11-15-17 express

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2017

Volume 42 | Number 102 | 3 sections | 40 pages s u n

v a l l e y

k e t c h u m

h a i l e y

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c a r e y

iDahO mOuntain

Event raises record amount for cancer

MVisit ARKETING CONFAB Sun Valley gives update Page 3

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Hailey sets priorities for transportation

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Woman faces charge for neglecting child Page 13

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Early-season snowfall off to strong start la niña has formed in Pacific Ocean By PETER JENSEN and MARK DEE

S express photo by roland lane

THE EAGLE HAS LANDED Former longtime lead guitarist of the eagles, Don Felder, 70, strung dozens of southern california classic rock hits into nearly two hours of nonstop music at Whiskey Jacques’ on saturday night. the private concert, part of an event hosted by Zions bank, was composed mostly of hits from the eagles’ heyday, many of which Felder penned or co-wrote. “For most of the ’70s and ’80s, my memories have like this smoky haze around them,” Felder joked between songs, but that haze certainly didn’t obscure his memory of classics such as “Seven bridges road,” “the long run,” “take it easy,” “hotel california,” “Witchy Woman,” “heartache tonight” and “tequila sunrise,” the latter of which he dedicated to the eagles’ founding member Glenn Frey, who died of complications from pneumonia in 2016. Felder, who taught rocker tom Petty to play guitar at a Gainesville, Fla., music store, performed Saturday with a second guitarist and a keyboardist, both of whom provided backing vocals, and multi-instrumental backing tracks containing drum tracks and other instruments.

Express Staff Writers

kiers and snowboarders, rejoice! With a about week to go until Thanksgiving and the traditional opening day for Bald Mountain, the Wood River Valley is set to get its first significant snowstorm of the season. The National Weather Service has issued a winter storm watch for the valley starting at 5 p.m. today, Nov. 15. Between 8 and 12 inches of snow could fall above 6,500 feet, with up to 15 inches possible in some areas. In Ketchum, forecasts call for between 1 to 3 inches of snow in the afternoon, and 5 to 8 inches overnight. However, temperatures in Hailey will be high enough to get a mix of rain and snow, with only a few inches of accumulation or none at all. The weather will shift to a mix of rain and snow in Ketchum on Thursday, according to forecasts. It will stay partly cloudy with daytime high temperatures in the upper 30s through the weekend. The mountain snowpack is already off to a strong start thanks to early-season cold temperatures and some snowfall, and the long-term outlook appears favorable for skiers and snowboarders.

Opening day Sun Valley Resort is on track to open parts of Dollar and Bald mountains on

“It’s like someone giving you a puzzle on christmas morning and taking away 40 of the pieces.” Mike Huston

NWS meteorologist, on winter snow forecasts Thanksgiving Day, spokeswoman Kelli Lusk said Tuesday. The resort will likely have a top-tobottom run open on Baldy, with the gondola, River Run Express and Lookout Express in operation, Lusk said. The mountains will be open starting at 9 a.m. on Nov. 23. “We’re on target for opening day,” Lusk said. “It looks like we’re going to have great conditions.” Last week, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced that La Niña weather conditions will likely remain in the Pacific Ocean this winter, which is a major influence on the temperatures and precipitation patterns for the western U.S. Generally, La Niña portends coolerthan-average temperatures and plentiful snowfall in the Pacific Northwest. “We are currently in La Niña,” said Mike Huston, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service’s office in Pocatello. “Before, we were waiting for it to happen. Now, we’re seeing the See SNOW, Page 12

Former deputy coroner sues county as whistleblower Landon Neet alleges he was fired for exposing coroner’s practices By JOSHUA MURDOCK Express Staff Writer

A former Blaine County chief deputy coroner who worked under Blaine County Coroner Russell Mikel is suing the county on the grounds that he was fired after telling county officials that Mikel used him for work at his private business. In a lawsuit against Blaine County filed in 5th District Court on Thursday, Landon Neet, of Hailey, alleges that he was placed on administrative leave and ultimately fired from his job at the Coroner’s Office after he complained to Blaine County

officials that Mikel was asking him, a county employee paid with tax dollars, to perform duties at Mikel’s longtime private business, the Wood River Chapel mortuary and funeral home in Hailey. Mikel, originally a deputy coroner himself, was appointed as Blaine County coroner in 1986 following the resignation of the prior coroner, according to Blaine County’s website, and he’s been consistently re-elected as the county’s coroner since then. Reached by phone Tuesday morning, Mikel said he had yet to review the lawsuit, but that he was scheduled to do so soon with Blaine County Chief Deputy

Attorney Tim Graves. “I haven’t had a chance to—no we haven’t reviewed it yet,” Mikel said. “I’ll have to seek [his] counsel because we haven’t even seen it yet, so no comment at this time.” Graves stated in an email on Tuesday that he had “no comment on the lawsuit or the claims therein.” On Tuesday, County Commissioner Larry Schoen said “[Neet] and Russ Mikel did not get along, and that conflict had serious consequences.” Schoen said that county commissioners decided in the budgeting process to discontinue the chief deputy coroner position for

this fiscal year, and that Neet is misconstruing that as retaliation. Schoen also said that because Mikel owns and operates the only mortuary in the area, and because the county lacks mortuary facilities otherwise, the Blaine County Coroner’s Office has for decades been located in Wood River Chapel, meaning that “there will be some crossover.” Observing that voters have reelected Mikel with the Coroner’s Office being in the Wood River Chapel for decades, Schoen said he’s provided “excellent service and value” to the county under the longstanding arrangement. Schoen said he personally met

with Neet and Mikel multiple times, individually and together, and that the lawsuit “is very much from [Neet’s] perspective.” According to the lawsuit, Neet began work for Blaine County in mid-May working 32 hours per week. The lawsuit charges that Neet’s job description directed him “to serve as a liaison between [Wood River Chapel] and law enforcement, to examine bodily remains to determine how and why a death occurred, to photograph crime scenes, to notify next of kin and to transport bodies to the funeral home.” In the lawsuit, Neet alleges See SUIT, Page 12


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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Killebrew-Thompson sets record Tournament raised $1 million for cancer research “The generosity our donors showed … was astounding—it was truly something special to witness.”

Nonprofit raises money for Blaine County students and teachers By MARK DEE Express Staff Writer

Hannah Stauts

Killebrew-Thompson Memorial

By MARK DEE Express Staff Writer

The Killebrew-Thompson Memorial event in Sun Valley took a swing at cancer in August, and made its most powerful impact yet. The tournament raised a record $1 million in 2017, bringing its total contribution to cancer research to $16.6 million over its 41 years of operation. The money will be split evenly between St. Luke’s Mountain States Tumor Institute and the Masonic Cancer Center at the University of Minnesota. “Killebrew-Thompson has once again astounded us with their generosity and commitment to the fight against cancer,” said Dr. Dan Zuckerman, executive medical director of St. Luke’s MSTI. “This is one of the premier cancer charity events in the country, and St. Luke’s MSTI is proud to be one of the beneficiaries. It is because of KTM that we can offer such an array of cuttingedge clinical trials and experimental therapies to cancer patients all across Idaho.” Members of the Killebrew-Thompson board of directors will present the check to Zuckerman on Nov. 30 in Boise.

Education Foundation establishes endowment fund

Courtesy photo

The Killebrew-Thompson Memorial event raised a record $1 million in August through its golf tournament, benefit concert and charity auction. “The board of directors of the Killebrew-Thompson is very pleased with the success of this year’s event, and our ability to contribute to cancer research,” said Joe Puishys, chairman of the board. “While the fight against cancer is ongoing, the efforts of our beneficiaries are helping to improve the lives of cancer patients across the country.” Some funds will be headed to Minneapolis, home of the Masonic Cancer Center, and the city where Danny Thompson and future Hall-of-Famer Harmon Killebrew played together with the Minnesota Twins baseball team. Then a 29-year-old shortstop, Thompson died following complications of myeloid leukemia in 1976, 10 weeks after his final game.

That’s when Killebrew, an Idaho native, set up the Danny Thompson Memorial golf tournament to fund research. Following his own death from esophageal cancer in 2010, Killebrew’s name was added to the bill. Next year’s tournament will take place at Sun Valley from Aug. 15-18. The event includes the tournament, a charity auction and a benefit concert. “We’re overjoyed with the success of the 2017 KTM,” Executive Director Hannah Stauts said. “The generosity our donors showed during the Auction Gala was astounding—it was truly something special to witness. We can’t thank them enough for making this landmark donation for cancer research possible.”

The Blaine County Education Foundation has established an endowment fund to further its efforts to supplement School District funding. The 25-year-old organization provides financial assistance to students and teachers in the county, but operates separately from the Blaine County School District. It doesn’t receive taxpayer funding. Instead, it relies on grants and private donations to help defray the costs of the school supplies, field trips and extracurricular activities that it finances for students under financial strain, as well as for its grants for local teachers to implement new programs in the classroom. The Idaho Community Foundation will manage the money. That foundation runs endowments for more than 85 nonprofits across the state, totaling $126 million. “The best thing about agency funds like the one Blaine County Education Foundation has set up at ICF is that they continue to grow, through investment, even while they’re making distributions,” said Idaho Community Foundation President and CEO Karen Bilowith. Anyone can make a tax-deductible donation to the foundation. For more information on the foundation’s programs and its endowment fund, contact Executive Director Kristy Heitzman at kheitzman@blaineschools. org, or call 208-788-5449. “Our newly established endowment will safeguard long-term financial sustainability and continued supplemental assistance for Blaine County School District students, families and teachers,” said Steve Guthrie, co-chair of the Blaine County Education Foundation’s board of directors.


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INSIDE THIS ISSUE

IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS Editorials. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 News of Record. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15 Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 ARTS & EVENTS Weather . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 HOW TO REACH US

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Wednesday, September 20, 2017

ENPLANEMENTS UP, LODGING MOSTLY FLAT OVER SUMMER MONTHS By PETER JENSEN

W

Express Staff Writer

hile hotel lodging occupancy in the Wood River Valley dipped slightly over the peak summer months this year, it experienced a significant boost of 6 percent in June. The nonprofit marketing organization Visit Sun Valley provided those results to residents and business owners at a community meeting in Ketchum on Tuesday. The hotel occupancy rate in winter 201617 was 35 percent in the Wood River Valley, and it jumped to 44 percent in summer 2017. Broken down by month, May had a 12 percent drop compared to the same month in 2016. June had a 6 percent increase yearover-year, July and August each had a 1 percent dip, September dropped 16 percent and October dropped by 4 percent. Partnering with a company called DestiMetrics, Visit Sun Valley has overhauled its occupancy reports. The new report culls data from 10 partners: Alpine Lodging, AmericInn Lodge & Suites, Hotel Ketchum, Best Western Plus Kentwood Lodge, Coldwell Banker Distinctive Properties, the Knob Hill Inn, the Limelight Hotel, Natural Retreats Sun Valley, Sun Valley Resort and the Tamarack Lodge. That survey includes 777 units, which represent 58 percent of the 1,338 total units included in a valleywide census that DestiMetrics compiled in the spring. It does not include short-term rentals advertised on websites such as HomeAway or VRBO. Katie Barnes, DestiMetric’s business intelligence account and sales manager, cautioned that the Limelight added 99 units to the inventory, but Hotel Ketchum, formerly the Bellemont Hotel Sun Valley, closed to undergo a renovation. The Sun Valley Inn, similarly, started a renovation to 25 of its rooms in August and should reopen in mid-December. Barnes noted that hotel occupancy experienced a major spike on the weekend before the total solar eclipse in August, when the rate was 97 percent. That was a major increase over the same weekend in 2016, and helped Sun Valley to outperform other resort destinations in the Western U.S. in August. Year-over-year enplanements at Friedman Memorial Airport increased by 7.3 percent in June, 8.7 percent in July and 7.3

Visit Sun Valley gives presentation Tuesday

Express photo by Roland Lane

Visit Sun Valley Executive Director Scott Fortner discusses marketing of the Sun Valley area Tuesday in Ketchum.

Enplanements Friedman Memorial Airport had a strong summer and a robust October for enplanements, which is a statistic that measures the number of people who board an airplane. Here is the breakdown for each month: JUNE: 2017: 6,458 ~ 2016: 6,017 (7.3 percent increase) JULY: 2017: 12,658 ~ 2016: 11,643 (8.7 percent increase) AUGUST: 2017: 13,242 ~ 2016: 12,342 (7.3 percent increase) SEPTEMBER: 2017: 7,500 ~ 2016: 7,266 (3.2 percent increase) OCTOBER: 2017: 5,215 ~ as2016: 3,864 (35 percent increase) percent in August, and a majority of business owners reported a better summer than last year in a survey conducted by Visit Sun Valley. In the survey, 52.8 percent said it was better than last year, 38.9 percent said it was the same and 8.3 percent said it was worse.

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The trend reversed in September, when Sun Valley underperformed the industry average, and then flipped again in October. Friedman Memorial Airport had a 35 percent increase in enplanements in October, according to statistics from the Friedman Memorial Airport Authority. Visit Sun Valley Executive Director Scott Fortner said his organization is ready to launch its winter marketing campaign, including an increased effort to target tourists in the Chicago area. Friedman is starting a new direct flight from Chicago in December. Fortner said Visit Sun Valley’s public relations firm, Fahlgren Mortine, will host a get-together for media organizations and journalists in Chicago on Wednesday night to advertise Sun Valley as a destination this winter. “A lot of people forgot about us, so it’s a good opportunity to go in and remind people,� Fortner said. Visit Sun Valley is splitting up its marketing budget to spend 14 percent in Chicago, 8 percent nationally, 8 percent in Seattle, 22 percent in New York City, 12 percent in San Francisco, 8 percent in Portland, 19 percent in Los Angeles and the last 9 percent regionally. Fortner said Visit Sun Valley has to compete against people planning trips to beaches and sunny areas in the winter, so it’s important to inspire the sense of wonderment that comes with skiing or exploring the outdoors in Idaho. “We have to really ram home that awe factor,� he said. Fortner noted that the pace of hotel lodging reservations hasn’t matched that of booking flights to Friedman, leading him to question if it’s attributable to an influx of second-home owners, friends and family coming to visit full-time residents, or if people are simply waiting to reserve a hotel room. He said traffic to Visit Sun Valley’s website has increased by 18 percent this year and its video view rates are hitting new highs. He said Visit Sun Valley is tailoring its marketing efforts to complement Sun Valley Resort’s. “We’re trying not to duplicate efforts,� he said. “We’re having more of a blanket effect than doubling up.� Peter Jensen: pjensen@mtexpress.com

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HOUSING OPTIONS The Idaho Mountain Express (USPS 720-490) is published weekly on Wednesdays, by Express Publishing Inc., 591 First Avenue North, Ketchum, Idaho. Subscription price is $65 per year. Periodical postage paid at Ketchum, Idaho and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Idaho Mountain Express, P.O. Box 1013, Ketchum, Idaho 83340. Vol. 42, No. 102

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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

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Hailey sets transportation priorities List includes Pathways for People projects By TO N Y T E K A RO N I A K E E VA N S Express Staff Writer

The Hailey City Council on Monday approved a prioritized list of transportation infrastructure projects. The list was recommended by city staff and amended by the City Council. Each city in Blaine County has been asked to identify its priorities, rank them and submit them to the county, where they will be incorporated into a countywide list that will then be ranked by the Blaine County Regional Transportation Committee for funding considerations. “It helps when receiving grants that a project is ranked high by a regional transportation committee,” said Hailey Public Works Director Mariel Miller. The top four priorities for Hailey are: (1) Croy Street crossing improvements that would extend a Pathways for People bike/pedestrian path across Main Street. 2) A separated shared-use path for the northern reach of Broadford Road. 3) Croy Street bike path from the Wood River Trail to Main Street. (4) Advisory bike lanes on Second Avenue. There are several more long-term priorities on the list. City Councilman Pat Cooley added to them an enhanced traffic feature to allow for easier access northbound onto Main Street at Cedar Street. “These are subject to change,” said City Councilman Don Keirn. “But the list gives us a good idea of the financial [cost projection] side of it.” Three of these projects are already funded by a two-year $400,000 tax levy increase supported by Hailey voters. But Miller said the city could apply

Mayor set to return to Hailey today Haemmerle recovering from injuries in Utah By TO N Y T E K A RO N I A K E E VA N S Express Staff Writer

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for additional funding for them, in case engineering and construction costs are higher than original projections. “We don’t know what the actual cost will be,” Miller said. Miller said the city employs a strategy whereby staff always applies for high-priority projects first, even if they are already theoretically funded. She said that if, as a result of additional grant funding, all the tax levy funding is not used for the Pathways projects, that funding could be spent on another project or used to enhance or expand the original project. “We can make the money go further,” she said, often by using grant matching funds. “But there would have to be a lot of public discussion about this for it to happen,” she said. Miller said the county will meet with all cities and agencies to prioritize projects as a group and find funding opportunities for them. She said if two entities both have highly ranked projects, the committee will provide letters of support for both. “It’s never been a competitive process,” she said. The county transportation infrastructure prioritized list is scheduled for completion in December. In other Hailey news: • The City Council approved a letter to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission seeking to remove potential federal oversight on operating the Indian Springs hydroelectric facility, because it is no longer on federal land. • The council held a third reading of an ordinance that creates a pre-application design-review process.

Hailey Mayor Fritz Haemmerle had plans to return to the Wood River Valley today, Nov. 15, for the first time since being injured in a cycling accident in Utah in mid-October. Haemmerle sustained what were described in a news release from City Hall as “moderate” injuries from a bicycle accident while on vacation near St. George, Utah. According to the news release, he sustained a broken pelvis and several other fractures when a tire blew on his bike while he was moving at about 35 mph. He underwent a successful surgery for

the broken pelvis and has been recuperating in a regional medical center. Haemmerle had planned to be back in town for a Nov. 13 City Council meeting, but was delayed. City Councilman and acting Mayor Don Keirn said Haemmerle was happy to be returning home. “He’s making what he’s calling a jailbreak” from the medical center, Keirn said. Haemmerle has been conducting city business. He wrote a formal news release in recent days that detailed the city’s position with regard to the sentencing of local soldier Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl. The next City Council meeting is scheduled for Dec. 11. Tony Evans: tevans@mtexpress.com

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CITIZENS SCRUTINIZE WILDERNESS PLANNING Forest Planner Emily Simpson presents draft management plans for the new Hemingway-Boulder, White Clouds and Jim McClure-Jerry Peak wilderness areas to an audience of about 25 people at the American Legion Hall in Ketchum on Monday night. Concerns expressed by those attending included advocating inclusion of a plan to address U.S. Wildlife Services’ predator killings, prohibiting pack goat use to prevent transmission of disease to bighorn sheep, reducing group size limits as well as numbers of pack horses, permanently closing unused grazing allotments and expanding grazing as a means of controlling wildfires. The U.S. Forest Service and BLM are accepting public comments on the plans until Nov. 27. Final plans are expected to be completed in the spring, and implementation could begin as early as next summer. Express photo by Roland Lane


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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Ketchum P&Z mulls avalanche zoning changes Panel also looks at snow storage By PETER JENSEN Express Staff Writer

The Ketchum Planning and Zoning Commission is tackling changes to how Ketchum permits commercial snow storage on vacant lots, as well as allowing subdivisions in avalanche zones. Ketchum planning staff will present amendments to city ordinances at the next P&Z meeting Dec. 11. But the P&Z commissioners were presented with some options during their meeting Monday night. They did not take a formal vote, but offered feedback on the changes. Commissioners Erin Smith and Betsy Mizell were absent. John Gaeddert, a contract planner working with the Planning Department, said the city intends to add a definition of commercial snow storage to its land-use ordinances and implement standards for hauling snow from one property to a vacant lot. It does not affect public property or city rights of way. The standards would bar commercial snow storage from the floodplain, avalanche districts or the Mountain Overlay, while ensuring it has adequate drainage so snowmelt occurs only on that property. Owners of vacant lots can lease their properties for snow storage, but staff proposed new standards that would only allow piles up to 10 feet in height with a 20-foot setback from property lines.

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Planning Director Micah Austin said the city’s zoning for areas susceptible to avalanches needs to be changed. The city has allowed condominiums and townhomes to be built there since the ordinance was adopted in the late 1970s. The ordinance needed to be updated to reflect the practice. The original ordinance stated that no further subdivisions were allowed, including lot splits, within avalanche zones. Despite that, the city approved 43 condominium and townhome subdivisions in avalanche zones from 1979 to 2009, according to a city staff report. Twenty-six units have been built in the Mountain Overlay District, red zone or high-hazard areas since 1974. Austin said staff recommends allowing a density of 11 units per acre outside the Mountain Overlay District, and no lot splits at all within the district. He said the units have to be built to withstand the force of an avalanche. Commissioner Neil Morrow said he supports allowing the practice, as long as the units are built to safely withstand an avalanche. “As long as they follow the rules, it’s probably a good idea to see if you can maximize some of the spaces,” Morrow said. The commissioners did not vote on the zoning changes. They will be brought up again at the Dec. 11 meeting.

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Peter Jensen: pjensen@mtexpress.com

Front-yard crash leads to DUI charge Mauricio Pedraza-Rodriguez, 22, also cited for racing, reckless driving By JOSHUA MURDOCK Express Staff Writer

A Bellevue man and a Hailey man were both cited for street racing, and the Bellevue man was arrested for DUI, after a suspected roadrage incident and street race that led to one car crashing through a front yard and into three parked cars in Woodside. According to Hailey Police Lt. Steve England, officers responded around 6 p.m. on Nov. 4 to a report of a traffic crash in the 3100 block of Woodside Boulevard. According to England, Mauricio PedrazaRodriguez, 22, of Bellevue, had crashed his blue 2002 BMW through the front yard of a home, striking at least three parked vehicles in the process. Pedraza-Rodriguez was arrested on suspicion of DUI and two breath tests indicated his blood-alcohol content to be 0.18 percent and 0.19 percent, respectively, each more than twice the legal limit of 0.08 percent. Incidentally, England said, a different suspected drunk driver crashed into parked cars owned by the same person at the same location almost exactly a year earlier. England said the crash was reported after the fact by Matthew Poynter, 24, of Hailey, and seemed to be precipitated by “somewhat of possibly a road-rage incident” between the two that began around Woodside Boulevard and Countryside Boulevard before it escalated to the two racing each other southbound on Woodside. “Mr. Pedraza[-Rodriguez] ends up wrecking into the parked cars and Mr. Poynter goes home and calls us,” England said, noting that both were cited for street racing, and that Pedraza-Rodriguez was also cited for reckless driving and charged with DUI. Neither driver was injured, he said.

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LADIES NIGHT Please join us for an evening of holiday cheer!

Express photo by Roland Lane

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A banner sign at the Warm Springs base of Bald Mountain notifies skiers of Sun Valley Resort’s annual autumnal restriction on uphill traffic during preseason mountain operations.

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Resort issues reminder on uphill restrictions Uphill travel limited to before 9 a.m., after 4 p.m. during ski season aware of the uphill traffic restrictions during this time,” Peter Stearns, Sun Valley Resort’s With Sun Valley Resort’s open- director of mountain operations, ing day for the winter season said in the release. Throughout the winter seaonly eight days away, the resort is reminding outdoor enthusi- son, special events, mainteasts not to travel uphill on Bald nance and avalanche mitigation or Dollar mountains during pre- may require localized closures and restrictions, the season operations. release stated. This year’s prohiFor the 2017-18 winbition on uphill traffic ter season, uphill trafextends through the fic will be permitted end of Friday, Nov. 17, “in most areas” begin“when machine operPeter Stearns ning Saturday, but ations are happenDirector of mountain uphill traffic will be ing on the mountain,” operations restricted to before 9 according to a news a.m. and after 4 p.m., release from Sun Valley Co., which stated that “hik- according to the release, and ing, skinning, dog walking and people who begin to climb the general snow play on the moun- mountain before 9 a.m. must also tain are activities that may put descend by 9 a.m. people at risk during this time.” Opening day for Sun Valley “Safety is our No. 1 priority, so Resort’s 82nd winter season is we want to make sure everyone is Thursday, Nov. 23, starting at 9 a.m.

By JOSHUA MURDOCK Express Staff Writer

“Safety is our No. 1 priority.”

Gimlet levee proposal put on hold County commissioners will wait to hear application By MARK DEE Express Staff Writer

The Blaine County commissioners will wait a couple more weeks to hear a proposal for a levee project along the Big Wood River in Gimlet, accepting the applicant’s request Tuesday to push back the hearing from its scheduled slot that afternoon. The commissioners voted to reschedule the discussion to Thursday, Nov. 30, at 9 a.m. Last week, the Land Use Department received some 11thhour revisions to the project south of Ketchum, after one of the four property owners named in the application withdrew.

As it stands, the design includes a 1,773-foot levee to protect three homes along the river, plus debris removal and dredging to restore the stretch’s carrying capacity. “To my knowledge, it’s been decades since we have had a levee proposal from a private landowner, if at all,” Blaine County Floodplain Manager Kristine Hilt said last week. Beyond county permits, the project would also need approval from the Idaho Department of Water Resources and the Army Corps of Engineers. As of press time Tuesday, those applications were still pending review. Mark Dee: mdee@mtexpress.com

Correction An article in the Friday, Nov. 10, edition entitled “Sawtooth Society leader to retire” misstated the name of the Austin Kraal Memorial Volunteer Program.


Express

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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Halloween crash lands man in hospital Vehicle goes over bank beside highway By JOSHUA MURDOCK

• Downtown Ketchum At Its Best Since 1987 •

A single-vehicle traffic accident on state Highway 75 north of Ketchum on Halloween night resulted in the sole occupant of the vehicle being transported to the hospital with suspected internal injuries. According to Blaine County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Will Fruehling, a sheriff’s deputy was driving southbound on Highway 75 near Sage Road around 11:28 p.m. on Oct. 31 when he observed a northbound vehicle drive past him at what he estimated was an excessive rate of speed. Fruehling said the deputy had just begun his shift at the time and his radar was not yet activated. The deputy turned around and traveled northbound with lights activated in pursuit of the vehicle, Fruehling said, but “at that point all he could see was taillights in the distance.” The deputy lost sight of the vehicle near curves in the highway around Lake Creek Road, and he deactivated his lights, assuming the vehicle had turned onto another road or completely outrun him, Fruehling said. Shortly thereafter, Fruehling said, the deputy responded to a report of a driver that had crashed off the road in those curves, and he returned to the area to find that the vehicle he had been following, driven by Aaron McLauglin, 36, had crashed down an embankment on the east side of Highway 75, coming to rest where the deputy couldn’t see it when he first drove through the area. Personnel from the Ketchum Fire Department transported McLauglin, who was cited for driving without privileges, to St. Luke’s Wood River hospital with possible broken ribs and a possible punctured left lung. Fruehling said alcohol was not a factor in the crash.

SAVE THE DATES!

Express Staff Writer

Joshua Murdock: jmurdock@mtexpress.com

Suspected drunk driver rolls vehicle near Carey 56-year-old male driver transported with head injury By JOSHUA MURDOCK Express Staff Writer

A 56-year-old man suspected of driving under the influence was transported to the hospital with head injuries after crashing his vehicle off state Highway 26 south of Carey on Saturday. According to Blaine County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Will Fruehling, personnel responded around 9:35 a.m. to a report of a one-vehicle crash on the highway near Cutoff Road. Personnel from Carey Fire and Quick Response transported the driver, the sole occupant of the vehicle, to Castle’s Corner store, at which point Wood River Fire & Rescue personnel transported the man to St. Luke’s Wood River hospital.

Fruehling said charges have not been filed against the driver, pending the results of a blooddraw test for blood-alcohol content taken at St. Luke’s before the driver, who was not named, was transported by air ambulance to a larger hospital. Wood River Fire & Rescue Chief Bart Lassman said the man reportedly self-extricated from his vehicle, which came to rest on its roof after crashing off the road. According to paramedics who responded, “[the driver] had scalped himself, pretty much the whole back of his head.” The driver stated that he was wearing a seatbelt, Lassman said.

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OUR VIEW

IDAHO MOUNTAIN

The Valley’s independent, locally owned newspaper © 2017 Express Publishing, Inc.

EXPRESS PUBLISHING, INC. P.O. Box 1013 591 First Ave. North Ketchum, ID 83340 Phone: (208) 726-8060 Fax: (208) 726-2329 E-Mail: news@mtexpress.com advertising@mtexpress.com On the Internet: www.mtexpress.com

Surviving in a M.A.D. world requires staying sane

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world. For half of the 20th century, nuclear powers played the “mutually assured destruction” card to keep international conflicts from going nuclear. Any nation that launched nuclear weapons would be incinerated themselves. M.A.D. guaranteed. M.A.D. faded into the background but the specter has kept even the newer nuclear nations, such as Pakistan, India and Israel, from suggesting the possibility of their use. North Korea seems to be way less intimidated by the prospect of mutual destruction. Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un is intent on compiling a nuclear arsenal, but assuming that his intentions are offense is probably

Board of Directors Jeff Cordes Connie Johnson Curtis Page Martha Page Evelyn Phillips Pam Morris Elaine Somerville Publisher Pam Morris Editor Greg Foley Sports Editor Jeff Cordes Arts Editor Andy Kerstetter Reporters Mark Dee Tony Evans Peter Jensen Greg Moore Josh Murdock Business Manager Connie Johnson Copy Editor Greg Moore Operations Director Allison Kindred Photographers Willy Cook Roland Lane

orth Korea and the United States are on a path to making a nuclear mistake. Posturing, tough talk and miscalculations about motives are dragging us all back into a M.A.D.

Western states and the U.S. Department of Agriculture need to permanently end the use of cyanide bombs to kill predators on public lands. The bombs are indiscriminate and can kill or harm the animals and humans that happen to trigger them. Shortly after an Idaho boy was injured and his dog killed by one of the devices in March, the USDA’s Wildlife Services announced that it would cease using the devices on private, state and federal lands in the state. However, the cessation is to last only until Wildlife Services gives 30 days’ notice prior to any new placement of the devices in the state. It is unclear if Wildlife Services just backed off the use of the devices until the furor that arose over the Idaho incident died down or had something more extensive in mind. A notice isn’t enough to protect the public. Idaho isn’t the only state where objections to the devices have been lodged. Conservation groups in Colorado sued Wildlife Services for its activities there and the agency last week agreed to temporarily end the use of cyanide bombs on public lands while it

New Business Development Specialist Irene Balarezo Circulation Manager Dana Black

In the 2016 Idaho Press Club awards competition, held in May 2017, the Mountain Express won the General Excellence and Pinnacle Award for weekly newspapers.

analysis. The actions in Idaho, Colorado and California are encouraging. They look like the writing on the wall for cyanide bombs. Even so, the public has no guarantee that the deadly devices will not be used again. Idahoans should press their state and national elected officials to ensure that these devices stay gone for good.

GOP tax bill cuts middle-class benefits

Office and Classified Manager Jabbara Edwards

Advertising Representatives Sara Adamiec Chris Mullen Jerry Seiffert Nick Thompson

completes a new environmental analysis. In northern California, conservationists sued and got an agreement to halt the aerial shooting of coyotes in wilderness areas in 16 counties for at least six years while Wildlife Services completes a new analysis of the environmental impact of killing hundreds of predators. The agency will look at the use of cyanide bombs in those areas as part of the

OTHER VIEWS

Graphic Designers Erik Elison Kristen Kaiser

Advertising Trafficker Freda Avery

small, weak country, was regime change. They were wrong. Nearly two decades into war in Iraq and neighboring territories, the United States still hasn’t paid the full bill owed for that mistake, and it wasn’t nuclear. If nuclear missiles fly, North Korea will be destroyed. The North American continent may be relatively untouched. In any conflict, Seoul would almost certainly be flattened. It is little wonder that young South Koreans resent President Trump for putting them in the crosshairs. North Korea has, or soon will have, weaponized nuclear capability. Nothing is likely to change that. Bluster about regime change can only increase the likelihood that those nuclear weapons will be used. Surviving in a new M.A.D. world will require a return to the sanity of diplomatic language and an end to the madness of overtly threatening Kim Jong Un.

Not gone for good

Production Manager Tony Barriatua

Classified Sales Alex McCausland

wrong and most certainly dangerous. His No. 1 motivation is to hold onto power. He also seems to want other nations, especially the United States, to take him seriously. U.S. Central Intelligence Agency Chief Mike Pompeo has blustered Kim’s worst nightmare, which is regime change. President Trump went to the United Nations, blasted through Asia and implied in both venues that regime change might happen in North Korea. Past rhetorical stumbles have been epic. Iraq’s deceased President Saddam Hussein preened, blustered and poked the U.S. bear. He didn’t think the U.S. would invade a sovereign country that was not attacking U.S. assets or allies. He was wrong. U.S. neo-cons of the time, led by Vice President Dick Cheney, thought America’s answer to a noxious dictator, especially one from a

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

T

o pass their immense tax giveaway to the rich, Republicans need to ensure their plan would add no more than $1.5 trillion to the deficit over the next decade. To do so, they’re cutting billions of dollars in tax benefits to people trying to raise children, pay for college, buy a home or invest in renewable energy. That is why taxes would go up for about 45 percent of middle-class taxpayers by 2026 under the House bill, according to an analysis by The Times. By contrast, the people in the top 1 percent of income will get an average tax cut of $64,720 a year by 2027, according to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. Even the congressional Joint Committee on Taxation concludes that the tax cuts are heavily tilted toward the rich. Yet, the Republicans may take the knife to even more middle-class benefits, because the Congressional Budget Office said that The New York Times published this editorial on Nov. 8.

the bill would overshoot the $1.5 trillion target by nearly $200 billion. If the bill exceeded the $1.5 trillion deficit threshold, it would have to be considered under rules requiring 60 votes in the Senate for passage, rather than a simple 51 vote majority. But whether the provisions in the bill are procedural necessities or just incredibly mean-spirited, these are some ways they could hurt your family: The bill eliminates the adoption tax credit, which is worth $13,570 per child to parents dealing with adoption procedures that can cost tens of thousands of dollars. Republicans want to get rid of the medical expenses deduction, which is primarily used by families grappling with serious health problems. Under the proposal, dependent-care benefits that families receive from employers for things like day care or elder care, including flexible spending accounts, will become taxable. The bill would repeal the deduction for moving expenses when families take a new

job that is at least 50 miles away. One of the biggest changes in this bill is a technical one involving how income thresholds, credits and other parts of the tax code are adjusted for inflation. This will end up pushing middle-class taxpayers into higher brackets and making credits and deductions less valuable over time. The Republicans want to end a program that lets state and local governments issue private-activity bonds to finance housing and let homeowners claim a tax credit on certain mortgages. The bill repeals numerous education deductions and credits. It also makes taxable the value of the tuition and other benefits universities give to their graduate teaching and research assistants. The House bill would get rid of a $7,500 tax credit for electric car purchases starting with vehicles that hit the road next year. The production tax credit for renewable energy will become less valuable under the Republican proposal.


Express

Be aware, educated about abuse

www.mtexpress.com

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

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LETTERS

In response to the letter published last week by Diana Fassino, we at The Advocates for Survivors of Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault have the following comments. Sexual harassment is about power and control. It is not about flattery and harmless fun in response to women asking for it due to how they dressed. Women dress and look the way they want to in order to please themselves and feel confident, not to get unwanted touching or whistles. “What is the matter with us all” is that finally many of us are starting to believe that there is support for speaking out. Women are not just suddenly remembering, we’ve known it all along. Now we are just feeling safe to speak about it publicly. It is time for change, a change in attitudes, behavior and actions. It is time for men who use their power to sexually harass and control women to stop and accept responsibility for inappropriate actions. At The Advocates, we work to help victims of abusive acts of power and control—hundreds of people each year, dozens every day—mostly women and children. None of them asked to be abused. But now their lives are ruined by a husband, boyfriend, father, uncle or brother who was taught by our society that it is OK to abuse innocent women and children to get one’s way. This is not OK. We provide support and resources for them to heal and rebuild their lives, which for some can take a lifetime. Take the time to get educated and become aware. Read the “Rape of Mr. Smith.” Watch “What Were You Wearing?” Listen to some real-life stories. Then, maybe you will understand and be part of the movement. Join us. TRICIA SWARTLING CEO The Advocates

Environment camps are valuable Wow, I didn’t realize that by sharing the discrepancies and inequities in spending per student between the Hemingway middle school and Wood River Middle School environmental camps with the taxpayers funding both schools, it would put the district funding of the WRMS program at risk. My goal was to highlight the fact that despite significant budget cuts districtwide over the last few years, the Hemingway middle school clearly has excess funding if it can afford such an expensive camp for its sixth-graders. WRMS’s environmental camp (ROES) has been a beloved and valuable program for Blaine County’s sixth-grade students for more than 40 years. My husband has very fond memories of his time at environmental camp as a Blaine County sixthgrader in 1987. He was really excited that our daughter got to have the same experience 30 years later. I just hope my younger daughter will get to experience it as well. If you or your child have had a positive experience with sixth-grade environmental camp, or you value outdoor programs for Blaine County students and you would like to see equitable funding for these programs continue, please consider writing to the board of trustees and superintendent to voice your support at the following email addresses: ShawnBennion@ blaineschools.org; RobClayton@blaineschools.org; KellyGreen@blaineschools. org; EllenMandeville@blaineschools. org; KevinGarrison@blaineschools.org; gholmes@blaineschools.org. ANGELA BURRELL Hailey

Victims of assault deserve support I am also “appalled and disgraced” by the “me too” campaign, but not for the same reasons as the letter writer (Nov. 8). I’m appalled and disgraced that sexual assault and harassment have become

About letters DEADLINE: 5 p.m. Friday for the Wednesday paper; 5 p.m. Tuesday for the Friday paper. WORD COUNT: letter (300 words), guest opinion (600 words). All letters must bear a signature plus a printed full name, address and phone number for verification. Only the author’s name and city will be printed. Submissions are accepted at Box 1013, Ketchum, ID 83340; fax: (208) 726-2329; e-mail: letters@mtexpress.com, or hand delivered to 591 1st Ave. N., Ketchum. E-mailed letters must be labeled with a clearly stated subject and also include an address and telephone number for verification. Letters may be edited for length and readability. The newspaper may reject letters that are too long or intended primarily for fund raising. The Express reserves the right to reject letters that are libelous, obscene, unseemly, illegible, photocopied or not individually addressed to the Idaho Mountain Express. Letters of thanks will be printed in the classified section. They must be 200 words or less. the “norm” in our culture. I’m appalled and disgraced at the toxic environments that enable degradation, harassment and assault. I’m appalled and disgraced that we don’t believe victims—in fact, we blame them. The letter writer implied women wouldn’t be harassed if they would just “leave the high heels and low-cut dresses in the wardrobe.” People do not sexually assault and harass people because they are “sex-maddened.” They do it to feel power and control. When we say they can’t help themselves, we’re helping them. The perpetrator. The rapist. The assaulter. We shouldn’t be telling victims what they should have done, said or wore. We should be addressing the person perpetrating the abusive behavior. So: “Don’t rape and sexually harass people.” The end. As for the letter writer’s wish “to turn the clock back to those lost days of innocence and harmless fun, when young girls were secretly flattered by the good-natured whistles of workmen as we pranced past some building site,” I’ll have to unpack that at other time. But I will share my wish for young girls. I hope they never feel that they are nothing more than their physical appearance. I hope they know no one ever has the right to touch or talk about their bodies without their consent. I hope they see a day when women are not treated as vessels but have unconditional, unassailable agency over their bodies and, therefore, their humanity. To all victims who read Diana’s letter and felt crushed, please know: You are supported. You are believed. There are resources available. We stand together. HEIDI COOK Ketchum

Action now needed at City Hall As the cliché goes, “The people have spoken.” By a huge margin, they are demanding new approaches and progressive change for Ketchum. But sweeping out the incumbents is no guarantee of success there; it will take determination and backbone for the new administration to join with the two incumbent councilmen in making the tough calls that are long overdue for our city. Five generations of family can impede new ideas; smugness and condescension in City Council are no substitutes for action. The message is clear: Be part of the solutions or be prepared to be replaced—that goes for members of the city administration, as well. I invite all members of our community to come to the new City Council meetings where streamlining in conducting meetings will be the new norm, where unpreparedness will be a thing of the past, where proposals from citizens will be given a quick but thorough evaluation so as to be put on the agenda for further deliberation and action.

I call on the new administration to be in close touch with all city workers and departments for their thoughts and suggestions. I further call on them to do their homework when it comes to getting the pulse of the people—no more $23 million palaces. No more proposals without visual representations, so that we know exactly what is being proposed (i.e. Forest Service Park/City Hall). And I call on all the people, voters or not, to give Neil Bradshaw and the council the continued support that their overwhelming success has earned them. They need it but, more importantly, we need it. GARY HOFFMAN Ketchum

Young women deserve better I was appalled by the sentiments expressed in the letter in the Nov. 8 paper discussing recent harassment accusations. As a young woman in my first fulltime job, I hope to have a long career in workplaces where I feel comfortable and respected. I see the “me too” movement as a vital step toward preventing the harassment and assault that can make workplaces hostile to both women and men. The sheer volume of recent accusations shows how much work we need to do as a society. We should not blame the victims who have finally come forward, but instead make it clear that this kind of harassment is not acceptable. For every woman wearing high heels and a dress when she was assaulted, I’m sure there were more wearing slacks and flats or an unflattering work uniform. The clothing of the victims is not important, but the behavior of the perpetrators is. I understand that the recent accusations may make many people uncomfortable. However, I think some societal discomfort is only fair, given the years of discomfort suffered by those subjected to harassment, assault and hostility in their workplaces. Hopefully, young people like me will be protected from this harassment in our future jobs by the bravery of victims speaking out now. Workplace sexual harassment may have been tolerated or culturally accepted in the past, but that fact does not make it right or innocent at any point in time. BROOKE LAWRENCE Hailey

Sexual assault has deep effects Would the writer of last week’s letter on sexual assault have all women wearing burqas because showing any skin might make it too difficult for a man to control himself? It is the same argument she is making, just taken further. I don’t care what someone is wearing, how much alcohol someone has had to drink, what they have done or not done. Nothing, absolutely nothing, justifies sexually violating someone’s body against her will. Period. Full stop. Don’t judge those who have been through it. Judge, instead, the powerful messages society sends to young girls and

women about what they should and should not wear and how that relates to their sense of worth. Judge society’s messages to boys and men that can instill in some the belief that they are entitled to take what they want against someone’s will. Current statistics estimate that 1 in 4 women have experienced sexual assault at some point in their lives. In all likelihood, that number is much higher given the significance of underreporting. The effects of assault on a person are profound and lifelong. Women are not “suddenly remembering” events that happened long ago, as the letter writer says. They have been aware of them all along and living the aftereffects, including deep shame because of perspectives like hers. They are not “suddenly remembering” the assaults; they are finally speaking of them. Next time you are at a large gathering, look around the room at the women there. Many of them have been harassed, assaulted or raped. Try to visualize and imagine what that experience must have been like. Rather than judge them, exhibit some grace and be grateful that you are not in their shoes. KATHY HIPSHER Bellevue

Russian election meddling is serious Nearly 170 respondents to the recent Idaho Mountain Express online poll said they were not concerned about foreign governments interfering in future U.S. elections. Seriously? Are these respondents not concerned because they feel the threat is not real? If so, they are mistaken. Recently, our country’s intelligence agencies unanimously agreed that Russia had interfered in our 2016 elections. We now have incontrovertible evidence that Russia utilized false stories placed in social media to influence our elections. Was this really OK with these 170 respondents? Are they not worried that this will occur in the future? Let’s consider this in a slightly different context. Would those who said they were not concerned about foreign interference in national elections feel the same way if it were clear that one of our local government jurisdictions, say Hailey or perhaps Blaine County, had surreptitiously interfered in the Ketchum mayoral election? Move up one level. What if California were found to have interfered in statewide Idaho elections because it wanted to turn Idaho blue? No problem? Decades ago in my high school history and civics classes, I learned how sacred and significant our electoral process was. It is not to be tampered with. Wars were fought and millions died to protect this fundamental aspect of democracy. Voting is not a privilege. It is a responsibility. Our electoral process is not to be interfered with by foreign governments. I find it terribly hard to understand why so many local residents are not concerned. What am I missing? ALAN RICHARDSON Hailey

See LETTERS, Page 14


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On a recent Saturday in Hailey, a young girl sat before a stack of felt-tip markers in the corner of a well-lit room. All pink and pigtails, she picked one up and wrote “My Family” at the top of a plain white page. Then, she filled it with neon stars. Her parents sat 15 feet away, waiting in line to start a process that they hope, months from now, will see them standing before a different banner, filled with different stars—red, white and blue. This was Citizenship Day, one of 10 workshops designed to help immigrants across the state navigate the fraught landscape and bureaucratic hurdles along the road to naturalization. In all, 18 legal, permanent residents began the process of turning their green cards into full citizenship at the workshop; eight of them left with completed packets easily an inch thick, bound for a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services clearinghouse in Arizona. The rest hit snags somewhere in the six-step process, like documentation or financing. (All in, the application costs $725 to submit.) But for the people filling the seats Saturday, those shortterm delays are slight. “I know people living in this valley for over 20 years who are still in the process of getting citizenship,” said Patty Tobin, co-founder of the Blaine County-based Immigration Alliance of Idaho, which helped bring the workshop to Blaine County. “Many of them came here as children—this is all they know.” While the mechanisms of naturalization have always been arduous, the added protection of citizenship has gained new magnetism of late. According to a report published by The New York Times in October, 2016 saw applications peak to the highest level in a decade—and that number is on pace to rise this year. Meanwhile, the forms are piling up: The average review time has risen to 8.6 months, twice what it was a few years ago. Once processed, applicants wait again to take a citizenship test, and then again before the oath of allegiance. Lawful permanent residents are eligible for citizenship after five years on a green card, or three if married to a U.S. citizen. According to the most recent available count from the Department of Homeland Security, which covers 2014, 8.9 million immigrants living in the U.S. meet those requirements. So, a few extra months—let alone a few hours on a weekend in Hailey—may not seem like much, especially because local

applicants tend to wait much longer. “All these people have green cards, and have had them for a very long time. I don’t know what it is, but I haven’t seen one less than 10 years old today,” said Rabiou Manzo, immigration supervisor at the International Rescue Committee, who was overseeing the applications. “It shows that people here need to be educated about the advantages of citizenship.” Chief among them is protection—citizens can’t be deported. Green cards can be revoked, and anyone holding one can be deported for committing a range of broadly defined crimes. Plus, anytime a permanent resident leaves the country, he or she can be denied re-entry by immigration officials. Deportation was the topic hours earlier, when the Idaho Organizing Project, a nonprofit outreach group, was joined by a representative from the Mexican Consulate to hold an emergency planning workshop to help immigrants prepare for the possibility.

“I know people living in this valley for 20 years who are still in the process of getting citizenship. Many of them came here as children— this is all they know.” Patty Tobin

Immigration Alliance of Idaho That night, some 50 people filled a darkened room. At the back, children doodled a maze of swooping parallel lines along a whiteboard. And the rest, somber and silent, watched as Maria Andrade explained the risks. Andrade, a Boise-based lawyer and founder of the Idaho Organizing Project, worked through nearly 100 pages of material—what to do if approached by ICE, what to do if detained. How to make sure your children are looked after, your finances, your family. And how to plan ahead in case you’re sent away for good. “It used to be pretty safe—or pretty easy to assess someone’s risk,” she said. “In the past, if Immigration Enforcement went looking for someone they considered high priority, they’d pretty much leave anyone else they encountered alone. Now, the prosecutorial priority has basically been eliminated. Everyone is high priority.” “Naturalization is the best form of protection,” she continued. “Even if you have a green card, it’s not as safe as it used to be.” See CITIZENSHIP, next page


Express

Hailey parks master plan vote delayed Public input sought on neighborhood parks By TO N Y T E K A RO N I A K E E VA N S Express Staff Writer

The Hailey City Council delayed a vote on Monday on the newly revised Hailey Parks, Lands and Trails Master Plan until December, to allow more public comment. Hailey has 14 neighborhood parks, comprising 60 acres of land, and 2 miles of paved trail and 2.8 miles of unpaved community trails. Hailey Parks and Event Coordinator Stephanie Cook drafted the plan revision in September. A stated goal of the 10to 20-year plan is to ensure that “development contributions meet the overall recreation goals of the community by linking assets or lands together as development occurs.” The 50-page plan outlines partnerships with the Blaine County Recreation District, Blaine County School District and area neighborhoods to generate funding, create accessibility and connectivity between public areas and take input from neighbors. A Historic Overlay District is proposed to create small parks that could include benches, rose gardens and other assets in old Hailey, and seek further development opportunities as older residential buildings transition to business uses. View corridors, riparian areas, urban forests and wildlife corridors are identified in the plan for incorCity staff memo poration into public parks and trails, along with a glossary of terms and individual park development planning sheets. The plan outlines funding mechanisms that include levies, bonds, grants, fundraising campaigns and a variety of taxing districts to acquire land for capital improvements and maintenance. “With a master plan and associated capital improvement plan, the city can work towards building specific assets or amenities in an orderly manner as financing allows, instead of continuing to rely on volunteer projects and other contributions,” the plan states. Mayor Fritz Haemmerle instructed staff to devise a plan to include input on park use from neighbors. Staff took his instruction. “Moving forward, the Parks and Lands Board have agreed to assist in the process of planning each individual park,” states a staff memo issued Monday. Beginning in December, board meetings will include public discussions regarding goals, purposes and future uses and amenities of individual parks in the city. “This includes identifying how different areas of parks are being utilized, and possibly changing the use if the area is underutilized,” the memo states. City staff has plans to invite “stakeholders” as well as neighbors to meetings for parks under review, to gather their input. Community Development Director Lisa Horowitz said stakeholders could be any interested party or another recreational provider or organization. Dave Keir is a Woodside resident who recently protested the city’s rezone of a parcel of land previously set aside for open space, to build an ARCH rental-housing project. The city voted to keep half the 0.59-acre property as open space. Keir requested that the city include the half-acre of property in its park inventory, and said he would help with the open space layout and design, which he said could include the installation of large boulders. The City Council will again review the master plan on Monday, Dec. 11, at 5:30 p.m.

“Moving forward, the Parks and Lands Board have agreed to assist in the process of planning each individual park.”

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CITIZENSHIP Groups help clear pathway to citizenship Continued from previous page At a table the next morning, Andrade poured over the applications, another set of eyes proofing the 38-page N-400 application form and all its accompanying documents—the folded and dog-eared and photocopied pages required to move the process forward. “For me, this is one of the best

ways for individuals not only to feel, but to actively become members of the community,” she said, sorting another application on the table. “They’ve always had rights, but [citizenship] does something to your mental state. It allows you to become a better advocate for yourself, and your community. And that changes the character of the community for the better.”

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6th & Leadville Development RFP - EXTENDED The deadline for the city’s request for proposals for a development project at the corner of 6th and Leadville has been extended to Friday, Dec. 29, at 5 p.m. This project could consist of rental community housing and public parking or a public parking structure. Visit ketchumidaho.org/rfp for full description. Public Notice MUNICIPAL CODE TEXT AMENDMENT: On Dec. 12, at 5:30 p.m., the P&Z Commission will hold a Public Hearing on proposed zoning amendments 16.04 and 17.124, Ketchum Municipal Code, concerning avalanche design standards and development standards for commercial off-site snow storage The public is invited to comment through Dec. 12, 2017 at 5:00 p.m. Public Meetings CITY COUNCIL MEETING Monday • November 20 • 5:30 pm • City Hall PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION MEETING Monday • December 11 • 5:30 pm • City Hall

Keep Up With City News Visit ketchumidaho.org to sign up for email notifications, the City eNewsletter and to follow us on Facebook and Twitter. Email questions and comments to participate@ketchumidaho.org.

elements take shape.” For the Wood River Valley, that means about equal chances of having above-normal or below-normal temperatures, Huston said. This winter’s La Niña is expected to be weak, and the National Weather Service has adjusted its forecast to feature above-average precipitation for central Idaho and the Wood River Valley. For December, January and February, Huston said, that includes a 29 percent chance of below-average precipitation, 33 percent chance of normal and a 37 percent chance of above-average precipitation. “That doesn’t mean we can’t see atmospheric rivers like last year that put us way over the top, or other short-term phenomena you can’t see coming this far out,” he said. “Even with the best skill, La Niña only tells us 40 to 60 percent of the story. These forecasts, it’s like someone giving you a puzzle on Christmas morning and taking away 40 of the pieces. Have fun.” Last winter also featured weak La Niña conditions in the Pacific Ocean, and it provided a massive snowfall in central Idaho. The snowpack in the Big Wood River basin broke records for its water content, which is a key measurement for the amount of snowfall that accumulates over the winter season, according to the Natural Resources Conservation Service. Since 1950, Sun Valley has experienced 20 La Niña winters, according to meteorologist Coleen Haskell, of the website OpenSnow.com. She wrote that weak La Niña events correspond with larger amounts of snow in Sun Valley, which could happen again this winter.

Express photo by Roland Lane

Snowmaking guns run on the Warm Springs side of Bald Mountain earlier this month, helping to create a base for the upcoming ski season.

Snowier, colder so far The NRCS maintains snow telemetry sites in the mountains above the Wood River Valley, which track air temperature and snowpack data. At the Hyndman site at 7,440 feet east of Ketchum, the snow depth was 4 inches and the water content was 0.8 inches Monday. That’s in line with the average water content on Nov. 13 from 1980-2016, which was 0.84 inches. The average daily temperature at the site from Oct. 1 to Nov. 13 was 32.9 degrees, below the 1988-2016 average of 35.02 degrees. On Dollarhide Summit, at 8,420 feet elevation southwest of Ketchum, the snow depth Monday was 14 inches. The water content was 2.5 inches and the average temperature in the past six weeks was 34.83 degrees. The normal Nov. 13 precipitation for that site, measured from 1981 to 2010, is 2.4 inches of water. The average daily temperature, from 1988 to 2016, is 35.04 degrees. At the Galena site, 7,470 feet in elevation near Galena Summit, the snowpack depth was 9 inches Monday. The average tempera-

Snowpack stats The Wood River Valley has experienced above-average snowfall so far this autumn. That trend has held true across Idaho. As of Monday, the snowpack in the Big Wood River basin was 142 percent of normal, according to the Natural Resources Conservation Service. Here is a look at other major river basins in throughout the state: • Little Wood River: 142 percent of normal. • Salmon River: 185 percent. • Boise River: 145 percent. • Payette River: 240 percent. • Clearwater River: 159 percent. • Henry’s Fork: 160 percent. • Owyhee River: 165 percent.

ture from Oct. 1 to Nov. 13 was 32.39 degrees. The average for that time period from 1988 to 2016 is 33.29 degrees. The water content at that site was 2 inches. The average for Nov. 13 from 1982-2016 is 1.36 inches.

Suit alleges county broke Whistleblower Act Continued from Page 1 that Mikel immediately “directed him to complete tasks in furtherance of Mikel’s private business,” including preparing bodies for cremation, boxing ashes, creating memorial videos and slideshows, cleaning the Wood River Chapel garage, replacing fire extinguishers and performing yard work at the chapel, specifically raking pine cones. The claim was filed by Neet’s retained attorney, Benjamin Worst, of Ketchum. Within about a week of employment as Blaine County’s chief deputy coroner, Neet brought his concerns to Blaine County Administrative Services Manager Mandy Pomeroy, he states. Neet’s complaint states that he told her that Mikel “was using him to perform tasks for Mikel’s private business, constituting waste of Blaine County manpower and theft from Blaine County.” The lawsuit alleges that Pomeroy “knew Mikel used the services of the chief deputy coroner in furtherance of his private business, that it had been going on for some time and that this was not what Neet had signed up for.” On May 23, the day after speaking with Pomeroy, Blaine County reclassified Neet from “nonexempt” to an “exempt” employee, providing him coverage under Idaho’s Whistleblower Act, according to the lawsuit, and Pomeroy told Neet he need not worry about retaliation. Neet’s claim alleges that Mikel continued to direct him to perform work for Wood River Chapel, including, once again, raking pine cones. On June 2, the lawsuit claims, Neet, Mikel and Pomeroy met with Schoen, at which time Mikel said he wasn’t concerned with Neet’s job description but

he criticized Neet for not working hard enough to rake pine cones. At the meeting, it was decided that Neet would no longer work at the Coroner’s Office at Wood River Chapel, but that he would instead work at a separate office and meet weekly with Mikel, according to the lawsuit. At their first weekly meeting, the lawsuit claims, Mikel told Neet that his employment with the county wouldn’t work if he couldn’t work for Mikel’s business, and alleges that Mikel told Neet he didn’t care that it would be illegal for Neet to work for Wood River Chapel while being paid by the county. Neet also asserts that he was repeatedly insulted by Mikel at the meeting. Neet left that meeting with Mikel, reported the incident to Pomeroy and filed a claim with the Idaho Attorney General’s Office “seeking an investigation of alleged criminal acts committed by a county elected official,” according to the lawsuit. On June 8, Mikel placed Neet on administrative leave, the lawsuit alleges, and on Aug. 29, Neet met with Idaho Attorney General Chief Deputy Investigator Christopher McCormick to provide information on Mikel’s alleged theft of manpower and wages from the county. On Sept. 18, the lawsuit alleges, Neet received notice from Blaine County that his employment would be terminated on Sept. 30 because “his job had been eliminated as part of a reorganization of the Coroner’s Office.” Neet’s lawsuit alleges that Blaine County violated Idaho’s Whistleblower Act by retaliatorily firing him for reporting what he believed was theft from the county allegedly committed by Mikel. The lawsuit seeks attorney’s fees and damages for injuries that include lost wages, a search for future employment and future relocation expenses.


Express

Hailey woman allegedly neglected baby, lied Diana Elizabeth Lopez, 23, charged for injury to child By JOSHUA MURDOCK Express Staff Writer

A Hailey woman faces at least one misdemeanor charge of injury to a child, and may soon face a felony charge, after allegedly leaving her 2-year-old baby unattended in a dirty apartment for hours, something police reported has happened before. Diana Elizabeth Lopez, 23, was arrested for felony injury to a child and providing false information to an officer, a misdemeanor, on Nov. 2 after officers found her young, allegedly malnourished son left alone in the child’s father’s apartment at Snow Mountain Apartments in Woodside, according to a probable-cause affidavit written by Hailey Police Lt. Steve England. Online court records indicate that Lopez is currently charged with misdemeanor injury to a child, but England said Monday that the Hailey Police Department is working with prosecutors to charge Lopez with a felony. According to the affidavit, officers responded at 3:56 p.m. on Nov. 2 to a report of an unattended child crying and “possibly laying in pee” in a bedroom of an apartment rented by Lopez. A maintenance worker conducting interior apartment checks discovered the child and stated he’d been left alone in the unit since at least 2:50 p.m. that day, England wrote. Bellevue Deputy Marshal Ross Scaggs was closest to the apartment, so he arrived first, and found the child “laying on the floor very close to the door … without any type of food [and] wearing a heavily soiled diaper,” England wrote. The room was “very dirty, as was the whole apartDIANA LOPEZ ment, and the room also smelled strongly of urine,” according to the affidavit. Scaggs changed the child’s diaper using diapers and wipes from a neighboring unit because there were none in Lopez’s apartment, England wrote, and police later determined the unit contained no diapers or baby food—only spoiled milk. England wrote that he and Officer Antonio Munoz arrived shortly thereafter, and that personnel from Wood River Fire & Rescue transported the uninjured child to the Hailey Police Department in an appropriate car seat. He wrote that he and Munoz had prior knowledge of the apartment, Lopez and the child because on March 8, 2016, Lopez’s sister forced her to take the child to the hospital for malnourishment, which led to a diagnosis of “several older injuries all over his body from lack of supervision.” At the time, England wrote in the affidavit, Lopez said she was depressed and felt she didn’t give the child the “love” he deserved. It wasn’t until about 6 p.m. on Nov. 2 that Lopez went to the Hailey Police Department to inquire about her son, England wrote, at which point a representative from the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare was in route from Twin Falls to collect the child. By that time, a “concerned neighbor” had called England and reported that Lopez “constantly” leaves her children, particularly the child left alone on Nov. 2, unattended for long periods of time, the report states. At 2 and a half years old, Lopez’s son cannot walk or talk, England wrote. Though Lopez rents the apartment where the child was found, England wrote, only her children’s father lives there, and she lives in a unit nearby. England wrote that Lopez gave multiple varying and contradictory accounts at the police station and later at the apartment of how and why the child was left unattended. According to the affidavit, officers believe that Lopez’s 11-year-old sibling brought Lopez’s three children—a 3-year-old daughter, the son in question and a 13-month-old daughter—from the children’s father’s apartment to her apartment that morning before the father went to work for the day. Lopez, who stated that she knew the children’s father was working all day, then allegedly left her 2-year-old son in the father’s empty apartment after he left for work, and she told officers that she then drove to Twin Falls to hand off her two daughters to her father, who was taking them on a vacation. However, after giving this information to officers, England wrote, a young girl from a nearby apartment ran out, hugged Lopez’s leg and called her “Mommy,” but Lopez ignored the girl and she eventually left. Lopez initially said the girl was a neighbor’s daughter, England wrote, but then said she was lying. Lopez was arrested around 6:26 p.m., and Health and Welfare worked with the Hailey Police Department, Lopez’s sister and the children’s father to craft a “safety plan” for Lopez’s children. Lopez’s sister said the children’s father “takes much better care” of the children than Lopez does, England wrote in the report. Joshua Murdock: jmurdock@mtexpress.com

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Superintendent didn’t address real issue with funding I am in full agreement with Angela Burrell’s letter to the editor from Nov. 1 regarding the funding for the Middle School outdoor education camps— specifically, the unbalanced amounts spent between WRMS and Hemingway. While I appreciate that Dr. Holmes took the time to respond, she twisted the point of Angela’s letter. It is true that the School District did not budget a separate line item for Hemingway middle school’s outdoor camp, but how does Hemingway have such an excessive budget that it can afford to spend roughly $5,000 for 22 students to go to its camp? That was the point of the letter—it was not to suggest the money that WRMS ($9,000 for 240 students) is granted for its camp be taken away! Dr. Holmes and the board have recently taken so much heat from the public about why a middle school was allowed to move forward at Hemingway with such low numbers that this was a convenient opportunity for Dr. Holmes to point out that zero dollars was given to Hemingway middle school for its camp. Again, the public needs to know the real number and that real number is that Hemingway’s budget allowed it to spend $5,000 for its camp. If the Hemingway

middle school was allotted a budget that reflected its low enrollment, that would have freed up more money for WRMS and the other privately funded outdoor programs that Dr. Holmes mentioned in her letter. Dr. Holmes’ letter only mentions WRMS and does not at all address what Hemingway spent on its camp. Why not? Dr. Holmes continues to say, when it suits her needs, “the money follows the students.” Looking at the current Hemingway model, this couldn’t be further from the truth. LORI BURKS Hailey

Join Air St. Luke’s When our son was seriously injured in a mountain biking accident last month, he required air transport to a trauma center in Boise. Although we have been members of Air St. Luke’s since 2004, this was the first time we needed its services. Fortunately, a $60 annual membership in Air St. Luke’s waives any portion of the transport bill not covered by medical insurance. In our case, this relatively small fee will equate to savings of more than $25,000. If you are not a member of Air St. Luke’s, we encourage you to join today. Your membership not only supports this outstanding medical transport program that benefits us all, but also reduces the financial burden of a medical emergency requiring air transport. Given where we live, none of us can afford to be without the protection that Air St. Luke’s membership provides. DANNI AND JOHN DEAN Hailey

NEWS OF RECORD

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• Bids • sales • auctions • • PuBlic Meetings • there’s Opportunities in the LEGALS Find the legals in the Paid/subscribed edition of the idaho Mountain express

Marriage Licenses 2 Nov.-Candecy Erika Iguavel Delao, 25, and Isay Humberto Campos Pariona, 24, both of Ketchum. 9 Nov.-Jennifer Rene Daniels, 29, and

Matthew Hank Murdock, 26, both of Bellevue.

The remainder of News of Record cannot be published this week because of limitations of delivering information through a new stateinstalled court records system put in place in Blaine County. The Idaho Mountain Express is working to find a means of getting full records of civil and criminal cases in Blaine County 5th District Court.

LEGAL NOTICE SUMMARY n Patricia Saldana is changing her name to Patricia Vazquez Chavez. n Michael Meyers has been appointed Personal Representative of the Estate of David R. Meyers, deceased. n Meredi Wagner has been appointed Personal Representative of the Estate of MURIEL MAE SLANE, deceased.

n Public Notice is hereby given that the Blaine County Hearing Examiner will hold a Public Meeting on, November 30. n Public Notice is hereby given that the Blaine County Board of Commissioners will hold a Public Meeting on, November 30. n Trustee sale of 126 EQUUS LOOP, BELLEVUE, ID.

n ERIC DAIGH’s personal property will be on sale on the NOV. 18,, at South Valley Storage.

n Trustee sale of 711 S. RIVER STREET, HAILEY, ID.

n RYAN GUZAN’s personal property will be on sale on NOV. 18, at Valley Self Store.

n Trustee sale of 2321 WINTERHAVEN DR., HAILEY, ID.

n Ordinance No. 1179 is amending Title 10, Chapter 8, of The Ketchum City Code. n Public Notice is hereby given that the Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a Public Meeting on, December 4.

See the full text of all public notices in the Idaho Mountain Express, the paid newspaper, available from vending machines or by subscription. Call 726-8060.

Share a Piece of Your Mind Write to the editor letters@mtexpress.com


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15

OBITUARIES Glen Wakefield

Joseph Stephen David

Dementia ended Glen Wakefield’s earthly life at age 87 in Oregon. When and where Union Pacific Railroad employed his father during the Great Depression defined Glen’s itinerant childhood, rotating between Salina, Cheyenne and Laramie. Following his parents’ divorce, his mother married Lyman Brown, a Wyoming game warden, moving Glen from city life to living out on an Almy ranch. Glen’s employment began by delivering newspapers. At the end of each school day in Kemmerer, he reported for work at the original JC Penney “mother” store. After graduation in Evanston, he worked underground on Wyoming’s Aspen Tunnel and Oregon’s Toketee Falls Tunnel. Glen drove Laramie Taxi cabs his father/stepmother owned. Wyoming’s Agriculture Department employed him prior to enlisting in the Navy. He served aboard the USS O’Brien DD725 at anchor in Korean waters. Afterwards, the GI Bill facilitated attending Coyne Electrical School in Chicago, from which he graduated in 1955. A licensed electrician then in Utah, Glen worked in industrial and construction settings. He owned and operated an Idaho lighting equipment store, as well as a residential and commercial electrical contracting business in Sun Valley area from 1971-1979, prior to moving to Oregon. He then worked on construction projects, before ending his career as a Port of Portland electrical inspector and staff engineer. Like his father, Glen belonged to the Elks (Lodge No. 1989). Like his stepfather, Glen was an LDS Church member. Other passions included creating and working with his hands (sculpting, creating Halloween costumes, computer drafting “blueprints,” building decks); enjoying horses, cats and dogs throughout his life, especially teaching dog training and competing in dog shows; dressing stylishly (loved wearing a Sunday suit and tie, a tuxedo when appropriate, dress shirt and slacks for lounging around); being active (skiing, hunting, ice skating). In his 80s, Glen walked three miles daily, bowled in two senior leagues, danced at least three times weekly, until 2014’s strokes hastened his physical decline. He enjoyed his friends and varied activities at Courtyard Village retirement home and Elsie Stuhr Senior Center. While on leave from the Navy, Glen married Bomell in Evanston, with whom he had daughter Deborah (and Garry Peterson of Nevada) and son Robert (and Connie Wakefield of Utah). Later living in Salt Lake City, he met and married Kay, who at the time had preschool sons: Lew (and Ivy Yocom of Oregon) and Tim (and Cindy Yocom of Utah). Late in life in Beaverton, he married Lucille, who also survives him along with grandchildren, great-grandchildren, cousins and friends. Glen was predeceased by daughter Joan in 1956 at birth, as well as his parents and brother. Interment occurs outdoors at Willamette National Cemetery, Nov. 17, at 3 p.m. Memorial service occurs in Garden Home LDS Church Building, 6605 SW Garden Home Road, Portland 97223, Saturday, Nov. 18 at 2 p.m. In lieu of flowers, contributions in Glen’s memory are welcome either to Oregon Humane Society, 1067 NE Columbia Blvd., Portland OR 97211, www.oregonhumane.org; Elsie Stuhr Foundation, 5550 SW Hall Blvd., Beaverton OR 97005, www. thprd.org; or The Salvation Army, specifying “Portland ARC,” 6855 NE 82nd Ave. Portland OR 97220, www.salvationarmyusa.org. Arrangements are by www.finleysunsethills.com.

On Friday, Nov. 10, 2017, Dr. Joseph Stephen David, aka Dr. Joe, took his last breath on this earth following a long battle with Alzheimer’s disease. Joe spent the last two years under the great care of the staff at DeSano Place Memory Facility in Jerome. Dr. Joe was born in tiny Welland, Ontario, on Jan. 17, 1929, in the shadow of Niagara Falls, and grew up with his brother, sister, mom and dad in an apartment above the family clothing store. Joe was a good student and led his high school football team to a championship his senior year from the quarterback position. His mother didn’t discover he was playing football until her friends saw Joe riding in the ticker-tape parade through downtown Welland. Bertha (Bubie) David wasn’t pleased. Joe matriculated across the border at State University of New York, Buffalo. Having grown up in an orthodox Jewish family, Joe experienced bacon for the first time on his very first day in Buffalo. From his boarding room attic, he smelled a foreign and yet glorious aroma and rushed down for breakfast. After consuming the bacon, he wrote his mother a letter apologizing for his transgression. Bubie replied that it was okay, as long as he promised never to lick his lips afterwards. Joe continued on at SUNY medical school, and after graduating in general surgery from SUNY and finishing his pediatric surgery residency at The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, he packed up his Austin Healy and headed to Hollywood, Calif, beginning his practice as a pediatric surgeon in Beverly Hills in 1958. In 1962, he set up shop in Orange County, where he and his partner, Bill Kincannon, were the first, and for a while, only pediatric surgeons in the OC. In 1968, they were awarded the Orange County Press Club Headliners Award for their contributions in the medical field for developing and perfecting a surgical procedure to treat a rare and often fatal birth defect known as gastroschisis. Dr. Joe went on to become the chief of staff at Children’s Hospital of Orange County in California, performing countless, often life-saving procedures, on newborns and infants during his long career. Along the way, Dr. Joe fell in love with Sun Valley, Idaho, purchasing an Atelier condominium overlooking the Sun Valley Lake in the early 1970s, while on a road trip to Yellowstone. The family spent almost every winter break and summer vacation in the Wood River Valley until Joe and his bride, Elizabeth, retired full-time in Sun Valley in the mid ’80s. The first night in town was always celebrated with a pizza pie at Louie’s before heading to the condo. Although Dr. Joe was forced to retire earlier than he hoped due to the effects of medication he used to treat an artery condition, he remained involved in the health care field, serving on the board of directors of St. Luke’s Hospital, Wood River Valley during the transition from its original location on the campus of Sun Valley to its present location south of Ketchum. Dr. Joe was an amateur car collector, and his most prized possession was a 1937 Jaguar S.S. 100 Roadster, one of only 198 ever built. He was a vociferous reader and an utterly awful golfer. He won the “coveted” Mr. Irrelevant Golf Tournament in Newport Beach, Calif. This event, celebrating the last pick in the NFL draft, is “won” by the golfer with the highest score. Dr. Joe carded a smooth 142 to run away with the title of worst golfer in Orange County. In retirement, Joe enjoyed spending time with his six grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents and his siblings and is survived by his wife of 53 years, Elizabeth; his children, Michael David and Sara (Jeff) Loomis; and six grandchildren, Gray David, Darby David, Tillie David, Asher Loomis, Isaac Loomis and Charlie Loomis. He is also survived by literally thousands of children he operated on and cared for over the years.

How to submit obituaries Obituaries submitted for publication in the Idaho Mountain Express must be delivered by noon Monday for the Wednesday paper, or by noon Wednesday for the Friday paper. Information provided must include the name and phone number of funeral home or mortuary in charge of arrangements. E-MAIL: complete e-mail form via our Web site at www.mtexpress. com/contact.php. FAX: 1-208-7262329. CONFIRMATION: Receipt of obituaries sent by fax or e-mail must be confirmed by calling the Express at 208-726-8060.

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Alzheimer’s is a tragic disease, affecting millions of individuals and their families. Dr. Joe was keenly aware of the disease, its effects and lack of a cure, as he conducted thorough research upon his diagnosis. November is Alzheimer’s Awareness Month, and in lieu of flowers, please consider donating in Joe’s name to The Cure Alzheimer’s Fund, a great organization that funds research for the best ways to slow, prevent or reverse the disease. Its research covers finding a cure and helping determine those who are at a higher risk of developing the disease at a younger age.

Destiny Caudle Destiny Caudle was born Dec. 19, 1975, in Alaska. She was raised as a young child on her Papa and Granny’s ranch in Montana, where she loved playing with her Penny dog, the farm animals and riding horses with her friends. Her remaining life was in Idaho, where she will be missed and loved by her vibrant smile, sassy attitude and a deep loving heart, especially for her little sis, Chante, animals and friends throughout many states. Sadly my precious Destiny daughter fulfilled her purpose here and has joined her family, dogs and Heavenly Father at much too young of an age. We love you a sky full, eternally. Mamma and Sissy. A celebration for her life will be announced at a later time. A memorial webpage for Destiny is available at www.woodriverchapel.com, where friends may share a story or photo and light a candle. Arrangements are under the care of Wood River Chapel of Hailey, Idaho.

Terry Neil Wall Terry Neil Wall passed away Sunday, Nov. 12, 2017, at the age of 64 in his home, surrounded by his family. He was born June 19, 1953, in Downey, Idaho, to Evan and Lavessa Wall. Terry met his wife, Sharon Kay (Bartlett) Wall in Jerome, Idaho. They married on July 20, 1973, and have been together for 44 years. They lived in Jerome, Idaho, until moving to Hailey, Idaho, in 2003. They have two children, daughter Brandie Lee (Russell) and grandchildren Damon and Austin; and son Terry Neil Jr. (Kelly) and grandchildren Keaton, Aspen, Kylee and Aubrieanna. Terry served honorably for a short time in the Navy, stationed at the Naval Amphibious Unit at Coronado Island, Calif. His hobbies were hunting, camping and being around his family. He worked most of his adult life as a carpenter. He was very proud of working with his children. First with his son, Terry, in his construction company and then with his daughter, Brandie, in her restaurant. Terry was preceded in death by his parents, Evan Wall and Hazel Lavessa (Henson) Wall, and his sisters, Marlene, Sherry and Debbie. He is survived by his wife, Sharon, their two children and six grandchildren. A viewing will be held Thursday, Nov. 16, from 6-8 p.m. at Farnsworth Mortuary, 1343 S. Lincoln Ave., Jerome, Idaho 83338. A funeral service will be held Friday, Nov. 17, at 11 a.m. at Farnsworth Mortuary with graveside service to follow at Jerome Cemetery. Memories and condolences may be shared with the family on Terry’s memorial webpage at www.farnsworthmortuary.com.

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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Thank you for the mobile phone. The personal computer. Denim jeans in the office. For being the generation that showed us a better way.

Motorist crashes truck into irrigation pivot Local farmer assists in extrication of driver By JOSHUA MURDOCK Express Staff Writer

Continue living life to the fullest with a Blue Cross of Idaho Medicare Advantage plan and choose from the largest network of doctors in the state. Learn more at 1-855-216-6852 or www.journeyonidaho.com. Enrollment ends December 7, 2017.

EXPRESS RANKED BEST IN NATION FOR LOCAL NEWS

The Idaho Mountain Express is being

recognized as thesystem. best community Medicare evaluates plans based on a 5-star rating Star Ratings are calculated each year and may change from one year to the next. newspaper in the nation for local news coverage.

Blue Cross of Idaho Care Plus, Inc. is a Medicare Advantage health plan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in Blue Cross of Idaho Care Plus, Inc. depends on contract renewal. This information is not The National a complete description of benefits. Contact theNewspaper plan for moreAssociation, information. Limitations, copayments and restrictions may apply. Benefits, copayments/coinsurance thepremium largest and/or newspaper association in themay change on January 1 of each year. The formulary, pharmacy network, and/or provider network, may change at any time. You will United announced the Express receive notice when necessary. Not allStates, plans are available inthat all areas.

won the first-place award in the top tier of

Blue Cross of Idaho Care Plus, Inc. complies with applicable Federal civil rights laws and does not the Best News category discriminate on the basis of race, color,Local national origin,Coverage age, disability, or sex. in ATENCIÓN: si habla español, tiene a su disposición servicios de asistencia Llame al 1-888-494-2583 (TTY: 1-800-377thegratuitos association’s 2016lingüística. Better Newspapers 1363).Llame al 1-888-494-2583 (TTY: 1-800-377-1363). 注意:如果您使用繁體中文,您可以免費獲得語言 Contest. The nationwide contest judged 援助服務。請致電 1-888-494-2583 (TTY: 1-800-377-1363).

work done in 2015.

©2017 Blue Cross of Idaho Care Plus, Inc. is an independent licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association, with services provided by Blue Cross Idaho. The category wonofby the Express included

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A crash at high speed left a woman trapped in her severely damaged truck after it crashed off Gannett Road and struck a wheeled support of a center-pivot irrigator in a field on Nov. 5. According to Blaine County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Will Fruehling, a deputy was driving northwest on Gannett Road near Cove Ranch, south of Bellevue, shortly before 8:25 p.m. when he observed a white longbed, four-door Ford F-250 pickup truck speed past him in the opposite direction. His frontmounted radar clocked the truck at 89 mph and his rear-mounted radar recorded a speed of 96 mph, Fruehling said, indicating that the truck was accelerating toward 100 mph. Fruehling said the deputy turned his vehicle around and activated his lights to pursue the truck, “but the vehicle was quite a ways ahead of him.” It was unclear if the driver of the truck, Antolina Santos, 52, noticed the deputy pursuing her because of the distance between them, Fruehling said, and she continued southeast on Gannett Road until she failed to round a curve near Gannett. At that point, with the deputy about onequarter mile behind, the truck left the roadway, overturned at least one time, landed upright and collided with an A-frame support of a rolling center-pivot irrigation system, causing the system to collapse onto the cab of the truck, crushing it onto Santos, Fruehling said. Wood River Fire & Rescue Chief Bart Lassman said it took about 50 minutes of work by more than 20 personnel to free Santos, who was “very uncooperative.” He said the Hailey Fire Department, Wood River Fire & Rescue, and Carey Fire and Quick Response all responded to the scene. Crews were dispatched at 8:25 p.m., he said, and arrived on scene at 8:43 p.m. To extricate Santos, firstresponders enlisted nearby farmer Rocky Sherbine and his front-end loader to stabilize the center pivot, preventing it from falling on personnel and from

Photo courtesy of Wood River Fire & Rescue

A Ford F-250 pickup truck is crushed beneath a collapsed center-pivot irrigator after a motorist allegedly crashed the truck off Gannett Road while traveling in excess of 90 mph on Nov. 5. further crushing the truck’s cab onto Santos once the doors were removed, Lassman said. The machine was also used to lift the truck’s steering column up and away from Santos to free her legs. Santos was extricated from the cab and personnel transported her to St. Luke’s Wood River hospital beginning at 9:35 p.m. “She … was unable to communicate with us to a degree where we could figure out what was hurting her,” Lassman said. “Her legs were trapped … so we were assuming she was going to have some kind of leg injury, as well [as the head injury]. We suspected some possible internal injuries, too.” Because of snow, transport directly from the scene via helicopter proved to be impossible, so Santos was taken to St. Luke’s before a subsequent ground transport to Friedman Memorial Airport, where she was transported by an air ambulance airplane to Saint Alphonsus Regional Medical Center in Boise, Lassman said. Fruehling said a blood-draw test for blood-alcohol content was performed at St. Luke’s before the flight, and test results are pending. He said authorities initially believed Santos was a suspect in a hit-and-run traffic accident in Bellevue that night, but that was found to be incorrect. Joshua Murdock: jmurdock@mtexpress.com

Jumbo air tanker wins protest Jet likely to fight fires next season By KEITH RIDLER

daily and non-daily newspapers with a

Associated Press

circulation of more than 6,000. Second

BOISE— A giant passenger jet converted to fight wildfires but grounded by U.S. officials during much of this year’s fire season could be aloft much more next year. The U.S. Government Accountability Office on Thursday sided with Global SuperTanker Services in its protest against the U.S. Forest Service. The Colorado-based company challenged the Forest Service’s 5,000-gallon limit on air tankers that kept the 19,000-gallon Boeing 747-400 idle until late August. After that, it flew only in California. The accountability office says the Forest Service’s decision to exclude the jumbo air tanker from competing for federal contracts isn’t reasonable. Officials recommended the Forest Service revise its size limits and the company be reimbursed costs involved in making the protest.

place went to the Leelanau Enterprise of Michigan and third place went to The St. Louis American of Missouri. The NNA also announced that the Express will be recognized in the General Excellence category for non-daily

Express HONORED FOR GENERAL EXCELLENCE of 10,000 or more. by the national newspaper association Established in 1885, the NNA represents newspapers nationwide with a circulation

owners, publishers and editors of more than 2,200 community newspapers in the


Sports

BCRD NORDIC SEASON PASSES ARE ON SALE— Blaine County Recreation District has started sales of season passes for the 2017-18 BCRD Nordic trail system. Passes can be purchased online at www. bcrd.org. Those who purchase online will save $50 on adult BCRD Nordic trail passes purchased through Sunday, Nov. 19. In the valley, a pass is required to ski on all groomed trails except the 20-mile Wood River Trail linking Bellevue, Hailey, Ketchum and Sun Valley,

EDITOR JEFF CORDES — 726-8060

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SHIFFRIN GRABS EARLY LEAD ON ALPINE FIS WORLD CUP—Reigning Alpine World Cup overall women’s champ Mikaela Shiffrin of Colorado has taken the early lead on the 2017-18 tour after two technical races in Europe. Shiffrin, 22, from Eagle-Vail, is nursing a 125-115 lead over another 22-year-old, Petra Vlhova of Slovakia. Vlhova came from behind Saturday at Levi, Finland to edge first-run leader Shiffrin by .10 seconds. Vlhova also beat runner-up Shiffrin at the World Cup Finals slalom March 18 at Aspen.

Cutthroat soccer players make HDSC All-League Post-season and banquet awards The 3A High Desert Soccer Conference of south-central Idaho’s 4th District has announced 2017 All-Conference firstteam players chosen by the prep league’s coaches. Nine Community School players, five girls and four boys, were chosen to the All-Conference squads that included 18 boys and 18 girls. Leading scorer Cash Dart (26 goals) topped the All-Conference picks for coach Richard Whitelaw’s Cutthroat boys (175-0)—winners of the league tournament title for the third time in four years. Coach Kelly Feldman’s Cutthroat girls (19-1-1) set a school records for goals scored (133) on their way to a ninth consecutive HDSC tournament title and the consolation championship of the State 3A tourney. Top scorers Lily Fitzgerald (51 goals, 123 career) and Ella Viesturs (22 goals, 109 career) led the All-League Cutthroats. Here are the league picks:

All-Conference boys Community School: Shea Brokaw, Henry Cherp, Cash Dart and Charlie Stumph. Bliss: Armando Cordoba, Fernando Marez, Steven Rubio and Yuvani Vizcarra. Buhl: Dustin Dominguez, Victor Quezada and Mauricio Velazquez. Wendell: Gasper Diaz and Felipe Paniagua. Declo: Tony Marino and Micah Mensing. Filer: Cody Ruiz. Gooding: Andres Cruz and Brian Mireles.

All-Conference girls Community School: Ella Viesturs, Anik Zarkos, Kate Weatherholtz, Libby Kaiser and Lily Fitzgerald. Declo: Gretchen Pirtle. Buhl: Kayanna Zamora and Madison Somers. Wendell: Nadia Guadarrama, Sofia Martinez, Angela Murrillo and Tati Martinez. Bliss: Jenni Rodriguez and Ellyanna Demaray. Filer: Rose Davies, Saisha Serratos and Luzeny Zumba. Gooding: Kessia Tellez.

Cutthroat awards banquet The Community School’s fall sports banquet was held Sunday, Nov. 12. Here are the boys’ and girls’ award winners: Boys: Team Captains—Charlie Stumph, James Everitt and Henry Cherp. Most Improved—Seamus O’Connell. Top Goal Scorer and Goal of the Year—Cash Dart. State Tournament Most Valuable Players—Mikel SanchezduPont and Shea Brokaw. Most Inspirational—Henry Cherp. Most Valuable Player—Charlie Stumph. Coaches Award—James Everitt. Girls: Most Valuable Player—Lily Fitzgerald. Single-season scoring record—Lily Fitzgerald (51 goals). State Tournament Most Valuable Players—Skylar Cooley and Ella Viesturs. Most Improved—Lily Pogue. Rookie Award—Caroline Estep. Most Inspirational—Anik Zarkos. Coaches Awards—Anik Zarkos and Ella Viesturs.

Express photo by Roland Lane

Wood River junior Luci Cuellar (right) spots an opening and prepares to drive during Friday’s season-opening home game against the Gooding Senators on the Hailey court. Gooding took a 10-point lead at half and made it stand up in a 39-30 non-conference victory.

WRHS girls open hoops season with homestand

W

ood River High School’s varsity showed some promising defense but struggled to put points on the board during its season-opening girls’ basketball games on the Hailey hardwoods Friday and Monday. The Gooding Senators built a 23-13 halftime lead and maintained it in the second half Friday for a 39-30 non-conference victory over the Wolverines. Junior Grace Parker led Gooding with 20 points, while junior Audra Mary had 12 for Hailey. Monday night, a veteran Buhl team with seven seniors came into the Hailey gym and used a 15-6 scoring edge in the second quarter to post a 37-26 non-league triumph. Buhl senior forward Madison Somers tallied a game-high 13 points.

Mountain Home arrives Thursday in Hailey Wood River out-rebounded Buhl 28-13 in the fast-paced game and put together several scoring runs by attacking the basket and going to the glass. Junior Luci Cuellar (5 rebounds, 3 steals, 2 blocked shots) scored 8 of her team-high 10 points in the second half as Wood River outscored Buhl 18-16 after intermission. Coach Amanda Crist’s Wolverines played Monday without their tallest player, Mary, and without seniors Harlee Manning and Emma Flolo. But younger players like Torie King, Grace Parke, Haley Bjorkman and Sariah Nilsen stepped in for vital minutes.

Junior point guard King (2 points, 6 rebounds, 4 steals, 5 assists) had a solid all-around game and Parke, a Hailey sophomore, pitched in with 6 points, 3 boards and 2 steals. Other contributors were Payson Bennett (4 points, 3 rebounds), Bjorkman (2 points, 5 boards, 1 assist), Patrea Topp (2 points, 3 rebounds) and Nilsen (3 rebounds). Buhl juniors Kyra Azevedo (9 points, 3 steals, 4 assists) and Emily Gorrell (6 points) along with senior Sage Eckert (5 points) helped the Tribe to their first win of the season. Wood River visits Kimberly today, Wednesday and hosts Mountain Home on Thursday, Nov. 16 at 7 p.m. for its first 4A clash. Mountain Home opened with a 70-27 home win over Columbia last Saturday.

Respected athletic director Fred Miller dies at 86 Former Sun Valley resident Former Sun Valley resident and well-respected college athletic director Fred Miller, 86, died Sunday, Oct. 22 of natural causes at his beach house in Nehalem, Ore., surrounded by his family. Earlier this year, Miller was selected for the 41st James J. Corbett Memorial Award which is the highest award a person can achieve in collegiate athletics administration. Miller served as athletic director at Long Beach State from 1967-71, Arizona State University from 1971-80 and San Diego State University from 1985-95. He helped create the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, now known as Big West Conference. A 1953 graduate of the College of Pacific where he lettered in

football, track, tennis and rugby, Miller served in the U.S. Navy during the Korean War. He played pro football for the Washington Redskins and in the Canadian Football League. He earned advanced college degrees in education from Univ. of Southern California and Indiana University. While he and wife Jeanne lived in Sun Valley, Miller worked with former Sun Valley-Ketchum Chamber of Commerce executive director Wendy Jaquet to create Wagon Days sponsorship funding. Ketchum resident Jaquet said about Miller, “He was a great guy and will be missed.”


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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Courtesy photo by John Peck

The pursuit of Carey’s defense was vital to Saturday’s 48-28 State 1A Div. 2 semi-final win over Deary’s Mustangs. Here, Deary back Parker Johnston carries the ball, but finds a Panther defensive wall, from left, Hilario Ruiz, Porter Mecham and DJ Parke. Carey had not allowed a third quarter touchdown all season until Heath raced home from 9 yards out with 26 seconds left in the third. But it was too late—Carey’s lead became 42-28.

Big plays, defense lift Carey past Deary 48-28 Panthers advance into 11th state title game By JEFF CORDES Express Staff Writer

The Carey Panthers certainly enjoy scoring touchdowns and winning high school football games—11 of them without a loss and never trailing on the scoreboard this fall. After their touchdowns, 81 in 11 wins this season, the 32 Carey players, four coaches and water boys always gather happily in a big team huddle away from the sideline. They talk about successes, praise each other and look forward to more celebratory huddles. If the 2017 eight-man football season was a chemistry class, Carey would be getting an A+. Players thank their lucky stars for the opportunity to represent the community. After vanquishing their opponents, the players stride over in front of wherever the Panther Nation fans are sitting in the bleachers, remove helmets, place them on the ground in front of them and, as a team, sing the Carey fight song. It’s small town Idaho football at its best. Coach Lane Kirkland has said, “This is a great group of young men and we believe in them. They are mature, tough and hungry.” The Panther players are in decent football shape going into the final Milk Bowl Championship weekend, yet a school record-setting season offensive output of 592 points (53.8 ppg) has encouraged Carey cheerleaders

to even greater fitness. If the boys are getting A+ in chemistry, the cheerleaders are getting A+ in mathematics. They use the factorial method to calculate their ceremonial jumping jacks after each touchdown. For instance, a 6-0 score means six jumping jacks. Another touchdown making it 12-0 means 12 more. By the fourth TD, they’re doing 24. Their season high is 484 against in the 11-touchdown game against Murtaugh. If you count the 192 they did Saturday in Carey’s State 1A Division 2 semi-final against Deary at Pocatello’s Holt Arena, they’ve done about 2,700 this season. Even coach Kirkland has been inspired by the boys to greater fitness. He did a cartwheel after each of Carey’s seven touchdowns in Saturday’s 48-28 victory over Deary. It was Kirkland’s 144th win as Carey’s head coach, and certainly one of the sweetest with son Trevor Kirkland playing a pivotal role as center of the strong offensive line. Yet the coach acted like it was his first. Kirkland said, “The kids maintained a quiet confidence all last week at practice and then confidently vocalized at Thursday’s practice, ‘I know we can beat these guys,’ and half the battle was over. “Every kid was totally dialed in throughout the game.” In Saturday’s semi-final at Caccia Field matching two unbeaten teams, Carey used a

pair of first-quarter long gainers to counter a pair of long Deary scoring drives and build a 20-14 lead at the break. Then, Carey’s special teams and defense took over the spotlight as the Panthers tallied their final four touchdowns of with great field position in short fields—scoring on 31-, 26-. 34- and 17-yard drives after turnovers and defensive stops. Kirkland said, “The defense settled in and took over the game with lots of aggression and speed. By end of the third quarter we totally had their number. “Lots of kids made plays. “Offensive execution was great again in the first half as we got off to a quick start. We did struggle on third downs a bit in the second half and felt we should of put up another four scores, but we were playing a great team and they made the stops. Our offensive line did great!” With its 20-point victory, Carey advanced into the State 1A Division 2 eight-man football championship game Saturday, Nov. 18 at 2 p.m. at Middleton High School against another unbeaten team, the Tri-Valley Titans from Cambridge. Tri-Valley (10-0) recorded its own 20-point semi-final win last Friday 20-0 at home over Butte County of Arco (8-2). The Titans, who scouted Saturday’s DearyCarey game, are averaging 53.2 ppg on offense and yielding only 12.8 ppg, but have given up 86 points on defense in their last four games.

Carey is seeking the fourth unbeaten season in school history to go along with unblemished state championship campaigns in 1994 (over Deary at Holt Arena), in 1998 (over Deary at Holt) and 2008 (over Kootenai at the Kibbie Dome). The Panthers are 5-5 in their 10 state championship game appearances, also winning in 2006 over Salmon River at Holt Arena and in 2010 over Garden Valley at Eagle High School. It’s the first title game visit for Tri-Valley, a cooperative of Cambridge and Midvale. Kirkland said, “Tri-Valley has lot of size with a mixture of speed and talent. They have a lot of momentum coming into this game. It will come down to who can handle the stage best in the opening drives and who wants it more for the rest.”

A hard-fought semi-final Carey players had a blast playing Deary, taking to heart their season mission of accepting whatever gridiron challenge comes along to improve and change for the better. Senior running back Hilario Ruiz rushed for 145 yards and three touchdowns, and senior quarterback Houston Hennefer rushed for 66 yards and two TDs along with his 148 passing yards and one touchdown pass. DJ Parke, another senior, led the defense with 10 tackles one sack, a fumble recovery and an onsides kick recovery. Senior Hayden Wayment aver-

aged 41 yards for three punts and made a clutch fumble recovery. And junior Omar Morales was a potent weapon with tricky, bouncing onsides kickoffs that gave Deary fits. Overall, Carey out-gained Deary 505-312 in total yardage and had a 317-172 advantage in rushing yards. Coach Darrah Eggers’ Mustangs entered the game averaging over 52 points a game, but the Panthers did much to contain their attack. Hennefer’s 29-yard swing pass to junior Porter Mecham (133 all-purpose yards, 9 tackles) followed by a Hennefer 18-yard keeper behind Porter Mecham’s block were the big plays on Carey’s first touchdown. Hennefer’s two-point conversion run made it 8-0. Deary senior quarterback Colten Heath (60 yards rushing, 94 yards passing) engineered a 62-yard scoring drive capped by an 18-yard scoring strike to Jayce Weinmann. Carey kept an 8-6 lead when DJ Parke and Tanner Mecham (10 tackles) pursued to stop the conversion. Fortunately, Carey’s Carson Simpson was alert to pounce on Deary’s onsides kickoff attempt, giving the Panthers possession at the 13-yard-line. Time for a big play. Hennefer faded back and set the tone for the rest of the game by dropping a long pass into Tanner Mecham’s hands at midfield. Mecham deftly avoided two Deary tackles and completed an See PANTHERS, next page


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Panthers meet Titans in final Continued from previous page 87-yard touchdown play—Carey’s longest TD of a season that features 20 scoring plays exceeding 50 yards. Unfazed by the turn of events, Deary’s Heath went back to work and led the Mustangs on a 70-yard scoring drive helped by two Carey penalties for first downs. Jalen Kirk’s conversion run tied the game at 14-14 and had the Mustang fans yelling for more. Carey dashed their hopes. On the first Panther play, Ruiz weaved his way through the scrimmage line and accelerated for a 60-yard TD giving Carey a 20-14 lead. In a span of less than three minutes, the two rivals had totaled four TDs, but Carey maintained its lead. Carey’s special teams and defense started to shine. DJ Parke recovered the Morales onsides kick and Carey was forced to punt, but Wayment booted the ball perfectly and Hennefer touched it down at the Deary 2-yard-line. The Mustangs couldn’t move out of their hole, and Carey senior Kaden Koudelka returned the short punt 11 yards to the 31. From there, Porter Mecham ran the right end for 11 yards, Ruiz went left behind Tanner Mecham’s crack-back block for 14, and Hennefer sped up the middle from spread formation for a 6-yard TD and 26-14 lead. Deary got better field position when Parker Johnston covered the short Morales kickoff at the Mustang 45. But Wayment blocked Colten Heath’s first-down pass attempt, and then freshman Dallin Parke sacked Heath on second down and stripped the ball. Wayment recovered the fumble and Carey went to work from the Deary 26. On fourth down at the 18, coach Kirkland called time out and huddled with his offense. Hennefer got the Mustangs a little jumpy at the line with a long count, and running back Ruiz found a huge hole for an 18-yard TD scamper. Porter Mecham caught the conversion pass and the lead became 34-14. Carey converted four of six fourth-down attempts during the game, and two went for TDs including the final score of the game in the fourth quarter. Kirkland said, “Our focus on fourth downs was simply a fact of imposing our will and getting it done. Great players make great plays happen.” Down 20 points, Deary didn’t quit by any means. Heath attacked the right flank with short passes and quickly moved his team 55 yards for the final TD of the first half—cut-

ting the deficit to 34-22. Could Deary regroup at half and make a run at the Panthers, just as Eggers’ 1998 Mustangs did at Holt Arena in cutting Carey’s lead from 44-30 to 44-42 before the Panthers prevailed in the last Deary-Carey championship game clash? After all, Deary was receiving the second-half kickoff. What the Mustangs didn’t realize was that Carey’s defense had not yielded a single point in the third quarters all year. Once again, the unpredictable bounces of Morales’ kickoffs came into play when the pigskin careened up into the air and took an unforeseen, backwards bounce away from Deary’s Parker Johnston. Tanner Mecham recovered at the 29. Johnston couldn’t believe it. Kirkland said, “The second half kickoff was exactly what we needed to slow down their charge.” Hennefer’s apparent 25-yard touchdown pass to Porter Mecham on fourth down was disallowed by a penalty, and the ball changed hands. But DJ Parke recovered a fumble on Deary’s second play. Hennefer plunged for a fourth-down conversion to keep Carey’s drive alive, and Ruiz took a direct snap for an 11-yard TD behind Hennefer’s lead block. Hennefer’s conversion pass to Koudelka at the back of the end zone restored the lead to 20 points at 42-22, with 19 minutes left to play. The two teams traded touchdowns as the game wore down, but the outcome had already been determined. “We were able to work the clock a bit during the second half and proved we can play four tough quarters of football,” said Kirkland. The coach added about Carey’s first title game appearance since 2011, “Winning the semi-final game is the biggest hump to get over to give yourself a chance. We did it. Now, it’s time to culminate the last 14 weeks of practice into one game and make it happen. “It wasn’t the championship game, but simply a great warm-up and trial run for this week. I like our speed, quickness, and teamwork. There is no one star on this team—they all are. These kids will never quit.” “We have earned this game and we intend on giving our best to bring home a banner.” Carey had a little scare late in the fourth quarter when second-leading scorer Ruiz

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

19

SPORTS SUMMARY Registration starts for 14th annual Hailey Turkey Trot

Courtesy photos by John Peck

Carey head coach Lane Kirkland does a cartwheel along the Panther sideline after Tanner Mecham’s 87-yard touchdown pass reception giving the Panthers a 14-6 lead late in the first quarter Saturday in Pocatello. limped off the field with a knee injury. But Kirkland said Monday, “Hilario is ready to go this week. He got us off to a fast start (against Deary) and Tanner’s catch came at a great time.” See today’s Express web site for CareyDeary statistics. PANTHER NOTES—Carey School student Ava Smith did a beautiful rendition of the national anthem before Saturday’s semi-final…….The Panthers controlled the clock for 15 of 24 minutes in the second half and limited Deary to 49 yards rushing and 32 yards passing… Prior to Saturday, the Panthers had lost the state semi-final for three straight years and had settled for third-place trophies each time……Tri-Valley is ranked 53rd nationally and fourth in Idaho by maxpreps.com. Carey is ranked 142nd nationally and ninth in Idaho…. This is the second straight year that Middleton has hosted the State 1A Division 2 championship game. Salmon River (11-1) beat Kendrick (9-2) there by a 30-20 score last November for the fourth Savages’ state championship in five years, and the seventh overall…. Only Carey (5 titles) trails Salmon River in championships since the Idaho High School Activities Association started sanctioning eight-man football back in 1984…….

The Chamber in Hailey is organizing the 14th annual Hailey Turkey Trot scheduled for Thanksgiving Day—Thursday, Nov. 23 starting at 10 a.m. from Sturtevants in Hailey. The 5-kilometer (3.1-mile) run and walk has become popular with visitors and locals alike, attracting over 500 participants each year. The course travels along the Big Wood River and through the Draper Wood River Preserve. Pre-register online at haileyidaho.com through Wednesday, Nov. 22 at 2 p.m. Advance cost is $15 adult, $10 per child ages 10-and-under, or $40 per family for up to four immediate family members. Day of race registration will cost $30 per person. You can also register in person at The Chamber office located at 781 South Main in Hailey at Wertheimer Park near Campion Ice House. Normal operating hours are Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from 11-6. The Chamber will be open Tuesday, Nov. 21 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Wednesday, Nov. 22 from 9-2 for final entries. Call 788-3484 or email info@haileyidaho.com for details.

Runners finish Nike Cross Regionals at Eagle Island Wood River High School runners were among 1,901 in Saturday’s 2017 Nike Cross Regionals (NXR) 5-kilometer (3.1-mile) footraces at Eagle Island State Park west of Boise. Top result for Wood River was Gabe Smith-Nilsen’s 36th place out of 306 runners in the Men’s Open Invitational Section 2. Nilsen’s time was 16:59, 0:52 back of the leader. Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation cross-country skier Eve Jensen of Boise High placed seventh in the Women’s Championship class at 17:50, 0:37 back of the leader. Other boys’ Section 2 results: 90— Will McGonigal 17:37. 250—Steve Roth 19:33. In Women’s Open Invitational Section 2: 188—Alex Rogers 23:49.

CSI Ski Swap set for Friday and Saturday, Nov. 17-18

Carey freshman Dallin Parke puts the sack on Deary quarterback Colten Heath, dislodging the ball that senior Hayden Wayment (right) recovered for the Panthers. Four plays later, senior Hilario Ruiz raced home from 18 yards out for Carey’s third unanswered touchdown and a 32-14 lead in the second quarter. It was Ruiz’s first of three TD runs for the game.

Disappointed there is no Ski Swap here in the Wood River Valley for the fall of 2017? Check out the College of Southern Idaho’s 48th annual Ski Swap, sponsored by the Outdoor Recreation Center. The two-day event is scheduled for Friday, Nov. 17 from 3-10 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 18 from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. at the CSI Recreation Center Gym, 315 Falls Ave. Those interested in selling used skis, snowboards and other winter gear can check in at the gym Thursday, Nov. 16 from 5-9 p.m. or Friday from 12 noon to 2:30 p.m. Claude’s Sports and Idaho Water Sports will be at the event selling new equipment at reduced prices. Early-bird admission price of $5 per person is effective Friday from 3-6 p.m. Those attending will get the best pick of pre-owned gear. The regular $2 per person admission price will be accepted Friday from 6-10 p.m. and all day Saturday.


Classifieds 20

Express



www.mtexpress.com  Wednesday, November 15, 2017

HOW TO PLACE FREE AND PAID ADS (See ad types in gray box below):  ONLINE: Visit www.mtexpress.com. Locate the gray bar, click Classified Ads, then click Submit a Classified Ad. Follow the steps. OR, go direct to order: classified.mtexpress.com  EMAIL: classifieds@mtexpress.com  CALL: 208-726-8060 or FAX: 208-726-2329 WE ACCEPT: Visa, Mastercard, American Express and Discover cards

DEADLINES: Monday 1 p.m. for Weds. paper, Weds. 1 p.m. for Friday. TO VIEW ADS ONLINE: Visit www.mtexpress.com. Locate the red bar, click Classifieds Ads, click View This Week's Classified Ads. Or, to go direct: classified.mtexpress.com

I N D E X

Share Office w/Therapist Ketchum, 6 mos. $200/mo 309-0014

100 PROPERTIES FOR SALE

101 Within WR Valley 102 Outside WR Valley 103 Open House 104 Business Opportunity 105 Mobile Homes

200 PROPERTIES FOR RENT

201 Commercial Rental 202 Exchange 203 Other 204 Carey 205 Fairfield 206 Shoshone 207 Hailey/Bellevue 208 Mid-Valley 209 Ketchum/Sun Valley 210 Short Term 211 Roommate Wanted 212 Want to Rent

300 EMPLOYMENT

301 Contractors 302 Services 303 Jobs Needed 304 Help Wanted

400 TRANSPORTATION

401 Aircraft 402 Nautical 403 Motorcycles 404 Snowmobiles 405 American Automobiles 406 Import Automobiles 407 Trucks/4WD Vehicles 408 Recreational Vehicles 409 Auto Accessories

500 MARKETPLACE

501 Antiques 502 Appliances 503 Furniture 504 Household 505 Clothing 506 Wood, Woodstoves 507 Cameras 508 Computers 509 Electronic Equipment 510 Musical Instruments 511 Ski Equipment 512 Sports Equipment 513 Construction 514 Equipment 515 Farm & Livestock 516 Pets 517 Yard Sales 518 Whatever

600 OTHER

601 Classes 602 Lost & Found 603 Miscellany 604 Miscellany II 605 Needed 606 Rides & Riders 607 Too Unique to Classify 609 Public Notices 610 Letters of Thanks

Note: If there are no ads for a category, that category is left out for the week.

*EARLY DEADLINE* for November 24, day after Thanksgiving. All ads and changes need to be in on November 15 for the November 24th paper. The office will be CLOSED On November 24th & 25th. Have a Good Holiday! Sun Valley - A Great Place to Visit, A Better Place to Live! Search Sun Valley Luxury Real Estate http://www.svluxuryre.com Jim @ Coldwell Banker. jim@svmproperties.com 208-720-1212

Trailer Home In The Meadows for sale. Call 208-720-6784.

220 E River St, Downtown Ketchum Single Office Space Available, $275 All inclusive. 208-481-0139 Bellevue: Artisan Shop Space, approx 2000 sq ft w/ multiple rooms for various uses, great light, radiant heat. AND, access to corals & small barn & extensive garden spaces. No smoking, farm type animals possible! $1,000/month + utils. Call Brian at 208-720-4235 or check this out at http://www.svmlps.com Long Terms /Bellevue E.G. Willis Building Heart of Hailey Great Location Architecturally Unique Move In Special! Free Rent Now Available Prime Main St. Ground Level Space Call for details and to view Tiffany 208-788-4464 Gary 208-488-9709 Hailey: 513 N. Main Street Office or retail space for rent, visible from main street. Plenty of parking, Great location. Up to 1,550 s/f but can be split. 208-788-2817. Hailey: Prime Ground Level Office space, with large window views. 1,250 S/F. modern building. Double entry doors to this unit. Troy, 208-788-7446

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Sun Valley Road location. Off street parking 1400 sq. ft. 720-5213

Ketchum - For Lease: Small 2nd Floor office for lease all utilities included. $900/mo located at 100 S Leadville Ave. Christiania Building •1749 sq.ft. office/retail - Ground floor. •896 sq.ft. - 2nd floor. •824 sq.ft 2nd floor office available 12.15.17 Hailey - For Lease: 409 N Main st. 5,400 Sq.Ft. com bined 1st and 2nd floors. 2,400 Sq.Ft basement. Meriwether Building •1431 sq.ft - retail corner space. •1169 sq.ft - retail space, next to Iconoclast Books & Gifts. •2nd floor offices- from 767 sq.ft. to 1034 sq.ft. Croy Street Exchange Building. •2nd floor offices from 448 sq.ft. to 992 sq.ft. $1.00 per sq. ft. gross, plus power. Call 208-725-0800

House On Silver Creek for rent. 2BD, 3BA. $1,500/mo 208-720-5150 Picabo Idaho Rental 3 BD, 2 BA House. Recent remodel. Nice quiet neighborhood. No smoking. No pets. $900/month, $1,000 refundable cleaning/security deposit required. 208-358-3944 or 208-481-1347.

Bellevue: 2 BD, 1 BA, House, Lovely well maintained. Old Bellevue. Green living, new flooring. No Smoking. Pets Maybe. Flexible lease, $1,255, 208-841-9566. Bellevue: Artist’s Home. Charming secluded, views. Fine furnishings, 3 car attached garage. Fenced garden 2-3BD/2BA. Available December thru April. 2-5 months lease. Pets with deposit. $1,900. 208-721-2774 Charming Home Northeast Hailey. Very clean and excellent condition. Two beds, two baths & two car garage, great room layout, lots of natural light, gas heat, gas cooktop, WD, DW, nice yard and patios. For more details call Jeff, 208-309-4444. East Hailey Apartment: 2BD, 2BA 1 year lease. $1,200/month rent. $1,000 Security/Damage/Cleaning Deposit. Includes water, sewer, trash, landscaping, snow removal, fridge, gas range, dishwasher, stack washer/dryer hook up. 2 parking spaces. Call 208-720-6720. Hailey: 1BD/1BA Apartment, north end of River St in downtown. Walk to everything! $750/mo, 12-month lease. 208-578-4412 or apply at: www.AllstarPropertyServicesInc.com Hailey: 2 BD/2 BA Home in Cutters, unfurnished, 2 story, custom and like-new. Big entry deck, back yard garden patio, mature landscaping, 2 car garage, good all-day light. Hard wood floors in living/dining, gas log stove f/p, stone counters in kitchen & bathrooms, brushed stainless appliances in kitchen (inc gas stove!), front loading W/D, gas forced air heat. Carpet in upstairs bedrooms. No smoking, no pets. Available immediately. $1,800/month + utils. Call Brian at 208-720-4235 or check this out at www.svmlps.com Hailey: 2BD/1BA Apt in downtown Hailey. Upstairs corner unit. Clean, warm and quiet. No smoking, no pets. $795 per month. Call 208 481-2411. Hailey: 2BD/2BA Townhouse, $925 per month. End unit and hardwood floors. Great in-town location. Walk to everything. Safe, clean and well maintained. Pets are considered. 1..Go and look at building at 311 N River St. 2. If interested, text your email address to 720-1821. 3. You will be emailed an application, fill out and email back. Avail. 12/1. Hailey: 3BD 2BA, 2 car garage. Brand new remodel, new carpet & paint throughout. New appliances. Private fenced yard. GFA, unfurnished, no pets, no smoking. 6+ mth. lease. $2,000 mth. Della View, dry side. 1st, lst, dep. Landscaping inc. 208-721-8020 Hailey: 4 BD, 2 BA, House, 601 S 4th Ave, Hailey. Large fenced yard, beautiful trees, large windows, high end appliances, 2 car garage. Available now, month to month. Flexible lease, furnished, 2,300 sq. ft. W/D, Microwave, Dishwasher, Fireplace/ Wood Stove, Air Conditioning, Outdoor Area, Carpet. Parking Available. Pets Allowed, Storage Available, $2,400, 208-891-8333. Call or text.

Hailey: Clean and Quiet mid Woodside home. 3BD, 2BA, 2 car garage, split floor plan, good neighborhood, fenced yard, gas heat and water, newer appliances, W/D hookups, no smoking, pets negotiable. $1,650/mo Available Jan. 1st. 208-720-4633. Hailey: Spacious Deerfield 3BD/2BA, garage and fenced yard. Unfurnished, 12-month lease, $2000 p/month. 208-578-4412 or apply at www.AllstarPropertyServicesInc.com Hailey: Super Nice 1BD/1BA Apartment! Uncommon set up and newer construction. Large, unfurnished, custom living space over 2 car garage. Tons of light, radiant heat, full kitchen (inc gas stove!), gas log f/p, & stack w/d. No smoking, no pets. Avail ASAP. $1,300/month + utils. Call Brian at 208-720-4235 or check this out at www.svmlps.com Picabo 20 Acre Horse Ranch 3 Bed, 4 Bath 4,800 sq.ft., 1 story Calif Ranch style home with 5 stall barn. Includes 1/2 mi. of Silvercreek. Long term 12 mo. lease. $2,500/mo. + utilities. Available Now. Call Sara at 208-720-1147. saracolwell@gmail.com West Hailey Home for rent. Great location, private yard. 4 bed, 1 bath, W/D. Some pets OK. $1,400 + utilities. New paint and carpet in progress. 208-726-2721 text ok.

1 Bed, 1 Bath Ketchum Condo Great Baldy Views, Furnished, No Pets, 1 year lease, Available Now. $1,000 per month plus electric. Call 208-622-3510. 1BD Furnished Condo. 1 year lease. $1,200/mo + Util. 720-2899 2 BD, 2 BA, 2-Story Ketchum Condo $1,800. Jan 1. Furnished. Spacious. Very clean. Leather furn, plasma TV, New W/D, Cable, DW, Hot Tub. Inside storage. No smoking or pets. 200 yds from River Run. Mountain views. Flex lease. Pics and video: www.tomiselin.com/condo Password: “condo” 858-888-2278. 2 BD, 2BA Elkhorn Condo. Views of Baldy. $1,500/mo. 208-720-9774. Downtown Ketchum. 3 Bed 1 Bath house. Lot of parking, walk to everything. Unfurnished, new paint, Blinds, windows. $1,495 per month plus electric, W,S,T and Lawn Care included. 1 year lease. No pets. Black Diamond Management 208-622-3510 Elkhorn: 2 BD/2 BA Condo, fully furnished and outfitted, “turnkey.” Top floor, all-on-one level, and views to Baldy! Very clean and well maintained with good light, all appliances (except clothes W/D), wood burning f/p, hot tub/pool for complex. No smoking, no pets. Available early December. $1,600/month + utilities. Call Brian at 208-720-4235 or check this out at www.svmlps.com Elkhorn: 5BD/3.5BA With garage, available immediately, unfurnished, $2,850 p/month, 6-12-month lease. 208-578-4412 or apply at www.AllstarPropertyServicesInc.com Have Your Own Space, 3BD/2BA furnished home with attached two car garage on cul-de-sac next to creek in convenient Elkhorn. Entertain on the 2nd level deck with a peek of Bald Mt. or hit the close by bike trails/bus. Small dog ok, no smoking $2,400/mo flexible lease but long term preferred. Amenities W/D, Microwave, Dishwasher, Fireplace, Outdoor Area, Cable TV Hookups, Carpet, Laundry Facilities, office / storage available. Lonneker4@yahoo.com 858-754-7511. Hulen Meadows Guest Apartment 1Bedroom / 1 Bath, 600 SF, Unfurnished. No pets. $950 per month + utilities. 1 year lease. Contact John 208-720-5776 Ketchum: 2BD Trailer, lg deck. $1,265/mo, option to buy. 720-3157.

In Sun Valley Area, Ketchum. An incredible 3+BD, 3+BA private home exquisitely furnished. Mountain decor, private yard and garage. High end appliances, granite. Avail. month to month or lease option. Pet Possible. Call for details and pricing: 208-720-7777. Ketchum: 1 BD, 1 BA, Condo, two story Pine Ridge, Warm Springs Rd. Month to month lease, unfurnished, 750 sq. ft., Utilities Included, $700/month 1st & last, 726-7566. Ketchum: 1BD/1BA. Walk to town, RR lifts, 1-yr lease, pets ok, clean, unfurnished, parking, quiet complex, WD on site, some utilities. On bike path. No smoking. $850 per mo. Available now. Billy 208-450-9476. Ketchum: 2 BD, 2 BA totally remodeled Ridge condo with contemporary feel overlooking golf course, end unit, gas fireplace, brand new kitchen. 12 month lease, unfurnished, Elkhorn amenities. $1,500. Call 208-721-0342. Ketchum: 3 BD, 2 BA, Upstairs Duplex, updates, in Warm Springs. Location, great sun and views, flexible terms possible. Dog negotiable. Good credit only. 6-12 months. $2,175 /month First/last + deposit 208-721-0856. Ketchum: 3 BD, 3.5 BA, House, Newly renovated West Ketchum house located on 141 Bordeaux. Very modern with unobstructed views of cliffs on Baldy. Very private, fenced in yard. Dogs allowed. Available with or w/o furniture. See http://goo.gl/2wVG7p for pics. 2675 sq. ft. $3,800, ceo@scottevest.com 2 car heated garage 208-806-1776 Ketchum: 3 Bed/2 Bath lovely west Ketchum log home. Includes all appliances, remodeled home with granite kitchen, large paver back yard patio, storage shed, no garage. Prefer 6+ month lease, $2,500 month + utilities. 208-720-4429 Ketchum: 3BD, 2BA downtown, walk everywhere. Tile and wood floors, 3 decks, private small fenced yard. Carport, W/D, dishwasher, radiant heat, wood stove. Commercial office possible, 1 dog negotiable. $2,200. Available Now. 208-726-8500. Ketchum: 4 BD/2.5 BA Custom Home, large and unfurnished, contemporary architecture, great light, in a quiet neighborhood. All appliances (including gas stove!), gas log stove in living room, gas forced air heat, office, mix of wood flooring and carpeting, nice outdoor deck space, & over-sized single car garage. No smoking, pet considered. Available now! $3,250/month + utils. Call Brian at 208-720-4235 or check this out at www.svmlps.com Ketchum: Big Affordable Condo! Great for larger family, housemates, or construction crew! 5BD/4BA, furnished, “turn key,” and ready to occupy! Great location - easy walk to downtown. Very clean and straight, all appliances, attached garage, pet considered. Available early November. $3,500/month + utilities. Call Brian at 208-720-4235 or check this out at www.svmlps.com Ketchum: Sunny, Very Clean, lovely 2B/2BA West Ketchum condo. Last tenant stayed 7 yrs! Upstairs unit, vaulted ceiling in liv room, green views from nearly every window, private deck, handy locking storage unit on ground level for bikes & skis, wood burning fireplace, W/D and assigned parking. No pets, no smoking. Unfurnished, basic cable included with 1 yr lease. First, last and deposit for move in. Available now. Price reduction $1,300! 720-7306. Ketchum: Warm Springs 3BD, 3.5 BA, $2,000 per month. Fully furnished, utilities included. No smoking, no pets. Call Diane 208-726-9500. RV Hookups Available, Northfork Trailer Park, $400. 208-720-0403


Express

Ketchum: Warm Springs: 2 BD/1 BA house. $1,550/month plus utilities. Available through May 1. Either unfurnished or partially furnished. 1 car garage with storage. Large unfenced yard and W/D. Gas forced air. Quiet street a half block from bus line. Dogs ok, no smoking. svtasks@gmail.com. Luxurious, Private Riverfront Home. Exquisite views of Baldy. Decks overhang the river. On Lake Creek x-country ski trails. 5 minutes to lifts. Gourmet kitchen, pizza oven, 3 fireplaces, woodstove, hot tub, steam shower, exercise room, home theater. 1/31 - 6/6 flexible. 720-6220. South Ketchum: Custom Log Home 3 BD, 3 1/2 BA, gourmet kitchen, hardwood floors, radiant heat, 3 car heated garage, 1,500 sq FTC. basement, waterfront, 4 acre near bike path. Flexible lease. Available now. 208-720-6311. Townhouse For Rent. Ski Sun Valley, November through April. Beautiful family home. Fenced yard. Approximately 2,000 sq. ft in Warm Springs area. 3 bedrooms plus flex room. $3,500 per month, utilities included. Photos available upon request. 425-327-9908. Warm Springs: 2 BD/2 BA “Classic” Townhome, over/under floor plan (no neighbors above!), unfurnished, all appliances, wood stove, single car garage. Vaulted ceilings, good light, views, decks, close to WS lifts and bus stop. No smoking, pet considered. Available early November. $1,500/month + utils. Call Brian at 208-720-4235 or check this out at www.svmlps.com West Ketchum: Unfurnished 1,836 sq. ft. 3 BD, 2.5 BA house. Newer wood floors, carpeting, quartz countertops & appliances. Open floor plan, fenced back yard. 2 car garage, W/D, snow removal, W/S/G included. F/L/D, LT Lease, now available. $3,000. Call 208-201-4646.

Single Adult Female looking for a 1 BD- Ketchum/Warm Springs area. Local landscape design professional. Have rented in Ketchum for 5 years, now searching for a new lease starting Jan. 1. Very responsible, clean, and organized. Great references. Please text or call: 208- 720-2089

Assistant Need help? Running out of time for everyday tasks? Organizing, decorating, bookkeeping, running errands. You name it and I can help. 123assistant@gmail.com Come home to a sparkling home. Housekeeping with love Residential - construction Commercial cleaning 30 years experience and good references Cell - 481-0347 - Linda Love lovelindalou@gmail.com Handyman Jack of all Trades. Reliable, trustworthy, clean. Small jobs to large remodel projects, or just the honey-do list. Mark, 208-573-1784 Sun Valley Executive Services Has an opening for a new client. Offering personal/executive assistance, accounting, event planning, concierge services and more. 22 years experience locally. For resume and references call 208-720-3780. YOU have enough to do! MAID FOR YOU/AT YOUR SERVICE provides professional property mgmt & residential services: expert cleaning; organizing. YOU name it! The Party Poopers. We Scoop the Poop! Exc. refs. 208-788-7976 ph/fx. maidforyou_atyourservice@cox.net

Are you looking for a fun and fast paced place to work with competitive benefits? Pete Lane’s Mountain Sports is hiring for the following: • Season Locker Concierge • Retail Associate Visit www.sunvalley.com/jobs for more information and to apply! Are you struggling to pay bills and eat well? Are you between jobs, retired, or a single parent trying to feed kids on a single income? The Hunger Coalition wants to help. Call us 788-0121. www.thehungercoalition.org ¿Usted está luchando para pagar sus cuentas y alimentarse bien? ¿No tiene trabajo fijo, está jubilado/a o es madre soltero tratando de alimentar a sus niños con un solo ingreso? Hunger Coalition le quiere ayudar. 788-0121. http://thehungercoalition.org

BEST OF THE VALLEY! Gold Medal - Best Hotel Bronze Medal - Best Employer Join our team delivering award winning service to guests & locals, in Ketchum’s living room. Full time, part time or seasonal employment available. Server - $8/hr + tips Bartender - $10/hr + tips Housekeeper - $12/hr Houseperson - $12/hr Front Desk (PT) - $13/hr Please visit our website for details about open positions and to apply: www.limelighthotels.com/careers

Charming Cabin Rustic and charming log cabin in Mid-Valley. Remodeled 2 Bed / 2 Bath, wrap-around porches, great views. Close to the river. W/D. Furnished. Some utilities. $1,400/mo. Available Dec thru May. Call 510-325-9824 or clayb20@gmail.com Mid Valley, 3BD, 2 1/2 BA furnished house. Rental available: January 1st, 2018 - April 1st, 2018. $1,200 per month. a_rule200283340@yahoo.com Quaint Tiny - Living Cabin Lofted bedroom, sitting area, mini kitchen, new bath. Utilities included. $500/mo. Mid-Valley. 510-325-6847

Fall Special! Responsible Roommate to share remodeled 2 story townhouse in E. Hailey w/great views. Own furnished BD/BA. Near bike path, public trans & more. Must like dogs. I have 1. No additional pets. Ref. req’d. Short term possible. 1 month sec. dep. $475. 788-7976 Warm Springs, Large furnished room with private bath. 1 mile to lift, Wifi and utilities included. No smoking, available now. $625/mo. 858-249-8831.

I Need a house or condo for my family for Christmas. Dec. 22nd-26th. 4+ bunk room or loft. 8 adults and 3 well behaved children. Ketchum preferred. 1 bedroom and bath on main level. Please call MB Davis. Great references. 208-721-2877. I’m Looking For a Studio or a 1 Bedroom Apartment. Hailey/ Bellevue/Ketchum area. I Work in Hailey. No pets, Responsible, Mature. Long Term Renter. Please call 208-309-2699. thanks Responsible, Mature, Adult, non-smoker, no pets looking for a 1 bedroom. Excellent local references. Please call 208-890-9017.

$$$$$$$ Multi Position Person: Looking for a multi talented person to perform maintenance projects, assist housekeeping and home owners, maintain vehicles / landscaping and snow removal equipment. Must be flexible, able to change directions quickly and work extended lengths of time during owners arrival and occupancy. MUST have a sense of humor, 207-720-1412. Kbco7000@gmail.com Alarm Installer: Sentinel has an opening for an Alarm Installer. Experience preferred but not necessary. Pay based on experience. Must have valid driver’s license. Email resume to mark@sentinelfire.com A.C. Houston Lumber Company in Ketchum is looking for: • Counter Sales Position • Contractor Sales Position - Full Time - Experience Preferred • Stocking Clerk, must be able to lift 80 lbs. • Drivers Class-B & Class-A pref. Must be able to speak English. Contact Bob or Jon Houston. 208-726-5616

Administrative Support Location: Rocky Mountain Hardware Contact: Jay Dahlstrom (jdahlstrom@rockymountainhardware.com) RMH is looking for a strong candidate to fill the position of Administrative Support. This person will perform data entry, interact with customers via phone call, run reports, utilize strong computer and typing skills to perform the functions of the position, purchase supplies, utilize email frequently, and display a willingness to perform varying tasks. If your skillset fits this description, please send your resume for consideration. Wage: DOE. Dog Sitter Needed in exchange for housing. 808-358-1157. Early Morning Home delivery newspaper route available in Hailey/Ketchum area. Must have own reliable vehicle. 800-574-8751 or 208-543-8751.

Great Pay & Benefits: Medical/Dental/Vision Insurance, 401K Vacation/Sick/ Personal Time Off. Use of company ski passes Aspen Skiing Company is an equal opportunity employer.

Best Western Kentwood Lodge has a Friday and Saturday late night Front Desk Guest Service position available. Join our team. Please apply in person at 180 S. Main St., Ketchum.

Bigwood Bread Is looking for a Full Time Dish Washer and Line Cook. Must be available between 8am and 5pm and must be able to lift 50 lbs. Hard work and dedication a must. Must be able to multi task. We are a growing business with hours to give, and are looking for a long term team member to join our growing business. Please send resume to info@bigwoodbread.com or visit us at 271 Northwood Way in Ketchum.

Bigwood Bread is looking for Front of House Café Manager. We are expanding our operation soon and are looking for a qualified individual to grow with us long term. We offer daytime hours with occasional evenings. Ability to please customers, handle a fast pace, multi task and work well with others is a must. Previous restaurant experience is necessary. Competitive pay DOE. Also looking for long term Front of House Staff. Willing to train. Room to grow. Please send resume to info@bigwoodbread.com or visit 271 Northwood Way in the Ketchum Industrial Park. Knitters, Sewers, Quilters needed. Call or text 208-720-6759.

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Cristina’s Restaurant is hiring full time staff for the following positions: • Line Cook • Takeout/Catering Cook • Bakery • Servers Must be able to work flexible hours, including weekends and holidays. Please apply in person at the restaurant or fax resume to 208-725-0751. Drivers Needed for Sun Valley Limo & Taxi. Looking for 2 Drivers, must be neat in appearance. Make great money over the holidays and the ski season. Need to know the valley well. Please call Kirk, 208-481-2119. Earn Extra Money Delivering the new Names and Numbers Sun Valley, ID Telephone Directory. If interested please call: 844-589-6411 Ex. 4 or email below and reference: (SUNV17) recruiting@ soonercustomdistributionsinc.com

Formula Sports, the local’s ski shop, is hiring its winter crew. Hardgood & Softgood SalesPT/FT, experienced preferred. Rental Tech’s-FT/PT, skiing background preferred. Please email your resume to: formulasports@msn.com Enjoy Working Outdoors? At Horizon Air the Ramp/Customer Service Agent is often the first person that our customers will meet in person. Not only is customer service very important, so is the ability to work in physically demanding and varying weather conditions. One moment a CSA is scanning people on to a flight and the next, they are repeatedly lifting 50lb bags on and off aircraft or de-icing an aircraft 30 ft. in the air. This role is perfect for someone who can work flexible hours. If you’ve worked outside or in physically demanding conditions with some customer service computer oriented experience, then this is the job for you. It’s hard but also very rewarding. Opportunities for advance exist for everyone especially those who excel at their performance. Exceptional attendance and reliability is imperative. Strong computer skills required $11.86 + Full Medical and Flight Benefits. If interested in this position please email: tory.ostic@alaskaair.com

Friedman Memorial Airport Seeks Seasonal Airport Terminal Hosts/Information Officer The Friedman Memorial Airport in Hailey, Idaho is seeking qualified applicants for seasonal Airport Terminal Host/Information Officers. Deadline to Apply: 11/30/17 Estimated Employment Period: 12/15/17 - 01/02/18 Wage: $14/hr. Application information is available online at http://iflysun.com/business-opportunities-employment/ or in the Friedman Memorial Airport Manager’s Office, 1616 Airport Circle, Hailey, ID 83333. Applications/ Resumes will be accepted until November 30, 2017. Qualified Candidates may submit their qualifications and anticipated salary requirements to lisa@iflysun.com or deliver them to the Airport Manager’s Office. Experienced, Energetic, Committed Servers and/or Bus Person for lunch service Monday through Friday. Employment will extend through Winter 2017/2018. Send resume to: rsbrrys@yahoo.com

Hank Brown Painting Painters Wanted. Hourly wages depend on how many years of experience. 208-788-5831 or 208-720-7440

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Janitorial Positions, Full & Part Time. Experience preferred with references but will train the right person. Phone for application. 208-720-1226

Ketchum Public House and Hailey Taproom Help Wanted! Hot-Line Cooks and Servers wanted! Full and part-time available immediately. Bring in resume.

Ketchum’s #1 Rated Hotel Rarely Available Front Desk: There’s only one Number 1, the Knob Hill Inn. If you would like to join a fun, energetic family-oriented team, stop by the hotel and introduce yourself. Pick up an application or email your resume to jschade@knobhillinn.com. Benefits available, shared ski pass with the best wages in town! Mountain Pride Pickup Driver. Drive our non-CDL truck to Boise every Wednesday morning, make pickups and return to Ketchum. Please call 208-725-5600. Now Hiring! Valley Temp Services General Laborers & Housekeeping, Carpenter Apprentices, & Landscapers. Call for appointment. 726-9045 www.valleytemp.com Office Manager CPA firm seeking Office Manager. Applicant must have strong bookeeping-accounting knowledge and be able to multitask effectively, while maintaining a positive work environment. Must also have a professional work ethic, good people and phone skills as well as experience with A/P, A/R, payroll and administrative management and coordination. Knowledge of QuickBooks, Excel, Microsoft Word and Outlook proficiency required. Please Email cover letters, resumes, and references to: ken@lfp2.com Openings For Full time Receptionist and part time Legal Assistant in busy Ketchum law firm engaged in litigation, real estate and corporate law. Experience in law office preferred. Pay commensurate with experience. Please email resume with references to jrl@lawsonlaski.com or fax to 208-725-0076.

PK’s Ski Shop is now hiring for the upcoming ski season. Ski Tuning Rental Techs, Retail Sales. Part-time & full-time positions Flexible hours, Corporate Ski Pass, Industry Perks. No phone calls please. Email a resume to: Ritchie@pkski.com RECEPTIONIST Jarvis Group Architects is looking for a P/T Professional Receptionist. Must have computer skills (Microsoft Office). 20-25 hrs per week, M-F. Email cover letter and resume in PDF format. No phone calls please. Email: careers@jarvis-group.com Restaurant Esta at Club 511 is looking for experienced Kitchen Staff and Servers Apply at Esta2133@gmail.com 726-0841 Smoky Mountain Pizzeria Grill is now accepting applications for Grill Cooks and servers Long-term, day and night shift. 200 Sun Valley Road, Ketchum Sun Valley Woodworks is seeking a Woodworker for custom furniture and cabinet production. Experience preferred. 208-788-1907.


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Snow Removal Equipment Operators. On call. Experience needed. For pickup plows and/or compact loaders. Pay DOE. Please call 208-726-5267.

Want To Do More for your community? Ever considered becoming a Firefighter? The Ketchum Fire Department is now accepting applications for Paid-on-Call Firefighters. No experience necessary - we will teach you the skills. Come by the KFD firehouse at 480 East Ave. N, Ketchum to apply. Call Sr. Lt. Tory Frank at 208-726-7805 for more information. Deadline is Tuesday, 11/28.

Motor Home Storage unit for sale. 50’X14’. Insulated and heated in Picabo. 208-720-5150. Own A Classic 1986 Holiday Rambler “Imperial”, 33 foot, Class A. New engine and generator. $8,000 or reasonable offer Bruce at 208-788-3248 bclarken56@gmail.com RV Storage Available, uncovered. $50 per vehicle. 1 covered space available, $60. 1 storage building available, $75/mo. 1 mile South of Bellevue. 208-481-1130

St Luke’s Wood River is currently hiring CNA’s for our Med/Surg Unit.! If you are a patient focused care giver we have a great opportunity for a full time Certified Nursing Assistant. Schedule is 3 12 hour shifts per week Night and Variable shift available. Position requires a current Idaho CNA certification and HS Diploma/GED, would prefer 6 months of experience. Please apply online at www.stlukeonline.org

The Barkin’ Basement is looking for a part-time Pick-up Assistant/ Sorter. Must be able to work weekends and holidays. A current drivers license is required, along with a satisfactory driving record and personal car insurance. Must be able to lift and carry 50+ lbs up and down stairs and be able to bend and reach. We are looking for a reliable, self-starting leader who can work well in a team and fast-paced environment. Bilingual is a plus. For more information call 208-788-3854 or email barkin@animalshelterwrv.org. Applications are available at the Barkin’ Basement 111 S. Main St. Hailey.

The Hailey Police Department is hiring for the position of School Resource Officer. This position is a 40 hour a week sworn full time position working at the Wood River High School located in Hailey. An Idaho POST Intermediate certificate (or its equivalent) is required. NASRO certification is desirable. The successful applicant will be working closely with school district administration and school staff. The City of Hailey Police Department is an accredited law enforcement agency and offers a competitive benefit package including PERSI retirement, medical, dental and vision insurance. Employees with the City of Hailey receive 13 paid holidays per year. Starting salary for this position is $56,000 to $60,000 depending on experience. Please send a letter of interest and a resume to Assistant Chief of Police David Stellers at dave.stellers@haileycityhall.org

Wages for all Nursing positions at Family Health Services have increased recently! Family Health Services has an opening in our Fairfield Clinic for an LPN, CMA, MA or CNA to provide support for general patient care and education. Applicants must be a graduate of an accredited Nursing, Medical Assisting or Certified Nursing program. 6 months experience preferred. 24-32 hours per week. This position includes a full range of benefits including health insurance, short and long-term disability, life insurance, PTO, holiday pay and 401(k) retirement. For a full job description, wage info and to apply: www.fhsid.org EEO/Drug Free Workplace

Want to work on the Mountain this winter? Our Mountain F&B team is still looking for the right folks to round out their front of house teams for the upcoming season! • Busser • Cashier • Food Runner • Host/Hostess Apply online at www.sunvalley.com/jobs

Warfield Distillery & Brewery Is Hiring! All Positions, front and back of house, daytime / nightime shifts available. Starting lunch service this winter. Come join our great team! Email: sean@warfielddistillery.com

*WARNING* When purchasing a vehicle, make sure that the title is in the name of the seller. Under Idaho motor vehicle code, a vehicle cannot be sold unless the title is in the name of the seller, (exception: Idaho licensed dealer). The seller shall provide the new purchaser a signed bill of sale showing the following: full description of vehicle, the vehicle identification #, amount paid & name(s) & address of the new purchaser. The bill of sale must be signed, dated and show actual mileage at the time of sale. If you have any questions, please contact your local assessor’s office.

1963 M.G.1. 2 dr sport sedan. 1100cc motor - fires - (restorable) No text. $600. 208-320-3048. 2003 Mini Cooper, S. John Cooper works. Manual transmission, good condition, snow tires included. 109,500 miles. $5,995. 208-720-3646

225/55/R17: 95% tread, Toyo Eclipse, $200 for 4. Nokian studded snow tires, $100 for 4. $250 for all 8. Text 208-720-0564 4 Tires 205/65R15C w/steel wheels and OEM hubcaps for VW Eurovan or others. C rated for heavier loads. Great shape, plenty of tread. $300 OBO. 4 Toyo 255/60R16 Observe winter tires w/ custom 5 spoke alloy VW Eurovan or Audi. Like new. $600 OBO. 720-2509 4 Tires Continental 275/65 R18 Were on a 2012 Ford F250 used approximately 25,000 miles. $100, Call or text 208-720-5994 Dodge Parts. Replacement 318 engine and rebuilt transmission 727. 3k miles on engine and transmission in van running for testing. $700, OBO. 806-316-7685. Jeep Wrangler Alloy wheels and BFG KO2 tires. Only 500 miles! Set of 5 for $999. Call or text Rob at 208-358-4651. Jeep Wrangler Barricade rock rails for 4 door. New condition. $225. Call or text Rob at 208-358-4651. Packline Model 90 full size car top cargo box in excellent condition. $200. firm. Contact at 206-595-6132 Studded Snow Tires Volkswagen Jetta Federal Himalaya WS2 studded snow tires (225/45/R17) w/ 2011 Jetta Sportwagon TDI rims. Excellent condition. $400. Call Dan 721-1754 Studded Snow Tires. 205/65R15 good cond. 4 for $100. 208-726-9098.

*ATTENTION* Buyers and Sellers should always exercise caution when participating in sales transactions. The Federal Trade Commission has a list of ways to avoid fraud, which can be found at: https://www.consumer.ftc.gov/ articles/pdf-0003-avoid-fraud.pdf

2 Genuine Santa Fe chairs. $100 each. Santa Fe armoire, 79” tall, 42” wide. $600. 208-726-3177. 2 Twin Mattresses in good condition, $25. each. 208-481-0830 All Oak Oval country style coffee table. 48x28, nice and solid for $125 OBO. 208-726-4067 Black Wood Coffee Table, excellent Condition, $150 OBO, 208-309-0470 Brown Table. Round, oak, 42” wide, a leaf that goes with it that is 18”. $50. Call Patty at 208-450-9028. Butcher Block Cart/Table, 33¾ tall X 22¼x22¼, laminated top, slatted lower shelf, side knives holder, ball casters. Great condition. $175. 208-720-9033 Cal. King Log bedroom set. Headboard, footboard, 5 foot dresser with 6 large drawers, 2 nightstands. Custom made. $700. 208-720-0577. Classic ‘50’s Diner booth set. This super fun set shows a little wear but is in good condition. 2 red and white booth benches (48”x25”x39”) and a white and chrome table (36”x48” x30”) included. $3,200 new, selling for $750. Online photos 208-7203478. Custom King Log bed. Includes 2 night stands. $500. 208-726-3177. Free Blue Sleeper couch. Good condition, come and get it. 208-622-5734. Giant Bean Bag Chair. Huge! Costs over $220 brand new. Burgundy color. Used. Asking only $50 or best offer. Call or text 208-475-4835 Grey 3 Cushion 208-309-0470

Sofa,

$250,

Hickory Bar Stools covered in Ralph Lauren fabric. A pair for $100. These come with more of same fabric to recover as necessary. 208-720-0481. Irish Pine Wardrobe. Can hold about 30-40 hanging long garments. Old and very attractive. Must sell. Only $350-a real steal. Call or email for picture or information. robertakahn@hotmail.com or 208720-0481 Oak Roll Top desk with lots of drawers and cubbies and matching oak high back spindle swivel chair. $300. Dark walnut look desk with seven drawers. $100. 208-720-0577. Pine Cupboard- Old Irish and in great condition. Large and can hold lots of items. Purchased 30 years ago for $3,000 but must sell for only $475. Call or email for picture or information. 208-720-0481 robertakahn@hotmail.com Red Couch And love seat. 2 sets of slip covers. $300. Sleigh coffee table, 7 foot, $100. 208-720-4557. Sealy Queen size plush top bed with Box Spring, frame, headboard ( dark brown) and matching side tables. Originally from Ashley Furniture, gently used. $200 for all, call 208-515-4148. Sofa With Matching lounge chair and matching ottoman. Good condition. $150. 208-720-1113.

‘98 Subaru Impreza Outback Sport. 178K miles, new brakes, good tires, engine runs very well. Sound system included! $999 OBO. 208-720-8797.

Antique Dresser. 5 drawer, upright, $150 OBO. 208-309-2746.

Sofa: Genuine Nubuck leather, approx, 78” long. Excellent cond. $600. 503-939-1141.

Teenage Toyota Corolla for sale. Year = 2000; Mileage = 213k; Condition = Fair; Runs = Yes; Cost = $900 Cash. Probably faster than a Prius. Call 970-219-4853

French Riddling Wine Rack. Very old. Excellent condition! $300. Antique dining room breakfront. 57” wide, 77” tall. Beautiful - must see. $300. 208-726-3177.

Teak Dining Table, 84” x 42”, $800, and 8 matching chairs $800. Discount for both. Great condition, beautiful. Text for photo. 208-720-5596

‘02 Toyota Sequoia. Great condition, new tires. $4,900. 720-2803. 2000 Toyota Landcruiser ALL WHEEL DRIVE. Great winter vehicle. Garaged. Kept in great condition. $8,500. 805-729-1030

2013 Winnebago Era Mercedes Sprinter van. Complete motor home. 49K miles. 18MPG, turbo diesel engine. $64,500. 858-344-9003. rinsinger@msn.com Camper Van 2003 Ford E250, 5.4L V8, Prof. conversion, Westy layout, pop-top, sleeps 4, gas range, frig, heater, generator, front and back tow hitch, roof rack. 113,000 miles. $22,000 720-2085.

Brand New! Panasonic FV-11VHL2 WhisperWarm 110 CFM Ceiling Mounted Fan/Heat/Light-Night-Light Combination, White. Asking $220 OBO. 208-450-9470 call/text. Espresso Maker, Gaggia Classic, brews espresso and steams milk in seconds. Great crema and micro foam, beautiful machine, runs like new. $200. text or call 208-720-4099

Tilting Artist/Drafting/Activity table. White in color with adjustable height and tilt. Excellent condition and very well priced at $50. 208-720-0481. Weathered Bedroom Pine dresser. 8 drawers. $300. Pine armoire (Sierra Madre) holds large TV, 76” tall, 46” wide, 2 drawers, 2 storage. $300. Both like new. 208-726-3177. Wood Queen Post bed, Great condition, $400. 208-309-0470

Miele Stainless Steel Built-in Coffee System. 24 Inch Whole Bean, non-plumbed. Perfect condition. $999 firm. 208-721-0606.

File Cabinet. 4 drawers, 52” tall, beige $20. Photo Available. 208-720-3780.

Older Whirlpool Washer and Dryer, $100. Call for pictures. John 208-788-0025.

Incense Burner, electric, beautiful, black and gold ceramic. Used once. $25. 208-726-3416

Whirlpool Stove. Convection and bake. 2 years old. Aqualift technology. Paid $800 asking $400 OBO. 208-788-3110. Whirlpool Washing Machine in good condition. Lightly used, $200 OBO. 726-4962

Little Chief Smoker. Front loading with 6 shelves. In good condition. Just in time to smoke your Elk meat! Can send picture. $25 208-720-725605 Orchid House: Indoor glass greenhouse with programmable lights and heat for seedlings or tropical plants. Approximately 3’ X 2’ X 4’ and includes an extra set of lights. $100. 208-720-1855. Patio Table 60” metal with glass top & lazy susan server $80. Needs painting. 4 metal/mesh chairs & 2 rockers- $15 Total for set $180 or OBO. 208-309-1222 Stool, Wood With square rush seat. 29” high. Seat is 16” sq. $15. 208726-3416 Tiffany Ceiling Lamp, hangs, neutral colored, perfect condition. $125. 721-8810. Wool Rug - 9’X 6’ handwoven rag style. Very good condition. Green shades with fringe border. Priced to move at $125. 208-720-0481. Yucca Plants, 5 - 3’ to 6 ‘, $40 to $60. 208-788-9007.

1/2 Dozen Sweaters (L-XL). I have too many good looking ones. $30-$40 each. 208-720-2162. Australia Stockman Coats (Morrison). Brown, regular and long lengths. XXL. Like new. $50/ea. 720-2162. Chaps, Dark Brown Suede, custom made western riding with fringe. Ladies small, like new, $35. 208788-7976 Dale of Norway classic ski sweaters. Excellent Condition. Mens size LG. Womens LG & XL. Several of each to choose from, 4 total. $50-$100. Photos Avail. 208720-3780 Long, Black Aussie, Outback duster coat. Repels rain and snow. Keeps you warm and stylish. Women’s small. Like new. $50. 208-788-7976 Morland, Velour Lambskin coat (tan). Medium size (length 34”and sleeves, 32”) Made in Glastonbury, England. $150. 208-720-2162. Red/Black, Womens Columbia, winter 3 way jacket with heavy fleece liner, like new. Size Med. $50. 208788-7976

* Firewood, Mike Beck * Maple, Applewood, Pine, Fir., Cherry, Tamarack and Locust. Any length. Kindling. Split & Delivered. Money back guarantee. Stacking & Free Samples available. Open 7 days a week, 7am-9pm. 208-788-2895 I Have Musical Gear, i.e. guitar, amps, etc. to trade for cord wood. 208-788-3674. Seasoned Firewood. Now Available. Stacking Available. Bill Whitehead, 208-481-0742.

Lowepro Camera Backpack. Brand new, tags still on, never used. Firm at $75. Retail $129. 721-8810.

Need a Wizard? For expert assistance call Leland Bruns, the PC Wizard. 788-1956 or Dan Casali, the MacWizard, 726-5120. We solve hard problems.

Yaesu VX-5 Transceiver. Remote mic and extra clamshell. Great radio $100 OBO. Almost new Samsung 42” TV with wall mount. $275 OBO. 720-2509.

Kirby Heritage Vacuum. All attachments plus shampooer attachment. $450 OBO. 208-788-4755 or 208-727-7469. Rubbermaid Style Storage Bins. Used, but in great shape. Have 12 of them for $10 each. Call or text 208-475-4835

Beautiful, Antique, Grand piano, $999. Pics available on request. 720-2603.


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2010 Black Diamond Zealots (182) with Dynafit bindings in excellent shape - $200 OBO - 757-636-3040 2016 Stockli GS 170 with Marker Bindings. Great race ski for a smaller person. $150 208-720-3365 2017 Mens Salomon District snowboard Bindings, size Medium in black and white. $100. Call or Text for more info. 251-454-9440. 2017 Rossignol Xium S1 Skate Skis 180 Rottefella Xcelerator Pro Bindings $625 OBO. 2017 Rossignol Xium WC Skate Boots, Sz 43.5. $400 OBO. Perfect condition. Sold separately or together for better deal. Call 208-721-3211 All Mountain Blizzard crush skis with bindings. 156cm. Tip,132, waist, 98, tail, 122. Twin tips. Older but hardly used. $150. 208-726-3951. Atomic Backcountry Ski with Dynafit bindings and skins. 174 length, 125-88-111. $150. Volkl Mantra skis, 177 length, 98 underfoot. $100. Call Steve at 208-450-9164. Atomic Boots. 110 RS Redster. 24.5eu or 285mm. Skid 5 days, brand new condition. $250, 721-1028 Atomic Skate Skis, ARC 178 cm $80; Fischer RCS soft cold $60; Salomon Equipe 8 179 cm. All kept with travel wax, SNS bindings, text or call 208-720-4099 Board Bin Season Snowboard leases now available. High end great riding boards, boots and bindings. Trade in as you grow. Starting at $89. For info call 726-1222 Brand New, Head Super Joy womens skis with Joy11 bindings. Size 148cm. Screaming deal. $349. Call or text 208-720-4901 Columbia Ski Jacket. Down, Omniheat, removable hood, water /wind proof, powder skirt, pockets/ pouches, pit zips & more. Like new M/LG. $50. 208-720-9033.

K2 Mt. Baker Superlights with Voile Switchback tele bindings. 174 cm $225 OBO. 3 Pair Voile Switchback bindings $50ea. Extra heel pieces for Voile. Linken Tele bindings. $40 OBO, Voile VPII bindings. $50. Garmont Syner-G 27.5 New liners never heated. $50. 720-2509 K2 Potion All Terrain skis, size 160, 127/80/109, Marker bindings. Skied on maybe 15 times. $150 208-720-2786 K2 Skis: Rictor 90 177cm-new $325, 172cm. Amp Charger $225, 160cm. Luv Machine 74TI (2017) $325, Rictor 174cm $150, Mach GS Race 181cm. $125, Motocross Comp. 174cm. $125, Lotta Luv 153cm. $125. All with Markers, hand tuned (only) & waxed. 726-8764 K2amp Rictor 163 cm with Salomon bindings. Excellent condition. skied only couple times. $130 OBO. 208-726-4067.

Free Board Bin Snowboard season leases for local kids. Limited supply available for kids who otherwise wouldn’t be able to ride this season. Call the Board Bin, 726-1222 or stop by 180 4th Street, Ketchum. Freedom Found Ski pass ‘17-’18. $1,200. 208-720-4596.

Skate Bindings; Salomon SNS Carbon RS2 Skate, in like new condition, $45. 208-720-4099

KJUS Formula Ski pants, womens M/long, Dermizaz insulation, thinsulite, weatherproof, gators, ankle zips, zipped pockets, ankle kick guard. Ex. Cond. $50 208-720-9033

Splitboard Gear - Voile Mojo 166 in rough shape (rock board status)$75, Spark Fuse bindings, $75 Voile skins $25- Interface (climbing bars, pucks, tour brackets, $50 - All for $200 - 208-720-4702. Text for pictures

Lange RX130LV Shells. 24.5eu or 286mm. Green and white surefoot edition. Very good condition. $75 721-1028 Madhus Ultrasonic Classic skis, length 190 cm. $70. Call 208-622-7268. New Burton Snowboarding jacket. Size Medium. Great shape, worn very little. I can text pictures. Asking $200, 208-659-2810

Classic $50.

skis, Call

Rossignol Hero Jr. boots. Size 23.5. Only used 5 times. $75. 541-980-0046. Rossignol Hero SG skis. 2016, 205cm, 40 meter radius. Excellent condition, light use. FIS compliant. $350. 208-720-4596. Rossignol Premium XC skate boots. Size 44. Like new. $400. 208-720-7792. Rossignol Temptation- 88 performance skis. Used only 5x; like new. Length 164 cm. Side cut 135-88-234. Radius 17. $345. Call 208-622-7268. Rossignol Women’s size 5, snowboard boots, used about 10 days. $50. 541-980-0046 Salomon Alpine Ski helmet. Adult size L. $25. Call 208-622-7268.

Stockli 159 Cm womans stormrider w/ tyrolia bindings. 2016 model year. like new. only $300. 208-726-4067. Swix CT5 poles, pro-fit grips, 124cm (used 2X) $50 208-720-9033. Technica Fling Inferno Womens Ski Boots with Ultra Fit Liners. Navy blue and white. Size 9 (24.5) Retail $575 Asking $100. 208-720 3963. Union Snowboard Bindings. Hardly ever used. $100 Text for photos or with questions 208-720-3365 Volkl Mantra 177cm Marker Jester bindings. Great shape. $150. 208-726-8032.

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Astrisk Knee Braces. Great protection for moto and skiing. 2 pair used. Cell Model $250 and Ultra Cell Model $300. Call 208-720-5431. Bauer Hockey Skates. Size 4EE (fits shoe-size 5.5-6), Brand new still in box $160 new, asking $120. Call or text 208-721-0606. Bic SUP 14’ Tracer. Fast and stable carbon fiber board with travel bag. $700 (new $2,300). Call 208-720-5431.

K2 Enemy Cross Bike, small, like new. $400. Kreitler rollers. $200. 720-2509 Keep Your Biking legs in shape. Minoura HyperMag ALU trainer in new condition. Roadbikereview.com rated at 4/5 stars. Original cost $225 will sell for $100 OBO. Call 788-8498 or 309-1861.

Figure Skates. Size 7.5. $20. 208-788-2467

Mid-fat wheel set for fat bike. Hugo 52 wheels, Turnagain hubs (front 15 x 150 mm, rear 12 x 197 mm), Surly Knard tires (29x3). Tubeless system. $550. Call or text Rob at 208-358-4651.

Fishing Reels: Shimano/Caenan 101, $40. Corvalus 401, $40. Shakespeare Ugly Stik Lite 8/6, $20. 208-726-9552.

Smith IOS Goggle lenses. 4 lenses, different shades, some never used. $25 each or $80 for all 4. 208-726-3951.

Fitbit Charge HR heart rate+activity wristband. Black, size large. Also monitors workouts, run stats, sleep quality, etc. Syncs to cell phone & computer. Brand new, never opened. $100. 720-0577.

SUP- Stand Up paddleboards. Glide Retro Boards 12’6. Great all around boards used with paddle $400 (new $1,200) Call 208-720-5431.

Focus Mares Carbon CX Bike 58cm XL Rapha Team Edition. DT Swiss Wheelset, SRAM 1x, Easton cockpit. Great on gravel, cx, or road. Ridden 1 season, mostly road. Saddle and pedals not included. $999. Text 412-720-1443 for photos.

Trijicon 3x30 Optic with TA60 mount. Red chevron. Never needs batteries. Military tested lifetime warranty. In original box. $899. Pictures online. 208-720-3174

Garmin Forerunner 410 GPS. Sports watch. Used, works great. $45. Text 208-720-9917. Get Your Legs in shape for skiing. FreeMotion F5.6 FreeStrider Elliptical Trainer. Stride length up to 35 inches. EllipticalHub.com gives it an 8.7 out of 10 rating. Was ~ $2,000 new will sell for $800 OBO. Call 788-8498 or 309-1861 Great Gift! Foosball table in new condition. Original cost $500 and now selling for $215, Call 208-788-3868 Hockey Skates. Easton Ultra Lite. 10.5. New condition. $125. 208-309-2233 Junior Hockey Gear Pee Wee/Squirt sizes. Pants, shoulder pads, shin guards, helmet, sticks, gloves, elbow pads, shirts, socks, skates; size 4 & 4.5 prices from $5 $25 OBO. 208-788-2467

Thule 870Xt Fairing, 32 In. $40 OBO. 208-450-9259

Two Large Fishing tackle boxes full of new lures. $250 each OBO. 208-788-1409. Yakima Control Towers. Set of 4. $100 for all, retail $200 new. 4 Yakima Landing Pad 1’s for $45. Retail $90. 208-450-9259. Yakima Fatcat 6 EVO rack. Premium Rooftop Snowsports Mount. Holds & Locks Up To 6 Pairs of Skis or 4 Boards. Low Profile Clamp Design w/ DoubleJoint Hinge. Universal Roof Rack Fit. $145, message 208-720-7226

250 1x10 pine fence boards, 56-61” long, painted light brown, $1 each. 208-720-4444. Carrera Marble White Vanity Top with single sink, beveled edges & backsplash. Brand New in Crate. Has small hairline crack. 22 x 48. Photos Avail. $450. 208-720-3780

Women’s Backcountry Ski boots. Scarpa Gea RS size 24 with Intuition Liner. Used in good condition. Dynafit compatible. $300, Alice 208720-9917

2017 Salomon Assassin Classicks Snowboard 155 with or without 2017 District Bindings Medium. An amazing all-mountain board, less than 30 days ridden. $200 ($260 with bindings). Call/Text for pics or more info. 251-454-9440. 6 Pairs Women’s running shoes. Brooks, Altra, Hoka. Size 8. Pairs only worn a few times or brand new (still in box). Prices range from $25 $60. Call 208-309-3793.

Pet Week of the

G3 Manhattan A.T. skis. 185cm, Dynafit vertical 12 bindings, G3 Ascension skins. Great condition. $450. 208-720-7792. G3, Cable Bindings, new, $25, 208-928-6216

PROUDLY brings you The Animal Shelter’s latest pets in need of a home The Animal Shelter offers monthly, no cost, spay & neuter clinics to Blaine County Residents. Now is the time to have your pets spayed. Spaying/neutering saves lives by preventing unplanned litters.

PUPPIES:

CHIP 7m nm Blk/Brn Lab mix FRANKIE 8m sf Wht/Blk Aussie/Collie mix MAX 5m nm Blk/Wht BC/Idaho Shag mix TRIXIE 9m sf Blk/Wht BC mix ZOEY 8m sf Wht/Tan Terrier mix

DOGS:

AMY 1y sf Terrier/Staff. Mix BARB 5y sf Blk Lab mix BUTTERSCOTCH 5y nm Beagle/Chi mix EMERSON 1y nm Blk/Wht Rottweiler mix GILBERT 8y nm Blk/Brwn Rottweiler mix GOOB 1.5y nm Tan Pit Bull mix ISABEL 5y sf Blk Terrier mix IZZY 2y sf Tan/Brn Chihuahua mix LUCY 2y sf Brindle/Wht Pit Bull mix NANUK 2y nm Wht/Grey Alaskan Husky mix tter mix PURDY 1y sf Wht/Blk English Setter RUSTY 2y sf Cream/Brn Terrier mix SAMMY 1.5y sf Blk Pit Bull mix SANDIE 2y sf tan terrier mix m SARGENT 2y nm wht Havanesee mix SHADOW 2yy sf White Pit Bull

KITTENS:

ALEX 5m sf Orange/Wht DSH AVA 8m sf Blk/Wht DSH CHARLIE 5m nm Grey/Blk DSH DYLAN 5m nm Grey/Blk DSH EGAN 8m nm Blk/Wht DSH LANE 7m sf Blk/Orange DSH NATALIE 5m sf Grey/Wht DSH WINSTON 7m nm Blk/Wht DSH mix

CATS:

COOKIE 3y sf Blk/Bronze DSH FLORIDA 3y sf Brn DSH JAZZY 2y sf Brn DSH JOYCE 1y sf Blk DSH SAMMIE 8y sf Blk/Wht DSH mix MOLLY 12y sf Black DSH MUMFORD 2y nm Orange DSH NIPSY 1y nm Orange tip Siamese mix PONCHO 9y nm Grey/ Grey/Blk DSH

Giro G9 Ski helmet, brand new. Top of line size medium color black. $50. 721-1028 Head GS Jr race rebels. 165cm. Nearly new. Excellent condition. $200. 208-720-4596. Head SG Skis. World Cup Rebels. 175cm, 27 meter radius. Excellent condition, very light use. $300. 208-720-4596. Head SG Skis. World Cup Rebels. 203cm, 30 meter radius. Excellent condition, light use. $300. 208-720-4596. Lange RS90 Ski boot. Size 21-215. 2016-2017. Light use. $50. 208-720-4596.

23

PROUDLY SPONSORED BY

Barkin’ Basement Thrift Store • 111 South Main St, Hailey 10 to 6 Mon-Sat. • All Donations and Sales Support the Animal Shelter Free Pick-up of Donations call 788-3854

7K $QLPDO L 6KHOWHU RIIH IIHHUV IUHH PRQWKO\ VSD\ QHXWHU VSD\ 7KH $QLPDO RIIHUV IUHH PRQWKO\ FOLQLFV WR %ODLQH &RXQW\ 5HVLGHQWV 1RZ LV WKH WLPH WR KDYH \RXU SHWV VSD\HG RU QHXWHUHG 6SD\LQJ QHXWHULQJ VDYHV OLYHV E\ SUHYHQWLQJ XQSODQQHG OLWWHUV See photographs online at: www.animalshelterwrv.org Hours: Monday - Friday 10 to 6, Saturday and Sunday 10 to 4. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!

*Animals are in need of foster homes, please contact the Shelter if you’re interested inn fostering

Fischer Trans- Alp TS lite ski touring boots. Only used one season and in great condition. Mondo size 24.5 - $300 208-720-9834 - Gardner

Shred Girls Alpine Race Helmet, mega brain bucket, white, XS-S. Brand new, $65. With face guard, 75$. 721 1028

Ski boots intuition liner I have a pair of Dalbello Krypton pro ski boots with intuition liners. Size 26.5. They’re in good shape, asking $250 OBO. 208-659-2810.

Rossignol Delta length 205 cm. 208-622-7268.

Fischer Ranger 98 Skis and Skins. Only skied one season and in great condition. Great for touring or Baldy shredding. 172cm length - $225, 208-720-9834 - Gardner

Scarpa NTN Telemark boots. 2017 TX Comp size 27.0 used. $250. Call 208-720-5431.

Kid’s Lange Ski Boots: Team 7 Speed Blue size 22.5 - $35. Starlet 60 Silver/White 23.5 - $50. RXJ Green/White 25.5 - $65. All in above average condition. 208-788-6006

Dynafit, Chugach, 181 cm, matching skins, new, unmounted, perfect front, side, BC ski, $600, 208-928-6216

Elan Amphibio Skis. 176. Great all around ski. $150 Text for photos or with questions. 208-720-3365

Salomon X-Wave 9.0 ski boots. Length 27.5 (men’s 9½.) $65. Call 208-622-7268.

Skate Poles, Fischer Air Carbon, 163 cm $40; Oneway Diamond 600 classic, 145 cm $20. Text or call 208-720-4099

North Face Free Thinker Gore tex jacket. Size lg. Charcoal/Black. Excellent condition. $500+ new. $250. 208-309-2233.

Dynastar Legend 94 (132/94/118, 20 meter radius) 184cm w/Marker Baron 12 and BCA Lowfat Climbing Skins. Bindings fit boot sole 265-325mm. All in above average condition, tuned and ready. $350, 208-788-6006

Salomon X-Race skis with X16 bindings. 175 cm size. Brand spankin’ new, waiting for “World Cup Wednesday” podium. MSRP $1,150; Deal price $450. Call or text Andy at 720-4901

Kid’s Head XRC50 Skis 117cm w/Tyrolia SL45 bindings (Fit Boot Sole 260-290mm). Good Condition, tuned and ready! $50. 208-788-6006

Dynafit Revelstoke A.T. skis, 175cm, Dynafit vertical 10 bindings, dynafit skins, great condition. $400. 208-720-7792.

Dynastar Cham Team Skis (108/67/94 14 meter radius) 150cm w/Look Team Bindings (DIN 2-7,Fit boot sole 261-327). Above average condition, Tuned and ready! $100 208-788-6006

Rossignol Xium S2 skate skis, 192 cm, always kept with travel wax, in like new condition. SNS bindings or can upgrade to SSR Excelerator. Text or call 208-720-4099.




24

Express



www.mtexpress.com  Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Large, Used Petmate brand dog crate. Dimensions are approximately 40”L X 24”W X 30”H. $100 new, will sell for $40. 788-3340

Cast Iron Tub, Kohler K-790, steeping tub. 30 years old, but in excellent, like new condition. 60” x 36” x 20”, drop in, enamel beige almond finish. Weighs about 300 lbs. $200. 208-788-0025.

Midwest 24” folding metal dog Crate w/ divider panel, tray, deluxe Bolster Bed and dog crate Cover all brand NEW and still in delivery box from Amazon. Our cost $65. 208578-2456

Durastilt Drywall stilts, 24-40”, new in box. A $100 savings off list price at $300. 208-720-4444. Knaack Tool Box, metal, good condition. $250. 720-0665 Werner Extension Ladder- aluminum flat rung, 25’ 200 lbs, needs rope. $45 or OBO. 208-309-1222

1011D Copper Ranch Way Hailey ESTATE SALE Everything must go! Furniture, kitchenware, golf equipment, skis, tools, tv & sound system, BBQ, lots of Xmas decorations. Saturday, Nov. 18, 9am - Noon

Safety Speed H5 Vertical Panel Saw, 10’ frame, 3¼ HP Milwaukee Saw, Quick change Vert to Horiz, Cross cut 64” plus. Like new. $3,200 new plus shipping. Yours for $999. Grizzly 14” bandsaw $150 OBO, Powerematic 6” joiner, $100. 720-2509 Snowblower. 5-horse 22’, 6 speed snowblower. Wheel driven with new tires. $200. 208-788-4797.

20 letter-size bankers boxes with lids, R-Kive #725, $2 each. 208-720-4444.

Used Solar Equipment, Trace SW4024 inverter W/ Ananda fuse panel $250. 4 Trojan L16 RE B 6V deep cycle batteries, lightly used $100. 208-720-6440

Aerobeds... Company Coming! New & almost - Kids $75, 2 Twins $75 each & a Full $75. Newest models, fast inflate, Kids - heavy fleece with 4” recessed for safety. Twins - Premier Durasuede, twin sheets fit. Full, washable mattress cover. Text 208-721-8781.

17” Black Kieffer dressage saddle and black dressage bridle. Included are 2 girths, 2 pads, saddle cover and stand and bridle bag. $999 OBO. 208-481-0938. Equine Boarding Available at Figge Farms in Bellevue. Indoor stalls, outdoor stalls, pasture. Indoor heated arena. Lessons and riding available year round. Contact 208-721-1807 or 775-304-1129.

FOUND: Brown Carhartt Glove of the boys we picked up on Galena, Saturday, snorfing. 559-936-1787. LOST: Coach Wristlet lost on the block of the Hailey Library. It has my ID and keys in it, so I can identify it. If found please call 208-721-2980 LOST: Colorful African beaded bracelet with hook and eye closure. Sunday, Nov. 12th in Ketchum or Hailey. Carolyn 208-721-1775 LOST: Milwuakee Sawzall, on Muldoon Canyon just before the Idaho Ranch entrance. Was very expensive, please return. Lost around the first of nov. 208-215-2867

WANTED: INTERESTING SINGLE men & women over 50 to meet one another & enjoy the many wonders of our valley.....nature, sports, arts, theater, etc. Let’s enjoy & do it! Send contact information & brief summary of interests to: Box holder, PO Box 3981, Hailey, ID 83333.

*Express yourself in 608 Miscellany lll, only on FRIDAYS

FREE! Over a foot high stack of recipes from 1946 to the present. Call/text 309-0219

Rave, Rant, Connections, Birthday Greetings, Respond to Misc. ll.

Kitchen Tech Center - still in box 15.6” screen, preloaded recipes, Digital Screen, HD TV, Internet screen. By Pandigital $ 100. Text 208 -721-8781

FREE only on FRIDAYS in the Idaho Mt. Express. Deadline: Wednesdays at 1pm. classified.mtexpress.com/placead

Dog Kennel, Large size. 42” long x 28”wide x 29” high. $20. 208-726-4067.

15 Children’s Playmobil sets. Sold separately, $15-$40, or all together, $300. Fire truck, airplane, airport terminal, helicopter, ambulance, taxi, seaplane, train, stagecoach, castle, etc. Perfect condition, great for Christmas. Have photos. 208-788-9007.

Fox Red Labs Mother is out of Helm’s Point Doctor, both parents on site. Shots, dewclaws and wormed, parents hip and eye certified, excellent hunters. 5 reds, 2 blacks, only males left. $1,000; can deliver. Michele 208-794-2443 (mornings); Troy (afternoon & evenings) 208-573-4097

Baby Trend Double Stroller $30. 208-309-0470 Glider/Rocker From Land of Nod. Denim/chambray fabric with matching footstool. In good condition. Can text or email pictures.$200. Call or text 208-720-5994

Free Dog House - Petmate pet barn for large dogs. Heavy duty plastic. 208-309-1222

A thief is a thief, whether she steals a diamond or a loaf of bread...or $300,000. Cindy from the Navy, It’s Pete the nature video guy. We talked in the Duchin Room after not getting into the Shepherdess film. I have a long time friend I think you will enjoy meeting. Please reach out to me. Chill Dude.

NEEDED: Aluminum Cans, your donation will help support new playground equipment in Hailey thru Kiwanis Club. Drop donations off at 4051 Glenbrook Drive in Woodside Industrial Park or call Bob at 788-0018 to arrange pick-up. Over $9,000 raised so far. NEEDED: Metal Or wood benches for all of the Bellevue Bus Stops. If you have an old bench that is in good shape, please find a bus stop in Bellevue and give it a new home until permanent benches are established.

RIDE NEEDED: Ride for 1 needed to Boise airport Wed. 11/22 leaving around 12p. Will help with gas. 208-720-5089.

THANK YOU Thank you to all of the candidates who ran for office in Ketchum this election cycle. Thank you to all of the voters that came through Hemingway to cast their votes. And thank you to everyone who stopped by the bake stand to grab a treat. Teaching our children about civic responsibility is a right of passage. We look forward to visiting Washington DC to learn more about governance and our political history. ~ The Hemingway Steam School Travel Club.

THANK YOU To Matt and Janet Kroner, owners of Impact Auto Body in Woodside, for the on the spot adjustment of my Fender Bender! In response to my “Wow” reaction to his service, he said simply, “I’m here to help people, and you needed help.” Not only did he fix my fender so I can drive the car, he gave me a big boost to my faith in good people! ~Sue Jacobsen THANK YOU I would like to congratulate the Carey Panthers on their win over our football team on Saturday. The fans, community, players and coaches truly have a team that they should be proud of. Your players were aggressive, well prepared and had us on our heels the entire game. We have a lot of respect for the Carey Panthers and what you have accomplished over the past 20 plus years. Good luck during the championship game this week. Sincerely, Darrah Eggers, Principal, Athletic Director/Head Football Coach; Deary High School

THANK YOU The “Homegrown Film Festival” benefiting the Sawtooth Avalanche Center was OVER THE TOP! Outstanding films, enthusiastic crowd, and a wildly successful fundraiser! We would like to extend our heartfelt thanks to Black Diamond Equipment; the athletes, film makers and producers; the Liberty Theatre team; Jack Weekes; Sun Valley Company; Sawtooth Brewery; Atkinsons Market; The Haven Food Truck; Blue Heron Workshop; Copy and Print; the ticket vendors; the volunteers; and each and every one of you who attended (or tried) or gave the event a shout out. Truly, the Sawtooth Avalanche Center is a community effort! Thank you for your continued support! ~With gratitude, the Friends of the Sawtooth Avalanche Center.

EARLY DEADLINES For The Friday Paper After Thanksgiving, November 24. Deadlines for Display and Classified Ads is Wednesday, November, 15 @ 1pm. Our Office Will Be Closed 11/23 & 11/24.

If you forgive the fox for stealing your chickens, he will take your sheep. This year in B-league hockey I’m looking to lay the puck off the pipes on the ice and to lay the pipe off the ice.

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rts

 Weather .......................................2  Calendar ......................................6  Movies ..........................................7 EDITOR: ANDY KERSTETTER, 726-8060, EXT. 112 Information deadline: Thursdays at 5 p.m. Calendar deadline: Mondays at noon. GRAPHIC DESIGNER: ERIK ELISON

SEE AMERICAN MUSIC ICON’S ‘TAPESTRY’ FOR YOURSELF

Sawtooth Botanical Garden to host astronomy event

St. Thomas to host Choral Evensong service St. Thomas Episcopal Church at 201 Sun Valley Road, in Sun Valley, will host its monthly Choral Evensong service on Sunday, Nov. 19, starting at 5:30 p.m. Evensong is a traditional Anglican service of beautiful choral music, readings and prayers. The tradition of singing evening prayer evolved from the monastic tradition, and it is at least 1,000 years old. A reception will follow the service. The service is free and the public is invited to attend. St. Thomas hosts Evensong on the last Sunday of every month. For more information, visit www.stthomassunvalley.org.

‘Drop Everything’ ski movie to premiere Nov. 22

On Wednesday, Nov. 22, Sun Valley Resort and Matchstick Productions will present a premiere screening of the ski film “Drop Everything.” The screening will be held at Sun Valley Opera House at Sun Valley Resort starting at 7 p.m. as part of Sun Valley’s Winter Kick-Off Party. Tickets are $15 in advance or $18 at the door. Advance tickets are available at www.sunvalley.ticketfly.com. The movie is a funny, actionpacked ski movie featuring some of the world’s foremost freeskiers, including Mark Abma, Markus Eder, Eric Hjorleifson, Michelle Parker, Sammy Carlson, Cody Townsend, Elyse Saugstad, Tanner Rainville, Chris Rubens, Sander Hadley and Connery Lundin.

AUTHOR WILL SPEAK ABOUT HIS BOOK ON INDAINS IN SUN VALLEY PAGE 4

AND EVENTS

AROUND TOWN

On Thursday, Nov, 16, the Sawtooth Botanical Garden at 11 Gimlet Road south of Ketchum will host an “Astronomy in the Garden” event from 7-9 p.m. Tim Frazier, president of the Magic Valley Astronomical Society, will bring a few of his favorite telescopes to help teach people about basic night sky orientation, observe “Oh Wow!” deep sky objects and the planet Neptune, which is not normally visible to the naked eye. Kristin Fletcher, Sawtooth Botanical Garden education director, will share lore about nakedeye constellations. Advance registration required. Admission is $10 for SBG members and $12 for nonmembers. Children under 16 are admitted for free. Call 208-726-9358 to pay and reserve a spot. Visit www.sbgarden.org for more information.

IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS November 15 2017

The Center to screen film of Carole King’s 2016 London concert By ANDY KERSTETTER

F

Express Staff Writer

or its next installment in its 2017-2018 film series, the Sun Valley Center for the Arts will offer a rare look at one of 20thcentury America’s most iconic performer’s perhaps most legendary concert. On Thursday, Nov. 16, The Center will present the film “Carole King – Tapestry: Live at Hyde Park” at 7 p.m. at Magic Lantern Cinemas on Second Street in Ketchum. The film celebrates the 45th anniversary of King’s career-defining album “Tapestry” by capturing her outdoor concert for more than 65,000 fans in London’s Hyde Park on July 3, 2016. Her Hyde Park performance was King’s first concert in Britain since 1989 and the first-ever performance of the entire “Tapestry” album in sequence. It features King leading a full band (including rhythm guitarist Danny Kortchmar, who played on the original album) through each of the album’s 12 songs, as well as her favorite compositions from her prolific songbook. Guest performers at the concert included her daughter, Louise Goffin, who joined King on several tracks, like “Where You Lead,” which the pair re-recorded as the theme song to the popular TV series “Gilmore Girls” and the Laurence Olivier Award-winning West End cast of “Beautiful: The Carole King Musical.” “There were 65,000 lucky people in London in the summer of 2016 who saw Carole King perform,” said Kristine Bretall, director of performing arts at The Center. “This concert was the first to feature ‘Tapestry,’ played in order, live in concert. This film gives us the chance to be there onstage, to see Carole’s hands on the keys, and to enjoy the audience’s reactions from start to finish—it’s an up-close perspective that no seat would have provided.” Bretall said The Center is grateful to King for granting access to the film. Proceeds from screening of “Carole King—

Photo courtesy of Elissa Kline

American music legend Carole King jams out with guitarist Danny Kortchmar at her 2016 concert at Hyde Park in London. The concert was the only time her entire “Tapestry” album was performed in sequence. Tapestry: Live at Hyde Park” will support The Center’s Professional Artist Residency Program, which brings visiting musicians and artists into local classrooms to work with students and teachers at no charge to the schools. “I was lucky to work with colleagues of Carole King to secure the film and their team requested that net proceeds go toward supporting a program for kids in our community,” Bretall said. “Our Professional Artist Residency program was a natural fit. By bringing visiting musicians into schools, students in our valley have an incredible opportunity to see world-class musicians, hear them speak about their craft and make deeper connections to music and the world.”

Bretall said proceeds from the film will help offset some of the cost of this outreach program, which she said reaches an average of 2,000 students per year. Tickets are $10 for members of The Center and $12 for nonmembers, and are available in advance. If the show is not sold out in advance, remaining tickets will be available the night of the screening at the Magic Lantern Cinemas box office. To buy tickets or to learn more about other upcoming films in the 2017–2018 Film Series, visit www.sunvalleycenter.org, call 208-7269491 or visit The Center’s box office at 191 Fifth St. E. in Ketchum.

Not your grandma’s bingo Boise-based drag troupe to perform in Ketchum By ANDY KERSTETTER Express Staff Writer

Valley residents looking to add some spice to their regular Thanksgiving proceedings might want to check out the Limelight Hotel in Ketchum on Saturday, Nov. 25. Drag Queens will take over the hotel lounge for a day of drag adventures in a two-show engagement hosted by Boise-based drag troupe Charley’s Angels. Hosted by Spyke Naugahyde and her cast of performers, the Charley’s Angels troupe will be producing a Drag Extravaganza at 6:30 p.m. with doors opening at 6 p.m., followed by a second show at 9 p.m. Doors for the second show open at 8 p.m. Both shows are 21-and-over only, with advance tickets costing $15 and day-of tickets at the door costing $20. Advance tickets are available online at justinbucklesproductions.com.

Charley’s Angels has been performing throughout Idaho for the last 20 years, with group numbers, comedy, live singing and themed shows being their trademarks. The troupe has been producing shows the first weekend of every month in Pocatello for 20 years, though this is the first time the group has performed in Ketchum. The troupe will present “This Isn’t Your Grandma’s Bingo” Drag Bingo earlier that day, with doors opening at 11 a.m. and Bingo starting at noon. This event is 21-and-over only, with tickets costing $10. Each ticket sold includes a game pack of five games, with additional game packs available for $2 each at the doors. Charley’s Angels is part of Justin Buckles Productions, based out of Portland, Ore., which owns and operates eight touring shows now seen in 14 states. Tickets also will be available at the doors.

If you go What: Three shows, including Drag Bingo with Boise drag troupe Charley’s Angels. When: Saturday, Nov. 25. Drag Bingo at noon, with two-show Drag Extravaganza starting 6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. Where: The Limelight Hotel, Main Street, Ketchum. Cost: $12 advance, $15 at the door. Tickets available at justinbucklesproductions.com.


2

Express

www.mtexpress.com

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

R EOPENI NG

F R I D A Y, N O V. 2 4 T H 5:30 to Close

Open for lunch...soon A Ketchum Classic Wonderful Food, Warm & Friendly

Full Catering - Book for Christmas 231½ Leadville, Ketchum 726.9595 • Open daily at 6 p.m. R E S E RVAT IO N S AC C E P T E D Courtesy photo

The following vehicles are being sold by Mountain Rides Transportation Authority.

Bus #26, 32 passenger Fixed Route Bus publicsurplus.com auction #1974629 Bus #14 – 14 passenger Sprinter publicsurplus.com auction #1974648 S

it i ia p i rp o er an on ition a i te app to t i a tion

www.mountainrides.org or all 208.788.RIDE (7433)

Artist applications will open Dec. 1 for the 50th annual Sun Valley Arts and Crafts Fair to be held next summer.

Applications open for scholarships, artists at The Center Scholarships, Arts and Crafts Fair applications open Dec. 1 Now in its 20th year, The Center’s scholarship program awards four different types of scholarships to local educators and students to further their educaPracticing artists, art teachers and aspiring art- tion in the arts and humanities. For 2018, The Cenists alike are invited to apply for scholarships and ter will add a fifth scholarship in the Jack Thornton for spots in the Sun Valley Arts and Crafts Festival, Memorial Scholarship for the Performing Arts. The both through the Ketchum-based Sun Valley Center scholarship program is made possible by the profor the Arts. ceeds from The Center’s annual Wine Auction and Artist applications for the 50th Annual Arts & private donations. Crafts Festival, as well as The Center’s 2018 ScholThe new scholarship is open to Blaine County arship Program, will be available online beginning 11th- and 12th-graders who are involved in music, Friday, Dec. 1. theater, voice or dance and will award The 2018 arts festival will take one student $3,000. The Educator place Aug. 10-12 at Atkinson Park in Scholarship is open to Blaine County Ketchum. Artists in all fine art and pre-K through 12th-grade educators fine craft disciplines are welcome to and supports professional developapply. ment related to visual or performThe outdoor, juried festival aims ing arts or the humanities. The High to honor artists and their crafts, proSchool Scholarship is open to Blaine vide a welcoming venue for artists to County students in grades 9-12 who showcase and sell their art and creseek to further artistic studies outside ate an opportunity for the community of school hours; the Ezra Pound ScholKristin Poole to learn about the national arts and arship is available to Blaine County Artistic director crafts scene by interacting directly students in 11th grade who are studyThe Center with artists and makers, The Center ing visual arts; and the Gay V. Weake stated in a media release. Scholarship is available to Blaine County seniors The event also includes artist demonstrations, live who will major in the arts or humanities in college. music, food vendors and a children’s activity area. The scholarships are open to students in home“Over the years, the festival has welcomed hundreds school, private school and public school. of extraordinary artists and craftspeople from around For more information, visit sunvalleycenter.org. the country. It is a treat every August to see some famil- Questions about the application process may be iar faces and greet new makers to our community,” said directed to Sarah Stavros, festival director, at sstavKristin Poole, artistic director at The Center. ros@sunvalleycenter.org or 208-726-9491, ext. 121.

By ANDY KERSTETTER Express Staff Writer

“It is a treat every August to see some familiar faces and greet new makers to our community.”

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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

LIBRARY HOURS

TH E

Mon 10 am – 6 pm Tues 10 am – 8 pm Wed 10 am – 8 pm Thur 10 am – 8 pm Fri 10 am – 6 pm Sat 10 am – 6 pm Sun closed

COMMUNITY

LIBRARY Est. 1955 | Ketchum, Idaho

UPCOMING PROGRAMS =[ebe]o KdZ[h\eej _d Iekj^[hd ?ZW^e Xo I^Wmd M_bbi[o H\ifgXUm Bcj" %* * d"a" Courtesy photo

Thomas Adés’ 2016 opera “The Exterminating Angel” will be screened live from The Metropolitan Opera in New York on Saturday, Nov. 18, at the Big Wood Cinemas on Main Street in Hailey.

Opera fans invited to ‘surreal dinner party’ 2016 opera ‘The Exterminating Angel’ to be performed Saturday By ANDY KERSTETTER

If you go

Express Staff Writer

Sun Valley Opera’s 20172018 season continues with a live broadcast of Thomas Adés’ 2016 opera “The Exterminating Angel.” The opera will be shown live from The Metropolitan Opera in New York on Saturday, Nov. 18, at the Big Wood Cinemas on North Main Street in Hailey. Doors open at 10 a.m. with a pre-opera lecture by Dick Brown at 10:30 a.m. and opera beginning at 11 a.m. Tickets are $16 and can be purchased at any time at the theater. The opera’s run time is 2 hours and 40 minutes. Fol low i n g Adé s’ l a st opera, “The Tempest,” the Met presents the American premiere of the British composer’s “Exterminating Angel,” inspired by the Luis Buñuel film of the same name. At the opera’s premiere at The New York Times’ 2016 Salzburg Festival, the Times declared the opera “inventive and audacious … a major event.” “The Exterminating Angel” is a surreal fantasy about a dinner party from which the guests can’t escape. Tom Cairns, who wrote the libretto, directs the new production, and Adès conducts. With

What: Thomas Adés’ “The Exterminating Angel” live from The Met. When: Saturday, Nov. 18, 10 a.m. to roughly 1:15 p.m. Where: Big Wood Cinemas, North Main Street, Hailey. Cost: $16. Tickets can be purchased anytime at the theater.

a few exceptions, Adès and his librettist, Tom Cairns, stick close to Buñuel’s screenplay. “The film’s title may be a reference to the 19th-century Spanish Society of the Exterminating Angel, a death squad that hunted Spanish liberals. But it is more immediately a citation of I Chronicles 21:15, ‘And God sent an angel unto Jerusalem to destroy it’ after King David ordered a census in contravention of biblical law,” Sun Valley Opera wrote in a news release. The subject of the film is divine vengeance against a corrupt elite that is incapable of extricating itself from its torpor. For more information, visit www.sunvalleyopera.com.

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208.726.3493 | info@comlib.org | 415 Spruce Avenue North, Ketchum, ID www.comlib.org r B_XhWho YWhZi Wh[ \h[[ \eh Wbb

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3


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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Writer to discuss book on Native Americans

BLACK FRIDAY SPECIALS

‘History of Indians in the Wood River Valley’ was a labor of love By ANDY KERSTETTER Express Staff Writer

*LYH D *LIW &HUWLĂ€FDWH this year for the holidays and save money for yourself Spend Less & Get More $50 GC worth $60 $100 GC worth $115 $150 GC worth $170 $200 GC worth $225 7KDW¡V ULJKW SXUFKDVH D JLIW FHUWLĂ€FDWH IRU one price and get it for more. Offer good for Friday November 24th 11:00 until 5:00. /HW XV NQRZ DKHDG RI WLPH IRU IDVWHU VHUYLFH

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Join us for an Extravagant Bow make and take. Beverages & Sweet treats Go home with the perfect wreath and the BEST bow(s) www.bridgmanflorist.com (208) 725-0606 sebflorist@gmail.com

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SNIFFING OUT YOUR VALLEY NEWS

One Thanksgiving week in an elementary school in rural Georgia a couple of decades ago, students in a third-grade classroom were learning about European settlers—“pilgrims�—coming into contact with tribes of Native Americans—“Indians�—when the teacher informed the class that Indians no longer existed. That was news to Tony Tekaroniake Evans, whose family was of Mohawk descent from Quebec—the Kahnawake tribe’s Bear Clan, to be specific. Evans, the only Native American student in the school and new to town, raised his hand and said, “I’m Indian!� “Everyone looked at me, and the teacher rolled her eyes,� Evans said. “She said that the Indians had all melted into the big melting pot of America.� Evans’ mother became angry about the situation when he told her. Though Evans had grown up off-reservation, his mom and grandmother—whom he would overhear daily speaking in their native tongue to friends on the reservation in Quebec—had grown up on the reservation. “Then Mom started telling stories about our heritage, and she broke out the photo album of our relatives,� Evans said. “That began my lifelong interest not only in my own culture but in native culture, generally.� A resident of the Wood River Valley for numerous years now with his wife, who is of Tuscarora descent, Evans, who also is a reporter for the Idaho Mountain Express, became interested in learning more about the history of natives in this area. When his initial inquiries proved fruitless—with some local historians claiming that there was never much of a native presence in the valley—Evans decided to dig deeper. In 2016, he compiled a series of articles he wrote in 2011 for the Express about the topic and filled it out with information gleaned from interviews with local natives of the Shoshone-Bannock tribes, historians, locals and archaeologists who unearthed a site in Elkhorn in 1973 that suggested settlement as old as 10,000 years. “When I got here, I wondered where are the stories of the Indians who lived here,� Evans said. “It turns out Indians had lived here for a very long time. Not only did they have ties to the local area, but they had been coming back when settlers started arriving.� Published by the Blaine County Historical Museum, his book “A History of Indians in the Wood River Valley� offers a sort of crash-course overview of native history in the valley. “It’s a brief journey through 15,000 years of native history,� Evans said. Evans will give a lecture about the book on Thursday, Nov. 16, in the Minnie Moore Room at the Community Campus, 1050 Fox Acres, Road, in Hailey, from 6:30-7:30 p.m. The event is free and open to the public. Evans said he doesn’t bear his third-grade teacher any ill-will; he just said that she herself had been illinformed on the topic. “If you grow up Indian, you learn early on to take with a grain of salt what you learn in the classroom,� Evans said. He said the idea that there are no more Indians is ridiculous, especially considering that there are 400 federally recognized Indian nations in the U.S. “They’re everywhere,� he said. “You just have to turn and look.� He said his greatest success with the book since it was published is that the Blaine County School District obtained 250 copies to use in their history curriculum. “Now, the same mistake won’t be made when kids here ask questions about Indians in the Wood River Valley,� Evans said, adding that there’s more history to be uncovered. “I think there are many more stories to be told.�

Courtesy photo

Hailey resident Tony Evans will discuss his book, “A History of Indians in the Wood River Valley,� on Thursday, Nov. 16, at the Community Campus in Hailey. The book examines an overview of Native American history in the area spanning thousands of years.

“That began my lifelong interest not only in my own culture but in native culture generally.� Tony Tetaroniake Evans

Author of “A History of Indians in the Wood River Valley�

If you go What: A talk with Tony Evans about his book “A History of Indians in the Wood River Valley.� When: Thursday, Nov. 16, from 6:30-7:30 p.m. Where: Community Campus, Minnie Moore Room, 1050 Fox Acres Road, Hailey.

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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Courtesy photo

Craters of the Moon National Monument is one of southern Idaho’s many geological oddities. Geologist Shawn Willsey will talk about Craters and other sites in southern Idaho in a presentation on Thursday at The Community Library.

Learn about Idaho’s unique geology Geologist to give lecture at Community Library By ANDY KERSTETTER Express Staff Writer

Twin Falls resident and geologist Shawn Willsey will give a lecture about the varied geology in southern Idaho, referencing his book, “Geology Underfoot in Southern Idaho,” at The Community Library in Ketchum on Thursday, Nov. 16, from 6-7:30 p.m. The event is free and open to the public. Southern Idaho is a geologic jackpot. Etched in its rugged mountains, incredibly young lava fields and steep-walled canyons lie compelling evidence of amazing geologic events, including breccia from one of the largest meteorite impacts in the world. Willsey’s book uses clear prose, illustrations and photographs to tell the stories of 23 unique geologic sites across southern Idaho. He will discuss how Ice Age floods carved the Snake River

Canyon, how tree molds and lava tubes formed at Craters of the Moon, why 200 individuals of Idaho’s state fossil―the Hagerman Horse―died and were preserved in one place and where the land surface ruptured during the 1983 Borah Peak earthquake. Willsey is a geology professor at the College of Southern Idaho, and he also teaches whitewater rafting and rock climbing. Born in Arizona as a self-described “Air Force brat,” Willsey lived all over the western United States during his childhood. He earned a bachelor’s degree in geology from Weber State University and a master of science degree in geology from Northern Arizona University. He conducts research and leads geologic field trips in a variety of locations throughout the West and in Scotland, Iceland, Hawaii and Costa Rica. He has lived in Twin Falls since 2004 with his wife, Erika, and three children.

STARLINES ARIES - Mar 21/Apr 20 Of course you can, but that doesn’t mean you want to or should. Take some time to think about the consequences before you act.

LIBRA - Sept 23/Oct 23 You’re let in on a big secret. Guard it with your life. A breakdown in communication causes quite the scene at work. Take it easy.

TAURUS - Apr 21/May 21 Clearly a

SCORPIO - Oct 24/Nov 22 The big

loved one is troubled. Before you start prying, you may want to ask yourself if you have the energy to devote to the matter.

day is almost here. Go over your checklist and make sure everything is ready. There is no room for error. Important people are watching.

GEMINI - May 22/Jun 21 Small fixes

SAGITTARIUS - Nov 23/Dec 21 Geez.

at home make for big dividends later. Go, go! A comment catches you off-guard at work. Think through your response carefully.

Nothing you do is right for a certain someone. Give up and help out where you will be appreciated. An art project concludes.

CANCER - Jun 22/Jul 22 Cold weather sets in, and the to-do list grows. Seek the help of a couple of professionals, and you could save a bundle. A gift arrives.

CAPRICORN - Dec 22/Jan 20 Change is in the air, and it will be for the better. Go with the flow. The time to redo a room has come. Work from the top to bottom

LEO - Jul 23/Aug 23 Snooze, and

AQUARIUS - Jan 21/Feb 18 Travel

you will most certainly lose. When an opportunity arises, grab hold. A frank conversation with a friend leads to some self-revelations.

plans come together with the help of an old friend. Show your appreciation with a gift. An interior design choice turns out to be more difficult than thought.

VIRGO - Aug 24/Sept 22 The holiday

PISCES - Feb 19/Mar 20 Rest does not

season will be here before you know it. Start the planning now. A big project at work is headed your way and is sure to keep you busy.

come easily at home this week, setting everyone on edge. Be patient. Things will work out, and harmony will resume.

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Express

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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

EXPRESS CALENDAR 601 For more entries, details and up-to-date event information, visit us online at

PIONEER SALOON

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 15

SALOON 3:00 p.m. DINING ROOM 3:30 p.m.

TUES. WED. & THURS., NOV.

14TH,

15TH

&

16TH

Main Street, Ketchum WHISKEYJACQUES.COM THURSDAY SUNDAY MONDAY

FRIDAY 11/17

SATURDAY 11/18

JOHN WELSH BAND LIVE!! The Slide Show Tour 2017

ted BEST BAR V&oBEST PLACE TO WATCH A GAME

BY THE IDAHO MOUNTAIN E XPRESS

UPSTAIRS!!

BOISE STATE FOOTBALL!!

Ol’ Fashion Depot LIVE!!

SATURDAY 11/25

BOISE STATE FOOTBALL!! DYLAN JAKOBSEN LIVE!!

 4 TO 6 Monday thru Friday f LLiquor & Food F d Specials  HHalflf PPrice DDrafts,

DA

TYLOR & THE TRAIN ROBBERS LIVE!!

S

FRIDAY 11/24

FA MILIES WELCOME

EN

H APPY T HANKSGIVING! WE’RE C LOSED

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THURSDAY 11/23

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PRIVATE PARTIES UPSTAIRS GREAT PIZZA, BURGERS & APPS OPEN MON-FRI AT 4 PM SAT AT 1 PM • SUN AT 11 A M 208-726-5297

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"Simple food done exceptionally" Historic Bank Building Bellevue, Idaho TUES: Steak Fajitas for $25.99 WED: 1/2 Price Bottles of wine with purchase of entrée THUR, FRI & SAT: Prime Rib, dry aged certified angus beef SAT: Live Music w/ Jay Rath 7-10pm SUN: Brunch 10am - 3pm

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Story Time (Hailey): Books and crafts geared to children ages 2-4. Hailey Public Library Kids Area, 7 W. Croy St., Hailey. 10:30-11:30 a.m. www.haileypubliclibrary.org. Sun Valley Economic Development: Board of Directors meeting. Free. Zion’s Bank, 2nd Floor Conference Room, 311 N. Main St., Ketchum. 11 a.m.-1 p.m. www. SunValleyEconomy.org. Kiwanis of Hailey Weekly Lunch Meeting: Come see what the club is up to. $5. Senior Connection, 721 Third Ave. S., Hailey. 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. 208-7207395. haileykiwanis.org/. Healing Service: Communion with anointing and laying of hands for healing. St. Thomas Episcopal Church, 201 Sun Valley Road, Sun Valley. 1-1:45 p.m. “The Lucky Ones”: In partnership with the International Rescue Committee, Boise. Shot by Boise photographer Madeline Scott, “The Lucky Ones” is a photo-journalism exhibit chronicling the arrival of refugees to Boise between February and April of 2017, and their integration into daily life in Boise. The exhibit will run through Dec. 9. Free. The Sun Valley Museum of History, Ketchum. 1-5 p.m. Women’s Wednesday at the Climbing Wall: An informal gathering of lady climbers at the YMCA climbing wall. Open to all ages and all abilities - come build community and skill sets with fellow ladies in a fun, active environment. Wood River Community YMCA, 101 Saddle Road, Ketchum. 5-7 p.m. Katelyn Berman, kberman@woodriverymca.org, 208-928-6708. Ketchum Community Dinners: Come enjoy a free meal. Eat in or take out. Church of the Big Wood gym, 100 Saddle Road, Ketchum. 6-7 p.m. 208-869-7911. Free Team Trivia!: Games every Wednesday. Teams of up to four people. Free. Sawtooth Brewery & Tap Room, 110 N. River St., Hailey. 7:30-9:30 p.m. Paul Holle, paul@sawtoothbrewery.com, 208720-8437. Trivia Night: Come test out your trivia skills. Free. Lefty’s Bar & Grill, 231 Sixth St. E., Ketchum. 8 p.m.

THURSDAY, NOV. 16 Brown Bag Talk - Finding the Balance in Holiday Eating: Haley Willison, registered dietitian, will address strategies on how to stay on a healthy nutritional track through the holidays, while still enjoying the treats of the season. No preregistration required. Free. St. Luke’s Medical Center, River Run Rooms, 100 Hospital Drive, Lower Level, Ketchum. 12:15-1:15 p.m. Erin Buell, buelle@slhs.org, 208-727-8733. Hailey Rotary Club: Regular meeting. Community Campus, Hailey. 12:15-1:15 p.m. HaileyRotary.org. Overeaters Anonymous: Open meet-

ing every Thursday. Sun Club South, 731 First Ave. N., Hailey. 1:15-2:15 p.m. 208720-0100. Blaine County Chess Club: Meets weekly after school. Community Campus, 1050 Fox Acres Road, Hailey. 3-5:30 p.m. Adam Porth, 450-9048. Sewing Club for Kids: Teaches basic hand-stitching through simple projects for kids. Children must be age 7 to attend and sign-up is required. Call the library to reserve a spot. Parental help is encouraged and children under the age of 9 may not be left alone at the library. Free. The Community Library, 415 Spruce Ave. N., Ketchum. 4-5 p.m. DeAnn Campbell, kidcirc@comlib.org, 208-726-3493. TNT - Teens N Tweens: Various activities will be scheduled for teens and tweens every Thursday. Hailey Public Library Sun Room, 7 W. Croy St., Hailey. 4:30-5:30 p.m. 208-788-2036. www.haileypublicLibrary.org. November Business After Hours: Join The Chamber and Black Owl Coffee. Enjoy food and beverages and catch up with the latest happenings at The Chamber and around the valley. Bring a business card for a chance to win a raffle prize. Black Owl Coffee, 208 N. Main St., Hailey. 5-7 p.m. 788-3484. WRHS Girls Basketball: Home nonconference games vs. Mountain Home Tigers, freshmen 5:30 p.m., varsity 7 p.m. $5. Wood River High School, Hailey. Guitar Circle with Taul Paul: Guitar players, musicians, listeners and learners are welcome to share songs, ideas and techniques. Led by local professional musician and instructor Taul Paul, the Guitar Circle gives everyone a chance to play. Free. The Community Library, 415 Spruce Ave, Ketchum. 5:30 p.m. Weekly Connection Recovery Support Group: Peer-led support group for adults living with mental illness. It is a casual and relaxed approach to sharing the challenges and successes of coping with mental illness. The Sun Club South, 731 N. First Ave., Hailey. 5:30-7:30 p.m. nami-wrv.org. Souper Supper: Weekly hot meal served free. Open for all. St. Charles Catholic Church, 313 First St., Hailey. 5:30-6:30 p.m. “Geology Underfoot in Southern Idaho” by Shawn Willsey: Shawn Willsey is a Distinguished Professor of Geology at the College of Southern Idaho. Free. The Community Library, 415 Spruce Ave. N., Ketchum. 6-7:30 p.m. “A History of Indians in the Wood River Valley”: Local author Tony Evans will speak about his new book about Native Americans in the Wood River Valley. He has collected stories and historical photos from the up and down the valley as well as Carey and Galena. This event is sponsored by the Blaine County Historical Museum, which published the book. Signed copies will be available. Minnie Moore Room, Community Campus, Hailey. 6:30-7:30

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p.m. Mike Healy, mihealy@cox.net, 208788-4807. Carole King - “Tapestry” Live in Hyde Park film: Film celebrates the 45th anniversary of Carole King’s concert for more than 65,000 fans in Hyde Park on July 3, 2016 including the first-ever performance of the entire “Tapestry” album in sequence. Proceeds from this screening benefit The Center’s Professional Artist Residency Program. $10 / $12 nonmembers. Magic Lantern Cinemas, 100 Second St, Ketchum. 4:30 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Holly Bornemeier, hollyb@sunvalleycenter.org, 208-7269491. sunvalleycenter.org/. Astronomy at the Garden: Join Tim Frazier, president of the Magic Valley Astronomical Society, and some of his favorite telescopes to learn basic night-sky orientation, observe deep-sky objects and the planet Neptune. Kristin Fletcher, SBG Education Director, will share lore about naked-eye constellations. Advance registration required. Call 208-726-9358 to reserve your spot. $10 SBG members, $12 nonmembers. Children 16 and younger free. Sawtooth Botanical Garden, 11 Gimlet Road, 4 miles south of Ketchum. 7-9 p.m. Kristin Fletcher, kristin@sbgarden.org, 208-7269358. www.sbgarden.org.

FRIDAY, NOV. 17 Story Time (Hailey): Books and crafts geared to children ages 2-4. Hailey Public Library Kids Area, 7 W. Croy St., Hailey. 10:30-11:30 a.m. 208-788-2036. www.haileypubliclibrary.org. Alanon Meeting: Every Friday. For friends and families of alcoholics. This is an anonymous group. Free. 731 First Ave., Sun Club South, Hailey. 12-1 p.m. nocheaphorses@gmail.com, 208-7204414. Anorexics and Bulimics Anonymous: Open meeting every Friday. Sun Club North, 571 E. Second St., Ketchum. 12-1 p.m. 208-720-0100. Shabbat Service: Please call the Wood River Jewish Community for schedule. WRJC Office, 471 Leadville Ave., Ketchum. 6 p.m. 208-726-1183. Ascent Backcountry Journal 2018 Slide Show Tour: To benefit the Nordic and Backcountry Skiers Alliance and the Sawtooth Avalanche Center. Tickets available online at theslideshowsv.bpt. me. $15. Whiskey Jacques’, Main Street, Ketchum. 7 p.m. Old Death Whisper: Live music. Free rides home to Bellevue and Hailey. No cover. Silver Dollar Saloon, 101 S. Main St., Bellevue. 9:30-11:55 p.m. 208-720-3171. John Welsh Band: Live reggae and world music from Vancouver, B.C. Doors open at 9 p.m. $5 cover. Whiskey Jacques’, Main Street, Ketchum. 10 p.m.

SATURDAY, NOV. 18 Galena Lodge Opening Day: Galena Lodge. All day.

Calendar submission guidelines Calendar submissions for the Wednesday edition are due by noon on Monday, and submissions for the Friday calendar are due by noon on Wednesday. You can enter your items directly in to our online calendar by visiting mtexpress.com/calendar. Or, you may submit your event by email to calendar@mtexpress.com, or call 208-726-8060. Classes are published in our classifieds under Classes. To submit your class for publication, please email classifieds@mtexpress. com. There will be a charge for classes that charge any type of fee.


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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

CALENDAR Overeaters Anonymous and CoDependents Anonymous: Open meeting every Saturday. Sun Club South, 731 First Ave. N., Hailey. 9-10 a.m. 208-720-0100. Red Tent Gathering at New Moon: Come and sit in a circle of women to ground and center yourself and access your deep Truth and feminine wisdom. All women 18 and over are welcome to join. Pre-registration through Eventbrite is required to attend. This circle is open to the public and limited to a small group to preserve intimacy and sacred space. You will receive a welcome email upon registration with further details about location, guidelines and what to bring. Free. Private home, Ketchum. 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Sylvie Dore, redwoodfairy@hotmail.com, 408-859-7383. www. eventbrite.com/e/red-tent-gathering-atnew-moon-tickets-39780370158. Let the Games Begin Gymnastics Meet: Come watch local competitive gymnasts from Spirit n’ Motion Athletic School compete at their first meet of the season. Beginners (Bronze) compete at 10 a.m. Intermediate (Silver) at 1 p.m. and advanced (gold and up) at 3:30 p.m. All sessions are free. Free. Spirit n’ Motion Athletic School, 3950 Woodside Blvd., Hailey. 11 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Amanda Wilson, smascheer@hotmail.com, 208720-4306. www.spiritnmotion.com. Met HD Live - “The Exterminating Angel”: Thomas Ades’ 2016 opera based on the Luis Bunuel film of the same name, screened live from The Met in New York. Tickets available anytime at the theater. Pre-opera lecture by Dick Brown at 10:30 a.m. Run time is about 2 hours, 40 minutes. $16. Big Wood Cinemas, North Main Street, Ketchum. 11 a.m. Overeaters Anonymous: Open meeting every Saturday. Sun Club North, 571 E. Second St., Ketchum. 4-5 p.m. 208-7200100. Jay Rath: Live music. No cover. 7 Fuego, 200 S. Main St., Bellevue. 710 p.m. Live at the Hot Water - World’s Finest: Their “String-centric and bluegrass-inspired compositions seamlessly transition into 3-Dimensional Psytrance, Funk, and Dub soundscapes, leaving their audience with a full circle experience of emotion and dance. $10. Hot Water Inn, 100 Picabo St., Ketchum. 8:30-11:30 p.m. Mark Oliver, innhotwater@gmail.com, 626-484-3021.

SUNDAY, NOV. 19 Holy Eucharist, Rite One: Communion service with more traditional language. St. Thomas Episcopal Church, 201 Sun Valley Road, Sun Valley. 8-8:45 a.m. Judi Fuller, jfuller@stthomassunvalley.org, 208-726-5349. www.stthomassunvalley. org. Sunday School and Worship Service: Sunday School followed by worship and Bible teaching. Free. Calvary Bible Church, 102 Coyote Bluff Drive, Hailey. 9-11:30 a.m. Ron Brown, ron@calvarybiblewr.org, 208-788-9174. calvarybiblewr. org. Worship Service and Sunday School: Adult and child Bible Study at 9 am. Worship service at 10 am. Blended Traditional and Contemporary Lutheran Liturgical Worship Service. Valley of Peace Lutheran Church, 740 Wintergreen Dr, Hailey. 9-11 a.m. Joel Ripke, joelripke@gmail.com, 765-490-

8704. haileyvop.org. Holy Eucharist, Rite Two: Communion service with hymns, choir, and nursery care. Sunday school and youth group begin at 9:15 a.m.; adult education begins at 11:00 a.m. St. Thomas Episcopal Church, 201 Sun Valley Road, Sun Valley. 9:30-10:30 a.m. Judi Fuller, jfuller@stthomassunvalley.org, 208-7265349. www.stthomassunvalley.org. Sunday Morning Service: Inspirational service with music directed by R.L. Rowsey and a talk given by Rev. John Moreland. All are welcome. Light on the Mountains Center for Spiritual Living, 12446 Highway 75, Ketchum. 9:30-10:30 a.m. office@lightonthemountains.org. www.lightonthemountains.org. “The Lucky Ones”: In partnership with the International Rescue Committee, Boise. Shot by Boise photographer Madeline Scott, “The Lucky Ones” is a photo-journalism exhibit chronicling the arrival of refugees to Boise between February and April of 2017, and their subsequent integration into daily life in Boise. The exhibit will run through Dec. 9. Free. The Sun Valley Museum of History, Ketchum. 1-5 p.m. B League Recreational Hockey: 5 p.m. Rangers vs. Honey Badgers, 6:15 p.m. Baby Belugas vs. Subdudes, 7:30 p.m. Devils vs. Danny’s Wings. The bye goes to Royal Wulffs. Sun Valley Skating Center, Sun Valley. B+ League Hockey: 5 p.m. Hutch’s Bad Dogs vs. Dirty Vips, 6:15 p.m. Apple’s vs. Sharks. The bye goes to Aardvarks. Campion Ice House, 781 Airport Way, Hailey. Choral Evensong at St. Thomas Episcopal Church: Evensong is a service of music, readings, and prayers. The tradition of singing evening prayer evolved from the monastic tradition, and it is at least 1000 years old. Free. Reception follows. St. Thomas Episcopal Church, 201 Sun Valley Rd, Sun Valley. 5:30-6:15 p.m. Joel Bejot, joel.bejot@ cune.org, 208-720-1523.

MONDAY, NOV. 20 Swiftsure Volunteer Orientation and Training: Open to anyone wishing to become involved with Swiftsure Ranch Therapeutic Equestrian Center. Must be at least 14 years old. No horse experience necessary. Free. Swiftsure Ranch, 114 Calypso Lane, Bellevue. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Andrea, andrea@swiftsureranch.org, 208-578-9111. www.swiftsureranch.org. Story Time - Chickens & Turkeys: Join host Lee Dabney for fun stories. This week’s theme is “Chickens & Turkeys.” The Community Library, 415 Spruce Ave. N., Ketchum. 10:30-11:15 a.m. DeAnn Campbell, kidcirc@comlib. org, 208-726-3493. www.comlib.org/ childrens/. “The Lucky Ones”: “The Lucky Ones”: In partnership with the International Rescue Committee, Boise. Shot by Boise photographer Madeline Scott, “The Lucky Ones” is a photo-journalism exhibit chronicling the arrival of refugees to Boise between February and April of 2017, and their subsequent integration into daily life in Boise. The exhibit will run through Dec. 9. Free. The Sun Valley Museum of History , Ketchum. 1-5 p.m. Tobacco Cessation Course: This free, five-week class incorporates the evidence-based stages of change model to teach you the tools and provide you

the support to help you snuff out this addictive habit. Please call St. Luke’s Center for Community Health for information or to register, 208-727-8733. Free. St Luke’s Hailey Clinic, Carbonate Rooms, 1450 Aviation Drive, Hailey. 5-6 p.m. Erin Buell, buelle@slhs.org, 208727-8733. Look Good Feel Better: National public service program to help women cope with appearance-related side effects of cancer treatment. Pre-registration required to ensure a makeup kit. To register, call Barbara Stanton. Free. St. Luke’s Clinic, 1450 Aviation Drive, Hailey. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Barbara Stanton, 208378-1252. Souper Supper: Weekly hot meal served free. Open for all. St. Charles Catholic Church, 313 First St., Hailey. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Casino Pool League: Sign-up at 6:30 p.m., first break at 7 p.m. $5 entry. Casino Club, Main Street, Ketchum. 7 p.m.

TUESDAY, NOV. 21 Swiftsure Volunteer Orientation and Training: Open to anyone wishing to become involved with Swiftsure Ranch Therapeutic Equestrian Center. Must be at least 14 years old. No horse experience necessary. Free. Swiftsure Ranch, 114 Calypso Lane, Bellevue. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Andrea, andrea@swiftsureranch.org, 208-578-9111. www.swiftsureranch.org. Science Time with the ERC: Join Alisa McGown from the Environmental Resource Center as she hosts Science Time at The Community Library where children learn about the natural world. Free. The Community Library, 415 Spruce Ave. N., Ketchum. 11 a.m.-12 p.m. DeAnn Campbell, kidcirc@comlib. org, 208-726-3493. www.comlib.org/ childrens/. “The Lucky Ones”: In partnership with the International Rescue Committee, Boise. Shot by Boise photographer Madeline Scott, “The Lucky Ones” is a photo-journalism exhibit chronicling the arrival of refugees to Boise between February and April of 2017, and their subsequent integration into daily life in Boise. The exhibit will run through Dec. 9. Free. The Sun Valley Museum of History , Ketchum. 1-5 p.m.

By the Duck Pond In the Sun Valley Mall • 622-2244

By the Duck Pond In the Sun Valley Mall • 622-2244 ALL NEW DIGITAL PROJECTION SYSTEM

NOW SHOWING MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS

4:30 & 7:15

Sat. Only at 1:30 & 7:15 For Show Times check SVOperaHouse on Facebook or www.sunvalley.com/movies

Team Trivia: Every Tuesday. Free to play. Teams of up to four people. Bar tabs to the winners. Sawtooth Brewery Public House, 110 N. River St., Ketchum. 7:30-9:30 p.m. Paul Holle, paul@sawtoothbrewery.com, 208-720-8437. www. sawtoothbrewery.com.

PUBLIC MEETINGS WEDNESDAY, NOV. 15 Hailey Library Board: Regular meeting, Hailey Public Library, 5:45 p.m.

THURSDAY, NOV. 16 Ketchum Arts Commission: Regular meeting, Ketchum City Hall, 12-1 p.m.

MONDAY, NOV. 20 Ketchum City Council: Regular meeting, Ketchum City Hall, 5:30 p.m.

Thank a client! Recognize an employee. Give a gift this Christmas! Have a MERRY and BRANDED Christmas with promotional products from Davis Embroidery. Showroom: 270 Northwood Way (Ketchum Light Industrial) 208.726.1948

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Davis Embroidery - Promotional Products are AD DOLLARS well spent

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Wednesday, November 15 2017

JOHN WELSH TO BRING BLEND OF WORLD MUSIC Canadian musician to play at Whiskey Jacques’ on Friday By ANDY KERSTETTER Express Staff Writer

On Friday, Nov. 17, music lovers will get a chance to hear some world music tunes without leaving the valley. The John Welsh Band, of British Columbia, will make its valley debut that night at Whiskey Jacques’ on Main Street in Ketchum, with doors opening at 9 p.m. for the 10 p.m. show and admission costing $5 at the door. The band’s sound blends high-energy Latin music with West African, reggae and folk rock sounds. Welsh, a world traveler by nature, has lived and studied in Mexico and Guatemala, where he was heavily influenced by the native music, language and culture. After several years of playing with various bands, he and his brother, Chris—bassist for the band—met Nigerian-born Courage Eigbike, who brought his reggae and West African-influenced music to the band’s sound. They started creating music together with a vision of bringing their world music sound to a mainstream audience, Welsh said. The band started playing locally in Canada and eventually released its EP and music video “On the Road,” after which its popularity began to rise across British Columbia.

SS O E H R P X IDA E AIN T N MOU

Courtesy photo

The John Welsh Band, from British Columbia, will bring a unique sound to the stage at Whiskey Jacques’ blending Latin, West African, reggae and folk rock. Soon, the band was playing venues and festivals all over western Canada. The band eventually added drummer Nathan Larsen and lead guitarist Devin Modugno to round out its sound. “On the Road” eventually landed on the top 50 list on Canada’s national Earshot! charts. The band performs both in English and in Spanish in shows that emphasize crowd participation with singalong choruses. In 2016, the band garnered a Fraser Valley Music Award and was selected as one of Vancouver, B.C.’s best bands of 2016 by Vanmusic. The band released its most recent album earlier this spring.

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If you go What: John Welsh Band live. When: Friday, Nov. 17, at 10 p.m. Doors open at 9 p.m. Where: Whiskey Jacques’, Main Street, Ketchum. Cost: $5 cover.

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EDITOR JEFF CORDES 208—726-8060

Local Life

IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOVEMBER 15, 2017

AL EXP L RES ON T PHOT S O PAG HE FIR S ST T ES A FOR RE AVA HREE IL PUR CH ABLE 208 -726 ASE. -806 0

Early snow gives Sun Valley scenery a head start

Express photos by Roland Lane

Few places in the world are prettier than Sun Valley Resort and its centerpiece mountain Baldy. That’s especially true in the later parts of autumn and first parts of winter when early snow dresses up the landscape. Here, on Saturday, Nov. 4, Canadian geese enjoy the serenity of Bigwood Golf Course.

Six days after Ketchum’s Bigwood Golf Course closed to golfers for the 2017 season, Canadian geese had the place all to themselves on Saturday, Nov. 4. They enjoyed the arrival of some of the first snow of the 2017-18 winter season.


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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Cooler fall temperatures raise hopes for a plentiful winter

Tire tracks cut through the snow on Silver Creek Road in the Boulder Mountains north of Ketchum on Saturday, Nov. 4. The Sawtooth National Recreation Area received an early snowfall as the cooler temperatures of October dropped even more with the arrival of November.

Mountain manager John Matteson shuts down snow making equipment at Dollar Mountain during the cold morning of Monday, Nov. 6. Matteson said “It’s an exciting time to make snow. We love getting started.” Sun Valley’s 82nd winter season is due to begin on Thursday, Nov. 23.


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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Express photo by Roland Lane

JAZZ FESTIVAL GETS THE CROWDS DANCING AT SUN VALLEY Boise residents Justin Show and Camilla Mowry dance their hearts out along with other couples at Sun Valley Opera House during the Sun Valley Jazz Festival’s dance contest Saturday, Oct. 21. The success of the Jazz Festival since 1989 has been tied to the quality of music, as well as the draw of the location. “All the bands want to play in Sun Valley,” said Bill Allred of Orlando, Fla., the leader of one of the festival’s most popular musical groups. “Things are perfect here—the venues, appreciative fans, accommodations—everything, not to mention a spectacular setting in these gorgeous mountains.”

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE No. 1112 ‘S-Q’S ME!’

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RELEASE DATE: 11/19/2017

122 Northern Iraqi 31 “A Visit From St. Nicholas” poet 123 Alter ego on 32 Ways out of “The Simpsons” embarrassing 124 Tightwads’ opposites situations? 125 Hungers 34 Polished 126 Questionable 35 It may have a ring to it DOWN 36 Enero a diciembre 1 Ones in a mess, 37 Civil rights informally activist Guinier 2 Question: Abbr. 39 Laker legend 3 Pot-au-____ with a size 22 (French stew) sneaker, informally 4 Basis of the plot 44 Something absolutely of “Gone Girl” necessary 5 Like Corinthian 45 Fast-paced two-player card game columns 47 Munchies, say 6 Bacilli shapes 49 Enumerations of 7 Habiliments things to be sat on? 8 Cobbler’s tool 9 Vineyard designation 50 Is plenty angry 51 Song words before 10 ____ Cayes “the World” and “the (Haitian port) Champions” 11 Not related? 53 Like pre-1917 Russia 12 Gilbert who wrote “Love and Death on 55 Green shells 58 Animal with a flexible Long Island” snout 13 Rosetta Stone 59 Early title for Julius discovery site Caesar 14 In a senseless way 60 Brightest star 15 Deranged, in slang in Orion 16 Polish movie named 61 Apollo 11’s Best Foreign Eagle, for short Language Film of 64 What Lionel 2014 Messi wears 17 Work out 67 Brazil’s ____ 18 Henry VII’s house Bernardo 19 Lee who co-created do Campo the Avengers 68 Choreographer Ailey 24 Not an elective: Abbr. 69 2016 film set 28 Flower colored in Polynesia by Aphrodite’s blood, 70 Et ____ (footnote in myth abbr.) 30 “You know 72 Document certifiers, who this is” for short

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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

BASIC CABLE LISTINGS

NOV. 15 - NOV. 21 PRIMETIME

Wednesday EVENING November 15, 2017 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

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Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Full Conan Å Full Conan Å Search Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Riverdale (N) Å Dynasty (N) ’ Å Page Six Seinfeld Seinfeld Rules Rules King Mod Fam Mod Fam Empire (N) ’ Star “Faking It” (N) KSVT Ne Mom ’ Anger Mgt How I Met How I Met Anger Mgt News ET The Blacklist (N) ’ The Voice (N) Å Chicago P.D. (N) ’ News Tonight Show Meyers Big Bang Big Bang Goldbergs Speech Mod Fam Housewife Designated Survivor Today’s 6 Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline PBS NewsHour (N) ’ A Year in Space ’ Beyond a Year The Farthest -- Voyager in Space ’ Å Charlie Rose (N) ’ KMVT Ne Wheel Survivor (N) ’ Å SEAL Team (N) Å Criminal Minds (N) ’ KMVT Late Show-Colbert Corden Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mr. Robot (N) (5:00) “Shrek 2” Movie: ›› “The Pacifier” (2005) Movie: ›› “Shrek the Third” (2007) Movie:“Shrek 2” Mike Movie: ›› “Jurassic World” (2015) Chris Pratt. ’ Movie: ›› “Man of Steel” (2013, Action) Henry Cavill. ’ Å Movie ››› “Live Free or Die Hard” (2007) Bruce Willis. ‘PG-13’ Movie ››› “Déjà Vu” (2006) Denzel Washington. Se7en ‘R’ (5:30) Movie:“Stickman” (2017) Movie: ›› “Paul” (2011) Simon Pegg. Movie: ›› “Green Lantern” (2011) Ryan Reynolds. Grey’s Anatomy ’ Little Women: Dallas Little Women: Dallas Little Women: Dallas Little Women: Dallas Little Women: LA (N) NBA Basketball: Cavaliers at Hornets NBA Basketball: 76ers at Lakers SportsCenter (N) College Football SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Jalen Fantasy NHL Hockey: New York Rangers at Chicago Blackhawks. NHL Overtime (N) Sports Sports Sports Sports DRIVE ’ College Basketball: Ball State at Oklahoma. Sporting Rod. NFL Press NFL Press College Basketball Andi Bizaard Jessie ’ Bunk’d ’ Bunk’d ’ Raven Andi K.C. Bizaard Raven Stuck Liv-Mad. Movie: ›››› “Vertigo” (1958) James Stewart. Å Movie: ››› “Anatomy of a Murder” (1959) James Stewart. Å Spirit-St. Futurama South Pk South Park Å South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Broad Griffith Griffith M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Everybody Raymond Raymond Raymond Mom ’ Mom ’ Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Rules Rules Storage Storage Storage Storage Ozzy & Jack’s Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage

Thursday EVENING November 16, 2017 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

^ # & _ ( * + 7 ; < = > ? @ A H J K L N V Z ≠ Ø

Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Å Drop/Mic Conan Å Search Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Supernatural (N) ’ Arrow (N) ’ Å Page Six Seinfeld Seinfeld Rules Rules King Mod Fam Mod Fam Gotham (N) ’ The Orville (N) ’ KSVT Ne Mom ’ Anger Mgt How I Met How I Met Anger Mgt Football NFL Football: Tennessee Titans at Pittsburgh Steelers. (N) Å KTVB News Tonight Show Meyers Big Bang Big Bang Grey’s Anatomy (N) Scandal (N) ’ Å Away-Murder Today’s 6 Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Doc Martin Å Outdoor Changing Midsomer Murders Dickensian ’ Å Charlie Rose (N) ’ KMVT Ne Wheel Big Bang Sheldon Mom (N) Life in S.W.A.T. “Pamilya” KMVT Late Show-Colbert Corden Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Chrisley Chrisley Chrisley Chrisley Chrisley Cromar NBA Basketball: Warriors at Celtics NBA Basketball: Houston Rockets at Phoenix Suns. Inside the NBA (N) (5:30) Movie: › “Identity Thief” (2013) ’ Movie: ››› “Trainwreck” (2015) Amy Schumer. ’ Å Better Better Se7en ‘R’ Movie“Déjà Vu” (2013, Drama) Ioana Flora. ‘NR’ Å Movie ›››› “GoodFellas” (1990) Robert De Niro. ‘R’ Å (5:30) Movie: ›› “Paul” (2011) Movie: ››› “Mad Max: Fury Road” (2015) Å (DVS) Van Helsing (N) Å Ghost Wars (N) Å Grey’s Anatomy ’ American Beauty Star Project Runway Å Project Runway (N) Project Runway “Finale, Part 2” Beauty College Football: Tulsa at South Florida. Raymond James Stadium. SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter SportsCenter (N) College Basketball College Basketball: Providence vs Washington. (N) (Live) Boxing: Jose Martinez vs. Jesus Martinez. Nación U.S. Olympic Trials U.S. Olympic Trials: Women’s Second Playoff: Teams TBA. Ninja Warrior College Basketball Bensinger Fantasy Football NFL Press NFL Press NFL Press Heartland Poker Tour Andi Bizaard Jessie ’ Bunk’d ’ Bunk’d ’ Raven Andi K.C. Bizaard Raven Stuck Liv-Mad. Movie: ››› “Cinderella Liberty” (1973) Movie: ››› “The Goodbye Girl” (1977) Movie: ›› “Promises in the Dark” (1979) Futurama Futurama South Park Å South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Jeff Ross Roasts Andy Griffith Show M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Mom ’ Mom ’ Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Top Chef Junior Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Real Estate Wars (N) Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ The First 48 ’ Å The First 48 The Eleven (N) Å The First 48 ’ Å The First 48 ’ Å The First 48

2 TBS 3 CW 6 FOX / KTWT 7 NBC / KTFT 8 ABC / KSAW 10 PBS / KIPT 11 CBS / KMVT 23 USA

Friday EVENING November 17, 2017 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

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Movie: ››› “Ant-Man” (2015) Paul Rudd. Å (DVS) Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Movie:“Blast From the Past” Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Crazy Ex-Girlfriend Jane the Virgin (N) Page Six Seinfeld Seinfeld Rules Rules King Mod Fam Mod Fam Hell’s Kitchen (N) ’ The Exorcist (N) ’ KSVT Ne Mom ’ Anger Mgt How I Met How I Met Anger Mgt News ET Blindspot (N) Å Dateline NBC (N) ’ Å News Tonight Show Meyers Big Bang Big Bang Once Upon a Time (N) ’ Å (DVS) 20/20 (N) ’ Å Today’s 6 Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Wash Dialogue Great Performances “Indecent” ’ Å Poirot “The Labours of Hercules” C. Rose KMVT Ne Wheel MacGyver (N) Å Hawaii Five-0 (N) ’ Blue Bloods (N) ’ KMVT Late Show-Colbert Corden Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Bones ’ Å Bones ’ Å Bones ’ Å Movie: ››› “The Hunger Games” (2012) Jennifer Lawrence. Movie: ››› “Trainwreck” (2015) Amy Schumer. ’ Å Movie: ››› “22 Jump Street” (2014) Jonah Hill. ’ Å Movie ›››› “GoodFellas” (1990) Robert De Niro. ‘R’ Å Movie ››› “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” (2002) (5:00) Movie:“The Green Hornet” Movie: ›› “Green Lantern” (2011) Ryan Reynolds. Z Nation (N) Å Superstition (N) Å “The Craigslist Killer” Movie:“Oscar Pistorius: Blade Runner Killer” “Kidnapped: The Hannah Anderson Story” “I Killed My BFF” NBA Basketball: Thunder at Spurs NBA Basketball: Pelicans at Nuggets SportsCenter (N) College Basketball College Football: UNLV at New Mexico. University Stadium. (N) SportCtr Jalen Fantasy U.S. Olympic Trials: Men’s Second Playoff: Teams TBA. U.S. Olympic Trials: Women’s Second Playoff: Teams TBA. Truck College Basketball NHRA Drag Racing: Auto Club NHRA Finals. From Pomona, Calif. NFL Press NFL Press Football Football Andi Bizaard K.C. Andi Andi Raven Andi K.C. Bizaard Raven Stuck Liv-Mad. Movie: ›››› “The Wind” Movie: ››› “Being There” (1979) Peter Sellers. Å Movie: ›››› “Mean Streets” (1973) Å “Employee-Mnth” South Park Å South Pk South Pk Movie: ›› “Tommy Boy” (1995) Å Kevin Hart: Laugh M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Mom ’ Mom ’ Tardy Tardy Married to Medicine Married to Medicine Married to Medicine Tardy Movie: ›› “The Break-Up” M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Rules Rules Rules How I Met Live PD: Rewind (N) Live PD “Live PD -- 11.17.17” (N) ’ (Live) Å Live PD “Live PD -- 11.17.17” ’ Å

Saturday EVENING November 18, 2017 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

^ # & _ ( * + 7 ; < = > ? @ A H J K L N V Z ≠ Ø

“The Wizard of Oz” Movie: ›››› “The Wizard of Oz” (1939) Å (DVS) Full Jokers Drop/Mic Broke Girl Broke Girl Cleveland Cleveland Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Burgers Burgers Seinfeld Seinfeld King Cleveland Movie:“Karate Dog” College Football: Teams TBA. (N) ’ (Live) KSVT Ne Hell’s Kitchen ’ Pawn Pawn News Paid Prog. Will Super Saturday Night Live KTVB Saturday Night Live ’ Å News SNL College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Å JB Show Today’s 6 Big Bang Big Bang Castle ’ Weekend R. Steves Lawrence Welk StiOpnHrs Served? Time/By W1A ’ Murder Myster. Doctor Who Lucky Open Rd NCIS: Los Angeles 48 Hours ’ Å 48 Hours ’ Å KMVT Bensinger Leverage Å NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS “Child’s Play” NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS “Grounded” ’ NCIS Å (DVS) Movie: ›› “Divergent” (2014) Shailene Woodley. Å (DVS) Movie: ›› “Insurgent” (2015) Shailene Woodley. Insurgent (4:30) “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” Movie: ››› “Guardians of the Galaxy” (2014) ’ Movie:“Guardians of the Galaxy” (5:00) Movie ››› “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” Movie ›› “Young Guns” (1988) Emilio Estevez. ‘R’ Young-II “Green Lantern” Å Movie: ››› “Gladiator” (2000) Russell Crowe. Å Movie: ››› “John Wick” (2014, Action) “Deadly Lessons” Movie:“Double Mommy” (2017) Å Movie:“I Am Elizabeth Smart” (2017) Å Elizabeth Smart (5:00) College Football: Teams TBA. (N) Scores College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) SportCtr (5:00) College Football: Teams TBA. (N) College Football: Air Force at Boise State. Albertsons Stadium. (N) College Football Final U.S. Olympic Trials: Men’s Third Playoff: Teams TBA. (N) U.S. Olympic Trials: Women’s Third Playoff: Teams TBA. Motorclub College Football Postgame College Basketball: Utah State at Gonzaga. College Football: Montana at Montana State. Jessie ’ Raven Stuck Bizaard Bunk’d ’ Jessie ’ “Diary-Wimpy Kid: Dog Days” Andi Andi K.C. Movie: ›››› “Rear Window” (1954) Å Movie: ››› “High Society” (1956) Movie: ›› “Green Fire” (1954) Å Tommy Movie: ›› “Happy Gilmore” (1996) Å Movie: ››› “Crazy, Stupid, Love.” (2011) Premiere. “Happy Gilmore” Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Teachers Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Mom ’ Mom ’ Xscape Still Kickin’ It Xscape Still Kickin’ It Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Movie: ›› “White Chicks” (2004) Å Blue Bloods ’ Blue Bloods ’ Blue Bloods ’ Person of Interest ’ Person of Interest ’ Person of Interest ’ Live PD: Rewind (N) Live PD “Live PD -- 11.18.17” (N) ’ (Live) Å Live PD “Live PD -- 11.18.17” ’ Å

27 TNT

42 ROOT SPORTS

28 FX

43 DISNEY

29 AMC

44 TCM

30 SYFY

46 COMEDY CENTRAL

31 LIFETIME

54 TV LAND

32 ESPN

58 BRAVO

33 ESPN2

61 WGN

40 NBC SPORTS

63 A&E Listings are online zap2it.com


Express

Saturday AFTERNOON November 18, 2017 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30

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Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Grinch The Elf on Grinch “The Wizard of Oz” Hollywood Paid Prog. Rookie Blue ’ Å Rookie Blue ’ Å Elementary ’ Å Elementary ’ Å Sheriffs Sheriffs College Football: Teams TBA. (N) Extra College Football: Teams TBA. (N) ’ (Live) Extra Soccer Goal Zone Kickoff College Football: Navy at Notre Dame. Notre Dame Stadium. (N) ’ (Live) Å News Animal College Football Scores College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Scores Today’s 6 Paint This Explore Old House Old House Woodright Rough MotorWk Heartland British Baking Antiques Roadshow College Football: Teams TBA. (N) College Football: Kentucky at Georgia. Sanford Stadium. (N) (Live) Å Paid Prog. The Moms NCIS “Pop Life” ’ NCIS “Light Sleeper” NCIS “Iceman” ’ NCIS “Family” ’ NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS “Aliyah” ’ Law & Order “DWB” Movie: ››› “Twister” (1996) Helen Hunt. Movie: ›› “The Island” (2005) Ewan McGregor. Å (DVS) “Ghost Rider: Spirit” Movie: ›› “Man of Steel” (2013, Action) Henry Cavill. ’ Å “Capt. America: Winter” First Bld Movie ›› “Rambo: First Blood Part II” ‘R’ Movie ›› “Rambo III” (1988) Sylvester Stallone. ‘R’ “Lord of the Rings” “Justice League” “Justice League” Movie:“Justice League: Doom” (2012) Å Movie: ›› “Green Lantern” American Beauty Star Movie:“Daughter for Sale” (2017) Å Movie:“High School Lover” (2017) Å “Deadly Lessons” College Football Scores College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Scores College Football College Football Scores College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Scores College Football NASCAR America (N) Count NASCAR Racing: XFINITY Series: Ford Ecoboost 300. (N) (Live) XFINITY Post Trials College Football: Montana at Montana State. Bobcat Stadium. Postgame College Football Movie: ›› “16 Wishes” (2010) Andi Andi K.C. K.C. Andi Raven Stuck Bizaard Bunk’d ’ Movie: ›› “Donovan’s Brain” Movie: ››› “PT 109” (1963) Cliff Robertson. Å Movie: ››› “Westworld” (1973) Å ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show Movie: ›› “Employee of the Month” (2006) Å Movie: ›› “Tommy Boy” (1995) Å Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne ’ Å Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Gold Girls Gold Girls Real House. Real House. Housewives/NJ Housewives/OC Tardy Tardy Married to Medicine M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Blue Bloods ’ Blue Bloods ’ Live PD “Live PD -- 03.24.17” ’ Å Live PD “Live PD -- 11.10.17” ’ Å

Saturday EVENING November 18, 2017 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

^ # & _ ( * + 7 ; < = > ? @ A H J K L N V Z ≠ Ø

“The Wizard of Oz” Movie: ›››› “The Wizard of Oz” (1939) Å (DVS) Full Jokers Drop/Mic Broke Girl Broke Girl Cleveland Cleveland Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Burgers Burgers Seinfeld Seinfeld King Cleveland Movie:“Karate Dog” College Football: Teams TBA. (N) ’ (Live) KSVT Ne Hell’s Kitchen ’ Pawn Pawn News Paid Prog. Will Super Saturday Night Live KTVB Saturday Night Live ’ Å News SNL College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Å JB Show Today’s 6 Big Bang Big Bang Castle ’ Weekend R. Steves Lawrence Welk StiOpnHrs Served? Time/By W1A ’ Murder Myster. Doctor Who Lucky Open Rd NCIS: Los Angeles 48 Hours ’ Å 48 Hours ’ Å KMVT Bensinger Leverage Å NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS “Child’s Play” NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS “Grounded” ’ NCIS Å (DVS) Movie: ›› “Divergent” (2014) Shailene Woodley. Å (DVS) Movie: ›› “Insurgent” (2015) Shailene Woodley. Insurgent (4:30) “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” Movie: ››› “Guardians of the Galaxy” (2014) ’ Movie:“Guardians of the Galaxy” (5:00) Movie ››› “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” Movie ›› “Young Guns” (1988) Emilio Estevez. ‘R’ Young-II “Green Lantern” Å Movie: ››› “Gladiator” (2000) Russell Crowe. Å Movie: ››› “John Wick” (2014, Action) “Deadly Lessons” Movie:“Double Mommy” (2017) Å Movie:“I Am Elizabeth Smart” (2017) Å Elizabeth Smart (5:00) College Football: Teams TBA. (N) Scores College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) SportCtr (5:00) College Football: Teams TBA. (N) College Football: Air Force at Boise State. Albertsons Stadium. (N) College Football Final U.S. Olympic Trials: Men’s Third Playoff: Teams TBA. (N) U.S. Olympic Trials: Women’s Third Playoff: Teams TBA. Motorclub College Football Postgame College Basketball: Utah State at Gonzaga. College Football: Montana at Montana State. Jessie ’ Raven Stuck Bizaard Bunk’d ’ Jessie ’ “Diary-Wimpy Kid: Dog Days” Andi Andi K.C. Movie: ›››› “Rear Window” (1954) Å Movie: ››› “High Society” (1956) Movie: ›› “Green Fire” (1954) Å Tommy Movie: ›› “Happy Gilmore” (1996) Å Movie: ››› “Crazy, Stupid, Love.” (2011) Premiere. “Happy Gilmore” Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Teachers Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Mom ’ Mom ’ Xscape Still Kickin’ It Xscape Still Kickin’ It Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Movie: ›› “White Chicks” (2004) Å Blue Bloods ’ Blue Bloods ’ Blue Bloods ’ Person of Interest ’ Person of Interest ’ Person of Interest ’ Live PD: Rewind (N) Live PD “Live PD -- 11.18.17” (N) ’ (Live) Å Live PD “Live PD -- 11.18.17” ’ Å

Saturday MORNING November 18, 2017 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

^ # & _ ( * + 7 ; < = > ? @ A H J K L N V Z ≠ Ø

(5:30) Movie: ››› “Twins” Movie: ››› “Get Him to the Greek” (2010, Comedy) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Wrestling Dog Whis Dog Whis Dog Whis Dog Whis Intellig. Wonder Dog Tales Into Wild Animal Animal Paid Prog. Pregame Today (N) ’ Å Journey KTVB Morning News (N) Good Morning Hanna Ocean Rescue Wildlife Rock-Park Vacation Articulate Closer Opinion Lidia Sara’s Simply Jazzy Mexican CBS This Morning: Saturday (N) ’ Å Lucky Dr. Chris Innovation Inspec Dateline ’ Å Burn Notice Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met Comics Rifleman Riflem’n Rifleman Rifleman Riflem’n Rifleman Twi. Zone Con Man Star Shwr LifeLock Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Futurama Futurama Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. LifeLock Paid Prog. PiYo Wor. KA Mixer Paid Prog. (5:00) SportsCenter College GameDay (N) (Live) Å NFL Live NFL SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Premier League Soccer Premier Premier League Soccer: Teams TBA. (N) UFA Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Outages Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Hotel Tangled: Mickey Mickey Mickey Roadster Roadster Vampirina (5:30) Movie:“All This and Heaven Too” Movie: ›››› “Adam’s Rib” (1949) Grill Paid Prog. Prostate Paid Prog. Scrubs Scrubs ’ South Pk ’70s Show Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne “Vegas” Roseanne Roseanne Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA LifeLock LifeLock Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Flipping Vegas Å Flipping Vegas Å Zombie Flip Zombie Flip

Movie: ›› “Blast From the Past” (1999) Brain This Old Campmeeting College Football: Teams TBA. (N) ’ (Live) Boise Holiday Parade Soccer College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Milk Martha Kitchen Cook College Football: Teams TBA. (N) Å NCIS “Marine Down” NCIS “UnSEALed” ’ Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ Two Men Two Men Two Men Ghost Rdr Riflem’n Movie ››› “First Blood” ‘R’ Futurama Futurama “Justice League” Darkspots Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) College Football Premier NASCAR NASCAR Racing WWE OXL Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Pregame Elena Tangled: Hotel Jessie ’ Movie: ››› “People Will Talk” (1951) ’70s Show That ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne “Therapy” Below Deck Å Below Deck Å Funny Home Videos M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Ozzy & Jack’s Live PD: Rewind ’

www.mtexpress.com

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

5

Sunday AFTERNOON November 19, 2017 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30

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(11:30) Movie:“Bruce Almighty” Movie: ››› “Ant-Man” (2015) Paul Rudd. Å (DVS) Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Access Hollywood (N) Hollywood Movie: ›› “Vertical Limit” (2000) Chris O’Donnell. Rules Rules Goldbergs Goldbergs NFL Football: Rams at Vikings Postgame Football Predictions On Money Paid Prog. Designing The Moms HappiHou Countdown to Green NASCAR Racing: Monster Energy Cup Series: Ford EcoBoost 400. (N) ’ (Live) Å Football Night LPGA Golf Athlete Sports Escapes Paid Prog. FamFeud FamFeud ABC Today’s 6 Contrary Wash Oil Paint Sewing Quilting Garden Woods. Old House Old House Garden Dialogue Charlie NFL Football: Baltimore Ravens at Green Bay Packers. NFL Football: New England Patriots vs Oakland Raiders. (N) Å Wheel Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Movie: ›› “Eagle Eye” (2008) Shia LaBeouf. Å Movie: ››› “The Hunger Games” (2012) Jennifer Lawrence. Catch Fire Man Movie: ››› “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” (2014) Chris Evans. ’ Movie: ›› “The Amazing Spider-Man 2” M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Movie ›› “Young Guns” (1988) Emilio Estevez. ‘R’ Movie ›› “Young Guns II” (1990) Emilio Estevez. Å Close Movie:“Survivorz” (2016) Oliver Park. Å Movie: ››› “Gladiator” (2000) Russell Crowe. Å Cabin “Dirty Teacher” Å Movie:“Killer Coach” (2016) Keesha Sharp. Movie:“Pregnant at 17” (2016) Josie Bissett. “The Wrong Student” Women’s College Basketball E:60 30 for 30 SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Tennis College Basketball College Basketball Basketball Match of the Day NBCSN NASCAR Hot Pass From Homestead-Miami Speedway. (N) (Live) NASCAR Monster College Basketball College Football: Montana at Montana State. Bobcat Stadium. College Football “Diary-Wimpy Kid: Dog Days” Stuck K.C. Andi Andi K.C. Stuck Bizaard Bunk’d ’ Jessie ’ Movie: ››› “Plymouth Adventure” (1952) Movie: ›››› “Sounder” (1972) Å Movie: ›››› “Hannah and Her Sisters” ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Reba ’ Reba ’ Tardy Tardy Real House. Married to Medicine Married to Medicine Married to Medicine Xscape Still Kickin’ It Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Cops ’ Blue Bloods ’ Movie: ›› “We Are Marshall” (2006) Matthew McConaughey. ’ Movie: ›› “The Next Three Days” (2010) Russell Crowe. ’ Å

Sunday EVENING November 19, 2017 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

^ # & _ ( * + 7 ; < = > ? @ A H J K L N V Z ≠ Ø

Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Search Search Search Search Movie: ›› “Bruce Almighty” (2003) Saving Hope Å Movie:“The Face of an Angel” (2014) Å Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Cleveland Cleveland “Paranormal 3” Burgers Burgers Simpsons Ghosted Fam. Guy Last Man KSVT Ne Mod Fam Mod Fam Mom ’ Mom ’ Anger Mgt Football NFL Football: Philadelphia Eagles at Dallas Cowboys. (N) Å KTVB KTVB News at Ten Sports Outdoors The Toy Box Å 2017 American Music Awards (N Same-day Tape) ’ Å 6 News Big Bang Big Bang Castle ’ Weekend Antiques Outdoor Field Durrells in Corfu Poldark-Master The Collection Hinterland Å 60 Minutes (N) Å Wisdom of the Crowd NCIS: Los Angeles Madam Secretary (N) KMVT Overtime Conquest of the Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU (5:30) Movie:“The Hunger Games: Catching Fire” (2013) Movie:“The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 1” (2014) Good Behavior (N) “Spider-Man 2” Movie: ››› “Despicable Me 2” (2013) ’ Movie: ›› “Minions” (2015) Premiere. ’ Movie:“Minions” ’ The Walking Dead ’ The Walking Dead ’ The Walking Dead ’ The Walking Dead ’ The Walking Dead (N) Talking Dead (N) (5:30) “The Cabin in the Woods” Movie: ››› “John Wick” (2014, Action) Movie: › “G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra” (2009) Å “The Wrong Student” Movie:“The Wrong Neighbor” (2017) Å Movie:“I Am Elizabeth Smart” (2017) Å “Prison Break” SportCtr Who’s In? World/Poker World/Poker SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter SportsCenter (N) College Basketball College Basketball Who’s In? ESPN FC (N) Å E:60 NASCAR Victory Lap Shotgun Caffeine Figure Skating Premiership Rugby College Football College Basketball: Utah State at Gonzaga. NFL Press NFL Press College Football Movie: ››› “Frozen” (2013) ’ Å Tangled: The Series Andi Stuck K.C. Bizaard Raven Andi Movie: ›››› “Forbidden Planet” (1956) Movie: ›› “The Invisible Boy” (1957) Å Movie:“The Single Standard” That Littl South Pk South Pk South Park “D-Yikes” South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Reba ’ Reba ’ Reba ’ Reba ’ Reba ’ Reba ’ Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Mom ’ Mom ’ Xscape Still Kickin’ It Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Xscape Still Kickin’ It Housewives/Atl. Blue Bloods ’ Blue Bloods ’ Blue Bloods ’ Bones ’ Å Bones ’ Å Elementary ’ Å Movie: ›› “Armageddon” (1998) Bruce Willis, Billy Bob Thornton. ’ Å Live PD Movie: ›› “Armageddon” (1998) ’ Å

Monday EVENING November 20, 2017 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

^ # & _ ( * + 7 ; < = > ? @ A H J K L N V Z ≠ Ø

Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy American American Conan Å Seinfeld Conan Å Search Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Supergirl “Wake Up” Valor “Blurred Lines” Page Six Seinfeld Seinfeld Rules Rules King Mod Fam Mod Fam Lucifer (N) ’ The Gifted (N) ’ KSVT Ne Mom ’ Anger Mgt How I Met How I Met Anger Mgt News ET The Voice “Live Top 12 Performances” ’ The Brave (N) ’ News Tonight Show Meyers Big Bang Big Bang Dancing With the Stars (N Same-day Tape) The Good Doctor (N) Today’s 6 Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Antiques Roadshow Letterman-Mark Twain Independent Lens (N) ’ Å Charlie Rose (N) ’ KMVT Ne Wheel Kevin Can Man-Plan Superior 9JKL (N) Scorpion (N) ’ Å KMVT Late Show-Colbert Corden Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam WWE Monday Night RAW (N Same-day Tape) ’ Å Insurgent Movie: ›› “The A-Team” (2010, Action) Liam Neeson. Movie: ›› “The Expendables 3” (2014) Å (DVS) Expend 2 Movie: ››› “Kingsman: The Secret Service” (2014) Colin Firth. Movie: ››› “Lucy” (2014, Action) ’ Å Movie:“Lucy” (2014) (4:30) Movie ››› “Se7en” ‘R’ Movie ›› “The Book of Eli” (2010) ‘R’ Å Norman Reedus Comics Mad Max Movie: › “G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra” (2009) Å Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Grey’s Anatomy ’ Movie: ››› “Crazy for Christmas” (2005) Movie:“Dear Santa” (2011) Amy Acker. Å “Dear Secret Santa” NFL Football: Atlanta Falcons at Seattle Seahawks. (N) (Live) SportsCenter With Scott Van Pelt NFL PrimeTime Å College Basketball Basketball College Basketball: Baylor vs Wisconsin. (N) College Basketball Jalen Pokr Pokr Poker Masters (N) Pokr Pokr Pokr (5:00) College Football: Teams TBA. (Taped) College Basketball: Rice at UNLV. (N) (Live) Focused College Basketball Andi Bizaard Movie: ››› “Big Hero 6” (2014) ’ Å Big Hero 6 Raven Bizaard Stuck Liv-Mad. Movie: ››› “Salt of the Earth” (1954) Movie: ›› “The Brave One” (1956) Å Movie: ››› “Cry, the Beloved Country” Futurama Futurama South Park Å South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Griffith Griffith M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Everybody Raymond Raymond Raymond Mom ’ Mom ’ Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H How I Met How I Met Elizabeth Smart: Autobiography “Enhanced” Elizabeth Smart Elizabeth Smart Elizabeth Smart: Autobiography “Enhanced”

Tuesday EVENING November 21, 2017 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Answers to this week’s puzzle

G I F F I N E R S Q U A M I M S E T O Q U S O U P M R I E E R M T A M H E L O O N V A L I N E R N A S A G S Q U B T U E R E C T A U T S P E N

O R N A T E

R O D S

S H T A S Q A R S I E S Q T M R O A R T A T I E N D E

D A R W E R L S E S Q U R A S B M P A U I N S T E T M A U I R R E T I N I G S E S T L E S L E E D R S

C L U R E N U S T O E A L A N D R O T A P I R

T H E S K Y

A D A R I E R D R E O A E R S T D I E S I G L E D I E L Y B N I F L O S O O D E B E E W Q U A W U R D E N S

N I L E D E L T A

I N A N E L Y

L E I M N I R T E S Y S F A S K A E L S K

M E N T A L P E A P O D S C A N T B E

I S T S D O U T A L D A V O N L E R A N S F W I Q U E U M A S I E R A S S E O H L E A I M P T S O S O T T O P S E S T H O N S A R T O T C H Y

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Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Jokers Drop/Mic Conan Å Jokers Conan Å Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy The Flash (N) Å DC’s Legends Page Six Seinfeld Seinfeld Rules Rules King Mod Fam Mod Fam Lethal Weapon (N) ’ The Mick Brooklyn KSVT Ne Mom ’ Anger Mgt How I Met How I Met Anger Mgt News ET The Voice ’ Å This Is Us (N) Å Chicago Med ’ News Tonight Show Meyers Big Bang Big Bang Middle FreshDancing With the Stars Å Today’s 6 Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Mekong River Finding Your Roots The Vietnam War “A Disrespectful Loyalty” Charlie Rose (N) ’ KMVT Ne Wheel NCIS “Ready or Not” Bull “Thanksgiving” NCIS: New Orleans KMVT Late Show-Colbert Corden NCIS Å (DVS) Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam WWE SmackDown! (N Same-day Tape) Å Damnation (N) Bones ’ Å Bones ’ Å Bones ’ Å Major Crimes Å Major Crimes (N) Major Crimes Å Mike Mike Movie: › “Pixels” (2015) Adam Sandler. ’ Movie: ›› “Ted 2” (2015) Mark Wahlberg. ’ Å Ted 2 ’ Monster Movie ›› “Two Weeks Notice” (2002) Sandra Bullock. Movie ›› “The Notebook” (2004) Ryan Gosling. ‘PG-13’ Å Movie: ›› “Need for Speed” (2014) Aaron Paul. Å (DVS) Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Grey’s Anatomy ’ Movie:“Holiday Switch” (2007) Nicole Eggert. Movie:“The Flight Before Christmas” (2015) “Christmas City” MLS Soccer SportCtr College Basketball SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å College Basketball College Basketball SportCtr SC Feat. Jalen Fantasy NHL Hockey: Edmonton Oilers at St. Louis Blues. (Live) NHL Overtime (N) Curling Car Match College Basketball Spotlight Mark Few College Basketball: Davidson at Nevada. (N) UEFA Champions League Soccer Andi Movie: ››› “Big Hero 6” ’ Big Hero 6 Movie:“Meet the Robinsons” ’ Bizaard Stuck Liv-Mad. Movie: ›››› “Friendly Persuasion” (1956) Å Movie: ›››› “The Bridge on the River Kwai” (1957, War) Å Odds Futurama Futurama Tosh.0 Å Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Jefferies Griffith Griffith M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Teachers Mom ’ Below Deck Å Below Deck Å Below Deck Å Below Deck Å Below Deck (N) Å Below Deck Å Cops ’ Cops ’ Movie: ›› “Hitman” (2007, Action) Å Movie: ›› “Hitman” (2007, Action) Å How I Met How I Met Leah Remini Who Killed Tupac? (Premiere) (N) ’ Å Streets of Compton “Special Edition” Å Who Killed Tupac?


6

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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

LEGAL NOTICES IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT FOR THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF BLAINE IN RE: Patricia Saldana CASE NO. CV07-17-644 NOTICE OF HEARING ON NAME CHANGE (Adult) A Petition to change the name of Patricia Saldana, now residing in the City of Gannett, State of Idaho, has been filed in the District Court in BLAINE County, Idaho. The name will change to Patricia Vazquez Chavez. The reason for the change in name is: Separated from husband and would like to go back to maiden name. A hearing on the petition is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. on NOV. 28, 2017 at the Blaine County Courthouse. Objections may be filed by any person who can show the court a good reason against the name change. Dated: OCt. 16, 2017 CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT By: /s/ Crystal Rigby Deputy Clerk PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS OCT. 25, NOV. 1, 8 & 15, 2017

Blaine County Court Clerk, 201 2nd Ave. South, Suite 106, Hailey, ID 83333. /s/ Meredi M. Wagner 6719 Glacier Drive Boise, ID 83716 (208) 367-0207 Personal Representative PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOV. 1, 8 & 15, 2017 LEGAL NOTICE OF ADVERTISEMENT FOR SALE AT PUBLIC AUCTION The public is notified that a sale of certain personal property shall occur as provided pursuant to Idaho Code Section 55-2306(3) to satisfy a lien claim based on an obligation owed by ERIC DAIGH whose last known address is PO BOX 4322, HAILEY, ID 83333. The sale shall occur at 11:00 o’clock a.m. on the 18TH day of NOVEMBER, 2017, at South Valley Storage, 214 West Spruce Street, Bellevue, Idaho 83313. The property to be sold is the contents of a storage unit at South Valley Storage and is generally described as: personal effects. DATED this 1st day of NOVEMBER, 2017. SOUTH VALLEY STORAGE By Lien Claimant

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF BLAINE

PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOV. 8 & 15, 2017

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF, David R. Meyers, Deceased.

LEGAL NOTICE OF ADVERTISEMENT FOR SALE AT PUBLIC AUCTION

Case No. CV-2017-580 Notice to Creditors

The public is notified that a sale of certain personal property shall occur as provided pursuant to Idaho Code Section 55-2306(3) to satisfy a lien claim based on an obligation owed by RYAN GUZAN whose last known address is PO BOX 335, HAILEY, ID 83333. The sale shall occur at 10:00 o’clock a.m. on the 18TH day of NOVEMBER, 2017, at Valley Self Store, 1041 Airport Way, Hailey, Idaho 83333. The property to be sold is the contents of a storage unit at Valley Self Store and is generally described as: personal effects.

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of the abovenamed decedent. All persons having claims against the decedent or the estate are required to present their claims within four ( 4) months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or said claims shall be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the undersigned at the address indicated, and filed with the Clerk of the Court. Dated this 6th day of October, 2017. /s/ Michael Meyers, Personal Representative c/o Jill Eshman Law Post Office Box 4991 Ketchum, Idaho 83340 STATE OF IDAHO ) SS. COUNTY OF BLAINE ) Subscribed and sworn to (or affirmed) before me, D. Leigh Koonce, a notary public, on October 6, 2017, by Michael Meyers, proved to me on the basis of satisfactory evidence to be the person who appeared before me. /s/ D. Leigh Koonce, Notary Public Residing At: Hailey, Idaho Commission expires: 1/22/2019 PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOV. 1, 8 & 15, 2017 IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF BLAINE MAGISTRATE DIVISION IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF MURIEL MAE SLANE, Deceased, CASE NO. CV- 2017- 416 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IDAHO CODE SECTION 15-3-801 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Meredi Wagner has been appointed personal representative of the abovenamed decedent, Muriel Mae Slane. All persons having claims against the decedent or her estate are required to present their claims within four ( 4) months after the date of the first publication of the Notice to Creditors, or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the undersigned at the address indicated and filed with the clerk of the court;

DATED this 1st day of NOVEMBER, 2017. VALLEY SELF STORE By Lien Claimant PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOV. 8 & 15, 2017 PUBLICATION OF SUMMARY OF ORDINANCE NO. 1179 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF KETCHUM, BLAINE COUNTY, IDAHO, AMENDING TITLE 10, CHAPTER 8, OF THE KETCHUM CITY CODE, SO AS TO UPDATE THE ALLOWED USES OF OFFSTREET PARKING LOTS; CLARIFY A RESPONSIBILITY OF THE CITY; ESTABLISH A METHOD OF CREATING THE PENALTY SCHEDULE; PROVIDING FOR REPEAL OF CONFLICTING ORDINANCES; PROVIDING A SAVINGS AND SEVERABILITY CLAUSE; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE. A summary of the principal provisions of Ordinance No. 1179 of the City of Ketchum, Blaine County, Idaho, adopted on November 6, 2017, is as follows: SECTION 1. Amends Chapter 10.08, Parking and Traffic, to (1) enable overnight parking in public offstreet lots in accordance with posted regulations, (2) modify responsibilities for maintaining a time limit parking map, and (3) provides a process for establishment of a penalty schedule. SECTION 2. Provides for a repealer clause. SECTION 3. Provides for a savings and severability clause. SECTION 4. Establishes an effective date. The full text of this Ordinance is available at the City Clerk’s Office, Ketchum City Hall, 480 East Avenue North, Ketchum, Idaho 83340 and will be provided to any citizen upon personal request during normal office

hours. APPROVED: Nina Jonas, Mayor ATTEST: Robin Crotty, Interim City Clerk PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOV. 15, 2017 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING HAILEY PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION DECEMBER 4, 2017 5:30 P.M. PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a Public Meeting at 5:30 p.m. on Monday, December 4, 2017, to be held in the upstairs meeting room of Hailey City Hall and will hold Public Hearing on the following item(s). • Consideration of a City-initiated text amendment to Title 17, Section 17.05.040 District Use Matrix, to create a new Overlay Zone, “Mid-Residential Overlay Zone District”. This District will be a new Chapter 17.04R, which includes general application, bulk requirements, density and parking space requirements. • Consideration of a City-initiated text amendment to Title 16, Section 16.04.020, Streets, to 1) allow private streets to serve more than 5 residential units; and 2) to reduce the amount of guest parking required for private streets.. • Consideration of a request by Hailey Car Wash for a Conditional Use Permit for Lots 1-8, Block 135, Hailey Town site (809 and 805 S. Third Avenue) in the Limited Business Zone District to operate an Automotive Repair and Maintenance business consisting of 110’ long automatic car wash tunnel, mechanical room, and office (Phase 1). Future phases include convenience store and café. Any and all interested persons are invited to attend this public hearing or submit written comments or direct questions to the Community Development Assistant at 115 South Main Street, Hailey, Idaho 83333, or planning@haileycityhall.org. For special accommodations or to participate in the noticed meeting, please contact the City Clerk (208) 788-4221. PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOV. 15, 2017 LEGAL BLAINE COUNTY HEARING EXAMINER PUBLIC HEARING NOVEMBER 30, 2017 AT 6:30 P.M. On November 30, 2017 the Blaine County Hearing Examiner will hold a public meeting beginning at 6:30 p.m. on the first floor of the County Courthouse Annex Building located at 219 First Avenue South in Hailey, Idaho. (Entrance is on the south side of the building on Walnut Street). Items on the agenda include the following: Variance – 218 Alturas Drive. Public hearing and review of an application by Daniel Pulliam for a variance for front and side yard setbacks on Lot 7, Block 3, Alturas Vista Subdivision, for an existing carport. The required setbacks are: Front: 25’, Side 25’. The requested setbacks are: Front: 13’ 8”; South side: 10’ (North side: N/Aas existing). The property is located at 218 Alturas Drive, within the Planned Residential District (R-2), in Section 17, T3N, R18E, BM, Blaine County. The materials associated with these hearings are available for review at Land Use and Building Services located in the Blaine County Annex at 219 First Avenue South, Suite 208 in Hailey and on the Blaine County web page at www.blainecounty.org. To receive adequate consideration, written comment in excess of one page should be forwarded to Blaine County at least 4 days prior to public hearing by mail, e-mail to pzcounter@co.blaine. id.us, or by fax to (208)788-5576. PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOV. 15, 2017

LEGAL NOTICE BLAINE COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS NOVEMBER 30, 2017 On Thursday, November 30, 2017, the Blaine County Board of County Commissioners will hold a public meeting upstairs in the Old County Courthouse located at 206 First Ave. So., in Hailey. Items on their agenda include the following: 9:00 a.m. 30 Gimlet Rd. & 20-24 Gimlet Ln. - Stream Alteration & Floodplain Conditional Use Public hearing and consideration of an application by James Daverman, David Morrow & Gregory Carr to revise emergency stream alterations on the Big Wood River that occurred during the spring flooding of 2017, and perform additional stream and floodplain alterations including removal of woody debris from within the area directly adjacent to the river bed; removal of undercut trees along the bank and the installation of a flood control levee running 1,773 linear feet. This project is located at 30 Gimlet Rd. & 20-24 Gimlet Ln. (Lots 18, 19 & 20A Gimlet Sub. #10) and is zoned Planned Residential (R-2) with areas of Floodplain (FP) and Wetland (WE) Overlay Districts. 10:30 a.m. 965 W. Warm Springs Rd. - Stream Alteration & Floodplain Conditional Use Public hearing and consideration of an application by John Broschofsky to revise emergency stream alterations on Warm Springs Cr. that occurred during the spring flooding of 2017, and perform additional stream and floodplain alterations that include repairing eroded areas with fill, removing sediment, stabilizing the banks and revegetating areas to prevent further erosion. This project is located at 965 W. Warm Springs Road in Sec 6, T3N, R18E, B.M. Blaine County and is zoned Rural Remote (RR-40) with areas of Floodplain (FP) Overlay District. 1:30 p.m. 118 W. Channel Ln. - Stream Alteration Permit Public hearing and consideration of an application by Tavares Investments Ltd to revise emergency stream alterations on the Big Wood River that occurred during the spring flooding of 2017, and perform additional stream alterations that include an installation of an inset floodplain bench with rock and bioengineering treatments including woody vegetation. This project is located at 118 W. Channel Lane (Lot 1B of Gimlet West Sub) and is zoned Low Density Residential (R-1) with areas of Floodplain (FP) Overlay District. 2:30 p.m. 125 Lower Broadford Rd. - Stream Alteration Permit Public hearing and consideration of an application by Eccles Window Rock Ranch, LLC to revise emergency stream alterations on the Big Wood River that occurred during the spring flooding of 2017, and perform additional stream alterations that include the discharge of additional rock riprap and cottonwood trees with root wads into the bank. This project is located at 125 Lower Broadford Road in Sec 1, T1N, R18E, B.M. Blaine County and is zoned Residential/Agricultural (R-5) with areas of Floodplain (FP) and Wetland (WE) Overlay Districts. The materials associated with this hearing are available for review at Land Use and Building Services located in the Blaine County Annex at 219 First Avenue South, Suite 208 in Hailey and on the Blaine County web page at www.blainecounty.org. To receive adequate consideration, written comment in excess of one page should be forwarded to Blaine County at least 4 days prior to public hearing by mail, e-mail to pzcounter@co.blaine.id.us, or by fax to (208)788-5576. PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOV. 15, 2017

NOTICES OF TRUSTEE’S SALES RESCHEDULED NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE TRUSTEE’S SALE NO. ID-PRV-17002896 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that, Pioneer Title Company of Ada County, dba Pioneer Lender Trustee Services, the duly appointed Successor Trustee, will on December 12, 2017, at the hour of 10:00 AM, of said day, IN THE OFFICE OF BLAINE COUNTY TITLE,

360 SUN VALLEY ROAD, KETCHUM, ID, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of sale, the following described real and personal property (hereafter referred to collectively as the “Property”), situated in the County of BLAINE, State of Idaho, to-wit: LOT 7 IN BLOCK 2 OF BELLEVUE FARMS SUBDIVISION, ACCORDING TO THE OFFICIAL PLAT THEREOF, RECORDED AS INSTRUMENT NO 206106, RECORDS OF BLAINE COUNTY, IDAHO The Trustee has no knowledge of a more particular description of the abovereferenced Property but, for purposes of compliance with Section 60-113 of Idaho Code, the Trustee has been informed that the address of 126 EQUUS LOOP, BELLEVUE, ID 83313, is sometimes associated with said real property. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty regarding title, possession or encumbrances to satisfy the obligation secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in the Deed of Trust executed by RAFE RUSSELL LAPHAM II (FORMERLY KNOWN AS RALPH RUSSELL LAPHAM JR) AND ENNIS HOMESTEAD LLC, as Grantor, to BLAINE COUNTY TITLE COMPANY, as Trustee, for the benefit and security of LARRY SCHWARTZ OF HAILEY, ID WITH A VESTED INTEREST OF 42.86% AND AKAMAI DEFINED BENEFIT PENSION PLAN OF LA JOLLA, CA WITH A VESTED INTEREST OF 57.14%, as Beneficiary, dated 2/11/2016, recorded 2/11/2016, under Instrument No. 633037, Mortgage records of BLAINE County, IDAHO, the beneficial interest in which is presently held by LARRY SCHWARTZ OF HAILEY, ID WITH A VESTED INTEREST OF 42.86% AND AKAMAI DEFINED BENEFIT PENSION PLAN OF LA JOLLA, CA WITH A VESTED INTEREST OF 57.14%. THE ABOVE GRANTORS ARE NAMED TO COMPLY WITH SECTION 45-1506(4)(A), IDAHO CODE. NO REPRESENTATION IS MADE THAT THEY ARE, OR ARE NOT, PRESENTLY RESPONSIBLE FOR THIS OBLIGATION. The default for which this sale is made is the failure to pay when due under the Deed of Trust Note dated 2/11/2016, FAILURE TO PAY THE PRINCIPAL BALANCE WHICH BECAME DUE AT MATURITY, TOGETHER WITH ACCRUED STRAIGHT INTEREST AND ACCRUING DEFAULT INTEREST, CHARGES, FEES AND COSTS AS SET FORTH INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ATTORNEY FEES, TRUSTEE’S FEES AND ALL OTHER APPLICABLE FEES RELATED TO THE BREACH OF CONTRACT. All delinquencies are now due, together with unpaid and accruing taxes, assessments, trustee’s fees, attorney’s fees, costs and advances made to protect the security associated with this foreclosure. The principal balance is $700,000.00, together with interest thereon at 12.000% per annum from 2/11/2016, until paid. The Beneficiary elects to sell or cause the trust property to be sold to satisfy said obligation. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same. DATED: 10/25/2017. Pioneer Title Company of Ada County, dba Pioneer Lender Trustee Services Trustee By Deborrah Duncan, Assistant Secretary c/o Pioneer Lender Trustee Services 8151 W. Rifleman Street Boise, ID 83704 Phone: 888-342-2510 PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOV 8, 15 & 22, 2017 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Trustee’s Sale No. ID- PRV- 17002893


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7

LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that, Pioneer Title Company of Ada County, dba Pioneer Lender Trustee Services, the duly appointed Successor Trustee, will on March 8, 2018, at the hour of 10:00 AM, of said day, BLAINE COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 206 1ST AVENUE SOUTH, HAILEY, ID, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of sale, the following described real and personal property (hereafter referred to collectively as the “Property”), situated in the County of BLAINE, State of Idaho, to-wit: Lot 2, Block 1, Arbor Heights Subdivision, according to the plat thereof, filed as Instrument No. 489922, records of Blaine County, Idaho The Trustee has no knowledge of a more particular description of the abovereferenced Property but, for purposes of compliance with Section 60-113 of Idaho Code, the Trustee has been informed that the address of 711 S. RIVER STREET, HAILEY, ID 83333, is sometimes associated with said real property. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty regarding title, possession or encumbrances to satisfy the obligation secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in the Deed of Trust executed by KOLO, LLC, AND IDAHO LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY, as Grantor, to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as Trustee, for the benefit and

security of JODY AND JANELLE NELSON, as Beneficiary, dated 8/5/2014, recorded 8/11/2014, under Instrument No. 620536, Mortgage records of BLAINE County, IDAHO, the beneficial interest in which is presently held by JODY AND JANELLE NELSON. THE ABOVE GRANTORS ARE NAMED TO COMPLY WITH SECTION 45-1506(4)(A), IDAHO CODE. NO REPRESENTATION IS MADE THAT THEY ARE, OR ARE NOT, PRESENTLY RESPONSIBLE FOR THIS OBLIGATION. The default for which this sale is made is the failure to pay when due under the Deed of Trust Note dated 8/5/2014, FAILURE TO PAY THE PRINCIPAL BALANCE WHICH BECAME DUE AT MATURITY, TOGETHER WITH ACCRUED AND ACCRUING INTEREST, CHARGES, FEES, AND COSTS AS SET FORTH; (2) Delinquency on a prior encumbrance in so far as REAL ESTATE TAXES ARE DELINQUENT AND SUBJECT TO TAX LIENS; and (3) Grantor demolished the building on the subject real property IN VIOLATION OF THE DEED OF TRUST. All delinquencies are now due, together with unpaid and accruing taxes, assessments, trustee’s fees, attorney’s fees, costs and advances made to protect the security associated with this foreclosure. The principal balance is $202,199.00 with accrued unpaid interest in the amount of $72,791.64 through September 8, 2017, and accruing at 12%

per annum from September 9, 2017, until paid. The Beneficiary elects to sell or cause the trust property to be sold to satisfy said obligation. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same. DATED: 11/8/2017. Pioneer Title Company of Ada County, dba Pioneer Lender Trustee Services Trustee By Deborrah Duncan, Assistant Secretary c/o Pioneer Lender Trustee Services 8151 W. Rifleman Street Boise, ID 83704 Phone: 888-342-2510 PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOV 15, 22, 29 & DEC. 6, 2017 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE On Thursday, the 8th day of March, 2018, at the hour of 10:00 o’clock a.m. of said day at Pioneer Title Company, 491 N. Main Street, Suite 102, Ketchum, in the County of Blaine, State of Idaho, Ryan M. Fawcett, as Successor Trustee, will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of

Gam e

Riddle

Yucks on Chuck

There are 4 borthers 3 of them want to buy a television which is 30 pounds. Each of them pay 10 pound each they give the money to the fourth brother and asked him to go into town and buy the television. When he got there the man said there was 5 pounds off so the fourth brother took the 5 pound and television and left. He decided to make some money out of this so he took 2 pounds and give the other 3 pounds to his brothers. So the 3 brothers only payed 9 pounds each. 3 times 9 is 27 were is the last pound?

Chuck Norris once shot an enemy plane down with his finger, by yelling, ‘Bang!’ Chuck Norris can do a wheelie on a unicycle. Chuck Norris can do a wheelie on a unicycle.

sale, the following described real property situated in the County of Blaine, State of Idaho, and described as follows, to-wit: LOT 28 IN BLOCK 2 OF WOODSIDE SUBDIVISION NO. 27, PHASE 1, ACCORDING TO THE OFFICIAL PLAT THEREOF, RECORDED AS INSTRUMENT NO. 454797, RECORDS OF BLAINE COUNTY, IDAHO. The Successor Trustee has no knowledge of a more particular description of the above-referenced real property, but for purposes of compliance with Section 60-113, Idaho Code, the Successor Trustee has been informed that the street address of 2321 Winterhaven Dr., Hailey, Idaho, is sometimes associated with said real property. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty regarding title, possession or encumbrances to satisfy the obligation secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in the Deed of Trust executed by JUSTYN D. FELTON, a Single Man, Grantor, to Ryan M. Fawcett, Successor Trustee, for the benefit and security of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., recorded June 21, 2012, as Instrument No. 598611, Mortgage records of Blaine County, Idaho; and assigned to the IDAHO HOUSING AND FINANCE ASSOCIATION by Assignment of Deed of Trust recorded on October 27, 2017, as Instrument No. 647698, Mortgage records of Blaine County, Idaho. THE

ABOVE GRANTOR IS NAMED TO COMPLY WITH SECTION 45-1506 (4) (a), IDAHO CODE. NO REPRESENTATION IS MADE THAT HE IS, OR IS NOT, PRESENTLY RESPONSIBLE FOR THIS OBLIGATION. The default for which this sale is to be made is the failure to pay when due, monthly installment payments under the Deed of Trust Note dated June 13, 2012, in the amount of $908.00 each, for the months of June through October, 2017, inclusive; and for each and every month thereafter until date of sale or reimbursement. All delinquent payments are now due, plus accumulated late charges, plus any costs or expenses associated with this foreclosure. The accrued interest is at the rate of 3.75% per annum from May 1, 2017. The principal balance owing as of this date on the obligation secured by said Deed of Trust is $124,648.36, plus accrued interest at the rate of 3.75% per annum from May 1, 2017. DATED This 7th day of November, 2017. RYAN M. FAWCETT, a Member of the Idaho State Bar, SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE PUBLISH IDAHO MOUNTAIN EXPRESS NOV 15, 22, 29 & DEC. 6, 2017

Time

Add 3 on to 25 = 28 then add 2


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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

What Rhymes with WIN?

Name That Music

List 10 words that rhyme with “Win.”

Awards are given for different types of music. Fill in the blanks to name some of them.

1) P _ P 2) R O _ K 3) C L A _ _ I C A L 4) R A _

1. ___________

6. ___________

2. ___________

7. ___________

5) C _ U N T _ Y

3. ___________

8. ___________

6) J A _ Z

4. ___________

9. ___________

7) G O _ _ E L

5. ___________

10. __________

Some answers: bin, chin, Þn, grin, kin, pin, shin, spin, tin, twin

COLORING PICTURE

Q: What do you call cows that play instruments? A: Moo-sicians!

Q:What do you get when you cross a sweet potato with a jazz player? A: A yam session.

The Beginning

Fact or Fiction?

Award Challenge Every year, musicians from all over the world are awarded for their work at an event called the Grammy Awards. Here are some questions about some of the younger musicians that have received or been nominated for an award. How many can you answer correctly? 1) Baylor Swift writes her own songs. Fact or Fiction? 2) Lorde is from New Zealand. Fact or Fiction?

In 1958, a group of record company managers came together and decided to start the Grammy Awards. At the time, rock ’n’ roll music was becoming popular, but not everyone liked it or thought it was good, including some of the managers. Their goal was to make sure musicians continued to make good music by rewarding them for it.

3) One of Lorde’s most popular songs is “Royals.” Fact or Fiction?

The first event took place in the Grand Ballroom of the Beverly Hills Hotel on May 4, 1959. Awards were given in 28 categories for various types of music from country and western to rhythm and blues. Domenico Modugno won for Record of the Year and Song of the Year. Henry Mancini won for Album of the Year. Perry Como and Ella Fitzgerald won for Best Vocal Performance.

6) One of Michael Jackson’s most popular songs is “Thriller.” Fact or Fiction?

4) Beyonce used to be part of the girl group, Destiny’s Children. Fact for Fiction? 5)Michael Jackson sang with his brothers as a child. Fact or Fiction?

7) Paty Kerry is a singer and a songwriter. Fact or Fiction? 8) Justin Bieber is from the United States. Fact or Fiction? 9) Some of Justin Bieber’s fans are called “Beliebers.” Fact or Fiction? 10) Jariana Grande sings “The Way.” Fact or Fiction?

Since then, the awards have changed a lot, with many categories being added and some dropped. More awards are now given for everything from Best Rap Song to Best Comedy Album.

Answers: 1) Fiction, the singer’s name is Taylor Swift, 2) Fact, 3) Fact, 4) Fiction, the group’s name was Destiny’s Child, 5) Fact, 6) Fact, 7) Fiction, the singer’s name is Katy Perry, 8) Fiction, Bieber is from Canada, 9) Fact, 10) Fiction, the singer’s name is Ariana Grande

Answers: 1) Pop, 2) Rock, 3) Classical, 4) Rap, 5) Country, 6) Jazz, 7) Gospel

Express

Answers: 1) Pop, 2) Rock, 3) Classical, 4) Rap, 5) Country, 6) Jazz, 7) Gospel

8


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