in out - townnews.com

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TODAY’S FORECAST Sunny High 62º Low 40º Page A10 Classified . . . . . . . . . . .C4 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . .A9 Entertainer . . . . . . . . . .E1 Markets . . . . . . . . . . . .A6 Montana . . . . . . . . . . .B1 Obituaries . . . . . . . . . .B3 Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . .B4 Puzzles . . . . . . . . . . . .C9 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . .D1 TV listings . . . . . . . . . .C2 High school sports: Western Montana preps at your fingertips. Local news: Check out events, weather and more, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. INSIDE MISSOULIAN MOBILE APPS To subscribe to the Missoulian, call 1-866-839-6397 FRIDAY, October 3, 2014 Copyright 2014 $1 missoulian.com in style out with the girls happy shopping! shopsouthgate.com Saturday, October 4 JCPenney Court • 5-7 pm Ladies Night & Pink Duck Rodeo ‘CYRANO’ OPENS UM THEATER SEASON Humanities Montana enters final year at helm of Festival of the Book County weighs jail options By KATHRYN HAAKE of the Missoulian Should the county build an addition on the Missoula County jail, a $12 million expense? Or should it forgo $1 million in annual revenue from the Montana Department of Corrections and reclaim the 144 beds where the DOC now houses some of its inmates? Those are just a few of the questions posed to County Commissioner Jean Curtiss at a Thursday afternoon meeting on overcrowding at the Mullan Road facility. Commissioners Michele Landquist and Bill Carey weren’t in attendance. But just how crowded is the jail? Sheriff’s Capt. Jason Kowalski explained that inmates with mental health and addiction issues are consistently placed in cells where they shouldn’t be housed, and maximum security is full all the time. He said one day in MICHAEL GALLACHER/Missoulian Fifth-grade students from Bonner School were encouraged to take pictures, video and notes as they toured Lincoln’s new “Sculpture in the Wild” park Thursday morning. Artists from around the world and a small army of volunteers have been working on the park for the past three weeks. Wonders in the woods Bonner students take a tour of Lincoln’s Sculpture in the Wild By KIM BRIGGEMAN of the Missoulian L INCOLN – Can we touch it? Can we take pictures? If you pulled out one branch would it all fall down? Are you famous? When 11-year- olds pepper international sculptors with genuine wonders about their work, you know something’s clicking. It was snowing in this high mountain gallery as 44 fifth-graders from Bonner School piled off the bus Thursday to see one of the nation’s more unique sculpture parks. The three-week Sculpture in the Wild symposium was winding down to Saturday’s By MARTIN KIDSTON of the Missoulian As the University of Montana gears up to break ground on Missoula College, developers are eyeing the East Broadway corridor as a possible location for privately owned student housing. At the last meeting of the Missoula Redevelopment Agency, director Ellen Buchanan noted interest in bringing student housing to the area. The East Broadway corridor has been proposed as an urban renewal district, qualifying certain projects for tax increment financing assistance. Chris Behan, assistant director at MRA, said privately owned and operated student housing has been a trend in other university towns, including Moscow, Idaho, and Laramie, Wyoming. One national firm, Campus Crest, visited Missoula last year but declined to comment on its interest in the city. “Developers have looked at the (Old Sawmill District) – they’ve looked all over Missoula,” Behan said. “Obviously, some place like East Broadway makes sense because it’s right across the river from the university. When Missoula College moves down there, they’ve got even more potential.” While the interest remains, landing a private student housing project in Missoula has proved elusive. Two years have nearly passed since the city and UM signed a pledge to build and occupy 1,000 new units of student housing by December 2014. Both the city and UM have maintained that the effort remains ongoing. Behan also said the process takes time and is driven primarily by trends in the private sector. Even so, he added, the East Broadway East Broadway draws interest for privately owned student housing MICHAEL GALLACHER/Missoulian Students admire the work of New York sculptor Steven Siegel made from newspapers and lodgepole pine logs. By MARTIN KIDSTON of the Missoulian When the U.S. State Department posted a travel warning to Mozambique last month, it advised of possible civil unrest surrounding the country’s October elections. Posted on Sept. 18, the warning is one of nearly 40 global advisories and alerts listed by the Department of State. Ranging from Mexico to the West Bank, the advisories warn travelers of armed extremists, conflict, crime and disease. In Montana, such advisories now trigger a mandatory review process by schools within the Montana University System, one that requires students and Warnings prompt review process by Montana universities See HOUSING, Page A8 n More online: For the latest on the Ebola outbreak, go online to this story on Missoulian.com. See TRAVEL, Page A8 ENTERTAINER, MISSOULIAN.COM n Gallery: For a photo gallery from the Sculpture in the Wild, go online to this story on Missoulian.com. See SCULPTURE, Page A7 See JAIL, Page A8 TRAVEL OUTSIDE U.S. MISSOULA Sheriff’s captain: Facility so overcrowded, it’s ‘stressing me out beyond belief’ ENTERTAINER

Transcript of in out - townnews.com

TODAY’S FORECASTSunnyHigh 62º Low 40ºPage A10

Classified . . . . . . . . . . .C4Comics . . . . . . . . . . . .A9Entertainer . . . . . . . . . .E1Markets . . . . . . . . . . . .A6Montana . . . . . . . . . . .B1

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High schoolsports: WesternMontana preps atyour fingertips.

Local news: Checkout events, weatherand more, 24 hours aday, 7 days a week.

INSIDE MISSOULIAN MOBILE APPS

To subscribe to the Missoulian, call 1-866-839-6397

FRIDAY, October 3, 2014 Copyright 2014 $1

missoulian.com

instyle

outwith the girls happy shopping!

shopsouthgate.comSaturday, October 4JCPenney Court • 5-7 pm

Ladies Night& Pink Duck Rodeo

‘CYRANO’ OPENSUM THEATER SEASON

Humanities Montanaenters final year at helmof Festival of the Book

Countyweighs

jail options

By KATHRYN HAAKEof the Missoulian

Should the county build anaddition on the MissoulaCounty jail, a $12 millionexpense? Or should it forgo$1 million in annual revenuefrom the Montana Departmentof Corrections and reclaim the144 beds where the DOC nowhouses some of its inmates?

Those are just a few of thequestions posed to CountyCommissioner Jean Curtiss at aThursday afternoon meeting onovercrowding at the MullanRoad facility. CommissionersMichele Landquist and BillCarey weren’t in attendance.

But just how crowded is thejail? Sheriff’s Capt. JasonKowalski explained that inmateswith mental health andaddiction issues are consistentlyplaced in cells where theyshouldn’t be housed, andmaximum security is full all thetime. He said one day in

MICHAEL GALLACHER/Missoulian

Fifth-grade students from Bonner School were encouraged to take pictures, video and notes as they toured Lincoln’s new “Sculpture inthe Wild” park Thursday morning. Artists from around the world and a small army of volunteers have been working on the park for the pastthree weeks.

Wonders in the woodsBonner students take a tour of Lincoln’s Sculpture in the Wild

By KIM BRIGGEMANof the Missoulian

L INCOLN – Can we touch it? Can we takepictures? If you pulled out one branchwould it all fall

down? Are youfamous?

When 11-year-olds pepperinternationalsculptors withgenuine wondersabout their work, youknow something’s clicking.

It was snowing in this high mountain galleryas 44 fifth-graders from Bonner School piledoff the bus Thursday to see one of the nation’smore unique sculpture parks.

The three-week Sculpture in the Wildsymposium was winding down to Saturday’s

By MARTIN KIDSTONof the Missoulian

As the University ofMontana gears up to breakground on Missoula College,developers are eyeing the EastBroadway corridor as a possiblelocation for privately ownedstudent housing.

At the last meeting of theMissoula RedevelopmentAgency, director EllenBuchanan noted interest inbringing student housing to thearea. The East Broadway

corridor has been proposed asan urban renewal district,qualifying certain projects fortax increment financingassistance.

Chris Behan, assistantdirector at MRA, said privatelyowned and operated studenthousing has been a trend inother university towns,including Moscow, Idaho, andLaramie, Wyoming. Onenational firm, Campus Crest,visited Missoula last year butdeclined to comment on its

interest in the city.“Developers have looked at

the (Old Sawmill District) –they’ve looked all overMissoula,” Behan said.“Obviously, some place likeEast Broadway makes sensebecause it’s right across theriver from the university. WhenMissoula College moves downthere, they’ve got even morepotential.”

While the interest remains,landing a private studenthousing project in Missoula has

proved elusive. Two years havenearly passed since the city andUM signed a pledge to buildand occupy 1,000 new units ofstudent housing by December2014.

Both the city and UM havemaintained that the effortremains ongoing. Behan alsosaid the process takes time andis driven primarily by trends inthe private sector. Even so, headded, the East Broadway

East Broadway draws interest for privately owned student housing

MICHAEL GALLACHER/Missoulian

Students admire the work of New York sculptor Steven Siegel made fromnewspapers and lodgepole pine logs.

By MARTIN KIDSTONof the Missoulian

When the U.S. StateDepartment posted a travelwarning to Mozambique lastmonth, it advised of possiblecivil unrest surrounding thecountry’s October elections.

Posted on Sept. 18, thewarning is one of nearly 40global advisories and alertslisted by the Department ofState. Ranging from Mexico tothe West Bank, the advisorieswarn travelers of armedextremists, conflict, crime anddisease.

In Montana, such advisoriesnow trigger a mandatory reviewprocess by schools within theMontana University System,one that requires students and

Warningsprompt review

process byMontana

universities

See HOUSING, Page A8

nMore online: Forthe latest on the Ebolaoutbreak, go online tothis story on Missoulian.com.

See TRAVEL, Page A8

ENTERTAINER, MISSOULIAN.COM

n Gallery: Fora photo galleryfrom theSculpture in the Wild,go online to this storyon Missoulian.com.

See SCULPTURE, Page A7

See JAIL, Page A8

TRAVEL OUTSIDE U.S.

MISSOULA

Sheriff’s captain: Facility soovercrowded, it’s ‘stressing

me out beyond belief’

ENTERTAINER

EBOLA HISTORYA2 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

THIS DAY IN HISTORYToday is Friday, Oct. 3,

the 276th day of 2014. Thereare 89 days left in the year.The Jewish Day ofAtonement, Yom Kippur,begins at sunset.

Today’s Highlight inHistory:

On Oct. 3, 1944, duringWorld War II, U.S. Armytroops cracked the SiegfriedLine north of Aachen,Germany.

On this date:In 1789, President

George Washingtondeclared Nov. 26, 1789, aday of Thanksgiving toexpress gratitude for thecreation of the UnitedStates of America.

In 1863, PresidentAbraham Lincolnproclaimed the lastThursday in NovemberThanksgiving Day.

In 1922, Rebecca L.Felton, D-Ga., became thefirst woman to be appointedto the U.S. Senate (however,she ended up serving only aday).

In 1932, Iraq becameindependent of Britishadministration.

In 1951, the New YorkGiants captured theNational League pennant bya score of 5-4 as BobbyThomson hit a three-runhomer off the BrooklynDodgers’ Ralph Branca inthe “shot heard ’round theworld.”

In 1954, the familycomedy “Father KnowsBest,” formerly an NBCradio show, premiered onCBS-TV with Robert Youngreprising his role of JimAnderson.

In 1962, astronautWally Schirra became thefifth American to fly inspace as he blasted off fromCape Canaveral aboard theSigma 7 on a 9-hour flight.

In 1974, Frank Robinsonwas named major leaguebaseball’s first blackmanager as he was placed incharge of the ClevelandIndians.

In 1981, Irishnationalists at the MazePrison near Belfast,Northern Ireland, endedseven months of hungerstrikes that had claimed 10lives.

In 1990, West Germanyand East Germany ended 45years of postwar division,declaring the creation of areunified country.

One year ago: AConnecticut woman drivinga black Infiniti with her1-year-old daughter insidetried to ram a White Housebarricade, then led police ona chase toward the U.S.Capitol, where police shotand killed her. (Theunarmed woman, 34-year-old Miriam Carey, had beendiagnosed with postpartumdepression and psychosis;her child was unharmed.)

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Sherry Devlin at 523-5250 or 1-800-366-7186; email [email protected];or fax 523-5294.

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BOISE, Idaho (AP) –The owner of anindustrial surplus storenear Boise says he’snearly sold out ofrespirator masks after adisaster preparednesswebsite linked to his

store in a post aboutpreparing for an Ebolaoutbreak.

John Schiff, owner ofthe Reuseum in GardenCity, normally sells justone or two boxes of theparticulate respiratormasks in a week. Butstarting Tuesday, ordersfrom his online storejumped. Schiff says hisstock of 110 boxes wascleaned out, and heexpects his last five boxesto be gone by Friday.

Federal authoritiesannounced Tuesday thata man who recently spenttime in Liberia had beendiagnosed with Ebola at aTexas hospital. Officialsare closely monitoring100 people who hadcontact with the manbefore his diagnosis, andhis family members havebeen placed underquarantine.

The virus only spreadsthrough direct contactwith bodily fluids.

By MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE,ROBYN DIXON and KURTIS LEE

Los Angeles Times

DALLAS – Texas healthofficials on Thursday stepped uptheir efforts to fight against anypossible outbreak of Ebola byincreasing the number of peoplethey are monitoring to as many as100, including most who weresecondary contacts of the firstdiagnosed case of the disease inthe United States.

The sharp increase from the 12to 18 people announcedWednesday comes as the citycontinues to deal with the falloutfrom the case of Thomas EricDuncan, a Liberian who arrived inthe United States last month,began developing symptoms andthen tested positive for Ebola.

“These additional people hadsome sort of contact with thoseinitial 12 to 18 individuals. Someare classmates of students whohad contact with Mr. Duncan.They’re all being closelymonitored and watched,” ErikkaD. Neroes, public informationofficer at Dallas County Healthand Human Services, told the LosAngeles Times.

The county department putthe number of possible contactsat about 80, but state healthofficials in an official tweetincreased that to as many as 100.

Duncan remains in seriouscondition at Texas HealthPresbyterian Hospital where hehas been in isolation since Sept.28. He had traveled to the UnitedStates to visit with his fianceeand other relatives.

The original group of 12 to 18people, including five children,was in direct contact withDuncan.

In a Communicable DiseaseControl Order filed Wednesdaynight, four members of the familywere ordered to stay home andmonitor themselves for any fever.They also have to makethemselves available to healthofficials. The family is complyingwith the order, state officials said,though failure to comply is amisdemeanor.

Ebola can be spread only by

someone who has alreadydisplayed symptoms, which iswhy officials have insisted thatnone of the passengers on thevarious flights Duncan took fromLiberia are in any danger ofinfection.

In Texas, health officialshave been focusing oncontainment to prevent thedisease from spreading beyondDuncan, who fell ill on Sept. 24,sought treatment and wasreleased from a hospital only toreturn by ambulance days later.

Neroes said that none of the80 individuals have traveledoutside the Dallas-Fort Worthmetro area.

The five children, who havenot developed symptoms, didattend classes, leading parents toworry about whether to sendtheir children to school onThursday.

Chanel Castillo, 25, a nurse’saide, said she had debated withher mother whether to send her4-year-old daughter to pre-kindergarten at one of theaffected schools. Castillo said shehas friends who are consideringpulling their children out of theschool altogether.

“I said that’s not fair – at leastgive them an opportunity to takecare of the problem,” Castillosaid.

She loves the school, pre-kindergarten space is scarce, andstaff reassured her the girl wouldbe safe. So on Thursday, Castilloarrived as usual to drop her off.

“I just pray nothing badhappens to these kids,” she said.“Hopefully we have a calm dayand they’re focusing back ontheir education.”

Castillo said misinformationand fear continued to growovernight among parents in thesurrounding community, whichis largely minority, includingmany immigrants.

Maria Lopez, 32, a Spanish-speaking parent who was alsodropping her daughter off at pre-kindergarten on Thursday, saidshe received and read the letter toparents, but was still nervous. Inthe end, she decided to bring herdaughter to class because thedanger did not appear to beimminent.

“If it was, they would close allthe schools,” she said.

Kenneth Davis, 54, was

waiting for the bus with hisgirlfriend’s 7-year-old son. Shedecided to send the boy to schoolThursday, against Davis’ wishes.He wants all of the schools toclose until the Ebola threat haspassed.

“How do they know they’regoing to get rid of the disease?”he asked as the bus arrived. “I justfigure these kids shouldn’t begoing to school until they takecare of all that.”

Inside Sam Tasby MiddleSchool, one of the schoolsattended by children with directcontact with Duncan, halls werebustling. At least one student wasupset by the Ebola scare, cryingin a corner of the office, afraid togo to class. Staff tried to reassurehim, offering hand sanitizer.They referred questions to thedistrict.

Meanwhile, new detailscontinued to emerge aboutDuncan’s time in Africa and howhe was exposed to Ebola.

A young woman inPaynesville, Liberia, is believed tobe the Ebola contact who infectedDuncan.

Before Duncan flew to theUnited States on Sept. 19, he wasin direct contact with MarthaleneWilliams, 19, who died Sept. 16.The day before that, Duncanhelped the family in a fruitlesssearch for medical treatment forthe desperately sick woman.

After an entire day drivingaround Monrovia in a taxi, takingher from a local clinic to twoEbola treatment units, Duncanhelped Marthalene Williams’father and brother carry her fromthe taxi back into the family livingroom that night. She died thereearly the next morning, accordingto family members.

Duncan was in the front seatof a taxi, they said. Her father,Emmanuel, and brother SonnyBoy were in the back withMarthalene, who was convulsing.

Marthalene’s parents, Amieand Emmanuel Williams, lefthome early Thursday to seekmedical treatment, a day aftertheir son and a neighbor died.

In a typical sign of the wayEbola spreads from house tohouse, a neighbor, Sarah Smith,whose house is just one yard fromthe Williams’ house, also died ofsuspected Ebola on Wednesday.Her husband, Robert Garway,checked into the John F. KennedyMedical Center on Thursday.

Texas boosts monitoring

DAVID WOO/Dallas Morning News

A young man retrieves food supplies left by the North Texas FoodBank and the Red Cross on the front stoop of an apartment at The IvyApartments complex Thursday in Dallas.

As many as 100 peoplebeing watched; familyof Dallas patientordered to stay home

Idaho company sees run on medical masks

John Schiff, owner of theReuseum surplus store inBoise, Idaho, says he hashad a spike in sales ofsurgical masks on his site,which he attributes topublic concern over theEbola disease. KIMBERLEE KRUESI/Associated Press

How do they know they’regoing to get rid of thedisease? I just figure thesekids shouldn’t be going toschool until they take careof all that.

– Kenneth Davis, 54, who wants all of the Dallas

schools to close until theEbola threat has passed

By LOLITA C. BALDORAssociated Press

WASHINGTON –Defense Secretary ChuckHagel said he spoke withthe French defense ministerThursday about thepossibility of Franceparticipating in airstrikesagainst Islamic Statemilitants in Syria,something the French haveso far declined to do.

Appearing at a Pentagonnews conference alongsidethe French official, Jean-Yves Le Drian, Hagel saidFrance recognized the gravethreat that the Islamic Stategroup posed to the countryand to the region.

French PresidentFrancois Hollande’s officesaid Thursday that France –which is conductingairstrikes against theIslamic State militants inIraq – would “intensify” itssupport for Syrianopposition forces. But nodetails were provided.

Asked repeatedly byreporters whether theairstrikes would beexpanded to Syria, Le Drianwould only say that Francelaunched strikes in Iraqbecause the governmentthere requested help. Healso said the fight againstthe Islamic State was in thebeginning stages.

Le Drian also declined toanswer whether the Frenchprovided any intelligencesupport to the U.S. forairstrikes within Syria

against the KhorasanGroup, an al-Qaida cell saidto be plotting attacks on theWest.

“We have an excellentcooperation in this field ofintelligence, and this goodcooperation means also thatwe don’t give third parties,even great journalists, anydetails about intelligence,”he said through aninterpreter.

During their privatemeeting, Hagel and LeDrian spoke briefly andgenerally about thepossibility of Frenchparticipation in the Syriafight, but the U.S. did notexplicitly ask France toconduct airstrikes,according to a U.S. officialwho attended the meeting.

The official said nocommitments were madeduring the meeting, butthat the French also did notrule out conductingairstrikes in Syria.

The official spoke oncondition of anonymity todiscuss the private meeting.

Asked about theeffectiveness of the broadmilitary campaign againstthe Islamic State group inIraq and Syria, Hagel saidthe airstrikes have beeneffective, but this “is goingto be difficult and it’s goingto be long. And there were

no misconceptions whenwe started this that therewould be any quick finish.”

In other comments,Hagel said he welcomed thedecision by Turkey tolaunch military incursionsinto Syria and Iraq andallow foreign forces to useits territory for possibleoperations against the

Islamic State group.“We will continue to

consult with the Turkishgovernment on the specificsof how the implementationof that authority would becarried out,” said Hagel.

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 – A3

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Hagel, French minister discuss Syria strikes

BURHAN OZBILICI/Associated Press

Syrians from Kobani wait behind barbed wires to enter Turkey at the Turkey-Syria bordercrossing of Yumurtalik near Suruc, Turkey, on Thursday.

Poll: Half think U.S. at high risk of attackWASHINGTON (AP) – Half of Americans polled

think there’s a high risk of a terrorist attack on U.S. soil,yet only a third are closely following news of U.S.airstrikes against Islamic extremists in the Middle East.

Most people do think the airstrikes are a good idea.Two-thirds of those questioned for an AssociatedPress-GfK poll say they favor the offensive by the U.S.and allies. Most polled think there’s a high risk of aterrorist attack inside the United States, 53 percent.About 32 percent of those surveyed are paying closeattention to the military action, and 30 percent saythey’re barely monitoring the U.S. military action.

By SHERRY DEVLINof the Missoulian

Those who live or commutealong South Higgins Avenuecount the seasons, in part, by

the opening and closing of the littleice cream stand with the cone-shaped evergreen bush out front.

Winter’s freeze is at hand whenthe sidewalk readerboard begins the

countdown: “7 days left,” then6, 5, 4 ... and atthe end ofHalloween night,the HigginsAvenue DairyQueen seals thewindows andbegins its

hibernation. The neighborhood feelsa little sad, and a lot darker.

But soon enough comes mid-February and the return of thereaderboard countdown: “7 days,”then 6, 5, 4 ... and on Valentine’smorning the DQ slides open thewindows – no matter the weather –and spring is on its way.

In February 2010, when ArtMandell celebrated his 50thanniversary as owner of theneighborhood DQ, folks from allover town – and points well beyond– wrote the Missoulian with their

reminisences of family celebrations,after-school traditions, lazy summerevenings and the tiny cones loved bygenerations of Missoula dogs, largeand small.

“My favorite memory is going toDairy Queen in the late ’70s when Igot 100 percent on my spelling testsat Emma Dickinson.”

“My dogs learned to eat and lovebaby cones there.”

“Our family has been going toDairy Queen for as long as I canremember. When we would bedriving down the street with fivekids in the car, my husband wouldpretend that the steering wheel hada mind of its own and was turning infor ice cream. He would holler, ‘Idon’t know what is going on. I can’tcontrol this car!’ Then we would allget ice cream.”

MICHAEL GALLACHER/Missoulian

A4 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

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NATION

By COLLEEN SLEVINAssociated Press

GOLDEN, Colo. –Students and teachersfighting a plan to promotepatriotism and downplaycivil disobedience in somesuburban Denver U.S.history courses packed aschool board meetingThursday where thecontroversial changes couldface a vote.

Turnout was so high thatthe teachers union streamedvideo from the meetingroom – which holds acouple hundred people –onto a big screen in theparking lot outside.

About 300 students,parents and teachersopposed to the proposal

rallied in the parking lot andmarched along nearbystreets before the meeting.

Carole Morenz, holding asmall American flag and asign that said “Historymatters. Know the truth,”traveled from Pueblobecause she said she’sworried the change inapproach to teaching historycould be the “biggestcultural shift of ourlifetime.”

“They will lose theknowledge of what madeAmerica great,” saidMorenz, adding that she hasbeen concerned aboutproblems in education sinceshe began homeschoolingher children in the 1980s.

Dozens of students tookthe lectern, with just a

minute each to speak. Theydelivered 40,000signatures they say theygathered from around thecountry in support.

Students in a majorityof the 17 high schools inColorado’s second-largestschool district have leftclasses in droves over thepast few weeks, wavingsigns and flags in protest.

Many teachers also havebeen calling in sick,forcing school to becanceled some days. “Irespect the right of ourstudents to express theiropinions in a peacefulmanner,” SuperintendentDan McMinimee said. “Ido, however, prefer thatour students stay in class.”

The protests started

Sept. 19, the day after theJefferson County schoolboard proposed creating acommittee to review textsand course plans, startingwith Advanced Placementhistory, to make surematerials “promotecitizenship, patriotism,essentials and benefits ofthe free-market system,respect for authority andrespect for individualrights” and don’t“encourage or condone civildisorder, social strife ordisregard of the law.”

Board member JulieWilliams, who originallyproposed the review, andother backers of theproposal say students arebeing used as pawns byteachers, who are upset

about a plan to base raiseson an evaluation system.

Williams is one of theboard’s majority of threenew conservative members– Ken Witt, John Newkirk,and Williams – who werebacked by Republicans lastyear in an officiallynonpartisan election. Theycampaigned on theiropposition to a proposed$1 billion tax increase forschools, which votersrejected by a wide margin.

None of the threereturned calls Thursday.

Lesley Dahlkemper, aDemocrat and one of thetwo other board memberselected in 2011, said shedoesn’t understand whyher colleagues are pursuingthe resolution. “It simply

goes too far,” she said.Sarena Phu, 17, said some

of the nation’s greatestachievements, includingcivil rights and equality forwomen, were achievedthrough protests and socialunrest. Phu, the daughter ofVietnamese immigrants,praised the U.S. for being anation where people from allbackgrounds can thrive, butshe said students need tolearn about the negativesides of its story, includingthe mistreatment of NativeAmericans and theinternment of Japanese-Americans during WorldWar II. “Would you like tosweep us under the rug, too,just like our histories?” sheasked.

JPMORGAN CHASEData breach affected76 million customers

LOS ANGELES (AP) – Ahuge cyberattack againstJPMorgan Chase & Co. thissummer compromisedcustomer information forabout 76 millionhouseholds and 7 millionsmall businesses, the banksaid Thursday.

JPMorgan Chase saidthat names, addresses,phone numbers and emailaddresses were stolen fromthe company’s servers, butonly customers who use thewebsites Chase.com andJPMorganOnline and theapps ChaseMobile andJPMorgan Mobile wereaffected.

The New York-basedbank said there’s noevidence that the databreach included accountnumbers, passwords, SocialSecurity numbers or datesof birth. It also said it hasnot seen any unusualcustomer fraud stemmingfrom the data breach.

JPMorgan Chase, thenation’s biggest bank byassets, has been workingwith law enforcementofficials to investigate thecyberattack.

The bank discovered theintrusion on its servers inmid-August and has sincedetermined that the breachbegan as early as June,spokeswoman PatriciaWexler said. “We haveidentified and closed theknown access paths,” shesaid, declining to elaborate.

She also declined tocomment on whetherJPMorgan has been able todetermine who was behindthe cyberattack on itsservers.

GUANTANAMOJudge rejects requestfor closed hearing

A federal judge onThursday rejected a requestby the Obamaadministration to close a

hearing into the force-feeding of a GuantanamoBay prisoner who has goneon a hunger strike.

The Obamaadministration has soughtto keep the hearing closedon grounds that much ofthe information about theman is classified.

U.S. District JudgeGladys Kessler rejected thegovernment’s motion toclose the hearing in itsentirety. However, the judgeis not opening the hearingcompletely.

The hearing can be heldin open and closed sessionsto accommodate thegovernment’s concerns,Kessler wrote.

Associated Press

HEALTHStudy links lack of smellto death’s proximity

Losing one’s sense ofsmell is a strong predictorthat death is near-and itpossibly could be used asan early alert about serioushealth problems.

That’s the conclusion ofa study of older adultspublished this week in thejournal PLOS One, whichfound that those whofailed a smelling test weremuch more likely to diewithin five years.

Inability to sense odors“doesn’t directly causedeath, but it’s a harbinger,an early warning thatsomething has gone badlywrong,” the study’s leadauthor, Dr. Jayant M.Pinto, an associateprofessor of surgery at theUniversity of Chicago, saidin a statement.

In the study,researchers gave a smellingtest to about 3,000 peopleages 57 to 85. Thevolunteers were presentedwith five odors –peppermint, fish, orange,rose and leather – one at atime and asked to identifythem. (They didn’t have torespond off the tops of

their heads, the study says:Researchers provided fourpossible answers for eachscent.)

Five years later, theresearchers checked back.

Nearly 40 percent ofthe people who “failed”the test, correctlyidentifying none or onlyone of the scents, had diedin the interim, the studyfound. That’s comparedwith 19 percent of thosewho correctly identifiedtwo or three of the smellsand 10 percent of thosewho correctly identified atleast four.

Even after results wereadjusted for age, gender,race, overall health andsocioeconomic status, thesmell test still was a strongpredictor of five-yearmortality, the study found.

Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELESPolice recover statue oflate showman Sullivan

LOS ANGELES (AP) –Ed Sullivan will be back infront of an audience soon,but it won’t be a big show.

An 18-inch solid bronzestatue of the legendarytelevision variety showhost was recovered by LosAngeles police Thursday,four days after it wasstolen.

The LAPD says the 20-pound statue is in goodcondition. They gave nodetails on where it wasfound or who may havetaken it.

The statue was takenSunday from atop anoutdoor pedestal at theAcademy of TelevisionArts & Sciences Hall ofFame Plaza in NorthHollywood.

The plaza where thestatue stood honorssignificant TVpersonalities and pioneers.Sullivan’s classic varietyshow, “The Ed SullivanShow,” lasted for morethan two decades. He diedin 1974.

| BRIEFS |

Protesters pack meeting on school changes in patriotism, civil disobedience

Protesters workto keep order

HONG KONG – OnThursday night, a streamof protesters marched tothe office of Hong Kong’sembattled chief executive,where they were met by awall of police officersstanding behindbarricades.

Before they got there,Eunice Chiu and NickoCho offered the protestersplastic wrap to shield theirskin from a possible teargas attack.

“Protect your arms!Protect your arms!” thetwo protest volunteers saidin Cantonese. Cho wasn’tsure how long they wouldcontinue to offer help,given that a melee couldbreak out. “We don’tknow,” Cho said inEnglish. “We are waitingfor the police to fight.”

For five days, HongKong has been buffeted bythe largest street protestsin its history. Butcompared with massdemonstrations in theUnited States and otherparts of the world, HongKong’s version is a modelof civility, cleanliness andefficiency.

Every day, volunteerswork to scrub streets, pickup garbage and separaterecyclables. They offer freewater and yellow ribbonsto people joining orobserving the protestsand, of course, umbrellasand other protective gearare readily offered.

Thursday’s nightconvergence on the chiefexecutive’s office couldhave turned into a melee,and at one point it almost

did. But amid thenebulous leadershipstructure of theseprotests, volunteersquelled arguments andkept protesters fromsurging onto a nearbyhighway. At one point, 17-year-old student leaderJoshua Wong stood on aladder and urgedprotesters not to skirmishwith police.

“In Hong Kong, peopleare generally moredisciplined,” said JackieAu, 23, who staffed awater and gas maskdistribution site near thechief executive’s office.“People here are trying toget their point across, butin a way that is morerespectful.”

Volunteers work tokeep the protest sites cleanpartly because of civicpride, said Chow. But thebigger reason is morepragmatic. “We keep thisplace clean to encouragepeople (protesters) to stayhere,” she said.

Along with respondingto the needs of protesters,volunteers also try toremind them of theseriousness of thedemonstrations.

“Don’t trust Chinesespies,” read one flierhanded out Thursday toprotesters in CausewayBay, another protest site. Italso urged restlessoccupiers not to take“selfies” or engage inkaraoke. “Remember we’rea protest, not in carnival!”said the flier.

Stuart Leavenworth,McClatchy

By JOANNA CHUIand WENDY TANG

Associated Press

HONG KONG – HongKong’s embattled leaderrefused demands by pro-democracy protesters toresign Thursday, andinstead offered talks todefuse a week of massivedemonstrations that havegrown into the biggestchallenge to Beijing’sauthority since China tookcontrol of the former Britishcolony in 1997.

The Hong KongFederation of Students saidin a statement early Fridaythat they planned to join thetalks with the government,focused specifically onpolitical reforms. Theyreiterated that ChiefExecutive Leung Chun-ying step down, saying he“had lost his integrity.”

A wider pro-democracygroup that had joined thedemonstrations, OccupyCentral, welcomed the talksand also insisted that Leungquit.

Occupy Central “hopesthe talks can provide aturning point in the currentpolitical stalemate,” it saidin a statement. “However,we reiterate our view thatChief Executive LeungChun-ying is the oneresponsible for thestalemate, and that he muststep down.”

Leung’s comments cameat a news conference heldjust minutes before theprotesters’ midnightdeadline for him to quit.

“I will not resign,” hesaid.

The students hadthreatened to surround oroccupy governmentbuildings if Leung did notstep down, and the policehad warned of seriousconsequences if theprotesters carried out thatthreat.

Standing beside Leungwas the territory’s top civilservant, Chief Secretary

Carrie Lam, and he askedher to arrange the talks. Shesaid she would seek to meetwith leaders of thedemonstrations as soon aspossible. “I hope both sideswill be satisfied,” she said.“Students had wanted apublic meeting but I hopethat we can have someflexibility to discussdetails.”

The protesters wantBeijing to reverse itsdecision that all candidatesin an inaugural 2017election for chief executivemust be approved by acommittee of mostly pro-Beijing elites. They sayChina is reneging on itspromise that the city’s topleader will be chosenthrough “universalsuffrage.”

Leung said theauthorities would continueto tolerate the protests aslong as participants did notcharge police lines, buturged them to stop theiroccupation of much of thedowntown area.

“I urge students not tocharge into or occupygovernment buildings. ...It’s not about my personal

inconvenience,” he said.“These few days theprotesters’ occupation ofkey areas of the city hasalready seriously affectedHong Kong’s economy,people’s daily lives andgovernment functioning.”

Before Leung spoke, theheads of two majoruniversities whose studentsjoined in launching theprotests appeared before ajittery crowd in front of theentrance to his office andappealed for calm.

Earlier Thursday, policewere seen bringing insupplies of tear gas andother riot gear, and theprotesters prepared facemasks and goggles astensions rose in the standoffoutside the imposinggovernment compoundnear the waterfront.

After Leung’s newsconference, however, theatmosphere was palpablycalmer, although manyprotesters expresseddisappointment about theproposed talks.

“They didn’t mentionanything about when theyare going to talk, no details,nothing,” said JoannaWong, 28, who works in the

aviation industry.Marketing professional

Heiman Chan, 25, said thetalks should begin rightaway. “If we need to waittwo or three days, the crowdwill become smaller andthere will be fewer people tosupport this movement,”she said. “That’s why thegovernment just keeps uswaiting.”

The People’s Daily,published by China’s rulingCommunist Party, warnedin a commentary Thursdayof “chaos” in the city of7 million and expressedstrong support for Leung.

It said the centralgovernment firmly backedthe Hong Kong police –who were criticized forusing tear gas againstprotesters last weekend –“to handle illegal activitiesin accordance with the law.”

Ivy Chan, a 25-year-oldsocial worker, said shehoped the proposed talkswould yield results and thattear gas wouldn’t be usedagain. “What we want tofight for is our freedom, andthe free nomination ofcandidates for our chiefexecutive,” she said.

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 – A5

WORLD

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Hong Kong leader offers talks, not resignation

CHRIS STOWERS/McClatchy

Pro-democracy student activists gather in front of the Hong Kong government office ofChief Executive C.Y. Leung, urging him to resign, in Hong Kong, China on Thursday.

MONEY & MARKETS ONLINE: LOOK UP STOCKS AND MUTUAL FUNDS BY TICKER AND READ MORE NEWS AT MISSOULIAN.COM/BUSINESS

t t tt t ss t tt t tt t tt t tt t tt t tt t t

StocksRecap

Applied Matls AMAT 16.40 6 23.46 20.53 -.43 -2.1% t t t +16.1% +22.3% 24772 25 0.40

CenturyLink Inc CTL 27.93 8 45.67 40.76 +.34 +0.8% s t t +28.0% +34.1% 2519 dd 2.16

ConocoPhillips COP 62.74 5 87.09 74.69 -.31 -0.4% t t t +5.7% +11.1% 7389 12 2.92

Costco Wholesale COST 109.50 9 127.78 125.79 +1.03 +0.8% s s s +5.7% +9.6% 1533 28 1.42

Deutsche Bank CT2 pf DXB 24.46 7 26.57 25.91 ... ...% t t r +4.1% ...% 23 1.64

DirecTV DTV 57.40 0 89.46 87.34 +.75 +0.9% s s s +26.5% +44.8% 3627 16 ...

Fst Intste BancSys A FIBK 23.02 6 29.53 26.50 +.14 +0.5% t t t -6.6% +11.7% 183 14 0.64

Gas Natural EGAS 7.49 8 13.17 11.56 -.14 -1.2% t s t +44.0% +19.0% 43 20 0.54

Glacier Bcp GBCI 24.13 3 30.88 25.73 +.27 +1.1% t t t -13.6% +3.9% 376 18 0.68

GlaxoSmithKline PLC GSK 45.85 1 56.73 45.63 -.27 -0.6% t t t -14.5% -4.0% 7431 2.46e

Lee Enterp LEE 2.60 4 5.42 3.54 +.13 +3.8% s t s +2.0% +29.2% 111 dd ...

MDU Resources MDU 27.33 1 36.05 27.36 -.07 -0.3% t t t -10.4% -0.8% 966 18 0.71

Plum Creek PCL 38.70 1 50.08 39.04 +.04 +0.1% t t s -16.1% -14.6% 1068 33 1.76

Republic Svcs RSG 31.42 9 39.66 38.16 +.27 +0.7% t t t +14.9% +16.1% 2222 19 1.12f

Spectra Energy SE 32.80 6 43.12 38.79 -.19 -0.5% t t t +8.9% +16.2% 3929 23 1.34

Stillwater Min SWC 10.42 5 19.42 14.44 -.25 -1.7% t t t +17.0% +35.8% 2619 23 ...

Supervalu Inc SVU 5.38 8 9.78 8.82 +.18 +2.1% t t t +21.0% +5.0% 1994 17 ...

Wells Fargo & Co WFC 40.07 9 53.80 51.40 +.14 +0.3% t t t +13.2% +26.7% 14962 13 1.40

LocalStocks

DOW16,801.05 -3.66NASDAQ

4,430.20 +8.11S&P 5001,946.17 +.01 6-MO T-BILLS

.05% +.01 10-YR T-NOTES2.43% +.04 CRUDE OIL

$91.01 +.28 GOLD$1,214.20 -.40EURO

1.2674 +.0065qpp p p p qp

1,800

1,850

1,900

1,950

2,000

2,050

A M J J A S

1,920

1,980

2,040 S&P 500Close: 1,946.17Change: 0.01 (flat)

10 DAYS

3,800

4,000

4,200

4,400

4,600

4,800

A M J J A S

4,360

4,500

4,640 Nasdaq compositeClose: 4,430.20Change: 8.11 (0.2%)

10 DAYS

Is growth finallypicking up?

The U.S. economy grew at a robust 4.6 percent annual rate in the April-June quarter, the government said last week. That’s the fastest pace in more than two years and a sign growth could be breaking out of its sluggish post-recession pace.

The economy has expanded at about a 2 percent rate since the recession ended in June 2009. That’s far below the 3 percent that is typical of a healthy economy. Yet many economists are forecasting growth will remain above 3 percent in the second half of this year and all through 2015. If so, next year would be the first since 2005 to see growth above 3 percent. Economists at the National Association of Business Economics said Monday that they expect growth to reach 3 percent

next year.Another encouraging aspect of

the second-quarter figures is that growth was broad-based. Businesses stepped up their spending on machinery, computers and other equipment. Home construction and sales added a

quarter-point to growth, after shrinking for two straight quarters. Consumers spent more, and investment by state and local governments contributed the most to growth in five years.

Faster growth should support corporate profit growth and can be good for the stock market. The second-quarter growth figures helped push the Dow Jones industrial average up 1 percent when it was announced Friday.

Source: FactSet

4.6%

-8

-6

-4

-2

0

2

4

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

GDP growth (quarter-to-quarter)Economic growth may be breaking out of its sluggish post-recession pace.

%

CommoditiesThe price of crude oil rose for the first time in three days but remains more than $13 per barrel below where it was on Memorial Day. Natural gas fell for a third straight day.

Crude Oil (bbl) 91.01 90.73 +0.31 -7.5Ethanol (gal) 1.53 1.53 -0.33 -20.0Heating Oil (gal) 2.64 2.66 -0.66 -14.3Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.93 4.02 -2.26 -7.0Unleaded Gas (gal) 2.41 2.45 -1.66 -13.5

FUELS CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD

Gold (oz) 1214.20 1214.60 -0.03 +1.0Silver (oz) 17.00 17.21 -1.21 -12.1Platinum (oz) 1269.10 1287.70 -1.44 -7.4Copper (lb) 3.00 3.03 -1.22 -12.9Palladium (oz) 767.80 783.70 -2.03 +7.0

METALS CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD

Cattle (lb) 1.63 1.62 +0.23 +21.1Coffee (lb) 1.85 1.85 ... +66.7Corn (bu) 3.23 3.21 +0.47 -23.5Cotton (lb) 0.62 0.63 -0.49 -26.2Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 347.80 337.80 +2.96 -3.4Orange Juice (lb) 1.43 1.45 -1.31 +4.8Soybeans (bu) 9.24 9.17 +0.85 -29.6Wheat (bu) 4.83 4.79 +0.78 -20.2

AGRICULTURE CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD

Interestrates

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.43 per-cent Thursday. Yields affect rates on mort-gages and other consumer loans.

NET 1YRTREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3.253.253.25

.13

.13

.13

PRIMERATE

FEDFUNDS

YEST6 MO AGO1 YR AGO

3-month T-bill .01 .01 ... r t r .01

2-year T-note .53 .52 +0.01 t t s .32

10-year T-note 2.43 2.39 +0.04 t t t 2.6230-year T-bond 3.14 3.09 +0.05 t t t 3.70

5-year T-note 1.69 1.67 +0.02 t t t 1.38

52-wk T-bill .09 .08 +0.01 r r t .08

NET 1YRBONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

Barclays LongT-BdIdx 2.98 2.95 +0.03 t t t 3.49Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.39 4.41 -0.02 t t t 5.12Barclays USAggregate 2.30 2.36 -0.06 t s t 2.37Barclays US High Yield 6.08 6.13 -0.05 s s s 6.21Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.95 4.05 -0.10 t t t 4.59Barclays CompT-BdIdx 1.99 1.98 +0.01 t s s 1.59Barclays US Corp 3.04 3.10 -0.06 t s s 3.32

S&P 500 1946.17 +0.01 ...% t t s +5.29%Frankfurt DAX 9195.68 -186.35 -1.99% t t t -3.73%London FTSE 100 6446.39 -111.13 -1.69% t t t -4.49%Hong Kong Hang Seng 22932.98 -296.23 -1.27% t t s -1.60%Paris CAC-40 4242.67 -122.60 -2.81% t t t -1.24%Tokyo Nikkei 225 15661.99 -420.26 -2.61% t t s -3.86%

GlobalMarkets

INDEX YEST CHG %CHG WK MO QTR YTD

Seoul Composite 1976.16 -15.38 -0.77% t t t -1.75%Singapore Straits Times 3228.71 -35.38 -1.08% t t s +1.93%Sydney All Ordinaries 5298.50 -36.00 -0.67% t t t -1.02%Taipei Taiex 8975.19 -15.07 -0.17% t t s +4.22%Shanghai Composite 2363.87 +6.16 +0.26% s s s +11.72%

ASIA

Amsterdam 406.22 -10.58 -2.54% t t s +1.10%Brussels 3131.84 -66.77 -2.09% t t t +7.11%Madrid 1063.32 -34.41 -3.13% t t t +5.07%Zurich 8654.71 -134.82 -1.53% t t s +5.51%Milan 19894.88 -811.43 -3.92% t t t +16.56%Johannesburg 48189.06 -685.97 -1.40% t t t +4.18%Stockholm 1353.93 -27.66 -2.00% t t t +1.57%

EUROPE / AFRICA

Buenos Aires Merval 10703.32 -812.96 -7.06% t s s +98.54%Mexico City Bolsa 44254.43 -110.53 -0.25% t t s +3.57%Sao Paolo Bovespa 53518.57 +660.14 +1.25% t t s +3.91%Toronto S&P/TSX 14760.64 -44.80 -0.30% t t s +8.36%

SOUTH AMERICA / CANADA

A-B-C

ARCapA un AUMAU 9.74 Abraxas 60 AXAS 4.83 -.15Achillion dd ACHN 10.14 +.36ActivsBliz 21 ATVI 20.41 -.19AdobeSy cc ADBE 67.06 -.48AlignTech 28 ALGN 48.80 -1.27AllscriptH dd MDRX 13.47 -.01AlteraCp lf 28 ALTR 34.84 -.24Amarin AMRN 1.03 Amazon cc AMZN 318.41 +.95Ambarella 45 AMBA 42.10 +.59AmAirl n dd AAL 33.93 -.46ACapAgy dd AGNC 21.45 -.16AmCapLtd 29 ACAS 13.94 -.08ARltCapPr dd ARCP 11.85 -.19Amgen 21 AMGN 137.20 -1.62AnalogDev 21 ADI 47.80 -.45AngiesList dd ANGI 7.61 +.02Apple Inc s 16 AAPL 99.90 +.72ApldMatl 25 AMAT 20.53 -.43ArenaPhm dd ARNA 4.07 -.02

AriadP dd ARIA 5.85 +.57ArrowRsh dd ARWR 13.92 +.16ArubaNet dd ARUN 20.82 +.23Atmel cc ATML 8.03 +.06Autodesk 79 ADSK 57.74 +2.08AutoData 23 ADP 72.50 +1.08AvagoTch 35 AVGO 83.21 -2.33AvanirPhm dd AVNR 11.70 -.01AvisBudg 34 CAR 53.19 -.09Baidu 39 BIDU 214.80 +2.77BallardPw dd BLDP 3.14 +.12Biocryst dd BCRX 11.39 +1.24BlackBerry dd BBRY 9.47 -.48Broadcom 35 BRCM 38.84 -.50BrcdeCm 22 BRCD 10.66 -.16CA Inc 15 CA 27.18 +.05CDK Glbl n CDK 30.30 -.70CME Grp 28 CME 80.42 +1.02Cadence 38 CDNS 17.15 +.20Caesars dd CZR 12.08 -.24Calithera n CALA 9.41 CdnSolar 17 CSIQ 34.78 +.59CpstnTurb dd CPST 1.03 +.01CatalystPh dd CPRX 2.71 -.11

Celgene s 53 CELG 92.81 -.62ChartInds 19 GTLS 47.57 -4.98ChiFnOnl dd JRJC 5.94 +.05ChinaNet dd CNET 3.14 -.03Cisco 17 CSCO 25.06 +.03CleanEngy dd CLNE 7.17 -.26CognizTc s 19 CTSH 43.90 -.47Comcast 19 CMCSA 52.84 -.09Comc spcl 19 CMCSK 52.61 -.11CSVelIVST q XIV 37.72 +.22CSVixSht q TVIX 3.31 -.08Cree Inc 35 CREE 34.86 -4.76Ctrip.com 59 CTRP 55.09 -.81CumMed 16 CMLS 3.58 -.25CyberArk n CYBR 28.69 -.93

D-E-F

DirecTV 16 DTV 87.34 +.75DiscCmA s 11 DISCA 36.27 -.04DiscCmC s DISCK 36.05 +.03DishNetw h 32 DISH 63.58 -.02DonlleyRR 19 RRD 16.21 -.10DrmWksA 38 DWA 24.80 -1.95DryShips dd DRYS 2.27 -.05E-Trade 24 ETFC 22.15 +.12

eBay dd EBAY 54.86 -.60ElectArts cc EA 35.59 +.45Endocyte 21 ECYT 5.74 -.26EngyXXI 17 EXXI 11.13 +.26EnzonPh 2 ENZN 1.12 +.01Ericsson ERIC 12.49 +.02Exelixis dd EXEL 1.51 Expedia 34 EXPE 83.37 -1.41ExpScripts 31 ESRX 70.45 +.38ExtrmNet dd EXTR 4.85 +.08Facebook 83 FB 77.08 +.53FifthThird 11 FITB 19.79 -.01Finisar 18 FNSR 16.91 +.37FireEye dd FEYE 29.59 +.83FstIntBc A 14 FIBK 26.50 +.14FstNiagara 11 FNFG 8.30 +.04Flextrn 13 FLEX 9.99 -.01FrSeas rsh FREE .16 -.05FrontierCm 32 FTR 6.37 -.02FuelCellE dd FCEL 2.01 -.01

G-H-I

GT AdvTc dd GTAT 11.18 +.84Garmin 15 GRMN 49.89 -1.11GileadSci 23 GILD 104.56 -1.03

GluMobile dd GLUU 5.26 +.18GolLNGLtd dd GLNG 62.25 -1.98Goodyear 11 GT 22.34 +.23GoPro n GPRO 85.46 -6.34GreenPlns 12 GPRE 33.25 -2.05Groupon dd GRPN 6.58 +.01HercOffsh dd HERO 2.02 -.13HimaxTch 45 HIMX 9.79 +.24Hologic dd HOLX 23.88 +.04HorsehdH dd ZINC 14.98 -1.07HudsCity 28 HCBK 9.70 +.01HuntBncsh 13 HBAN 9.68 +.08IntgDv 22 IDTI 15.76 +.42Intel 17 INTC 33.52 -.47Intuit 27 INTU 84.52 -1.20InvBncp s 27 ISBC 10.09 +.06

J-K-L

JA Solar dd JASO 8.97 +.03JD.com n JD 25.69 +.67JDS Uniph dd JDSU 13.13 -.02JetBlue 10 JBLU 10.59 +.34KandiTech dd KNDI 14.24 +2.21KitePhm n KITE 34.68 +6.37LakeInd dd LAKE 8.34 -.67

Lattice 33 LSCC 7.00 -.24LibGlobA s dd LBTYA 42.59 +.08LibGlobC s LBTYK 41.18 +.11LinearTch 22 LLTC 42.72 -.39LinnEngy dd LINE 29.08 -.50LinnCo dd LNCO 28.37 -.42lululemn gs 26 LULU 42.36 +.90

M-N-O

MannKd dd MNKD 5.56 -.17MarIntA 29 MAR 66.80 -1.14MarvellT 15 MRVL 13.14 -.23Mattel 13 MAT 31.11 +.65MaximIntg 24 MXIM 29.65 +.01MelcoCrwn 18 MPEL 24.81 -.62Microchp 25 MCHP 46.28 +.21MicronT 13 MU 33.81 +.31MicroSemi 27 MSCC 25.40 +.18Microsoft 17 MSFT 45.76 -.14Mondelez 17 MDLZ 33.84 +.09Move Inc dd MOVE 20.93 +.01Mylan 32 MYL 46.50 +1.23NPS Phm cc NPSP 24.38 -.68NXP Semi NXPI 66.31 +.30Netflix cc NFLX 449.98 +11.18

NYMtgTr 6 NYMT 7.35 -.01NewsCpA 39 NWSA 15.81 -.17Novavax dd NVAX 4.05 -.07NuanceCm 63 NUAN 15.19 -.09Nvidia 20 NVDA 18.19 -.08OfficeDpt dd ODP 5.06 +.05OnSmcnd 17 ONNN 8.80 +.03Orexigen dd OREX 4.04

P-Q-R

PTC Inc 25 PTC 36.46 +.10Paccar 16 PCAR 57.06 +.85PacEthanol 97 PEIX 12.62 -.85PattUTI 25 PTEN 30.27 -1.83PeopUtdF 19 PBCT 14.47 +.10PlugPowr h dd PLUG 4.57 +.16PwShs QQQ q QQQ 97.21 PrUPQQQ s q TQQQ 82.33 -.04PShtQQQ rs q SQQQ 37.68 +.03ProspctCap PSEC 9.75 -.17Qualcom 17 QCOM 73.66 -.23RF MicD 38 RFMD 11.03 +.12

S-T-U

SLM Cp 5 SLM 8.66 +.19

SalixPhm cc SLXP 151.09 -3.47SanDisk 19 SNDK 94.32 -.79SeagateT 12 STX 55.52 +.44SearsHldgs dd SHLD 27.06 +1.88Sina 58 SINA 39.98 -.21Sinclair 23 SBGI 25.00 -.79SiriusXM 56 SIRI 3.39 -.04SkywksSol 28 SWKS 53.62 +.31SolarCity dd SCTY 57.31 +.84Staples 15 SPLS 11.92 +.06Starbucks 29 SBUX 74.45 -.16StlDynam 23 STLD 22.12 +.04SunPower 23 SPWR 32.56 -.02Symantec 17 SYMC 23.35 +.30Tekmira g dd TKMR 25.47 +.48TeslaMot dd TSLA 251.42 +11.18TexInst 23 TXN 46.84 -.04TibcoSft 65 TIBX 23.89 +.19TrimbleN 33 TRMB 29.46 -.37TripAdvis 61 TRIP 88.39 -1.10TriQuint cc TQNT 18.22 +.2621stCFoxA 20 FOXA 33.41 -.2921stCFoxB 20 FOX 32.37 -.49

V-W

VWR n VWR 21.05 VertxPh dd VRTX 104.80 -2.45ViacomB 14 VIAB 74.60 -.62VimpelCm dd VIP 6.66 -.24Vodafone VOD 32.33 -.41WebMD 55 WBMD 38.17 -2.08Wendys Co 29 WEN 8.10 -.01WDigital 14 WDC 95.11 +.53WholeFood 25 WFM 37.53 -.32Windstrm 29 WIN 10.71 +.02

X-Y-Z

Xilinx 18 XLNX 41.42 -.39Yahoo 35 YHOO 40.50 +.18Yandex YNDX 26.98 +.53ZionsBcp 16 ZION 28.52 -.02Zynga dd ZNGA 2.62 -.07

PE Sym Last Chg

A-B-C

AES Corp 24 AES 14.14 -.06AFLAC 9 AFL 57.67 +.11AK Steel AKS 7.63 +.38ASA Gold ASA 11.83 +.17AT&T Inc 10 T 34.97 +.01AbbottLab 25 ABT 41.21 +.03AbbVie 22 ABBV 56.67 -.56Actavis ACT 236.00 -2.48AdamsEx ADX 13.69 -.08AMD 34 AMD 3.39 +.04Aegon AEG 8.10 -.08Aetna 14 AET 79.39 -.43Agnico g 21 AEM 30.29 +1.03AgreeRlt 21 ADC 27.17 +.02AlaskaAir s 10 ALK 42.92 +.18AlcatelLuc ALU 2.93 -.04Alcoa 37 AA 15.36 -.34Alibaba n BABA 87.06 +.96AllegTch 24 ATI 35.09 -.88Allergan 41 AGN 176.86 -2.81AlliantEgy 16 LNT 55.83 +.03Allstate 12 ALL 61.14 +.33AllyFin n ALLY 22.35 -.31AlphaNRs ANR 2.27 -.01Altria 21 MO 45.47 -.30Ambev n ABEV 6.42 +.12Ameren 16 AEE 38.46 -.02AEP 15 AEP 52.28 -.10AmExp 16 AXP 85.87 +.06AmIntlGrp 9 AIG 52.61 -.35Amerigas 26 APU 46.22 +.09Anadarko APC 98.67 -.59Annaly 18 NLY 10.80 -.17Apache 29 APA 88.74 -2.31ApldIndlT 18 AIT 46.02 +.79ArcelorMit MT 13.05 -.09ArchCoal ACI 2.06 +.07ArchDan 19 ADM 50.53 +.13ArrowEl 12 ARW 54.14 -.18AsdEstat 9 AEC 17.50 +.11Atento n ATTO 12.96 ATMOS 17 ATO 47.48 +.03Autoliv 20 ALV 94.39 +2.38Avista 10 AVA 30.78 +.07Avon AVP 11.69 -.31BHPBil plc BBL 54.73 +.08BP PLC 6 BP 43.16 -.52

BT Grp BT 60.73 -.60BakrHu 21 BHI 62.11 -1.32BallCorp 18 BLL 62.31 +.20BcoBrad pf BBD 13.92 +.39BcoSantSA SAN 9.19 -.24BkofAm 20 BAC 16.88 +.06BkNYMel 18 BK 38.21 -.01B iPVix rs VXX 31.56 -.33BarrickG 18 ABX 14.70 -.05Baxter 20 BAX 71.55 +.04Bemis 17 BMS 37.99 +.30BerkHa A 16 BRK/A 206250 +1395BlkHillsCp 20 BKH 47.48 -.09BlkIT BKT 6.37 +.01Blackstone 12 BX 30.52 -.15BlockHR 18 HRB 30.73 +.22Boeing 19 BA 124.17 -.50BostonSci 66 BSX 11.85 +.05Brinker 23 EAT 51.35 +1.21Brinks BCO 23.63 -.05BrMySq 31 BMY 50.21 -.32Brunswick 5 BC 42.39 +1.37Buckeye 74 BPL 78.75 +.52CBS B 17 CBS 52.34 -.47CSX 17 CSX 31.34 +.25CabotO&G 35 COG 31.52 -.29CallGolf ELY 7.17 +.08CampSp 16 CPB 42.10 -.12CdnNR gs CNI 69.08 -.58Carnival 22 CCL 38.58 -.56Caterpillar 16 CAT 97.41 -.20Cemex CX 12.59 -.14CenterPnt 19 CNP 24.53 -.01Chemed 22 CHE 102.08 +.59CheniereEn LNG 76.02 -2.03ChesEng 25 CHK 22.23 -.20Chevron 11 CVX 117.11 -.54ChinaFd CHN 20.67 +.01Cigna 12 CI 88.72 -.72Citigroup 12 C 51.25 +.15CliffsNRs 5 CLF 10.00 +.23CocaCola 23 KO 42.66 -.08CocaCE 16 CCE 43.62 -.15CohStQIR RQI 10.61 -.05ColgPalm 27 CL 64.78 -.11ConAgra 41 CAG 32.77 -.31ConocoPhil 12 COP 74.69 -.31ConEd 13 ED 56.80 -.14CooperTire 12 CTB 28.93 +.50

CoreLogic 57 CLGX 26.64 -.10Corning 20 GLW 18.70 -.10Covance 29 CVD 79.13 +2.05Crane 16 CR 62.42 +.08CSVInvNG DGAZ 4.03 +.16CSVLgNGs UGAZ 14.36 -.65

D-E-F

DNP Selct DNP 10.05 -.05DTE 17 DTE 76.27 -.01DTF TxF DTF 15.00 -.07Deere 9 DE 81.71 +.16DeltaAir 3 DAL 35.28 +.38Deluxe 15 DLX 55.03 +.18DenburyR 15 DNR 14.32 -.18DevonE 17 DVN 66.56 -.51Diebold DBD 34.90 +.13Dillards 15 DDS 106.92 +.72DrxSCBear TZA 17.13 -.49DrxSCBull TNA 62.49 +1.73Disney 21 DIS 86.79 -.70DomRescs 21 D 69.32 +.06Donaldson 23 DCI 40.26 +.21DowChm 18 DOW 50.42 -.03DuPont 22 DD 70.23 -.25DukeEngy 24 DUK 74.99 -.31EMC Cp 23 EMC 28.50 +.07EastChem 11 EMN 78.57 -.42Eaton 18 ETN 62.04 -.64EdisonInt 13 EIX 56.30 -.38EmpDist 15 EDE 24.23 -.05EnCana g 15 ECA 21.51 +.13EngyTsfr ETP 65.23 +.70EnPro 58 NPO 61.58 +1.12ENSCO ESV 39.30 -.30Entergy 14 ETR 77.47 -.57Equifax 27 EFX 73.36 -.04EquityCmw EQC 25.06 -.41EquusTR EQS 2.12 -.05ExcoRes 32 XCO 2.90 -.15Exelon 16 EXC 34.73 +.16ExxonMbl 12 XOM 93.30 +.44FedSignl 12 FSS 12.78 +.07FirstEngy 24 FE 33.46 +.09Fluor 19 FLR 65.69 -.20FordM 9 F 14.56 -.03ForestOil FST 1.07 -.04FrptMcM 13 FCX 32.07 +.19

G-H-I

GabelliET GAB 6.27 -.02Gannett 15 GCI 29.23 +.02Gap 16 GPS 41.93 +.42GenDynam 19 GD 121.80 -2.49GenElec 18 GE 25.12 -.04GenMills 17 GIS 50.14 +.16GenMotors 28 GM 33.18 +.69GenuPrt 20 GPC 87.09 +.51GlaxoSKln GSK 45.63 -.27GlimchRt GRT 13.49 Globalstar GSAT 3.02 +.04Goldcrp g GG 23.60 +.39vjGrace 24 GRA 89.09 +.20Graco 21 GGG 71.42 +.12GtPlainEn 16 GXP 24.30 +.09H&Q Hlt HQH 28.11 -.05HalconRes HK 3.84 -.02Hallibrtn 20 HAL 61.44 -1.03HarleyD 15 HOG 58.11 +.47HarrisCorp 13 HRS 66.06 -.34HawaiiEl 15 HE 26.56 +.10HltCrREIT HCN 62.30 -.39HeclaM HL 2.59 +.04Hershey 25 HSY 93.91 -.42Hertz HTZ 23.72 -.14HewlettP 13 HPQ 34.51 -.04Hill-Rom 68 HRC 41.36 +.08HomeDp 22 HD 92.24 +1.22Honda HMC 32.00 -1.79HonwllIntl 18 HON 91.12 -.54Humana 17 HUM 127.15 -.84IAMGld g IAG 2.73 -.02IGI Labs IG 9.11 +.30iShBrazil EWZ 42.28 +.37iShEMU EZU 37.53 -.53iShJapan EWJ 11.36 -.22iSTaiwn EWT 15.31 +.19iShSilver SLV 16.41 -.07iShChinaLC FXI 37.47 +.01iShEMkts EEM 40.93 +.22iSh20 yrT TLT 117.20 -1.03iS Eafe EFA 62.68 -.68iShR2K IWM 108.83 +1.03iShREst IYR 69.13 -.11Idacorp 16 IDA 53.82 +.17ITW 13 ITW 83.06 -.05IntegrysE 19 TEG 65.16 +.12IBM 11 IBM 186.91 -.26

IntlGame 18 IGT 16.94 +.11IntPap 14 IP 46.73 -.48ItauUnibH ITUB 13.69 +.44

J-K-L

JP Engy n JPEP 19.11 JPMorgCh 15 JPM 58.84 -.53JanusCap 20 JNS 14.82 +.47JpnSmCap JOF 9.52 -.02JohnJn 19 JNJ 103.85 -.45JohnsnCtl 20 JCI 44.68 +.61KB Home 15 KBH 14.78 -.02Kellogg 12 K 60.72 +.07Keycorp 12 KEY 13.21 +.03KindMorg 34 KMI 39.39 +1.19Kinross g KGC 3.32 +.06KodiakO g 27 KOG 12.94 +.03KoreaFd KF 40.79 -.06Kroger 17 KR 51.50 -.10LVSands 19 LVS 61.87 +.63LatAmDisc LDF 12.89 +.01Lee Ent LEE 3.54 +.13LennarA 16 LEN 39.01 +.46LibtProp 24 LPT 33.16 -.11LillyEli 21 LLY 64.83 -.25LincNat 10 LNC 51.47 -.23LockhdM 18 LMT 176.35 -1.54Loews 54 L 41.45 +.12LaPac LPX 13.59 +.24LyonBas A 14 LYB 103.00 -2.00

M-N-O

MDU Res 18 MDU 27.36 -.07MFA Fncl 10 MFA 7.94 +.01MGM Rsts 81 MGM 22.00 -.11MagHRes MHR 5.13 MarathnO 10 MRO 36.90 -.23MktVGold GDX 21.62 +.22MV OilSvc OIH 47.55 -.65MV Semi SMH 49.73 -.24MktV Steel SLX 43.67 +.17MktVRus RSX 22.09 +.12McClatchy 3 MNI 3.40 +.03McDrmInt 6 MDR 5.30 -.25McDnlds 17 MCD 94.12 -.07McGrwH 25 MHFI 83.25 +.54Medtrnic 21 MDT 62.80 +.33MensW 63 MW 46.67 -.71Merck 31 MRK 58.85 +.14MexEqt MXE 16.56 +.19

MexicoFd MXF 26.70 -.29Mobileye n MBLY 55.00 +2.00Molycorp MCP 1.38 +.16Moodys 22 MCO 92.43 -.18MorgStan 18 MS 34.28 +.32MS Cap6 MSJ 25.49 +.09NCR Corp 13 NCR 32.19 -.10NRG Egy NRG 31.49 +.30Nabors 41 NBR 21.51 -.66NBGreece NBG 2.85 -.07NatGrid NGG 70.46 -.96NOilVarco 12 NOV 74.19 -.35NatPresto 11 NPK 57.40 +.71NewAmHi HYB 9.41 NewellRub 19 NWL 34.06 +.03NewmtM 14 NEM 23.28 +.27NextEraEn 20 NEE 93.77 -.52NiSource 23 NI 40.78 -.08NikeB 30 NKE 89.30 +1.60NobleCorp 6 NE 21.19 +.10NokiaCp NOK 8.29 +.09Nordstrm 18 JWN 68.83 +1.25NEurO 10 NRT 20.05 -.43NoestUt 19 NU 45.05 +.16NorthropG 14 NOC 126.90 -1.12NwstNG 20 NWN 42.65 +.25Nucor 31 NUE 52.38 -.45NuvMuOpp NIO 14.28 +.03OGE Engy 18 OGE 36.79 -.06OcciPet 13 OXY 95.22 +.93Oi SA OIBR .65 -.02Omncre OCR 61.41 +.07OneokPtrs 21 OKS 56.11 +.66Oracle 16 ORCL 38.27 +.18

P-Q-R

PG&E Cp 25 PCG 45.09 -.10PNC 12 PNC 84.21 -.37PNM Res 18 PNM 25.23 +.05PPG 24 PPG 191.17 PPL Corp 14 PPL 33.15 +.05Pandora P 24.18 +.95ParkDrl 16 PKD 5.09 +.27ParkerHan 17 PH 111.13 -.54PeabdyE 78 BTU 11.68 -.25Penney JCP 9.63 +.32PepBoy PBY 8.75 +.05PepsiCo 21 PEP 92.58 -.07PerkElm 25 PKI 42.40 -.45Perrigo 86 PRGO 151.46 +2.28

PetrbrsA PBR/A 13.93 +.09Petrobras PBR 13.39 +.09PetRes PEO 27.94 -.27Pfizer 17 PFE 29.06 -.09PhilipMor 16 PM 84.21 +.74Phillips66 15 PSX 77.76 -1.87Pier 1 13 PIR 11.92 +.24PinWst 15 PNW 54.95 +.14PitnyBw 22 PBI 24.02 -.20PlumCrk 33 PCL 39.04 +.04Polaris 25 PII 145.49 +.60Potash 21 POT 33.71 -.63Praxair 21 PX 125.30 -.53PrecCastpt 18 PCP 227.10 -2.48ProShtS&P SH 23.33 +.01PUVixST rs UVXY 30.33 -.65ProctGam 21 PG 83.05 -.09ProUShSP SDS 25.32 -.01PUShSPX rs SPXU 47.16 -.03PSEG 15 PEG 37.26 -.03Questar 17 STR 22.13 -.01RadioShk RSH .99 +.01RJamesFn 16 RJF 52.71 +.47RegionsFn 13 RF 9.91 +.02RepubSvc 19 RSG 38.16 +.27Revlon REV 31.34 +.30ReynAmer 20 RAI 58.61 -.12RiteAid 18 RAD 4.99 +.18Rogers 20 ROG 54.88 +.95RoyDShllA 14 RDS/A 74.29 -.88Royce RVT 14.33 -.07

S-T-U

SpdrDJIA DIA 167.65 -.03SpdrGold GLD 116.74 -.03S&P500ETF SPY 194.38 +.03SpdrOGEx XOP 66.46 -.38Safeway 3 SWY 34.20 +.02SandRdge SD 4.20 +.05Schlmbrg 20 SLB 97.78 -1.07Schwab 33 SCHW 29.05 +.26SeadrillLtd 3 SDRL 24.85 -.62SempraEn 24 SRE 104.89 -.18SenHous 20 SNH 20.92 -.04Sensient 19 SXT 51.25 +.12Sherwin 27 SHW 214.51 +.77SilvWhtn g 23 SLW 20.03 -.08SoJerInd 15 SJI 53.43 +.25SouthnCo 16 SO 44.13 +.04SwstAirl 20 LUV 32.46 -.09

Sprint S 6.25 SP Matls XLB 48.30 -.12SP HlthC XLV 63.11 -.13SP CnSt XLP 44.91 +.09SP Consum XLY 66.10 +.30SP Engy XLE 88.31 -.46SPDR Fncl XLF 22.95 +.06SP Inds XLI 52.09 -.06SP Tech XLK 39.26 -.02SP Util XLU 42.27 -.06StMotr 14 SMP 34.38 +.26StanBlkDk 23 SWK 87.26 -.24StillwtrM 23 SWC 14.44 -.25SturmRug 9 RGR 46.64 -.76SunEdison SUNE 18.29 +.01SwftEng SFY 8.89 -.32Synovus rs 19 SNV 23.74 +.18Sysco 24 SYY 37.18 +.19T-MobileUS TMUS 28.80 +.69TCW Strat TSI 5.52 -.05TECO 18 TE 17.71 +.16TaiwSemi TSM 20.29 +.19TalismE g 30 TLM 8.15 -.30Target 26 TGT 62.57 +.50TelefEsp TEF 15.10 -.17TmpGlb GIM 7.87 -.03Teradyn 22 TER 18.74 -.03Terex 10 TEX 31.98 +.73TevaPhrm 18 TEVA 54.23 +1.243M Co 20 MMM 138.67 -.51TimeWarn 16 TWX 73.20 -.51TollBros 19 TOL 31.03 +.08TrnsRty 10 TCI 10.28 +.28Transocn 6 RIG 31.58 +.53TriPointe 16 TPH 13.39 +.64TrinaSolar 13 TSL 11.58 +.18Trinity s 11 TRN 41.53 -1.59Twitter n TWTR 51.85 +1.79TwoHrbInv TWO 9.71 -.12Tyson 15 TSN 40.83 +.84UBS AG UBS 17.20 -.13UDR 37 UDR 27.36 +.09UGI Cp s 17 UGI 33.66 +.10UnionPac s 21 UNP 106.10 +.30Unisys 32 UIS 23.15 +.23UPS B 21 UPS 97.14 +.22US Bancrp 14 USB 41.29 +.03US NGas UNG 21.28 -.28US OilFd USO 34.37 +.22

USSteel X 36.90 -.23UtdTech 16 UTX 103.24 -.60UtdhlthGp 16 UNH 84.90 +.02

V-W

VF Corp s 24 VFC 66.62 +.73Vale SA VALE 11.09 +.23Vale SA pf VALE/P 9.73 +.18ValeroE 8 VLO 45.17 -.43Valmont 15 VMI 133.45 -1.57Valspar 22 VAL 77.32 +.47VangEmg VWO 41.16 +.25VangEur VGK 53.98 -.64VangFTSE VEA 38.83 -.43VantageDrl 5 VTG 1.19 Vectren 21 VVC 39.89 -.05VerizonCm 11 VZ 49.29 -.14ViadCorp 16 VVI 20.58 +.32Visa 24 V 209.72 -.29WGL Hold WGL 42.56 +.13WalMart 16 WMT 76.23 +.11Walgrn 30 WAG 59.76 +.72WalterEn WLT 2.35 +.27Wayfair n W 37.72 WeathfIntl WFT 19.61 -.33WeisMk 19 WMK 39.18 +.40WellsFargo 13 WFC 51.40 +.14WestarEn 15 WR 34.02 -.06WestpacBk WBK 28.34 +.14Weyerhsr 25 WY 32.06 +.28Whrlpl 16 WHR 143.06 +1.51WmsCos 71 WMB 54.76 -.01WiscEngy 16 WEC 43.41 +.21WTJpHedg DXJ 49.97 -1.14WT India EPI 21.71 +.15

X-Y-Z

XcelEngy 16 XEL 30.38 -.09Xerox 14 XRX 12.98 -.10YPF Soc YPF 33.31 -1.20Yamana g 77 AUY 6.12 +.21ZweigFd ZF 14.89 -.06

PE Sym Last Chg

Argentina .1183 .1184 8.4525 8.4450Australia .8804 .8726 1.1358 1.1461Brazil .4030 .4024 2.4816 2.4852Britain 1.6145 1.6177 .6194 .6181Canada .8964 .8949 1.1155 1.1175Chile .001680 .001674 595.12 597.45China .1629 .1629 6.1385 6.1385Denmark .1703 .1694 5.8737 5.9038Euro 1.2674 1.2609 .7890 .7931Hong Kong .1288 .1288 7.7616 7.7653India .0162 .0162 61.560 61.610Indonesia .000082 .000082 12150.00 12175.00Japan .009225 .009159 108.41 109.19

Malaysia .3077 .3055 3.2495 3.2735Mexico .074775 .074304 13.3735 13.4582N. Zealand .7896 .7805 1.2665 1.2812Norway .1552 .1549 6.4443 6.4546Russia .0253 .0252 39.5685 39.6860Saudi .2666 .2666 3.7514 3.7515Singapore .7862 .7854 1.2719 1.2732S. Africa .0893 .0889 11.1939 11.2518S. Korea .000942 .000941 1062.00 1062.66Sweden .1392 .1384 7.1863 7.2253Switzerland 1.0486 1.0449 .9537 .9571Taiwan .0328 .0328 30.47 30.46Thailand .03083 .03083 32.44 32.44

Currency in US$ US$ in Currency Last Prev Last Prev

Currency in US$ US$ in Currency Last Prev Last Prev

6-month T-bill .04 .03 +0.01 s t r .04

A6 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

noon “launch,” thepublic’s best and lastchance to see sixenvironmental sculpturesdirectly from thesculptors’ perspective.After that the artists –Kevin O’Dwyer and AlanCounihan of Ireland,Jaakko Pernu of Finland,Jorn Ronnau of Denmarkand Steven Siegel of theupper Hudson Valley inNew York – will be movingon to their next projects.

More than 300 kidsfrom schools in theBlackfoot and neighboringvalleys have been gettingsneak peeks for the pasttwo weeks, with O’Dwyer’sdaughter, Sinead, leadingthe tours through theforests.

On Thursday, the twoBonner fifth grades taughtby Lesa Homer and JimmyHudson were burning withan enthusiasm that easilyoffset the snowy 33-degreeday.

“It’s awesome,” saidKenny Copeland as hewalked down a faint pathfrom Siegel’s provocativewall of newspapers wovenaround peeled tree trunks.

So too the artists, mostof whom were working inthe snow to put thefinishing touches on theirpieces by Saturday.

“Hello, Bonner!”Counihan greeted thechattering mob. “Listenup! Don’t move! My nameis Alan! All together now,what’s yours?”

They were among thefirst to see his “House ofSky” piece in nearcompletion. Just the daybefore, the tall poles hadbeen crowned with the“house,” a glisteningstainless steel box that onestudent guessedrepresented a paintbrush.Another suggested a birdcage.

“All the people whocame out here to maketheir lives in Montana hada dream of building theideal house,” Counihanexplained. Romanticismquickly turned to reality.

“The idea of this houseof sky,” he said, “is youcan’t live in it. It’s like adream.”

And an ever-changingdream, said Counihan,whose inspiration camefrom Montana author IvanDoig’s book “This House ofSky.”

“It’ll never look thesame because the sky isalways changing,” he said.At the moment the sky wasone thick cloud.

“It looks like a giant icecube right now, doesn’tit?”

Siegel has employedthe labors of more than adozen volunteers over thethree weeks to build hisnewspaper wall. Heengaged two of the boysfrom Bonner in a one-sidedshoving match todemonstrate how theweaving pattern,represented by offset feeton a young human,provided more stabilitythan a straight-faced wallor feet together.

How’d you build this?somebody asked Pernu asthey gazed upon his not-quite-finished piecedubbed “Picture Frame.”

It’s a big picture frame –7 meters high, Pernuanswered one query –propped up by pieces oflumber. Hundreds ofbranches gathered after athinning project in thevalley were assembled inintricate patterns throughthe frame.

The students wereintrigued.

“It’s fun to listen tothem because they seem soexcited about it,” saidHomer. “The things theylike they go, ooh, wow,cool. There’s a definiteemotional response rightaway, even if I don’t knowif they understand it.”

Homer is “fairlycertain” her studentswon’t realize the impact ofsuch a unique art park untillater.

“I mean, today it’s a wayto get out of school,” she

said. “Some day I think it’llbe something waydifferent.”

Sinead O’Dwyer, afashion designer byprofession who’s movingfrom Amsterdam to NewYork later this month topursue her career, has ledclasses through the parkeach day for the past twoweeks. They then get anopportunity to buildsculptures of their ownusing just the naturalmaterials available on theforest floor. Examples ofthe temporary works ringthe parking lot.

“Every day we’ve hadone school or two orsometimes three,” she said.“If it’s three, it’s becauseit’s some of the smallerschools. For instance,Canyon Creek, Wolf Creekand Augusta came togetheryesterday.”

Classes from Lincoln’sschools have visited twice,each of the five sculptorsalso have given talks inturn at the school. Eachhas also made an eveningpresentation at adowntown venue.

There was a side trip toHelena last Friday, for anartists’ retreat at theHolter Museum of Art, oneof the project’s biggest

supporters. Director CalebFey will be the keynotespeaker at Saturday’slaunch.

The students’ firststops these past two weekshave been to the LincolnRanger Station acrossHighway 200 from the126-acre park. Therethey’ve watched aPowerpoint presentationof the different pieces thesculptors have createdaround the world, and alsogot a load of the hugegrizzly mounted at thefront of the office.

Kevin O’Dwyer, whodoubles as the park’sartistic director, gave theBonner classes a briefoverview of the sculpturesymposium when they firstarrived.

“We’ve all come in herefor just three weeks andeverybody is responding tothis landscape in theBlackfoot Valley in adifferent way,” he said.“Each artist has his ownidea how he interprets theheritage or the landscapeof the environment of thearea.”

The centerpiece teepeeburner is still a work inprogress. It was movedseven miles from LandersFork, site of the oldDelaney mill, in pieces overthe past several days. Thebottom foundation wasreassembled in a 12-hourday last Saturday. OnWednesday, the top twosections were moved in aslow procession.

The weather and othersnags prevented the cranecrowning ceremony onThursday, but theimproving forecast forFriday and Saturday leftO’Dwyer and his crewhopeful.

Saturday’s launch willbe a treasured occasion,project director RickDunkerley said.

“We’ll be going frompiece to piece and theartists are going to talkabout their inspiration forit, and it’ll be the onlychance for that,” he said.“They’ll never all five behere again for that.”

There’s room for aboutsix more pieces in the park

before things get toocrowded, but the first halfdozen have set the barhigh.

“What’s going to keepthe interest here is to keepthe level of the work ashigh as it is,” Dunkerleysaid. “There are lots ofdifferent kinds ofsculpture, but to come inand actually buildsomething that isresponding to theenvironment is kind ofcritical for some continuityof the whole thing.”

His own dream isn’tlimited to one park in theupper stretches of theBlackfoot.

“My vision of the thinggoes all the way toBonner,” Dunkerley said. “I

heard that there’s alreadytalk about Ovando wantingto do one.”

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 – A7

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A huge picture frame with woven pine branches by Finnish artist Jaako Pemu is nearing completion.

MICHAEL GALLACHER/Missoulian

Chloe Kujawa, left, and Raia Chase get autographs fromIrish sculptor Alan Counihan.

SculptureContinued

Every minute.

Every day.

missoulian.com

NATION

SATURDAYLAUNCH

The Launch ofBlackfoot Pathways:Sculpture in the Wild isset for noon onSaturday. Following anaddress by Caleb Fey,director of Helena’sHolter Museum of Art,will be a tour throughthe woods ofsymposium sculpturesby Alan Counihan andKevin O’Dwyer ofIreland, Jaako Pernu ofFinland, Jorn Ronnauof Denmark, andSteven Siegel of NewYork. Balladeer JackGladstone will presentthe ending ceremony.The sculpture park isjust east of Lincoln onthe north side ofHighway 200. It’s opento the public at nocharge.

TEXASMost abortion clinicsto close after ruling

Nearly two-thirds ofthe abortion clinicsremaining in Texas mustclose immediately after afederal appeals courtruled Thursday that thestate may enforce a lawthat requires thosefacilities to be built to thesame standards ashospitals.

On Thursday, the 5thU.S. Circuit Court ofAppeals in New Orleanstossed out a DistrictCourt judge’s injunction,which allowed theestimated 20 abortionclinics in Texas tocontinue operating.

Los Angeles Times

| BRIEFS |

By MATT FULLERMCT

The sudden resignationWednesday of Secret ServiceDirector Julia Pierson was aboutmore than a single fence-jumpingincident at the White House orTuesday’s troubling hearing onCapitol Hill, Rep. Jason Chaffetztold CQ Roll Call.

The Utah Republican, whoearned notice – especially in GOPcircles – for his forcefulquestioning of Pierson at theHouse Oversight and GovernmentReform Committee hearing, saidthe turn of events over the past 24hours really is the culmination ofmonths of a painstakingbipartisan probe of a troubledfederal agency.

“I’ve been investigating theSecret Service for more than ayear,” Chaffetz said, referencingwork done by his Oversightsubcommittee with jurisdictionover the Secret Service. Chaffetz,who has developed sources withinthe agency, said the pressureleading to Pierson’s departure hadbeen building.

“This is not a knee-jerkreaction to what happened at theWhite House,” Chaffetz said.

After the Secret Serviceinitially downplayed the Sept. 19breach, The Washington Postreported the intrusion was farmore extensive than indicated –and revealed the agency had also“fumbled” the response to ashooting incident almost threeyears earlier at the White House.

Chaffetz was rumored to be akey source in that news report–something he refused to commenton Wednesday night. “I can’t talkabout that,” he said.

The third-term congressman,who is in the midst of a four-waybattle with fellow RepublicansMichael R. Turner of Ohio, JimJordan of Ohio and John L. Mica ofFlorida to succeed Darrell Issa as

Oversight chairman, also didn’twant to talk about whether hisstar turn in Tuesday’s hearingwould help his bid for the gavel.

But it is clear theblistering questioning of Piersonhas raised the 47-year-oldRepublican’s profile.

“Savvy Utah Lawmaker LeadsGOP on Secret Service,” read oneABC News headline.

“Secret Service chief resignsafter Chaffetz-led call forresignation,” read another in hishome-state Salt Lake Tribune.

Chaffetz – who has maderepairing frayed relationshipswith Democrats on the Oversightcommittee part of his bid for thechairmanship – on Wednesdaysaid ranking Democrat Elijah E.Cummings of Maryland and Issadeserve credit for the committee’swork on the Secret Service lapses.

“Don’t get me wrong: I did this

in conjunction with ChairmanIssa,” Chaffetz said. “He’s beenvery helpful on this.“

And while Chaffetz led theRepublican charge in calling forPierson’s resignation – he wenton Fox News after Tuesday’shearing and said she should befired – Cummings wasn’t farbehind, expressing his owndoubts about the embattleddirector’s ability to fix the agencyon Wednesday morning.

“That was no accident,”Chaffetz said. “I have beensharing items of interest withElijah Cummings for months.This is not the first time he heardabout problems at the SecretService.”

After an explosiveconfrontation earlier this year inwhich Issa ordered Cummings’microphone turned off mid-sentence, many members say thenext chairman needs to have a

better relationship with thecommittee’s ranking Democrat.And Chaffetz’s ability to keepCummings in the loop _ evenbring him along in calling for anofficial to resign – could appeal toRepublicans looking to keep thecommittee’s focus on holding theWhite House to account, notpersonality clashes.

“We’re not going to agree oneverything, but I do think we trusteach other,” Chaffetz said ofCummings. “And that’s healthy.”

Chaffetz said hehoped hiswork on the subcommittee showshe can do things in a bipartisanway, he’s serious about the subjectmatter, and he can produceresults.

“We shed light where nobodyelse was looking. I shouldn’t hearabout these things before thepresident of the United States. Butwe did,” Chaffetz said. “And that’sno accident.”

September, the jail was 15women over the45-bed limit.

“It’s stressing me outbeyond belief,” Kowalskisaid.

In the past, MissoulaCounty relied on othercounties to house theoverflow, but that’s not anoption now. According toKowalski and other jailofficials, overcrowdingconditions are the norm inevery county in Montana,and at state facilities too.Montana’s jails are packedto the limit and simply toofull to handle Missoula’sconsistent overflow, theysaid.

But there’s also aquestion of nonviolent

criminals getting jail timefor minor crimes like aprobation violation ordriving on a suspendedlicense. Kowalski saidthat’s a big problem, andboth city and countycourts are incarceratingpetty criminals.

“Those cases are therewhere a transient has a $50fine and can’t pay it,”Curtiss said.

Not so, said MissoulaCounty Attorney Fred VanValkenburg.

“Ninety-eight percentof the people who are in jailare there because theyneed to be,” he said.

If people are going to jailfor nonviolent, minorcrimes, the city – not thecounty – is sending themthere, he said.

Van Valkenburg calledfor legislative reformlimiting the city’s ability to

charge someone with astate crime, but otherpeople at the meetingsuggested the county startby reviewing its contractswith the state.

According to Curtiss,the state offered the county$5 million to build the jailin the late 1990s inexchange for the 144 bedsused by DOC inmates. Thestate also pays the jailabout $1 million per year tohouse those inmates –which is a significant pieceof the jail’s budget, Curtisssaid. If the county renegeson that contract, localtaxpayers would have to

make up the difference andthat creates anotherproblem of where to housethose inmates.

“There’s nowhere to putthem,” she said. “It’s notsomething you can say, youhave 90 days to leave.”

But she said that whileChief Civil Deputy CountyAttorney Marnie McClainreexamines the contract,the county will also look ata few quick fixes, such asoffering training tosubstitute judges about jaildiversion programs and

examining jail alternativeprograms, like communityservice or work-release.

She said adding onto thephysical structure of thejail is the absolute lastresort because, as Sheriff

Carl Ibsen put it Thursday,“If you build it, they willcome.”

Another commissionmeeting on overcrowdingat the jail is tentatively setfor next month.

A8 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

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employees to wincommittee approval whentraveling to countriesunder advisory for school-related activities.

Montana’s two flagshipuniversities were alsorequired to build andlaunch a travel registry byOct. 1 – something theUniversity of Montana hasdone.

“We evaluate eachsituation on an individualbasis,” said Marja Unkuri-Chaudhry, director ofUM’s study abroad,student exchanges andinstitutional partnerships.“If we have faculty andstaff in countries with a

warning in place, theymust obtain priorpermission for travel bysubmitting a plan as partof their travelregistration.”

Unkuri-Chaudhry saidthe issue comes up severaltimes a year as UM’sfaculty and students travelthe globe to conduct theirwork, or as staffers torecruit new internationalstudents.

The state Board ofRegents mandated thereview back in March,requiring each campuswithin the state to adoptpolicies tracking theirinternational travelers.

“We’ve been pleasedwith the travel registry,”said Unkuri-Chaudhry.“Health and safety riskmanagement is an

important part ofinternational education.It’s something we have tostay on top of.”

If a UM employee orstudent plans to travel to acountry with an activewarning, the registrytriggers an automaticreview by a committeecomprising the Office ofInternational Travel, theOffice of EnvironmentalHealth and RiskManagement, and legalcounsel.

The registry includesemergency contactinformation and asks thetraveler to identify thespecific health and safetyrisks present at thedestination, includingthose listed by the Centersfor Disease Control and

Prevention and theDepartment of State.

Travelers must alsoidentify their plans tomitigate the risks. Ifstudents are involved, itrequires the traveler toexplain the academicrelevance of the program.

“We constantly monitorworld events and carefullyassess whether that’sgoing to affect any of thetravelers based on ourprocess,” said Unkuri-Chaudhry. “If we see ahealth or security concerndeveloping and havestudents or staff in thatregion, we’ll monitor thatvery carefully.”

UM maintains 90international studentexchanges and partnerswith 150 foreignuniversities in study

abroad programs. Thenations range from TheUniversity of Ghana to theAmerican University ofSharjah in the United ArabEmirates.

“When I register forinternational travel, ourregistry will tell me whatthe warnings are,” saidJulie Cahill, assistantdirector of internationalrecruitment at UM. “I’venever gone to any placeI’ve been told not to go bythe State Department.”

Cahill said UM staffersdon’t travel to West Africato recruit students, thoughit does conduct “armchairrecruitment” throughemails and other efforts.She’s planning a recruitingtrip to Japan and Chinathis year.

“We don’t physically go

to West Africa to recruitstudents,” said Cahillwhen asked about theEbola virus. “For us, it’snot a primary target forrecruitment. But we willrecruit anywhere in theworld. We have faculty andstudents who go all overthe globe.”

On Aug. 28, the StateDepartment posted atravel alert to West Africaafter the outbreak of theEbola virus. The alertcautioned against non-essential travel andprompted the CurryHealth Center at UM toissue its own campusadvisory. The center hasalso posted a healthnotification regarding theMiddle East RespiratorySyndrome, or MERS.

JailContinued

TravelContinued

corridor is likely to see itsshare of changes over thenext few years.

“There are a lot ofbuildings down there thatmay or may not be for saleand ready for demolition,”Behan said. “That area is

mentioned as thepotential Hellgate UrbanRenewal District. Eachtime someone comesthrough Missoula, we havethe tool – that URD – topromote the area todevelopers.”

UM is expected to breakground on its four-storyMissoula College in thecoming months. The $32million project is expected

to serve as a trend-setterfor the district, setting thestage for what MRAbelieves will be a series oftransformative projects.

With the university-affiliated MonTECincubation center alreadyon site and MissoulaCollege going up next to it– and with UM sittingacross the Clark Fork River– some see the area’s

future as a possibleextension of the universityitself.

Such visions could bepunctuated by a studenthousing project.

“I know people aretalking about that,” Behansaid. “You get that manypeople of a good clientbase and customer base,and there will be pressurefor more service-type

things. It tends to swirlaround the university.”

Vacant lots in the areaare limited – the landhemmed in by the ClarkFork River, Interstate 90and the railroad. But thearea also serves as agateway to Missoula, andwith 15,000 universitystudents and employeesworking just across theriver, a mixed-use

development that includesstudent housing couldemerge as a futurepossibility.

“There aren’t manylarge parcels out there, sosomething would have tosell,” Behan said. “Thechallenges provideopportunity for theprivate sector, all kinds ofservice and retail typevenues.”

HousingContinued

FROM PAGE A1

Jacquelyn Martin/Associated Press

With a Secret Service agent in the foreground, President Barack Obama speaks at the CongressionalHispanic Caucus Institute’s 37th Annual Awards Gala at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center inWashington, D.C., on Thursday.

Secret Service turmoil may help Utah Republican

By HANNAH HESSMcClatchy

WASHINGTON – HaveSenate Majority Leader HarryReid, D-Nev., or HouseSpeaker John Boehner,R-Ohio, ever taken anelevator ride alongside anarmed contractor with acriminal record?

The answer to that andother sensitive securityquestions aboutcongressional protectivedetails is hard to find, thanksto legislation enacted in2004.

Capitol Police areexempted from having torelease to another entity anyinformation “that relates toactions taken ... in responseto an emergency situation, orto any other counterterrorismand security preparednessmeasures” unless theydetermine that releasing theinformation will not“jeopardize the security andsafety” of the Capitolcomplex.

House appropriatorsinserted that language intothe Legislative BranchAppropriations measure atthe request of thedepartment, according toreporting from this newsorganization and others at thetime. A senior Capitol Policeofficial said then thatauthority of the agency towithhold information hadbeen challenged by variousexecutive branch agencies.

The law shielded CapitolPolice from having to provideinformation security plans tothe Department of HomelandSecurity, FBI, CIA and otherexecutive branch agenciesthat might submit Freedomof Information Act requests.

CapitolPolice infohard to find

Rep. Jason Chaffetz seeks tobecome Oversight chairman

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 – A9

BEETLE BAILEY

HI AND LOIS

DILBERT

PEANUTS

LUANN

GARFIELD

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

WIZARD OF ID

MUTTS

MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM

DOONESBURY

MALLARD FILLMORE

BLONDIE

ROSE IS ROSE

PICKLES

GET FUZZY

ZITS

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

STONE SOUP

FAMILY CIRCUS DENNIS THE MENACE

40s30s20s10s

90s80s70s60s50s

100s110s

0s

Cold Front Stationary Front Warm Front Low Pressure High Pressure

L H

This map shows high temperatures,type of precipitation expected andlocation of frontal systems at noon.

LH

Anaconda 52 35 0.00" 61 36 s 66 38 sBelgrade n/a n/a n/a 57 35 s 66 38 sBig Timber 54 37 n/a 58 42 s 69 42 sBillings 57 37 Trace 57 42 s 74 48 sBozeman 52 30 Trace 55 38 s 64 42 sButte 53 30 0.00" 57 33 s 64 37 sCut Bank 39 32 0.07" 60 41 s 69 42 sDillon 59 35 0.00" 62 35 s 68 38 sDrummond n/a n/a n/a 65 32 s 71 34 sGlasgow 44 39 0.03" 52 35 s 65 45 sGlendive 48 37 0.00" 50 32 s 65 43 sGreat Falls 38 32 0.11" 58 45 s 70 46 sHamilton 57 43 n/a 62 41 s 65 42 sHardin n/a n/a n/a 57 40 s 75 46 sHarlowton n/a n/a n/a 57 40 s 75 46 sHavre 43 36 0.18" 56 38 s 68 43 pcHelena 50 33 0.12" 59 40 s 67 43 sJordan 43 37 0.00" 55 34 s 67 43 sKalispell 53 40 0.00" 58 34 s 64 40 sLewistown 45 33 0.03" 56 39 s 66 43 sLibby 61 37 0.00" 65 30 s 69 38 sLivingston 53 40 Trace 60 39 s 69 41 sMiles City 52 37 0.03" 56 37 s 71 45 sPlentywood 43 37 n/a 46 30 s 61 42 pcPolson 65 51 0.00" 61 35 s 66 40 sRed Lodge 53 37 0.05" 50 41 s 64 42 sRoundup 61 39 0.00" 56 41 s 72 45 sSalmon, Idaho 28 64 0.00" 64 34 s 68 36 sSeeley Lake 55 41 0.01" 59 28 s 64 29 sSidney 48 39 0.00" 49 29 s 63 42 pcSuperior n/a n/a n/a 64 34 s 67 38 pcThompson Falls 63 45 0.00" 65 32 s 68 35 pcW.Yellowstone 51 38 0.20" 53 25 s 60 28 sWisdom 51 22 0.00" 59 24 s 63 29 s

CityYesterday

Hi Lo Precip

State Discussion:

Weather (W): bz-blizzard, c-cloudy, fg-fog, hs-heavy snow, hz-haze, ls-light snow, mc-mostly cloudy, mx-wintery mix, pc-partly cloudy, r-rain, sh-showers, sn-snow, su-sunny, th-thunderstorm, w-wind

Flathead Lake Level: 2,892.49' Change: -0.03

Albuquerque 73 52 75 42 s 82 46 sAnchorage 50 32 48 36 pc 45 33 mcAtlanta 85 63 78 53 t 64 43 sBismarck 65 38 45 27 s 54 39 pcBoise 68 45 72 46 s 74 48 sBoston 56 54 .45 62 55 s 65 52 shCasper 64 32 58 37 s 69 41 sChicago 72 63 59 42 sh 51 41 shCleveland 78 47 74 49 sh 53 44 shDallas 95 77 .32 82 51 s 80 57 sDenver 64 39 .03 61 41 s 74 46 sDes Moines 68 63 .07 53 35 s 53 41 sDetroit 72 53 .07 72 46 sh 52 41 shFairbanks 45 30 41 29 mc 36 24 snFargo 70 47 43 32 pc 46 34 mcFlagstaff 66 33 70 34 s 73 39 sHonolulu 91 74 .01 91 76 ra 88 75 sHouston 93 79 86 58 mc 81 57 sIndianapolis 81 60 .14 66 37 t 52 36 pcJackson, Miss. 90 74 .47 84 49 t 74 44 sKansas City 68 64 2.64 57 40 s 59 48 sLas Vegas 82 61 91 69 s 94 70 sLos Angeles 98 64 99 68 s 101 65 sMiami 93 80 .44 87 77 t 89 73 tMilwaukee 76 60 .02 59 41 sh 50 39 shMinneapolis 59 55 .74 48 35 mc 49 37 raNashville 90 62 79 46 t 63 42 sNew Orleans 91 76 84 64 t 72 59 sNew York 70 61 70 60 s 69 50 shOklahoma City 84 70 .25 70 46 s 75 55 sOmaha 62 59 .02 55 33 s 58 42 sOrlando 91 74 91 75 pc 86 60 tPalm Springs 97 73 99 74 s 102 76 sPhiladelphia 73 62 73 61 pc 71 45 shPhoenix 92 69 96 68 s 98 69 sPortland, Ore. 70 48 76 53 s 77 54 pcRapid City 64 37 .04 48 34 s 64 46 sReno 76 39 80 42 s 81 47 sSt. Louis 77 67 1.21 65 42 t 56 42 sSalt Lake City 64 42 68 49 s 70 53 sSan Diego 90 66 89 65 s 86 66 sSan Francisco 91 61 90 60 s 86 59 sSanta Fe 68 40 69 38 s 76 42 sSeattle 67 50 70 55 s 70 56 shSpokane 63 40 68 43 s 72 44 pcSyracuse 75 51 78 59 s 63 43 shTucson 91 61 93 65 s 95 66 sWashington 78 63 76 62 mc 71 47 sh

Libby

65 / 30

TodayHi Lo W

SaturdayHi Lo W City

TodayHi Lo W

TomorrowHi Lo W

SundayHi Lo W City

Kalispell58 / 34

Cut Bank60 / 41

Havre

56 / 38

Lewistown56 / 39

Billings

57 / 42

Cody

57 / 40

Bozeman

55 / 38

W. Yellowstone53 / 25

Salmon64 / 34

McCall

63 / 35

Butte57 / 33

Lewiston72 / 47

Spokane68 / 43

Polson61 / 35

Great Falls58 / 45

Hamilton62 / 41

Helena59 / 40

Missoula62 / 40

Athens 75 63 s 74 62 s 73 63 shBaghdad 95 69 s 98 71 s 99 72 sBeijing 66 56 sh 64 54 sh 68 48 sBuenos Aires 67 58 mc 64 59 sh 62 54 ra Cairo 89 66 s 88 66 s 89 67 s Calgary 61 46 pc 67 41 pc 67 41 pcHong Kong 84 72 s 85 73 s 86 73 sLondon 69 57 pc 64 41 sh 63 51 sMadrid 78 59 s 81 58 s 78 55 sMexico City 75 57 t 71 55 t 72 55 raMoscow 51 42 mc 46 37 mc 44 37 clParis 76 55 s 75 49 pc 63 45 sRio de Janeiro 70 60 sh 70 58 pc 72 58 mcSydney 67 56 pc 78 55 pc 87 61 sTokyo 83 70 pc 78 65 mc 67 62 raToronto 75 55 t 55 42 ra 54 45 pc

Yesterday Montana Extremes:High: 64 at Superior Low: 22 at Wisdom

Yesterday National Extremes:High: 102 at Fullerton, Calif. Low: 16 at Bodie State Park, Calif.

Sunrise Sunset

Moonrise MoonsetNormal high/low 65 / 36Record high 84 in 2010Record low 23 in 2002

Yesterday 0.00"Month to date 0.00"Normal month to date 0.06"Year to date 10.30"Normal year to date 11.26"

Today 7:38 a.m. 7:10 p.m.Saturday 7:40 a.m. 7:08 p.m.

Today 4:24 p.m. 2:56 a.m.Saturday 5:02 p.m. 2:56 a.m.

SunnyPrecip Chance: 0%

Today

Full10/8

Montana: 800-226-7623 www.mdt.state.mt.gov Idaho: 1-888-432-7623 Wash.: 1-800-695-7623

]

Height

*CFS=Cubic feet per second, Height is in feet

Location:Bitterroot near Missoula 3.23' 891 857Bitterroot near Darby 1.46' 306 310Blackfoot near Bonner 2.18' 609 628Clark Fork above Missoula 2.98' 1,520 1,409Clark Fork at St. Regis 5.45' 2,970 3,080Missouri below Holter Dam 4.24' 4,630 4,110Flathead River at Perma 8.09' 6,870 7,400Lochsa River near Lowell 2.17' 554 499

]

Flow(cfps)

Norm.Flow

Last10/15

New10/23

First10/30

Mostly SunnyPrecip Chance: 5%

SaturdaySunnyPrecip Chance: 0%

SundayMostly SunnyPrecip Chance: 5%

MondayMostly SunnyPrecip Chance: 5%

Tuesday

Temperatures valid through 6 p.m. yesterday.

Today, skies will be mostly sunny with highs for most of the state in the 50s and 60s, and in the 40s and 50s in the mountains. Overnight lows will be in the 30s and 40s.

YesterdayHi Lo Precip

TodayHi Lo W

SaturdayHi Lo W

Today

66 / 44

Tomorrow Sunday Monday

67 / 4465 / 4059 / 33

A10 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

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KURT WILSON/Missoulian

Oct. 3, 1866Green Clay Smith arrivedin Virginia City to assumeduties as Montana’ssecond territorialgovernor. He succeededSidney Edgerton, whohad gone east the yearbefore and neverreturned. A KentuckyUnion Democrat, Smithwas an officer in both theMexican and Civil wars.He resigned in 1868 andlater ran for president onthe Prohibition ticket in1876.

The act creating MontanaTerritory was signed intolaw by President AbrahamLincoln on May 26, 1864.In 2014, the Missoulian ishelping Montana mark its150th anniversary with adaily tidbit from the past.

U-system receives temporary stay

By MARTIN KIDSTONof the Missoulian

The Montana UniversitySystem has received a

temporary stay in releasingrecords to author Jon Krakauerpertaining to the 2012disciplinary hearing ofUniversity of MontanaGrizzlies quarterback JordanJohnson.

On Sept. 12, District CourtJudge Kathy Seeley ruledagainst the MUS, giving it

21 days to release the records toKrakauer regarding the case inquestion. But the clerk of courtsaid Thursday that she didn’treceive the author’s $45 filingfee to process the judgment, asrequired.

That left Seeley’s judgmentsitting in the clerk’s office untilSept. 25, when it was stamped

by Nancy Sweeney, the clerk ofcourt. To comply with thejudgment, the MUS wasgranted a stay, giving it untilOct. 16 to comply with Seeley’soriginal order – or the full 21days.

“Apparently, the judgesigned it on Sept. 12, but it sat

Lewis detailspublic lands,sportsmen’s

platformBy CHARLES S. JOHNSON

Missoulian State Bureau

HELENA – HouseDemocratic candidate JohnLewis released his sportsmen’sand public lands platformThursday that he said shows aclear contrast with thepositions of his Republicanopponent, Ryan Zinke.

“Montana deserves achampion for access who willfight back when representativesfrom other states want to selloff Montana’s public lands topay off the national debt,”Lewis said in a statement.“When a recent budgetproposal was presented in the

Second trialin bear spraycase set for

Nov. 3By KATHRYN HAAKE

of the Missoulian

The second trial for aMissoula man charged withusing bear spray on a womanand her golden retriever lastOctober in Pattee Canyon isscheduled for Nov. 3.

His first trial, last week inMissoula Justice Court, endedin a mistrial.

Ronald Pagel pleaded notguilty to a misdemeanor assaultcharge. His initial trial endedabruptly when substitute Judge

CouchsearchingSam Hudson, left, and her mom,

Nicole, cross South Fifth Street onThursday afternoon with a largeand heavy couch they found forthe taking on the curb outside a

neighbor’s house.

SENATE DISTRICT 49

Haines: Some federal landscould be run by state

Should the Legislatureapprove a water compactwith the ConfederatedSalish and Kootenaitribes? What componentsof the deal must exist foryou to support it?

I want a clear understandingthat non-tribal peopledepending on this watersystem will not be hurt. I havenot followed this question asportrayed in the media so Iwould spend considerableeffort to understand how thecompact would work. I votedfor a compact with the CrowTribe when I was in theLegislature, but as I recall itwas not as complex.

Should the state provideenough additional moneyfor the U-system, to freezetuition for two more yearsfor Montana students asthe Legislature did in2013? Why or why not?

I want to hear fromrepresentatives of the U-system and some commentsfrom representatives ofstudents before I say yes or no.

Should the state acceptfederal dollars to expandMedicaid to cover allMontanans up to 138 percent of the federal

Sands: Affordable educationkey to Montana workforce

Should the Legislatureapprove a water compactwith the ConfederatedSalish and Kootenaitribes? What componentsof the deal must exist foryou to support it?

The compact has beennegotiated in good faith byCSKT and the state ofMontana. The compactclarifies and protects the rightsall parties and providescertainty for water users. Ifully support the compact asnegotiated and will vote toapprove it.

Should the state provideenough additional money

for the U-system, to freezetuition for two more yearsfor Montana students asthe Legislature did in2013? Why or why not?

Addressing the increasingcost of higher education mustbe a legislative priority. Toomany Montanans can’t affordto attend or are saddled withlifelong debt. Freezing in-statestudent tuition is a partialsolution to the affordabilityissue, but long-term solutionsneed to include reduction ofthe interest on student loans (afederal issue), expansion ofloan forgiveness programs for

Editor’s note: As November’s general election nears, the Missoulian is running Q&A’s with candidates for countyand state legislative offices in western Montana. Today, we look at Senate District 49, the western side of MissoulaCounty, including Orchard Homes, Target Range, El Mar Estates and Lolo, all the way to the Idaho border. All of thecoverage is online at Missoulian.com.

RECORDS ON UM RAPE CASE

Author Jon Krakauer seeksrelease of information from 2012 incident

See STAY, Page B2

See SANDS, Page B2See HAINES, Page B2

See TRIAL, Page B3

PATTEE CANYON

See LEWIS, Page B3

U.S. HOUSE RACE

in the clerk’s office for a longtime,” said Kevin McRae of theMUS. “By the time we got it,we didn’t have the real 21 days,as the judge had ordered.”

McRae said the state doesn’tplan to release the recordswithout calling in legal expertsfrom the U.S. Department ofEducation for a closer reviewof Seeley’s order and its

potential ramifications.McRae said the state cannot

risk violating the federal FamilyEducation Rights and PrivacyAct. Doing so could costMontana students millions ofdollars in educational grants, hesaid.

“The easiest thing in theworld would be for the universitysystem to release all records thepublic requests at any time,”McRae said. “But that woulddisregard the fact that there’s anexpressed federal law that

prohibits us from doing that.”Krakauer is seeking records he

believes pertain to the 2012disciplinary proceedingsconducted by UM against astudent Krakauer names asJohnson, the startingquarterback for UM’s footballteam.

The UM disciplinaryproceedings found Johnsonguilty of rape and ordered himexpelled from school. He wasnever expelled, however, andwas later found not guilty of rapein Missoula County DistrictCourt. Johnson was temporarily

suspended from the footballteam, but was reinstated afterthe criminal trial.

McRae said the state fears alawsuit if it complies withSeeley’s order, which the MUSargues will force it to violatefederal law.

“We’ll be in litigation one wayor another, whether it’s theDepartment of Education, thestudents or with Krakauer,”McRae said. “We’re trying to dothe right and responsible thinghere.”

poverty level? If so,what type of expansiondo you support? If not,why – and how will thisincome group affordhealth insurance?

How much money isneeded to reach 138percent of poverty levels.Is any state fundinginvolved or is it all federal?(Or all state?) I neededmore info before I say yesor no to the question.

If Montana has astate budget surplusnext year, what areyour priorities for what

should be done withthat money? Would youreturn some of it totaxpayers or would youinvest some ininfrastructureprojects?

State law requires abudget to have more

money in than just forappropriations. So I recallit was to be a percentage ofthe budget allocations. Isthis the money consideredas surplus or are we talkingabout surplus fundsremaining after all otherobligations are funded?

Do you supportadditional restrictionson abortion inMontana? Should theLegislature continue toapprove federal moneyto family planningclinics, includingPlanned Parenthood?

I cannot supportabortions except to savethe life of the mother or amother and child.

There’s been talkabout whethermanagement of federallands in Montanashould be transferredto the state. Would yousupport the idea? Whyor why not?

I think some

management of federallands could be and shouldbe transferred to the state.I think national parks,wilderness areas, etc.should remain in federaljurisdiction.

Do you support oroppose the legislativereferendum on theNovember ballot thatwould end voterregistration at 5 p.m.on the Friday beforeElection Day onTuesday?

I support thereferendum. I saw toomany bus loads ofstudents that had had ahamburger and beer

arriving to vote at the lastminute. I admit I could bewrong, but I suspect manyin the “last minute” crowdhad voted somewhere elseas well.

Would you supportor oppose a bill tolegalize same-sexmarriage in Montana?Why or why not?

I would support a bill tolegalize same-sexmarriage in Montanabecause such legalizationwill eventually comeabout through theLegislature or the county.

certain occupations orpublic service, andprovision of additionalfunding for our highereducation system. Thefuture of our economy inMontana is dependent on ahighly trained workforceand access to affordableeducation is a keycomponent.

Should the stateaccept federal dollarsto expand Medicaid tocover all Montanans upto 138 percent of thefederal poverty level? Ifso, what type ofexpansion do yousupport? If not, why –and how will thisincome group affordhealth insurance?

Having directedMissoula’s PartnershipCommunity Health Centerthat provides care to low-income and workingpeople without health careor insurance, I know howimportant expansion ofMedicaid is for Montana’sfamilies and our economy.We already pay for lack ofaccess to health carethrough lost work days,sick employees and lack ofpreventative care for manyfamilies. And whenuninsured people arrive atour hospital emergencyrooms they often end up inmedical bankruptcy andthe hospital assumes thedebt as charity care. Yes,we must expand Medicaidto 138 percent of povertyand access the federalfunding to pay for the cost.Expansion of Medicaid willresult in healthier familiesand grow jobs in themedical care economy.

If Montana has astate budget surplusnext year, what areyour priorities for whatshould be done withthat money? Would youreturn some of it totaxpayers or would youinvest some ininfrastructureprojects?

First, a healthy budgetsurplus is important toMontana’s economic well-being, providing a cushionagainst unexpected costsand emergencies, such as abad fire season. Also, thesurplus underwrites ourbond rating that allowsMontana to borrow moneyfor infrastructure projects

at the best interest ratesavailable, saving millionsof dollars. Second, weshould invest in “onetime” funding for criticalneeds, including majorrebuilding of ourdeterioratinginfrastructure, such asbridges, roads, water andsewer systems. Finally, weshould provide propertytax relief for primaryresidences to helpMontana’s workingfamilies, seniors and thoseliving on limited incomes.

Do you supportadditional restrictionson abortion inMontana? Should theLegislature continue toapprove federal moneyto family planningclinics, includingPlanned Parenthood?

All Montanans have aprivacy right to makehealth care decisions,including the reproductivechoices that are best forthem and their families,without governmentalinterference. Funding forfamily planning services isessential to protect womenand men’s reproductive

health, regardless ofincome. As a formerPlanned Parenthood boardmember I applaud thework they do to providehigh quality health care,cancer screening, STDprevention, healtheducation and familyplanning services.

There’s been talkabout whethermanagement of federallands in Montanashould be transferredto the state. Would yousupport the idea? Whyor why not?

I oppose any effort totransfer responsibility forfederal lands to stateagencies and voters inSD49 think this is a verybad idea. Whatever ourcurrent complaints aboutsome federal policies,there is no evidence thatstate management woulddo a better job. The state ofMontana has enough

trouble adequately fundingand managing our currentpublic lands. For example,our 56 state parks are indesperate need of fundingfor basic maintenance andimprovements. Onelegislator suggested sellingour public parks as asolution. Public lands areour heritage and must beprotected and keptaccessible for present andfuture generations.

Do you support oroppose the legislativereferendum on theNovember ballot thatwould end voterregistration at 5 p.m.on the Friday beforeElection Day onTuesday?

I oppose the effort todeny access for thousandsof Montanans who registerand vote on Election Day.As a long time pollingplace manager on ElectionDay, I frequently see voterswho believe they haveregistered with DMV butdo not show up asregistered. It is a relief tobe able to tell them theycan still register and voteon Election Day. We mustprotect every citizen’sright to cast their ballot,not place unnecessaryobstacles in their way tothe voting booth.

Would you supportor oppose a bill tolegalize same-sexmarriage in Montana?Why or why not?

I strongly supportmarriage equality forsame-sex couples as a civillegal contract. However,until the U.S. SupremeCourt overturns all banson same-sex marriage,such as in the MontanaConstitution, marriagediscrimination willcontinue in Montana. Ialso support legislative

action to prohibitdiscrimination inemployment and housingby including sexualorientation language to theMontana Human RightsAct. It is time to protecteveryone fromdiscrimination based onirrelevant characteristics,including sexualorientation.

FROM PAGE B1B2 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

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DICK HAINESAge: 77Political party: RepublicanLegislative district: SenateDistrict 49Educational background: BSME.Occupation: Engineer.Political background: Threeterms House of Representatives; twoterms on City Council.

DIANE SANDSAge: 67Political party: DemocraticLegislative district: Senate District49.Educational background: HighSchool in Frazer; graduated from theUniversity of Montana inanthropology; graduate school atGeorge Washington University in history andwomen’s studies.Occupation: Retired from the Historical Museumat Fort Missoula. Former positions: interim executivedirector of Missoula Partnership Health Center;federal/state relations at the Office of PublicInstruction; project director for the MontanaCommunity Foundation; former director of twoUSFS Youth Conservation Corps programs;executive director of the Montana Women’s Lobby.Political background: Elected four terms (eightyears) to the state House of Representatives; staff tothe state Senate majority leader; chair of the InterimCommittee on Children, Families, Health andHuman Services, vice chair of House JudiciaryCommittee; co-chair of the Democratic Women’sLegislative Caucus; chair of DPHHS CommunityHealth Center Committee; member of the CapitolComplex Advisory Committee, executive director ofthe Montana Women’s Lobby; founding boardmember of Carol’s List.Civic involvement: Missoula County ElectionsAdvisory Board and polling place manager;president of Missoula AAUW and MT AAUW publicpolicy chair; former board of Missoula PlannedParenthood and founder of MT NARAL; founder ofMT PRIDE and the UM Women’s Center, member ofthe DPHHS Mental Health Oversight AdvisoryCouncil; former chair of UM Rhodes ScholarshipCommittee, member of the Western Montana AreaHealth Education Center Advisory Board.

HainesContinued

SandsContinued

Sands

Haines

StayContinued

We’ll be in litigation oneway or another, whether it’sthe Department ofEducation, the students orwith Krakauer.

– Kevin McRae of theMontana University System

U.S. House that sought tomitigate Washingtonspending by selling offMontana lands, myopponent suggested it was‘a good framework.’ Youwill never catch mesupporting that policy,ever.”

In response, Zinkecalled this claim “a Lewislie” and added, “I’ve neveradvocated selling publiclands. What I support isreturning to healthyforests, forcing the ForestService to manage theforests and to returnreasonable timberharvest. I do think weneed to manage ourforests and our wildernessbetter.”

Lewis was referring toZinke’s comment lastspring on budget writtenby House BudgetChairman Paul Ryan,R-Wis., and which passedthe House. In an interviewwith the State Bureau inApril, Zinke called thebudget written by HouseBudget Chairman PaulRyan “a reasonableframework goingforward.”

Zinke said Thursday hesupports the Ryan budgetfor having the courage tobalance the federal budgetin 10 years and look atdiscretionary andnondiscretionaryspending. However, Zinkesaid he opposes its plansto sell federal lands and tocut Medicare spending.

In response to Zinke’scomments, Lewis’campaign spokeswomanKathy Weber said Zinke,running for lieutenantgovernor on a ticketheaded by NeilLivingstone in 2012,signed the MontanaConstitutionalGovernance Pledge. Thosesigning pledged to “workto restore all lands

unlawfully seized thefederal government,whether by congressionalacts, rules, laws decree,executive order or anyother means under colorof law, to be returned to itsrightful owners, thesovereign citizens ofMontana.”

Here are highlightsof Lewis’ platform:nMaking Montana

public lands public byimproving access. Lewiscited a recent report thatshowed 1.9 million acresof public lands in the stateare not accessible. Hesupports targetingexisting resourcesthrough the Land andWater Conservation Fundto go toward improvingaccess by prioritizing newfishing and huntingaccess sites. He also backsefforts to encouragevoluntary collaborativework with private landowners adjacent to publiclands to promote access.nWorking together to

improve access. Lewistouted efforts by privatelandowners to work withsportsmen to openmillions of acres up forhunting and fishingthrough the state BlockManagement Program. Hesaid that voluntaryprogram could bestrengthened andimproved by havingsomeone like him inCongress who iscommitted to followingthrough for sportsmen.He called for using theconservation title of thefarm bill as a criticalsource of funding forvoluntary conservation ofprivate lands to boostpublic access.n Providing better,

smarter management ofpublic lands from theground up. Instead ofwaiting for Washington,D.C., to tell Montananswhat works best, Lewisapplauded ongoing efforts

by various stakeholderswho have worked for yearsto come up withMontana-made publiclands bills. If elected,Lewis pledged to supportthe Rocky Mountain FrontHeritage Act, Forest Jobsand Recreation Act andNorth Fork WatershedProtection Act.n Freeing funding for

active management tosupport access. Lewis saidhe favors the bipartisanWildfire Disaster FindingAct, which would create aspecial disaster fund tofight “mega-fires.” Hesaid investing in wildfireprevention will savetaxpayer dollars, lost livesand property in the longrun.n Supporting public

shooting ranges. He saidhe favors granting statesthe ability to allocate aneven greater proportion offunds they receive to gofor maintaining shootingranges on federal and statelands. Nearly 300,000Montanans have huntinglicenses, while more than60 percent of Montanahomes have firearms, hesaid.n Protecting hunters

and anglers fromexcessive regulation.Lewis said he will go to batfor sportsmen as theEnvironmental ProtectionAgency considersregulations that couldaffect the availability oflead bullets and fishingtackle. He said nationalammunition shortageshave been reported in thelast six years, with 92 percent of ammoproduced in the UnitedStates being lead-based.nKeeping public lands

open. Lewis said hesupports the KeepingPublic Lands Open Act,which would preventfederal lands from beingclosed in the unfortunateevent of a governmentshutdown, such as whatoccurred last year.

GovernmentMISSOULA COUNTY

COMMISSIONERS: All-Abilities Playgroundribbon-cutting celebration,4 p.m., McCormick Park.

Public eventsBITTERROOT PUBLIC LIBRARY,

306 State St., Hamilton, 363-1670: Story time for kids,10:30 a.m. Featuring “WhereThe Wild Things Are” withstoryteller Sally Blevins.

MISSOULA PUBLIC LIBRARY,301 E. Main St., 721-2665:Tiny Tales and preschoolstorytime, 10:30 a.m.; Yarns@ the Library, noon; YoungAdult Writers, 3:30 p.m.;MakerSpace open time/project development, 1-5 p.m.

OrganizationsPACHYDERM CLUB, noon,

Elbow Room, 1855 StephensAve. Speaker: MatthewLowy, candidate for justiceof the peace.

MISSOULA SENIORCITIZENS, 705 S. HigginsAve., 543-7154,missoulaseniorcenter.org:yoga, 9 a.m.; quilters, 10a.m.; lunch, 11:30 a.m.;pinochle, cribbage, bridge,12:45 p.m.; pinochle, 7 p.m.

BirthsChristina and Calvin Larsen,

Plains, girl, Sept. 30Katrina and Eric Weckenbrock,

Missoula, boy, Sept. 30Emily Clark and David Benjamin

Prior, Missoula, Sept. 26Chloe A. Ferguson-Morgan and

Cody D. McDuffie, Missoula,boy, Sept. 26

Nicole Pettijohn and EthanFulks, Missoula, boy, Sept. 26

Eryn Stoddard, Lolo, boy, Sept.25

Holly Trail and Josh West,Missoula, boy, Sept. 25

Colette and Calvin Peterson,Stevensville, girl, Oct. 1

Amber and Jason Stewart, Loloboy, Oct. 2

Justin BruceJohnson

HAMILTON – JustinBruce Johnson was born onNov. 18, 1988, to BruceJohnson and Janet (Steele)Johnson in Williston, NorthDakota. He passed awayTuesday, Sept. 30, in Helena.

Visitation will be held onFriday, Oct. 3, from 5 to 7 p.m.at the Daly-Leach Chapel.Funeral services will be heldon Saturday, Oct. 4, at 2 p.m.at the Assembly of GodChurch Hamilton with burialto follow at RiverviewCemetery. Condolences maybe left for the family atdalyleachchapel.com.

Roger RallHAMILTON – On

Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2014, theworld lost a wonderful man,Roger Rall, 72, of Hamilton.He died peacefully in thehome that he built.

Funeral services will beheld Monday, Oct. 6, at 2 p.m.at Grace Lutheran Church, 275Hattie Lane, with Pastor VernSandersfeld officiating.Interment will take place atRiverview Cemetery inHamilton immediatelyfollowing the service. Aluncheon hosted by the ladiesof Grace Lutheran will be heldat the church followinginterment.

Condolences may be leftfor the family atdalyleachchapel.com.

John MorganDavies

ALBERTON – JohnMorgan Davies, 75, ofAlberton, passed away onMonday, Sept. 29, 2014, at thefamily home on Petty Creek.

John was born on March30, 1939, in Fairbanks, Alaska,to Audrey and W. MorganDavies. He left Alaska in l957to attend the University ofMontana and worked as anelectronic repairman until hisretirement.

On Sept. 28, 1966, hemarried Patricia Heminger,the luckiest day of her life. Heloved to spend time with hisfamily, read, collect plunder,work on his computer andspend time with his goodfriend, Richard Houldson,machining small metal parts.

He is survived by his wifePatricia of Petty Creek; fourdaughters, Sarah (Mark)Spadaro of Cleveland, Ohio,Katherine (Mike) Mullin ofSitka, Alaska, Emily (Ryan)Thiessen of Helena and Brigid(Chuck) Spence of Alberton;two sons, John Morgan(Morgan) of North Bend,Oregon, and Noah (Carolina)of Colorado Springs; hisbrother James (Sunny) ofAnchorage, Alaska, and threegrandchildren, Clare and FinnMullin and Sylvia Thiessen;and his beloved dog Hopper.

John was a good andhonest man without pretense.His humor was unique and hispersonal integrity, courageand intellect were of the firstorder. Goodbye, My Love.

A memorial will be held atthe family home nextsummer. Arrangements underthe care of Garden CityFuneral Home.

Sheila RaeChristensen

VICTOR – Sheila RaeChristensen (Nana) was bornon Nov. 20, 1943, inBellingham, Washington. She

lived a happy,fun-filled 67years, but leftus for hernextadventure onMonday,Sept. 29,2014. Shegrew up inSeeley Lakeand attended

high school at Hellgate andSentinel schools. She retiredfrom Victor School District in2009.

She leaves behind threechildren, Clint (Jamie) Riceand Joe (Tammy) Rice of Arleeand Rhonda (Sam) Kinney ofRonan; nine grandchildren,and four great-grandchildren.In her words, “I have the mostbeautiful kids and grandkids.”She is also survived by twosisters, Kathy (John) Lewis ofVictor and Christie (Ray)Brander of Avon and twobrothers, Jim Christensen ofStevensville and Craig (Peggy)Christensen of Darby, andseveral nieces and nephews.She was preceded in death byher parents Lyla and RobertChristensen, and two brothersRoy Lyle and Robert Dean.

Her spirit of adventure wasunsurpassed. She enjoyedhorseback riding, gardening,and taking care of all of her“critters.” One of her favoritememories was riding in the2000 Montana CentennialCattle Drive. She lovedFlathead Lake and attendedthe Christensen familyreunion in 2013 and got a tourof Wild Horse Island. In 2014,she attended anotherChristensen family reunionwhere she was able to reunitewith cousins she hadn’t seenin 50 years.

Her final days were filledwith extreme joy as she wassurrounded by friends andfamily. She loved hearing allher little grand babies runningaround the house. She smiledand said, “pitter-patter,pitter-patter, that is the bestsound there is,” whilelistening to all the little onesrunning up and down the hall.Sheila feels her greatestaccomplishment in life washer three children. Despitehaving health issues, she hada perpetual grin on her faceand was full of spunk andhumor the entire time. Shewas full of energy and aninspiration to all.

Nana’s celebration of lifefor friends and family will beheld on Saturday, Oct. 11, atVictor Senior Citizens Center,246 Fifth Ave., Victor,beginning at noon.

Condolences andmemories may be shared withthe family atbrothersmortuary.com.

Ramona L. (Vacura)Larson

MISSOULA – Ramona L.(Vacura) Larson, 86, diedWednesday, Oct. 1, at theVillage Health Care Center inMissoula.

Brothers Mortuary andCrematory is assisting thefamily with memorialservices.

Merlynn Brown‘Minnie’ McOmber

CORVALLIS – MerlynnBrown “Minnie” McOmber,60, of Corvallis, diedWednesday, Oct. 1, at theMarcus Daly Hospice andPalliative Care Center.

Arrangements are underthe care of the Daly-LeachChapel.

Jill K. MorganCORVALLIS – Jill K.

Morgan, 45, of Corvallis, diedWednesday, Oct. 1, at herhome of natural causes.Arrangements are under thecare of the Daly-LeachChapel.

Sam A. RobertsMISSOULA – Col. Sam A.

Roberts, 95, of Missoula, diedat St. Patrick Hospital onWednesday, Oct. 1.

Services are pending.Arrangements are under thecare of Garden City FuneralHome.

Brandon BryceDuMont

RONAN – Brandon BryceDuMont, 18, was called homeon Monday, Sept. 29, 2014.Brandon was born March 26,1996, in Missoula to proudparents, Dennis Alexander

DuMont andSarah ElaineWebster-Decker.

Brandonwas a proud2014 graduateof RonanHigh School.Brandon wasa talentedathlete

participating in baseball,basketball, golf, MMA, track,football and wrestling. Heexcelled in wrestling as adivisional placer, two-timedivisional champion andthree-year state placer.Brandon was strongacademically, when he wantedto be, and received ascholarship for wrestling atMontana State University-Northern. Brandon wasundeniably dedicated toanything he dreamed and hiswork ethic was incomparable.

When Brandon was about6 or 7 years old, he was a verygood chess player. In his freetime, Brandon, ran road race-courses with his DodgeStratus RT and he was veryproud of his Dodge truck.Brandon enjoyed motorcycleriding, fishing, camping,swimming, hiking, modelbuilding, working on cars inthe shop and makingdoughnut toast around thecampfire. Brandon was asocial butterfly and was wellloved by his friends andfamily. Brandon’s amazingsmile will forever beremembered.

Brandon was preceded indeath both grandfathers,Dennis DuMont and FrankWebster, and will bewelcomed with open arms bynumerous loved ones.Brandon is survived byparents Dennis (Sarah)DuMont and Sarah (Dan)Decker; grandparents PattyDuMont and DorothyWebster; siblings, Tahsha(Jim) Brady, CorderoMcArthur, Cole McArthur,Courtney Perry, Aaron Perry,Aubrey DuMont, AaliyahDecker and Beaudean Decker.Being blessed with such alarge family Brandon leavesbehind numerous aunts,uncles, cousins that love andwill miss him.

Wake services began onWednesday evening at theWebster family home on LittleMartin Road in Ronan. Rosarywill be Friday evening at 7p.m. with wake closing tobegin Saturday at 11 a.m.Services will follow at RonanCommunity Center at 2 p.m.Brandon will be laid to rest inthe Calvary Cemetery, Ronan.A meal will follow at theRonan Community Center.Everyone is invited to attendthe celebration of Brandon’slife.

Gary GeerSTEVENSVILLE – Gary

Geer, a longtime resident ofStevensville, passed away in

Arizona fromHuntington’sdisease onMonday, Sept.29, 2014. Hewas born onSept. 19, 1937,to Walter andBeulah Geerin Rolla,North Dakota.He moved to

Montana as a teenager andgraduated from StevensvilleHigh School in 1955.

Gary married JudiHildebrandt in 1959 and theyhad three children. He wasemployed at StevensvilleForemost Creamery andcreameries in Hamilton andMissoula. He ended his careerat Whitetail Golf Course as agreens keeper. He was an avidgolfer and served on the boardof directors for the golf course.His efforts and love for thesport of golf wereinstrumental in establishingthe course that is used todayby many of his family andfriends.

He is preceded in death byhis parents and siblings,Audrey Ebel, Donne Geer andBill Geer. He is survived by hischildren, Vicki Geer, SandiGeer and Ricky Geer (Debbie);grandchildren Kisha Geer,Anthony Froehlich, RandyEngland and Jimmy White;two great-granddaughters;sister- in-law Rosemary Geer,and numerous nieces andnephews.

A graveside service willtake place at 11 a.m. Oct. 11 atRiverside Cemetery inStevensville. There will be apotluck to follow at the HighCountry in Stevensville. In lieuof flowers, the family suggestsdonations to the StevensvilleHigh School golf team.

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 – B3

MONTANA

| OBITUARIES |

| DEATH NOTICES |

| CALENDAR |

Christensen

DuMont

Geer

Marie Andersen called a mistrial shortlybefore closing arguments, “claiming anirregularity in the proceedings.”

The new trial date was set during ahearing Thursday.

According to prosecutors, the then66-year-old man sprayed the dog and its

owner, Shenandoah Roath, while theywere hiking in the Pattee CanyonRecreation Area.

The unleashed dog approached Pagel,prompting him to spray the canine, andwhen Roath confronted him, prosecutorsclaimed he sprayed the woman, too.

Pagel said he sprayed the woman byaccident when the dog approached him asecond time. His actions, he claimed,were all in self-defense.

LewisContinued

FROM PAGE B1

TrialContinued

By PERRY BACKUSRavalli Republic

FLORENCE – The longwait for thousands ofFlorence-area commuterscreeping daily over the oldbridge east of town isabout to end.

Sometime betweenFriday and Monday, thebarriers blocking access toa brand new bridge overthe Bitterroot River willfinally come down andtraffic will be reroutedover the structure.

“We’re shooting forFriday, but it could getpushed off to Monday,”said Montana Departmentof Transportation projectmanager Bill Maart.

Once traffic is divertedto the new bridge, Maartsaid crews will beginremoving a portion of theold structure to createenough space so a bikelane and barrier can becompleted on the newbridge.

“They will only take

down a little bit of it rightnow,” Maart said. “Theywon’t start demolishingthe rest of the bridge untillater on this winter.“

Plans call for pavingboth approaches to thenew bridge during thisyear’s construction seasonif the weather holds.

Construction on the $11 million project on theEastside Highway just eastof Florence began inearnest in March. Thelargest portion of thepaving was completed thissummer, but the bridgeremained a bottleneck forthe nearly 8,000commuters who use theroad daily.

“The constructioncrews really screamedthrough the majority ofthe project,” Maart said.“People were really happyto see that get completedso quickly, but they were alittle disappointed withthe slow down at thebridge.”

The new roundabout

seems to be working wellnow that people havefigured it out, he said.

“I didn’t hear too muchabout it,” he said. “Therewere a few people withconcerns or questionsabout roundaboutetiquette. The biggestproblem is there are somepeople who are justterrible drivers. You can’tfix them.”

Maart said there willstill be some seeding,paving of approaches anda chip seal next year beforethe project is complete.

“The main thing that Itell people is that it’s allweather dependent,” hesaid. “I have to schedulechanges on a daily basis.That’s one of the mainthings I hear from people.They’ve heard somethingwould be done by a certainday and then it wasn’t.”

“So I’m saying wepossibly could have thenew bridge open Friday,but conservatively it willopen Monday,” Maart said.

FLORENCE

Bridge over Bitterroot Riverset for weekend opening

KALISPELLBrowning man admitspunching girlfriend

KALISPELL (AP) – ABrowning man who hastwice been convicted ofpartner or family memberassault has pleaded guiltyto assaulting his girlfriendin an agreement that calls

for prosecutors torecommend he serve afive-year suspendedsentence with theDepartment ofCorrections.

Calvin Steve SpottedEagle, 39, pleaded guiltyThursday to felony partneror family member assault.

Prosecutors allegedSpotted Eagle was arguing

with his girlfriend in lateAugust and punched herin the head as they walkedin downtown Kalispell.The woman fell, struck herhead on the pavement andwas knocked unconscious.

Charging documentssay Spotted Eagle draggedher to the side of the road.

Sentencing is set forDec. 19.

| BRIEFS |

ELECTIONS 2014Same-day registration eases issues

Sen. Jeff Essmann’s guest column(Sept. 15) ignores the fact thatconscientious citizens don’t always knowthat they are not registered to vote. IfLegislative Referendum 126 passes,finding this out on Election Day will betoo late.

In 1990, I arrived at my customary,local polling station to vote in the schoolboard election in another state, only tofind that I was not registered to vote. Tomake it more troubling, I was a candidate.No one had noticed that I was ineligibleto run or vote. I was given a provisionalballot and hired an attorney for severalhundred dollars to establish that I wasqualified to be a candidate. A few dayslater the matter was settled and I wasdeclared one of the winners.

How could this have happened?Clearly it is not that I did not consider theelection and my vote important enough,despite the assertion made by the senatorabout the reason people fail to register tovote in a timely manner.

It turned out that in the summer of1988, my husband’s company hadtransferred him to England for over ayear. We both voted absentee in thepresidential election that November, butmy sample ballot was returned asundeliverable. I returned in January of1990 to our previous address, butsomeone in the county board of elections had removed my name from the list of registered voters on the basis of the returned sample ballot and I

became disenfranchised.How easy it is to lose one’s voting

privilege. Please vote no on LR126.Arlene Walker-Andrews,

Missoula

Creationist Daines not qualifiedSteve Daines proudly proclaims his

belief that creationism is the correctexplanation for the diversity of life onEarth. He says that evolution is bunk, aliberal charade purveyed on America by

godless anti-Christians, and thatcreationism should be taught inMontana’s and the nation’s scienceclasses.

The fact that Daines, R-Mont.,believes in creationism instead ofevolution speaks volumes about who he is– none of it good for a man aspiring torepresent Montana in the U.S. Senate.

To reject evolution is to reject all ofmodern science. Evolution is as wellestablished as any other scientificexplanation of the universe we inhabit.

The evidence for it is overwhelming.Evolution is the foundation underlying allof today’s biology and medicine. To rejectit is the height of ignorance.

If Daines becomes our U.S. senator,Montana will become the laughingstockof this nation and the world. All advancedcountries teach evolution in theirschools; none teach creationism. Themain point is that Daines, by believing increationism and a 6,000-year-old earth,defines himself as a scientific illiterateand thus unfit for any elected office inthis country, particularly the U.S. Senate.

Science is the basis for all of thetechnology and economic development inthis country. Without a knowledge of andbelief in science, one cannot legislatewell, nor create jobs in a scientificallybased society. Thus, no jobs will becoming from Daines. How could hepossibly understand the complexities ofany of the legislation before the Senate,almost all of which either directly orindirectly depends upon science and theweighing of evidence? Daines, believingin a 6,000-year-old earth, has provenhimself incapable of such thinking.

Please vote for Amanda Curtis – awoman who knows biology, mathematicsand the scientific method – forMontana’s U.S. senator.

Matthews O. Bradley,Kalispell

Today, the Missoulian’seditorial board introduces anew regular feature on ourOpinion page: Huckleberriesand Chokecherries. EachFriday, we will use this editorialspace to present“Huckleberries” to the peoplewho deserve specialrecognition for doingsomething positive, and therecent events that warrantcheering. By the same token,we’ll dole out “Chokecherries”to those who’ve donesomething disappointing, andthe events that causedconsternation in the past week.

You can join in this newfeature by sending us yournominations for “berries” byemail at [email protected] on the Missoulian OpinionFacebook page. Then watcheach Friday for another crop ofberries: We hope you enjoy it!

Huckleberries to politicalcandidates willing to face theiropponents in a public debate.This election cycle, thatincludes Montana U.S. Housecandidates John Lewis and

Ryan Zinke, who participated intheir first one-on-one debateMonday night. Up until almostthe last minute, it looked asthough a debate wouldn’thappen. Zinke’s campaign citeda scheduling conflict but thenmade the necessary re-arrangements so that theRepublican could be at theMontana State University-Billings campus to debateDemocrat Lewis. The winner ofthis debate? Montana voters.

Chokecherries to thecandidates who refuse todebate in Missoula. While adebate in Billings – oranywhere else in Montana – iscertainly better than none,residents of western Montanahave concerns that are uniqueto this side of the state. Thoseconcerns deserve to beaddressed, and debated, in aformat that allows everyMontana voter to hear how a

particular candidate wouldsolve them, as well as whatpriority that candidate wouldassign those solutions.Candidates who claim to be toobusy, too certain of the electionor any other excuse don’tdeserve your vote.

Huckleberries to Ebolareadiness. As awful as this virusis – it’s killed at least 3,000people in Africa so far this year– it’s comforting to know thatthe staff and facilities at St.Patrick Hospital are equippedto handle any patients whoshow symptoms of the disease.It’s especially comforting giventhat the first case of Ebola inthe United States was recentlydiagnosed, in Texas. St. Pat’shas a special wing of itsintensive care unit modified tosafely treat any patients withEbola or other contagiousdiseases, while keeping thewider community safe and

healthy too.

Chokecherries to the messMissoula CountyCommissioners have allowedthe Missoula CountyFairgrounds AdvisoryCommittee to become. Thisweek the former chairwoman ofthe Missoula CountyFairgrounds AdvisoryCommittee, Diane Beck,resigned after deeming thevolunteer panel “a completewaste of my time.” We don’tblame her a bit – or the otherfive people who have resignedthis year. Four other membersended their terms Sept. 30, butbefore they may reapply, thecounty has to determine howmany members the boardshould have. A resolution says11; the bylaws say 15, and thelongstanding discrepancywasn’t discovered until August.And little wonder – thecommittee hasn’t held a

meeting since May.

Huckleberries to a newtrail to Frenchtown’selementary and intermediateschools. The investment madein this trail – a little more than$300,000 – is sure to reaprewards well into the future, ashundreds of students maketheir way to and from schoolsafely. Hopefully, the trail willencourage even more youngpeople – and their older siblingsand parents – to walk or bike inFrenchtown.

Chokecherries to tuitionincreases. While the averagecost of higher learning has risendramatically this millennium,Montana has enacted a series oftuition freezes to try to keepcollege and universityeducation affordable.Nevertheless, this week theadvocacy group Alliance for aJust Society reported thattuition at Montana’suniversities has doubled since2000 – and the averageMontana student is now morethan $27,000 in debt.

n Comments: Keep theconversation going. To commenton any of these letters, go toMissoulian.com/news/opinion/mailbag.

OpinionMISSOULIAN EDITORIAL

EDITORIAL BOARDPublisher Mark Heintzelman, Editor Sherry Devlin, Opinion Editor Tyler Christensen

NEWSROOM 523-5240

YOU SAID IT ONLINE“Washington needs more leadership and lesspolitics.”

– Leith Wimmer, Montana City

FRIDAY, October 3, 2014B4

New ‘huckleberries’ and ‘chokecherries’ feature begins

L ast weekend’s gathering atFairmont of the remainingdelegates to Montana’s

1972 Constitutional Conventionreminded me of Montana’shistory of corporate dominance;

also of ouremergence as acitizen-stateduring twoperiods ofprogressivechange, and thelurking danger ofsliding back intocorporatedominance.

From itsbeginning,Montana wasdominated

economically and politically bypowerful interests. Eventually,“The Anaconda Company” andits friends ran the state. Policywas determined in New YorkCity. Control of the news wasrigid. Anaconda’s corporatedominance in Montana’spolitical affairs was unique inAmerican history. For its first 75years, Montana was a one-company state, unlike anyother.

Montana’s first progressiveperiod, from 1904-1914, sawMontana becoming the first

state to pass child labor laws forchildren under 16; passing theeight-hour workday; limitingcampaign spending; prohibitingany corporate money incampaigns; allowing Montanavoters, rather than theLegislature, to elect our U.S.senators; and giving women theright to vote before it became anational standard. And in 1924,by initiative, we enacted a metalmines tax to make miningcompanies pay their fair sharefor the first time.

But then “The Company”and its allies tightened theCopper Collar aroundMontana’s neck for another 40years until the secondprogressive period. Between1965 and 1980, the peopletransformed Montana from acorporate colony into a free,modern state. In that secondprogressive period, the fulcrumof that change came was those100 Montanans who crafted ournew Constitution.

State government’s executivebranch was reorganized into lessthan 20 departments under thegovernor, reversing the buildupover nearly a century of nearly200 uncontrolled boards,bureaus and commissions,which had made it easier for

private corporate interests tocontrol Montana.

A modernized Legislatureemerged with increasedstaffing; legislative council;legislative auditor; legislativefiscal division; legislative voteswere that recorded and madepublic; single-memberlegislative districts, whichbrought people closer to theirlegislators; and no longer didAnaconda Company-paidattorneys draft the legislativebills.

Montana got more flexibleand empowered localgovernments; a fairer taxstructure; open and transparentgovernment including openmeetings and open records;more participatory selection ofjudges; strong judicial andlawyer standards; morerecognition of workers’ rights; astrong right of privacy; and theright to a clean and healthfulenvironment.

Women emerged with rightsunder the law and increasedtheir political power.Constitutionally guaranteedequal rights for all wereestablished. More up-to-datecampaign reform laws werepassed. And the corporate-financed effort to put a

regressive general sales tax onMontanans was stronglyrebuffed at the polls because itwas seen as a massive tax shiftfrom corporations to littlepeople.

At the conclusion of thesecond Montana progressiveera, Montanans were in chargeof their own destiny. But theeconomic and power elite havenot gone quietly into the night.They continue to fight back forpower and privilege, both herein Montana and nationally.

The U.S. Supreme Court hasessentially declaredcorporations to be citizens andunleashed unlimited moneyinto the political arena,allowing the wholesalepurchase of our democracy. The“Best Congress Money CanBuy” continues to reward therich and punish the poor,creating an economic climatethat destroys the middle class.In Montana, efforts to drivecorporate tax obligations downto zero and eliminate anyregulation at all are combinedwith efforts to make it moredifficult for people to vote.

With this unrestrictedcampaign money, the super-rich and the large corporationsvirtually “buy” their own

version of the truth and often“buy” the support of regularfolks to vote against their owninterests.

Montana residents should bealert and informed whenentering the polling booth orfilling out absentee ballots.They should look past theadvertising, public relationsand the rhetoric and lookclosely at the candidates. Thinkabout who is paying for thingsand ask “why.”

Montana shouldn’t backslideinto that old corporatedominance. We can honor those100 Montana constitutionaldelegates who carved out a newand better Montana by beinginformed; by knowing where wecame from and what we havegained; by considering theweak, not the wealthy; byvoting in the interest of thepeople, not the powerful.

Evan Barrett, of Butte, hasspent the past 45 years at thetop level of Montana economicdevelopment, government,politics and education. He is thedirector of Business &Community Outreach and aninstructor at Highlands Collegeof Montana Tech. These are hispersonal views.

Stop Montana from backsliding into old corporate dominance

EVANBARRETT

Letters

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 – B5

OPINION

International education makes Montana’s future brighterBy KELSEY STAMM

M ontana is known for itsmany wondrous naturalattributes, but one thing

it is not renowned for is beingcosmopolitan. With somenotable exceptions, in recentyears Montana has beencomparatively isolated fromexposure to internationalcultures. Due to advances intravel and communicationtechnology, together withconcerted efforts to bring culturalexchange to Montana, ourcommunities are gaining moreaccess to such enrichingopportunities.

The benefits of travel andmaking internationalconnections are notinconsequential. Gov. SteveBullock has clearly prioritized theeconomic benefits ofinternational exchange, asdemonstrated by his recent tradedelegation to China. Suchengagement is becomingincreasingly common as Montanalooks to become a seriouscompetitor in international trade.

The benefits of internationalexchange are particularlysignificant to Montana youth.Young people who participate ininternational exchange havegreater knowledge and awarenessof other cultures. More than that,they acquire advanced skills incommunication, problem-solving, a greater sense ofpurpose and stronger criticalthinking. Evidence also suggeststhat youth who participate ininternational education are moreinclined to attend college andidentify career goals earlier thantheir peers.

During the 2013 InternationalEducation Week, U.S. Secretaryof State John Kerry said,“International educationprepares our youth for theglobalized 21st centuryworkforce, whatever the field ofstudy someone may choose.Students with experienceoverseas gain the skills, they gainself-reliance and they gain aworldview that they need in orderto compete in a global economy.”

I have been fortunate towitness the impact of

international education onMontana youth by leading theMaureen and Mike MansfieldCenter’s American YouthLeadership Program, sponsoredby the U.S. Department of State.In 2013 and 2014, I led two groupsof 20 Montana high schoolstudents and two high-schoolteachers to Cambodia to studyenvironmental issues. The monthI spent with each group isunforgettable. Unforgettablebecause, yes, there was a leechambush in the jungle, thehumidity is over 90 percent andteenagers are faced with having tolearn to bathe with a bucket – butthe real eye-opening experiencesfor these young people run muchdeeper.

Consider Charlotte’sreflection on her experience inCambodia last summer: “Seeingfirsthand the struggles, thelandscape, the work, the poverty,the behavior and the culture ofCambodians provides insightinto the lifestyles of much of theworld’s population. It helps usbetter understand the world weare growing up in and the

struggles we will face and theproblems we will have to solve. Inan increasingly globalized world,that kind of education is mostimportant.”

Each person in the AYLPCambodia program was affectedin a personal way. However, basedon two years of this program,participants have cited similarchanges as a result of thisexchange: greater motivation toperform community service andhelp others; more open-minded;increased interest in internationalaffairs and travel; moreappreciative for what they have athome and as U.S. citizens; greaterself-awareness and confidence;better public speaking andteamwork skills; moreindependent and able to solveproblems; and more prepared toleave for college.

These are significant changes.These are 40 of Montana’s futureleaders more prepared – andeager – to take on challengeslocally and internationally.

This is why I am grateful thatthe Mansfield Center has beengiven the opportunity by the U.S.

Department of State to extendthis opportunity to moreMontanans. We are honored toannounce that we are recruiting20 Montana high school studentsand two Montana educators totravel on an all-expense-paidprogram to Thailand in 2015.Participants will engage withtheir Thai peers in learning aboutfood security and climate change,while developing leadership skillsand conducting communityservice. They will experience thediversity of this beautifulcountry, from urban areas likeBangkok, to the southern MalayPeninsula, to the rural hill tribesof the north. We are activelyseeking people from allbackgrounds and abilities toapply. After all, it’s not just anexchange with Thai, but with oneanother.

For the application andprogram information, please visitumt.edu/mansfield.

Kelsey Stamm is a programmanager with the MansfieldCenter at the University ofMontana.

POLITICAL ADSRight to opt out taken away

Like most folks who have had a stomachfull of political TV ads and mailings, Iposted a note on my mailbox stating thatmy box would no longer accept unsolicitedpolitical election “garbage” of any kindfrom any party.

Today a note was left by my mailmanstating that according to the local Florencepost office manager, he was “required” todeliver this trash.

Someone better explain why I am forcedto accept this stuff or any unsolicited bulkmail, all of which winds up in my trash canupon delivery. And, when did I lose yetanother right to my privacy?

I should be able to opt out of all thiswaste of paper and my time.

Alan Gelman,Florence

COMMUNITY MEDICAL CENTERDon’t be apathetic with future

A framed document titled “Donor’s Billof Rights” is prominently displayed on atable in the Community Medical CenterFoundation office. It assures donors “thatphilanthropy merits the respect and trustof the general public and prospectivedonors can have full confidence in the nonprofit organization and causes they areasked to support; we declare all donorshave these rights.” No. IV, listed in theDonor’s Bill of Rights, says, “to be assuredgifts will be used for the purpose for whichthey were given.”

Those citizens who raised $1.1 million tobuild Community hospital 40 years ago,and subsequent donors, gave the gift to anonprofit charitable entity, not for theprofit motives of a multinationalconglomerate.

I have been told that doctors who wereinvited by the CMC board to discusspossible changes to the hospital’s businessstructure were restricted to options thatdidn’t include keeping it the same localnonprofit entity, and were required to signnon-disclosure statements. Was the board,itself fatigued by overwhelmingpresentations of alternates to the currentstructure? CMC makes a profit every year,that is why an equity firm wants it. Thebusiness is turning a profit. I hope the CMCboard sees there was no legitimate reasonto avoid public scrutiny or to avoidpetitioning public opinion.

Missoula County Commissioners needto take a leadership role in representingcitizen’s interest in the sale now pendingwith the state attorney general’s office.

Citizens, don’t allow yourself to beapathetic regarding this failure to honordonor rights. How can we fight fordemocracy in foreign lands if we don’trecognize our failure to be aware of anddefend our “rights” at home?

Visit facebook.com/pages/save-missoula-community-hospital/726157284136274.

Margie Hendricks,Polson

ELECTIONS 2014Larsen offers endorsements

For the past six years I have had thehonor of representing the citizens ofSenate District 50 in the MontanaLegislature. Most of this region isredistricted as Senate District 49 effectiveJan. 1, 2015.

I have aimed to serve the diverse

interests of this district well and havelistened to many, many folks who haveconcerns about our community andMontana. I’m told we have communicatedpretty darn well.

It is my pleasure to introduce some newcandidates who will work for you andlisten to your concerns:

Former state Rep. Diane Sands isrunning for the new SD49. She helped mesecure funding for improving entrance andexit roadways into Lolo School from theMontana Department of Transportation,which greatly improved safety. Sands alsoworked to obtain permanent funding forTraveler’s Rest State Park and wasinstrumental in helping fund the low-income housing project in Lolo.

Willis Curdy is running for the newHouse District 98. A longtime resident ofthe area, a rancher/farmer and teacher, hehas been active serving on the MissoulaRural Fire Department Board of Trustees,the Graduation Matters Missoula ParentCommittee and organizing high-schoolsenior projects for Missoula seniorcitizens.

Bill Geer is well known to folks in theLolo area, having served on the LoloCommunity Council as vice chairman forfive years. He has also served on theBitterroot Meadows HomeownersAssociation board for 20 years, is pastchair of Mullan Trail District of Boy Scoutsand a board member of Hellgate Huntersand Anglers for five years. Geer and hiswife, along with six other Lolo citizens,operate the Lolo Food Bank. His goal is torepresent the new House District 97.

These fine people will serve you well. Ioffer my unqualified endorsement andhope you will give them your vote.

Sen. Cliff Larsen,Senate District 50,

Missoula

Rights should outweigh inconvienceJust another reminder of why it is so

important to defeat – vote no on –Legislative Referendum 126.

During the last election cycle, I poll-watched at St. Joseph School. I was shockedat the number of people who thought theywere registered, but weren’t. They hadmoved from one place in Missoula toanother, or “thought” they had theiraddress changed, but hadn’t. So manythings happen in our fast-paced world it is

hard to keep up. If this referendum ispassed, these folks would be out of luck.

Voting should be the easiest thing in ourdemocracy to do, and voters’ rights shouldoutweigh a little inconvenience for electionstaff. I have struck up some of the bestconversations ever while waiting in line tovote!

Susie Reber Orr,Missoula

GOP doesn’t vote for MontanaRepublican candidates for Congress use

their Montana roots to justify theirconservative views. My Montana roots goback to the 1860s. I am conservative in thesense that I support the EnvironmentalProtection Agency, a Republican creationwhen they were a party of the “people.”Clean air and water are vital to life andhealth. Beyond this, I am liberal. I believe inthe instruments created by our foundingfathers: equality, justice for all, the right tovote, the Bill of Rights and theConstitution.

Republican Ryan Zinke feels his militaryexperiences are an asset to take toCongress. Though they may apply on abattlefield, in a democratic form ofgovernment, the use of tact, diplomacy andcompromise are better suited foundations.Both candidates’ idea of “my way or noway” describes the tea party. Obstructionhasn’t helped Montana, so why continuewith a failed policy?

Both Steve Daines, R-Mont., and Zinkebemoan the national debt, which is a resultof the Republican actions of tax cuts for thevery rich, corporate tax cuts and borrowingto pay for President George W. Bush’s wars.They support cutting social programs thathelp Americans including Medicare, SocialSecurity, school lunch programs for needykids, education and even “Sesame Street.”

Republicans want to legislate women’sreproductive rights and they are againstequal pay for equal work, effectivelyreturning women to the stature of second-class citizens.

The Forest Jobs and Recreation bill,written with input from loggers, ranchers,farmers, sportsmen and, yes,environmentalists, was ignored by Dainesbecause he has his own forest bill. Nodoubt, it will favor the corporate interestsover Montanans because the dark-moneypockets of these interests will buy thesecongressional seats.

Before voting Republican, try to recallthe last time a bill was passed by this partythat benefited Montanans.

John Walden,Missoula

Check the ‘none of the above’ boxGet real!One individual running for office

believes he is qualified because he was aNavy SEAL (thank you for your service)and wants to rid the world of“Obamacare.”

Another running for office claims hewill prevent Congress being paid until thebudget is balanced.

Not a word about the economy, foreignaffairs, negotiating with the other party forthe good of the country, or anything else ofsubstance. I wish there were “none of theabove” on the ballot. Get real, politicians!

Mel Walters,Stevensville

GRIZZLY FOOTBALLWhere’s the Montana recruits?

I wonder why the Grizzly footballcoaches are falling down on the recruitmentof Montana boys. At last Saturday’s game,there were only two Montana starters onoffense and only two Montana starters ondefense.

In the past, most of the best players onwinning Griz teams were Montana boys.Not just from the big schools, but fromschools like Frenchtown, Dillon,Drummond, Havre, Colstrip, Hardin andBaker. In those days, the coaches made aconcerted effort to use as many of thescholarships available for Montana athletes.Now it seems that most of the scholarshipsthat the fans pay for go to Arizona orCalifornia.

Is it just easier to recruit by telephoneinstead of checking out the Montanaschools?

I think the athletic director had best getinvolved and see that more effort isexpended on Montana recruitment. Do youagree, Griz fans?

Robert H. Wilson,Polson

EAST ROSEBUD CREEKThanks to Daines for proposal

As the president of Friends of EastRosebud, an organization designated topreserving and protecting the East RosebudCreek, I was very pleased to see U.S. Rep.Steve Daines, R-Mont., introducelegislation to preserve the East RosebudCreek by designating specific segments ofits waters under the Wild and Scenic RiversSystem.

The East Rosebud is a beautiful andpristine area in Carbon County surroundedby wilderness. This special place deservesprotections, as countless Montanans andvisitors from all over the world descend onthis one-of-a-kind landscape to enjoy itsnatural beauty. Ensuring future generationshave this opportunity is incrediblyimportant.

Having spent much of his youth hikingin and enjoying the Beartooths, Dainesunderstands what this place means toMontana’s way of life. it is veryencouraging that he is undertaking thiseffort on behalf of all of us that call thisstate our home.

Leslie Ziegler, president,Friends of East Rosebud,

Roscoe

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By PERRY BACKUSRavalli Republic

HAMILTON – It’s beennearly a century sinceHelen Self heard theGrantsdale School bellring.

On Saturday at 10 a.m.,the 105-year-old Missoulawoman will step forwardwith her 4-year-old great-great-great-nephew,Asher Jessop, to officiallydedicate the bell’s newlocation on the Ravalli

County Museum lawn.“It was pretty nice that

they asked me to do that,”Self said Thursday.

The dedication of theGrantsdale School belltower is a highlight of the35th annual McIntoshApple Day celebration onthe museum lawn, whichalso features the first-ever“Liquid Apple Night” hardcider fest on Saturdaynight.

The sound of theGrantsdale bell will

certainly bring backmemories for Self.

“My brother Joe and Iwalked two miles to schoolevery day,” she said. “Wewere very anxious to go toschool back then. Wewanted to get aneducation. We nevermissed a day.”

Self is the oldest personstill alive who attended theGrantsdale School. Hergreat-great-great-nephewattends the new HamiltonChristian Academy that

now occupies the historicschool building.

When the HamiltonSchool District closedGrantsdale last year due tofunding shortfalls, itdonated the bell and towerto the museum. A cadre ofvolunteers helped re-erectthe bell tower last week atits new site in front of themuseum.

“I remember themringing the bell when itwas time for us to comeinside from recess,” Self

said. “We would all run asfast as we could back to theschoolhouse.”

“It was a nice school togo to,” she said. “It washeated by a woodstove.The teachers knew that wehad to walk that far andthey always had hotchocolate waiting for Joeand I when we got there.”

“It was very chilly onsome of those mornings. Ifthe snow was deep, we hadto plow through it to getthere,” she said. “I think

it’s going to be nice to hearthat bell ring again.”

MONTANAB6 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

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ON MISSOULIAN.COMRead more aboutthe GrantsdaleSchool, onlinewith this story.

Oldest living Grantsdale alum set to ring old school’s bell105-year-old, relative will help dedicate new location in Ravalli County

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 - C1

Hamilton 375-0166 • Florence 273-0910 • Missoula 721-4141 • Polson 883-3800 • Seeley Lake 677-6565

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540 Morrell Creek Dr, Seeley Lake | $659,000OVER 400' of Morrell Creek Frontage! Comfort and luxury surround you in this 4 BD, 4 BA home on 4.75 ACRES of forested land. Stunning floor plan: gleaming HARDWOOD Ash floors, new GRANITE countertops, GOURMET kitchen. mls#20144738

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Friday Morning /Afternoon OnTV October 3 M H K W 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30

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MSNBC 42 54 51 José Díaz-Balart (N) NewsNation (N) Andrea Mitchell Reports Ronan Farrow Daily (N) The Reid Report (N) The Cycle (N) NOW With Alex Wagner The Ed Show (N) MTV 48 19 20 39 Catfi sh: The TV Show ’ Catfi sh: The TV Show ’ Girl Code ’ Girl Code ’ Girl Code ’ Girl Code ’ Girl Code ’ Girl Code ’ Awkward. ’ Faking It ’ Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. NBCSN 96 96 146 (7:00) The Dan Patrick Show (N) ’ (Live) ‘PG’ Truck Tech Muscle Out. Secrets J. Houston Fishing Bill Dance FLW Outdoors ‘G’ Motorsports Hour ‘14’ Count Pro Ftb Talk NICK/East 30 30 30 36 Bubble Guppies ’ Å Wallykazam! PAW Patrol Dora Wallykazam! PAW Patrol PAW Patrol SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Odd Parents Odd Parents SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SHO/East 379 379 229 (7:35) Movie “Save the Last Dance” Å Movie ›› “Dangerous Minds” (1995) (11:15) Movie ››› “Cocaine Cowboys” (2006) Drug lords invade 1980s Miami. Movie ›› “Deep Impact” (1998) Robert Duvall. Å SHO/Pac 378 378 221 43 Truman (8:45) Movie ›‡ “Legendary” (2010) ’ ‘PG-13’ Å (10:35) Movie ››› “Save the Last Dance” (2001) ’ Movie ›› “Dangerous Minds” (1995) (2:15) Movie ››› “Cocaine Cowboys” (2006) ’ ‘R’ SPK/East 34 20 42 Gangland ’ ‘14’ Å Gangland Los Angeles. ’ Gangland ’ ‘14’ Å Gangland Chicago gangs. Cops Å Cops Å Cops Å Jail Å Cops Å Cops Å Cops Å Jail Å STARZ 421 421 241 “Monsters University” ‘G’ Movie ››› “Ice Age” (2002) ‘PG’ Å (10:25) Movie › “Battle of the Year” (2013) ‘PG-13’ (12:20) Movie ››‡ “At Middleton” ‘R’ The Take ’ (2:20) Movie ››‡ “Dr. Dolittle 2” ‘PG’ SYFY/East 27 56 57 41 Movie ›› “Vampyre Nation” (2012, Horror) ‘14, L,V’ Movie › “The Bleeding” (2009, Horror) Vinnie Jones. Movie ›› “My Bloody Valentine” (2009), Jaime King Movie “Wrong Turn 5: Bloodlines” (2012, Horror) (V) TBS 4 17 5 48 (7:00) Movie “Get Smart” Funniest Home Videos MLB Baseball: Game 2 -- Detroit Tigers at Baltimore Orioles. (N) (Live) King King Seinfeld ’ Seinfeld ’ Seinfeld ’ TBA TCM 28 55 59 (7:45) Movie “Fixer Dugan” Movie ››› “At the Circus” (1939) (V) Movie “The Wagons Roll at Night” Å Movie ››› “Thousands Cheer” (1943, Musical) Å (2:15) Movie ››‡ “Our Vines Have Tender Grapes” TLC 46 47 44 24 Hoarding: Buried Alive ’ American Gypsy Wedding Four Weddings ’ Å 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids Gown Gown Gown Gown Gown Gown TMC 398 398 291 44 (8:10) Movie “Blast” (2004) Eddie Griffi n. (9:45) Movie “Some Girl(s)” (2013) ‘NR’ (11:15) Movie ››‡ “Step Up Revolution” (2012) ’ Movie ››› “What About Bob?” (1991) (2:40) Movie ››› “Mr. Destiny” (1990) TNT 37 39 26 49 Supernatural ’ Å Supernatural ’ Å Bones ’ ‘14, D,L’ Å Bones ’ ‘14, L,V’ Å Bones ’ ‘14’ Å Bones ’ ‘14, L,V’ Å Castle ’ Å (DVS) Castle ’ Å (DVS) TRUTV 29 46 36 World’s Dumbest... ‘14’ World’s Dumbest... ‘14’ World’s Dumbest... ‘14’ World’s Dumbest... ‘14’ World’s Dumbest... ‘14’ World’s Dumbest... ‘14’ World’s Dumbest... ‘14’ World’s Dumbest... ‘14’ TVLD/East 43 45 43 52 The Beverly Hillbillies ‘G’ Walker, Texas Ranger ’ Gunsmoke ‘PG’ Å Bonanza ‘PG’ Å Bonanza ‘G’ Å Walker, Texas Ranger ’ Walker, Texas Ranger ‘PG’ Walker, Texas Ranger ‘PG’ USA 53 35 24 27 Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU VH1 33 63 48 Gossip Table VH1, Music Movie ››› “Elf” (2003) Will Ferrell, James Caan. ’ Movie ›‡ “Billy Madison” (1995) Adam Sandler. ’ Couples Therapy ’ ‘14’ Atlanta Exes ’ ‘14, D,L’ Atlanta Exes ’ ‘14, D,L’ WGN 3 Walker, Texas Ranger ’ In the Heat of the Night ’ In the Heat of the Night ’ WGN Midday News (N) ’ Law & Order ’ Å Law & Order ’ Å Blue Bloods ’ Å Blue Bloods ’ ‘14’ Å

Sports Channels ESPN 35 22 32 26 SportsCenter (N) Å SportsCenter (N) Å SportsCenter (N) Å SportsCenter (N) Å SportsCenter Football Live NFL Insiders (N) Å NFL Live (N) (Live) Å Around/Horn Interruption ESPN2 36 21 33 47 First Take (N) ’ (Live) Å Numbers Never Lie (N) First Take ’ Å SportsNation (N) Å NASCAR Racing NASCAR ROOTU 60 41 TCopper 24 Ladders HealthFood Paid Prog. Cleaning Paid Prog. Wheelbarrow BrainBoost The Dan Patrick Show (N) MLS ROOTR 37 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Shark Body Beast Anti-Aging Big Belly? Football Rams Report Big 12 C-USA Football Women’s College Soccer: Hokies at Tar Heels

Public TV/Local Access KSPS Wild Kratts Wild Kratts Curious Curious Daniel Tiger Daniel Tiger Sesame Street ’ (EI) ‘Y’ Dinosaur Sit & Be Fit Charlie Rose ’ Å Antiques Rudy Maxa Thomas Sesame St. KUFM 6 9 4 32 Curious Daniel Tiger Daniel Tiger Sesame Street ’ (EI) ‘Y’ Sit & Be Fit Ciao Italia Craftsman’s NOVA ’ ‘PG’ Å Dewberry Quilting Arts Thomas Sesame St. Cat in the Curious CIVIC 11 Transportation Policy Coordinating Committee MCPS Meetings and Special Presentations Missoula City Council Committee Meetings MCAT 7 Wake Up Missoula Classic Arts Showcase ‘G’ Free Speech TV ‘Y’ Sermons Aging Sovereign Hope Church SKC Sesame Street ’ (EI) ‘Y’ Dinosaur Dinosaur Peg Plus Cat Peg Plus Cat Super Why! Thomas Sesame St. Cat in the Curious Curious Arthur ‘Y’ Arthur ‘Y’ Wild Kratts Wild Kratts

Friday Afternoon / Evening OnTV October 3 M H K W 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

*Broadcast Channels (*Non-Cable channel numbers: ABC/KTMF 23: 59 in Flathead CBS/KPAX 8; 18 in Flathead NBC/KECI 13; 9 in Flathead FOX/KMMF 17 CW/KPAX2 8.2) CBS 8 8 8 30 Dr. Phil (N) ’ ‘14’ Å CBS News News Jeopardy! ’ Wheel The Amazing Race (N) ’ Hawaii Five-0 (N) Å Blue Bloods (N) ’ Å News Late Show W/Letterman Ferguson CW 18 18 18 Engagement Engagement Cops Rel. Cops Rel. King of Hill Cleveland Whose Line Whose Line America’s Next Top Model Seinfeld ’ Seinfeld ’ Cougar Town Cougar Town Raising Community ABC 11 11 11 29 Family Feud Family Feud World News Local News Mod Fam Mod Fam Last Man Standing Å Shark Tank (N) ’ ‘PG’ (9:01) 20/20 (N) ’ Å Local News (10:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline (N) NBC 13 13 13 31 Ellen DeGeneres Show News (N) Nightly News News (N) Ent Bad Judge A to Z ’, L Dateline NBC A cold case involving a murdered nurse. News (N) Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyers FOX/KTMF2 10 10 10 Simpsons Family Guy Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Big Bang Big Bang Utopia (N) ’ ‘14’ Å Gotham Å (DVS) Local News Inside Ed. Simpsons Family Guy (11:05) Bones ’ Å FOX/KDVR Judge Judy Judge Judy FOX31 News FOX31 News Jeopardy! ’ Wheel Utopia (N) ’ ‘14’ Å Gotham Å (DVS) FOX31 News Fox on Fox FOX31 News Simpsons Simpsons (11:35) TMZ KREM The Dr. Oz Show (N) ’ Dr. Phil (N) ’ ‘14’ Å News CBS News KREM 2 News at 6 (N) Inside Ed. Access H. The Amazing Race (N) ’ Hawaii Five-0 (N) Å Blue Bloods (N) ’ Å KXLY Rachael Ray (N) ’ Å The Queen Latifah Show News World News 4 News at 6 News at 6:30 Ent The Insider Last Man Standing Å Shark Tank (N) ’ ‘PG’ (11:01) 20/20 (N) ’ Å MeTV 194 194 194 Adam-12 Adam-12 Emergency! ‘G’ CHiPs ‘PG’ M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Andy Griffi th Andy Griffi th Hogan Hero Gilligan Isle Odd Couple Odd Couple Cheers ’ Perry Mason Movies 195 195 195 Movie ››› “Sands of Iwo Jima” (1949, War) Å Movie ›››› “The African Queen” (1951) Humphrey Bogart. Å (8:20) Movie ››› “Hondo” (1953) Å (10:10) Movie ›››› “The African Queen” (1951) (V) KHQ Ellen DeGeneres Show Judge Judy Judge Judy News Nightly News News Millionaire Jeopardy! ’ Wheel Bad Judge A to Z ’, L Dateline NBC A cold case involving a murdered nurse. KMGH The Now Denver 7News at 5 World News 7News Right The List (N) Last Man Standing Å Shark Tank (N) ’ ‘PG’ (9:01) 20/20 (N) ’ Å News (10:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline (N)

Cable Channels A&E 61 52 38 35 The First 48 ’ ‘14’ Å Criminal Minds ’ Å Criminal Minds ’ Å (7:01) Criminal Minds ’ (8:01) Criminal Minds ’ (9:02) Criminal Minds ’ (10:01) Criminal Minds ’ (11:02) Criminal Minds ’ AMC 54 36 25 (3:30) Movie “Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines” ‘R’ Movie ››‡ “Van Helsing” (2004, Fantasy) Hugh Jackman. ‘PG-13’ Å (V) Movie ›› “Volcano” (1997, Action) Tommy Lee Jones. ‘PG-13’ Å Van Helsing AP 39 40 29 53 Treehouse: Out on a Limb Tanked: Unfi ltered (N) ’ Treehouse Masters Å Tanked ’ ‘PG’ Å Tanked (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å Tanked ’ ‘PG’ Å Tanked ’ ‘PG’ Å Treehouse Masters Å BRAVO 66 181 (4:15) Movie ›› “Pearl Harbor” (2001, War) Ben Affl eck, Josh Hartnett, Kate Beckinsale. (V) (7:20) Movie ›› “Pearl Harbor” (2001, War) Ben Affl eck, Josh Hartnett. (V) (10:25) Movie “Gangs of New York” (V) CART/Pac 44 42 56 37 Gumball Total Drama Total Drama Gumball Gumball Teen Titans Teen Titans Clarence Gumball Uncle Gra. King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad CMT 24 58 47 Movie “The Dukes of Hazzard: The Beginning” (2007, Comedy) Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Raising Raising Raising Movie ››‡ “Days of Thunder” (1990, Action) Tom Cruise. Å (V) CNBC 57 34 39 Mad Money (N) Ultimate Factories ‘G’ Shark Tank ’ ‘PG’ Å Ultimate Factories ‘G’ Ultimate Factories ‘PG’ Ultimate Factories ‘G’ Restaurant Startup Restaurant Startup CNN 31 38 34 25 (3:00) The Situation Room Erin Burnett OutFront (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) This Is Life With Lisa Ling Spotlight Unguarded Anthony Bourdain Parts Bourdain: Prime Cuts Spotlight Unguarded COM 51 59 49 Workaholics Workaholics Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Colbert Rep Daily Show South Park (8:29) Tosh.0 Key & Peele Gabriel Iglesias: Fat Gabriel Iglesias: Hot/Fluffy Gabriel CSPAN 21 6 19 Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Justice John Paul Stevens Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Key Capitol Hill Hearings DIS/East 34 Girl Meets (4:40) Jessie (5:10) Movie ›››‡ “Wreck-It Ralph” (2012) ‘PG’ “Star Wars Rebels” Dog Dog Vampire Vampire Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Dog Dog DIS/Pac 49 32 22 Dog Dog Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Dog Girl Meets (7:40) Jessie (8:10) Movie ›››‡ “Wreck-It Ralph” (2012) ‘PG’ “Star Wars Rebels” Dog Dog DISC 55 53 58 51 Airplane Repo ’ Å Airplane Repo ’ Å Airplane Repo ’ Å Bering Sea Gold (N) ’ (8:02) Airplane Repo (N) ’ (9:02) Bering Sea Gold ’ (10:04) Airplane Repo ’ (11:04) Airplane Repo ’ E!/East 47 60 Sex and the City Å E! News (N) ‘PG’ Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City E! News (N) ‘PG’ Movie ›› “Scary Movie 3” (2003) Anna Faris. (V) ENC 444 444 444 (3:45) Movie ››‡ “Murder at 1600” (5:35) ›› “The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen” Movie ›› “High School High” (1996) Movie ››‡ “Sky High” (2005) ‘PG’ (V) (10:45) Movie › “Grown Ups 2” (2013) FAM/East Cinderella Movie ›› “Never Been Kissed” (1999) Drew Barrymore. (V) Movie ››› “The Princess Bride” (1987) Cary Elwes. The 700 Club ’ Å Movie ››‡ “Liar Liar” (1997, Comedy) Jim Carrey. FAM/Pac 38 41 28 Reba Å Reba Å Boy Meets... Movie ›› “A Cinderella Story” (2004) Hilary Duff. (V) Movie ›› “Never Been Kissed” (1999) Drew Barrymore. (V) Movie ››› “The Princess Bride” (1987) Cary Elwes. FOXNEWS 52 33 37 Special Report Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor (N) The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor Å The Kelly File Hannity FX 58 16 40 How I Met How I Met How I Met Two Men Two Men Movie › “That’s My Boy” (2012) Adam Sandler, Andy Samberg. (V) Movie ››› “21 Jump Street” (2012, Comedy) Jonah Hill, Channing Tatum. (V) HALL 45 44 53 The Waltons ‘G’ Å The Waltons ‘G’ Å The Waltons ‘G’ Å The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Frasier ’ Frasier ‘PG’ HBO 318 318 201 40 REAL Sports Movie ›› “Kingdom Come” (2001) ’ (6:15) Movie ›‡ “R.I.P.D.” (2013) Jeff Bridges. Å Movie ››‡ “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty” (2013) REAL Sports Gumbel Real Time With Bill Maher HGTV 50 57 55 45 Love It or List It ‘G’ Å Love It or List It ‘G’ Å Love It or List It ‘G’ Å Love It or List It ‘G’ Å Hunters Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Love It or List It ‘G’ Å Hunters Hunters Int’l HIST/East 25 49 50 Hillbilly: The Real Story ’ American Pickers Å American Pickers Å American Pickers Å American Pickers Å (9:03) American Pickers ’ (10:01) American Pickers (11:01) American Pickers HIST/Pac 50 Wild West Tech ’ Å Wild West Tech ’ Å Hillbilly: The Real Story ’ ‘PG’ Å American Pickers Å American Pickers Å American Pickers Å American Pickers Å LIFE/East 67 50 46 28 Wife Swap ’ ‘PG’ Å Wife Swap ’ ‘14’ Å Movie “She Made Them Do It” (2012) ‘14, L,S,V’ Å Movie “The Surrogacy Trap” (2013) Adam Reid. Å (10:02) Movie “She Made Them Do It” (2012) ‘14’ Å MSNBC 42 54 51 PoliticsNation (N) Hardball Chris Matthews All In With Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show Lockup Orange County Life After Lockup Lockup Lockup Tampa MTV 48 19 20 39 Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Wild ’n Out Wild ’n Out Wild ’n Out Wild ’n Out Wild ’n Out Wild ’n Out Movie › “The Final Destination” (2009, Horror) ’ (V) Movie ›› “Final Destination 3” (2006) Premiere. ’ NBCSN 96 96 146 Pro Ftb Talk NFL Turning Point ’ Preview MLS Soccer: Sporting Kansas City at D.C. United. (N) ’ (Live) National Pro Grid League: Finals. (Taped) ’ Off the Grid Formula One Racing NICK/East 30 30 30 36 iCarly ’ ‘G’ Å (DVS) Thunder Turtles Turtles Full House Full House Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Friends ’ Friends ’ How I Met Your Mother ’ How I Met Fresh Prince SHO/East 379 379 229 Movie ››› “Save the Last Dance” (2001) ‘PG-13’ Masters of Sex ’ Å Movie ››› “Mistaken for Strangers” Movie ›››‡ “Django Unchained” (2012) Jamie Foxx. ’ ‘R’ Å (11:15) Masters of Sex ’ SHO/Pac 378 378 221 43 (2:15) “Cocaine Cowboys” Movie ›› “Deep Impact” (1998) Robert Duvall. Å Movie ››› “Save the Last Dance” (2001) ‘PG-13’ Masters of Sex ’ Å Movie ››› “Mistaken for Strangers” Django SPK/East 34 20 42 Cops Å Cops Å Cops Å Cops Å Cops Å Cops Å Bellator MMA Live (N) ’ (Live) (9:15) Cops (9:26) Cops Jail Å Jail Å Jail Å Jail Å STARZ 421 421 241 (3:50) Movie “Monsters University” ‘G’ (5:40) Movie ››› “Michael” (1996) John Travolta. (V) Movie ›› “Bad Boys II” (2003) Martin Lawrence. ’ ‘R’ Å (V) Movie ››› “About Last Night” (2014) Outlander ’ SYFY/East 27 56 57 41 Movie ›› “Resident Evil: Extinction” (2007, Horror) WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å Z Nation (N) ‘14, L,V’ Spartacus: Gods (10:05) Z Nation ‘14, L,V’ “Wrong Turn 5” TBS 4 17 5 48 (3:30) To Be Announced MLB MLB Baseball: Game 2 -- Kansas City Royals at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. (N) (Live) Inside MLB Get Smart TCM 28 55 59 (4:15) Movie ››› “7 Faces of Dr. Lao” (1964) Å Movie ›››› “The African Queen” (1951) Å (V) Movie ›››‡ “Sahara” (1943) Humphrey Bogart. (V) Movie ›››‡ “Beat the Devil” (1954) Å (V) TLC 46 47 44 24 Gown Gown Little People, Big World ’ 19 Kids 19 Kids Four Weddings (N) Å Four Weddings ’ Å Four Weddings ’ Å Four Weddings ’ Å 19 Kids 19 Kids TMC 398 398 291 44 Mr. Destiny Movie “Some Girl(s)” (2013) ‘NR’ Å Movie ››› “Gucci: The Director” ‘NR’ Movie ››‡ “Step Up Revolution” ’ (9:10) Movie ››‡ “StreetDance” (2010) ’ ‘PG-13’ Movie “StreetDance 2” (V) TNT 37 39 26 49 Castle ’ Å (DVS) Castle ’ Å (DVS) On the Menu ‘PG’ Å Movie ››‡ “Sherlock Holmes” (2009, Action) Robert Downey Jr. (9:31) On the Menu Å (10:31) Hawaii Five-0 ’, V Hawaii TRUTV 29 46 36 Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow Tow TVLD/East 43 45 43 52 Walker Hillbillies Hillbillies Hillbillies Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Raymond Raymond Friends ’ Friends ’ King The King of Queens ’, D King USA 53 35 24 27 Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene VH1 33 63 48 T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop Couples Therapy ’ ‘14’ Saturday Night Live Å Saturday Night Live Å WGN 3 Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Movie ››› “Backdraft” (1991, Action) Kurt Russell, William Baldwin. (V) How I Met How I Met How I Met Parks Parks Parks

Sports Channels ESPN 35 22 32 26 SportsCenter (N) Å College Football: Louisville at Syracuse. (N) (Live) (8:15) College Football: Utah State at BYU. (N) (Live) (11:15) SportsCenter (N) ESPN2 36 21 33 47 NASCAR Racing High School Football: Norcross (Ga.) at North Gwinnett (Ga.). (N) (Live) CFL Football: Calgary Stampeders at Saskatchewan Roughriders. (N) (Live) Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) ROOTU 60 41 MLS High School Football: Sumner at Auburn-Mountainview. High School Football: Glacier Peak at Bellevue. (N) (Live) Boxing ROOTR 37 College Field Hockey: Duke at Louisville. (N) (Live) Sports Unlimited Game 365 Bensinger Boxing The Dan Patrick Show Poker After Dark Å

Public TV/Local Access KSPS Cat in the Curious Curious Wild Kratts World News Business PBS NewsHour (N) Å Washington Moyers Doc Martin ’ ‘PG’ Å Austin City Limits Celebrates 40 Years (N) ’ Å KUFM 6 9 4 32 Peg Plus Cat Arthur ‘Y’ Arthur ‘Y’ Business PBS NewsHour (N) Å Washington Charlie Rose Austin City Limits Celebrates 40 Years (N) ’ Å World News Charlie Rose (N) ’ Å Just Seen It CIVIC 11 Missoula City Council Missoula Live Com Mess Bonner/Milltown Community Council Comm Meeting Missoula City Messages Planning Board Meeting MCAT 7 Surviving MCPS Spring Concerts UM Homecoming Parade American Art Asaph Cafe Concerts Com Mess Gay USA SKC Martha WordGirl ‘Y7’ PBS NewsHour (N) Å Washington Charlie Rose Austin City Limits Celebrates 40 Years (N) ’ Å Charlie Rose (N) ’ Å Tavis Smiley Tavis Smiley Washington Charlie Rose

M: Charter, Missoula area/Milltown. H: Charter, Hamilton. K: Charter, Kalispell. W: Montana Wireless ON MISSOULIAN.COM: For TV listings, go to missoulian.com/tvlistings.

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY“No one can build his security upon the noblenessof another person.” – Willa Cather, Americanauthor (1873-1947)Plugged In

FRIDAY, October 3, 2014C2 NEWSROOM 523-5240

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 – C3

PLUGGED IN

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Dear Abby: My father isdating a woman who is not onlymy ex-boyfriend’s mother, but

also the woman hecheated on mymother with andleft her for. I don’twant to be aroundher and have toldmy father this, buthe doesn’t acceptor respect myfeelings. Beingaround themcauses stress onmy marriagebecause myhusband doesn’t

want to be around her either, andwe don’t want her around ourchildren.

This is causing so much stress

that at times I’m afraid it couldend our marriage. When I try totalk to Dad about this, he acts likethere is no reason for me to beuncomfortable and blames myhusband for these feelings. It’s likehe completely denies that there isany way I could feel the way I do,even though she has broughtnothing but negativity into mylife.

I don’t know what to do. I wantto still have a relationship with mydad, but my marriage comesbefore this. How can I keep both?

– In the Middlein Pensacola

Dear in the Middle: Yourfather refuses to acknowledgeyour feelings because he sees youonly as an extension of himself.

Your opinions “surely” mustmatch his own, and if they don’t,then they must have beenplanted there by someone else.In his mind, he and his ladyfriend have done nothing wrong,so how could you possiblyobject? That you could have amoral compass that points in adifferent direction is not on hisradar.

Because your dad insists onimposing this woman on yourfamily, recognize that youprobably can’t have one withoutthe other. That will mean seeingyour father far less than youwould like, and away from yourhusband and children – if at all.Under no circumstances shouldyou allow your father to destroyyour marriage as he did his own.

Dear Abby: I was wonderingif you could help me out with aco-worker who is constantly onher phone. Four, five, sometimeseight times a day she is makingand accepting personal calls. It’svery distracting to the rest of theoffice. When she’s not at herdesk, it’s then my responsibilityto cover for her.

I would like to find a politeway to say “these phone calls canbe made after hours.” I do NOTwant to ruffle any feathers. Anyadvice would be greatlyappreciated.

– Too Chicken to Talk

Dear Too Chicken: Thecompany’s policy on personalcalls during business hoursshould be a part of the employeehandbook. If it isn’t, it should be

brought to the attention of youremployer or supervisor so it canbe included when the handbook isupdated.

Ideally, the person to speak toyour co-worker about this wouldbe your boss. Because these callsare distracting the otheremployees, your boss should bemade aware of it so he or she candeal with it.

To My Jewish Readers:Tonight at sundown, Yom Kippur,the holiest day of the Jewishcalendar, begins. It’s a day offasting, reflection, prayer andrepentance. To all of you, mayyour fast be an easy one.

Contact Dear Abby atdearabby.com or P.O. Box69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

JEANNEPHILLIPS

A baby born today has a Sunin Libra and a Moon in Capricornif born before 5:00 a.m.Afterward, the Moon will be inAquarius.

Happy birthday for Friday,Oct. 3, 2014:

This year you feel as if you willbe able to create more of whatyou want. Your success depends

upon yournetworkingskills. If you aresingle, it will beyour choicewhether youdecide tochange yourstatus. Youmight beenjoyingplaying thefield a bit toomuch! If youare attached,the two of youoften will be

found socializing out and about.You love to party together, andyou enjoy the bond that exists

between you. As a couple, youwill surpass any issue thatemerges. Aquarius piques yourinterest.

The stars show the kind ofday you’ll have: 5 dynamic, 4positive, 3 average, 2 so-so, 1difficult

ARIES (March 21-April 19)HHHH You’ll want to go along

with the majority, but a partnercould worry you. You come froma point of caring, but you alsowould like to spend time withyour immediate circle. Followyour intuition, and considerblending everyone together.Tonight: Just don’t be alone.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)HHHHH You might want to

move in a new direction, but aloved one could have manyquestions. You are likely to feeloverwhelmed from dealing withas much negativity as you seemto be getting. You will need to pullback and do some thinking.Tonight: Out and about.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)HHHHH Reach out to

someone at a distance. Youmight not be comfortable withwhat you are hearing, and youcould have a lot of questions.The answers you get could forceyou to hit the pause button untilyou gain a broader perspective.Trust your instincts. Tonight: Takeoff ASAP.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)HHHH A partner will make a

decision that forces your hand. Adiscussion could point to moredisagreement. Accept what youare hearing, and respect thisperson’s point of view. You mightbe taken aback by what happensas a result. Tonight: Enjoy themoment.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)HHHH A roommate or loved

one loves teasing you. However,you could close downunintentionally. Is this behaviorreally what you want to do?Consider your role in thissituation. Keep conversationslight and easy. Tonight: Followsomeone else’s cue.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

HHHH Consider what needsto happen with a close friend whooften unnerves you. You couldopt to meet a trusted loved onefor a late lunch to discuss thissituation. Recognize what ishappening at home and in yourimmediate circle. Tonight: Gowith the flow.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)HHHH Your imagination will

come out in conversations,particularly through your wordchoice. A misunderstandingcould have you asking yourselfhow you could have avoided adifficult situation. A flirtation couldstart up from out of the blue.Tonight: Let the fun begin.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)HH You are likely to trigger a

key person in your life by makinga sharp comment. You might behearing only what you want tohear. You could be overwhelmedand more negative than yourealize. Clear your mind, and takea walk. Do something you love.Tonight: Head home early.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)HHHH Your interest might be

piqued, and you could have a lotof questions. Let a friend revealas much as he or she feelscomfortable revealing. You mightdecide to leave well enoughalone; otherwise, you could see aproblem evolving. Tonight: Catchup on others’ news.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)HHH Be aware of the cost of

proceeding as you have been.Your ability to remain positive lieslargely in the fact that you knowwhen to take a step back. Followthrough when you think you areon better ground; you will be a lothappier that way. Tonight: Yourtreat.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)HHHHH You don’t need to

explain anything, or at least youfeel that way. Be careful – aproblem could ensue at a laterdate when this attitude could bethrown back in your face. Though

you might be annoyed ateverything you are hearing, bediplomatic. Tonight: Kick up yourheels.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)HH You might want to slow

down and do some thinkingbefore you take action. One-on-one relating will result in someinteresting ideas. Take your time,and don’t feel pressured by whatis happening around you. Time isyour friend right now. Tonight:Keep a secret.

Today’s birthdaysRock and roll star Chubby

Checker is 73. Magician RoyHorn is 70. Former astronautKathryn Sullivan is 63.Baseball Hall of Famer DaveWinfield is 63. Baseball Hall ofFamer Dennis Eckersley is 60.Civil rights activist Rev. AlSharpton is 60. Rock musicianTommy Lee is 52. Singer GwenStefani (No Doubt) is 45. SingerIndia.Arie is 39. Actress-singerAshlee Simpson is 30.

JACQUELINEBIGAR

Father’s choice of girlfriend sends ripples of stress through family

| ASTROLOGY |

By JAKE COYLEAssociated Press

NEW YORK – In its bidto upend the movie businessthe way it has television,Netflix has secured one ofthe big screen’s biggest box-office draws and mostirreverent comedic talents.

Adam Sandler has signeda four-film deal withNetflix, the streamingservice announced earlyThursday. The actor will starin and produce each feature,all of which will premiereexclusively on Netflix.

“When these fine peoplecame to me with an offer tomake four movies for them,I immediately said yes forone reason and one reason

only: Netflix rhymes withwet chicks,” Sandler said in astatement. “Let the

streamingbegin!”

Netflixdeclined tosay howmuch it waspayingSandler. Butthestreaminggiant has a

history of reaching deep intoits pocket to lure big-nametalent. To land “House ofCards,” with director DavidFincher and star KevinSpacey, Netflix reportedlyspent $100 million for theshow’s first two seasons.

On Tuesday, Netflix

signaled its long-plannedentry into original movies,announcing that it willstream a sequel to 2000’sOscar-winning “CrouchingTiger, Hidden Dragon” –one of the most lucrativeforeign language releasesever. The sequel, producedby the Weinstein Co., willopen in August 2015simultaneously in Imaxtheaters and on Netflix.

Sandler is one ofHollywood’s most reliabledraws, with films that havecollectively grossed morethan $2.4 billiondomestically. But his mostrecent film, the romanticcomedy “Blended,” withDrew Barrymore, sputteredwith a meager haul just

$46.3 million for WarnerBros.

Ted Sarandos, chiefcontent officer for Netflix,said Sandler’s films areregularly among the most-viewed by Netflix members.

“People love Adam’sfilms on Netflix and oftenwatch them again andagain,” Sarandos said. “Hisappeal spans across viewersof all ages. Everybody has afavorite movie, everyone hasa favorite line, not just in theUS but all over the world.”

Sandler’s internationalappeal fits Netflix’s globalaspirations. The companyhas been rapidly expandingoverseas, most recently inEurope, and is now availablein nearly 50 countries.

The four features, whichare currently plannedwithout any theatricalrelease component, areexpected to be comedies.Among Netflix’s Sandlertitles available for streamingare “Happy Gilmore” and“Click.”

The first movie in thedeal, to be jointly developedbetween Netflix andSandler’s Happy MadisonProductions, could come asearly as late 2015.

Netflix’s plans with“Crouching Tiger, HiddenDragon: The Green Legend”have already upset themovie industry’s traditionalpatterns. The nation’s threelargest exhibitors – AMC,Regal and Cinemark –

quickly refused to carry it ontheir screens. “We will notparticipate in an experimentwhere you can see the sameproduct on screens varyingfrom three stories tall to3 inches wide on asmartphone,” Regalspokesman Russ Nunleysaid.

But many analysts seethe disruption caused byNetflix’s entry into originalmovies as an overduechallenge to Hollywood’scarefully controlledtheatrical model.

“This is just the start ofwhat Netflix is going todo,” said Rich Greenfield,media analyst for BTIGResearch. “Stay tuned.This is the beginning.”

Sandler signs with Netflix for 4-movie deal

Sandler

421 N. Davis #9, 2Bd/1Ba, garage,W/D hkps, $750/mo., dep. O.A.C.,

pets? Great Places, Inc. 546-2280

2 Bed, 2122 A Raymond,All Utilities Paid, No Dogs,

$800/mo. 239-4891 or 240-3889.

100 S Curtis, 2 bed, garage,hookups,Yard $695/mo.

No pets/smoke.Fidelity Mgmt. 251-4707

Very nice lg. Southside 2Bd/1Ba,DW, W/D hkps., lg. fenced yard,gar., no pets/smoking. 1yr. lease.

$875mo. 360-3240

411 DUPLEXES, UNFURNISHED

We have your place!• Houses • Apartments

• DuplexesFor a complete listing

549-6106/422 Madison$15 Application Feewww.gcpm-mt.com

Garden City Management

LOOK!Newer 2Bd, 1000 sq ft. cable,

W/S/G paid. Linda Vista. No pets.$675. Fidelity Mgmt. 251-4707

HOTTEST Deal in Msla on2 Bed Apartments $575 & $750 permonth. ALL UTILITIES INC.

Call Today. 543-9798

Commercially zoned (C1-4) newlyupdated duplex w/additional unde-

veloped lot. 2br/1ba units with densand W/D hookups. Double garage.Behind Gold’s Gym off Reserve.

$249,900. (406)459-4530

BRAND NEW!SPACIOUS 2-BED, 1 BA.

WITH D/W, A/C, W/D,CRPRT, WD. FLRS, GARDENAREA,CLOSE TO DOWNTOWNAND U. $845 AND UP. MSLA.

PROP. MAN. 251-8500.www./rentinmissoula.com

Avail. Oct 10th. 2Bd Duplex onToole Ave. Cats OK, W/S/G

included. $720/mo. 531-1793

528 Hickory 1 Bed.No pets/smoke. $525

Fidelity Mgmt. 251-4707

Every minute. Every day.

missoulian.com

ROUTESAVAILABLE

EARN EXTRA INCOME!DELIVERING THE MISSOULIAN

CALL TODAY406-523-5290

*Estimated Profit

Route Main Street *Bi-Weekly *4 wks14 BROOKS STREET AREA $225.00 $450.0017 UNIVERSITY AREA $500.00 $250.0029 LOWER RATTLESNAKE $130.00 $260.0079 RUSSELL & 35TH AREA $105.00 $210.0090 39TH & 23TH AREA $220.00 $440.00125 BEHIND SHOPKO $175.00 $350.00134 MILLER CREEK AREA $675.00 $1,350.0032/106 SOUTH AND RESERVE $250.00 $500.0035/13 MIDTOWN MISSOULA $970.00 $335.0037/116 FAIRVIEW/ DEARBORN/ BENTON $460.00 $230.00BIGFM1 BIGFORK AREA $300.00 $600.00CHARM1 CHARLO AREA $400.00 $800.00FLORM3 FLORENCE- RURAL $700.00 $350.00FLORM4 FLORENCE- RURAL $300.00 $150.00LIBBM1 LIBBY RURAL $700.00 $350.00LOLOC2 LOLO- CITY $135.00 $270.00LOLOM2 LOLO - RURAL $135.00 $270.00LOLOM4 LOLO - RURAL $350.00 $700.00STIGM1 ST IGNATIUS RURAL $325.00 $650.00STIGM2 ST IGNATIUS TOWN $350.00 $700.00

If you are interested in a route and don’t see one listed in your area, please give us a call.We will add you to our waiting list and call you when a route becomes available.

4301 Birdie Court, 2Bd, storage,hookups, no pets/smoke, $725.

Fidelity Mgmt. 251-4707

2Bd apt near mall, W/D,No pets/smoke, $775/$500 dep

Refs. 406-721-6599

Garage Sale2625 Mount

Friday & Saturday 8am-2pmPower tools, air nailers, bench saw,

joiner, new vinyl windows, exteriordoors, clothing, books & misc.

Consumer Direct ManagementSolutions

Missoula-based EDISystems Analyst

See our posting athttp://careers.consumerdirect

care.com/

1Bd on Eaton St.W/S/G included. Pets ok.

$575/mo. 531-1793

Frenchtown Mini StorageUnits for Auction, A6, A17, A11,A24, A12, B2, D12, F21, D7, G5,G8, S3, S18, S25, S29, S30, S36.Sat. 10/18/14 @ 9:00 a.m. 16840Beckwith, Frenchtown, MT 59834Cash only.#20371778 October 3 & 10, 2014

209 PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS

12405 GARAGE SALE ORCHARD HOME

1Bd close to UM & Downtown,furnished or unfurnished, all utils.

paid including TV/Internet,549-7711. alpharealestate.com

Need very reliable/quality/detailedJanitor for part time cleaning

One reference requiredExcellent employers/Competitivewage. Please call 1-888-456-5470

119 Johnson, 1Bd, hkps.No pets/smoke. $510.

Fidelity Mgmt. 251-4707

Yard SaleTwo Family Shed Cleanout.Bit of Everything.Tools, fishinggear, ladies stuff. Peggy Lane

Off Broadway past Reserve Stoverpass. Follow signs.Sat Oct 4th 9am-5pm

1 Bed Apts, Great location,no pets, $585/mo + dep,

incl. W/S/G. Call 531-0134

gift

fun

ideas

Please contact Jackie Maunder for more information at [email protected]

Saturday, Nov. 8, 9am-3pmUniversity Center Ballroom

The Ultimate Indoor

[craft sale]Be sure you are part of the largest craft sale inWestern Montana. Booth spaces are filling up, so

call today to reserve your booth

Sponsored by

Found: very timid female cat, tortie,declawed, 2-6 yrs old, downtown on

Sept 4, Call 721-2084 after 3pm

Free scrap removal service, al metalincluding rding lawnmowers,

wash/dryer, water heaters, cars.Call 406-493-8051 Rob

5455 Primrose LaneFriday & Saturday

8am-6pmAntiques, guns, sporting goods

& lots of stuff.

MISSOULA CORRECTIONALSERVICES, INC.

is accepting applications for (1)part time Technician position fora program titled The Sobriety andAccountability Program. The quali-fied applicant has a high schooldiploma, and a year experienceworking with the public. For furtherinformation, please contact yourlocal Job Service.

Nordic track ski machine, pick up inalley behind 2455 McDonald

Lost orange tabby cat. Linda VistaBoulevard. answers to "Timmy".

406-207-4573

12403 GARAGE SALE MULLAN RD

208 GENERAL HELP

Tech books on Visual Basic, Java,SQL, HTML, database, i-Net+. AlsoGerman and Russian literature.Call Florence 273-9093 to leavename and number.

Lost between South Walmart parkinglot & Reserve/39th St. Black remotecontrol dog collar w/ 8" antenna be-tween 10am & Noon Sunday morn-ing. Call 498-5685 if found

Notices under this classificationare required by law to be run in anewspaper of general circulation. Anotarized proof of publication will beprovided for all notices. Some no-tices may require pre-payment.DEADLINE FOR SUBMITTALS ISNOON, THREE WORKING DAYS INADVANCE of the date the noticeneeds to be published. The Mis-soulian will accept responsibility forprinting errors on the first publicationonly. If you have questions aboutplacing a legal ad, please call clas-s i f i eds a t 721 -6200 o r1-800-332-6212, and ask for Legals.FAX: Attn: Legals, to 406-523-5221.Email: [email protected] legals to: Missoulian Legals,P.O. Box 8029, Missoula, MT 59807.If you have questions regardingthe proof of publication for aprinted legal ad, please call ChrisArvish in our Legal Ad Depart-ment: 523-5236.

Drivers Wanted: Maxi Flatbeds,Home weekends, Canada legal for53', Odometer miles, Load bonus,Paper logs. Cliff Reed, Inc. Corvallis,MT. 406-961-4671

Well used furniture set.273-0939/274-6376

REWARD Lost Camera behind Bit-terroot River Inn, Canon EOS digitalw/telephoto lens Tuesday. 363-4691or 360-1892

2 free young cockatiels to a goodhome w/a cage. 240-0885

2550 Gilbert AvenueSaturday Oct. 4th, 8am

Tables, bar stools, thermarests,jackets, picture frames,

Disney videos, comedy videosets, sleeping bags, silver plate,

Wedgewood, misc.

399 LEGALS MNAXLP

caras-properties.com

PROPERTY MANAGEMENT CO.401 SW Higgins 543-9798

Call Us AboutAvailability?Paid Utilities?Pets? Specials?

• Houses • Apartments• Office • Retail •

Studios................$450-$6001Bd.....................$450-$6502Bd.....................$515-$7003Bd+................$450-$1,500

Lost: small female domestic tortoiseshell with 3/4 length tail, goes by'Loki' in 44 Ranch Estates on Sun-day 9/28. Call 360-0713

Free horse manure. Nochemicals. Will load

Call 214-4939

410 APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

REWARD!!! LOST Ford Fusion carkeys on Saturday morning downtown

call 406-550-1212

FREE CHICKENS WANTED!!!!!Please contact Paul:

(406) 531-9999

Massive Yard Sale:Antiques, Toys, Film, Video &

Electronic Gear, Building Materi-als, Tools, Furniture & Shells,Excellent 205/55/R16 Snows.

1415 Dickinson StSaturday 9am

Reward for finding Subaru keys mis-sing from the currents aquaticslocker room. 529-7038

Close to U/Downtown Lg. 2 Bd+,$700; Nice bsmt. 2Bd, bonus room.$550. W/G paid. No pets/smoking.

396-0283 or 728-3819

12401 GARAGE SALE RATTLESNAKE

Found: Pacific Trails Coat; Back-pack; Cell Phone. Call Walt @

Missoula Police Dept. 552-6336

Used Appliances Wanted to helpfund child abuse prevention

through the Parenting Place. Freepickup available. Tax deductible.

Donation Warehouse - 240-40421804 North Ave. W

1Bd close to UM & Downtown,furnished or unfurnished, all utils.

paid including TV/Internet,549-7711. alpharealestate.com

Lost: Siamese mix cat, white w/greymarkings, grey raccoon like tail &

blue eyes. Rattlesnake area.830-6792

406 APARTMENTS FURNISHED

Tool SaleOctober 3rd-5th 10am-5pm54 Horning Dr. - Superior

Mostly automotive but somecarpentry & gardening tools.

Details on Craigslist

Found: Source of supply for radiotubes, Call 728-8819

Donate your good used furnitureor appliances to help prevent childabuse through the Parenting Place.Tax receipts & free pickup available.Donation Warehouse - 240-4042.

1804 North Ave W.

Apheresis RNThis position will function as amember of the Clinical Services -Apheresis team in Missoula, Mon-tana. Responsible for performingany or all platelet collections.Registered nurse with currentstate licensure & 1 year exp. is re-quired. Must have valid driver's li-cense.The Red Cross is a nonprofit or-ganization that offers employeesgrowth and development, oppor-tunity for advancement, teamspirit, competitive salaries and acomprehensive benefits package.

Applicants can apply online athttp://www.americanredcross.apply2

jobs.comRequisition#: BIO47030

124 GARAGERUMMAGE SALES

4 Michelin winter tires, 225/65R17.549-7436

Free firewood at 3945Trails End. Miller Creek

213 HEALTH CARE/ SCIENCE

Visit AZARA CREATIONSUnique crystals, lemurians,wands, gemstone jewelry.

October 4-5.Hellgate MineralSociety Gem Show.

Hilton Garden Inn. MissoulaCall 541-410-5382 for info

112 TO GIVE AWAY

76 year old retired backcountrypacker, Charlie Russell fan, no

smoking/drugs, still working,seeks 55-75 year old country girlin good health, who likes moun-tains, hiker, mountain lakes,

hopefully have horses.Call 208-476-0488

❄ CORVALLIS XMAS BAZAAR

Get your tables now! 11/29, 9-3,

961-3961 or 369-2131

Montana CDC is seeking a Con-troller to oversee all financial ac-tivities at Montana CDC and itssubsidiary corporations. Go tohttp://mtcdc.org/about-us/news-reports/ for more information

128 BAZAARS, BAKE SALES

122 PERSONALS

Friday, Oct. 3rd, 9AM-2PM4665 Mark Court.

Bedroom furniture, desk, dressingtable, fish aquarium, lots of tile

and tile pieces, and other misc.household items. 1 day only!

12415 MILLER CREEK/LINDA VISTA

AniMealswww.animeals.com

CATS• Found Cat: female, approxi-mately 6 years old, orange andblack tortoiseshell, no tail, foundon West Broadway on 7/14/14.• AniMeals Seniors for Seniorsprogram waives the adoption feefor anyone 65 and older adoptinga cat 9 years old and older. Allcats are spayed or neutered, vac-cinated, and microchipped free ofcost before they're adopted. Formore information call AniMeals at721-4710.• Fosters needed! AniMeals is inneed of foster families for kittens.Fostering is a 1-2 month commit-ment, AniMeals supplies the food,litter, and other supplies, and yousupply the love. Call 721-4710 orvisit:http://animeals.com/FOSTER.htmlfor more information.

114 LOST & FOUND

Old InventorySALE!

$5.00 of Mistinted Paint$10.00 of Tint To Preference

Price Per Gallon

Garden CityPaint and Glass3217 Brooks St,

Missoula, Mt 59801406.549.0608

Missoula County Public Schools'Board of Trustees' Teaching andLearning Committee Meeting, 12:00p.m. (Noon), Monday, October 6,2014, Business Building, BoardRoom, 915 South Ave. West.View agenda on website:www.mcpsmt.orgAnyone wishing to attend a meet-ing noted above who needs ac-commodations for a disability,please notify Carol White at728-2400, ext. 1023 two (2) days inadvance.

Huge Yard Sale: University Area532 E. Central. Sat. Oct 4th8am-11am. Sporting Goods,Collectibles, Musical Inst.,

Clothing (Mens, Women, Infant),Gun Cabinet, Lots of Little Gems

Goose, 4 ducks, 2 roosters, 1chicken. For pets only. Take all.317-3437

Summit Beverage is seeking aPricing Coordinator to join ourteam. This position will be re-sponsible for the input, mainte-nance and monitoring of our elec-tronic product records. Applicantsshould have at least 2-3 years ofoffice/data entry experience, beable to work independently, man-age multiple tasks, and havestrong organizational and timemanagement skills. BA/BS de-gree preferred. Apply online atsummitbeverage.com/careers [email protected] calls please.

12413 GARAGE SALE UNIVERSITY

22" Panasonic TV w/remote & in-structions. Works great. 728-7001lv. msg.

Goat. 8 yr old Fainting goat nanny.Last kids (2), March 2014. 543-8272

Free to give away working Treadmillyou pick up. call me at 396-9541

KW Sales Co. is seeking a jour-neyman HD truck mechanic. Weare looking for someone with abackground in all aspects of class8 truck repair. ISX and MX train-ing a plus. Pay D.O.E. 721-2760Troy

Cannabis ClinicMedical Marijuana Cardrenewals and new patientappointments. Since 2009

589-5516

Free pallets, pick up at BoyceLumber 1410 S. Russell St HUGE ALL CHURCH

GARAGE SALE!ZOOTOWN CHURCH

(across from Cabela's)October 3rd & 4th

8am-4pm

NOTICE TO CREDITORSCause No. DP-14-190Dept. No. 2IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATEOF SHEILA KAY REEP,Deceased.

MONTANA FOURTH JUDICIALDISTRICT COURT, MISSOULA

COUNTYNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that theundersigned has been appointedPersonal Representative of theabove-named estate. All personshaving claims against the said estateare required to present their claimswithin four (4) months after the dateof the first publication of this Noticeor said claims will be forever barred.Claims must either be mailed to AN-GELA JONES, the Personal Repre-sentative, return receipt requested,c/o REEP, BELL, LAIRD & SIMP-SON, P.C., P.O. Box 16960, Mis-soula, Montana 59808-6960 or filedwith the Clerk of the above-entitledCourt.DATED this 29th day of Septem-beer, 2014

REEP, BELL, LAIRD & SIMPSON,P.C.

By: /s/ Richard A. ReepAttorneys for Personal

RepresentativeRichard A. Reep, Esq.REEP, BELL, LAIRD & SIMPSON,P.C.2955 Stockyard RoadP.O. Box 16960Missoula, Montana 59808-6960Telephone: (406) 541-4100Facsimile: (406) 541-4101Attorneys for Personal Representa-tive#20364480 October 3, 10 & 17,2014

112 TO GIVE AWAY PUBLIC NOTICES 12410 GARAGE SALE SOUTHSIDE 209 PROFESSIONAL

POSITIONS 399 LEGALS MNAXLP

CUSTOMER SERVICEPH: 800-332-6212

Email: [email protected]

BREAKING NEWSTEXT ALERTSsign up atmissoulian.com

www.missoulian.com and mobile plus SellitMT.com - place it online now

½Price to Advertise3 lines = $49494 lines = $5649

$700 for each additional line

Good for your Economy!

3 line minimum, $7.00 each additional line. Please pay in advance,cancelable, non refundable. Not good on Business Opportunities or Employment.

When you use our 14-day Special!Includes: 14 days Missoulian, 10 days Ravalli Republic, Missoulian.com & SellitMT.com

Ask about Bulletins - Only $10 per week!

Offer Expires October 3, 2014

406-721-6200 • toll free 800-332-6212 • fax 523-5221Mon-Fri 8 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.

www.missoulian.com and mobile plus SellitMT.com place it online now

C4 - Missoulian Classified, Friday, October 3, 2014

12201 Moccasin Ct - PerfectBusiness/ Home -Warehouse Stor-age, Living Quarters (1b/ 1b) MainLevel, Office Space Upstairs. 2 Ac-

res, 4RV Hookups (Unzoned GreatPotential) $359,000. 406-544-2620

Farviews/Lewis & Clark school- 3/2fireplace and pellet stove. 2 car gar-

age. Motivated. $232,000. 214-4761

510 RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY

755 Montana Ave.Missoula - $209,900

OPEN SUNDAY 12:-1:30!! CLOSETO THE RIVER & GOLF!! 3 BD/1 BA+ located on a corner lot. Main levelincludes lvg rm, kitchen, 2 BD's andfull BA, hardwood flrs throughoutmain. Property backs to park, maturelandscaping & more! mls#20144763

Katy Mckinnon - 544.9955

3073 Catherine Ct.Missoula - $559,000

Beautiful one level 3bd 2.5ba TargetRange home on one acre. Featureshdwood & tile floors, a/c, tall ceilings,gas fireplace, master suite w/ soak-ing tub & steam shower.Lg fencedyd w/ u/g sprink, storage shed & gar-age mls#20143442

The Bryan Team329-2011 or 329-2020

Lake Front Condo on Hauser LakeNE of Helena. 2855 sq ft with

3 bed, 3 bath. High endliving, hardwood, granite...$659,000. Dan 406-949-4655

9955 George Cates BlvdLuxury Ranch Living

$595,000* 6 Bed/4 Bath on 5 Acres* 10 stall horse barn* 40x50 & 20x40 heated shops* Custom cabinetry throughout* Add 5 acres with well for$175,000!* www.georgecates.com

Shelly Evans, Broker406-544-8570 Call/Text

Check the Missoulian everyday for legal listings for

both the City of Missoula &Missoula County.

All legal listings are alsoavailable on Missoulian.com

5905 Longview DriveMissoula - $219,500

3 Bedroom, 2 Bath home in theSouth Hills. Large, landscaped lotwith sheds & Greenhouse. Singlecar garage is heated. Updates in-clude 3 Pane Windows, Maint. FreeSiding, Bamboo Floor and HickoryCabinets in the kitchen and More.mls#20146116

Bill Taber - 544-6557

399 LEGALS MNAXLP 399 LEGALS MNAXLP

2203 W SussexMissoula - $170,000

3 bedroom, 1 bath home has beencompletely remodeled and is movein ready. All wood floors have justbeen refinished and they are abso-lutely gorgeous. Located on a cornerlot with a fenced yard. Call Jay todayfor a showing. MLS: 20146222

Jay Getz 214-4016

1997 Briarwood Mobile home on 1 acre inFrenchtown. 3bdrm/2bath not on a permanent

foundation. 24’X40’Shop/Garage, 22’X17’Coveredcarport w/attached 16’X13’unfinished hobby rm.

$138,000Red Carpet Realty 728-7262

www.redcarpet-realty.com

"Carefree Condo Living onFlathead Lake"

From $195,000 to $625,000Mission Bay Realty

Mac Swan406-253-0855

[email protected]

509 COUNTRY LIVING 510 RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY

913 SW HigginsRecently remodeled.

$825/mo. All utilities paid!Martin's Property Mgmt LLC

777-1366 or 239-8308or 549-2062

502 WATERFRONT SITES

1018 Burlington, 240sf to 1,318sfMid-Town Private Offices,

Ample Parking, Util. IncludedCall 206-914-4069

205 Trails End, Hamilton, views,3bd/1ba, 1.22 ac, 2 mi. from townPRICED REDUCED! $169,900 MLS# 55533 MK Broker 406-241-9982

428 OFFICE/RETAIL LEASE

211 Red Fox RdLolo - $239,500

PRICE REDUCED & SELLER MOTI-VATED! This 3BD, 2BA home fea-tures new paint and carpet through-out. Fabulous 1/4 acre fenced yardw/underground sprinklers and PRI-VATE LAKE FRONTAGE! Only 10minutes to Missoula. This is a spe-cial place! mls#20145868

Julie Anton - 406-868-1839

Target Range Ct. 80' max.Ref's & dep required. No Pets

406-721-2404

Mobile home lots centrallylocated, $340/mo W/S/G pd,

move in specials available!Please call MREM 541-6468 for

appt. or see website at:www.millenniumrem.com

Bed & Breakfast? Guide Service? Private Retreat? You decide… Beautiful 2 story, 3600 sq. ft.home on 59.4 timbered acres bordering USFS & close to Cabinet Gorge Reservoir.

This area is known for fishing, hunting, hiking, riding & outdoor recreating. Custom home withgourmet kitchen 3 bdrms/3 ½ bath. Shop 60’ X 68’ w/radiant floor heat, ½ bath.

Please call Rick or LynnetteFor a personal showing728-7262 or 544-5778

Red Carpet Realty • 728-7262 • redcarpet-realty.com

Lg. double wide lot, great view onMullan Rd. No dogs. $275mo.

543-3903

2.8 Acres on Old West Trailnorth of Corvallis offN. Birch Creek Road.

$75,000 cash or short termw/ $20K down. 642-3864

422 MOBILE LOT RENTAL

5 Bedroom, 4 Bathroom Homeon 11 acres (feels like 100 acreswith adjacent space) with barn and

horse fencing. New carpet and paint.4 miles to Florence/93 Junction.

Whole House wood stove or simplypropane furnace. Beautiful viewson all sides. In ground sprinklersfor lawn around the house. No

smoking or dogs/cats inside house.Rent negotiable.

Call Ken 801-558-0795.**Home Also For Sale**

509 COUNTRY LIVING 509 COUNTRY LIVING

1808 DixonMissoula - $255,000

Charming 3bd 2ba home in a desira-ble area. Features hardwood floors,brick fireplace, oak cabinets, openkitchen and dining area. Coveredback porch opens to large back yardwith mature landscaping and under-ground sprinklers. mls#20145738

The Bryan Team329-2011 or 329-2020

501 BITTERROOT PROPERTY

501 BITTERROOT PROPERTY

• CitiLodge Weeklies: $159 & UpMicro/Fridge Avail., Wifi, 549-2358-----------------------------------------------• Sleepy Inn Weekly Special:Ph., Wifi, Cable, Kitchen, 549-6484

FURNISHED. Nice. Missoula.1 week only: 1/2 Price Deposit

$435/mo. incl. util. 866-728-2664www.ValueAddedRentals.com

3 rooms avail. in Canyon River GolfCourse home. 1 master & 2 regular

bdrms. Brand new appliances.Furnished living areas. $550-$750.

531-4550

Country Living…Close to Arlee,3bdrm/2bath Split Entry home on 10acres, mother-in-law apt, garage/shop.

$238,000Red Carpet Realty 728-7262

www.redcarpet-realty.com

420 ROOMS FOR RENT

14550 Hellgate LaneClinton - $289,900

Nice country property nestled in thepines. Beautifully landscaped, thisproperty feels like a park, with firepit, deck, covered patio and more.Split level with two levels of livingspace. 4 bd, 2 ba, 5 car attachedgarage/shop! mls#20144471

The Bryan Team329-2011 or 329-2020

507 MISSION VALLEY PROPERTIES

524 Dixon AveMissoula - $349,000

Lovely 4 BD, 3 BA home in theLewis & Clark area situated on anoversize corner lot. Lots of room withover 1800 sq ft on each level. Openfloor plan with large rooms. Needssome updating, but priced to sell at$96 per sq. ft. MLS: 20146215

Jay Getz 214-4016

2413 Garland DriveMissoula - $299,000

NEW LISTING! 2KW solarsystem-watch your meter run back-wards. Well maintained home withcomplete one level living plus a fin-ished lower level. Kitchen with themaple flooring & updated appli-ances. 3 BD, 3 BATH, DBL GAR &more mls#20146148

The Bryan Team329-2011 - 329-2020

Like New Duplex. 2BD/2BAincludes W/D, New Appliances,

A/C, Single Garage, $825/mo.Drake Rentals. 406-552-9898

First time onmarket!This 704 +/- acre property is in two parcels, one consisting of 544.2 +/- acres and the other 160 +/-acres. This is a pristine property for hunting or grazing, with several springs. Buy and build your dream.Property is located in Missoula County lying East and North of railroad right away. Legal access is off

Tucker Road. MLS#20143281. Please call Deb at (406)239-5563 for showings.

DEBBIE DAUENHAUER-HESS • Cell: (406) 239-5563DAUENHAUER REAL ESTATE NWNATIONAL

Duplex on Bitterroot River, Stevi,2+1 full bath, 1100 sq.ft. with viewsof the river and Mts. Laundry w/d

incl. Garage att, fenced, gardeningincluded. New carpet/paint. $930

381-00865241 Canyon RiverMissoula - $799,000

ELEGANT LIVING NEAR THE 16THTEE AT CANYON RIVER GOLFCOMMUNITY! Functionality andbeauty in a luxury 3 bd, 3 bathhome. Open floor plan with spaciousdining area and kitchen with hard-wood hickory cabinetry, stainless ap-pliances. MLS: 20141965

Jay Getz 214-4016For Private Showing

2Bd/2Ba Executive condo. 1 levelliving, Energy Star, attached double

garage, $1200/mo. Good credit.No pets. Call Betty Wilkins,Broker/Owner, 406-880-9410

Victor City Lot. 122 B St.Large double garage/shop.Owner may carry contract.

Price reduced $54,500!406-273-9018

419 CONDOS FOR RENT

508 Pattee CanyonMissoula - $299,000

Super nice quality built brick homelocated in the very popular Lewisand Clark school district. Hardwoodflrs, new vinyl windows, central air,and a private fenced back yard withu/g sprinklers. 4 bd, 2 bath, dbl gar-age mls#20144197

Bryan Team 329-2011

Target Range Ct. 2Bd & 3Bd,dep & ref's required. No Pets.

406-721-2404

✹ ✹ 2 & 3 Bdrm Available ✹ ✹406-546-9475, 406-728-6477

418 MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR RENT

STORAGE for YOUR PEACE of MIND• Dry, climate controlled units• Secure with easy access• Room for the entire house• Boat, RV, Motorcycle, Antiques, Archives, Wine Collections,Heirlooms, Personal Items

406.926.31582220 River Road, Msla • Visit us on Facebook

UNITSAVAILABLE

CALLTODAY! 350 Strand Avenue

Missoula - $350,000Charming 3 bdrm, 2 bath home inthe Lewis & Clark area with a privateback yard fenced and landscapedlike an oasis! Coved ceilings, hard-wood floors and arched doorways.Lower level with second kitchen. De-tached single car garagemls#20146267

Jennifer Taylor 360-0184

Lower Pattee Canyon ExecutiveHome, 4Bd/3Ba, 3 car garage,Available now. No smoke/pets,

$2600/mo. + dep. 728-5006 lv. msg.

436 STORAGE RENTAL 436 STORAGE RENTAL

Lot 5 Cora CourtMissoula - $159,000

TARGET RANGE 1 acre lot! Lovelylevel lot with well & power. Irrigationditch borders the property and thereare water rights off the ditch. lilacsand perennial flower beds. Beautifulviews in a quiet setting. 80 foot well,35 GPM. MLS: 20133190

Jennifer 406.360.0184 Bethany406.396.0704

Lolo, 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath. Newerhome, no smoke. $1325/mo.Call 360-0393 or 626-0586

Shop space with officespace. Off Reserve. 251-4645

3212 HelenaMissoula - $329,000

Completely updated home with 4levels of living space, 5bd 3ba. Up-dated appliances, new flooring onmain, newer roof, u/g sprinklers, cen-tral air, chain link fencing, garageshop plus shed. Big fenced yard withmulti-level deck. mls#20145336

The Bryan Team 329-2011

506 LOTS, ACREAGE 510 RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY

Close to U/Downtown, 4Bd/2Ba,bonus rms. $1500. W/D, DW, fenced

yard & more. No pets/smoking.396-0283 or 728-3819

ADEA ⟨ 3015 W RailroadUnits avail. 2080 sq. ft. overhead

door, $900/$750 dep. 728-2332

2000sf shop near Wye,14' overhead door, office, bath,$900/mo. + $850 dep. 273-0159

Available Now! 1Bd, handicap acces-sible, $650/mo + $650 dep. Tenant

pays electric, W/S/G provided. Nosmoking. For showing call Yvonne

218-8993

430 INDUSTRIAL/WAREHOUSE LEASE

5268 Avalon - Lolo. Newer 3Bd/2Ba,1 level, single gar., $890/mo. Call

Chuck 544-4403 for showing.2234 Roy Dr.

Missoula - $218,900Meticulously cared for 2 bd, 1 bathone level home located on a cornerlot in a desirable cul-da-sac. Dbl gar-age, u/g sprinklers, all appliances in-cluded. Utilities bills are minimal forthis energy efficient home. Move inready. MLS: 20146261

Brandy Gillespie 218-8893

WESTSIDE COMMONS PROFES-SIONAL BLDG, 120 S. 5th Hamil-ton, 875sq/ft, private bath, groundfloor, ample parking, A/C, bright win-dows, Unit 101, $795. incl. garbage,water, sewer. 369-4313 4975 Lower Miller Creek Road

Missoula - $459,900Wonderful country property Wellmaintained 5 BD, 2.5 BA home plusoutbuildings. Large living room withgas brick fireplace open to diningand wall of windows overlooking theback yard. Remodeled kitchen withupdated appliances. mls#20145157

The Bryan Team329-2011 or 329-2020

Shop space with officespace. Off Reserve. 251-4645

380 Hidden Valley Road SouthFlorence - $225,000

This home sits on 5 beautiful fencedacres, it enjoys an amazing view ofthe Bitterroot Valley and has the pri-vacy so many seek in this area. Br-ing your horses and your visionwhen you make this home yours.The location provides an oasis ofyour own. MLS: 20145990Judy 329-2017 Or Barbie 329-2063

5 Bedroom, 4 Bathroom Homeon11 acres (feels like 100 acres

with adjacent space) with barn andhorse fencing. New carpet and paint.

4 miles to Florence/93 Junction.Whole House wood stove or simplypropane furnace. Beautiful viewson all sides. In ground sprinklersfor lawn around the house. No

smoking or dogs/cats inside house.$1950/ month plus deposit.

Call Ken 801-558-0795.**Home Also For Sale**

For sale by owner. Realtor’s welcome.

FOR MORE INFO CONTACT 406-726-3396

Time to downsize the ranch. 40 acres available.Only 20 minutes north of Missoula with a trout

stream running through the property.

FIRST TIME OFFERED IN OVER 50 YEARS!

5444 HauganMissoula - $524,900

NEW LISTING! Super nice MillerCreek 5bd 3ba home with solar fea-tures. Solar panels tie into waterheater and interior rock walls absorbheat in winter. Over 9 acres, triplecar garage, garage/shop with RVdoor. mls#20146203

The Bryan Team329-2011 or 329-2020

3Bed / 2Bath - 2car garage inPotomac,MT 7+acres- primarily

wood heat. $900mo. 360-325-3458

506 LOTS, ACREAGE 506 LOTS, ACREAGE 510 RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY

3bd, 2ba home w/shop, Hwy 93frontage, North Hamilton, $950/mo.

406-363-8716

3 Bed near Food Farm/UM,hookups, no pets/smoke,

$975/$700 dep. Refs. 721-6599

416 HOUSES, UNFURNISHED

Call or visit our website for lease rates!140 N. Higgins

235 - 475 SF office space & 1600 SF Street Level Retail500 N. Higgins

400, 530, 1000, 1200, & 2600 Sq. Ft. Options!

227 B N. Higgins Ave.1620 sq. ft. Available Now!

800 Kensington350, 600, 930, 1400 & 1850 Sq. Ft. Options!

1119W. Kent Ave237 SF - 760 SF starting at $180/mo

1505 & 1521 Russell1089 & 3090 sq. ft.

415 N Higgins- Higgins PlazaOffices 150-475 sf. Starting at $195/mo.

RENTSPM.COM • 406.549.3929

Triplex in Lolo 2Bd/1Ba, lg. 1100sq. ft. W/D hkps. $695+$695 dep.No pets or smoking. Call 214-1562

Hamilton, nice space set up forbeauty shop, office, etc. Hwy front-age, gas/water/sewer pd. $500./mo363-0966 or 363-4867

372 Hidden Valley Rd SouthFlorence - $310,000

AMAZING LOG HOME ON 5 AC-RES! Beautiful open floor plan fea-turing 4BD, 2BA, floor-to-ceiling rockfireplace, and tiled sunken tub.Horses welcome. Great MOUNTAINVIEWS in all directions! Only 20 mindrive to Missoula. Must see!mls#20146003

Julie Anton - 406-868-1839

228 Riverview Dr., Seeley Lake.End lot in subdivision. Nice main-tained 1500+ sq ft home in SeeleyLake. Storage & covered area forwood, toys & more. Short walk toall Seeley has to offer. Chance toown that weekend getaway at anaffordable price. Enjoy Seeley’srecreation fun whether its summero r w i n t e r . $ 1 0 5 , 0 0 0 –MLS20142204BRUCE A WOLD (406) 677-4149

Rattlesnake 2Bd/1Ba Duplex,Exc. location, garage, lawn, garden,

on quiet street, gas heat, fireplace,W/D hkups, DW, fridge, stove.

$800/mo + $1000/dep + utils. Back-ground check/refs. 509-981-6985

505 SEELEY SWAN, BLACKFOOT

Clean 2Bd, W/D hookups, DW,gas, yard, garage, No pets/smoke.

$750/mo. 406-251-5631

510 RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY 510 RESIDENTIAL

PROPERTYOffice/Retail $10-$15 per sq.ft.

• 345 W Front | 1800sq.ft., 2500 sq.ft.• 622 Railroad, Alberton | 650 sq.ft.• 2404 Washburn | 1000 sq.ft.Warehouse/Office $6-$8 per sq.ft.• 3719 Grant Creek Rd | 2600 sq.ft. + ¾ acre• 1132 Longstaff | 2450 sq.ft.• 725 Ronan | 1700-10,000 sq.ft.

PROPERTY MANAGEMENT CO.401 SW Higgins • 543-9798

909 Spartan Dr, Lower Unit,2Bd/1Ba, W/D incl., DW, fencedback yard, garage, ALL utilitiesincluded. $1000/mo + depositNo Pets/Smoke. Call 544-1537

305 Wyant Ln, Hamilton 2bd+/2ba,privacy, studio/barn, 2 ac. mtn views,MLS# 56483 MK, Broker, PRICEREDUCED $205,000. 406-241-9982

411 DUPLEXES, UNFURNISHED 428 OFFICE/RETAIL

LEASE

501 BITTERROOT PROPERTY

"Flathead Lake Homes"From $347,000 to $929,000

Mission Bay RealtyMac Swan

[email protected]

503 FLATHEAD PROPERTY

Brand New!Ashlyn Place Apts155 N. CaliforniaNew 2 Bdrm deluxe apt. withview, elevator, washer/dryer,work-out room on site.

Call Ashlyn Place Apartments,721-2458, 544-1429 or 880-3766 for info.

Larchwood South Shore subdivision on Noxon Reservoir,shared well, Community Dock, 1+ acre Avista frontage lots.

Year around access & activities from hunting tofishing to snowmobiling.

Red Carpet Realty 728-7262www.redcarpet-realty.com

$108,900 to $129,900353 Speedway

$214,900 •MLS 20146075Options, options

New construction with custom finishes & lots ofoptions for future expansion. 2 bed/2 full baths on mainfloor, full unfinished basement with 9’ ceilings and 3egress windows, roughed in bath, etc. 1,142 sq. Ft.

on each floor.

3111 Catherine Court$399,900 •MLS 20146063

Target Range areaLarge 5 bedroom, 3 bath home on 1 manicured acre inthe desirable Target Range area. Over 3,300 square feetfinished. Family room with gas fireplace.Includes an oversized double garage &large storage shed, extra parking area.

2 NEW MUST SEE PROPERTIES

Jauna Poindexter, Realtor | 207-1360Bill Bangs, Broker | 239-8622

410 APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 410 APARTMENTS

UNFURNISHED 502 WATERFRONT SITES 510 RESIDENTIAL

PROPERTY 510 RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY

Missoulian Classified, Friday, October 3, 2014 - C5

SERVICED I R E C T O R Y

CARPET/TILE/HARDWOOD

CLEANING

Joe’s Mobile Auto RepairI’ll come to you! Licensed & bonded.

273-1944

Paying CASH for Broke DownCars - Trucks - Vans CALL TODAY! 541-0044

Kraiger’s Flooring, Lic./Ins., carpet/linoleuminstall + repairs, 30 years experience.

Craig Buss, 240-4485

Laminate - Vinyl - Carpet Installation Restretch andrepairs. Lic/Ins. Hafner Installation.

544-2672 cell / 273-2579 lv. msg.

Will clean move ins/outs only. Refs.Lic’d/Ins’d. Laurie (406) 546-5651

GARDEN YARD & LANDSCAPING

Spring Clean-up/Power RakingHedge Trimming, Lawn Mowing, Tree Pruning.

Tayer’s Lawn & GardenCall 880-8373

AUTOMOBILE SERVICES

Driveways, City SidewalksExcavation, Curbs, Repairs

Lic’d & Bonded, 19 years experience. CC acceptedCall Steve 406-241-4932

JD Parker ConstructionAsphalt Paving, Parking Lots, Seal Coating,Gravel Service, Dump Truck/Bobcat Service.

Lic’d. Bonded & Ins’d. 239-7151

Screened Top Soil, Bark, Compost,Gravel, Rock & Fill.

Delivered Call 721-4826

Bellboys Lawn CareCOMPETITIVE PRICING on all lawn care needs

including weekly mowing. aerating, bed maintenance,thatching. Lic’d & Insur’d. Professional. 406-396-1747

Don Williams Tractor ServiceMowing Fields, Pasture & Lots. Grading of Driveways,BuildingPads & Parking Areas, Landscape Grading,

Horse Arenas, & Round Pens360-8100, 29 Years in Business, Insured

SCREENED TOPSOILat $18/yd, delivery, Missoula area.

544-2584 and 370-0463

ASPHALT SERVICE

MLD CONCRETEFooting, walls, flatwork, driveways.

Mike 361-0442

GUTTER AND DOWNSPOUT SERVICE

Can’t Wait Clean UpIn Home and Commercial Cleaning.

Landscaping and Garden Maintenance.Mowing. Tree Trimming & Removal.

370-3935 Call for free estimates.

American AsphaltPaving • Patching • Seal coating

Concrete Repairs.Licensed/Insured 544-6404

HANDYMAN SERVICE

Helping Hands Handyman ServiceAvailable year round!

Michael (406)214-8677

Need something Fixed/Painted/Cleaned/Hauled/Yard?No job too small. Lic./Ins. Ref’s. Avail.

Fixed by Flaherty • 531-8316

Call for Free Quote 406-830-4810Lincensed Insured Contractor

Proudly Serving all Western MT

10% off New Installs15% off Gutters

Cleaned and Repaired

Grizzly TrailSeamless GuttersNew Installs, Gutters Cleaned &Repaired, Leaf Gaurd Systems,Over 75 Colors, Offering theBest Possible Product at anAffordable Price. Serving

Missoula & the Bitterroot Valley.

l

Call For a Free Quote 406-830-4810We Hang them Right the 1st TimeLicensed and Insured Contractor

GARDEN YARD & LANDSCAPING

EXCAVATING

Excavation - Grading - DemoBasements, Driveways, Water, Sewer, Drainfields &French Drains, Concrete Removal, Ditch Digging

19 years experience. Lic., Ins. & BondedCall Steve 406-241-4932

CONCRETE SERVICES

BLACKFOOT ASPHALT MAINTENANCESeal coating protects your

asphalt and makes it look likenew! Licensed, Bonded, andInsured. 406-830-6930 or

www.blackfootasphalt.com

CLEANING DONE RIGHT- the first time. Residential/Commercial;

Rentals/New Construction; PartyCleaning/Preparations. Ref. Available

406-207-1944

CLEANING

Landscape Maintenance, Lawn Mowing& Field Mowing, Pruning, Trimming, FALLCLEANUPS, SNOW REMOVAL, Hauling.

Licensed & Insured - 258-2929

Brothers & Sons Lawn Care“Sprinkler Blowouts”

Final lawn cuts & fall cleanup.Call Pascal 493-5728

FURNITURE REFINISHING

RESTORE THE OLD FOR THE FUTURENorth Avenue Furniture Refinishing8752 Bogar Lane, Clinton, MT.

406-825-4140

✻ Screened Top Soil, Bark,Compost, Gravel, Rock & Fill.

Delivered. Call 721-4826

625 LAWN, GARDEN

6418 Mormon CreekLolo - $895,000

Large warehouse building with al-most 30,000 SF of useable space!One story steel frame building (builtin 2005) with 24,800 SF on the mainlevel and a 4,900 SF storage mezza-nine. Great location, condition, andaccess! mls#20144187

Mike Bryan 329-2022

MATTRESS SALE!Brand new regular & pillow top

mattress sets in all sizes. Wewill gladly beat any other

mattress dealer's in-stockprices on new mattresses.

Full House Furniture2100 S. Reserve St

Missoula, MT. Phone: 549-0601www.fullhousefurniture.com

FSBO 2400 Windsor CourtMullan Road - Country Crest

2100 sq ft, 4 bedroom, 3 full bath,vaulted ceilings, open kitchen,

dining and great room. finishedwalk-out basement with family room

and laundry. Covered deck withMtn views, fenced yard & pond.

AC, UG sprinklers. $363,000Eric or Julie 298-0890/370-7916

King size bed w/headboard & 6drawer pedastal underneath.Bedding to fit. $100/o.b.o.

273-2420 or 240-2317.

3810 Rocky Mountain RoadBonner - $300,000

http://www.realestateshows.com/724487Just outside of town thisupdatedhome offers 3 bedrooms and 3baths. Situated on 1.14 acres inBonner. Fenced backyard, Doublegarage and private setting and re-cently updated! The kitchen appli-ances were new in 2013. MLS:20144419

Jennifer 406.360.0184Bethany 406.396.0704

Price Reduced!!! $214,500FSBO 4608 Monticelllo Place.4Bd/2Ba with 2 car garage, newstainless appliances, upgradedflooring and lighting, new deck,

underground sprinklers. Qualifiesfor Rural Development Loan! Willwork with buyer's agent. Qualified

buyers only. MLS #20145623.Call Jennifer 770-310-0517

618 FURNITURE

6920 Mullan Rd. 3Bd/1.5Ba..9 Acres. No covenants. Bringyour toys. Home office or light

commercial? $199,5001514 SW 4th St. Starter Home

3Bd/1Ba. 2 lots. Newersingle gar Close to GFS &

Biking paths. $168,900Near Russell School & Mall4Bd/2Ba family home. Newremodeled bsmt w/ egress

windows. Double-double sizegarage. $239,900.

REAVES REALTY406-240-1771

Helping Buyers and Sellers inMissoula for over 35 years!

Missoula City Full BeverageLiquor License.

Call 370-0351 or 370-0146

1225 Rodgers StreetMissoula - $1,490,000

NEWLY BROUGHT INTO THE MIS-SOULA URBAN RENEWAL DIS-TRICT. Great opportunity for com-mercial, industrial, or residential de-velopment. Formerly Clawson Win-dow Manufacturing. Value is in theland. 8.69 Acres in a great location.mls#20141574

Gary Bryan 329-2011Mike Bryan 320-2022

Magnificent Views on this 4Bd,2Ba property situated on 2 acres.

Radiant in-floor heat, UG sprinklers,deck, fire pit & much more!

$296,900/negotiableForSaleByOwner.com Listing ID

23974078. 406-370-0678

518 COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES

Fidelity Real EstateLolo area homes

11897 Sleeman $524,900Large home

on 72 ACRES

212 Cap Devilla $245,900Great updated home

2 car garage plusextra parking for toys

Call Bonnie Williford240-6616

See all onMISSOULAHOMES.COM

1333 WashburnMissoula - $147,000

Completely renovated to like-newcondition in 2008. Updated ameni-ties included refinished hardwoodfloor, new roof, windows, exteriorand interior doors, interior trim, andmuch more! A real cutie.mls#20142564

406-329-2017

2020 S RussellMissoula - $499,000

Pool, Pond and Spa business forsale! Includes real estate, inventory,equipment and customer list. Busi-ness services and sells pool, pondand spa related items. Long timeMissoula business. Strong and sta-ble cash flow. mls#20146010

Mike Bryan 329-2022

506 Riverside, Stevi - $160,0004Bd/2Ba remodeled

3017 River Bend - $155,0001 acre, 136' Blackfoot River

The Lane - $97,50002.57 acres

555 BUSINESS FOR SALE

2006 Friendship Elite, 3Bd/2Ba,exc. cond., must sacrifice.

$36,000/o.b.o. 305-484-4214

Shannon Tonn/Cindy Klette406.239.2408/406.544.4635

2101 Dearborn Ave #13Missoula | $129,900

• Great centrally located condo.• Hardwood floors & granite counters.• $134/monthly HOA dues.

MLS #: 20136443

406.239.2408/[email protected]

NICE HOME! 3Bd/2Ba, bright, clean,refurbished; deck, vinyl siding,

energy windows, in quiet park neardowntown. $22,500. 543-3166

105 E BroadDrummond - $80,000

It may work to take this conversionfrom a home to several apartment annumber of years ago, back to ahome?? Price is reduced and in thecenter of Drummond. There is arental house in the back too! GreatDeal for right person! mls#20142920Judy 329-2017 Or Barbie 329-2063

524 MANUFACTURED HOMES

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-321007 Handley Loop, Clinton

Wallace Creek 4 Bedroom/3 Bath.Cathedral Ceilings, new flooring

and formal dining room.Over a lush acre with large trees

and views of the mountains.$279,000 ∗ MLS#20145148

See Map #20 in Sunday'sOpen House Directory

103 RegalMilltown - $169,500

Completely renovated to like-newcondition in 2008. Updated ameni-ties included refinished hardwoodfloor, new roof, windows, exteriorand interior doors, interior trim, exte-rior paint, furnace, water heater, in-sulation, electrical, flooring, cabinets,co mls#20145266Barbie 329-2063 Or Judy 329-2017

1225 Van BurenMissoula - $195,000

This location for getting to the U of Mand down town is GREAT. Not allthat far from the Rattlesnake Wilder-ness area either. The charm of thishome speaks for itself as you gothrough the property. There are 2bedrooms plus a bright office. MLS:20142787Judy 329-2017 Or Barbie 329-2063

FSBO: Belview Area1812 35th St

Near SG Mall, 3Bd/2.5Ba plus3 bonus rooms, 1500 sq ft w/ full

finished basement, attached2 car garage, covered outsidedeck, UG sprinklers, central air,

2 fireplaces, with or withoutfurnishings, $300,000-$325,000.

For appt call 549-2809

BRAND NEW!Exciting New 2 Bed Units Just

Completed, Features TiledKitchen & Bath, Gas Fireplace,A/C, Carport, Deck, Clubhouse

w/ Fitness, $129,900View at www.the4100.com

MLS#20135885Priske Realty 880-6799

43037 Saint Marys Lake RdSaint Ignatius - $149,500

AMAZING VALUE! Gorgeously fin-ished 2BD, 2BA home featuringhand-scraped hardwoods, tiled bath-rooms, granite counters, and twofireplaces. Fenced .20 acre yard,wraparound Trex deck, and nice pri-vacy. Must see to appreciate!mls#20145821

Julie Anton - 406-868-1839

514 OUT OF TOWN5305 Avalon LaneLolo - $186,800

Price reduction! RD Eligible,Lovelywell cared for home with 2 bedrooms& 2 bathrooms plus attached doublecar garage. Great landscaping withUG sprinklers and two patioa r e a s . M a i n f l o o r l i v i n g !http://www.RealEstateShows.com/7245 mls#20144460

Jenn 406.360.0184 OrBethany 406.396.0704

14075 Hampton DriveTurah - $289,000

http://www.realestateshows.com/712915 This five bedroom, three bathroom home has so many amenitiesthat make it perfect for entertainingattached 2 car garage, 3 car shed,alarge bonus room above the garage.Master suite. MLS: 20142226

Jennifer 406.360.0184Bethany 406.396.0704

Priced to Sell! $205,000.2232 E. Crescent. 4Bd/2Ba.

Fenced yard. Too manybonuses to list! Call 880-6117

FSBO 825 Dixon Ave. Excellentlocation, close to U of M and localschools. Nice quiet neighborhood,

2 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 bonus roomsin full basement, 2 car attachedgarage. Large fenced yard and

covered deck, newly refurbished.Must see! $245,000.Call 406-745-4559

Affordable Properties For Sale-Florence Log Freddie Mac fore-closure home on 10 acres. NeedsWork. $149,000-Rock Creek River Front Lots$110,000-Very nice Clinton home on 1 ac-res w/creek frontage. 4bed/3bath.Shows great. Estate Sale! $269k.-Frenchtown acreage with amaz-ing views. 2.96 acres over look-ing valley $64,900-Blackfoot home on 10 acres. Out-standing building site. $225,000.-3.2 acres no covenants nearJohnsrud and Bfoot River. Mo-biles OK! Cool views $66,500-Rock Creek Cabin and shop nearriver. Almost new condition. 4.2acres. $174,500-Central Msla home on 5 lots w/garage, barn. Ton of Develop-ment Potential. $285k.Call Clint @ PRU MSLA 544.3730

2200 Garland #30Missoula - $107,500

MOVE-IN READY NOW! Cute, com-fortable & convenient home. Move-inready with fresh paint, new carpet, acompletely redone bathroom, newshower surround, new vanity, newcabinet doors in the kitchen, and anew powder coated railing. MLS:20136902

Jay H. Getz - 214-4016For Personal Showing

510 RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY 510 RESIDENTIAL

PROPERTY 510 RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY 510 RESIDENTIAL

PROPERTY 510 RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY 523 CONDOS FOR SALE

C6 - Missoulian Classified, Friday, October 3, 2014

SERVICED I R E C T O R Y

TILE INSTALLATION

Tile InstallationWalk-in showers, Kitchens & Bathrooms

justinthetileguy.com. 214-7932

TREE SERVICE

WINDOW CLEANING SERVICE

MONTANA WINDOW CLEANING829-0339 • SINCE 1994

Fisher Family Construction.Metal & architectural shingles,Free estimates, Lic./Ins.

Roof for Troops Rebate: Active Military, Veterans & Retireesreceive $500 off your next roof.

Ivan Fisher......274-2036

R & S Painting Serving Griz Countryfor 14+ yrs. Interior/Exterior painting& staining, senior discounts, letters

of refs. Lic/Ins. Free est.Call 240-3793

PETCARE SERVICES

CRITTER SITTERPets loved & cared for in their home.

No kennel cough shots ;)Less stress especially for cats. Reasonable rates.

Free consultation to meet you and your pet.Starting at $15/visit. Lic’d/ Ins’d.

Call Marcia 207-3345

REMODELING REFINISHINGAMERICAN BUILT CUSTOMS, INC.

#1 in Custom Kitchens & Bathrooms in MissoulaDon’t Miss Our Fall Specials on Kitchen & Bathroom Remodels.

Up to 10% Discount. Senior & VA Discounts Always.· Custom, Additions & Repairs · Decks, Doors, Windows & Siding

· 1 Year Warranty on All Labor. Lic’d & Ins’d & Bonded.Call Mark 327-5655

Cecil Buss Maintenance ContractorsIn Business for 37 years

Stone & Stucco • Tile • Painting DrywallGeneral Contracting • Window Replacement • General Repairs

Cell 406-529-0430

MB Painting30 yrs. experience, refs. available. Lic/Ins.

728-5737

LIGHTEN UP PAINTINGLicensed & Insured. Celebrating our 30th anniversary!

Carrie 207-9255

Glacier Tree ServiceSpring Specials! Free estimates. Tree & shrub care,

pruning & removal, stump grinding, fire burn/removal.15% off with this ad!

Lic’d/Ins’d. 406-529-9228

e

HEATING & COOLING

Silvertip Heating & AirFurnaces, Fireplaces, A/C, New Construction,Remodel, Gas Piping. Exp. Lic. Bonded. Ins.

Refs. 493-0081 or 207-0201

HOME IMPROVEMENT SERVICE

Remodel, New Construction, Additions & RestoreLic’d./Ins’d. 406-531-2123

www.seamansconstruction.com

HANDYMAN SERVICE

HoppersHopping to meet your every building need!

Remodeling, restoration, renovation, or handyman.

406-926-1681 • hopperscreations.com

Brian’s Handyman ServiceHousehold Repairs and Minor Remodels.

“I can fix just about anything”

Lic/Ins............................544-5823

No job too small! Texturing,Drywall & construction. Lic./Ins.273-6649 or 460-1666

X

401 SW Higgins • 543-9798PROPERTY MANAGEMENT CO.

Covering all aspects of homemaintenance & repair, includ-ing general upkeep. Save time& money by working with ourestablished & efficient team.

Call 543-9798 today!

PERFECTION PAINTERS Lower Prices207-0688

Staggs Painting & Power Washing

Residential & Commercial. Lic’d & Ins’d.Best Bids on Repaints. Quality work for a fair price!

Refs. Available. Credit Cards accepted.Senior Discounts 406-529-7428

MOVING/HAULING

Moving/Hauling, Tree/Hedge Pruning,power pole saw, yard, garage, lot cleanup, fieldmowing, Bobcat, building demolition. 880-6661

ROOFING

Expert Painting by Brush & Roller,Interior/Exterior. Experienced.

Reasonable. Senior Discount. Refs.Call 406-214-4080 for estimate

Missoula Valley Tree ServiceTree and Shrub pruning / removal spring ratesfree estimates. Military and senior discounts.

406-531-8573

PAINTING

Home Repair &Maintenance

406-830-7961Remodels & Home Improvements

20 Years Experience • Licensed & Insured

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

Big Sky Virtual AssistantIndependent Contractor Business

Support Services- Website Design, Social Media,Print Media and more. Find out more informationabout my services, visit www.bigskyva.com

Contact me (406) 827-9698

WALLPAPER REMOVAL

Wallpaper RemovalDrywall Repair, Painting, Texturing

Call 239-3116

REMODELING REFINISHING

Silva Remodel and RepairFull home service. Frame to finish, floor toceiling. 30+ years of making homes great!

Licensed, Insured. 406-565-1223

7 DAYS

1x.5” .............$79

1x1” ........... $129

1x1.5” ........ $179

1x2” ........... $229

14 DAYS

1x.5” .............$99

1x1” ........... $149

1x1.5” ........ $199

1x2” ........... $249

30 DAYS

1x.5” .......... $129

1x1”.......... $179

1x1.5” ........ $229

1x2” ........... $279

Want to advertise your business’ service?ADVERTISE IN THE SERVICE DIRECTORY

Add Ravalli to any package for $40

[email protected] or 800-332-6212

Riehl RenovationsSpecializing in interior & exterior remodels,decks & small repairs. Licensed & Insured.

Call 361-0384

Timothy Grass Hay & AlfalfaGrass Hay. All Round Bales.

Call 406-544-5155

AKC French Bulldog Puppies,$2000 sold limited. 880-4065

spurlockbulldogs.net

BORGI Puppies (WelshCorgi/Border Collie) Black/white;Brown/white; Tri; $250. Cardwell;

406-490-9097; 406-287-3618 lv msg

AKC Black Labs. Ready Now!Dew claws removed, wormed and

first shots. $700. For pictures goto www.riveredgelabs.com

Can deliver to MissoulaCall 208-836-5653

Beagle / Jack Russell pups 8 wksold first shots ready go. Males $175

Females $275 406-333-1009

Quality blue Yamaha golf cartwith trimmings and a 5x8 trailer,

both in great condition, $3000.Will consider offers/trades (guns).

728-1753. Leave message/will return calls

English Bull Dog Puppies AKCChampion bloodlines, vet checked.Males & females, Starting at $1,000Missoulabulldogs.com.406-721-3646.

Bagged Livestock Feed wholegrains: wheat, oat barley & corn.

Cracked 3 way: barley, oats & corn.Good quality hay available.

961-3528 or 360-1125

702 PETS, SUPPLIESHay Hey. Round Bales,

Horse Hay. Charlie 544-3237

Pressure washer 3200psi gaso-line powered, $300. Chiefwagon stove, needs parts

$150; Boy mannequin $225. 8'showcase, others available.

$200. 406-560-1709

Elk & Deer Hunters: New Rem.700 SPS, camo, 270 win short magBlue Book $709. sell $565.961-3476 before 9pm

Grass/Alfalfa Hay. SmallSquares,

$7.50/bale. Rounds/$85.Wheat Straw, $4.

Quantity discounts.Frenchtown/Missoula. 626-4017

Cash for Aluminum CansWe buy all types of Scrap Metal

Aluminum Brass Copper IronTues-Sat. 9am-5pm

Modern Recycling 369-57111359 Hwy 93 North

For sale: Ruger M-77 Mark II 338Win Mag with muz. brake & over

molded stock. Leopold 3x9 customshop scope & 3 boxes Hornady

ammo. Excellent condition. Shootsgreat. $750 cash/firm. 406-864-6240

Certified Weed Free Grass Hay.Small Squares, $10/bale.

406-626-5248

AKC Border Collie working andconfirmation lines. $800. 240-6960

isokoirakennels.com

★ USED SPAS ★Buy - Sell - Service - Trade

406-295-9728HytecSpas.com

Premium irrigated grass/alfalfa hay,extra large rounds, net wrapped, norain, starting at $80/bale. Discountsfor large quantities, delivery availa-ble. Call 406-235-4226

764 HAY, FEED, PASTURE

Electric hospital bed, $350;New 4" memory foam, $50;

New & used women's shoes,size 9, $1-$10.

Call 406-887-2119

Rufus resides at Bitterroot HumaneAssociation, but you can meet thisspecial shepherd mix in front ofWalgreens in Hamilton on Saturdaysfrom 11:30 to 2:30 too. Rufus is a 6year old neutered male who enjoyshiking, travel, and long belly rubs.He is friendly, but not pushy. Due torecent hip surgery he may need aboost into your truck. He wants toget to know you and become yourindoor/outdoor companion forever.He does not relate well to young chil-dren or cats. Call 363-5311 for moreinfo.

MacIntosh Apple are ready at. FrostTop Orchards. Fresh unpasteurizedMacIntosh Cider available beginningSeptember 27th. Great Honey Crispyear! Several other apple varieties

available. Call 961-1509634 Quast Ln, Corvallis.

MISSOULA CO.

Oct. 3-5Fri. 1-5 • Sat. 9-5 • Sun. 9-3

facebook.com/scishows(406) 633-9333

Missoula County FairgroundsIncludes:

Antiques &Flea MarketSHOP WITH CASH!

Call me. Now buying anypre-owned car, SUV, truck, RV.

I'll beat your trade-in quote fromthe big dealers! PAYING CASH!

Quicker, easier than park-n'-sell!

Nick @ 406-493-0686

Black wooden entertainment center$800, HP Photosmart Machine $45;Reese trailer hitch $400, Stainless

steel refrigerator, reconditioned$800; Wicker table & 2 chairs $100;Black wooden coffee & end tables$350. Hoover floor cleaner/vacuum

$45. 721-6365

AKC Standard Poodles & F1BDoodles, call for prices. 210-5130

Sweet corn, winter squash,pumpkins, broccoli, new potatoes,

alfalfa hay, grain-fed beef,Moellers Nursery, Corvallis, 961-3389

627 MISCELLANEOUS 627 MISCELLANEOUS Springfield Military 03-A3 .30-06,like new, never fired, $800;

Remington 11-87 12 gauge, 28"barrel, modified choke, very nice,

$375. 406-360-5400

762 FARM PRODUCEBlack Labrador Retriever Puppies,

Proven hunting bloodlines, ReadyOct 8th. $650. 546-4095/370-7729

Rock Creek Schnauzers has pup-pies, 5 males AKC reg. Vet Checked

1st. shots. $500. 406-859-3109

Horseshoeing - 35 YearsExp.

All Types. Shoeing $75. Trim $30.Call Darrell Howard, 540-3353

CCW Class - October 4thCCW, Defensive Pistol & Defensive

Rifle. 493-2302 or 207-4160 forinfo.

Practicalshootinginstruction.com

300 WBmark5 $795., 300 sh magw/bk $600., 270 Win $500., 264 Win$600. All w/scopes. Selling due to ill

health. 406-291-7945 Jerry

2 Registered Miniature Mares.Bred to miniature cremello

stallion w/ black gene for 2015.$550 each. 406-529-9283.

Join us at Dunrovin Ranch to offerthanks for all that animals give tous. In honor of St. Francis of As-sisi, Dunrovin will host an AnimalBlessing Sat., Oct. 4th at 11:30AM. Come to Dunrovin or join liveat www.DaysAtDunrovin/dunrovinpresents. Pastor JeanLarson will officiate at the ranch.Deacon Ron Davies will officiateonline. Pets welcome on leash!

HorseshoeingCall Jerry at 244-2082 leave msg.

Rem. 870 Wingmaster, 3", fullchoke, $250; Rem 870 Wingmaster3", mod choke, slug barrell, $325;Browning BPS 10 gauge, choke$475. Tubes, 10 boxes, new ammo,steel, $30/box, all or some.207-1441

HorseshoeingBlack Mtn. Farrier Service

406-207-2280

4 horse trailer WW. Good tires.Mats, brakes, bearings, lightsredone. $3000/o.b.o. 207-1441

AS SEEN AT PEOPLE’S MARKETFROM ANTLERS GALORE

FOR SALE:DOG CHEWS

- LOLO, MT -

CALL FOR APPT. 406-273-9987 orEMAIL: [email protected]

YOU BUY ‘EM, WE SELL ‘EM!

Custom Wood Gun Cabinet,holds up to 10 guns w/ storage

area below & locks. Excellentcondition. $500. 370-2811

752 HORSES, SUPPLIES

NALC Registered Catahoulas 8weeks old, first shots and worm-

ing only 4 left. $400. 406-210-4719

Pomeranian PuppyCall 274-7090

NEED CASH? We Buy Guns,Collectibles, Old Military.

Tom at 406-546-6930

.44 S&W Model 29, SS, 8 3/8"barrel, condition 95%,

Call 381-5212, Thurs. all day.Fri & Sat. afternoons only

REM 700 ADL .30-06.Like new. Weaver scope.$349. Roger 406-829-1649

641 HUNTING, FIREARMS

Golden Doodle PuppiesChampion Bloodlines

F1B Golden Doodle Puppies tobe born 9/16/14. Ready to go to

new happy families,11/16/14.Golden doodles are highly intelli-

gent, loving and dedicated compan-ions. Also make great hunting dogs.

For questions and complete infoplease call Cindy at 406-260-3529 or

Jeff at 406-253-1428 or visit us atwww.springcreekgoldendoodles.com

Seeking InvestorsBuilder is seeking investors for new development of the Meridian Apart-ment Complex.Tucked into the Northwest corner of Montana, Kalispell is the gateway toGlacier National Park and Flathead Lake. Kalispell is NorthwesternMontana's largest retail and business hub.This project consists of 5 acres, 65 apartments in 8 buildings, a clubhouse, and a manager's apartment. The conditional use permit has beenapproved and the engineering site plan is 85% complete.The property is accessed from the Meridian Road on the West and bor-ders Hwy. 93 on the East. It is walking distance to Kalispell Regional Hos-pital and a majority of the medical community is located near it. In addi-tion, walking distance to Flathead Valley Community College, HuttonPlaza, all the new commercial businesses North of Kalispell, Kalispell Jun-ior High School, the fairgrounds, and downtown Kalispell.Additionally, with the collapse of the housing mortgage market and re-quirement of 30% down, the rental market will continue to grow and thisprime location will save buyers money on fuel with its close proximity tojobs and services.

Please Contact (406) 270-5440

Quality blue Yamaha golf cartwith trimmings and a 5x8 trailer,

both in great condition, $3000.Will consider offers/trades (guns).

728-1753. Leave message/will return calls

AKC Alaskan Malamute PupsReds, seals, blacks. Excellentbloodlines. Will be vet certified.

1st shots. DewormedFamily raised. Taking deposits,Ready October 15th! $1,200.626-5932 Frenchtown Area

Himalayan kittens, 2 male flamepoints, 12wks. old. CSA papers,$450each/o.b.o. 406-552-5503

558 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 558 BUSINESS

OPPORTUNITIES 640 SPORTS EQUIPMENT 702 PETS, SUPPLIES 702 PETS, SUPPLIES 702 PETS, SUPPLIES

Missoulian Classified, Friday, October 3, 2014 - C7

2011 Toyota Rav4Only $19,995

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

2012 Toyota Rav 44WD, AC, 1 Owner,

$19,993MissoulaNissan.com

549-5178'07 Chevy 1500 Crew Cab

new wheels & tires, leveling kit,20mpg, 150K miles,

$15,950Mike @ Gateway Imports

406-531-6666

2012 Nissan Xterra S4x4, 1 owner, $21,993MissoulaNissan.com

549-5178

Taking Bids: 1998 Dodge Ram1500 1/2 T 105,309 Miles, 2000Dodge Durango 203,738 miles &1994 Cadiallac Seville " As Is Condi-tion" Polson 406-883-2940

2013 Kia Sorento LXV6, AWD, 3rd row seating,

$20,993.MissoulaNissan.com

549-5178

948 4 WHEEL DRIVE

New Forest River Slide-In CamperOnly $10,500

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

It Works.

in the

SEL

L I

T

2011 Ford F150 Super Cab XLT4x4, Eco Boost, Tow package,

$26,993MissoulaNissan.com

549-5178

Camper - 2005 S&S PonderosaModel, 9.5'. Excellent

condition.New batteries, fullpropane tanks, lots of storage in

and out. $11,000. 406-549-4575.

2 Toyota Highlandersto choose from!

2005 7-passenger 4WD w/ 108k2002 Limited 4WD w/ 116k

Both CLEAN, straight, and NICE!$10,970 - $12,970BRING TRADES!

406-493-0686

'91 Lance p/u camper, 9.5', likenew cond., stored inside, great

hunting rig, $5500. 258-5327

'94 Northland Camper, 10.9' Polar200 model, everything works, excel-lent condition, $2000. 544-9704

2007 Jeep RubiconOnly $21,995

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

946 P.U. CAMPERS, CANOPIES

1990 Chevy 1500Short box, 4x4, 5-sp, 350 V-8,

ready for paint.On sale $2,000

2004 Honda Element EXAll wheel drive & ready for Mon-

tana! On sale $7,995

2005 Chevy Avalanche LSZ-71, 4x4, auto, 5.3L V-8.

On sale $9,995

2011 Honda Pilot EX-L1 owner, leather, moon roof

& more. $21,993MissoulaNissan.com

549-5178

'98 GMC Yukon SLT, AWD,leather, heated seats, exception-

ally clean. $5900. 544-5288

'03 Mazda Tribute LX, 6cyl., exc.cond., AWD, auto, V6, 4dr, nice,

clean, $5900. 544-5288

Do not let your prior creditproblems make you drive a

vehicle you don't want.We can help! Call 251-2600

'05 Chevy ColoradoCrew Cab LS, 4x4, Power All,

New Tires, Nice Truck,Only 108K Miles, $11,900

721-4391 All-American Auto

2012 Ford Explorer XLTOnly $31,995

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

2013 Ford Escape SElOnly $22,995

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

'05 Chevy 1500 Z71,Loaded, Heated Leather, RearEnt., Custom Tires & Wheels,Tinted Windows, Nice Truck,

170K Miles, $10,990721-4391 All-American Auto

'06 Subaru Tribeca B9 AWD,loaded, sunroof, htd leather seats,dual AC, NAV, 5 passenger, cham-

pagne gold, 116K, perfect condition,$15,995. 360-6574/370-6872

945 SPORT UTILITY 948 4 WHEEL DRIVE

'03 Chevy Tahoe LTLoaded, Heated Leather, Sunroof,

Rear Captain Chairs, 3rd Row,Custom Tires & Wheels,

132K Miles, $9990721-4391 All-American Auto

Your Missoulian newspaper...only a click away.just $50 per year for subscriberscall today to subscribe 866-839-6397only $100 per year for non-subscribers

MONTANA SENATE RACE

AIRBORNE!

ON THE MOUNTAIN!

In Sunday’s Territory section,you’ll meet an amazing group ofMissoula aerialists and dancerswhose artistry literally takes flight.

In Sunday’s Missoulian, we’llbegin a series of profiles of thecandidates for Montana’s openU.S. Senate seat. We’ll begin withnewcomer Amanda Curtis.

Once Missoula’s old-fashioned,kid-friendly ski hill, MarshallMountain has struggled in recentyears. But plans are afoot for abusy new future for the backyardvenue, and we’ll have all thedetails in Sunday’s Missoulian.

Don’t miss out on this week’s

We’re on the road again this weekendwith the Griz football team, this time atNorth Dakota. Watch for live coverageand commentary Saturday on Missoulian.com, and a full complement of stories,photos, stats and features in Sunday’sSports section of the Missoulian.

Every minute. Every day.

missoulian.com

ROAD TRIP!

2006 Chevy Tahoe LT5.3L V-8, 110K miles, leather,

loaded, Z-71.On sale $14,995

Snowbirds here is your winterhome. Fully equipped Montana

3400RL 5th wheel, satellite, W/D,computer desk, generator & much

more! $49,500. 406-837-9946

2011 Chevy Traverse LS1 owner, low miles, local trade

$18,993MissoulaNissan.com

549-5178

2014 Chevy SuburbanOnly $42,995

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

945 SPORT UTILITY

98 Ram 1500Only $3,495

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

1999 Dodge Caravan7-passenger, 2nd row captains.

JUST 103k, local trade!Light blue, automatic, AC,CLEAN! $3970/TRADES?

406-493-0686

Cash for your Scrap MetalsAluminum - Copper - Cans

Vehicles - Appliances - BatteriesAlmost anything MetalTues-Sat. 9am-5pm

Modern Recycling 369-57111359 Hwy 93

06 Ram 2500Only $14995

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

2005 Jayco Jayflight 27BH trailer,great condition, sleeps 6-8, queen

3/4 and bunk, full kitchen, bathroom,table couch, AC/heat & awning,

reduced to $9,700. 406-542-6634

940 BUSES, VANSWanted: Standard size desk.

Call 549-8806

11 Ram 3500Only $34,995

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

808 WANTED TO BUY 914 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

12 Ram 3500, Crew CabOnly $44,995

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge'76 Chevy Caprice,Runs & looks

like new,$6500/OBO. 251-2931

13 Ram 3500Only $36,995

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

938 ANTIQUES, CLASSICS

★ Removing Junk Vehicles ★Cash For Clunkers

406-546-9971

1997 Ford Ranger XLTV6, only 70K miles,

$2,993MissoulaNissan.com

549-5178

Fat Man Frame w/Mustang frontend, power rack & pinion, disc

brakes (new). 2 Corvette rear ends -1 complete & 1 for parts; $2900

273-2592

926 VEHICLE PARTS, SALVAGE

Will pay per pound.

WANT TO BUYDEER, ELK &MOOSE HORNS

ANTLERS GALORE- LOLO, MT -

Call Bill 273-9987or

239-3161

YOU SELL ‘EM, WE BUY ‘EM!

808 WANTED TO BUY 808 WANTED TO BUYSet of (4) Michelin 225/65R17, exc.

cond $175. Set of (4) 205/55R16exc. cond. $100. 626-2424

Kar kaddy new tires & spare.Asking $500/o.b.o. Call 880-9767

'97 Ford Ranger Club Cab XLTRWD, 5spd, Awesome Little

Truck, New Tires, Runs Perfect,Only 127K Miles, $3,900

721-4391 All-American Auto

4 tires aluminum rims for DodgeTruck, highway tread about 50%$400. 207-1441

925 TIRES & WHEELSForest Service Vehicle Auction

36 Vehicles includingsedans, SUVs, trucks & backhoe.

Visit www.gsaauctions.gov for list ofvehicles & equip. Sale is 10/1 - 10/8

Call 329-3645 for more info

'98 Dutchmen Classic 5th whl, likenew, 1 slide, appliances, awning,

heat/AC, 50 amp, slps 6, $6875/oboUpgraded hitch $750. 406-821-0169

05 Dodge Ram 3500Only $21,995

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

2004 Desert Fox Toy Hauler 28'Bumper Pull like new condition,

asking $15,000. 406-253-4980

08 Chevy DuramaxOnly $24,995

406-676-5811Ronan Dodge

914 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

944 PICKUP, TRUCK

2 Day Public AuctionSaturday, Oct. 11 @ 9:00 AM &

Sunday Oct. 12 @ 10:00 AM.TOOLS--TRACTORS--ANTIQUES--SCRAP IRON Located at 58Hot Springs Rd in Hot Springs.Visit www.bobbyroshon.com for

full ad, photos, etc. 406-844-2159

2005 Arctic Cat M7 153Great condition- 3,277 milesGaraged & well maintained

$3800 obo - 581-1432

Raft, ATV, Snowmobile Trailers,Car dollys, Repairs. Made in Montana.

Hand-crafted like the Amish, video atwww.trailersmt.com 406-370-5466

802 AUCTIONS, AUCTIONEERS

912 SNOWMOBILES

New & Used Ford Tractor PartsRusty Nuts, (406) 626-4700

$25, TIRE Mount & BalanceTouring, Sport, Dual-Sport, Dirt

728-1424. Jim Iverson

910 MOTORCYCLES

1. Danuser post pounder, 2. 2 Inter-national balance head mowers, 9' &7' bars, 3. 300 gal fuel tank w/ stand,4. Quacker, 5. 3 bottom plow, 6. balesweep head, 7. Blanket harrow,Make offer. 821-4427

Very nice boat: '91 Cobalt, 22',cuddy cabin, 454 engine, nice stereo

system, low hours, tandem trailer,exc. buy at $12,500. 676-5525

768 FARM SUPPLIES, EQUIPMENT

'96 Plymouth Voyager, 116k miles,handicap accessible w/ lowered

floor, power door opener, power infloor ramp, tie downs, exc. cond.,

3.3 V6, recently overhauled, clean,new front tires, block heater, new

under hood hoses, clamps, trans. kit,low mileage, $15,500/obo.

Silver Star, MT. 406-287-5638

908 BOATS, MOTORS

RAFT TRAILERSFACTORY DIRECT

New & Used $995 & upNO! Middleman

M&M TRAILER FactoryHighway 93 Stevensville

406-728-1000www.mmmissoula.com

PRICES ARE UP!BUYING TIMBER. Live, dead, orbeetle kill. Bucket work available forproblem trees. Free est. 544-4645

WESTERN STATES TRAILERS:Raft, Cargo, Equipment, Utility406-251-1322 ∗ 4810 Hwy 93 S

trailers-autos.com

Always Buying! Jeff's AutoRemoval CA$H Today! No Tires,

No Title, No Problem! Call 369-9015

2014 Flatbed Utility &Equipment Trailers

Better Built for a Better Buyat RV Truck Sales Msla.

406-880-4961

Wanted to Buy:1st or 2nd generation DodgeCummins Diesel, 4WD, withclean title, no motor needed;Also Dodge V10, no motor

needed. Call 381-2065

921 UTILITY TRAILERS

Alfalfa Hay. 1st, 2nd &3rd cut in barn on Mullan Rd.

$7.00/bale. 396-1745 or 728-6075

Buying Antler For Top Dollar $ $ $Elk, Deer, Moose call Jeff

847-366-8689

AAA certified weed free alfalfa grasshay, premium 2nd cutting, no rain,

heavy small squares. $10/bale.Straw also available. 240-9604

I Buy Lead, I will pay morethan the scrap yards,

Call Mike at 406-821-4758

'08 Chevy Uplander LTLOADED! Local trade!Only 134k easy miles.

7 passenger. Power doors!Leather! CLEAN!

REDUCED $6,970!BRING TRADES!

406-493-0686

Forest Service Vehicle Auction36 Vehicles including

sedans, SUVs, trucks & backhoe.Visit www.gsaauctions.gov for list ofvehicles & equip. Sale is 10/1 - 10/8

Call 329-3645 for more info

2011 KAWASAKI VULCAN 900...................NOW $4,980

only 3,388 miles, was $5,995 ........................................STK# F14A - 377

2005 BUICK LACROSSE LX...........................NOW $8,342

very clean, 76K miles, was $9,495............................. STK# F15A - 151

2005 FORD F150.......................................... NOW $11,654

reg. cab, 96K miles, new tires, was $12,495 ................ STK# F15B - 110

2014 FOCUS HATCHBACK.......................... NOW $15,995

5sp, only 6,925 miles, was $16,495 ..........................STK# P14 - 205

2007 GMC YUKON DENALI......................... NOW $16,885

loaded, was $18,995........................................... STK# F13A - 701

2008 CHEVY AVALANCHE 4X2 .................. NOW $18,488

44,079 miles, was $21,495 ........................................... STK# P14A - 174

2007 CHEVY IMPALA LT........................................NOW $8,437

92,613 miles, leather, nice, was $9,485................................... STK#F14A-649

2010 TOYOTA HIGHLANDER HYBRID AWD.......... NOW $21,876

was $22,998.....................................................................................STK# F14A - 349

2013 DODGE CARAVAN SXT...................... NOW $22,896

V6, Stow-n-Go, was $25,495............................................STK# P14 - 246

2012 HYUNDAI SANTA FE SE.................... NOW $22,898

AWD, V6, 15,468 miles, leather, was $23,995 ..........................STK# P14 - 227

2013 JEEP WRANGLER SPORT................. NOW $25,894

green, hardtop, auto, low miles, 11535 miles, was $26,995 ................STK# F13A - 812

2013 FORD EDGE LTD AWD....................... NOW $26,247

33,158 miles, was $27,495..................................................................STK# P14 - 201

2010 F150 PLATINUM................................. NOW $32,374

crew cab, 38,182 miles, very clean, was $34,995 ..............................STK# F14A - 442

Bitterroot Ford features Ford Certified Pre-ownedvehicles with interest rates as low as 0.9% APR

and a 7 year 100K mile limited warranty.(See dealer for details).

Pre-OwnedCAR SALEPre-OwnedCAR SALE

www.bitterrootmotors.com(406) 251-2525

3943 Brooks Street, Missoula, MontanaMonday - Saturday : 8:30am - 6:00pm

Reduced

2 PRE-OWNEDFORD RAPTORS

IN STOCK

764 HAY, FEED, PASTURE 808 WANTED TO BUY 918 INDUSTRIAL

EQUIPMENT 940 BUSES, VANS

C8 - Missoulian Classified, Friday, October 3, 2014

'03 Nissan Frontier SEV6, 4x4, Power All, Beautiful

Little Truck, New Tires,Only 128K Miles, $9,900

721-4391 All-American Auto

2002 Jeep Wrangler 4x4Hardtop, Auto, Sport, Clean!

Maintained w/ 124k miles.Plow available.

Local consignment. Bring trades!SOLD!!!

406-493-0686

'11 Tacoma SR5, double cab 4x4,V6 auto, 6' box, 98K, 1 owner,

$21,950. BBAS 360-5400

'06 Jeep Grand CherokeeLimited 4x4, Loaded, Heated

Leather, Sunroof, PremiumSound, Nice SUV, Only119K Miles, $11,900

721-4391 All-American Auto

1970 International Scout,$2000. 240-5835

2004 GMC 2500HD 4WD SLE1-owner, Gas, CLEAN!

Only 98k. Needs nothing!Auto, AC, PW, PL,Tow pkg,

Matching canopy. NICE!SOLD!!!

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2008 Ford F-150 XLTSuper crew, 93K miles, 4x4.

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'03 Chevy Silverado HD, 1owner, 3/4 ton, 4x4, canopy, likenew, 144k $11,700. 544-5288

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C10 - Missoulian Classified, Friday, October 3, 2014

SportsFRIDAY, October 3, 2014 NEWSROOM 523-5240

DGRIZ SPORTS APPThe Missoulian’s Montana Grizzlies Sports app forAndroid and iOS devices is all Griz, all the time. Go to yourphone platform’s app store to download the free app.

HEAD INTO OVERTIMEMONTANA GRIZZLIES SPORTS APP

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Griz Sports Prize Pack: $200 grocery store gift card to stock up on tailgate supplies, and 2 tickets tothe home game. One prize pack will be given away before each home game during regular season. Every minute. Every day.

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Stay connected to everythingMontana Grizzlies sports

• Latest news and live game updates• Schedules and stats all in one location• Pre-game information• Action photos• Predictions and analysis from oursports reporters

KILE BREWER/Grand Forks Herald

North Dakota and its sophomore quarterback, Joe Mollberg, will put their 2-0 home record on the line Saturday afternoon againstMontana. NoDak is coming off what Mollberg describes as its best half of football offensively last week at Montana State. UND lost thatgame, 29-18.

GRIZ TRACKS

BBaabbyy sstteeppssNNoorrtthh DDaakkoottaa ooffffeennssee ssttaarrtteedd ssllooww bbuutt iiss ccoommiinngg ooffff bbeesstt hhaallff

By BILL SPELTZof the Missoulian

S lowly but surely sophomore JoeMollberg has gained traction assignal-caller in North Dakota’s new

offense.It’s been tough. NoDak’s top priority is

to establish the run and that hasn’tworked out real well.

So the burden has fallen on Mollberg tomake something happen with a mostlynew group of receivers and an averageoffensive line. NoDak ranks last in the BigSky Conference in scoring and yards butdid show signs of life offensively lastSaturday in a 29-18 loss at 13th-rankedMontana State.

Mollberg recorded season highs incompletions (22) and passing yards (222).His 22 completions were more than hisprevious three games combined.

“The second half was the best footballwe played as an offense this year,” said theQB, whose team will play host to seventh-ranked Montana on Saturday at 12:37 p.m.

“The best thing about it was the courageand heart we played with. We could haveeasily threw in the (towel) but we neverdid.”

North Dakota hasn’t had much luckplaying on the road, losing handily at SanJose State and Missouri State along withSaturday’s setback in Bozeman. But theGreen and White have won both theirhome games, making the most of 29 pointscombined against Robert Morris andStony Brook.

“We’ve got some veterans on theoffensive line and they’re doing a greatjob,” Mollberg offered. “But our scheme,our offensive tactics, can be kind ofdifficult at times, learning this new

offense. Everyone has got to have theirhead on straight and doing the right thingevery snap.

“We’re taking baby steps. That’s what ittakes sometimes. It’s pretty much theexact opposite of last year. We lost a lot ofweapons at receiver. I have to take on thatleadership role. We’ve had tough games,especially offensively, but we’re comingtogether.”

North Dakota’s offense is similar toMontana’s in that both teams will use afullback and two tight ends on occasion tobolster their ground attacks. Two bigdifferences are that Mollberg doesn’t havethe experience or elusiveness of UMquarterback Jordan Johnson and NoDakdoesn’t have as much proven talent atrunning back as Montana.

North Dakota’s top ground gainer isredshirt freshman Kyle Norberg, whoswitched from linebacker to running backthis summer. He has 150 yards on 51

■ Video: To see what Griz beatwriter Bill Speltz and reporter AJMazzolini have to say about theGrizzlies’ matchup with NorthDakota, watch their Griz Tracks video atMissoulian.com.

We’ve got some veterans on the offensive line and they’re doing a great job.But our scheme, our offensive tactics, can be kind of difficult at times, learning

this new offense. Everyone has got to have their head on straight and doing the rightthing every snap.

– Joe Mollberg, North Dakota quarterback

See BABY, Page D5

FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS

Dangerous Eagles eye upsetBy AJ MAZZOLINI

of the Missoulian

Missoula Big Sky opted foran extra point in the fourthquarter last week at Bozeman.The PAT put the Eagles up byeight with seven minutes toplay, but a two-pointer justseemed too risky at the time.

Well after Bozeman scored,completed their own two andthen scored again in overtime,

Big Sky coach Matt Johnsonwasn’t playing for the tie anylonger. His swinging-gate fakekick set-up turned into an easypitch and catch from LukeEntzel to Michael Banna and a29-28 victory.

The play, and the outcome,embody what the Eagles havebecome in the last three weeks:A team ready to pounce whoopponents shouldn’t sleep on.

“We’ve continually gottenbetter,” said Johnson, whoseteam has won three straightfollowing an 0-2 start. “Theykinda know who they are now.

“I could see us playing a lotof close games, just kinda theway we are, but once our kidsrealized our full potential, Ithink we could be reallydangerous for people.”

The Eagles will need to be

dangerous this week becausetheir foe Friday certainly is. BigSky hosts the 5-0 KalispellGlacier Wolfpack forhomecoming at MissoulaCounty Stadium.

Sentinel is also in play,hitting the road for BillingsWest on Friday; Hellgate is alsoaway to play Butte that sameevening.

STATE AA GOLF

West boys,girls leadafter first

roundMissoulian

BOZEMAN – The State AAgolf tournament may be on thesouth end of the state this year,but Thursday’s opening roundwas all West.

Billings West leads the boys’and girls’ team races after Day 1of the state tournament fromBozeman’s Bridger Creek GolfCourse.

The West boys shot a team305, topped by individual leaderJoey Moore’s 1-over 72, to take anine-stroke cushion overBillings Senior into the secondand final day of play. KalispellGlacier is four strokes behindSenior at 318 with HelenaCapital lurking at 319.

The Golden Bear girls have alittle more breathing room aftertheir 336. Butte shot 352 whileSenior fired a 361. MissoulaHellgate is tied for fourth withKalispell Flathead at 368.

Moore owns the boys’ lead,but only by a stroke over ahandful of pursuers. PaytonStott of Skyview, Kienan Stiefof Helena and Cody Sherrill ofGlacier all shot 72. The toplocal golfer is Hellgate’s FinnMikkola, who is tied for 13th at77 with two others, includinglast year’s State AA runner-upCody Babinecz of Great Falls.

STATE A GOLF PREVIEW

Whitefish girls,Hamilton boys

look like favorites

See AA GOLF, Page D2

By KYLE HOUGHTALINGof the Missoulian

One thing is for certainheading into this year’s State Agolf tournament: Someoneother than Polson – winner ofthe last three state girls’ titles –will be crowned victorious.

The defending championPirates still have some toughgolfers at the top in HeatherFrank, Peyton Anderson andKiyara McCue, but the squadthat has been so dominant overthe last few years had only thosethree girls on the varsity squadand did not qualify a team forstate out of the Northwestern Adivisional tournament.

The Pirates’ team absenceleaves the door open forWhitefish, which finishedsecond at state a year ago, sixstrokes back from Polson.

“We have a lot of second-place team trophies in the lasttwo years,” Whitefish coachTim Olson said. “These kidsthat are seniors on both sides,the boys and the girls, theywould love to be on top thisyear.”

Whitefish may have what ittakes to be top dog this yearwhen play begins Friday atHamilton Golf Club. Leadingthe charge is two-time Class AAthird-place finisher CoralSchulz, who moved toWhitefish from Helena at thestart of this school year. Schulz,

See A GOLF, Page D5

See EAGLES, Page D5

All Times MDTFriday, Oct. 3

AUTO RACING10 a.m.

FS1 – NASCAR, Nationwide Series,practice for Kansas Lottery 300, at KansasCity, Kan.

11 a.m.FS1 – NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for

Hollywood Casino 400, at Kansas City,Kan.

2 p.m.ESPN2 – NASCAR, Nationwide Series,

practice for Kansas Lottery 300, at KansasCity, Kan.

3:30 p.m.ESPN2 – NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole

qualifying for Hollywood Casino 400, atKansas City, Kan.

11 p.m.NBCSN – Formula One, qualifying for

Japanese Grand Prix, at SuzukaCANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE

8 p.m.ESPN2 – Calgary at Saskatchewan

COLLEGE FOOTBALL5 p.m.

ESPN – Louisville at Syracuse8:15 p.m.

ESPN – Utah St. at BYUGOLF6 a.m.

TGC – European PGA Tour, Alfred DunhillLinks Championship, second round, at St.Andrews, Angus, and Kingsbarns,Scotland

9 p.m.TGC – LPGA, Reignwood Classic, third

round, at BeijingMAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

10 a.m.TBS – Playoffs, American League Division

Series, game 2, Detroit at Baltimore1 p.m.

FS1 – Playoffs, National League DivisionSeries, game 1, San Francisco atWashington

4:30 p.m.FS1 – Playoffs, National League Division

Series, game 1, St. Louis at Los Angeles7:30 p.m.

TBS – Playoffs, American League DivisionSeries, game 2, Kansas City at LosAngeles

PREP FOOTBALL5 p.m.

ESPN2 – Norcross (Ga.) at NorthGwinnett (Ga.)

SOCCER6 p.m.

NBCSN – MLS, Kansas City at DC United

n China Open Thursday

At The National Tennis CenterBeijing

Purse: Men, $3.76 million (WT500)Women, $5.43 million (Premier)

Surface: Hard-OutdoorSingles

MenSecond Round

Tomas Berdych (3), Czech Republic, def.Viktor Troicki, Serbia, 6-3, 6-4.

Grigor Dimitrov (5), Bulgaria, def. PabloAndujar, Spain, 6-4, 6-4.

Rafael Nadal (2), Spain, def. PeterGojowczyk, Germany, 6-3, 6-4.

Marin Cilic (4), Croatia, def. Joao Sousa,Portugal, 6-3, 6-3.

Andy Murray (6), Britain, def. PabloCuevas, Uruguay, 6-2, 6-2.

Martin Klizan, Slovakia, def. ErnestsGulbis (7), Latvia, 6-2, 3-0, retired.

WomenThird Round

Serena Williams (1), U.S., def. LucieSafarova (13), Czech Republic, 6-1, 1-6, 6-2.

Simona Halep (2), Romania, def. AndreaPetkovic (15), Germany, 7-6 (4), 5-7, 7-6(1).

Petra Kvitova (3), Czech Republic, def.Venus Williams (16), U.S., walkover.

Svetlana Kuznetsova, Russia, def.Angelique Kerber (7), Germany, 2-6, 6-4, 6-3.

Ana Ivanovic (9), Serbia, def. SabineLisicki, Germany, 6-3, 7-5.

Roberta Vinci, Italy, def. EkaterinaMakarova (12), Russia, 6-1, 0-6, 7-5.

Samantha Stosur, Australia, def. AlizeCornet, France, 6-4, 6-2.

DoublesMen

First RoundNovak Djokovic/Filip Krajinovic, Serbia,

def. Ernests Gulbis, Latvia/MarcinMatkowski, Poland, walkover.

Julien Benneteau, France/Vasek Pospisil(4), Canada, def. Liu Siyu/Ning Yuqing,China, 6-3, 6-1.

QuarterfinalsJohan Brunstrom, Sweden/Nicholas

Monroe, U.S., def. Juan SebastianCabal/Robert Farah, Colombia, 6-7 (4), 6-3, 10-7.

Jean-Julien Rojer, Netherlands/HoriaTecau, Romania, def. Tomas Berdych,

Czech Republic/John Isner, U.S., 7-6 (3), 4-6, 12-10.

WomenSecond Round

Kristina Mladenovic, France/AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova, Russia, def. MartinaHingis, Switzerland/Flavia Pennetta (8),Italy, 6-3, 3-6, 10-6.

Raquel Kops-Jones/Abigail Spears (4),U.S., def. Andreja Klepac, Slovenia/SilviaSoler-Espinosa, Spain, 6-2, 6-0.

Alla Kudryavtseva, Russia/AnastasiaRodionova (6), Australia, def. MonaBarthel, Germany/Mandy Minella,Luxembourg, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 10-7.

Garbine Muguruza/Carla Suarez Navarro(7), Spain, def. Simona Halep,Romania/Raluca Olaru, Romania, walkover.

Sara Errani, Italy/Roberta Vinci (1), Italy,def. Han Xinyun/Zhang Kai-Lin, China, 6-2,6-3.

QuarterfinalsAndrea Hlavackova, Czech

Republic/Peng Shuai (5), China, def.Jarmila Gajdosova, Australia/AjlaTomljanovic, Croatia, 6-4, 7-5.

Kristina Mladenovic, France/AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova, Russia, def. RaquelKops-Jones/Abigail Spears (4), U.S., 3-6,7-6 (7), 10-6.

Cara Black, Zimbabwe/Sania Mirza (2),India, def. Garbine Muguruza/Carla SuarezNavarro (7), Spain, 6-3, 6-1.

n Japan Open Thursday

At Ariake ColosseumTokyo

Purse: $1.37 million (WT500)Surface: Hard-Outdoor

SinglesSecond Round

Milos Raonic (3), Canada, def. JurgenMelzer, Austria, 6-4, 6-3.

Kei Nishikori (4), Japan, def. DonaldYoung, U.S., 6-4, 7-6 (4).

Jeremy Chardy, France, def. KevinAnderson (7), South Africa, 6-4, 6-4.

Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, def. MichalPrzysiezny, Poland, 6-4, 7-6 (5).

DoublesQuarterfinals

Ivan Dodig, Croatia/Marcelo Melo (2),Brazil, def. Rohan Bopanna/Leander Paes,India, 6-3, 6-2.

Marcel Granollers/Marc Lopez (3), Spain,def. Kei Nishikori/Yasutaka Uchiyama,Japan, walkover.

n Dunhill Links Thursday

At St. Andrews and Carnoustie,Scotland

c-Carnoustie (ChampionshipCourse): 7,412 yards, par-72

k-Kingsbarns Golf Links: 7,210yards, par-72

s-St. Andrews (Old Course): 7,305yards, par-72

Purse: $4.8 millionFirst Round

O. Wilson, England 32-32 – 64cR. Jacquelin, France 33-32 – 65cP. Harrington, Ireland 31-35 – 66cS. Lowry, Ireland 31-35 – 66kG. Bourdy, France 34-33 – 67cE. De La Riva, Spain 32-35 – 67kR. Evans, England 35-32 – 67kJ. McLeary, Scotland 33-34 – 67kA. Otaegui, Spain 33-34 – 67sR. Rock, England 33-34 – 67sM. Foster, England 36-32 – 68cR. Green, Australia 35-33 – 68kT. Lawrence, South Africa 34-34 – 68kA. Levy, France 37-31 – 68cJ. Parry, England 32-36 – 68sG. Storm, England 33-35 – 68sS. Gallacher, Scotland 34-34 – 68cP. Casey, England 35-34 – 69cT. Fleetwood, England 35-34 – 69cR. Gonzalez, Argentina 35-34 – 69sP. Lawrie, Scotland 36-33 – 69kH. Otto, South Africa 33-36 – 69kR. Palmer, United States 35-34 – 69cR. Ramsay, Scotland 35-34 – 69cM. Siem, Germany 32-37 – 69sG. Stal, France 34-35 – 69kJ. Walters, South Africa 31-38 – 69kL. Oosthuizen, South Africa33-37 – 70cD. Clarke, Northern Ireland35-36 – 71sV. Dubuisson, France 36-35 – 71cE. Els, South Africa 37-34 – 71cN. Faldo, England 36-35 – 71cS. Lyle, Scotland 36-35 – 71sC. Montogomerie, Scotland37-35 – 72cP. McGinley, Ireland 36-36 – 72cR. McIlroy, Northern Ireland37-36 – 73cM. Kaymer, Germany 36-38 – 74cC. Schwartzel, South Africa37-38 – 75cD. Duval, United Staes 39-39 – 78c

n Reignwood Classic Thursday

At Pine Valley Golf ClubBeijing

Purse: $2.1 millionYardage: 6,585 Par: 73 (36-37)

First Rounda-amateur

Stacy Lewis ......................34-32– 66Caroline Hedwall ..................34-33– 67Jenny Shin ......................33-35– 68Sun Young Yoo ..................32-36– 68Haeji Kang ......................35-34– 69Ilhee Lee ........................34-35– 69Mi Hyang Lee ....................36-33– 69Belen Mozo ....................35-34– 69Inbee Park ......................33-36– 69Yani Tseng ......................34-35– 69Brittany Lang ......................34-36– 70Mirim Lee ........................34-36– 70Caroline Masson ..................35-35– 70Amy Yang ......................34-36– 70Chella Choi ......................34-37– 71Austin Ernst ......................34-37– 71Sydnee Michaels ..................34-37– 71Yanhong Pan ....................37-34– 71Giulia Sergas ......................34-37– 71Amy Anderson ..................36-36– 72Sandra Gal ......................36-36– 72Eun-Hee Ji ......................35-37– 72Sarah Kemp ....................35-37– 72Pernilla Lindberg ....................38-34– 72Catriona Matthew ..................36-36– 72Pornanong Phatlum ..............38-34– 72So Yeon Ryu ....................35-37– 72Christel Boeljon ....................36-37– 73Mi Jung Hur ......................37-36– 73Ji Young Oh ......................34-39– 73Brooke Pancake ..................38-35– 73Thidapa Suwannapura ............39-34– 73Mariajo Uribe ......................38-35– 73Liying Ye ........................37-36– 73Na Zhang ......................37-36– 73Katie Burnett ......................37-37– 74Karine Icher ......................36-38– 74Moriya Jutanugarn ................34-40– 74I.K. Kim ..........................38-36– 74P.K. Kongkraphan ..................37-37– 74Candie Kung ....................36-38– 74Meena Lee ....................37-37– 74Xi Yu Lin ..........................36-38– 74Suzann Pettersen ..................36-38– 74Dewi Claire Schreefel ................38-36– 74Yuting Shi ........................37-37– 74Jennifer Song ....................38-36– 74Kelly Tan ........................34-40– 74Line Vedel ........................37-37– 74Xin Wang ......................36-38– 74Panpan Yan ....................36-38– 74Na Yeon Choi ....................36-39– 75Laura Davies ....................38-37– 75a-Mohan Du ....................38-37– 75Shanshan Feng ..................38-37– 75Danielle Kang ....................40-35– 75Christina Kim ......................33-42– 75Amelia Lewis ....................37-38– 75Jiayun Li ........................38-37– 75Lee-Anne Pace ..................36-39– 75Jane Park ......................36-39– 75Yuyang Zhang ..................37-38– 75Marina Alex ......................37-39– 76Dori Carter ........................39-37– 76Jaye Marie Green ..................40-36– 76Tiffany Joh ........................37-39– 76Hee Young Park ..................33-43– 76Jennifer Rosales ....................38-38– 76Sarah Jane Smith ..................37-39– 76Beatriz Recari ......................38-39– 77a-Ziyi Wang ......................37-40– 77Liqing Chen ......................37-41– 78Caizhu Guo ....................39-39– 78Linyan Shang ....................38-40– 78Dan Li ..........................38-41– 79Hong Tian ......................38-41– 79a-Xinying Wang ..................40-39– 79Cuixia Chen ......................40-40– 80Kris Tamulis ......................42-38– 80Lingling Tan ......................42-41– 83Zi Li ............................43-41– 84

n NBA preseasonAll times MDT

EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division

W L Pct GBBoston 0 0 .000 – Brooklyn 0 0 .000 – New York 0 0 .000 – Philadelphia 0 0 .000 – Toronto 0 0 .000 –

Southeast DivisionW L Pct GB

Atlanta 0 0 .000 – Charlotte 0 0 .000 – Miami 0 0 .000 – Orlando 0 0 .000 – Washington 0 0 .000 –

Central DivisionW L Pct GB

Chicago 0 0 .000 – Cleveland 0 0 .000 – Detroit 0 0 .000 – Indiana 0 0 .000 – Milwaukee 0 0 .000 –

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBDallas 0 0 .000 – Houston 0 0 .000 – Memphis 0 0 .000 – New Orleans 0 0 .000 – San Antonio 0 0 .000 –

Northwest DivisionW L Pct GB

Denver 0 0 .000 – Minnesota 0 0 .000 – Oklahoma City 0 0 .000 – Portland 0 0 .000 – Utah 0 0 .000 –

Pacific DivisionW L Pct GB

Golden State 0 0 .000 – L.A. Clippers 0 0 .000 – L.A. Lakers 0 0 .000 – Phoenix 0 0 .000 – Sacramento 0 0 .000 –

Wednesday’s GamesNo games scheduled

Thursday’s GamesNo games scheduled

Friday’s GamesNo games scheduled

Saturday’s GamesNew Orleans vs. Miami at Louisville, KY,

5:30 p.m.

n MLS standingsAll Times MDT

EASTERN CONFERENCEW L T Pts GF GA

D.C. 15 9 6 51 46 34New England 14 13 3 45 44 42Kansas City 13 11 6 45 45 37Columbus 11 9 10 43 43 36New York 10 9 11 41 48 46Toronto FC 11 11 7 40 42 45Philadelphia 9 10 12 39 46 45Houston 10 13 6 36 35 50Chicago 5 8 17 32 38 46Montreal 6 18 6 24 34 54

WESTERN CONFERENCEW L T Pts GF GA

x-Seattle 18 9 3 57 57 46x-Los Angeles 16 5 9 57 63 31Real Salt Lake 13 7 10 49 50 38FC Dallas 14 10 6 48 52 40Vancouver 9 8 13 40 38 40Portland 9 9 12 39 54 51Colorado 8 14 8 32 41 54San Jose 6 12 11 29 34 42Chivas USA 6 18 6 24 25 58

NOTE: Three points for victory, one pointfor tie.

x- clinched playoff berthThursday’s Games

Philadelphia 1, Chicago 1, tieFriday’s Games

Sporting Kansas City at D.C. United, 6

p.m.Saturday’s Games

Houston at New York, 4 p.m.FC Dallas at Vancouver, 5 p.m.Columbus at New England, 5:30 p.m.Toronto FC at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.Portland at San Jose, 9 p.m.

Sunday’s GamesSeattle FC at Colorado, 1 p.m.Montreal at Chicago, 3 p.m.Real Salt Lake at Chivas USA, 5 p.m.

Wednesday, Oct. 8Houston at Toronto FC, 5:30 p.m.San Jose at Portland, 8:30 p.m.

Friday, Oct. 10Chicago at Sporting Kansas City, 6:30

p.m.Vancouver at Seattle FC, 8 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 11New England at Montreal, 2 p.m.Toronto FC at New York, 5 p.m.Columbus at Philadelphia, 5 p.m.San Jose at Real Salt Lake, 7:30 p.m.Colorado at Chivas USA, 8:30 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 12D.C. United at Houston, 1 p.m.Los Angeles at FC Dallas, 5 p.m.

n NFL standingsAll Times MDT

AMERICAN CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PABuffalo 2 2 0 .500 79 75Miami 2 2 0 .500 96 97New England 2 2 0 .500 80 90N.Y. Jets 1 3 0 .250 79 96

SouthW L T Pct PF PA

Houston 3 1 0 .750 87 67Indianapolis 2 2 0 .500 136 95Tennessee 1 3 0 .250 60 110Jacksonville 0 4 0 .000 58 152

NorthW L T Pct PF PA

Cincinnati 3 0 0 1.000 80 33Baltimore 3 1 0 .750 103 60Pittsburgh 2 2 0 .500 97 99Cleveland 1 2 0 .333 74 77

WestW L T Pct PF PA

San Diego 3 1 0 .750 102 63Denver 2 1 0 .667 75 67Kansas City 2 2 0 .500 102 79Oakland 0 4 0 .000 51 103

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PAPhiladelphia 3 1 0 .750 122 104Dallas 3 1 0 .750 115 86N.Y. Giants 2 2 0 .500 103 91Washington 1 3 0 .250 95 109

SouthW L T Pct PF PA

Atlanta 2 2 0 .500 131 113Carolina 2 2 0 .500 73 96New Orleans 1 3 0 .250 95 110Tampa Bay 1 3 0 .250 72 119

NorthW L T Pct PF PA

Detroit 3 1 0 .750 85 62Green Bay 3 2 0 .600 134 106Chicago 2 2 0 .500 92 100Minnesota 2 3 0 .400 101 126

WestW L T Pct PF PA

Arizona 3 0 0 1.000 66 45Seattle 2 1 0 .667 83 66San Francisco 2 2 0 .500 88 89St. Louis 1 2 0 .333 56 85

Thursday’s GameGreen Bay 42, Minnesota 10

Sunday’s GamesCleveland at Tennessee, 11 a.m.Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 11 a.m.Houston at Dallas, 11 a.m.Chicago at Carolina, 11 a.m.St. Louis at Philadelphia, 11 a.m.Atlanta at N.Y. Giants, 11 a.m.Buffalo at Detroit, 11 a.m.Baltimore at Indianapolis, 11 a.m.Pittsburgh at Jacksonville, 11 a.m.Arizona at Denver, 2:05 p.m.Kansas City at San Francisco, 2:25 p.m.N.Y. Jets at San Diego, 2:25 p.m.Cincinnati at New England, 6:30 p.m.Open: Miami, Oakland

Monday’s GameSeattle at Washington, 6:30 p.m.

Thursday, Oct. 9Indianapolis at Houston, 6:25 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 12Jacksonville at Tennessee, 11 a.m.Detroit at Minnesota, 11 a.m.Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 11 a.m.Denver at N.Y. Jets, 11 a.m.New England at Buffalo, 11 a.m.Carolina at Cincinnati, 11 a.m.Pittsburgh at Cleveland, 11 a.m.Green Bay at Miami, 11 a.m.San Diego at Oakland, 2:05 p.m.Dallas at Seattle, 2:25 p.m.Washington at Arizona, 2:25 p.m.Chicago at Atlanta, 2:25 p.m.N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m.Open: Kansas City, New Orleans

Monday, Oct. 13San Francisco at St. Louis, 6:30 p.m.

n CFL standingsAll Times MDTEAST DIVISION

W L T Pts PF PAHamilton 5 7 0 10 262 272Montreal 5 8 0 10 245 313Toronto 4 8 0 8 308 325Ottawa 1 11 0 2 180 308

WEST DIVISIONW L T Pts PF PA

Calgary 11 2 0 22 361 239Edmonton 9 4 0 18 341 252Saskatchewan 9 4 0 18 296 289B.C. 7 6 0 14 275 250Winnipeg 6 7 0 12 304 324

Friday’s GamesMontreal 15, Ottawa 7Edmonton 24, Saskatchewan 0

Saturday’s GamesHamilton 16, Winnipeg 11Calgary 14, B.C. 7

Friday, Oct. 3n Winnipeg at Ottawa, 5 p.m.n Calgary at Saskatchewan, 8 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 4Edmonton at Toronto, 2 p.m.B.C. at Hamilton, 5 p.m.

n NHL preseasonAll times MDT

EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GAToronto 7 4 2 1 9 21 18Tampa Bay 5 4 1 0 8 18 7Montreal 5 4 1 0 8 12 9Detroit 6 3 2 1 7 10 10Buffalo 5 2 2 1 5 14 11Boston 5 2 2 1 5 14 14Ottawa 5 2 2 1 5 12 13Florida 5 0 3 2 2 9 18

Metropolitan DivisionGP W L OT Pts GF GA

Columbus 7 6 1 0 12 25 15N.Y. Islanders 6 4 1 1 9 17 15Washington 7 4 3 0 8 16 19Philadelphia 8 3 3 2 8 21 25New Jersey 5 3 1 1 7 12 13Pittsburgh 6 3 3 0 6 9 11

N.Y. Rangers 4 2 2 0 4 16 13Carolina 5 1 4 0 2 11 17

WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GADallas 6 4 2 0 8 21 23Nashville 5 3 2 0 6 9 9Minnesota 5 2 2 1 5 12 13St. Louis 6 2 3 1 5 19 19Chicago 5 2 3 0 4 11 11Winnipeg 6 2 4 0 4 12 16Colorado 6 0 5 1 1 7 19

Pacific DivisionGP W L OT Pts GF GA

Arizona 7 4 1 2 10 23 18Calgary 8 5 3 0 10 15 15Los Angeles 5 4 0 1 9 20 14Vancouver 6 4 2 0 8 16 13Edmonton 7 4 3 0 8 13 14San Jose 5 2 2 1 5 12 13Anaheim 6 2 3 1 5 15 17NOTE: Two points for a win.One point for overtime loss.

Wednesday’s GamesBuffalo 6, Washington 1Columbus 6, Carolina 3Pittsburgh 2, Detroit 0Montreal 3, Chicago 1Edmonton 3, Arizona 2

Thursday’s GamesWashington 3, Philadelphia 2, SONew Jersey 2, N.Y. Islanders 1, SOLos Angeles 2, Colorado 1, SOTampa Bay 3, Florida 0St. Louis 4, Minnesota 1Calgary 4, Winnipeg 2Vancouver 2, Edmonton 1

Friday’s GamesBuffalo at Carolina, 5 p.m.Chicago at N.Y. Rangers, 5 p.m.Montreal at Ottawa, 5:30 p.m.Detroit at Toronto, 5:30 p.m.Boston vs. N.Y. Islanders at Bridgeport,

CT, 5:30 p.m.San Jose at Arizona, 8 p.m.

Saturday’s GamesDetroit at Boston, 3:30 p.m.Ottawa at Montreal, 5 p.m.N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 5 p.m.Florida at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m.Nashville at Columbus, 5 p.m.St. Louis at Minnesota, 6 p.m.Calgary at Winnipeg, 6 p.m.San Jose at Anaheim, 8 p.m.Edmonton at Vancouver, 8 p.m.Colorado vs. Los Angeles at Las Vegas,

NV, 8 p.m.

n Postseason glanceAll Times MDTx-if necessaryWILD CARD

Tuesday, Sept. 30: Kansas City 9,Oakland 8, 12 innings

Wednesday, Oct. 1: San Francisco 8,Pittsburgh 0

DIVISION SERIES(Best-of-5)

American LeagueAll AL games televised by TBS

Baltimore 1, Detroit 0Thursday, Oct. 2: Baltimore 12, Detroit 3n Friday, Oct. 3: Detroit (Verlander 15-12)

at Baltimore (Chen 16-6), 10:07 a.m.Sunday, Oct. 5: Baltimore (Gonzalez 10-

9) at Detroit (Price 15-12), 1:45 p.m.x-Monday, Oct. 6: Baltimore at Detroit

(Porcello 15-13), TBDx-Wednesday, Oct. 8: Detroit at Baltimore,

TBDLos Angeles vs. Kansas City

Thursday, Oct. 2: Kansas City (Vargas 11-10) at Los Angeles (Weaver 18-9), 7:07p.m.n Friday, Oct. 3: Kansas City (Ventura 14-

10) at Los Angeles (Shoemaker 16-4), 7:37p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 5: Los Angeles (Wilson 13-10) at Kansas City (Shields 14-8), 5:37p.m.

x-Monday, Oct. 6: Los Angeles at KansasCity, TBD

x-Wednesday, Oct. 8: Kansas City at LosAngeles, TBD

National LeagueWashington vs. San Francisco

n Friday, Oct. 3: San Francisco (Peavy 7-13) at Washington (Strasburg 14-11) (FS1),1:07 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 4: San Francisco (Hudson9-13) at Washington (Zimmermann 14-5)(FS1), 3:37 p.m.

Monday, Oct. 6: Washington (Fister 16-6)at San Francisco (Bumgarner 18-10) (FS1or MLBN), TBD

x-Tuesday, Oct. 7: Washington at SanFrancisco (FS1), TBD

x-Thursday, Oct. 9: San Francisco atWashington (FS1), TBD

Los Angeles vs. St. Louisn Friday, Oct. 3: St. Louis (Wainwright 20-

9) at Los Angeles (Kershaw 21-3) (FS1),4:37 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 4: St. Louis (Lynn 15-10) atLos Angeles (Greinke 17-8) (MLBN), 7:37p.m.

Monday, Oct. 6: Los Angeles (Ryu 14-7)at St. Louis (Lackey 3-3) (FS1 or MLBN),TBD

x-Tuesday, Oct. 7: Los Angeles (Haren13-11) at St. Louis (Miller 10-9) (FS1), TBD

x-Thursday Oct. 9: St. Louis at LosAngeles (FS1), TBD

LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES(Best-of-7)

American LeagueAll AL games televised by TBS

Friday, Oct. 10: Detroit-Baltimore winnerat Los Angeles OR Kansas City at Detroit-Baltimore winner

Saturday, Oct. 11: Detroit-Baltimorewinner at Los Angeles OR Kansas City atDetroit-Baltimore winner

Monday, Oct. 13: Los Angeles at Detroit-Baltimore winner OR Detroit-Baltimorewinner at Kansas City

Tuesday, Oct. 14: Los Angeles at Detroit-Baltimore winner OR Detroit-Baltimorewinner at Kansas City

x-Wednesday, Oct. 15: Los Angeles atDetroit-Baltimore winner OR Detroit-Baltimore winner at Kansas City

x-Friday, Oct. 17: Detroit-Baltimore winnerat Los Angeles OR Kansas City at Detroit-Baltimore winner

x-Saturday, Oct. 18: Detroit-Baltimorewinner at Los Angeles OR Kansas City atDetroit-Baltimore winner

National LeagueSaturday, Oct. 11: St. Louis-Los Angeles

winner at Washington OR San Francisco atSt. Louis-Los Angeles winner (Fox)

Sunday, Oct. 12: St. Louis-Los Angeleswinner at Washington OR San Francisco atSt. Louis-Los Angeles winner (FS1)

Tuesday, Oct. 14: Washington at St.Louis-Los Angeles winner OR St. Louis-LosAngeles winner at San Francisco (FS1)

Wednesday, Oct. 15: Washington at St.Louis-Los Angeles winner OR St. Louis-LosAngeles winner at San Francisco (FS1)

x-Thursday, Oct. 16: Washington at St.Louis-Los Angeles winner OR St. Louis-LosAngeles winner at San Francisco (FS1)

x-Saturday, Oct. 18: St. Louis-LosAngeles winner at Washington OR SanFrancisco at St. Louis-Los Angeles winner(Fox)

x-Sunday, Oct. 19: St. Louis-Los Angeleswinner at Washington OR San Francisco atSt. Louis-Los Angeles winner (FS1)

Friday, October 3COLLEGE SOCCER Montana at Sacramento State, 5

p.m.COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL North Dakota at Montana, 7

p.m., West Auxiliary Gym.MEN’S COLLEGE TENNIS Montana at Boise State

Invitational.WOMEN’S COLLEGE TENNIS Montana at Long

Beach State Invitational.HOCKEY Butte at Missoula Maulers, 7:30 p.m., Glacier

Ice Rink.HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL Kalispell Glacier at

Missoula Big Sky, 7 p.m., Missoula County Stadium;Missoula Hellgate at Butte, 7 p.m.; Missoula Sentinel atBillings West, 4 p.m.; Helena High at Kalispell Flathead, 7p.m.; Frenchtown at Libby, 7 p.m.; Whitefish at Polson, 7p.m.; Corvallis at Stevensville, 7 p.m.; Hamilton at Anaconda,7 p.m.; Eureka at Loyola Sacred Heart, 7 p.m.; Deer Lodgeat Ronan, 7 p.m.; Bigfork at Troy, 7 p.m.; Plains at ThompsonFalls, 7 p.m.; Flint Creek at Charlo, 7 p.m.; Noxon at Darby, 7p.m.; Superior at Seeley-Swan, 7 p.m.

HIGH SCHOOL GOLF State AA tournament, BridgerCreek Golf Course, Bozeman; State A tournament, HamiltonGolf Club.

HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL Noxon at St. Regis, 7p.m.; Victor at Alberton, 7 p.m.; Two Eagle River at HotSprings, 7 p.m.; Troy at Bigfork, 7 p.m.

SCOREBOARDD2 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

n To have your event listed in the calendar, write to theMissoulian at P.O. Box 8029, Missoula, MT 59807-8029, faxto 523-5294 or email to [email protected].

MONTANA/LOCALTech football coachadds AD duties

BUTTE (AP) – MontanaTech football coach ChuckMorrell will also serve asthe school’s athleticdirector.

Morrell takes over forDave Lau, who resignedfrom the position forfamily reasons afterserving for about threemonths.

Tech Chancellor DonBlackketter said Thursdaythat Morrell’s experiencein collegiate athletics, hisdedication to MontanaTech and its studentathletes and hiscommitment to the Buttecommunity make him theperfect choice.

Morrell was namedTech’s football coach inDecember 2010. His teamshave posted a 15-22 record,with eight of those winscoming in 2012 when Techwon the FrontierConference title and a spotin the NAIA playoffs.

Missoula’s Huse 2ndat Ironman 70.3

Local professionaltriathlete Sue Huse hadanother standout outinglast week, taking second atthe Ironman 70.3 Augusta(Georgia) Sunday.

Huse, 40, finished in 4hours, 18 minutes and 44seconds. In first wasLauren Barnett of Dallas at4:11.33.

It was Huse’s third top-four finish in Ironman 70.3races this year. She wasthird at Boise, Idaho, inJune and fourth inMuskoka (Ontario) inSeptember.

In July she also won theGreat White NorthTriathlon in Stony Plain,Alberta.

NATIONALD-Backs to interviewA’s coach Chip Hale

PHOENIX (AP) – TheArizona Diamondbacks saythey have receivedpermission to interviewOakland Athletics benchcoach Chip Hale for theteam’s vacant managerposition.

Hale is a formermanager of theDiamondbacks’ Triple-Aaffiliate in Tucson – aswell as the MissoulaOsprey – and was on thebig league coaching staff,either as infield coach orthird base coach, forArizona for three seasons.He just completed his thirdseason as Oaklandmanager Bob Melvin’sbench coach. Before that,he was third base coach forthe New York Mets for twoseasons.

The Diamondbacks alsohave asked for permissionto interview Texas Rangersinterim manager TimBogar.

On Wednesday, theteam listed eight othercandidates to beinterviewed, includingformer Colorado, LosAngeles Dodgers andPittsburgh manager JimTracy.

Bears announce NFLdraft headed to Chicago

NEW YORK (AP) – The2015 NFL draft will be heldin Chicago, the leagueannounced Thursday.

Hours after the Bearsposted an announcementon their Twitter account,the NFL confirmed thedraft will move to Chicagoon April 30-May 2. It willbe held AuditoriumTheatre of RooseveltUniversity.

The draft was held inChicago in 1938, 1942-44,1951, and 1962-64.

Moving the draft out ofNew York, where it hasbeen held for decades, waslikely once the leaguebegan taking bids for theevent. Los Angeles andChicago were the finalistsfor next year’s event.

The NFL soured onRadio City Music Hall afterit was forced to move thedraft back two weeks intoMay this year.

| BRIEFS |

| SPORTS ON TV |

| BASKETBALL |

| FOOTBALL |

| HOCKEY |

| TENNIS |

| GOLF |

| BASEBALL |

| SOCCER |

Shealyn Hafer is pacingthe girls’ pack with a 72and a five-stroke lead. Apair of West golfers,Hannah Zwemke andHayden Flohr, trail her at77 along with defendingchampion Teigan Avery.Senior’s Kortney McNeil,who took second to Averylast year and won state in2011 and ’12, is one strokebehind that.

Hellgate’s MaddieTrent shot 81 to pull intoeighth place.

The tourney concludesFriday at Bridger Creek.

State AA tournamentAt Bridger Creek Golf Course

Thursday

BOYSTeam scores: Billings West 305,

Billings Senior 314, Kalispell Glacier 318,Helena Capital 319, Great Falls CMR 322,Great Falls 326, Butte 330, MissoulaHellgate 331, Helena 334, Bozeman 338,Kalispell Flathead 346, Billings Skyview347, Missoula Sentinel 356, Missoula BigSky 375.

Individual scoresJoey Moore, West ................................ 72Payton Stott, Skyview ............................ 73Kienan Stief, Helena.............................. 73Cody Sherrill, Glacier ............................ 73Colton Hunt, West ................................ 75Trey Hoagland, Butte..............................75Sean Benson, Senior ............................ 75Austin Walter, Senior ............................ 75Cory Preshinger, Capital ........................75Easton Enott, CMR ................................76Scott Larson, Glacier..............................76Ryan Keenan, Flathead..........................76Mark Solomon, CMR..............................77Cody Babinecz, Great Falls ..................77Finn Mikkola, Hellgate............................77Garrett Woodin, West ............................78Connor Brown, Bozeman ......................78Allen Rogers, CMR ................................79Tevin Lewis, Capital ................................79Barron Culver, Capital ............................79Tom Mann, Glacier ................................79Caleb Trost, Glacier................................80Schafer Paladichuk, Great Falls ............80Houston Green, Butte ............................81Patrick Zimmer, Senior ..........................81Devin Bray, Hellgate ..............................81Parker Elliot, West ..................................82Keaton Sunchild, Great Falls ................82Adam Henneberry, Senior ......................83Rayce Compton, Big Sky ......................83

Isak Nord, Hellgate ................................83Matthew Marshall, Flathead ..................84Nate Fuge, Sentinel................................84Will Kilmer, Butte ....................................85Owen Hathaway, Helena........................85Tyson Odden, Bozeman ........................85Jack O’Donnell, Bozeman ....................85Braxton Humphrey, Senior ....................86Riley Lawrence, Capital..........................86Sean Wilson, Skyview ............................87Tyler Strickland, Great Falls....................87Talon Burchard, Helena..........................87Jacob Welch, Flathead ..........................87Logan Martin, Skyview ..........................88Blake Hasquet, Sentinel ........................88Isaiah Weldon, Butte ..............................89Logan Teegarden, Helena......................89Sean Ramsbacher, Sentinel ..................89Cole Stenzel, CMR ................................90Jake Quinn, Big Sky ..............................90Will Holloran, Bozeman..........................90Sam Stern, Glacier ................................90River Duce, Hellgate ..............................90Will Hoagland, Butte ..............................91Duncan Hollar, CMR ..............................91Travis Wright, Helena ............................91Skyler Skinner, Capital............................91Tanner Thelen, Great Falls ....................93Brayden Hall, Bozeman ........................94James Martin, Sentinel ..........................95Kolten Kostelecky, Sentinel ....................96Riley McVey, Big Sky ..............................97Aiden Chisholm, Hellgate ......................98Nathan Rodecker, Skyview ....................99Evan Miles, Flathead..............................99Nick Weaver, Flathead ........................101Tyson Gentri, Big Sky ..........................105Riley Nelson, Glacier ............................106Carter Westphal, Big Sky ....................107Jameson Williems, Skyview ................111

GIRLSTeam scores: Billings West 336, Butte

352, Billings Senior 361, Missoula Hellgate368, Kalispell Flathead 368, Bozeman370, Great Falls 375, Kalispell Glacier 381,Helena 381, Great Falls CMR 390, HelenaCapital 399, Billings Skyview 411,Missoula Sentinel 416, Missoula Big Sky336.

Individual scoresShealyn Hafer, Butte ..............................72Hannah Zwemke, West ..........................77Hayden Flohr, West ................................77Teigan Avery, Glacier ..............................77Kortney McNeil, Senior ..........................78Mike’la Atkinson, West ..........................80Jenna Jensen, Flathead ........................80Maddie Trent, Hellgate ..........................81Bridget Beyer, Bozeman ........................83Rylie Carmichael, CMR ..........................84Hannah Rosanova, Bozeman ................84Hailey Ogolin, Butte ..............................85Jalen Wagner, Senior ............................88Morgan Knutson, Flathead ....................88Shelby Van Hemelryck, Capital..............89Emma Dyre, Senior ................................90Casey Babinecz, Great Falls..................90Jenna Herrick, Hellgate..........................90Delaney Schmidt, Skyview ....................92Abigail Davidson, Great Falls ................92Susie Hawthorne, Hellgate ....................92Savanna Voyles, CMR............................93Rebecca Knutson, Flathead ..................93Claire Inman, Helena..............................94Weslee Nehl, Helena..............................94Catrina Babinecz, Great Falls ................95Kyersten Seibenaler, Glacier ..................96Mari Pizzini, Helena................................96Ashton McCloskey, Butte ......................97

Jamie Wilson, Capital ............................97Rowan Rankin, Helena ..........................97Lexie Williams, Butte ..............................98Kayla Slavik, Great Falls ........................98Sara Mitchell, Sentinel............................98Angela King, Skyview ............................99Madison Bartleson, Skyview ................101Emily Moran, Bozeman........................101Hillary Smith, West ..............................102Kameryn Basye, Bozeman ..................102Ashley Puyear, Helena ........................103Sydnee Nowlen, Sentinel ....................104McKenna Hulslander, Glacier ..............104McKenna Tinseth, Glacier ....................104Sidney Lamb, Capital ..........................104Sadie Starcevich, Butte........................105Allie Bofto, Senior ................................105Kara Hogan, Hellgate ..........................105Gillian Kitchell, CMR ............................106Liz Basolo, Sentinel ..............................106Ryen Meeks, Bozeman ........................106Addison Beagles, CMR........................107Shayla Johnson, Big Sky ....................107Liz Lorentz, Flathead............................107Renae Hiesler, Great Falls....................108Mackenna Van Soest, Sentinel ............108Amber O’Mara, Capital ........................109Peyton Kimmer, West ..........................111Brie Finbraaten, Sentinel ......................111Toni Calloway, CMR..............................112Sami Ormesher, Big Sky ......................113Emma Epperly, Glacier ........................114Sam Mathis, Big Sky ............................116Emma Tolzien, Skyview ........................119Katie Stobie, Flathead..........................119Madi O’Mara, Capital ..........................119Maddie Keiper, Hellgate ......................124

AA golfContinued

FROM PAGE D1

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 – D3

SPORTS

NFL

PackersthumpVikings

By GENARO C. ARMASAssociated Press

GREEN BAY, Wis. –The Green Bay Packerskept scoring on a rainyThursday night.

Even Julius Peppersfound his way across thegoal line through the mistagainst the MinnesotaVikings.

Peppers returned aninterception 49 yards fora touchdown, AaronRodgers threw for threescores, and Green Bayrouted its NFC Northrival 42-10.

Eddie Lacy ran for aseason-high 105 yardsand two touchdowns.Jordy Nelson hauled in a66-yard touchdowncatch, and the Packersheld Minnesota scorelessfor three quarters.

The Packers led 28-0after the first half playedin a light rain. Theyessentially toyed withMinnesota the rest of theway.

Peppers had thehighlight-reel play in thesecond quarter afterpicking off a pass over themiddle from ChristianPonder, who was hit bytackle Luther Robinson ashe released the throw.

The 34-year-oldPeppers veered left acrossthe field and waited forblocks before chuggingthe final 10 yards alongthe sideline to make it 21-0 with 7:06 left in thesecond quarter.

Peppers, the Packers’prized free-agentacquisition, stopped for asecond in the end zonebefore safety MorganBurnett came up andpointed at the stands.Peppers took his firstLambeau Leap.

Peppers became thefirst player in NFL historywith 100 sacks and 10interceptions.

Things only got worsefor Ponder, who started atquarterback with rookieTeddy Bridgewater outwith a sprained left ankle.

Jamari Lattimoreintercepted Ponder’s passover the middle onMinnesota’s next drive,setting up Rodgers’ 11-yard touchdown pass toDavante Adams to giveGreen Bay a four-touchdown lead with 4:55left in the first half.

The rest of the gamewas a mere formality.Fans took delight inshowering former GreenBay receiver GregJennings with booswhenever he touched theball.

On the long scoringstrike, Rodgers foundNelson off play-action,and the NFL’s leadingreceiver hauled in thepass at the 20. He easilyoutraced safety HarrisonSmith into end zone forthe Packers’ secondtouchdown.Minnesota 0 0 0 10 – 10Green Bay 14 14 14 0 – 42

First QuarterGB–Cobb 8 pass from A.Rodgers

(Crosby kick), 9:39.GB–Nelson 66 pass from A.Rodgers

(Crosby kick), 5:18.Second Quarter

GB–Peppers 49 interception return(Crosby kick), 6:51.

GB–D.Adams 11 pass from A.Rodgers(Crosby kick), 4:51.

Third QuarterGB–Lacy 11 run (Crosby kick), 10:33.GB–Lacy 10 run (Crosby kick), 3:42.

Fourth QuarterMin–Ponder 6 run (Walsh kick), 14:54.Min–FG Walsh 26, 10:07.A–78,054.

Min GBFirst downs 20 15Total Net Yards 299 320Rushes-yards 25-111 28-156Passing 188 164Punt Returns 2-9 4-18Kickoff Returns 5-134 0-0Interceptions Ret. 1-5 2-59Comp-Att-Int 22-44-2 15-22-1Sacked-Yards Lost 6-34 2-14Punts 7-43.4 6-50.7Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0Penalties-Yards 9-91 5-30Time of Possession 32:09 27:51

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING–Minnesota, Asiata 15-72,

McKinnon 7-24, Ponder 3-15. Green Bay,Lacy 13-105, Starks 12-46, Kuhn 2-6,Flynn 1-(-1).

PASSING–Minnesota, Ponder 22-44-2-222. Green Bay, A.Rodgers 12-17-0-156, Flynn 3-5-1-22.

RECEIVING–Minnesota, Thielen 4-57,Ford 3-31, Wright 3-27, McKinnon 3-22,Jennings 2-31, Banyard 2-11, Patterson2-8, Gray 1-16, Ellison 1-12,Charle.Johnson 1-7. Green Bay, Cobb 3-34, Lacy 3-27, Quarless 2-19, Janis 2-16,Starks 2-2, Nelson 1-66, D.Adams 1-11,Kuhn 1-3.

MISSED FIELD GOALS–None.

AMERICAN LEAGUE DIVISION SERIES

Homer-happy O’s rout TigersAssociated Press

BALTIMORE – NelsonCruz and the BaltimoreOrioles had the goodfortune of avoiding CyYoung Award winner MaxScherzer during the regularseason.

Or maybe it was theother way around.

In his 2014 debutagainst the hard-hittingOrioles, Scherzer found outquickly that a poor pitchcan go a long way – in theother direction.

Cruz and J.J. Hardyhomered, and Baltimorehammered out 12 hits indefeating Scherzer and theDetroit Tigers 12-3Thursday in the opener oftheir AL Division Series.

“I just left too manypitches up,” Scherzer said.“This is a great-hittingballclub. You give them achance to extend theirarms, they can really hit it.”

Jonathan Schoop andAlejandro De Aza each hadtwo hits and two RBIs forthe Orioles, who turned aclose game into a rout withan eight-run eighth inningagainst Scherzer and threeineffective relievers.

The 12 runs set apostseason record forBaltimore, making itssecond playoff appearancesince 1997.

Game 2 of the best-of-five series is Friday atCamden Yards. JustinVerlander, the second ofthree straight Cy Youngwinners the Orioles willface, is set to go againstleft-hander Wei-Yin Chen.

Verlander must avoidthe mistakes made byScherzer, who allowed fiveruns and seven hits in 7 1-3innings. The right-handerwas 18-5 during the regularseason, but in this one hewas burned by the long balland outpitched by theOrioles.

“I’ve got to find a way toget the ball down,”Scherzer said. “I wasn’tquite able to do thattonight, and I paid for it.”

Cruz led the majors with40 homers during theregular season, a goodportion of Baltimore’s bigleague-best 211 long balls.His first-inning drive offScherzer put the Orioles up2-0 before Detroit’s VictorMartinez and J.D. Martinezconnected off ChrisTillman in the second to tieit.

But Baltimore had toomuch firepower for theTigers. Hardy led off theseventh by driving a poorlythrown changeup fromScherzer over the center-field wall for a 4-2 lead.

“The one that stings isthat J.J. Hardy home run,”Scherzer said. “That homerun really changed thegame in my eyes, gave themthat insurance run.”

Cruz added his third RBIwith a single during a wildeighth inning keyed by aDetroit error that kept theboisterous, orange-cladcrowd of 47,842 on its feet.

Five different Oriolesfinished with two hits.Clearly, facing Scherzerwas not too daunting atask.

“It’s the same game,” DeAza said. “Yes, this is a goodpitcher, but it’s the same

game. You have to throwthe ball to home plate for astrike to get us out.”

Tillman (1-0) allowedtwo runs in five inningsbefore Andrew Miller gotfive outs – three bystrikeout. Darren O’Daygave up an eighth-inninghomer to Miguel Cabrera,but the drive followed adouble play.

Orioles manager BuckShowalter then called uponcloser Zach Britton, whohad 37 saves during theregular season. Britton gotthe last out in the eighth,and by the time the ninthinning rolled around, hewasn’t needed anymore.

Miller had a 1.35 ERA in23 games with Baltimore,O’Day finished at 1.70 andBritton closed at 1.65.That’s one big reason whythe AL East-championOrioles were 80-4 whenleading after eight innings.

Meanwhile, Detroit’srevamped bullpen lookedshaky – although it wasshortstop AndrewRomine’s error that got thebig eighth inning going.

“I can’t remember thelast time he made an errorat shortstop,” Tigersmanager Brad Ausmus

said. “This was anunfortunate one, but itdoesn’t change my mind onhim as a shortstop.”

Although he had a 5.56ERA in the first inningduring the regular season,Tillman began his initialforay into the playoffs inimpressive fashion bystriking out the side on 14pitches.

Cruz hit an opposite-field drive to right in thebottom half after NickMarkakis hit a leadoffsingle. It was his 15thcareer postseason homerun, tied with Babe Ruthfor 10th place on the careerlist.

“It’s just I like to enjoythis moment, you know,”Cruz said. “I think as aplayer, you want to be inthe situation. And, youknow, it’s no reason.”

The rollicking, towel-waving fans had barelysettled down when VictorMartinez led off the secondwith a towering shot overthe right-field wall. Fourpitches later, J.D. Martinezhit a tying homer in hisfirst postseason at-bat.

Nick Markakis answeredwith an RBI single in theBaltimore half. At that

point, six of 10 battersreached safely againstScherzer.

After yielding the back-to-back homers, Tillmanretired the next 11 battersbefore Romine singled withtwo outs in the fifth.Another single and a walkloaded the bases for ToriiHunter, who hit into afielder’s choice onTillman’s 105th and finalpitch.

Afterward, Showaltersaluted the crowd for theirenthusiasm.

“If you don’t get that,you’re too cold for hisgame,” he said. “I wish Iwould have had a towel.”Detroit Baltimore

ab r h bi ab r h biKinsler 2b 4 0 1 0 Markks rf 4 2 2 1TrHntr rf 4 0 0 0 De Aza lf 4 1 2 2MiCarr 1b 3 1 1 1 A.Jones cf 5 1 0 0VMrtnz dh4 1 1 1 N.Cruz dh 4 2 2 3JMrtnz lf 4 1 1 1 Pearce 1b 4 1 2 0Avila c 4 0 1 0 JHardy ss 3 2 1 1Cstllns 3b 4 0 0 0 Flahrty 3b 3 2 1 1AnRmn ss4 0 2 0 Hundly c 4 0 0 1RDavis cf 3 0 1 0 Schoop 2b 4 1 2 2Carrer ph 0 0 0 0Totals 34 3 8 3 Totals 35121211Detroit 020 000 010 – 3Baltimore 210 000 18x – 12

E–R.Davis (1), An.Romine (1). DP–Detroit1, Baltimore 1. LOB–Detroit 7, Baltimore 3.2B–De Aza 2 (2), Schoop (1).HR–Mi.Cabrera (1), V.Martinez (1),J.Martinez (1), N.Cruz (1), J.Hardy (1).SB–A.Jones (1).

IP H RER BB SODetroitScherzer L,0-1 7.1 7 5 5 1 6Chamberlain 0 1 2 1 0 0Soria 0.1 3 4 4 1 0Coke 0.1 1 1 1 1 0BaltimoreTillman W,1-0 5 4 2 2 1 6A.Miller H,1 1.2 0 0 0 1 3O’Day H,1 1 2 1 1 0 0Z.Britton H,1 0.1 0 0 0 0 0Tom.Hunter 1 2 0 0 1 1

Chamberlain pitched to 2 batters in the8th. HBP–by Scherzer (De Aza). WP–Coke.Umpires–Home, Paul Schrieber; First, ScottBarry; Second, Jeff Kellogg; Third, JimWolf; Right, Dan Bellino; Left, FieldinCulbreth. T–3:42. A–47,842 (45,971).

Royals 3, Angels 2At Anaheim, Calif.,

Mike Moustakas hit a solohomer in the top of the 11thinning to give the KansasCity Royals a 3-2 win overthe Los Angeles Angels inthe opener of their ALDivision Series lateThursday night.

Chris Iannetta andDavid Freese homered forthe Angels, but the ALWest champions strandedseven runners in the finalfour innings before headingto extras.

NICK WASS/Associated Press

Baltimore’s Steve Pearce is tagged out at second by Detroit second baseman IanKinsler as Pearce tried to stretch a single into a double in the sixth inning of Game 1 ofbaseball’s AL Division Series on Thursday in Baltimore.

Associated Press

WASHINGTON – TheSan Francisco Giants andWashington Nationals bothmissed the postseason lastyear. That’s pretty muchwhere the similarities endheading into Friday’s NLDivision Series opener.

Bruce Bochy hasmanaged the Giants to twoof the past four WorldSeries championships.Nationals skipper MattWilliams is about to lead a

team intheplayoffsfor thefirst time.

The Giants have woneight consecutivepostseason games,including an 8-0 wild-cardvictory at Pittsburgh onWednesday night.

The NL East championNationals, most of whomhave never won a playoffseries, spent Wednesday attheir home ballpark playingan intrasquad scrimmagebetween groups theydubbed “The Face-Eaters”– a reference to JaysonWerth’s 2013 commentabout showing up for agame “ready to eatsomebody’s face” – and“Team Alpha.”

It was dressed up to lookand sound like the realthing: Fake crowd noise waspiped in; videos were shownon the scoreboard; thegame-day PA announcerintroduced players; rookiereliever Aaron Barrett evensang the national anthem.

“All in all, it was goodcamaraderie and goodcompetition and got thejuices flowing a little bit,which is what was needed,”reliever Tyler Clippard said,referring to the four-daybreak the Nationals will

have had between Sunday’sregular-season finale andthe series start. “It was agame situation. We in thisclubhouse are verycompetitive people, andwant to beat each other justas bad as we want to beateverybody else.”

First baseman AdamLaRoche joked the Giants’“confidence is up” becauseof their win against thePirates, “but we just had abig intrasquad yesterday, soour confidence is up, too.”

Both teams worked outat Nationals Park onThursday, and bothmanagers announced theirstarting pitchers for Games1-3.

Friday’s matchupbetween Washington’sStephen Strasburg and SanFrancisco’s Jake Peavy –pals who sometimes workout together in San Diego –gives one indication of thegap in experience the seriesrepresents. Strasburg, heldout of the 2012 postseasonto protect his surgicallyrepaired elbow, will bemaking his playoff debut;Peavy will be making his

sixth October start,including as a member oflast season’s World Serieschampion Boston Red Sox.

Their catchers alsoillustrate the differencebetween the teams:Strasburg will be throwingto Wilson Ramos, who wasinjured in 2012 and neverhas participated in a playoffgame; Peavy will work withBuster Posey, a member ofthe Giants’ 2010 and 2012title teams, along with the2012 NL MVP winner.

Game 2 will featureJordan Zimmermannagainst Tim Hudson, andGame 3 will have DougFister against MadisonBumgarner, who threw afour-hit shutout againstPittsburgh in SanFrancisco’s seventhconsecutive victory in anelimination game.

“Once we get to thepostseason, it’s like a newseason for us,” said Giantsshortstop BrandonCrawford, who hit a grandslam Wednesday. “We haveplenty of ups and downsduring the regular season,but now it’s kind of a newslate for us.”

The Giants finishedsecond in the NL West at88-74 after going only 41-40 in the second half.Washington went 53-28 inthat span, and a majors-best 21-9 in its last 30, tofinish 96-66, the NL’s bestrecord.

“We may not match upwith a lot of people onpaper,” Hudson said. “But Ithink once you get out thereand play, the guts and theheart that this team has ...gets this team over thehump a lot of times.”

The last time the LosAngeles Dodgers facedthe St. Louis Cardinals inthe playoffs, ClaytonKershaw had a terribleouting and the Dodgerswere bounced out of thepostseason.

A year later and a roundearlier,Kershawhas achanceto erase

the memories of that 9-0loss in Game 6 when hestarts Friday’s NL DivisionSeries opener against AdamWainwright.

“That’s the hardest partabout it. Your season ends,”Kershaw said Thursdaybefore the Dodgers workedout. “It always hangs withyou until your next start. Ihad to wait a long time forthat next one.”

Kershaw is coming offanother award-worthyregular season in which hewent 21-3 and his 1.77 ERAled the major leagues for thefourth straight year. He was10-2 with a 1.70 ERA athome, too.

Wainwright hasn’t beennearly as successful atChavez Ravine. The right-hander is 1-3 with a 4.30ERA in seven games,

including six starts.“I pay no mind to what

happened in the regularseason,” Wainwright said.“Obviously, Clayton had anamazing regular season andnow we go to the postseasonand it’s anybody’s ballgame.This is one game for the restof your lives every day, sowe’ll take that mindset andbe ready.”

Wainwright had thethird-best ERA in theNational League at 2.38 thisseason, and was even betteron the road at 1.72. But in aseason in which Kershawhas been so dominant, theCardinals’ ace can’t helpbut be somewhat of anafterthought.

“I’m more impressedthat, what is he 26 years old,that he’s had the career he’salready had and is thepitcher he is already,” the33-year-old Wainwrightsaid. “Most times it takes apitcher a few years to kindof break in and then hestarts finding his own, andhe’s just been excellent fromthe very beginning.”

Kershaw missed ahandful of starts with a badback in April, and afterpitching late into thepostseason a year ago, theinjury provided him somewelcome rest. Manager DonMattingly said the team waslooking for ways to reduceKershaw’s innings anyway,and the schedule kicked insome extra help late lastmonth.

“I don’t know if that’sgoing to make a differenceor not,” Kershaw said. “I feelpretty much the samehealth-wise as I did lastyear. Arm feels great.Strength, everythingphysically feels really good.”

NATIONAL LEAGUE DIVISION SERIES PREVIEWS

Giants head to Washington on a roll

ALEX BRANDON/Associated Press

San Francisco manager Bruce Bochy watches histeam during a workout at Nationals Park on Thursday inWashington. The Washington Nationals play the SanFrancisco Giants in the National League Division Seriesstarting Friday.

Game 1

FS1, 1 p.m.

Game 1

FS1, 4:30 p.m.

VARSITY/FRIDAYD4 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

PREP SOCCER ROUNDUP

Corvallis boys blow past Hamilton, 8-2Missoulian

HAMILTON –Alejandro Ortiz took partin six Corvallis goals as theBlue Devils dispatched ofHamilton 8-2 in a matchupof Bitterroot foes onThursday.

Corvallis (6-0 inSouthern A, 9-1 overall)jumped out to a 7-0 leadbefore Hamilton could findthe net. Ortiz scored threeof the first four Devils’goals, assisting EmmettSemple on the other. Healso had helpers onanother goal by Sempleand one by DJ Pekoc rightafter halftime.

“This was our bestoffensive game by far,”Corvallis coach GregShifflett said. “Hamilton isa good opponent, too.They’re our rival.”

David Feldmann talliedboth of Hamilton’s (3-2-1,5-4-1) goals, though theycame late in the 60th and64th minutes, long afterthe outcome was decided.

Corvallis 4 4 – 8Hamilton 0 2 – 2C – Alejandro Ortiz (Cayden Ayers), 14:00C – Emmett Semple (Ortiz), 18:00C – Ortiz (Justin Catanach), 20:00C – Ortiz (Stevio Dong), 32:00C – DJ Pekoc (Ortiz), 41:00C – Semple (Ortiz), 52:00C – Ayers (Avery Walden), 58:00H – David Feldmann, 60:00H – Feldmann (Angelo Garcia), 64:00C – Pekoc (Ladd Grenfell), 77:00Shots on goal – Corvallis 18, Hamilton 9.

Saves – Corvallis 6 (Shelby Gifford),Hamilton 5 (Casey Ryter). Corner kicks –Corvallis 5, Hamilton 3. Total fouls–Corvallis 4, Hamilton 3. Cards – none.

ELSEHWERE

Kalispell Glacier 3,Missoula Big Sky 3

At Big Sky Fields, theunderdog Eagles held theadvantage late but let itslip as the Wolfpack camehowling back to force adraw, 3-3.

Dana Kowacheckaccounted for all three Big

Sky goals, scoring twice inthe first half and in the53rd minute for the hattrick. He helped the Eaglesget out to a 2-0 halftimelead.

Kalispell Glacier’sBrandon Purdy counteredKowachek’s attack withtwo goals and an assist.His final goal was theequalizer in the 73rdminute.

“All credit goes toGlacier for showing greatspirit for fighting back,”Big Sky coach RossMcMonies said.

With the tie, the Eagleswent to 2-5-2 . The Packare 4-1-3.

Glacier 0 3 – 3Big Sky 2 1 – 3B – Dana Kowachek (Sam McKay), 18:00B – Kowachek (Quinn Pruitt), 30:00G – Brandon Prudy (Rohit Tappeta),

47:00B – Kowachek (free kick), 53:00G – Colton Becker (Prudy), 66:00G – Purdy (unassisted), 73:00Shots on goal – Glacier 12, Big Sky 15.

Saves – Glacier 14 (Ryker McIntyre), BigSky 11 (Nathan Mahler). Corner kicks –Glacier 4, Big Sky 9. Total fouls –Glacier 7,Big Sky 9. Cards – None.

Whitefish 0, Polson 0

At Polson, the Piratespulled off a Northern Astunner in playing to adraw with the league-leading Bulldogs.

In a match marred by 19fouls, Polson keeperTrevor Basler was a herowith 10 saves. The Piratesmoved to 0-3-2 in leagueplay and 0-7-2 overallwhile the Bulldogs are now4-0-2, 6-2-2.

Whitefish held a 10-2edge in shots on goal.Bulldogs keeper HavenGunderson made foursaves.

Whitefish 0 0 – 0Polson 0 0 – 0Shots on goal – Whitefish 10, Polson 2.

Saves – Whitefish 4 (Haven Gunderson),Polson 10 (Trevor Basler). Corner kicks –Whitefish 7, Polson 0. Total fouls –Whitefish9, Polson 10. Yellow card – Polson.

Stevensville 4, Frenchtown 0

At Stevensville, QuadeRenstrom began a second-half outburst with a goal inthe 54th minute, and thehost Yellowjackets downedFrenchtown in a SouthernA matchup.

Payden Belcourt addedtwo goals in a 10-minutespan for the Jackets (4-1-0in league, 6-2-1 overall),and Parker Bryant addedanother in the 78thminute.

Dylan Gavlak assistedon three of the goals, andCurtis Liston fed Belcourtfor his second.

Bridger Truett madeseven saves for the Broncs(0-5-1, 1-8-1).

Frenchtown 0 0 – 0Stevensville 0 4 – 4S – Quade Renstrom (Dylan Gavlak),

54:00S – Payden Belcourt (Gavlak), 60:00S – Belcourt (Curtis Liston), 70:00S – Parker Bryant (Gavlak), 78:00Shots on goal – Frenchtown 8,

Stevensville 17. Saves – Frenchtown 7(Bridget Truett), Stevensville 2 (BronsonJensen). Corner kicks – Frenchtown 1,Stevensville 6. Total fouls – Frenchtown 8,Stevensville 12. Cards – Stevensville,yellow; Frenchtown, yellow.

Bigfork 4,Columbia Falls 2

At Columbia Falls, fourdifferent Vikings scored tohelp Bigfork get theNorthern A road winagainst the Wildcats.

Cameron Cantrell gotBigfork (4-1-0 inconference, 5-3-1 overall)started in the fifth minute,and Kyle Thompson tackedon a second goal in the12th.

Bigfork and ColumbiaFalls alternated goals fromthere on out, with CatsKeenan Jessat and AlexGarraate each scoring, andShane Rieske and TylerZavala adding on forBigfork.

Columbia Falls fell to 1-4-0, 2-7-0.

Bigfork 3 1 – 4Col. Falls 1 1 – 2B – Cameron Cantrell 5:00B – Kyle Thompson 12:00C – Keenan Jessat 20:00B – Shane Rieske 21:00C – Alex Garraate 50:00B – Tyler Zavala 62:00Shots on goal – Bigfork 13, Col. Falls 7,

Saves – Bigfork 2 (Kyle Cummings), Col.Falls 10 (Brandon Carberg). Corner kicks –Bigfork 2, Col. Falls 2. Total fouls – Bigfork7, Col. Falls 11. Cards – Bigfork 1, Col.Falls 1.

GIRLS

Kalispell Glacier 3,Missoula Big Sky 2

At Big Sky’s McEnaneyField, the Eagles scoredthree times, but once forthe Wolfpack, as KalispellGlacier won the WesternAA match, 3-2.

With the Wolfpackalready leading 1-0, BigSky scored in its own net inthe 26th minute, giving thePack a two-scoreadvantage. Glacier’s EllieStevens put her team up 3-0 at halftime with a scorein the 31st minute.

Cassidy Pierce and theEagles came flying back inthe second half, as Piercescored two unassistedgoals in the 43rd and 78thminutes. Big Sky fell justshort of the comeback,though, and remainedwinless, 0-6-3 overall.Glacier improved to 2-3-3.

Glacier 3 0 – 3Big Sky 0 2 – 2G – Carly McDonald (Cadie WIlliams)

2:00G – Own goal (Lindsay McDonald) 26:00G – Ellie Stevens (McKayle Dennehy)

31:00B – Cassidy Pierce (unassisted) 43:00B – Cassidy Pierce (unassisted) 78:00Shots on goal – Glacier 6, Big Sky 9,

Saves – Glacier 4 (Amy Braig) Big Sky 2(Chelsea Todd) Corner kicks – Glacier 3,Big Sky 5. Total fouls – Glacier 7, Big Sky 4.Cards – None.

Stevensville 3,Frenchtown 1

At Stevensville, CarlySebastian scored the

Yellowjackets’ game-winning goal in the 49thminute to get her team theSouthern A victory.

Sebastian, who assistedon Katie Benson’s first halfgoal, put Stevensville (2-2-1 in league, 2-5-2 overall)ahead 2-1 on a pass fromSierra Leese. MeganPendergast added aninsurance goal in the 70thminute on a direct kickfrom 30 yards out.

Jasmine Mitchell madeit 1-1 about 10 minutesprior to half with the onlyBroncs (0-5-1, 0-9-1) goalof the afternoon.

Frenchtown 1 0 – 1Stevensville 1 2 – 3S – Katie Benson (Carly Sebastian), 18:00F – Jasmine Mitchell, 30:00S – Sebastian (Sierra Leese), 49:00S – Megan Pendergast (free kick), 70:00Shots on goal – Frenchtown 7,

Stevensville 8. Saves – Frenchtown 5(Chloe Emmons), Stevensville 6 (EvieTiplady). Corner kicks – Frenchtown 1,Stevensville 4. Total fouls – Frenchtown 0,Stevensville 0. Cards – none.

Hamilton 3, Corvallis 0

At Hamilton, KendalGordon and Kara Weesehelped each other scoregoals to lead the Broncs ina Southern A girls’showdown.

Gordon got the first-place Broncs (6-0 inleague, 7-2 overall) on theboard in the fourth minute,scoring off a feed fromWeese. In the 55th minute,Weese scored off Gordon’sassist for the match’s finalgoal.

In between, BriannaHuggans scored off adirect kick for Hamilton.

Corvallis was outshot22-7 by the hosts and fellto 4-2 in league games and5-5-0 overall.

Corvallis 0 0 – 0Hamilton 2 1 – 3H – Kendal Gordon (Kara Weese),4:00H – Brianna Huggans, 17:00H – Weese (Gordon), 55:00Shots on goal – Corvallis 7, Hamilton 22.

Saves – Corvallis 7 (Kira Doyle), Hamilton 4(Larami Schara). Corner kicks – Corvallis 1,

Hamilton 3. Total fouls – Corvallis 5,Hamilton 6. Cards – none.

Bigfork 0,Columbia Falls 0

At Columbia Falls, theVals used strong play in netby keeper Celeste Rehbeinin pulling off the NorthernA surprise.

League-leaderColumbia Falls (4-0-1conference, 5-1-3 overall)held a whopping 23-5 edgein shots on goal. ButRehbein was the equalizerwith 15 saves.

Bigfork moved to 1-2-2,4-3-2.

Bigfork 0 0 – 0Col. Falls 0 0 – 0Shots on goal – Bigfork 5, Col. Falls 23.

Saves – Bigfork 15 (Celeste Rehbein), Col.Falls 2 (Alyson Gimbel). Corner kicks –Bigfork 3, Col. Falls 5. Total fouls –Bigfork3, Col. Falls 10. Cards – none.

Polson 3, Whitefish 0

At Polson, Sarah Howellscored twice and TiaraDuford had three points tohelp the Pirates top theBulldogs for the first timein 13 years, according toPolson coach MichaelHewston.

Howell scored early inthe first half and late in thesecond half, with bothgoals getting help from aDuford pass. Duford addeda score of her own in the53rd minute to give thePirates (2-2-1 overall) atwo-goal lead beforeHowell’s final score.

Whitefish (3-2-1) wasoutshot 9-5 as Polsonmaintained possession andstayed on the attack formost of the game.

Whitefish 0 0 – 0Polson 1 2 – 3P – Sarah Howell (Tiara Duford),13:00P – Tiara Duford (unassisted), 53:00P – Sarah Howell (Tiara Duford), 76:00Shots on goal – Whitefish 5, Polson 9.

Saves – Whitefish 5 (Kess Nelson), Polson4 (Jenna Evertz). Corner kicks – Whitefish4, Polson 5. Total fouls –Whitefish 2, Polson1. Cards – None.

PREP VOLLEYBALL ROUNDUP

Clairmont, Maidens roll to first league winMissoulian

RONAN – SydneeClairmont had 12 kills, 13assists and a blockThursday, and the RonanMaidens overcame a first-set loss to top Deer Lodgefor their District 6-Bvolleyball victory.

Kendra Starkel added sixkills, a block and 20 digs forthe Maidens, who won 18-25, 25-13, 25-13 and 25-18.

Ronan is 1-2 in leaguematches and 3-7 overall.

Danielle Richwine’s 20digs and five aces alsoaided Ronan’s effort.

For Deer Lodge (0-3, 2-6), Hunter Therriault hadnine assists and five aces,while Lenora Campbellhad five kills.

Jaicee Senecal had 19digs for the Wardens.

Ronan def. Deer Lodge, 18-25, 25-13, 25-13, 25-18.

Kills – Deer Lodge 12 (Lenora Campbell5), Ronan 28 (Sydnee Clairmont 12).Blocks – Deer Lodge 3 (Kerstin Cooper 2),Ronan 3 (3 with 1). Digs – Deer Lodge 34(Jaicee Senecal 19), Ronan 59 (KendraStarkel 20, Danielle Richwine 20). Assists –Deer Lodge 9 (Hunter Therriault 9), Ronan23 (Clairmont 13). Aces – Deer Lodge 9(Therriault 5), Ronan 14 (Richwine 5).

ELSEWHERECLASS AA

Kalispell Glacier def.Missoula Big Sky, 3-0

At Big Sky Gym, thefirst-place KalispellGlacier Wolfpack rode 10aces from Ali Williams to astraight-set Western AAvictory.

Katie Wiley led theWolfpack (6-0 in league,12-1 overall) at the net with12 kills, and Hailee Bennetthad 11 digs.

Anna Gragg had fourkills and three blocks forBig Sky (0-7, 2-12), whichgave up 19 aces to theWolfpack. Carly Hartadded team highs in assists(nine) and aces (three).

Kalispell Glacier def. Missoula BigSky, 25-16, 25-13, 25-12.

Kills – Glacier 38 (Katie Wiley 12), Big Sky12 (Anna Gragg 4, Kiley Snow 4). Blocks –Glacier 2 (Brielle Bumgarner 2), Big Sky 4(Gragg 3). Digs – Glacier 33 (HaileeBennett 11), Big Sky 26 (Macey Newbary10). Assists – Glacier 28 (Hannah Liss 28),Big Sky 11 (Carly Hart 9). Aces – Glacier 19(Ali Williams 10), Big Sky 4 (Hart 3).

CLASS A

Loyola Sacred Heart def.Polson, 3-0

At Polson, LoyolaSacred Heart went up aclass and knocked offPolson in straight setsbehind 12 kills and threeblocks from Sierra Tiede.

Sadie Crippen had 11assists and Olivia Round 15digs for the District 6-BBreakers, who are now 8-1.

Haley Fyant’s six killsled Northwestern A Polson(2-4). Jaiden Toth added 18assists and 16 digs for thePirates.

Loyola def. Polson 25-23, 25-18, 25-21.

Kills – Loyola 23 (Sierra Tiede 12), Polson23 (Haley Fyant 6). Blocks – Loyola 5(Tiede 3), Polson 2 (Nichole Lake, TaylorRost). Digs – Loyola 55 (Olivia Round 15),Polson 73 (Libby Clay 16, Jaiden Toth 16).Assists – Loyola 22 (Sadie Crippen 11),Polson 18 (Toth 18). Aces – Loyola 6 (NA),Polson 3 (Taylor Brackey 2).

CLASS B

Florence def. St. Ignatius 3-0

At Florence, SabrinaHopcroft had 12 kills andRylie Hawkins bumped up42 assists as the unbeatenFalcons made short workof their District 6-B rival.

Megan Byrne addedfour aces for Florence (4-0in league, 10-0 overall),which won 25-8, 25-11, 25-12. The Falcons had 44 killsto 12 for St. Ignatius (2-2,4-5).

Emilie Charlo had threekills and three blocks forthe Bulldogs.

Florence def. St. Ignatius, 25-8, 25-11, 25-12.

Kills – Mission 12 (Emilie Charlo 3,Sydney Castor 3), Florence 44 (SabrinaHopcroft 12). Blocks – Mission 5 (Charlo3), Florence 2 (Jessica Dufresne, MeganKowalski). Digs – Mission 27 (3 with 5),Florence 63 (Kristine Drozdz 29). Assists –Mission 10 (Jordan Eichert 10), Florence43 (Rylie Hawkins 42). Aces – Mission 2(Castor, Shania Dubois), Florence 12(Megan Byrne 4).

Bigfork def. Eureka, 3-0

At Eureka, Marissa Hizafloored 10 kills in helpingpower the Vals to theWestern 7-B sweep, 25-20,27-25, 26-24.

Charity Parsonschipped in with 10 assistsand four aces for Bigfork.The Vals moved to 3-1 in

league play, 6-3 overall.Amanda Peterson had

10 kills for the Lions (2-2,5-6).

Bigfork def. Eureka, 25-20, 27-25,26-24.

Kills – Bigfork 29 (Marissa Hiza 10),Eureka 23 (Amanda Peterson 10). Blocks –Bigfork 4 (Berg 2), Eureka 4 (ElliottPeterson 4). Digs – Bigfork 62 (Fraley 14),Eureka 88 (Courtney Lemer 19). Assists –Bigfork 22 (Kalia Wicklund 22), Eureka 20(Charity Parsons 10). Aces – Bigfork 7(Riley Coleman 3), Eureka 10 (Parsons 4).

CLASS C

Drummond def. Seeley-Swan, 3-2

At Drummond, anoffensive outburst for bothteams turned into anexciting five-set win, 25-16, 13-25, 26-24, 20-25, 15-7, for the Trojans inWestern 9-C actionagainst the Blackhawks.

Seeley-Swan had 44kills, led by AlexBohlman’s 21, as theHawks (3-5 in conference,4-5 overall) showedcunning with their ballplacement early in thematch.

The Trojans matchedSeeley’s offensive prowesswith 30 kills of their own.Claire Fickler had eight tolead Drummond (6-2, 6-2), and Sami Carlsonadded seven. Carlson alsorecorded a team-high sixaces in the win.

Drummond def. Seeley-Swan, 25-16,13-25, 26-24, 20-25, 15-7

Kills – Seeley-Swan 44 (Alex Bohlman21), Drummond 30 (Claire Fickler 8 SamiCarlson 7). Blocks – Seeley-Swan 7(Bohlman 4), Drummond 10 (Kristen Piippo3). Digs – Seeley-Swan 91 (Paige Holmes24), Drummond 73 (Addison Schindler 20,Sabrina Shows 18). Assists – Seeley-Swan39 (Holmes 18), Drummond 25 (Shows24). Aces – Seeley-Swan 13 (Tyana Murphy4), Drummond 14 (Carlson 6).

Charlo def.Two Eagle River, 3-0

At Charlo, the Vikingsspread the ball around onoffense with 10 differentgirls recording kills in a 25-16, 25-5, 25-23 sweep ofDistrict 10-C foe TwoEagle River.

Cheyenne Nagy ledCharlo (7-1 in league, 7-2overall) with five kills andSienna Brown had fourmore. Mikaylan Roylancepassed our 12 assists andalso hit for five aces.

Tyra Michel led Two

Eagle (0-7, 0-7) with sevenkills and seven aces as theEagles did most of theirdamage on the serve with14 total.

Charlo def. Two Eagle River, 25-16,25-5, 25-23.

Kills – Two Eagle 18 (Tyra Michel 7),Charlo 22 (Cheyenne Nagy 5). Blocks –Two Eagle 2 (Michel), Charlo 0. Digs – TwoEagle 7 (Casadi Wunderlich 2), Charlo 33(Brooke Doty 12). Assists – Two Eagle 6(Shaylyn Andrew 3), Charlo 17 (MikaylanRoylance 12). Aces – Two Eagle 14 (Michel7), Charlo 12 (Roylance 5).

Arlee def. Superior, 3-1

At Arlee, the Scarletsdominated the first twosets to put Superior in a bighole and although thesecond two were muchcloser, the deficit was toogreat to deny Arlee theDistrict 10-C victory.

Superior actually wonmore points in the finaltwo games, though Arleetook the match 25-12, 25-9, 21-25, 26-24.

Becca Whitesell pacedthe Arlee (5-1 in league, 6-2 overall) offense with 24assists, eight to AutumnMoran for kills.

Superior’s (2-6, 3-6)McKenzie Stagger led herteam with 10 assists andfour aces. Morgan Sharpalso had 10 assists.

Arlee def. Superior, 25-12, 25-9, 21-25, 26-24.

Kills – Superior 25 (Danielle Ewoniuk 7),Arlee 28 (Autumn Moran 8). Blocks –Superior 4 (Marissa Koke 4), Arlee 3 (Threewith 1). Digs – Superior n/a, Arlee n/a.Assists – Superior 21 (Morgan Sharp 10,McKenzie Stagger 10), Arlee 27 (BeccaWhitesell 24). Aces – Superior 9 (Stagger4), Arlee 11 (Violet Pablo 3, Whitesell 3).

St. Regis def. Hot Springs, 3-0

At St. Regis, GabbyMoeller had a huge day tohelp her Tigers sweep theSavage Heat, 25-16, 25-14,25-19 in Western 10-Caction.

Moeller led St. Regiswith 20 of the team’s 39kills, and she added twoblocks and six digs. St.Regis’ Madi Hill was in on19 assists, and helped setup Moeller’s kills.

Makenzi Skellenger had16 of Hot Springs’ 51 kills,but the Heat fell to 1-5 inconference, 1-5 overall.

The Tigers put pressureon the three teams aheadof them in conference by

improving to 5-2, 5-3.St. Regis def. Hot Springs, 25-16,

25-14, 25-19Kills – Hot Springs 10 (Stacy Gray 6), St.

Regis 39 (Gabby Moeller 20). Blocks – HotSprings 2 (Lexie DeTienne 2), St. Regis 2(Moeller 2). Digs – Hot Springs 51(Makenzi Skellenger 16), St. Regis 17(Moeller 6). Assists – Hot Springs 10(Josey Parr 9), St. Regis 33 (Madi Hill 19).Aces – Hot Springs 4 (Four with one), St.Regis 7 (Anna Sanford 3).

Darby def. Valley Christian, 3-0

At Valley ChristianGym, Darby’s strongservice game made adifference in the Tigers’District 9-C win over thehost Eagles.

The visitors had 19 acesand otherwise disruptedthe Eagles’ offense. Partlyas a result, Valley Christianstandout Cheyenne Joneshad a below-average 10kills, though she also hadsix blocks and 14 digs.

Darby is 7-1 in leaguematches and 8-1 overall.The Eagles fell to 6-3 and7-3. Grace Lowder had fouraces for Christian.

Darby def. Valley Christian, 25-22,27-25, 25-18.

Kills – Darby 6 (n/a), Valley Christian 18(Cheyenne Jones 10). Blocks – Darby 4(n/a), Valley Christian 7 (Jones 6). Digs –Darby 7 (n/a), Valley Christian 49 (Jones14). Assists – Darby 14 (n/a), ValleyChristian 16 (Lilly Schulz 7). Aces – Darby19 (n/a), Valley Christian 6 (Grace Lowder4).

Philipsburg def. Lincoln, 3-0

At Lincoln, a big blockin the middle wasn’tenough for the Lynx, as theProspectors swept theirWestern 9-C counterpart,25-10, 25-12, 25-11.

Lincoln had eightblocks, led by CarleyDeLuca’s four, butPhilipsburg still managed31 kills to the Lynx’s six.Kyra Brabender had 13 killsand Ciera Wingo had 12 forthe Prospectors (5-2 inconference, 6-2 overall).

The Lynx, who fell to 1-6, 1-7, had trouble with itsserve-receive, asPhilipsburg had 12 aces.

Philipsburg def. Lincoln, 25-10, 25-12, 25-11

Kills – Philipsburg 31 (Kyra Brabender 13,Ciera Wingo 12), Lincoln 6 (Carley DeLuca4). Blocks – Philipsburg 1 (Wingo), Lincoln8 (C. DeLuca 4). Digs – Philipsburg 31(Wingo 10), Lincoln 23 (Abby Castagne 5,Tori Kirby 5). Assists – Philipsburg 26 (LizGraham 25), Lincoln 3 (Katie DeLuca 3).Aces – Philipsburg 12 (Tara Dunkerson 4)Lincoln 4 (Tia Fulghum 2).

CROSS COUNTRY

Mundel, Kujalastand out atT. Falls meet

Missoulian

THOMPSON FALLS –Columbia Falls’Samantha Mundel andRussell Kujala of Plainswon individual honors atthe Thompson FallsInvitational crosscountry meet Thursday.

Timberlake High outof Idaho swept the teamchampionships at River’sBend Golf Course, with54 points for the boysand 35 for the girls.

Thompson Falls’ boys,with Tanner Lawsfinishing second andXavier Broderick eighth,were second at 80.Whitefish was third at86.

On the girls’ sideWhitefish was second(63 points) and ColumbiaFalls was third (73).

Mundel won her racein 18 minutes, 38seconds, whileTimberlake’s KassidyHammond was a distantsecond at 19:02. AlexBartmess of Eureka wasthird at 19:14.Timberlake had five girlsfinish in the top 10.

Kujala edged Laws by6 seconds in the boys’race, winning in 16:34.Timberlake’s BraydenMenti was third,followed by DaltonDelaney of Charlo at16:58.

BOYSTeam scores: Timberlake 54,

Thompson Falls 80, Whitefish 86,Frenchtown 89, Eureka 120, ColumbiaFalls 174, Ronan 182.

Top 15 individuals1, Russell Kujala, Pln, 16:34; 2, Tanner

Laws, TF, 16:40; 3, Brayden Menti, Tbl,16:48; 4, Dalton Delaney, Cha, 16:58; 5,Keaton Grove, Wfh, 17:01; 6, JaidenRowe, 17:02; 7, Ethan Potthoff, Wfh,17:29; 8, Xavier Broderick, TF, 17:32; 9,Tanner Akerill, Tbl, 17:35; 10, Taj Hagan,Eur, 17:37; 11, Ethan Lannaghan, Wfh,17:38; 12, Brendan Jessen, Tbl, 17:43;13, Frank Dean, Ftn, 17:44; 14, JordanHardy, Tbl, 17:46; 15, Glenn Morden,CF, 17:47.

GIRLSTeam scores: Timberlake 35,

Whitefish 63, Columbia Falls 73, Eureka109, Ronan 189, Frenchtown 209.

Top 15 individuals1, Samantha Mundel, CF, 18:38; 2,

Kassidy Hammond, Tbl, 19:02; 3, AlexBartmess, Eur, 19:14; 4, TaylorHammond, Tbl, 19:36; 5, KimberlyEarhart, Pln, 19:49; 6, Demi Horton, Pln,19:58; 7, Barrett Gray, Wfh, 20:33; 8,Kamy Waldram, Tbl, 20:48; 9, MeredithStolte, CF, 20:58; 10, Isabella Miejerink,Tbl, 21:03; 11, Lily Kelley, Tbl, 21:16; 12,Peyton Twete, Wfh, 21:24; 13, SarahPerez, Wfh, 21:35; 14, Tyann Totten, Eur,21:37; 15, Annika Gordon, Wfh, 21:48.

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 – D5

FROM PAGE D1 SPORTS

THIS WEEK IN GRIZ SPORTS

attempts with an averageof 2.9 yards per tote.

That’s a far cry fromMontana’s rushing leadersJordan Canada and TravonVan, who both have rightaround 300 yards. Canadaaverages 5.0 yards percarry and Van 7.9.

NoDak’s next two mosteffective running backshave been CedricSimmons and AdamShaugabay. Simmons isout indefinitely with ashoulder injury andShaugabay is questionablefor Saturday after sittingout last weekend with aninjury.

The Green and Whitehave an established widereceiver in senior R.J.McGill. He has 17 catchesfor 200 yards and equaledhis career high last weekwith seven catches for 63yards.

But after McGill,

NoDak’s receiving statsdrop off considerably.

“Their offense seems tobe struggling a little bitright now,” Montanacoach Mick Delaney said.“But still, if things go righton a good day ... If theyproved they could run theball, then they’d be a well-balanced team and couldthrow it a little bit better.”

Montana’s defenseposes a supreme challengefor North Dakota, whichoften runs out of a one-back set. The Griz lead theBig Sky in fewest pointsallowed (86) and fewestyards allowed per game(338.8 average).

“We have a lot ofrespect for their defense,”NoDak first-year coachBubba Schweigert said.“They don’t give youmuch. You’ve got to earneverything you get.

“We have to try to finda way to control thefootball to help ourdefense. That’s a big

challenge to try to movethe chains and gain fieldposition.”

Mollberg is impressedwith Montana’s defensiveline, which has racked up amajority of the team’sleague-high 18 sacks.

He is all too familiarwith the Grizzlies’defensive prowess aftercoming out on the losingend of a 55-17 home gameagainst Montana lastseason. In that contest,Mollberg completed 25 of43 passes but had twointerceptions and wassacked four times.

“They’re very physicalup front,” the QB said.“They’ve got some studs.Their corners are physical.But we’re eager for thetask. We’re ready to go.

“They played very welllast year and they’re verytalented. You could tellthey wanted that revengefor (2012). But we’re goingto put it all on the line thistime and we’ll see whatwe’ve got.”

Despite his roller-coaster ride in September,Delaney expects the 6-foot-2 Mollberg tochallenge Montana’sdefense.

“He is a big, strongphysical guy and I thinkhe’s starting to find hisway,” Delaney said. “Andthey play well at home.”

Quick kicks: In five startsMollberg has completed 55 of109 passes for 652 yards. Infour starts Montana’s Johnsonhas completed 66 of 121passes for 681 yards ... UNDhas designated Saturday as its“blackout” game and fans arebeing encouraged to wearblack clothing. NoDak hasaveraged 8,074 fans in twohome games ... Saturday’scontest will be televised. InMissoula it will be available onCharter channels 10/510;DirecTV channel 24 and DishNetwork channel 17.

Bill Speltz can bereached at 523-5255 [email protected].

BabyContinued

a junior, has beendominant this season inClass A, and won theNorthwestern A divisionaltourney by 11 strokes,shooting a 77.

“She’s definitely afront-runner going intothe state tournament,”coach Olson said ofSchulz. “She has not onlybrought a solid golf gamebut some leadership andcompetitiveness to theteam. It has run throughboth the girls’ team andthe boys.”

Hamilton coach OwenBurch, who brings both hisboys and girls’ squads tothe state meet at his team’shome course, thinksSchulz and her team arethe favorite to win state.

“Whitefish, with Coral,she’s just a special talent,”Burch said. “She givesthem a huge advantage. Ifyou dropped her score andtook a No. 5 score, you’relooking at maybe a 30-stroke difference.”

Finishing right behindCoral at the divisionaltourney was her teammateKatie Fyall, who shot an88. A Schulz-Fyall 1-2punch, combined withstate-tournamentexperience in seniors

Malia Morris and GeorgiaDonaldson, may make theBulldogs the team to beat.

So it could be saidabout the Bulldogs on theboys’ side. Also reelingfrom a runner-up finish toSidney at state in 2013,underclassmen CodyOlson and Mitch Younglook to fill the big shoes ofsince-graduated all-staterArt Doorn. Olson andYoung shot 77 and 78 tofinish first and second atthe Northwestern Atournament, respectively.

“We’re looking for theexperience of those twokids, having played in twoprevious statetournaments, to just playto their capabilities,” coachOlson said. “They’re notgoing to scare anybodywith low numbers, buttheir consistency reallyneeds to show the nextcouple days.”

Challenging not onlythe Bulldogs, but the restof the boys’ field will beHamilton, the host team.

The Broncs shot animpressive team score of318 at the Southwestern Adivisional, which was alsoheld at the Hamilton GolfClub. That team score wasbetter than Whitefish’smark by 26 strokes. Theywere two strokes off ofEastern A’s winner,

Billings Central (316).“We’ve been very

blessed this year. It seemslike when one or two kidsslip a little bit, the otherthree kids have playedreally well,” coach Burchsaid. “… It takes a goodfive-person effort.Hopefully for two roundsat state four or five of themcan put it all together, thatwould be pretty fun.”

Hamilton got that typeof performance at the SWAdivisional. Josh Heathwon, Ky Burch finishedsecond and three otherBroncs’ golfers were in thetop seven.

The Broncs also havethe home-field advantage,playing the statetournament on theirpractice course.

“Hamilton is obviouslythe favorite,” Whitefish’sOlson said. “They had agreat divisional score,they’re on their home turf;they get to sleep in theirown beds.”

You can throw theirdivisional scores out thewindow, though, as theweather conditions for thisweekend’s tournamentshould be quite differentfrom when the Broncsplayed there a week ago.Last weekend it was wetand windy. For Friday andSaturday, the weather isexpected to be in the low

70s and mostly sunny.Out of the East, Billings

Central, with team-leaderLiam Clancy, may be thefavorite to win the teamtitle. Clancy shot a 70 atthe Eastern divisionalmeet, and four otherCentral golfers shot in the80s.

Anaconda’s CalebStetzner, who finishedsecond two years ago andfifth last season, may alsocontend for an individualtitle, one season after hisfellow CopperheadJackson Wagner, whograduated, was crowned.

The Sidney girls, whomissed last year’s statetournament, looked strongin their divisionaltournament, firing a 375,which would have beensecond only to Whitefish’s344. Northwestern A’sFrenchtown may alsosurprise some teams.

“Sidney’s girls are reallygood and the Frenchtowngirls, every meet I’ve goneout and watchedFrenchtown girls, if theyput it together at the righttime, they could challengeWhitefish in my opinion,”coach Burch said.

First-round actionbegins at 10 a.m. at theHamilton Golf Club. Thetournament concludes onSaturday.

A golfContinued

Glacier at Big Sky, 7 p.m.

Glacier has been asclose to unstoppable asany Class AA team hascome this fall, scoring ahair shy of 50 points perouting while beating everyone of its five opponentsby 18 or more points – andan average of 32.

Coach Johnson can’tforesee stopping Glacierentirely; they have toomany weapons for that. Ifthe Eagles can limit howthose drives end, though,they’ll give themselvesroom to hang with thePack.

“Against Bozeman,they had 360 yards ofoffense,” he said. “For us,if they’re not gettingpoints out of it, it’s almostmeaningless.”

It’s still quite the task.Glacier all-state seniorquarterback BradyMcChesney throws forabout 250 yards per gameand is averaging betterthan three scoring strikes.Logan Jones and SamMcCamley have been hisfavorite targets, each nearthe 350-yard plateaureceiving. Jones has six TDreceptions to McCamley ’sthree, the same number asDevin Cochran.

Glacier’s run defense isstout and allows just 61yards on the ground pergame, partially because ofits tacklers and partiallydue to teams often havingto pass upon fallingbehind early.Coincidingly, Glacier isgiving up 200 yardsthrough the air on average.

The Wolfpack also

leads all teams intakeaways with 14,including 10interceptions. Big Sky hasgiven up the ball a state-low four times, almosthalf as many as any otherteam, with no picksthrown.

Sentinel at West, 4 p.m.

Sentinel ventures on itslongest commute Friday,the 5 1/2 hours to Billings,and a matinee start meansthe Spartans must headout at first daylight.Coach Dane Oliver doesn’texpect his boys to begroggy, though.

“The nice thing is wewake up tomorrowmorning for fall football;we’re not going to class,we’re just going to playfootball,” Oliver saidThursday. “We know it’s abig game because we’reboth part of that big partin the middle (of the AAstandings).”

Both teams are 2-3 atthe midway point of theseason. The scheduledoesn’t do Sentinel anyfavors with the state’sremaining twoundefeateds, Glacier andHelena High, coming upin the following twoweeks. So Friday’s gameagainst West is verging onmust-win territory.

The Golden Bears have

the kind of power-rungame Sentinel has seenbefore this year, recentlyagainst Big Sky, withbacks Jackson Cobb andZach Wolff combined for110 yards per outing andfive total rushing TDs.Last time Sentinel facedthat kind of offense, theEagles ran for 330 yards.

Coach Oliver’s grouphas found a new defensiveidentity in the last twoweeks, both wins, whilestopping the run.

“Biggest thing welearned was we need toplay our style of defense,”he said. “In the Big Skygame, we tried to out-think ourselves a little bit.Once we got back to ourbase defense, we couldjust react and not think.”

Hellgate at Butte, 7 p.m.

Everybody knows theButte High Bulldogs (2-3)like to throw the ball; it’sas true this week as it waswhen the Cook brothersfirst suited up three yearsago. State record breakerDallas has graduated, butlittle brother Dylan is stillairing it out to the tune291 yards per game, mostin the state.

“Mr. Cook is a heck of apasser and Dylan Daum, Ibelieve, is a great kid too,”Hellgate coach MattSoftich said of Butte’s top

pass-and-catch threat.“He does everything.They line him up in thesecondary, running back,he’s a backup quarterback,he’s a wide receiver andhe’s very fast.

“I think he probablyplays the glockenspiel inthe band at halftime, guydoes everything.”

Daum leads all playersin receiving yards andcatches this fall (30-360)for a team that puts itsemphasis on the pass. TheDawgs only run for 54yards per outing, secondto last among Class AA.

For the Knights (0-5) tohave a chance to keep upwith the high-scoringBulldogs and find theirfirst win, Coach Softichsaid his boys will need toget pressure on thequarterback withoutsacrificing coverage in thesecondary. Plainly put, hisdefensive backs will needto step up their gamebecause there won’t be asmuch help this week.

It’ll also be importantto steal possessions whenpossible. Butte gives theball up more than anyother team with 16turnovers in five games.

“We have to win theturnover battle; that’ssomething we’ve stressedthis week,” Softich said.“We have to start winningthe turnover battle. Westarted last week with twoturnovers right off the batand it got us in a hole.”

Reporter AJ Mazzolinican be reached at 523-5298, [email protected],www.MissoulaPreps.comor @ajmazzolini.

EaglesContinued

The nice thing is we wake up tomorrowmorning for fall football; we’re not

going to class, we’re just going to play football.We know it’s a big game because we’re bothpart of that big part in the middle (of the AAstandings).

– Dane Oliver, Sentinel football coach onSpartans’ game at Billings West

UM volleyball looks tostay perfect in Big Sky

Missoulian

A 2-0 start toconference play could turninto 4-0 for the Montanavolleyball team, whichhosts North Dakota Fridayand Northern ColoradoSaturday.

Both matches begin at 7p.m. at the West Auxilarygym.

A pair of five-set winsover Weber State andMontana State last weektook the edge off an 0-12non-conference slate.

It was the Grizzlies’ firstroad sweep since 2009 andthey had lost four five- setmatches before last week,falling behind early in each.

“It’s been somethingwe’ve been addressing allseason, because it’s been aproblem in other sets, notjust the fifth set,” said UMcoach Jerry Wagner. “Weneeded to start limiting thesize and amount of runsthe other teams weregetting and get some runsof our own to counteractthat. That’s beensomething that’s beencoming around.”

North Dakota is 14-5,including 2-0 in the BigSky after wins EasternWashington and Idaho.UND is led by senior setterNikki Husfeldt andsophomore outsidehitter/middle blockerChelsea Moser. Both havebeen named Big SkyConference Player of theWeek this season.

Northern Colorado is 7-7 overall and a surprising0-2 in Big Sky matcheswith losses to Eastern andIdaho. UNC is also 1-7against the Grizzlies inMissoula, though the all-time series is tied 9-9.

UM sophomore RaeganLindsey had double-doubles in both matcheslast week, with 24 assistsand 10 digs at WSU and 20assists and 10 digs at MSU.They were the first double-doubles of her career.

The Griz crosscountry program’sMontana Invitational is setfor Saturday morning atthe UM Golf Course.

The five-kilometerwomen’s race is set for10:30 a.m. and the menstart their 8k at 11:15 a.m.

Teams from Montana,Montana State, EasternWashington and Gonzagawill compete in both races,as well as Carroll Collegeand the College of Idahoand the Santa Clarawomen’s team.

Montana opened itsseason two weeks ago atthe Montana StateInvitational in Bozeman,with the women placingfourth out of five Division Ischools in what was astrong regional field.

Senior Kali Dennehywas fifth in Bozeman,covering the course in 17minutes, 24 seconds.Sophomore Reagan Colyerwas UM’s next-highestfinisher at 15th.

The women’s team willhave a healthy Dennehy onSaturday, but it will bewithout Colyer, who has afoot injury that mayrequire her to shut downher cross country seasonwith an eye on being readyfor the indoor and outdoortrack seasons.

Dennehy, who finishedfourth at the 2010 Big SKyConference championshipsbut has fought injury eversince, will be one of thefavorites Saturday. So willMSU freshman CarolineHardin and Eastern runnerSarah Reiter.

The men were lastamong four Division Iteams in Bozeman. JuniorMark Messmer led theGrizzlies by placing 22nd.

“It’s our home course,and there’s an advantage tothat,” said UM coachCollin Fehr. “We ran thecourse Wednesdaymorning, so they’ve felt it.They’ve felt the contours,the hill and the corners, sothey’ll know it better thanany other team there andhow to approach it.”

Montana’s fledglingsoftball program concludesits first fall season with twogames Saturday inFrenchtown.

The Grizzlies playColumbia Basin out ofPasco, Washington, at 1:15p.m. and Williston (NorthDakota) State at 3:30.Montana went 2-0 atFrenchtown last Sunday,beating North IdahoCollege 11-1 and CarrollCollege 6-4 in front of asizable crowd upwards of700.

Both tennis teams areon the road, with the menofficially starting their fallseason at the Boise StateInvitational that beginsFriday.

The team had someexhibition matches twoweeks ago in Bozeman,where the doubles team ofTomasz Soltyka and PeterMimnagh-Fleming stoodout.

The rest of team willlook different, as coachKris Nord combines fourfreshmen with twosophomores and twojuniors.

“We’re mixing a coupledoubles teams up to seehow that looks,” Nord said.“That’s probably the mainthing right now is to get agauge on what we need towork on and where are weat this point in the fallseason.”

The women’s team hasits third tournament of thefall, at the Long BeachState Invitational in sunnySouthern California.

Coach Steve Ascher hasall three of his seniorshealthy and ready to battleUCLA, UC Irvine andothers.

Precious Gbadamosiand Laurence Pelchat sawtheir first action of the fallseason last weekend atWashington State,combining in the CrimsonDoubles bracket to win theconsolation championship.Senior Sasha Carter willreturn after sitting out lastweekend.

Joining the three seniorswill be sophomore HannahSulz and two freshmen,Cam Kincaid and ChristyScott.

The Montana soccerteam, tied atop the Big SkyConference after the firstof six weekends of leagueplay, is at Sacramento StateFriday (5 p.m. Mountain)and Portland State Sunday(2 p.m.) in Hillsboro,Oregon.

The Grizzlies (6-5-0)have won three of fourmatches. Sacramento Stateis 5-6-0 after losses atSouthern Utah (2-1) andNorthern Arizona (1-0) lastweek.

Portland State (3-4-3) isthe defending Big Skyregular-season championand was picked first in thepreseason coaches’ poll,but has won just one of itslast five.

Southern Utah, tiedwith Montana and Idahoatop the Big Sky, beat PSU2-0 last week. That endedthe Vikings’ 12-matchunbeaten streak in Big Skyplay.

The Grizzlies have notwon a match on theSacramento State-Portland State road tripsince a 1-0 victory over theHornets in 2008.

UM last won atPortland State in 2006, bya 1-0 score.

Home teams went 8-1-1last week in Big SkyConference matches.

UM’s Hallie Widner iscoming off a banner weekthat included the goal inher team’s 1-0 win overWeber State and two goalsagainst Idaho State. She isthe Big Sky’s co-OffensivePlayer of the Week.

The Grizzlies’ 12.6 shotsper game rank first in theBig Sky, and they ranks inthe top four in the Big Skyin both goals (1.45/g) andgoals-against average(1.16). Senior Chloe Torres’four assists are tied for theBig Sky lead with WeberState’s Kendra Smith.

By ARNIE STAPLETONAssociated Press

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. –Virgil Green has emergedas the most versatilemember of Denver’soffense.

Last month alone, thefourth-year pro fromNevada lined up as atraditional tight end, splitout wide and in the slot, atH-back, halfback andfullback.

No wonder PeytonManning lamented losinghim to a concussion earlyin Denver’s 26-20overtime loss at Seattlelast month, suggesting hisdeparture forced theBroncos (2-1) to crumplemuch of their game plan.

Football fans tend tooverlook Green, a memberof the same 2011 draftclass as Julius Thomas, afantasy player’s dreamwho has caught an AFC-high 17 touchdown passessince 2013.

Green is still searchingfor the end zone. He has 19career catches and onecarry. Yet, his coaches andteammates recognize hisacross-the-boardimportance.

“People don’t noticethe little things, but he’s a

very big part of ouroffense,” wide receiverDemaryius Thomas said.“Without Virgil, ouroffense won’t be able torun like we want it to.”

They saw that atSeattle when Green wentout in the first half and theBroncos fell behind 17-3before Manning staged afurious fourth-quarterrally that tied it.

“I thought Virgil’sinjury was significant,”Manning said afterward.“We had a good drive withhim in there. Once hewent out it limited someof the things we wanted todo (with formations), andI thought we becameone-dimensionalbecause of his injury andscore. That is not whatyou want to do withthese guys.”

The two-tight endsets the Broncos rely onso heavily depend onGreen’s multifacetedskill set.

“His ability to be adual threat for us in passprotection and runblocking” makes him sovital, offensivecoordinator Adam Gasesaid Thursday. “Andthen he does enough inthe passing game towhere you can’t fall

asleep on him. He’s a verypowerful guy and brings alittle different aspect forus at that position.”

Green takes all thesecomments ascompliments.

“It does mean a lot tome, but by the same tokenI have to be consistent.There have been timeswhere I haven’t been realconsistent this year,”Green said. “One of myfocuses is to be consistent,especially in the run game,get things going for usbecause I know we’regoing to handle things inthe passing game. But aslong as I can move guys off

the line of scrimmage andbe consistent with it, ouroffense will be flawless.”

Although Thomas is aPro Bowler in line for amegadeal, Green insistedthere’s really not thatmuch that separates thetwo fourth-year tightends.

“I really don’t think meand Julius are really allthat different,” Green said.“He’s just had moreopportunities.Athletically, I’m as fast asJulius. I can move just likeJulius. I’m as smart asJulius. So, I don’t thinkthere’s too much of adiscrepancy there.”

By BARRY WILNERAssociated Press

The NFL’s injuryepidemic began evenbefore any preseasongames were played, withthe likes of Sean Lee andKiko Alonso going down.

Since then, big-nameplayers (RG3, RobertMathis, KnowshonMoreno, Sam Bradford,B.J. Raji, DeAngelo Hall,Chris Long, Ike Taylor)have been sidelined, andentire units such as Atlantaand Philadelphia’soffensive lines andCarolina’s backfield havebeen ravaged.

What gives? ACLs,Achilles tendons andshoulders, among otherthings.

Consider what hashappened to the Vikings,who lost quarterback MattCassel (broken foot), andright guard Brandon Fusco(torn pectoral muscle) forthe season. Tight end KyleRudolph (sports herniasurgery) will miss about sixweeks.

That almost makeslinebacker ChadGreenway’s hand and ribproblems from which hewill soon return seemtame. Almost.

“I never envisionedthat, but it’s a part offootball,” Vikings coachMike Zimmer said after allof those injuries occurredin one game. “Last year inCincinnati we lost our bestdefensive tackle, our bestcorner, one of our bestlinebackers, a very gooddefensive end. Thingshappen in the NFL, so thisis a survival of the fittestgame, it’s always amarathon.”

Marathon or sprint, it’sdifficult – sometimesimpossible – to stay ontrack with so many playersgetting hurt. Althoughinjured reserve numbersare not significantlydifferent at this point fromrecent seasons (39 in-season through four weekslast year, 41 this year), theyremain alarming.

Going back to thesummer, a total of 262players have gone oninjured reserve, with only21 of them designated toreturn this season.

Many of those playerswho went on IR before theseason might not havemade teams anyway.

Judging only by IRnumbers, according toSTATS, linebacker far andaway is the mostvulnerable spot to injurieswith 54 already in 2014.

That includes suchcritical members of theirdefenses as Lee in Dallas,Alonso in Buffalo, SeanWeatherspoon in Atlanta,Derrick Johnson in KansasCity, Jarvis Jones inPittsburgh, Nick Roach inOakland, Danny Trevathanin Denver, and Zach Brownin Tennessee. Not all ofthem are on IR, but theirlengthy absences aredamaging.

Detroit saw LB StephenTulloch suffer the weirdestof all injuries, tearing hisACL while doing amocking celebration aftera sack of Aaron Rodgers.

More troubling is whenthe likes of Hall andJohnson are sidelined withAchilles tendon tears eventhough they are notinvolved in contact whenthey get hurt.

“There are like 14 ofthese in the NationalFootball League rightnow,” Chiefs coach AndyReid said of Achillesinjuries. “Three teams arein double digits withthem (players on IR). Soit’s out there and peopleare examining it to try tofigure it out.”

Running back andwide receiver have the

next highest numbers onIR, 34 and 33.

Injuries are unavoidablein such a violent sport, andfootball on all levels hasbeen criticized for howhead trauma andconcussions were handledfor years. The NFL hasinstituted some rules,particularly thoseprotecting defenselessplayers, that it hopes willcut down on injuries.

Still, with the playersbigger, faster and in bettershape than ever, and withequipment that, at times,can become weapons,football never will beinjury free. Or anythingclose.

So teams try to adapt.But when they get rackedat the same positions orunits, it often is a criticalblow to their chances forsuccess.

Under the salary cap,and with the large gapbetween starters andbackups – particularlyoutstanding starters andinexperienced backups –injuries often are decisive.

Carolina won the NFCSouth last season and gotoff to a 2-0 start in 2014.But with their backfield awreck, the Panthers weredrubbed the past twoweeks as Pittsburgh andBaltimore couldconcentrate on stoppingQB Cam Newton.

“The injuries that haveplagued our running backsis almost hard to believe,”says tight end Greg Olsen,referring to losing for theshort term DeAngeloWilliams (ankle), JonathanStewart (knee), and FozzyWhittaker (hamstring),and for more than half theschedule, Mike Tolbert(hairline leg fracture, onIR/designated to return).

“You talk about havingfour active running backson Day 1 of the season andevery single one of themgets injured. I mean, whatare you going to do? It’s acrazy thing. You can goyears without having arunning back get hurt andwe have our top four guysout.

“But that’s the NFL.There are a lot of teamsbanged up and we have tofind a way to get through.”

Yes, that’s thementality. The season is abattle of attrition, and itmight not always be themost talented teams thatprosper, but the healthiest.

With health beingrelative, measured perhapsby having the fewest majorinjuries.

“I think you want to beat full strength,” Broncoscoach John Fox says.“Unfortunately in thisleague not everybody is,and so I mention it everyyear: You need some goodbreaks and injuries arepart of those good breaks– being healthy. Like Imentioned a year ago, wehad seven guys on IR thatwere starters and wemade it to the SuperBowl.

“So you just knock onwood and try to remainhealthy.”

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Chiefs add thunder to lightningBy DAVE SKRETTA

Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. –At various times over thepast few years, the KansasCity Chiefs have tried tofind a bit of thunder topair with their lightning.Each time, all they reallyfound was a whisper.

Thomas Jones, on thedownside of his career.Peyton Hillis, a shell of hisformer self.

Rather than provide acomplement to speedsterJamaal Charles, theymerely offeredunproductive carries. Butat long last, the Chiefsappear to have finallyfound their bruising backin the form of Knile Davis,someone who can take thepressure off their All-Proin a meaningful way.

“They’re bothexplosive players,” Chiefscoach Andy Reid said.“They are completelydifferent players, but theyare both explosive players.And that makes my jobeasy, just give them theball.”

Just like he did Mondaynight at ArrowheadStadium.

After missing most ofthe previous two gameswith an ankle injury,Charles returned to thestarting lineup againstNew England. He ran for92 yards and atouchdown, and alsocaught a pair oftouchdown passes,leading the suddenlyresurgent Chiefs to a 41-14rout.

But the return ofCharles didn’t signal the

end of Davis, who hadfilled in admirably in hisabsence. He ran for 107yards on 16 carries, hissecond straight gameeclipsing the centurymark.

“Coach Reid is a greatoffensive mind. He knowshow to put us in the bestsituation to help our teamwin,” said Charles, whohas gone through severalcoaches during his time inKansas City.

“Knile is starting tobelieve in himself and isstarting to getcomfortable,” Charlesadded. “I’m happy for himthat he’s really finding hisway in this game.”

Charles has beenfinding his way for quite awhile.

The former sprinter has5,938 yards rushing torank third in team history,and needs just 77 yards topass Larry Johnson for

second place. He needs132 yards to surpass PriestHolmes for tops in therecord book, a mark thatwouldn’t be out of thequestion on Sunday in SanFrancisco.

The way Charles hasdone it boils down tospeed and shiftiness. Hewas an elite track athleteat Texas, and onceharbored dreams ofsprinting in the Olympics.But it’s just not straight-line speed that makes himeffective; he also has anuncanny ability to stopand start, and his jukesand spin moves on somehapless defender haveresulted in countlesshighlights.

Davis, who was astandout at Arkansas, hasthe physical frame tosimply run defenders over.

He also has elite speed,of course, and wins mostraces to the end zone. Butat 5-foot-10, 227 pounds,Davis is a load to handlewhen he lowers hisshoulder pads, and histree-trunk thighs make itdifficult to tackle him low.He has plenty of his ownhighlights, racking upwhat John Maddenaffectionately called“YAC” – yards aftercontact.

“I think it givesdefenses different looks,”Chiefs quarterback AlexSmith said. “I think itkeeps both those guysfresh, for sure. We ask alot of Jamaal, you know, soit’s nice to be able to resthim at times. I thinkKnile’s play has deservedit, has warranted that.”

MICHAEL ZITO/Associated Press

Kansas City running back Knile Davis picks upyards against the Denver Broncos during a game atSports Authority Field at Mile High Stadium in Denver lastmonth.

Green is Broncos’ Mr. Versatility

By DILLON KATOof the Missoulian

The theater students of theUniversity of Montana arestarting the new school year with

a play with panache.“Cyrano de Bergerac” is the first

production of the School of Theatre

and Dance’s mainstage season, andwill have a 23-member cast directed byfaculty member Randy Bolton. Theproduction will have showings on Oct. 7-11 and Oct. 14-18

Two years ago, Bolton was also thedirector for UM’s production of“Arabian Nights.” He said becausethese shows are also a part of the

theater school’s training program, theyoften look for ones that canaccommodate more people. Inaddition to the on-stage talent, Boltonsaid there are just as many or morestudents working on the technical andproduction part of the play.

MAGPIES HOLDCD RELEASEPARTY Page E3

FRIDAY, October 3, 2014 NEWSROOM 523-5240

EEntertainerDESSERT CABARET Page E3

THEATER

By CORY WALSHof the Missoulian

The Festival of the Book never has anofficial theme, only a drive to connectpeople with the written word.

And so on Friday, Oct. 10, the 15thannual event will be spread acrossdowntown Missoula, in galleries, movietheaters and more. Authors of novels,poetry, memoirs and nonfiction will fanout to eight different venues to sharetheir work, instead of stayingconcentrated in the Holiday InnDowntown.

“We’re just trying to spread it aroundand get all over downtown,” said KimAnderson, Humanities Montana’s

By CORY WALSHof the Missoulian

After 15 years, Humanities Montanais pulling out of the Festival of the Book,an annual highlight for a communitythick with writers and readers.

Last year, for example, the three-dayevent drew 7,500 to hear headliningwriter Sherman Alexie and numerousothers in venues across downtownMissoula.

Kim Anderson, who started thefestival and has run it each year since,said several factors contributed to thedecision. This year, it lost severalsponsorships, but the organization isalso refocusing on its mission.

The group serves Montana as awhole, as an independent nonprofit

The Montana Festival of theBook runs from Thursday, Oct. 9,through Saturday, Oct. 11. Watchfor more coverage next Friday.Find a complete schedule ofevents at humanitiesmontana.org.

See BOOK, Page E7 See ORGANIZER, Page E7

Spreading literature throughout downtown

Humanities Montana pulling out as organizer

Out&About

THE WEEK IN ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

FRIDAYOCTOBER 3

ART First Friday, downtown Hamilton.Businesses open with activities until 11 p.m.

Young Artist After-school Program,Fridays 3:45-5:30 p.m., Zootown ArtsCommunity Center, 235 N. First St. W.Young artists learn fundamentals, history,techniques and purposes whileexperimenting with a variety of funmediums. $10 per day for members, $12 fornonmembers. Call 549-7555 or visitzootownarts.org.

BOOKS, READINGSAuthor Walter Kirn reads his fictionas part of the Fall 2014 UM CreativeWriting Program Visiting WriterSeries, 7 p.m., Dell Brown Room, TurnerHall, UM. Free and open to the public.Visit cas.umt.edu/creativewriting.

Kim Zupan reads and signs “ThePloughmen,” 5:30 p.m., Fact & Fiction,220 N. Higgins Ave. Call 721-2881 or visitfactandfictionbooks.com.

DANCE Live band dance, 7:30-10 p.m., GoldenAge Hall, 727 S. Fifth St., Hamilton. $3.Call 240-9617.

KIDS’ STUFFStory Time for Kids, 10:30 a.m.,Bitterroot Public Library, Hamilton.Call 363-1670.

Tale-ativities: The Lorax, noon; artseries, 4 p.m., Children’s MuseumMissoula, 224 W. Front St. Call 541-7529or visit childrensmuseummissoula.org.

Tiny Tales and Preschool Storytime,Missoula Public Library, 301 E. Main St.Call 721-2665 or visitmissoulapubliclibrary.org.

MUSICGlacier Jazz: Dixie, Ragtime andMore, 3-11:30 p.m., Kalispell Eagles Club.Tickets $75. The 21st annual jazz party isall under one roof this year. The lineupincludes the Fat Babies from Chicago,Dave Bennett and the Memphis Boys,Evergreen Classic Jazz Band, RaySkjelbred’s First Thursday Band, LastChance Dixieland Jazz Band, DianneDunne’s Good Tyme Jazz Band, RockyMountain Rhythm Kings and violinist

See OUT, Page E2

Radius Gallery

“Yellowstone Steam,” (pastel drawing, 25-by-64 inches) by Bobbie McKibbin. The RadiusGallery’s “Wind and Bones” group exhibition pays tribute to the poetry of the late James Welch.

MONTANA FESTIVAL OF THE BOOK

n Photo gallery: View a slideshow of gallery openings by going to the homepage on Missoulian.com.

“There is a Right Way”The justice of the prairie hawkmoved me;his wings tippedthe wind just right and the mousewas any mouse.I came away,broken from my standing spot,dizzy with the sense of a worldtrying to be right,and the mousea part of a wind that stirs the plains.

– James Welch, “Riding the Earthboy 40”

By CORY WALSHof the Missoulian

A critic once said James Welch’spoetry had “wind and bones”in it.

The description struck RadiusGallery owner Lisa Simon, whotaught Welch’s work as a collegeEnglish instructor, as the perfecttheme for a group show. With itsintimations of “strength,sparseness and energy” she saw itas a rich representation of theWestern sensibility.

FIRST FRIDAY

‘Wind and Bones’ draws on Welch’s poetic words

See ‘WIND,’ Page E4

See ‘CYRANO,’ Page E6

BACK TOTHE CLASSICSUM drama’s season kicks off with ‘Cyrano’

KURT WILSON/Missoulian

Christian de Neuvillette (Mason Wagner) woos Roxane (Rigel Rae) at her balcony while Comte de Guiche (MarquisArchuleta) and his henchman de Valvert (Kelly Bouma) plot their breakup in the UM production of “Cyrano de Bergerac.”

Nonprofit citesfunding, new focus

on its programs

E2 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

FROM PAGE E1

Wai Mizutani. An After-GlowParty at 5 p.m. Sunday featuresmusic and a buffet at theKalispell Hilton Garden Inn(cost $25). Call (406) 892-2115for tickets or visitflatheadjazzsociety.com.

“Evening in Rio: A Tributeto Antonio Carlos Jobim,”7:30 p.m., Bigfork Center forthe Performing Arts, 526Electric Ave. Tickets $25-$32.A quintet featuring guitaristRomero Lubambo andAmerican saxophone legendScott Hamilton performs themusic of Jobim – the foundingfather of Brazil’s bossa nova andcomposer of some of the world’smost popular songs. Call (406) 730-2817 or visitsingerandsimpson.com.

International String Trio,7 p.m., Libby Memorial Center.Founded in 1999, the trio hasgained national recognition forits distinct sound and stylisticdiversity, including classical,jazz, popular and world music.

The Fun and SupportAccordion Group featuringJean Roberts and CleoGunther, 6-7:30 p.m., NorthValley Public Library, 208 MainSt., Stevensville.

Karaoke, 9 p.m., CowboyCasino and Lounge, ElectricAvenue, Bigfork.

Solid Sound Karaoke,Westside Lanes, 1615 WyomingSt.

Karaoke, 9 p.m., Rustic Hut,Florence.

Karaoke, 8 p.m.-1 a.m., TurahPines.

Live music, 8-10 p.m., SymesHotel, Hot Springs.

DJ Jimmy Jan, 9 p.m., PlumLoco, 201 Main St.,Stevensville.

Karaoke by Figmo, 9 p.m.,Evaro Bar.

POTPOURRIFifth annual Seeley LakeBrew Fest in conjunctionwith the Tamarack Festival,Seeley Lake. Friday’s includesBrewmasters presentation 6:30 p.m., Double Arrow Lodge.Call (406) 677-2880 or visitseeleylakechamber.com.

Mountain Brook Quilt andCraft Market, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.,Cayuse Prairie School, 897 LakeBlaine Road, Kalispell. Call(406) 837-2061.

Ghost Tours, 7-9 p.m.,Conrad Mansion Museum,330 Woodland Ave., Kalispell.Tickets $15. Candlelit tours ofmansion start every 15 minutes;recommended for ages 10 andolder. Call (406) 755-2166 orvisit conradmansion.com.

Great NorthwestOktoberfest continues,5-11 p.m. Thursdays and Fridaysand noon-11 p.m. Saturdays,Depot Park, Whitefish. Tickets$4 per day (free for childrenunder age 12 with parent). Enjoyauthentic German food, beer,music, dancing and some crazycontests. The beer tent boaststable seating for 400, a stageand dance floor. The array ofcontests includes log sawing,keg tossing, stein holding andwaitress races; kids’ events alsoare on tap. Call (406) 862-3501or visitwhitefishoktoberfest.com.

Festival of Flavorscontinues, Flathead ValleyCommunity College, 777Grandview Drive, Kalispell. Theevent brings the communitytogether for 10 days to discoverand celebrate the pairing of foodand wine, ending with theGrand Wine Tasting at theHilton Garden Inn. Completeschedule:fvcc.edu/festival.html.Call (406) 756-3963 topurchase tickets.

Scarecrow Festival,5-9 p.m., downtownStevensville. View a plethora ofartfully attired scarecrowsduring the ninth annualcelebration. Festivities kick offduring First Friday, which alsoincludes a pumpkin-carvingcontest, horse-drawn carriagerides, accordion music, andliving statues. ContinuesSaturday. Call 777-3773 or visitmainstreetstevensville.com.

The Daly Mansion fall“paint-out,” 9 a.m.- 5 p.m.Impressionist Tricia Bass andArt Focus Fine Art and Framingco-host a non-instructed event,is free and open to bothprofessional and amateurartists, no registration required.Bass will lead an optionalcritique at 4 p.m. for a $10suggested donation. Allproceeds for will be donated tothe mansion for their generaloperating fund. Participants areencouraged to bring a bag lunchfor a mid-day break andsocializing; Art Focus Fine Artswill provide beverages. Forquestions contact Bass [email protected] orcontact Suzanne Casteel at 363-6004 Ext. 2. Spectators arewelcome.

Yarns at the Library, noon-2 p.m.; MakerSpace opentime/project development,

1-5 p.m.; Young Adult Writersfor writers in grades 9-12, 3:30p.m., Missoula Public Library,301 E. Main St. Call 721-2665 orvisit missoulapubliclibrary.org.

THEATER “Oliver!” the musical versionof Charles Dickens’ classic,“Oliver Twist,” 7:30 p.m.,Stevensville Playhouse. Tickets$10 adults, $8 kids 12 and under,available at Valley Drug inStevensville or online atstevensvilleplayhouse.org.Call 777-2722.

Viscosity Theatre and localactor Hugh Bickley present“Holocene,” an original two-act play about the struggle tosalvage culture after the fall ofhuman civilization, 7 p.m., thePalace Lounge, 147 W.Broadway. Tickets are $12, $9for student rush. Visitfacebook.com/holocenetheplay.

SATURDAYOCTOBER 4

ART “Growth,” with OdetteGrassi, 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.,Living Art of Montana, 725 W.Alder St. No. 17 . A writing andtiny terrarium workshop opento anyone facing illness or lossincluding care providers andfamily members. No charge,materials provided, art andwriting experience notnecessary. Call 549-5329 orvisit livingartofmontana.org.

“ART21” Access ’14, 1 p.m.,Missoula Art Museum, 335 N.Pattee St. Come to the MAM fora sneak preview of Season 7 ofthis awarding-winning PBSseries. In Episode 1:“Investigation,” viewers willlearn how do artists pushbeyond what they already knowand readily see. Featured artistsare Thomas Hirschhorn,Graciela Iturbide, LeonardoDrew. Call 728-0447 or visitmissoulaartmuseum.org.

BOOKS, READINGSBig Read event: Dramaticreading of “Why DucksSleep on One Leg,” 2:30p.m., Missoula Public Library,301 E. Main St.

Phillip Douglas signs“Spirit Made Smaller,”10:30 a.m.-noon, Fact &Fiction, 220 N. Higgins Ave.Call 721-2881 or visitfactandfictionbooks.com.

JR Eason signs “Throughthe Back Porch Door,”Barnes & Noble, 2640 N.Reserve St.

DANCEMissoula Folklore Societycontra dance, 8-11 p.m.,Union Hall, 208 E. Front St.,upstairs. Workshop, 7:30 p.m.Music by Sandy Boys; callerDerek Gallagher. $6 MFSmembers and students; $9nonmembers, under 15 free.Visit missoulafolk.org.

KIDS’ STUFFLibrary at Clark ForkMarket mobile computer labavailable with complete libraryservices, 8 a.m.-1 p.m.; FamilyStorytime at Clark ForkMarket, 11 a.m., MissoulaPublic Library, 301 E. Main St.Call 721-2665 or visitmissoulapubliclibrary.org.

MUSICGlacier Jazz: Dixie, Ragtimeand More, 11 a.m.-11 p.m.,Kalispell Eagles Club. Tickets$75. The 21st annual jazz partyis all under one roof this year.The lineup includes the FatBabies from Chicago, DaveBennett and the Memphis Boys,Evergreen Classic Jazz Band,Ray Skjelbred’s First ThursdayBand, Last Chance DixielandJazz Band, Dianne Dunne’sGood Tyme Jazz Band, RockyMountain Rhythm Kings andviolinist Wai Mizutani. Call(406) 892-2115 for tickets orvisit flatheadjazzsociety.com.

All-State String Workshop,9 a.m.-4 p.m., Music Building.The UM School of Music willpresent this workshop.Information: 243-6880.

“Evening in Rio: A Tributeto Antonio Carlos Jobim,”7:30 p.m., WhitefishPerforming Arts Center, 600 E.Second St. Tickets $25-$32. Aquintet featuring guitaristRomero Lubambo andAmerican saxophone legendScott Hamilton performs themusic of Jobim, the foundingfather of Brazil’s bossa nova andcomposer of some of the world’smost popular songs. Call (406)730-2817 or visitsingerandsimpson.com.

The Wailin’ Jennys, 8 p.m.,Bitterroot Performing ArtsCenter, 327 Fairgrounds Road,Hamilton. Starting as a happyaccident of solo singer-songwriters getting together fora one-time-only performanceat a tiny guitar shop inWinnipeg, Manitoba, theWailin’ Jennys have grown overthe years into a belovedinternational folk act. Visitbartc.org or call 363-7946.

Missoula SymphonyOrchestra presents “Music,Love & Other Drugs,”

featuring Tim Fain, violinsoloist, 7:30 p.m., DennisonTheatre, UM. For tickets, call721-3194 or visitmissoulasymphony.org.

Live music, 8-10 p.m., SymesHotel, Hot Springs.

Solid Sound Karaoke,Westside Lanes, 1615 WyomingSt.

Karaoke, 9 p.m., Rustic Hut,Florence.

POTPOURRI “The Dirty Sexy ChocolateShow,” a “silly cooking showmeets a sexy cabaret,” by localpastry chef Jeremy Sher, TopHat, 7:30 p.m. Firstperformance sold out,additional performance onSaturday, Oct. 18. Go totophatlounge.com for ticketinformation.

Book swap/fundraiser,10 a.m.-4 p.m., Valley School ofMinistry and Leadership,Christian Assemble FoursquareChurch, 1001 Cleveland St.Thousands of books to choosefrom, signings by local authors,and raffle tickets for prizedrawings at 1 and 4 p.m. Call370-4260.

Missoula Figure SkatingClub’s Skate for Free Day,10-11:30 a.m., at Glacier IceRink. Get some skating tipsfrom professional coaches.Registration forms will beavailable for skating classes.For more information, visitmissoulafsc.org or call 543-5889.

Second annual Honey Fest,10 a.m.-2 p.m., Sam’s Spade,111 S. Fourth St., Hamilton.

Fifth annual Seeley LakeBrew Fest in conjunctionwith the Tamarack Festival,Seeley Lake. Featuring livemusic from noon-6 p.m. andmore than 20 Montana craftbeers on tap. Call (406) 677-2880 or visitseeleylakechamber.com.

20th annual HellgateMineral Society Show andSale, 9 a.m.-6 p.m., HiltonGarden Inn, 3720 N. Reserve St.Gems, fossils, minerals,lapidary plus kids’ activities,silent auction and dealers.Admission $2 per person,children under 14 free withparents. Call 543-3667 or 396-8582.

Mountain Brook Quilt andCraft Market, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.,Cayuse Prairie School, 897 LakeBlaine Road, Kalispell. Call(406) 837-2061.

Ghost Tours, 7-9 p.m.,Conrad Mansion Museum, 330Woodland Ave., Kalispell.Tickets $15. Candlelit tours ofmansion start every 15 minutes;recommended for ages 10 andolder. Call (406) 755-2166 orvisit conradmansion.com.

25th annual Log Jam, 4 p.m., Flathead CountyFairgrounds Trade Center,Kalispell. A barbecue dinnerwill be served at 5 p.m. Startingat 6 p.m., there will be live andsilent auctions along with bingogames for cash, a beer garden,raffles and dancing. ChanceyWilliams and the YoungerBrothers Band will provide liveentertainment. Visitmontanalogjam.org.

Church bazaar, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Bigfork UnitedMethodist Church, 750 ElectricAve. Call (406) 837-4547.

Kalispell Ski Club Ski Swapand Sale, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,Flathead County Fairgrounds,Kalispell. Visitkalispellskiclub.com.

Great NorthwestOktoberfest continues,5-11 p.m. Thursdays and Fridaysand noon-11 p.m. Saturdays,Depot Park, Whitefish. Tickets$4 per day (free for childrenunder age 12 with parent). Enjoyauthentic German food, beer,music, dancing and some crazycontests. The beer tent boaststable seating for 400, a stageand dance floor. The array ofcontests includes log sawing,keg tossing, stein holding andwaitress races; kids’ events alsoare on tap. Call (406) 862-3501 orvisit whitefishoktoberfest.com.

Festival of Flavorscontinues, Flathead ValleyCommunity College, 777Grandview Drive, Kalispell. Theevent brings the communitytogether for 10 days to discoverand celebrate the pairing of foodand wine, ending with theGrand Wine Tasting at theHilton Garden Inn. To view thecomplete schedule, visitfvcc.edu/festival.html.Call (406) 756-3963 topurchase tickets.

35th annual McIntosh AppleDay, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., RavalliCounty Museum, 205 BedfordSt. Enjoy arts, crafts, food andproduce from the HamiltonFarmers Market as well as newvendors from outside the area.The highlight of the day is thesignature bake sale, with locallygrown, hand-picked applescrafted into apple pies, caramelapples, apple butter andbarbecue pork with applechutney. The HistoricGrantsdale Bell Tower openingceremony will take place at 9 a.m. with the oldest livingGrantsdale student, Helen Self,ringing the bell. Call 363-3338or visit brvhsmuseum.org.

“Liquid Apple Night: A HardCider Festival,” 4-8 p.m.,Hamilton Legion Park. Hostedby the Ravalli County Museum,the relaxing and refreshingevening under the stars offerssamples of cider, locally cateredfood and music. Call 363-3338

Scarecrow Festival,5-9 p.m., downtownStevensville. View a plethora of artfully attired scarecrowsduring the ninth annualcelebration. From 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., the public also can castvotes for three “Peoples’Choice” awards two awards for“Artistic Merit.” Living statuesare also part of the event.Call 777-3773 or visitmainstreetstevensville.com.

Library at Clark ForkMarket – mobile computer labavailable with complete libraryservices, 8 a.m.-1 p.m.;Storytime at Clark ForkMarket – stories for children ofall ages and caregivers, 11 a.m.,Missoula Public Library, 301 E.Main St. Call 721-2665 or visitmissoulapubliclibrary.org.

Hamilton Farmers Market,9 a.m., Bedford Street,downtown Hamilton.Call 961-0004.

Missoula Farmers Market, 8 a.m.-1 pm., north end ofHIggins Avenue. Visitmissoulafarmersmarket.com.

Stevensville FarmersMarket, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Thirdand Main streets, Stevensville.

Clark Fork Market, 8 a.m.-1 p.m., under the HigginsAvenue Bridge. Visitclarkforkmarket.com.

THEATER“Oliver!” the musical versionof Charles Dickens’ classic,“Oliver Twist,” 7:30 p.m.,Stevensville Playhouse. Tickets$10 adults, $8 kids 12 and under,available at Valley Drug inStevensville or online atstevensvilleplayhouse.org.Call 777-2722.

“A Party to Murder,” 7 p.m. Inthe Stensrud Playhouse’s latestmurder-mystery dinner theaterpresentation, six people havecome in secret on Halloween toplay a murder mystery game at arustic island cottage. Secretpassageways, incriminatingletters, hidden compartments,bodies in the window seat and a25-year-old unsolved mysterytwist and turn toward theunexpected and terrifyingconclusion. Tickets are $49 forone or $69 for two. Includes acatered meal by A MoveableFeast. Go tostensrudplayhouse.com formore information.

University of MontanaSchool of Theatre andDance presents “UMDancers on Location:A Site-Specific Danceconcert,” noon, MansfieldLibrary courtyard, UM. Free.Call 243-4581.

SUNDAYOCTOBER 5

ART Family workshop, 2-5 p.m.,the Clay Studio of Missoula,1106 Hawthorne Unit A. $35 foradult and one child, includesclay, glazing and firings.Additional adults and childrenwelcome for $15 per individual.Call 543-0509 or visittheclaystudioofmissoula.org.

KIDS’ STUFFFamily Storytime, 2 p.m.,Missoula Public Library, 301 E.Main St. Call 721-2665 or visitmissoulapubliclibrary.org.

MUSICFaculty and Guest ArtistSeries, 7:30 p.m., MusicRecital Hall. Featuring guestartist Adam McCord onsaxophone. Tickets $12 generaland $8 students and seniors.Information: 243-2441,[email protected].

Missoula SymphonyOrchestra presents “Music,Love & Other Drugs,”featuring Tim Fain, violinsoloist, 3 p.m., DennisonTheatre, UM. For tickets,call 721-3194 or visitmissoulasymphony.org.

Glacier Jazz: Dixie, Ragtimeand More, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.,Kalispell Eagles Club. Tickets$75. The 21st annual jazz partyis all under one roof this year.The lineup includes the FatBabies from Chicago, DaveBennett and the Memphis Boys,Evergreen Classic Jazz Band,Ray Skjelbred’s First ThursdayBand, Last Chance DixielandJazz Band, Dianne Dunne’sGood Tyme Jazz Band, RockyMountain Rhythm Kings andviolinist Wai Mizutani. AnAfter-Glow Party at 5 p.m.Sunday features music and abuffet supper at the KalispellHilton Garden Inn (cost $25).Call (406) 892-2115 for tickets orvisit flatheadjazzsociety.com.

“Evening in Rio: A Tributeto Antonio Carlos Jobim,”7:30 p.m., Whitefish LakeRestaurant, 1200 U.S. Highway93 N. Tickets $25-$32. A quintetfeaturing guitarist RomeroLubambo and Americansaxophone legend Scott

Hamilton performs the music ofJobim. Call (406) 730-2817 orvisit singerandsimpson.com.

Acoustic jam session, 2-4 p.m., Sapphire LutheranHomes, corner of 10th and Riverstreets, Hamilton. If you playguitar, mandolin, harmonica,fiddle, bass, banjo, Dobro orsimilar acoustic instrument youare invited, or just come tolisten. Call 381-2483.

POTPOURRI“Difficult Duty: TimO’Brien’s Americal Division,Vietnam, 1967-72,” anillustrated talk, 2 p.m., RockyMountain Museum of MilitaryHistory, Building T-316, FortMissoula. With Col. JimHamilton, U.S. Army (Ret.),Infantry Platoon Leader, 23rd(Americal) Division, Vietnam,1968-70. Call 549-5346.

Big Read event:“Reflections on Vietnam,”3 p.m., Missoula Public Library,301 E. Main St.

20th annual HellgateMineral Society show andsale, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., HiltonGarden Inn, 3720 N. Reserve St.Gems, fossils, minerals,lapidary plus kids’ activities,silent auction and dealers.Admission $2 per person,children under 14 free withparents. Call 543-3667 or 396-8582.

Pink Me Up 1K/5K colorcelebration, 2 p.m., Kidsports,Kalispell. This non-timed eventcelebrates and honors the livesof loved ones who haveexperienced cancer. Raceparticipants will get dousedwith hues of pink and othercolors. Cost is $8 for cancersurvivors and seniors, $18adults, $40 for family of five.Registration closes at noonThursday, Oct. 2. ContactCathy Lisowski at (406) 751-4507 or [email protected].

Kalispell Ski Club Ski Swapand Sale, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.,Flathead County Fairgrounds,Kalispell. Visitkalispellskiclub.com.

THEATER “Oliver!” the musical versionof Charles Dickens’ classic,“Oliver Twist,” 2 p.m.,Stevensville Playhouse. Tickets$10 adults, $8 kids 12 and under,available at Valley Drug inStevensville or online atstevensvilleplayhouse.org.Call 777-2722.

“A Party to Murder,”5:30 p.m. In the StensrudPlayhouse’s latest murder-mystery dinner theaterpresentation, six people havecome in secret on Halloween toplay a murder mystery game at arustic island cottage. Secretpassageways, incriminatingletters, hidden compartments,bodies in the window seat and a25-year-old unsolved mysterytwist and turn toward theunexpected and terrifyingconclusion. Tickets are $49 forone or $69 for two. Includes acatered meal by A MoveableFeast. Go tostensrudplayhouse.com formore information.

Missoula CommunityTheatre auditions for“Winter Wonderettes,”12:30-5 p.m., Main Streetentrance. Show will be underthe direction of Andy Meyerswith Lizzie Hatfield serving asmusic director. Roles for emailsingers/actors/movers betweenages of 18-40. Production datesare Dec. 11-14 and 17-21.Call 728-1911.

MONDAYOCTOBER 6

ART Young Artist After-schoolProgram, Mondays 3:15-5:30p.m., Zootown Arts CommunityCenter, 235 N. First St. W. Learnfundamentals, history,techniques, and purposes whileexperimenting with a variety offun mediums. $10 per day formembers, $12 for nonmembers.Call 549-7555 or visitzootownarts.org.

MUSICChoral Gala, 7:30 p.m.,Dennison Theatre. The UMSchool of Music StudentEnsemble Series presents thethird annual Choral Gala,featuring University Choir,Women’s Chorus and ChamberChorale. This performance willinclude music from multiplecontinents in an electric blendof styles and cultures. Solo andsmall-group performances alsowill be featured. Information:243-2441,[email protected].

Raising the Dead, liverecorded shows of the GratefulDead, 5 p.m., the Top Hat, 134W. Front St. Free; all ages.

POTPOURRILecture by Rae Linden, MA,“The Body-MindConnection,” 6 p.m.,Bitterroot Public Library,Hamilton. Free.

Monday Night Movie, 8 p.m.,Top Hat, 134 W. Front St.Featuring “Surfwise: TheAmazing True Odyssey of thePaskowitz Family.”

MakerSpace: Raspberry PiProjects, 3:30-6 p.m.;MakerSpace: Intro toRemote-ControlledRobotics (class 1 of 6),6-8:30 p.m.; Make-ItMonday-Hmong doll,4-5 p.m.; “ComputerFundamentals,” registrationrequired, 6 p.m., MissoulaPublic Library, 301 E. Main St.Call 721-2665 or visitmissoulapubliclibrary.org.

Super Trivia Freakout,8:30 p.m., the Badlander,208 Ryman St. Free.

Magic by Evan Disney, 6-8 p.m., Mackenzie RiverPizza, Front Street.

TUESDAYOCTOBER 7

ART“After School Art AdventureI” with Bev Glueckert,Tuesdays through Oct. 21,3:45-5:15 p.m., Missoula ArtMuseum, 335 N. Pattee St. Ages:7-12, $50/$45. Students willwork on a variety of fun andchallenging projects inspired bythe current exhibits. No projectis ever repeated and studentsare always introduced todifferent means of expressionusing a variety of materials andprocesses. Students will exploreprintmaking, art that respondsto the environment, storytellingthrough art, and sculpture made out of everyday materialssuch newspaper and glue.Call 728-0447 or visitmissoulaartmuseum.org.

Papel Picado, 6-8 p.m.,Zootown Arts CommunityCenter, 235 N. First St. W. Inhonor of the Day of the Dead,learn the Mexican folk art ofPapel Picado, the decorativecraft of cutting thin paper intoelaborate designs. Make astunning, colorful, banner justin time for your Dia de losMuertos celebration. Free formembers, $20 nonmembers.Call 549-7555 or visitzootownarts.org.

Open figure drawing,5:30-7:30 p.m., Missoula ArtMuseum, 335 N. Pattee St.$7/$5; uninstructed. Thisongoing session provides artistsan opportunity to draw from alive model. Some suppliesavailable for use andparticipants must be 18 years orolder. Call 728-0447 or visitmissoulaartmuseum.org.

KIDS’ STUFFSlime science, 11 a.m.,Children’s Museum Missoula,224 W. Front St. Call 541-7529or visit childrensmuseummissoula.org.

Tiny Tales for ages birth-3,10:30 a.m., Missoula PublicLibrary, 301 E. Main St. Call721-2665 or visitmissoulapubliclibrary.org.

Storytime, 10 a.m., Barnes &Noble, 2640 N. Reserve St.

MUSICInternational String Trio,7 p.m.,Ronan Performing ArtsCenter. Tickets $12-$14. Aguitarist from Russia, a violinistfrom England and a bassist fromthe U.S. offer a trip throughcultures and continents fromAppalachian folk to gypsy jazz,from tangos to Irish jigs.Call (406) 676-2427 or visitbig-productions.net.

Five Valley Chorus meetsTuesdays, 7-9 p.m., FirstBaptist Church, corner ofWoody and Pine Streets. Guestswelcome. Visit fivevalleysweetadelines.com or call 543-8137 for more information.

POTPOURRIMarjorie A. CrawfordLiterature Seminar, 9:30a.m., featuring Shawn Wathenon “Notes from Underground”by Fyodor Dostoevsky; SocratesCafe, 7 p.m., Bitterroot PublicLibrary, Hamilton. Call 363-1670.

The Birth Center ofMissoula sponsors the film“The Milky Way,” 6-8:30 p.m.,Crystal Theatre, 515 S. HigginsAve. Panel discussion follows.Free, donations welcome.

MakerSpace opentime/project development,1-5 p.m.; System Check! theofficial MPL Gamers Club for all ages-play on Wii, Xbox 360,6:30 p.m., Missoula PublicLibrary, 301 E. Main St. Call721-2665 or visitmissoulapubliclibrary.org.

CompassionateCommunication class,7 p.m., Warehouse Mall, 725 W.Alder No. 17 (Living Art offices).Based on the work of MarshallRosenberg and the Center for

OutContinued

See OUT, Page E6

PUZZLE ANSWER

By CORY WALSHof the Missoulian

If you have about two decades’ experience intheater, and two decades as a pastry chef, thelogical combination of your talents might be “TheDirty Sexy Chocolate Show.”

Jeremy Sher, the writer, director and dessert chef,says there’s not many shows like it in Missoula, so he’shoned his quick pitch over the past months.

“It’s basically like a sexy cabaret meets a really sillycooking show with a live band. And we make a desserton stage during the performance and give it to theaudience,” Sher said.

When audience members settle into the cabaret-style seating at the Top Hat Lounge, they’ll beentertained by a local cast. Familiar names includeReid Reimers (Missoula Community Theatre’s“Spamalot”), Leah Joki (“Prison Boxing”), Adam Wardand more. Heather Adams of the Downtown DanceCollective choreographed and will act in the show.

FRIDAY, October 3, 2014 NEWSROOM 523-5240

Ticket E3

Culinary cabaretShow serves up songs, dance and dessert

Missoulian

Halloween is the perfecttime of year for a venue thatspecializes in murder-mysteries.

Through the month ofOctober, the StensrudPlayhouse will present, “AParty to Murder,” which hasearned many a reviewfavorably comparing it tothe work of mystery-masterAgatha Christie.

The plot is a classicsetup: At a remote islandcottage, six people havegathered to play a murder-mystery game. In trueHalloween fashion, the funturns ominous and the

attendees realize the stakesare higher than merescripted drama. That meanstwists and tropes such assecret passageways,accusatory letters, hiddencompartments, bodies,betrayals and a 25-year-oldmystery.

The Stensrud willpresent the catered terroron Saturdays and Sundaysin October, starting thisweekend. Tickets are $49for one or $69 for two. Theevening includes a meal byA Moveable Feast. Go tostensrudplayhouse.com formore information and thevarious entree options.

Courtesy photo

The Stensrud Playhouse’s production of “A Party toMurder” includes, back row: Alyssa Berdahl, ConradRandles, Kyle “Scoob” Decker, Hillary Bard; front row: ChrisTorma, Alicia Bullock-Muth, director Chris Greensweight,and assistant director Landry Bertsch.

THEATER

Murder-mystery for Halloween

EVENT

Tamarack a Timeto sample diverse fare

Tamarack Time,which is like a foodcompetition at thecounty fair without thefair, is coming toBigfork on Saturday,Oct. 11.

There will be about200 different dishes in14 categories, eachcategory with judgeswho taste every entryand award medals forthe first, second andthird places. The tastingis open to anyone whowould like toparticipate. Just showup, pay your $4 and youcan sample all of theentries. Chili anddesserts appear to bethe favorite categories.

Food entries shouldarrive between 11 a.m.and noon. Judging willbegin at 12:30 p.m. andmembers, who pay the$4 can start sampling at1 p.m. The Garden Barwill then celebrateOktoberfest with free

brats and beer startingat 2 p.m., following themain Tamarack tasting.

The event wascreated by Elna andGeorge Darrow to createa sense of communityamong the localresidents. GretchenGates, from Eva GatesHomemade Preserves,and Donna Lawson, JugTree, took over whenElna passed away in2009.

They have tried toexpand the event tohave family friendlyevents with a pumpkincarving contest. Thereare also some adultevents, like the fashionshow at theMountaineer andOktoberfest at theGarden Bar.

The event takes placeon Electric Avenue indowntown Bigfork onOct. 11. For moredetails, call the BigforkChamber at 837-5888.

Missoulian

By CORY WALSHof the Missoulian

“Tornado” is a spot-on name for anindie-rock album soaked in loud,distorted guitar, but it was the subjectof some debate.

The Magpies, a Missoula band, hadan agreement before embarking on atour of the Midwest.

“If we saw a tornado, we were goingto name the record ‘Tornado,’ ” saidTolan Harber, one of the band’s twoguitarists and two vocalists.

When a storm shut down theinterstate and left them strandedovernight in Sioux Falls, South Dakota,it ended up being close enough.

The Magpies will hold an album releaseparty for “Tornado” on Friday, Oct. 3, atthe Real Lounge.

See MAGPIES, Page E9

See CABARET, Page E5

THEATER

MIKENSI ROMERSA/Missoulian

The cast of “The Dirty Sexy Chocolate Show” put the finishing touches on their show at one of their final dressrehearsals. The Top Hat Lounge will be hosting show Saturday, at 7:30 p.m. The show includes dancing, singing and,of course, dessert.

MIKENSI ROMERSA/Missoulian

The show takes the audience through the process ofmaking chocolate on stage. “Sexy people being silly andslinging chocolate – what’s better than that?” said JeremySher, the show’s creator.

MUSIC

Magpies:Raucous,melodic

rock

Oct. 3 J BOOG

Oct. 11 POLYRYTHMICS

Oct. 13 GUTTERMOUTH

Oct. 21 PIMPS OF JOYTIME

Oct. 24 BLITZEN TRAPPER

Oct. 29 RUSTED ROOT

Oct. 30 SIR-MIX-A-LOT

Oct. 31 FRUITION & THE SMOKIES

Nov. 1 HORSE FEATHERS

Nov. 4 FREEMAN

Nov. 6 GREENSKY BLUEGRASS

Nov. 13 FRONTIER RUCKUS

Nov. 14 ALEJANDRO ESCOVEDO

Nov. 15 GREG BOWN

Nov. 16 SHOOK TWINS

Nov. 23 THE GREEN

Dec. 1 JOHNNY MARR

Dec. 5 PEPPER

W/ HOT RAIN

W/ AGAINST THE GRAIN & IN THE WHALE

W/ MOON HOOCH

W/ EDJ

W/ DEADWINTER CARPENTERS

& PETER BUCK

W/ THE MOVEMENT & NEW BEAT FUND

tickets available at the Top Hat and www.tophatlounge.com/eventsk l bl h T H d h l /

MUSEUMSARLEE/JOCKO VALLEYMUSEUM, corner of Bouchand Fyant streets, Arlee, 726-3167: Featured: “ContemporaryAmerican Indians in Montana”and “Immigrants from Aroundthe World” plus a video, “I’llRide that Horse,” about womenbronc riders in Montana. Otherdisplays include a tribute topeople who served in the armedforces along with an old-timers’picture gallery and more.Hours: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.

BIGFORK MUSEUM OF ARTAND HISTORY, 525 ElectricAve., Bigfork, (406) 837-6927,bigforkmuseum.org: ThroughOct. 31: The MontanaWatercolor Society’s 32ndannual national juried showfeatures works by 50 artistsfrom across the United States.Opening reception Oct. 3,5-7 p.m.

RAVALLI COUNTYMUSEUM, 205 Bedford St.,Hamilton, 363-3338,brvhsmuseum.org: Current androtating exhibits: 21st annualErnst Peterson photographMontana contest and exhibit.“Montana’s Treasure: GoldCamps and Ghost Towns,” “TheHistoric Nez Perce Trail,”“World War II,” “A WalkThrough the Bitter Root,”“Wildlife,” “The Corps ofDiscovery,” “Trapper/Miner.”Ravalli County Museum,205 Bedford St., Hamilton.Call 363-3338 or visitbrvhsmuseum.org.

MISSOULA ART MUSEUM,335 N. Pattee St., 728-0447,missoulaartmuseum.org:Featured exhibitions: KateHunt, “Recent Works” throughFeb. 21. “The Art of HumanConflict” through Dec. 24. BillOhrmann’s “TaintedRevelations” through Oct. 11.“Crossing the River: HmongStory Cloths,” through Dec. 24.Helen McAuslan, “The KentState Paintings” through Nov.22. Melanie Yazzie through Oct.11. Pam Caughey, “Ubiquitous:Migration of Pathogens”through Dec. 24. Crow’sShadow Institute of the Artsselected works, Oct. 17-March21. Pat Zentz, “Trio,” Oct. 17-March 28. First Friday, Oct. 3,5-8 p.m. Museum hours Monday-Thursday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.,Friday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.

HISTORICAL MUSEUM ATFORT MISSOULA, Building322, 728-3476,fortmissoulamuseum.org:Featured exhibits: “The Road toToday: 250 Years of Missoula’sHistory,” “Growing the GardenCity: Missoula’s First 50 Years”and “The Missoula CameraClub.” Hours: Monday-Saturday, noon-5 p.m.

HOCKADAY MUSEUM OFART, 302 Second Ave. E.,Kalispell, (406) 755-5268 orvisit hockadaymuseum.org:Through Nov. 8: Janet Sullivan’sexhibit “Flowing Waters.”

MONTANA MUSEUM OFART AND CULTURE, Meloyand Paxson galleries, PAR/TVCenter, University of Montana,243-2019,umt.edu/montanamuseum.Vanessa German: “Bitter Root,”Oct. 16-Jan. 10 in the PaxsonGallery. Amanda Browder: “Endof the Infinite,” Oct. 16-Jan. 10,in the Meloy Gallery. Hours:Wednesday, Thursday,Saturday, noon-3 p.m.; Friday,noon-6 p.m.

MUSEUM OF THE PLAINSINDIAN, junction of U.S.Highway 2 and Highway 89West, Browning, (406) 338-2230:Featuring the artwork of TomGervais, Mitchell Zephier andHerman Red Elk. Hours:Tuesday-Saturday, 9 a.m.-4:45 p.m.

NINEPIPES MUSEUM OFEARLY MONTANA, 69316U.S. Highway 93, Charlo, 644-3435: Hours: 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,Monday-Saturday.

ROCKY MOUNTAINMUSEUM OF MILITARYHISTORY, Building T-316,

Fort Missoula, 549-5346,fortmissoula.org: Featuredexhibits on War of 1812, CivilWar, Frontier period, ImperialAge, World Wars, Korea,Vietnam, Mideast conflicts,Civilian Conservation Corps,and Montanans in battle.Hours: Seven days a week,noon-5 p.m.

GALLERIES4 RAVENS GALLERY, 248 N.Higgins Ave., 317-1543,[email protected]: InOctober: “Fire, Earth, Air,Water: No Element StandsAlone,” by Missoulaphotographer Nancy Greenfieldand Arlee sculptor DannyKraus. Opening reception,Oct. 3, 5-8 p.m.

E3 CONVERGENCEGALLERY, 229 W. Main St.,830-3168,e3convergencegallery.com: InOctober: “Space AgeLandscapes,” a series 15 years inthe making by artist Melvin

Simon, who opened thegallery with Jason Neal thissummer, sent out a call forsubmissions under thatminimal but visuallyengaging theme.

The appeal of thephrase was apparent in theresponse. “Artists wouldjust light up” when shetold them about the show,Simon said.

Twenty-one artists’work fills the gallery onEast Main Street, wherethey’re accented byselections from “Ridingthe Earthboy 40,” theacclaimed Blackfeetnovelist’s sole collection ofpoetry.

While Simon wasinitially worried thecoinciding of October andthe phrase “wind andbones” might lead to aslew of misguidedsubmissions, most artistsresponded to Welch’swords and sensibility – shepointed to the heavy use ofblack, white and graythroughout the gallery.

Bitterroot Valley-based photographerBarbara Michelmancontributed several largeworks, including a black-and-white print of thesprawling field whereChief Charlo surrendered.

Radius-representedartist Melissa Bangs hasfive watercolor still lifes ofbones starkly centered onall-white backgroundsthat were paintedspecifically for the show.

Bangs’ roots in Montana

reach back to her great-grandmother’s homesteadon the Hi-Line, andreading “Fools Crow” atage 12 was a formative,unforgettable experiencefor her.

“Welch’s wordscompletely opened myeyes and heart to thehistory that long precededmy family’s history here,what was truly lost and theriches that remain. ‘FoolsCrow’ shaped my worldand has never left me,” she

wrote in an email.Bangs began this series

in 2009, and hermotivations dovetailedwith the theme Simonchoose. Her artiststatement for the seriesasks, “What is left afterthe many layers have beenpealed back or have wastedaway?” and contemplatesthe cycle of the seasonsand life and death.

Missoula firefighter andartist Dean Johnsonoffered up a ceramic deerskull that mimics the lookof actual bone. He also hasa series of pronghornskulls, which have unrealcolors such as gunmetal orbright, leaching hues fromsoda-firing.

Assemblage and collageartist Susan Carlson,who’s represented byRadius, contributed atleast three pieces.

For “The Wings andBones of Words,” Carlsonused as a base an oldlantern, about the size of alarge hourglass frame.Inside are pieces ofscientific equipment, dogbones and feathers

gathered from her walks.The lantern frame and

interior are lined with textfrom “Fools Crow,” cutfrom an actual copy of thenovel.

“It was already in roughshape, otherwise Iwouldn’t have torn it up,”she noted. She knew Welchand his wife Lois, and didhouse painting and otherwork for them over thecourse of 20-some years.

Collecting runs inCarlson’s family, andassemblage art became anatural direction forsomeone surrounded byold, well-loved objects.

While artists sheadmires, like JosephCornell, had tidy workingspaces, it’s not in herworking method. Shedescribes her workspace asan “art-nado” once she’sdone with a piece.

She thinks aboutassemblages like the Welchcontribution for weeksbefore working on it.

“It doesn’t happen tillit’s ready to happens,” shesaid. Then the rightcombination of objectswill come to her and she’ll

begin experimenting.Fittingly, she compared

it to the way writers work.

In addition to thepoetry on the walls, thegallery will host literary-related events.

Throughout the day onFriday, Oct. 10, local poetswill give readings inconjunction with theFestival of the Book.

At 2:30 p.m., a Welchtribute reading will includea cast member from“Winter in the Blood,” theMontana-made filmadaptation of Welch’snovel. In addition, DylanDywer will read a passagefrom Welch’s novel“Heartsong of ChargingElk,” and perform a pieceof music from anaccompanying scorewritten by nationally-acclaimed jazz musicianWayne Horvitz.

“It’s a really movingpiece. It’s pretty gorgeous,’Simon said.

Entertainer editor CoryWalsh can be reached at523-5261 or [email protected].

E4 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

FROM PAGE E1

The Radius Gallery, 114 East Main St., ishosting “Wind & Bones Exhibit: An InterartisticTribute to James Welch,” from Oct. 3 to Nov. 16.The art opening will be held First Friday, Oct. 3.On Friday, Oct. 10, the gallery will host poetryreadings in conjunction with the Festival of theBook.

10:30 a.m.: Shann Ray, Henrietta Goodmanand Mark Gibbons.

1 p.m.: Melissa Mylchreest, Dave Caserio andChris Dombrowski.

2:30 p.m.: James Welch tribute reading withmembers of the local literary community, castmembers from the “Winter in the Blood” filmadaptation of Welch’s novel. Opening remarks willbe made by Lois Welch.

5:30 p.m.: Annual Readers & WritersReception. Tickets are $25.

‘Wind’Continued

GALLERIES

“Imaginary Worlds” paintings and mixed mediasculpture by Barbara Morrison is on display at Montana Artand Framing through October.

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Barbara MorrisonImaginary Worlds

paintings andmixed mediasculpture

Oct. 3- 31First Friday

Opening 5-9pm

709 Ronan Street, Missoula 541-7100

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Cooper. Opening reception Oct. 3, 5-9 p.m.

ART CITY, 407 W. Main St.,Hamilton, 363-4764: Featured:“The Fox and the Hedgehog,” byJennifer Ogden and DulcieBelanger. First Friday, Oct. 3,5-8 p.m. featuring music byLight and Variable Winds.Hours: Thursday-Friday 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday 11 a.m.-4 p.m. and by appointment.

THE ARTISTS’ SHOP, 127 N.Higgins Ave., 543-6393.Through October: “Tribute,”recent works on paper utilizingprintmaking and mixed mediatechniques by Bev BeckGlueckert. Artist’s receptionOct. 3, 5-8 p.m. Hours:Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.and Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

THE BRINK GALLERY, 111 W.Front St., 728-5251,thebrinkgallery.com: InOctober: “Post-Rural,” work byBrad Allen, James Bailey, KevinBell, Matt Hamon, Karina Hean,Trey Hill, Nicole Pietrantoni,Edgar Smith and Noah Wilson.Opening reception, Oct. 3,5-8 p.m.

BRUNSWICK GALLERY,223 W. Railroad St.: First Friday,Oct. 3, 5-8 p.m., Featuringwood block prints and newstudio opening of Claire EmeryArt. 728-7910 or emeryart.com.

CLAY STUDIO OFMISSOULA, 1106 Hawthorne,Unit A,theclaystudioofmissoula.com:In October: Chris Dufala andElena Lourenco: Vestiges.

COLLAGE GALLERY OFFINE ART, 573 Electric Ave.,Bigfork, (406) 837-0866,collagebigfork.com: ThroughOct. 16: “Soundings,” amultimedia exhibition featuringencaustic paintings, video,sound and installation bySara Mast.

DANA GALLERY, 248 N.Higgins Ave., 721-3154,danagallery.com. In October:

Fifth Annual Young GunsExhibition showcasing 11talented regional artists: CalebMeyer, Silas Thompson, FrancisSwitzer, Laura Blue Palmer,Clay Pape, BreannadeMontigny, Ryan Brown,Anthony Yazzie, CharnayMurphy, Anna Moore and TreyMcCarley. First Friday receptionOct. 3, 5-8 p.m.

FRONTIERSPACE, alleybetween Spruce and Pinestreets: In October: “It’s Okay;We’ll Dry,” work by Missoulaartist Caitlin Hofmeister. FirstFriday, Oct. 3.

GALLERY OF VISUAL ARTS,Social Science Building, firstfloor, UM, 243-2813,[email protected]:Featured through Oct. 30: Twoexhibitions featuring tools asobjects, Stephen Glueckert’s“We Use Them To Do Things”and Chad Steve’s“Re/Creation.” Steve will give a

gallery talk on Tuesday, Oct. 14,5:30-6:30 p.m.

GREEN LIGHT, 301 N. HigginsAve., 541-0080: First Friday,Oct. 3 featuring pencil andcharcoal drawings by LukeMontrose.

HANGIN’ ART GALLERY,92555 Highway 93 N., Arlee,726-3335,hanginartgallery.com: ThroughOct. 24: The Killdeer ArtisansSummer Show features artist,poet and educator KarenGoulet, director of the artdepartment at Salish KootenaiCollege in Pablo.

MONTANA ART ANDFRAMING, 709 Ronan St.,(406) 541-7100,montanaart.com: ThroughOctober: “Imaginary Worlds”paintings and mixed mediasculpture by Barbara Morrison.Opening reception Oct. 3,5-9 p.m.

MONTE DOLACK GALLERY,139 W. Front St., 549-3248,dolack.com: First Friday ArtNight, Oct 3: Featuring recentdrawings from the figure byMonte Dolack. Music by AlyssaRae Hands. Open Tuesday-Friday, 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. andSaturdays 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

MURPHY-JUBB FINE ART,210 N. Higgins Ave., 728-7050,kendahljanjubb.com: Featuringpaintings, photographs andprints by Kendahl Jan Jubb,James Hoffmann, Susan Mingoand Yu Wenya. First Friday, Oct.3. Hours: Monday-Saturday,9 a.m.-6 p.m.

OHRMANN MUSEUM ANDGALLERY, two miles south ofDrummond on Highway 1.Featuring paintings andsculptures by Bill Ohrmann.

Reimers plays a chefwho “falls from grace” ashe becomes increasinglyobsessed with andaddicted to chocolate.Along the way there will beoriginal music, dreamsequences with jazzsingers and more.

A band specially formedfor event will provide thatsoundtrack, in the vein ofIsaac Hayes, CurtisMayfield and theCommodores. Theperformers include PhilStempin of ReverendSlanky, Lizzie Hatfield,music director forMissoula CommunityTheatre’s “Les Miserables”and Margi Cates of theWhizpops.

Over the course of theshow, there’s also the on-stage preparation of thedessert. Giving it awaywould be a spoiler, though.

“It’s definitelydecadent, it’s definitelychocolate. It’s also a classicdessert that people maynot have heard of,” Shersaid.

“Cook’s choice” is asafe bet, since Sher hasbeen working as a pastrychef for a little more thantwo decades. He’s the

pastry chef at Scotty’sTable and the ButtercupMarket and Cafe. Beforethat, he served as pastrychef at Posh Chocolate.All three are sponsoring

the show.His acting resume is

almost as long, mostrecently including theMontana RepertoryTheatre’s “Circle Mirror

Transformation.”“I’ve devised and

created a lot of theaterpieces, and I’ve made a lotof desserts. But I’ve neverdone the two together atthe same time,” Sher said.

Considering it wassomething of anexperiment, Sher wassurprised to find the firstshow this Saturday soldout. The Top Hat agreed toadd a second one on Oct.18, also in a primeSaturday night time slot.

Regarding content, he

tells people it’s “racy butnot raunchy.” It includesno nudity, but there areadult language andthemes, and it’srecommended for people18 and older.

But, he added, it’s also“really, really silly.”

Entertainer editor CoryWalsh can be reached at523-5261 or [email protected].

FROM PAGE E3

FROM PAGE E4

GalleriesContinued

CabaretContinued

MIKENSI ROMERSA/Missoulian

Local artist Jack Metcalf created all of the props for “The Dirty Sexy Chocolate Show.”They include a shark, a scooter, a zebra and many more.

MIKENSI ROMERSA/Missoulian

Posh Chocolate, the Downtown Dance Collective, Scotty’s Table and the Buttercup Market and Cafe are all sponsors ofthe show, which also includes a live five-piece band.

See GALLERIES, Page E7

“The Fox and the Hedgehog,” by Jennifer Ogden andDulcie Belanger is at Art City.

“The Dirty Sexy Chocolate Show,” has soldout its first show Saturday, Oct. 4, at the Top HatLounge, 134 W. Front St. However, tickets areavailable for an additional show at 7 p.m.Saturday, Oct. 18. Doors open at 6 p.m. Ticketprices range from $15 for an individual to $150 fora reserved table. Go toticketfly.com/purchase/event/692561 to purchase.

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“We always try to have abig, classic show. Then amusical theater piece inthere, an Americanrealism, and a comedy,” hesaid.

Bolton said the castingand design were finalizedin the spring so rehearsalscould start as soon as thefall semester began. Whilemost of the performershad previous stageexperience, including apair of graduate students,it was still important tohave as much time aspossible to bring people upto speed.

“Actors were going intocostume fittings duringthe first week of classes,we hit the groundrunning,” he said.

The play follows thetitular character, a notedsoldier and poet in the 17thcentury French Army. Hismain flaw being a verylarge nose, the appearanceof which has alwaysbothered him. Bergerac,

who is infatuated with hisdistant cousin Roxane,agrees to aid a new cadet,Christian de Neuvillette,who has caught her eye.

“Christian doesn’tspeak well, doesn’t writewell, gets tongue tied, buthe is very handsome,”Bolton said. “The iconicscene is when Cyranocoaches him in the nighton what to say as Christian

stands below the balconyspeaking to Roxane.”

Roxane begins to fall inlove with Christian,believing him to be theeloquent gentleman thatis, in fact, Cyrano.

“It all unfolds veryfast,” Bolton said.

The play, originallywritten by EdmondRostand, has beentranslated and adapted byRanjit Bolt. Bolton said

while the adaptation has avery modern feel to it, theUM production is still verysquarely going at a classicfeel for “Cyrano,”including what hedescribed as “lavish”period costumes.

“A large number ofthem are actually rentedfrom the OregonShakespeare Festival,” hesaid.

Bolton is also a

professor at UM’s Schoolof Theatre and Dance,where he teaches classes inacting and playwriting. Hesaid the students are veryexcited about theproduction.

“They have embracedthe style and the languageof it all. I’m just reallyimpressed with how farthey have picked up andrun with even the tiny, tinydetails.” Bolton said.

Nonviolent Communication.To register contact PatrickMarsolek, (406) 443-3439 [email protected].

Trivia, 7:30 p.m., VFW, 245 W.Main St.

Trivia, 8 p.m., Elbow Room,1855 Stephens Ave.

Trivia Night, 6:30 p.m., EastShore Smokehouse, Highway35, Polson.

THEATERUniversity of MontanaSchool of Theatre andDance presents “Cyrano deBergerac” by EdmondRostand; adapted by RanjitBolt, 7:30 p.m., MontanaTheatre, PAR/TV Center, UM.Tickets $20 general, $16 seniorsand students, $10 children 12and under. Visitumt.edu/theatredance.

WEDNESDAYOCTOBER 8

ART Glass Fusing OrientationClass, 6-7:30 p.m., ZootownArts Community Center, 235 N.First St. W. This introductoryclass will cover the basics ofglass-from how the kilningprocess works to slumping,fusing, mold-making, and glassaftercare. Once you haveattended this fun night of glassfusing you’re welcome to comein anytime and work in ourGlass Fusing Studio. $15 plusthe cost of glass. Call 549-7555or visit zootownarts.org.

Young Artist After-schoolProgram, Wednesdays 3:15-5:30 p.m., Zootown ArtsCommunity Center, 235 N. FirstSt. W. Learn fundamentals,history, techniques, andpurposes while experimentingwith a variety of fun mediums.$10 per day for members, $12 fornonmembers. Call 549-7555 orvisit zootownarts.org.

DANCEEast Coast Swing,beginning/intermediate,7-8:30 p.m., Sunrise Saloon,1101 Strand. $5.

KIDS’ STUFFRice table, 11 a.m.; facepainting, 2:45 p.m., Children’sMuseum Missoula, 224 W. FrontSt. Call 541-7529 or visitchildrensmuseummissoula.org.

Toddler and Baby StoryTime, 10:30-11:15 a.m.,Bitterroot Public Library,Hamilton. Call 363-1670.

Storytime, 10:30 a.m., NorthValley Public Library, 208 MainSt., Stevensville. Visitnorthvalleylibrary.org.

MUSIC“2nd Wednesday: Sound,Soup & Sanctuary,” ThomasHensley (tenor) with AliceWilliams (piano); works byFaure, Duparc, Verdi andHandel; 12:10 p.m. (soup andbread luncheon to follow at12:30). Free-will offering.University CongregationalChurch 405 University Ave.Info: 543-6952.

DJ LRock, 9:30 p.m., SunriseSaloon, 1101 Strand.

Karaoke, 7:30-10:30 p.m.,Eagles Lodge, 2420 South Ave.W. Call 721-2740.

Milkcrate Wednesday, ThePalace, 147 W. Broadway. Free.

Markie Mark Karaoke, 7 p.m., Finley Point Grill,Highway 35, Polson.

Solid Sound Karaoke,Westside Lanes, 1615 WyomingSt.

Karaoke, 9 p.m., theBadlander, 208 Ryman St. Free.

Karaoke, 8 p.m.-1 a.m.,Eagles, 2520 South Ave. W.

POTPOURRI Brown Bag Lunch and

Learn Webinar, noon,“Repayment Options forMontana Borrowers” by ChjerPoelman-Allen; open computerlab, 1-3 p.m., Bitterroot PublicLibrary, Hamilton. Call363-1670.

Wine tasting, 6-7:30 p.m.,Bambino’s Italian Restaurant,Highway 93, Polson. $18 perperson. Call (406) 883-2668.

Communication practicegroup, noon, Jeannette RankinPeace Center, 519 S. HigginsAve. No charge; no experiencenecessary. Visitinnerworkingsresources.com.

“Files and Folders,”registration required,12:30 p.m.; free matineeclassic film, 2 p.m.; Middleschool writers, 3:30 p.m.,MakerSpace: 3-D printeropen hours, 5:30-9 p.m.; BigSky System Check! GamersClub for all ages at Big SkyBranch Library, Big Sky HighSchool, 4-6 p.m.; “BeginningWORD,” registration required,6 p.m.; 2nd WednesdayBook Group discusses “TheThings They Carried” by TimO’Brien, 7 p.m., MissoulaPublic Library, 301 E. Main St.Call 721-2665 or visitmissoulapubliclibrary.org.

Trivia, 7 p.m., Broadway Bar,1609 W. Broadway

Trivia, 8 p.m., Flathead LakeBrewing Co., 424 N. HigginsAve.

Trivia, 8 p.m., Silver SlipperLounge, 4063 U.S. Highway 93.

Trivia night, 7-9 p.m., VillageRoost Bar & Grill, Bigfork.

Trivial Beersuit, 8:30 p.m.,the Pulse inside the Press Box,825 E. Broadway.

THEATERUniversity of MontanaSchool of Theatre andDance presents “Cyrano deBergerac” by EdmondRostand; adapted by Ranjit Bolt,7:30 p.m., Montana Theatre,PAR/TV Center, UM. Tickets$20 general, $16 seniors andstudents, $10 children 12 andunder. Visitumt.edu/theatredance.

THURSDAY OCTOBER 9

ARTFestival of the Dead freefamily friendly workshop:Big wearable headbands,6-8 p.m., Zootown ArtsCommunity Center, 235 N. FirstSt. W. Free. Call 549-7555 orvisit zootownarts.org.

Young Artist After-schoolProgram, Thursdays 2:30-5 p.m., Zootown ArtsCommunity Center, 235 N. FirstSt. W. Learn fundamentals,history, techniques, andpurposes while experimentingwith a variety of fun mediums.$10 per day for members, $12 fornonmembers. Call 549-7555 orvisit zootownarts.org.

BOOKS, READINGS“He Said, She Said” AuthorRoad Show, 5:30 p.m., Fact &Fiction, 220 N. Higgins Ave.Featuring Wendelin VanDraanen and Mark HuntleyParsons discussing the writingprocess and signing booksincluding “Road Rash,”“Flipped” and “Sammy Keyes.”Call 721-2881 or visitfactandfictionbooks.com.

Fellowship Clup meets todiscuss “The Five Levels ofAttachment: Toltec Wisdomfor the Modern World,” byDon Miguel Ruiz Jr., 6 p.m.,Bitterroot Public Library,Hamilton. Call 363-1670.

DANCECountry two-step,beginning/intermediate,7-8:30 p.m., Sunrise Saloon,1101 Strand. $5.

KIDS’ STUFFLego Club, 3:30 p.m.,Bitterroot Public Library,Hamilton. Call 363-1670.

Family yoga, 11 a.m.,Children’s Museum Missoula,224 W. Front St. Call 541-7529or visit childrensmuseummissoula.org.

Tiny Tales for birth-0, 10:30a.m.; R.E.A.D. Dogs, 3 p.m.;Lego Club, 3:30 p.m.,Missoula Public Library, 301 E.Main St. Call 721-2665 or visitmissoulapubliclibrary.org.

MUSICGlacier Symphony SoloistSpotlight with violinistSimone Porter, 7:30 p.m.,Alpine Ballroom, 333 S. MainSt., Kalispell. Call (406) 407-7000 or visit gscmusic.org.

Open mic, 7:30-10:30 p.m.,Eagles Lodge, 2420 South Ave.W. Call 721-2740.

TNT, top 40, the Badlander,208 Ryman St. Free.

Solid Sound Karaoke,Westside Lanes, 1615 WyomingSt.

Solid Sound Karaoke,Westside Lanes, 1615 WyomingSt.

POTPOURRI Lecture by Parish Kohanim,commercial and fine artphotographer, 7 p.m., UCTheatre, UM. Free and open tothe public. Call Rocky MountainSchool of Photography, 543-0171.

“Red Skies of Montana,”6:30 p.m., Miracle of AmericaMuseum, Polson. The 1952feature-length movie is basedon the 1949 tragic Mann Gulchfire. A short tour ofsmokejumper-related artifactsin the museum collection willprecede the film. Call (406)883-6804.

MakerSpace: ArduinoProjects, 3-6 p.m., MissoulaPublic Library, 301 E. Main St.Call 721-2665 or visitmissoulapubliclibrary.org.

Tell Us Something: “TheThings We Carry,” livestorytelling event, 6 p.m., theTop Hat, 134 W. Front St. Nocover, all ages.

Trivia, 7 p.m., Brooks andBrowns Bar, 200 S. Pattee.

Trivia, 8 p.m., Lucky StrikeCasino, 1515 Dearborn Ave.

THEATERUniversity of MontanaSchool of Theatre andDance presents “Cyrano deBergerac” by EdmondRostand; adapted by Ranjit Bolt,7:30 p.m., Montana Theatre,PAR/TV Center, UM. Tickets$20 general, $16 seniors andstudents, $10 children 12 andunder. Visitumt.edu/theatredance.

MCT’s Out of the BoxProductions presents “TheWoman in Black,” whichfavors film noir tones andsuspense over horror, 7:30 p.m.,First United Methodist Church,300 E. Main St. Tickets $15,available at the MCT BoxOffice, 200 N. Adams St.,online at mctinc.org by calling728-7529 or at the door.

Whitefish Theatre Co.presents “Harvey,” 7:30 p.m.,O’Shaughnessy Center, 1Central Ave., Whitefish. Tickets$18 adults, $16 seniors, $8students. Preview nightThursday, Oct. 9, is $10 generalseating at the door. ThePulitzer-Prize-winning comedytells the hilarious story ofElwood P. Dowd and hisimaginary friend, a giant rabbit named Harvey. Call (406) 862-5371 or visitwhitefishtheatreco.org.

ARTIST CALLSThe Missoula Art Museum’s43rd Benefit Art Auction isaccepting submissionsthrough Oct. 15. It is open toall artists although submissionswill not be accepted fromdealers, galleries or thirdparties. Only finished workswill be considered. The artauction will be held Feb. 7, 2015.For more information, visitmam.submittable.com/submit.

E6 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

FROM PAGE E1

FROM PAGE E2

OutContinued

‘Cyrano’Continued

The University of Montana School ofTheatre and Dance’s production of “Cyranode Bergerac” will have performances Oct. 7-11and Oct. 14-18 at 7:30 p.m. The play will be held inthe Montana Theatre in the PAR/TV Center at theUM campus. Tickets are $20 for general, $16 forstudents and seniors and $10 for children.

POLITICALMONTANA

RICH BULEY: Daines onlycares about one jobPolitical Montana

At least the Republicansare consistent

Zinke doesn’t understandthe Affordable Care Act

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MONTANAPublic Radio HighlightsOctober 3-9, 2014

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89.5 FM Polson 91.9 FM Hamilton

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FRIDAY OCTOBER 3, 20145:00-9:00 a.m. Morning Edition from NPR, Montana Morning News, and Marketplace Morning Report9:00 a.m. AWriters Almanac - Historical literary calendar, commentary and poetry with host Garrison Keillor9:05 a.m. Morning Classics – Dvorak: Poetic Tone Pictures, Op. 85, for piano; Enescu: Violin Sonata in A minor,“Torso”; Spohr: Potpourri #4 in B major, Op. 24; Fibich: Toman and the

Wood Nymph, Op. 49, also The Tempest, Op. 4611:00 a.m. Freeforms with Mike Steinberg12:30 p.m. BBCWorld Service – News andWorld Briefing1:00 p.m. Science Friday – panels of expert guests join host, Ira Flatow, to discuss science and take questions from listeners2:06 p.m. Performance Today4:00 p.m. The Pea Green Boat with Annie Garde – A show for children of all ages5:00 p.m. All Things Considered – In-depth NPR news from around the world5:32 p.m. Montana Evening Edition - Montana news and features, plus commentaries by listeners5:54 p.m. National Native News - A five-minute newscast focusing on issues that impact Native Americans such as health care, cultural preservation, education and more6:00 p.m. All Things Considered7:30 p.m. Pazz & Jop – A modern mix of pop music with hosts Fred Rice and Rigel Bankshot10:00 pm Muse’s Jukebox – Eclectic mix of rock n’roll, folk, jazz and pop

SATURDAY OCTOBER 4, 20145:00 a.m. Only a Game – A weekly sports magazine hosted by NPR commentator, Bill Littlefield6:00 a.m. Weekend Edition Saturday – from NPR7:00 a.m. The Children’s Corner with Annie Garde9:00 a.m. Weekend Edition Saturday – from NPR11:00 a.m. San Francisco Opera – La Traviata (in Italian) by GiuseppeVerdi4:00 p.m. Radiolab –“Space”– In the 1960s, space exploration was an American obsession. This program charts the path from romance to increasing cynicism. The hosts talk with

Ann Druyan, widow of Carl Sagan and also astrophysicist, Neil de Grasse Tyson5:00 p.m. All Things Considered from NPR6:00 p.m. Live Election Debate – Republican Ryan Zinke and Democrat John Lewis are the candidates running for Montana’s lone congressional seat. MTPR will broadcast the debate

and analysis live.7:30 p.m. A Prairie Home Companion with Garrison Keillor9:30 p.m. Jonkunnu Express – African and Caribbean music with Joan Richarde11:00 p.m. City Lights – Modern pop and dance music for the eclectic with Joan Richarde

SUNDAY OCTOBER 5, 20146:00 a.m. Sunday Baroque8:00 a.m. Center Stage fromWolf Trap – Music of RalphVaughanWilliams, Andre Previn, Dave Brubeck, and Johannes Brahms9:00 a.m. Weekend Edition Sunday from NPR including the puzzle11:00 a.m. Montana Public Radio News Encore – An encore broadcast from the week’s news11:10 a.m. Front Row Center –The MTPR weekly arts interview – Kim Anderson talks about the 15th annual and the final Humanities Montana coordinated Montana Festival of the

Book.11:20 a.m. The Food Guys –“Turnovers”11:30 a.m. Wait,Wait…Don’t Tell Me –The“oddly informative”NPR news quiz show – with Peter Sagal12:25 p.m. Field Notes –“Starling Obfuscation”12:30 a.m. Jazz at Lincoln Center1:30 p.m. Jazz Archives with Joe Korona2:00 p.m. Dimensions in Jazz - A mix of the best of the world of recorded jazz3:55 p.m. AWriters Almanac4:00 p.m. TED Radio Hour – A journey through fascinating ideas, astonishing inventions, and new ways to think and create5:00 p.m. All Things Considered - In-depth NPR news from around the world6:00 p.m. On the Media - NPR’s weekly analysis of the latest media issues7:00 p.m. Chicago Symphony Orchestra – Schubert, Mahler, andWagner9:00 p.m. Oasis – Electronic and acoustic new age music with local host, Joan Richarde11:00 p.m. Echoes - A musical soundscape from many genres and traditions1:00 a.m. Sojourn - Gentle music for the wee hours with host, Joan Richarde

MONDAY OCTOBER 6, 20145:00-9:00 a.m. Morning Edition from NPR, Montana Morning News, and Marketplace Morning Report9:00 a.m. AWriters Almanac - Historical literary calendar, commentary and poetry with host Garrison Keillor9:05 a.m. Morning Classics –Verroust: 3 Solos de Concert for Oboe and Piano; Koechlin: Quatre Petites Pieces, Op. 32 for horn, piano, and violin; Benda: Concerto in E minor for flute,

strings and basso continuo11:00 a.m. Freeforms withWilliam Marcus12:30 p.m. BBCWorld Service – Newscast and The Newsroom1:00 p.m. Alternative Radio – Bruce Schneier –The Internet, Privacy, and Power2:06 p.m. Performance Today with Fred Child - Classical musical performances with interviews, commentaries, and timely features3:00 p.m. Fieldnotes –“Starling Obfuscation”4:00 p.m. The Pea Green Boat with Annie Garde and friends – a show for children of all ages5:00 p.m. All Things Considered – In-depth NPR news from around the world5:32 p.m. Montana Evening Edition – News and features, plus commentaries by listeners5:54 p.m. National Native News - A five-minute newscast focusing on issues that impact Native Americans such as health care, cultural preservation, education and more6:00 p.m. All Things Considered – continues7:30 p.m. You Must Remember This with Allen Secher –“Let’s Get Away From It All”– a musical travel log starting in Kalamzoo, including NewYork NewYork-It’s aWonderful Town,

and meeting in St. Louis.8:30 p.m. Thistle and Shamrock with Fiona Ritchie9:30 p.m. DancingWith Tradition – Ethnic and traditional music of many cultures11:30 p.m. Ensemble – Classical music with host Joan Richarde

TUESDAY OCTOBER 7, 20145:00-9:00 a.m. Morning Edition from NPR, Montana Morning News, and Marketplace Morning Report9:00 a.m. AWriters Almanac - Historical literary calendar, commentary and poetry with host Garrison Keillor9:05 a.m. Morning Classics –Widerkehr: Duo Sonata in C major for oboe and piano; Kuhlau: Andante and Polacca for Natural Horn and Fortepiano; Brahms: Serenade #2 in A major, Op.

16; Dvorak: Serenade #2 in D minor, Op. 44; Spohr: Clarinet Concerto #4 in C minor11:00 a.m. Freeforms with Michael Marsolek12:30 p.m. BBCWorld Service – Newscast and The Newsroom1:00 p.m. Home Ground Radio with Brian Kahn1:30 p.m. Musician’s Spotlight – Birds of Chicago – Founders, Alison Russell and JT Nero play blues, country, gospel and folk.., poetry you can dance to and poetry you can play really

loud2:06 p.m. The Stan Howe Show3:06 p.m. The Folk Show with April Hale4:00 p.m. The Pea Green Boat with Annie Garde – a show for children of all ages5:00 p.m. All Things Considered - In-depth NPR news from around the world5:32 p.m. Montana Evening Edition – Montana news and features, plus commentaries by listeners5:54 p.m. National Native News - A five-minute newscast focusing on issues that impact Native Americans such as health care, cultural preservation, education and more6:00 p.m. All Things Considered7:30 p.m. This American Life –With Ira Glass8:30 pm. ReflectionsWest – Doug Midgett reflects on the visible legacies left in the agricultural ghost towns of Eastern Montana. He pairs his thoughts with a poem by a

homesteading writer Gwendolyn Haste.8:35 p.m. Selected Shorts9:35 p.m. Performance Today from American Public Media10:30 p.m. In OtherWords11:00 p.m. Night Train with John Myers –Thematic shows blending words and music

WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 8, 20145:00-7:00 a.m. Morning Edition from NPR, Montana Morning News, and Marketplace Morning Report9:00 a.m. AWriters Almanac - Historical literary calendar, commentary and poetry with host Garrison Keillor9:05 a.m. Morning Classics – Raff: Variations on an Original Theme, Op. 179; Mendelssohn: Cello Sonata #2 in D major, Op. 58; Hummel: Piano Trio in G major, Op. 65; Bruch: Symphony

#2 in F minor, Op. 3611:00 a.m. Freeforms with T Tate12:30 p.m. BBCWorld Service – Newscast and The Newsroom1:00 p.m. Moyers and Company1:25 p.m. Tellin’Ellen – Suicide, Depression and Mental Illness - Ellen King-Rodgers talks with Pam Faerber, founder of bigbearstampede.org, a resource-packed website dedicated to

raising awareness about depression, mental illness and suicide. Learn to recognize the signs, and how to take action2:06 p.m. Performance Today with Fred Child - Classical music performances with interviews, commentaries, and timely features3:54 p.m. ReflectionsWest – Doug Midgett reflects on the visible legacies left in the agricultural ghost towns of Eastern Montana. He pairs his thoughts with a poem by a

homesteading writer Gwendolyn Haste.4:00 p.m. The Pea Green Boat with Annie Garde and friends – a show for children of all ages5:00 p.m. All Things Considered – In-depth NPR news from around the world5:32 p.m. Montana Evening Edition - Montana news and features, plus commentaries by listeners5:54 p.m. National Native News - A five-minute newscast focusing on issues that impact Native Americans such as health care, cultural preservation, education and more6:00 p.m. All Things Considered7:30 p.m. MountainWest Voices with host, Clay Scott – program featuring the extraordinary stories of ordinary people throughout the Rocky MountainWest7:35 p.m. On Being with Krista Tippitt – conversations about life’s deepest questions8:30 p.m. What I Like About Jazz – features small group jazz from 1950 to now9:30 p.m. Blues on the Move - Blues from early roots to current hits with John Arvish, Joan Richarde, or Phil Hamilton11:30 p.m. Earthsongs – An exploration of the Native influences that help shape and define contemporary American music

THURSDAY OCTOBER 9, 20145:00-9:00 a.m. Morning Edition from NPR, Montana Morning News, and Marketplace Morning Report9:00 a.m. AWriters Almanac - Historical literary calendar, commentary and poetry with host Garrison Keillor9:05 a.m. Morning Classics – Haydn: Flute Sonata in C major, Op. 87; Mozart: Trio for clarinet, viola, and piano, K. 498; Mercadante: Flute Concerto #4 in G major; Manfredini: Two String

Quartets: #4 in C major and #3 in A major; Clementi: Minuetto Pastorale in D major, also Symphony in Bb major, Op. 18 #111:00 a.m. Freeforms with Zed12:30 p.m. BBCWorld Service1:06 p.m. Resource Revolution – from Climate One. The global energy economy is undergoing tectonic shifts. Business leaders, scientists and authors talks about the path toward a

prosperous and sustainable economy2:06 p.m. Jazz Sessions - A variety of jazz tunes and styles with Terry Conrad4:00 p.m. The Pea Green Boat with Annie Garde – a show for children of all ages5:00 p.m. All Things Considered – In-depth NPR news from around the world5:32 p.m. Montana Evening Edition - Montana news and features, plus commentaries by listeners5:54 p.m. National Native News - A five-minute newscast focusing on issues that impact Native Americans such as health care, cultural preservation, education and more6:00 p.m. All Things Considered7:30 p.m. TheWrite Question – Pete Fromm, author of the novel“If Not For This”8:00 p.m. From the Top – A showcase for the rising stars of classical music, aged 9-18. Hosted by pianist, Christopher O’Riley9:00 p.m. Performance Today with Fred Child – Classical musical performances with interviews, commentaries, and timely features10:00 p.m. Music from the Hearts of Space – mellow electronic and acoustic music11:00 p.m. Night Flight - Eclectic selections of late-night tunes, hosted by John Myers and Joan Richarde

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affiliate of the NationalEndowment of theHumanities.

As such, Anderson saidthe board “felt that theintensity of the staff time”required to plan a festivalyear-round warranted thedecision to pull out.

Anderson said she’s“totally optimistic” thefestival will continue.They’re in talks with othergroups, but she couldn’tname any on record yet.

“It’s a little prematureto give any moreinformation than that.We’re talking to people.

We want to support anongoing festival,”Anderson said.

Executive director KenEgan said the group iswilling to offer “some seedfunding” toward acontinuing festival. Heimagines that it will likelybe a “consortium oforganizations in Missoulaand around the state.”

After this year’s festivalis over, Egan said he andAnderson will reach out toother organizations and“see what’s possible.”

He said they’re willingto work with “whomever iswilling to take it on” andfind other sources offunding. They’ll also reachout to organizers of book

festivals in Billings,Bozeman and Great Falls.

Egan said he’d like tohear “new paradigms” and“new thoughts” on what astatewide book festivalshould look like.

Meanwhile, HumanitiesMontana has numerousprograms goingsimultaneously across thestate. It distributes fundsto other organizations,books 200 to 250 expertspeakers in schools peryear, and runs HometownHumanities, now in itsthird year.

That program brings ayear’s worth of artsprogramming to acommunity at no cost.Previous recipients were

Miles City and Dillon,while this year’s is LincolnCounty as a whole. Localgroups select the offeringsfor the year, everythingfrom speakers in schools tohistoric downtownpreservation work.

The hope is that by thenext year, theinfrastructure is in placefor the community to“move to the next level,” bywriting grants for projectsof its own.

Anderson said theorganization still has acommitment to literatureand the state’s literarycommunity.

“It wasn’t money asmuch as much as ourfocus,” she said.

OrganizerContinued

assistant director ofprograms.

Just a few examplesinclude the Radius Gallery,where local poets will readtheir work and celebrateesteemed Montana authorJames Welch with abackdrop of original artinspired by his poetry. (Seerelated story.)

At the Dana Gallery,local authors andmusicians with Missoulachamber-folk groupStellarondo will performsurrounded by the venue’sannual “Young Guns”show, which highlightsyoung painters.

At the Roxy Theatre,photographer Steve Gnamwill discuss “Crown of theContinent,” a book thatpairs his images of GlacierNational Park with essays

by local residents.Former Missoulian

reporter Joe Nickell willpresent his book, “TaintedRevelations: The Art of BillOhrmann,” at Fact andFiction.

“I think it’s a really goodmix of different genres andkinds of presentations,”Anderson said. For acomplete schedule, go tohumanitiesmontana.org.

The third annualFestival Poetry Slam willclose out the evening atStage 112, hosted by TahjKjelland.

On Saturday, Oct. 11,the festival will reconveneat the Holiday InnDowntown for a slew ofpanels for readers of anyinterest, whether it’s tipsfrom local romance authorDanica Winters on gettingyour name in print; how toedit an anthology; or sageadvice on how veteranauthors develop their

personal narratives into amemoir.

Anderson said thedefining factor each year isnew work and trends in thepublishing industry.

“Last year, we had thisnew partnership withChristian romance writers.It wasn’t really a world Iknew much about,”Anderson said.

Authors from the regionwho’ve all released newbooks in the past year tostrong reviews will sitdown for a panel called“West With A Twist: ADiscussion of WesternNovels.” They includeMalcolm Brooks, DavidAllan Cates, Pete Fromm,Bruce Holbert and CarrieLaSeur.

This year, they’readding a surreal, loopingtheatrical installation byMissoula artist TheoEllsworth and writer JoshWagner. (The piecepremiered at the Zootown

Fringe Festival in the fall,and also has anaccompanying graphicnovel.)

“We’re always trying tolook for ways we canconnect people with thewritten word,” Andersonsaid, seeking a variety thatavoids the talking headformat.

The festival’s galareading will be held asalways at the WilmaTheatre.

With a “fast-moving,”celebratory atmosphere,authors Brooks, Fromm,Rick Bass, David JamesDuncan, Tami Haaland,Walter Kirn, WilliamKittredge and AnnickSmith will take the stagefor a celebration ofWestern literature anddiscuss what it means tothem.

Stellarondo will serve ashouse band, helping tomark the 15th anniversary

of the event.Some of those authors

were there for the firstFestival of the Book.

While literary festivalswere a relatively newconcept, Anderson saidthey had quite a turnout:3,000 over the course oftwo days.

Thursday, Oct. 9,schedule

All events are free.1 p.m.Montgomery Distillery,

129 W. Front St.: “How toWrite Your Best Book”writing workshop withDanica Winters. FeaturingWendelin Van Draanen,multi-award-winning

author of more than 30books, and Mark HuntleyParsons, author of “RoadRash,” a young adultadventure about a band onthe road.

5:30 p.m.Fact & Fiction, 220 N.

Higgins Ave.: “He Said,She Said Tour,” withWendelin Van Draanen andMark Huntley Parsons.

6 p.m.Top Hat Lounge, 145 W.

Front St.: Tell UsSomething. At thisstorytelling event, 11 localresidents have 10 minutesto share a true story frommemory based upon thetheme, “The Things WeCarry.”

PURPLE POMEGRANATE, 222 Central Ave., Whitefish, (406)862-7227, purplepomegranate.com: InOctober: “Totem,” a juried fiber artexhibition.

RADIUS GALLERY, 114 E. Main St.,541-7070, radiusgallery.com: ThroughNov. 16: “Wind & Bones,” an“interartistic tribute to James Welch”.First Friday opening Oct. 3. Hours:Wednesday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-6 p.m.

SANDPIPER GALLERY,306 Main St., Polson, (406) 883-5956,sandpiperartgallery.com: ThroughNov. 7, “Man and Beast”. Openingreception, Oct. 3, 5-7 p.m.

STUMPTOWN STUDIO,145 Central Ave., (406) 862-5929,stumptownstudio.org: Through Nov.3: “Dia de Los Muertos,” Day of theDead exhibit.

UNIVERSITY CENTER GALLERY,University Center, UM, 243-5564,umt.edu/uc/ucg: In October:“Unknowing” works by Dave Tarulloand Michael Workman.

UPCYCLED, 517 S. Higgins Ave.,239-2538: First Friday, Oct. 3,featuring Jenna Nord of First EmbracePhotography.

ART ON VIEWBERNICE’S BAKERY, 190 S. ThirdSt. W., 728-1358: Featured “OddSocks,” oil expressionism by BrockElam.

BETTY’S DIVINE, 521 S. Higgins Ave.,721-4477: First Friday, Oct 3, 5-8 p.m.,featuring “Up and down, over, under,this way and that,” artwork of the

Primrose Montessori School children.Bluegrass music by Jon Schick, 6:30 p.m.

NUTRITIONAL LABS EAST WALL,1001 S. Third St. W., along theBitterroot Spur Trail: unveiling ofWillard Alternative High School’smural “Flourishing,” Oct. 3, 5-7 p.m.

BRIDGE PIZZA, 600 S. Higgins Ave.,542-0002: Jay Rummel’s trilogy ofprints, “Lady from Missoula County,”“Road to the Buffalo” and “When FirstUnto Came to this Country.” MonteDolack’s original movie posters circa1973.

BUTTERFLY HERBS, 232 N. HigginsAve., 728-8780: In October: paintingsby Aaron Barcus.

CARAS NURSERY ANDLANDSCAPE, 2727 S. Third St. W. ,543-3333: Through Oct. 15: The 10thannual Outdoor Sculpture Show.

CHILDREN’S MUSEUMMISSOULA, 225 W. Front St., 541-7529, childrensmuseummissoula.org.:First Friday, Oct. 3, 5-7 p.m., featuringwork by Peaceful Heart Preschool.

INNER WISDOM HYPNOTHERAPY,127 N. Higgins Suite 307B, 544-2496,innerwisdommissoula.com: FirstFriday, Oct. 3, 508 p.m.: “Art,Bluegrass and Hypnosis.” Artist JayArellano combines sacred geometrywith gothic renaissance and modernthemes.

MISSOULA MERCANTILEBUILDING, southwest corner: FirstFriday Artwalk Oct. 3, 5-8 p.m.Featuring “Rapunzel,” a three-storymulti-colored soft sculpture by fabricartist Amanda Browder.

ZOOTOWN ARTS COMMUNITYCENTER, 235 N. First St. W.,549-7555, zootownarts.org: Galleryopening, Oct. 3, 5-7:30 p.m. featuring“Facts About Made-Up Monsters” by9-year-old Asa Smetanka plus artistsinclude Patricia Thornton, Josh Quick,Jon Richter, Joanna Smetanka, AndySmetanka, Jazmine Penelope, KiaLiszak, Cindy Laundrie Marshall, TheoEllsworth, Amy Pedersen, EricPedersen, and more, and Oct. 10, 5:30-8:30 p.m. featuring Festival of theDead Group Art show. Hours 11 a.m. to6 p.m., Monday through Saturday.

“Trio,” a show by Pat Zentz, is at the Missoula Art Mueseum fromOct. 17-March 28.

FROM PAGE E1

BookContinued

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 – E7

FROM PAGE E5

GalleriesContinued

“Tribute,” recent works on paper utilizing printmaking and mixedmedia techniques by Bev Beck Glueckert is at The Artists’ Shop.

Amanda Browder’s “End ofthe Infinite,” will be in the MeloyGallery at the Montana Museum of Art and Culture from Oct. 16-Jan. 10,

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STARTING THIS WEEK“Annabelle” not yetreviewed – A young couplewith a new baby learn that avintage doll in their home has ademon attached to it. WithAnnabelle Wallis, Ward Hortonand Alfre Woodard. Written byGary Dauberman. Directed byJohn Leonetti. Rated R. 95 min.

“Gone Girl” ★★★1/2 – Seereview above.

“Left Behind” not yetreviewed – When millions ofChristians are transported toheaven in the Rapture and therest of the world is plunged intochaos, a pilot tries to save hishysterical passengers and getback to his family. With NicolasCage, Chad Michael Murray andCassi Thomson. Written by PaulLalonde and John Patus.Directed by Vic Armstrong.Rated PG-13. 110 min.

AT THE ROXYFriday-Sunday

“Walking the Camino: 6Ways to Santiago” ★★★★ –A profile of six pilgrims takingthe Camino De Santiagopilgrimage in Spain. DirectorLydia Smith will conduct Q&Asafter both screenings. Unrated.84 min.

“Dancing in Jaffa” ★★★★ –In this documentary, renownedballroom dancer Pierre Dulainetakes his program, DancingClassrooms, back to his city ofbirth, Jaffa, to teach Jewish andPalestinian Israelis to dance andcompete together. With PierreDulaine, Yvonne Marceau, AlaaBubali. Written by Philip Shaneand Hilla Medalia. Directed byHilla Medalia. Unrated. 90 min.

“Dona Flor and Her TwoHusbands” not reviewed –In a small city of Brazil, Flor (avery good looking woman)marries Vadinho, a veryhandsome and erotic man. Oncemarried, she finds he is a good-for-nothing. With Sonia Braga,José Wilker, Mauro Mendonça.Written by Jorge Amado (novel),Bruno Barreto. Directed byBruno Barreto. Rated R.110 min.

“Castle in the Sky” ★★★★– A young boy and a girl with amagic crystal must race againstpirates and foreign agents in asearch for a legendary floatingcastle. With Anna Paquin,James Van Der Beek, ClorisLeachman. Written anddirected by Hayao Miyazaki.Rated PG. 124 min.

“Nausicaä of the Valley ofthe Wind” – The Roxy isscreening a Hayao Miyazakiretrospective every Wednesdaythrough October. Centuriesafter war has devastated theEarth, Princess Nausicaa leadsthe people of the Valley of theWind. Feuding clans fight withplanes and tanks as well asswords in a world that is bothprimitive and futuristic. Inaddition to her people’sconflicts with other factions,Nausicaa must also contendwith the insects of the jungleincluding the Ohmu, a race ofgiant, intelligent bugs thatpoisons the surroundingatmosphere – and is spreadingrapidly. Voices by AllisonLohman, Patrick Stewart andUma Thurman. 1984,Japan/USA, 117 min.

“The Zero Theorem” ★★ –An eccentric, reclusivecomputer genius works on amysterious project to discoverthe meaning of life – or thecomplete lack of one. WithChristoph Waltz, Lucas Hedges,Mélanie Thierry. Written by PatRushin. Directed by TerryGilliam. Rated R. 107 min.

CONTINUING“A Most Wanted Man”★★★★ – A Chechen Muslimillegally immigrates toHamburg, where he gets caughtin the international war onterror. The film, based on a Johnle Carré novel, features of thelast lead performances by thelate Philip Seymour Hoffman asa gruff, weary Germany agent.With Rachel McAdams, DanielBruhl. Screenplay written byAndrew Bovell. Rated R. 122min.

“A Walk Among theTombstones” ★★1/2 – Aformer NYPD cop working as an

unlicensed private investigatorreluctantly agrees to help aheroin trafficker hunt down themen who kidnapped andbrutally murdered his wife.With Liam Neeson, Dan Stevensand David Harbour. Written anddirected by Scott Frank. RatedR. 114 min.

“The Boxtrolls” ★★★ – Ananimated movie about anorphan who is raised bymischievous undergroundcreatures and must protectthem from the town villain.With the voices of IsaacHempstead-Wright, BenKingsley and Elle Fanning.Written by Irena Brignull andAdam Pava. Directed byAnthony Stacchi and GrahamAnnable. In 3-D. Rated PG.96 min.

“Boyhood” ★★★★ – Writer-director Richard Linklatercouldn’t have known where 12years of shooting this storywould lead, following a boy andhis family across time. But weare blessed that he did, becauseit has resulted in anextraordinarily intimate portraitof a life unfolding and anexceptional, unconventionalfilm in which not much elseoccurs. (Betsy Sharkey, LAT).With Ellar Coltrane, PatriciaArquette, Ethan Hawke andLorelei Linklater. Directed byRichard Linklater. Rated R. 165min.

“Dolphin Tale 2” ★★★ – Aboy who helped rescue andrehabilitate an injured dolphintries to find her a companion soshe can stay at the localaquarium. With NathanGamble, Harry Connick Jr. andMorgan Freeman. Written anddirected by Charles MartinSmith. Rated PG. 100 min.

“The Equalizer” ★★1/2 – Adisillusioned former black-opsagent looking to put his darkpast behind him comes out ofretirement to save a young girlfrom ruthless Russiangangsters. With DenzelWashington, Chloe GraceMoretz and Marton Csokas.Written by Richard Wenk.Directed by Antoine Fuqua. InImax. Rated R. 128 min.

“The Giver” ★★ – In aseemingly utopian societymarked by contentment andconformity, a young man isselected to be the new Receiverof Memory, the lone person inhis community who carries theknowledge of the old world.With Brenton Thwaites, JeffBridges and Meryl Streep.Written by Michael Mitnick.Directed by Phillip Noyce. RatedPG-13. 89 min.

“Guardians of the Galaxy”★★★★ – After stealing amysterious orb coveted by anintergalactic villain, a brashadventurer teams with a motleycrew of alien outlaws to surviveand save the universe in thismovie based on the Marvelcomic book. With Chris Pratt,Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista andBradley Cooper. Written anddirected by James Gunn. In 3-D

and Imax. Rated PG-13. 121 min.

“The Maze Runner”★★★1/2 – In a post-apocalyptic future, an amnesiacteen wakes up trapped in amassive maze with a group of

‘GONE GIRL’★★★Cast: Ben Affleck,Rosamund Pike, CarrieCoon, Kim Dickens, NeilPatrick Harris, Tyler PerryDirected by DavidFincher, written by GillianFlynn, based on her novel. Rating: R for a scene ofbloody violence, somestrong sexualcontent/nudity, andlanguageRun time: 149 minutes

By ROGER MOOREMcClatchy-Tribune

“Gone Girl” isDavid “Zodiac”Fincher’s

seriously twisted, twisty-turny adaptation of GillianFlynn’s novel about ahusband accused of killinghis wife, first by theoutrage engine known ascable news, and then bythe cops.

But that’s only

ostensibly what it’s about.As Nick Dunne’s famouscriminal attorney (TylerPerry) counsels him, “Thiscase is about what peoplethink of you.” CastingMissi Pyle as a shrill, rush-to-judgment shrew in theNancy Grace mold kind ofunderlines that BigMessage.

But this absurdly long,occasionally miscastmystery thriller lacksmuch mystery. Its bigreveal comes at thehalfway mark. The furthertwists and competingnarratives about whatmight have reallyhappened unravel ratherthan unfold. And that BigMessage masks somethingdecidedly more cynical.

Entertaining enough.But one of Fincher’sfinest? Not by a Missourimile.

Ben Affleck playsDunne, a guy who dropsinto his small townMissouri bar, has a flirty

chat with the cute barmaid(Carrie Coon) and comeshome to discover his rich,beautiful wife is missing.Nick is confused,concerned. Scared witless?Desperate? Not in theleast. The rumpleddetective on his case (KimDickens) picks up on this.So do we.

There are blood stains.There was an affair. As themissing wife, Amy(Rosamund Pike) narrates,theirs was a marriage introuble. Amy, reading fromher diary, says “I feel likeI’m something to bejettisoned, if necessary.”

But all is not what itseems. Nick’s barmaid palturns out to be his twinsister. He tries to actguileless, is slow to hire anattorney. The coupletreated each anniversary asa puzzle, a treasure huntwith clues. Amy left those“Clue” couplets, inenvelopes all around theirworld, and Nick is frantic

to recover them before thecops do. Why?

His in-laws (Lisa Banes,David Clennon), quick tomobilize search partiesand media coverage for thegirl they named “AmazingAmy” in a series of kid-litbest sellers, wonder abouthis behavior. He’s just notdistraught enough.

And in flashbacks, wesee the flirtation that led toa relationship, theadorable date at the bakerytaking its sugar delivery(clouds of sugary powderfill the night air aroundthem), the male wishfulfillment fantasy sexthey have in bookstoresand the like. But hints oftrouble are there, andthose might explain Nick’sdisconnect from thekidnapping.

Pike, unutterablygorgeous, is just brittleenough in the flashbacksto make us fuzzy on whatmay have led to whateverhas befallen her. Affleck

looks...guilty. Which is allthat’s required.

Neil Patrick Harris ismiscast as a cliched richbeau from long ago, Perryplays a version of a lawyerwho might appear in oneof his own films — aperfectly-coiffed, sing-my-own-praisesshowboat.

“Elvis is IN Missouri,”he announces, a celebritylawyer taking a case that’sbecome a nationalsensation.

The actors don’t sell therift that pulled at thiscouple, and in giving uphis revelations so willingly,Fincher suggests he’smaking a commentary onmodern relationships andmarriage. By the time hepulls out all the stops forthe never-ending finale,he’s flirting withmisogyny.

It’s good, but we’vecome to expect more fromthe guy who gave us “FightClub” and “The Social

Network.” This is more ona par with “Girl with theDragon Tattoo.” Thecalculated shocks feel likea movie we’ve seen before,though at least in this case,that’s not true.

E8 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

ENTERTAINER

MOVIES

‘Gone Girl’ gives up its surprises to comment on modern marriage

THIS WEEK’S FLICKS

See FLICKS, Page E9

20th Century Fox

“Gone Girl” is DavidFincher’s seriously twisted, twisty-turny adaptation of Gillian Flynn’s novel about a husband accused of killing his wife, first by the outrage engine known as cablenews, and then by the cops.

missoulian.com

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achieve before Donovanjoined.

He’s a gear aficionado,with enoughqualifications to prove it.He runs an effects blogcalled EffectsBay.com.The accompanyingTwitter account has28,000 followers.Sometimes he builds hisown pedals. He startedmaking his own heavy-duty instrument cables toget the sound he wanted, ahobby that grew into afull-fledged business,

Rattlesnake Cable Co.He previously played in

a handful of Missoulagroups, including Pollen,HyperLopro and ameticulously rehearsedCure cover project.

The addition of asecond guitarist allowsthem to double the soundin minor-key rippers like“Alakali Flats,” which runsa descending, minor-keychord progressionthrough loud-quiet-loudsections and theoccasional outbreak of

“ear-knife” guitar noise –Harber’s nickname for aparticular frequency ofdistortion.

“Jealous Amounts,” atrack Pollington cited asone the record’s best,splits the differencebetween those mellowinterludes and the loud,noisier guitar work. Itplays to both Harber andPollington’s vocalstrengths – his a calm,nearly speaking voice inthe verse, and hers amelodic wail during thechorus with a touch of asneer.

It neatly encapsulatesup one of Harber’sbreakdowns of theMagpies’ sound: louddrummers, guitar ruckus,melodic vocals.

The five-state run was abit of a warm-up for therecording, the Magpies’fourth full-length releasesince 2007, when Harberstarted the band with hiswife, SamanthaPollington, who plays bassand splits the vocal duties.

They recorded the 10 tracks a week after theyreturned, at Black NationalRecording Studios withChris Baumann. It was cutlive, with Harber,Pollington, lead guitaristHank Donovan anddrummer Jamie Rogers allin the same room.

The lean, 44-minutealbum balances the band’sinterests: heavily distortedguitar work that hearkensto Dinosaur Jr. and SonicYouth, contrasted withanthemic, catchy melodiesin Harber and Pollington’svocal lines.

They recorded it in lessthan a week, keeping thetinkering with guitarsounds to a minimum.

“I think we wanted tomake sure it sounded likeus and the way we playlive. A lot of it was firsttake, no overdubs,”Donovan said.

A few of the songs havebeen re-recorded,including “Buttercup,”from their 2009 album“Pica, Pica.” A staple oftheir live shows, it’s nowalmost doubled in runningtime, with a lengthy build-and-release instrumentalsection at the end.

“It grew up,” asDonovan put it. Or asHarber said, “It’s waydifferent. It’s way better.“

It begins as a slow,distorted ballad and soonshifts into a sea of noisy,melodic guitar. There wereno extra guitar tracksadded, it’s just a routinethey developed live. Likethe rest of the record, itsounds like the work of atight band that’s taken it’sshow on the road multipletimes in the past 12 months.They can switch on a dime,or let a theme build at anatural pace.

“That one makes mesmile because there are nooverdubs, and it soundsfrickin’ huge,” Donovansaid.

The give-and-takebetween the guitars is adynamic they couldn’t

other boys and has to find away to escape. With DylanO’Brien, Kaya Scodelario andAml Ameen. Written by NoahOppenheim, Grant PierceMyers and T.S. Nowlin.Directed by Wes Ball. RatedPG-13. 113 min.

“Teenage Mutant NinjaTurtles” ★1/2 – Fouranthropomorphic turtlestrained in martial arts team up

with a fearless reporter and herwisecracking cameraman tosave New York City from thevillain Shredder and hishenchmen, the Foot Clan. WithMegan Fox, Will Arnett,William Fichtner and K. ToddFreeman. Written by JoshAppelbaum, Andre Nemec andEvan Daugherty. Directed byJonathan Liebesman. RatedPG-13. 101 min.

“This Is Where I LeaveYou” ★★ – When their fatherdies, four adult siblings areforced to return to theirchildhood home and live under

the same roof for a week withtheir oversharing mother andan assortment of spouses andexes. With Jason Bateman, TinaFey and Adam Driver. Writtenby Jonathan Tropper. Directedby Shawn Levy. Rated R.104 min.

“The Trip to Italy” ★★★1/2– One fascination of directorMichael Winterbottom’sbreezy culinary road trip withSteve Coogan and Rob Brydonis the way the male ego getsskewered in the pair’sexchanges. The film isessentially a running gag on the

competitive urge as Cooganand Brydon try to outdo eachother’s Michael Caineimpression, struggle to appearhappy at one man’s success orsuppress a certain satisfactionat another’s failure. Along theway, the pair sample the localcuisine, search out the spotsthat inspired British Romanticpoets Shelley and Byron, andcontemplate modern life andmiddle age. (B.S., LAT). NR.115 minutes.

Compiled by the Missoulianfrom the Los Angeles Timesand wire services.

Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014 – E9

ENTERTAINER

FROM PAGE E8

ACROSS1. It gave an NC-17 ratingto the 2006 documentary“This Film Is Not YetRated”5. “Stop right there!”11. Rose of Guns N’ Roses14. X-ray units15. James who was on thecover of Sports Illustratedwhile still in high school16. “____-Choo!”(children’s book about alamb with a bad cold)17. “Impression, Sunrise”painter19. Invoice fig.20. Pants part21. Actor McGregor22. Yours, in Paris23. Fingers24. Uproar28. Gives a stage cue30. Workout pioneer Jack31. Harmony32. Where heroes aremade33. Some sports cars34. Shakespeare characterwho asks “Am I that name,Iago?”39. Australian boot brand42. Bump off43. Not definite47. Like some legalservices49. Colts’ home beforeLucas Oil Stadium52. Junior programmers,slangily54. Surgery sites, for short55. Boot56. 2014 TV retiree57. Kobe Bryant’s team, onscoreboards58. Jungle swinger59. 1988 INXS hit .. or whatto look for in 17-, 24-, 34-and 52-Across63. “There is no ____except stupidity”: OscarWilde64. Treatment center65. “Be that ____ may ...”66. Koppel or Kennedy

67. Sheets and such68. Conductance units

DOWN1. 1969 Peter O’Toole titlerole2. Ginger ale type3. “Born Free” author Joy4. Sch. with a Phoenixcampus5. Attacked suddenly6. Staffs up again7. Treasury offering duringWWII8. Suffix with east or west9. Orange “Sesame Street”Muppet10. “The Lord of the Rings”creature11. Dying down12. Unknown quantity13. California daily, forshort18. He played Tonto in2013’s “The Lone Ranger”22. “Ugly Betty” actressOrtiz25. Kind of sch.26. Opposite of bueno27. Lena of “Chocolat”29. 1,400, to Caesar32. Place to play videogames35. Ancient kingdom nearthe Dead Sea36. Prefix with gram37. Singer Celine38. First ____39. From Los Angeles toSan Francisco, e.g.40. Rock band follower41. Gift from above44. Daft45. Its range is 88-108MHz46. “We totally should!”48. “Wanna ____?”49. Land, as a fish50. Jaded ones51. John Irving’s “____ ofthe Circus”53. Oscar winner for “AFish Called Wanda”59. MCCC halved60. Clint : the Good :: ____: the Ugly61. Sportscaster Scully62. Cooke of soul

‘Devil’BByy DDAAVVIIDD LLEEVVIINNSSOONN WWIILLKK

ANSWER ON PAGE E2

STARTING FRIDAY

FlicksContinued

FROM PAGE E3

MagpiesContinued

MISSOULAn Carmike 12, 541-7469

“Annabelle”“Gone Girl”

“The Equalizer”“The Boxtrolls”

“The Maze Runner”“A Walk Among the Tombstones”

“This is Where I Leave You”“Dolphin Tale 2”

“Guardians of the Galaxy”

n Roxy Theater, 728-9380Friday-Sunday

“Walking the Camino: 6 Ways toSantiago,” 5 and 7 p.m.

“The Zero Theorem,” 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.

Sunday:“Nausicaa of the Valley

of the Wind,” 4 p.m. “Dancing in Jaffa,” 5 p.m.

TuesdayNational Theatre Live: “A Streetcar

Named Desire,” 7 p.m.Wednesday:

The 1491s Native American

comedy troupe, 7 p.m. “Dona Flor & Her Two Husbands,”

7 p.m. “Castle in the Sky,” 8 p.m.

n Wilma, 728-2521“A Most Wanted Man”

“Boyhood”“The Trip to Italy”

HAMILTONn Pharaohplex, 961-3456

“Annebelle”“Gone Girl”

“Left Behind”“The Boxtrolls

“The Equalizer”“The Maze Runner”

KALISPELLn Stadium 14 Cinema, 752-

7800“Annebelle”“Gone Girl”

“Left Behind”“The Equalizer”“The Boxtrolls”

“The Maze Runner”“A Walk Among the Tombstones”

“This is Where I Leave You”“The Drop”

“Dolphin Tale 2”“The Giver”

“Guardians of the Galaxy”

POLSONn Showboat, 883-5606

“The Boxtrolls”“Gone Girl”

RONANn Entertainer, 676-4496

“Annabelle”Native American film series, “TheCherokee Word for Water,” 1 p.m.

Saturday only

WHITEFISHn Mountain Cinemas, 862-3130

“The Equalizer”“The Boxtrolls”

“The Maze Runner”“Gone Girl”

The Magpies will hold an album releaseparty for “Tornado” on Friday, Oct. 3, at theReal Lounge, 112 Pattee St. Also performing arelocal rock bands Boys and MASS FM. The freeshow starts at 9 p.m.

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MILKSHAKES

FRIDAY, OCT. 3DARK HORSE, 1805 RegentSt.: Walking Corpse Syndrome,Arctodus and Ironwood, 8 p.m.,$5

EAGLES, 2420 South Ave.:Flood, 8 p.m.-1 a.m.

NINEPIPES LODGE &ALLENTOWN RESTAURANTAND BAR, U.S. Highway 93,outside Ronan: Montana DarkHorse Band, 8:30 p.m

REAL LOUNGE, 112 Pattee St.:Magpies album release partywith Boys and MASS FM,9 p.m., free.

STAGE 112, 112 Pattee St.:Montana native and Nashvillesinger Ira Wolf with Zack Josephand Gil and the Spills, 9 p.m.,$3.

SUNRISE SALOON,1101 Strand Ave.: Seattle’s TheOlson Brothers, 9:30 p.m.

TEN SPOON VINEYARD,4175 Rattlesnake Drive: TheCaptain Wilson Conspiracy,6-8:30 p.m.

TOP HAT, 134 W. Front St.:Family Friendly Friday, 6 p.m.,no cover, all ages; J Boog withHot Rain, 10 p.m., $12/$15, ages18 and older.

UNION CLUB, 208 E. MainSt.: Irish music session,6-9 p.m.; Three Eared Dog,9:30 p.m., no cover

SATURDAY, OCT. 4DARK HORSE, 1805 RegentSt.: Rage Against the Machinetribute act Guerrilla Radio, withguests Cain and Fable and RedCarpet Devils, 8 p.m., $5

DRAUGHT WORKS, 915 TooleAve.: Customer appreciationday, noon-9 p.m. with free foodand music by Red Onion Purple,5-8 p.m.

EAGLES, 2420 South Ave.:Flood, 8 p.m.-1 a.m.

STAGE 112, 112 Pattee St:Missoula Zoo Grass with Taarkaand Moonshine 6 p.m., 18 andup, $10.

SUNRISE SALOON,

1101 Strand Ave.: Seattle’s TheOlson Brothers, 9:30 p.m.

TOP HAT, 134 W. Front St.:The Dirty Sexy Chocolate show,7:30 p.m., $150 reserved tablesof six, $28 reserved, $20general, $15 student/teacher.

UNION CLUB, 208 E. MainSt.: Gladys Friday, 9:30 p.m.,no cover.

SUNDAY, OCT. 5THE BADLANDER,208 Ryman St.: The CaptainWilson Conspiracy, 8 p.m.-midnight.

DRAUGHT WORKS, 915 TooleAve.: The Captain WilsonConspiracy, 5-7 p.m.

RIVER’S EDGE, Alberton:Montana Old Time FiddlersAssociation, 1-5 p.m.

MONDAY, OCT. 6THE RED BIRD, 111 N. HigginsAve.: The Captain WilsonConspiracy with Steve Kalling,DR Harsell and Keaton Wilson.

TUESDAY, OCT. 7STAGE 112, 112 Pattee St.:Singer/songwriter showcase.

TOP HAT, 134 W. Front St.:Picking circle, 6 p.m., no cover,all ages; Lochwood, 8 p.m.,no cover, ages 21 and older.

SUNRISE SALOON, 1101 Strand Ave.: Eric Barrera,9 p.m.

WHEAT MONTANA, 2520 S.Third St. W.: Kids in Bluegrassand the Black Mountain Boys,5:30-8 p.m., no cover.

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8THE BADLANDER, 208 Ryman St.: Rubblebucketwith Body Language, 8 p.m.,$12/$14.

DEANO’S, 5318 W. HarrierDrive: Evan Disney presents livemusic, comedy and magic,7-9 p.m., $7, $12 for ages 18-20includes appetizers.

DRAUGHT WORKS, 915 TooleAve.: The Captain WilsonConspiracy, 5-7 p.m.

TOP HAT, 134 W. Front St.: The Captain Wilson Conspiracy,7 p.m., no cover

THURSDAY, OCT. 9DRAUGHT WORKS, 915 TooleAve.: Carla Green Trio, 6-8 p.m.

LAKE BAR, U.S. Highway 93,Polson: Lil Gladys Band, 8 p.m.

SUNRISE SALOON,1101 Strand Ave.: 406, 9 p.m.

UNION CLUB, 208 E. MainSt.: Mary Place and Blue Moon,5:30-8 p.m.

SOUNDCHECK Live music in western Montana clubs

E10 – Missoulian, Friday, October 3, 2014

ENTERTAINER

PopMatters.com

Thom Yorke“Tomorrow’s

Modern Boxes”

Tomorrow’s ModernBoxes,” which sportsangular geometry in itsvery cover art, isn’t aboutany new technology, evenwith its faux-edgy releasethrough BitTorrent. It’sabout the old questionabout the power andlimitations of our humancontainers. Yet Yorke’smeditations on themodern make “Boxes”thoroughly listenable butuneven. The album’s firsthalf is noticeably morecoherent and accessible

than the challenge andtrouble of the secondmovement. It isn’t entirelyclear if the artist isexhausted with the projector himself in the album’sfinal few tracks. Hisfrustration and impotencebecome ours.

Geoff Nelson

Prince“Art Official Age,”

“Plectrum/Electrum”

While “Art OfficialAge” is assuredly the moremelodically assured of thetwo discs,“Plectrum/Electrum” is attimes way more fun, withPrince unleashing hisiconic guitar skills in a

litany of rockers that call tomind early cult favoriteslike 1979’s “Bambi” beforefalling into a generic popspiral that he never reallyrecovers from. Still, thesetwo new albums arewelcome additions toPrince’s canon, becauseeven with all of thematerial he released afterhis 2004 return to thespotlight, none of themwere as wall-to-wall fun asthese discs are.

Evan Sawdey

Lucinda Williams“Down Where the Spirit

Meets the Bone”This album stands with

Williams’ strongest workand represents that rare

thing in American popularmusic and its culture ofcelebrity: a performer whois comfortable in her ownskin, even if it isn’t, andhasn’t been for some time,the skin of a teenager. Andrare, too, in that this is adeceptively optimisticalbum about embracingone’s place along the longand winding path of life.It’s no coincidence that themost confident andforceful Williams sounds ison the album’s gospel-tinged “Everything But theTruth”: “You gotta makethe most,” she sings “ofwhat equipment you’vegot.” Amen.

Ed Whitelock

Oasis“What’s the Story (MorningGlory)? (Deluxe Edition)”

“(What’s the Story)Morning Glory?” is alandmark album thatneeds little introduction,as its legacy has been self-perpetuating as the yearshave gone by, often cited asa critical favorite whilealso proving to be theOasis album the mostAmericans own as well asbeing the fifth biggest-selling album in the historyof the UK. This deluxeedition does a great job ofrounding up the group’sexcellent B-sides, butgiven how few insights aretruly gained through all of

these bonuses and rarities,only the most devoted ofOasis fans need apply.“Morning Glory’s” legacyis the same as it ever was,but this deluxe editiondoing shockingly little toalter it in any notable way.

Evan Sawdey

Other notablereleases this week:

Blake Shelton –“Bringing Back theSunshine”

Luke Winslow-King –“Everlasting Arms”

Trigger Hippy –“Trigger Hippy”

The Last Bison – “VA”Electric Youth –

“Innerworld”Sea Oleena – “Shallow”

New music this week from: Thom Yorke,Prince, Lucinda Williams and Oasis

Your Missoulian newspaper...only a click away.just $50 per year for subscriberscall today to subscribe 866-839-6397only $100 per year for non-subscribers

MONTANA SENATE RACE

AIRBORNE!

ON THE MOUNTAIN!

In Sunday’s Territory section,you’ll meet an amazing group ofMissoula aerialists and dancerswhose artistry literally takes flight.

In Sunday’s Missoulian, we’llbegin a series of profiles of thecandidates for Montana’s openU.S. Senate seat. We’ll begin withnewcomer Amanda Curtis.

Once Missoula’s old-fashioned,kid-friendly ski hill, MarshallMountain has struggled in recentyears. But plans are afoot for abusy new future for the backyardvenue, and we’ll have all thedetails in Sunday’s Missoulian.

Don’t miss out on this week’s

We’re on the road again this weekendwith the Griz football team, this time atNorth Dakota. Watch for live coverageand commentary Saturday on Missoulian.com, and a full complement of stories,photos, stats and features in Sunday’sSports section of the Missoulian.

Every minute. Every day.

missoulian.com

ROAD TRIP!

Thankstothe for6engagingYearsofFirstFridaysatMAM.

CROSSING THE RIVER:HMONG STORY CLOTHS

AnonymousHmong textile artist, FleeingLaos, appliquéandembroidery, ca. 1977.

OCTOBER 3First Friday //5-8 PM //FreeGallery Talk: SusanMiller // 7 PMSusan Miller is a scholar of textiles from around the world, andclose friend of Missoula’s Hmong community. She lovinglycollected Hmong textiles with gorgeous embroidery, appliqué,and other masterfully applied techniques.

335N. Pattee //missoulaartmuseum.org //Tuesday - Saturday 10AM -5PM

free expression. free admission.

Enjoy music from the talent pool at and local foodcarts at First Fridays.

THE RIFF REPORT