Coloradoan 051714

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QUEEN OF THE HIGH JUMP

YOUR HOME • D1

GARDENER TAKES A XERISCAPE JOURNEY

Poudre’s Paul wins for third year in row » Sports • C1

MAN CHARGED IN CALIFORNIA FIRE PAGE B1

SATURDAY

May 17, 2014

www.coloradoan.com

COUNTY’S JOBLESS RATE FALLS TO 5-YEAR LOW By Pat Ferrier

LARIMER COUNTY UNEMPLOYMENT

PatFerrier@coloradoan.com

Larimer County’s unemployment rate dropped to 4.4 percent in April, the lowest it’s been since October 2008, according to a new jobs report released Friday by the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment. The rate, which was seasonally adjusted, dropped a full percentage point from March and nearly a full point compared to April 2013. “It’s a sign of a rebounding economy and growth in certain sectors that have been driving the economy for the past six to 12 months,” said Jacob Castillo, economic develSee JOBLESS, Page A6

Larimer County’s unemployment rate fell to 4.4 percent in April, the lowest rate since October 2008. Construction and health care are adding jobs. AP FILE PHOTO

April 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

Key VA health official departs under fire

BBB LAUNCHES REVIEW PROGRAM FOR CHARITIES

Rate 4.4 percent 5.3 6.2 6.8 7.3 7.0 3.7 3.0 4.0 4.4 4.6 5.1 4.7 2.6 2.3

Source: Colorado Department of Labor and Employment

BUSINESS » The Better Business Bureau charity review program will put nonprofits to the test. » Page A10

By Rob O’Dell and Dan Nowicki

DYING WOMAN TO PARTICIPATE IN CSU CEREMONY

The Arizona Republic

The second in command at the Department of Veterans Affairs left Friday amid the growing controversy over patient wait times and allegations of falsification of records in Fort Collins and elsewhere. However, the departure of Dr. Robert Petzel, the VA’s undersecretary for health, almost immediately created a new controversy: VA Secretary Eric Shinseki said he resigned, but congressional critics Robert said he had anPetzel nounced his 2014 retirement in September. Petzel left just a day after he had joined Shinseki in a contentious hearing before the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee. “Today’s announcement from the VA regarding Undersecretary for Health Robert Petzel’s ‘resignation’ is the pinnacle of disingenuous political doublespeak,” Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., and chairman of the House Committee on Veterans Affairs, said in a statement. “Petzel was already scheduled to retire in 2014 and President Obama has already announced his intention to nominate Petzel’s replacement, so characterizing this as a ‘resignation’ just doesn’t pass the smell test.” VA brass came under fire after whistleblowers instigated an internal investigation of long wait times at VA facilities, including a Fort Collins clinic. The investigation found that VA employees here falsified patient scheduling records to give the impression that veterans were

DAILY DIGEST » Accounting student with advanced breast cancer will participate in commencement ceremonies. Patricia Cudd’s quest to find a home for her dog recently made news. » Page A3

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BED BUG QUICK FACTS

COLORADOAN

TATTOO WITH A LITTLE BITE

‘Bed bug tattoo gun,’ born out of an attempt to better locate blood-suckers, turns heads, some stomachs.

By Madeline Novey MadelineNovey@coloradoan.com

Michael Crespin was awfully relaxed for a guy who had a cluster of blood-hungry bed bugs gnawing at his arm. The Colorado State University student held an upended mason jar to the inside of his left forearm for about 20 min-

utes Thursday morning. From within their glass prison, the tiny insects bit his exposed skin, their pincers darting in and out of openings in a mesh screen stretched across the mouth of the jar. Their feast slowed as their bellies filled, and Crespin ended the feeding to reveal the faint outline of a fish just be-

low the crook of his elbow. He grinned, comparing it with the hardly distinguishable skull and cross bones applied to his right forearm the week before. “It’s funny. There’s actually more pain in holding the jar in place for 20 minutes than them feeding,” he said, adding he’s See TATTOO, Page A9

» Bed bugs are blood-sucking insects that are hard to eradicate. » They don’t care whether people are rich or poor — only that a person is living. People shouldn’t be embarrassed if they find bed bugs in their things or homes, Colorado State University entomologist Terri Randolph says. » When traveling, Randolph recommends people leave their luggage in the hall while doing a search of a hotel or motel room. Look along the mattress, behind pictures and along floorboards for the bed bugs’ excrement, which leaves behind bloody stains. » If you confirm the existence of bed bugs in your home or business, there are a few treatment options: Some companies will administer a cold ice slurry; and there’s traditional chemical treatments. The most effective, CSU entomologist Matt Camper said, is heat treatments, during which a company will raise the temperature in a place to 130 to 140 degrees, killing bed bugs at every stage of life. » Information: http://bit.ly/ bedbugscsu.

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Student Michael Crespin of Fort Collins holds a jar filled with bed bugs against his arm as he gets a bed bug tattoo at the Colorado State University Insectary on Thursday in Fort Collins. On the right is Terri Randolph, a senior research associate who keeps a colony of the bugs in a jar. V. RICHARD HARO/THE


SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

Colorado

EVANS Flooded mobile home parks being cleared

Right-to-try bill set to expand use of experimental drugs DENVER — Frustrated by federal

delays getting experimental medications to terminally ill patients, some states are forging so-called “Right To Try” legislation to allow access to the drugs without federal approval. Colorado is poised to become the first state to enact the proposal when Gov. John Joann Ginal Hickenlooper signs it into law Saturday in Fort Collins. The bill, sponsored by Rep. Joann Ginal, D-Fort Collins, passed unanimously through the Colorado Legislature after emotional testimony from relatives who told harrowing stories of seeking federal permission in vain to access experimental drugs. “When you’re terminal and there’s a drug out there that might help you, it can seem that the obstacles to get that drug are insurmountable,” said Sen. Irene Agui-

lar, a physician who co-sponsored Colorado’s bill. Aguilar dubbed the measure the “Dallas Buyers Club” bill, after the 2013 movie about a determined AIDS patient who smuggled treatments from Mexico because they weren’t cleared for use in the United States. “Right To Try” bills await governors’ signatures in Louisiana and Missouri, and Arizona voters will decide in November whether to set up a similar program in that state. The legislation clears the way for drug companies to provide experimental medications to patients outside of clinical trials. But drugmakers would not be required to do so. Colorado’s bill got a careful nocomment from doctors’ groups, hospitals and health insurers. The bill was amended to clarify that health-care providers and insurers aren’t liable for any adverse effects in a patient who gets access to a drug outside clinical trials and then gets sick or dies. Patients and relatives who support “Right To Try” laws insist they’re willing to accept any

amount of risk to gain access to experimental drugs. Among them is Keith Knapp of Sacramento, California, whose wife, Mikaela Knapp, died last month of a rare form of kidney cancer. The Knapps tried in vain to access investigational drugs through existing “compassionate use” guidelines, which require permission from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. “You just get caught in the bureaucracy of it all,” Keith Knapp said Friday. But critics of “Right to Try” abound. Dr. David Gorski, a surgical oncologist and editor of the blog Science Based Medicine, insists “Right To Try” proposals are simply feel-good measures that won’t help many patients. “These proposals are built on this fantasy that there are all these patients out there that are going to be saved if they could just get access to the medicine,” Gorski said. “In reality, the patients that might be helped are very few, while the number of patients who could be hurt by something like this are many.”

AURORA — The wife of Aurora’s fire

chief could face a felony charge for a hit-and-run crash that injured two children in another car, police said. Adriene Garcia rear ended a sedan stopped at a red light Wednesday night and left the scene, Aurora police said. Her Nissan Pathfinder was found about 20 minutes later. The two children, who weren’t wearing seatbelts inside a Hyundai sedan, were taken to the hospital. Police said one of them suffered a serious injury but is expected to recover. Garcia’s attorney, Danny Foster, said she managed to drive the vehi-

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cle more than a mile before it stalled. She then called her husband, who in turn called 911. “They’re fully cooperating with the investigation,” Foster said. He said Garcia suffered a brain injury several years ago and the family is investigating whether that contributed to the accident. “We’re not quite sure why she was not cognizant of the accident,” Foster said, adding that Garcia is no longer driving pending the investigation. “She has a lot of processing issues. This is not the type of person who would flee the scene and leave her responsibilities at the door.” Police said they expect to recommend a felony careless driving

charge against Garcia. They were also investigating whether to charge the driver of the Hyundai, whom they did not identify, for failing to restrain his children. The Denver area has been plagued by a string of serious hitand-runs in recent years. KUSA-TV reported that 132 people have died in Colorado as a result of hit-andruns since 2008, at least 11 in 2014 alone. Among the more alarming cases was that of a Denver man who drove his friend’s Saab into a crowded bus stop last year. Two young boys were also killed in Denver last year while crossing the street with their mother, a case that remains unsolved.

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The Colorado Bureau of Investigation says DNA test results are inconclusive in efforts to track down the person who left tainted meatballs in a Boulder County Park. Authorities say a chemical that sickened at least three dogs in Gunbarrel is commonly used in pesticides and rodent poisons. Boulder County Animal Control Officers say at least eight meatballs were left in a grassy area of the park. A $4,600 reward is being offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the persons responsible.

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Kathy Jack-Romero, Publisher KathyJack@coloradoan.com (970) 224-7885 Lauren Gustus, Executive Editor LGustus@coloradoan.com (970) 224-7755 INFORMATION CENTER (NEWSROOM) For questions concerning news, or to request a correction on a story, call: Rebecca Powell, Senior Editor for Platforms RebeccaPowell@coloradoan.com (970) 416-3969

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By The Associated Press

At least one person has been injured after an SUV crashed into a Jefferson County school bus near Conifer. Colorado State Patrol spokesman Josh Lewis says the collision happened Friday afternoon just outside Elk Creek Elementary School in western Jefferson County. The driver of the SUV was injured. There were 12 students and the driver on the bus. No one on the bus appeared to be hurt. The name of the school the students attend was not available.

GUNBARREL No suspects found in tainted meatballs case

Fire chief’s wife accused in hit-and-run

Year 141 ~ No. 24

Eric Larsen, Senior Editor for Content EricLarsen@coloradoan.com (970) 224-7745

CONIFER At least 1 injured in school bus accident

CollegeAve

By Kristen Wyatt Associated Press

Two mobile home parks in Evans that were devastated by September’s flood are being cleared. Health officials in February warned that trash, old food, and household cleaning products left behind in the flood debris would cause problems once the weather warmed. But before the cleanup could start,park owners had to figure out how to pay for the work and how they could legally remove the damaged trailers that were owned by their tenants. County health department director Mark Wallace says the owner of the Bella Vista park has removed a “significant” amount of debris. The owner of Eastwood Village has arranged to give away some damaged trailers. It may not be cleared for another two months.

S. Shields

PAGE A2

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FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE A3

READERS REPOND

Hit-and-run consequences

“Why do motorists hit cyclists and pedestrians and run? Because the consequences for running are less than staying. We can stop this in our community. We can send a strong message that it is not OK to hit a fellow human being and leave them on the side of the road as if they were nothing more than a lowly squirrel or rabbit.”

Woman involved in hit-and-run with bicyclist might not serve prison time.

“We’re suffering from the problem that nearly everyone is a driver, and they can see themselves making a ‘mistake’ like this so they don’t want to punish others.”

JENNIFER LANGFORD BROOKS, via Facebook

ERIC CARLSEN, via Facebook

“That is why we are gathering support to set hit-and-run fatalities on cyclists a national agenda on our Legislature. If there is outrage, please join us and read, sign and share our petition.” MARIO GASTELUM, via Facebook

“I’m partially mollified by the fact that she will have a felony on her record which will haunt her for the rest of her life.” AKOLOTU MOELOA, via Facebook

TODAY’S TOP GALLERIES

MOST POPULAR STORIES ON THE WEB

CSU

See more photos from this gallery at Coloradoan.com/ photos

1. Photo gallery: A look back at Poudre Fire Authority

Dying woman to walk at CSU graduation

2. Photo gallery: Track and field state championships

3. Authorities announce sexuallyviolent predator release

4. Bed bug tattoo gun draws attention to CSU entomologists

By Erin Udell ErinUdell@Coloradoan.com

5. Sheriff’s office deploys cameras to curtail panhandling

Two years into her master’s degree studies at Colorado State University, Fort Collins resident Pat Cudd, who is living with terminal cancer, will walk with her classmates during the College of Business’s graduation Saturday. Cudd, 62, made news in April when she went on a mission to find her pit bull mix, Sherlock, a home for after she dies. She adopted Sherlock about two years before being diagnosed with stage 4 breast cancer, which has since spread. The former attorney decided to continue her studies in accounting at CSU after her diagnosis. According to a news release from the university, she’s worked with instructors who have either allowed their classes to be taped or recorded their own special lectures for Cudd to watch on her own time. As of this semester, she hasn’t completed her degree. “This is an honor beyond belief,” Cudd said about her chance to walk at graduation. “This means so very much to me but is also very important for those currently working their way through cancer. The message is this: Never give up hope.” The College of Business’s commencement ceremony will take place at 8 a.m. Saturday at Moby Arena on the CSU campus. It can be live-streamed through the university’s commencement website, with the link going live 15 minutes before each ceremony.

6. Photo gallery: Graduations at CSU

5. Photo gallery: Laboratory opens for business

ONLINE NOW AT COLORADOAN.COM

WHAT GOES ON AT THE BREWERS OLYMPICS? Video: Take a look at the athleticism, style and teamwork: http:// noconow.co/brewersolympics

DISASTER PREPAREDNESS

Forum set on tending animals during disaster

Colorado State University’s Veterinary Teaching Hospital plans a free, all-day workshop for professionals who respond to animals’ needs during disasters. The Animal Disaster Sheltering Exercise will run from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday at The Ranch Events Complex, 5280 Arena Circle, Loveland. Disaster Animal Shelter Education owner Diana Robinson will lead the program designed for supervisory employees in charge of managing animal shelters during a disaster. CSU educators and staff will be among the 35 people helping present the training. Information: Jeff Dodge, (970) 491-4251 or jeff.dodge@colostate.edu.

GERRY HORAK

Meeting with councilman canceled

Graduation begins at CSU Steven Wade has his pins affixed by his father, Maj. Jimmy Wade, retired, left, and cousin, Noah Davis, 9, during the CSU Army ROTC commissioning ceremony Friday during graduation ceremonies at the university. V. RICHARD HARO/THE COLORADOAN

A listening session with Fort Collins City Councilman Gerry Horak scheduled for Saturday has been canceled. Horak’s next listening session is scheduled from 9 to 11 a.m. May 31 at Cups Coffee, 1033 S. Taft Hill Road. Residents are invited to attend sessions with Horak, who is mayor pro tem of the council, to exchange ideas and share their views on the issues facing Fort Collins. — Coloradoan staff

— Coloradoan staff

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PAGE A4

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

Police: Lack of communication led to 911 death Denver woman was killed by her husband 12 minutes into a call to 911; review says officers responded appropriately but dispatcher failed to relay gravity of situation.

By Sadie Gurman Associated Press

DENVER — Denver police officials blame their delayed response to a woman who

was killed 12 minutes into a 911 call on a dispatcher who failed to relay information to officers about the gravity of the situation. An internal review re-

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leased Friday says officers’ response to the woman’s home was reasonable and appropriate, given the limited information the dispatcher gave them. The dispatcher had information from the call-taker that should have been given to the responding officers about the possibility of escalating violence, police Cmdr. Matt Murray said. Unspecified discipline is pending against the dispatcher, police said. Kristine Kirk, 44, plead-

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ed in the 911 call for authorities to hurry and send officers April 14 because her husband had asked her to get a gun and shoot him. She said Richard Kirk, 47, was hallucinating and talking about the end of the world after eating marijuana-infused candy and taking pain pills, according to police reports. As the call continued, she frantically said her husband was getting a gun from a safe. Within a few seconds, the call-taker could hear her

screaming. There was a single gunshot before the line went quiet. Responding officers were unaware of those critical details before they arrived, police said Friday. The 911 call-taker entered notes about them into a computer, but the dispatcher, who passes the information to officers, never aired the details over the radio. She gave them initial information about the call but failed to update them for 13 minutes about the rising threat of violence. An officer only realized the seriousness of the call and summoned backup after looking at the call-taker’s notes on a computer in his squad car, but by then, Kristine Kirk was no longer speaking. Kristine Kirk had clearly indicated that her life was in “imminent danger,” which under new policies enacted since the shooting would have allowed officers to respond with lights and sirens,

Murray said. “Officers were not given verbal information while they were responding to the scene,” he said. “With the policy changes, there would have been a different response.” The new policy, created partly in a response to the killing, also calls for dispatchers to air information over the radio so officers don’t have to look at their computers while driving, among other changes. But it’s impossible to say whether the changes would have saved Kristine Kirk’s life, Murray said. “How many minutes it would have shaved off, we don’t know,” he said. The department continues to investigate whether the dispatcher’s work load and call volume played a role in the delay. Richard Kirk has been charged with first-degree murder. A public defender representing him did not return calls for comment.

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PAGE A6

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

VA

Murawsky has been the network director of the Veterans Integrated Service Network 12 since 2009. Petzel held a similar post as director of VISN 23 from October 2002 to May 2009. Lawmakers on Thursday grilled both Petzel and Shinseki over documents showing that the agency had known for several years about ongoing patient-care delays and VA employees’ efforts to cover up long wait times by gaming the VA scheduling system.

The disclosures in Phoenix created a wave of similar revelations at other VA facilities across the nation, putting Shinseki and his top administrators in the line of political fire. Senators said Thursday that they now have information on problems at VA facilities in at least 10 states — including Colorado, Georgia, Illinois, Texas and Wyoming. Dr. Jeffrey A. Murawsky will fill Petzel’s post, according to a White House announcement made May 1.

Continued from Page A1

receiving care sooner than they were. Whistleblowers in Phoenix have alleged that as many as 40 veterans may have died while awaiting appointments through the Phoenix VA Health Care System. They also have claimed document fraud in reporting wait times at Phoenix facilities.

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who has been critical of Petzel, thinks the undersecretary’s departure is a political move to shift blame on someone who was leaving anyway. Flake said Friday that he had criticized Petzel to Shinseki earlier this month in a telephone call after Petzel said a preliminary review indicated no evidence to support allegations of misconduct at the Phoenix health center. Petzel’s remarks seemed “completely tone-deaf” to the scandal and an ongoing investigation by the VA’s Office of Inspector General, Flake said. “When I talked to Shinseki, I said I thought that his comments were unfortunate because they basically implied that all was clear and there were no problems,” Flake said. “And Shinseki said that I was right, that it was unfortunate, and that he instructed all of his subordinates not to make such statements in the future.” “I could tell that Shinseki was annoyed. That statement by Petzel had given leadership a lot of grief because it basically was preempting the IG report,” Flake said. Sen. Jerry Moran, RKan., a member of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee who has called for Shinseki’s resignation, noted Friday that while Petzel was retiring anyway, Shinseki’s announcement was evidence of dysfunction at the VA. “It is important to note that Undersecretary Petzel was the only VA witness at the Senate VA Committee hearing who admitted knowledge of IG reports. He should not shoulder the blame for VA’s failures,” he said Friday in a written statement.

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opment manager and enterprise zone administrator at the Larimer County Workforce Center. “We’ve seen growth in health care, manufacturing and construction,” he said. But there remains “a portion of the population struggling to find jobs. We see that every day in the Workforce Center,” he said. Larimer County employment grew by more than 1,800 jobs in April, when the labor force reduced by only 16 people. The statistics do not tell how many of those workers who found jobs are underemployed, working part time or have summer jobs. “The unemployment stats paint a sanguine picture of a more robust employment dynamic, but there are still issues we’re addressing,” Castillo said. “We are making sure we’re tackling the issues of the skills gap so employers can find the talent they need at the time they need it and job-seekers have the skills they need to move right in to gainful employment.” Larimer County’s unemployment rate grew steadily during the recession, hitting its peak in January 2010 when the jobless rate hit 8.4 percent. It fluctuated through the first couple of years of the decade but has been on a downward trend since then, dropping below 6 percent in September 2012. Colorado unemployment dropped to 6 percent in April, the lowest level the state has seen since the beginning of the Great Recession. The state labor department said Friday that nearly 14,000 jobs were added between March and April, the 30th straight month of job growth. The leisure and hospitality industry, education and health services added the most jobs. The last time the state’s unemployment rate was 6 percent or less was in November 2008, when it hit 5.7 percent. The Associated Press contributed to this report.


FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE A7

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PAGE A8

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN


FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE A9

Tattoo Continued from Page A1

excited to see “what kind of reaction I get.” No needles or ink were used in the making of this tattoo. This process is perhaps a little more creepy crawly, not to mention temporary. It’s tattooing via bites done in the name of science — but there’s an accompanying aesthetic appeal for those who have gone under the bed bug tattoo gun. CSU entomologist Terri Randolph acquired a bed bug colony several years ago. The idea was to train her beagle, Bob, then 3, to sniff out the pests that stow away in luggage and take up unwelcome residence in homes and hotels. She would first let the tiny crawlers feed off her so they’d smell like a human, and then hide them in vials around her house for Bob to seek out. To Bob, it was a game that yielded treats. To Randolph, it was a way to help people find the hard-to-eradicate insects that don’t care whether their hosts are rich or poor — only that they’re alive. The welts the bugs left on Randolph’s body grew more severe over time; each person has a different physical reaction. So she found willing volunteers, or victims, she jokes, in her colleagues at CSU, who started feeding the bed bugs so Bob’s training could continue. That was in 2009. One day, Randolph and others decided to create a template out of paper they laid over the mesh on the jar. This would force the bed bugs to bite at a person’s skin exposed within a predesignated area. A person’s immune cells will flood into their tissues from the blood, producing redness and swelling — the tattoo. It can take a day or two for the tattoos to really show up on a person’s skin. Bed bugs can’t pass bloodborn diseases to humans. As

A pattern of a fish is placed over a screen on a jar filled with bed bugs Thursday at the Colorado State University Insectary in Fort Collins.

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far as infections go, a person could get one if they were harboring bacteria under their fingernails and scratched at the bug bite tattoo, which can get quite itchy. That’s why Randolph tells people they can’t scratch, as much as they’d like to. Whitney Cranshaw, a professor and entomologist, was the group’s guinea pig. He got the first temporary bed bug tattoo in the shape of a shamrock. Other holidaythemed shapes ensued, including hearts and a bunny for Easter.

That’s what CSU instructor and urban entomologist Matt Camper sported after subjecting himself to the hungry bed bugs. Even though he posted a video of the experience in 2009, it recently caught the attention of people at the show “Outrageous Acts of Science.” The episode featuring CSU aired May 10 , but neither Randolph nor Camper had an opportunity to watch it. “All we know is that we’re No. 8 in ‘Outrageous Acts of Science,’ ” Camper said, laughing.

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PAGE A10

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

BBB launches charity review program

YOUNG PROFESSIONAL A weekly interview with an under-40 professional.

By Sarah Jane Kyle SarahKyle@coloradoan.com

Gordon Seirup is a Loveland entrepreneur and owner of custom website company Copper Leaf Creative. COURTESY OF GORDON SEIRUP

WEB WORK PROVIDES

CREATIVE OUTLET

By Pat Ferrier PatFerrier@coloradoan.com

Question: Explain what you do. Answer: I own and manage a website development company, Copper Leaf Creative, creating custom websites for small- and medium-size businesses. Q: How did you get into the business? A: I’m artistic. I never learned to paint, sculpt or even draw very well. I first started dabbling in Adobe Photoshop in 2000 and applied those skills to working with websites the same year. I launched my first website as a freelancer for a paid client in 2001. I then fell out of the business, got a B.S. in psychology from Colorado State University and found my way back to the industry in 2008 as an employee. I started Front Range Creative in 2008, which then grew into Copper Leaf Creative in 2011. Q: What are the biggest challenges you or your industry face? A: My biggest challenge is achieving the American Dream the hard way — actually bootstrapping a company by delivering a quality product and leveraging those proceeds to grow. We carry virtually no debt and have no investors. We are growing organically, though the pace of that growth can be frustrating and very difficult. Q: What are the biggest rewards of your job? A: What I find most rewarding is the creative outlet. Not having learned any other artistic skill, building websites allows me to cre-

ate, putting things out in the world. Secondarily, I love the social value of growing a team of creative individuals striving toward a common goal and having fun doing it. Finally, being recognized as an expert and valued asset is quite rewarding. Q: What advice do you have for someone else thinking about a career in your field? A: Web development is a big field all by itself — let alone the larger “working with computers” field. Find the aspect of development you love; become a ninja at that; do that; love what you do. Q: What did you want to be when you grew up? A: I truly never had that much foresight. I never saw past 25 until I was 27. Q: Where do you see yourself careerwise in 10 years? A: Owning three or four companies staffed by talented, passionate professionals, managed independently from each other and from me, and always looking for what I’d like to do next. Q: Outside of work, what’s your favorite thing to do and your favorite place to do it? A: Socialize. Wherever the right people are is the right place to be. Q: What role does volunteerism/giving back play in your work or personal life? A: I grew up participating in myriad volunteer opportunities from Boy Scouts to church-related missions. Over the past year, I have gotten more involved with the Mountain View Rotary Club. Also,

GORDON SEIRUP » Age: 29 » Occupation: Entrepreneur, owner of custom website company Copper Leaf Creative » Education: Bachelor of Science in psychology, Colorado State University » Family: Wife, two dogs » Contact information: gordon@ copperleafcreative, (970) 744-8246

Copper Leaf Creative donates Web development and related services to a number of nonprofits. Q: What role does social media play in your business and how do you utilize it? A: Very little. I hop on Facebook a couple of times per month and usually with a specific purpose. Social media is ever-present professionally. Q: Where is your favorite spot in Loveland and why? A: My backyard. My wife and I bought a terribly neglected house with about 32 square feet of grass in the backyard. Now the backyard features a 600-square-foot patio and expansive grass. With the generous help of many friends, we built it all ourselves. Sitting back there watching the world go by is very relaxing and rewarding. Q: What do you do in your leisure time? A: Sail, hike, camp, 4-wheel Q: If you could interview one person in the world, who would that be? A: Sir Richard Branson

Larimer workforce center gears up for young entrepreneur tourney finals By Coloradoan staff

The Larimer County Workforce Center will host its Young Entrepreneur Tournament from noon to 3:30 p.m. Saturday at the Larimer County Courthouse Offices hearing room, 200 W. Oak St., Fort Collins.

The tournament finals are open to the public to attend and feature entrepreneurs younger than age 18 pitching their ideas while competing for a cash prize of $500, according to a release. Development of the ideas during the tournament takes place over five consecutive Saturdays, with this Saturday rep-

resenting the final week. Four finalists were selected to compete in the Blue Ocean Enterprises Challenge Venture Fest in 2015. Learn more at www.larimer workforce.org/yet or contact Andrew Minor at aminor@larimer. org or (970) 619-4653.

The Better Business Bureau serving Northern Colorado and Wyoming launches this month a Center for Nonprofit Excellence and formal charity review program. Carrie Rossman, director of the BBB Institute for Marketplace Trust locally, said the center’s charity review will put nonprofits to the test of 20 stringent standards in four categories: governance and oversight, measuring effectiveness, financials, and fundraising and informational materials. Examples include ensuring a board of directors has no fewer than five voting members, that an organization assesses its performance and effectiveness every two years, that at least 65 percent of total expenses are spent on program activities and that any promotional materials are truthful. “They’re stringent standards but we believe a charity — if they have a quality board and staff — should not find these standards challenging,” Rossman said. “We really view this as a set of best practices. Meeting and working toward (the standards) can put them on a launching pad for collaboration and raising more dollars.” The review is free to nonprofit organizations, which are considered accredited upon completion of the 20 standards. A licensing fee is required for any organization using the BBB seal. Rossman said the fee is variable according to nonprofit size but starts around $150. “That seal is a trust mark,” she said. “It helps their donor know that they’re trustworthy.” Reviewing charities is nothing new to the longstanding organization, which began more than a century ago. Rossman said the newly formed Center for Nonprofit Excellence is one of three programs in the Institute for Marketplace Trust, formerly known as the BBB Foundation. The Center for Fraud Prevention launched last fall. The Center for Character Ethics launched this spring. The Center for Nonprofit Excellence will be formally announced May 29 at the United Way Technical Assistance Partnership Spring Symposium. Sarah Jane Kyle is the Coloradoan reporter covering volunteerism, nonprofit and philanthropy. Follow her on Twitter @sarahjanekyle or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ reportersarahjane.

START THE PROCESS To learn more about becoming an accredited charity and to view the set of standards, visit www.bbb.org/ wyoming-and-northern-colorado/ charities-donors. Call Carrie Rossman at (970) 488-2043 or email crossman @wynco.bbb.org with any questions.

NEWS TIPS Coloradoan business reporter Pat Ferrier covers issues related to the economy, development and growth in Fort Collins. Contact her at (970) 2247742 or email business@coloradoan. com.

Bringing the “WHY” to the conversation. That’s the NEW Coloradoan.

BUSINESS AROUND TOWN

Fat Shack to appear on Travel Channel Late-night diners, get ready for your close-up — the Travel Channel film crew will be at Fort Collins’ Fat Shack on Saturday grabbing footage for “Food Paradise.” The program, featuring must-see food spots across the country, will film at the restaurant at 706 S. College Ave. from 9 p.m. to midnight. Fat Shack — with the motto “late night done right” — specializes in sandwiches and munchies and offers diners the Fat Shack Challenge, to eat three 8-inch sandwiches in 30 minutes.

LOCAL STOCKS OF INTEREST Name

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AT&T Inc NY 1.84 AbbottLab NY .88 AdvEnId Nasd ... AMD NY ... Agilent NY .52 AlcatelLuc NY .18 Alcoa NY .12 ... AlphaNRs NY ARltCapPr Nasd 1.00 Amerigas NY 3.52 ApldMatl Nasd .40 AvagoTch Nasd 1.08 BkofAm NY .04 B iPVix rs NY ... Boeing NY 2.92 BostonSci NY ... BrMySq NY 1.44 Celestic g NY ... ChesEng NY .35 Nasd .76 Cisco NY .04 Citigroup CocaCola NY 1.22 Comcast Nasd .90 ConAgra NY 1.00 Corning NY .40 Danaher NY .40 DrxSCBear NY ... eBay Nasd ... EMC Cp NY .46 Facebook Nasd ... FedExCp NY .60 FifthThird Nasd .48 NY .50 FordM NY .80 Gannett GenElec NY .88 GenMotors NY 1.20 Genworth NY ... GileadSci Nasd ... Guarnty rs Nasd .20 HeskaCorp Nasd ... HewlettP NY .64 iShJapan NY .13 iShChinaLC NY 1.02 iShEMkts NY .86 iS Eafe NY 1.70 iShR2K NY 1.45 iShREst NY 2.56 Intel Nasd .90 IBM NY 4.40 JPMorgCh NY 1.60 JohnsnCtl NY .88 Jumei n NY ... Keycorp NY .26 Kroger NY .66 MktVGold NY .19 MarIntA Nasd .80 Merck NY 1.76 MicronT Nasd ... Microsoft Nasd 1.12 MolsCoor A NY 1.48 MorgStan NY .40 NBGrce rs NY ... NewLead rs Nasd ... Oi SA C NY .14 Oi SA NY .14 Oracle NY .48 Penney NY ... Petrobras NY .46 Pfizer NY 1.04 PlugPowr h Nasd ... PwShs QQQNasd 1.30 QLT s Nasd 3.92 Rackspace NY ... RegionsFn NY .20 RiteAid NY ... S&P500ETF NY 3.48 Safeway NY .92 Schwab NY .24 SiriusXM Nasd ... SpiritRC n NY .66 Sprint n NY ... SP Engy NY 1.59 SPDR Fncl NY .34 Symantec Nasd .60 Target NY 1.72 3M Co NY 3.42 Twitter n NY ... UnionPac NY 3.64 UPS B NY 2.68 US Bancrp NY .92 UnivFor Nasd .42 Vale SA NY .84 VangEmg NY 1.20 VeecoInst Nasd ... VerizonCm NY 2.12 WalMart NY 1.92 WellsFargo NY 1.40 WholeFd s Nasd .48 Windstrm Nasd 1.00 WisdomTr Nasd ... WT India NY .16 Woodward Nasd .32 WldW Ent NY .48 XcelEngy NY 1.20 Yahoo Nasd ... Zynga Nasd ...

11 24 18 80 20 ... 43 ... ... 26 28 31 19 ... 23 22 28 16 23 16 11 22 18 16 17 21 ... ... 21 76 26 10 10 18 20 14 14 30 18 ... 12 ... ... ... ... ... ... 14 13 13 16 ... 13 16 ... 27 37 11 15 ... 17 ... ... ... ... 17 ... ... 16 ... ... ... 61 13 34 ... 3 30 52 ... ... ... ... 18 19 20 ... 20 22 14 22 ... ... ... 11 16 12 25 24 18 ... 20 ... 16 28 ...

YTD Chg %Chg

Last 36.74 39.06 18.22 4.02 55.03 3.82 13.45 4.17 13.10 46.56 20.21 68.49 14.51 36.55 130.81 12.80 48.78 11.31 27.64 24.37 46.44 40.89 50.19 31.44 20.95 75.32 18.11 51.95 26.25 58.02 138.23 20.03 15.76 27.41 26.67 34.00 17.64 80.80 12.98 10.65 32.52 11.15 35.97 42.94 68.49 109.57 71.38 25.82 187.06 53.31 44.78 24.18 13.11 46.99 23.42 58.35 55.87 26.03 39.83 64.73 30.14 3.03 .63 .89 .83 41.69 9.73 15.28 29.12 4.29 87.71 4.99 36.12 9.88 7.58 188.05 34.45 25.00 3.11 11.39 9.01 93.40 21.75 22.44 58.64 141.13 32.26 195.16 101.33 40.89 48.39 13.73 42.61 31.36 49.07 77.01 49.08 37.91 9.37 9.56 21.72 45.86 11.27 30.50 33.41 3.35

+.22 -.18 +.36 +.06 +.54 -.17 +.13 -.23 -.12 +.10 +1.52 +.56 -.04 -.87 -.40 +.11 -.15 +.03 -1.35 +.19 -.08 +.37 -.12 +.33 -.01 +.35 -.33 +.59 +.36 +.10 -.45 -.13 +.07 +.35 +.07 -.36 -.17 +.70 +.07 -.11 +.11 +.02 +.40 +.56 +.15 +.69 +.52 -.19 +.60 -.20 +.15 ... -.06 +.70 -.20 +.42 -.02 +.17 +.23 +.21 +.37 +.13 +.24 +.02 +.04 -.24 +1.36 +.01 +.06 +.26 +.58 +.11 +5.44 -.16 -.12 +.65 +.15 ... -.04 +.14 -.52 -.24 +.03 +.13 +.46 +.15 -.51 +4.04 +.87 +.32 +.47 -.25 +.52 +.24 +1.11 +.18 +.05 -.85 -.19 +.11 +1.22 +.10 -8.66 -.08 -.39 -.01

+4.5 +1.9 -20.3 +3.9 -3.8 -13.2 +26.5 -41.6 +1.9 +4.5 +14.3 +29.5 -6.8 -14.1 -4.2 +6.5 -8.2 +8.8 +1.8 +9.5 -10.9 -1.0 -3.4 -6.7 +17.6 -2.4 +6.7 -5.3 +4.4 +6.2 -3.9 -4.8 +2.1 -7.3 -4.9 -16.8 +13.6 +7.6 -7.6 +22.1 +16.2 -8.1 -6.3 +2.7 +2.1 -5.0 +13.2 -.5 -.3 -8.2 -12.7 0.0 -2.3 +18.9 +10.8 +18.2 +11.6 +19.7 +6.5 +17.3 -3.9 -45.9 -99.9 -46.0 -47.5 +9.0 +6.3 +10.9 -4.9 +176.8 -.3 -10.5 -7.7 -.1 +49.8 +1.8 +18.2 -3.8 -10.9 +15.9 -16.2 +5.5 -.5 -4.8 -7.3 +.6 -49.3 +16.2 -3.6 +1.2 -7.2 -10.0 +3.6 -4.7 -.1 -2.1 +8.1 -34.4 +17.4 -46.0 +24.5 +.5 -32.0 +9.2 -17.4 -11.8

We’re keeping an ear to the ground to get you answers as soon as we have them. To see what else has changed check out Coloradoan.com or pick up a copy today.

Together, we can do amazing things.


FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE A11

LETTERS Unique structure makes Montessori School great

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THE FIRST AMENDMENT “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble; and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.”

DOONESBURY

THUMBS-UP & THUMBS-DOWN

“The Opera Fort Collins board of directors gratefully acknowledges the following businesses, funding agencies, individuals and patrons who generously contributed to the success of the fifth annual Afternoon Tea with a Divo fundraising event. Funds raised directly benefit the OFC operating budget and the upcoming production of Puccini’s ‘Turandot’ (May 30 at the Lincoln Center). Thank you – your partnerships keep us singing: City of Fort Collins Fort Fund, Allura Skin, Laser & Wellness Clinic, Magnolia Music Studio, Amici Pizzeria, Avogadro’s Number, Babette’s Feast, Butter Cream Cupcakery, Cafe Vino, Catering to You by James, The Charcol Broiler, The Chocolate Cafe, The Corner Bakery, Fiona’s Delicatessen & Catering, the Fort Collins County Club, King Soopers, the Rainbow Restaurant, Sam’s Club, Whole Foods, Pampered Chef representative Jen Sajbel, Fort Collins Symphony, The Currier Inn (Greeley), Melinda Larson, Carol and Bill Richey, Gary and Carol Ann Hixon, Kimberly Miller, Sarah College, Sandy Klein, Marie Krizanovic, Ruth Potter, Bill Richey, Sue Stephens, Pam Treanor, The National Charity League, Debut Theatre Company, OpenStage Theatre & Co., the Fort Collins Children’s Theatre, and Opera Pronto.” Vicki Fogel Mykles, Opera Fort Collins executive director “A huge thumbs-up to the OtterCares Foundation and its staff, Tricia Lemmer, Adam Molzer and Gary Rogers for their impressive leadership of the G3 Challenge. Keep the thumbs up for all the employees of OtterBox and Blue Ocean Enterprises who participated in the ‘Get It, Grow It, Give It Challenge’ and all the donors who collectively raised support for local youth organizations. Junior Achievement is thrilled to be a local recipient organization and overwhelmed by the generosity of everyone who gave. A special thanks to Curt and Nancy Richardson for their gracious leadership as entrepreneurs and philanthropists. This support will help Junior Achievement reach over 10,000 K-12 students with innovative economic education in entrepreneurship, financial literacy and work readiness. Thank you!” Joy Nyenhuis, district director, Junior Achievement — Rocky Mountain Inc. “The Boltz Middle School seventh-grade team would like to offer a huge thumbsup to Midtown Arts Center and the Bohemian Foundation for their generous contributions, which allowed more than 200 seventhgrade students to see the live production ‘Robin Hood.’ This trip wouldn’t have been possible without you. Thanks so much!”

GARRY TRUDEAU

Chris Nickel, seventh-grade geography, Boltz Middle School “Thumbs-up to Fossil Ridge High School students Ryan Baeverstad and Alex Thompson, who planned and organized the Nick Seaman 5K Race to benefit RamStrength and honor Nick Seaman, a FRHS teacher and coach who lost his battle with cancer in 2011. More than $8,200 was raised to help local families dealing with the financial costs of cancer. Thanks to the following sponsors: Bacon Elementary Student Council, OtterCares, Dr. Arica Abrames, Terry Brown/Poudre Valley Environmental Sciences Inc., Todd Heenan/Fort Collins Club, Johnson’s Corner, Sabrina Steele/Azurite Marketing, Valer Productions, Gojo Sports, Go Figure Accounting Services, Starbucks, Texas Roadhouse, Ward Orthodontics; Jamie Suto, Sophie Bibbey and Keller Foster of Poudre High School; Sandra Cole, Carolyn Turner, Shannon Tivona and Caleb Slade of Fort Collins High School; Rocky Mountain High School administration, the RMHS Jazz Ensemble, and Ron Clark, Dani Harton and Ellen Field of Rocky Mountain High School; Marcus Rasmussen of Fossil Ridge High School and the FRHS National Honor Society. Thanks to Joe and Becky Vasos and the Ramstrength volunteers. Proceeds from this event will enable RamStrength to continue to support our local families affected by cancer.” Seaman/Rickett families and Lubick Foundation/RamStrength “Poudre Past Midnight provided a fun, safe, drug- and alcohol-free event following prom thanks to the most generous donations from the following: Overland Foods, American Furniture, Orthopaedic Center of the Rockies, Dohn Construction, Fort Fun, Greg Fisher — Architect, Kilwins, Jimmy John’s, Sonic, Taco Bell, Shakes Alive, Cold Stone, Big City Burrito, Raintree Athletic, Lupitas, Supermarket Liquor, Chipotle, Jax, Chipper’s, Chappelle, TBar, DaVinci Signs, Pizza Palace, Canino’s, Walrus, Fat Shack, Noodles, Island Grill, Fake Bake Tanning, Moot House, 5 Guys, Fuzzy’s, Garrettson’s Sports, J. Gumbo’s, Lundstedt Automotive, Hawker’s Automotive, Lyric, Burke Cleaners, Liz Mizer, Shaklee — Carol Peterson, Arbonne — Kim Irwin, Mind/Muscle Bodywork, Peleton Cycles, Lee’s Cyclery, Best Buy, At the Beach, Summer’s Auto, Raynor Doors, Jim’s Wings, McAllister’s, Pobre Panchos, Fort Collins Youth Clinic, Washington’s, Pizza Hut, Marco’s Pizza, BeauJo’s, Dickstein’s, El Burrito, Cosmo’s, CB Potts, Domino’s, Mama Roni’s, Safelite Auto Glass, Dickey’s, Human Bean and Mary Biggers.” Amy Bibbey, Fort Collins

I am thrilled the school board gave unanimous support to the Fort Collins Montessori School, or FCMS. Opening this fall, not delaying a year, means FCMS will be able to keep Frank Vincent as head of the school. He has more than 40 years of experience in Montessori education and is highly regarded within the Montessori community. He knows how to make FCMS a success. Personally, I am an advocate of Montessori education because of the mixed-age classrooms, the three-hour work block, and the unique Montessori materials. The mixed-age classroom allows the younger students to be inspired by the older ones, and gives the older students a chance to be a mentor and a teacher to the younger ones. The three-hour work block encourages students to get immersed in their work, developing in them an ability to focus and self-direct. The Montessori materials are developed in a way so the students know when they have mastered the material; they are not depending on the teacher to tell them if they’ve gotten it right. This feature encourages the students to take ownership of their own learning, independent of any exterior reward or validation. These are real-life skills being encouraged and developed. Also, having gotten to know many of the FCMS parents, this is an amazing community of dedicated and inspiring people. I’ve been hoping for a school like FCMS for my boys and want to thank the PSD board for its unanimous support of it. Kate Muldoon, Fort Collins

Are you for or against more smoking restrictions?

Do you have a strong opinion one way or another on the possible expansion of the city’s smoking restrictions? The city is gathering input on the following possible regulations: prohibiting the use of electronic smoking devices in all places where conventional smoking is prohibited; requiring 100 percent of hotel/motel rooms to be smokefree; banning smoking in all parks, trails and natural areas; prohibiting smoking at public events and festivals; making some areas of Old Town smoke-free. If you are interested in writing a 550-word opinion piece advocating for one side of the issue or the other, please email Opinion@coloradoan .com with contact information.

YOUR CITY REPRESENTATIVES Mayor Karen Weitkunat Email: kweitkunat@fcgov.com; phone: (970) 416-2154 Gerry Horak, mayor pro tem, District 6 Email: ghorak@fcgov.com; phone: (970) 217-2993 Bob Overbeck, council member, District 1 Email: boverbeck@fcgov.com; phone: (970) 988-9337 Lisa Poppaw, council member, District 2 Email: lpoppaw@fcgov.com; phone: (970) 223-4136 Gino Campana, council member, District 3 Email: gcampana@fcgov.com; phone: (970) 460-6329 Wade Troxell, council member, District 4 Email: wtroxell@fcgov.com; phone: (970) 219-8940 Ross Cunniff, council member, District 5 Email: rcunniff@fcgov.com; phone: (970) 420-7398 Email mayor and all council members at once: cityleaders@fcgov.com Mailing address for mayor and council members: P.O. Box 580, Fort Collins, CO, 80522

MALLARD FILLMORE

BRUCE TINSLEY

DAVID SIROTA COLUMN: JOURNALISM

It would be a real tragedy if journalism lost its nerve

When I went into journalism, one of the first things I was told as a freshman is that journalism is different from stenography. It is supposed to be — or at least has been — about using rights granted under the First Amendment to be a check on government and corporate power. Yet, the hedge in that last sentence is deliberate because a new survey from the Indiana University suggests things are fast changing in the news industry — and not for the better. The latest in 42 years worth of surveys of journalists, this one polled more than 1,000 reporters in the latter half of 2013. That time frame is significant — it was right when revelations about the NSA’s mass surveillance were being published. As IU researchers note, “The percentage of U.S. journalists endorsing the occasional use of ‘confidential business or government documents without authorization,’ dropped significantly from 81.8 percent in 1992 to 57.7 percent in 2013.” To really understand the implications of this shift, think back to almost every famous investigative scoop. Then ask yourself: What would have happened to those stories had they only come to one of those 4 in 10 reporters who oppose the use of “confidential business or government documents without authorization”? The answer, most likely, is those stories would never have been published, and history might have unfolded in an entirely different way. Maybe “The Jungle” would never have been written, and then the most basic food safety standards would never have become law. Maybe Richard Nixon would have served two full terms. And maybe we would still know very little about just how much our own government is surveilling us. “The job” is now defined differently depending on where you may be in the news ecosystem. And in much of that ecosystem, the risks and costs associated with adversarial journalism have reduced “the job” to that of a loyal state- and corporate-aligned journalist. This is why so many Washington reporters publicly slammed the NSA disclosures. It also explains why financial journalists so often defend Wall Street. Simply put, the path that avoids regular confrontation with power is often far easier, less risky and more lucrative in the news business. Thus, it has become the preferred path, to the point where almost half of the news business does not support reporting news that the government and corporations don’t want reported. And who knows? Maybe the next IU survey 10 years from now shows a full-on majority of journalists saying news outlets shouldn’t publish without the express consent of the corporations and governments. That would no doubt make the CEOs and politicians quite happy, but it would be a tragedy for the rest of us. David Sirota is a staff writer at PandoDaily. Email him at ds@davidsirota.com, follow him on Twitter @davidsirota or visit his website at www.davidsirota.com.


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IN MONEY

05.17.14

IN LIFE

Criminals to celebs ask Google to be ‘forgotten’

A tearful sign-off for Barbara Walters on ‘The View’

ABC VIA AP

GM to pay $35M for recall delays

Online TODAY

WHAT WE’RE FOLLOWING A look ahead to news, features, photos and videos we’ll be posting today at usatoday.com and on our free apps for all mobile devices.

Record fine part of settlement in safety defect probe James R. Healey USA TODAY

EDYTA BLASZCZYK, AP

uMONEY What makes a community livable for retirees? Great golf courses? Outstanding medical services? Wonderful theater venues? Check out the Q&A at usatoday.com/money.

JOSEPH EID, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Residents of Homs inspect their destroyed neighborhood Monday after rebel holdouts departed.

SYRIAN REBELS LOSE GROUND Retreat from Homs is a major blow to opposition hoping to overthrow Assad

TOMMY GILLIGAN, USA TODAY SPORTS

uSPORTS The Preakness, the 2nd leg of the Triple Crown, is today. See if Kentucky Derby winner California Chrome can get a step closer to horse racing’s coveted achievement at usatoday.com/sports.

SUNDAY IN USA WEEKEND Fire up that grill: We’ve got smokin’ recipes from The Culinary Institute of America, including a grilled banana split. USA WEEKEND magazine is distributed Sundays in this newspaper.

Mona Alami, Osama Abu Zeid and Elizabeth Parker Magyar

The deal “puts all manufacturers on notice that they will be held accountable.”

Special for USA TODAY

AMMAN, JORDAN The rebel abandonment of Homs, a city known as the “capital of the revolution,” is the strongest sign yet that the dream of toppling Syrian dictator Bashar Assad from within has failed. “We were under siege for so long,” said rebel Orhan Ghazi. “The people of Homs have begun to move away from thinking about the revolution. They want to live, and that’s it.” Assad is running for re-election June 3 for a job in which he is the only real candidate at a time when the Sunni rebels who have fought his regime for three years are severely weakened by losses in what were once their strongholds. Last week green buses full of armed rebels snaked their way through the ruins of Homs, a rebel bastion that had been pounded from the air by Assad forces since May 2011. Rebels had withstood shelling and snipers, a cut-

Anthony Foxx, Transportation secretary

SANA VIA AP

Syrian President Bashar Assad

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for Fort Collins Coloradoan. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.

Find USA TODAY Sports in today’s local sports section.

Top cities for walking, biking to work Percentage of walking or biking commuters:

Boston Washin

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addition, GM agreed to give the DOT’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration “full access to the results of GM’s internal investigation into this recall.” That’s a big concession by GM. CEO Mary Barra told congressional committees in April that she only would hand over parts directly related to safety. Anton Valukas, chairman of the Chicago-based law firm Jenner & Block and a former U.S. attorney, is handling GM’s internal probe. GM agreed to continue paying $7,000 per day — the maximum fine — for missing NHTSA’s deadline for documents it demanded about the recall. It now will pay until it delivers Valukas’ report, expected by June 30. The GM settlement “puts all manufacturers on notice that they will be held accountable if they fail to quickly report and address safety-related defects,” Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said.

Man charged in fueling one Calif. fire

Investigators busy trying to find source of other blazes Natalie DiBlasio

USA SNAPSHOTS©

General Motors was slapped with a record $35 million fine by the Department of Transportation for delays in recalling 2.6 million older-model small cars with an ignition switch defect that has been linked to at least 13 deaths. The fine, the maximum the DOT can impose, is part of a consent deal announced Friday to settle the department’s inquiry into whether GM notified the government within the required five business days after finding a safety defect. GM admits in the agreement that it did not. The government says GM also agreed to make “significant and wide-ranging internal changes” in how it handles safety issues. In

USA TODAY

As some San Diego County residents returned home to face a charred landscape Friday, investigators worked to determine the cause of a string of dangerous wildfires. A 57-year-old man has been charged with arson in one of 10 wildfires that swept the San Diego region this week. Alberto Serrato pleaded not guilty Friday in connection with a 105-acre fire in suburban Oceanside, which was started Wednesday and is fully contained. Tanya Sierra, a spokeswoman for the San Diego County district attorney’s office, said witnesses saw Serrato adding brush to the flames near homes, but he was not seen starting the fire. Meanwhile, two teens were ar-

DAVID MCNEW, GETTY IMAGES

A helicopter drops water near homes at the Cocos fire Friday in San Marcos, Calif. Ten wildfires are threatening the region. rested Thursday evening on suspicion of attempted arson, according to NBC San Diego. Escondido Police Lt. Neal Griffin said investigators could not yet connect them to any of the larger fires. Residents of two neighbor-

hoods in a suburb north of San Diego were allowed to return home as crews built containment lines around the fires. Fires have destroyed at least eight houses, an 18-unit condo complex and two businesses since Tuesday. The hardest-hit

areas were in San Marcos and Carlsbad, a suburb of 110,000 people that lifted evacuation orders late Thursday. State fire officials said one fire was found to have been caused by a spark from construction equipment. It could take months to get to the bottom of the most damaging fires. “We are not ruling out anything,” San Diego County Sheriff Bill Gore said. Firefighters found a burned body Thursday in a transient camp in Carlsbad — the first apparent fatality. At Camp Pendleton, all non-essential staff were ordered to leave Friday because a third wildfire has ignited on the Marine base. Tourists coming to San Diego faced a somewhat surreal situation. “The view of the fires on the fly-in was a little bit terrifying,” said Sam Pfeifle from Maine. As of Thursday, the entire state of California is in a severe, or worse, drought. Contributing: Beth Weise in San Francisco; Doyle Rice in McLean, Va.; AP


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USA TODAY FOR FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

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Citizen patrols push out pro-Russia rebels

Steelworkers restore calm in east Ukraine city Portia Walker

Special for USA TODAY

MARIUPOL , UKRAINE In this rusty steel town is a possible game changer for the conflict in Ukraine. Workers in Mariupol, a troubled city in the country’s southeast, are restoring order to their streets with peaceful patrols. Groups of unarmed volunteers, some wearing the red and gray jackets of the steelworks they are employed by, are removing roadblocks and pushing out pro-Russia separatists. The patrols began this week after Rinat Akhmetov, Ukraine’s richest man and a powerful force in the area, mobilized steelworkers in his factories to join local police in restoring calm to the city’s streets. “I strongly believe that Don-

bass can only be happy in a united Ukraine,” he said, referring to the local name for this region of eastern Ukraine. Pro-Russia insurgents have retreated from government buildings in this major eastern Ukrainian city — the second largest in the region — as steelworkers began citizen patrols. Mariupol was one of the cities overrun by pro-Russia protesters who have been in control of government buildings there for weeks. Last week as many as 20 pro-Russia fighters were killed in violent clashes with Ukrainian forces. Akhmetov, a magnate whom Forbes magazine this year listed as worth $12 billion, had formerly supported ousted Ukraine president Victor Yanukovych, a proMoscow ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin who fled to Russia in February. At the Azovstal industrial plant here on Friday, executives from the steelworks posed before TV crews and reporters, signing a memorandum pledging order and security in the city.

EVGENIY MALOLETKA, AP

“The factories are beyond politics. We just watch over so there is peace in the city.” Alexander Levada, citizen patrol

Several dozen steelworkers were clearing out the barricades outside the government building on Friday. Passersby commented on how the patrols helped crack down on burglaries and carjackings that became a norm after the pro-Russia insurgents asserted themselves in the city earlier this month. The steelworks invited journalists to follow one of the patrols. “Now there are no more looters on the street,” said Alex-

Steelworkers clear debris Friday in a government building in Mariupol, Ukraine, that had been seized by separatists.

Vietnam’s PM sends text on standoff

Syrian rebellion falters v CONTINUED FROM 1B

off of water and electricity, and the obliteration of their neighborhoods one after the other. Hemmed into the Old Quarter of the city, the anti-Assad fighters had no choice but to retreat. “The rebels are in bad shape — they can’t win this war,” said Joshua Lendis, director of the Center for Middle East studies at the University of Oklahoma. “On the other hand, it is going to be hard for the regime to defeat them because the rebels get money and arms from the outside.” With the fall of Homs, the Syrian government now controls about 50% of the territory, says former general Wehbe Katisha, a Lebanese military expert. A year ago, it looked as if Assad may go the way of other Arab despots toppled by popular uprisings demanding democratic reforms. The “Arab Spring” ousted dictators in Libya, Tunisia and Egypt. In Syria, Sunni Muslims who are the majority had risen up in 2011 and taken territory countrywide. Bolstered by an influx of foreign militants seeking an Islamic state, rebels inched within miles of the capital of Damascus. President Obama and European powers were poised in August to launch strikes against Syrian positions for Assad’s use of chemical weapons to massacre hundreds of civilians in violation of a “red-line” Obama had set for taking action. But Shiite Muslim fighters from Hezbollah in neighboring Lebanon poured into Syria to take the lead in battles against rebels. Iran sent in military trainers and officers, and Russia blocked military action at the U.N. Security Council and refused to abide by a ban on weaponry to its ally,

Leader encourages anti-China protest as he shuns violence Calum MacLeod USA TODAY

JOSEPH EID, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Assad. Obama backed away from his threat to bombard Syria. “Obama’s policy towards Syria ... will have adverse effects on the long-run for both the U.S. as well as for us Syrians,” says Syrian activist Abu Obeida al-Chami, who has fled the Damascus suburbs to nearby Lebanon. National Security adviser Susan Rice has said the USA will continue “to empower the moderate Syrian opposition” inside Syria despite the latest developments. But the U.S. will not deviate from limiting its assistance to non-lethal aid to the Syrian opposition, the White House says. Many rebels say they would have defeated Assad’s regime by now had the West provided them with heavier weapons. Ammar al-Hosn, an activist who spoke from the Ghouta region, said the Sunnis were able to win the battle themselves if they received weapons instead of encouraging words from the West. “We are fighting with light and medium-range weapons ... but it is not enough,” he says. Al-Hosn admits that some of the fault lies with themselves. “The infighting among rebel groups has distracted them from

“The rebels are in bad shape — they can’t win this war.” Joshua Lendis, Center for Middle East studies at the University of Oklahoma

their original objective of overthrowing the regime,” he says. Meanwhile, the evacuation from Old Homs as it is known, began last week. A U.N.-brokered deal between the two fronts allowed around 2,000 fighters to head to safer areas. Regime supporters see the deal as a win. “The settlement ... is a major breakthrough leading to the restoration of safety and stability in Old Homs,” Homs governor Talal al-Barazi told pro-regime newspaper al-Watan. Rebels say the regime is making too much of the withdrawal. “Homs is the capital of the revolution. It falls and Syria will be even more divided,” said Ahmed al-Ahmed, a rebel in Aleppo. Abu Odai, spokesperson for the rebel group Feiliq a-Rahman, agrees that the revolution will live on. “If this truce is completed in Homs, it does not mean Homs has fallen into regime hands, it means the rebels of Homs will continue their struggle in other areas,” he added. “Homs is a single place, not all of Syria.”

People remove debris from the courtyard of damaged Syriac Orthodox Um alZinar church in Homs, central Syria, on Monday.

Contributing: Jad Salfiti and Luigi Serenelli in Berlin. Alami reported from Beirut.

IN BRIEF LANDSLIDE VICTORY FOR INDIAN OPPOSITION PARTY

India’s opposition leader, Narendra Modi, will become the next prime minister of the world’s largest democracy, winning the most decisive election victory the country has seen in three decades and sweeping the long-dominant Congress party from power. Modi, a career politician whose campaign promised a revival of economic growth, will have a strong mandate to govern at a time of profound changes in Indian society. He also has said he wants to strengthen India’s strategic partnership with the United States. But critics worry the ascendance of his Hindu nationalist party could worsen sectarian tensions with India’s minority 138 million Muslims. The results were a crushing defeat for the Congress party, which is entwined with the NehruGandhi political dynasty. IRAN NUCLEAR MEETING ENDS WITH SETBACKS

Iran nuclear talks stalled Fri-

ander Levada, one of the men who worked at the Illyria steelworks and said he had joined the patrol four days ago. “Before it was not safe to walk the streets.” Levada stressed that the steelworkers were not politicized and intended only to calm the situation. “The factories are beyond politics. We just watch over so there is peace in the city.” But it was clear there were still deep divisions in town. The patrol melted away as angry proRussians gathered outside city hall. The building, damaged in recent clashes, still carried the flag of the separatist Donetsk Peoples’ Republic. Speakers shouted antiKiev slogans. “We are here against the politics of Akhmetov. He is afraid to lose his money,” said Alexander Sukhorsky, 48, an unemployed welder who joined the protest. German Mandrakov, who had led pro-Russia forces that took over government buildings here, told the Associated Press that “someone is trying to sow discord among us ... but we will continue our fight.”

BEIJING Vietnam’s Prime Minister texted millions of citizens late Thursday, encouraging them to defend the nation’s sovereignty in a dispute with China over an oil rig that left at least two Chinese workers dead and 100 injured. Nguyen Tan Dung warned against letting “bad elements” engage in violence, but did not directly condemn anti-China riots in Vietnam this week. Vietnamese authorities have arrested over 600 suspects, but more protests are planned Sunday. “As long as the oil rig is not withdrawn from Vietnam’s continental shelf,” the people will continue to demonstrate, said Le Dang Doanh, a Vietnamese economist and former government adviser in Hanoi. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying accused Hanoi on Thursday of “indulgence and connivance” toward the mobs that attacked Chinese factories in Vietnam this week. Vietnamese remain suspicious of China, with whom they fought a border war in 1979. A clash in 1974 gave China de facto control of the Paracel Islands, where China towed an oil rig May 1. That move sparked the latest troubles. Vietnam says 80 Chinese ships are protecting the rig, deployed about 120 miles from Vietnam’s coast and well within Vietnam’s 200-mile exclusive economic zone, as defined by the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea.

Corrections & Clarifications

FLOOD RESCUE IN BOSNIA

disappointed, he insisted that the result of the three-day talks that ended Friday represented no more than a setback at this point in continuing attempts to reach a deal. A senior U.S. official — who demanded anonymity under U.S. briefing rules — said there was “great difficulty” in trying to move toward common positions. Both Araghchi and the official said further meetings were planned in June, but no dates were announced. BOMBINGS KILL 10, WOUND 70 IN KENYAN MARKET

AMEL EMRIC, AP

A member of the army carries a boy rescued from flooding Friday in the Bosnian town of Maglaj. day, casting a shadow on earlier advances and denting hopes that Tehran and six world powers will meet a July 20 target date for a deal meant to curb Iran’s atomic program while ending sanctions on the Islamic Republic. Deputy Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi acknowl-

edged the meeting made “no progress” in its ambitious goal of starting to draft an agreement meant to ease a decade of Western distrust about Tehran’s nuclear agenda in exchange for sanctions relief. In that, “we failed,” he told reporters. But while saying he was

Two bombs killed 10 people and wounded 70 others Friday, tossing bodies into the air at a market in Kenya’s capital, while hundreds of British tourists were evacuated from the coastal resort of Mombasa after warnings of an impending attack by Islamic extremists. No group has claimed responsibility for the blasts, which went off minutes apart in the Gikomba market near downtown Nairobi. From wire reports

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USA TODAY FOR FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

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NATION Blazes whip up funnels of fire

MILITARY INTELLIGENCE ROTC, once shunned on many college campuses, is making a comeback. What you may have missed:

Spark-spitting ‘firenadoes’ can be 500 feet across Doyle Rice

ERIC RISBERG, AP

USA TODAY

UC-BERKELEY AT EASE WITH ROTC, VETERANS

Détente has come to Berkeley. The University of CaliforniaBerkeley, once synonymous with antiwar activism, is expanding efforts to attract veterans and welcome the military to campus. For its part, the military is expanding ROTC on campus. “Those old days are gone,” said Lt. Col. Stephen Suhr, an Army ROTC professor at the university. The Army ROTC program has grown to 44 cadets currently, up from 32 in 2012. Berkeley’s Haas School of Business has about 21 veterans out of a total enrollment of 487 and has worked to expand that number. Business school applications from veterans increased to 102 for the 2014 academic year, up from 39 in 2011. Suhr said the anti-military reputation doesn’t fit anymore although the stigma associated with it sometimes hurts efforts to recruit ROTC students, who fear they will encounter hostility on the campus. — Jim Michaels

DELCIA LOPEZ, AP

A candlelight vigil is held outside the Whole Women’s Health Clinic in McAllen, Texas, in March.

TEXAS ABORTION LAW HINDERS RIGHTS TO CARE

In Valley, women’s access to services involves lot of risk Rick Jervis USA TODAY

BROWNSVILLE ,

TEXAS The women who visit Lucy Felix at her advocacy center are lately faced with a slate of difficult choices: risk deportation to drive to a clinic, cross the nearby border into Mexico for a risky abortion or keep an unwanted, unplanned pregnancy to term. Since Texas lawmakers passed new restrictions on abortion clinics last year, the number of clinics in the Rio Grande Valley that perform the service has dropped from two to zero, forcing women to drive more than 300 miles round trip to other cities for services or attempt riskier procedures across the border.

In the Valley, the poorest part of the state, the law is crippling women’s rights to abortions, said Felix, a Brownsville-based field coordinator with the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health. Under Texas House Bill 2, doctors who perform abortions must have admitting privileges at area hospitals, abortions past 20 weeks are banned and clinics must have ambulatory surgical centers. In the wake of the new rules, the number of licensed facilities in Texas dropped from 41 in 2011 to 24, the state Department of State Health Services says. When the ambulatory surgical centers requirement kicks in Sept. 1, that number could fall to six. Supporters of the law say the measures are to ensure the safety of women. “The state of Texas is not closing these abortion facilities,” said Joe Pojman, executive director of Texas Alliance for Life. “The abortion facilities are deciding they do not wish to provide

the new health and safety standards the state requires.” But the closing clinics often can’t afford the costly additions required by the law and amount to unlawful restrictions of abortion rights guaranteed by the U.S. Supreme Court, said Julie Rikelman, legislative director of the Center for Reproductive Rights. After the law passed, two abortion clinics in the Rio Grande Valley — one in McAllen, the other in Harlingen — closed, leaving Corpus Christi, 160 miles away, the nearest alternative, said Dan Grossman with Ibis Reproductive Health, a group that studies women’s health. After Sept. 1, the Corpus clinic is to close, as well. Road trips to Corpus Christi or San Antonio pass through Border Patrol checkpoints, which deter many women who don’t have proper immigration status, Grossman said. Some in the Rio Grande Valley are turning to other alternatives, including risky self-induced abortions, he said.

Busting loose after long winter AAA expects uptick in travelers over Memorial Day

DAVID DOBRYDNEY, AP

SPY PLANES AIDING SEARCH IN NIGERIA

The U.S. military is flying some of its most advanced spy planes in search of the girls kidnapped by militants in Nigeria, according to a senior defense official. The highflying drone, Global Hawk, has been joined by MC-12 Liberty aircraft, which have pilots and a crew, to vacuum up images and communication signals, said the official who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the aircraft the military has deployed. The aircraft are not armed. The military is not sharing intelligence collected directly with the Nigerian government, Army Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman said. — Tom Vanden Brook

DOCTOR VISITS UP FOR SERVICEMEMBERS

The brutal legacy of more than a decade of war on the U.S. military is made plain in a study released Thursday. It shows that, on average, each service member visited a doctor more than once a month last year — the highest-ever rate for out-patient treatment. The pace of more than 14 outpatient visits per service member in 2013 was a rate nearly 60% higher than in 2004, and up slightly from 2012. A little less than half the visits were for routine health care or chronic issues requiring counseling or physical rehabilitation. The analysis was released in the April edition of the Pentagon’s “Medical Surveillance Monthly Report.” — Gregg Zoroya Military Intelligence is a blog at usatoday.com.

Larry Copeland USA TODAY

This Memorial Day will see the second highest number of travelers on the roads and in the skies since 2000 and the highest since the recession, auto club AAA said Friday. The long, rough winter coupled with a slow but steady economic recovery and gas prices about the same as last year, will contribute to a 1.5% increase over last year in Memorial Day travel, said Mar-

shall Doney, AAA’s chief operating officer. AAA expects 36.1 million people to travel at least 50 miles from home from May 22 through May 26, up from 35.5 million last year. Of those traveling for Memorial Day, 31.8 million will go by automobile, a 1.2% increase over last year; 2.6 million will fly, a 2.4% increase, and 1.7 million will go by train, bus or ship, a 6.5% increase, according to AAA. “The freezing cold winter ... has generated hot demand for summer travel,” Doney said at a news conference at Reagan National airport outside Washington, D.C. Congestion mitigation firm INRIX predicts a 25% rise nationally in holiday traffic congestion

36.1 MILLION people to travel at least 50 miles

from home May 22-26

31.8 MILLION will travel by automobile 2.6 MILLION expected to travel by air

over a year ago. “There’s a lot of pent-up demand,” said Jim Bak, a spokesman for the Kirkland, Wash.-based company. The good news for drivers: The price of gasoline — $3.65 a gallon this year compared with $3.63 last year — is expected to continue to fall through the holiday, AAA said.

Some of the fierce fires this week in Southern California have spawned fire whirls, also called firenadoes or fire tornadoes. A fire whirl is a “spinning vortex column of ascending hot air and gases rising from a fire and carrying aloft smoke, debris, and flame,” according to the Bureau of Land Management’s Glossary of Wildland Fire Termonology. “Fire whirls range in size from less than 1 foot to more than 500 feet in diameter. Large fire whirls have the intensity of a small tornado.”

FIRE WHIRL Mini-tornadoes known as fire whirls can form in any size fire, but they are most destructive in large fires. How they form:

Hot air Hot air Fire whirls occur when cool air rushes in to take the place of rising hot air

Fire whirl

Cool air

Cool air

Source USA TODAY research FRANK POMPA, USA TODAY

Fire whirls can form in any size fire and are most destructive in large fires. Created by cool air rushing to take the place of hot air, the spinning can hurl embers great distances. Whirls usually intensify a wildfire. “There are little vortices all over the place on the edge of where the fire is forming,” meteorologist Harold Brooks of the National Severe Storms Laboratory said. “Put vertical motion on top of them (there’s lots of that available around a fire) and it will rapidly concentrate and intensify the rotation,” he said. Fire whirls are also more likely to occur where winds are forced to change directions, such as near a grove of trees.

IN BRIEF ARK. HIGH COURT SUSPENDS GAY MARRIAGE RULING

Arkansas’ highest court has suspended a judge’s ruling striking down the state’s same-sex marriage ban, halting the distribution of licenses that have been issued to hundreds of gay couples. The state Supreme Court on Friday granted a request to suspend Pulaski County Circuit Judge Chris Piazza’s decision voiding a 2004 constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman. Piazza last week struck down the ban, but expanded that ruling on Thursday to include all state laws preventing gay couples from marrying. Attorney General Dustin McDaniel and four counties named in the lawsuit asked justices to stay Piazza’s ruling while it’s on appeal. TOP VA HEALTH OFFICIAL RESIGNS UNDER FIRE

The top official for veterans’ health care resigned Friday amid a firestorm over delays in care

CHRISTIE SPEAKS TO GRADUATES

possible. “Brown v. Board of Education shifted the legal and moral compass of our Nation,” Obama said in a presidential resolution on the 1954 ruling. Today marks the 60th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, the ruling that struck down school segregation. Obama noted that, a decade after the ruling, “Brown’s moral guidance was translated into the enforcement measures of the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act.” DATA: DHS FREED THOUSANDS OF CRIMINAL IMMIGRANTS LORI M. NICHOLS, AP

Gov. Chris Christie speaks during Rowan University’s commencement Friday in Glassboro, N.J. and falsified records at veteran hospitals. Veterans Secretary Eric Shinseki says he has accepted the resignation of Robert Petzel, the department’s undersecretary for health care. Shinseki had asked for the resignation, a department official later said on condition of anonymity because he was not

authorized attribution.

to

speak

for

OBAMA HONORS BROWN V. BOARD OF EDUCATION

President Obama is honoring the Supreme Court decision that in some ways made his election

The Homeland Security Department released 36,007 convicted criminal immigrants last year who are facing deportation, including those accounting for 193 homicide and 426 sexual assault convictions, according to new federal data. The immigrants released had completed their criminal jail sentences, and nearly all still face deportation. From staff and wire reports


4B

USA TODAY FOR FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

**

AHMET SIK, GETTY IMAGES

Relatives mourn during a funeral Thursday for miners in Soma, Turkey. At least 292 of the nearly 800 people in a mine when a fire broke out Tuesday died.

HEARTBREAK IN TURKEY As families mourn deaths, discontent grows over safety in mines

AHMET SIK, GETTY IMAGES

A miner in Soma waits for word on his trapped friends.

DEPO PHOTO VIA AFP/GETTY IMAGES

An aide to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan kicks a protester during the leader’s visit to Soma.

SEDAT SUNA, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

An activist in Istanbul pays tribute to the mining victims.

Grieving relatives laid their

People attend the funerals of miners Thursday in a cemetery in Soma. Most of the miners died from carbon monoxide poisoning, and hopes were fading of finding alive any of the nine or 10 people still thought to be inside the mine.

loved ones to rest in mass burials this week, as gravediggers labored to make room for more victims of Turkey’s worst mining disaster. Government and mining company officials denied negligence in Tuesday’s coal mine fire in Soma, in western Turkey. Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said at least 292 people died, AHMET SIK, GETTY IMAGES

485 escaped or were rescued. Exhausted miners rest as they await their trapped friends Wednesday in Soma. Rescuers continued to pull the dead and injured from the coal mine in western Turkey more than 19 hours after an underground fire.

AHMET SIK, GETTY IMAGES


USA TODAY FOR FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

5B

**

MONEY Darden sells Red Lobster for $2.1B

MONEYLINE FIRST WORD “Let’s be clear: Our reputation is everything. Being boastful, indiscreet and vulgar is not OK. It will have serious consequences BLOOMBERG for your career. And, I have lost patience on this issue.”

Roger Yu

USA TODAY

— Colin Fan, co-head of Deutsche Bank’s investment bank, in a video to his traders, the “Financial Times” reported ANHEUSER-BUSCH WINS DISCRIMINATION LAWSUIT AnheuserBusch did not discriminate against a former executive by paying her significantly less than a male predecessor, a St. AP Louis jury decided. The company argued Francine Katz’s compensation compared favorably with similar jobs at other large corporations and the predecessor had more duties.

PHILIPPE HUGUEN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

The EU’s top court ruled on May 13 that individuals have the right to ask Google to delete personal search data.

Requests to be ‘forgotten’ pour in Europeans jump on judge’s ruling Elizabeth Weise

@eweise USA TODAY

Just days after the European High Court of Justice ruled that people have the “right to be forgotten,” Google is getting requests from criminals wanting links to information about their crimes removed. Tuesday’s ruling stated that under European privacy laws, individuals can have the right to request search engines remove links to information they feel is no longer relevant. As of Friday, Google had received multiple such requests from Europeans, a source close to the company familiar with the situation told USA TODAY. How the requirement will be implemented isn’t yet known. “That’s the question that everybody is asking themselves at this point,” said Rita Di Antonio, European director for the International Association of Privacy Professionals in Giulianova, Italy. It appears Google plans to comply with the court’s ruling. In a statement, the company said, “this is logistically complicated — not least because of the many languages involved and the need for careful review. As soon as we have thought through exactly how this will work, which may take several weeks, we will let our users know.” It will be difficult for Google to pick and choose which requests it will honor, said Eduardo Ustaran, a lawyer who specializes in privacy law in London. If it rejects a request, “regulators in each member state would then have to fight in the citizen’s corner,” Ustaran, author of The Future of Privacy, said. “How are they going to deal with what could become tens of thousands of requests?” SAN FRANCISCO

AP

NUMBERS OF THE DAY

2.6% AND 8.3%

April’s unemployment rates in North Dakota and Rhode Island, which were, respectively, the lowest and highest among all states. The U.S. rate was 6.3%, and 30 states were below that. LAST WORD “Ullman has stabilized this company. The question is, can he grow it?” — BTIG analyst William Frohnhoefer on J.C. BLOOMBERG Penney CEO Mike Ullman. Penney reported its first quarterly sales gain since 2011 this week. It also lost $352 million in the quarter, adding to three years of losses exceeding $2.5 billion.

DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 4:00 p.m.

16,550 16,500

16,491

9:30 a.m.

16,447

16,450 16,400 16,350

44.50

16,300 FRIDAY MARKETS INDEX

Nasdaq composite Standard & Poor’s 500 Treas. note, 10-year yield Oil, lt. sweet crude, barrel Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar

CLOSE

CHANGE

4090.59 1877.86 2.52% $102.02 $1.3698 101.51

x 21.30 x 7.01 x 0.03 x 0.52 y 0.0018 y 0.03

SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM

uUSA MARKETS, inside

Wedding cost control

John Waggoner

jwaggoner@usatoday.com USA TODAY

Top ways married couples contained wedding costs:

Examples of link-removal requests Google has received: uA company wanted links about it in a forum discussing consumer rip-offs to be removed. uA former politician requested links to a news article about his behavior when he was previously in office be removed, because he wants to run again. uA physician requested that links to a review site about him be removed. uA man convicted of possession of child sexual abuse imagery requested links to pages about his conviction be removed. uA celebrity’s child asked that links to news articles about a criminal conviction be removed. uA university lecturer who was suspended wants links to articles about the suspension removed. uA convicted cyberstalker mentioned in an article about cyberstalking laws requested that links to the article be removed. uAn actor wants articles about an affair with a teenager removed. uA tax scammer requested that links to information about his crime be removed. uAn individual who tried to kill his family requested a link to a news article about the event be removed.

“How are they going to deal with what could become tens of thousands of requests?” Eduardo Ustaran, a lawyer who specializes in privacy law

for a number of years, and that reference to them was now entirely irrelevant” and so requested that the notices be removed from the newspaper’s website. The court ruled that while the paper could keep the page up on its own site, Google must remove the listing from its search index. The ruling only applies to information retrieved by searching on an individual’s name, and requests would have to be by the individual, legal experts said. For example, a Nazi war criminal could ask Google to remove the link to a Wikipedia page about him or her, but couldn’t “ask Wikipedia to take down the page,” said Edwards. The biggest question is how what it taken down get decided. “Who defends the public interest? Who says ‘This should stay up?’ ” said Edwards. “How can you make Google make that judgment?”

Top-performing tech funds the past 5 years: Fund, ticker Fidelity Select IT Services, FBSOX Fidelity Select Software and Computer Svc. FSCSX Saratoga Technology & Communications, STPAX Red Oak Technology, ROGSX Fidelity Select Computers, FDCPX Average technology fund

DIVIDENDS, GAINS REINVESTED THROUGH WEDNESDAY. SOURCE LIPPER.

Simplified wedding

34%

Ditched wedding planner

28%

Pared down guest list

27%

Chose buffet over plated dinner

26%

Source American Express Spending & Saving Tracker of 1,503 adults JAE YANG AND SAM WARD, USA TODAY

ALAN DIAZ, AP

Seafood chain has 700 restaurants in the U.S. and Canada.

With tech, boring can be better Dividend plays may have the last laugh

USA SNAPSHOTS©

What people want gone

The simplest and cheapest option would be for the Internet search company to “automate the takedown with some simple forms and then let others worry about whether it has public interest implications,” said Lilian Edwards, a professor of Internet law at University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland. The ruling came out of a request by Mario Consteja Gonzalez of Spain about a legal notice that appeared in La Vanguardia newspaper in Barcelona about his home’s repossession and auction in 1998. He said “proceedings concerning him had been fully resolved

Darden Restaurants said Friday it has agreed to sell its Red Lobster casual dining chain and related real estate assets to investment firm Golden Gate Capital for $2.1 billion. Shares of Darden fell $2.20, or 4.3%, to close at $48.49 on Friday. The deal lets Darden shed its worst-performing chain to pay off some debt and focus on its flagship Olive Garden chain, which also has been struggling. Darden will receive net cash proceeds, after tax and transaction costs, of about $1.6 billion for the seafood chain with 700 restaurants in the U.S. and Canada. Orlando-based Darden says it will use $1 billion to pay off debt and use the rest to buy back shares. Sales at casual dining restaurants have been sluggish, with industry analysts blaming a general lack of innovation and also less appeal for younger consumers. Darden had considered various plans to unload Red Lobster, including a spinoff. Darden also approached real estate buyers about sale-leaseback financing for the business. Golden Gate, a private equity firm in San Francisco, announced a sale-leaseback deal Friday, to reduce its exposure to Red Lobster’s real estate. In the $1.5 billion deal with American Realty Capital Properties for more than 500 Red Lobster restaurants, Golden Gate will sell the land and buildings to ARCP and lease them back. Darden said it chose Golden Gate because it was an all-cash offer and the deal allows the company to maintain its current dividend of 55 cents per share, or $2.20 per year. Red Lobster has been the laggard among Darden’s chains, which also include LongHorn Steakhouse and The Capital Grille. In the fiscal third quarter ended Feb. 23, Red Lobster’s sales at locations open at least a year fell 8.8% from a year ago to $611 million, and visits were down nearly 12%. In comparison, LongHorn Steakhouse sales rose 0.3%, and Olive Garden declined 5.4%. The company said that removing Red Lobster from its portfolio frees it to focus on reinvigorating Olive Garden, the company’s leading revenue generator.

In the little village of Schadenfreude, the hills echo with the sound of laughter at the expense of others. Most days, something as simple as stepping on a rake is enough to send the villagers twittering merrily. For much of the past three years, you could hear hearty trills of laughter as the more aggressive technology investors giggled as their returns from companies like Facebook, Twitter and Netflix INVESTING EVERY SATURDAY

walloped those from older, stodgier tech companies such as Microsoft, Cisco and Intel. But the laughter has faded in recent weeks, as big, dividendpaying tech companies have (largely) held up in the tech retrenchment. In fact, there’s a growing realization that big tech can pay big dividends — something that’s good for both retirees and young investors. The joy of investing in technology is, of course, owning a stock

Total return 2014 5 years -6.5% 202% -4.6% 200% -3.5% 186% 1.8% 186% -1.8% 168% -1.5% 130%

that doubles or triples rapidly, giving you the chance to scoff at the losers who invest in more prosaic names, such as Coca-Cola or Wells Fargo. Unfortunately, tech stocks that soar typically fall on their faces eventually. Most small tech spitfires are trades, not long-term investments. For every Apple, there are dozens of Pets.com. Last year, tech companies that paid no dividends clobbered their less exciting brethren. The tech-

laden Nasdaq composite index has 603 tech companies, of which 127 pay dividends. In 2013, the non-payers averaged a 57% gain, vs. 45% for dividend payers, including dividends, according to S&P Capital IQ. But the giddy trills of laughter are coming from dividend payers this year. So far this year, tech dividend payers are up 1.2%, vs. a 6.3% loss for non-payers. Tech stocks are noted for volatility, and dividends have two benefits in rocky markets. The first is that their cash payouts will cushion your losses in a bad market. The other is that companies that pay regular, reasonable dividends tend to be more financially stable than those that don’t. Part of the reason is that once you pay a dividend, Wall Street gets very testy if you cut or susv STORY CONTINUES ON 6B


6B

USA TODAY FOR FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

**

AMERICA’S MARKETS

What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY

It’s not exactly an information vacuum, but Wall Street traders who started to show signs of jitters in recent days after the Dow hit a record high Tuesday and then faded, will be forced to trade on a dearth of market-moving data points this coming week. The light incoming data, however, should not be ignored. They will focus on home sales, earnings from companies that sell stuff to homeowners and the much-anticipated release of the minutes of the Federal Reserve’s April 2930 meeting, which will shed some light on when the Fed might start hiking interest rates. First-quarter earnings season is winding down. Only 23 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500

Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:

+44.50

DOW JONES

LESS THAN $100,000

+7.01

INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE

CHANGE: +.3% YTD: -85.35 YTD % CHG: -.5%

CLOSE: 16,491.31 PREV. CLOSE: 16,446.81 RANGE: 16,414.32-16,498.99

NASDAQ

COMP

+21.30

+6.92

CHANGE: +.5% YTD: -86.00 YTD % CHG: -2.1%

CLOSE: 4,090.59 PREV. CLOSE: 4,069.29 RANGE: 4,044.27-4,091.16

GAINERS

CLOSE: 1,102.91 PREV. CLOSE: 1,095.99 RANGE: 1,088.56-1,102.91

Price

$ Chg

Nordstrom (JWN)

70.55

+9.06

+14.7 +14.2

Autodesk (ADSK)

51.67 +3.85

+8.1

+2.7

Applied Materials (AMAT)

20.21

+1.52

+8.1

+14.3

Lam Research (LRCX)

58.52 +2.66

+4.8

+7.5

Kansas City Southern (KSU)

103.52 +4.58

+4.6

-16.4

Constellation Brands (STZ)

82.95 +3.09

+3.9

+17.9

shion retailer jumps after first-quarter results. Evens 2014 after solid first quarter.

Meets quarterly expectations and hits month’s high.

Price target raised at RBC Capital.

Railroad operator upgrades to buy at Bank of America.

Solid Friday brings shares near year’s high.

20.84

+.69

SanDisk (SNDK)

90.99

+2.67

+3.0 +29.0

374.09

+9.66

+2.7

-2.6

90.48

+2.31

+2.6

-2.5

Breaks losing streak since hitting year’s high.

Intuitive Surgical (ISRG)

Keeps market perform at Leerink Swann.

Tiffany (TIF)

Reverses loss from downgrade.

LOSERS

Company (ticker symbol)

+3.4

-8.5

YTD % Chg % Chg

Price

$ Chg

Chesapeake Energy (CHK)

27.64

-1.35

-4.7

+1.8

Darden Restaurants (DRI)

48.49

-2.20

-4.3

-10.8

NetApp (NTAP)

33.72

-.99

-2.8

-18.0

Mylan (MYL)

46.96

-1.06

-2.2

+8.2

Whole Foods Market (WFM)

37.91

-.85

-2.2

-34.4

Windstream (WIN)

9.37

-.19

-2.0

+17.4

Cabot Oil & Gas (COG)

36.51

-.70

-1.9

-5.8

TripAdvisor (TRIP)

82.16

-1.45

-1.7

-.8

Cameron (CAM)

63.62

-1.02

-1.6

+6.9

Murphy Oil (MUR)

60.13

-.97

-1.6

-7.3

To spin off oilfield services; stock even for 2014 now. Tries to sell Red Lobster, hits month’s low.

Price target lowered at Wunderlich.

Favorable Copaxone ruling doesn’t recover early dip.

Gets downgraded and gets price target cut. Dips early, but 2014 still solid.

Hits month’s low, but Zacks likes this one.

Price target lowered at Nomura.

Nears month’s low as insider unloads.

Oil export ban doesn’t help weak sector.

Darden Restaurants

Late Thursday the retailer said apparel, jewelry and home goods Price: $9.73 sales helped it deliver better-thanChg: +$1.36 expected earnings for the first % chg: +16.2% Day’s high/low: quarter. Sales at stores open at least a year grew 6.2%. $9.87/$9.41 Fund, ranked by size PIMCO TotRetIs Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard InstPlus Vanguard TotStIIns Fidelity Contra American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds GrthAmA m

ETF, ranked by volume Ticker SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPY iShs Emerg Mkts EEM PowerShs QQQ Trust QQQ iShares Rus 2000 IWM SPDR Financial XLF Barc iPath Vix ST VXX Direxion SCapBear 3x TZA iShs China Large Cap FXI iShare Japan EWJ SPDR Energy XLE

Chg. unch. +0.18 +0.18 +0.65 +0.65 +0.65 +0.18 +0.41 +0.05 +0.14

4wk 1 +1.0% +0.6% +0.6% +1.0% +1.0% +1.0% +0.6% -0.4% +1.9% +0.8%

YTD 1 +2.9% +1.7% +1.7% +2.4% +2.4% +2.4% +1.8% -1.6% +4.6% +0.2%

Close 188.05 42.94 87.71 109.57 21.75 36.55 18.11 35.97 11.15 93.40

Chg. +0.65 +0.56 +0.58 +0.69 +0.03 -0.87 -0.33 +0.40 +0.02 -0.24

% Chg +0.3% +1.3% +0.7% +0.6% +0.1% -2.3% -1.8% +1.1% +0.2% -0.3%

%YTD +1.8% +2.7% -0.3% -5.0% -0.5% -14.1% +6.7% -6.3% -8.1% +5.5%

INTEREST RATES

MORTGAGE RATES

Type Prime lending Federal funds 3 mo. T-bill 5 yr. T-note 10 yr. T-note

Type 30 yr. fixed 15 yr. fixed 1 yr. ARM 5/1 ARM

Close 6 mo ago 3.25% 3.25% 0.09% 0.09% 0.01% 0.07% 1.56% 1.34% 2.52% 2.71%

Close 6 mo ago 4.17% 4.30% 3.22% 3.41% 2.56% 3.02% 3.26% 3.54%

SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM

Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.38 1.37 Corn (bushel) 4.84 4.84 Gold (troy oz.) 1,293.30 1,293.50 Hogs, lean (lb.) 1.19 1.19 Natural Gas (Btu.) 4.41 4.47 Oil, heating (gal.) 2.95 2.95 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 102.02 101.50 Silver (troy oz.) 19.29 19.45 Soybeans (bushel) 14.65 14.70 Wheat (bushel) 6.74 6.78

Chg. +0.01 unch. -0.20 unch. -0.06 unch. +0.52 -0.16 -0.05 -0.04

% Chg. +0.4% unch. unch. unch. -1.3% unch. +0.5% -0.8% -0.4% -0.6%

% YTD +2.5% +14.6% +7.6% +39.2% +4.3% -4.0% +3.7% -0.2% +11.6% +11.4%

FOREIGN CURRENCIES Close .5945 1.0867 6.2337 .7300 101.51 12.8936

Prev. .5954 1.0877 6.2309 .7291 101.54 12.9496

6 mo. ago .6207 1.0450 6.0925 .7413 100.23 12.9385

Yr. ago .6533 1.0168 6.1539 .7747 102.06 12.2659

FOREIGN MARKETS Close 9,629.10 22,712.91 14,096.59 6,855.81 41,898.84

Prev. 9,656.05 22,730.86 14,298.21 6,840.89 41,561.83

Change -26.95 -17.95 -201.62 +14.92 +337.01

%Chg. -0.3% -0.1% -1.4% +0.2% +0.8%

YTD % +0.8% -2.6% -13.5% +1.6% -1.9%

SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Beware of too-high dividends pend it. Investors rely on dividends, and when investors are disappointed, they clobber the stock. So companies think long and hard before they decide to pay a dividend. It’s worth noting that companies with unusually high dividends tend to underperform. Companies don’t dole out lavish dividends because they’re swell folks. A dividend yield is the payout divided by the stock price. Most likely, a high dividend yield means the stock price has fallen. According to a recent study by

NAV 10.92 47.27 47.29 172.50 173.63 172.51 47.30 93.68 21.42 43.10

1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED

Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City

IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY

a lot of sins. The only real danger to owning a company with a lot of cash is that management sometimes gets tempted to do stupid things with it. But among the risks in this world, that’s a relatively small one. uA rating of three stars or higher from Standard & Poor’s. That’s not a guarantee that a stock will fare well, and you could argue that a five-star stock has nowhere to go but down. Nevertheless, companies with low ratings tend to take awhile to climb out of their fix. The five most interesting tech dividend plays:

$10

April 21

May 16

4-WEEK TREND

$48.49

May 16

$9.73

$10

$6

April 21

May 16

INVESTING ASK MATT

TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS

COMMODITIES

two managers of the Heartland Funds, companies with high dividend payouts tend to underperform over time. A sustained drop in anticipated earnings usually foreshadows a dividend cut — or bankruptcy filing. So, if you’re going to look for dividend-paying tech companies, look for those that pay decent dividends, but not outrageous ones. In this case, we looked for stocks of companies that paid more than 2.5% and less than 5%. For added safety, we looked for: u$1 billion or more in cash or other short-term holdings. A billion dollars in the bank can cover

POWERED BY SIGFIG

$11.27

4-WEEK TREND

J.C. Penney

Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso

$25

The company said it agreed to sell its underperforming Red Lobster $60 chain and related real estate assets to investment firm Golden Gate Capital for $2.1 billion. It will focus $40 on its flagship chain, Olive Garden. April 21

Price: $48.49 Chg: -$2.20 % chg: -4.3% Day’s high/low: $49.38/$48.29

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

v CONTINUED FROM 5B

+0.14 +9.69 GE JNSXX GEVA

4-WEEK TREND

The wrestling promoter plunged Chg: -$8.66 on news its online TV network % chg: -43.5% won’t make up for weak demand in Day’s high/low: its other businesses. $11.80/$10.59

TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS

Masco (MAS)

Ups dividend by 20%, May’s winner now.

5 day avg: 6 month avg: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

STORY STOCKS World Wrestling Entertainment Price: $11.27

YTD % Chg % Chg

Company (ticker symbol)

+0.12 +5.34 GE DDD FB

More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis.

CLOSE: 1,877.86 PREV. CLOSE: 1,870.85 RANGE: 1,864.82-1,878.28

S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS

+0.14 +7.28 GE JNSXX SPY

NOTE: INFORMATION PROVIDED BY SIGFIG IS STATISTICAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOMMENDATION OF ANY STRATEGY OR SECURITY. VISIT SIGFIG.USATODAY.COM/DISCLOSE FOR ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES AND INFORMATION.

POWERED BY SIGFIG

RUSSELL 2000 INDEX

CHANGE: +.6% YTD: -60.73 YTD % CHG: -5.2%

5 day avg: 6 month avg: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

MORE THAN $1 MILLION

5 day avg: 6 month avg: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

For smaller SigFig investors (less than $100,000 in assets), Tesla has been the most-bought stock in mid-May.

RUSSELL

RUT

COMPOSITE

-0.17 +3.20 GE TSLA GWPH

$250,001$1 MILLION

STANDARD & POOR'S

CHANGE: +.4% YTD: +29.50 YTD % CHG: +1.6%

$100,001$250,000

5 day avg: 6 month avg: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

S&P 500

SPX

USA’s portfolio allocation by wealth

Here’s how America’s individual investors are performing based on data from SigFig online investment tracking service:

report next week, including home improvement retailers Home Depot (Tuesday) and Lowe’s (Wednesday), says Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. The profit-reporting season has been better than expected. Profit growth is tracking at a 5.5% pace, based on reports from 93% of S&P 500 names. Wall Street will be watching these stocks closely, as their businesses are reliant on spending by consumers and construction contractors and offer a glimpse into the health of the economy and housing market. Investors will also get data on the spring home-selling season. On Thursday, the number of existing homes sold in April will be released, followed Friday by new home sales. Nomura America is expecting existing home sales to rise 2% to 4.68 million units. New home sales are expected to rise 6.8% to 410,000, Nomura says.

MAJOR INDEXES DJIA

How we’re performing

DID YOU KNOW?

Wall Street eyes light week of data

ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM

Berkshire Class B shares are an easy option

Q: Should I copy Warren Buffett’s stock picks? Matt Krantz

mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY

A: Imitation may be a sincere form of flattery, but it’s not a great way to make money with stocks. Every quarter Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway discloses its ownership stakes in public companies. Investors pay a great deal of attention to Berkshire’s portfolio because Buffett has had a solid long-term track record at picking winning stocks and sticking with them. Most recently Buffett disclosed new stakes in companies, including one in telecom Verizon. He also said he’s reducing holdings in General Motors. There’s not much of a reason to mimic the moves, though. Most important, why mimic Berkshire when you can simply buy the real thing? After years of resisting a split, Berkshire finally announced a split of its Class B shares in 2009. The shares trade for about $125 apiece now, so there’s nothing to stop you from just investing in the company itself. Doing so will eliminate the timing issues that come with copying Buffett. Shares of Verizon jumped 2% the day after Berkshire disclosed its stake. If anything, investors might use the Berkshire endorsement as a validation of stocks they own already or are thinking about buying. If a stock passed muster with Buffett, it definitely must have some attraction to long-term investors.

uMicrosoft (ticker: MSFT). Microsoft survived the tech wreck with considerable aplomb. The company sells for 13 times its expected 12-month earnings, which makes it cheap by most standards (the lower the P-E, the cheaper the stock, relative to earnings). And it’s sitting on $77 billion in cash. Yield: 2.66%. uIntel (INTC). Another survivor of the tech wreck, the chip giant has been a disappointment the past 12 months. But it has about $12 billion in cash, a P-E of 12.4, and a yield of 3.42%. uCisco (CSCO). Wall Street woke up to the company on Wednesday, with its stock soaring 7% on a great earnings report. But the company still yields

3.07%, carries a P-E of 11.3, and has $50.6 billion in cash. uTexas Instruments (TXN). The company is up 5.2% this year and has $1.6 billion in cash. Its P-E is 16.9, and its dividend yield is 2.56%. uSymantec (SYMC). The stock sells for 11 times earnings and yields 2.8%, and one reason it’s so cheap is that it has fallen 13% this year. Still, it’s hard to imagine that the market for computer protection will shrink in years to come. And the company has $4.7 billion in cash. If you invest in the big, dividend-paying companies, you won’t double your money overnight — but you’ll probably have the last laugh.


USA TODAY FOR FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

**

7B

LIFE LIFELINE

MOVIES

ROYALS REPORT SELFIES WITH HARRY Cellphones have not always been Prince Harry’s friends (phonehacking, nude Vegas photos), but he can’t live without them either. This week he sent his first tweet to promote his Invictus Games for wounded vets, and on Friday, during a two-day visit to Estonia, he happily posed for selfies in the crowd after paying tribute to the country’s fallen warriors.

CHRIS JACKSON, GETTY IMAGES

MAKING WAVES What Paris wedding? It’s “la dolce vita” for Kim Kardashian and Kanye West, who are making it legal in the City of Flowers not the City of Lights. Elisa Di Lupo, with the Florence mayor’s office, tells the Associated Press the wedding and reception will be May 24 at the city’s 16th-century Belvedere Fort.

MIKE COPPOLA, GETTY IMAGES

CAUGHT IN THE ACT Stuff like this doesn’t usually happen at the decorous Cannes Film Festival: A man ran onto the red carpet Friday and dived under America Ferrera’s full gown before security dragged him off. Ferrera, there for the premiere of “How to Train Your Dragon 2,” was creeped out. The man was later identified by “The Hollywood Reporter” as Ukrainian “prankster journalist” Vitalii Sediuk.

JULIEN WARNAND, EPA

THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “The ‘Rachel’ was one of the hardest hairstyles to maintain. Me and the blow dryer and the hairbrush GETTY IMAGES weren’t meant for each other. When (my stylist) would style it, my hair would look gorgeous. But then when I was left to my own devices, it wouldn’t look the same.” — Jennifer Aniston tells ABC News why she hated her famous haircut Compiled by Maria Puente

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Bam! Pow! Batman turns 75 The May 1939 issue of Detective Comics No. 27 introduced Batman and is in the top five highest-priced comics sold (in millions): Action Comics No. 1 $2.2 Superman, 1938 Action Comics $1.5 No. 1 Amazing Fantasy No. 15 $1.1 Spider-Man, 1962 Detective Comics No. 27 $1.1 Batman, 1939 Action Comics $1.0 No. 1 Source gpanalysis.com, April 2014; Image DC Comics ANNE R. CAREY AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY

Valka (voiced by Cate Blanchett) is a protector of dragons, like the Hobblegrunt Gruff. She has a mysterious past.

DREAMWORKS ANIMATION

‘Train Your Dragon 2’ may burn brighter than the first Thanks to original’s lasting popularity, sequel has big fan base ready to line up Bryan Alexander @bryalexand USA TODAY

CANNES , FRANCE How To Train Your Dragon was a hit in 2010. But its sequel seems poised to soar to even greater heights. After a glamorous red carpet world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival on Friday, How To Train Your Dragon 2 is looking to bust out of the gates when it opens June 13. Eric Wold, a senior media analyst for the B. Riley & Co. investment firm, is feeling very bullish that Dragon 2 “should generate significantly greater revenues than the first.” A big factor is that children, and adults, have come to love the original through the release, DVDs and word-of-mouth. Two Academy Award nominations in 2011 (including best animated film) didn’t hurt. Now that the sequel is coming out, there’s more positive name recognition for the

once-unknown brand. Further, a popular Cartoon Network show, Dragons: Riders of Berk, began airing in fall 2012, further endearing the franchise to viewers. “This has driven up new interest and buzz,” says Wold. Another factor: The glut of animated releases has slowed this summer, giving Dragon 2 a nineweek window to own the animated market unopposed. “This will drive up additional pent-up demand from children and families looking for something to watch,” says Wold. The filmmakers are excited about a new story that takes place around teen character Hiccup and his Night Fury dragon, Toothless, both of whom have grown up five screen years since their last adventure. There are new characters, including Eret, son of Eret (voiced by Game of Thrones star Kit Harrington) and Valka (Cate Blanchett) who is Hiccup’s long-lost mother. Director Dean DeBlois says he

THIBAULT CAMUS, AP

Cate Blanchett poses with character Toothless at the world premiere of How to Train Your Dragon 2 at Cannes on Friday. recruited Blanchett at the 2011 Oscar program for the sequel. “I told her that I had written the part for her in How To Train Your Dragon 2. And she smiled, saying that the (original) movie was “a big hit in her household with her three boys,” says DeBlois. “I told her about the character, and I could see it blossoming in her mind.” Djimon Hounsou, who plays villain Drago Bludvist, says it’s

also all about the dragons, both returning and new fierce creatures. “The dragons are an amazing draw. And they are the main characters in this film,” he says. DreamWorks CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg says he believes the film will live up to the original’s good name — and then some. “The first one is beloved, but I am confident we have a movie that is a very worthy next chapter,” says Katzenberg.

PEOPLE

Walters on Hillary, Oprah tribute: ‘I’m so moved’ Big names show up for fond farewell to ‘View’ pioneer Olivia Barker USA TODAY

Of course Barbara Walters, on her last official day on television, would draw the most powerful women in broadcasting to her set to celebrate her retirement. But she also drew two of the most powerful women in the world: Hillary Rodham Clinton and Oprah Winfrey, who surprised the TV pioneer on her last day co-hosting The View. The typically unflappable Walters, 84, looked genuinely stunned, even teary. Friday marked the end of her five-decade career on television, including her 17 years on The View, which she co-created. While she’ll continue to serve as an executive producer of the talk show, her on-air duties are finished. “I can’t believe this day has come, and I can’t believe it’s for real. I don’t know what we’re all going to do,” said Clinton, the first guest on Friday’s show.

IDA MAE ASTUTE, ABC

A slew of female journalists join Barbara Walters as she says goodbye to daily TV with her final appearance on The View.

The former secretary of State had some advice for Walters, who came to ABC in 1976 after beginning her career on NBC’s Today in 1962. “First of all, take some time off,” Clinton said. “At least a week.” (Still, there was interviewing to be done. The question, you can guess. The answer: “I am running — around the park,” Clinton revealed.) And for Winfrey, it turns out

Walters had a profound influence on the talk titan. “You have literally meant the world to me,” Winfrey said. “When I auditioned for my first television job, I didn’t know what to do, so I pretended to be Barbara.” That lasted until “I mispronounced Canada and called it ‘Can-AH-da,’ which Barbara would never do.” Winfrey continued, “I want to

thank you for being a pioneer and everything that word means.” Walters’ reaction to the tribute? “I’m so moved.” Then out walked a literal receiving line of broadcasting giants, from Katie Couric to Connie Chung, whom Walters seemed to embrace just a little longer. Standing among the crowd, Walters said, “This is my legacy.” Nonetheless, despite the extraordinary hour, there were the standard books to shill (Clinton’s Hard Choices) and gossip to suss out (guest Michael Douglas, who separated from wife Catherine Zeta-Jones in August, said they are now doing “good”). Walters, of course, had the last word, a meaty five minutes or so of airtime: “How do you say goodbye to something like 50 years in television?” With jokes: “The good news is I will have time now to get Botox. But now that I’m no longer going to be on the air, I don’t need Botox.” With feeling: “From the bottom of my heart to all of you, I can say, thank you, thank you.” And, finally, with a bit of poetry: “When all of that is done, I can take a deep breath and enjoy my view.”


8B

USA TODAY FOR FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

**

Rocklahoma

Pryor, Okla. May 23-25 Located outside Tulsa, Rocklahoma was established in 2007 but revamped by AEG Live in 2010, now welcoming a broader spectrum of classic, up-and-coming and popular rock bands. A part of the World’s Loudest Mouth festival series, this jamming weekend also features an annual Miss Rocklahoma beauty pageant. HEADLINERS: Kid Rock, Staind, Twisted Sister, Deftones, Motorhead DETAILS: rocklahoma.com

Sasquatch!

George, Wash. May 23-25 The festival’s Fourth of July weekend event recently was canceled for lack of fan interest, giving concertgoers even more incentive to attend the Memorial Day weekend festivities. Attendees have been flocking to this Northwest fest, held along the cliffs of the Columbia River Gorge at the famous The Gorge amphitheater, since 2002. HEADLINERS: Outkast, The National, M.I.A., Foster the People, Kid Cudi

indie rock. HEADLINERS: Fall Out Boy, Paramore, Empire of the Sun, Young the Giant, Fitz & the Tantrums

SUMMER’S BEST FESTS, COAST TO COAST

DETAILS: bunburyfestival.com

Forecastle

Envious of all your sun-drenched friends posting their music-fest adventures to Instagram? Well, join ’em! With more than three months of summer festivals about to kick off, USA TODAY’s Patrick Ryan recommends 25 of the season’s best.

Louisville July 18-20 A number of Kentucky-based breweries will be on hand to quench attendees’ thirst with craft beer. Festival-goers also can buy passes to the popular Bourbon Lodge, which serves — you guessed it — many varieties of whiskey. HEADLINERS: Outkast, Jack White, Beck, The Replacements, Band of Horses DETAILS: forecastlefest.com

Lorde will be one of the headliners at Boston Calling on May 23-25.

DETAILS: sasquatchfestival.com

Boston Calling

Boston May 23-25, Sept. 5-7 Now in its second year, Boston Calling is continuing its biannual events in the historic City Hall Plaza, hosting early- and late-summer fests. HEADLINERS: Jack Johnson, Death Cab for Cutie, Modest Mouse, Tegan & Sara, Bastille (May); The National, Lorde, The Replacements, Childish Gambino, Nas, The Roots (September) DETAILS: bostoncalling.com

KEVIN MAZUR, WIREIMAGE, FOR NPG RECORDS 2013

Prince heads to the Essence Festival.

Pitchfork

Chicago July 18-20 The taste-making music publication offers up its ninth festival in Chicago’s Union Park, hosting indie royalty and virtual unknowns for more than 50,000 attendees. HEADLINERS: Beck, Kendrick Lamar, Neutral Milk Hotel, Grimes, St. Vincent DETAILS: pitchforkmusicfestival.com

Lollapalooza

Chicago Aug. 1-3 A record 300,000 people came out for last year’s enormously popular fest, and this year looks to be no different: Tickets for the Grant Park festivities sold out in 20 minutes. HEADLINERS: Eminem, Kings of Leon, Arctic Monkeys, Calvin Harris, Lorde

MARK HORTON, WIREIMAGE

Elton John heads to Tennessee to play Bonnaroo June 12-15.

Electric Daisy Carnival

New York, May 24-25 Las Vegas, June 20-22 One of the biggest electronic festivals in the world, Electric Daisy Carnival Las Vegas attracted more than 345,000 attendees last June. EDC festivals in London and Orlando also are planned this year. HEADLINERS: Bassnectar, Cash Cash, Cedric Gervais, Krewella, Rudimental (New York); Vegas headliners to be announced DETAILS: electricdaisycarnival.com

Free Press Summer

Houston May 31-June 1 Organized by local arts newspaper ‘Free Press Houston’, the indie-leaning two-day fest is held in Eleanor Tinsley Park. More than 100,000 people attended last year. All can enjoy an array of music workshops, art installations and the beloved paint slip-and-slide. HEADLINERS: Jack White, Vampire Weekend, Zedd, Lauryn Hill, Wu-Tang Clan DETAILS: fpsf.com

CMA Music Festival

Nashville June 5-8 The massive country event already has sold out its nighttime concerts at LP Field, but more than 100 other acts will play free shows at outdoor venues around downtown Nashville. HEADLINERS: Jason Aldean, Dierks Bentley, Florida Georgia Line, Lady Antebellum, Miranda Lambert DETAILS: cmaworld.com/ cma-music-festival

Governors Ball

New York June 6-8 Festivalgoers make the hike to Randall’s Island by subway, bus, car and ferry for the three-day event, where you can kick back playing lawn games such as corn hole and bocce ball or experience art installations. HEADLINERS: Outkast, Jack White, Vampire Weekend, The Strokes, Phoenix

DETAILS: lollapalooza.com

Newport Jazz

ZACH CORDNER, INVISION/AP

Bonnaroo

Manchester, Tenn. June 12-15 Aside from boasting one of the season’s most eclectic lineups, Bonnaroo also hosts movie screenings, stand-up comedy and a late-night “silent disco,” where everyone boogies wearing wireless headphones. HEADLINERS: Elton John, Kanye West, Lionel Richie, Skrillex, Frank Ocean

Hard Summer

Los Angeles Aug. 2-3 The immensely popular EDM event is moving from its usual Chinatown setting to the Whittier Narrows Recreation Area this year. HEADLINERS: Tiësto, Disclosure, Dillon Francis, Jack U, Axwell DETAILS: hardsummer.com

Spring Awakening

Chicago June 13-15 Tickets are nearly sold out for the massive third-annual fest, which welcomes legendary DJs and EDM newcomers to Soldier Field. HEADLINERS: Tiësto, Pretty Lights, Kaskade, Knife Party, Diplo

Outside Lands

San Francisco Aug. 8-10 Along with the smorgasbord of headliners, festivalgoers can sample a wide selection of gourmet cuisine in the festival’s many “lands” (simply called Beer, Cheese, Choco and Wine). HEADLINERS: Kanye West, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, The Killers, Arctic Monkeys, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis

DETAILS: springawakeningfestival.com

DETAILS: sfoutsidelands.com

VOTE FOR THE BEST LIFE.USATODAY.COM

Which is summer’s best fest? Cast your vote online.

RICK KERN, GETTY IMAGES FOR SAMSUNG

ROBERT HANASHIRO, USA TODAY

Firefly

Dover, Del. June 19-22 Set against the forest backdrop of the Woodlands, Firefly is unique for its Treehouse Sessions, where rising artists slide or zip-line in to play “treehouse” sets. HEADLINERS: Foo Fighters, Outkast, Jack Johnson, Imagine Dragons, Beck DETAILS: fireflyfestival.com

Summerfest

Milwaukee June 25-29, July 1-6 Summerfest touts itself the “world’s largest musical festival,” and it’s easy to see why: More than 800 acts are set to play 11 stages, drawing crowds of 900,000 over 11 days. HEADLINERS: Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars, Dave Matthews Band, Outkast, Brad Paisley

X Music

DETAILS: xgamesaustin.com/festival

DETAILS: newsportjazzfest.org

DETAILS: bonnaroo.com

DETAILS: governorsballmusicfestival.com

Austin June 6-8 Come for the X Games, stay for the music at the Austin360 Amphitheater. The three-day, general-admission ticket is bargain-priced at $89. HEADLINERS: Kanye West, Pretty Lights, Flaming Lips, Mac Miller, Slightly Stoopid

Hang out this weekend with The Black Keys’ Patrick Carney and Dan Auerbach at Hangout in Gulf Shores, Ala.

Newport, R.I. Aug. 1-3 The famed jazz fest, which has played host to Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday and countless other music luminaries, is celebrating its 60th anniversary this year. HEADLINERS: Bobby McFerrin, Trombone Shorty, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Dr. John, Robert Glasper

DETAILS: summerfest.com

Kanye West’s June plans include Austin’s X Music.

Kicker Country Stampede

Manhattan, Kan. June 26-29 Motocross exhibitions and carnival attractions will accompany the musical offerings at the 19th annual event, which attracted 165,000 festivalgoers last summer. HEADLINERS: Luke Bryan,

Eric Church, Chris Young, Easton Corbin, Randy Houser DETAILS: countrystampede.com

Electric Forest

Rothbury, Mich. June 26-29 Just three hours outside Detroit, this wooded escape comes alive with eccentrically dressed patrons, neon lights, psychedelic art installations and, of course, dozens of DJs, rappers and pop acts. HEADLINERS: The String Cheese Incident, STS9, Zedd, Lauryn Hill, Cut Copy DETAILS: electricforestfestival.com

Essence

New Orleans July 3-6 On top of its electric lineup, nearly two dozen influential African Americans will be speaking as part of the fest’s empowerment panels, including an HIV/AIDS talk led by Alicia Keys. HEADLINERS: Prince, Janelle Monáe, Nile Rodgers, Mary J. Blige, Jill Scott

DETAILS: essence.com/festival

Bunbury

Cincinnati July 11-13 The banks of the Ohio River are flooded with craft beer and six stages of

Summer Set

Somerset, Wis. Aug. 15-17 Another forest locale for friends to pitch a tent or park their RV, this Wisconsin hideaway is in its third year. HEADLINERS: Bassnectar, Chromeo, Wu-Tang Clan, Chance the Rapper, Schoolboy Q = DETAILS: summersetfestival.com

Made in America

Philadelphia, Los Angeles Aug. 30-31 The Jay-Z-supported, Budweiserproduced fest is hosting its inaugural event in Los Angeles’ Grand Park, after its second Philadelphia outing drew 60,000 fans last year. HEADLINERS: To be announced DETAILS: madeinamericafest.com

Bumbershoot

Seattle Aug. 30-Sept. 1 The rainy city fest prides itself on being about more than just music, with art exhibits, theatrical performances and panels with literary and TV personalities. HEADLINERS: Foster the People, J. Cole, The Replacements, The Head and the Heart, Schoolboy Q DETAILS: bumbershoot.org


FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE C1

Several Fort Collins-area swimmers advance to finals at state meet

Bibbs says Denver feels like the right spot at Broncos’ minicamp

HIGH SCHOOL SWIMMING • C6

NFL • C2

CALIFORNIA CHROME HANDLERS HOPE HE CAN RECHARGE FOR PREAKNESS PAGE C11 STATE TRACK AND FIELD

FLYING HIGH Poudre’s Carly Paul wins high jump state title for third consecutive year. By Kelly Lyell | KellyLyell@coloradoan.com LAKEWOOD — The state meet brings out the best in Carly Paul. The Poudre High School senior won the Class 5A state championship in the high jump for the third year in a row Friday, overcoming an early miss and fatigued legs from running a preliminary race in the 300 hurdles between jumps. “She did exactly what she needed to do, right when she needed to do it,” Poudre jumps coach Alex Square said. Paul was one of three jumpers to clear 5 feet, 8 inches — matching her season-best. She won by having the fewest misses leading up to that height after all three failed to get over 5-9. At that point, Paul was pretty certain she had won, even as Rampart’s Ashlyn Hare was celebrating with her coach, believing she had just won the state title. A review of the results by Colorado High School Activities Association officials confirmed it. Paul, who got over 5-7 and 5-8 on her second attempts, was the winner, with Fountain-Fort Carson’s Rajon O’Quinn — who needed three tries to clear 5-7 and two to get over 5-8 — second and Hare, who needed three tries to clear 5-8, third. “I just came in today hoping to do my very best, and I think that’s what happened,” said Paul, Poudre’s first three-time track and field state champion. “... It really came down to the very last jump. It STATE TRACK was a good way to win AND FIELD it.” Paul’s title was the CHAMPIONSHIPS sixth individual » Where: Jeffco Stadium crown won by an ath- » When: 8:30 a.m. Satlete from a Fort Col- urday, gates open at lins school during the 7:15 a.m. three-day state meet » Admission: $8 for at Jeffco Stadium and adults, $6 for students the only one Friday. K-12 and senior citizens City athletes won five » Information: individual titles and www.chsaa.org one relay championship Thursday. Heritage Christian’s Rebekah Rairdon, winner of a state title in the girls 1A 3,200-meter run Thursday, finished second Friday in the girls Class 1A 800 meters. Heritage Christian teams finished second in both the girls and boys 1A 3,200 relay, while Resurrection Christian was second and Liberty Common third in the boys 2A 800 relay. Fort Collins’ girls were third in the 5A 800 medley relay, while the Liberty Common girls were third in the 2A 800 relay. Nobody could match what Paul did. Three consecutive state titles in the same event after finishing second her freshman year. “I would say the first time that she won was more of a physical feat,” Square said. “The last two were all mental.” It’s all about focus, said Paul, who will run track in college at Brown University. She gives her full attention to whatever event she’s competing in at the time. She finished second in her preliminary heats of both hurdles races, posting the third-fastest qualifying time for Saturday’s final in the 100 hurdles Thursday and the fourth-fastest prelim time for Saturday’s final in the 300 hurdles Friday. She also ran the anchor leg Friday on a Poudre 1,600 relay team that just missed advancing to the final, turning in the 10th-fastest qualifying time. The top nine teams move on. Instead of getting in the way of her highjumping, competing in other events helps alleviate the pressure that comes with being a two-time state champion trying to win a third title. “This year, I felt less pressure, because I took a new outlook on it,” Paul said. “I decided, ‘You know what? I’m going to make the most of my senior year. I’m going to do my best, and I perform best when I’m having fun.”

Follow reporter Kelly Lyell at twitter.com/KellyLyell and facebook.com/KellyLyell.news.

BASEBALL

Rocky gets 2 wins to open state tourney By Kevin Lytle KevinLytle@coloradoan.com

DENVER — For 16 innings Friday,

Poudre’s Carly Paul clears the height of 5 feet, 8 inches on her way to winning the Class 5A girls high jump for the third consecutive year.

PHOTO GALLERY Visit Coloradoan.com to see a photo gallery of Friday’s state track and field championships.

the Rocky Mountain High School baseball team fought through two tough games that would have been worthy of state title games. In the first game of the Class 5A state tournament, the Lobos beat Regis Jesuit 2-1 with the game-winning run coming in the sixth inning. Then, in the second game, Rocky Mountain took down defending champion ThunderRidge 5-4 in nine innings after trailing in the sixth. Let’s start at the finish. With the game tied at 4 in the top of the ninth inning, ThunderRidge (15-8) had two runners reach base, but a failed sacrifice and a lineout double play allowed reliever Cory Richer to escape unharmed. Leading off the bottom of the ninth, Nathan Elsheimer singled and advanced to second on an error by the left fielder. Zach Hahn bunted and reached first on an error. Cole Anderson was intentionally walked to load the bases with no outs. Dean Lawson stepped to the plate, took a pitch off the shoulder, and Rocky Mountain (18-5) walked off 5-4 winners against the team that beat them in the state title game last year. “I knew he liked to come with the curve, and I was sitting on that,” said Lawson, who was hit twice against ThunderRidge. “I’m so excited. I’m going to take it on the bus. It feels great.” It was the second win in less than two weeks against ThunderRidge after the Lobos beat the Grizzlies in the final game of the regular season. This one was set up by a close game over Regis. In the bottom of the sixth of Rocky Mountain’s opening game against Regis, the Lobos had two outs when Kyle Reisman reached base on an error with the game tied at 1. Kadin Breeze came in as a courtesy runner and advanced to third on a single from Trevor Thomas. Catcher Garrett Hammer singled to right field, pumping his fist running down the baseline, as Breeze scored the go-ahead run. Tyler Stevens finished off Regis (18-4) with a complete game win, striking out eight and allowing just three hits and one run. The Lobos are now in a perfect See LOBOS, Page C5

ROCKY MOUNTAIN 2, REGIS JESUIT 1 (GAME 1) Regis Jesuit Rocky Mountain

000 010 0 —1 3 1 010 001 0 —2 4 3

W — Tyler Stevens. L — Brent Schwarz.

ROCKY MOUNTAIN 5, THUNDERRIDGE 4 (GAME 2) Poudre’s Carly Paul clears a bar on her way to winning the Class 5A girls high jump during the second day of the Colorado State Track and Field Championships on Friday at Jeffco Stadium in Lakewood. PHOTOS BY ERIN HULL/THE COLORADOAN

ThunderRidge Rocky Mountain

004 000 000 —4 12 3 300 001 001 —5 10 1

W — Cory Richer. L — Tyler Loptein. 2B — Stajduhar, RM; Hammer, RM; Hopper, TR; 3B — Westmoreland, TR.


PAGE C2

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

Colorado Sports MLB Sat. 5-17

Ice

Rapids

Rockies

Wyoming 6 p.m.

at Real Salt Lake 7:30 p.m.

San Diego 6:10 p.m.

Sun. 5-18

San Diego 2:10 p.m.

Mon. 5-19

By Dennis Georgatos Associated Press

DENVER — Jorge

Tue. 5-20

San Francisco 6:40 p.m.

Wed. 5-21

San Francisco 6:40 p.m.

Thur. 5-22

De La Rosa delivers for Rockies

at Nebraska 6:05 p.m.

San Francisco 1:10 p.m.

Fri. 5-23

at Atlanta 5:35 p.m.

SCHEDULE SATURDAY Baseball

5A tourney: Rocky vs. Mountain Vista at All-City Stadium, Denver..........................................................................................3 p.m.

Boys swimming

Class 4A state meet finals EPIC ..............................................2 p.m. Class 5A state meet finals at Veterans Memorial Aquatic Center ..........................................................................................2 p.m.

Track

Track & Field state meet at Jeffco Stadium...................8:30 a.m.

Indoor football

Cavalry at Ice ..............................................................................6 p.m.

ON TV SATURDAY Auto Racing

Indianapolis 500 qualifying (Ch. 7).......................................2 p.m. NASCAR Sprint Cup All-Star Race (FS1) ..........................6:30 p.m.

Baseball

North Carolina at Miami (ESPNU) .......................................10 a.m. Pirates at Yankees (FS1) ...........................................................2 p.m. White Sox at Astros (WGN) ....................................................2 p.m. Orioles at Royals (MLB)............................................................5 p.m. Rockies at Padres (Root).....................................................6:10 p.m.

Basketball

WNBA: Chicago at New York (ESPN2) .................................6 p.m.

De La Rosa carried a no-hitter through six innings and pitched seven scoreless innings, as the Colorado Rockies withstood a late rally to beat the San Diego Padres 3-1 on Friday night. De La Rosa’s bid for the first no-hitter by a Rockies pitcher at Coors Field ended in the seventh inning, when Chris Denorfia led off with a triple off the scoreboard in right field, just the second time a Padres batter had gotten the ball out of the infield to that point. But De La Rosa stranded Denorfia by retiring the next three batters, getting Everth Cabrera on an infield grounder, Chase Headley on a liner to second and Carlos Quentin on a pop-up to blank the Padres on one hit through seven innings. De La Rosa, who was pitching on eight days’ rest because of a bout of back spasms, struck out five and walked one in winning his fifth straight since an 0-3 start. Adam Ottavino and Boone Logan kept the Padres in check through the eighth and LaTroy Hawkins got his 10th save in as many chances despite giving up three hits in the ninth, including an RBI single by Headley. The only no-hitter at Coors Field was on Sept. 17, 1996, by Hideo Nomo in a 9-0 Los An-

Rockies starting pitcher Jorge De La Rosa throws during the first inning of Friday’s game in Denver. JOE MAHONEY/AP

geles Dodgers’ win over the Rockies. Ubaldo Jimenez has the only no-hitter by a Rockies pitcher, at Atlanta in a 4-0 win on April 17, 2010. Padres starter Eric Stults was matching De La Rosa until Drew Stubbs doubled down the third base line with one out in the fourth inning for the game’s first hit. The Rockies went on top in the bottom of the fifth, taking advantage of a fielding error by second baseman Jedd Gyorko to score an unearned run. D.J LeMahieu’s two-out double advanced Jordan Pacheco, aboard on a fielder’s choice, to third.

ROCKIES 3, PADRES 1 San Diego Denorfi rf ECarer ss Headly 3b Quentin lf Amarst pr Gyorko 2b S.Smith ph Maybin cf Hundly c Alonso 1b Stults p Vincent p Grandl ph ATorrs p Thayer p Totals

San Diego Colorado

ab r h bi

4 4 4 3 0 3 1 4 3 2 2 0 1 0 0

1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Colorado Blckmn rf Stubbs cf Tlwtzk ss CGnzlz lf Arenad 3b Culersn 3b Mornea 1b Pachec c LeMahi 2b JDLRs p Ottavin p Logan p Hwkns p

31 1 5 1 Totals

000 000 001 000 010 11x

ab r h bi

4 4 3 4 4 0 4 4 4 2 0 0 0

0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0

1 2 1 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 0 0 0

1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

33 3 9 2

— —

E—E.Cabrera (7), Vincent (1), Gyorko (6). LOB—San Diego 5, Colorado 8. 2B—Denorfia (5), Stubbs (6), LeMahieu (5). 3B—Denorfia (3). SB—Stubbs 2 (4), Tulowitzki (1). CS—Maybin (1). S—J.De La Rosa. San Diego IP H R ER BB SO Stults L,2-4 62⁄3 6 2 1 1 2 1 Vincent ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 2 A.Torres ⁄3 2 1 0 0 2 1 Thayer ⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 Colorado IP H R ER BB SO J.De La Rosa W,5-3 7 1 0 0 1 5 2 Ottavino H,8 ⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 1 Logan H,5 ⁄3 0 0 0 1 1 Hawkins S,10-10 1 3 1 1 0 1 Umpires—Home, Seth Buckminster; First, Brian Knight; Second, Fieldin Culbreth; Third, Manny Gonzalez. T—3:02. A—35,384 (50,480).

1 3

De La Rosa bounced a grounder to second that Gyorko bobbled, allowing De La Rosa to beat the throw to

first and Pacheco to cross the plate with the first run. Pacheco added a run-scoring single in the eighth.

Cycling

Tour of California (NBCSN)................................................2:30 p.m.

Football

Arena: Portland at San Jose (ESPN2)....................................8 p.m.

Golf

PGA Byron Nelson Championship (Golf) ...........................11 a.m. PGA Byron Nelson Championship (Ch. 4)............................1 p.m. Champions Tour: The Tradition (Golf)..................................1 p.m. LPGA Kingsmill Championships (Golf).................................3 p.m.

Horse racing

Preakness (Ch. 9)..................................................................2:30 p.m.

Lacrosse

NCAA playoffs: Maryland vs. Bryant (ESPN2)...................10 a.m. NCAA playoffs: Albany vs. Notre Dame (ESPN2) .......12:30 p.m.

Hockey

Rangers at Canadiens (Ch. 9) ................................................11 a.m.

Soccer

FA Cup final: Arsenal vs. Hall City (Fox) .............................10 a.m. MLS: Rapids at Real Salt Lake (Altitude) .......................7:30 p.m.

Softball

NCAA regional playoffs TBD (ESPN) ...................................10 a.m. NCAA regional playoffs TBD (ESPN) .............................12:30 a.m. NCAA regional playoffs TBD (ESPN) ...............................2:30 p.m. NCAA regional playoffs TBD (ESPN).....................................5 p.m. NCAA regional playoffs TBD (ESPN) ...............................7:30 p.m. Note: Listings are for live events only unless noted. For a complete listing, go to www.tvguide.com.

WHAT’S TRENDING TOP SPORTS VIDEO

NFL

Bibbs puts his disappointment aside By Arnie Stapleton Associated Press

ENGLEWOOD

Kapri Bibbs was bypassed in the NFL draft despite leading the nation with 31 touchdown runs in his single season at Colorado State. Yet, he insists he’s glad he turned pro. “I expected to get drafted, but at the end of the day, I can only be happy that I’m here,” the 5-foot-11, 203-pound running back said after the first workout of the Denver Broncos’ rookie minicamp Friday. “I remember when I prayed to God and asked him to just to give me an opportunity, I didn’t ask him to get drafted, I just asked him to give me an opportunity and that’s what he did.” Therefore, Bibbs said, he doesn’t consider coming out of school after his sophomore season a mistake. Bibbs said there were plenty of other teams lining up for his services after the draft concluded last weekend, including the Buccaneers, Falcons, Bears and Ravens. He said he decided to stay in Colorado because he and Denver running backs coach Eric Studesville hit it off at

the NFL combine and he wanted to play in an up-tempo system engineered by Peyton Manning. “I just feel like this is the right spot,” Bibbs said. Besides, the Broncos didn’t draft a running back after letting free agent Knowshon Moreno go, so “I’ll get as many reps as any new guy will get,” Bibbs said., “I’m looking for opportunity. I’m not coming in and trying to make the practice squad.” Bibbs hopes to crack a rotation that features projected starter Montee Ball and his fellow second-year back C.J. Anderson — who made the roster as an undrafted free agent last year — and Ronnie Hillman. He’ll face some strong competition, particularly from undrafted free agent Juwan Thompson, a 225pound back from Duke and one of four other running backs who were sharing snaps Friday. None have Bibbs’ resume, however. In his only season in Fort Collins, Bibbs ran for a school-record 1,741 yards and 31TDs on 281carries for a 6.2yard average. Bibbs, however, had just six 100-yard games and he only caught eight passes and

never more than one in a game. Then, there was the small sample size. He attended Snow College in 2011 and Front Range Community College in 2012 before going to CSU in 2013, where he joined his new teammate Ball and Barry Sanders as the only players in NCAA history to run for more than 30 TDs in a season. Yet, he never heard his name called in the three-day, seven-round draft. “Hey, at the end of the day, I’m just happy that I’m here,” Bibbs said. “The draft, that’s all fine and dandy but I’m ready to make a name for myself.” He did that in college with The Denver Broncos’ Kapri Bibbs his play on the field, but Rams runs a drill during rookie camp coach Jim McElwain has a on Friday in Englewood. policy that forbids first-year JACK DEMPSEY/AP players from speaking with the media, so Bibbs never got to know Bibbs at a dinner the to talk about his accomplish- team had for the rookies ments even though he was Thursday night, and “he’s an one of the primary reasons impressive young man.” Colorado State won eight Bibbs might not be able to games, including the New flash his full repertoire on the Mexico Bowl. football field, however, until “Yeah, I was just the man training camp, as he conbehind the mask, like Bat- tinues to work his way back man,” Bibbs said with a from a turf toe injury on his laugh. right foot that bothered him As such, his gregarious na- over the final month of his ture is largely unknown. college career and nags him Coach John Fox said he got still.

PHOTOS: SEE ALL THE STATE TRACK AND FIELD ACTION Coloradoan photojournalist Erin Hull captures the action, drama and emotion of the state track meet. See the photos at Coloradoan.com/sports.

TOP SPORTS STORIES 1. Photo gallery: Track and field state championships 2. Broncos’ Welker won’t return $14K

dellenbachchevroletcadillac.com/military


FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

BASEBALL STANDINGS

RESULTS

AMERICAN LEAGUE

FRIDAY’S GAMES

TODAY’S PROBABLE PITCHERS

Brewers 4, CUBS 3 Reds 3, PHILLIES 0

AMERICAN LEAGUE

East Baltimore New York Toronto Boston Tampa Bay

W 22 21 22 20 18

L 18 19 21 21 24

Pct. GB Strk. .550 — W-2 .525 1 W-2 .512 11/2 W-2 .488 21/2 L-2 .429 5 L-1

Central Detroit Minnesota Chicago Kansas City Cleveland

W 25 20 21 20 19

L 12 20 22 21 23

Pct. GB Strk. .676 — W-4 .500 61/2 W-2 .488 7 W-2 .488 7 L-2 .452 81/2 L-2

West Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Texas Houston

W 26 22 20 20 14

L 16 18 21 22 28

Pct. GB Strk. .619 — W-1 .550 3 W-3 .488 51/2 L-3 .476 6 L-3 .333 12 L-1

Last 10 6-4 5-5 6-4 5-5 3-7 Last 10 7-3 5-5 5-5 6-4 6-4 Last 10 7-3 7-3 4-6 3-7 4-6

Home Away 9-10 13-8 9-10 12-9 10-11 12-10 10-12 10-9 8-12 10-12 Home Away 13-8 12-4 11-10 9-10 11-10 10-12 10-9 10-12 12-9 7-14 Home Away 12-10 14-6 9-10 13-8 8-10 12-11 11-11 9-11 8-15 6-13

NATIONAL LEAGUE East Atlanta Washington Miami New York Philadelphia

W 22 22 21 19 17

L 18 19 21 22 22

Pct. GB Strk. .550 — L-2 .537 1/2 W-2 .500 2 L-1 .463 31/2 L-3 .436 41/2 L-4

Central Milwaukee St. Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago

W 27 22 19 17 13

L 15 20 21 23 27

Pct. GB Strk. .643 — W-2 .524 5 W-3 .475 7 W-1 .425 9 L-1 .325 13 L-3

West San Francisco Colorado Los Angeles San Diego Arizona

W 27 24 22 20 16

L 15 19 20 23 27

Pct. .643 .558 .524 .465 .372

GB — 31/2 5 71/2 111/2

Strk. W-2 W-1 L-1 L-1 L-1

Last 10 5-5 5-5 4-6 3-7 2-8 Last 10 6-4 6-4 5-5 5-5 2-8 Last 10 6-4 5-5 4-6 5-5 5-5

Home 13-8 12-9 17-5 9-12 6-12

Away 9-10 10-10 4-16 10-10 11-10

Home Away 14-10 13-5 10-6 12-14 11-10 8-11 12-11 5-12 7-12 6-15 Home Away 13-6 14-9 14-5 10-14 9-13 13-7 12-11 8-12 4-17 12-10

AL LEADERS

NL LEADERS

THROUGH THURSDAY

THROUGH THURSDAY

STRIKEOUTS Price, Tampa Bay

70

STRIKEOUTS Cueto, Cincinnati

Lester, Boston

66

Strasburg, Washington 70

Scherzer, Detroit

66

Fernandez, Miami

70

Kluber, Cleveland

66

Wacha, St. Louis

62

Tanaka, New York

66

Kennedy, San Diego

60

76

SAVES Tom Hunter, Baltimore

11

SAVES FrRodriguez, Milwaukee 16

Rodney, Seattle

11

Romo, San Francisco

Nathan, Detroit

10

Street, San Diego

12

Two players tied at

10

Jansen, Los Angeles

12

14

HOME team in caps

Milwaukee’s Kyle Lohse pitched seven innings, retiring his last 13 batters. Cincinnati’s Alfredo Simon allowed five hits over 72⁄3 innings, and Devin Mesoraco hit a three-run homer. NATIONALS 5, Washington’s Tyler Moore had two hits and drove in a pair of runs, and Mets 2 Nationals relievers threw four scoreless innings. Scott Hairston had an RBI double and a single. Athletics 11, Oakland’s Josh Reddick homered INDIANS 1 twice, including a grand slam, and drove in a career-high six runs. Josh Donaldson added a three-run shot. Blue Jays 2, Toronto’s Drew Hutchison outdueled RANGERS 0 Yu Darvish and Melky Cabrera hit a two-run double in the eighth inning. Orioles 4, Baltimore’s Chris Tillman tossed his first career shutout, and Nelson Cruz ROYALS 0 drove in two runs. Tillman scattered five hits and a walk while striking out three. TWINS 5, Minnesota’s Kyle Gibson allowed one Mariners 4 run in seven innings, and Brian Dozier and Josmil Pinto homered. Dozier and Trevor Plouffe each hit RBI doubles in the third inning. Tigers 1, Detroit’s Max Scherzer tossed six RED SOX 0 shutout innings, outdueling Boston ace Jon Lester. Torii Hunter delivered an RBI single in the first for the Tigers. CARDINALS 5, St. Louis’ Allen Craig had three hits, Braves 2 drove in a run and scored twice and Lance Lynn allowed two runs over seven innings. Carlos Martinez retired the Braves on four pitches in the eighth and Trevor Rosenthal set down the side in order for his 12th save in 13 opportunities. ROCKIES 3, San Diego note: The Padres acquired Padres 1 OF Jake Goebbert in a deal that sent utility player Kyle Blanks to Oakland. White Sox 7, Chicago note: Gordon Beckham ASTROS 2 homered on the first pitch of Wednesday’s game, becoming the first White Sox player to do so since Ray Durham did it twice in 2000. Dodgers at Arizona note: LHP Randy Wolf exerD’BACKS cised the out clause in his contract and (late) was granted his release. Rays at Tampa Bay note: RHP Alex Cobb, ANGELS sidelined since April 13 because of an (late) oblique strain on his left side, is scheduled to make a rehab start today with Class-A Charlotte. Marlins at Thursday: San Francisco’s Buster GIANTS Posey hit a go-ahead double as part (late) of a three-run fifth inning and the Giants held on to beat Miami 6-4. Pirates at The game was postponed because of YANKEES, the threat of inclement weather, and ppd. will be made up as the second game of a doubleheader Sunday. The opener is scheduled to begin at 1:05 p.m.

LOOK AHEAD

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

Pitchers

GS

All times Mountain

WEDNESDAY W-L

2014 Statistics Pct. WHIP ERA

Chicago White Sox at Houston, 2:10 p.m.

CWS: Noesi (R) HOU: Cosart (R)

3 8

0-3 2-3

.000 .400

1.70 1.30

IP

8 2

5-1 2-0

(Line: OAK -130) .833 .97 2.28 51.1 1.000 .87 2.13 12.2

Baltimore at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. BAL: Norris (R) KC: Duffy (L)

7 2

2-3 1-3

.400 .250

(Line: KC -120) 1.21 3.98 43.0 1.04 1.96 18.1

Detroit at Boston, 5:10 p.m. DET: Porcello (R) BOS: Lackey (R)

7 8

(Line: BOS -125) 6-1 .857 1.03 3.22 5-2 .714 1.21 3.57

8 2

3-2 0-2

8 8

46.1 29.2

.254 .278

53.0 44.2

.250 .313

(Line: LAA -155) 1.38 3.71 34.0 1.17 3.69 53.2

.228 .228

(Line: MIN -115) .600 1.38 3.69 .000 1.48 3.64

(Line: TEX -115) 7-1 .875 1.25 1-4 .200 1.54

Tampa Bay at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m. TB: Ramos (L) LAA: Wilson (L)

6 8

1-2 4-3

.333 .571

.248 .145 .244 .260

Toronto at Texas, 6:15 p.m.

TOR: Buehrle (L) TEX: Ross Jr. (L)

.216 .213

44.2 53.0

Seattle at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. SEA: Elias (L) MIN: Deduno (R)

BA

(Line: HOU -135) 7.25 22.1 .326 4.30 44.0 .228

Oakland at Cleveland, 5:05 p.m. OAK: Kazmir (L) CLE: Tomlin (R)

2.04 5.04

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Atlanta at St. Louis, 12:15 p.m.

ATL: Harang (R) STL: Miller (R)

8 8

4-3 5-2

(Line: STL -130) .571 1.18 2.98 .714 1.48 3.22

48.1 44.2

.229 .241

Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 12:20 p.m. MIL: Garza (R) CHC: Jackson (R)

8 8

2-3 2-3

(Line: MIL -125) 1.45 4.98 47.0 .267 1.44 4.56 47.1 .277

.400 .400

N.Y. Mets at Washington, 2:05 p.m.

NYM: Colon (R) WAS: Gonzalez (L)

8 8

2-5 3-3

.286 .500

(Line: WAS -160) 1.44 5.84 49.1 1.24 3.97 47.2

Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 5:05 p.m. CIN: Bailey (R) PHI: Hamels (L)

8 4

3-2 0-2

3 1

2-0 1-0

.293 .326

(Line: LAD -155) 1.000 1.06 1.74 20.2 1.000 .56 1.69 5.1

.262 .118

San Diego at Colorado, 6:10 p.m.

SD: Erlin (L) COL: Lyles (R)

7 8

2-4 5-0

(Line: COL -155) .333 1.24 4.22 42.2 1.000 1.09 2.66 50.2

Miami at San Francisco, 7:05 p.m. MIA: Koehler (R) SF: Lincecum (R)

8 8

3-3 3-2

.316 .233

(Line: PHI -115) 1.51 4.72 47.2 1.73 5.32 23.2

.600 .000

L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 6:10 p.m. LAD: Kershaw (L) ARI: Anderson (R)

PAGE C3

.500 .600

(Line: SF -145) 1.14 2.57 49.0 1.55 4.78 43.1

.255 .223 .195 .295

INTERLEAGUE

DET 7, BAL 5 LAA 3, PHI 0 KC 3, COL 2 CWS 4, OAK 2 TB 2, SEA 0 CLE 15, TOR 4 NYY 4, NYM 0 BOS 9, MIN 4 HOU 5, TEX 4 WAS 5, ARI 1 SF 10, ATL 4 SD at CIN, ppd., rain PIT 4, MIL 1 CHC at STL, ppd., rain MIA 13, LAD 3

THURSDAY MIN 4, BOS 3, 10 innings TOR 4, CLE 2 NYY 1, NYM 0 BAL 2, KC 1 LAA 6, TB 5 CIN 5, SD 0, 1st game SD 6, CIN 1, 2nd game MIL 4, PIT 3 STL 5, CHC 3 SF 6, MIA 4

SUNDAY OAK at CLE, 11:05 a.m. PIT at NYY, 11:05 a.m., Game 1 CIN at PHI, 11:35 a.m. NYM at WAS, 11:35 a.m. BAL at KC, 12:10 p.m. CWS at HOU, 12:10 p.m. SEA at MIN, 12:10 p.m. ATL at STL, 12:15 p.m. MIL at CHC, 12:20 p.m. TOR at TEX, 1:05 p.m. TB at LAA, 1:35 p.m. MIA at SF, 2:05 p.m. LAD at ARI, 2:10 p.m. SD at COL, 2:10 p.m. PIT at NYY, 2:35 p.m., Game 2 DET at BOS, 6:05 p.m.

MONDAY DET at CLE, 5:05 p.m. CIN at WAS, 5:05 p.m. MIL at ATL, 5:10 p.m. CWS at KC, 6:10 p.m. HOU at LAA, 8:05 p.m.

Pittsburgh at N.Y. Yankees, 2:05 p.m. PIT: Volquez (R) NYY: Phelps (R)

7 2

1-3 0-0

.250 .000

(Line: NYY -130) 1.20 4.36 43.1 .244 1.45 4.09 22.0 .244

ERIC RISBERG/AP

James Hetfield, left, and Kirk Hammett of the band Metallica, perform the national anthem before the GiantsMarlins game on Friday.

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PAGE C4

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

State Track and Field Championships NOTEBOOK

SCOREBOARD

Close finish catches up to Heritage Christian

By Kelly Lyell KellyLyell@coloradoan.com

LAKEWOOD — Chalk it up to

karma. A day after Heritage Christian Academy’s Rebekah Rairdon slipped past the defending state champion to win the girls Class1A 3,200-meter run at the state track and field championships, the Heritage Christian boys came out on the other end of a photo finish in an eight-lap race. John Lee was wrapping up an impressive anchor leg for the Eagles in the 3,200 relay and stretching for the finish line for what would have been a state championship. But just inches away from the finish, Idalia’s Erick Enriquez nudged in front of him for the win. Idalia finished in 8 minutes, 57.27 seconds, while Heritage Christian’s time was 8:57.38, and third place South Baca’s was 8:57.66. Lee had edged in front of South Baca coming out of the final turn. It was the metric equivalent of 2 miles, covered by four runners apiece, and the top three teams were separated by just three-tenths of a second. “It was pretty intense,” Lee said. “The whole last stretch, I just couldn’t help thinking I can’t let my team down, so I

CLASS 5A BOYS

Team scores — Chaparral 27; Fountain-Fort Carson 26; Fossil Ridge 24; Highlands Ranch 22; Grandview 22; Cherry Creek 20; Denver East 20; Cherokee Trail 20; Monarch 17; Fort Collins 14; Smoky Hill 13; Pine Creek 13; Mountain Vista 13; Regis 11; Liberty 10; Rocky Mountain 10; Poudre 8; Douglas County 7; Doherty 7; Mountain Range 7; Lakewood 6.5; Pomona 6.5; Boulder 6; Columbine 6; Chatfield 5; ThunderRidge 5; Rampart 4; Rock Canyon 4; Arvada West 4; Legacy 3; Palmer 3; Grand Junction 1; Fruita Monument 1; Fairview 1. 800-meter run — 1, Cerake Geberkidane, Denver East, 1:52.30; 2, Blake Yount, Smoky Hill, 1:52.42; 3, Isaac Green, Monarch,1:54.50; 4, Daniel Book, Cherry Creek, 1:54.54; 5, Luke Sheesley, Fort Collins, 1:55.33; 6, Devin Reasoner, Chaparral, 1:55.75; 7, Travis Anderson, Chaparral, 1:56.20; 8, Dominic Compoz, Chaparral,1:56.37; 9, Phillip Benjamin Thomas, Fountain-Fort Carson, 1:56.56. 800-meter relay — 1, Fountain-Fort Carson, 1:26.21; 2, Cherokee Trail, 1:26.23; 3, Grandview, 1:27.43; 4, Highlands Ranch, 1:27.48; 5, Poudre, 1:28.76; 6, Arvada West,1:29.35; 7, Legacy,1:29.76; 8, Douglas County, 1:29.77; ThunderRidge DQ.

GIRLS

Poudre’s Spencer Long, left, clears a hurdle during the preliminaries of the Class 5A boys 300 meter hurdles Friday at the Colorado State Track and Field Championships in Lakewood. ERIN HULL/THE COLORADOAN

ran as hard as I could for as long as I could.” Rairdon had beaten Ginger Hutton of Shining Mountain Waldorf School by five-hundredths of a second in a photo finish Thursday. Joining Lee on the Eagles’ 3,200 relay team Friday were Robbie Wagner, Drayton Browning and brother Matthew Lee. Heritage Christian also finished second in the girls 3,200 relay, with the team of Kyla Bruxvoort, Taylor Glasgow, Ellie Beery and Rachel Rairdon finishing in 10:44.97, more than 11 seconds behind winner South Baca.

TRACKING TEAM TITLES: The Fort

Collins girls held a commanding lead in the 5A team standings with 51 points with nine of the 19 events in the three-day meet completed. Second-place Fountain-Fort Carson had 26 points and third-place Cherry Creek 25. Heritage Christian’s boys were in third place in 1A with 28 points, two behind South Baca and one behind Hi-Plains. STRONG ENCORE: Rebekah Rairdon added a second-place finish in the 800 to the state title she won Thursday in the 3,200. This time, Hutton held on to beat her, winning in 2:23.52 to Rairdon’s 2:28.97. Rachel Rairdon was fourth in 2:31.49. Fort Collins’ Lauren Gregory, winner of the girls 5A title in the 3,200 Thursday, was fourth in the 800 in 2:14.26. RELAY RACERS: Fort Collins finished third in the girls 5A sprint medley relay, while Fossil Ridge was fifth and Poudre sixth. Rocky Mountain’s girls were fourth and Poudre’s boys fifth in the 5A 800 relay.

Team scores — Fort Collins 51; Fountain-Fort Carson 26; Cherry Creek 25; Highlands Ranch 18; Denver East 18; Loveland 17.5; Eaglecrest 17; Monarch 17; Pine Creek 17; Fairview 16.5; Rampart 16; ThunderRidge16; Arvada West15; Poudre14; Brighton 13; Fossil Ridge 12; Cherokee Trail 12; Rocky Mountain 11; Castle View 10.5; George Washington 10; Arapahoe 10; Horizon 10; Legend 8; Boulder 6.5; Lakewood 6.5; Standley Lake 5; Rock Canyon 4; Smoky Hill 3.5; Pomona 3; Mountain Vista 3; Grandview 1. 800-meter run — 1, Jordyn Colter, Cherry Creek, 2:09.16; 2, Macy Kreutz, Highlands Ranch, 2:10.23; 3, Catherine Liggett, Legend, 2:13.69; 4, Lauren Gregory, Fort Collins, 2:14.26; 5, Kamryn Hart, ThunderRidge, 2:15.17; 6, Megan Mooney, Horizon, 2:16.07; 7, Elissa Mann, Monarch, 2:16.39; 8, Darby Gilfillan, George Washington, 2:16.56; 9, Claire Green, Monarch, 2:17.79. 800-meter relay — 1, Pine Creek, 1:37.57 (set meet record in prelims); 2, Fountain-Fort Carson,1:39.75; 3, Eaglecrest,1:40.08; 4, Rocky Mountain, 1:40.27; 5, Cherokee Trail, 1:41.04; 6, Boulder, 1:43.34; 7, Loveland, 1:43.80; 8, Highlands Ranch, 1:45.38; 9, Grandview, 1:45.75. 800-meter medley relay — 1, Eaglecrest, 1:44.19; 2, Denver East, 1:45.68; 3, Fort Collins, 1:45.98; 4, Arapahoe, 1:48.55; 5, Fossil Ridge, 1:48.80; 6, Poudre, 1:49.03; 7, Pine Creek, 1:50.09; 8, Highlands Ranch, 1:51.66; Mountain Range DNS. High jump — 1, Carly Paul, Poudre, 5-08; 2, Rajon O’Quinn, Fountain-Fort Carson, 5-08; 3, Ashlyn Hare, Rampart, 5-08; 4, Katelyn Ellis, Brighton, 5-05; 5, Hanna Davis, Standley Lake, 5-03; 6, Kiara Kearney, Rampart, 5-03; 7(tie), Heather Betz, Fairview and Ashley Krawczuk, Loveland, 5-01; 9 (tie), Audrey Hogenkamp, Lakewood and Hailey Hampson, Boulder, 5-01.

CLASS 2A BOYS

Team scores — Rye 48; Lyons 40.5; John Mall 26; Telluride 24; Vanguard 23; Rangely 21; Yuma 20; Paonia 18; Resurrection Christian 16; Custer County 14; Hotchkiss 14; South Park 13; Peyton 12; Swink 11; Crested Butte 10; West Grand 9; SkyView Academy 8; Merino 8; Akron 8; Sedgwick County 8; Wray 8; Liberty Common 7; Crowley County 6; Lutheran 5; Dayspring Christian 5; Pikes Peak Christian 4.5; Burlington 4; Mancos 4; Ignacio 4; Limon 4; Meeker 4; Denver Academy 2; Sangre de Cristo 2; Kiowa 2; Simla 1. 800-meter run — 1, Samuel Ambler, Rye, 1:57.33; 2, Jorden Jole, Merino, 1:59.11; 3, Jeff Wil-

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2014 CADILLAC ATS TURBO

liams, Telluride, 1:59.63; 4, Jeramiah Hillman, Paonia, 2:00.60; 5, Miles Hatton, Vanguard, 2:01.08; 6, Ro Paschal, Mancos, 2:01.24; 7, Corbin Pagnotta, Rye, 2:01.54; 8, Sawyer Pehkonen, Resurrection Christian, 2:02.05; 9, Andrew Tiedeman, Hotchkiss, 2:02.21. 3200-meter run — 1, Paul Roberts, Lyons, 9:36.75; 2, Ben Butler, SkyView Academy, 9:39.18; 3, Marcel Such, Lyons, 9:53.35; 4, Joel Such, Lyons, 9:58.47; 5, Jack Plantz, Telluride, 10:01.07; 6, Corey Lewenkam, Custer County, 10:03.18; 7, Jacob Benson, South Park, 10:07.87; 8, Andy O’Dell, Denver Academy, 10:07.88; 9, Jason Sturgis, Paonia, 10:13.27. 800-meter relay — 1, Vanguard, 1:31.09; 2, Resurrection Christian,1:31.78; 3, Liberty Common, 1:31.87; 4, Crested Butte, 1:33.29; 5, Dayspring Christian, 1:33.36; 6, Paonia, 1:33.49; 7, Telluride, 1:33.97; 8, Kiowa, 1:35.51; 9, Ignacio, 1:36.38. Triple jump — 1, Samuel Ambler, Rye, 44-06; 2, Andrew Morton, Rangely, 44-01; 3, Brian O’Connor, Custer County, 42-06.50; 4, River Panish, Hotchkiss, 42-04.25; 5, Trey Zupancic, Rye, 42-01; 6, Jeremy Musgrave, Meeker, 41-08; 7, Thomas Payne, Limon, 41-05.75; 8, Robert Engel, Yuma, 40-09.75; 9, Cody Norris, Simla, 40-08. Pole vault — 1, Brandon Hinkle, Yuma, 13-02; 2, Jared Clarkson, Akron, 12-05; 3, Damian Smith, Yuma, 11-11; 4, Casey Gore, West Grand, 11-11; 5(tie), Owen George, Lyons and Carson Anderson, Pikes Peak, 11-11; 7, Nick Ritschard, West Grand, 11-05; 8, Tyler Long, Rye, 11-05; 9, Thomas Payne, Limon, 11-05. Discus — 1, Garrett Quintana, John Mall, 149-05; 2, Baylor Buck, Wray, 148-09; 3, Andrew Vigil, John Mall, 148-05; 4, Isaac Bauer, Crowley County,145-08; 5, Henry Waite, Lutheran,141-01; 6, Tyler Boyd, Burlington, 140-09; 7, Colt Allred, Rangely, 139-07; 8, Zachary Horning, Sangre de Cristo, 136-08; 9, Jerod Berg, Swink, 136-02.

GIRLS

Team scores — Paonia 56; Hotchkiss 42; Yuma 37; Lyons 33; Akron 19; Highland 16; Liberty Common 14; Soroco 14; Hoehne 14; West Grand 13; Wray 12; Wiggins 10; Sargent 10; Fowler 10; Del Norte 9; Nederland 8; Eads 8; Limon 8; Crested Butte 7; Swink 7; Calhan 7; Vanguard 6; Rye 6; Meeker 6; Crowley County 6; Las Animas 5; Ouray 5; Byers 5; Telluride 5; Merino 4; Sangre de Cristo 3; Pikes Peak Christian 3; Denver Christian 3; Peyton 2. 800-meter run — 1, Jennifer Celis, Hotchkiss, 2:11.43 (Meet record); 2, Tabor Scholl, West Grand, 2:14.53; 3, Taylor Polson, Paonia, 2:21.79; 4, Jenna Anderson, Lyons, 2:22.27; 5, Jenny Smith, Vanguard, 2:24.29; 6, Taylor Godsey, Wray, 2:24.60; 7, Bri Hayes, Denver Christian, 2:27.52; 8, Jayde Van Oort, Rye, 2:28.64; 9, MacKenzie Dill, Highland, 2:29.48. 3200-meter run — 1, Miriam Roberts, Lyons, 11:36.43; 2, Bailey Kuechenmeister, Nederland, 11:54.94; 3, Natalie Anderson, Hotchkiss, 12:03.00; 4, Mae Anderson, Hotchkiss, 12:13.33; 5, Sierra Tucker, Lyons, 12:14.37; 6, Bailey Walser, Merino, 12:23.05; 7, Matti Hlatki, Calhan, 12:32.12; 8, Jessica Schwindt, Liberty Common, 12:34.63; 9, Anna Fake, Telluride, 12:35.52. 800-meter relay — 1, Paonia, 1:47.67; 2, Hotchkiss, 1:47.69; 3, Liberty Common, 1:48.91; 4, Meeker, 1:49.81; 5, Wray, 1:50.79; 6, Del Norte, 1:50.99; 7, Yuma, 1:51.55; 8, Wiggins, 1:52.39; Akron DQ. 800-meter medley relay — 1, Paonia, 1:51.96; 2, Wiggins, 1:53.67; 3, Crested Butte, 1:54.01; 4, Hoehne, 1:54.19; 5, Del Norte, 1:55.13; 6, Telluride, 1:56.02; 7, Wray, 1:56.34; 8, Highland, 1:57.23; 9, Hochkiss, 1:59.16. Long jump — 1, Logan Hixon, Yuma,16-03; 2, Jamie Clawson, Highland, 16-02.25; 3, Lindsey Tatum, Swink, 16-02; 4, Kelci Vantreese, Sargent, 16-00.50; 5, Taylor Spady, Las Animas, 15-06.75; 6, Taylor Christiansen, Lyons, 15-06.25; 7, Brianna Hobby, Fowler, 15-06.25; 8, Brooklynd Erickson, Paonia,15-04.25; 9, Sarah Bowes, Liberty Common, 15-03. Pole vault — 1, Monica Drury, Yuma, 8-08; 2(tie), Karli Christensen, Akron, Mallory Noble, Yuma and Jessica Rossi, Soroco, 8-02; 5, Jaryn Dreher, Akron, 8-02; 6, Gabby Willson, West Grand, 7-08; 7, Kaitlin DeGulio, Pikes Peak, 7-08; 8, Peighton Roth, Yuma, 7-08; 9, Anna Cunico, West Grand, 7-08. Shot put — 1, Morgan Hartigan, Paonia, 39-10; 2, Keturah Tatum, Limon, 38-05.75; 3, Jaclyn Sallee, Fowler, 38-04.50; 4, Eboni Nash, Eads, 37-03; 5, Tara Traphagan, Yuma, 35-08.25; 6, Riley Cookson, Calhan, 34-06.25; 7, Jenna McKinley, Sangre de Cristo, 34-02; 8, Brooke Lenox, Eads, 33-10; 9, Janessa Ramey, Akron, 33-05.

CLASS 1A BOYS

Heritage Christian 28; Vail Christian 27; Stratton 20; Prairie 19; Idalia 18; Elbert 18; Plateau Valley 18; Pawnee 16; Otis 15; North Park 15; Walsh 14; Granada 13; Bethune 13; Holly 11; McClave 11; Fleming 9; Flagler 8; Shining Mountain 6; Centennial 6; Peetz 4; Caliche 4; Arickaree 3; Hanover 3; Kit Carson 2; Plainview 2; Cheyenne Wells 2; Lake City Community 1. 800-meter run — 1, Clay Russell, North Park, 2:01.91; 2, Erick Enriquez-Acosta, Idalia, 2:03.41; 3, Ethan Pence, Vail Christian, 2:05.17; 4, Justin Seamans, Bethune, 2:05.34; 5, Luke Duggan, Pawnee, 2:06.67; 6, Eric Etl, Caliche, 2:07.32; 7, Jason Richard, Heritage Christian, 2:08.84; 8, Ramon Ortega, Plateau Valley, 2:09.59; 9, Matthew Crane, South Baca, 2:09.70. 800-meter relay — 1, McClave, 1:34.00; 2, Vail Christian, 1:34.19; 3, Plateau Valley, 1:35.73; 4, Holly, 1:36.70; 5, Granada, 1:37.90; 6, Otis, 1:38.61; 7, Flagler, 1:39.76; Peetz DNF; Heritage Christian DQ. 3200-meter relay — 1, Idalia, 8:57.27; 2, Heritage Christian, 8:57.38; 3, South Baca, 8:57.66; 4, Walsh, 9:06.20; 5, Hi-Plains, 9:08.80; 6, Peetz, 9:09.43; 7, Hanover, 9:14.46; 8, Cheyenne Wells, 9:23.23; 9, Plateau Valley, 9:24.91. Triple jump —1, Kyle English, Stratton, 43-06; 2, Alex Vandenbark, Fleming, 40-03.50; 3, Michael Kaiser, Prairie, 40-00.75; 4, Jonah Baca, Shining Mountain, 40-00.25; 5, Tobias Kearney, Plateau Valley, 39-10.75; 6, Cristian Alvarez, Walsh, 39-08.50; 7, Trent Leoffler, Arickaree, 39-04.50; 8, Matthew Crane, South Baca, 38-09.25; 9, Joey Stahley, Fleming, 38-08.25. Discus — 1, Caleb Brown, Elbert, 148-08; 2, Zeth Schoenfeld, Otis, 140-10; 3, Avery Marzolf, HiPlains, 137-07; 4, Kizu Nyerere, Centennial, 133-00; 5, Branden Currey, Vail Christian, 131-02; 6, Chaz Hebberd, Walsh, 129-08; 7, Daniel Kachin, Plateau Valley,123-08; 8, Ryan Koeller, Plainview,118-09; 9, Eduardo Deleon, Bethune, 116-08.

GIRLS

Team scores — Shining Mountain 42; Heritage Christian 41; Vail Christian 33; Plateau Valley 32.5; South Baca 28; Dove Creek 27; Idalia 23; HiPlains 21; Cheyenne Wells 18; Arickaree 16.5; Granada 16; Deer Trail 15; Briggsdale 13; Otis 13; Wiley 11; Bethune 11; Prairie 10; Peetz 9; North Park 9; Walsh 9; Cotopaxi 8; McClave 8; Weldon Valley 7; Elbert 6; Caliche 6; Stratton 5; Lake City Community 5; Cheraw 4; Holly 3.5; Kit Carson 3; Fleming 3; Plainview 1.5. 800-meter run — 1, Ginger Hutton, Shining Mountain, 2:23.52; 2, Rebekah Rairdon, Heritage Christian, 2:28.97; 3, Bree-ann Carwin, South Baca, 2:29.44; 4, Rachel Rairdon, Heritage Christian, 2:31.49; 5, Montana Cook, Walsh, 2:32.30; 6, Paisley Sheehan, Shining Mountain, 2:33.01; 7, Jessica Guynes, Dove Creek, 2:34.37; 8, Shaelynn Wood, South Baca, 2:35.50; 9, Brittany Tezak, Cotopaxi, 2:37.67. 800-meter relay — 1, Idalia,1:50.70; 2, Plateau Valley, 1:52.72; 3, Vail Christian, 1:53.57; 4, HiPlains, 1:53.69; 5, Granada, 1:54.67; 6, Wiley, 1:54.68; 7, Fleming, 1:56.52; 8, Holly, 1:56.55; Prairie DQ. 3200-meter relay — 1, South Baca, 10:33.41; 2, Heritage Christian, 10:44.97; 3, Cotopaxi, 10:45.78; 4, Shining Mountain, 10:58.60; 5, Lake City Community, 11:03.07; 6, Dove Creek, 11:15.29; 7, McClave,11:16.12; 8, Bethune,11:28.05; 9, Elbert, 11:28.89. 800-meter medley relay — 1, Idalia, 1:56.08; 2, Plateau Valley,1:57.47; 3, Wiley,1:58.30; 4, Prairie, 2:01.27; 5, Briggsdale, 2:01.40; 6, Peetz, 2:01.57; 7, Dove Creek, 2:06.21; 8, Shining Mountain, 2:08.94; Heritage Christian DQ. High jump — 1, Morgan Howard, Cheyenne Wells, 5-03.50 (Meet record); 2, Celia Smith, Vail Christian, 5-02.50; 3(tie), Miranda Schowalter, Plateau Valley, and Haley Dietz, Arickaree, 4-08.50; 5(tie), Faith Ormiston, South Baca, D’Lanee Doyle, Walsh and Leilani Carrasco, Briggsdale, 4-06.50; 8(tie), Sheridan Rushton, Holly and Alyssa Splitter, Plainview, 4-06.50. Triple jump — 1, Kirby Vanderpool, Granada, 34-10.75; 2, Morgan Howard, Cheyenne Wells, 34-01.50; 3, Haley Dietz, Arickaree, 33-05.75; 4, Jaedyn Lambrecht, Caliche, 32-09.25; 5, Hannah Maben, Elbert, 32-08.50; 6, Rebecca Kaiser, Prairie, 32-04; 7, Shayla Bogenhagen, Kit Carson, 31-10.75; 8, Jackie Linnebur, Deer Trail, 31-09; 9, Morgan Burns, Peetz, 31-07.50. Shot put — 1, Madison Young, Dove Creek, 36-04 (Meet record); 2, Abbi Lowell, Deer Trail, 33-01; 3, Jeneen Ibrahim, Weldon Valley, 33-00.50; 4, Trisha Reeder, Bethune, 32-03.75; 5, Alyssa Forgue, McClave, 32-02; 6, Addy Foxhoven, Cheraw, 30-08; 7, Vyktoreya Sholes, Bethune, 30-07; 8, Jackie Linnebur, Deer Trail, 30-06; 9, Brittany Gonzales, Granada, 29-09.

Team scores — South Baca 30; Hi-Plains 29;

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FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

Lobos

BASEBALL

RCS cruises into semis at state

Continued from Page C1

position in the double-elimination tournament. They advance to play Mountain Vista (20-3) at 3 p.m. Saturday at All City Stadium in Denver. Mountain Vista beat Chaparral 4-0 and Chatfield 7-1 on Friday. “You look at the season Regis has had, then you look at the state champions. We knew today was going to be a tough day,” coach Scott Bullock said. “You go get two (wins) today and put yourself in a good position. Now we’ve got to go take advantage.” After winning one-run games against two teams many considered favorites to win a state title, confidence is riding high. “It was huge the way we did it,” Lawson said. “We fought through a lot of adversity. I think right now there’s nothing we can’t overcome.”

By Kevin Lytle KevinLytle@coloradoan.com

With two 10-run wins Friday, the top-seeded Resurrection Christian baseball team cruised into the Class 2A semifinals. The No. 1 Cougars (20-3) beat No. 16 Dolores 10-0 to open play at Hobbs Field in Pueblo. RCS then beat No. 9 Nucla 12-2 to advance to the 2A semifinals where the Cougars will face No. 5 Denver Christian on May 24 in Pueblo. In the win over Nucla, Nathan Wiggins had three RBIs, and Del Chance Richardson and Luke Mondt added two each. Cory Wiggins threw all five innings of the mercy-rule-shortened game. He struck out nine batters and allowed just three hits. Jake Lohr earned the win against Dolores, pitching all six innings of the mercy-rule-shortened game. He struck out 11 batters and allowed just one hit. RCS and Denver Christian both play in the Mile High League. The Cougars beat Denver Christian 10-0 in midApril on the way to a league title.

PAGE C5

The Rocky Mountain baseball team celebrates its 2-1 win over Regis Jesuit in the first round of the state baseball tournament Friday. The Lobos went on to beat ThunderRidge in the second game. They will play Mountain Vista at 3 p.m. Saturday at All City Stadium in Denver. ERIN HULL/THE COLORADOAN

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Follow sports reporter Kevin Lytle at twitter.com/ Kevin_Lytle.

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PAGE C6

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SPORTS IN BRIEF

HIGH SCHOOL SWIMMING

Several Fort Collins-area swimmers move on at state

By Stephen Meyers StephenMeyers@coloradoan.com

Fort Collins High School junior swimmer Max Holter advanced to Saturday’s finals of the Class 5A State Championships in Thornton with two impressive swims. Holter had the top 100-yard butterfly time in Friday’s prelims at Veteran’s Memorial Aquatic Center, swimming the race in 49.29 seconds. His 51.19

time in the 100 backstroke was good for second, behind Regis Jesuit’s Stuart Hennessey. Diving prelims begin at 9 a.m. Saturday and the finals in all events start at 2 p.m. Both the Fort Collins and Fossil Ridge 200-yard medley relay teams qualified for the finals and the SaberCats also advanced in the 200-and 400yard freestyle relays. Poudre also advanced in the 400-yard freestyle relay.

In the relays, Regis qualified No. 1 for the finals in the 200-yard medley and the 400 freestyle relay. Fairview is tops in the 200-yard freestyle. Fort Collins’ James Piotrowski had the fifth-fastest time in the 50-yard freestyle in 21.11 seconds, advancing him to the finals. Walter Dauksher of Fossil Ridge made the finals in the 200-yard freestyle, placing eighth in prelims.

CSU men lead MW track championships The CSU men’s track and field team leads with 58 points after Friday’s action at the Mountain West Outdoor Championships at the University of Wyoming in Laramie. The CSU women are in second, with 52 points. The San Diego State women lead, scoring 68.5 points during Friday’s session, which included several finals in distance and throwing events. Wyoming and New Mexico follow Colorado State in the men’s team race with 52

and 45 points, respectively. CSU senior Jessica Sharbono broke the facility and MW Championship record in winning the discus, recording a mark of 193 feet, 1 inch, good for second all-time in MW history. Teammate Trevor Brown set a MW Championship record in the 110 hurdles, running a time of 13.64 seconds in the prelims. He also qualified for Saturday’s finals with the fastest time in the 400 meter hurdles. CSU freshman Rachael Rudel won the 10,000 meters in a time of 37 minutes, 55.26 seconds, while junior Ben

Larson — a Rocky Mountain graduate — placed fourth in the 10,000 in 31:44.48.

Colorado Ice host Wyoming Cavalry

The Wyoming Cavalry, losers of six straight, come south across the border to play the Colorado Ice at 6 p.m. Saturday at the Budweiser Events Center. The Ice (6-3) is coming off a 55-34 win over the Texas Revolution and sits a game behind the Nebraska Danger for the lead in the Indoor Football League’s Intense Conference. — Coloradoan staff

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FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE C7

COLLEGE NOTEBOOK

Fresno St. football at UNLV shifts to a Friday for TV

LAS VEGAS — The Mountain

West Conference says it’s moving Fresno State’s football game at UNLV to Oct. 10 for a Friday night matchup to be televised nationally by CBS Sports Network. Kickoff is set for 7 p.m. at Sam Boyd Stadium. The game originally had been scheduled for Oct. 11. An updated list of games involving Mountain West teams that the league released on Wednesday also shows either ESPN or ESPN2 plans to carry Washington State’s Friday night game at Nevada on Sept. 5. Minnesota: Minnesota football coach Jerry Kill is starting a fund to help children with epilepsy. Kill and his wife, Rebecca, donated $100,000 to start the “Chasing Dreams” fund through

the Epilepsy Foundation of Minnesota. The Kills have an initial goal of raising $500,000. The Star Tribune (http:// strib.mn/1jzLpBv) reports the money will help fund seizuresmart school initiatives, along with Camp Oz, a camp for epilepsy patients in Hudson, Wisconsin. Jerry Kill says his goal to educate every school in Minnesota on how to handle seizures in school. Kill was diagnosed with epilepsy in 2005 and has missed parts of four games in three seasons at Minnesota because of seizures. Last October, Kill took a two-week leave after a seizure kept him from joining the Gophers for a game at Michigan. Florida State: A sheriff’s office has released surveillance video that shows Heisman Trophy

winner Jameis Winston leaving a supermarket without paying for crab legs and crawfish. The video released Thursday by the Leon County Sheriff’s Office shows the Florida State quarterback picking up the seafood at a Tallahassee Publix on April 29. He then casually left the store behind a uniformed sheriff’s deputy who was working off-duty as a security guard. Store managers reported him and deputies went to his apartment. He told them he forgot to pay. He was issued a civil citation requiring him to perform 20 hours of community service, which he has completed. He was briefly suspended from the Florida State baseball team. He is a relief pitcher. Winston also issued a public apology. — Wire services

NBA PLAYOFFS

Top seeds move on to the finals

By Cliff Brunt

Associated Press

OKLAHOMA CITY — After a wild start to the NBA playoffs — dramatic Game 7s, overtime games — the league’s postseason has returned to normal. The top seeds in the East and West have advanced to the conference finals. The two-time defending champion Miami Heat have been the most dominant team in the postseason, losing just once. Meanwhile, top-seeded and wildly unpredictable Indiana has staggered into the East finals rematch with the Heat, although the Pacers did

win five road games to advance. It took San Antonio seven games to eliminate Dallas in the first round, but then the top-seeded Spurs rolled past Portland in five to advance to the West finals. Oklahoma City rallied from a 3-2 deficit against Memphis, then fought through a dramatic six-game series against the Los Angeles Clippers. The East finals begin Sunday with Indiana hosting Miami; the West tips off Monday night when OKC travels to San Antonio. The Pacers have made no secret they were looking for-

ward to rematch with Miami after pushing the Heat to seven games before losing on the road in last year’s East final. Oklahoma City beat San Antonio 4-2 in the 2012 West final, and many felt they might have beaten the aging Spurs last year if the teams had met, but Russell Westbrook was injured and the Thunder were eliminated. The Thunder know it will be challenge, but are confident after sweeping San Antonio this year in their fourgame regular-season series. The Heat, led by four-time MVP LeBron James, are looking for their third straight title.

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PAGE C8

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

PGA TOUR

Todd leads by 2 at Nelson; Casey shoots record back 9

By Stephen Hawkins Associated Press

IRVING, Texas — Paul Casey

was scuffling midway through his second round at the Byron Nelson Championship, hoping he could do enough just to make the cut.

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on a back nine, an 8-under 27 with six birdies and an eagle. That was part of his 7-under 63 that was the low round of the day, though he could never remember such a good nine. “On par-3 courses, I think,” Casey said. “I like to think I would be good at shooting low

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rounds of golf through the past, but certainly nothing like that.” When Casey made the turn, he was coming off a threeputt at No. 9, his third bogey of the day. The 36-year-old Englishman, whose only PGA Tour victory was five years ago, was then 2 over for the tournament, even after making a 9-foot eagle putt on the par-5 seventh hole. “I think it’s easier when your back is up against the wall, like I was today” Casey said. “I was backed into a corner and had to do something. A little shift in, let’s say, attitude, and a little shift in goals.” Also at 6 under were Martin Kaymer only five days after he won The Players Championship, and 2003 Masters champion Mike Weir (66). The others were Graham DeLaet and Morgan Hoffmann, who had had bogey-free 66s, and Tim Herron (66), Charles Howell III (66) and Marc Leishman (68). Kaymer had his second consecutive 67, and has been in the 60s for all six of his rounds at TPC Four Seasons. The German won at TPC Sawgrass on Sunday. “If you had a good week, obviously you can take a lot into the next week. You play a little bit more free, a little bit more relaxed,” Kaymer said. “It’s a new week, and I want to do as good as possible here.” For the second time in five years, Todd is back on the PGA Tour after getting his card back through the Web.com Tour. He ended his round with back-to-back birdies to wrap up a round of 64 in which he needed only 22 putts. That included the 6-footer at the par-3 17th after his tee shot rolled just past the hole. “It’s nice to put two underpar rounds together before the cut. That’s been a challenge for me this year,” Todd

Brendon Todd hits off the 17th tee during the second round of the Byron Nelson Championship on Friday in Irving, Texas. TONY GUTIERREZ/AP

said. “I was patient today.” Todd, who started with six consecutive pars before four birdies in a five-hole stretch, first got to 7 under with a 12foot birdie at the par-3 13th hole, but gave that stroke back at the par-4 15th when he hit his first two shots into the rough and had his only bogey. Peter Hanson was leading after a first-round 65, but was eight strokes worse Friday and dropped back to a tie for 25th at 2 under. David Duval, only a stroke off the lead after an opening 66 that included birdies on four of his last five holes, shot a 76 Friday and missed the cut by a stroke at 2-over 142. The former No. 1 player, now 890th in the world15 years later, had six bogeys over his last 11 holes and had only one birdie during his second round. Weir hasn’t had a top-25 finish since 2010, when the 44year-old Canadian left-hander suffered a partial ligament tear in his right elbow. “The work I’ve been doing over the years is to get back into this position, and now I’ve got to see if I can handle it and get momentum going and play well on the weekend,”

Weir said. “It’s been difficult to play and not be in contention.” Casey made a 6½-foot birdie putt at No. 10. His drive at the short par-4 11th was short of the greenside bunker, and from an awkward stance hit his approach over the pin onto the fringe before making a 24foot birdie. He also had birdies at Nos. 13-15, a 32-foot putt for an eagle-3 at the 16th, and closed with another birdie. The overall nine-hole scoring record is Corey Pavin’s 8under 26 on the front nine in the first round of the 2006 U.S. Bank Championship in Milwaukee in 2006. Seven others have had 27s on nine holes, the last Nick Watney in the third round of the 2011 AT&T National. Scottie Scheffler, a17-yearold amateur from Dallas, shot a 68 with six birdies and four bogeys to make the cut at 1under 139. Jordan Spieth, now 20 and the eighth-ranked player in the world, made the Nelson cut at ages 16 and 17 when he too was a top-ranked junior player from Dallas playing on a sponsor exemption. Spieth was 3 under after a 67 Friday.

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FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE C9

FOR THE RECORD

NBA Daily Playoff Glance All Times MDT CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Monday, May 5 Washington 102, Indiana 96 L.A. Clippers 122, Oklahoma City 105 Tuesday, May 6 Miami 107, Brooklyn 86 San Antonio 116, Portland 92 Wednesday, May 7 Indiana 86, Washington 82 Oklahoma City 112, L.A. Clippers 101 Thursday, May 8 Miami 94, Brooklyn 82 San Antonio 114, Portland 97 Friday, May 9 Indiana 85, Washington 63 Oklahoma City 118, L.A. Clippers 112 Saturday, May 10 Brooklyn 104, Miami 90 San Antonio 118, Portland 103 Sunday, May 11 L.A. Clippers 101, Oklahoma City 99 Indiana 95, Washington 92 Monday, May 12 Miami 102, Brooklyn 96 Portland 103, San Antonio 92 Tuesday, May 13 Washington 102, Indiana 79 Oklahoma City 105, L.A. Clippers 104 Wednesday, May 14 Miami 96, Brooklyn 94, Miami wins series 4-1 San Antonio 104, Portland 82, San Antonio wins series 4-1 Thursday, May 15 Indiana 93, Washington 80, Indiana wins series 4-2 Oklahoma City 104, L.A. Clippers 98, Oklahoma City wins series 4-2 CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Sunday, May 18 Miami at Indiana, 1:30 p.m. Monday, May 19 Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 7 p.m. Tuesday, May 20 Miami at Indiana, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 21 Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 7 p.m. Saturday, May 24 Indiana at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Sunday, May 25 San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 6:30 p.m. Monday, May 26 Indiana at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 27 San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. Wednesday, May 28 x-Miami at Indiana, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, May 29 x-Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 7 p.m. Friday, May 30 x-Indiana at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Saturday, May 31 x-San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 6:30 p.m. Sunday, June 1 x-Miami at Indiana, 6:30 p.m. Monday, June 2 x-Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 7 p.m.

NHL Daily Playoff Glance All Times MDT SECOND ROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Thursday, May 1 Montreal 4, Boston 3, 2OT Friday, May 2 N.Y. Rangers 3, Pittsburgh 2, OT Chicago 5, Minnesota 2 Saturday, May 3 Boston 5, Montreal 3 Los Angeles 3, Anaheim 2, OT Sunday, May 4 Chicago 4, Minnesota 1

Pittsburgh 3, N.Y. Rangers 0 Monday, May 5 Pittsburgh 2, N.Y. Rangers 0 Los Angeles 3, Anaheim 1 Tuesday, May 6 Montreal 4, Boston 2 Minnesota 4, Chicago 0 Wednesday, May 7 Pittsburgh 4, N.Y. Rangers 2 Thursday, May 8 Boston 1, Montreal 0, OT Anaheim 3, Los Angeles 2 Friday, May 9 N.Y. Rangers 5, Pittsburgh 1 Minnesota 4, Chicago 2 Saturday, May 10 Boston 4, Montreal 2 Anaheim 2, Los Angeles 0 Sunday, May 11 N.Y. Rangers 3, Pittsburgh 1 Chicago 2, Minnesota 1 Monday, May 12 Montreal 4, Boston 0 Anaheim 4, Los Angeles 3 Tuesday, May 13 N.Y. Rangers 2, Pittsburgh 1, N.Y. Rangers wins series 4-3 Chicago 2, Minnesota 1, OT, Chicago wins series 4-2 Wednesday, May 14 Montreal 3, Boston 1, Montreal wins series 4-3 Los Angeles 2, Anaheim 1, series tied 3-3 Friday, May 16 Los Angeles 6, Anaheim 2, Los Angeles wins series 4-3 CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Saturday, May 17 N.Y. Rangers at Montreal, 11 a.m. Sunday, May 18 Los Angeles at Chicago, 1 p.m.

GOLF PGA-Byron Nelson Par Scores Friday At TPC Four Seasons Resort Irving, Texas Purse: $6.9 million Yardage: 7,166; Par: 70 (a-amateur) Second Round Brendon Todd 68-64 Graham DeLaet 68-66 Morgan Hoffmann 68-66 Martin Kaymer 67-67 Mike Weir 68-66 Paul Casey 71-63 Tim Herron 68-66 Marc Leishman 66-68 Charles Howell III 68-66 Gary Woodland 68-67 Retief Goosen 70-65 Ryan Palmer 67-68 Boo Weekley 67-68 Tyrone Van Aswegen 67-68 James Hahn 71-65 Matt Kuchar 69-67 Padraig Harrington 68-68 Louis Oosthuizen 68-68 Alex Cejka 67-70 Charlie Beljan 72-65 Tim Wilkinson 66-71 Andres Romero 71-66 Vijay Singh 69-68 Jordan Spieth 70-67 Daniel Chopra 70-68 Robert Garrigus 74-64 Peter Hanson 65-73 Rory Sabbatini 70-68 Keegan Bradley 70-68 Brian Gay 71-67 -

Lap length: 1.5 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (4) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 40 laps, 149.7 rating, 0 points. 2. (2) A J Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 40, 127, 0. 3. (9) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 40, 106.8, 0. 4. (5) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 40, 100, 0. 5. (10) Aric Almirola, Ford, 40, 92.8, 0. 6. (3) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 40, 90.1, 0. 7. (8) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 40, 90.3, 0. 8. (1) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 40, 96.9, 0. 9. (6) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 40, 81.7, 0. 10. (7) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 40, 73.2, 0. 11. (15) David Gilliland, Ford, 40, 64.2, 0. 12. (11) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 40, 65.1, 0. 13. (13) Alex Bowman, Toyota, 40, 63.1, 0. 14. (14) Dave Blaney, Ford, 40, 50.5, 0. 15. (17) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 40, 56.3, 0.

LINCOLN

HORSE RACING Preakness Odds The field for Saturday’s 139th Preakness Stakes, with post position, horse’s name, jockey’s name and odds: 1. Dynamic Impact Menna 12-1 2. General a Rod Castellano 15-1 3. California Chrome Espinoza 3-5 4. Ring Weekend Garcia 20-1 5. Bayern Napravnik 10-1 6. Ria Antonia Borel 30-1 7. Kid Cruz Pimentel 20-1 8. Social Inclusion Contreras 5-1 9. Pablo Del Monte Sanchez 20-1 10. Ride On Curlin Rosario 10-1

MSRP $40,480

Trainers (by post position): 1, Mark Casse. 2, Mike Maker. 3, Art Sherman. 4, Graham Motion. 5, Bob Baffert. 6, Tom Amoss. 7, Lnda Rice. 8, Manny Azpurua. 9, Wesley Ward. 10, William Gowan. Owners (by post position): 1, St. Elias Stable. 2, Starlight Racing & Skychai Racing, LLC. 3, Steve and Carolyn Coburn & Perry and Denise Martin. 4, Loooch Racing Stable. 5, John Oxley. 6, Kaleem Shah, Inc. 7, Black Swan Stable & Vina Del Mar. 8, Rontos Racing Stable Corp. 9, Mrs. John Magnier, Derrick Smith, Michael B. Tabor, Wesley A. Ward.10, Daniel J. Dougherty. Weights: 126 each. Distance:1 3-16 miles. Purse: $1 million. First place: $600,000. Second place: $200,000. Third place: $110,000. Fourth place: $60,000. Post time: 6 p.m. EDT.

MLS 132 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 135 135 135 135 135 136 136 136 136 137 137 137 137 137 137 138 138 138 138 138 138

-8 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -4 -4 -4 -4 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2

AUTO RACING NASCAR Sprint Cup-Sprint Showdown Results Friday At Charlotte Motor Speedway Concord, N.C.

At A Glance All Times MDT EASTERN CONFERENCE Sporting Kansas City New England D.C. Houston New York Columbus Philadelphia Toronto FC Chicago Montreal

W

5

3

L

2

T Pts

17

GF GA

15

8

5 4 4 3 3 2 3 1 1

3 3 5 3 4 5 4 2 5

2 2 2 5 3 5 0 6 3

17 14 14 14 12 11 9 9 6

14 13 15 18 10 12 7 17 7

10 11 19 17 11 15 9 18 17

WESTERN CONFERENCE Seattle Real Salt Lake FC Dallas Vancouver Colorado San Jose Los Angeles Chivas USA Portland

W

7 5 5 4 4 2 2 2 1

L

3 0 5 2 3 3 2 5 3

T Pts

1 5 1 4 3 4 3 3 6

22 20 16 16 15 10 9 9 9

GF GA

22 21 20 16 11 10 8 12 13

19 12 19 12 12 11 6 19 16

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NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday’s Games New York at Toronto FC, 2:30 p.m. New England at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Montreal at D.C. United, 5 p.m. Los Angeles at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Chivas USA at FC Dallas, 6:30 p.m. Colorado at Real Salt Lake, 7:30 p.m. San Jose at Seattle FC, 8 p.m. Columbus at Portland, 8:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Sporting Kansas City at Chicago, 1 p.m.

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PAGE C10

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

QUOTE OF THE DAY WHAT’S SAID ON THE ICE STAYS ON THE ICE, AND UNFORTUNATELY THAT CODE IS BROKEN.” Bruins forward Milan Lucic, saying he wouldn’t apologize for comments that angered the Canadiens’ Dale Weise and Alexei Emelin after Montreal ousted Boston in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

LUCIC BY TIMOTHY T. LUDWIG, USA TODAY SPORTS

NOT PAYING FINE IS FIRST LEGAL STEP FOR STERLING

SPORTSLINE

Jeff Zillgitt

@JeffZillgitt USA TODAY Sports

FABRICE COFFRINI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

FIRST WORD OF COURSE IT WAS A MISTAKE. YOU KNOW, ONE MAKES A LOT OF MISTAKES IN LIFE.” FIFA president Sepp Blatter, telling Swiss channel RTS that giving the 2022 World Cup to Qatar was a mistake because of the extreme heat players will have to endure. MAGIC NUMBER

7-4

Odds, according to Bovada.lv, on the Blackhawks winning the Stanley Cup. The Canadiens are 11-4, the Rangers 7-2 and the Kings 11-2. TWEET OF THE DAY

EARNHARDT BY USA TODAY SPORTS

@DaleJr ENJOYED MEETING CHUCK TODAY. VERY NICE GUY. NOT A TURRIBLE DRIVER EITHER. NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt Jr., after spending time on the track with TNT analyst Charles Barkley. The former NBA All-Star said he wanted to meet Earnhardt. ALMOST LAST WORD “WHAT WE’RE TRYING TO DO NOW IS GET FROM GOOD TO GREAT.” Penguins President and CEO David Morehouse, after the firing of general manager Ray Shero.

The letter from Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling’s attorney to the NBA claiming no wrongdoing on Sterling’s behalf is a persuasive indication he plans to fight the league in court, sports law expert Warren K. Zola says. “It was to put the NBA on notice that they’re preparing to go to battle,” said Zola, an adjunct professor of business law at Boston College’s Carroll School of Management. “It’s clear that the attorney and, I assume, Donald Sterling do not feel any punishment is warranted. Clearly, that’s a precursor to litigation.” USA TODAY Sports reported Thursday that Sterling’s lawyer, Maxwell M. Blecher, told the NBA his client would not pay the $2.5 million fine and does not warrant “any punishment at all.” He also said the matter would need to be adjudicated. The letter addresses only the fine, for which Sterling missed the payment deadline, and the lifetime ban, not the league’s push to terminate Sterling’s ownership. “I don’t see any scenario in which he and his attorney have an ability to overturn either the ban or the league fine,” Zola said. “Quite frankly, even if he doesn’t pay the fine, it can be withheld from television payments, as would interest from that fine.” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver issued the fine and ban April 29, when he said he would urge NBA owners to force a sale of the Clippers. Silver’s stance came after a recording of Sterling making racist comments was made public; the first-year commissioner received widespread praise around the NBA, including backing from all 29 other owners. Using the NBA’s constitution and bylaws, the league has a clear and unassailable case against Sterling, according to Zola. The

ANDY MARLIN, USA TODAY SPORTS

Commissioner Adam Silver banned Sterling last month.

MARK J. TERRILL, AP

Donald Sterling missed the deadline to pay a $2.5 million fine, perhaps angling for a say in the sale of the Clippers. NBA has homed in on Article 13(d), which states an owner may be terminated if the owner should “fail to or refuse to fulfill its contractual obligations to the Association, its Members, Players, or any third party in such a way as to affect the Association or its Members adversely.” Sterling also signed moral and ethical contracts as part of being an owner, and the league thinks he violated contractual obligations in the audio recording. “The courts have a really hard time and will have a hard time overturning the internal constitution and bylaws within a pri-

vate association unless those actions are arbitrary and capricious, and that doesn’t it appear that is the case,” Zola said. University of Toledo law professor Geoffrey Rapp said Sterling and his attorneys also could be setting groundwork to allow Sterling to have a say in the potential sale of his team. “I still think most of the public statements by both Sterlings (Donald and wife Shelly) represent an attempt to stake out a position to have more control over the terms and price of the sale of the team,” Rapp said in an e-mail. “I’ll believe they want to sue only

KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS

Shelly Sterling has a 50% ownership stake in the team.

when they file a complaint.” Sterling likely would want the highest price for his team, which could sell for more than $1 billion. “What will be interesting is what will happen if and when bids are submitted to the league,” Zola said. “The league and its owners have clear authority to determine and approve a potential buyer. What happens if they decide to pass over a higher bid for an owner that they value?” There is such a precedent in professional sports: The Boston Red Sox were sold in 2002 to a group that wasn’t the top bidder.

Price vs. Lundqvist intrigues Kevin Allen

kmallen@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

BRIAN SPURLOCK, USA TODAY SPORTS

LAST WORD “I MADE THE MISTAKE OF NOT CALLING THE NFL OR NFLPA TO DOUBLE-CHECK BEFORE I TOOK THE MEDICATION.” Colts DL Robert Mathis, after receiving a four-game suspension for violating the NFL’s policy on performance-enhancing drugs. Mathis said he had been taking medication to treat infertility issues.

The New York Rangers and Montreal Canadiens meet in the Eastern Conference final after a regular-season series that featured three shutouts, four total goals and a 2-1 Montreal edge. Five factors that could determine who wins the series, which opens today in Montreal (1 p.m. ET, NBC).

Edited by Reid Cherner

The power play: The Cana-

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Fastest times at Preakness Stakes Secretariat 1973

1:53.00

Tank’s Prospect

1:53.40

Louis Quatorze 1996

1:53.40

Curlin

1:53.46

2007

First-rate fourth lines:

Both teams get good mileage out of their fourth lines. The Rangers’ Brian Boyle, Dominic Moore, Daniel Carcillo and Derek Dorsett have contributed one way or another. Boyle is the team’s top hitter and one of its better shotblockers. Montreal gets plenty from Dale Weise and Brandon Prust. Daniel Briere also has been on the Canadiens’ fourth line and is among the most productive playoff performers in NHL history, with 115 points in 118 games. He had a goal and an assist in eight minutes of play in Game 7.

Carey Price vs. Henrik Lundqvist: The Rangers are Rick Nash’s slump: The

Since 1925

1985

diens could win this series on the strength of their power play. They are 10-for-38 (26.3%) with the man advantage. The Rangers are 6-for-55 (10.9%) and at one point in these playoffs their slump reached 0-for-36.

looking for a new contract this summer, and he has demonstrated how much value he can have for a team. He has been a difference-maker, generating four goals and eight assists in 11 playoff games. He’s been the league’s best non-goalie over the first two rounds of the playoffs. If he continues to play this well, he will help Montreal in all three zones.

more goalie-dependent than the Canadiens. Lundqvist must be as sharp as he was in the final three games vs. the Pittsburgh Penguins, when he stopped 102 of 105 shots and seemed to make good chances vanish. But don’t sell Price short; no NHL goalie faces more pressure than a Canadiens one, and he has been as wall-like as Montreal has needed.

Rangers winger has no goals and five assists in 14 playoff games. The Rangers need to get Nash rolling to keep up with the Canadiens, who are averaging almost one goal per game more in the postseason. Nash seems to have lost his way in the offensive zone. The amazing aspect of Nash’s slump is that he leads the NHL with 52 shots in the postseason.

Super Subban: Canadiens By position Source USA TODAY research MATTHEW COOPER AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY

defenseman P.K. Subban will be

Goaltending: Lundqvist and

RYAN REMIORZ, AP

Carey Price has allowed 2.15 goals a game for the playoffs.

Price met in the Olympic gold medal game in Sochi, and Price’s Team Canada won. But Lundqvist also has won gold — with Sweden in 2006. When Price faced the Rangers this season he stopped 74 of 75 shots; Lundqvist stopped 25 of 27 in one game. Lundqvist has better numbers this postseason, owning a 1.99 goals-against average and .931 save percentage. Price is at 2.15 and .926. Both teams would be content if this series evolved into a goaltending duel. EDGE: Rangers Defensemen: The Rangers’ Big Three are Ryan McDonagh, Dan Girardi and Marc Staal, but Anton Stralman is underrated. Those four match up well against any level of competition. Although New York’s Alain Vigneault is known as an offensive coach, this group can bunker up around the net almost as well as they did when John Tortorella was coach. Subban, Andrei Markov, Alexei Emelin and Josh Gorges are Montreal’s top four defensemen. Subban and Markov are averaging 26 minutes a game;

Gorges and Emelin are both averaging better than 22. These teams are the best two shot-blocking teams left in the tournament. Subban and Markov give the Canadiens the advantage in offense from defense. EDGE: Even Forwards: One postseason story line has been the Rangers’ need to get more from their top six forwards. They’ve been rolling four lines, and the third line of Benoit Pouliot, Derick Brassard and Mats Zuccarello has been performing like their first line. Chris Kreider’s return from injury has given the offense a boost. But they need more from Nash, Martin St. Louis, Derek Stepan and Brad Richards if they want to reach the Stanley Cup Final. The Canadiens hope Max Pacioretty, with two goals in his past two games, is heating up at the right time. The trade for Thomas Vanek made Montreal’s offense more dangerous, but Brendan Gallagher and Lars Eller — each with nine points in 11 games — have been more consistent. Tomas Plekanec plays more than any of those players because he is so valuable. EDGE: Canadiens Injuries: Montreal, C-W Alex Galchenyuk is expected to return this series. Rangers, none Prediction: If Price is right, look for Montreal to get back to the Stanley Cup Final for the first since 1993. Montreal in six games. FOLLOW COLUMNIST KEVIN ALLEN

@ByKevinAllen for the latest in the world of hockey.


FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE C11

HORSE RACING

TOMMY GILLIGAN, USA TODAY SPORTS

California Chrome trainer Art Sherman, speaking with exercise rider William Delgado, aboard the horse, says two weeks isn’t much time to get a horse prepared.

TURNAROUND A PREAKNESS KEY California Chrome handlers hope Derby champ can be in top form Gary Mihoces

@ByGaryMihoces USA TODAY Sports BALTIMORE The Preakness Stakes will be run in about two minutes. There is another important time frame: two weeks. California Chrome is the heavy favorite at 3-5. He’s on a five-race winning streak, including the Kentucky Derby. But he has had about a month off between each victory. Between the Derby and the Preakness, he’ll have had two weeks. The Preakness will measure whether he can recharge, regroup and run down the stretch as he has in previous wins — and continue his bid for the first Triple Crown in 36 years. “It always bothers me coming back in two weeks, like I think most trainers. It takes a horse a good 10 days to really bounce out of a race good,” says Art Sherman, 77-year-old trainer for the California-bred favorite.

Social Inclusion, the No. 2 choice on the betting line, hasn’t run since he placed third in the Wood Memorial on April 5. He has raced three times this year. “He was a big horse. Now he’s bigger and stronger,” says Manny Azpurua, 85-year-old trainer of Social Inclusion.. Beyond a throat irritation revealed this week by California Chrome’s trainers and dismissed by them as of no consequence, Sherman says he has liked what he has seen of his horse. He says he’s been holding his weight and eating well. Just as he did the week before the Derby, Sherman has put California Chrome through no timed works this week, just gallops. “So I’m sure not changing anything. Let’s go for it,” says Sherman. But there will be changes compared with the Derby. The Preakness field is 10 horses compared with 19 in the Derby. The pace figures to be faster than the Derby. In the Derby, California Chrome won in a time of 2:03.66,

NASCAR

slowest on a fast track for a Derby winner since Cannonade in 1974. California Chrome took the lead down the stretch and ran away from the field. Jockey Victor Espinoza eased up on him near the finish, trimming his victory margin to 13⁄4lengths. Candidates to push the pace early today include Social Inclusion, Bayern, General a Rod, Dynamic Impact and Ring Weekend. “There is a lot of speed in there,” says Dynamic Impact trainer Mark Casse. “Of course, a lot of times you think that way and it does not materialize, but I think that will happen. I hope he is able to sit right behind the speed.” That figures to be the preferred route for California Chrome, too: get out of the starting gate cleanly, hang near the front-runners and take over down the stretch. California Chrome will start from the No. 3 post. Social Inclusion will be in the No. 8 post and Ride On Curlin in No. 10. “There’s a lot of speed on the outside,” Sherman says. “Victor will know what to do with him going into this first turn. And after we go around the first turn and see where we’re at, he’ll have a target. I’m almost

sure of a runner (a horse charging to the early lead).” Then we’ll see what California

“It takes a horse a good 10 days to really bounce out of a race good.” California Chrome trainer Art Sherman

Chrome has in the tank. “Well, it’s always easier when you’ve got less horses. It’s less traffic,” Sherman says. “If he comes away from the gate in good shape, and there’s three speed horses in here, he likes that target to run at. So I really think that with good racing luck he should be in a position where he’ll be in the clear.” A year ago, Derby champ Orb opened as an even money favorite on the morning line. By race time, he was 3-5. He finished fourth in a Preakness won by Oxbow, a 30-1 long shot after running sixth in in the Derby. Should California Chrome get a Preakness win, he’ll have three weeks to prepare for the final test

of the Triple Crown, the 11⁄2-mile Belmont Stakes in New York. Since Affirmed won the last Triple Crown in 1978, a dozen horses have won the Derby and Preakness and then lost in the Belmont. Beyond California Chrome, two horses from this year’s Derby are in the Preakness: Ride On Curlin (seventh in the Derby) and General a Rod (11th). Among those resting up this weekend for the Belmont is Commanding Curve, runner-up behind California Chrome in this year’s Derby. That’s part of the Triple Crown test: five weeks, three races. “Well, the challenge is there,” Sherman says. “I’m not one to run back in two weeks … I know it’s a tradition, but it’s harder on the horses, to me. … I can see where they have a lot of fresh shooters. They miss the Derby, and they come for you at the Preakness. “It’s going to be even worse when I get to the mile-and-a-half race at the Belmont. They’re going to have a lot of horses in the wings waiting for me there. So I’ve got to keep my horse happy and fresh and hope he’s in top shape.”

A rotating All-Star Race? Drivers say they’re for it Earnhardt, Kenseth suggest how it could work Jeff Gluck

@jeff_gluck USA TODAY Sports CONCORD,

BOB JORDAN, AP

Dale Earnhardt Jr., at practice Friday at Charlotte Motor Speedway, likes the idea of having the All-Star Race elsewhere.

N. C. Tonight will mark the 30th running of the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, and 29 of them have been held at Charlotte Motor Speedway. But should the exhibition race stay at Charlotte? Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Matt Kenseth both said they’d be open to moving the race when asked Friday during interview sessions. “I wouldn’t be opposed to changing it up a little bit,” Earnhardt said. “It wouldn’t be a bad idea to take it to Bristol or some-

where like that and mix it up a little bit.” Kenseth said he came up with an idea a couple of years ago that he thinks would work: Rotate the All-Star Race among different tracks each season, but hold it at venues where the Sprint Cup Series doesn’t already race. “I think it should go to Iowa and Milwaukee and St. Louis and Pike’s Peak (Colorado) and maybe even Memphis,” Kenseth said. “I think that would be great for all those markets that don’t have a NASCAR race. I think you’d sell them out, whether that’s 30,000 or 40,000 people. “I think the race would be good. It’s not a points race. I think that would expose a lot of fans to our product live who don’t get to see it now.” Cup rookie Kyle Larson also had a suggestion, which he offered via Twitter: Rockingham. Earnhardt said he favored the

old three-segment format from the late 1980s — such as the one that created the circumstances for 1987’s Pass in the Grass, involving Dale Earnhardt Sr. and Bill Elliott. The current format consists of four 20-lap segments followed by a 10-lap shootout; the drivers’ average finishes in each segment decide the order coming to pit road for a mandatory four-tire pit stop before the shootout. As for the track itself? No venue can guarantee a great race, Earnhardt said. “You could run it at Bristol 10 years in a row and some would be awesome and some wouldn’t — just the same way you’d have it here,” Earnhardt said. “We just have to hope everything works out in our favor and we get an exciting finish, however that happens. “Sometimes it will, sometimes it won’t.”


PAGE C12

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

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R1

Today’s Ticket

BY STACY NICK THE COLORADOAN

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE D1

DISCOVER MORE THINGS TO DO

Celebrate Armed Forces Day at the Mackenzie Place Third Annual Classic Car Show. Open from11a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, this event will feature live entertainment from Kenny Cordova, along with food vendors, including The Boot Grill. Admission is free. Mackenzie’s Place is located at 4751 Pleasant Oak Drive. Proceeds from the event will go to benefit The Wounded Warrior Project. Visit www. mackenzieplace.com for more information.

See more things to do, entertainment, dining and nightlife in Thursday’s Ticket or go to Coloradoan.com/ entertainment.

Your Home BRYAN SOTH AND DWIGHT SAILER BUILDING SOLUTIONS

Using less water can open door to more natural beauty in landscape

Get primed on freshening up your home with paint Fresh paint on the wall is a fairly inexpensive way to give any home an instant facelift. Paint can draw people into a room. It can make a space appear larger or cozier. Experts say color is full of meaning and has the power to influence moods and set the tone of your home. So how do you choose a color, and what should you know before you paint? Today’s paint color selection is so vast we swear you could drown in a sea of paint chips. Too many choices often lead to decision paralysis. So how do you narrow it down and choose the color that’s right for you? Start by looking at your room’s finishes and furnishings. Try matching a vein or fleck of color found in the tile or countertop. Do you have a favorite piece of artwork or upholstered chair? Use a color in the piece as your inspiration. Next, narrow your selections

A BACKYARD

RECONSIDERED By Janice Benedict CSU Master Gardener

It started last August, with a water bill. We agreed quickly that improvement was needed; and being unwilling to cut down on showers and laundry, the conversation soon came around to “The Lawn.” With no dogs or small children, a turfgrass backyard seemed a natural water user to eliminate: an easy decision to reach, but implementation proved to be a bit more complex. Up came the turf, and it became, along with a load of topsoil, three berms of varying heights and eccentric shapes. The spaces between berms became pathways made of crushed gravel, with landscape fabric beneath in the hope of forestalling some of the weeds. Well, perhaps the bindweed will be slowed down a bit. Optimism is a necessary ingredient in these mat-

ters. The berms were covered with a thick layer — about four inches — of shredded cedar mulch, and then the real fun began: what to plant? As cooler weather approached, we settled on a load of mid-sized, decorative rock, which we arranged, and rearranged, and finally augmented with several low, spreading Scotch pines. Done, for the winter. The cold months became study time. One of the berms, the one with the most direct sunlight, was to be truly “xeric,” that is, designed to survive without additional water, once established. Of the remaining two, both would be “low water,” needing occasional irrigation during extended dry periods. One of these is partly shaded. With this general plan in mind, the search began. Several books proved to be invaluable. “Dryland Gardening:

Adoptable Animals

See BUILDERS, Page D7

Xeriscape gardens surround a group of homes in northwest Fort Collins. Xeriscape gardens require very little or no water to maintain and have a low impact on the environment. COLORADOAN LIBRARY

Plants That Survive and Thrive in Tough Conditions,” by Jennifer Bennett (Firefly Books, 2005) was helpful for general information and background. Specific plant recommendations were detailed enough to discuss cultivars appropriate to specific zones and circumstances. Newer and more local is “Durable Plants for the Garden: A Plant Select Guide,” edited by James E. Henrich (Fulcrum Publishing, 2009). This is truly the go-to source for High Plains gardeners. Plant Select is the collaborative output of CSU, Denver Botanic Gardens, and Green Industries of Colorado. The book was recently updated with a booklet describing their selections since 2009, and each spring a new flier announces the

latest choices. The booklet, “A Guide to Plants for Western Gardens and Beyond,” and the annual fliers, are available at garden centers, through your local Extension office or online at www.plantselect.org. One other work deserves mention because of its local emphasis and inclusion of current (and therefore likely to be available at your favorite garden center) varieties and cultivars: “Waterwise Plants for Sustainable Gardens: 200 Drought-Tolerant Choices for All Climates,” by Lauren Springer Ogden and Scott Ogden (Timber Press, 2011). Since we wanted to emphasize ornamental grasses on the new berms, this reference was See BACKYARD, Page D2

See more Pets & Animals stories on Page D3.

To visit with these featured pets or any other adoptable animals, stop by Larimer Humane Society at 6317 Kyle Ave., Fort Collins. The shelter is open from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. For more information, call (970) 226-3647 or visit larimerhumane.org.

Sweet Pea (A441516) Sweet Pea, a 6-year-old domestic mediumhair cat, might take a little time to get to know you, but once she does, this tortie tiger kitty will shower you with love. Give her a place to bloom for $25.

Mei Mei (A442929) Mei Mei is crazy about chasing balls, playing and taking walks. This blackand-white 11-year-old female Chihuahua shorthair mix can be your best buddy for $100.

Maui (A441509) Maui’s curious and alert eyes are clearly focused as she keeps tabs on everyone in the house. Eightyear-old Maui is a brown tiger domestic shorthair cat, and she can keep an eye on you for $25.

ROBYN DOLGIN DESIGN BY INTENTION

Ideas can help create a resilient garden With so many conditions being unpredictable in today’s world, the concept of resiliency in the landscape and garden has been swirling around my mind. The biggest reality check comes with the weather and how it impacts everything else. Three big questions come to mind. First, how do we anticipate or prepare for extremes of sunny and warm as it gives way to frost and frigid temperatues all within 24 or 48 hours? Secondly, how do we respond to extremes of parched, cracked soil shifting to downpours and flooding, which erode once stable soils and plantings? Finally, what do we do about our citizen scientistlike observations of fewer pollinators and natural allies in the garden, such as bees, birds and other benign wild creatures? Here are a few ideas, many of which are not necessarily new or rocket science but are a sure-fire way to stay in the game with as litSee DOLGIN, Page D7

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PAGE D2

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

Backyard

SPENCER BATH ORGANIC PRACTICES

Minerals can unlock the microbiology of gardening Gardening is too often limited by context, maybe as a relaxing hobby to grow tasty food for family and friends, or maybe even to sell produce at the local farmer’s market. Gardening with the organic approach implies a search for greater awareness of the whole, in connecting with our cosmic nature, and a means by which we may attain minerals from the soil, converted by microbiology, absorbed and provided to us by plants. These minerals are keys to unlock epigenetic potential in our coded DNA, impacting our health, vitality and meta-consciousness.

It is established that minerals affect genetic expression, that among other important health-related functions in the body. We depend on microbiology, plants, and soil to proffer these minerals in a form usable by our bodies, so a highly mineralized soil is of the utmost importance. The organic approach asks us to shift our awareness in many ways, firstly, we escape the prison of NP-K to enter the prism of foundational minerals, as a single ray of sunlight exits a crystal as a kaleidoscopic rainbow. Minerals are referred to as foundational; it is from the availability and ratio of these minerals in soil that fertility unfurls. A shortage of any one mineral causes a metabolic friction, the Liebigs’s Law of Minimum. A shortage impinges potential, first in one cell, but affecting entire ecosystems. Organisms must then adjust and compensate rather than effortlessly attain an accelerated toroidal flow, or vibration. The most effective manner in which to remineralize soil is

to apply rock powders. We do this to replicate areas of the planet where Mother Nature demonstrates maximum fertility, typically near volcanoes where naturally high mineralization is endemic. With the Colorado plains last mineralized by the grinding, weathering movement of glaciers 10,000 years ago, our clay is long due for mineral supplementation. As we harvest, we must replace, a sobering and continual thread of the organic approach. This is bread from stones. Rock powder sources abound. Granite, basalt, lime, zeolite and certain clays can all be used to further fertility in the soil, each with varying mineral content, physical properties, function and expression within soil dynamics. I prefer the basalts, giving high paramagnetism and a wide array of mineral content. Though minerals may not be used directly by plants, they are necessary for microbiology. Bacteria and mycorrhizae feed on minerals within rock powders, a radically stimulated microbiome ensues. Rock

Continued from Page D1

powders are excellent for all methods of growing, whether container gardens, raised beds, small acreage, or established lawns and landscapes. Application recommendations vary widely, but a starting point is usually 1 ton per acre, or 10-20 pounds per 1,000 square feet. Basalt powders are insoluble, meaning they will not burn, even at rates over 10 tons per acre. Gradation, or particle size, is an important factor in choosing a material. The smaller the particle, the more easily it is broken down by microbiology and the more readily available it is. A quality powder will contain particles from 100 to 200 microns, up to sand and rice sized particles where density will hold a higher paramagnetic charge. Think of paramagnetism as a measure of a rock powders ability to transmit and hold subtle or spiritual energies, either from the sun and planets, or from your own positive intentions.

invaluable for its extensive selection and good pictures. After all this reading, what did we choose? Here’s the shopping list, with more choices than we’ll need, since availability is always a question: Grasses » Blue Grama, Bouteloua gracilis ‘Blonde Ambition.’ A candidate for the xeric berm. » Big Bluestem, Andropogon gerardii. A tall, bluegreen centerpiece. » Feather Reed Grass, Calamagrostis acutifolia ‘Karl Foerster’ or ‘Overdam.’ » Undaunted (TM) Ruby Muhly, Muhlenbergia reverchonii. A delicate, colorful Plant Select® choice for 2014. » Japanese Blood Grass, Imperata cylindrical ‘Rubens’ or ‘Red Baron.’ » Blue Fescue, Festuca glauca ‘Elijah Blue’ or ‘Sea Urchin.’ Just 8inches tall – something for the foreground. Shrubs » Chieftain Manzanita, Arctostaphylos x coloradensis. Evergreen, spreading, xeric. A 2013 Plant Select® choice, perfect for a south-facing slope. » Daphne, Daphne x burkwoodii ‘Carol Mackie,’ for the part-shade, low-water berm. Perennials » Basket of Gold, Aurinia saxitilis. Good for the slope, around some rocks, on the xeric berm.

Spencer Bath of Fort Collins can be found at Bath Garden Center and Agri-charge.com.

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Looking for additional gardening information? Check out the CSU Extension Horticulture Agent blog at www.csuhort. blogspot.com for timely updates about gardening around the state.

PLANTTALK COLORADO

Visit PlantTalk Colorado for fast answers to your gardening questions; www.planttalk.org PlantTalk is a cooperation between Colorado State University Extension, GreenCo and Denver Botanic Gardens.

» Butterfly weed, Asclepias tuberosa. Lovely orange flowers, beloved by bees and butterflies. » Desert Four O’Clock, Mirabilis multiflora. Too tall to be called a ground cover, but mounds nicely to fill spaces. Purple to fuchsia flowers, xeric. » Hummingbird Trumpet, Zauschneria californica or Z. garrettii. Long-flowering, into fall. Combines well with grasses. » Blue Flax, Linum narbonense. Mounds nicely and can tolerate part shade. Another 2013 Plant Select® choice. If you need visual images of what these plants look like, just type the name into your favorite search engine. Janice Benedict has received training through Colorado State University Extension's Master Gardener program and is a Master Gardener volunteer for Larimer County.

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FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE D3

Your pets

Learn the signs of cancer in pets

By Dr. Rodney Page

Special to the Coloradoan

Did you know that cancer is the leading cause of death among dogs more than 2 years old? This is a startling statistic and might be unknown to people who haven’t confronted cancer in a pet. May is designated as Pet Cancer Awareness Month by the American Veterinary Medical Association, and it’s a good time to bone up on the risks and signs of cancer in pets — and to understand current treatment options. The Colorado State University Flint Animal Cancer Center is the world’s largest center focused on veterinary oncology, with about 100 scientists and clinicians who handle about 6,000 appointments and 3,000 consultations annually. We also train veterinary students and conduct clinical trials to treat dogs with naturally occurring tumors, while also gaining critical insight in our quest for a cancer cure. The mission of our Animal Cancer Center is to successfully treat pets with cancer — and to use the knowledge we attain to advance cancer treatment for people. Tumors and their growth are remarkably similar between pets and people; that makes cancer treatment in dogs an ideal model for advancing cancer treatment for human patients. Here are a couple things we know about cancer in dogs: About half of dogs older than 10 will develop cancer; in some breeds, the mortality rate is 50 percent or greater. By comparison, 41 percent of men and women will be diagnosed with cancer during their lifetimes, according to data from the National Cancer Institute. The prevalence of pet cancers is distressing for those of us who consider our dogs as family members. Yet there’s also good news: About 50 percent of cancers in dogs are curable with surgery, chemotherapy or radiation. Another 25 percent of canine cancers are controllable, meaning treatment will help to extend life and improve quality of life. In the final 25 percent of canine cancer patients, it is unreasonable to consider prolonging survival. In these cases, veterinarians have many tools to provide palliative care, meaning we seek to relieve pain and provide other supportive therapies so the patient is comfortable until the end of life. As is the case in people,

there are different types of cancer in dogs. Among U.S. men, prostate, lung and colorectal cancers are most common; in U.S. women, breast, lung and colorectal cancers develop most frequently, data from the National Cancer Institute show. In dogs, we most often see tumors of the lymph nodes; hemangiosarcomas, or tumors that develop in the blood vessels; and osteosarcomas, or bone cancers; and sarcomas in general. Early detection and treatment are important for dogs, just as for people. So it’s helpful to know the top 10 warning signs of cancer in pets: » Abnormal swellings that persist or grow. As we like to suggest, pet your pet! This is the best way to find lumps, bumps or swelling that could be anywhere on the body. » Sores that don’t heal. Nonhealing sores can be a sign of infection or cancer. Your veterinarian can determine the reason a sore is not healing. » Weight loss. Illness could be to blame if your pet is losing weight but is not on a diet. » Loss of appetite. It’s not normal for pets to lose their appetite; inappetence is another sign of possible illness. » Bleeding or discharge from any body opening. Bleeding can occur for a number of reasons, most of which are abnormal. We consider unexplained vomiting and diarrhea as abnormal discharges, as well. » Offensive odor. This is a common sign, especially for tumors of the anus, mouth or nose. » Difficulty eating or swallowing. This is a common sign of cancers of the mouth or neck. » Hesitation to exercise or loss of stamina. This can be one of the first signs that your pet is not feeling well. » Persistent lameness. There can be many causes of lameness, including nerve, muscle or bone cancer. » Difficulty breathing, urinating or defecating. Schedule a veterinary evaluation if your pet displays any of these symptoms. The CSU Flint Animal Cancer Center has a number of ongoing clinical trials. To learn about options, visit www.csuanimalcancercenter.org and navigate to “Clinical Trials.” Dr. Rodney Page is a veterinary oncologist and director of Colorado State University’s Flint Animal Cancer Center.

CSU plans forum on sheltering animals during disasters By Coloradoan news services

Colorado State University’s Veterinary Teaching Hospital on Monday is co-sponsoring a free, all-day workshop for Front Range professionals who respond to pet needs during disasters. The Animal Disaster Sheltering Exercise will be 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday at The Ranch Events Complex in Loveland. It will be led by Diane Robinson, owner of Disaster Animal Shelter Education and former training manager of the American Humane Association’s Red Star Animal Emergency Services Response program. The event, co-sponsored by CSU Extension and The Ranch (Larimer County Fairgrounds), is designed for supervisor-level personnel in charge of selecting, setting up and managing animal shelters when disasters such as wildfires or floods strike. The group of about 35 will include county extension agents, veterinarians, fairgrounds managers, Humane Society representatives and animal control officers. Background material on best practices for animal disaster sheltering has been

Great Dane Joe enjoys some yard time June 12, 2012, after being evacuated from the High Park Fire and temporarily relocated to the Larimer Humane Society. COLORADOAN LIBRARY

provided through webinars produced by Robinson for Pet Aid Disaster Services. Dr. Ragan Adams, coordinator of CSU Veterinary Extension and event organizer, said participants will share

their experiences and discuss set-up and layout ideas, dilemmas and standard protocols. Dr. Tim Hackett, director of the James L. Voss Veterinary Teaching Hospital, said

the event is about “not waiting for the next disaster to do your planning. It’s important to get everybody in the same room when they’re not out fighting fires or saving animals from flood.”

other stones that are likely still in the bladder, once the obstruction has been relieved. A urinary obstruction is probably the most serious, nontraumatic emergency a young, otherwise healthy cat could face. Depending on the owner’s level of suspicion that something is wrong, the cat may have gone many hours without being able to empty its bladder. This can lead to lifethreatening electrolyte abnormalities as well as kidney damage. Luckily, these are typically reversible if the obstruction is relieved and corrective treatment is instituted, usually in the form of fluid therapy. Cats that are allowed to urinate outside are, by definition, more discrete about their bathroom habits. Many people like this aspect of cat ownership, but not seeing what your cat leaves behind means you don’t see changes in the volume of urine produced, or blood, which frequently accompanies developing urinary blockages.

Cats with a blocked urethra have a distended and extremely uncomfortable abdomen. They are often vocal about the pain, especially while trying to urinate. They become withdrawn, stop eating, and may vomit if kidney damage has occurred. Veterinarians differ on how to approach urinary blockages. Some relieve the pressure on the bladder immediately by passing a needle into the abdomen and emptying a sufficient quantity of urine to bring some immediate relief. Once this is done, some routine blood work can tell us the electrolyte status and kidney function of the patient, an intravenous catheter placed, and fluid therapy started. My belief is that doing this first renders the patient more stable for the anesthesia which must accompany the actual unblocking, but some vets feel that passing a needle into an extremely swollen bladder can bring on rupture of said bladder. Both approaches can be ar-

gued and defended. Once the patient is under anesthesia, a urinary catheter specially-made for this purpose is passed up the urethra and into the bladder. This is often easier said than done, since the obstruction is most commonly at the very narrow tip of the penis, the opening of which is only about 1 to 2 millimeters in diameter. With a urinary catheter in place, the bladder can be repeatedly flushed with sterile saline. This removes the small particles of solids in the bladder that contributed to the blockage, and gives the cat a patent urethra. The catheter is usually left in place for 24 to 48 hours. Athome care typically involves feeding a diet that encourages more water consumption, so that the urine is more dilute and less prone to solid formation.

CHRISTIE LONG PET DOCTOR

Urinary blockages make cats miserable A “blocked Tom,” as they are referred to by those of us in the profession, is a cat, typically a male one, whose urethra, the tube designed to carry urine from the bladder out of the body, has become obstructed. The cat is physically unable to urinate or can only pass very small quantities of urine at a time. The blockage usually is comprised of a plug of solid waste, such as mucous or crystals composed of minerals. Sometimes the blockage is a bladder stone, which instantly complicates the situation, because most of these cats need surgery to remove

Christie Long is a veterinarian at the VCA Fort Collins Animal Hospital. Call her at (970) 204-4567 or send email to thepetdoctor@gmail.com.

Be Kind & Leave Your Pet Behind

Every summer hundreds of pets die in overheated parked cars. You may think that leaving a pet in a car for a short time would be fine, but every minute that goes by, the interior temperature in your car climbs dramatically and becomes lethal to your pet! The table below explains the dramatic nature in how temperature climbs in a parked car.

Helpful Facts

! Pets cannot sweat like humans to lower their core body temperature, so when they are trapped in a hot car they easily succumb to heat stroke, suffer brain damage and are at risk for death. ! Even if the temperature feels cool and comfortable to us outside the car, the interior can easily reach 90 degrees or higher if the car is exposed to sun. ! Opening car windows not only increases your pets risk of escaping, but it does very little to decrease the interior temperature of the car as the heat inside is generated from the metal exterior of the car being heated by the sun.

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Outside

Inside

Time to Reach

75 75 85 85 85 100

100 120 90 100 120 140

10 min 30 min 5 min 8 min 30 min 15 min


PAGE D4

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

DEAR ABBY JEANNE PHILLIPS

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

ZITS

DILBERT

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

FRANK & EARNEST

GARFIELD

Friend not happy being second choice for prom Dear Abby: I was invited to my first prom yesterday. The boy is a senior and the son of a friend of my mom’s. We have a lot in common. We have been friends for years. The problem is, he asked a friend of mine to go to the prom last week, and he did it right in front of me. My friends keep telling me he really does like me, even though I was apparently his second choice. How do I keep myself from feeling like a consolation prize? — Second Best Dear S.B.: The boy who asked you to the prom wants to have a good time. As you said, you are friendly and have a lot in common. Please don’t let the fact that he asked your friend first get in your way. It’s not a contest for anyone’s affection; it’s only a dance. Dear Abby: I met an amazing lady. She’s beautiful, sexy, charming, attentive, classy, smart and conservative. In short, she is almost everything a man would ask for in a woman except for one thing — she’s a tad clingy, and in some instances, it is annoying. I’m the type of guy who loves my space. She seems to respect it but gets a little down when I decline an offer to spend time. To avoid hurting or offending her, I sometimes just do whatever will make her happy, although it feels like a chore. The more I feel I’m forcing myself to spend time with her, the more I lose interest. Am I just not ready to settle down? — Likes My Space Dear Likes: That’s what it sounds like to me. And that’s what you should tell the lady, because someone with all the wonderful qualities you attribute to her won’t be alone and heartbroken for long. Dear Abby: In June of last year I fractured my kneecap. I was employed at the time and asked my daughter to fill in for me while I recuperated. Not only did she walk away from the job, she has yet to visit or even call me to see how I am doing. It hurts me to this day. How can I get past this hurt and disappointment? — Still Hurting In Palm Desert Dear Still Hurting: I can’t imagine anyone being so cold and distant — not to mention irresponsible — unless there were unresolved issues between the two of you or your daughter has emotional problems. How do you get past something as painful as this? The first option would be to try to understand what has caused your daughter to act the way she has. Another would be to fill your days with enough activities that you don’t have time to dwell on it.

BREVITY

RUBES

SPEED BUMP

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com.

HOROSCOPES HOLIDAY MATHIS

PEANUTS CLASSIC

Aries (March 21-April 19). The secret to happiness is freedom of movement. Shed your baggage. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Though you might wish you could take something back, you also know that there is no “back.” Gemini (May 21-June 21). Get some sunshine. Cancer (June 22-July 22). You don’t have to talk with someone often to have an excellent relationship with that person.

ROSE IS ROSE

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). It’s not how much you give but the way you give that will matter.

NON SEQUITUR

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). The thing that usually seems to take forever will be accomplished in only a few minutes because there simply isn’t more time than that to spend on it. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Everyone needs to be needed. It would be a mistake to busy yourself so diligently in trying to be self-sufficient that you rob someone of the chance to feel needed.

BLONDIE

Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). There’s no choice you could make that others wouldn’t mention, so just make the choices you can stand behind regardless of what they say. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You believe there is some good reason for the position you are in, though it’s futile to dwell on exactly what that reason might be. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You send mental messages to people who don’t pick up the signal. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Laughter shows solidarity, and it would be nice to know that you are on the same side.

BORN LOSER

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Prospecting for new opportunities will be the main attraction. Tonight, make a plan as to how you’ll be able to maintain what you have when things get busy. Today’s Birthday (May 17). Though the main players seem to have purposes that are diametrically opposed to your own, you will cleverly train against the opposition and become mighty. Your lucky numbers are: 20, 5, 18, 46 and 12. Write the astrologer, Holiday Mathis, at Creators Syndicate at www.creators.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY » 1912: The Socialist Party of America nominates Eugene V. Debs for president at its convention in Indianapolis. » 1946: President Harry S. Truman seizes control of the nation’s railroads, delaying — but not preventing — a threatened strike by engineers and trainmen. » 1973: A special committee convened by the U.S. Senate begins its televised hearings into the Watergate scandal.


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Music Lounge Music Lounge Classic Arts Showcase ‘G’ Dog ‘G’

Kodiak (In Stereo) ‘14’ (CC)

(6:00) Mov: ›› The Dilemma (2011) NCAA Update

American Greed

Music Lounge CTV

M Good Luck ‘G’ I Didn’t ‘G’ G Deadliest Catch ‘PG’ (CC)

My Cat From Hell ‘PG’

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Cops Rel. ‘PG’ Cops Rel. ‘PG’ Cops Rel. ‘PG’ Cops Rel. ‘PG’ Mov: ›‡ Son-in-Law (1993, Comedy) Pauly Shore, Carla Gugino. Forensic ‘14’

Paid Program

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Ø ¨ X [ U

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Deadliest Catch ‘PG’ (CC)

The Soup ‘PG’ Fashion Police ‘14’

SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) (CC)

Austin ‘G’

NBA Tonight

SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) 2014 Draft Academy

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Red Eye

Justice With Judge Jeanine

Geraldo at Large ‘PG’ (CC)

Red Eye

Restaurant: Impossible ‘G’

Diners ‘G’

Diners ‘G’

Restaurant: Impossible ‘G’

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House Hunters Renovation ‘G’

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Property Brothers ‘G’ (CC)

American Pickers ‘PG’ (CC)

American Pickers ‘PG’ (CC)

American Pickers ‘PG’ (CC)

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(6:00) Mov: Return to Zero (2014) Premiere. Lockup: Raw

To Be Announced

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TBA

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Golden ‘PG’

Golden ‘PG’

Golf Central

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Frasier ‘PG’

Frasier ‘PG’

House Hunters Renovation ‘G’

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American Pickers ‘PG’ (CC)

American Pickers ‘PG’ (CC)

Mov: Return to Zero (2014, Drama) Minnie Driver, Paul Adelstein. (CC) Lockup

Lockup: Corcoran

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Mov: ›‡ Scary Movie 2 (2001) Shawn Wayans. (In Stereo)

Mov: › Not Another Teen Movie (2001) Chyler Leigh. (CC)

Mov: The Sweetest Thing

Sam & Cat ‘G’

Full House ‘G’

Friends (In Stereo) ‘PG’ (CC)

George ‘PG’

Thunder ‘G’

(5:30) Sweet Home Alabama

Full House ‘G’

Friends ‘PG’

Friends ‘PG’

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George ‘PG’

George ‘PG’

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Face Musc

Mov: ››‡ The Thing Called Love (1993) River Phoenix.

Mov: › Double Take (2001) Eddie Griffin.

NASA Educ.

Bookends

Rhythms

History ‘G’

NASA

NASA

NASA

Postgame

Rockies Time

World Poker Tour: Season 12

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MLB Baseball

Wildest Police Videos ‘14’

Wildest Police Videos ‘14’

Honor Music

History ‘G’

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Rampage/King Mo: Pre

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Cops ‘PG’

Cops ‘14’

Wildest Police Videos ‘14’

Big Bang ‘PG’

Big Bang ‘PG’

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Deal With ‘14’

Bam ‘14’

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Family Preys

(6:00) Mov: The Haunting

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(6:00) La Voz Kids ‘PG’ (SS)

Pelicula: ››‡ X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009) (En Estéreo)

Titulares Tele. Operación ‘14’ 12 Corazones ‘14’ (SS)

Pagado

Sex Sent Me to the E.R. ‘14’

OMG! EMT! (N) ‘14’ (CC)

OMG! EMT! ‘14’ (CC)

OMG! EMT! ‘14’ (CC)

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Sex Sent Me to the E.R. ‘14’

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The Dead Files ‘PG’ (CC)

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Sex Sent Me to the E.R. ‘14’

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Mov: I Love You, Man (2009)

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Boondocks

Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ (CC)

The Dead Files ‘PG’ (CC)

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Fam. Guy ‘14’

World’s Dumbest... ‘14’

World’s Dumbest... ‘14’

World’s Dumbest... ‘Y7’

Raymond ‘G’

Raymond ‘PG’ Raymond ‘G’

Raymond ‘PG’ Raymond ‘G’

King ‘PG’

The King of Queens ‘PG’

Comed. ‘14’

Noticiero

Sábado Gigante Concurso Miss Colita 2014. (N) ‘PG’ (SS) Mod Fam ‘PG’

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Great Songs of the ’90s ‘PG’

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World’s Dumbest... ‘14’ Raymond ‘G’

Mov: Death by Invitation

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WWE A.M. Raw (N) ‘PG’ (CC) Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ‘14’

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Funniest Home Videos ‘PG’

Bones (In Stereo) ‘14’ (CC)

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Rules ‘PG’

Rules ‘PG’

30 Rock ‘14’

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SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE D5

CAROLYN HAX TELL ME ABOUT IT

New mom torn over job opportunity and staying with baby Adapted from a recent online discussion. Hi, Carolyn: I need help tackling a big decision. I’m a first-time mom currently staying at home. We moved for my spouse’s job before the baby came and now I’m unemployed for the first time in my adult life. My skill set is very specific; there are no local job opportunities. I have a possible job opportunity that is well matched skill-wise but requires a lengthy daily commute and semi-frequent out-of-town travel. My spouse works a rotating day-night shift, making child care a challenge. I currently look after the majority of child care, meals, household chores, bills, etc. Some days I love being home with my child, and other days I feel like getting back into the workforce is the thing to do. Our family is in a different part of the country and we don’t have much of a support network here. I’ve recently been diagnosed with postpartum anxiety but am starting to feel back to myself thanks to medication. I don’t know how to start to figure out which choice is best for me, my child, my spouse, our family. Can you give me some questions to think about that might help point me toward making a choice and feeling confident it’s a good fit? — To Work or Not The big decision here is whether to be a full-time, at-home mom or to seek some kind of employment. The decision about this particular job is not big; it’s just an incremental decision in the course of the bigger decision. So, start by asking yourself whether you want to work outside the house, and, more aptly, why you’ve come to consider it now. Is the opportunity driving the conversation? Your unease at being “unemployed”? A sense that being an at-home mom doesn’t suit you? Also discuss with your husband where your preference tips — i.e., what amount of stress on your home life would overwhelm any benefits you get from working. If you decide a job makes sense for you and your family, then you weigh this job on its merits alone. It sounds as if you have two solid reasons to say no to the current offer (commute, travel) and one solid one to say yes (uncommon skill match). So, all you need to do for this decision is figure out which trumps what. If you decide you want a job but not this one, then you move on to the next big question: What kind of work do you want, can you get and will best accommodate your priorities? Is a career change a viable option? Retraining? Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com.

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PAGE D6

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

TED SCHAAF GARDENS ON SPRING CREEK

Houses of Worship

ALL SAINTS ANGLICAN CHURCH

FIRST CHURCH OF

1311 Ashford Drive (Off Terry Ranch Road)

CHRIST, SCIENTIST

Cheyenne,Wyoming Tel: 307-630-6513

1230 W. Mulberry St.,

Sunday Eucharist 10.00 a.m.

970-682-2425,

Father Richard Andrews,Vicar

Sunday Service 10:00 a.m.,

AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH 600 S. Shields St., 970-482-2173

WednesdayTestimony Meeting 7:30 p.m., www.christiansciencefortcollins.com

Worship 10:30 am, Sunday School 9:15 am

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN

www.abcfortcollins.org ~ Dr. Bill Prather

CHURCH

A Place to Connect,Think, and Serve

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11 a.m. - Celebration Worship

Adult Forum and SS at 9:30 a.m.

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COMMUNITY OF CHRIST

OUR SAVIOUR’S LUTHERAN

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2000 S. Lemay Avenue,

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Church School 9:45 am.

Saturday Evening Worship 5:30 p.m.

220 East Oak

Sunday Worship Services

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Coffee & Fellowship

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at 9:30 a.m.

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608 East Drake Road

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Sunday Worship 9:00 am & 11:00 am

OSLC Preschool 484-7412

Children and Adult Sunday School 11:00 am

Pastor Michael Stadtmueller

Wednesday Service 7:00 pm

Pastor Leta Behrens

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www.our-saviours.org

SAINT JOHN’S LUTHERAN CHURCH 305 E Elizabeth St, Fort Collins www.StJohnsFC.org 970-482-5316 Worship: Sundays at 9:00 a.m. Bible Study hour at 10:30 a.m. Holy Week Services: Thursday 11:00 a.m. or 6:30 p.m. Good Friday 7:30 p.m. Celebrate Easter at Saint John’s! 6:30 and 9:00 a.m. Services ST. LUKE’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 2000 Stover St., Ft. Clollins, CO www.stlukesfc.org 8:00 a.m.Worship, Rite I 9:00 Breakfast/9:30 Christian Forum 10:30 a.m. Sunday School 10:30 a.m.Worship, Rite II Child care provided all morning Handicap accessible

TIMBERLINE CHURCH 2908 S.Timberline Rd.

fly bush is a semi-woody 6 foot shrub that is irresistible to all butterflies. The fragrance of their flowers reminds me of cotton candy. It’s no wonder butterflies swarm to this plant. In early spring, cut the entire plant down to about 3 inches. Deadheading will prolong the blooming cycle. Tall Gayfeather, Liatris scariosa, is a tall spiky flower with rose-lavender flowers. They are fall bloomers making them an ideal nectar source for migrating butterflies. At the Gardens on Spring Creek we have noticed hummingbirds staying around far longer than in the past. For more than a month, hummers could be found feeding on our flowers. One of our best wildflowers for attracting humming birds are our Penstemons. Penstemon barbatus “Praire Fire” has large tubular red flowers. Their regal appearance makes them a show stopper in the garden. An interesting fact about penstemons is that they have 5 stamens, four of them fertile, the fifth is sterile. The sterile stamen is often beaded, which gives rise to the common name of beardtonge. One of my alltime favorite flowers is the Sunset Hyssop, Agastache rupestris. Their sunset orange, tubular flowers, bloom August through frost. As an added bonus, the whole plant exudes rich root beer aroma. We all must be aware that pollinators are at risk due to sometimes careless use of pesticides. When applying insecticides check first and see if pollinators are active in the garden. Also check and see if the pesticide is toxic to bees. We can make a difference in the life of the pollinators and it all starts in our own back yards.

Pollinators are key to life here on planet Earth. Although we often think of honey bees are our primary pollinator, there are more than 1,000 other bee types that contribute. Most of these bees are solitary, making their homes in the soil. Bees should be encouraged into the garden. Both annual and perennial salivas are favorites. Saliva “Victoria Blue” is an excellent annual plant that bees love. Salvia “Snow Hill” is a stunning, perennial white variety especially suited for smaller gardens. Catmint can be somewhat aggressive; however, there are several smaller varieties that, from my experience, appear well behaved. Give Nepeta “Little Tich” a try. Unlike the taller varieties, this one doesn’t flop over. Prune plant back for a second flush of flowers. Every garden needs to have English Lavender. Not only do bees love them, their leaves secrete one of our most cherished essential oils. The child in all of us can’t resist seeing a butterfl. Several plants are a must for attracting these beautiful creatures. As their names suggest, both butterfly weed and butterfly bush are on the top of their list. Butterfly weed, Asclepius tuberosa, is a native wildflower found growing in dry, lean soils. Its bright orange, tubular flowers not only provide pollen for butterflies, it is also a host plant for the Monarch butterfly. Butter-

970 482-4387 Child care available for birth - 2 years. Live Services, Main Auditorium; 5 p.m., Saturdays 8:30 a.m., 10 a.m., 11:30 a.m. Sundays Traditions: 8:30 a.m., Sundays Expression: 10:00 a.m.,Sundays Wed. 6:45 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. UNITY OF FORT COLLINS 1401 W.Vine St, 970-482-1620 Sundays 9 & 10:30 AM Children andYouth Programs www.unityfc.org VINEYARD CHURCH OF THE ROCKIES 970-484-5999 vineyardoftherockies.org Fort Collins Campus - 1201 Riverside Sundays: 9am, 10:45am & 6pm Windsor Campus - 1450 Westwood Sundays: 9 & 10:45am WESTMINSTER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1709 West Elizabeth St., FC. 9:30 - 10:30 Celebration Worship 10:30 - 11:00 Coffee and Fellowship 10:45 - 11:45, Coffee with the Pastor Discussion, Reflection and Prayer 970-482-7214 www.westpresftc.com

To add your listing to “House of Worship” Email: Classifieds@Coloradoan.com by noon on Wednesday

Ted Schaaf is a horticulturist at The Gardens on Spring Creek. He can be reached at (970) 416-2486 or tschaaf@fcgov.com.

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REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH Join us for Joyful Worship at 7755 Greenstone Trail (Carpenter Road West of Timberline) Saturday - 5 p.m.- REJOICE! Contemporary Service. Sunday Traditional Worship 8:00 a.m. Sunday Contemporary Worship at 9:30 & 11:00 a.m. Christian Education Hour 9:30 a.m. Staffed Nursery All Morning Senior Pastor Tim Runtsch www.redeemerconnect.com 970 225-9020

Pollinators are key to garden life and beauty


FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

PAGE D7

COMMUNITY LINK Editor’s note: Community link highlights free public services, support groups, meetings, reunions, calls for donations or volunteers, and the activities of charitable and nonprofit organizations in the area. If your organization is conducting a special project and would like to put a notice in the paper, please submit the information to Community Link, Fort Collins Coloradoan, 1300 Riverside Ave., Fort Collins, CO 80524; citynews@coloradoan. com; or fax to (970) 224-7899. Alzheimer’s Caregiver Support Group, a support group for family members and/or caregivers of those with Alzheimer’s disease, meets from 10 to 11:30 a.m. on the first Tuesday of every month at Crossroads Church, 5420 N. Taft, Loveland. For more information, call the Alzheimer’s Association Northern Colorado office at (970) 472-9798. Alzheimer’s Caregiver Support Group, a support group for family members and/or caregivers of those with Alzheimer’s disease, meets from 1:30-3 p.m., the third Thursday of each month at Stepping Stones Adult Day Program 302 3rd St., SE, Loveland. Alzheimer’s Caregiver Support Group meets 1-2:30 p.m., first Thursday of the month at the Alzheimer’s Association office, 415 Peterson, Fort Collins. Alzheimer’s Adult Children Support Group meets 7-8:30 p.m., the third Wednesday of each month at the Alzheimer’s Association office 415 Peterson, Fort Collins.

Miss a day. Miss a lot. THE source for local news in Northern Colorado. SUBSCRIBE TODAY! CALL (877) 424-0063

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Dolgin Continued from Page D1

tle stress to yourself and your plants as things continue to change. First, stay optimistic and happy. Let go of any attachments to how you think things should be. We are playing by a different set of rules now and more creative problem solvers are needed who see challenges as opportunities. There are two approaches to dealing with the weather. One is to grow plants that you know are Front Range-hardy, native or very adaptable to this area’s extremes. The other is to be prepared to extend more energy and TLC

Builders Continued from Page D1

to a few colors. Keep in mind that each should complement the paint of adjacent rooms because the eye can’t help but view these colors together as one palette. For additional ideas, look to houzz.com, scour Pinterest or consult an interior designer.

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protecting those plants. Hail and vegetable gardens are simply not compatible, so it’s wise to set up a structure to protect your plants. Short of being a high tunnel or greenhouse, ideally, it should let light, moisture, pollinators and beneficial insects in. Some crops will merit more attention than others based on their value and ability to rebound. This year, my tomatoes and peppers may have some sort of a floating ceiling. A few years ago, I used netting to help deflect hail and although it prevented birds from easily grazing on insects, it provided some sense of security. When the temperature soars and the wind sucked moisture away, I occasional-

ly see dried, tight soils give way to cracks in my raised beds as they do tend to dry out more quickly than inground ones. This situation is easily remedied by breaking up the hardpan surface and wetting the ground before topping it with 3-4 inches of compost and leaf mulch. Healthy soil contributes to vigorous, more resilient plants that can either withstand adverse conditions or rebound more quickly. Installing rain gardens and directing runoff from downspouts to its best advantage will utilize natural moisture when we do get some. To address a possibility of less pollinators or storm damage in the garden, planting a diversity of pollinator-

Before you decide on your final color and invest money in several gallons of paint, purchase small samples of two or three paint choices and brush them on sample boards. Leave these in the intended room and view them throughout the day to see how light affects each color. The paint chip you may love under the florescent lights of the store will almost always look different at home. Once you select a final col-

or, your friendly paint supplier can help you decide on latex or oil-based paint, determine how much paint to purchase and suggest the most appropriate paint finish (flat, eggshell, satin, semi-gloss or gloss) for your room. They can also identify necessary supplies, including items needed for basic prep work and the best painting tools for your particular job. Just remember that not all paint is created equal and you typi-

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friendly flowering plants along with different cultivars of the same crop to spread out the harvest dates can increase yields and hedge against total crop loss. As gardeners, we are naturally an upbeat, resilient bunch. Each of these issues and solutions merit more attention, thought and action based on our own situation. Start now to prepare for and ensure a fruitful season. Robyn Dolgin of Wild Iris Living offers consultations, designs and maintenance for edible and ornamental landscapes, ranging from courtyards to small acreages. She can be reached at (970) 493-5681, robyn.dolgin@ gmail.com or WildIrisLiving. com.

cally get what you pay for. You may want to also consider using paint with zero or low Volatile Organic Compounds, or VOCs. According to Consumer Reports magazine, VOCs found in common household paint have been linked to respiratory illnesses and other health problems. In the case of VOCs, less is truly more. For application and prep work tips, there are good on-

Alzheimer’s Men’s Caregiver Lunch Group meets from noon-1 p.m., the third Friday of each month at the Alzheimer’s Association office 415 Peterson, Fort Collins. Alzheimer’s Life Transitions Support Group meets from 9-10:30 a.m., every Wednesday at Elderhaus Adult Day Program 605 S. Shields, Fort Collins. American Legion fundraising breakfasts are from 8 to 10 a.m. Sundays at the American Legion Post 4, 2124 County Road 54G (U.S. Highway 287), Fort Collins. Proceeds benefit local veterans and youth programs. Cost is $5 per person. Information: (970) 484-0418. American Sewing Guild meets the third Wednesday of each month at 6:30 p.m. at Allnutt Funeral home at 650 W. Drake Road, Fort Collins. All skill levels and disciplines are welcome. Each meeting includes social time, sharing time and a program. Guests are welcome. Information: (970) 232-9683. ASSE International Student Exchange Programs is seeking volunteers to serve as area representatives in the community. ASSE provides academic year and semester exchange programs in the United States for high school students from around the world. Students are 15- to 18-years-old, have passed a series of academic and character requirements, and are awaiting an opportunity to embark on their American adventure. Information: Western Regional Office, (800) 733-2773 or asseusawest@asse.com. Autism Support Group: The Arc of Larimer County. “Spectrum of the Spectrum” support group is for parents/caregivers of children/adults living with autism. Meetings are 6:30-8 p.m., the first Tuesday and third Wednesday of every month at The Arc of Larimer County, 1121 W. Prospect Road, Fort Collins. For further information: http://spectrumofthespectrum.blogspot.com/ or email spectrumofthespectrum@ gmail.com. Celebrate Recovery is a confidential, biblical-based program of recovery for individuals and/or their family members to help them deal effectively with recovery from addictions, codependency and other life struggles. CR meets at 6:30 p.m. every Thursday night in the south auditorium at Timberline Church, 2908 S. Timberline Road, Fort Collins. The first Thursday of every month, a meal is provided at 5:30 p.m. Child care is available for infants to fifth grade. CR has gender-specific small groups that deal with a variety of issues. All are welcome. Information: (970) 552-4CRT (4278) or facebook .com/ CRTimberline Children’s Speech and Reading Center, or CSRC, a nonprofit therapy clinic for children, provides free screenings for children birth to 12

line resources such as “15 Painting Tips to Paint Like a Pro” on diynetwork.com. For example, if you plan to paint a dark saturated color, be sure to use a tinted primer. Primer not only provides a great surface the paint can adhere to, but it also brings out the paint’s true color and cuts down on the number of coats needed for coverage. It’s also important to make any necessary repairs to the surface, scrape old paint and paint

years old who are struggling with speech, language and/or reading difficulties. Financial assistance is available for qualified families who are seeking individual or small group therapy programs for their children with speech, language and/ or reading difficulties. The staff is experienced and certified in specialized treatment programs. Information: Laura, (970) 419-0486, laura@ csrckids.org or www.csrckids .org Christ Clinic, a free community medical clinic, is open from 6 to 9 p.m. every Monday at 3920 S. Shields St. Christ Clinic is a family medicine clinic rather than an urgent care center, therefore patients are seen by appointment only. It is staffed by volunteers from the Christian medical community in Fort Collins. Information: (970) 481-2390 or www.chirstclinicfc.org. Colorado LifeSharing, a nonprofit that supports adults with developmental disabilities, is looking for volunteers who are willing to give their time, either on a regular basis or for special projects. Volunteers who are able to commit to a regular schedule are needed to teach classes to the day program, act as a mentor or job coach, or support participants out in the community. Volunteers wishing to help on a less regular schedule can help with special projects and events. The group also is looking for someone interested in being a volunteer coordinator. If interested, send your contact information to info@coloradolifesharing.org or call (970) 663-6696. Court Appointed Special Advocates, or CASA, of Larimer County is seeking caring, community volunteers to advocate on behalf of abused and neglected children who have open cases in the 8th Judicial District. Volunteer advocates spend 10 to 20 hours per month working with these children and representing them in court. Contact Tami Serbousek, Tami@CASALarimer. com, (970) 498-6182. Information: www.CASALarimer.com. Dance Express, an inclusive modern dance troupe for people with and without disabilities, is accepting donations for its annual gift campaign. You may send a tax-deductible donation using PayPal on www.danceexpressfc.org or through the mail to Dance Express, 633 S.College, Suite H, Fort Collins. Information: Mary Elizabeth Lenahan at (970) 493-2113. Disabled Resource Services is in need of volunteers to assist homebound people and seniors who struggle with a disability. Assignments vary depending on volunteers’ interests and can include transportation to doctor appointments, yard work, snow shoveling, organization, reading to the blind, light housekeeping or handyman work. Information: Michael A. Marr, BSW, volunteer coordinator and case manager aide, (970) 482-2700 (office). Dutch Hop/Polka Dance is held from 2-6 p.m. Sundays at 3001 8th Ave., Suite 295, Evans. Greeley Dutch Hoppers dance with live bands. Information: (970) 472-1655. Cost is $10. Eco-Thrift is accepting small household electrical devices and metals for recycling at its store at 208 N. Howes St., Fort Collins. There is a fee involved for recycling these items. Information: (970) 484-4224 or http://eco-thrift.com Elder Pet Care offers reduced-cost veterinary care for senior citizens age 55 and older who own pets. The office is at 909 N. College Ave., Fort Collins, and is open from 1 to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. Appointments are also available. Information: (970) 493-2657 Family Leadership and Training Institute, or FLTI, has a series of 20 sessions on leadership training, civic literacy and civic participation skills designed to help build leadership skills and give you the confidence and connections to help you make a difference. Apply online at www. coloradofamilyleadership.com. Fort Collins Breakfast Optimist Club meets each Monday morning at 7:00 a.m. at Dennys Restaurant. (North side of Mulberry just off the Interstate.) Our purpose is to help and sponsor activities for youths. Fort Collins Municipal Railway Society — the Mountain Avenue trolley — is seeking volunteers to operate and maintain the 1919 restored Birney Safety Car for the 2014 season. Information: contact Bob at (970) 817-0562.

only clean, nonglossy surfaces. Always remember that if you start painting and you don’t like it, just paint over it — and let the chips fall where they may. Bryan Soth and Dwight Sailer have owned and operated HighCraft Builders, a Fort Collins design-build remodeling company, for 16 years. Contact them at (970) 472-8100 or visit www.highcraft.net.


PAGE D8

SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2014

FORT COLLINS COLORADOAN

State forecast: Saturday / Sunday

Sunday

Saturday

Monday

High 70° High 84° Low 44° Low 50° Brief sun breaks, Becoming windy in the afternoon PM thunderstorms

Craig 72° / 36°

High 86° Low 52° Breezy and very warm

Greeley 67° / 45°

84° / 50°

76° / 52°

79° / 45°

Denver 68° / 45°

Vail 53° / 36°

80° / 41°

Limon 66° / 45° 80° / 44° Burlington 64° / 42°

80° / 51°

61° / 35°

Grand Junction 83° / 54°

Colorado Springs 72° / 47°

87° / 55°

Gunnison 67° / 34°

Fort Collins: The rest of the week Tuesday Wednesday Thursday

Julesburg 61° / 45°

69° / 40°

Glenwood Springs 76° / 40°

Colorado, a bit of hail is certainly possible with a few of the late afternoon storms, but it should stay on the small side.

77° / 45°

Estes Park 59° / 38°

78° / 37°

Kathy’s word on the weather

Thundershowers Saturday will be a little stronger than the showers we've seen the past few days. As we're so used to here in Northern

61° / 43°

Cheyenne Fort Collins 70° / 44°

Steamboat Springs 65° / 37° 72° / 38°

National roundup

75° / 51°

80° / 52°

71° / 33°

Pueblo 77° / 48°

Friday

Lamar 77° / 48°

86° / 55°

High 80° Low 50°

High 74° Low 45°

High 77° Low 51°

Fair weather Thunderstorms A round of clouds, dry and return by afternoon warm midday thunderstorms

Durango 76° / 37°

High 75° Low 47°

Last 24 hours 0.01 Record/year 1.69" in 1952 Total this month 3.71 Total this year 7.44 Normal, year to date 5.62"

High/low yesterday High/low last year Record high/year Record low/year Average high/low

62 / 44 82 / 52 91 in 1996 26 in 1916 70 / 42

Observations from CSU Weather Station, valid for the 24-hour period ending at 8 p.m. yesterday

Allergy index

UV index today

10

0-2: Minimal 3-4: Low 5-6: Moderate 7-9: High 10+: Very high

The higher the UV index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.

Sun and moon Today’s Today’s Today’s Today’s

Last May 21

sunrise sunset moonrise moonset

New May 28

Courtesy of National Allergy Bureau

Recreational forecast Area river flows

5:42 AM 8:12 PM 11:15 PM 8:28 AM

First June 5

Moderate Moderate Absent Not Counted

Trees Grasses Weeds Molds

Poudre River at Canyon mouth 728 397 Poudre River at Ft.Collins

Today’s high/low 11,000 feet 9,000 feet 7,000 feet

Full June 13

81° / 47°

76° / 39°

Good chance for aftenoon storms

Temperature almanac

Precipitation almanac

Trinidad 75° / 44°

Alamosa 74° / 39°

78° / 37°

55° / 31° 65° / 37° 59° / 38°

84° / 52°

Air quality

Watering Guide

28

40

0.2

0.00 0.00 0.00

3 days ago: 5 days ago: 7 days ago:

Visibility

Ozone and carbon monoxide

If you last watered: Your lawn needs

Ozone

Carbon monoxide

Visibility

0-50: Good 0-50: Good 51-100: Moderate 51-100: Moderate 101-150: Unhealthy for sensitive groups 101-200: Poor 201 - 300: Extremely poor 151 and above: Unhealthy

Courtesy of Fort Collins Utilities

Air quality forecast

Pollutant standards indexes for yesterday

Red alertmeans elevated No ozone levels are predicted, Alert and individuals with sensitivity to

air pollution should limit outdoor exertion from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. No alert means elevated ozone levels are not forecasted. Source: Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment

Extremes

National weather -20 -10 0 10

Los Angeles 81 / 60 Phoenix 103 / 71

Forecasts and maps prepared by:

70 80 90 100 110

Minneapolis 63 / 43

Boise 78 / 49 San Francisco 66 / 53

Yesterday’s State Extremes: High: 82 at Pueblo Low: 28 at Gunnison Yesterday’s National Extremes: High: 113 at Death Valley, Calif. Low: 21 at Lakewood, Wis.

20 30 40 50 60

Seattle 63 / 52

Chicago 58 / 44 Denver 68 / 45

New York 75 / 54 Snow

St. Louis 64 / 46

Raleigh 73 / 51 Atlanta 73 / 55

Dallas 82 / 62

New Orleans 82 / 64

Map valid to 5 p.m.today

Cheyenne, Wyoming www.dayweather.com

Mix

Today Tomorrow City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 71 44 pc 69 47 th Albany,NY Albuquerque, NM 87 52 pc 89 52 su 76 51 pc 85 62 pc Amarillo, TX Anchorage, AK 63 50 pc 58 41 pc 73 55 sh 70 52 sh Atlanta, GA 69 47 th 70 48 th Billings, MT 67 38 pc 71 53 pc Bismarck, ND 78 49 pc 68 43 th Boise, ID 73 54 r 64 52 sh Boston, MA 58 44 sh 60 47 pc Chicago, IL 61 39 pc 66 44 pc Cincinnati, OH 54 44 sh 58 42 sh Cleveland, OH 82 62 pc 82 64 mc Dallas, TX Des Moines, IA 67 43 pc 70 52 pc 56 43 sh 61 46 pc Detroit, MI 94 68 pc 96 68 su El Paso, TX 63 38 sh 53 33 sh Fairbanks, AK 63 44 pc 70 52 pc Fargo, ND 79 45 pc 76 43 pc Flagstaff, AZ 74 50 r 71 49 sh Hartford, CT 85 70 su 86 72 hz Honolulu, HI 82 66 pc 83 67 pc Houston, TX Indianapolis, IN 60 41 th 66 47 pc 81 58 pc 81 60 pc Jackson, MS 60 39 pc 54 43 sh Juneau, AK Kansas City, MO 64 47 pc 70 55 pc Las Vegas, NV 100 76 pc 94 69 pc 66 43 pc 72 56 pc Lincoln, NE Little Rock, AR 69 56 th 72 58 th Los Angeles, CA 81 60 su 73 59 su Miami Beach, FL 80 72 pc 81 74 su Milwaukee, WI 53 41 sh 56 44 pc Minneapolis, MN 63 43 pc 70 49 pc 65 49 sh 71 49 sh Nashville, TN New Orleans, LA 82 64 su 84 66 su 75 54 pc 73 53 pc New York, NY Oklahoma City, OK 74 56 mc 78 63 th 67 45 pc 71 54 pc Omaha, NE 84 64 su 87 65 su Orlando, FL Philadelphia, PA 72 51 pc 71 50 pc 103 71 pc 101 69 pc Phoenix, AZ Pittsburgh, PA 58 40 sh 60 39 sh 69 50 th 63 47 th Portland, OR 65 46 th 71 53 th Rapid City, SD 82 46 pc 72 44 pc Reno, NV Sacramento, CA 86 57 pc 79 56 pc 64 46 pc 70 51 pc St. Louis, MO Salt Lake City, UT 81 59 pc 78 52 pc San Diego, CA 72 61 pc 71 61 pc San Francisco, CA 66 53 pc 64 53 su 80 45 pc 82 46 su Santa Fe, NM 63 52 sh 63 51 sh Seattle, WA 70 45 sh 67 43 th Spokane, WA 85 67 su 86 66 su Tampa, FL 101 67 su 99 67 pc Tucson, AZ Washington, DC 71 50 pc 70 48 pc 69 46 pc 74 59 pc Wichita, KS Wilmington, DL 72 48 pc 71 49 pc

Wx: 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

Other information

Showers

Fort Collins / Loveland forecast, time and temperature: 484-8920 Rain Mountain forecast and avalanche Miami warning information: 482-0457 80 / 72 T-storms State road conditions: (877) 315-7623

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The Coloradoan, Saturday, May 17, 2014

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E2 The Coloradoan, Saturday, May 17, 2014

There is a difference between highway and off-road travel By TOM & RAY MAGLIOZZI KING FEATURES SYNDICATE Dear Tom and Ray: Greetings from Doha, Qatar. Six months ago, I bought a used 2006 Hummer H3 (now with 115,000 miles), which my wife uses five days a week to take our son to school. Traffic in Doha is notoriously bad (and a bit dangerous), so these daily school runs are pretty stressful. But we may have a safety valve. We can trim the commute (and avoid a lot of traffic) by taking a three-mile off-road stretch. This isn’t boulder-strewn terrain, it’s just mildly rocky dirt. I encourage my wife to take the H3 on this stretch at every opportunity -- but she’s concerned that 60 off-road miles every week (to and from school twice a day, five days a week) is too much for the car and it will “fall apart” prematurely. We’re only going to be in Doha for another 18 months, and she wants the vehicle to last at least that long. I say it’s a Hummer -- and that this kind of driving is a Hummer’s existential purpose. I don’t see the car falling apart for several years to come. What do you guys say? Can she take our H3 off-road on every school run? -- Mike TOM: I think the real problem is AUTOS

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“whoosh” of air escaping when you unscrew your gas cap. TOM: The system has a self-test mode. It’s possible that all you’re hearing is the pump pressurizing the system to test it. It may have just been a coincidence that you’ve been near the truck every time that happened. RAY: But I’m guessing that the pump is coming on more often than it should. That’s probably because your system isn’t holding pressure. TOM: You could have a slow pressure leak somewhere. It could be from your gas cap, a bad valve, a rusted fuel-filler neck or a dozen other places. But something’s allowing the pressure inside the fuel system to drop, and that’s kicking on the pump. RAY: Or, the pressure sensor is faulty, and is turning on the pump when it doesn’t need to be on. TOM: Either way, if we’re correct, the Check Engine light will come on soon -- if it’s not on already, Grover. That’ll be your cue to do, what? Check the engine! RAY: Yeah. Have a mechanic scan the truck and see what trouble codes the computer has stored. That will give him some clues as to where to start looking. Good luck. *** Auto repairs can be costly! Save money by ordering Tom and Ray’s pamphlet “Ten Ways You May Be Ruining Your Car Without Even Knowing It!” Send $4.75 (check or money order) to Ruin, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. AUTOS

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that has something that “runs” on occasion when it is sitting in the garage. We have not started the truck in nearly two months, and my wife heard it run just yesterday. What is causing this, and how do I stop it? Does this truck have a random battery discharger, or is it just lonely because we have not run it lately? We have had it since new, and it is in nearly new condition due to the fact that the price of gas is so high. Most of its life has been spent in the garage -- except when some family member moves, or during deer season. It sounds like something is running -- like a pump, maybe? Can you tell me what’s running and if there’s anything we should do about it? Thank you. -Grover TOM: First, stop hanging around your parked truck so much, Grover. People are going to think you’re some kind of weirdo. RAY: This truck, like all vehicles these days, has an evaporative emissions control system to keep gasoline vapors from escaping into the atmosphere. I think what you’re hearing is the system’s pump. TOM: To contain the vapors and prevent air pollution, your fuel system is kept under constant pressure, so the vapors are pushed into a charcoal canister, where they’re trapped and held. Then, when the engine starts, they’re released into the cylinders to be combusted. It’s a good system. RAY: That fuel system pressure is the reason you sometimes hear a little

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if stuff is still working, the truck sounds and feels like it’s falling apart because it rattles and clanks down the road, even on pavement. RAY: In truth, it’s impossible for us to know if something major will break in the next 18 months, whether you take that shortcut or not. The car has a lot of miles on it. And who knows if it would have happened anyway? All we know for certain is that the chance of having to replace suspension components goes up when you move from paved roads to rocky dirt roads. TOM: If it were me, I’d take my chances. The H3 is based on Chevrolet’s small pickup truck, the Colorado. So while it’s not super heavyduty (or unbearable to drive) like a real Hummer, it’s based on a truck chassis, and should be able to take a reasonable amount of punishment. RAY: And based on what you say, the shortcut would save your wife time and stress, and might even be safer, since it’s less heavily trafficked. TOM: I agree, as long as your wife has good cellphone service that works out there. If she ever were to break down, or just get a flat tire, you’d want her to be able to easily and reliably call for help. And make sure she has a broomstick or something in the car, so she can fend off an angry band of camels if necessary. Good luck, Mike. RANDOMLY RUNNING TRUCK IS CONFUSING OWNER Dear Tom and Ray: We have a 1999 GMC Sierra

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ride quality in the Hummer, Mike. She’s bouncing off the seat on that dirt road, banging her head against the dome light. If you had spent a little more and bought her a Cadillac Escalade, you wouldn’t be hearing these complaints. RAY: You’re actually both right about the H3, though. Sometimes when you see a used-car ad, the seller will say something like “150,000 mostly highway miles.” Why does he say that? TOM: So he can unload his rattletrap of a car. Mike probably will say the same thing when he sells this Hummer. RAY: Sure. But it’s well known that smooth highway miles take less of a toll on the car than bumpy, pothole-encrusted city miles. TOM: When you bounce the car up and down off the road continually (which is what you’re doing on a rocky dirt road), you cause certain parts to wear out more quickly -notably, the front suspension components. RAY: Things like the tires, the struts, the springs, the ball joints, the tie rods, the stabilizer links, the steering rack and all the bushings and couplings down there get pounded when you drive that way. Those parts will wear out sooner than they would have otherwise. Even on a Hummer. TOM: All that shaking and bouncing also causes other stuff in the truck to “loosen up.” This ultimately results in what we call “rattletrap syndrome,” where even

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The Coloradoan, Saturday, May 17, 2014

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4321 S MASON 970-206-9963 Lexus GX 460, ’11 #500, $43,980 41K Miles, AWD, 4.6L V8, 6-Speed Automatic, Fully Loaded, Rare Knights Armor Pearl Paint, Freshly Serviced with a Full Warranty Get Off College Ave Save Thousands! 970-682-4403

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The Coloradoan, Saturday, May 17, 2014

’71,

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80524 DRY CREEK

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LEGAL NOTICES

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80525 STRATBOROUGH

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34208914 Coloradoan May 10, 17, 24, 31, 2014

CALL 224-4000 FOR RATES & INFORMATION

FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 1-877-424-0063

FIND THE HELP YOU WANT FILL THE WITH THE HELP YOU WANT COLORADOAN WITH THE CLASSIFIEDS COLORADOAN CLASSIFIEDS

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80524 PETERSON

CAMPERS/RVs 5TH WHEELS Cambridge 2006 36’, 5th wheel trailer, 4 slide outs, w/d, fireplace, very nice, low miles, located in Laramie, WY $29,900 obo 307-760-3765 TAHOE 25 SD 5TH WHEEL, ’02, #9547B $6,999 Ace Motorcycles 970-223-1203

RUMMAGE SALE Sat 8a-3p 318 Peterson St (Garage in the Alley)

Rummage through all that we have. Make your offer. 80524 TERRY LAKE

GARAGE SALE Sat 8a-3p 3221 TERRY LAKE RD

eclectic furniture and decorating items, tools, small appliances, and surprises galore. 80525 BROWNSTONE

LARGE GARAGE SALE Sat 9a-1p 2607 Brownstone Ct clothes, furniture, business items 80525 DORAL

MOTORCYCLES/ MOPEDS

GARAGE SALE Fri & Sat 7a-3p 1118 DORAL PL

(Near S Lemay & South Ridge Greens Blvd) FOR SALE by Owner. furniture, tools, exercise 2008 Harley Davidson equip., BBQ, board Low Rider. Great Congames, crafts, books, dition. $12,000 OBO. clothes, work bench, (970)302-8663 and lots of misc. bbowman@miramontlife 80525-Flagler Rd. style.com

GARAGE SALE

Fri. & Sat. 7:30-? 518 Flagler Rd Ridgewood Hills between College & Shields, off Trilby kids 4 wheeler, swingset, treadmill, kids clothes, lawn chairs

XL Mr. Herzer’s Deluxe Dog Crate. $200 premium quality, solid wood frame and Rhino Wicker panels. Retails at $600 970-223-8585 Yorkie 7 yr. old male and 2 yr old female for sale. (970)420-5183

GARAGE SALES 80521

Mountain

YARD SALE Fri & Sat 9a-2p 1006 W Mountain Ave

Cash Only, Rogers flatware, antiques, Nat. Amer. breyers, Noritake , fiesta ware, Sirius satellite car radio system, freebies, & much more 80526

REGISTRY RIDGE NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALE Sat 8am-1pm

Shields and Trilby Many great items for sale!

Highland Meadows

Community Garage Sale Highland Meadows Golf Course Community Friday, May 16 and Saturday, May 17th 8:00 am - 4:00 pm Cty Rd 30 and Cty Rd 5

The sale is Saturday May 17th from 8:00am until 1:00 pm. Springfield is located at Horsetooth Road and Mead Street (west of Taft Hill). Something for everyone 80526-Horsetooth You don’t want to miss out on this one!

Come see this HUGE multi-family Garage Sale. Tons of great stuff Tools, kid items, antiques, Must See, Something for everyone. 80550

WCR

GARAGE SALE Sat 8a-4p 7507 WCR 72 (2 mi N of Windsor)

something for everyone check craigslist, High end window treatments, tools, electric, auto, and household

Springfield Subdivision is having their annual neighborhood garage sale.

The sale is Saturday May 17th from 8:00am until 1:00 pm. Springfield is located at Horsetooth Road and Mead Street (west of Taft Hill). Something for everyone

80525

Are you the next Garage Sale Millionaire, Are you a Picker, Come see this HUGE multi-family Garage Sale. Tons of great stuff Tools, kid items, antiques, Must See, Something for everyone.

Furniture Pieces Harley Davidson Collectibles Southwest Artwork Household Items Tools and related items Great prices

80528

FOSSIL LAKE

FOSSIL LAKE RANCH COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE Saturday May 17th, 8am to 2pm

(Corner of Ziegler and Kechter in Ft Collins) Over 20 homes participating this year. For a map of homes please go to www.pamcass.com Sponsored by Pamela Cass The Group Real Estate 970-222-6025

80525 Rollingwood

Down Home Country Craft Sale (You Don’t want to miss this one!)

2118 Rollingwood Dr Fri & Sat 8a-4p Fabulous one of a kind potter by Chaucy, Unique, indoor/outdoor birdhouses, and antique bedframe garden benches and flower sculptures to brighten up your yard/home or make for that perfect graduation/Father’s Day gift!! Plus many surprises!! 80525 S LEMAY

MOVING SALE Sat, May 17th 7 am-Noon

4014 S Lemay Ave, House # 5 Off of S Lemay and Horsetooth Home goods Furniture Electronics Clothing Kids items Tools 80526

ESTATE SALE May 16-18, 8 - 3

2713 Meadowlark

Raft, kitchen, dishes, glasses, trundle bed, twin box springs, king headboard & frame, fabric, yarn, books, wheel barrows, lamps, ANTIQUE vanity, trunk & buffet, desks, office chairs, meat/deli slicer, electronics, patio furniture, ceiling fan, more! CASH ONLY PLEASE.

80528

NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALES Sat 8-2

OBSERVATORY VILLAGE: Lady Moon/Rock Creek

desks, toys, games, shelves, Christmas items, Indian Jewelry, bikes, western boots, child books, furniture, clothes, appliances, tools, snowshoes, softball gear, golf clubs.... 80528 OBSERVATORY VILLAGE

GUNS

Colorado Gun Collectors 49TH ANNUAL GUN SHOW

MAY 17, 9am-5pm MAY 18, 9am-3pm

Fri & Sat 8-2

DENVER MART

Furniture, tools, SS refrigerator, child clothes, toys, books, bikes, scrapbooking/crafts, bookcases, + more!

OVER 1000 TABLES I-25 @58th Ave. Exit 215 Admission $10.00

MOVING SALE

3609 Cassiopeia

80528 PROMONTORY DR.

GARAGE

Fri.-Sat. 8-4 PM

7740 Promontory Dr. Ft. Collins, CO.

Highway 392 & Highland Meadows Pkwy. clothes, furniture, household items, tools, electronics, Christmas decorations, HO train & accessories

FIND YOUR NEW VEHICLE IN THE COLORADOAN CLASSIFIEDS

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Piano Baldwin Spinet $500 Good cond., You move. 970-495-1961

LAWN/GARDEN Rotary Lawn Mower, 6.75 HP, Power propelled, 21" rear discharge, pull start, $100 cash 223-8780

MACHINERY/ TOOLS Scroll, saber, bench & radial arm saws, drills sanders, jointer, lathe, planer & sm tools 970-484-4963

CALL 224-4000 FOR RATES & INFORMATION

COLORADOAN CLASSIFIEDS 224-4000

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224-4000 TO PLACE AN AD

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GENERAL

GENERAL

Application Analysts X 3 Application Analyst Application Analyst - Accela focused Application Analyst - PeopleSoft focused Pay Range $69,665 to $88,296 Weld County Government Apply online at www.weldgov.com

Drivers Needed CDL Class A, HOME DAILY, Local Work $1,000 Sign on Bonus

Earn $950-$1,000/week Excellent Benefits,New Equipment Must have 2 Years Tractor Trailer Experience APPLY ONLINE: www.recruiting.moderntrans.com Call: 970-663-4366 Network Engineer Pay Range $75,056 - $95,126 Weld County Government Apply online www.weldgov.com

FOR HOME DELIVERY 1-877-424-0063 SELL YOUR HOUSE IN THE COLORADOAN CLASSIFIEDS

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found Black lab mix located off S. Taft Hill Rd. Fort Collins (970)481-6880

THANK YOU NOTICES

SEE BETTER RESULTS WHEN YOU LIST YOUR CAR IN THE COLORADOAN CLASSIFIEDS AND CARS.COM

CALL 224-4000 FOR RATES & INFORMATION

Thank you Blessed Mother, Jesus, St. Anthony, for favors granted - DAS

TO LIST YOUR CAR WITH THE COLORADOAN CLASSIFIEDS AND CARS.COM

CALL 224-4000 FOR RATES & INFORMATION

LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

Advertisement for General Contractor Construction Services-Windsor, CO

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FOR HOME DELIVERY 1-877-424-0063

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Community Garage Sale Timnath Ranch Saturday May 17, 8:00 am - 4:00 pm Three Bells Pkwy (CR 3) and River Pass Rd (CR36)

700 Mansfield Drive Fort Collins, CO 80525

Pure Bred Golden Retreiver Pups,1st shots, girls $600 970-482-4694

80550

Springfield Subdivision is having their annual neighborhood garage sale.

625 Flagler Rd Fort Collins

GARAGE SALE

POODLES: Stnd AKC. 16 wks, Male cream, black, first shots, $800 402-432-4876

80526-Horsetooth You don’t want to miss out on this one!

Sat (5/17) 8 - 3 pm

Friday-Saturday-Sunday 7:30 - 4:00

Goldendoodles Ten goldendoodle puppies. Mother goldendoodle and father poodle. Eight females and two males. Both brown and cream colored. They are $900 each. (970)663-2488 tomi.grundvig@gmail. com

Come see this HUGE multi-family Garage Sale. Tons of great stuff Tools, kid items, antiques, Must See, Something for everyone.

80528

Ridgewood Hills subdivision (off Trilby): Furniture, canoe, kids and adult clothes, kids toys and books, and more.

German Shepherd Pups AKC working line 4 sale 1500.00 FIRM (970)599-0233

furniture, lamps, dryer, rubber stamps, household items and much more

80525 FLAGLER RD

GARAGE SALE

DOGS

2225 & 2243 Dover Dr

8:00 am - 4:00 pm CR 15 and Jacoby Rd (CR 68.5) 1 mile north of King Soopers on CR 15

E5

LEGAL NOTICES

legals

YAMAHA XV 750,

GARAGE SALES

what’s up

GARAGE SALES

legals

AUTOS

Aims Community College, Greeley, Co will receive submittals for Request for Proposals for General Contractor Construction Services. This RFP is to build a Public Service Institute facility on the Windsor Campus. The project will include, at a minimum, a training tower with simulated smoke and an administration/ academic support building. Deadline for submittals is 2:00 p.m. local time on Tuesday, June 10th, 2014 at the Purchasing Office, West Farm House, 4911 West 20th Street, Greeley, CO, 80634. Request for Proposals packets may be picked up at the Greeley Campus, Purchasing Department, 4911 West 20th Street, Greeley, CO. Please email Dorene Boyd, dorene.boyd@aims.edu to receive an electronic copy.

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.com

A Mandatory conference and site visit will be held on Thursday, May 29, 2014 at 10 a.m. local time, on the Windsor Campus, located at 1120 South Gate Dr., Windsor, CO. The conference attendee shall be an agent of the company. Please hold all questions and requests for clarification until the conference. Dorene Boyd Aims Community College Director of Purchasing dorene.boyd@aims.edu 34208943 Fort Collins Coloradoan May 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25, 2014

Case No. 14C4120 PUBLIC NOTICE OF PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME District Court, Larimer County, Colorado, 201 Laporte Ave, Fort Collins, CO 80521, 970-4986100. Public Notice is given on May 1, 2014 , that a Petition for a Change of Name of an adult has been filed with the Larimer County Court. The Petition requests that the name of Julie Elaine Edler be changed to Julie Elaine Chaplain. SHERLYN K. SAMPSON Clerk of Court 34209123 Fort Collins Coloradoan May 16,17,18, 2014 Case No. 14PR30183 NOTICE TO CREDITORS District Court, Larimer County, Colorado, 201 Laporte Avenue, Suite 100, Fort Collins, CO 80521 (970)494-3500. In the Matter of the Estate of: Orrin Richard Miller, a/k/a Orrin R. Miller, a/k/a Orrin Miller, Deceased. All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to District Court of Larimer County, Colorado on or before September 10, 2014, or the claims may be forever barred. Perry Myles Jultak, Personal Representative 2055 S. Evanston Street Aurora, CO 80014

LOG ON TODAY.

34208923 Ft. Collins Coloradoan May 10, 17, 24, 2014 Case Number A59578 Superior Court of California, County of San Diego Central Division, Juvenile Court, 2851 Meadow Lark, San Diego, CA 92123 In the matter of Kimberly Gallardo Becerra Date of Birth 10/25/05, a minor CITATION FOR FREEDOM FROM PARENTAL CUSTODY AND CONTROL To: Fernando Gallardo Alvarez You are advised that you are required to appear in the Superior Court of the State of California, County of San Diego, in Department One at the court location indicated above on Jul 11, 2014, at 9 a.m., to show cause, if you have any, why Kimberly Gallardo Becerra minor should not be declared free from parental custody and control (*for the purpose of placement for adoption) as requested in the petition. You are advised that if the parent(s) are present at the time and place above stated the judge will read the petition and, if requested, may explain the effect of the granting of the petition and, if requested, the judge shall explain any term or allegation contained therein and the nature of the proceeding, its procedures and possible consequences and may continue the matter for not more than 30 days for the appointment of counsel or to give counsel time to prepare. The court may appoint counsel to represent the minor whether or not the minor is able to afford counsel. If any parent appears and is unable to afford counsel, the court shall appoint counsel to represent each parent who appears unless such representation is knowingly and intelligently waived. If you wish to seek the advice of an attorney in this matter, you should do so promptly so that your pleading, If any, may be filed on time. Dated May 6, 2014

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E6 The Coloradoan, Saturday, May 17, 2014

COLORADOAN COLORADOAN FOR HOME FOR HOME COLORADOAN FOR HOME CLASSIFIEDS CLASSIFIEDS DELIVERY DELIVERY CLASSIFIEDS DELIVERY 224-4000 224-4000 1-877-424-0063 1-877-424-0063 224-4000 1-877-424-0063

local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local news. local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local, local,

LOG ON TODAY.

Honor Your Medical Superstars Attract potential job candidates and take advantage of special, limited-time advertising deals by highlighting those on your staff who go the extra mile to deliver quality care.

NATIONAL NURSES WEEK MAY 6-12

FC-0000394808

Ad Specials Run Through May 18 | Space Is Limited - Please Don’t Delay!

To advertise, call 888-692-7330 or email FortCollinsJobs@gannett.com

More Max. More I-25. More of what matters to you.

From the Mason corridor to I-25, Fort Collins is on the move. Now the Coloradoan will keep traffic moving even better with more transportation coverage. And with more national news from USA TODAY, you’ll be connected like never before. If it matters to you, you’ll find the whole story here.

FC-0000391629


E4 The Coloradoan, Saturday, May 17, 2014

AUTOS PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ’01 #4611 Only 128K! Call for Price!

AUTOS SATURN VUE ’07 #4695 Only 66k! $11,988

(970) 237-3466

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RAM 1500 BIG HORN ’12,

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#6839D-1 Only 23K Miles! $29,993 970-226-5340

RAM 1500 BIG HORN ’12, WILL GO QUICK! #1620-1 $28,993 970-226-5340

RAM 1500 LARAMIE ’14, 3K Miles, V8 5.7L, #6920D-1 $48,995 970-226-5340

RAM 1500 TRADESMAN ’14, Gray, Only 3K! #6921D-1 $36,995 970-226-5340

RAM CARGO 119 WB VAN ’12, Only 18K! White, #10757 $18,995 970-226-5340

SATURN AURA ’07 #4721 Only 102k! $8,988

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Black, 5-Speed Auto,

AUTOS SUBARU IMPREZA WRX STI, ’07, $21,996 #P1026A FORT COLLINS MITSUBISHI 970-286-2200

SUBARU IMPREZA ’12

AUTOS SUBARU OUTBACK ’01

AUTOS TOYOTA COROLLA ’08

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SUBARU OUTBACK ’11

TOYOTA PRIUS ’09

AUTOS Toyota Tacoma Double Cab ’11 #507, $29,980 Silver, 4WD, 5 Speed Manual, SR5 Package, Clean CarFax, 12 month/12k Warranty Get Off College Ave Save Thousands! 970-682-4403

TOYOTA TUNDRA ’05,

#4719 Only 55k! $20,988

#4680 Only 66k! $13,988

#446669 108K Miles, $12,991

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SUBARU LEGACY 3.6R LIMITED, ’11,

SUBARU XV CROSSTREK 2.0i PREMIUM, ’13,

V6 Cyl., Maroon, Harman Kardon Audio, Only 25k!

$22,963 #836529

Toyota Rav4 V6, ’11, Sport, 20K, $22,988, #3137

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#H9221 $23,990 970-267-5072

FORT COLLINS MITSUBISHI 970-286-2200

SUBARU FORESTER 2.5X PREMIUM, ’12,

SUBARU OUTBACK 2.5i PREM ’12,

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Subaru Forester 2.5X ’10 #514, $19,980 AWD, Orange, 5 Speed Manual, 2.5L H4, Only 28k Miles, Be Confident In This Polar Vortex, Many Financing Options Available, W/ Warranty Get Off College Ave Save Thousands!

$19,493 #P1033 FORT COLLINS MITSUBISHI 970-286-2200

$19,995 #B7639A

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Auto Tans., Ice Silver Metallic, 17 inch Alloy Wheels, Only 41k!

#H9224 $18,990 970-267-5072

Tangerine Orange, #2168-2 $23,995

TOYOTA CAMRY LE, ’03,

SUBARU OUTBACK 2.5i PREMIUM, ’11, #340601 93K Miles, $16,993

Auto Trans., 4 Cyl. 2.4L, Silver, 33 Hwy MPG, Only 119K! #H1029-1 $8,990 970-267-5072

FORT COLLINS MITSUBISHI 970-286-2200

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SUBARU OUTBACK 2.5i PREMIUM, ’12, $19,999 #P1034 FORT COLLINS MITSUBISHI 970-286-2200

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(970) 237-3466 giantautoware house.com VOLKSWAGEN PASSAT ’09

$20,989 #P1016

#4736 Only 70k! $13,988

FORT COLLINS MITSUBISHI 970-286-2200

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TOYOTA SEQUOIA PLATINUM, ’12, Black, 22K Miles, 6 Speed Auto., 4WD, 5.7L V8, Heated&Coolerd Leather, Full Factory Warranty! #565 $52,980 Get Off College Ave Save Thousands! 970-682-4403

(888) 529-9406 SUBARU IMPREZA WRX STI w/ Silver Painted Wheels, ’07, $19,999 #14109A

TOYOTA RAV4 LMTD, ’11,

#4773 42.5K Miles! $31,988

970-226-5340

#8926B-1 $22,995 970-267-5072

SUBARU FORESTER XT LIMITED, ’09, AWD, White, Gray Leather, Power Everything, Only 79k!

SUBARU XV CROSSTREK PREM ’13,

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4321 S MASON 970-206-9963

TOYOTA TUNDRA ’12

TOYOTA COROLLA LE, ’02, $4,371 #14029A

FORT COLLINS MITSUBISHI 970-286-2200

TOYOTA SIENNA ’05 #4726 Only 175k! $8,988

Volvo XC70 3.2, ’10 #488, $26,980 51k Miles but Looks And Drives Like New, 6-Speed Automatic, AWD, Heated Leather Seats, Power Rear Lift Gate, and Much More. Clean CarFax Get Off College Ave Save Thousands! 970-682-4403

VW PASSAT WAGON, ’03, Stk#W03S302 $6395 www.europeanm otorcarsinc.com 970-484-0041

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