben Brown/The Daily Journal
Firefighters from the Ukiah Fire Department rush Virginia Larkin, 64, to the ambulance
after she was shot early Monday morning. Larkin was transferred to Santa Rosa
Memorial Hospital for treatment and later flown to UC Davis medical center.
Local law office the scene
By BEN BROWN
The Daily Journal
A secretary at the Hugh L. Preston law firm on
South School Street was shot in the head by a
man who fled the scene at 9:39 a.m. Monday.
Larkin was first taken to Ukiah Valley Medical
Center, transferred to Santa Rosa Memorial
Hospital then flown to UC Davis Medical Center
Monday afternoon, and remained in critical condition there Monday night, according to a hospital spokesman.
The woman, identified by Preston as his secretary Virginia Larkin, 64, was shot by a man who
she apparently knew.
At the courthouse, police arrested Howard
Eugene Raff, 55, of Beaver Dam, Ariz, said
Ukiah Police Detective Sgt. John McCutcheon.
Police also have in their possession a semi-automatic handgun which is believed to have been
used in this attack.
McCutcheon said Raff ran from Preston’s
office to the Mendocino County Courthouse
where he was detained by courthouse security.
Raff made statements to courthouse security
after he was detained but McCutcheon would not
say what those statements were except to say that
Raff and the shooting victim may have been
linked both personally and through her work at
Preston’s law office.
Larkin had been represented by the Preston
law office in a child support case against Raff in
1985.
Raff was identified as the suspect by several
witnesses who were in the area at the time of the
The suspect in the shooting is Howard
Eugene Raff of Arizona.
shooting, McCutcheon said.
It is not known if anyone else was in the office
at the time of the shooting. Preston said no one
else should have been.
Preston said Larkin has been working for him
for 20 years.
“She’s like my right hand,” he said.
Preston’s law office deals mostly with probate
and family law. He said he has been threatened
previously over cases he has handled.
“In the law business we get threats, not that
often, every six-months or so,” Preston said.
Ben Brown can be reached at [email protected]
U.S.
Congressman
Mike
Thompson, California’s District 1 representative since 1998, is running for
one of 435 House
of Representatives
seats that will be
decided today.
A Democrat, he
has high hopes his
party will win the
majority that has
been held by
Republicans since
Thompson
1994, and also high
hopes for what a
Democratic majority in the House can do.
“I think most important is what it’ll
mean for the country,” Thompson told
The Daily Journal on Friday.
According to a final pre-election
USA Today/Gallup poll released
Monday, voting intentions for
Congress showed Democrats with a 51
percent to 44 percent lead over
Republicans.
“I think we have not been well
served with a one-party rule in
Washington, D.C. There’s been no
checks and balances,” Thompson said
of the GOP’s years-long reign of both
the House and Senate. “It’s whatever
the White House wants, the White
House gets.”
With a majority win for Democrats
in the House today, he believes
advances in health care issues and fiscal areas can be made. As a member of
the House Committee on Ways and
Means, which he said deals primarily
with health care, Social Security, and
trade and tax policy, he said a win
would mean more influence.
See HOUSE, Page 16
Hoplander
arrrested in
stabbing
Ukiah Police
officers investigate
at the law offices
of Hugh L. Preston
where Virginia
Larkin was shot
Monday morning.
The suspect was
later arrested at
the Ukiah
courthouse.
BY LAURA MCCUTCHEON
The Daily Journal
Hopland school library filling up again
Recent donation of
1,000 books helps
repair flood damage
By LAURA MCCUTCHEON
The Daily Journal
Books -- over a thousand of them
--- have been flowing into the
Hopland Elementary School library
to replace reading materials lost in
the damaging New Year’s Eve
weekend flood.
Floodwaters created well over a
million dollars in damage to the little country school.
Project Inkslinger, one of
American Mensas Community
Service programs, just completed a
donation of over a thousand books
to the library, to replace the thousands lost in the storm.
“With the help of groups like
Reader to Reader, Inc. and the
Junior League-Palo Alto MidPeninsular, we were able to donate
over 100 boxes of books to the
school,” said Michael Beetham,
coordinator for Project Inkslinger.
“In the aftermath of the storm last
January, children joined in wearing
rubber gloves and gumboots and
carted the ruined books out to the
dumpster in Radio Flyer wagons.
It’s well worth our time, energy and
effort to help give a library full of
books back to those kids,” Beetham
said.
“All summer, they kept sending
them to us,” Hopland School
Principal Jeanne Yttreness said
gratefully. “They came in 30-pound
increments.”
School
librarian,
Becki
Sankovich, noted many schools,
businesses, and individuals, too,
have donated to the library which
should “hopefully” be open sometime next month. Likely the largest
local donation -- $14,500 -- came
See BOOKS, Page 16
A 20-year-old Ukiah man was
reportedly in stable condition Monday
at Ukiah Valley Medical Center after
being stabbed early Sunday morning.
The victim, whose name is being
withheld by the Mendocino County
Sheriff’s Office, was at a party in the
3800 block of Highway 175 in
Hopland when he was stabbed in the
chest, causing major injuries, according to MCSO Capt. Kurt Smallcomb.
Deputies and officers from the
California Highway Patrol responded
to the incident at around 1:30 a.m.
after someone at the party called 911.
Apparently, the suspect -- 26 yearold Hopland resident Marco Gonzalez
-- and his brothers, took offense at the
victim’s activities at the party and a
confrontation took place. A large fight
erupted, at which time the victim was
allegedly stabbed by Gonzalez.
Smallcomb said he does not think
the fight was gang related.
The victim was transported by
ambulance to the hospital.
Gonzalez was arrested on suspicion
of attempted murder and booked into
the Mendocino County Jail. His bail is
set at $500,000.
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2 – TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006
DAILY DIGEST
Editor: K.C. Meadows, 468-3526
POLICE REPORTS
The world briefly
Democrats assail
status quo
WASHINGTON (AP) —
On the eve of midterm elections, Democrats criticized
Republicans as stewards of a
stale status quo while
President Bush campaigned
into the evening in a drive to
preserve GOP control in
Congress.
“They can’t run anything
right,” said former President
Clinton, taunting Republicans
about the war in Iraq, the
aftermath
of
Hurricane
Katrina and even the scandal
involving the House page program that complicated GOP
efforts to win two more years
in power.
Bush campaigned on
Monday from Florida to
Arkansas and Texas. But the
day brought one more
reminder of his poor standing
in the polls when Republican
gubernatorial
candidate
Charlie Crist skipped the presidential rally in Pensacola,
Fla., to make a speech of his
own hundreds of miles away.
Bush made no mention of
the evident snub in public, but
not so his aides. “Let’s see
how many people show up in
Palm Beach on 24 hours
notice, versus 8,000 or 9,000
people” expected for the president’s speech, said Karl
Rove, the White House’s top
political strategist.
Some late polls suggested
momentum was swinging the
Republicans’ way, and Ken
Mehlman, the party chairman,
told allies the surveys summoned memories of 1998,
when the GOP lost seats but
held power.
Iraq drafts law to
reinstate Saddam
supporters
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) —
A day after Saddam Hussein
was sentenced to hang, the
country’s Shiite-dominated
government offered a major
concession Monday to his
Sunni backers that could see
thousands of purged Baath
party members reinstated in
their jobs.
With a tight curfew holding
down violence after Saddam’s
guilty verdict and death sentence,
the
government
reached out to disaffected
Sunnis in hopes of enticing
them away from the insurgency, which has killed tens
of thousands of Iraqis and is
responsible for the vast majority of U.S. casualties.
The
U.S.
military
announced the deaths of five
more American troops, two in
a helicopter crash north of
Baghdad and three in fighting
west of the capital. The deaths
raised to 18 the number of
U.S. forces killed in the first
six days of November.
Relentless
sectarian
killings also persisted despite
the extraordinary security precautions, which eased late
Monday. Fifty-nine bodies
were discovered Sunday and
Monday across Iraq, police
officials said.
Nevertheless,
Sunday’s
verdict and Monday’s opening
to the Sunnis were seen as a
welcome break for the United
States, which had recently
called for the Iraqi govern-
[email protected]
The Ukiah Daily Journal
ment to stop purging members
of Saddam’s Baath party from
their jobs. Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki, however, has
balked at U.S. requests to set
up an amnesty for insurgents.
Cuba’s foreign
minister backs off
HAVANA (AP) — Cuba’s
foreign minister stepped back
Monday from an earlier assertion that Fidel Castro would
return to power in December
and declined to say whether
the ailing Cuban leader would
be well enough to attend next
month’s celebration of his
80th birthday.
Less than two months after
telling The Associated Press
he expected Castro to be fully
back at the helm in early
December, Felipe Perez
Roque said he could not discuss when Castro will return.
“It’s a subject on which I
don’t want to speculate,” the
minister told the AP in an
interview. Castro’s return
“will come when it’s the right
moment.”
Perez Roque said he meets
with Castro frequently and the
Cuban leader is steadily
recovering from his intestinal
surgery.
“He looks good. I see that
his recovery is advancing,” he
said. “We are optimistic, and
happy. The only ones who are
sad are our enemies, who
were all prepared to celebrate
(his death).”
Up until his illness, Castro
was known for micromanaging projects, leading massive
marches along the Malecon
coastal highway and giving
hours-long speeches. Perez
Roque declined to speculate
on whether the Cuban icon
would ever be such an active
leader again.
Fire hits Orlando’s
Gatorland
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) —
A fire early Monday
destroyed a section of
Gatorland, one of Florida’s
oldest tourist attractions, and
killed as many as four pythons
and crocodiles.
The blaze badly damaged
the gift shop, entrance and
ticket booth. The giant concrete gator head that serves as
the main entrance was
charred, its white teeth blackened with soot, its mouth full
of debris.
The park’s alligators were
apparently safe in a lake, but
the fire claimed two 8-foot
pythons kept in a pen near the
gift shop, said Michelle
Harris, a park spokeswoman.
And two 5-foot crocodiles
held in the same pen were
missing and feared dead.
The 110-acre park opened
in 1949 and attracts about
400,000 tourists each year.
The following were
compiled from reports
prepared by the Ukiah
Police Department. To
anonymously
report
crime information, call
463-6205.
ARREST -- Joel Young,
22, of San Luis Obispo, was
arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence and
possession of a controlled
substance at the intersection
of East Gobbi Street and
Marshall Street at 9:01 p.m.,
Sunday.
ARREST -- Wright Xoche,
28, of Covelo, was arrested on
suspicion of driving under the
influence in the 700 block of
North State Street at 1:40
a.m., Sunday.
ARREST -- Gregory
Neely, 25, of Willits, was
arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence and
resisting arrest in the 1200
block of North State Street at
2:14 a.m., Sunday.
ARREST
-Pablo
Arreguin, 41, of Willits, was
arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence in the
1200 block of North State
Street at 2:35 a.m., Sunday.
The following were prepared from reports prepared by the Willits Police
Department.
SHERIFF’S REPORTS
The following were
compiled from reports
prepared
by
the
Mendocino
County
Sheriff’s Office:
ARREST -- Zachary
James Raby, 19, of Redwood
Valley, was arrested on suspicion of transportation of marijuana, driving under the influence of alcohol, driving on a
suspended license and violation of probation in the 6000
block of North Highway 101
in Calpella at 11 p.m., Sunday.
According to reports, Raby
was stopped by a Sheriff’s
deputy for speeding and a
records check through the
Department of Motor Vehicles
revealed Raby’s license status
was suspended for a prior DUI
and Raby was on probation
for the DUI.
He was arrested for driving
on a suspended license and for
violation of probation. A
search of his vehicle revealed
just under one pound of suspected processed marijuana.
He was then transported to
the Sheriff’s Office where a
subsequent blood alcohol test
revealed Raby was in violation of driving under the influence of alcohol.
Raby was booked into the
Mendocino County Jail and is
being held without bail due to
the probation violation.
BOOKED -- Joseph Adam
Copeland, 26, of Dayton, was
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FD-24
Fletcher Ross Pinkham, 22,
of Little River, was driving
southbound in a 2000 Honda
Civic when, for an unknown
reason, he struck the rear of
the vehicle driving in front of
him.
Pinkham was arrested on
suspicion of driving under the
influence at the scene. He was
treated for moderate injuries
at Mendocino Coast District
Hospital.
The other party received no
injuries.
FIRE AND RESCUE
VEGETATION FIRE -Firefighters responded to a
vegetation fire at 3:50 p.m.
Monday, on Laughlin Way in
Redwood Valley. About two
acres of grassland was consumed in the blaze.
The cause of the fire is still
under investigation.
Redwood Valley/Calpella
Fire Department and the
California Department of
Forestry and Fire Protection
responded to the incident.
Those arrested by law enforcement
officers are innocent until proven guilty.
People reported as having been arrested may contact the Daily Journal once
their case has been concluded so the
results can be reported. Those who feel
the information is in error should contact the appropriate agency. In the case
of those arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of an intoxicant: all DUI cases reported by law
enforcement agencies are reported by
the newspaper. The Daily Journal makes
no exceptions.
CORRECTIONS
The Ukiah Daily Journal reserves this
space to correct errors or make clarifications
to news articles. Significant errors in obituary notices or birth announcements will
result in reprinting the entire article. Errors
may be reported to the editor, 468-3526.
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The following were
compiled from reports
prepared by the California Highway Patrol:
ACCIDENT -- Minor
injuries were suffered by four
individuals when two vehicles
collided on Highway 1 south
of Moat Creek Bridge at 9:18
p.m., Saturday
Sean Storm, 37, of Point
Arena, was driving a 1989
Nissan pick-up truck northbound at approximately 55
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miles per hour, and Kelly
Dicky, 42, of Guerneville, was
driving a 1994 GMC pick-up
truck southbound at approximately 50 miles per hour
when the vehicles collided
head-on.
According to CHP reports,
the events leading to the traffic collision are yet to be
determined due to off-scene
investigation of sobriety and
impairment of both drivers.
The traffic collision is still
under investigation.
Dickey, who had two passengers in his vehicle, was not
considered to be under the
influence of alcohol.
Storm was arrested on suspicion of driving under the
influence of alcohol, although
fault has not been assessed in
the traffic collision. Charges
against Storm are pending
through the Mendocino
County District Attorney’s
Office.
All parties were treated for
minor
injuries
at
the
Mendocino Coast District
Hospital and released.
ACCIDENT -- Minor
injuries were suffered when a
vehicle struck a concrete
retaining wall and an AT&T
utility pole on State Route 1
north of Boice Lane at 2:51
a.m., Sunday.
Meaghan Davis, 20, of
Mendocino, was traveling
southbound at approximately
55 miles per hour in a 1996
Nissan when she made an
unsafe turning movement to
the left of the roadway, reportedly due to her state of intoxication and fatigue.
Davis was arrested on suspicion of driving under the
influence and driving on a
suspended or revoked license.
Charges are pending through
the
Mendocino
County
District Attorney’s Office.
She was treated for minor
injuries at the Mendocino
Coast District Hospital and
released.
The traffic collision is still
under investigation.
ACCIDENT -- Moderate
injuries were suffered when
two vehicles collided on
Highway 1 north of Comptche
Ukiah Road at 10 p.m.,
Saturday.
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booked into jail at 7:57 a.m.
Thursday, on suspicion of
transportation of marijuana
for sale and possession of a
controlled substance.
BOOKED -- Ryan Francis
Noga, 25, of Dayton, was
booked into jail at 9:06 a.m.
on suspicion of transportation
of marijuana for sale and possession of a controlled substance.
BOOKED -- Kenneth Lee
Jr. Hanover, 20, of Covelo,
was booked into jail at 8:30
p.m. Thursday, on suspicion
of driving under the influence,
evading a peace officer, and
driving on a suspended
license.
BOOKED -- Chris Robert
Spencer, 35, of Ukiah, was
booked into jail at 11:19 p.m.
Thursday, on suspicion of driving under the influence.
BOOKED -- David Robert
Fisher, 34, of Laytonville, was
booked into jail at 12:36 a.m.
Friday, on suspicion of corporal injury to a spouse, and
resisting arrest.
BOOKED -- Mark Aaron
Beardslee, 33, of Ukiah, was
booked into jail at 2:37 a.m.
Friday, on suspicion of violation of parole, driving on a
suspended license, and driving under the influence.
BOOKED -- Jeffrey
Martin Cogburn, 31, of Dos
Rios, was booked into jail at
7:35 p.m. Friday, on suspicion
of driving under the influence.
BOOKED -- Allan Dale
Duke, 46, of Redwood Valley,
was booked into jail at 9:23
p.m. Friday, on suspicion of
driving under the influence.
BOOKED --Steven Patrick
Enderson, 25, of Garberville,
was booked into jail at 7:52
a.m. Saturday, on suspicion of
possession of marijuana for
sale and transportation of marijuana for sale.
BOOKED -- Douglas
Charles Brass, 54, of Willits,
was booked into jail at 12:31
a.m. Saturday, on suspicion of
possession of a marijuana for
sale, possession of a controlled substance, and revoking probation.
BOOKED -- Adrian Lee
Brumley, 22, of Ukiah, was
booked into jail at 11:44 p.m.
Sunday, on suspicion of corporal injury to a spouse, rape
of a spouse, and vandalism.
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How to reach us
Business Hours ...........468-3500
Mon-Fri .................9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
Sat-Sun............................Closed
Business Hours...........468-3533
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Sun.......................7 a.m.- 9 a.m.
Switchboard..............................468-3500, 468-0123
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Legal/Classified Advertising.......................468-3529
Kevin McConnell - Publisher ...................... 468-3500
K.C. Meadows - Editor................................468-3526
Sue Whitman - Group Systems Director ....468-3548
James Arens - Sports Editor ...................... 468-3518
Richard Rosier - Features Editor..................468-3520
Katie Mintz - City & County .......................468-3523
Laura McCutheon - Schools ....................... 468-3522
Ben Brown - Police & Courts......................468-3521
Isaak Eckel - Chief Photographer...............468-3538
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Joe Chavez - Advertising............................468-3513
Victoria Hamblet - Advertising...................468-3514
Emily Fragoso - Advertising Asst..................468-3528
Yvonne Bell - Office Manager......................468-3506
Circulation Director...................................468-3532
Newspaper In Education Services..............468-3534
UDJ Web site..........................ukiahdailyjournal.com
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©2006, MediaNews Group.
Published Daily by The Ukiah Daily Journal at 590 S. School St., Ukiah, Mendocino County, CA.
Phone: (707) 468-3500. Court Decree No. 9267 Periodicals Postage Paid at Ukiah, CA. To report a
missed newspaper, call the Circulation Department between 5 and 6:30 p.m. Monday through
Friday, or between 7 and 9 a.m. weekends. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Ukiah
Daily Journal, Post Office Box 749, Ukiah, CA. 95482. Subscription rates for home delivery as of
March 1, 2005 are 13 weeks for $30.78; and 52 weeks for $112.15.
All prices do not include sales tax.
Publication # (USPS-646-920).
TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006 – 3
HEALTH
Editor: Richard Rosier, 468-3520
ASK DR. GOTT
By Peter H. Gott, MD
Bowel gangrene
a serious medical
condition
DEAR DR. GOTT: You mentioned gangrene of the
bowel in your column. I had never heard of this until
recently. A friend of mine had a colonoscopy last
September and had no problems detected. However, in
November, she had a severe pain on a Sunday night,
was sent to the emergency room of the hospital and had
her colon removed the next day. Gangrene had started
to occur. Up to this point, she had never had any bowel
problems, so it has been hard to understand why this
problem happened so suddenly. My question is, could
something have happened during the colonoscopy that
she wasn’t told about that might have caused this to
happen?
DEAR READER: One of the most serious consequences -- fortunately rare -- of colonoscopy is bowel
perforation. During the procedure, the instrument
sometimes pokes a hole in the colon that can lead to
serious infection, terminating in gangrene if not treated.
Symptoms ordinarily appear in a matter of hours but
may be masked for several days. A two-month wait
would be virtually impossible. Therefore, I doubt that
the colonoscopy caused the gangrene your friend experienced.
Bowel gangrene is more often the consequence of
colon ischemia, arterial blockage of colonic segments
leading to death of intestinal tissue. In the elderly, sudden or recurring abdominal discomfort must include
bowel gangrene as a possible cause. For this reason,
emergency scanning studies are necessary for diagnosis
and to define the extent of the problem before surgery,
the only life-saving cure.
Abdominal pain in children is commonly caused by
appendicitis. However, in adults, there are many other
causes, ranging from gallbladder disease and peptic
ulcer to bowel ischemia and cancer.
I believe that your friend had appropriate treatment
for her colonic problem, which was not related to her
colon study two months before.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I am in serious need of your
help! I am a 24-year-old female and I am having trouble with my right ear. Every time there is a moderately
loud noise, my ear starts buzzing. The buzzing is getting worse each day, and now, whenever I laugh or even
talk loudly, I have to plug my ear. Even the water hitting my cheek in the shower makes it buzz. I have seen
two ear specialists and have had several hearing tests
only to reveal that I have perfect hearing. One doctor
told me it could possibly be a tumor but not likely. The
buzzing seems to be getting worse and more frequent,
and I am worried about permanent damage. Any suggestions?
DEAR READER: You are suffering from an unusual form of tinnitus (ear noise).
I recommend that you be examined by another earnose-and-throat specialist to discover the cause of your
tinnitus. Additional opinions in situations such as these
are generally extremely valuable.
To give you related information, I am sending you a
copy of my Health Report “Ear Infections and
Disorders.” Other readers who would like a copy
should send a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope
and $2 to Newsletter, PO Box 167, Wickliffe, OH
44092. Be sure to mention the title.
Doctor Gott is a practicing physician and the author
of the new book “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Diet.”
(Quill Driver Books, www.quilldriverbooks.com; 1800-605-7176). If readers would like to contact Dr.
Gott, they may write him tat Dr. Gott c/o United Media,
200 Madison Ave., 4th fl., New York, NY 10016.
HEALTH CALENDAR
ALANON: Family and friends of alcoholics; 5:30 p.m. on Mondays, noon on
Tuesdays, noon on Fridays and 10:30 on
Saturdays; Calvary Baptist Church, 465
Luce Ave.; 463-1867 or 621-2721.
Alateen: Meets Thursdays 8 to 9 p.m.;
Calvary Baptist Church, 465 Luce Ave.,
enter at east side back door; 463-1867 or
621-2721.
Alcoholics Anonymous: Daily; call 4627123, www.aaukiah.org.
Breastfeeding Support Group: meets second Wednesday from 10:30 a.m. to noon
and fourth Wednesday from 10:30 a.m. to
noon; Mendocino County Public Health –
WIC office, 1120 S. Dora; Tess O’Connell,
472-2739.
Celebrate Recovery: 12-step group;
Fridays; issues include: codependency, substance abuse, depression, eating disorders;
Bible based, confidential; teacher/speaker
meeting, 7 to 8 p.m.; men’s/women’s small
groups, 8 to 9 p.m.; Ukiah Bible Church,
2140 Arroyo Dr., Ukiah; Dale Higgins, 4689255, or UBC at 462-0151.
Childbirth classes: Learn about nutrition
during pregnancy , preparing for childbirthh, breastfeeding and infant safety.
Thursdays, 6 to 8 p.m., 333 Laws Ave., in
Ukiah, 472-4603.
Council on Domestic Violence: First
Wednesday, 1:30 to 3 p.m., Public Health
Department, 1120 S. Dora St., Conference
Room 198, in Ukiah except for May and
October, which will be held at 10-Mile
Court, 700 S. Franklin St. in Fort Bragg,
472-2699.
La Leche League: Breastfeeding group;
meets second Tuesday, various times;
Nursery Room at Presbyterian Church, corner of S. Dora and W. Perkins; Margaret
Turano, 468-9587.
NAMI: (National Alliance for the Mentally
[email protected]
The Ukiah Daily Journal
FIRST 5 Mendocino awards $200,000
locally in effort to help overcome
California’s childhood obesity epidemic
26 local organizations to
receive grants for fitness
and nutrition programs
reaching families with
children ages 0 to 5
The Daily Journal
Over the past few years these
fear-filled words have flooded
our ears and eyes warning us
about what is happening to the
health of our children. With a
decrease in physical activity and
an increase in poor eating habits
to blame in the rise of childhood
obesity, parents and caregivers
have the power to turn this
unhealthy trend around. That’s
what FIRST 5 Mendocino had
in mind when it awarded
$200,000 in Nutrition and
Fitness Small Grants funds to
various organizations throughout
Mendocino
County.
According to the North Coast
Nutrition
and
Fitness
Collaborative, 35 percent of
low-income young children in
Mendocino County are overweight.
“By awarding grant money
specifically toward improving
children’s nutrition and physical
fitness, the importance of
addressing these issues is
emphasized,” said Jeremy
Mann, MD, and Commission
Chair. “FIRST 5 Mendocino has
awarded funds to expand local
programs that share the goal of
teaching and encouraging children to learn healthy habits.”
A grant awarded to Safe
Passage Family Resource
Center’s
Breastfeeding
Awareness program in Fort
Bragg will provide breastfeeding support to new mothers.
“Mothers who breastfeed are
paving the way for a healthier
life for themselves and are providing their infants with good
health through nutrition,” said
Richard
Schanler,
M.D.,
researcher at the USDA/ARS
Children’s Nutrition Research
Center. “Breastfeeding should
be portrayed as a natural part of
everyday life.”
Other nutrition programs
focus on eating fresh and
healthy
foods,
such
as
Discovery World Preschool’s
Fit to Grow program, which will
install early learning demonstration gardens in the preschool.
Kids who participate in gardening programs generally develop
a greater interest in science as
well as an interest in the nutrients in fruits and vegetables
grown in the garden, according
to educators responding to a
recent
study
by
Texas
Cooperative Extension.
Nuestra Casa’s Wisdom in
Health program is another exciting opportunity to increase the
nutrition education in our community. This project will provide parents with children 0-5
HEALTH BRIEFS
Nurse practitioners
recognized for service
Since the first training programs began in
1965, Nurse Practitioners (NPs) have been
expanding access to care to people across
the nation. Today, over 70,000 NPs are providing direct patient care from newborns to
the elderly. From its beginning in 1992,
Mendocino Community Health Clinic, Inc.
(MCHC) has employed NPs to serve our
patients.
Sunday, Nov. 5 through Sunday Nov. 12
is National Nurse-Practitioner Week, and
MCHC takes this time to recognize the
strong contribution NPs are making to community health. This is possible because of
their rigorous medical training. NPs are
Ill Family Support Group) first and third
Wednesdays,6:30 p.m.; call 972-9040, 4858033, or 467-9116 for location and information. Nami is an organization dedicated to
improving the lives of people with brain disorers by providing mutal support,education
and advocacy.
Multiple Sclerosis Self-help Group:
People with multiple sclerosis can take one
more step toward ending effects of MS at
the Ukiah group; sponsored by the National
MS Society; 7 p.m.; second Tuesday.
Men’s Cancer Support Group: Group on
summer hiatus, call for one-on-one with
staff. A supportive place to share your cancer experience; second and fourth
Wednesdays of each month; 6 to 7:30 p.m.;
at their new offices at 590 S. Dora St.;
Mendocino Cancer Resource Center; 4673828.
Narcotics Anonymous: Meetings throughout county; 485-9110.
New Life Workshop: Do you need help
managing your weight? Noon to 1 p.m.
Thursdays; Salvation Army, 714 A S. State
St., Ukiah; 468-9577.
Overeaters Anonymous: Mondays at 5:30
p.m.; Thursdays at 5:30 p.m., Saturdays at
11 a.m.; 741 S. Oak St.; 472-4747.
Parkinson’s Support Group: Meets third
Thursday from 10 to 11 a.m. at Brookside,
1199 S. Dora.. Call Jeff at 485-6057.
Sweet Success: The California Diabetes
and Pregnancy Program; support for special
pregnancies in which women have diabetes;
planning pregnancy or are pregnant, need
extra support; 463-7527.
T.O.P.S.: (Take off pounds sensibly): Meets
from 9:15 to 10:30 a.m., every Tuesday, at
Calvary Baptist Church, 465 Luce Ave;
Carolyn Madole, 463-0261.
T.O.P.S.: Low-cost, non-profit group meets
every Tuesday at Autumn Leaves, 425 E.
Gobbi St., in the community room. Weighin is from 5:30 to 6:15 p.m. Meeting is from
6:15 p.m. to 7:15 p.m.; Linda MacDonald,
467-2391.
T.O.P.S.: Every Thursday at Washington
with information on how to live
healthy through their diets during various cultural events.
“We will lead parents in
preparing traditional holiday
meals with fewer calories,” said
Mireya Gaona, “Hopefully this
program will show that families
can still cook traditional cultural foods, but cook in such a way
that they can live healthfully
through diet.”
Grants encouraging physical
fitness will reach children as
young as two years old when a
free public playground in
Recreation Grove is enhanced
by the City of Willits.
“We would not have been
able to build this play structure
so soon without FIRST 5
Mendocino’s matching funds,”
said Dave Madrigal, Public
Works Director, and City of
Willits.
Another grant will teach
preschool-age children and their
parents the benefits of physical
activities through free, bilingual
yoga classes. Yoga Mendocino’s
Breathe Like a Dolphin – Yoga
Registered Nurses with advanced training
to provide some of the same services a
physician is qualified to perform, including
physical examinations, diagnoses and treatment for common medical problems, interpretation of diagnostic and laboratory tests,
performance of routine health care maintenance procedures and patient health education. To maintain their state license to practice, they must complete 30 units of continuing medical education every two years.
MCHC recognizes the following Nurse
Practitioners for their dedicated service on
behalf of our community and our organization: Scott Claypool and Cottie Morrison,
each with 14 years of service; Susan Hadel,
seven years of service; Mary Ziady, five
years of service. On behalf of hundreds of
patients in the inland Mendocino County
community, we thank you for your expertise, caring and commitment.
MCHC is a local nonprofit health care
organization that ensures access to quality
Mutual Building community room, 700 S.
State St.; meeting is from 8:30 to 10:30
a.m.; it is a low-cost, weight-reduction support group; call 462-4901 or 485-7801.
T.O.P.S.: Every Friday at the Meadows
Mobile Court clubhouse, 8686 East Road,
Redwood Valley; weigh-in is from 9:30 to
11 a.m.; meeting is from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m.;
call 485-8260 or 485-1238.
Ukiah Community Center Crisis Line:
Need help? Call 463-help (4357) or 1 (800)
575-help (4357).
Ukiah Diabetes Education: The Diabetes
Education Group; 7 p.m.; second Monday;
463-7698.
Ukiah Valley Blood Center/Blood
Centers of the Pacific: Mondays, 9 a.m. to
4:30 p.m.; Tuesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 pm.;
Thursdays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; 620 Kings Ct.,
Suite 110; make appointment, donate,
schedule blood drive at workplace; 1 (888)
393-GIVE.
Weight-loss Surgery Support Group:
Free, open to the public, Gastric Reduction
Duodenal Switch (GRDS) support and
information group; Central Valley
Bariatrics; 1st Friday; 6 p.m.; Bartlett Hall,
Ukiah Senior Center complex, 499 Leslie
Street, Ukiah; call Ruth Lorain at 485-0455;
e-mail, [email protected].
Weight Watchers: Redwood Valley
Weight Watchers meet at the Redwood
Valley Cafe and are hosted by Redwood
Valley Fitness on 9620 N. State St. Their
leader is Laurel of Ukiah Weight Watchers.
For more information, call 485-5696.
Women’s Cancer Support Group: Group
on summer hiatus, call for one-on-one with
staff. A supportive place to share your cancer experience; first and third Thursday of
each month; 6 to 7:30 p.m.; at their new
offices at 590 S. Dora St.; Mendocino
Cancer Resource Center; 467-3828.
If you – or the organization that you represent – change a phone number, an address,
or any information in this calendar, please
call at the Ukiah Daily Journal at 4683520,
or
e-mail
us
at
[email protected].
for Kids and Families program
will provide free professional
yoga training and yoga mats and
a DVD for families to take
home.
Physical fitness will also be
introduced into the preschool
curriculum. Through a grant to
the Mendocino County Office
of Education/SELPA State
Preschool
Consortium,
a
“Preschool in Motion” program
will train preschool staff at 16
sites on ways to incorporate
early childhood physical education into daily activities for children.
“Children need to engage in
developmentally appropriate
activities and fitness,” said
Damon Dickinson, SELPA
Director, “Encouraging and fostering enjoyment of movement
in young children will help to
ensure healthy development and
participation in physical activity
later in life.”
For more information on
these nutrition and fitness programs or other FIRST 5
Mendocino programs and services, please call 462-4453 or
visit www.mendochildren.org.
FIRST
5
Mendocino:
Research shows that a child’s
brain develops most dramatically in the first five years and
what parents and caregivers do
during these years to support
their child’s growth will have a
meaningful impact throughout
life. Based on this research,
California
voters
passed
Proposition 10 in 1998, adding
a 50 cents-per-pack tax on cigarettes to support programs for
expectant parents and children
ages 0 to 5. FIRST 5 Mendocino
distributes approximately 1 million a year in Prop. 10 revenues
to meet local needs.
health services to the most vulnerable people in our communities.
La Buena Vida 2006
community report
In honor of October’s BiNational Health
Week, Hillside Health Center in Ukiah hosted a health fair called La Buena Vida (The
Good Life) on October 8, 2006.
Approximately 200 people came to the fair.
Over 25 local agencies and businesses participated, broadening guests’ access to
health-related services.
Guests participated in a range of health
assessments and had numerous opportunities for health education. MCHC devoted an
entire wing of the fair to diabetes; volunteers from Ukiah Valley Medical Center
performed blood glucose tests. Once again,
Ukiah Valley Fire District brought the FireSee HEALTH, Page 9
Local dentist
achieves fellowship
The Daily Journal
Mendocino
Community
Health Clinic, Inc. is pleased to
announce that Virginia Meek,
DDS, has been made a Fellow
of the Academy of Dentistry for
Persons with Disabilities. This
honor is the highest level of
recognition awarded by the
Academy; it is offered to those
who have fulfilled all the
Academy’s educational requirements and who are deemed to
have made a major contribution
to the art and science in the field
of dentistry for people with disabilities.
In addition to her regional
contribution to the oral health of
persons with disabilities, Dr.
Meek helped design MCHC’s
pediatric oral health program
and continues to train staff dentists and their teamS on childspecific care protocols. Her
infectious enthusiasm for her
field is renowned.
An MCHC dentist since
1992, Dr. Meek received her
degree as a Doctor of Dental
Surgery from University of
California, Los Angeles, School
of Dentistry. She continued her
education attaining certification
in Dental Education in the Care
of the Disabled from the
University of Washington
School of Dentistry, Seattle. She
also continues to pursue access
to Hospital Dentistry for persons with special needs through
Virginia Meek
the University of the Pacific and
the California Society of
Pediatric Dentists.
When she is not seeing
patients or enjoying her new
grandchild, Dr. Meek serves
Northern California communities through her work as a member of the Statewide Oral Health
Access Initiative, Head Start
Health Services Advisory
Committee, Mendocino County
Children’s Health Committee,
the Statewide Task Force on
Oral Health for People with
Disabilities, the Redwood Coast
Regional Center and the North
Bay Regional Center. MCHC
applauds her achievements and
expresses its gratitude for her
clinical expertise and professional dedication to underserved
communities.
4 – TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006
FORUM
Editor: K.C. Meadows, 468-3526
Letters from our readers In our opinion
Who have we become?
To the Editor:
For the last few years I have been worrying incessantly about the state of our
nation. Whenever I turn on my radio or
read the paper I start to fume with disbelief
at what is going on around us. And lately I
have been seething over the United States
involvement in world affairs and the current administration’s reckless disregard of
the Constitution.
It fills me with boundless anger that we
are going in debt, trillion after trillion,
fighting a war on terror that we cannot win.
Terrorism is a tactic not a nation, person or
thing. You cannot battle it with guns and
bombs because it is not a physical object or
entity. It is an idea. Trying to fight an idea
with violence is like throwing water on a
chemical fire - you just spread it around.
And that is what we are doing in the
Middle East. Through our arrogant violent
actions we are making the case for everything Al Qaeda and other ‘terrorist groups’
say about us. Our government, through its
lies, manipulation and immoral acts exposes to the world the hypocrites that we have
become.
If our government had stayed focused on
the search for Osama Bin Laden after 9/11
and maintained the support of the world
instead of lying to everyone about weapons
of mass destruction and marching into
Baghdad after Sadam, perhaps we could
focus on global warming, the real threat to
the whole world. If we were intent on stopping the genocide in Darfur with all our
might right now, instead of wasting the
lives of our service men and women as
well as innocent civilians by occupying
Iraq, people might take us seriously. If we
were a model for upholding the Geneva
conventions and the rights of prisoners of
war instead of torturing and humiliating
them perhaps the rest of the world wouldn’t think we were a bunch of double-talking, fork tongued, lying, mercenary thieves.
Why don’t we get it that the only way to
stop terrorism is to prove to the world community that we uphold the beliefs we say
we stand for.
For the latest example of hypocrisy, and
no not the Mark Foley story, let us remember the fateful day of October 22, 2006. On
that Tuesday, our Constitution we claim to
hold so dear was torn to pieces when the
president signed the Military Commissions
Act of 2006 (that Congress passed of
course). For those who don’t know what I
am talking about here are Senator
Feingold’s words on the subject according
to CNN.
“It allows the government to seize individuals on American soil and detain them
indefinitely with no opportunity to challenge their detention in court”And the new
law would permit an individual to be convicted on the basis of coerced testimony
and even allow someone convicted under
these rules to be put to death. Do you
understand what that means? Any of us,
any one of us, citizen and non-citizen alike
who is “suspected” of being a terrorist or
conspiring to be or help terrorists could be
swept away and held in a military prison
indefinitely and coerced into testifying
against ourselves. What happened to the
Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Amendments? What
happened to the right to a speedy trial with
a jury of my peers? What happened to the
right not to incriminate myself? What happened to the right to privacy and personal
property and innocent until proven guilty?
Has everything that America stands for
been thrown away in order to bring it to
other countries? What kind of free democracy are we offering? What have we done?
Did we just hand G.W. a dictatorship? In
Germany they gave Hitler very similar
powers with the “Enabling Act” that our
Congress has just given to Bush with the
Military Commission Act. How can we
fight terrorism if we are becoming the ones
who terrorize their own people? How could
we convince people to stop attacking us
LETTER POLICY
The Daily Journal welcomes letters to the
editor. All letters must include a clear name,
signature, return address and phone number.
Letters chosen for publication are generally
published in the order they are received, but
shorter, concise letters are given preference.We publish most of the letters we
receive, but we cannot guarantee publication. Names will not be withheld for any
reason. If we are aware that you are connected to a local organization or are an
elected official writing about the organization or body on which you serve, that will
be included in your signature. If you want to
make it clear you are not speaking for that
organization, you should do so in your letter.All letters are subject to editing without
notice. Editing is generally limited to
removing statements that are potentially
libelous or are not suitable for a family
newspaper. Form letters that are clearly part
of a write-in campaign will not be published. You may drop letters off at our office
at 590 S. School St., or fax letters to 4683544, mail to Letters to the Editor, P.O. Box
749, Ukiah, 95482 or e-mail them to
[email protected]. E-mail letters should also
include hometown and a phone number.
ON EDITORIALS
Daily Journal editorials are written by
Editor K.C. Meadows with the concurrence
of Publisher Kevin McConnell.
[email protected]
The Ukiah Daily Journal
Water will be key
The recent City Council meeting to discuss use of city water by outlying water districts once again shows the need for a unified look at water in the Valley.
While the current discussion is only about
making emergency water available to
Millview and Willow water districts when
necessary, such an agreement could lead to
city water being used out of the city limits in
the future.
The city would certainly need to be careful about that, but we would not like to see
the city cut off the possibility. There may be
a future city annexation of property or city
support for a development that benefits city
residents in which water may be a positive
bargaining chip for the city.
when we give them every reason to do so?
I challenge us all to take a hard look at the
consequences of our actions. If we do not
cease in our current direction and return to
being real Americans and real patriots who
defend the document that defines who we
are, the constitution, we will become the
evil we are now intending to eliminate.
Look in the mirror America, who have we
become?
Anthony Esserman Melville
Hopland
also investigating claims that Vroman was
growing marijuana ... Since all of this is
unsubstantiated innuendo and no law
enforcement agency involved admits it
happening, how can the Daily Journal
make these statements? I would ask the
Daily Journal where Ben Brown came by
“facts” for this story? And why is it a headline story?
The only value this story may have is it
may draw a few voters to Ms. Lintott’s
camp. Is it possible that the fear of having
a dead man elected to D.A. in Mendocino
County is so great, our “own” local newspaper has to stoop to yellow journalism in
another attempt to discredit Mr. Vroman? Is
it also possible that, even deceased, Mr.
Vroman would make a better D.A. than
Ms. Lintott?
Robert Kiggins
Ukiah
Editor’s reply: Since we endorsed Mr.
Vroman in this election our purpose would
not be to discredit him now. However, we
wanted to give local law enforcement an
opportunity to respond to allegations being
made in other media and indeed the acting
DA did dispute some of them.
Time for change
To the Editor:
It’s time for the Democrats to stand up
and defend the Constitution and the universal enfranchisement of citizens that ensures
it’s survival. An immediate injunction to
stop the illegal purges, caging lists and other
Republican dirty tricks that are not tricks,
but federal crimes, is crucial. They have
stolen three straight election cycles. If not
now, when? This imperial executive is out
of control, and it’s minions are without scruples.
Stephen Snyder
Ukiah
Water is going to be key to the smart and
organized growth we will need to be a viable
community. Today we see once again the
changing and various needs of multiple
water districts in a Valley which needs to do
more to unify its use of resources.
Appalled at pot case
Why is this news?
To the Editor:
Why is it that a story of innuendo
regarding allegations of illegal firearms and
marijuana growing by our late District
Attorney, Norm Vroman a front page headline news item? There is no value to this
story. It is based on allegations (by whom?)
that are unsubstantiated by any of the federal agencies purportedly involved, the
DA’s office or Mr. Vroman’s wife. The supposed investigation by federal authorities
was to have taken place shortly before Mr.
Vroman’s death, and the Daily Journal
states that “It is believed that agents ....
were investigating allegations that Vroman
had illegal firearms at his home ... obtained
through asset forfeiture” and “Agents were
To the Editor:
We have had the honor of spending a
solid week with Memo and Mark Parker.
I’ve reached the age of 67 and I’ve met
few people who have been as intelligent
and humane as the Parker brothers. Memo
is a genuine, compassionate intellectual.
His older brother Mark, speaks four languages and shares his brothers decent and
care giving philosophy. We are appalled
that these kind and sweet men have been
put in chains for growing flowers while
Bush and his “henchmen” have brought
hell and heartbreak to our nation and the
world.
Alan Graham
Albion
WHERE TO WRITE
President George Bush: The White
House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, D.C. 20500; (202) 456-1111, FAX
(202)456-2461.
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger:
State Capitol, Sacramento, 95814. (916)
445-2841; FAX (916)445-4633
Sen. Barbara Boxer: 112 Hart Senate
Office Bldg., Washington, D.C. 20510;
(202)224-3553; San Francisco, (415) 4030100 FAX (415) 956-6701
Sen. Dianne Feinstein: 331 Hart Senate Office Bldg., Washington, D.C. 20510.
(202)224-3841 FAX (202) 228-3954; San
Francisco (415) 393-0707; [email protected]
Congressman Mike Thompson: 1st
District, 231 Cannon Office Bldg, Washington, D.C. 20515. (202) 225-3311; FAX
(202)225-4335. Fort Bragg district office,
430 N. Franklin St., PO Box 2208, Fort
Bragg 95437; 962-0933,FAX 962-0934;
www.house.gov/write rep
Assemblywoman Patty Berg: State
Assembly District 1, Capitol, Rm. 2137,
Sacramento, 95814. (916) 319-2001; Santa
Rosa, 576-2526; FAX, Santa Rosa, 5762297. Berg's field representative in Ukiah
office located at 104 W. Church St, Ukiah,
95482, 463-5770. The office’s fax number is
463-5773.
E-mail
to:
[email protected]
Senator Wes Chesbro: State Senate
District 2, Capitol Building, Room 5100,
Sacramento, 95814. (916) 445-3375; FAX
(916) 323-6958. Ukiah office is P.O. Box
785, Ukiah, 95482, 468-8914, FAX 4688931. District offices at 1040 Main St., Suite
205, Napa, 94559, 224-1990, 50 D St., Suite
120A, Santa Rosa, 95404, 576-2771, and
317 3rd St., Suite 6, Eureka, 95501, 4456508. Email: [email protected].
Mendocino County Supervisors:
Michael Delbar, 1st District; Jim Wattenburger, 2nd District; Hal Wagenet, 3rd District; Kendall Smith, 4th District; David Colfax, 5th District. All can be reached by writing to 501 Low Gap Road, Room 1090,
Ukiah, 95482, 463-4221, FAX 463-4245.
[email protected]
Visit our web site at ukiahdailyjournal.com
email us at [email protected]
VIEWPOINTS
THOMAS D. ELIAS
Vote self-interest
Almost no one in California disagrees with the idea
that smaller classes help public school students learn
better. No one thinks it's a good thing that pencils,
notebooks and rulers are in such short supply at many
schools that teachers often reach into their own pockets to get school supplies for students.
Proposition 88 on the ballot today promises to fix
that by raising about $450 million each year in new
money for the schools, allocating $100 million for
instructional materials and $85 million for grants to
help teachers who buy needed items for pupils.
The problem is where the money comes from. For
Proposition 88 seeks to inflict a parcel tax on all of
California, calling for the most regressive type of levy
that's legal in America, one plainly favoring the rich
over everyone else, landlords and businesses over
homeowners.
To raise its money, Proposition 88 would tax every
piece of real estate in California an identical $50 per
year. No matter how noble the cause that money would
fund, nothing changes the fact that a dirt-poor homeowner living in west Oakland or South Central Los
Angeles or rural Trona would pay the same tax each
year as the owners of shopping malls and oil refineries
and gigantic mega-mansions.
Far more cash has been spent backing this proposition than fighting it, and polls show it has a decent
chance of passing. But if voters look out for their self
interest today this plan should go down in flames, a
fate it richly deserves despite the fact that state Schools
Supt. Jack O'Connell calls it "the next step in improving our education system."
Not that voters always look out for their own selfinterest. Often they are bamboozled by big money
campaigns into voting trouble for themselves. One
example was the defeat of Proposition 98, a 1998 ballot initiative aimed at cancelling the electric deregulation scheme passed two years earlier by state legislators and okayed by then-Gov. Pete Wilson.
Big utilities and electricity generators spent about
$89 million to blast this proposition, while supporters
could muster only about $100,000. That was approximately a 1,000-1 spending edge for the no side. The
proposition lost by a wide margin. Voters opposed their
own self-interest, with energy chaos and enduring high
prices the result.
It was the same a few years earlier, when big corporations spent more than $30 million fighting off a
proposition to allow stockholder lawsuits for fraud
when companies made false claims in order to boost
their stock prices and sales.
Now a new election is upon the state and voters
again have the choice of backing their own self-interest or not.
There is Proposition 87, opposed by big oil companies who don't want California to join other states that
charge royalties for oil pumped from beneath their soil.
Example: Every Alaskan gets a yearly stipend, often
amounting to as much as $10,000, from royalties
charged for oil drilling there. Taxes are low in Texas
and Oklahoma because of oil royalties. California gets
not a nickel in similar revenue.
Oil companies say a royalty would increase gasoline prices. Maybe it would, despite a Proposition 87
provision banning any pass-through of the new levy.
But even if the charge were passed through, gasoline
prices are usually based on overall world-wide costs of
oil, not by local charges. Any California levy would be
divided among gasoline users the world over, meaning
that even if prices rose here, it would be only a fraction
of a penny per gallon.
Would it be worth this to fund research aiming to
reduce oil use and make alternative energy vehicles
cheaper and more available to all drivers? If so, this
measure is in the self-interest of most voters, no matter what its opponents say.
Then there's Proposition 90, which would prevent
local and state government from condemning or taking
private property with the intention of eventually turning it over for private uses or projects. But it also
demands compensation when proposed developments
are reduced or eliminated by government action.
One example mentioned in the ballot argument
against this measure notes that when a developer can
prove he planned to build 2,000 homes on a piece of
land, but city or county or state action allowed only
500, that developer must be compensated for the loss
of profit on the 1,500 cancelled homes. This could cost
billions of dollars each year.
Voters here need to balance their fear that their
homes might be taken without adequate compensation
against the likelihood that predatory companies would
buy up California land, announce big plans and then
seek gigantic settlements when their plans inevitably
are scaled back. In most cases, taxpayers would have
to fund those settlements.
In short, it pays to take a close look at every proposition on the ballot and decide the answer to one simple question before casting a vote: Would this help or
hurt me and my family and friends?
Thomas D. Elias is a syndicated columnist.
The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
Publisher: Kevin McConnell
Editor: K.C. Meadows
Advertising director: Cindy Delk
Office manager: Yvonne Bell
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THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
HEALTH
TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006 – 5
Too much choice in health care?
By H.J. CUMMINS
Minneapolis Star Tribune
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. -Ah, those simpler days -when folks had only one
“consumer driven health
plan” in their insurance
enrollment packages. Then
there were two: health reimbursement arrangements
(HRAs) and health savings
accounts (HSAs).
Then they started mutating.
Now, as U.S. workers
make their 2007 coverage
choices, some of their packets
offer three, four or more variations just on those new
designs.
Some see it as offering
Americans health plans that
are increasingly fine-tuned to
their needs.
“For people who are new
to this, they’re having some
real opportunities for choice,
and to think about what’s the
right thing for them,” said
Barbara Flitsch, a specialist
in consumer-driven health
plans for the consulting firm
Watson Wyatt.
But it’s a development that
worries some health care
advocates.
“These things are extraordinarily complex, and if
there’s variation within an
employer that only adds to
the intimidation factor,” said
Kip Sullivan, a member of
the steering committee of the
Minnesota Universal Health
Care Coalition.
HRAs and HSAs
There continues to be wide
disagreement on how common these new plans are;
estimates range from 7 to 29
percent of U.S. companies.
There’s even wider disagreement on whether their basic
concept -- that Americans
need to become careful consumers of health care -- will
cut fast-rising health care
costs or just shift more of
them to the workers. HRAs
and HSAs are highdeductible health plans that
start each year with a pot of
money -- something like an
up-front bank account -- that
pays at least part of that
deductible. After the
deductible, health insurance
kicks in, with plans typically
paying 80, 90 or 100 percent
of the rest of the costs that
year. All the plans also set a
cap on how much any
employee could pay out of
pocket in a year.
The two types have some
basic differences.
In HRAs, all the money in
that up-front account comes
from the employer and stays
behind if an employee quits.
In HSAs, both employer
and employee can fund the
account -- but then all the
money belongs to the
employee. Employees take it
with them if they quit.
Allianz Life Insurance
Company of North America,
based in Golden Valley,
Minn., has had an HRA for
three years and added an
HSA for 2006, according to
Heidi Lundgren, director of
compensation and benefits. It
also offers a traditional health
plan called a preferred
provider organization, a PPO,
which charges policyholders
only a small fee when they
get care within a prescribed
network of doctors and other
services.
The HRA is now its most
popular plan, with more than
half of about 1,800 employees enrolled, Lundgren said.
Darryl Chouinard, a vice
president of operations,
moved to the HRA when it
first was offered.
“The money they were
giving me (in the account)
intrigued me,” Chouinard
said. “That was all the carrot
I needed.”
Besides, he was 37, single,
and healthy, so it made sense
to pick a plan that cut his
monthly premiums, even
though it could cost him more
if he became seriously ill.
Chouinard went for the
HSA this year, largely
because he likes the option to
put in extra money of his own
-- pretax, even -- and roll
over any leftovers through the
years to an account he can
use into retirement. The
money also earns interest
along the way.
HRAs can have pharmacy
coverage inside or outside the
plan, and sometime employers let employees choose
between them, she said. If the
pharmacy coverage is outside, it can be set up with a
fixed co-pay throughout the
year, like many traditional
health plans. If it’s inside,
Flitsch said, prescriptions get
paid just like every other
medical bill -- building
toward the deductible until
the insurance kicks in.
Regulations require HSAs
to keep their pharmacy coverage inside the plan, she said.
A plan’s price tag is the
other major variation, said
Stephen Parente, a health care
economist at the University
of Minnesota’s Carlson
School of Management.
Parente’s employer learned
that the hard way. Enrollment
in the new-style plans
dropped from about 1,000 to
300 employees between 2005
Drugs and money
Some of the biggest differences are among drug plans,
said Flitsch at Watson Wyatt.
• Precious Metals
• Jewelry
• Coins
468-0640
“Since 1980”
Full Service
and 2006 when, among other
things, the university’s contribution to its HRA plans
dropped, he said.
Here’s what happened to
HRA family plans: In 2005,
the university put $1,200 in
the up-front account toward a
$3,000 deductible. In 2006,
the university put $1,000 in
the up-front account toward a
$4,000 deductible. That
means families have to pay
$1,200 more in medical costs
before insurance kicks in.
Also, the insurance coverage
dropped from 100 to 90 percent.
“Clearly there was a price
issue,” Parente said. “I think
the university didn’t expect
the negative response.”
In the details
Some of the terms that
vary in the new plans:
• “Preventive” medications. Recent regulation clarifications by the federal government allow HSAs to cover
medications deemed as preventive care at 100 percent -like other wellness features,
commonly not subject to any
deductible, Flitsch said.
Various plans are starting to
choose which pharmaceuticals they’ll consider preventive -- including possibly
insulin, asthma inhalers and
medication for high blood
pressure -- choices that could
be important to an employee.
• Two kinds of deductibles.
With a simple family
deductible of, say, $4,000,
insurance kicks in when the
family’s total bills top that.
However, some plans add
individual deductibles, which
means insurance doesn’t kick
in for any one family member
until he or she has spent, say,
$1,000 -- even if the family
total is already well over
$4,000.
• Coverage. Especially
with HRAs, it’s important to
check exactly where the upfront money can be spent.
Consultants say some
employers’ plans are broad
enough to cover such things
as dental, orthodontia and
vision -- so employees can
spend according to their particular needs.
• Fees. HSA accounts can
have investment options.
About half of employers pay
the fees associated with that,
according to a Buck
Consultants survey. Vesting
HRAs. The money in these
up-front accounts is not
portable, as it is in HSAs. But
some employers are “vesting”
their employees after, say,
five or 10 years -- keeping
that money in an account for
their use in retirement.
HRAs and HSAs. Firms
with a group of owners -- law
and accounting firms and
medical clinics, for example -
- give the owners HSAs but
give their clerical and other
staff HRAs, finding them
more suitable to high
turnover jobs. Up-front
money. One third of employers put no money in their
employees’ HSA accounts. Of
those that do, the average is
$988 for individuals and
$1,632 for families, according to the Kaiser Family
Foundation, which follows
employer health benefit
trends. Bonuses. Look for
incentives such as an extra
$50 in the up-front account
for taking annual health
assessments, or completing
smoking cessation or weightloss programs. Help in choosing care. In these new plans,
employees are supposed to
become careful health-care
consumers, but some insurers
offer better research resources
than others. Private industry
also is stepping in. For example, the new WebCare
Compare in Minneapolis
charges employers $25 per
year per employee for access
to the cost and quality comparisons on its website,
according to company president Mark Fisher. “That has
been the biggest frustrations
for employees: They don’t
know what their costs will
be,” said James Fries, a benefits consultant in the
Plymouth office of the
Stanton Group. The variety
can be daunting, several consultants said. “Generally
speaking, simple is better in
my view,” Flitsch said. “It’s
all still so new, and people
need a new kind of understanding.” But employers are
open to suggestions, she said.
“We see employers really
tuned into feedback because
there is so much variation,”
Flitsch said. “Some have
even put up blogs, and actually do use any constructive
information the next time
around.”
Veterans
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707-462-4778 • www.ukiahcoop.com
Mon-Fri 8am-8pm • Sat 8am-6pm • Sun 10am-6pm
In honor of your service the Ukiah Daily Journal
at 590 S. School St., Ukiah will be hosting coffee
and a “Thank You for Serving” cake from
10am-4pm, Friday November 10
Please join us and have your picture taken
for publication on Thanksgiving Day.
Win a dinner for two!!
Enter our drawing & you could win a dinner for two
Questions? Call Linda 468-3535 or Annette 468-3529
6 – TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006
SPORTS
Editor: James Arens 468-3518
LOCAL
CALENDAR
TODAY
JC women's soccer at Yuba
College at 3 p.m.
UHS volleyball at Elsie Allen
at 4:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 8
JC volleyball at home against
Contra Costa College 6:30 p.m.
THURSDAY, NOV. 9
JC men's basketball at home
against Lassen College 6 p.m.
FRIDAY, NOV. 10
JC volleyball at Laney College
6:30 p.m.
JC women's soccer at home
against the College of Marin
3:00 p.m.
UHS football at Santa Rosa
7:30 p.m.
Potter Valley football at home
against Round Valley 7:30 p.m.
JC women's basketball at
home against Shasta College 5
p.m.
SATURDAY, NOV. 11
JC football at Solano College
1 p.m.
JC women's basketball at
home against the College of
the Siskiyous 4 p.m.
[email protected]
The Ukiah Daily Journal
Warriors 107, Mavericks 104
By JAIME ARON
AP Sports Writer
DALLAS — Don Nelson
made a triumphant return to
Dallas — barely, and in one of
the wild finishes that remind
him how stressful coaching
can be.
Baron Davis scored 26
points and Jason Richardson
added 22, just enough for the
Golden State Warriors to hold
off the Mavericks 107-104 on
Monday night in their new
coach’s return to his old
stomping grounds.
The Warriors led 107-97
with 2:26 left, but didn’t score
again. A 3-pointer and a layup
by Devin Harris, and a jumper
by Dirk Nowitzki got the
Mavericks
close.
Jerry
Stackhouse missed a 3 that
would have tied it with about
5 seconds left and Anthony
Johnson got the rebound. He
passed to Harris, but Harris
passed back to Johnson as
time expired.
Not only did Dallas fail to
get off the final shot, fill-in
coach Del Harris was screaming for a timeout. Official Dan
Crawford apologized afterward, saying he couldn’t hear
it. Nelson smiled, laughed and
gave Harris, one of his best
friends, a pat on the back.
Dallas fell to 0-3 for the
first time since 1993-94 and is
in jeopardy of the first 0-4
start in franchise history, not
exactly the start the club
expected coming off its first
trip to the NBA finals.
The Mavs lost forward Josh
Howard to a sprained left
ankle midway through the
second quarter, then coach
Avery Johnson joined him in
the locker room a few minutes
later after getting ejected for
arguing a non-call. With 3:05
left in the game, Jason Terry
was ejected for a hard takedown of Golden State’s Monta
Ellis.
Nowitzki led Dallas with
26 points. Harris scored 17 in
his first start this season and
Terry had 15 after scoring
only one the previous game.
Troy Murphy scored 20
points for Golden State, which
has beaten the Mavericks four
straight overall and four in a
row in Dallas. The Warriors
were the only team that beat
the Mavs three times last season.
Before the game, Nelson
received a loud cheer from the
crowd and even polite
applause from Mavericks
See WARRIORS, Page 7
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Seattle 16
Raiders 0
Bruins struggling
By JOSH DUBOW
AP Sports Writer
COMMUNITY
DIGEST
Want to play rugby?
Mendocino Steam Donkeys
are looking for players to join
their team. Practice is held
every Wednesday at 5:30 p.m.
at the softball complex just
north of Ukiah off of Highway
101. All ages welcome and for
more information contact Liam
at 743-9986 or visit www.mendorugby.com.
Times changed for
SAL Boxing classes
Effective immediately the new
hours will be Tuesday at 5:30
p.m. The cost is still only $5 for
the whole year and classes are
ongoing at the Redwood Health
Club.
To join SAL Boxing you must
fill out SAL paperwork and
have a parental signature if you
are under 18.
The class is a mix of all levels
and ages and you are encouraged to join boxing if you want
to seriously study boxing or just
want a good workout.
High school
basketball
officials needed
Basketball Officials Needed
for High School and Junior High
School. Interested? Contact
462-8450.
Ukiah Lacrosse Club
practice starts
The Ukiah Crushers Lacrosse
team will begin practice at the
Ukiah High School practice
fields (north of the football
field).
Practice will begin
December 2nd at 10:00.
Players who have not registered should come to practice
with insurance information,
$175 club fee (checks made to
Ukiah Crushers), and required
gear. If you have questions,
please contact Ian Pratt at 8439038.
Thanksgiving Break
basketball clinic
Nov. 20 – Nov. 22
Open to boys and girls ages 7
–17. This three day long fall
basketball camp offers players
an opportunity to build a solid
sports foundation. Each day is
filled with fundamental skills,
progression drills, easy to
understand instruction, as well
as games and fun competitions. From beginners to
advanced players this camp will
be a great experience. This clinic is tailor made for youth basketball players looking to get a
head start on team and league
play.
Camp is held at the Pomolita
Middle School Gym. Camp is
from 8:00am – 12:00pm. Lunch
is not provided.
Tuition for camp is $100.00.
For more information, please
call 463-6714.
Hoop shoot contest
On Saturday, Nov. 18 there
will be a Hoop Shoot Contest
for kids between the ages of 8
and 9, 10 and 11 and 12 and 13
at
the
Coyote
Valley
Gymnasium across from the
Shodakai Casino just six miles
north of Ukiah. This event is
sponsored by the Ukiah Elks
Lodge #1728 and there will be
awards to the winners. For
more information, contact the
Ukiah Elks Lodge at 462-1728
or Robert Cannon at 462-7897.
HEY LOCAL
COACHES!
Please report your game
results! Phone (707) 468-3518
or make submissions to: The
Ukiah Daily Journal Sports
Department, 590 S. School
Street, Ukiah, CA 95482. Fax
(707) 468-3544 or visit
www.ukiahdailyjournal.comclick on “Sports”, then click on
the “Report Game Scores”
banner.
Editor’s note: The Ukiah Daily
Journal welcomes submissions
from local youth sports teams.
You can e-mail results to [email protected] or visit The
Daily Journal Web site
(www.ukiahdailyjournal.com),
and click on “Sports.”
Sean Connelley/The Oakland Tribune
California Robert Jordan catches a touchdown pass in front of UCLA’s Dennis Keyes in the third
quarter at Memorial Stadium in Berkeley on Saturday.
Fading UCLA hopes
to salvage a bowl bid
By KEN PETERS
AP Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES — The UCLA
Bruins’ goals for this season have
been diminishing by the week. Now
they hope they can regroup and finish
strongly enough to salvage a bowl
bid.
The Bruins are mired in a fourgame losing streak and they face
more tough tests in their final three
games — against Oregon State this
weekend, then Arizona State and No.
7 USC after that.
“We know the position we’re in, or
lack thereof, in terms of the conference race,” UCLA coach Karl Dorrell
said Monday. “But I’m optimistic
because of how their (the Bruins’)
attitude is getting better.”
Asked if it would be considered a
disaster if the Bruins don’t become
eligible for a bowl, Dorrell said it
would be a tremendous disappointment.
“That’s really our focus right now
as a team, getting ourselves in that
position,” he said. “That starts with
this week.”
The Bruins (4-5, 2-4 Pac-10) need
to win two of their final three to
become bowl-eligible.
In the meantime, Dorrell said, “I’m
just so focused on a win this week.”
Coming off a 38-24 loss to No. 8
California, things don’t necessarily
get any easier for the Bruins on
Saturday. Oregon State (6-3, 4-2) has
won four straight, including a 33-31
upset of USC on Oct. 28.
The Bruins’ offense was productive, at least in rolling up yards,
against the Golden Bears, with
Patrick Cowan passing for 329 yards
and running for a touchdown. UCLA
outgained Cal 516-433, but mistakes
— and the inability to score a couple
of times in the red zone — cost the
Bruins.
Defensively, the Bruins weren’t
effective, and the coach mentioned,
among other things, missed tackles.
He also pointed to blown coverage
that allowed the Bears to score on a
long touchdown pass, and a special
teams breakdown that resulted in a
Cal punt return for a score that essentially put the game out of reach.
“We did play hard. We did not play
smart at times, which seems to be an
issue that’s plaguing us this season,”
Dorrell said. “We need to be more
disciplined and we need more consistency.
Redshirt sophomore quarterback
Ben Olson, who began this season as
the starter then went out in the fifth
game with a knee injury, was cleared
to ease back into practice this week.
Dorrell noted that Olson hasn’t practiced for a long time and that he doesn’t expect him to play this weekend.
Having lost to Oregon, Notre
Dame and California in recent weeks,
Dorrell was asked which of the three
he thought was the toughest. The
Bruins’ crosstown rival, USC, faces
the same three teams before meeting
UCLA in Pasadena on Dec. 2.
“I think Cal,” Dorrell said. “No
disrespect to the other two schools.
Cal is playing as a great team right
now, really good defense, their quarterback is not making any mistakes,
they’ve got good runners, good
receivers.”
SEATTLE — Craig Terrill
and the Seattle Seahawks
delivered the kind of defensive performance they needed
with Shaun Alexander and
Matt Hasselbeck on the sideline with injuries.
Facing
the
Oakland
Raiders on a stormy night
sure helped the cause.
Terrill had three of
Seattle’s nine sacks and
Seneca Wallace threw a
touchdown pass to get his
first win as an NFL starter, a
16-0 victory over the Raiders
on Monday night.
The Seahawks (5-3) had
lost three of four games since
Alexander, last year’s league
MVP, was sidelined with a
broken foot. Hasselbeck, a
Pro Bowl quarterback last
year, has missed two straight
games with a sprained knee
ligament, limiting Seattle’s
big-strike ability.
But backups Wallace and
Maurice Morris did enough to
make up for those losses on
this night. Wallace went 18of-30 for 176 yards, including
a 22-yard TD pass to Deion
Branch in the first quarter,
against the Raiders (2-6).
Morris ran for a careerhigh 138 yards on 30 carries
as the Seahawks had a season-high 207 yards on the
ground.
While the backups stepped
up to help give the defending
NFC champion Seahawks a
one-game lead over St. Louis
in the NFC West, it was the
improvement on defense that
was most notable.
Seattle had allowed at least
28 points in five successive
games for the first time since
its first five games in existence in 1976, and held the
opposition scoreless in only
one of the previous 17 quarters.
But the Seahawks had little
trouble
shutting
down
Oakland’s last-ranked offense
on a wet and windy night that
made it difficult for the
offenses. The Raiders gained
only 185 yards and failed to
score an offensive touchdown
for the fifth time in eight
games this season.
Andrew Walter was 16-of35 for 166 yards and couldn’t
get the ball deep to Randy
Moss against a defense that
had been susceptible to the
long pass.
Seattle sacked Walter five
times in the first quarter,
including on three successive
See FOOTBALL, Page 7
Texas Rangers hire Washington as manager
By STEPHEN HAWKINS
AP Sports Writer
ARLINGTON, Texas —
Ron Washington has always
been a popular coach with
players, stressing communication and letting them be themselves.
Now he will get his chance
as a manager with the Texas
Rangers, who wanted and
needed somebody with those
characteristics.
“I’m going to be a players’
manager. My job is solely to
make sure that every player on
the Texas Rangers feels like
they are part of everything
going on here,” Washington
said Monday night, when he
was introduced at a news con-
ference. “As a manager, I’m
no good if the players don’t
get it done. If the players get it
done, I’m great.”
When Buck Showalter was
fired after an 80-82 season
with three years left on his
contract, general manager Jon
Daniels said the Rangers
needed a “different perspective.”
That’s exactly what they
get with Washington, a coach
for the Oakland Athletics the
past 11 seasons. His two-year
contract with Texas includes
two additional option years.
“Keep it simple stupid,
that’s my motto,” he said.
“The way you do that, you
make sure you’re prepared in
the fundamental areas of baseball and let the talents take
over.”
Chosen over four other
candidates
to
replace
Showalter, the 54-year-old
Washington inherits a team
that has had only one winning
season since last making the
playoffs in 1999. He is the
Rangers’ 17th full-time manager and first black manager.
Daniels wanted to hire a
winner, an optimist and a
communicator.
“Work ethic, professionalism, respect of the game,”
Daniels said. “I didn’t think
we were going to find all of
those characteristics in one
person. (Washington) proved
me wrong.”
Showalter was known for
his hands-on approach that led
to some discord in the clubhouse between some players
and the manager. He was 319329 in four seasons, and the
Rangers never finished higher
than third in the AL West
under him.
The New York Yankees and
Arizona Diamondbacks both
won the World Series the year
after Showalter left them.
Washington also was a candidate in Oakland to replace
fired A’s manager Ken Macha.
Washington first interviewed
with Texas last month and met
with Hicks, Daniels and other
Rangers officials during
another interview Sunday.
“Good baseball people, you
know when you are around
one,” Washington said. “I just
know I’m a good baseball
man.”
Instead of waiting until late
Monday to meet and pick their
new manager, Hicks and
Daniels realized after their
three-hour session Sunday
with Washington that he was
their mutual top choice.
“I kind of grabbed J.D. to
the side, this guy is fantastic,”
Hicks said.
Washington takes over a
team with three-time All-Star
shortstop Michael Young,
slugging first baseman Mark
See RANGERS, Page 7
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
SPORTS
TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006 – 7
SCOREBOARD
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
49ers keeping it simple
By GREG BEACHAM
AP Sports Writer
SANTA CLARA —
Coach Mike Nolan gave
the day off to the San
Francisco 49ers on
Monday — which meant a
nice three-day weekend
for an offense that managed just 133 yards and
no touchdowns Sunday.
Yet the 49ers still could
relax on their vacation
because the defense
worked overtime against
the Minnesota Vikings,
carrying the Niners (3-5)
to a 9-3 victory on three
field goals by Joe Nedney.
The result contradicted
everything that seemed
true about the 49ers so far
this season. An offense
that had shown steady
progress from last season’s miserable form
reverted to incompetence,
but a defense that yielded
150 points in its previous
Ron Lewis/San Mateo County Times
four games suddenly
San Francisco 49ers defender Brandon Moore moves in on quarterback Brad
became impenetrable.
Johnson for a sack during a victory against the Minnesota Vikings Sunday at
Nolan seemed only
slightly less confused than Monster Park in San Francisco.
his fans, but didn’t quesn’t show it: He immediately volungames in the season’s final eight
tion the result.
teered for special-teams duties. Both
weeks. While the players relaxed,
“Hopefully that builds some confiNolan and Davis already were hard at
dence for our guys in the things we’ve Moore and Lewis will be starters
Sunday
in
Detroit
as
well,
Nolan
said.
work trying to make sure the 49ers
been doing,” Nolan said while his
“Everybody wants to win the game. look good again.
players got their first Monday off durThere are no egos,” said Moore, who
“It’s not like we’re a bunch of
ing his tenure. “They’ve continued to
now leads the team with 3 1/2 sacks.
schmucks out there,” linebacker
work hard all the way through, even
“It’s just good to prove to everybody
Derek Smith said after the game.
in the weeks where we (gave) up the
that we’re capable of being successEXTRA POINTS: Nolan seems
41, 41 and 48 (points) and whatever
ful. Inside here, everybody on this
warm to the possibility of returning to
else it was. They’ve continued to
defense knows how good we can be.” the 49ers’ vintage uniforms full-time.
work hard, and it showed in the
San Francisco shut down
game.”
San Francisco wore the cherry-red jerMinnesota’s West Coast offense with
In truth, the 49ers seemed to sucseys and striped socks of the 1980s
its best defensive performance in five
ceed in large part because of what
Super Bowl champions in Sunday’s
seasons — and that was a relief to
they stopped doing: missing tackles,
game, and the son of former 49ers
Nolan and defensive coordinator Billy coach Dick Nolan liked what he saw.
lining up in terrible defenses and
playing far too many sets, which con- Davis, who have been taking heat for
“We’ve discussed it,” Nolan acknowltheir shared responsibility for a club
fuses even the veterans on this
edged. “The players like the uniforms
that was on pace to allow the most
maligned unit.
a lot, too. That’s the key thing. It’s a
points in NFL history until yielding
The players said San Francisco
great uniform. ... I like it too, not just
just three points in the last 90 minbasically played two defensive
because I grew up with it. I like that
schemes, mostly abandoning the mul- utes.
red. ... Obviously, that’s (owner) John
“As bad as last week was, and as
tiple defensive fronts that never
York’s decision, as much as anybody.”
good as this week is, it’s still a weekseemed to work earlier in the season.
... Even San Francisco’s offensive
to-week
job,”
Davis
said.
“It’s
one
The 49ers also made more substituweek, and it was a great game. We’ve coordinator planned to root for the
tions than normal, shuttling players
into the lineup to maintain their fresh- got to make sure we continue to grow team that fired him Monday night. If
the Oakland Raiders beat Seattle, the
after this game.”
ness.
49ers would be just one game off the
San
Francisco
still
has
allowed
517
And two new additions to the startlead in the NFC West. “Norv (Turner)
more yards, 49 more first downs, 13
ing lineup paid big dividends.
said it’s OK to root for the Raiders,”
more
touchdowns
and
95
more
points
Brandon Moore took over for Jeff
Nolan said with a laugh. ... Kwame
than
it
has
generated,
but
Nolan
will
Ulbrich and immediately dominated,
making a career-high 14 tackles and a be grateful for gradual improvements. Harris and Adam Snyder will split
playing time at right tackle roughly
sack while lining up everywhere from Nolan knows his mass substitution
plans
aren’t
ideal,
but
plans
to
keep
it
equally again this week. They took
inside linebacker to defensive end,
turns at the position Sunday, but
while safety Keith Lewis had also had up until he has 11 defenders he trusts
on every play.
Nolan won’t turn the job over to
a strong game in place of Mike
Although it’s just one good game,
Snyder because he’s the primary
Adams.
the defense finally showed a compebackup for both tackles, including
Though longtime starter Ulbrich
might have been disappointed, he did- tence that should help in its five road
injury-prone LT Jonas Jennings.
Rangers
Continued from Page 6
Teixeira and 16-game winner
Kevin Millwood. All-Star outfielders Gary Matthews Jr.
and Carlos Lee and 15-game
winner Vicente Padilla are
among seven Rangers who
have filed for free agency.
Washington played in 564
major league games over parts
of 10 seasons for five teams
(the Los Angeles Dodgers,
Minnesota,
Baltimore,
Cleveland and Houston).
But his only managerial
experience was two years in
Class-A in the New York Mets
organization before his 11 seasons as Oakland’s infield
instructor and third-base
coach.
“He’s been through it as a
player, he’s been through it as
Warriors
Continued from Page 6
owner Mark Cuban, whom
Nelson is taking legal action
against to collect $6 million
he says he was promised by
the team’s previous owners.
Nelson returned on the perfect night as the club unveiled
a banner honoring its 2005-06
Western Conference championship, a feat set in motion
when he took over the club as
general manager in the late
1990s. He wasn’t part of the
brief ceremony, but felt like it,
saying before the game it was
the best years of his career
a coach. He knows how to
win,” Teixeira said after
attending Washington’s news
conference. “He said everything that a player wants to
hear. He said everything that
an owner and a GM wants to
hear. He’s all about winning.
He’s a baseball guy that wants
to win.”
Washington was popular
with Oakland players, many
of whom wanted him to be
their new manager. He was
instrumental in the development of six-time Gold Glove
third baseman Eric Chavez
and making the A’s consistently one of the AL’s top fielding
teams.
Two years ago, Chavez
gave Washington one of his
Gold Glove trophies with the
inscription, “Wash, not without you.”
“Ron is a good baseball
man who has been an integral
part of our success,” A’s GM
Billy Beane said. “We’ll miss
him, but this opportunity is
very well deserved.”
The other finalists for the
Texas managerial job were
Rangers bench coach Don
Wakamatsu and Japan Serieswinning
manager
Trey
Hillman, an Arlington native
and the Rangers’ former director of player development.
Both interviewed with Daniels
and Hicks last week.
Wakamatsu has been with
the Rangers four seasons and
still has a year left on his contract. Daniels has spoken with
him about remaining on staff,
though it might be in a different role.
Washington plans to interview Philadelphia third-base
coach Art Howe, one of his
former major league managers, about being his bench
coach.
“because we went from the
worst to the best.”
Nowitzki gave Nelson a big
hug before tipoff, then before
halftime Nelson found himself coaching against one of
his best friends, Harris. It was
their first time matching wits
since February 1999.
Johnson was tossed with
about four minutes left in the
second quarter following a
non-call when Terry missed a
layup and wound up sprawled
on the floor. He got one technical for saying, “That’s bull,”
then another — and an automatic ejection — for griping
about getting a technical. His
harshest words followed as he
made his way to the locker
room.
Notes: Nelson and Harris
last coached against each
other when Nelson was with
the Mavs and Harris was running the Lakers. Los Angeles
won 101-88. ... Nelson had his
fourth different starting lineup
in as many games. In this one,
Mike Dunleavy Jr. didn’t start
for the first time. ... Harris
replaced Greg Buckner in
Dallas’ starting lineup, but
Buckner started the second
half in Howard’s place. ... The
curtain covering the Western
Conference champion banner
got stuck about halfway up. A
worker had to walk across a
catwalk and give it a stiff tug
to free the snag.
Wakamatsu is a candidate
for the A’s job, and the
Rangers had given Oakland
permission to speak with
Wakamatsu if he wasn’t their
choice as manager.
New York Mets third base
coach Manny Acta and
Phillies minor league manager
John Russell, a former
Rangers catcher who caught
one of Nolan Ryan’s seven nohitters, also interviewed but
didn’t meet with Hicks.
Milwaukee
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
New Jersey
7 5 1 15 32 38
N.Y. Rangers
7 6 1 15 50 51
Pittsburgh
7 4 0 14 39 30
N.Y. Islanders
6 6 2 14 38 45
Philadelphia
3 10 1
7 29 57
Northeast Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Buffalo
12 1 1 25 63 39
Toronto
9 5 3 21 58 57
Montreal
7 3 3 17 43 37
Ottawa
5 7 1 11 40 34
Boston
4 6 2 10 32 48
Southeast Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Atlanta
11 3 3 25 62 47
Carolina
7 6 2 16 48 53
Washington
6 4 4 16 47 48
Tampa Bay
7 7 1 15 50 44
Florida
6 7 2 14 41 49
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Nashville
9 3 1 19 47 39
Detroit
9 4 1 19 38 31
St. Louis
4 6 3 11 34 44
Columbus
4 7 1
9 28 39
Chicago
4 9 0
8 35 47
Northwest Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Minnesota
10 3 0 20 41 27
Colorado
7 5 2 16 46 43
Vancouver
7 7 1 15 38 37
Edmonton
7 6 0 14 38 36
Calgary
4 7 2 10 34 39
Pacific Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Anaheim
10 0 4 24 50 33
Dallas
11 2 0 22 42 24
San Jose
10 5 0 20 46 34
Los Angeles
4 9 3 11 36 48
Phoenix
4 10 0
8 36 63
Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss
or shootout loss.
———
Monday’s Games
Atlanta 5, Boston 3
Washington 4, Ottawa 3, OT
Toronto 4, Philadelphia 1
Tampa Bay 5, N.Y. Islanders 1
Dallas at Vancouver, late game
Pittsburgh at Anaheim, late game
Tuesday’s Games
Carolina at New Jersey, 4 p.m.
Edmonton at Montreal, 4:30 p.m.
Los Angeles at Colorado, 6:30 p.m.
Dallas at Calgary, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at San Jose, 7:30 p.m.
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
Philadelphia
3
New Jersey
1
Toronto
1
New York
1
Boston
0
Southeast Division
W
Atlanta
2
Orlando
2
Charlotte
1
Miami
1
Washington
1
Central Division
W
Cleveland
2
Detroit
2
Indiana
2
Chicago
2
L Pct GB
0 1.000
—
1 .500 1 1/2
2 .333
2
3 .250 2 1/2
3 .000
3
L
1
2
2
2
2
Pct
.667
.500
.333
.333
.333
GB
—
1/2
1
1
1
L
1
1
1
2
Pct
.667
.667
.667
.500
GB
—
—
—
1/2
Football
Continued from Page 6
plays — the last two by
Terrill. The Seahawks added
four more in the game, raising
Oakland’s NFL worst total to
44 on the season.
The Raiders had won two
straight after dropping the
first five games of the season
but once again proved not to
be ready for prime time. They
became the first team to be
shut out twice in a season on
Monday night football, following a 27-0 season-opening
loss to San Diego, and have
been outscored 53-3 in three
prime-time games.
The frustration showed at
the end when defensive lineman Tyler Brayton was ejected in the final minutes for
kneeing Seattle tight end
Jerramy Stevens in the groin.
Oakland’s offensive line
was once again overmatched
as it has been most of the season. Starting left guard Barry
Sims missed the game with an
abdominal strain and Corey
Hulsey struggled in his place.
Oakland allowed nine
sacks for its second straight
Monday night game and it
wasn’t
as
if
Shawne
Merriman and Shaun Phillips
2
2 .500
1/2
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L Pct GB
New Orleans
3
0 1.000
—
San Antonio
3
1 .750 1/2
Houston
1
2 .333
2
Memphis
1
2 .333
2
Dallas
0
3 .000
3
Northwest Division
W
L Pct GB
Utah
3
0 1.000
—
Minnesota
2
1 .667
1
Portland
2
1 .667
1
Seattle
1
2 .333
2
Denver
0
2 .000 2 1/2
Pacific Division
W
L Pct GB
L.A. Lakers
3
1 .750
—
L.A. Clippers
2
1 .667 1/2
Golden State
2
2 .500
1
Sacramento
1
2 .333 1 1/2
Phoenix
1
3 .250
2
———
Monday’s Games
Orlando 106, Washington 103
San Antonio 105, New York 93
Chicago 110, Milwaukee 85
Golden State 107, Dallas 104
Detroit at Utah, late game
Minnesota at Sacramento, late game
Portland at L.A. Clippers, late game
Tuesday’s Games
Atlanta at Cleveland, 4 p.m.
Philadelphia at Indiana, 4 p.m.
Seattle at Miami, 4:30 p.m.
Houston at Memphis, 5 p.m.
Golden State at New Orleans, 5 p.m.
Minnesota at L.A. Lakers 7 :30 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON RED SOX—Named Duane Gustavson,
Laz Gutierrez, Tony Guzzo, Edgar Perez and
Josh Loggins area scouts; Eddie Romero coordinator, Latin America operations; Jose Zapata
manager and Nelson Paulino bench coach of its
Dominican Summer League team; and Ricard
Petit scout for Venezuela.
DETROIT TIGERS—Named Matt Walbeck manager for Erie of the EL, Tom Brookens manager
for West Michigan of the Midwest League, Murray
Cook East Coast scouting crosschecker and Mike
Rojas minor league catching coordinator.
TEXAS RANGERS—Named Ron Washington
manager.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS—Named Ivan DeJesus special
assistant to the manager.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Reinstated SS Alex
S. Gonzalez from the voluntary retired list.
WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Agreed to terms
with INF Josh Wilson, OF Michael Restovich,
RHP Tim Redding and RHP Joel Hanrahan on
one-year contracts. Agreed to terms with RHP
Jermaine Van Buren, RHP T.J. Nall, RHP Colby
Lewis, RHP Felix Diaz, RHP Eduardo Valdez,
RHP John Hall, RHP Winston Abreu, RHP Jim
Magrane, LHP Mike Bacsik, RHP Billy White,
RHP Chris Michalak, C Juan Brito, C Danny
Ardoin, INF Joe Thurston, INF Alejandro
Machado, OF Darnell McDonald and OF Wayne
Lydon on minor league contracts.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ARIZONA CARDINALS—Signed LB Gerald
Hayes to a five-year contract extension and LB
Monty Beisel to a one-year contract. Placed LB
James Darling on injured reserve.
DENVER BRONCOS—Signed DT Demetrin Veal
and LB Nate Webster to contract extensions.
NEW YORK JETS—Waived TE Zach Hilton.
Signed OL Na’Shan Goddard.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES—Signed DE Trent Cole
to a five-year contract extension through the 2013
season.
were doing it. Terrill, who
came in with two sacks in 25
career games, topped that
total in the first half, and
Grant Wistrom got his first
two of the season.
The Seahawks got into the
end zone on their opening
drive, moving the ball 68
yards with help from a personal foul against the Raiders’
coaching staff. Wallace used
an exaggerated pump fake to
get Fabian Washington out of
position on the 22-yard scoring strike to Branch.
A 29-yard punt by threetime All-Pro Shane Lechler
set up Josh Brown’s 20-yard
field goal on Seattle’s next
drive and Brown added a 25yard field goal in the second
quarter to make it 13-0. His
final field goal was from 20
yards with 1:17 left in the
game.
Notes: The shutout was the
Seahawks’ first since Dec. 5,
2005, when they beat
Philadelphia 42-0 in their
most recent appearance on
Monday Night. ... Wallace’s
37-yard scramble in the third
quarter was Seattle’s longest
run of the season. ... The
Raiders have lost five straight
overall on Mondays, being
outscored 116-27 in the
process.
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NATION
8 – TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
World War II aircraft carrier gets stuck in the mud
By PAT MILTON
Associated Press
NEW YORK — The USS
Intrepid, the aircraft carrier that survived World War II bomb and
kamikaze attacks, got stuck in the
mud in the Hudson River on Monday
as tugboats tried to pull it from its
berth.
The ship — a huge floating military museum that draws hundreds of
thousands of tourists a year — was
supposed to be towed across the river
to a dry dock in Bayonne, N.J., for a
$60 million renovation.
Six tugs pulled with a combined
30,000 horsepower but moved the
Intrepid only about 15 feet. Not even
an unusually high tide could free the
27,000-ton, 872-foot-long ship from
the ooze.
“We had the sun, the moon and the
stars in alignment, and it was just a
very disappointing day for us,” said
Bill White, president of the Intrepid
Sea, Air & Space Museum.
White said he was unsure whether
officials would try again to move the
ship, or refurbish the carrier where it
sits. The ship was not blocking the
Hudson’s busy shipping lanes.
The next high tide is Dec. 6, but
that will be about a foot lower than
Monday’s, White said.
“We were able to move her 15
feet, and then she came to a halt. We
tried to add more power with another tugboat but we couldn’t wiggle
her free,” said Jeffrey McAllister, the
ELECTION 2006
Political parties
spend $225 million
on targeted races
By JIM KUHNHENN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON
—
National committees for the
Republicans and Democrats
have spent about $225 million
for or against candidates, concentrating their resources in
10 Senate races and 66 House
contests that could determine
who controls Congress.
The data is based on a
review of independent spending reports filed with the
Federal Election Commission
as of Monday. Republicans
spent about $81 million in 53
congressional districts, mostly
on television advertising
opposing Democratic challengers. Democrats spent $64
million in 56 congressional
districts, most of them represented by a Republican.
In Senate contests, the
Democratic
Senatorial
Campaign Committee has
trained its sights on seats currently held by Republicans in
Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee,
Virginia, Rhode Island,
Montana
and
Arizona.
Republicans are aiming for
three Democratic-held seats in
New Jersey, Maryland and
Michigan.
The parties have spent little
or no money in Pennsylvania,
where Republican Sen. Rick
Santorum
has
trailed
Democrat Bob Casey Jr., for
months.
The spending data illustrates the difficulties facing
Republicans in this elections,
where they have been forced
to defend seats instead of
aggressively seeking to defeat
incumbent
Democrats.
Midterm elections in secondterm presidencies are notoriously harsh on the ruling
party. For Republicans, growing public antipathy toward
the war in Iraq has made their
hold on Congress even more
tenuous.
Democrats need a net gain
of 15 seats in the House and
six seats in the Senate to capture control of Congress. The
last time Democrats had
majorities in both chambers
was 1994.
The spending for House
seats has been mostly concentrated in the Ohio Valley. Ten
Republicans are vulnerable in
Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky.
Another 10 are fending off
strong
challenges
in
Pennsylvania and New York.
Many independent groups,
including labor, business and
ideological organizations, are
spending in some of the same
contests that have attracted
party money. The Missouri
Senate race between incumbent Sen. Jim Talent and
Democrat Claire McCaskill
has attracted the most money,
with parties and independent
groups spending more than
$20 million in the state.
The House race that has
seen the most spending is a
rematch
between
Pennsylvania
Republican
incumbent Jim Gerlach and
Democrat Lois Murphy. Their
district sits in southeastern
Pennsylvania, nestled in the
hills that run from the outer
Philadelphia suburbs to the
old industrial city of Reading.
The National Republican
Congressional Committee has
spent $3.9 million, mostly in
ads against Murphy, and the
Democratic Congressional
Campaign Committee has
spent $3 million against
Gerlach.
chief pilot of the tugboat operation.
The Intrepid has been moored at a
pier on Manhattan’s West Side for 24
years, during which time silt accumulated as deep as 17 feet around its
keel. The decommissioned ship no
longer has engines, but it does still
have its four propellers, each about
15 feet across, and they got stuck in
the mud.
Crews had removed 600 tons of
water from the Intrepid’s ballast
tanks to give the ship added buoyancy, and dredges removed 15,000
cubic yards of mud to create a channel from dockside to deeper water.
Elected officials, veterans who
served on the Intrepid and others had
waited on the flight deck for the
beginning of the five-mile journey
down the river. Helicopters flew
overhead; New York Police
Department blue-and-white power
boats, Fire Department boats and a
Coast Guard cutter were on hand to
accompany the aircraft carrier.
The final mooring lines were cast
off at the order of 80-year-old retired
Rear Adm. J. Lloyd “Doc” Abbot Jr.,
who served two years as the
Intrepid’s skipper in 1960-62 and
was named honorary commander for
the day.
“It was the best job I ever had,”
Abbot said, standing once again on
the ship’s deck. “Intrepid had a soul
of her own. How can a hunk of iron
have a soul, you may ask. But I loved
her. She kept me safe and at times I
kept her safe.”
The Intrepid, launched in 1943,
helped bring about the naval defeat
of Japan. It suffered seven bomb
attacks, five kamikaze strikes and
one torpedo hit, losing 270 crewmen.
It also served during the Korean
and Vietnam wars and was used to
recover Mercury and Gemini astronauts after their space capsules
splashed down at sea. The FBI used
it as an operation center after the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
Associated Press writer Richard
Pyle contributed to this report.
On the Net:
Intrepid:
www.intrepidmuseum.org/
Supreme Court considers if man
jailed 8 years can sue for false arrest
By MARK SHERMAN
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Andre
Wallace faces the distinct possibility that the legal system
that wrongly kept him in jail
for a third of his life will now
tell him he waited too long to
seek compensation.
Several Supreme Court justices indicated Monday they
are inclined to agree with
lower court rulings that
Wallace missed a deadline by
waiting until 2003 to sue the
Chicago police officers who
arrested him illegally in 1994.
Wallace was freed from
prison in 2002, after Illinois
courts ruled his arrest was illegal, reversed his murder conviction and caused prosecutors to drop charges against
him. He had been in custody
since shortly after John Handy
was shot to death in 1994,
when Wallace was 15.
He had two years in which
to file his civil rights lawsuit.
The question before the justices is whether the two-year
clock began running when
Wallace was arrested in 1994,
when he was released from
custody in 2002, or at some
point in between.
The 7th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals said Wallace
should have taken some action
in the two years following his
arrest. In similar cases in other
parts of the country, appeals
courts have said false arrest
claims can’t be filed until convictions are nullified.
Kenneth
Flaxman,
Wallace’s lawyer, said the
court would compound his
client’s injury by telling him
the deadline, or statute of limitations, had expired. “It’s just
tough. You’re seized for 8 1/2
years and you can’t go to state
court and you can’t go to federal court,” Flaxman said.
The Supreme Court is a
stickler for deadlines and several justices said the claim
should have been filed closer
to the arrest.
The deadline serves several
interests, including peace of
mind of the police officers
who otherwise would not
know for years if they would
be sued, Chief Justice John
Roberts said.
Chicago police officers
Kristen Kato and Eugene Roy
brought Wallace in for questioning in Handy’s death in
January 1994. In the course of
an interrogation that went
through the night, Wallace
said he was subjected to a
“good cop/bad cop” routine
that included being slapped
and kicked. In the officers’
account, Wallace was free to
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Eventually, Wallace confessed. He tried and failed to
have his statements thrown
out on the grounds that he was
arrested without probable
cause and that his confession
was coerced.
He was convicted of first
degree-murder in 1996 after a
trial in which Wallace claimed
he shot Handy in self defense
or, alternatively, in mutual
combat, attorneys for the officers argued in court papers.
Wallace appealed the conviction. The Illinois Appellate
Court eventually threw out the
confession because it was the
product of an arrest made
without probable cause.
Prosecutors at that point
decided not to try Wallace
again, but would reinstate the
murder
charge
against
Wallace if they get additional
evidence, the officers’ lawyers
said.
A ruling is expected before
July.
The case is Wallace v.
Chicago Police Officers, 051240.
590 S. School St.
468-3500
Funded by a grant from the
California Integrated Waste
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THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
HEALTH
TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006 – 9
Don’t let headaches take over Trials will test
By FAITH DAWSON
Cox News Service
See a doctor if you have
ATLANTA -- Traffic, mortgages, inlaws -- there’s an opportunity for a
headache almost every hour. You can’t
get away from them. So when headaches
strike, you should reach for a bottle of
pain reliever, right?
Not so fast. Aspirin or other drugs can
help many headaches, but if you’re not
getting relief, you could have more than
just stress- or tension-causing elements in
your life. You might have a sinus problem
or a food allergy. Your headache could
even be hereditary.
Kim Carothers, 40, suffered from
headaches so bad that she had to be hospitalized several times a year. Doctors
suspected they might be menstrual side
effects, but Carothers’ high-stress, dailytravel, tech-sales job kept her so busy that
she says she couldn’t find the time to take
doctors’ advice. Besides, she didn’t want
to rely on drugs. “I was always scared I’d
get immune to the medication or I’d
become addicted,” she says.
Carothers began seeing a neurologist,
who helped her find the right kind of prescription medication, and she quit her
tech job in 2002. She hasn’t been hospitalized for headaches in almost a year.
If you have an unusual headache, you
should consult a doctor. If the headaches
are frequent or severe, you should consider keeping a journal of when they
strike and how they feel.
“It’s worthwhile documenting their
headaches with a diary so that they can
see if there’s some consistent pattern that
brings on a headache,” says Dr. Leslie
Kelman, a neurologist and director of the
Headache Center of Atlanta. “This can be
helpful not only to them ? [but also] for
the doctor.”
• frequent or severe headaches
• a new type of headache that you’ve
never felt before
• a headache that keeps getting worse
• the worst headache you have ever
experienced
• a headache that develops suddenly
• headaches brought on by coughing,
sneezing or exertion
Doctors also should know about
headaches that . . .
• accompany a history of head or neck
injuries
• are accompanied by other unexplained symptoms, such as fever or
weight loss
• are one-sided
• wake you up
• change when you stand up or sit
down
Health
Continued from Page 3
Safe Van and taught in-home
fire safety, Over 20 Ukiah
High students volunteered
their skill in Spanish working
side-by-side with professionals who needed translation
support. They were a great
group and we appreciate their
service.
Other highlights included
nutrition education, bodymass index assessments and
education, blood pressure
tests, hearing screenings,
vision screenings, in-chair
oral health screenings, and
flossing and brushing instruction.
Mendocino Community
Health Clinic, Inc. and
Nuestra Casa wish to thank
the community donors who
helped make the recent La
Buena Vida Health Fair possible.
They appreciate the spirit
of volunteerism and dedication by the many organizations and individuals who
made this community service
possible.
Peer support
for mental health
recovery to be
discussed
Wednesday
How can mental health
clients and others recovering
from severe emotional distress
help each other recover? How
can systems best help support
mental health recovery? What
is the role of client-operated
programs providing mutual
support for mental health
recovery? What are the learning curves facing state and
local public agencies as they
shift toward a recovery orientation in mental health services?
These and other topics will
frame an informal discussion
this Wednesday evening, in
Ukiah with Dave Hosseini,
the former director of the nonprofit,
Sacramento-based,
Consumer Self-Help where he
supervised the local Patient
Rights program for 9 years.
Mr. Hosseini also served as
Public Policy Advocate for the
California Association of
Social
Rehabilitation
Agencies, where he advocated
with state legislative leaders
for reforms in oversight and
services for people disabled
with mental illness.
The discussion will be held
at the Ukiah United Methodist
Church at 270 North Pine
Street from 7 to 8:30 p.m., this
Wednesday evening.
For more information, call
AHC at 462-3360 x203, or
e
m
a
i
l
[email protected], or
For many people, an over-the-counter
cure is the fastest and easiest way to
relieve a headache. If you plan to take a
medicine such as aspirin or ibuprofen,
take the recommended dosage as quickly
as possible so that your headache doesn’t
linger. Over-the-counter medicines are
generally useful for most everyday
headaches, says J.D. Bartleson, an associate professor of neurology at the Mayo
Clinic College of Medicine, so experiment until you find one that works for
you. Otherwise, try one of these cures
beyond the bottle:
• Rest or sleep in a quiet, darkened
room.
• Place a cold compress on your forehead.
Lung cancer
education
workshop set for
this Thursday
A free telephone education
workshop on lung cancer put
on by CancerCare, in conjunction with The Lung Cancer
Alliance, The National Lung
Cancer Partnership, and the
American Society of Clinical
Oncology, will take place this
Thursday, from 10:30 to
11:30a.m.
According to workshop
publications, the program
entitled, “Progress in the
Treatment of Lung Cancer”
will address the latest developments in lung cancer and
discuss new research, treatment approaches, quality-oflife considerations, and tips
for communication with your
health care team.
This program will be available for listening live in the
offices of The Cancer
Resource
Centers
of
Mendocino County in Ukiah
and Mendocino on Thursday
from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. To
participate from your home,
register online at www.cancercare.org and provide a telephone number where you can
be reached during the time of
the workshop. This is a free
service. No phone charges
will apply.
These program archives
can be accessed at a later date
by visiting the archives page
within the CancerCare website,
www.cancercare.org.
They will also be available in
the libraries of the Ukiah and
Medocino offices of The
Cancer Resource Center. For
more information, contact the
Cancer Resource Centers of
Mendocino County at 1-800449-6483, 467-3828, or 9373833 or go to www.crcmendocino.org.
Look Good ... Feel
Better, set for
Monday, Nov. 13
Look Good ... Feel Better,
helps women overcome
effects of cancer treatment.
Sign up now for Look Good ...
Feel Better, a free class for
women whose appearance has
been affected by cancer treatments. The class offers an
opportunity to meet with volunteer cosmetologists and
other cancer patients to learn
to use styling and skin care
techniques to overcome the
appearance-related effects of
chemotherapy and radiation.
“On top of the very real physical and emotional concerns of
cancer itself, the side effects
of treatment can be devastating to a woman’s self-
Triggers
Common causes of headaches include:
• Stress
• Hormonal changes in women
• Certain foods and/or alcohol
• Caffeine or caffeine withdrawal
• Going hungry
• Lack of sleep
• Certain medicines, including
headache pain relievers, when you use
them too much
Foods/Beverages
Headache relief
check online at www.ukiahumc.org/ahc.
• Practice relaxation techniques such
as controlled breathing.
• Massage your head and neck.
• Dab peppermint oil on your temples.
It’s said to relieve tension headaches.
• Drink a caffeinated beverage.
Caffeine reduces swelling of the blood
vessels in the head. But it can also keep
you awake at night, so use caution.
Many foods contain compounds that
cause headaches. Some people may be
sensitive or allergic to these. Some
known headache offenders:
• Ripened cheeses such as cheddar,
Stilton, Brie and Camembert
• Chocolate
• Fermented or pickled foods
• Sour cream
• Nuts and peanut butter
• Broad beans, lima beans, fava beans
and snow peas
• Foods containing monosodium glutamate (MSG) such as soy sauce, meat tenderizers and seasoned salt
• Excessive amounts of tea, coffee or
cola beverages?
• Sausages and hot dogs
• Alcoholic beverages
esteem,” recalls volunteer
Lisa Mace, “In her mirror she
sees someone she doesn’t
even know,” Patients who
have participated in Look
Good... Feel Better call the
program an emotional lifesaver, because it returns them
to a sense of normalcy.
Classes are free, with new
sessions offered on the second
Monday of each month from
10 a.m. to noon at the
American Cancer Society
office, 115 East Smith St.,
Ukiah. Their next class is on
November 13, 2006. For more
information, call 462-7642 x
3 to reserve your place and
order your free styling kit.
Restorative yoga
at Yoga Mendocino
to be held Nov. 17
Yoga Mendocino is offering a special, donation-based
series of restorative classes
once a month on Friday
evenings, from 5:30 to 6:45
p.m., continuing on Nov. 17
and Dec. 15. These classes are
a wonderful way to start your
weekend feeling rested and
renewed. In a restorative yoga
drugs in slowing
Alzheimer’s
WEST PALM BEACH,
Fla. -- The Alzheimer’s
Disease Cooperative Study
(ADCS), a federally established consortium conducting clinical trials on
Alzheimer’s disease, will
receive $52 million over six
years to conduct several new
trials, the National Institutes
of Health (NIH) announced.
The award is a cooperative
agreement between the
NIH’s National Institute on
Aging (NIA) and the
University of California,
San Diego (UCSD), which
coordinates the consortium
of nearly 70 sites in the
United States and Canada.
The purpose of the award
is to test drugs for effectiveness in slowing down the
progression or treating the
symptoms of AD, as well as
to investigate new methods
for conducting dementia
research. Researchers will
focus on possible therapies
aimed at affecting the beta
amyloid peptide and the tau
protein, both involved in the
development of AD.
These projects join ongoing ADCS trials testing
whether statins and highdose folate/B6/B12 supplements can slow the clinical
signs of AD, as well as a
study of valproate to determine whether this drug can
either slow decline or help
delay the agitation and psychosis that often emerge in
AD patients.
Alzheimer’s
disease
affects an estimated 4.5 million people in the U.S. It
increases dramatically with
age, affecting approximately
40-50 percent of people age
85 and older.
NIA
supports
the
Alzheimer’s
Disease
Education and Referral
(ADEAR) Center, which
provides information on
clinical studies and other
research to the public,
health professionals, and the
media. ADEAR can be contacted at 1-800-438-4380 or
www.
nia.nih.
gov
/alzheimers.
Carolyn Susman writes
for the Palm Beach Post. Email: carolyn (underscore)
[email protected].
class props such as blankets,
bolsters, pillows and blocks
are used to bring you into a
sequence of supported poses
that are held for several minutes at a time. Most of us have
very busy lives and may experience some level of chronic
stress. Learning the relaxing
techniques of restorative yoga
is beneficial for many reasons
including relieving chronic
stress. When the body is supported in a pose, the muscles
begin to lengthen and expand,
and the mind and the breath
become quiet, all responses
that are known to help allevi-
ate stress. These gentle, therapeutic restorative classes can
be deeply rejuvenating and
balancing. Give yourself permission to come enjoy the
practice of active relaxation at
Yoga Mendocino. You can
bring your own blankets and
pillows or use the ones provided at the studio. These
classes are suitable for everyone. Yoga Mendocino is a
non-profit yoga studio located
at 206A Mason St., Ukiah.
For more information, call
462-2580 or visit online at
www.yogamendocino.org, or
email at [email protected].
By CAROLYN SUSMAN
Cox News Service
Part 1
and
Part 2
Publication Dates:
Publication Dates:
The Ukiah Daily Journal
November 23rd
The Journal Sampler
November 28th
online at ukiahdailyjournal.com
The Ukiah Daily Journal
December 8th
The Journal Sampler
December 12th
online at ukiahdailyjournal.com
Advertising Space
& Materials Deadline:
November 16th
Advertising Space
& Materials Deadline:
November 29th
Call your
Ukiah Daily Journal
representative now to
reserve your space.
468-3500
The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
HEALTH
10 – TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
Graceful aging often
Web the best place for
credited to cosmetic surgery exploring medical options
These are lips done for
women 35-64 who have the
procedure to “restore, not to
over-fill” aging lips. Truth be
told, lips thin with age and can
make you look older, hence
the interest among some
women.
Among men? Statistics for
2005 show the top five cosmetic surgical procedures for
men declined from 2000.
Those operations dropping in
popularity included liposuction, breast reduction, and hair
restoration.
Among women, only three
of the top five procedures
declined, but breast augmentations and tummy tucks took
off. Way off. Tummy tucks
were up 113 percent.
Botox, however -- which
temporarily freezes facial
muscles and removes lines -was wildly popular among
both sexes, increasing triple
digits for both men and
women over the past five
years.
Ditto, for laser hair
removal, which -- to be fair -saw a much more modest
increase among men. Still, the
guys were going for it.
Carolyn Susman writes for
The Palm Beach Post, E-mail
[email protected].
sidered the acceptable solution if someone is looking better with age, and that women
are particularly vulnerable to
those assumptions. Did anyone ever accuse Bill Clinton
of having a face-lift while he
was running for office, or
John McCain of having a little
work done after being a POW
in Vietnam? (That could shoot
your looks down, certainly.)
Both men, while looking
their age during their last runs
for office, were considered
appealing to women voters, as
is. Maybe one of them did
have a little Botox here or
there to soften those masculine facial lines, but no one
even considered that possibility. Or dared to ask.
Why are these assumptions
made so freely with women?
Statistics may play a part here,
particularly the popularity of
certain facial procedures
among females.
The American Society of
Plastic Surgeons recently
released data showing that lip
augmentation
procedures
have increased over the years
and are up nearly 40 percent
since 2000.
And, say the surgeons,
these are not just procedures
done for women who want the
pouty Angelina Jolie look.
By CAROLINE SUSMAN
Cox News Service
WEST PALM BEACH,
Fla. -- Why do people believe
that women who age gracefully must have had plastic
surgery?
If her eyelids aren't drooping, and her lips are still kissable, and she looks good for
her age, the assumption is the
woman must have gone under
the knife.
That's certainly the nicest
thing that can be said about
the scurrilous remarks attributed to John Spencer, the
Republican who is challenging Sen. Hillary Rodham
Clinton (D-N.Y.) for her seat.
The Daily News reported
recently that Spencer claimed
that Clinton had undergone
extensive plastic surgery to
make her look pretty.
The follow-up was that
Spencer called the accusations
that he spoke that way a
“complete fabrication” and
said he merely was pointing
out how different she looked
from her high school photo, or
something.
OK. Who among us hasn't
changed a hairdo or glasses or
gained or lost pounds since
high school or college?
The point is two-fold: That
plastic surgery is always con-
By LYNDA SHRAGER
Albany Times Union
The Internet can provide information on
almost any topic imaginable. According to
AARP, the Web is “recognized as the central
tool in today's information age.”
A recent study by the Kaiser Foundation,
however, indicated that today's seniors are
resisting this technology. It found that fewer
than 31 percent of people older than 65 had
ventured out on the Web. This is disconcerting
because as people are being called upon to take
more control over their health care decisions
and become more knowledgeable about medical options, the Internet is a critical tool.
Part of the problem is that some Web sites
are not easily accessible. The trick is to find
sites that are easy to navigate, which will lead
to collecting useful information. Just as it was
challenging to learn to drive or to take up a
new sport, becoming computer literate should
merely be considered a new skill to master.
It is never too late, and the rewards can be
great. As you surf the Web you will soon be
able to distinguish between a user- friendly site
and one that makes you work too hard to
obtain the desired information.
The home page should contain a link entitled “about us.” Go there for an overview of
the site, including the sources and credentials
of those who own or sponsor it. User- friendly
sites will have bold headings in the navigation
bar that help guide you to the material you are
looking for. It should also have pages that contain bright and contrasting colors, recognizable
symbols, simple graphics and bullet points to
break up long pieces of text into bite-sized
pieces.
Here are some user-friendly Web sites for
your perusal.
If you are unfamiliar with computers, go to
http://www.aarp.org and type in “understanding computer basics” in the search box for
lessons on understanding common terms, navigating sites and finding topics.
Try http://www.nihseniorhealth.gov, an
excellent site developed by the National
Institute on Aging and the National Library of
Medicine. It offers an easily navigated presentation on various diseases and health related
issues.
The user may choose different text sizes and
types of contrast.
One site, http://www.Generationsonline.org,
provides specially programmed software to
senior centers, libraries, and various locations
where older people congregate. Its mission is
to promote Internet literacy to enhance the
quality of life for seniors.
For help in finding federal, state and local
benefits,
check
http://www.Benefitscheckup.org. It is geared
toward those 55 and older.
(This column should not be substituted for
medical advice. It is recommended that you
talk with your doctor when making medical
decisions. Lynda Shrager is an occupational
therapist, author and professional health organizing consultant from Slingerlands, N.Y. Email her at [email protected].)
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TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006 – 11
TIME OUT
Editor: Richard Rosier, 468-3520
[email protected]
The Ukiah Daily Journal
by Charles M. Schulz
PEANUTS
by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
ZITS
by Scott Adams
DILBERT
by Art and Chip Sansom
THE BORN LOSER
BLONDIE
by Dean Young and Jim Raymond
by Bob Thaves
FRANK AND ERNEST
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
by Lynn Johnson
BEETLE BAILEY
by Mort Walker
DOONESBURY
by Gary Trudeau
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
by Dik Browne
Datebook: Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2006
Today is the 311th day of 2006 and the 46th
day of autumn.
TODAY’S HISTORY: In 1916, Montana’s
Jeannette Rankin became the first woman
elected to Congress.
In 1917, Vladimir Lenin’s Bolshevik forces
overthrew the provisional government, sparking the Russian Revolution.
In 2000, the U.S. presidential election was
undecided at the end of the day, as Al Gore and
George W. Bush awaited results in New
Mexico, Oregon and Florida.
ASTROGRAPH
By Bernice Bede Osol
Wednesday, Nov. 8, 2006
It’s a cycle where you can
do some extraordinary
things just by trying. Now is
the time to get those innovative ideas or inventions
you’ve been unable to promote to the marketplace.
Cleverness will sell.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- You’ll break down
those barriers that usually
hold you back from being
just yourself. As a result,
you’ll
find
yourself
extremely popular. Pals will
be vying for attention from
the new you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- To your credit, you’ll be quite resourceful in handling matters that
you wish to bring to a conclusion. When you apply
yourself, your clever ways
will wrap things up very
nicely.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- Liberate yourself
from tasks that take strength
and muscle, and concentrate
on engaging in activities that
call for mental gymnastics.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 19) -- You’re always a
resourceful individual, but
your ingenuity for acquiring
what you want or need is
remarkably keener than
usual. When you’re strongly
motivated, the sky’s the
limit.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Don’t think you can
keep under wraps those
leadership qualities that you
have a tendency to hide. At
the least provocation, you’ll
Classified
keep you on the right track.
The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS: Marie Curie
(1867-1934), physicist/chemist; Leon Trotsky
(1879-1940), Russian revolutionary; Albert
Camus (1913-1960), writer; Dame Joan
Sutherland (1926-), opera singer, is 80; Joni
Mitchell (1943-), singer/songwriter, is 63.
TODAY’S SPORTS: In 1991, NBA star
Magic Johnson announced his retirement as a
result of having contracted HIV.
be unable to keep them from
soaring to the surface.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -- Although you are usually quite pragmatic, it
might be wiser to pay heed
to your hunches at this time.
Those intuitive flashes
you’re likely to get will be
right on the mark.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Try to avail yourself
of any invitation you get
where you’ll have an opportunity to meet new people.
An individual among the
gathering could turn out to
be someone who’ll interest
you.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) -- Break out of the mold
when it comes to your work
TODAY’S QUOTE: “If we had had more
time for discussion, we should probably have
made a great many more mistakes.” -- Leon
Trotsky
TODAY’S FACT: Magic Johnson returned
to the NBA for the 1995-1996 season, his 13th
with the Los Angeles Lakers.
TODAY’S MOON: Between full moon
(Nov. 5) and last quarter (Nov. 12).
and take on a project you’ve
been reluctant to tackle for
fear of failure. You have the
brainpower to do whatever
is needed.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- Spirited discussions
may be the order of the day.
You’ll find it quite satisfying to express some of your
more fervent beliefs, but you
also could learn something
in the process.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Should you be confronted
by some challenges, you’ll
not withdraw. Instead, you’ll
find them quite stimulating
and will enjoy being
resourceful in order to get
the better of them.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) -- You should be able to
take everything in stride
because
you’re
clever
enough to adjust to conditions in ways where things
come out to your advantage.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) -- Not only will you be
remarkably adept at juggling
several projects, but you’ll
also be courageous enough
to break free of inhibitions
that usually hold you back.
Scorpio, treat yourself to
a birthday gift. Send for
your Astro-Graph yearahead predictions by mailing $2 to Astro-Graph, c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Box
167, Wickliffe, OH 440920167. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.
468-3500
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Mendocino County’s
Local Newspaper
ukiahdailyjournal.com
12 – TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006
TIME OUT
Editor: Richard Rosier, 468-3520
[email protected]
The Ukiah Daily Journal
Puzzlers
THE LEARNING
CHALLENGER
by Robert Barnett
DIRECTIONS:
A. Using each "Chaos Grid" number with its
letter one time, arrange the numbers with
their letters for the "Order Grid" so each
vertical column, horizontal row, and two
diagonals each ADD to numbers inside
thick lined cells.
B. Some correct numbers with their letters
have been put into the "Order Grid" to
get you started. Also, above the "Order
Grid" is a "Decoded Message" clue.
C. After you have solved the "Order Grid"
doing as direction "A" says, put the letters from horizontal rows, from left to
right, under "Decoded Message" and
make words to form the answer.
CHAOS GRID
1
E
5
A
20
P
0
E
23
M
27
K
1
C
5
E
19
D
20
E
22
H
1
O
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by Henri Arnold and Mike Argirion
23
N
24
R
0
D
1
T
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
CHAVO
CLUE: ON A SHIP
ORDER GRID
48
1
O
23
N
48
©2006 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
48
RISUV
48
19
D
48
48
27
K
48
48
48
48
11/7/2006
DECODED MESSAGE:
LESCUM
ANSWERS IN NEXT EDITION
© 2006 Robert Barnett
www.jumble.com
BLOUFE
Answers to Previous
Learning Challenger
NOCTURNAL PRIMATE
26
N
-5
U
8
L
-1
M
-9
O
16
R
0
P
21
A
-10
C
8
N
4
R
26
T
21
T
9
A
16
I
-18
E
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
Answer: THE
Yesterday’s
11/6/2006
(Answers tomorrow)
SWASH
DIVERT
GATHER
Jumbles: CHIME
Answer: An aging basketball star doesn’t lose this —
HIS HEIGHT
Husband is confused over wife’s utter neglect
Dear Annie: My wife, “Lena,” and I recently separated after almost 15 years of marriage
and two wonderful sons. Like any marriage,
we have had our ups and downs. I love her with
all my heart and soul. Needless to say, I was
floored when Lena told me she could no longer
live with me.
I put aside any ego and feelings of anger,
and we came to amicable terms for a separation
agreement. Since Lena had been a stay-athome mom since our children were born, I told
her I was willing to take custody of our boys
while she got her new business off the ground.
Three days after we separated, Lena started
seeing the father of a boy on my sons’ soccer
team. Everyone, including my sons, could see
what was happening. It made the whole situation very awkward. A month later, she moved
into the boyfriend’s home. She has seen our
boys only four times, and each time has been
met with some type of drama. She did not call
or write either child on his birthday. In fact, she
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
By Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar
treats her boyfriend’s son better than her own.
This is smashing my broken heart to pieces.
I still love Lena and know there is a good person inside her, but I can’t understand how she
could do this to her own children. Per the separation agreement, Lena has the boys one
weekend a month, but they don’t want to see
her or spend time with her. I would never keep
them from her, but I also don’t want to force
them to go.
Lena used to be Mom of the Century. Now,
it’s like she died. Am I obligated to make the
boys spend one weekend a month with her,
knowing they will be at “his” house? -- Three
Broken Hearts in Virginia
TUESDAY EVENING
6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00
Dear Virginia: Probably, so your best bet is
to make this a less negative experience for your
sons. They are angry with their mother, and she
is so wrapped up in herself and her new
boyfriend that she is neglectful. Still, it’s best
for them if Lena stays involved in their lives,
even a little. Get some counseling for your
boys and for yourself so all of you can deal
with this mess in the healthiest way possible.
Dear Annie: My parents married in 1969,
had three kids, and divorced in 1991. They
later remarried in 1994 and have been happy
ever since.
My question is, which anniversary should
we celebrate? Can we celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary in 2009? I’m a huge fan of
parties and would love to throw them a surprise
40th. -- Don’t Have a Clue What To Do
Dear Don’t Have a Clue: This is entirely
between you and your parents. Which anniversary do they consider themselves to be celebrating? That’s the number you should follow,
even if it means celebrating their 15th instead.
Dear Annie: Please print this to remind
people to be kind to others. My sister passed
away three months ago at age 50. She suffered
from Crohn’s disease for 27 years without
complaint. What did bother her were people
who made her the target of thoughtlessness.
Yes, my sister was thin from illness, not
from anorexia. For the lady who suggested she
add a few more items to her grocery cart, she
would have loved to do so had her body
allowed a diet without boundaries. A hospital
staff member said, “My you are a little one!”
Do you think that made her feel better?
The next time you feel like asking a stranger
to turn sideways to see if she’ll disappear,
please think first. My sister would never have
gone up to a stranger and said, “My, it looks
like you’ve put on a few pounds.” -- Grieving
in Appleton, Wis.
Dear Grieving: We are so sorry for your
loss. People don’t mean to be cruel, and we
hope you can forgive them for their thoughtlessness. Please consider some short-term grief
counseling to help you let go of your anger.
11/7/06
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The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
Roseanne Barr
Comedy
Movie: “A History of Violence” ‘R’
White Boyz
Masters of Horror %
More local news than
any other source
Turn to the Classifieds.
We have postings for
positions in many areas,
including Automotive,
Clerical, Retail, Service
and Telemarketing.
Take advantage of the
Classifieds and uncover a
treasure chest of
opportunity.
590 S. School St.
Ukiah
468-3500
Mendocino County’s
Local Newspaper
ukiahdailyjournal.com
UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006 -13
The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL Classified
468-0123
Announcements
010...Notices
020...Personals
030...Lost & Found
040...Cards of Thanks
050...In Memoriam
060...Meetings & Events
070...Travel Opportunities
Employment
100...Instruction
110....Employment Wanted
120...Help Wanted
130...Sales Help Wanted
140...Child Care
Services
200...Services Offered
205...Financial Services
210...Business Opportunities
215...Businesses for Sale
220...Money to Loan
230...Money Wanted
240...Investments
250...Business Rentals
350...Rooms for Rent
360...Rest Homes
370...Wanted to Rent
380...Wanted to Share Rent
390...Mobiles & Space
Mon.–Fri.
8:00 to 5:00
480...Miscellaneous for Sale
490...Auctions
590...Garage Sales
Farm-Garden-Pets
500...Pets & Supplies
General Merchandise 510...Livestock
400...New & Used Equipment 520...Farm Equipment
530...Feed/Pasture Supplies
410 ... Musical Instruments
540...Equipment Rentals
420...Boats
550...Produce
430...Building Supplies
Rentals
300...Apartments Unfurnished 440...Furniture
450...Wanted to Buy
Transportation
310...Apartments Furnished
460...Appliances
320...Duplexes
600...Aviation
470...Antiques
330...Homes for Rent
610...Recreational Vehicles
475...Computers
340...Vacation Rentals
620...Motorcycles
Call us today to place your ad
• Locally • Statewide • Countywide • Nationwide •
One Call – One Bill – We make it EASY for you!
Copy Acceptance
The Daily Journal reserves the
right to edit or withhold publication & may exercise its discretion in acceptance or classification of any & all advertising.
Deadlines
New classified ads, corrections
& cancellations is 2:00 p.m. the
day before publication.
Payment
All advertising must be paid in
advance unless credit account
630...Auto Parts & Acc.
640...Auto Services
650...4X4s for Sale
660...Vans for Sale
670...Trucks for Sale
680...Cars for Sale
690...Utility Trailers
Real Estate
710...Real Estate Wanted
720...Mobile Homes for Sale
730...Mobile Homes with Land
740...Income Property
750...Ranches
760...Lots/Acerage
770...Real Estate
has been established. MasterCard & Visa are accepted.
Errors
When placing your ad, always
ask for the ad to be repeated
back to you. Check your ad for
any errors the FIRST DAY.
The Ukiah Daily Journal will be
responsible for only one incorrect insertion & no greater
extent than the cost of the
space occupied.
Your Ad Is
Seen On The
Internet!!!
ukiahdailyjournal.com
793-06
11-7,14/06
ADVERTISEMENT OF SALE
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned
intends to sell the personal proper ty and
household items described below to enforce a
lien imposed on said property under the CA.
Self-Service Storage Facility Act (Bus. & Prof.
Code ss 21700-21716). The undersigned will
sell at public sale by competitive bidding on
November 16, 2006 at 10:30 A.M. on the
premises where said property has been stored and which are located at Red Carpet
Mini-Storage, 151 Lake Mendocino Dr.,
County of Mendocino, Ukiah, CA, the following:
(Household Items)
Edwina Young
”
Unit# B-88
Teddy Saulmon
”
Unit# C-125
Bryan Koishor
”
Unit# G-158
Mike Estes
”
Unit# I-59
Wade Craig
”
Unit# M-55
Beverly Portocarrero ”
Unit# N-324
Beverly Portocarrero ”
Unit# M-69
Teddy Saulmon
”
Unit# R-447
Purchases must be paid for at the time of purchase in cash. All purchased items sold as it,
where is and must be removed at the time of
sale. Sale subject to cancellation in the event
of settlement between owner and obligated
party. Auctioneer: Douglas P. Carter, (707)
468-8887 Bond #RED 1040197
794-06
11-7,14/06
ADVERTISEMENT OF SALE
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned
intends to sell the personal proper ty and
household items described below to enforce a
lien imposed on said property under the CA.
Self-Service Storage Facility Act (Bus. & Prof.
Code ss 21700-21716). The undersigned will
sell at public sale by competitive bidding on
November 16, 2006 at 10:00 A.M. on the
premises where said property has been stored and which are located at Pete’s Mini Storage, 1404 S. State St., County of Mendocino, Ukiah, CA. the following:
(Household Items)
Jennifer M. Belloir-Thurkow
Unit#W-5
Purchases must be paid for at the time of purchase in cash. All purchased items sold as is,
where is, and must be removed at the time of
sale. Sale subject to cancellation in the event
of settlement between owner and obligated
party. Auctioneer: Douglas P. Carter, (707)
468-8885 Bond #RED 1040197.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
750-06
10-17,24,31,11-7/06
FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 2006-F0699
THE
FOLLOWING
PERSON(S)
IS
(ARE) DOING BUSINESS AS:
J.A.
LAVILETTA
VINEYARD
2581 Mill Creek Road
Ukiah, CA 95482
Dennis L. Hunt
2581 Mill Creek Road
Ukiah, CA 95482
Mary Lynn Hunt
2581 Mill Creek Road
Ukiah, CA 95482
This business is conducted by Husband
& Wife. The registrants commenced to
transact business under the fictitious business name or names
listed above on October 16, 2006. Endorsed-Filed on October 16, 2006 at the
Mendocino
County
Clerks Office.
/s/Mary Lynn Hunt
MARY LYNN HUNT
771-06
10-24,31,11-7,14/06
FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 2006-F0715
THE
FOLLOWING
PERSON(S)
IS
(ARE) DOING BUSINESS AS:
Rovetti’s
Landscape
5650 LakeRidge Rd.
Ukiah, CA 95482
Jerry Inc.
5650 LakeRidge Rd.
Ukiah, CA 95482
This business is conducted by a Corporation. State of incorporation: California. The registrant
commenced to transact business under
the fictitious business
name or names listed
above on October
17, 2006. EndorsedFiled on October 18,
2006 at the Mendocino County Clerks Office.
/s/Jerry Rovetti
JERRY ROVETTI
PRESIDENT
Sell It Fast
With
Ukiah
Daily
Journal
Classifieds
PUBLIC NOTICE
788-06
10-31,11-7,14,21/06
FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 2006-F0740
THE
FOLLOWING
PERSON(S)
IS
(ARE) DOING BUSINESS AS:
MELANIE’S
MADHOUSE
8000 Uva Dr.
Redwood Valley, CA
95470
Melanie Mountanos
8000 Uva Dr.
Redwood Valley, CA
95470
This business is conducted by an Individual. The registrant
commenced to transact business under
the fictitious business
name or names listed
above on October
27, 2006. EndorsedFiled on October 27,
2006 at the Mendocino County Clerks Office.
/s Melanie
Mountanos
MELANIE
MOUNTANOS
789-06
10-31,11-7,14,21/06
FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 2006-F0741
THE
FOLLOWING
PERSON(S)
IS
(ARE) DOING BUSINESS AS:
NIKROX
INVESTMENTS
P.O. Box 927
Redwood Valley CA
95470
Melanie Mountanos
8000 Uva Dr.
Redwood Valley, CA
95470
Roxanne Pardini
8000 Uva Dr.
Redwood Valley, CA
95470
Nicolette Pardini
8000 Uva Dr.
Redwood Valley, CA
95470
This business is conducted by co-partners The registrant
commenced to transact business under
the fictitious business
name or names listed
above on August 27,
2006. Endorsed-Filed
on October 27, 2006
at the Mendocino
County Clerks Office.
/s/Melanie
Mountanos
MELANIE
MOUNTANOS
10
NOTICES
ADOPTIONS &
FOSTER CARE
True to Life Children's
Services seeks families.
Reimbursement, training
& professional support
provided. 463-1100
#236800809
GET FREE OF
GUILT and Sickness
Forever! World Wellness Expo. Deepak
Chopra and Master
Teacher of A Course
In Miracles. San
Jose, Nov. 3-5.
www.Wellness.
ACIMI.org
30
LOST &
FOUND
Found Beagle by
Ardella’s Restaurant
in Willits. Sat 10-27.
Call 485-0123
SUBSCRIBE TODAY!
The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
707-468-3500
30
LOST &
FOUND
Hello I am J.J.
I am a 9 week old
female pit-bull mix
puppy.
My
low
adoption fee includes: my vaccinations are up to date.
I am spayed and I
have a microchip.
What a deal! One
you can only find at
our local shelter,
298 Plant Road,
Ukiah. Come on by
or call 467-6453
HI!
I’m your basic very
sweet female brown
dog.
I was bebopping on
Low Gap Rd. 2 miles
west of the high
school, styling in my
pur ple puppie harness on Sat. 10/28 at
8 a.m. and was taken
to the shelter. I weigh
in at 37 lbs.
Do you belong to
me? If so come get
me at the Ukiah Shelter, 298 Plant Rd. I
am surrounded by
other lost dog friends.
You can also call the
shelter at 467-6453.
If you don’t come get
me I could be adopted on 11/3.
I’m James and my
sister Jenny are just
the cutest 2 month
old pups!! We can be
yours! We could go
to separate homes as
well. Our home for
now is at the Ukiah
shelter. Low adoption
fees for puppies includes spay/neuter,
all appropriate vaccinations and a microchip, so that par t
would be a good
thing for my new humans. Come see us
at 298 Plant Rd. or
call 467-6453 for
more information.
120
HELP
WANTED
$125,000 A Year
Gen. Management
Training Program
For experienced
Sales People. You’ll
work 3 years at our
Willits location and
promote to General
Management of your
own dealership.
TOP GENERAL
MANAGERS
Make $600,000/year.
You need at least 3
years of successful
sales experience,
and you must be willing to relocate in two
years. Call LUV
HOMES and ask for
Duane 707-459-9588
All Shifts FT & PT
Available!!!
No experience
needed. Higher wage
with experience.
This year’s seniors
welcome. Full training provided. Drug
testing required, cannabis not tested for
hire. Assist disabled
in their home and on
outings. Call for interview. 485-0165
120
HELP
WANTED
ADMINISTRATIVE
SECRETARY
Instructional
Technology and
Support Services
F/T, 11/mo/ yr,
$15.15 - $19.33/hr.
HS Diploma or
GED, secretarial
coursework,
45 WPM & 4
years exp. reqd.
Mendocino
County Office of
Education
www.mcoe.us
707-467-5012
[email protected]
DEADLINE: 11/07/06
PROGRAM
SECRETARY ROP
FT (8hrs/5 days
wk/11 mos yr)
$13.72-$17.51/hr.
HS diploma or
GED, secretarial
coursework, min. 3
yrs exp. & 45 wpm
required. Excellent
benefits at a low
cost.
Mendocino
County Office of
Education
www.mcoe.us
707-467-5012
[email protected]
DEADLINE:
11/20/06
TEACHERMillwright
Willits .20FTE
$27.84-$46.36/hr.
Regular teaching
credential NOT
reqd. Designated
Subjects Credential issued based
upon work exp and
HS Grad.
Mendocino
County Office of
Education
www.mcoe.us
707-467-5012
[email protected]
DEADLINE:
11/9/06
*Part-Time Sales
Associate
Sherwin-Williams Co.
in Ukiah. Tuition
reimbursement for a
responsible and
dependable part
timer. Must be over
18 years of age, have
good communication
skills, be physically
able to lift, load and
carry 50-75 lbs and
have some work
experience in sales
or customer service.
Requires a valid CA
driver's license and a
clean driving record.
($9.00-$11.00 per/hr)
up to 32hrs per week.
M/F/D/V EEO Apply
at: Sherwin Williams
1045 South State St.
Ukiah, CA 95482
707-462-1214
A COOL TRAVEL
Job. Now hiring (1824 positions) to work
& travel entire USA.
Paid training, transportation, lodging furnished. Call today,
Start today. 1-877646-5050.
120
HELP
WANTED
ACCOUNTING
TECHNICIAN III
Responsible
and
technical accounting
duties; monitor, maintain & analyze budgets & funds; prepare
reports. Info.& app.:
Ukiah Unified
School District
Personnel Commission
1056 N. Bush St.,
Ukiah, CA 95482,
463-5205.
Job description
available at:
www.edjoin.org
E.O.E.
Admin./Receptionist
Busy property management co. seeking
F/T individual. Salary
DOE + benefits.
Apply at Century 21,
495 C E. Perkins
with resume.
ATTN: FLATBED
DRIVERS
$850-$1050 per
week! Dedicated runs
available. Free Benefits. Home Weekends
and some week
nights. CDL-A Required. 1-866-3941944.
AUTO TECH FT
Exp. helpful but will
train right person.
Benefits. P.U. app. at
575 S. State St.
BOOKKEEPER
FT/PT A-R, A-P, Quickbooks, Call please
468-5220 Sal DOE
BOOKKEEPER
Full Chg for Industrial
shop, F/T M-F,
Quickbooks, Sal
DOE & Benefits.
Please mail resume
to box 04036, c/o
Ukiah Daily Journal,
P.O. Box 749, Ukiah,
CA 95482
BUSSER
Days, nights, wkends.
BARTENDER
Days, nights, wkends.
Apply at
Club Calpella
6175 N. State.
CAREGIVERS
AM & PM SHIFTS
Apply at 1343 S.
Dora St. Ukiah
CNA’s F/T, P/T,
days & PM’s.
Great working cond.
Apply in person
Valley View Skilled
Nursing Center,
1162 S.Dora, Ukiah
Community Catalysts
seeks Skills Coaches
to work in the
PLUM HOUSE.
Fun Working
Environment!
Working with individuals with developmental disabilities in
their home. All positions avail. Wage
begins $8.50-$10
DOE. Excel. bens.
DMV, Drug test, H.S.
diploma or equiv.
Pick up an app. at
401A, Talmage Rd.,
in Ukiah. Questions?
462-2395. E.O.E.
Facility # 236801959
COOKS
(experienced) for all
A.I.L.
working with DD
adults. Must pass live
scan. 463-3517
shifts for fast paced
environment.
Pay DOE. Apply at
Schat’s Bakery
Community Health
Representative
(CHR)
Guidiville Indian
Rancheria is seeking
a CHR-knowledge of:
Diabetes, health ed.,
vital signs, and IHS
program preferable.
HS Diploma required.
Must have clean
DMV print-out.
For more info. call
462-3682
113 W. Perkins, Ukiah
See Lisa or Phil
DRIVER-COVENANT TRANSPORT
has opportunities for
CDL-A drivers in your
area! No matter what
your exp. level is, we
have what you’re
looking for. Now
hiring Students,
Solos, Teams, Lease
Purchase & O/O’s.
Call today! 1-866684-2519. EOE.
120
HELP
WANTED
DEPUTY SHERIFF I
DEPUTY SHERIFF II
County of
Humboldt.
Deputy Sheriff I
(Academy Graduates) $2952-$3604;
Deputy Sheriff II
(Lateral Entry)
$3181-$3884 monthly, plus excellent
benefits, including
P.E.R.S. 3% @50
safety retirement.
Deputy Sheriff I
candidates must be
currently attending or
have completed a CA
POST certified
academy within the
last three years.
Deputy Sheriff II
candidates must
have successfully
completed a oneyear probationary
period with a CAPOST certified law
enforcement agency.
Continuous Recruitment. Application
materials available at
Humboldt County
Personnel, 825 5th
Street, Room 100,
Eureka, CA.
707-476-2349.
Apply online at
www.co.humboldt.ca.us.
AA/EOE.
DIESEL
MECHANIC
Excel. pay, good
benefits. 3 yrs. min.
exp. Good DMV
record. 462-6721
DRIVE AWAY!
Indend. Cont. CDL-B,
Semi-Retired Deliver
Utility Trucks Across
America. Fax Res.
816-364-0378 or call
1-800-364-2336.
Driver or Contractor
FT Bobtail Driver,
lift, load, and unload textiles/
Fax resume: 510295-0300
or
email:bobby@cctg.
org
DRIVEREXPERIENCED
& Trainees Needed.
Earn up to $40k+
next year. No experience required. $0
down. CDL Training
Available. Central
Refrigerated 1-800521-9277 x4779.
DRIVER- GORDON
TRUCKING- Get
Paid for Your Experience- Up to 10
Years! Sign-On Bonus! Start up to $.41
per mile! No-Down
Payment Lease
Purchase Program.
1-888-832-6484.
www.Gordon
Trucking.com
Driver:
Don’t just start your
career, start it right.
Company sponsored
CDL training in 3
weeks. Must be 21.
Have CDL? Tuition
Reimbursement!
[email protected]
1-800-6828
Driver:
Take Care of your
family. Join ours.
Consistent miles, regional and dedicated
runs. Company paid
Commercial Drivers
License training.
www.swifttruckingjobs.com
1-800-476-6828
Round Table Pizza
Now hiring for evening shifts, must be
18 or older. Please
apply in person
between 1-4 at
292 S. State Street
120
HELP
WANTED
DRIVERS
Reefer Recent
Average
$1,294/week
Great Benefits. Salt
Lake City terminal
Orientation and Dispatch. On the Road
Training available.
1-800-771-6318
Enterprise Rent a car
is hiring F/T P/T drivers & car preps Must
be 21+ Clean DMV a
must. Call Glenn @
510-772-9689
EXP. MECHANIC.
Elect./Hyd./Weld.
w/tools. Benefits.
Training. Lampson
Tractor 707-463-1210
Express Lube Writer
& Techs needed at
fast growing new car
dealer apply on line
thurstonautoplaza.com
Graveyard shift
WORKING with kids,
small homelike environment, good pay &
benefits. Fax resume
to 463-6957
Home Care Options
seeks caregivers for
PT & FT & live in.
EOE. 462-6888
Howard Hospital
Opportunities
●RN:
Med/Surg
PT days
●RN: Med/Surg
PT PM
●RN: Med/Surg
PT Nights
●CNA: Med/Surg
FT Days
●Unit Secretary:
Med/surg Per
Diem
●Home Health
CNA: FT
●Stock Clerk 1:PT
●Lab Assit.
Phlebotomist: FT
Cert. req.
HowardHospital.com
or call 456-3015
INSTALL
TECHINICIANS
top 20 DISH Network
Retailer needs Inhouse/independent
techs immediately.
Top pay, benefits,
clse to home guaranteed. ALL COUNTIES. Experience
required.
1-800-919-9961.
NCO Head StartUkiah EHS Asst/
Assoc. Tchr I-II Must
have 6 Core CDV
units. asst. $8.89/hr.
assoc. I-II Must have
12 Core CDV units.
$10.11-$11.06/hr
DOQ. & 6 mos ECE
exp. Sp/Eng pref +
Bene’s. Must complete NCO apl & include tanscripts, 800606-5550 Closes: 5
PM 11/14 (Postmarks
not accepted). EOE
Join Our
Professional
Driving Team
RINEHART OIL
a local petroleum
distributor is currently
seeking qualified
Class A Drivers
Applicants will need
to have Full endorsements, Clean DMV,
Current Medical
Card. Positions are
Full-time, year-round.
The shift works 5
days on/3 off with
rotating start days.
$19.25 hr (after training). $20.50 after 6
months. Quarterly
Bonus Program,
Health Benefits,
401(k) Plan, Holiday,
Vacation Pay.
Please apply in
person at 2401 N.
State St., Ukiah.
120
HELP
WANTED
LAB TECH Local
environmental lab
seeks motivated individual for FT technician position in its
extractions dept.
Apply 208 Mason St.
Ukiah. No phone
calls please.
LIKE
CHILDREN?
This might be
the job for you.
CHILDCARE
WORKERS,
ALL SHIFTS.
F/T 4 day week.
Star ting
salar y
$9.40 per hour.
On call $9 per hour.
Qualifications:
Pass medical and
drug exam, TB test,
criminal
background check and
have valid Cal.
Drivers license.
GREAT NEW
MEDICAL, DENTAL,
VISION PKG.
matching
403B
TSA Plan, paid holidays & vacation,
paid training’s, on
duty meals.
FREE Co-op Day
Care Provided
Apply:
TRINITY YOUTH
SERVICES
915 W. Church St.
or on line@
www.trinityys.org
Maintenance/Handy?
for apt. complex.
Free apt. + hourly
wage. 462-6075
MENDO MILL
IS SEEKING
APPLICANTS FOR
THE FOLLOWING
POSITIONS:
RECEIVING CLERK:
Receive & distribute
incoming merchandise. Ship out outgoing shipments. Must
be detail oriented and
highly organized.
Prior exp. a+.
INVENTORY
CONTROL CLERK:
Do resets; establish
min/max levels;
support 4 local area
stores.
TRUCK DRIVER:
Class B or better
drivers for local area
deliveries in Ukiah
and Willits area. Help
in Lumber yards with
customer service &
remerchandising
yard, build and deliver loads. Prior exp.
a+. Must have clean
DMV and some forklift exerience. Must
be DOT compliant.
LUMBER YARD
SALES & SVC:
Unload incoming
trucks and put away
merchandise; help
load outgoing local
area deliveries; AND
Help customers with
selections.
Forklift exp. a+.
RETAIL SALES:
Bring your prior lumber, hardware, paint,
electrical or plumbing
exp. & share with
our customers.
All positions req.
successful results
of physical and
drug screen upon
job offer.
Send resumes or
apply at
Mendo Mill &
Lumber Company
1870 N. State St.,
Ukiah, Ca. 95482.
NO PHONE CALLS
PLEASE
120
HELP
WANTED
Mental Health Facility
seeking counselors
FT/ PT 1 yr min. exp.
Fax: 925-685-4306
[email protected]
NEW EXCITING
POSITION WORKING WITH KIDS
6 wks pd vacation
401 K. Day & Eve
avail. Small homelike
environment, good
pay & benefits. Fax
resume to 463-6957.
Night Shift
Driver/Laborer
PT position starting
at $9.00+/hr DOE.
must have a CLEAN
DMV and a good
work history. Must
be exp. driving with
truck & trailer. Able
to work weekends.
3 nts/wk. Contact
Richie 462-7467
Night Staff FT,
32 hr. & 40 hr shifts.
Full benefits. $9.40
to start. Qualifications: Pass medical
and drug exam. TB
test, criminal background check and
have Valid CA Drivers License. Great
new medical, dental,
vision pkg. matching
403B TSA Plan,
paid holidays & vacation, paid trainings, on duty meals,
Apply: Trinity Youth
Services 915 W.
Church St. or on line
@www.trinity ys-org
Nuestra Casa :
Home VisitorOutreach Worker
15 hours/wk @10/hr
*Requires bilingual/
bicultural capacity.
487 N. State Street
Ukiah, CA 95482
Tel: 463-8181
Fax: 463-8188
Office support staff.
Work 60% for program assist’g adults
to remain independant, 40% in Information and Assistance
Prog. Office exp.,
writing and PC proficiency, 50 wpm. CDL
& vehicle. $1743$1923/mo, exc. benefits. Send resume
and cvr ltr to
Linkages/I&A
301 S. state St.,
Ukiah or Fax
707-468-5234 EOE
Pharmacy
ClerkTypist in training.
Computer,
typing,
MATH, people skills.
FT 1-9, PT 3-9, FT 95:30.Salar y
DOE,
Drug Test. BLUE
DRUG 707-468-5220
Pharmacy Sales
Clerk F/T inquire at
Willits Rexall Pharmacy 90 S. Main St.
459-6877
Pharmacy Tech
We are growing!
Ca. licensed ONLY
PT/FT, Salary DOE,
Drug test. BLUE
DRUG 707-468-5220
River Oak Charter
School (K-8) seeking
Certificated Teacher
Substitutes.
$125.00 per full day.
Call 467-1855 or
stop by 555 Leslie St.
for application.
Wanted
Immediately
RNs, LVNs
& CNAs
Pleasant Care
Skilled Nursing
Facility. Call Becky
or Joan 462-6636
14- TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006
120
HELP
WANTED
Program Director,
Transition Age
Youth Program: FT,
Ukiah. Oversee 7
bed transitional living
program for older
homeless youth,
oversee/implement
new services for transition age youth, especially those w/mental health issues.
Requires BA/equiv,
counseling, case
management, administrative exp. $14 to
$17.04 per hour, outstanding benefits.
Job description/
required application
at 463-4915
Schat’s Bakery
is looking for a
CAKE
DECORATOR.
Exp. pref. Apply at
113 W. Perkins St.
SECRET
SHOPPERS
To Evaluate Local
Business. Flex hrs,
Training Provided
1-800-585-9024
ext.6520.
Seeking people to
work one on one supporting DD individual
in a home setting.
Call Cindy 468-9331
SOCIAL SERVICES
ENTHUSIASTS
WANTED ON
THE COAST!
Join our team and
suppor t individuals
with developmental
disabilities to live a
good life in the community
Nor thStar
Services; a progressive, person centered
organization, located
in beautiful Mendocino County has openings in Fort Bragg. A
variety of full time
and part time schedules available. No
similar experience is
required. Just a love
for people and a desire to support individuals to become
more independent
and have valued
roles in the community. Must be enthusiastic about working
evenings and weekends.
Overnights
available. Good wages & great benefits.
Relocation
funds
available. Must have
job references and
clean DMV. Call
NorthStar Services at
800-216-6215
to
learn more.
TERMITE TREATER:
Treating & light repairs.
Br. III. Exp. only.
Fax resume o:
707-554-0191
120
HELP
WANTED
WEEKEND
RECEPTIONIST 8-5
Apply at 1343 S.
Dora St.
Westamerica Bank
Exp. F-T Sr. Teller &
Teller in Cloverdale.
Benefits inc. Apply In
Branch/online @
www.westamerica.com
Workers needed
No skills nec. willing
to train. Clean DMV
485-7829
210
BUSINESS
OPPORT.
ALL CASH CANDY
Route. Do you earn
$800 in a day? Your
own local candy
route. Includes 30
machines and candy.
All for $9,995. MultiVend, LLC 880
Grand Blvd., Deer
Park, NY 11729.
1-888-625-2405
Are you making
$1,710 per week?
All cash vending
routes with
prime locations
available now!
Under $10k
investment required.
Call Toll Free (24/7)
1-800-637-7444
START YOUR OWN
Landscape Curbing
Business- High Demand. Low Overheads. High Profit.
Training Available.
Priced from $12,000.
1-800-667-5372.
www.EdgeMaster.net
VENDING ROUTE
Snacks and drinks,
Energy and healthy
snacks too! All sizes,
All brands, great
equipment.
Great locations!
Financing available
with $7, 500 Down.
1-877-843-8726.
250
BUSINESS
RENTALS
Banquet Hall &
Kitchen Ukiah Senior
Center 499 Leslie St.
462-4343
COMMERCIAL
LEASE UKIAH
2030 Industry Rd.
1. 5000 Sq.Ft. Aprx.
w/400 sf office
2. 5000 Sq. Ft. Aprx.
720 sq ft clean room
w/1500 sf office.
Melanie 707-485-1328
Victory Theater
Offices
From $400/mo incl.
AC/ Ht/elect. Janit. &
park. NCR 468-9101
SUBSCRIBE TODAY!
The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
707-468-3500
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
300
APARTMENTS
UNFURNISHED
$660/mo all util inc.
Lg Studio 1510 S.
State St. Apt #8 N/P
480-8600/838-0604
1&2bd Apts. available on N. Main & N.
Bush $725/$795/mo,
no pets. 462-4759
2bd. upstairs apt.
Gas heat. On site
lndry. 611 S. Oak St.
462-4262 btwn 5
& 7pm or lv. msg.
2bd1ba. Cov. parking. D/W. Wtr., garb.
pd. $745/mo. No
pets. 463-3721
2br 1.5 ba. townhouse. D/W, Sml yd.,
Wtr. Garb. pd. Cov.
parking. No pets.
$795/mo. 463-3721
2br Cute Cen. loc.
NP No sec. 8 Good
cred. $725+ dep. To
view call 472-0322
625 N. STATE ST.
PARK PLACE
1 bd. $725-$775
2 bdr. $850 TH $950.
Pool/garg. 462-5009
625 N. STATE ST.
PARK PLACE
1 bd. $725-$775
2 bdr. $850 TH $950.
Pool/garg. 462-5009
ALDERWOOD APTS
1450 S.State St.
NEW OWNERS
Refurbished 2 bd.
DW\Garage+pool
$850 mo. 463-2325
Beautifully rentovated
1 br in a tiny victorian
on W. side near
town. W/D N/P/S
$1000/mo. + util &
deposit 468-0248
COOPER LANE
2 bed., 1 ba. apts.
Water & garbage
paid, carport.
$735+dep.
Beverly Sanders
Realty 462-5198
HOPLAND
1 bd. Recently
remod. $695 +
dep. Avail now.
489-8600
LEE KRAEMER
PROPERTY MGMT
Spacious 1bd1ba.
$750.
POOL, LAUNDRY,
CARPORTS
No Section 8.
463-2134
New 2B/1B W. Side
apt. New W/D, Ref &
stove. $1000/mo.
468-9442/ 272-9072
Spacious 2 bdrm
1 bth Heat, AC & H20
paid. Patio or balcony
$900 N/P 462-8600
Spacious 2bd. Pool.
H20, trash pd. $750.
Also 1bd. $625. Ht.
AC Pd. N/P. 462-6075
300
330
APARTMENTS
UNFURNISHED
HOMES
FOR RENT
Sml 1 bd. Rwd. Vly.
1 car garg. No lndry
facilities. $800 incl.
elect., wtr & garbage.
485-8112
UKIAH
Studio in Willits
$675 H20 & elec. inc
N/S/P 707-486-7193/
762-4951/456-0648
140 Zinfandel
1bd1ba. $660
Hud OK.
W.side. Beaut. renovated Victorian. 2bd.
+ofc.N/sec. 8. $1050
mo+ dep. 467-0371
CENTURY 21
Les Ryan Realty
Property Management
468-0463
UKIAH MODERN
2bd. Wtr.gar. pd.
pets ok. Mason St.
N/S $750mo. 433-4040
330
HOMES
FOR RENT
1 bdrm cottage W.
Side Ukiah. W/D,
yard, trees, lease,
$835/mo. 743-1525
370
WANTED
TO RENT
Professional cpl
seeks lng trm RV
site. Cntry prfd.
509.781.0380
380
WANTED TO
SHARE RENT
$475/mo. incl. utils.
Near Raley’s, private
home. Avl. Nov. 4907157, 468-9332
191 Cherry St. #Aspacious 2bd.
1+ba. w/ large
storage unit; fully
equipped, security
gates, incl. all utilities except nat. gas.
$1050/mo. Selzer
Realty 468-0411
400
206 Rosemary Lane .
3 bdrm 1bth landscape inc. $1250/mo.
467-9495
3bd2.5ba. NEW
in town of nice. Lake
view! Dbl. car gar.
$1050/mo. 349-0753
HIGHLY DESIRABLE
WESTSIDE UKIAH
Charming 2bd.1ba.
Garage, yards,W/D
h/u.,Cent.loc. Walk
to Dntwn. No S/P
sec.8. $1085/ mo.+
Dep. 463-2093
Hopland 2bd2ba.
Newly remod. Big
yard. $1100/mo. +
dep. N/S. 462-2489
Hopland 4 bdrm 2 bth
$1500/mo Next to
school. Fenced yard.
Avail. 12-1 744-1604
Lrg. mobile
in quiet
senior park.
No pets.
$850/mo.
$850 sec.
dep.
462-7630
Newly remod. 3 bdrm
2 bth gar, yard, deck,
Cent Air & heat,
$1500. + $2,000 dep.
N/S/P 1461 Riesling
Ct. Ukiah. 459-4626
Rdwd Vly - 3bd2ba
$1600+dep . 1bd.
cottage $750/mo. +
dep. 1 or both. Lse/
option? 485-1088
NEW & USED
EQUIPMENT
POWER WHEELCHAIRS & SCOOTERS at little or no
cost to seniors/disabled with Medicare,
MediCal or Insurance. Free Delivery,
Training & Warranty.
ProHealth Mobility.
1-877-740-4900.
www.ProHealthMoblity.com
440
FURNITURE
3 piece tan Italian
Leather sofa set.
$450.00 462-7283
8 ft. brown
NAUGAHYDE SOFA
$175/bo.
485-8089
460
APPLIANCES
USED
APPLIANCES
& FURNITURE.
Guaranteed. 485-1216
470
ANTIQUES
Tall English antique
chairs. Matched set +
love seat. A steal @
$350 462-7088
480
MISC.
FOR SALE
Brand Name
Shopping Mall
SHOP ONLINE!
Virtual shopping mall
like you’ve never
seen before. 40
brand name storesalphabetical order.
Find your store immediately.
www.brandnameshopping.com
1-626-574-7611.
MISC.
FOR SALE
HEALTH
BREAKTHROUGHTS
Discover how Glycobiology is impacting
virtually every health
condition known. Borrow the Educational
DVD Pack by mail
from our library.
www.wellnessdriven.
com. Message: 1971-544-1590.
Hot Tub ‘06 Deluxe
Model. Many jets.
Therapy seat.
Warranty. Never
used. Can deliver.
Worth $5700. Sell
$1750 with new
cover. 707-766-8622
Low Rate
No documentation
mortgages. Ideal if
retired. Self Employed, Divorced, Privacy-Conscious. Unemployed. no job required.
Purchase/Cash-out
refinance Loans
Available. 1-888Zero-Down
www.NoMortgageBank.com
SPA-Deluxe ‘06
model. 30 jets.
Therapy seat. Never
used. Warr.Can del.
$2850 468-4300
SPECIAL BUILDING
SALE
“Don’t Miss It”
2006 delivery or deposit holds till spring.
25’x40’x12’=$4800.
40’x60’x16’+$12.800.
Front end optional.
Other sizes available.
Pioneer
1-800-668-5422
Steel Buildings:
Factory Direct. Sept.
Clearance Sale.
24X24, 30X40,
50X100, 60X120.
Other Sizes available. No Reasonable
offer refused. Free
delivery ordered by
September 29th.
1-888-666-4296.
WANTED
2 Water Fall style
night stands from
1930’s/1940’s era
485-5255
You Be The Bank
Give me just 1 year
and I’ll make you 1114% Trust Deeds
and Mortgages. 18
years Real Estate
exp. CAG Financial
Inc. 1-858-270-0251
500
PETS &
SUPPLIES
Fox Terrier Beagle
mix both parents on
site. Ready 11-27 4m
6f $350 ea. 485-1055
590
GARAGE
SALES
FREE GARAGE
SALE SIGNS.
Realty World Selzer
Realty. 350 E. Gobbi
Fri & Sat 9-5 1881
Oak Grove Dr. R.Vly
Tools, clothes, misc.
New items. Must go!
620
MOTORCYCLES
1994
KAWASAKI
VULCAN V-Twin 750
cc windshield, S.
Bags, xlnt cond. Economical $2,800 obo.
357-0895
Honda XR 100 2000
Good cond. Runs
great. $1,500 OBO
367-3069
630
AUTO PARTS &
ACCESSORIES
4 BF Gdrich Bajas
35x12.50R16.5.
6 lug Near new alum.
whls. $950. 937-1546
We recycle & pay $
Legal I.D. Req.Brass,
alum. & junk batteries, radiators. All Non
ferrus. 467-1959
650
4X4'S
FOR SALE
Ford Ranger 1985
1 owner, Smogged
ready to go. $2,000.
462-2898
Honda CRV 47k,
2003. AC, excel.
cond. CD, cassette
AWD, new brakes.
$16,900. 937-6268
Nissan 4x4 ‘00 x cab
5 spd 50k
#431776 $9800.
Marino’s 485-0499
660
VANS
FOR SALE
VW ‘78 Westfalia
camper bus. 1 fam.
owned. Never driven
in bad weather. New
tires. 94K. $12,000 or
ofr. (319)330-9174
670
TRUCKS
FOR SALE
DODGE RAM 2002,
diesel, 4x4, quad.
cab, leather int, 63k
mi. 3/4 ton, long bed,
exc. cond. $21,000.
707-964-4622
Ford ‘01 F250 XLT
Crew Cab. Diesel. Alloys, AC, CD, Tow
pkg. $16,500 743-1177
680
CARS
FOR SALE
1989 class A
Winnebago
M. H. well maint.
svc records
avail. apx 109,000
miles $11,000 OBO
707-621-0819
680
CARS
FOR SALE
1998 Chevy Blazer
LT 150,000 Highway miles/loaded
$5,000 OBO
707-367-6969
Geo Prism ‘93
$1500. ‘89 Honda
Civic. $1200. Both 1
owner. 468-9478
Honda Civic EX ‘00
5 spd Loaded 4 dr.
#539243 $6900 Warr
Marino’s 485-0499
Honda Civic LX ‘00
4 dr A/T 92 K $6900.
Warr. #578884
Marino’s 485-0499
WANTED TO BUY!
VW pop top camper
van. ‘90’s. AT. Will
pay cash. 472-0364
690
UTILITY
TRAILERS
ROLLOFF
DUMP
TRAILER with (3) 10cubic-yard
boxes.
Perfect for construction. Excel. cond.
$14,000. 468-9710
750
RANCHES
Colorado Fall
Ranch
Sale Starting at one
$29,900! Spectacular
views! Rolling fields.
Elec/Tele included.
Excellent financing.
Call now. 1-866-6965263.
NEW MEXICO
First time offer. Adjacent to Lake Sumner.
10 acres. Rare river
front property in New
Mexico. incredible
setting. Including frequently running Pecos River, views and
diverse topography. 5
minutes to Recreational Lake. Limited
number of small
ranches. Excellent financing. Call
NML&R, Inc.
1-800-204-9760 or
visit
www.RiverRanches.n
et
760
LOTS &
ACREAGE
*Land Auction* 200
Properties must be
sold! Low down/ E-Z
Financing. Free catalog. 1-800-759-6240.
www.LandAuction.com
A DREAM FIND-20
acres-reduced
$89,900. Near Tehachapi. Fresh mountain air & picture perfect views. Streams &
oaks. Ideal for horses, country getaway,
or to buy & hold.
Financing. Call owner
1-888-821-5253.
760
LOTS &
ACREAGE
Arizona- Below Market. 36AC- $279,900.
Wickenburg area.
Stunning ranch w/
amazing views.
Diverse topography,
abundant ground
water. Great for horses, private retreat or
buy & hold. Subdividable. E-Z terms. Call
AZLR 1-866-516-4868.
Arizona- Below Market. 36AC- $279,900.
Wickenburg area.
Stunning ranch w/
amazing views.
Diverse topography,
abundant ground
water. Great for horses, private retreat or
buy & hold. Subdividable. E-Z terms. Call
AZLR 1-866-516-4868.
Clearlake View Lot!
$5000 dn. $332/mo.
$25,000 total price!
262-0122 Bkr/Prin.
Gulf Front Lots
$595k. Homes starting mid-$300k. New
master planned
ocean front community on beatiful
Mustang Island, near
Corpus Christi, Tx.
www.CinnmonShore.
com, 1-866-554-5758.
Last Chance to
Own! Abandoned
Farming/ Mining Settlement less than 2
hrs Albuquerque. 20
acres- $17,900. Old
Farming & Mining
Community. Incredible setting frequently
running river, spring,
views and diverse
topography. Excellent
financing. Few lots
remain! Call NML&R,
Inc. 1-88-370-5263 or
visit www.SantaRitaRanches.net
New to MarketNevadas Best
Bargin. 5 Acres$19,900. Spectacular
snow-capped views.
Great for horses.
Financing availible!
Call now!
1-888-330-2836.
Wyoming Ranch
Dispersal 35 acres$49,900 acres- $59.
900. Snowcapped
mountain views. Surrounded by gov’t
land. Abundant wildlife. Recreational
paradise. Low taxes.
EZ terms.
Call Utah Ranches,
LLC.
1-888-703-5263.
Looking for the best
coverage of the local arts
& entertainment scene?
The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
770
REAL ESTATE
Have equity in your
property? Income
or credit problems?
Unusual property
1
Interest rates as low as 1%
Need cash out? Can do!
RATES STILL LOW!
Call Larry Wright
GOLDEN BEAR
MORTGAGE
707-239-8080
2bd/1b lrg. lot, remd.
bath, new paint inside, hard wd floors.
$292k. 485-6106
AVOID OR STOP
FORECLOSURE!
Save your Credit &
Equity before its too
late. Free Special
Report explains your
options. Free 24 hr
recorded message.
1-866-738-5424
ext 83 www.WeBuy
HousesUkiah.com
Brand New
Manufactured Home
Dealership ZERO
Down to land owners
Call LUV Homes for
info. 707-459-9588
CHEROKEE VILLAGE ARKANSAS!
2 championship Golf
Courses, 7 lakes, Full
Service Marina, 2
hours NW Memphis
Tennessee. Lots
starting at $3995.
Mike:
1-800-850-4576.
FRANKLIN,
North Carolina New
Timber Frame Home,
Rustic Elegance, 2.7
ac, Captivation
mountain views,
stream, ponds,
porch-outdoor fireplace, 3 BR, 3 BA,
Loft, Unfinished
basement. $924,500.
1-770-0856.
www.ThePondatFeatherstone.com
NEVADA GETAWAY
SELLING QUICKLY.
10 ac Trout Stream,
$59,900. High elevation alpine acreage.
eastern slope of year
round snow covered
White Mountains,
which will provide
cool, clean water that
feeds the rainbow
trout creek, which
borders the entire
back boundary. Awe
inspiring.
1-888-581-5263 or
www.NVLR.com
WE BUY HOUSES
$$ FAST $$
Call us today @
(707) 462-9000
or visit us @
norcalbuyshouses.com
With the help
of these
sponsors...
TRAVEL
U.S.A.
Publication Sales Co.
hiring 18 sharp
enthusiastic
individuals to ravel
the U.S. Two week
all expense paid
training and daily
cash bonuses.
$ 1-800-592-5752 $
Truck Driver/
Warehouse Aide
Class B lic. Full benefits. (med, dental,
vision & life). Contact
Sherwood Valley
Rancheria 459-9690
x112 or p/u apps
@ Tribal Office 190
Sherwood Hill Dr.
TRUE TO LIFE
CHILDREN’S
SERVICES
seeks 2 additional
homes for Shelter
Care program
Applicants need to
have at least 1 spare
bdrm to house a child
for up to 30 days.
Guaranteed monthly
allotment. Generous
increase upon placement. Income tax-exempt. Exp. with children req. Parents will
receive training, + Social Worker, in-home
support & respite.
Need 1 or 2-parent
homes, with 1 parent
home full time. Home
with no more than 1
biological child considered.
Retirees invited to
apply. Contact TLC
707-463-1100
Lic#236800809
True to Life Childrens
Services A non profit
FFA is looking for a
Social Worker/Case
Manager for a 1/2
time position with the
Shelter Care Program. Case load will
consist of up to 8
children in In-land
and Fort Bragg shelter homes. Applicants
must have or be 1/2
semister away from a
Masters Degree in
related field. Competitive salary. Contact
TLC @ 463-1100
480
Valley View Skilled Nursing
• Ukiah - Advanced
Xerographics
• Blue Ribbon Pets Kelly Bosel, C
• Century 21 Les
Ryan Realty
• DJ Pinoy Music
• Dominican
University, Ukiah
Center
• Dow & Associates
• Keough’s
Landscaping
• Mountain Valley
Printing
• Myers Apothecary
Shop
• O’Haru
• Redwood Children’s
Services
If you would like to be a sponsor and
support Newspapers in Education
Call: 468-3500
• Redwood Health
Club
• Robertson , Cahill
Ed Assoc CPA’s
• Ukiah Ford LincolnMercury
• Ukiah Valley
Medical Center
• Valley View Skilled
Nursing
• WalMart
• Walsh Oil Co. Inc.
• Wild Affair
Productions
• Yum Yum Tree
Restaurant
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006 -15
SERVICE DIRECTORY
ANTIQUE
MUSICA
with this coupon
FREE
Antiques &
Collectibles
Appraisals
EVERY TUESDAY 11-5
Redwood Valley
Antique Mall
9621 N. State St.
Redwood Valley
485-1185
Buying Antiques &
Collectibles Daily.
TREE TRIMMING
FRANCISCO’S
Tree & Garden
Service
Yard Work
Dump Runs
Tree Trimming
Insured
Musica ~ Video de Mexico
•CDs/Videos
• Phone Cards
• Cellular Prepaid Cards
• Check Cashing
• Evios de Dinero a Mexico
•Western Clothing/Boots
•Cachuchas/Hats
•Money Order
From Covelo to
Gualala the most
trusted name in the
Termite Business!
Call for
appointment
485-7829
POOL SERVICE
Escobar Services
Lic. #367676
GUTTERS
27 Colors to Choose From
Fascia
Gutter
Ogee
Gutter
Curved
Face
Gutter
5 1/2”
4”
5 1/2”
Aluminum • Copper • Steel
Limited Lifetime Warranty**
FREE
ESTIMATES
Family Owned for 41 Years
Lic. # 292494
462-2468
**To original owner.
Insured Bonded
Massage
Oolah Boudreau-Taylor
Thorough & Sensitive
Deep Tissue & Sports
Massage
My work is to reduce your pain,
improve your ability to do your
work, and allow you to play harder
1st Visit Special
2 Hrs/$65
By appointment 8am to 6:30pm, M-F
485-1881
Auto Detail & Wash
all your credit card &
unsecured debt to one low
monthly payment
SAVE UP TO
60%
Debt free in 36 mos. or less
Free consultation
www.oneabsolute.us
ELECTRICIAN
SHANAHAN
ELECTRIC
Auger
Electrical
Trenching Dump Truck
420 O.K.
Free Estimate
Serving Lake, Mendocino,
Sonoma Counties & beyond
707-621-0422
C-10 #825758
EXCAVATING
All types of home repair,
remodeling, construction,
window & door repair,
carpentry & tile
Can fix almost anything.
Serving Ukiah,
Redwood Valley,
Calpella &
Willits.
Work
Guaranteed
800-968-5195
(707) 485-0810
MASSAGE
HOME REPAIR
Medicine
Energy
Massage
Prepainted
Seamless Gutters
License #OPR9138
Redwood Valley
(707) 744-1912
(707) 318-4480 cell
CONSOLIDATE
TERMITE BUSINESS
CREEKSIDE
LANDSCAPE
Joe Morales
Sangiacomo
Landscape
1258 N. State St. Ukiah
MASSAGE THERAPY
Complete Landscape Installation
• Concrete & Masonry • Retaining Walls
• Irrigation & Drip Sprinklers
• Drainage Systems • Consulting & Design
• Bobcat Grading • Tractor Service
HANDYMAN
Established in 1970
Office (707) 468-0747
Cell (707) 391-7676
LANDSCAPING
License #624806 C27
DEBT CONSOLIDATION
• Consult • Design
• Install
Exclusive Line
of Bobcat track loaders
467-3901
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
LANDSCAPING
Non-licensed contractor
CalMend
Mr. Terry Kulbeck
564 S. Dora St., Ukiah
Occupational Science Degree
Holistic Health Practitioner
National Certified (ABMP)
Massage Therapist
1 hr. $40 • 1 and a half hour $60
Swedish & Lymphatic Oil Massage,
Tui-Na & Shiatsu Acupressure,
Cranial Sacial & Polarity,
Neuromuscular Assisted Stretching
Naturopathic Medical Massage
Treat yourself Today
(707) 391-8440
DUMP RUNS
• Tractor work
• Hauling
• Clean up
• Painting
• Fences
• Decks
468-0853
Home Repair
• Electrical
Ceiling fans, wall outlets, wall
heaters (gas & electric),
Dryer hookups
• Carpentry
Doors, windows, fine finish trim
• and more
• Satisfaction Guaranteed
Irv Manasse
All Local Numbers
707-313-5811 office
707-456-9055 home
707-337-8622 cell
Lic # 884022
REFINISHING
Furniture
and Antique
Repair
& Refinishing
30+ years experience
Laquer, Varnish, Oil,
Wax, Water-based finish
Workshop
in Redwood Valley
free estimates
cell
Allen Strong
707-485-0802
ELECTRICIAN
HOME REPAIRS
391-5052
I RETURN CALLS & SHOW UP!
Residential & Commercial
Specializing in Small Area
Excavation
pool service
~HAND WASH~
Starting at $10.00-$25.00
• Supplies & Chemicals
• Equipment installation,
Repairs and Maintenance
Call Jason or Tony
354.3323 • 354.1089
SPA & SALON
INTERIOR/
EXTERIOR DETAIL
from $100.00
P/U & Delivery Available
• Underground Utilities
• Storm & Water Systems
• Septic Systems
• Road Construction
• Demolition • Fencing
• Landscaping
• Lot Prep. & Cleaning
• 6”-30” Hole Bore
• No Cost Estimate
No job too small!
Contractor since 1978
• Expert diagnosis & repair
• Service upgrades
• Lighting – inside & out
• Hot Tubs
• Dedicated circuits
• Surge protection
• Cable TV, Computer & Phones
ANYTHING ELECTRICAL
Ron’s Electric Lic.#784130
We use and recommend
Aveda products.
158 S. Main St. Willits
(707) 456-9757
Parking Lot Re-Striping
& Power Washing
Residential
Commercial
Lic # 6178 • Insured
Office: 485-7536 • Cell: 477-6221
General Engineer • Lic.#878612
467-0215
(707) 972-8633
Toll Free:866-NO SHOCKS
www.alvarezhomerepairs.net
CONSTRUCTION
COUNTERTOPS
ELECTRICIAN
UPHOLSTERY
CSK Electric
OM CRE ATIONS
CUST
UPHOLSTERY
DAY SPA & SALON
• Waxing
• Massage
• Make Up
• Body Wraps
Carpentry - Plumbing
Electric - Tile
Cement - ETC
Call Today: (707) 463-1000
301 Kunzler Ranch Road Suite G, Ukiah
Lic. #840192
• Hair Style
• Manicures
• Pedicures
• Facials
HOME REPAIRS
Foundation to finish
Homes • Additions
• Kitchens • Decks
Lic. #580504
707.485.8954
707.367.4040 cell
SOLID SURFACE &
LAMINATE COUNTERTOPS
2485 N. State St. • Ukiah
Bill & Craig
707.467.3969
CL 856023
Residential
Commercial
Lite Industrial
“No Job Too Small!
Give Us A Call!”
FREE ESTIMATES
707-481-8186
Stay Informed
on Local Issues
The Ukiah
DAILY JOURNAL
RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL
LICENSED & INSURED
Furniture • Auto • Marine
e
Larg Of
“We meet all
io
t n
your upholstery
Selec bric
Fa
needs.”
ock.
In St
468-5883
275 Cherry St. • Unit A • Ukiah
NEXT TO UPS
NOTICE TO READERS
We publish advertisements from companies and individuals who have been
licensed by the State of California and
from unlicensed companies and
individuals.
All licensed contractors are required by
State Law to list their license number in
advertisements offering their services.
The law also states contractors
performing work of improvements
totaling $500 or more must be licensed
by the State of California.
Advertisements appearing in these
columns without a license number
indicate that the contractor or
individuals are not licensed by the
State
of
California.
Further
information can be obtained by
contacting the Contractors State
License Board.
WEATHER
16 – TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 2006
THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL
.
3-DAY FORECAST
SUN AND MOON
REGIONAL WEATHER
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs
and tonight’s lows.
TODAY
68°
Cloudy with a passing shower
TONIGHT
CALIFORNIA CITIES
Sunrise today .............
Sunset tonight ............
Moonrise today ..........
Moonset today ...........
6:47
5:06
6:36
9:36
a.m.
p.m.
p.m.
a.m.
Rockport
58/50
Laytonville
62/43
MOON PHASES
Last
New
First
Covelo
68/44
Westport
59/50
Full
50°
Mostly cloudy with a shower
possible
WEDNESDAY
64°
39°
Times of clouds and sun with
a passing shower
THURSDAY
63°
39°
Sunshine and patchy clouds
Nov. 12 Nov. 20 Nov. 27 Dec. 4
ALMANAC
Ukiah through 2 p.m. Monday
Temperature
High .............................................. 79°
Low .............................................. 48°
Normal high .................................. 66°
Normal low .................................... 42°
Record high .................... 85° in 1931
Record low ...................... 24° in 1920
Precipitation
24 hrs to 2 p.m. Mon. ................ 0.00”
Month to date ............................ 0.46”
Normal month to date ................ 0.87”
Season to date .......................... 0.77”
Last season to date .................. 1.45”
Normal season to date .............. 3.80”
Fort Bragg
56/53
Willows
73/51
Willits
65/43
Elk
58/50
UKIAH
68/50
Philo
66/49
Redwood Valley
67/47
Lakeport
69/50
Lucerne
70/48
Boonville
67/50
Gualala
60/53
Clearlake
70/50
Cloverdale
70/51
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2006
City
Today
Hi/Lo/W
Wed.
Hi/Lo/W
City
Today
Hi/Lo/W
Wed.
Hi/Lo/W
Anaheim
Antioch
Arroyo Grande
Atascadero
Auburn
Barstow
Big Sur
Bishop
Blythe
Burbank
California City
Carpinteria
Catalina
Chico
Crescent City
Death Valley
Downey
Encinitas
Escondido
Eureka
Fort Bragg
Fresno
Gilroy
Indio
Irvine
Hollywood
Lake Arrowhead
Lodi
Lompoc
Long Beach
Los Angeles
Mammoth
Marysville
Modesto
Monrovia
Monterey
Morro Bay
91/57/s
72/55/pc
76/55/s
79/51/s
74/52/pc
82/54/s
69/51/pc
78/37/s
90/52/s
92/57/s
83/53/s
80/57/s
78/60/s
72/53/pc
59/47/r
83/52/s
91/58/s
81/56/s
89/51/s
58/46/r
56/53/c
75/54/s
73/52/s
92/54/s
86/58/s
90/58/s
84/47/s
75/53/pc
71/56/s
88/57/s
94/60/s
64/36/s
73/53/pc
73/55/s
92/57/s
66/53/pc
75/54/s
76/55/pc
67/45/pc
70/42/pc
73/45/pc
66/43/pc
82/52/s
64/48/pc
75/36/pc
89/56/s
75/54/s
80/41/pc
66/51/pc
68/54/pc
66/45/pc
55/42/sh
80/53/s
77/56/pc
71/56/pc
78/54/s
56/40/pc
54/43/pc
75/50/pc
68/44/pc
90/55/s
73/57/pc
75/57/s
76/35/s
70/45/pc
66/50/pc
74/56/pc
78/60/pc
54/26/pc
68/44/pc
70/47/pc
77/55/s
61/47/pc
70/49/pc
Napa
Needles
Oakland
Ontario
Orange
Oxnard
Palm Springs
Pasadena
Pomona
Potter Valley
Redding
Riverside
Sacramento
Salinas
San Bernardino
San Diego
San Fernando
San Francisco
San Jose
San Luis Obispo
San Rafael
Santa Ana
Santa Barbara
Santa Cruz
Santa Monica
Santa Rosa
S. Lake Tahoe
Stockton
Tahoe Valley
Torrance
Vacaville
Vallejo
Van Nuys
Visalia
Willits
Yosemite Valley
Yreka
71/52/pc
89/54/s
65/55/pc
91/53/s
91/56/s
76/55/s
94/63/s
91/58/s
90/55/s
67/46/c
70/50/c
93/50/s
70/55/pc
70/54/s
92/51/s
82/60/s
93/57/s
64/56/pc
71/56/pc
75/55/s
62/53/pc
86/58/s
75/53/s
67/53/pc
82/58/s
70/52/pc
66/36/pc
74/55/pc
67/36/pc
82/59/s
73/53/pc
69/53/pc
92/55/s
75/50/s
65/43/c
70/42/s
64/37/r
69/40/pc
89/57/s
63/47/pc
77/53/s
76/52/pc
68/52/pc
92/63/s
75/56/s
78/51/s
62/39/pc
65/43/pc
77/51/s
67/46/pc
63/43/pc
80/53/s
67/59/pc
77/53/pc
62/50/pc
66/48/pc
68/48/pc
62/43/pc
73/57/pc
70/49/pc
64/48/pc
68/57/pc
65/40/pc
55/23/pc
70/45/pc
55/23/pc
71/57/pc
68/46/pc
66/41/pc
77/53/s
68/46/pc
58/37/pc
58/35/pc
53/32/sh
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, rrain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Lake Mendocino – Lake level: 729.98 feet; Storage: 56,257 acre-feet (Maximum storage 122,500 acre-feet) Inflow: 145 cfs Outflow: 44 cfs
Air quality – Ozone: .028 ppm (State standard .090 ppm) Carbon monoxide: .80 ppm (20.0 ppm) Nitrogen dioxide: .016 ppm (.25 ppm)
Yosemite makeover put on hold over concerns for scenic river
By GARANCE BURKE
Associated Press Writer
FRESNO — Ambitious
plans to remodel lodging,
move a road and expand
campsites
in
Yosemite
National Park are on hold
until officials prepare a better
plan to protect the Merced
River, which runs through the
heart of the park, a judge
ruled.
Two conservation groups
celebrated Friday’s ruling,
which effectively halts about
$60 million in construction
projects for at least two years,
as a major environmental victory.
Yosemite officials, still
reeling from the decision, said
it could have “huge negative
impacts” on the park’s efforts
to accommodate the 3 million
visitors who travel there each
year.
“The fact that now we can’t
House
Continued from Page 1
“It’s going to allow me to
do more on that committee,”
Thompson said. “I’ve been
very, very active in the area of
health care, especially as it
pertains to rural areas. I’ll be
able to do more and have
greater success in getting
improvements to rural health
care.”
According to Thompson,
doctors are scheduled to take a
reduction in Medicare reimbursement rates that are
already low, something he is
planning to fight.
“It’s hurting us everywhere, but even more so in
rural areas. We’ll be able to
address that issue,” Thompson
said.
Fiscally, the nation’s $300
billion deficit and national
debt of $8.5 trillion can be
addressed by imposing a payas-you-go rule that would
require Congress to fund the
bills it passes rather than leave
them for future generations,
Thompson said.
“This Congress has been
spending money like the
proverbial drunken sailor,” he
said of the current leadership.
To
take
majority,
Democrats need to gain at
repave a road, with winter
coming on, is just devastating,” said Scott Gediman, a
park spokesman. “Sure you
can argue about campgrounds
or building the lodge, but what
about when you’ve got paving
on a road that’s literally
falling apart?”
The order, issued in a U.S.
District Court in Fresno,
directs the park service to
immediately stop nine projects included in the Yosemite
Valley Plan, a grand scheme to
develop the park’s amenities
that has been the subject of a
lengthy legal battle.
While the case likely will
be appealed, legal scholars
said it was not surprising that
part of the park’s $442 million
remodeling effort now figured
in a lawsuit.
“Anything that’s done in a
national parks system, particularly those that are beloved
and heavily visited, is likely to
be challenged by some group
of stakeholders,” said Richard
Frank, an environmental law
professor at the University of
California, Berkeley’s Boalt
Hall School of Law. “We’re
seeing more litigation of this
kind than ever before.”
Under the Wild and Scenic
River Act, the park is required
to have a plan to regulate
development near the banks of
the Merced, whose tributaries
course through many of the
Valley’s cherished sites. A
creek borne of the river, for
instance,
rushes
over
Yosemite Falls, the tallest
waterfall in North America.
The river became central to
debates over Yosemite’s
future in 1997, when it wiped
out campgrounds, lodging and
parking
in
a
flood.
Environmental groups said the
park’s plans to replace those
features did not adequately
protect the Merced, and filed
least 15 seats, and Thompson
hopes that even more are won.
“If there’s a small margin
and the Republican’s minority
prevents us from governing,
that’s going to be very, very
difficult going into the next
election,” Thompson said.
“The only thing worse than
not winning the House would
be winning the House and
holding it for only two years.”
As for the U.S. Senate, he
was “cautiously optimistic”
that there might also be a
change in majority, but said it
was too close to call.
The
final
USA
Today/Gallup pre-election
poll for Senate said races in
some key states were too tight
to speculate, noting that of the
33 seats up for election,
Democrats need to take away
seats held by Republicans in
six states as well as keep all of
the seats they currently hold .
If the House changes
majority and the Senate
remains under GOP control,
Thompson believes the two
will be able to work together.
“The Senate’s been much
more moderate than the
House. The House has been
downright Draconian on the
policies that they’ve pushed
forward,” Thompson said.
“One thing’s for sure, even if
it stays in Republican control,
there’s going to be more
Democrats next time.”
Katie Mintz can be reached
at [email protected].
NOYO THEATRE
suit.
By 2004, the case had made
its way to the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeal, which
ordered officials to revise
their management plan for the
river.
But park officials have
failed to write a management
plan that adequately protects
the river, U.S. District Judge
Anthony Ishii ruled Friday.
The judge sided with the
plaintiffs, who argued some of
the construction projects lie
directly in the Merced’s flood
plains and as such, could harm
the river’s “outstandingly
remarkable values.”
“What the court is saying
is, it’s in the public’s interest
to stop the park from doing
what it wants to do, immediately,” said Greg Adair, executive director of Friends of
Yosemite Valley, which filed
the
suit
along
with
Mariposans
for
Environmentally Responsible
Growth.
“Yosemite is an ecological
treasury of the Sierra Nevada
and as we see the population
growing and global changes
happening, its resources
become more and more precious,” Adair added.
Park officials now must
devise a legally valid plan to
protect the Merced River
before going ahead with projects to upgrade the Valley’s
sewer system, redevelop
Yosemite Lodge and repave
roads.
In Friday’s order, Ishii
agreed with a previous ruling
that park officials did not
properly assess the impact of
an increased number of visitors — an issue also raised by
environmental groups.
Books
“I need to go individually
through each book and put it
into the computer and get
everything on the shelves,”
Sankovich said.
Asked if there would be
enough books to fill the
library, she said: “Right now
it’s stacked full of books, but I
think we are probably going to
have a full library once we get
them out,” she said.
Hopland
Elementary
School will hold a book fair
on Dec. 12 to raise additional
funds for the library to pay for
supplies, more books, and so
forth.
Project Inkslinger(r) was
founded in 1993 to restore a
single library that was
destroyed
when
the
Mississippi River flooded
parts of the Midwest and
South. The program was
planned and implemented
totally within Mensa from
idea conception to book collection to database preparation to the final delivery, with
members using their own
backs and hands to put books
on the shelves. Thirteen years
later, volunteers are still helping to restore libraries in the
US that have been destroyed
by tragedy and lack the financial means to rebuild.
Continued from Page 1
from Fetzer Vineyards.
“We’ve had tons and tons
of donations from all over the
country, even from Mexico,”
Sankovich said Monday.
“What I am doing right now is
sorting through the books we
have that survived (the flood).
... I am starting with our existing books and haven’t even
gotten into looking yet at the
donated books,” she said, noting, every book needs to be
shelved and cataloged.
A galaxy of choices awaits you…
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Plenty of parking 10-4
118 S. State St., Ukiah
Phone/Fax (707) 462-0907
Potter Valley
Soap Works
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Soap Co.
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1252 Airport Park Plaza
Ukiah
462-2660
Behind Les Schwab Tire
1.877.7GETHSI
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323 North Main St • Ukiah
462-5911
*1/2 price installation for High-Speed Internet is valid on a Ready-Home installation only. 1/2 price installation of up to 5 video outlets with at least Adelphia Broadcast
Cable. Customer must subscribe to an Adelphia Video product to receive any HSI offer. Standard service rates apply at the end of the promotional period. Offer
available in serviceable areas only. Offer may expire without notice. Services subject to applicable franchise fees and taxes. Equipment charges, installation fees and
other restrictions may apply. Offer not available to current customers or customers disconnected for nonpayment. Services and channels not available in all areas.
Offer does not include High-Speed Internet Premier. A monthly modem rental fee applies unless customer owns modem. Professional installation required for nonAdelphia cable video customers and rates vary according to service area. Actual speeds may vary and are not guaranteed. Internet Download speed claims are for
comparison purposes only and are based on HSI’s standard maximum download speed of 4.0 Mbps versus the standard DSL package’s maximum download speed
of 1.5 Mbps. Many factors affect download speed. High-Speed Internet service is subject to the terms and conditions contained in Adelphia’s Broadband Access
Agreement available at www.adelphia.net. Other restrictions may apply. Call Adelphia for additional details, pricing and restrictions. ©2006 DMS Marketing, Inc.
All rights reserved. ADW1037CO