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Home >> October, 2007

This week: Best bets around the area

Posted on: Wednesday, October 31st, 2007 in: Uncategorized

FRIDAY

Edmonds

Seattle International Comedy Competition

The Comedy Underground brings top regional comics for a night of stand-up fun at 7:30 p.m. at the Edmonds Center for the Arts, 410 Fourth Ave. N. Tickets are $26 general, $24 seniors and adult students with ID, $13 youths, available at the box office or at 425-275-9595. Information: www.edmondscenterforthearts.org.

SUNDAY

Edmonds

Seattle Opera Young Artists program

The showcase for young opera singers presents Gaetano Donizetti’s “Rita” and Leonard Bernstein’s “Trouble in Tahiti” at 7:30 p.m. at the Edmonds Center for the Arts, 410 Fourth Ave. N. Tickets are $22 general, $20 seniors and adult students with ID, and $11 youths, at the box office or 425-275-9595. Information: www.edmondscenterforthearts.org.

SUNDAY

Everett

Katie Couric’s “The Brand New Kid”

Village Theatre Pied Piper presents the Kennedy Center musical about Lazlo, the second-grade “new kid,” at 2 and 4 p.m. at the Everett Civic Auditorium, 2415 Colby Ave. (School shows are 10 a.m. and noon Monday.) Tickets are $12-$14 by contacting Village Theatre at 425-257-8600 or www.villagetheatre.org.

Nader sues Democratic Party over ‘04 election

Posted on: Wednesday, October 31st, 2007 in: Uncategorized

WASHINGTON - Consumer advocate and 2004 independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader sued the Democratic Party on Tuesday, contending officials conspired to keep him from taking votes away from nominee John Kerry.

Nader’s lawsuit, filed in District of Columbia Superior Court, also named as co-defendants Kerry’s campaign, the Service Employees International Union and several so-called 527 organizations, such as America Coming Together, which were created to promote voter turnout on behalf of the Democratic ticket.

The lawsuit also alleges that the Democratic National Committee (DNC) conspired to force Nader off the ballot in several states.

The lawsuit seeks “compensatory damages, punitive damages and injunctive relief to enjoin the defendants from ongoing and future violations of the law.”

Nader received 463,653 votes in the election, or 0.38% of total votes cast.

DNC spokesman Luis Miranda declined to comment on the suit.

Huckabee backtracks on rape case

WASHINGTON - Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee distanced himself Tuesday from the case of an Arkansas man who killed a woman after being paroled for rape when Huckabee was the state’s governor.

Huckabee had once spoken in favor of releasing the man but told reporters the decision to do so was made by parole-board members appointed by his Democratic predecessors, Jim Guy Tucker and Bill Clinton.

Huckabee said he could not remember all the details of a meeting he had with parole-board members during which the case of Wayne DuMond came up. But he said, “I didn’t try to, you know, push anybody’s buttons on it.”

Two months after taking office in Little Rock, Huckabee said he favored DuMond’s early release because he doubted the inmate’s guilt and because DuMond had been castrated while awaiting his rape trial.

DuMond was released to Missouri in 1999, where he was charged in the murder of a Kansas City-area woman. He died of cancer in prison in 2005.

Huckabee acknowledged Tuesday that he initially favored DuMond’s release but said he changed his mind when he realized commuting the sentence would mean the man would be under no parole supervision.

Guiliani: Immigrants not employers’ worry

WASHINGTON - Responsibility for stopping illegal immigration belongs to the federal government and not to cities, states or businesses, Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani said Tuesday.

Giuliani told small-business owners he would not punish them for unwittingly hiring illegal immigrants.

Federal officials are “trying to put the responsibility for this on employers, on city government, on state government,” the former New York mayor said during a conference call arranged by the National Federation of Independent Businesses.

“The simple fact is, nobody but the federal government can stop people from coming into this country illegally, and the federal government does a very bad job of that,” Giuliani said.

He said no other presidential candidate will solve the problem.

Giuliani says he would build a fence along the U.S.-Mexico border that includes high-tech monitoring to detect those trying to enter the country illegally. He also calls for hiring more Border Patrol agents.

Legal immigrants should be issued a tamper-proof federal identification card, he said, “and if something is wrong with that card, it’s the federal government’s responsibility, not yours.”

Kucinich questions Bush’s mental health

PHILADELPHIA - Democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich questioned President Bush’s mental health in light of comments he made about a nuclear Iran precipitating World War III.

“I seriously believe we have to start asking questions about his mental health,” Kucinich, of Ohio, told The Philadelphia Inquirer’s editorial board Tuesday. “There’s something wrong. He does not seem to understand his words have real impact.”

Kucinich, known for his liberal views, trails far behind the leading candidates in most Democratic polls.

Bush made the remarks at a news conference this month. He said: “I’ve told people that if you’re interested in avoiding World War III, it seems like you ought to be interested in preventing [Iran] from having the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon.”

Republican National Committee spokesman Dan Ronayne said it was hard to take Kucinich seriously.

Seattle Times news services

If only the NFL could send Miami to Siberia

Posted on: Wednesday, October 31st, 2007 in: Uncategorized

Who says those Brits don’t know their NFL?

The Giants’ 13-10 win in London on Sunday dropped Miami’s record to 0-8, causing Tom Lutz of the London Guardian to note: “Some Dolphins fans have complained that they’ve been deprived of a home game, but judging by their team’s inept performance, the NFL has done them a favor.” Denver Omelet Dept.

Among the top 10 Colorado Rockies excuses for losing the World Series, courtesy of CBS’s David Letterman:

• “Manager distracted by Joe Torre walking around with his résumé .

• “O.J. stole the equipment!

• “Turns out our ‘flaxseed oil’ really was flaxseed oil.”

Hippo wars

FoxSports.com’s report that a hippopotamus seeking refuge from the Southern California wildfires wound up in the swimming pool of Chargers special-teams coach Steve Crosby is being met with some skepticism.

USAToday.com reports that the nearby San Diego Wild Animal Park has no hippos, that hippos or pygmy hippos are all accounted for at the San Diego Zoo and Fund for Animals Wildlife Center, and that the county veterinarian’s office reported no incidents of a hippo intervention.

And after watching Sunday’s Dolphins-Giants game from London, we can vouch that Tony Siragusa wasn’t the pool perp, either.

Cheek, please

The coach of a teenage-girls soccer team in Windsor, Calif., allegedly lowered his pants after a contentious game Saturday, the San Francisco Chronicle reported, and gave the opposing sideline a two-run salute.

And for those of you who believe in such karma, yes, there was a full moon that night.

Lost in the shuffle

News: Rams guard Richie Incognito might miss the rest of the season with a kneecap injury.

Comment: Could there possibly be a more obscure NFL player than an offensive lineman on a winless team named Incognito?

Talking the talk

• Scott Ostler of the San Francisco Chronicle, on the Lakers’ soap opera starring Kobe Bryant: “Bryant has become L.A.’s version of Barry Bonds ‘07 - a beloved, sore-kneed and controversial superstar/media magnet whose main job is to dazzle the fans so they don’t notice how bad the team is.”

• Marc Tandan of the Virginian-Pilot, after NFL commissioner Roger Goodell cleared suspended receiver Chris Henry to resume practicing with the Bengals: “Cincinnati can’t wait to get him back in a nonpolice lineup.”

• Bill Lankhof of the Toronto Sun, on how sports and politics mix: “About as well as a long-tailed cat in a roomful of rocking chairs.”

• Shannon Sharpe of Sirius NFL Radio, on all the hype for Sunday’s matchup between the 8-0 Patriots and the 7-0 Colts: “If this was cartoons, this is Godzilla vs. Megalon.”

CSI: Fenway

Boston police arrested 37 overzealous fans in the wee hours Monday morning after the Red Sox captured their second World Series in four years.

Asked to explain their clients’ nutty behavior, defense lawyers shrugged and said it was just many being Manny.

Dwight Perry: 206-464-8250 or dperry@seattletimes.com

Indie rock struggling to make money in digital era

Posted on: Wednesday, October 31st, 2007 in: Uncategorized

The digital music era was supposed to be the great equalizer.

No longer would independent labels waste money pressing physical copies, securing crucial and costly distribution, or warehousing unsold albums. They could use the windfall to promote and market their artists, to turn tiny trickles of returns into legitimate revenue streams.

The Internet’s long tail of niche audiences provided access to an unprecedented number of potential fans.

Well, the mp3 did end up leveling the playing field … just not the way many had hoped.

As more and more people discovered the wonders of high-speed connections, music gave new meaning to the adage “the best things in life are free.”

For indie acts, popularity no longer guarantees profit, much less the promised land - not when entire records are available for the taking via torrents or one-click hosters. And for the millions of teenagers who grew up After Napster (and the demographic most likely to fawn over Conor Oberst), those files come largely guilt-free.

Sure, there’s still a large portion of us who dropped hundreds, maybe thousands of dollars on music before we bought our first iPod, customers who don’t look at CD prices the way libertarians regard taxes. But that audience - the one that helped transform the music industry into the litigating force it is today - is shrinking. They aren’t dying, or giving up music in their old age (Norah Jones, holla!), or taking up piracy.

They’re starting to think inside the big-box.

It’s not the shortage of people willing to pay $15.99 for a new CD that’s puzzling the industry, or the influx of people willing to pay nothing. It’s the stores willing to sell music for next to nothing.

Indie rock, get to know capitalism. Or else.

Boxed out

“This is actually capitalism on steroids,” said Kris Gillespie, general manager of Domino Records. “There’s no physical product. It’s something that can switch hands very, very quickly and very, very easily. Any kid under the age of 21 who is a devout music fan knows it’s out there waiting for them.”

Gillespie is one of the lucky ones. His independent label released albums by Franz Ferdinand and Arctic Monkeys and won’t suffer any cash-flow problems for the foreseeable future. But that doesn’t mean he’s carefree. In fact, he’s more distressed than ever.

“Ten years ago, Best Buy started selling CDs as loss-leaders, where they were actually selling the CDs for less than they were paying for them,” Gillespie said. “The fear is that being played out again in terms of the digital world.”

Box stores largely ignored indie records during the last 10 years because it didn’t make sense to stock a product that wouldn’t move a significant amount of units. That obviously isn’t a concern in the virtual marketplace.

But Gillespie can breathe easy about Best Buy, for now. It’s in bed with Real Networks’ Rhapsody subscription service, which doesn’t support iPods, the impetus for this rush to download. As long as Best Buy ignores 75 percent of the market, indies can ignore Best Buy.

But Amazon.com cast its stone in September, selling complete, no-strings-attached mp3 albums for $8.99, 10 percent less than iTunes. And that’s not accounting for sale prices - while you can download Pink Floyd’s “Wish You Were Here” for $11.99 from iTunes, you can get the same files for $4.45 from Amazon.

“We plan to build a successful digital business in the same way we built a sustainable business selling physical goods, which is by starting with the customer and working backward,” said Amazon spokeswoman Heather Huntoon. “That’s what we’ve done with Amazon MP3, starting with what we think customers want - convenience, selection, and low prices - and worked backwards.”

Given the already low margins associated with digital music, moving album prices lower would barely dent Amazon’s bottom line, but could very well turn indie labels into NPOs.

“The pricing model is going to be driven down to probably - without artwork, with Amazon, with Best Buys coming in - somewhere between $6.99 and $7.99 when the dust settles,” said Howard Greynolds, owner of the tiny Overcoat Records in Chicago. “What percentage of that we’re getting remains to be seen.”

Price point taken

Is $7 an album enough to keep an indie label in the black? Not according to Rian Murphy, sales manager at Drag City Records. Murphy’s label decided to pull its catalog from digital subscription service eMusic because it had to sell three times the amount of songs to make the slim profit iTunes already provided. The service provides plans that can whittle the price of a song down to 27 cents - appetizing to consumers but nauseating for artists.

“Keep your eye on the bottom line, and if it doesn’t make sense, don’t do it,” Murphy said. “Things become known eventually. You don’t really have to force them down people’s throats.”

Murphy says it’s up to independent labels to resist slashing their own prices just to fit someone else’s corporate business model. Drag City albums sell for $9.99 on iTunes and $8.99 on Amazon, though Murphy says Amazon is swallowing the difference.

“There are too many people out there who don’t value their own exposure, who want (their music) to get to the maximum number of people and they don’t care what they have to do,” Murphy said. “This is the reason, as far as I’m concerned, that the industry is in trouble.”

It’s the music, stupid

The industry Murphy speaks of consists of labels, distributors and managers, but primarily artists - artists who discovered it’s quite easy to make your own record on ProTools, but not so easy to trade it for goods and services.

“There are a lot of very mediocre bands out there right now, and it’s going to be harder and harder for those sorts of artists,” Gillespie said. “There’s too many bands on too many labels putting out too many records.

“If you figure in single-track downloads at 10 tracks equals one album, the economy of the music industry is only off about 8 percent of where it was in the late 20th-century peak. So it’s not that dire, but it’s become diffused over so many bands and so many releases.”

As the de facto price for digital albums falls, labels will have to become more selective in who they sign and look for alternative resources, like licensing and touring.

“You’ve got to be a good live band,” Gillespie said. “If you’re no good live, you soon won’t be able to sustain a career in this business.”

Capitalism. Cannibalization. Piracy. Getting a piece of this pie has never been so hard. Unless, of course, you’ve got talent.

“Ultimately, it still comes down to good music,” Greynolds said. “Bands can complain that their record isn’t selling, and the hardest thing for any band to admit is maybe people don’t like their music.”

Whose mouse is mightiest? UW code whiz hopes it’s his

Posted on: Wednesday, October 31st, 2007 in: Uncategorized

Some arrive with keyboard and mouse in hand - much like a pool shark arriving at the big match with his own cue. Others put troll figurines atop their computers, Cokes to one side. Online they are known by names like “Soultaker” and “Blackmath.”

Knuckles crack. It’s competition time.

Creating fast and flawless computer programs may not sound like a competitive spectator sport. But when University of Washington senior Michael Skinner takes on other top college computer programmers from around the world in Florida today, there will be $260,000 total prize money at stake, and observers watching competitors’ every keystroke on large plasma screens.

Think “Star Trek” convention meets World Series of Poker.

Skinner, 22, who is better known in this world by his online handle “Paranoia,” carries national pride on his back. He’s one of only two Americans to make the final 120 competitors in the 2007 TopCoder Collegiate Challenge. The other is Yui Yo Ho, a University of Central Florida computer-science student.

The contestants will compete in one of five categories. Skinner and seven other finalists in the “marathon match” category will be given a problem and eight hours to come up with the best solution. First prize wins $15,000. Past TopCoder problems have included plotting a route for a spaceship through a galaxy of moving stars and asteroids, and finding the best way to place advertisements among clusters of people. Companies sometimes pay to get real problems solved.

Participants write hundreds of lines of computer code to best accomplish their tasks. The key lies in creating elegant and sophisticated mathematical algorithms, or problem-solving procedures.

TopCoder is a private company that makes money by selling some of the finished code and matching employers with contestants. The competition is also sponsored by pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly, Deutsche Bank and the National Security Agency - which states on the competition Web site that it wants to employ U.S. citizens to help break.

Skinner, who grew up in Montana, considers himself lucky because his parents were behind the technology curve. They owned an ancient computer that didn’t have a hard drive - instead they would boot it up using floppy disks. To use that computer, Skinner needed to learn text commands.

At age 8, when his family moved to Sammamish, Skinner was already using computers. By age 10, he was writing programs. He remembers that one of his first tested users on their math skills by posing multiplication or addition questions.

These days, he can converse in five languages - computer languages, that is. C++ is his code of choice. And yes, he has already been recruited, by Google. He plans to start working at the company’s Kirkland office next fall, after finishing his computer-science degree and traveling in Europe.

He said it’s crucial to know all the maddening details of computer syntax ahead of time. And it’s important to devise a game plan before starting to write code, then to pay attention to little details along the way. He particularly relishes probability questions.

But Skinner finds his dedication can get too intense.

“The trouble I find with my girlfriend is that, every now and again, I will think about a problem too hard and I won’t hear what she’s saying,” he said.

Skinner has excelled in other competitions as well. He will be on the top UW team in another regional competition Nov. 10. Stuart Reges, a senior lecturer in computer science at the UW, said he has high hopes that team might make it to the world finals.

“Michael is particularly fast at solving problems, and that helps in contests,” Reges said. “It takes a lot of practice to do well. And he has been practicing.”

But Skinner will face tough competition in Florida - including students from Poland and France who placed at the TopCoder open competition earlier this year, and another from the United Kingdom who won a recent elimination round.

Mike Lydon, the chief technology officer of TopCoder, said Americans once dominated the competition. He said he doesn’t think the U.S. is degenerating in computer science but rather that other countries have embraced the competition aspect more wholeheartedly.

“But it is clear that the borders are disappearing, especially when it comes to software development,” Lydon said. “In order for U.S. developers to remain competitive, and for us to remain competitive as a country, education needs to get much more focused on computer science at middle school and high school.”

Nick Perry: 206-515-5639 or nperry@seattletimes.com

Child-porn law re-examined

Posted on: Wednesday, October 31st, 2007 in: Uncategorized

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court struggled Tuesday to determine if a provision of the nation’s anti-child-pornography law goes too far and violates the freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment.

No one disputes it is a crime to have pornographic pictures of children or send them over the Internet. What remains unclear is whether it is illegal merely to talk about and offer pornographic pictures of children over the Internet.

Four years ago, Congress sought to strengthen the law against pornographers and pedophiles and made it a crime - carrying a five-year prison term - to use the computer to “advertise, promote (or) present” real or purported material with “sexually explicit” depictions of minors younger than 17.

Hearing arguments Tuesday in a case that challenges that portion of the law, the justices posed a series of hypothetical examples to the lawyers. Suppose, for example, a news team or a freelance cameraman takes videos of children being sexually abused in the brothels of a developing country, would advertising that video constitute a crime? What if a film reviewer describes a new movie - or an old one such as “Lolita” - and says it depicts a young girl having sex? What about a documentary that shows soldiers raping girls?

In defense of the law, U.S. Solicitor Gen. Paul Clement said the government intends to prosecute only those who knowingly exchange true pornography. “If the underlying movie is not child pornography, then truthful efforts to promote that movie would be captured,” he said. “If you’re taking a movie like ‘Traffic’ or ‘American Beauty’ … you have nothing to worry about.”

The example of the soldier raping girls proved more troublesome. “If the depiction were sufficiently graphic … the person would be in possession of child pornography,” Clement said. Nonetheless, he said the defendant could challenge the prosecution because he had no intent to make pornography.

The dispute arose last year when the U.S. Court of Appeals in Atlanta struck down the anti-pandering provision of the child-pornography law because it was too broad. It could cover, the judges said, an e-mail such as “Good pics of kids in bed,” even if it were sent by a grandfather who is referring to toddlers in pajamas.

The ruling came in the case of a child pornographer, Michael Williams, of Key Largo, Fla. Williams exchanged messages online with an undercover agent and offered nude photos of a 4-year-old he described as his daughter. While he did not have such photos, agents found other child pornography on his home computer.

He was sentenced to five years in prison for possessing the child pornography and another five years for offering the nude photos online. The appeals court upheld his conviction for possession but voided the second conviction. Williams is doing 60 months in federal prison in Texas for the possession charge.

Tuesday, most of the justices signaled they were inclined to overturn the appeals court and uphold the law. Several also wondered why a true pornographer should go free based on examples of innocent persons who might be caught up in the law.

“What’s your best realistic example?” asked Justice Samuel Alito, looking perturbed as the lawyer for Williams debated a series of hypothetical examples with the other justices.

When attorney Richard Diaz said movies such as “Titanic” or “Lolita” are described online as showing “hot teen sex,” Chief Justice John Roberts cut him short. “Your client didn’t produce ‘Lolita,’ ” he said.

Coupons offered to clean yards, dispose of garbage

Posted on: Wednesday, October 31st, 2007 in: Uncategorized

Everett residents are eligible for $17 in coupons for the disposal of garbage and yard debris.

The city is offering the coupons through a pilot program intended to spur residents into cleaning up their properties. Ten neighborhoods are eligible for coupons redeemable this year, and 11 more will be eligible in 2008.

The coupons may be redeemed at the Airport Road Recycling & Transfer Station, 10700 Minuteman Drive, Everett.

Each neighborhood association will receive up to 155 coupons, each valid for up to 360 pounds of debris. Coupons may be obtained by attending neighborhood meetings.

Neighborhoods eligible this year include Pinehurst/Beverly Park, South Forest Park, Silver Lake, Everett Mall South, Cascade View, Boulevard Bluffs, Westmont, Holly, Harborview and Riverside.

Eligible in 2008: Bayside, Cascade View, Everett Mall South, Delta, Evergreen, Glacier View, Lowell, Northwest, Port Gardner, Valley View and View Ridge/Madison.

For more information, call Jack Harris at 425-257-8988. For neighborhood association contacts, call Wendy McClure at 425-257-8717 or e-mail her at wmcclure@ci.everett.wa.us.

Snohomish County

$1.2 million grant

for pilot program

Snohomish County has been awarded a $1.2 million state grant for a pilot program aimed at combating homelessness among families and older youths.

The county also will contribute about $600,000 from its Ending Homelessness Fund.

The state Department of Community, Trade & Economic Development grant will fund Project Ladder, which will offer housing vouchers and case management aimed at long-term self-sufficiency through vocational, employment and financial-literacy training.

The program will serve youths “aging out” of foster care and families receiving Temporary Assistance for Needy Families. Families with domestic-violence issues will receive priority.

Catholic Community Services will provide support services to families, while Cocoon House will provide services to youths.

Snohomish County

Nominees sought

for 3 committees

Managers of the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest are seeking nominees for three Resource Advisory Committees (RACs), which help review proposed forest-management projects in the national forest.

Each advisory committee consists of 15 members who serve three-year terms and are reimbursed for travel and per-diem expenses.

Meetings are generally held once or twice yearly within the geographic area the RAC serves. Members must reside near the RAC boundary. The northern RAC includes national forest lands in Whatcom and Skagit counties; the central RAC includes national forest lands in Snohomish County; and the southern RAC includes national forest lands in King and Pierce counties.

Candidates’ names will be submitted to the secretary of agriculture for appointment consideration.

The nomination period closes Monday. Applications must be made to the appropriate RAC: North, 360-856-5700; Central, 360-677-2414; South 425-888-1421. Applications can be found at www.fs.fed.us/r6/newsbrfs/releases-stored/RACApplication.doc.

Stanwood

Reardon endorses

Housing Hope

Snohomish County Executive Aaron Reardon is backing an affordable-housing initiative for Housing Hope.

Housing Hope wants to build Lincoln Hill Village, 24 apartments for very low-income families, on 1.5 acres in the Stanwood area.

Reardon last week asked the Snohomish County Council to provide Housing Hope with a low-interest, 30-month loan of $842,500. The loan would make the project eligible for nearly $2.8 million in tax-credit financing from the state Housing Finance Commission and $842,500 from the State Housing Trust Fund.

The trust-fund money would allow Housing Hope to repay its county loan.

Bothell

Forum set on

mass violence

A free mass-violence community forum will be held from 9 a.m.-noon Nov. 7 at the University of Washington Bothell.

The intent of the forum is to help citizens learn about issues that have arisen around the nation involving incidents of mass violence in schools and cities.

Attendees will learn about preparedness, response and recovery practices and will take part in an exercise about steps that could be taken to safeguard Bothell in a situation involving mass violence.

The UWB is at 18115 Campus Way N.E., near Interstate 405.

Leaders from the community also are invited to take part, including schools, businesses, faith-based organizations, government, neighborhood associations, nonprofit groups and event planners. Individuals and other organizations also are welcome to attend.

Arrangements to attend may be made by calling 425-487-5555 or e-mailing laura.wood@ci.bothell.wa.us by noon Tuesday.

Other details are available on the city Web site, www.ci.bothell.wa.us.

Stanwood

Art show at

“green” house

More than 20 regional artists will show environmentally conscious art in a demonstration green-built home in “Go Green at the Beach,” a free public open house and reception from 7-10 p.m. Friday at a waterfront residence at 19126 Soundview Drive N.W., in Stanwood.

The event was rescheduled from a previous date.

Public tours of the house will continue from 1-5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays through Nov. 11, with a suggested donation of $5.

For more information and directions, call 206-235-7643 or go to www.goinggreenatthebeach.com.

Pac-10 Football | Ducks-Sun Devils get spot on ESPN

Posted on: Wednesday, October 31st, 2007 in: Uncategorized

Until Monday, the Pacific 10 Conference faced a quirky and embarrassing prospect: Saturday’s Oregon-Arizona State game, appealing enough to attract ESPN’s “College GameDay” show to Eugene, wasn’t going to be on television outside the teams’ market areas.

But the Pac-10, ESPN and Fox Sports Net reached an agreement that will allow Saturday’s most attractive game nationally to be shown on ESPN at 3:45 p.m. The Sun Devils are 8-0 and ranked fourth in the latest Bowl Championship Series standings, while Oregon is 7-1 and No. 5.

In the Seattle area, that puts the game directly opposite Washington-Stanford, to be shown on FSN at 3:30 p.m.

“It took the cooperation of Fox Sports Net and the Pac-10,” ESPN spokesman Mike Humes said last night.

Duane Lindberg, Pac-10 associate commissioner, said he began discussions a couple of weeks ago with the Oregon Sports Network and Fox Sports Net, which were originally to show the game only to the local areas of the two programs.

Then came an inquiry from ESPN, Lindberg said, in which it said it would like to pick up the Oregon-ASU game if both won key games Saturday. Each did, and the arrangement was finalized Monday.

The late “audible” was required because of two elements: the offseason locking-in of potentially attractive games, and the unpredictability of the 2007 season.

Months ago, ABC picked UCLA-Arizona at 12:30 p.m., partly because of the Los Angeles TV market. It’s also homecoming for Arizona, and most schools want those times decided early for planning purposes.

The Oregon State-USC game at 5 p.m. was earmarked last spring for ABC or ESPN. It was attractive because of USC’s drawing power and as a rematch of OSU’s ‘06 upset.

Fox Sports Net had picked Washington State-California for a 7 p.m. start, and the UW-Stanford game went to local Fox affiliates.

Which was fine, except the Oregon-ASU game was then going to an extremely limited audience in those two states, despite its significance.

Lindberg said conference members like some TV games determined in the offseason, both for budgeting and planning purposes.

“We’re trying to determine in the first of May and June who are going to be the good teams, and you always make mistakes,” he said. “Hopefully, we’ve taken what was a bad situation and made it good.”

Humes said the second appearance of “College GameDay” in Eugene this year was independent of the game being shown on ESPN. But referring to the unpredictability of the season, he added, “If somebody had said ‘GameDay’ would have originated from Kentucky and Oregon twice, I don’t know if anybody would have believed them.”

Bud Withers: 206-464-8281 or bwithers@seattletimes.com

Protect your pets from Halloween fright

Posted on: Tuesday, October 30th, 2007 in: Uncategorized

Halloween can be a scary time for animals. The Seattle Animal Shelter and the Seattle Humane Society offer tips to keep Halloween from being a fright for pets and trick-or-treaters.

• Don’t leave pets out in the yard on Halloween.

• Trick-or-treat candies are not for pets. Chocolate is poisonous to dogs.

• Keep dogs and cats away from lit pumpkins and other flames that can be knocked over easily.

• Consider keeping your pets in a separate room during trick-or-treat visiting hours and parties.

• Make certain your pet is wearing a pet license in case it escapes through an open door.

Civic calendar

“Take winter by storm”

Today: New storm-response plans are being announced at 10:30 a.m. at Seattle City Hall by the city, King County, the state Department of Transportation and Puget Sound Energy. The plans will address improving storm response based on lessons learned from last winter’s storms.

Traffic watch

Today-Friday: Magnolia Boulevard will be closed from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. between West Garfield Street and West Howe Street to all through traffic except King County Metro Transit and school buses. The street will remain open to pedestrians. Traffic southbound on Magnolia Boulevard will be detoured to West Howe Street, and then to 28th Avenue West. Northbound traffic will be detoured to 28th Avenue West, Condon Way West and then to West McGraw Street.

More flu shots

Through November: Walk-in flu-shot clinics are being offered by Kmart pharmacies through November. Call 800-822-8345 to find the date and time of a flu clinic at the various stores. The flu-shot vaccines are available for customers for $28, and pneumonia shots are available for $50.

Here & Now is compiled by Seattle Times lead news assistant Lynne Berry. To submit an item, e-mail herenow@seattletimes.com or call 206-464-2226.

Oct. 30, 1969: University of Washington football coach Jim Owens suspended four African-American football players - Gregg Alex, Ralph Bayard, Harvey Blanks and LaMar Mills - for what he termed lack of commitment to the team. In response, other African-American players on the team refused to travel to a game, and activists demanded Owens’ resignation. Owens reconsidered and reinstated all but one player. Protests against the suspension followed, and UW President Charles Odegaard promised an overhaul of football disciplinary practices.

Source: Historylink.org

Symetra sets IPO shares at $18 to $20

Posted on: Tuesday, October 30th, 2007 in: Uncategorized

Symetra Financial increased the expected value of its initial public offering by 21 percent to as much as $908.5 million.

Proceeds from the sale of 45.4 million shares, which will be priced at $18 to $20 each, will go to shareholders who sell rather than Symetra itself, the Bellevue insurer said Monday in a regulatory filing.

The sale, including an overallotment portion, represents about half the outstanding stock, giving the company a market value of as much as $1.9 billion.

Symetra was formed from the life-insurance unit that Safeco sold to a group led by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway and White Mountains Insurance Group in 2004. They paid $1.41 billion.

Berkshire and Hanover, N.H.-based White Mountains each owned a 26 percent stake as of Sept. 30. This will fall to 15 percent each after the sale, the filing shows.

Symetra said profit climbed 9.6 percent to $159.5 million last year on premium revenue of $525.7 million. The company had total assets of $19.9 billion as of March and employs more than 1,200 people.

The company expects its shares to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol SYA, it said in the filing. Merrill Lynch, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs Group and Lehman Brothers Holdings are managing the offering.