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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Bend Highdasedall
If grouseis listed, deal may ease pain for ranchers
Friday night's long-awaited homecoming for Lindsey Bingham, 9, was a whirlwind community event. Nowthe family — no strangers to medical difficulties — tries to return to normalcy, at least until the next test.
— Lava Bears' bid for a state title came up short in the Class 5A championship game.D1
Fresh derries deckonAn alliance of growers, farmworkers and amajor retailer is promoting
better produceand
By Dylan J. Darling
work conditions.E1
The Bulletin
An agreement between the Oregon Cattlemen's Association and a pair
... but there's a ways to go, as a hepatitis A outbreak
traced to Oregon shows.B3
of federal agencies could buffer ranchers from increased restrictions if the sage grouse becomes a protected species. "It gives them the ability to start doing things now," said Jeff Clark, spokesman for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. The Cattlemen's Association, which calls itself the "voice of the cattle industry in Oregon," signed the agreement Thursday with the BLM and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The
Odituary
— Jean Stapleton, Archie Bunker's
By Markian Hawryluk
better angel,
The Bulletin
dies at 90.BS
COntrOVerSy —How long can Eric Holder hold on?
Obama officials take sides on his tenure and demeanor.A4
Fracking —A ban in New Mexico is all about water.A7
Google Glass — Another potentially dangerous distraction we don't need?F1
N
ot even her puffy cheeks could hide
Lindsey Bingham's smile. As soon as her fmuly's red Suburban pulled to a stop, the 9-year-old leapt
i: j /'
from its doors and into the
-
55-page agreement
arms of some 120 family
doesn't establish mandatory efforts to
s
and friends gathered in
avoid harming sage grouse or damaging
;.i
front of the North Powder
their habitat, but it allows ranchers to enter into individual agreements with the BLM to help the bird when they sign a lease or permit for cattle grazing. "It's a voluntary agreement," said John O'Keeffe, treasurer for the Cattlemen's Association. SeeGrouse/A4
Public School to welcome herback. And a Wed exclusiveLong-lost World War I-era painting is finally found
— wearing a hefty price tag. bendbnlletin.cnm/extras
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Advice to the Class of2013: Do it yourself By David Beard The Washington Post
Dear Class of 2013: There is no easy path. You will face setbacks. Boom-
ers have hogged up your jobs. You'll have to rely on yourselves. And quit it with the excuses. What happened to the unicorns and the rainbows in the commencement speeches to the Class of 2013? In these straitened, sequesteredtimes, some speakers are mixing in another theme: tough love. Here's a glimpse at what graduates are being told, from the luminaries doing the telling.
Oprah Winfrey: Yes, you'll stumble At Harvard on Thursday, the TV host recounted her own setbacks and dedicated her talk to "any-
body who's Winfrey
felt screwed by li f e ." Ev-
erybody, she told them, needs resilience, to move forward after inevitable stumbles. And even themost successful people need reassurance, validation. Please, she urged them, think broadly enough to "have more faceto-face conversations with
people you may disagree with." SeeAdvice/A6
Most of all, she wanted to see her two cousins, girls about her age. Shefound them quickly,and soon the guest of honor disappeared to do the things normal 9-year-old girls do. At least for an hour or two, there were no tests or needles or medical equipment to worry about. After more than ayear away, including 264 days in the hospital, Lindsey was home. The family of Jason and Stacy Bingham, of North Powder, has made national news after three of five children were diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy, a lifethreatening enlargement of the heart. The oldest, Sierra, 13, had a hearttransplant seven years ago. Lindsey had hers this year, on Valentine's Day. Gage, 4, has a pacemaker, but medications appear to be keeping his condition in check. Megan, 11, and Hunter, 6, show signs they might have the same condition, but they are well for now. So while the health concerns are still daunting, back in their hometown the Binghams can now try to re-establish a sense of normalcy. SeeHeart/A5
r I
Ideas flow on clashing pot laws
Kathy Orr / Wescom News Service
Grandpa Dale Bingham gives 9-year-old Lindsey a big hug at her welcoming party in North Powder. Lindsey's grand adventure, as she called it in her journal, isn't over, but she may be one step closer to a "normal" life.
By Rob Hotakainen McCtatchy Newspapers
An eventfulyearforLindseyBingham Lindsey returned home to North Powder, in Northeast Oregon, this weekend after a year in California, where doctors initially implanted an artificial heart pump and then
transplanted ahumanheart. Her journey: May21, 2012:Lindsey leaves Oregon for Boise, Idaho, and Palo Alto, Calif.
June 21:Doctors place Lindseyonthetransplant list. June 30:Lindsey gets the Berlin Heart pump. Feb.14, 2013:A donor heart is implanted.
Feb. 28:Lindsey is discharged from the hospital. May31:The Bingham family arrives home in North Powder.
June 12:Lindseyandher sister Sierra aredueback in Palo Alto for a checkup.
Qw Follow The Bvlletiris coverage of this story, and afeed of the Bingham family blog, at denddsttetin.com/binghamhearts
U.S., Chinawant limits oncyberspying By David E. Sanger and Mark Landler New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — The United States and China have agreed to hold regular, high-level talks on how to set standards ofbehaviorforcybersecurity and commercial espionage, the first diplomatic effort to defuse the tensions over what the U.S. says
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 71, Low42
Page B1
is a daily barrage of computer break-ins and theft of corporate and government secrets. The talks will begin in July. On Friday, President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping, who took office this spring, are scheduled to hold an unusual, informal summit meeting in Rancho Mirage, Calif., that could set the tone for
their relationship and help them confront chronic tensions like the nuclear threat from North Korea. But U.S. officials say they do not expect the process to immediately yield a significant reduction in the daily intrusions from China. The head of the U.S. Cyber Command and director of the
National Security Agency, Gen. Keith Alexander, has said the attacks have resulted in the "greatest transfer of wealth in history." Hackers have stolen a variety of secrets, including negotiating strategies and schematics for next-generation
fighter jets and gas pipeline control systems. SeeHacking /A6
INDEX
The Bulletin
Business/Stocks E1-6 CommunityLife C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles C6 D1-6 Calendar B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B 4 - 5 S ports Classified G 1 - 6L ocal/State B 1- 6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies C8
Vol. 110, No. 153, 48 pages,
AnIndependent Newspaper
7 sections
Under federal law, banks can't accept money from retail shops that sell marijuana, even if they're regulated by a state. That's because, in the eyes of the U.S. government, all pot sales are illegal, with marijuana, like heroin and LSD, classified as a Schedule 1 controlled substance. Eventhough Washington and Colorado have legalized marijuana, pot advocates say it will be impossible for them to tax and sell the drug next year if the U.S. government doesn't give them a pass on violating federal laws. If the Obama administration doesn't broker a middle ground, the issue appears destined for a clash. Against this backdrop, scholars and advocates are searching for a compromise. See Pot/A4
+ .4 We userecycled newsprint
: IIIII o
88 267 02330
A2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
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NATION 4% ORLD Health Care debate —It's Republican versus Republican in the latest round of political battles over health care. Conservative Repub-
a oma S orm'S
ea New York Times News Service H ENRYETTA , Ok l a. — Twelve days after a tornado killed 24 people and destroyed hundreds of homes, Oklahoma City and its suburbs awoke Saturday morning to the aftermath of Round 2, after a storm set off tornadoes and severe flooding that caused widespread damage throughout the region Friday and claimed at least nine victims, including two children. None of the tornadoes that touched down Friday were as powerful as the one that tore through much of Moore, Okla., on May 20. But the high winds, hail and heavy rain — a total of roughly 8 inches in a few hours — wreaked their own sort of havoc on Oklahoma City and suburbs
lican legislators in major states are trying to block efforts by more
pragmatic governors of their own party to accept health insurance for more low-income residents under President BarackObama's health
0 riSeS 0
care law. Unlike their congressional counterparts, who've misfired in repeated attempts to torpedo the law, state Republicans may well
to the west, overturning tractor-trailer rigs, stranding motorists on flooded streets and interstate highways and sending passengers at Will Rogers World Airport in Oklahoma City into underground tunnels to seek shelter. T ens o f th o u sands r e mained without power as the storm moved through Arkansas, Missouri and Kentucky, claiming at least three more lives. State officials said awoman and her child who appeared to have been caught in the storm on Interstate 40 west of Oklahoma City were among the dead. Even towns far east of Oklahoma City, like Henryetta, 90 miles away, were drenched in a storm that produced hurricane-like effects.
Main Street in Henryetta was a s w i f t-moving r i ver, with water rising to the tops of the tiresof stranded cars,setting garbage cans and other debris afloat and seeping into a Wal-Mart store, gas stations and other businesses. Moore, 11 miles south of Oklahoma City, appeared to have been spared the kind of damage that was inflicted by the May 20 tornado, which destroyed an elementary school and killed 10 children. But this time there was flooding to contend with, as well. Mayor Glenn L ewis t old The Oklahoman newspaper that Moore was experiencing w i d e spread f l o o ding that accompanied Fr iday's
uninsured.
high winds and drenching
"football house" in Annapolis, Md.
sink the expansion of Medicaid in populous states such asFlorida and Michigan. That would mean leaving billions of dollars in federal matching funds on the table and hundreds of thousands of the poor
Wildfil'es —Fire crews in NewMexico on Saturday fought two growing wild blazes that havescorched thousands of acres, spurred evacuation calls for dozens of homes and poured smoke into the touristy state capital. State officials said the uncontained blaze near
Santa Fehad spread to 8 square miles, making it apparently the largest of several wildfires burning in the West as it placed the city under a blanket of haze. Meanwhile, more than 900 firefighters in California
continued to battle the 3,600 acrePowerhouse fire in the Angeles National Forest and Santa Clarita area on what officials said was the hottest day of the week. The wildfire is only15 percent contained, ac-
cording to a U.S.Forest Service spokesman. NaVal aCademy rape Claim —The U.S.Naval Academy is investigating allegations that three of the school's football players sexually assaulted a femalemidshipman at aparty last year — an explosive allegation that surfaced Friday as the military faces increased
scrutiny over whether it pursues such casesaggressively enough.The investigation, led by the Naval Criminal lnvestigative Service, has not
yielded anyarrests,anacademy spokesman said.Susan Burke,an attorney for the woman,said the incident occurred at anoff-campus
rainfall.
Iraq viOlenCe — More than ayear after the U.S. military left Iraq, the country is reeling from its most sustained violence since 2008. Over the last two months, more than1,700 people have been killed,
smuoo Aw. DcsuuesRe
raising fears the country is sliding back into chaos. Thecurrent
TURKISH PROTESTSCONTINUE
mayhem began with a wave of protests by Sunnis alleging neglect and mistreatment at the hands of the Shiite-led government of Nouri
al-Maliki. Violence has risen steadily since anApril 23 crackdown by security forces on a Sunni protest in the northern city of Hawija.
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337
British soldier slaying —British police chargedasecond suspect Saturday with the murder of a soldier who was hacked to death in a London street, as right-wing and antifascist groups both
demonstrated in response to a slaying that has heightened religious tensions in Britain. The Metropolitan Police said 28-year-old Michael Adebolajo was charged with the murder of Drummer Lee Rigby. Ade-
DEPARTMENT HEADS
bolajo also is accused of attempting to murder two police officers, and possession of a firearm.
Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541-383-0370 Circulation andOperations Keith Foutz .........................54f -385-5805 Finance Holly West ...........541-383-0321 Human Resources
Japan and Africa —Japan will provide a fresh, five-year aid package for Africa worth up to $32 billion, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Saturday, at the outset of a three-day international conference on the
Traci Donaca ......................
continent's development. Theaid includes loans for infrastructure construction and a training program for African youth, the premier said.
TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran..........541-383-0360 City DeskJoseph Oitzler.....541-383-0367 Community Life, Health Julie Johnson.....................541-383-0308 Editorials Richard Coe......541-383-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon........................541-383-0377 Home, All Ages AlandraJohnson................541-617-7860 News Editor Jan Jordan....541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey......541-383-0366 Sporls Bill Bigelow.............541-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou ............541-410-9207
RIISSla Smnking ban —A law that bans smoking in public places
j
has taken effect in Russia, a contentious move in a country with one of the highest smoking rates in the world. The ban, which came into
force Saturday, prohibits smoking in workplaces, schools, universities and on public transportation. More restrictions will be applied a year later. Cigarettes are much cheaper in Russia than in the U.S.
5~4 '<
and Europe, withthe price of a packstarting atabout $1. About40 percent of Russians smoke. — From wire reports 0
t
Thinking Dfselling your property?
The Associated Press
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
Q 22Q 28Q 33Q 53 Q59 O The estimated jackpot is now $50 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
36 Q 42 Q5Q9Q29Q 30 Q The estimated jackpot is now $15.3 million.
Turkish protesters clash with riot police Saturday
widely criticized for violent tactics Friday, set off
at Taksim Square in Istanbul, Turkey. Violent protests against the government of Prime
scenes of jubilation and destruction, as some drank and partied while others destroyed police vehicles
Minister RecepTayyip Erdogan engulfed Istanbul,
and bulldozers.
Turkey's largest city, Saturday and spread to other cities, including the capital, Ankara, as tens of thou-
While the protest began over plans to destroy a park, for many demonstrators it had moved beyond
sands of demonstrators took to the streets in a
that to become abroad rebuke to the10-year leader-
second day of civil unrest and faced the tear gas and
ship of Erdogan and his government, which they say has adopted authoritarian tactics.
water cannons of aharsh police crackdown. By late afternoon, the police withdrew from
F QR S A L E •
'7 88- 4 2 2
ple at demonstrations across the country, and that 79
people werewounded, a number that was probably low. After Friday's protests, which were smaller and
off the protests last weekwith government plans to turn a park into a replica Ottoman-era army barracks and mall. The departure of the police, who had been
9
5% Listing Only 3% If We
The lnterior Ministry said it had arrested 939 peo-
Istanbul's central Taksim Square, allowing the demonstrators to gather unimpeded in the place that set
•
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less violent than those Saturday, a Turkish doctors'
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group reported nearly1,000 injuries.
David Madrigal • 541-788-4229
Hezbollah stronghold attacked New York Times News Service BEIRUT — Sixteen mortar shells and rockets fired from Syria crashed in a stronghold of Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militant group, in eastern Lebanon on Friday night, L ebanon's N a tional N e w s Agency reported Saturday. It was the first strike on a major hub of Hezbollah, whose fighters are allied with the Syrian president, since hostilities broke out in Syria more than two years ago. The agency reported no casualties, but said the rockets fell overnight on Baalbek, a Hezbollah town d o m inated mostly by Shiites with a sizable Sunni population and a smaller Christian one, setting trees and bushes afire. The attacks came almost a week after Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah, announced his military support for the government of President Bashar Assad of Syria. Syrian opposition groups, which aim to overthrow A s s ad, c o n demned Nasrallah's stand and called for his fighters to withdraw from Syrian soil. Some rebel brigade leaders threatened to retaliate against H ezbollah directly.
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I
r' REAETOR
SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Sunday, June 2,the 153rd day of 2013. There are 212 days left in the year.
NEED TO KNOW
STUDY
HAPPENINGS CanCer SurvivOrS —It's National CancerSurvivor's Day The Heaven Can Wait 5k walk/
run for breast cancerawareness is happening in Bend.
HISTORY Highlight:In 1953, the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II took
place in London's Westminster Abbey, 16 months after the death of her father, King
George Vl; it was the first such ceremony to be broadcast on television. In1863, during the Civil War, Union Maj. Gen. William Sherman wrote a letter to his wife, Ellen, in which he commented,
"Vox populi, vox humbug" (The voice of the people is the voice of humbug).
In1886, President Grover Cleveland, 49, married Frances
Folsom, 21, in the BlueRoom of the White House. (To date, Cleveland is the only president
to marry in the executive mansion.) In 1897, Mark Twain, 61, was quoted by the New York Jour-
nal as saying from London that "the report of my death was an
exaggeration." In1924, Congress passeda measure that was then signed by President Calvin Coolidge guaranteeing full American citizenship for all Native Ameri-
cans born within U.S. territorial limits. In 1941, baseball's "Iron Horse," Lou Gehrig, died in New York of the degenerative
disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; he was37. In1966, the U.S. space probe Surveyor 1landed onthe
moon and begantransmitting detailed photographs of the
lunar surface. In1979, Pope John Paul II arrived in his native Poland on the first visit by a pope to a
communist country. In1983, half of the 46 people aboard an Air Canada DC-9
were killed after fire broke out on board, forcing the jetliner to
make an emergency landingat Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. In1986, for the first time, the public could watch the pro-
ceedings of the U.S.Senateon television as asix-week experiment began. In 1987, President Ronald
Reagan announced hewas nominating economist Alan Greenspan to succeedPaul Volcker as chairman of the
Federal Reserve Board. In1997,Timothy McVeigh was
convicted of murder andconspiracy in the Oklahoma City
bombing. (Hewas executed in June 2001.) Ten yearsago:President George W. Bush, visiting the Middle East, pledged to work
unstintingly for the goal of Israel and a Palestinian state living side by side without
bloodshed. Five years age:Polygamist sect children began to bereunited with their parents two
months after the state of Texas removed the children from the
sect's ranch. Oneyearago:Ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was
sentenced to life in prison.
BIRTHDAYS Actress-singer Sally Kellerman is 76. Actor Ron Ely is 75. Actor Stacy Keach is 72. Rock musician Charlie Watts is 72.
Actor Charles Haid is 70. Movie director Lasse Hallstrom is 67. Actor Jerry Mathers is 65.
Actress JoannaGleason is63. Actor Dennis Haysbert is 59.
Comedian DanaCarvey is 58. Actor Gary Grimes is 58. Pop musician Michael Steele is 58. Actor Navid Negahban is 49.
Singer Merril Bainbridge is 45. Actress Paula Cale is 43. Actor
Anthony Montgomery is 42. Actor-comedian WayneBrady is 41. Actor Wentworth Miller is 41. Actor Zachary Quinto is
36. Actor Dominic Cooper is 35. Actress Nikki Cox is 35. Actor Justin Long is 35. Actor
Deon Richmond is 35. Actress Morena Baccarin is 34. — From wire reports
o ar, se ues raion's e e s izin seem sma The $85 billion in federal budget cuts called the sequester, which some warned would shake the nation like an earthquake, seems like a series of isolated tremors that are easily overlooked — but for those affected, the disruption is real. By William Douglas McClatchy Washington Bureau
Taken as a whole, the impact of the mandated acrossthe-board federal spending cuts "so far has been really teeny," said Barry Anderson, the deputy director of the National Governors Association. The U.S. economy is showing signs of improvement, with housing prices up, gasoline prices down and April's 7.5 percent unemployment rate the lowest in four years. But as the sequester continues, more Americans are learning that even the teeniest
change in Washington spending can have a big impact on their lives. From furloughed workers to shuttered federal offices t o c a nceled W h i te House tours and lighter entitlement checks, the reality of the sequester is hitting home. " Clearly, s e quester w a s overhyped, in the sense that the impression was given that all the bad things would happ en immediately, and t h at was not the case," said Robert Bixby, the executive director of the Concord Coalition, a nonpartisan budget-watchdog group. "There have been some real-world furloughs, and that does have a negative impact. The question is whether those have had consequences." A growing number of people think so. A May ABC NewsWashington Post poll found that 37 percent of Americans think they've been adversely affected by f e deral budget cuts,up from 25 percent in a March poll. Half of the negatively a f fected r espondents in bothsurveys described the impact on them as major. The country got a collective taste of sequestration's reach in April, when the furloughs of air traffic controllers left airport towers understaffed and triggered major flight delays. Complaints from passengers, airlines and the tourism industry s purred C ongress to pass a bill that allowed the Department of Transportation to transferas much as $253 million from other parts of the agency tokeep airport towers sufficiently staffed. "Everyone wants to know what's the next big, splashy
(budget cut) thing that happens," said Sharon Parrott, the vice president for budget policy and economic opportunity at the liberal Center for Budget and Policy Priorities. "There are examples and stories across the country, but because there are so many cuts in so many places it's hard to sort through." Many aren't hard to find. The InternalRevenue Service, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Housing and Urban Development were closed May 24, their employees among the 125,000 federal workers furloughed without pay for at least a day. IRS offices will be closed again on July 5, July 22 and Aug. 30 because of the cuts. Nearly 2 million long-term unemployed Americans will see less money in their unemployment checks. All but seven statesalready have imposed the cuts, which range from 10.7 percent in s ome states, to 23 percent in Wyoming, according to the National Employment Law Project, a New York-based advocacy
group. In addition, Florida, Miss ouri, South C arolina a n d M aine h av e r e d uced t h e number of weeks residents can receive the emergency payments. "There's nothing overhyped
here if this is what you're living off of," said Maurice Emsellem, policy co-director of the National Employment Law project. In California, unemployed workers seeking help from the state's Employment Development Department were told that they'd better telephone before lunchtime because the employees manning the agency's benefits call-center hot line won't answer after that, as they shift to other duties from noon to 5 p.m. because of budget cuts. In Florida, sequester-related cuts to the Alliance for Aging, a private, nonprofit group that helps administer federal dollars to programs that assist senior citizens, is forcing Rosanna Taveras to shut down a Miami Gardens program run through Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Miami that feeds 30 hot lunches a day to the occupants of an apartment
The diggesthits sofar The $85 billion in federal budget cuts are being phased in during the fiscal year ending Sept. 30. Some of the effects:
Unemploymentinsurancecuts Percentagethat states that are cutting federally funded emergency benefits, effecting 2 million people: * 10.7% • 12.2-17.7%• 18 -25% O t h er
/flra a
Furleughs ~ z z»
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O
federal workers furloughed at least one day
680,000
Defense Department civilian workers to be furloughed 11 days
he — %-
Ordinary Americans
Have youfelt any negative impact?
Asked March10
Y es ~ * These states are stopping emergency benefits for a periodofw eeks orhave notannounced a plan.
25%
Asked May19
Yes ~
37%
Sources: National Employment Law Project, McClatchy Washington Bureau, ABC/Washington Post poll © 2013 MCT
What'snextforthesepuester? Barry Anderson, the deputy director of the National Governors
building.
Association, warns peoplewhothink the sequester is painful now to
"These clients live in low-income housing," said Taveras, the shock of a $ 45,000 cut from the alliance still resonating in her voice. "They'll have to prepare their meals for themselves or have one less meal. I thought we were going to be saved." While the Pentagon has been praised for thus far averting the gloom and doom scenariosthat former Defense Department Secretary Leon Panetta painted about the fate of national security under the sequester, military f a m ilies are fretting about what the cuts are doing to deployments and the quality of life on bases, according to a recent survey by Blue Star Families. Of particular concern is a plan to furlough nearly 11,000 teachersfor five days beginning in September at 193 Defense Department s c hools worldwide that serve 83,391 students.The teachers are getting a reprieve of sorts: Eightyfive percent of the Defense Department's 770,000 civilian employeesare scheduled tobe furloughed for ll days this fiscal year, starting in July. "The Defense Department should look for a smarter way to address the budget restrictions through sequestration," Sens. Mark W arner, D-Va., and Kirsten Gillibrand, DN.Y., wrote to Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel last week. Although the National Governors Association said the sequester's overall i m p r int on states had been minuscule thus far, governors from 40 states are complaining about the federal government trying to recoup millions of dollars of what it claims is sequestered money that was allocated before the budget cuts kicked in March l. The states — including Alaska, Idaho and O r egon — received notices from the U.S. Forest Service asking them to repay about $17.9 million that had been allocated to them through the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act. The act provides funding for rural counties where the timber industry was once widespread. "Secure Rural Schools payments were made on time in early January 2013 while the sequestration debate continued in Congress," Forest Service Chief Thomas Tidwell explained in a l etter to t he governors association. "Subsequently, the sequestration took effect, and agencies were required t o i m p lement i t ." Needless to say, Tidwell's demand has made timber-state lawmakers hopping mad.
take note when fiscal year 2014 begins Oct. 1. More than $90 billion in discretionary federal spending has to be sliced in addition to $18 billion
in automatic mandatory cuts in programssuch as Medicare. "It hasn't hurt so bad yet," he said, "but, gosh, it could hurt a lot next year."
Most younger breast cancer patients get mastectomies The Washington Post A majority of young women diagnosed withbreast cancer opt to have a mastectomy rather than a more modest, but in many cases equally effective, procedure that spares much of the breast, according to new research to be presented Monday. The study, to be presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology's annual meeting in Chicago, found that 62 percent of women with breast cancer under age 40 chose to have their breasts removed despite previous research showing that women who have more t a rgeted p r ocedures coupled with radiation have similar survival rates. The studyis likelyto fuel concernsthatwomen are increas-
ingly undergoing medically unnecessary mastectomies. The study did not closely scrutinize the reasons for the women's choices. Shoshana Rosenberg,the lead researcher, said the findings highlighted the need to study whether outsize anxiety about recurrence or death plays a part and whether women are getting adequate information. "We're not saying this is a good or bad decision," Rosenberg said. "We want to make sure that women are making informed decisions."
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 20'I3
IN FOCUS:THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
Ho er's res startturnsroc y By Peter Baker, Charlie Savage and JonathanWeisman
of a law barring federal recognition of same-sex marriage that social conservatives viewed as a bulwark against attacks on the traditional family. T he p a r ty-line f u r o r peaked with hearings into Operation Fast and Furious, a botched gun-trafficking investigation by federal agents based in Arizona. When Holder, after Obama invoked executive privilege,refused toprovide department emails relating to the fallout after the operation ended, the House voted to hold him in contempt of
New Yorh Times News Service
W ASHINGTON — At t h e end of last year, with the election decided and the Obama administrationin office for four more years, Attorney General Eric Holder considered stepping down. He decided against it, in part because before he left he wantedto move beyond the disputes that had marked his tenure, accomplish some of the goals he had set for the job and leave on his own terms. If Holder really thought he could escape controversy, the last few weeks have reinforced how inescapable controversy has become for the nation's chief law enforcement officer. A furor over leak investigations and the seizure of phone recordsfrom reportersat The A ssociated Press an d F o x News have again engulfed the attorney general in allegations, investigations and calls f or resignation. Over thecourse of 4/2years, no othermember of President Barack Obama's Cabinet has been at the center of so many p olarizing episodes or t h e target of so much incoming fire. While the White House publicly backed Holder as he tried to smooth over the latest uproar amid new speculation about his future, some in the West Wing privately wish he would step down, viewing him as politically maladroit. But the latest attacks may stiffen the administration's resistance in thenear term forfear ofemboldening critics. The president is said to ap-
The Associated Press file photo
The White House views attacks on Attorney General Eric Holder as a "political agenda."
Congress. The White House "would preciate H o lder's i n t egrity not hasten the departure of and his positions during some someone who's competent of the big fights over what to and runs the department and do about terrorism and other is a friend because there's volatile issues. Moreover, ad- a drumbeat," said William visers said, Obama after a full Daley, a former White House term in office is less likely to chief of staff under Obama. worry about political flare-ups "Whoever Barack Obama that will eventually die down. puts in there, these people Under his leadership, the de- will try to drumbeat him out partment scaled back a voter- of there, no matter what." intimidation lawsuit from the But that does not mitiBush era involving the New gate the frustration of some Black Panther Party, a deci- presidential a i des. "The sion that conservatives used to White House is apoplectic portray the black-nationalist about him, and has been fringe group as a political ally for a l ong t ime," said a of the Obama administration. Democrat who would not He reopened criminal investi- be identified. gations into the CIA's interroWhite House officials begations of terrorism suspects lieve that Holder does not and tried to prosecute five men manage or foresee probaccused of plotting the Sept. 11 lems. "How hard would it attacks in civilian courts rather be to anticipate that The AP than military tribunals, which would be unhappy?" the provoked accusations that he former official said. "And was soft on terrorism. And he then they haven't defended abandoned the legal defense their position."
Adout thesagegrouse Scientific name:Centrocercus urophasianus Characteristics: Malesarelarger thanfemales, with males about 26 to 30inches from beak totail and weighing upto nearly 8pounds, andfemales19 to 23 inches andweighingupto4/2pounds.Maleshaveagraycrown,markingsontheback of the neckandabrown chestwith a largewhite patch inthe middle. During courtship, maleshavesacsthat inflate from their chests. Theyalso havelong, tapered tail feathers. Femaleshavemore cryptic coloring that allows themto blend in with theenvironment during nesting. Theylive upto sixyears. Breeding: Sagegrousebreedin leks, or strutting grounds, wheremales display for femalesbefore mating. Leksareusually in openareassurrounded by sagebrush,suchasold lake beds, ridges or roads. Typically the sameleks are usedeachyear. Femalesbuild nests about10 daysafter mating in shallow depressions onthe ground, sparsely linedwith grass andsheltered by sagebrush or a clump of grass. Habitat:Typically sagebrush-dominatedgrasslandbetween4,000 and8,000 feet abovesealevel, with annual precipitation between10and16 inches.Sage grouse prefer rolling topography,with slopesusually less than30percent. Found in Baker,Crook, Deschutes,Harney, Lake,MalheurandUnion counties in Oregon. Food: Highly dependent onsagebrush, with studiesshowing that the plant may make upmorethan 60percent of thebirds' diet. They also eatherbaceous leaves, bunchgrassesanddandelions. The Associated Press file photo
Source: Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
Grouse Continued from A1 M easures ranchers m a y take to aid sage grouse include
hanging markers on fencing, installing escape ramps from water troughs and clearing out plants that are encroaching on sagebrush. The chickenlike birds sometimes fly into barbed-wire fences and fall into water troughs to their peril, and they have lost habitat to invasive plants. By taking such steps now, ranchers may help keep the
The Bulletin
See video of sagegrouse congregating near Bend: bendbulletin.com/sagegrouse the birds roam a region including parts of Central Oregon. The Fish and Wildlife Service in 2010 labeled the sage grouse acandidate for protection under the federal Endangered Species Act and identi-
fiedimproperlymanaged graz-
ing as a threat. The agency has until fall 2015 to decide whether it plans to list the sage grouse. If the Fish and Wildlife SergrousefromEndangeredSpecies vice lists the bird, ranchers Act protection, said O'Keeffe, a would have to consult with the rancher in Adel, a Lake County agency as well as the BLM for town east of Lakeview. "That's grazing leases and permits. the goal," he said. Across Oregon the BLM has Sage grouse are found in 11 1,230 grazing permits and leasWestern states — Idaho, Wash- es — permits are for lands with ington, California, Colorado, grazing districts while leases Montana, Nevada, North Daare for lands without grazing kota and South Dakota, Utah, districts and are often smaller. "This is a win-win, allowWyoming and Oregon, where I I
Pot Continued from A1 Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson vows to defend his state's plan, while opponents say any attempt by a state to cash in on marijuana sales will result in a legal challenge from opponents. Two ideas at compromise have emerged: Grant waivers to the states, giving them p ermission to stray from the law, similar to what President Bill C l inton did in granting states freedom to experiment with w elfare requirements. Or have Attorney General Eric Holder sign cooperative agreements with the states, allowing them to sell marijuana so long as they run tightly controlled operations with federal oversight. Stuart Taylor, who studied the conflict between state and federal marijuana laws as a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a Democratic-leaning think tank in Washington, said the issue is "begging for presidential leadership." But it would be much easier, he said, for the White House to move on waivers if Congress approved the idea first. "It's a little awkward to say, 'We just won't say we won't enforce federal law in certain ways.' ... The problem is that nobody thinks that Congress is going to do anything on this front soon," Taylor said. As for the second possibility, Taylor said, Holder could use his authority under the federal Controlled Substances Act to sign cooperativeagreements on enforcement and regulatory issues. Legalization opponents say that allowing the states to proceed under any circumstances would be a mistake. "People are trying to think of creative ways around federal law, but the bottom line is that the executive cannot override a federal law passed by Congress — and I don't think they would want to.... I just think that could be instantly challenged," Kevin Sabet, assistant professor and director of the Drug Policy Institute at the University of Florida, said in an interview. Sabet, who recently teamed up with f ormer Democratic Rep. Patrick Kennedy to create an anti-legalization group called Project SAM ( Smart Approaches t o M a r i juana), predicted that the Obama adm inistration ultimately w i l l intervene. "I see no indication that the Obama administration is just going to completely take this lying down," he said. "When you have a state that's actually
going to be making money off of selling and promoting marijuana, from a legal perspective, that's going to be difficult." It's unclear what the administration has planned. The White House had no comment, referring questions to the Justice Department, which had little to say. "The department is continuing to review the legalization initiatives passed in Washington and Colorado," said spokeswoman Allison Price. The administration's silence has left Washington state and Colorado in limbo as they finalize their marijuana regulations. In March, Holder told a Senate committee that his department would issue a policy "relatively soon." Taylor said the p resident needs to step in. "When the people who are in charge of enforcing the laws systematically avoid g i v ing people the information they need to plan, that seems to me a failure of leadership," Taylor sa>d. Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, a pro-legalization group in Washington, saidthe waiver process could make it clear whether states are exempt from international anti-drug treaties and whether federal workers and military
ing Democrats to deal with a hot-potato issue before they select their presidential candidate for 2016. W hile Clinton r elied o n waivers to allow states to conduct experiments with welfare in the 1990s, the Obama a dministration u se d t h e m just last year to allow states to make changes in federal welfare-to-work requirements. Discussions on giving the states marijuana waivers have taken place at the Capitol and at the Brookings Institution, which held forums on issues linked to legalization in midApril and again on Wednesday. The forums are financed partly with a donation from billionaire Peter Lewis, a top legalization advocate. Brookings would not disclose the size of his gift. In last month's forum, Mark Kleiman, a professor of public policy at the University of California, Los Angeles, and a consultant who's helping Washington state design its marijuana regulations, said the best solution would be to legalize marijuana nationally. But he said that approving waivers, which he described as "the cannabis equivalent of the welfare-reform waiver policy," would allow growers and sellers to conduct business legally and to deposit money with banks. "And then the bank that you want to deposit your money in wouldn't have to worry about whether its teller was going to get a20-year sentence for vio-
personnel could legally use marijuana. And he said that getting the waivers in place soon could have an added benefit, allow-
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lating the money-laundering laws," Kleiman said. Ferguson, Wash i n gton state's attorney general, who spoke at the forum, said he's open to the idea of a cooperative agreement. But he added that he has told his legal team to "prepare for the worst" and be ready to fight in court. "Our job is to defend the will of thevoters,"Ferguson said. If the issue lands in court, Washington state and Colorado could face an uphill fight because of the Constitution's Supremacy C l ause, w h i ch p resumes that f ederal l aw trumps state law in the case of a conflict. While Holder has been slow to respond on the marijuana issue, he wasted no time in reacting last month after Kansas lawmakers passed a law attempting to nullify some federal gun requirements. On the day after the law took effect, Holder fired off a letter saying that federal law took priority overthe new statelaw because of the Supremacy Clause.
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ing for continued commercial a ctivity i mportant t o r u r a l
Oregon while providing additional voluntary conservation measures for an at-risk species," Jerome Perez, BLM state director for Oregon and Washington, said in a news release. O'Keeffe said the talks that led up to the agreement started in 2010. "This agreement is a vital component of a landscape-level approach to address the conservation needs of sage-grouse in Oregon and beyond," Paul Henson, statesupervisor for the Fish and Wildlife Service in Oregon said in a press release. "Working collaboratively with public and private partners, we can improve habitat for the bird and ultimately restore health to the sagebrush ecosystem for the benefit of both wildlife and ranching life." — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarlingC<bendbulletin.com
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SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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Continued from A1 "The first thing I really enjoyed is, when we got out of the Suburban, five kids went in five different directions," their father, Jason, said. "I didn't even see them again until we
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were packing up to go." Three and a half months after her transplant, doctors say Lindsey is doing remarkably well, attributing that, in part, to the Berlin Heart, an artificial heart pump that kept her alive and active as she waited for a donor heart. "One of the things we have found, the reason why these devices are so helpful, is that patients are in much better shape when it comes time to transplant," said Dr. Daniel Bernstein, a c ardiologist at the Lucile Packard Children's Hospital in Palo Alto, Calif., and one of a team of doctors involved in Lindsey's care. Before doctors coulduse such devices, children in need of transplants often languished in intensive care units for months. If the wait for a donor heart dragged on, many didn't survive. And if they did, they often came to the transplant in a fragile state, complicating recovery. Lindsey waited eight long months on the Berlin Heart, but it allowed her to be active and in good shape for her transplant. "The Berlin really helped her organs stay healthy. She was up and running around and going to school and doing artwork," Bernstein said. "She has actually flown through the post-transplant process." Although she was able to return home, she'll be no stranger to the hospital. Lindsey will have to return for heart biopsies to watch for any potential rejection of her new h eart. She'll have clinic visits and ultrasounds. Like her sister Sierra, she'll have to take immunosuppressive drugs all her life to keep her immune system from attacking the foreign tissue now beating inside her chest. "The risk of having a rejection episode is highest in the first couple of months after the transplant and then it goes down, so she's at highest risk between now a n d a n other month or two," Bernstein said. "After that period of time, the risk appears to decline. It never really goes away." It's a lesson the entire family has learned well with Sierra. Seven years after her transplant at age 6, she still gets regular biopsies. Within the past year, she was showing some signs of rejection. Doctors adjusted her medications, and her last biopsy results in May came back as a zero, the lowest possible score. "When I told the results to Sierra, she jumped up and down, and squealed with delight. You could see the relief written all over her face," Jason wrote on the family blog. "I think she keeps a lot of that bottled up inside, because she doesn't want anyone to worry about her." Lindsey put it all into perspective. "Jeez, you would have thought she got an offer for a heart," she said.
Aged spirits Their shared experiences will give the girls a bond that •
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Photos by Kathy Orr/ Wescom News Service
ABOVE: Lindsey, middle, plays with her cousin and classmates at the North Powder school, after some120 people welcomed the girl, her four siblings and her parents home to the town nestled between the mountains of Northeast Oregon. RIGHT: Classmate Dallon Harvidson was among those greeting the Binghams.
"The first thing I really enjoyed is, when we got out of the Suburban, five kids went in five different directions." — Jason Bingham
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been under full anesthesia. She wakes up and the procedure is over. If she undergoes the procedure awake, she can be in the same room as Sierra. Lindsey and Sierra both f ace decisions and t al k o f p rocedures fe w k i d s c a n understand. "They had to grow up early. They're still immature little kids but in a way they're aged spirits," Stacy said, borrowing a line from a parent she met down in Palo Alto. "They know more than kids their age should have to."
.r/
sey avoid the monthly infusions of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) that Sierra now undergoes. They often result in debilitating headaches, particularly if she doesn't drink enough water. In fact, Lindsey is doing so well that Stacy and Jason spend more time talking about Sierra's various tests during hercheckups. "Sierra's numbers are down, not to normal or where they want her, but down from really high," Stacy said. They know all that could change in a moment.
"We live biopsy to biopsy,"
she said. "The next test is a month away," Jason added. "We've been down the road before, 'Oh, all is well. We made it. It's over. The kids are playing.'" "It's never over," she says. "Lindsey walks in here in five minutes and her ankles are swollen or Gage's face is swollen," Jason said. "That's the reality. It's happened to us many times." "The nice thing is we can have a normalcy here in between visits," she said. The Binghams live next door to Jason's parents on the family ranch, in a valley nestled between two mountain ranges in Eastern Oregon. Two of Jason's brothers and their combined nine kids live nearby. It's the type ofplacewhere parents can let their kids ride their bikes freely without worrying about strangers or traffic, a far cry from the streets of Palo Alto. The Binghams tried as much as theycould to create a regular life for their five children over the very irregularpast year. They all moved down to California in the summer to be near Lindsey, and for most of their stay, lived in a small room in the Ronald McDonald House adjacent to the hospital. The table was so small, no
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Between visits The Binghams: Sierra, Megan, Hunter, Gage and Lindsey, with dad Jason and mom Stacy. "I always marvelled at their ability to maintain a sense of normal home life in a really abnormal situation," says Mary Burge, who works at the Palo Alto hospital. "I think that's one reason everyone has coped so well." goes well beyond the standard sibling ties. The sisters will undergo biopsies, take many of the same medications, and take many trips back to Palo Alto for treatment and checkups. At home, they share a bedroom. Sierra can provide Lindsey with both a road map and a guided tour. Sothe Binghams knewto expect that Lindsey would swell up from the prednisone, one of the medications she takes to prevent rejection. They know they will likely have to buy Lindsey bigger clothes for the next six months but that she'll slowly return to normal as the dose is decreased over time. "She'll always have to take i mmunosuppressive med i cines, but the doses are going to be a lot higher now compared to what she's going to be taking six months from now, a year from now, two years from now," Bernstein said. "And the things that we have to do in terms of watching her will decrease over the next couple of months."
Jason says that as the big sister, and the first to have a heart transplant, Sierra feels she must provide an example for Lindsey. "Lindsey watches Sierra. 'Whatever Sierra can do, I can do,"' Jason said."It's averyheavy responsibility for a 13-year-old. It's a really big responsibility she carries on her shoulders." Last month, the family went to the beach in C a lifornia, only afew days after Sierra received an IV treatment. While the rest of the kids were playing on the dunes, Sierra stayed in the car with "screaming" headaches. But Jason said she didn't complain or let on in front of Lindsey. Lindsey has told her parents she wants to do her next heart biopsy awake, just like Sierra does, even though she's scared of the procedure. Doctors will snake a catheter through an opening in her neck to her heart and take tiny samples of heart tissuetotestforrejection. So far each ofLindsey's biopsies has
Much has changed since Sierra got her new heart. Doctors have moreexperience with the Berlin Heart, allowing them to wait for a better match for Lindsey's heart. Lindsey also underwent plasmapheresisto clear her blood of antibodies that might increase her risk of rejection. That could help Lind-
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more than three of them could have dinner together. Used to having family dinners together every night, they found a larger room in the hospital where they could all eat together. Everyone in the family would take turns telling the family about their day. Before their first breakfast back home, Stacy noted how far they had come. "We can sit more than three people at the table," she said. "Let's take this moment to reflect on that." Then Lindsey said grace. Mary Burge, a social worker at Packard, has seen many families try to cope with the stress and upheaval of having a child in the hospital for a long stretch of time. She was amazed at how well the Binghams were able to keep their lives from spiraling into crisis mode. "I always marvelled at their ability to maintain a sense of normal home life in a really abnormal situation," she said. "I think that's one reason everyone has coped so well." Even in the hospital with Lindsey, Stacy always made sure the kids stayed on top of their homework. She had w orksheets for G age, w ho isn't in school yet, and Lindsey regularly attended class in the hospital. In a journal that Lindsey kept, she wrote how, when she didn't want to go to school, Stacy would tell her she was taking the Berlin Heart machinethere,and since Lindsey was connected to it, she was going to have to go as well.
Continued next page L HI GH DESERT BANK •
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
Continued from A5 "I really believe families who maintain education for their kids through a medically traumatic experience, the kids do better, and Lindsey always had the expectation that she was going to measure up to the family standard forbehavior, manners, cleanliness, hygiene," Burge said. "The fact that you need to go to school, you need to do your homework, because you're going to be promoted tothe next grade, which means you will be alive, it's a subtle message." School also gave the Binghams some structure to their lives and filled up what could have been empty days. "School was such a saving grace,because itforced us to step back. Lindsey had to be by herself sometimes and that was OK. Otherwise the other kids wouldn't have had a life," Stacy said. "That put us into a routine. Time started flying when they became active in school and sports." Saturdays, in contrast, were a bsolute torture. W i t h n o school and not enough weekend staff to take Lindsey and her Berlin Heart machinery around the hospital, they were stuck, five kids and two adults in a tiny hospital room. "Like hamsters on a treadmill," Stacy said. They celebrated afullyear of birthdays and holidays at the hospital, trying to keep their family traditions intact. Stacy made her traditional spudnut doughnuts on Thanksgiving and orange rolls on Christmas. Instead of the holiday sledding trip, they broke open a pinata and had a snowball fight with marshmallows. A friend made them snowballs out of quilt batting, which Lindsey threw at the doctors in another mock fight. Megan and Sierra played sports at school and played
Hacking Continued from A1 Nonetheless, a senior U.S. official involved in the negotiations to hold regular meetings said in an interview Friday that "we need to get some norms and rules." "It is a serious issue that cannot simply be swatted away with talking points," said the official, who noted that the meetings would focus primarily on the theft of intellectual property from American companies. "Our concerns are not limited to that, but that's what needs urgent attention," he added. The Chinese government has insisted it is a victim of cyberattacks, not a perpetrator, and Chinese officials have vigorously denied the extensive evidence gathered by the Pentagon and private security experts that a unit of the People's Liberation Army, Unit 61398, outside Shanghai, is behind many of the most sophisticated attacks on the United States. On Saturday, after Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel spoke
in theschool orchestra. They had to get up early to practice their instruments — Megan the clarinet, Sierra the alto sax — in a room at the Ronald McDonald House each morning. Life had to continue. Sierra and Lindsey are already due back in Palo Alto for a checkup June 12. That happens to be Jason and Stacy's anniversary. They didn't get to celebrate last year's either.
an option," Jason said. "A generation ago, we'd be a two-kid family right now." Their last week at the hospital underscored their good fortune. Other families experienced the same trials and challenges the Binghams now have faced three times, with Sierra,
Lindsey and Gage.
A girl, Chloe, who was on the Berlin Heart at the same time as Lindsey, was back in the hospital with a high fever and vomitGreat cost ing. Rogilio, the boy who took Lindsey's grand adventure, over Lindsey's hospital room as she called it in her journal, when she left, finally got his has come at a great financial heart. But a young boy named cost. The family has a highCaleb, who went to school with deductible health i n surance Lindsey and had an incurable plan, so the first $13,000 of condition, passed away. In the their costs aren't covered. Still, middle of playing a game with that's a drop i n t h e bucket his nurses, the 6-year-old simply compared with the total bills. laid back in his bed and died. While Lindsey was on the BerAnd the Binghams know lin Heart, Jason saw charges of that Lindsey is alive today only $250,000 each month. The in- because another child didn't surance paid a negotiated rate make it, and a family somewith the hospital, about half of where gave a gift of life in their that amount. The monthly bills darkest hour. for July for the Berlin Heart They can't help but think surgery, and February for the about why they have been so transplant, topped seven fig- fortunate. "All the time," Stacy said. ures. The year in Palo Alto may have cost more than $3 million. "You meet a family there and They continue to pay $1,000 you hear their story. All of a per month in prescription medi- sudden you button your lip. cation costs, receiving some What ar e w e c o mplaining help from the pharmaceutical about? We're good." companies that make the drugs. Even as Jason was packing Lindsey takes 14 drugs each up the Suburban on his final day, Sierra 12 and Gage four. day in California, he spotted Their good fortune is a com- a man whose eyes told a story mon theme from Jason and of heartbreak. The doctor had Stacy. While many might look just told him they had run out upon their plight and feel pity, of options, that they should go the Binghams know they're home to spend their last few incredibly fortunate to have days with their dying son. "Everyone wants to h ear two kids with successful heart transplants. the happy story, so they can "Yeah, we've got to figure go back to their own life. It's out how to deal with head- human nature." Jason said. "I don't know how you cope with aches, how to get our kids to California every month. But something like that. We've nevwe had options. The IVIG is an er had to cross that road." option, the Berlin was an op— Reporter: 541-817-7814, tion, the heart transplants was mhawryluh@bendbulletin.com
of a "growing threat of cyberintrusions" at a conference in Singapore, in comments directed at China, a Chinese general
heart of the economic relationship between the two countries, even more so nowthat previous sources of friction, like China's
gave a tart response, saying
foreign exchange policies, have
she doubted the United States' assurances that its growing military presence in Asia was not directed at China. While cyberattacks will be a major subject of the talks in Rancho Mirage, the main effort will be to forge a rapport between Obama and Xi. U.S. officials hope the estate, known as Sunnylands, which has played host to U.S. presidents and foreign dignitaries dating to Richard Nixon, will put both men at ease. U.S. officials said they have been surprised by the pace at which Xi, a l ongtime party functionary who consolidated his grip on power in March, has installed new faces in the Chinese leadership and moved to take greater control over the military, something his predecessor never mastered. Cybersecurity issues loom large between the U.S. and China because they go to the
eased in the last year. In return, the Chinese will press the Americans on their use of cyberweapons: while there is no evidence they have been usedagainst Chinese targets, the sophisticated cyberattacks on Iran's nuclear program by the United States and Israel are often cited by the Chinese news media and military journals as evidence that Washington, too, uses cyberspacefor strategic advantage. Where the talks will lead, however,is unclear:after cons iderable debate within t h e Obama administration, officials have concluded that cyberconflict does not lend itself to the kind of arms control treaties that the U.S. and the Soviet Union began negotiating 50
years ago. Today, cyberweapons are held by private individuals as well as states, and figuring out where an attack began can be maddeningly difficult.
Advice The philanthropist noted criticism o f t h e m i l l ennial generation for being more absorbed in online friendships than face-to-face encounters. To Duke g r aduates, Gates said: Use those broad electronic connections to broaden your world — and take that enhanced knowledge and those friendships to help you move ahead. "I want to encourage you to reject the cynics who say technology is flattening your experience of the world. Please don't let anyone make you believe you are somehow shallow because you like to update your status on a regular basis."
President Barack Obama: Don't make excuses In a speech at Morehouse College that mentioned a lifelong drive to make up for an absent father, Obama said too
many youngblack men make bad choices. "Growing up, I made quite a fewmyself. Sometimes I wrote off my own failings as just another example of the worldtryingto keep ablack man down. I had a tendency to make excuses for me not doing the right thing.... We've got no time for excuses. In today's hyperconnected, h y percompetitive world, with millions
of young people from China
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Continued from A1
Melinda Gates: You've got connections
/0
7
Gates
Obama
Col b er t
and India and Brazil, many of whom started with a whole lot less than all of you did, all of them entering the global workforce alongside you, nobody is
going to give you anything you haven't earned. Nobody cares
how tough your upbringing was. Nobody cares if you suffered some discrimination. "Moreover, you have to remember that whatever you've gone through, it pales in comparison to the hardships previous generations endured — and if they overcame them, you canovercome them, too."
Stephen Colbert: It's DIY,kids The comedian turned serious for a moment with University of Virginia grads, noting the disruptive world they are walking into and joking, sort of, that self-absorbed boom-
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thing unique, something bigger than themselves, something quite special. They nowbecome part of the long string of human spirit that pulls you along."
Gabrielle Giffords: Be courageous
Sometimes just the presence ersare hogging the bestjobs: of aspeaker is an achievement. "There is no secret society out The former congresswoman, there that will tap you on the still recovering from the 2011 shoulder and show you the shooting in Arizona, gave a way. The true secret is, your short speech to Bard graduates life will not be defined by the that emotionally passed the basociety we have left you.... Ev- tontothem. "The nation's countery generation must define it- ing on you to create, to lead, to self. If you must find your own innovate," she said. "Be bold, be path, and we have left you no courageous, do your best." easy path, then decide now to choose the hard path that See more graduation advice leads to the life and the world online atwapo.st/13IQg0r that you want."
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SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A 7
IN FOCUS: OIL AND GAS
ew exicocount 's rac in anisa a outwater Saying no to 'fracking'
By Julie Cart
Mora County, N.M., becamethe first county in the U.S. to pass an ordinance banning hydraulic fracturing, the controversial process known as fracking that extracts oil and gas from shale rock deepunderground.
Los Angeles Times
OCATE, N.M.
-
HOW FRACKING WORKS
Coio
Sitting in the tidy living room of the home they I
Well head
built themselves, Sandra and Roger Alcon invenOcate,.. Santa Fe as Vegas
t
tory what they see as the bounty of their lives:
4 V
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freedom, family, community, land, animals ... and
Albuq que
water.
10,000 lt.
40
— Well
NEW MEXICO
"We've lived off the land for f iv e g enerations," said Roger Alcon, 63, looking out on a northern New Mexico landscape of high mesas, ponderosa pines and black Angus cattle. "We have what we need. We've been very happy, living in peace." Wells are the Alcons' only source of water. The same is trueforeveryone elsein Mora C ounty, which i s w h y l a st month this poor, conservative ranchingregion of energy-rich New Mexico became the first county in the nation to pass an fracturing, the controversial oil and gas extraction tech-
west last summer when the 100 km town of Las Vegas, N.M., took up the cause, calling for a halt 10 to fracking u n ti l a d equate Texas 20 regulations protecting public health are adopted. 10 MEXICO It has now reached California, where communities are ©2013 MCT considering similar bans. Culver City — home to the nation's largest urban oil field rolls. But in sparsely popu— is drafting oil and gas regu- lated Mora County, where 67 lations that call for a morapercent of the 5,000 residents torium on f r acking. Citizen are Spanish-speaking, people groups in San Luis Obispo cherish their culture and way and Santa Barbara are preof life. paring their own community S andra A l con s a i d h e r rights ballot measures aimed neighbors don't care about at outlawing the procedure. mineral rights or oil money. H ydraulic f r a cturing i n - T hey are angry about t h e
nique known as "fracking"
volves injecting a high-pres-
that has compromised water quantity and quality in communities around the country. "I don't want to destroy our water," Alcon said. "You can't drink oil."
sure mix of water, sand and chemicals deep underground to fracture rock formations, releasing oil and gas that is hard to reach with conventional d r illing m ethods. A blizzard o f a p p lications to sink wells using fracking is
ordinance banning hydraulic
Growing opposition
spurring a nationwide energy
In embracing the ban, landowners turned their back on potentially lucrative royalty
rush sometimes called the "shale gale."
payments from drilling on
Among the leading con-
their property and joined in a groundswell of civic opposition to fracking that is rolling westfromOhio, New Yorkand Pennsylvania in the gas-rich Marcellus shale formation. Pittsburgh became the first U.S. city to outlaw fracking in November 2010 after it came to light that an energy company held a lease to drill under a beloved city cemetery. Since then, more than a dozen cities in the East have passed similar ordinances. The movement leapfrogged
c erns of o p ponents is t h e absence of any federal law
requiring companies to fully i dentify t h e c h e micals i n their fracking f l uids. Such formulas are considered by the industry to be a trade secret. Community-based anti-
fracking campaigns — citing public health issues — call for complete disclosure of injection fluids. Many New Mexico counties welcome oil and gas production, an industry that adds to the tax base and employment
Shale layer ~ 1. A well may bebored using
3. Sand flows into the fissures,
2. Large amounts of water, sand and chemicals are injected into the well at high pressure, causing fissures in the shale.
directional drilling, a method that
allows drilling in vertical and horizontal directions to depths of over 10,000 ft.
keeping them open so that the oil
from the shale can flow up and out of the well.
Source: LISC, ESRI, Los Angeles Times reporting Graphic: Los Angeles Times
"is all about water," estimating that 95 percent of the county's residents support the ban, although some argue that the jobs and income that accompany drilling would help the depressed area. Olivas, a hunting and fish-
The City Council is considering a fracking moratorium, even though only 10 percent of the field is within the city limits. The bulk of the wells are in unincorporated Los Angeles County. City officials and residents ing guide, said he grew up say they are concerned about watching his parents work in air and water quality, as well way energy companies' "land the uranium mines of eastern as about earthquakes being men" treated them. Residents New Mexico. When the mines triggered by drilling at 8,000 here are seen as easy marks played out, towns shriveled to 10,000 feet — the depths f or hustlers o f fering l i t t le Up. w here the u ntapped oil i s compensation for oil and waChasing that b o om-and- found. ter rights, she said. bust economy is not w orth "They know we have a lot of despoiling a n e n v ironment Fracking on a fault line elderlyand rural people; some that remains remarkably unL ow-magnitude ear th don't speak English," she said. touched and provides a sus- quakes have been associated "They don't know that some tainable living for most people with fracking, but Ed Memi, of us went to college and some here, he said. a spokesman for PXP, which "We are one ofthe poorest operates in t h e I n g lewood of us have the Internet. "I may look stupid, but I'm counties in the nation, yes, Field, called suggestions that high-pressure drilling causes not. I k now w hat they are but we are money-poor, we "hysterical doing." are not a sset-poor," Olivas earthquakes said. "We've got land, we've accusations." Protecting the water "There is no evidence that got agriculture, we've got our M ora County, u sing i t s heritage and we've got our hydraulic f r a c turing has authority t o r e g ulate com- culture." caused felt s e ismic a c tivmercial activity, specifically The California community ity anywhere in California," b arred c o r porations f r o m closest to adopting an antiMemi said. "The practice of fracking. The ordinance also fracking ordinance is Culver hydraulic fracturing has been established that citizens have City, which includes a portion subjected to dozens of studies a right to a safe and clean of the 1,000-acre Inglewood in recent years, and the fundaenvironment. Oil Field. More than 1 million mental safety of the technolCounty Commission Chair- people live within five miles ogy is well understood by sciman John Olivas said the ordi- of the field, where some 1,600 entists, engineers, regulators nance is not a referendum on wells have been drilled since and other technical experts." oil and gas. Rather, he said, it 1925. But Meghan Sahli-Wells,
IIIIIAO
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'4,"aMMlJi%l'I'1' lkl6BTS '~"'-s""',lrlla MO IA CO IJ Jutie Cart/Los Angeles Times
A sign In Mora County, N.M., shows support for the county's ban on drilling for natural gas using hydraullc fracturlng. Culver City's vice mayor, said the city needs to see more study of fracking's impact before it could be allowed. "I grew up in L.A. All my life I've heard about air-quality p r oblems, e arthquakes and water issues," Sahli-Wells said. "It just so happens that f racking really hits o n t h e three major challenges of this area. Frankly, I've been waiting for people to wake up and say, 'We are fracking on a fault line? Is this really in our interests?'"
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O ur nam e s a y s i t . • • Our pr i ce s p r o v e i t i
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4-5
Weather, B6
©
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
Burns are part offorest research
BRIEFING
gM
Brush fire near Tumaloputout A debris fire alongside U.S. Highway 20 south of Tumalo was extinguished
by Bend firefighters Saturday afternoon, according to the Deschutes
County Sheriff's Office At around 4:15 p.m., firefightersand deputies
were sent to thefire, which was reported to
By Scott Hammers
be spreading into surrounding brushand
The Bulletin
Two prescribed burns set for this week west of La Pine will be lit as part of a research project into fuels management, forest insects and disease, and longer-term climate change issues. The Bend Fort Rock Ranger District will be conducting the burns between Tuesday and Thursday in the Pringle Falls Experimental Forest, approximately 10 miles west of La Pine and 25 miles southwest of Bend. Established by the U.S. Forest Service in 1931, the Pringle Falls Experimental Forest has been set aside to allow forestersa place to study forest management techniques. The first research forest created in the Pacific Northwest, the 11,000-acre parcel is home to both undisturbed and managed stands of native conifers, and has been a center for Ponderosa pine research Smoke from the two planned fires, the 108-acre Extra Rx and the 158-acre Nut Rx, should be visible from La Pine, Sunriver and U.S. Route 97, but smoke is expected to be minimal and short-lived. A 490-acre prescribed fire was burned in the experimental forest in mid-May as part of thesame research project undertaken by the Deschutes National Forest. Weather conditions should be favorable for burning according to National Weather Service forecasts, with daytime high temperatures in the area expected in the mid to upper 70s and light winds all three days.
trees. Smoke and fire fighting efforts blocked
the highwayfor a short time, and a crew from the
Oregon Departmentof Transportation assisted
I
r
with traffic control. The fire was contained
L-
to approximately half an acre.
i'
„IC „
Investigators de-
termined theowner of the property had been
burning weedsalong his fence line whenthe wind picked up,spreadingthe flames to nearby brush.
The ownerwas issued a
trd Joe Kline l The Bulletin
Participants compete against one another in the third annual Central Cascades Table Tennis Tournament on Saturday at the Boys & Girls Club in Bend.
warning by Bend Fire.
Beginning Monday, outdoor burning will be banned in Deschutes County until fire officials
lift the seasonalburn ban
on ers aceo in en ournamen in
0
in the fall.
Hiker rescuedat Smith Rockpark A man who fell while hiking down the west
side of Astrisk Passat Smith Rock State Park
was rescued byDeschutes CountySearch & Rescuepersonnel on Saturday morning. According to anews release fromRedmond Fire & Rescue, the
incident was reported at around 8:45 a.m. Redmond firefighters
reached themanfirstand began treatment while a
Search & Rescueteam was activated. Search & Rescuepersonnel brought the man to
the edge oftheriver, where hewascarried across in aninflatable boat and transported by
www.bendbulletin.com/local
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
In the world of table tennis, the United States is a backwater, and Bend even more so, Sean Purdy explained Saturday over the sound of two dozen players
knocking pingpong balls back and forth in the gym at the downtown Boys tL Girls Club. Gesturing to the basketball hoops ringing the floor, Purdy said that in China,
gyms are designed to accommodate table tennis, widely recognized as the national sport. Even the
very bestAmerican players are a step behind the world, he said — at the London Olympics, not one qualified to enter the medal tournament, he said. In larger cities like Portland, a dedicated player can find one of several clubs to join, and can find a place to play 24 hours a day and competitive tournaments throughout the year. But in Bend, it's the Bend Table Tennis Club, a group that spent its early years moving from place to place until finding a home at the Boys 8 Girls Club.
Bend's most dedicated players meet 6-9 p.m. every Monday night for informal play. Saturday, the club hosted players of all ages and abilities for the Central Cascades Third Annual Table Tennis Tournament. Not that Bend lacks any skilled table tennis players. The best half-dozen or so frequently travel to regional tournaments, Purdy said, and can reliably beat anyone they might encounter in a pickup game at a picnic or a party. "It's a big world, but it's still small in Bend," he said.
Jill Fahnestock came from Salem to enter Saturday's tournament. An occasional participant in what she remembers as a "10-year war" between her father and her brother on the family's pingpong table, Fahnestock only recently started getting serious about table tennis. "This is probably the best activity to do in Oregon, because you can do it 365 days a year," Fahnestock said. "You you build up a good sweat, it's good for the brain."
SeePingpong/B3
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammersC<bendbulleti n.com
ambulance for additional treatment.
Man captured after chase A man who climbed out the window of a vehicle in an effort to elude Deschutes County
Sheriff's Deputies was captured and jailed Sat-
urday evening. According to the Sheriff's Office, a deputy contacted Zane Isbell,
35, of Redmond, in a disabled vehicle parked in the median of U.S.
Highway 97 inRedmond at around 5:20 p.m. The
deputy recognizedIsbell in the passengerseat, and after the deputy told him he had outstanding
warrants, Isbell climbed over the driver and out the window.
Isbell ran across two lanes of traffic, and was
nearly struck by acar, according to theSheriff's Office. Deputies chased him down and captured
him in a nearbyfield. Isbell facesnew charges for possession of methamphetamine, third-degreeescape, resisting arrest and at-
CENTRAL CHRISTIAN
Man's airplaneflight from Bend to POrtland makeS the PaPerin '38 Compiled by Don Hoiness from archivedcopies ofThe Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARS AGO For the week ending June I, 1913
Editorial: Portland's opportunity In Portland the other day, C.S. Hudson told members of the Portland Ad Club that "Portland stands with her face toward the Pacific, her right hand in southern Washington, her left hand in the Willamette Valley, and her back to Central Oregon," and he urged her at least to look over her shoulder. And that was good advice — good not only from the standpoint of Central Oregon but also from Portland's. Central Oregon may be de-
YESTERDAY veloping slowly, but she is advancing surely, and as she forges ahead into her own it will mean that a territory enormous in acres and in possibilities, at Portland's back door, will, with what she must sell and what she must buy, be able to lend a tremendous impetus to Portland's growth. Especially is the time ripening for a determined effort on Portland's part to cultivate her relations with Central Oregon, because anyone familiar with local conditions realizes that it will be a matter only of a few years at most when the construction of railroads to the south will open the gates to California. And then Portland will have to fight her battles on an even footing with San Francisco — and San Francisco is an
«4')= II
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active and able rival, against whom Portland had better exert herself, not only later but also today, when the foundations of a lasting cooperation between this territory and Oregon's metropolis may be established.
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Caterpillar engines for farming work J.R. Stinson of Prineville, who was here last week with the Hill party, told of the introduction of the caterpillar engine into Central Oregon farming operations. "The Oregon 8r Western Colonization Co. has recently sold 1600 acres of land in the Harney valley to Portland parties," said Mr. Stinson, "and the purchasers will ship two caterpillar engines to Bend and take them out to their ranch to be used in farming operations." SeeYesterday/B2
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Central Christian graduates Desiree Duke, right, and Danielle Duren laugh while waiting to process in with their classmates during the school's commencement ceremony on Saturday at Highland Baptist Church in Redmond.
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tempting to eludepolice, as well as his warrants theftand drug-related crimes. He is being held at the Deschutes County
Jail on $320,000 bail. — From staff reports
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1spa8clasercenter 2065 NE Williamson Ct. Bend • 54I- 3 3 0-555I www.ExhaleSpaAndLaserCenter.com
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 20'I3
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open5:30p.m.;Bend location; 541-554- I802.
TODAY DOG AGILITY EVENT: Bend Agility Action Dogs is hosting a dog trial from beginners to advanced; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-408-7065 or cdmann@bendbroadband.com. HEAVENCANWAIT: 5K walk and run to benefit Sara's Project; $25 in advance, $40 day of race; 9 a.m., 8 a.m. activities; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; 541706-6996 or www.heavencanwait. Ol'g.
CASCADE WINDSSYMPHONIC BAND: The band performs under the direction of Michael Gesme; free; 2 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.cascadewinds.org. SUMMER READINGPROGRAM: "DIRTY" BOOKS: Librarians discuss different types of "dirty" books from gardening to true crime accounts; free; 2 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. SUMMER SUNDAYCONCERT: The Portland-based Americana act Redwood Son performs; free; 2:30 p.m., doors open at noon; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541318-5457 or www.bendconcerts. com. SUNRIVER DANCE ACADEMY PRESENTATION: The academy presents "Ballet in the100 Acre Wood" by Sara Jo Slate, and "Dance Safari" featuring tap, jazz and belly dancing by performance groups; $10, students and seniors $9 in advance only; 3 p.m.; La Pine High School, 51633 Coach Road; 541-593-8408 or www. sunriverdance.com. CHRIS PUREKA: The Massachusetts singer-songwriter performs at a house concert; call for location; $15, reservations suggested; 6:30 p.m., doors
Yesterday Continued from B1 "So far as I know this will be the first use of such engines on a farm in Central Oregon. One of these men is a practical farmer of much experience." Some time ago a traction e ngine was taken into t h e Harney country, to be used for farm work, but it was not of the caterpillar type.
75 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 1, 1938
Quintuplets are still the king's wards The five little Dionne's are going to live with their parents, but in order to do so will pay for the house in which the entire family is to be domiciled. While it has not been announced, it may be guessed that the famous four-year-olds will continue to pay their own expenses, includingthe cost of nurses and teachers, whether they will help to support the seven other little Dionne's and give father and mother a lift now and then is conjectural. A compromise has been effected by which the family is reunited. This will doubtless meet with the approval of the many who have followed the adventures of the quintuplets especially since the five will remain as wards of the king. If their status had been other than this, it is quite unlikely that there would be living human quintuplets today. As to the youngsters turning to and doing their part to defray the grocery bills, the crown will still have the say. Probably the quintuplets will be able to afford to do this out of current earnings, for their movie and advertising contract have already made them very wealthy babies. Whether they will be permitted to remains to be divulged.
Bend manmakes trip by plane to Portland One hour and five minutes after he left Bend Wednesday, Dr. D.M. Field, local dentist, was in Portland but he assured friends here today that he did not make the trip by car. Dr. Fieldcrossed the Cascades at an elevation of 11,500 feet in an airplane.He returned by stage to Bend yesterday evening.
50 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 1, 1963
Mardi Gras due Memorial Day E verything i s
AL E N D A R
r e ady a t
MONDAY STUDENT READINGS:Featuring monologues, poetry and mu sic; free; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.
TUESDAY 'ROUND NEVADACLASSIC CAR TOUR: A classic car show stops in Bend in support of Healthy Beginnings; $10 for no host sandwich bar; 11:30 a.m.; Elks Lodge, 63120 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-6357 or http://nevada-rides.com/new/the2010-tour/cars-of-the-2013-tour/. GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: Featuring a screening of "Happy," a documentary film exploring secrets of the emotion; free; 6:30-8:15 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.
WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERSMARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket©gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. SISTERS RODEO: The "Xtreme Bulls" bull-riding event followed by the rodeo dance; $15, children under 12 free, $5 for dance; 6:30 p.m. for rodeo, gates open 4:30 p.m., 9 p.m. dance; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20; 541-549-0121 or www. sistersrodeo.com. THE HONEYCUTTERS:The North Carolina Americana band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.
Bachelor Butte for the fourth annual Mardi G ras t omorrow, Memorial Day. An annual zany costume affair, this year's dress theme bears a Gay Nineties label. Everyone, Mardi Gras officials said today, is invited to join in the parade of costumes tomorrow at 1 p.m. on Bachelor Butte. Numerous prizes will b e awarded to co s tume w i n ners. They will be i n t h ree categories: individual, family or group, and boys and girls under 12 years of age. Sixteen awards w i l l be presented, including an individual season pass to Bachelor Butte. Al l t h e p r i z es have been donated by local merchants. A new "fun feature" this year is the "Win Kreider" ski contest wherein prizes will be presented tothe youngest and older skiers that schuss the rope tow hilL Persons entering the Mardi Gras Parade of C o stumes are asked to be registered by noon tomorrow.
The Bulletin file photo
Bend Agility Action Dogs will host a trial today at the Crook County Fairgrounds. Francis School,700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174.
THURSDAY SISTERS RODEO SLACK PERFORMANCE:Slack performance, with breakfast concessions; free; 8 a.m., breakfast opens 7 a.m.; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20; 541-549-0121 or www. sistersrodeo.com. FILM FESTIVALSCREENING: A screening of Central Oregon Film Festival winners; free; 3:30 p.m.; La Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; 541-312-1032 or lizg© deschuteslibrary.org. SUMMER READINGPROGRAM: "DIRTY" BOOKS: Librarians discuss different types of "dirty" books from gardening to true crime accounts; free; 6 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-3303760 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. "SWAN LAKEMARIINSKY LIVE": A special showing of the Russian ballet company's interpretation of
25 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 1, 1988
Editorial: Her lessons will live on No one helped more Central Oregonians enjoy and appreciate the outdoors during the past two decades than V irginia M eissner, a B e nd woman who died of cancer Tuesday. Meissner taught thousands of people of all ages to crosscountry ski, bicycle and hike safely in the central Cascades during her long career as a community education teacher
Tchaikovsky's ballet; $12.50; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 168 IMAX,680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. "THE LARAMIE PROJECT": Advanced Acting students present a staged reading inspired by the events surrounding the 1998 beating death of University of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard; $5, free to COCCstudents with I.D; 7:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7532 or Iforeman@cocc.edu. "THE 100 STORY": A one-act play by Edward Albee about a chance encounter between a transient and a book publisher in New York City's Central Park; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881, derek©volcanictheatrepub. com or www.volcanictheatrepub. com. CHAMPIONSHIP: The Americana band performs, with Delta Halos and 01' Mount'n Due; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation.com.
three guidebooks to the rety College. gion that described in detail She was a firm but caring the best places to ski, hike woman, and a patient teacher and explore. who knew how to say and do Meissner was a persistent just the right things for her lobbyist for more developed students. trails on public lands, and she Meissner was a f a m i liar was the first to explore routes sight striding down cr o ss- that are now popular skiing country sk i t r a i l s a r o und and hiking trails maintained Dutchman Flat or Swampy by the U.S. Forest Service. Lakes, her silver-white hair Her legacy is the thousands shining in the sunlight as she of Central Oregonians, young led a pack of inexperienced and old, w hom sh e i n t roskiers on their first trips into duced to the outdoors. Her the Cascades. lessons about the beauty and She also spent a lot of time importance of the natural enalone or with friends explor- vironment will not be soon ing the outdoors. She wrote forgotten.
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SERVING ALL OF CENTRAL OREGON Sunriver • LaPine • Redmond • Eagle Crest Sisters • Black Butte
Olympic ski team may train here Bachelor Butte may come into national prominence this summer. Bob Beattie, U.S. Olympic team ski coach, indicated today that he will be here sometime around June 14 to look at Bachelor Butte as a potential two-week training ground for the U.S. Olympic ski team. Beattie in a letter this week to Bill Heaiy of Bend, said that he wants a skiing facility available for use by either the end of August or the 1st of September. I t al l s t a rted w hen t h e Skyliners contacted him at t he Wenatchee meeting i n April of th e Pacific Northwest Ski Assn., where he was guest speaker. Beattie has remained interested since then. The 1964 Winter Olympics will be at Innsbruck, Austria.
"THE LARAMIE PROJECT": Advanced Acting students present a staged reading inspired BEND FARMERSMARKET: Free by the events surrounding the admission; 2-6 p.m.; St. Charles 1998 beating death of University Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541of Wyoming student Matthew 408-4998, bendfarmersmarket© Shepard; $5, free to COCCstudents gmail.com or www. with I.D; 7:30 p.m.; Central Oregon bendfarmersmarket.com. Community College, Pinckney FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Center for the Arts, 2600 N.W. Event includes art exhibit openings, College Way, Bend; 541-383-7532 artist talks, live music, wine and or Iforeman@cocc.edu. food indowntown Bend and the "THE 100 STORY":A one-act play Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; by Edward Albee about a chance throughout Bend. encounter between a transient and a book publisher in New York OPEN MIC: An opportunity for City's Central Park; $10; 7:30 p.m.; community members to add their Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. voice to the literary scene; free; Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881, 5:30 p.m.-8:00 p.m., participants derek©volcanictheatrepub.com or please arrive at 5 p.m.; The Nature www.volcanictheatrepub.com. of Words, 224 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-647-2233, info© "COMPANY": A timeless and thenatureofwords.org or www. brilliant musical comedy by Stephen thenatureofwords.org. Sondheim about a single man in a "HOW DIDWE GET HERE?" sea of married couples; $21 adults, $18 students and seniors; 8 p.m., LECTURESERIES: David champagne black tie reception at 7 M ontgomery presents"The Rocks Don't Lie: A Geologist Investigates p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Noah's Flood"; $10, $50 for series, Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626. $8 for Sunriver Nature Center BROTHERS OF THELAST WATCH: members, free for students with The Portland rock band performs, ID; 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon with The Religious Rite; $5; 8 Community College, Hitchcock p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879. Bend; 541-593-4394. JIVE COULIS: The Ashland funkORGAN CONCERT: OrganistMark rock-blues band performs; $5; Oglesby performs "Patriarchs, 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing 8 Prophets 8 Poetry: Old-Testament Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Organ Literature from Genesis to Bend;541-388-8331. Jeremiah"; free, donations accepted; 7 p.m.; St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church 8 School, 2450 N.E. 27th SATURDAY St., Bend; 541-382-3631. SISTERS RODEO: A PRCArodeo CENTRAL OREGONRETIRED performance with steer wrestling, TEACHERSPLANT SALE: Featuring roping and more; family night; annuals, perennials, decorations, $12, children under12 free; 7 p.m.; gardening supplies and more; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. proceeds benefit the Redmond Highway 20; 541-549-0121 or www. Opportunity Center Foundation sistersrodeo.com. and Central Oregon Community "ROBOT Ill FRANK": A screening College scholarship programs; of the PG13 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; free admission; 8:30 a.m.-2 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Zion Lutheran Church, 1113 S.W. Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541Black Butte Blvd., Redmond; 475-3351 or www.jcld.org. 541-382-7044.
FRIDAY
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The Oregon Department of Transportation i s w o r k in g o n a pl an t o imp r o v e US 97 in the north end of Bend. ODOT is recommending its preferred alternative, called modified East DS2 Alternative, and wants to share it with the community.
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SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
ost uestions o ow iscove o enetica mo iie w eat The Associated Press P ORTLAND — T h e d i scovery of genetically-modified wheat in an Eastern Oregon field has touched off a debate on the economics and safety of altering crop genetics. Critics of g enetic modification point to a study that estimates the wheat industry stands to lose $94 million to $272 million annually if gen etically-modified w heat i s introduced. The USDA announced the discovery of th e M onsantoowned strain on Wednesday. It led to Japan postponing a 25,000-tonorder from a Portland grain shipper. Unapproved ge n eticallymodified rice found in a 2006 U.S. harvest led to plunging riceprices and payments from t he offending company t o
American farmers, the Oregonian reported. Monsanto tested glyphosateresistant wheat in 16 states, including Oregon, from 1998 to 2005. The last Oregon trial was in 2001, accordingtothe USDA, and Monsanto ultimately withdrew its application to have the modified variety approved after it became clear export markets didn't want it. The company said it closed the testing program in a "rigorous, well-documented and audited" process that should have left no modified plants or seed remaining. To ensure the plants didn't emerge after the testing, modified seeds were burned, buried six feet underground or shipped back t o M o nsanto, said Bob Zemetra, a crop scientist who worked on the Mon-
santo fields in Idaho. Wide "no-plant" areas were maintained around test sites to prevent pollen movement from the modified wheat to other crops. Testing sites were checked two years after the trials for the presence of "volunteer" wheat plants that might have popped up. Center for Food Safety attorney George Kimbrell said Monsanto may be liable for dam-
Endangered shipyard —The Historic Preservation League of Oregon hasdesignated aWorld War II-era shipbuilding companyas one of the state's most endangered places. Thedesignation of the Astoria Marine Construction Company this week comes as it seeks a place on the National Register of Historic Places. The Daily Astorian
reports declining business and its designation as aDepartment of Environmental Quality Cleanup site cloud its future. Astoria Marine Construction was one of10 properties selected from nominations
submitted from across the state.
w ith r egulators relying o n company dataand inadequate monitoring of the plants' geographical spread, particularly after testing is complete. U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon is trying to repeal the so-called Monsanto Protection Act, a rider attached to a stopgap funding bill in March that strips federal courts of the ability to require more safety review for some genetically modified seeds. Investigators have not publicly ruled out any possibilities as to how the modified wheat entered a commercial field. Zemetra said accidental seed contamination is possible, but the questions of how and when may be impossible to answer. "There's a lot of fear," he said. "And this isn't going to help, I can tell you that."
ages if Oregon wheat growers or shippers lose sales. Kimbrell said it's unreasonable to expect genetically-modified plants to be controlled, especially when they arebeing tested near commercial wheat operations. "Nature finds a way," Kimbrell said. Kimbrell and other critics say U.S. regulation of genetically modified crops is weak,
GrantS PaSS fireS —Crews havechased down spot fires near a growing 115-acre wildfire that started Friday near lnterstate 5 in the Grants Pass area. About 50 firefighters were scheduled to work Saturday on containing and extinguishing the wildfire. Four fire suppres-
sion crews, four engines andtwo water tenders have beenassigned to the fire. Fire crews ignited unburned vegetation along the fire line, but the fire has notyet been contained. The Oregon Transportation Department temporarily closed a lane of northbound 1-5 in the area
Friday afternoon. City police also reportedly closed several nearby streets so emergency vehicles could usethem. TheGrants Pass Daily Courier says there were at least two reports of homesdamaged by the fire.
Gar intOPOnd — A manpolice suspect of drunken driving and fleeing the scene of anaccident drove his car into a Eugenepond. The driver, who was not identified, is alleged to have struck another car. People inside of the car struck by the man chased him in their vehicle. He then cut across an off ramp, several lanes of traffic and drove75 feetdown an embankment into Delta Ponds.The Eugene
Register-Guard reports the manwas uninjured. Hewas pulled from his car by two Eugenepolice officers. His car was towed from the pond. — From staff reports
HepatitisAout rea in e to erries romOregoncompany By Mary Clare Jalonick
at Costco, according to CDC. A Costco spokesman said Friday WASHINGTON — The Food thatthe company has removed and Drug Administration is the productfrom stores and is investigating an outbreak of attempting to contact members hepatitis A linked to a frozen who purchased the product in organic berry mix sold by an recent months. Oregon company. Hepatitis A is a contagious The FDA and the federal liver disease that ca n l a st Centers for Disease Control from a few weeks to a several and Prevention said Friday months. People often contract that 30 illnesses are linked it when an infected food hanto Townsend Farms Organic dler prepares food without apAnti-Oxidant B l end, w h i ch propriate hand hygiene. Food contains a pomegranate seed already contaminated with the mix. Illnesses were reported virus can also cause outbreaks. in Colorado, New Mexico, NeThe government has not anvada, Arizona and California. nounced a recall, but the CDC Several of those who fell ill recommended that r e tailers reported buying the berry mix and other food service opThe Associated Press
cords, we know w here the
"We do have very good records, we know
where the (pomegranateseeds) came from, we're looking into who the broker is and we're sourcing it back up the food chain to get to it." — Townsend Farms lawyer Bill Gaar
erators should not sell or serve Townsend F arm s O r g anic Anti-Oxidant Blend. The FDA said it is inspecting the processing facilities of Townsend Farms of Fairview, which sold the mix. The CDC said the strain of hepatitis is rarely seen in North or South America but is found in the
of exposure, and those who have already been vaccinated from, we're looking into who are unlikely to become ill, acthe broker is and we're sourc- cording to CDC. CDC said all ing it back up the food chain to of the victims are older than 18, get to it," Gaar said. rangingfrom 25 to 71years old. He said Townsend Farms The first illnesses were reportbelieves Costco is the only cus- ed at the end of April. tomer who bought the product, The same genotype of hepathough they are checking to see titis A was identified in an outif any other retailers may have break in Europe linked to frosold it. zen berries this year, the CDC Hepatitis A illnesses occur said, as well as a 2012 outbreak within 15 to 50 days of expo- in British Columbia related to a sure to the virus. Symptoms in- frozen berry blend with pomeclude fatigue, abdominal pain, granate seeds from Egypt. In jaundice, abnormal liver tests, addition to the United States dark urine and pale stool. and Turkey, the agency said the Vaccination can prevent ill- berries also included products ness if given within two weeks from Argentina and Chile.
(pomegranate seeds) came
North Africa and Middle East regions. B ill Gaar, a l a w yer f o r Townsend Farms, said the frozen organic blend bag includes pomegranate seeds from Turkey, and are only used in the p roduct associated with t h e outbreak. "We do have very good re-
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George Mcconnell, of Bend, finesses a shot over the net while competing in a match at the third annual Central Cascades Table Tennis Tournament on Saturday at the Boys & Girls Club in Bend. ' '
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Continued from A1 Fahnestock, 53, said table tennis is a particularly good game for older people.Beyond the physical exercise, the tracking of the ball and decision making keeps the mind nimble, she said. At a recent tournament that doubled as a fundraiser for Parkinson's disease, Fahnestock said she met a number of Parkinson's patients who play regularly to keep their minds sharp. One of Bend's most seasoned athletes, Lew Hollander, agrees. Now 82, Hollander is gearing up for his 24th Ironman triathlon in November. Thursday, Hollander rode his bike to the top of McKenzie Pass, followed by a run up Grey Butte on Friday, but he said he expected Saturday's tournament would be more taxing than either of those workouts. "Peoplekid me, you do the Ironman and all t hat stuff, the toughest thing I do is that
inner ninja comes out, and your paddle's over there, and the ball
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pingpong player
Borne said while Saturday's event was closer to "garage, basement-type table tennis" than a high-level tournament, with nothing on the line but a handful of donated prizes, players battle fiercely for every point. "It's still fairly competitive; sports are always competitive," he said. Fahnestock said that in the heat of a hard-fought match, the competitive impulse takes over, and she's pulled off shots she still can't explain. " Sometimes y ou r in n e r Monday night pingpong," ninja comes out, and your padHollander said. "After a cou- dle's over there, and the ball ple hours of pingpong, I'm comes back, and you have no exhausted, you can just wring idea how you did it," she said. me out." — Reporter: 541-383-0387, Tournament director Don shammers@bendbulieti n.com
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Shonita Lopez Anna Lea Voorhies, of Bend Sept. 1, 1923 - May 26, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held.
Berylle "Bee" Darlene Meister, of Bend Sept. 4, 1934 - May 25, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home in Bend, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Gathering will take place on Saturday, June 15 from Noon to 2PM at the Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd., Bend, OR. Contributions may be made to:
Humane Society of Central Oregon at www.hsco.org
Doane Loring Caudell, of Redmond April 23, 1932 - May 30, 2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com
Services: A private gathering will be held. Contributions may be made to:
Gideons International, PO Box 7672, Bend, OR 97708.
Francis George Daniel, of Bend Aug. 28, 1926 - May 29, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592; www.deschutesmemonalchapel.com
Services: 10:00 AM, Monday, June 3, 2013; Graveside Memorial Service will be held at Deschutes Memorial Gardens, 63875 N. Hwy 97, Bend.
Hazel E. Edgar, of Spokane Valley, WA (formerly of Bend, OR) Oct. 28, 1918 - April 16, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: A graveside service will be held for Hazel at 12:00 noon on Saturday, June 8, 2013 at Deschutes Memorial Gardens, Bend, Oregon. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, www.partnersbend.org.
Joan Alee Beckley, of Bend Dec. 6, 1928- May 28,2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471. Services: A celebration of life will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Leukemia Society,9320 SW Barbur Blvd., Suite 350, Portland, OR 97219.
Margaret "Maggie" Ruth Shank, of Bend Aug. 28, 1926 - May 23, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held.
Michael "Mike" R. Mackey, of Redmond May 25, 1931 - May 26, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home in Bend, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are being planned at this time. Contributions may be made to:
Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd St., Redmond, OR 97756. www.hospiceofredmond.org
Nancy Anne (Chaney) Mansveld, of La Pine June18, 1931- May 24, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services will be held, per Nancy's request. Contributions may be made to:
St. Vincent de Paul of La Pine, P.O. Box 1008, La Pine, OR 97739. www.centraloregonsvdp.org
Francis George
Hurtado
August 25, 1921 - May16, 2013
(Bud) Daniel
Robert 'Bob' Schifferer
May 21, 1920- May 22, 2013
P eter A . W e l k , 9 1 , o f Bend, B ea v e r to n an d Wasco, Ore., died p e acefully in hi s sleep May, 16, 2013. H e wa s b o r n A u g . 2 5 , 1921 in Berwick, N .D., to Frank and Catherine Schall Welk. A fter t h e d eaths o f b oth p a r ents when he w as very young, he Peter Welk m oved t o O regon with m an y o f h i s brothers and sisters. A fter P e ar l H a r b or , h e joined the Navy. He served i n th e 1 3 3r d U . S . N a v a l C onstruction Batt a l i o n , " The Seabees" o n m a n y Pacific I s l ands i n c l u ding Iwo Jima. I n t h e l a t e 1 9 50 s a n d e arly 1 9 60s, h e w o r k e d with his in-laws, John and Mae Fulton, on the family farm in Wasco. He moved t o B e averton i n 1963. H e w o r k e d f o r G underson B r o t hers a n d FMC until his retirement in 1986. A f t e r m ov i n g t o B end, he went to work f o r Sun F o rest C o n struction until he retired again at the age of 87. During the last few years of his life he spent much of his time back in Wasco, on the farm. He i s s u r v i ve d b y hi s wife, Patricia Fulton Welk, B end; and dau gh t e r , Christie Welk, W asco. He is also survived by sisters, D orothy H a n ley o f P o r t land and A g gi e F i elds of Spokane; a s o n f r o m a p revious m a r r i age, R o d ney W e l k ; an d man y nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents, his br othe rs, Fr ank , F r e d di e a n d Clem Welk, and his sisters, B arbara Sit t e r , B ec k y W allace, M ar y Ann Kongslie and Bea O'Meara Macnab. A graveside service was held Friday, May 24 at Sun Rise Cemetery in Wasco. A m emorial C elebration of Life is planned 3:00 p.m. Tuesday, June 11, 2013 at t he Tou c h m ar k Ri v e r Lodge, 19855 SW T o u chmark Way, Bend. Memorials may be made t o Sherman C o u nt y H i s t orical S o ciety, P .O. B o x 173, Moro, O R 9 7 039; or Wasco Cemetery Association, P.O. Box 155 Wasco, OR 97065. An online guest book is available at www.niswonger-reynolds.com
August 28, 1926- May 29, 2013
Nuv. 11, 1928 - May 29, 2013
Shonita Hurtado of Bend, Oregon (formerly o f P l acervilie, CA), passed away May 22, 2013 at St. Charles M edical C enter i n B e n d , Oregon. She was 93. Shonita was b or n M ay 21, 1920 i n W a l s enburg, C olorado, to A n t o nio a n d V ictoria ( L u c ero) L o p e z . She spent much of her life living in the San Francisco Bay area before moving to Placerville, California. She moved to Bend in 2010 to be closer to her daughter. S he e n j o ye d w a t c h i n g b aseball, p a i n t i n g and spending time with family. S honita i s s u r v i ve d b y h er dau g h t er , A r m it a (husband Tom) N i tcher of Bend; and sisters, Ida Garbizo of W alsenberg, Color ado a n d Er m i n i a Ma l donado of Pueblo, Colorado. Other survivors include 10 g randchildren, 1 4 g r e a t g randchildren a nd fi ve great great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, J ose H u rtado; a n d th e i r daughter, Maxine Moran. Autumn Funerals of Bend i s honored t o s e r v e t h e family, (541) 318-0842. www.autumnfunerals.net
Albert Stanley Townsend Jau. 4, 1942 - May 26, 2013 Albert Stanley Townsend, 7 1, o f B en d, Or e g o n , p assed away over M e m o r ial w e e k end . H e w as home where he wanted to b e, w i t h his loving f amily b y his side Simply p ut, S t a n was Bend, Oregon. B orn a n d raised here, Stan Stan Townsend w as b o r n a t the ol d " hospital h i ll " t o t h e l a t e Ralph and Olive Townsend o n January 4 , 1 9 42 . A g raduate o f Be n d Hi g h S chool, Stan m a r r ied h i s l ifelong l o ve , S h e rr y o n J anuary 18 , 1 966 . Th e y remained married for 47 years until Stan's death on Sunday. Stan was nothing short of a Bend legend. H e c a m e f rom e x t r e m el y m od e s t m eans, an d w o r k e d h i s way to a n i n c r edible l i f e. He began his career at the age o f 17 w or k i n g at Horn's Texaco on the corner of 3rd Street and Reed M arket . H e ul ti m a t e ly b ought th e b u s i ness an d l ater co n v e r te d it to Townsend Auto, which his son, Jason, now owns and operates. S tan is s u r v ived b y h i s l oving w i f e , S h e r ry ; a n d his c h i l d r en , S t e p h anie and Jason. I n l i e u o f fl o w e rs , t h e f amily i s r e q u esting t h a t d onations b e m ad e to Partners In Care (Hospice). A Celebration of L ife for f amily and f r i ends will b e h eld a t Sta n ' s fa v o r i t e p lace, th e Tow n s e n d R anch... or simply k n o w n as "the Land," at I:00 p.m., o n S a t u r d ay , J u n e 22 , 2013.
Margaret Ruth
'Maggie'
Peterson Shank August 28, 1926- May 23, 2013 Margaret R ut h ' M a g gie' Shank o f B e n d , O r e gon, passed away peacefully on May 23, 2013, at the age of 8 6. Maggie was born A u gust 28, 1926, in St. Paul, M innesota, t o Ray m o n d and M a r g a r et (Arnold) Peterson. Maggie is survived by her five c h i l d r en : d a u g hters, Christine Wren and Catherine H a l l ; s o n s , S t e v en, P aul a n d Pe t e r Sh a n k . Survivors also include five g randchildren, A r e n a n d J illian Shank, L i li a W r e n , India and Si en a A ndrews-Shank ; g r ea t g randson, E z r a Rog e r s ; a nd h e r b r o t h er , P e t e r James Peterson. She is preceded in death b y he r h u s b and, D o n a ld Floyd Shank, wh o p a ssed away in 1986. Family w ill h ol d a private remembrance later this summer and r e quests no flowers. Donations to Partners In Care of Bend, OR, or your l ocal ho s p ic e w i l l b e greatly appreciated.
Peter A. Welk
Robert "Bob" Schifferer, a Prineville resident p assed a way M a y 2 9 , 2 0 13. H e was 84 years old. Bob was born in T u r ner, Oregon November 11, 1928 to Jo hn an d M ar y S chifferer. H e j o i ne d t h e Army in 1953. H e was a f a r mer i n t h e T urner ar ea , r ai si n g prunes, c h e r r ies, s h e ep, and cattle until hi s r etirement in 1991. Bob moved t o Pr ineville an d c o n t i n ued to work r a i sing cattle a nd crops o n t h e f a m i l y ago. farm. In 2000, he was the He was a wonderful man Grand M a r s h al l of t h e who overcame a lot of obTurner lamb and wool show. stacles and accomplished a He i s s u r v i ve d b y h i s l ot in h i s l i f e . H e w a s a l oving w i f e o f 2 1 y e a r s , dedicated husband, father, Marie Smith-Schifferer of a hard work er, a t a lented Prineville; a b r other, Carl mechanic - able to fix anySchifferer and w if e Gerda thing that w a s b r o k en, a of Turner, Oregon; sisters, gifted carpenter- who built D orothy W i l son and M a r each of his own homes and garet McRae and husband was proud to say that "h e Alan; sons, Steve Smith of never lived under another E ugene, O r e g on , Dou g man's shingle". H e moved S mith an d w i f e C a ro l o f to Bend in 1956, where he Prineville, and Dan Smith a nd Mary c h ose t o b r i n g a nd w if e C a rl a o f B e n d , up their young family on a Oregon; seven g r a ndchilworking f arm w h er e t h ey dren; and numerous nieces r aised livestock, grew a l - and nephews. falfa hay and other crops. He was preceded in death B ud served o n a m in e by his parents and brother, sweeper, the USS Holland, Jack Schifferer. i n the Navy during W o r l d Memorial co n t r i b utions W ar II . He w o r k e d f o r m ay b e m a d e i n l i e u o f Santiam L um b e r Com - flowers to S t . V i n cent de pany in Sweet Home, HenP aul o r c h a r it y o f o n e ' s sley T r a i le r F a c t or y i n choice. B end and t he n f o r m a n y A funeral service will b e years until r e t irement, he held at P r i neville Funeral worked a s a car p e n t er Home 1:00 p .m . M o n d ay w ith t h e Or e g o n S t a t e June 3, 2013, with a c o mParks Department — helpmittal to follow at Juniper i ng to b u il d shop s , Haven Cemetery. restrooms, an d p i cnic A rrangements are in t h e f acilities a t T u m a l o , t h e care of P r ineville Funeral Cove, Fort Rock and John Home. Pl ea s e vi si t Day River — to name just a www.PrinevilleFuneralfew. H ome.com t o s h ar e y o u r P receded in death by hi s memories or express your s isters, Roylene W ar d o f condolences by signing the M adras a nd W i ni fr e d online Guest Book. Mullens of Albany. Bud is s urvived b y hi s l ovi n g wife, Mary; their five child ren, Mi ck e y , B ar r y , DEATHS S andy, M i l li e a n d M a r k ; his older s i ster, D o r othy Cole of Boise, Idaho; eight ELSEWHERE grandchildren, several g reat-grandchildren , as well as many nieces, nephews and friends. Deaths of note from around Whether he knew you as theworld: a fat h e r , g r an d f a ther, Vollis Simpson, 94: Artist uncle or friend, please feel who made whirligigs from rew elcome t o att e n d h is cycled heating and air condig raveside s e r v ic e w h i c h tioning systems and reflective will be h eld t his M o nday, material cut into thousands June 3, at 10:00 a.m., in the m orning, at B en d M e m o - of tiny pieces that made the r ial G a r d ens, 6 3 87 5 N works shine when lights hit H ighway 9 7 , B e n d , O r - them in the dark; his work egon. was featured i n m u seums and the 1996 Olympics. Died Friday at his home in North Carolina. Roger Shinn, 96: Pastor, educator, administrator and author who championed the Death Notices are free and will Deadlines:Death Notices are ecumenical movement and be run for oneday, but specific accepted until noon Monday social activism in Protestant through Friday for next-day guidelines must be followed. c hurches as t h ei r g r o w t h Local obituaries are paid publication and by 4:30 p.m. peaked in the 1950s and '60s. Friday for Sunday publication. advertisements submitted by Died on May 13 at his home in families or funeral homes. Obituaries must be received Southbury, Conn. They maybe submitted by by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough William Demby, 90: Author Thursday for publication phone, mail, email or fax. whose novels, the best-known The Bulletin reserves the right on the seconddayafter of which is "The Catacombs," to edit all submissions. Please submission, by1 p.m. Friday written while he was an expainclude contact information for Sunday publication, and triate in Italy, challenged literin all correspondence. by 9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday ary conventions and expectaFor information on any of these publication. Deadlines for tions of what a black writer services or about the obituary display adsvary; pleasecall for should write about. Died May details. policy, contact 541-617-7825. 23 at his home in Sag Harbor, N.Y. Phone: 541-617-7825 Mail:Obituaries — From wire reports Email: obits@bendbulletin.com P.O. Box 6020 Fax: 541-322-7254 Bend, OR 97708
k'
F rancis G e o r g e (Bud) Daniel, born on August 28, 1926, in Roseburg, Oregon, has passed a wa y p e a cefully at h o m e s u r rounded by l oved o nes, o n the evening of Wednesd ay, M a y 29, 2 0 1 3, a fter s u f f ering a stroke several Bud Daniel weeks
Obituary policy
Villanueva was chef to 5 presidents By Emily Langer The Washington Post
Danny Villanueva, 87, a retired Navy senior chief petty o fficer w h o
FEATURED served f ive QgpUARy pr e s idents
at the White H ouse a n d aboard the presidential yacht during his career as a military chef, died April 25 at Georgetown University Hospital. His death, from a stroke, was confirmed by his daughter Beverly Villanueva Lee. Villanueva was a longtime Oxon Hill, Md., resident. He was born Donato Castillo Villanueva on Dec. 12, 1925, to a farming family in Alaminos, in the Philippines. With the
goal of gaining U.S. citizenship, he joined the Navy shortly after the end of World War II and was assigned to be a cook. According to his daughter, he was serving in the Mediterranean when his ship received a visit from Dwight Eisenhower. Villanueva so impressed the president with his cooking that he was invited to work in the White House, and he readily
agreed. H e served in t h e W h i t e House staff mess at the end of Eisenhower's presidency and during the administrations of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. During the Nixon and Ford administrations, he was a chefaboard the Sequoia, the presidential yacht, and served as its leading steward. (The yacht later was auctioned offby President Jimmy Carter) Andrew Combe, a retired Navy captainand former commanding officer of the Sequoia, described Villanueva as "one of the finest and most dedicated sailors I knew in my 30-year Navy career." "He always did work to perfection," Combe said in an interview, and "was only satisfied with the very best." On the yacht, Villanueva served what Combe described as "the equivalent of state dinners" to the president, Cabinet members and dignitaries, including Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev during his historic 1973 visit to the United States. "We didn't panic. We worked hard. We found a way to ac-
commodate (them) the way dignitariesare supposed tobe entertained," said Rogelio Guillermo, a fellow Navy veteran who worked with Villanueva during Brezhnev's visit. "That was one of the best shows we had." Nixon was reported to have used the Sequoia more than any other president in the boat's history. In the final days of his presidency, amid the emotional turmoil of his impending resignation, Nixon seemed to find in the boat a sort of refuge. At times, Combe said, Nixon would ask on short notice to go for a cruise. "Getting the food together was quite a challenge," Combe said, and Villanueva was "the one who made that happen."
QQeeeeeleeoeeeeeeewgg Michael RayApplegate
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March23,l96T - May 12, 20I3
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NISWONGER-REYNOLDS
Mike went home to his Lord andSavior on May l2, 2013 at the age of46. Hewas born March 23, l967 in Hillsboro, Oregon to Rayand BarbaraApplegate. He later moved to Madras, Oregon and went to Madras High School where hemethis best friend Mike McCool Jr, who introduced him to his high school sweetheart, Tami. They fell in love andmarried September 5, I98T. Mike followed in his fathers foot steps and learned to be a diesel mechanicata veryyoung age.Through the years he becamewellknown andhighly respected in thegarbagetruckand equipment field.Hew as very proud of the 14 years hewasfleet manager for Bend Garbageand Recycling. Mike will always beremembered asthe big guy with a big heart and great sense of humor. He loved and protected his family, friends and pets with everything he had in him. Mike used his strong faith in God to guide him through his life and he loved to tell everyone how the Lord was there for him always.
105 NW IRVlNG AVENUE, BEND www.NISWONGER-REYNOLDS.COM
Mike was preceded in death by his grandparents William Hopson, Clon Applegate, Bertie Applegate, and his mother BarbaraHopson. He is survived by his wife of 26 years,Tami Applegate, father, RayApplegate, stepmother, Sue Applegate, brothers, TomApplegate and Richard Hart, grandmother, Alice Hopson, belovedniece'sand nephews, bestfriend,JakeHessandmany more family and friends.
S41.382.2471
A Celebration of Life will be held on June 8,20I3 at I I:00 am. 1421 SWCanyon Dr., Redmond, Oregon97T56.
FUNERAL HOME
In Lieu of flowers anaccount for Mike Applegate Memorial Fund hasbeen set up atanyWells Fargo Bank
8 LOCALLY FAMILY OWNED L. OPERATED We honor all pre-arranged plans including NeptuneSociety. 8' ri 'ql i/' %1lv~p 4 ~v'I ',1 j'
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Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond 541-504-9485 or WWW.autumnfunerals.net
SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BS
NORTHWEST NEWS
Storie nuke plant's legacy:waste FEATURED OBITUARY
cs t'r' . Ii
The Associated Press file photo
Cast members of "All in the Family," from left, Carroll O'Connor, Jean Stapleton, and Sally Struthers hold their Emmys backstage at the 24th annual Emmy Awards in Hollywood in1972. Stapleton died Friday at 90.
Actress Sta eton a e etter a
o Arc ie Bun er By Bruce Weber New York Times News Service
Jean Stapleton, an actress whose portrayal of a slow-witted, big-hearted and submissive — up to a point — housewife on the groundbreaking series "All in the Family" made her, along with M ary Tyler Moore and Bea Arthur, one of the foremost women in television comedy in the 1970s and a symbol of emergent feminism in American popular culture, died Friday at her home in New York City. She was 90. Her death was confirmed by her agent, David Shaul. Stapleton, though never an ingenue or a leading lady, was an accomplished theater actress with a few television creditswhen the producer Norman Lear, who had seen her in the musical "Damn Yankees" on Broadway, asked her to audition for a series. The audition, for a character named Edith Bunker, changed her life. The show, initially called "Those Were the Days," was Lear's adaptation, for a U.S. audience, of an English series called "Till Death Us Do Part," about a working-class couple in east London who had reactionary and racist views. lt took shape slowly. The producersfilmed three different pilots, the show changed networks to CBS from ABC, and Stapleton acted in a film directed by Lear, "Cold Turkey," before "All in the Family," as it came to be known, was broadcast in J anuary 1971. Then, for three or four months, hampered by mixed reviews, the show struggled to find an audience, but when it did, it became one of television's most
Stapleton's screechy half of the duet was all Edith; the actress herself had a long history
of charming musical performances. She was in the original casts of "Bells are Ringing" and "Damn Y ankees" on Broadway in th e 1950s, and "Funny Girl," with Barbra Streisand, in the 1960s, in which she sang "If A Girl Isn't Pretty," and "Find Yourself a Man." Off Broadway in 1991,
she played Julia Child, singing the recipefor chocolate cake in the mini-musical "Bon Appetit." On television, she sang with the Muppets. "All in the Family" was Stapleton's first television series, but before that she appeared as a guest on several shows, including "Dr. Kildare," with Richard Chamberlain, "My Three Sons," "Car 54, Where Are You?" and the courtroom drama, "The Defenders," starring E.G. Marshall, in which s he played the owner of a boarding house who accused one of her tenants — played by O'Connor — of murder.
After 'Ajl in the Family'
Stapleton bowed out of "All in the Family" as a series regular in 1979, but she appeared in several episodes the next year, after the title of the show had been changed to "Archie Bunker's Place." The opening episodeofthe second season of "Archie Bunker's Place" dealt with the aftermath of Edith's death. After "All i n t h e Family," Stapleton purposely sought out roles that would separate her from Edith, and in so doing she led a busy and varied, if less celebrated, performing popular programs, finishing life. She turned down a chance first in t h e N i elsen ratings to star as Jessica Fletcher, the for five consecutive seasons middle aged mystery writer and winning four consecutive at the center of "Murder, She Emmy awards for outstanding Wrote," that became a longcomedy series. Stapleton won running hit with Angela Lansthree Emmys of her own, in bury. But she did appear as a 1971, 1972 and 1978. guest on numerous television "All in the Family" was set in series, including "Caroline in Queens, where most of the ac- the City" and"Murphy Brown," tion took place in the well-worn starred with Whoopi Goldberg but comfortable living room of in a short-lived series, "Bagdad the Bunker family, led by an Cafe," did character turns in irascible loading-dock worker Hollywood films ("You've Got named Archie whose attitudes Mail" and "Michael") and made toward anyone not e xactly several television movies, inlike him — that is, white, male, cluding "Eleanor: First Lady of conservative and rabidly pa- the World" (1982) in which she triotic — were condescending, starred asEleanor Roosevelt, smug and demonstrably fool- a film that led to a one-woman ish. Memorably played by Car- show that toured the country. roll O'Connor, Archie bullied Perhaps the most significant his wife, patronized his daugh- work of her later life, however, ter, Gloria (played by Sally was Off Broadway, where she Struthers), and infuriated and performed to sterling reviews was infuriated by his live-in in challenging works by Horson-in-law, a liberal student, ton Foote ("The CarpetbagMichael Stivic (played by Rob ger's Children"), John Osborne Reiner), whom he not-so-affec- ("The Entertainer") and Harold tionately called Meathead. Pinter ("Mountain Language," Jeanne Murray was born "The Birthday Party.") "She bringssupreme comic i n Manhattan o n J an . 1 9, 1923. Her father, Joseph, was obtuseness to Meg, thepathetic an advertising salesman; her proprietor of a shabby seaside mother, Marie Stapleton, was boarding house," Frank Rich a concert and opera singer, of The New York Times wrote and music was very much a of Stapleton's performance in part of her young life. Young "The Birthday Party." ConJeanne was a singer as well, trasting her role with that of which might be surprising to her " broadly drawn E d i th those who k new S t apleton Bunker," Rich concluded, "Ms. only from "All in the Family," Stapleton's Meg is the kind of which opened every week with spiritually bankrupt modern Edith and Archie singing the survivor who makes one quessong "Those Were the Days." tion the value of survival."
By Shannon Dininny The Associated Press
RICHLAND, Wash. — A stainless steel tank the size of a basketball court lies buried in the sandy soil of southeastern Washington state, an aging remnant of U.S. efforts to win World War II. Th e t an k h o lds enough radioactive waste to fil l a n O l y mpic-sized swimming pool. And it is leaking. For 42 years, tank AY102 hasstored some of the deadliest material at one of the most environmentally c ontaminated p l aces i n the country: the Hanford Nuclear Reservation. This complex along the Columbia River holds a storied place in American history. It was here that workers produced the plutonium for the atomic bomb dropped by the U.S. on Nagasaki, Japan, in 1945 — effectively ending the second world war. Today Hanford's legacy i s less about what w a s made here than the environmental mess left behind — and the federal government's inability, for nearly a quarter-century now, to rid Hanford once and for all of its worst hazard: 56 m illion gallons o f t o x i c waste cached in aging underground tanks. Technical problems, mismanagement and repeated
delays have plagued the interminable cleanup of the 586-square-mile site, prolonging an effort that has cost taxpayers $36 billion to date and is estimated will cost $115 billion more. Add to that the leaks involving AY-102 and other tanks at the site, and watchdog groups, politicians and others are left wondering: Will Hanford ever really be free of its waste? If not, what will its environmental impact be on important waterways, towns and generations to come? "One corner of our country and my state acted as a stalwart during World War II and the Cold War and did the right thing," Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said in a recent interview. "We want the federal government to fulfill its obligation to our state." There i s no gr e a ter challenge at Hanford today than its underground tank waste. The l eaks i nside AY-102, a d o uble-walled tank that was supposed to provide more p r otection against spillage — as well as newer leaksfound this year in six other singlewalled tanks — show how critical the situation has become. Put simply: Time is running out on Hanford's deteriorating tanks and, in turn, for completing work on a more permanent solution to store what's in them. The f e d eral g o v ernment created Hanford at the height of World War II, moving 50,000 people to sagebrush fields, dotted with small farms, near the W a s hington-Oregon border for a top-secret construction project. The influx quickly made this area Washington's fourth-largest city, but most workers didn't even know exactly what they were buildingthe world's first full-scale nuclear reactor - until the bomb was dropped on
Boh Ellis /The Oregonian file photo via The Associated Press
Two tug boats push a barge containing the Trojan Nuclear Plant's reactor in 1999 during its 270-mile journey up the Columbia River. The 200 tons of concrete, encased in thick steel and shrinkwrapped in bright blue plastic, were destined for the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, to be buried 42 feet deep. these tank farms. Gravel fields cover the tanks themselves. Exhaust pipes jut out of the ground above each of them. U nderground, they h ol d a bubbling, brewing stew of radionuclides, hazardous chemicals and nitrates. Two radionuclides comprise much of the radioactivity: cesium-D7 and strontium-90. Both take hundreds of years to decay, and exposure to either would increase a person's risk of developing cancer. The first storage tanks, 149 of them, were built between 1943 and 1964 with just a single, stainless-steel wall. They were designed to last only 10 to 20 years, because they were intended as a stopgap measure until a more permanent solution could be found to deal with the waste. It turned out the tanks were susceptible to corrosion; some even buckled from the extreme heat radiated by the waste. As early as 1956, workers suspected one tank was leaking. Between 1959 and 1968, the U.S. Energy Department confirmed that 12 tanks were
ing the most dangerous liquid waste out of the leaking tanks into these vessels. By 1995, they had gotten as much of the liquid out as possible, leaving behind sludge the consistency of peanut butter. AY-102 was the first doublewalled tank, put into service in 1971 with an intended lifes-
pan of 40 years. The tank contains chunks of solids — many common m etals, i n cluding aluminum, nickel, lead, silver, copper, titanium and zinc — as well as other common elements. It also holds more than a dozen radionuclides, such as plutonium, uranium, strontium and cesium, all of which can cause cancers upon contact. Last fall, at 41 years of age, AY-102 was found to be leaking into the space between its inner and outer shells. So far, no waste has escaped the outer shell to the soil surrounding the tank, and a video review of six other double-shell tanks that began holding waste in the 1970s showed none of them was leaking. "None of these tanks would be acceptable for use today. They are all beyond their design life, and yet they're holding two-thirds of the nation's high-level nuclear waste," said Tom Carpenter of the watch-
dog group Hanford Challenge. Read the rest of the storyat
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Around that time, workers started building 28 doublewalled tanks to provide better protection, then began pump-
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In ensuing years, workers built eight more reactors to produce plutonium for th e n a tion's nuclear w eapons arsenal. T h ey also built hundreds of ancillary projects, including large canyons where toxic chemicals were used to reprocess the plutonium and extract uranium. All of this work produced massive amounts of radioactive and toxic waste, as reprocessing of the spent nuclear fuel created byproducts that were far too dangerous for human contact.Workers poured some of that waste directly into trenches in the ground at Hanford, but most of the deadliest waste was stored in 177 underground tanks, grouped into areas known as tank farms. There isn't much to see at
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 20'I3
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.
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ge Today: Mostly sunny
Tonight:1 Mostly clear
Get localweather u dates
LOW
71
42
• A storia 60/49
62/47
•
•
Sandy
7 0/35
Cottage
11/ 4 2
Hampton
• Fon Rock 73/33
68/32
63/36
Roseburg
•
Chemult
6 8/32
75149
71/36
•
M • Beach
67/41
Juntura
Riley 68138
Jordan Valley 12/39
Frenchgle 76/43
Rome
• 84'
81/42
Paisley
Medford
73/42
• Klamath
Ashland
72/50
Yesterday's state extremes
72/41
• 79/47
• Brookings
78152
71/43
Chr i stmas Valley
Chiloquin
Medford
63/50
EAST Partly cloudy to Ontario mostly sunny skies 82/53 wlll be the rule Valeo 81/52 • today.
Unity
73/35
78/45
Look for skies to become mostly sunny today.
68/39
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CENTRAL
Nyssa
Silv e r
Port Orfor
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Baker City
o Mit c hell 70/43
La Pine 69/35
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62/48 •
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71143
Coos Bay
67/36
73/40
Sunriver Bend
66/ 4 1
71M4
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72/37
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70/4 3
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(in the 48 contiguous states):
Mostly sunny
ge Mostly sunny
Mostly sunny
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
77 48
79 46
80 47
77 50
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 5:25 a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday.... 8 43 p.m New First F u ll Sunrise tomorrow .. 5:24 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 8:43 p.m Moonrise today....2:06 a.m Moonsettoday ....3:08 p.m June8 June16 June23 June29
Pi •
PLANET WATCH
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....6:45 a.m.....10:34 p.m. Venus......6:31 a.m.....10:08 p.m. Mars.......4i48 a.m...... 7:46 p.m. Jupiter......613 a m...... 9 34 pm. Satum...... 512 p m...... 3 54 am. Uranus.....2:43 a.m...... 3:18 p.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 75/41 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........93m1986 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Recordlow......... 23in1955 Average monthtodate... 0.03" Average high.............. 69 Year to date............ 2.74" Averagelow ..............40 A verageyeartodate..... 5.05" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.05 Record 24 hours ...1.04in1971 *Melted liquid equivalent
FIRE INDEX
OREGON CITIES Yesterday Sunday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
WATER REPORT
M onday Bend,westofHwy97.....Low H i /Lo/WBend,eastof Hwy.97......Low
Sisters..............................Low La Pine...............................Low Redmond/Madras........Low Prinevine..........................Low Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme
Astoria ........64/48/0.00....60/49/pc.....62/49/pc Baker City......74/35/0.00.....69/39/s......73/42/s Brookings...... 74/47/0.00..... 72/50/f......77/54/s Burns..........78/39/0.00.....71/35/s......75/39/s Eugene........78/39/0.00....70/43/pc......76/46/s KlamathFalls .. 80/37/000 ....75/38/s ... 79/39/s Lakeview.......79/50/0.00 ....76/43/s......76/46/s La Pine.........77/32/NA....69/35/pc......78/40/s Medford.......84/49/0.01 .....79/47/s......86/49/s Newport.......59/43/0.00....59/45/pc.....59/49/pc North Bend......63/48/NA.....62/49/s.....60/50/pc Ontario........82/47/0.00.....82/53/s......80/52/s Pendleton......78/41/0.00.....75/48/s......81/50/s Portland .......75/49/0.00....69/51/pc......75/52/s Prineville.......70/40/0.00....74/40/pc......80/47/s Redmond.......78/39/0.00.....73/40/s......79/45/s Roseburg.......82/48/0.00....75/49/pc......81/50/s Salem ....... 77/44/000 ...69/46/pc ... 75/49/s Sisters.........80/39/0.00....72/37/pc......78/42/s The Dages......80/48/0.00.....74/52/s......82/55/s
The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen.
Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 43,806...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 152,684..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 77,899 . . . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir.... . . . . 27,744.... . . 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 136,905..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 419 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,080 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 61 L OW MEDIU HI G H Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 134 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 133 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 1,656 Crooked RiverAbove Prinevige Res.. ... . . . . . 87 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 224 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 14.4 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 134 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM LOWI or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
To report a wildfire, call 911
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
IPOLLEN COUNT
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
o www m '
ge
Legend Wweather,Pcpprecipitation, s sun,pcpartial clouds,c clouds,h haze, shshowers,r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Yesterday's extremes
Sunny
3
BEND ALMANAC
IFORECAST:5TATE I
I
Ie
'
90/70 •
rleans
lando 9/74
88/73
+ Miami 85/76 Monterrey 90/72 •
• ""' R~ FRONTS Cold
CONDITIONS • ++++ 6 6++ ++x
O4•
*** * * * ** * :eo+do s o+
W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......88/77/0 00..87/66/pc. 91/71/pc Grandlapids....79/67/0 05..60/43/pc.. 67/47/s RapidCity.......64/45/002..71/49/pc...73750lt Savannah.......87/68/0.00 ..86/72/pc...86/70/t Akron ..........84/65/0.00...78/52/t.67/45/pc Green Bay.......78/60/0.31...60/42/s.. 66/44/s Reno...........88/50/0.00...90/55/s.. 88/56/s Seattle......... 72/54/trace ..69/52/pc.. 72/53/s Albany..........90/66/0.00...86/64/t. 77/50/pc Greensboro......87/69/0.00...84/68/t...79/62/t Richmond.......93/70/0.00 ..87/69/pc...80/63/t SiouxFalls.......60/52/0.02... 67/47/s...72/57/t Albuquerque.....86/52/000...86/62/t.. 91/61ls Harnsburg.......90/65/001...85/66/t. 77/54/sh Rochester, NY....88/68/0.43... 77/54/t. 68/49/pc Spokane........71/46/0.00... 66/48/t. 73/49/sh Anchorage ......53/46/0 00..58/48/sh. 59/45/sh Hartford,CT.....90/64/0.00...89/65/t...78/52/t Sacramento......97/56/0.00... 95/61/s .. 94/60/s Springfield, MO ..75/65/0.38..68/51/pc .. 74/58/s Atlanta .........86/68/0.00...85/68/t...84/63/t Helena..........67/35/0.00...67/44/t...60/43/t St.Louis.........79/66/003 ..72/56/pc.. 72/55/s Tampa..........91/75/0.68... 88/76/t...88/73/t Atlantic City .....89/66/0.00..78/66/pc...72/61/t Honolulu........85/74/0.00...89/76/s.. 89/75/s Salt Lake City....78/48/000... 91/60/s .. 81/54/s Tucson.........1 05/69/0 00..105/75/s. 102772/s Austin..........94/76/000..89/67/pc. 91/71Ipc Houston ........95/79/0 00..90770/pc.90/72/pc SanAntonio.....94/78/000 .. 90/69/pc. 91/71/pc Tulsa ...........80/65/0.00..75/54/pc. 82/65/pc Baltimore .......91/69/0.00... 91/73/t...83/64/t Huntsville.......87/70/0.35... 84/62/t. 80/60/pcSanDiego.......69/63/0.00.. 70/62/pc.69/62/pc Washington, DC..91/72/0.00...91/72/t...sl/62/t Bigings.........68/47/000..75/51/pc...69/47/t Indianapolis.....76/62/0 76..72/50/pc .. 71/52/s SanFrancisco....77/52/0.00... 71/53/s.. 67/53/s Wichita .........73/59/0.00..74/55/pc.79/65/pc Birmingham .. 87/72/0.00... 83/64/t. 85/64/pc Jackson, MS.... 90/72/0.00. 86/64/t .. 86/64/s SanJose..... 88/56/000.. 79/54/s.. 75/54/s Yakima .........79/49/0 00 76/49/pc.. 82/53/s Bismarck........64/48/003..66/47/pc.. 63/51/s Jacksonvile......86/68/000..87/73/pc...88/73/t SantaFe........82/43/0.00..80/49/pc.85/52/pc Yuma..........l 07/76/0 00 ..105/74/s. 101/74s Boise...........81/49/000...80/47/s .. 77/50/s Juneau..........48/44/040..58/43/pc. 62/49/pc INTERNATIONAL Boston..........92/70/000 ..86/62/pc...73/55/t Kansas City......68/59/0 00 ..68/51/pc. 74/60/pc BndgeportCT....86/64/000... 80/61/t...74/54/t Lansing.........79/65/016 ..64/43/pc .. 66/47/s Amsterdam......55/46/000 61/44/pc 58/46/c Mecca.........117/86/000 115/88/s. 118/88/s Buffalo.........85/67/0.20... 76/54/t. 66/49/pc LasVegas.......99/75/0.00..105/79/s. 102/77/s Athens..........74/69/0.00..83/61/pc.. 77/62/s Mexico City .....84/59/000... 76/54/t...75/52/t BurlingtonVT....90/64/000... 82/62/t. 73/52/pc Lexington.......84/70/015... 79/58/t. 73/55/pc Auckland........61/50/0.00..59/50/pc.63/45/sh Montreal........84/70/000.. 81/59/sh. 68/48/pc Caribou,ME.....79/62/004... 76/61/t...75/51/t Lincoln..........66/56/000 ..73/49/pc. 77/60/pc Baghdad.......I05/75/0.00..104/87/s. 108/83/s Moscow........79/57/000 ..78/53/sh .. 76/61/s Charleston,SC...86/68/000..86/71/pc...84/71/t LittleRock.......80/66/271 ..82760/pc..82/62/s Bangkok........99/81/0.00..94/80/pc...99/80/t Hairobi.........75/52/0.00... 73/51/s. 75/52/pc Charlotte........85/66/000...84/69/t...80/64/t LosAngeles......73/63/000..74762/pc.72/62/pc Beiyng..........90/61/000..93/67/sh. 88/69/pc Nassau... ......84/77/0.00..91/75/pc.80/75/sh Chattanooga.....87/72/008... 82/65/t. 80/62/pc Louisville........78/65/007 ..80/59/pc. 75/55/pc Beirut..........81/70/0.00...88/74/s.. 83/66/s New Delhi.......99/81/000 ..114/89/s.114792/s Cheyenne.......64/44/000...74/49/s.82/50/pc Madison Wl.....78/63/000..62/47/pc. 66/49/pc Berlin...........68/57/0 00..71/49/sh. 54/47/sh Osaka..........81/66/0.00 79/62/pc .. .. 79/64/s Chicago.........76/63/0 50 ..64/49/pc. 64/52/pc Memphis....... 84/66/0 53 82/62/pc .. 79/62/s Bogota.........64745/0.10...68/48/t...65/51/t Oslo............72/52/0.00...70/54/r. 62/47/pc Cincinnati.......81/65/000 ..77/54/pc .. 72/51/s Miami..........88/75/0 09... 85/76/t...84/75/t Budapest........66/43/0 00..70/48/sh. 63/45/sh Ottawa.........81/66/0.06 77/5osh .. .. 64/45/s Cleveland.......83/67/000... 80/52/t .. 65/49/s Milwaukee......77/62/000 ..51/48/pc60/48/s .. BuenosAires.....68/45/0.02..62/50/pc.64/49/pc Paris............70/50/0.00... 65/41/c.64/42/pc ColoradoSpnngs.68/45/000..78/52/pc. 85/56/pc Minneapolis.....72/58/006...66/47/s. 69/52/pc CaboSanLucas..90/70/0.00...90/68/s.. 90/68/s Rio deJaneiro....84/63/0.00... 81/68/s. 72/67/sh Columbia,MO...74/63/0.04..68/52/pc.. 71/58/s Nashvige........87/69/0.52...82/62/t .. 78/Sis Cairo...........99/73/0.00..111/73/s.. 99/67/s Rome...........64/54/0.00... 72/59/s. 71/59/sh Columbia,SC....91/68/0.00... 87/71/t...83/68/t New Orleans.....88/76/0.00... 88/73/t .. 89/73/s Calgary.........63/43/0 00..57/45/sh. 59/43/sh Santiago........66/50/0.11... 58/57/s .. 60/59/s Columbus, GA....90/71/0.00... 89/69/t...88/68/t New York.......90/73/0.00... 82/66/t...76/59/t Cancun.........86/75/3.80...83/79/t...85/80/t SaoPaulo.......79/59/0.00... 75/62/r. 63/58/sh Columbus, OH....86/68/0.00 ..76/55/pc. 70/49/pc Newark,Hl......93/72/0.00... 86/67/t...78/57/t Dublin..........57/41/0.00...59/51/c. 64/48/sh Sapporo ........85/58/0.00 66/50/sh. .. 66/49/pc Concord,NH.....94/60/0.00... 86/63/t...79/48/t Norfolk, VA......90/71/0.00..89769/pc...83/66/t Edinburgh.......59/41/0.00..59/41/pc.64/48/sh Seoul...........79/59/0.00 83/66/pc. .. 81/62/pc Corpus Christi....97/81/000 ..88/76/pc. 87/77/pc OklahomaCity...79/19/005 ..78760/pc.79/67/pc Geneva.........61/48/0.15..64/42/pc.. 63/41/c Shanghai........73/66/0.19..71/64/pc. 74/65/pc DallasFtWorth...87/75/000..84/62/pc.86/69/pc Omaha.........63/57/003..70/51/pc.76/60/pc Harare..........75/48/0 00...73/46/s.. 73/47/s Singapore.......91/73/1.84..89/80/pc...90/81/t Dayton .........79/68/000 ..75/51/pc. 69/50/pc Orlando.........89/72/000... 89/74/l...89/75/t Hong Kong......93/84/000..85/78/pc. 86778/pc Stockholm.......70/54/0.00..76/51/pc.. 74/55/s Denver..........70/42/000 ..79/54/pc. 87/56/pc PalmSprings....109/77/0.00..106/73/s. 102/72/s Istanbul.........79/63/0.00..75/63/sh.75766/pc Sydney..........73/57/000..63/50/sh. 60/50/pc DesMoines......70/56/007..66/51/pc. 70/56/pc Peoria..........74/62/0 24..68/52/pc. 70/52/pc lerusalem .......87/68/0.00...95/76/s.. 85/60/s Taipei...........93/81/0.00..89/73/pc...82/74/t Detroit..........81/64/012 ..75/49/pc.. 67/50/s Philadelphia.....93/71/000... 87/68/t...79/61/t Johannesburg....71/46/0 00...67/49/s.. 52/36/s TelAviv.........90/68/0.00...99/76/s..89/65/s Duluth..........60/48/064...63/40/s .. 57/43/s Phoenix........l08/80/0 00..109/80/s. 106/80/s Lima ...........70/59/0.00...74/64/s. 74/64/pc Tokyo...........72/61/0.00..6I62/sh.. 69/65/c El Paso..........97/72/000 ..96/72/pc. 100/75/s Pittsburgh.......85/67/002... 79/58/t. 71/48/pc Lisbon..........79/57/0 00 87/61/s 83/60/pc Toronto.........81/66/0 07 72/48/sh.. 64/46/s Fairbanks........79/51/000...79/48/s. 74/54/pc Portland,ME.....90/63/000..77/61/pc...75/51/t London .........64/50/000..66/48/pc. 66/45/pc Vancouver.......64/54/000..66/50/pc.. 68/55/s Fargo...........61/48/000...66/45/s. 68/53/sh Providence......89/63/0.00 ..84762/pc...75/557t Madrid .........75/46/0.00...78/50/s.. 82/53/s Vienna..........66/46/0.00..56/52/pc.. 55/50/c Flagstaff........81/48/000...82/46/s .. 78/45/s Raleigh.........89/67/0.00 ..87769/pc...80/657t Manila..........95/81/0.00...91/80/c...93/77/t Warsaw.........72/57/031..75/55/sh. 75/59/sh
OREGON NEWS
Pioneering UmpquaValley vintner gets recognition By Carisa Cegavske The (Roseburg) News-Review
MELROSE — In 1961, Richard Sommer, an agriculture student at the University of California, Davis, took a leap of faith. His professors told him Oregon would never be good wine country. S o mmer i g n ored them. After scouring Southern Oregon for a suitable site, he chose a Melrose farm where he planted 13 acres in the era's most popular wine grapesRiesling and pinot noir. About a year from now, the state agency Oregon Travel Experience will erect a marker at the edge of the HillCrest Vineyard, acknowledging it as Oregon's oldest estate winery and its founder as the first to grow pinot noir grapes in
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Nicholas Johnson /The (Roseburg) News-Review via The Associated Press
Hillcrest Vineyard owner Dyson DeMara leans over a map drawn by Richard Sommer in1962 which shows Sommer's plan for a vineyard in Melrose.
wine board and Linfield College to research the issue. He Oregon. alsopersuaded the state House Charles Humble, spokes- to pass a resolution honoring man for th e O regon Wine Sommer as the first pinot noir Board, a state agency that planter. markets Oregon wineries, said Researchers concluded that Sommer's decision to plant in Sommer planted his first vines Oregon played an important at HillCrest four years before role in creating what is today a fellow Californians David Lett $3 billion business in Oregon. and Charles Coury planted uHe gets credit for being vineyards in C o rvallis and the godfather of a pretty sig- Forest Grove, respectively. nificant industry in Oregon," D eMara still ha s a m a p Humble said. "Oregon owes a Sommer drew in 1962 showlot to Richard Sommer and his ing his plan for the vineyard pioneer spirit." and a few bottles of 1967 pinot Present-day HillCrest own- noir bottled after the first vines er Dyson DeMara acquired began to produce. the vineyardin 2003, six years At its height, the vineyard beforeSommer died. had 50 planted acres. Today it He recalls him as a bit ec- has 21. centric, a tinkerer and a quiet Most of Oregon's pinot noir man, who livedalone and had is produced in the Willamette never had children. Valley, but DeMara said the D eMara's c ertainty t h a t Umpqua Valley wineries benSommer was the first to plant efit from mountains and hills pinot noir grapes in Oregon that have deposited layers of led him to seek recognition soil on the valley floor. "All of that gives you differfor the winery's founder after the city of Forest Grove adver- ertt soils, which gives you the tised itself in 2011 as, "Forest taste of the grapes," he said. Grove: Where Oregon pinot The county boasts about 150 was born." soil types. D eMara worked with t he DeMara said Sommer's se-
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lection of a site with excellent soils lent the grapes a flavor that needs no enhancement. While many wine manufacturersuse additi ves, DeMara prefers to keep things naturaL It is the nature — both climate and soil — of the Umpqua Valley that gives the wine its taste, he said. "The great food products are really simple and wine is the Same Way,n he Said. DeMara said he believes wineries like H i llCrest can help spur tourism and bring money to the Umpqua Valley. While h igh-priced w i nes suffered when the economy dipped in 2008, the $25 to $30 a bottle wines like those produced in Oregon continued to sell well, DeMara said. "These wines have never lost their momentum," he said. DeMara said the historical marker is a fitting tribute to Sommer's place in Oregon history. He said he was thrilled to find out Sommer's contribution would be recognized. "I was on a high. To me it's all about doing the right thing for Richard artd his family and that's a good feeling," he said.
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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Milestones, C2
Travel, C4-7 Puzzles, C6
© www.bendbulletin.com/community
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
SPOTLIGHT
SNOQUALMIE FALLS
A week of events for Bite of Bend This year's Bite of
Bend will include a week of culinary events June 23-30. Highlights of the week include a world cuisine dinner featuring Portland
chef NongPoonsukwattana at 5 Fusion and Sushi Bar; a dinner at Hola! with chef Scott Neuman of Oba in Portland; and
• Perched atop the cataract, Salish Lodgehasstories to tell
a five-course dinnerat CascadeCulinary Institute featuring a 78-pound wild boar cooked by chef Ken Rubin of the Rouxbe Cooking School in Portland. Tickets for these
and other"Bite Week" events are available at www.thebiteofbend.com/ biteweek/. The official Bite of Bend will be11 a.m. to
10 p.m. June29and11 a.m. to 7 p.m. June 30 in downtown Bend. The
event is free tothe public and includes the live Top Chef competition, live
music, a beergarden by Deschutes Brewery, the fourth annual Beer Run, the Northwest Spirits
8 Mixology Show,a children's area,anda marketplace with "bites" of gourmet dishes from
local restaurants and chefs. Donations collected at event entrance points will benefit Boys
and Girls Clubs ofCentral Oregon. The music lineup forthe Bite of Bend will include headliner Hot Buttered Rum as well
as TonySmiley, Boxcar Stringband and Mosley Wotta on June 29. The
lwwer/! w
By JohnGottberg Anderson • For The Bulletin
SNOQUALMIE, Wash.— The Snoqualmie River rumbles through Ett E
the Cascade foothills, an hour's drive east of Seattle, like a runaway
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train. Tilt an ear and listen, and you might hear the old SLS8 E Railway — the Seattle, Lake Shore 8 Eastern — chugging westward
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down the line toward Puget Sound. If your head is resting on a pillow at the i n
l ate spring — about this time of year
Salish Lodge 8 Spa — youmay remem- — but dwindles during the drier summer ber the place from the early-1990s' "Twin m o n t hs, becoming more like Tumalo Falls Peaks" television series, cast in the open- t h a n Niagara. It recovers with the return ing sequences as the Great Northern Ho- o f autumn precipitation. tel — you might hear the locomotivefling Th e fal l s h ave f ar-reaching imporitself off a cliff, crashing tance. They were a traonto the r o ck s b elow, NORTHWEST TRAVEL dit i o nal spiritual center as you drift i nt o y o ur for native Snoqualmie dreams. Next week: Ghost towns Indi a n s , w h o se f a m ily But wait: That's not a of north Central Oregon ban ds l i v ed in the praitrain at all. It's spectacuries above the falls and lar Snoqualmie Falls, and it's rightoutside i n t h e lush valley downriver. Within a your window. few years of early white settlement in One of the most dramatic and memo- t h e 1 850s, tourists began making the rable attractions in the Pa cific Northtr e k f r om Seattle to see the impressive west, made more so by th e luxurious f a l l s . And then, shortly after the first lodge that overlooks it, is t his 268-foot r a i l r oads penetrated the S noqualmie cataract that pours over an ancient vol- V a l l ey in the 1880s, they were discovcanic ledge with the ferocit y of a never- e r e d by industry. ending avalanche. Power to the people Geologists say Snoqualmie Falls was created by glaciation during the last ice The spark that ignited the desire for hyage, ending about 11,000 years ago. Fed droelectricity in the Puget Sound area was primarily by mountain snow and seasonal exactly that. rains, the stream reaches its peak flow See Snoqualmie /C4
Photos by John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin
Mount Si rises behind Twede's Cafe, a key location in the1990-91 television drama "Twin Peaks." Series star Kyle MacLachlan, as Agent Dale Cooper, often stopped here for a piece of cherry pie and "a damn fine cup of coffee."
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June 30 lineupwill include Jackstrawand Long Tall Eddy. Contact: www.biteof
Salish Lodge & Spa sits at the top of Snoqualmie Falls, opposite a power plant that directs water into an underground turbine system. The plant at the foot of the falls, opened in1899, is presently undergoing major redevelopment.
bend.com.
Singing group plans openhouse
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Bella Acappella will
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hostan a cappellaopen house andguest night June 4 from 6to 9 p.m. at the Bend Senior Center.
This is a newwomen's
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Glassic car show will visit Bend
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Classic CarTour will
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Seventy-five classic car fans drive through the Western United States on the tour, visit-
ing historical sites in
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range this yearfrom a 1937 Chevrolet to a1966
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Shelby Cobra,according to the tour website.
This year's stop in Bend will include a lunch, open to the public, to
benefit Healthy Beginnings, a local nonprofit that offers free health
screeningsforyoung children. The lunch will take place at11:30 a.m. at the Elks Lodge, 63120
Boyd AcresRoad,Bend. Diners caneatfrom a sandwich barfor $10. Cars will be on display during the lunch visit. Contact: 541-382-1371.
Contact us with your ideas Have a story idea or event submission?
• Community events:
Email event information to events@bendbulletin. com. Allow at least10
days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351. • Story ideas: Email
communitylife©bendbulletin.com. — From staff reports
Local high schoolbandsbring home state trophies By David Jasper The Bulletin
Two Central Oregon schoolsemerged victorious from the Oregon School Activities Association's Band/ Orchestra Championships, held May 8-11 at Oregon State University in Corvallis. Bend's Summit High School Wind Ensemble took the 5A competition, while the Ridgeview High School Band from Redmond brought home the first-place trophy in the 4A dtvtston.
For Summit High, it was the 45-piece band's third consecutive year placing first. Being a repeat victor is especially tough, said Cecile Cuddihy, parent of a trumpet player in the ensemble. "They do not know who their opponents will be, nor do they know what their competition will be playing, which is why
being a repeating champion is so difficult." Adding to the challenge, says the group's director, Dan Judd, was the fact that attri-
tion was high due to the annual loss of graduating seniors. "We lost 25 players out of
a 45-piece group," Judd said. However, if the ensemble was a long shot to win, no one seemed too worried about it. "We don't talk about it much in band. We just work on the music, and we figure the ratings and that sort of stuff takes care of itself. But it was really fun to see how much these guys poured into it." SeeBands/C3
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Members of the Summit High Wind Ensemble hold their first-place trophy at the OSAA State Championships in May.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
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FormsforengagementweddinganniversaryorbirtitdayannouncementsareavaiiabieatTheBugetin i777SWChandterAve.,gend orby emailing milestones@bendbulletin.com. Forms andphotos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.
re nantat ? t'snotun ear o
ANNIVERSARY
By Kate Fridkis
tion for feeling accomplished just for getting pregnant. For my whole life, I'd wanted to stand out and go further and be more impressive than other people. But becoming a mother is completely ordinary. I wasn't sure I was allowed to feel proud of myself, and I was a little embarrassed that I did. I can feel my baby kicking now. She prods me from the inside, and it feels like a little r eminder every time. I a m
enough yet, despite all of their accomplishments, how they just weren't old enough. ul think I'm old enough," I said, interrupting. It got very quiet. Finally Stephanie said, "But how do you know?" "I don't, really," I said. "I just don't want to wait." To my surprise, she said that sometimes she wishes she could have a baby now, too, but she isn't married and here, too, my baby is saying. wants to get married first. You're my mother. And I am Julie added, "Don't get me warmed and scared by it. But wrong, I definitely want to not the same kind of desperate have kids. Someday." ul don't, ever," said Mara, fear I've felt so often about my career. Instead, it's a fear that and she looked uncharactersharpens me and makes me istically nervous. "You'll stay grateful. After a grueling first friends with me, though, after trimester, I am back to work this, right?" "Can I touch your belly'?" on my book proposal, and I'vetaken on a new column. someone asked. And suddenly, Sometimes I a m a n x i ous, everyone's hands were on me, thinking about how I should and for a moment I felt like the work harder, I should have sun in one of those Styrofoam a publisher by now, but the models of the solar system, anxiety has slipped into the with my friends orbiting my background in a way I never roundness. Their hands were thought it could. shy but supportive, and I felt Recently, the day before my important and relieved. Rebel27th birthday, I had my nonliously, I was impressed with fiction writing group over for myself. cake and conversation. Everyone sipped red wine except for me, and they talked about t heir recent victories — a cover story, a new job, a book deal. A l i ttle awkwardly, I 541-548-2066 shared my ultrasound photos. Adjustablg . "Oh my god," they said, uncertain at the sight of my ghostly black and white baby. And then they were all talking at once — reiterating themselves frantically to each other, explaining why t hey w eren't G allery- B e n d readyto have babies, howthey hadn't accomplished nearly 541-330-5084
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Patricia and Glenn Williams
Williams Glenn and Patricia (Cieloha) Williams, of Bend, celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary with a trip to Kauai, Hawaii, and a reception hosted by their children at McMenamin's in Troutdale. The couple were married June I, 1963, in Portland. They have two children, Tony (and Cindi), of Clyde Hill, Wash., and Scott, of Hillsboro; and
four grandchildren. Mr. Williams worked for the United States Air Force/Oregon Air National Guard until his retirement in 1995. Mrs. Williams worked for Kaiser Permanente until her retirement in 1990. Mr. Williams is a member of The American Legion. The couple enjoy RV-
ing, reading, gardening and watching sports. They have lived in Central
Oregon for 16 years.
BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend
Tony andSammeeGreen, a girl, Kingslee NoelGreen, 6 pounds, 11 ounces, May 21. Shane Harris andCatherine Broyles, a girl, Lillian AleneHarris, 7 pounds, 11 ounces, May11. Nicholas andAmandaLyman,a boy, Nixon LawrenceLyman, 7 pounds, 14 ounces, April19. Vince OrantesandErrilla DeT!enne, aboy,VincentJackson Orantes,7 pounds, 11.5 ounces, May19. Brett ZechmannandAndrea Henry,
a girl, Estelle Olivia Zechmann, 9 pounds, 2 ounces, May22. Delivered at St. Charles Redmond Kaceyand ReenaBradburry, a girl, Gracie May Bradburry, 7 pounds,13 ounces, May19. KennandKim White,a boy,Ruger JamesWhite,5pounds,9ounces, May 21. Michael and Jennifer Yamamoto, a boy,PaxtonJudeMarkYamamoto,5 pounds, 9 ounces, May21. Jered andNatalie Kirk, a boy, Zane MatthewKirk,7 pounds,6 ounces, May 8.
o eon cas or ra uation it By Claudia Buck The Sacramento Bee
Let's face it. When it comes to graduation gifts, most students would probably prefer cold, hard cash. Or maybe a plane ticket for a European backpackingtrip or a Mexican beach vacation. But as student loan debt has leaped higher than a soupedup SAT score, it may be wise to think twice about what makes
a good graduation gift. In the past seven years, student loan debt for borrowers younger than 30 has catapulted, hitting $322 billion in December 2012, a 124 percent increase from 2005, according toa recentFederal Reserve Bank of New York study. To get graduates off on a financially balanced footing, here are some money-savvy gift ideas.
t hat never gets old .. . a n d makes a surprisingly thoughtful graduation present."
Old school In their y o ung l i fetimes, many graduates today have likely never seen one: a paper U.S. savings bond. They became extinct on Jan. 1, 2012, and can be purchased only in digital form. (The only exception: Paper savings bonds can be purchased using your IRS tax refund.) To give a student a Series EE or I e l ectronic savings bond — in amounts starting at $25 — go to the U.S. Treasury website, Treasury Direct.gov. It also offers free graduation gift cards that you can personalize and print out to include with your gift.
Long-term gifting
To introduce a young graduate to the benefits of long-term Cash alternative investing, try a mutual fund, "Obviously, cash is king," said Lon Burford, a partner said personal finance blogger with wealth management firm Joseph Audette, a personal Genovese Burford & B r othf inance w r i ter/blogger f o r ers in Sacramento, Calif. A NerdWallet. But students, es- fund like the Vanguard S&P pecially high school graduates 500, he said, is "a great teachjuggling their own f i nances ing opportunity financially as for the first time, can quickly graduates begin getting closer blow through a lot of cash, he to when they'll stand on their notes. Instead'? own two feet. "Get a gift card from the "With one gift, you're helpuniversity's student bookstore. ing them own Apple, MicroIt's a little more thought than soft and Google — companies writing a check and lets them they're interested in," said Buruse the funds for things they'll ford, as well as stock stalwarts really need in school." like Chevron and Procter 8 Gamble.
Give a book
Too often, friends and family feel pressure to spend lavishly on a g r a duation gift, said the 30-year-old financial blogger, who says $25 to $50 or even a money-minded book can be more than ade quate. For t h e l a t ter, h e recommends: • "The M illionaire N e x t Door": "An easy read that puts young people in the right mind-set" for managing their spending and savings. • "A Random Walk Down Wall Street". «A classic (that) provides great background for young graduates interested in investing." • "Oh, the Places You'll Go!".
"A (Dr. Seuss) children's book
job-hunting help For graduates heading into the workworld, consider these: A new jacket or updated skirt/ shirt for interviews. A resumeor blog-writing class. A laptop, if one isneeded. A membership in a college alumni organization, which can help with job connections.
Buy an experience Some young
g r aduates
heading off to four years of college studies or that f irst 9-to-5 job deserve a once-ina-lifetime e x perience, said NerdWallet's Audette, such as a gift certificate for sky diving or funds tofuel a cross-country road trip.
NEW YORK — When I found out I was pregnant, I didn't really want to tell my friends. We'd talked about babies, over wine and second draft feature articles at a nonfiction writers' group, and everyone agreed that if you're smart, you wait until you're 35. "There's too much to do before then!" said one of the women. I was 26 when I got pregnant, which meant I'd jumped the gun by almost a decade. In a lot of different parts of the country, having a baby in your mid-20s is not a big deal. According to a 2009 report from the CDC, the average age of first-time mothers in Texas, Oklahoma, Utah and nine other states New Yorkers rarely visit was recently 22 to 23. On m y Ba b ycenter.com Due Date Club app, people are c o nstantly s t a r ting threads with titles like "aNy othr teen moms on here'??'?" And they get plenty of sympathetic answers. But the average age of f irst-time moms here i n New York is 26, although I hadn'tyet met anyone my
COurteSy Kate Fridkis
Kate Fridkis is pregnant at 26. In New York City, that's a weird thing to be. ented and driven, and for all
of us, being a young woman
was about proving ourselves in a competitive world. Sheryl Sandberg and Hillary Clinton were urging us forward, reminding us ofour endless potential. And it w a s clear that having a baby before fully establishing yourself professionally was exactly the same as giving up on your potential. Having a baby was the kind of thing that my friends' less ambitious sisters sometimes did, much to everyone's longage who was pregnant. distance concern. That's probably because I got married young, at 24. I didn't mean to, but I fell in love when you account for factors like advanced educa- in a way that wouldn't comtion, the ages climb. The promise. But marriage isn't Pew Research Center notes anything like a baby. Despite that 71percent of first-time what some people seemed mothers olderthan 35 are to think about it l imiting a college-educated. In New person'sfreedom, I felt more York City I only know one availableto pursue my career other woman my age who goals and other interests than has a baby. She'd gone to I ever had before. Without the Harvard and worked on distraction of dating and with Wall Street, but, she confid- the support of another income, ed in me in low tones, "I al- I could push myself harder. "You should write!" my new ways wanted to be a mom." I have not always wanted husband said. "That's what to be a mom. (If I've always you want to do, so you should wanted to be anything it's give it a shot." a famous fantasy novelist But then something hap— dorky, I know.) More im- pened. I began to think with mediately, I wanted to get an eerie, abrupt certainty that a college scholarship and I should get pregnant. At first, then get ahigh GPA and I dismissed the urge as selfthen get into an Ivy League sabotage. You just won't let If you would like to receive forms grad school and then have a yourself achieve your goals. to announce your engagement, sparkling career in the big But the changed part of my wedding, or anniversary, plus city. mind fought back. It s aid, helpful information to plan the Until now, the conver- There is enough time in life s perfect Central Oregon wedding, • sations I've had with my for all of this. Babies and writss pick up your Book of Love at friends about babies have ing, too. Stubbornly, it seemed The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler s ounded something l i k e to imagine that everything Ave., Bend) or from any of these this: would somehow turn out all valued advertisers: Glamorous, pe r f ectly right, that life had a slower, made-up Mara: "My mom more graceful arc than I picAAA Travel is a nurse. She says it's a tured. The part of my mind Awbrey Glen Golf Club myth that women are less that relentlessly encouraged Bend Metro Park 8 Recreation District fertile in their mid-30s." me to have a baby sounded The Bend Trolley (We all nod sagely) reassuringly like healthiness. Bend Wedding &Formal Black Butte Ranch Julie, who has just been It sounded like growing up. It Central Oregon Event Professionals Assoc. promoted and is managing sounded like calming down. Cuppa Yo 10 people and attending And I wa s emotionally exThe DD Ranch star-studded work parties: hausted. I gave in. Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center "I need to spend at least anEastlake Framing Impressed other five years on my caEnhancement Center Medical Spa reer. And anyway, my boss In the middle of the night, Erin Hardy Images hates pregnant women." during the first trimester, too Faith Hope Charity Vinyards 8 Events Giorgio's Wine, Brews & Spirits Stephanie, who works at sick to sleep, I found myself House on Metolius a tech startup: "Five years, downloading b o ok s a b out M. Jacobs definitely. That's the right infertility. I didn't know why, MCMenamins Old St. Francis School amount of time. You have to but suddenly I wanted to read Michelle Cross Photography live your own life first." e verything I c ould get my a Northwest Medi Spa Everyone else: "Yes!" hands on about and by people Old Stone who wanted a baby more than Pronghorn A change of heart Sunriver Resort anything and couldn't have Totally Polished I had been married for one. I didn't realize at first that Widgi Creek Golf Club a couple years when I deI was seeking some justificacided to go off birth control. By then, I was in therapy to try to cope with my career-related anxiety. At my preconception appointment (this is a thing! Although I may bethe only one who has ever taken advantage of it), the doctor congratulated 7 n' me for being so proactive and told me to go off the pill three months before I was even thinking about trying to conceive, to get the hormones out of my system and allow my body time to readjust. So I did. And then I panicked. "I have to finish my book," I told my therapist. "Maybe I should wait another year? Six months? ! 7™ 7 I think I rushed into this. is'yi fg!tAsilfl i ffl tfdiig'~ M l h w:'l L ilsf.t '"'.: % ' t l r!u'. I'm not ready." • P a t t e r n s • T e x t u r e s • Tw i s t s L oo p s But my body was. Two hours after that t herapy Your feet deserve an amazing carpet session, I peed on a stick, t elling myself that I w a s M asl a n d Ro y a l t y C o u r i st a n UCL stupid for even taking a test this soon. It said "YES" in v er y s t r aightforward digital letters. I was already pregnant. I have had many visions H OM E I N T E R I O R S of my professional self over the years but none of them i nvolved c h ildren. My friendswere career-oris
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LOS ANGELES
By Roberto Loiederman
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This is a story about Underground Los Angeles. Not the underground music scene — the underground art scene. The subway art scene. Yes, there is a subway in L.A. Even some Angelenos don't know about it, and most have never used it. But a system of subways and light rail was started in the early 1990s, and it's steadily expanding. Depending on where you live, the subway's an efficient way to get downtown, which has become more of adestination in recent years, what with the Music Center with its plays, concerts, ballets and operas; fine museums; a funky, lively boho arts district; the
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recommended tourist site. It's seedy, full of trash, somewhat dangerous. The boathouse has a caved-in roof, smells of urine and hasbeentakenoverbyferal cats. And yet Romero's artwork — just across the street and down a flight of stairs — makes the park seem idyllic. Again, a sharp contrast between what goes on a b oveground and what's depicted below. Each station on the Red Line boasts artwork worth seeing. Here are a few examples: At the W i lshire/Vermont stop, artist Bob Zoell, using large ty-
pographic symbols on tiled col-
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umns, created outlines that look both human and mechanical. The Civic Center station features Jonathan Borofsky's soft s» mannequins flyingoverhead. s «c . Frank Gehry-designed Disney The Pershing Square station Concert Hall; th e r elatively has spectacular neon pieces new Cathedral of Our Lady crafted by Stephen Antonakos. of the Angels. Plus the old atMost amazing of all is the tractions: Chinatown, L i ttle Hollywood/Highland station. Tokyo, Olvera Street's cheesy The art piece is the entire stabut charming Mexican street tion, designed by Sheila Klein fair, and such architectural and built by Dworsky Associgems as Union Station and the ates. Named " Underground Bradbury Building, featured in Girl," it's meant, perhaps, to be "Blade Runner." Bret Hartman /The Washington Post an abstract prone female. I don't see it that way. When Unlike some other urban A man walks down the stairs to the platform at the Hollywood and Vine station on the Red Line subway on May 5 in Los Angeles. The transit systems used by a wide subway is a study in the culture and humanity of the city. I look at the station from above, swath of economic and soI feel as if I'm inside the belly of cial classes, the L.A. subway a whale. Or maybe in a space— except for those who use it the subway car during the few ground narrative is a bust-out Up a level, there's a metal sign. But "Hooray" is spelled ship hangar that's part of a for their downtown work com- seconds you'rein each station. celebration of movies and mu- railing with f i v e h o rizontal "Hurray," like a carny huckster high-budget sci-fi movie. It's mute or to go to ballgames and Red Line art may not be part sic — a city proud of its enter- rails, like a musical staff. Sol- urging the marks to hurry in: a beautiful and breathtaking in cultural events — caters mostly of the normal tourist route, but tainment achievements. dered onto the handrail-cum- sardonic view of Hollywood. its ambition and execution. to those who don't have other it's worth a morning or an afThe below-ground narrative musical-staff are a large steel Still, as interesting as Red transportation options. ternoon. You need to get off the is different. At the Universal clef andthe musical notes of the Stark contrasts Line art is, most Angelenos I have a car, but sometimes train at some of the 14 stations, City Red Line platform, there song "Hooray for Hollywood." Several stops later, you get wouldn't dream of getting on I travel by subway because it wander around the platform, are four massiverectangular Most of the artwork at this to th e W e stlake/MacArthur the subway.They prefertheir puts me cheek-by-jowl with go up to a higher level to get a columns decorated with hand- station — dozens of tongue-in- Park station. Go up the steps personalbubbles — their cars. people I might not otherwise broad view. Explore both sides m ade ceramics on al l f o ur cheek variations on what "star" and you find 13 lovely ceramic Change, however, is in the come into contact with. On the of the turnstiles. Once you've sides. In English and Spanish, might mean — was created by depictions of scenes in and wind. A s L . A .'s downtown subway, I've sat next to a guy seen the art at one station, take the tiles tell a story of the diffi- Gilbert "Magu" Lujan: tile fan- around the park. Some are continues to blossom, as pricier who had a large tattoo — the F- the train in the same direction culties faced by native peoples tasies of different sizes, some night scenes (in blue) and some condos and lofts are built there, word — in Gothic script on his to the next station and enjoy and black settlers, and of their placed in out-of-the-way cor- are daytime (in rose). One of as more e c o-consciousness neck. I've stood next to a silver- the artwork there. unrecognized c o ntributions. ners, ready to be discovered. the most striking shows two takes over, the subway clientele Lujan's takes on "star" inhaired middle-aged guy who'd The best place to start a Red It's Southern California history middle-aged men talking and will probably gentrify. taken the cowboy motif way Line art tour is at the North with a progressive edge. clude a 1948 Chevy souped eating at Langer's Deli (a halfI just hope that the change too far: Stetson, bandanna, Hollywood terminus. Going Aboveground, it's all fun and up so that it rides low to the block away). doesn't happen too quickly. I chaps, filigree, fancy boots that down the steps or escalator, games and diversions from ground - "Low-Rider Star" Even though these ceramics like the Red Line the way it is. clacked when he walked. I've you seethree wide ceramic lay- daily life. Below, it's a stark sto- — and an anthropomorphic were done by Sonia Romero Unless I'm on the subway, I'd watched an immigrant student ers. The topmost layer depicts ry of 19th-century exploitation, animal (a dog?) standing with in 2010, for the most part they never rub elbows with a Gothpainstakingly translate a medi- the 1950s San Fernando Valley: war, strife and thorny racial each of its back paws inside a show scenes either from a Mac- ic-script- tattooed guy or a Bufcal textbook, word for word. pickup trucks and tract houses. relations. small car, each of which is atop Arthur Park that no longer ex- falo Bill wannabe. And listened to a busker doing The middle layer is the Valley Margaret Garcia's artwork a star — "Flying with Stars." ists — one with elegant couples And that's as much a part of "Skidding Star" shows a a pretty good Johnny Cash im- in the early 19th century: Cath- (construction designed by Kate boating in the lake — or if in the Red Line's raffish charm as itation — and given him a buck olic missionsand rancheros. Diamond) has a harsh beauty. large five-pointed star wearpresent time, they show an its artwork. for his efforts. The lowest layer is the Valley It's deliberately rough-hewn ing a red bikini. The two lower idealized park, not the one you All par for the course on the in the era of Native Americans, and naive, a hodgepodge of points of the star are "legs" see when you go up and walk Red Line. before Europeans arrived, and h and-lettered text an d p o r - covered in tar or grime, skid- acrossthe street. it depicts their remnants: bas- traits, th e s paces between ding on a downslope lined with Except for a stop at Langer's Take time to take it in kets, petroglyphs and bones. filled by ceramic depictions of palm treesand stars.The idea (at Seventh and Alvarado; go If that array of humanity The history lesson is clear: cannons, guns, hands, flow- that a star can skid downward for the world-class pastrami on doesn't appeal to you, consider Each era is built on top of pre- ers, bones, acorns and cut-off is the mordantly comic under- rye), MacArthur Park is not a this: Going by subway is eco- vious ones. As you pass these legs. The four massive col- side of the Hollywood dream. l ogically sound, you k n o w three strata and go deep into umns, with their garish colors Above, at street level, is the when the train will arrive, and the bowels of the subway, it and their message of justice sleaze and glitz of tourist Holyou don't have to worry about might feel as i f t h e b elow- for those who were denied it l ywood: the s idewalk w i t h parking when you get there. ground world you're entering in California in the 1800s, pro- stars' names inscribed inside Elevation Capital Strategies But if you use it only as a is one with a different view of duce a searing effect, artisti- stars; well-known theaters; ac400 SW BluA Drive Suite 101 Bend HOME INTERIORS means of transportation, you life and history than the one cally and emotionally. tors dressed as superheroes. Main: 541-728-0321 70 SW Century Dr. Su/te145 Bend, OR 97702 miss a lot of the fun. Every sta- that p r evails a boveground. But below ground is Lujan's t' 541 322 1337 www.elevationcapital.biz ////////////.complementshome.com Among the stars tion on the Red Line is decorat- As you'll see, that feeling is art, which gives "Hooray for ed with fascinating artwork, in accurate. Two stops beyond Universal Hollywood" a dark meaning. severalcases as a counterpoint City is the Hollywood/Vine sta- In one piece, a 1950s car with 'Prli A N N U~ I. to — or an ironic commentary Glitz and struggle tion. Once you get off the train, three p a ssengers e merges on — the area where the staThe stop after NoHo is Uni- you see ceilings covered with with musical notes out of a tion's located. versal City, serving popular thousands of film-reel holders. landscape of mountains and ::.=. Don't try to catch a quick tourist sites Universal Studios The walls of the station repre- houses and stars, all framed glimpse of the art from inside and CityWalk. The above- sent film stock. by an odd-looking Hollywood /
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Bands Continued from C1 Leading up to the competition, "I'd been telling them, 'Don't go over there with your heart set on any one thing. It's really hard to repeat,'" Judd satd. In its first year, the 46-member Ridgeview High School Band, ledby Dave Sime, managed to become the first band from Redmond toearn a placing at the state level, according
to a Redmond School District post announcing the win on its website. Along with the main band competition, which students spend the year preparing for, there is also a sight-reading component at the championships. For this portion, bands are givena new piece of music and have just seven minutes to prepare a performance. Ridgeview Band, which has no seniors in it and is made up of 85 percentfreshmen, won this
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Tour costs are based on 24 participants. Prices might have to bc adjusted if minimum number is not met. $500 deposit required per person. Final payment is due Septemher 3,2013. $100 per person cancel penalty applies if cancelled prior to September 3,2013. Balanceis non-refundable after September 3rd /
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 20'I3
Snoqualmie :p
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Continued from C1 A greatfiretorched downtown Seattle in J une 1889, and when the citizens — who, despite Thomas Edison's incandescent light bulb, had still been lighting their homes with candles and kerosene — saw electric s t reetcars r u n ning through the flames, they were finally persuaded by the new
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technology. C harles Baker, a y o u n g c ivil engineer w orking f o r the SLS8tE, imagined that t he falls' energy could b e harnessed to serve Seattle, Tacoma, Everett and o t her communities on Puget Sound. Encouraged by rapid advancPhotos by John Gottberg Anderson/For The Bulletin es in electrical engineering Tourists take their photos in Snoqualmie Falls Park with a view of the cataract behind. The falls were — development of alternating a traditional spiritual center for native Snoqualmie Indians, a tourist attraction beginning in the1850s current, invention of the water- and a power-generation site since1899. wheel turbine and creation of a system of power generation and distribution — he and a 35-man crew built the world's first, fully underground hydropower plant within a rock cliff along the river in 1898-99. The new r a i lroad t r ansported supply materials and equipment to the site. The crew drilled a 260-foot shaft through the bedrock, diverting water through underground turbines and returning it to the river below the falls. And when Baker pulled the switch that brought the plant to life on July 31, 1899, the office of the Snoqualmie Falls Power Co. in downtown Seattle became lit by the 6,000 kilowatts of electricity generated by the falls. A century later, the muchelaborated system r e mains intact. But a m ajor redevelr. 7/
opment is in progress and
nearing c o mpletion. P uget Sound Energy, the successor to Snoqualmie Falls Power, has installed new, higher-efficiency turbines and upgraded water-delivery systems to the facility's two powerhouses, one above the falls, one below. The work h a s f r ustrated some visitors. Many looked forward to hiking the trail from Snoqualmie Falls Park, and its observation platforms just off state Highway 203 near the top of the falls, to the pool at the foot of the torrent. That trail is closed until fall of this year, and there is presently no formal public access to that area. But the view is nevertheless marvelous, and the park itself — lush with June-blooming rhododendrons, as well as native salal, kinnikinnick and Western redcedar — is home to wildlife that ranges from black-tail deer to osprey and
A honeybee gathers pollen from a flower in Snoqualmie Falls Park. Although blackberry blossoms are the favored flower of Salish Lodge bees, their honey reflects a seasonal flavor profile of whatever the insects are ingesting.
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Pedestrians linger by a railroad siding in Snoqualmie, where the Northwest Railway Museum displays a large number of long-abandoned cars in various states of repair. Among them are a late-19thcentury switcher locomotive and other vintage equipment. people themselves. Anthropologists talk about two major Snoqualmie groups: the Upper Snoqualmie, who lived on the prairies above the falls, and the Lower Snoqualmie, whose homes were in the valley below the falls. The groups often met at Snoqualm-
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and harvest edible and medicinal plants. Prairies were periodicallyburned, encouraging nourishing berries and roots to grow more abundantly. But as were so many tribes in the A merican West, the Snoqualmies were too trusting of the intent of white settlers. The vast meadows of the upper valley, surrounded by ridges cloaked by c edar, hemlock and firtrees,were an open invitation to develop the land for farming and timber harvest.
ie Falls, cleaning and purifying
The Snoqualmie Falls pour 268 feet over an ancient volcanic ledge an hour's drive east of Seattle. Created by glaciation during the last ice age, ending about 11,000 years ago, the falls are fed primarily by mountain snow and seasonal rains.
a spoon held high above the plate. "It was a tradition," Lapasin bald eagles. said. "Honey has always been And nothing may demon- important here. And I thought strate the d e licate balance we could p r oduce enough achieved between technology honey here to satisfy all of the and nature better than the hon- lodge's needs, including gifteybees. shop sales and special spa treatments." Salish Lodge When the inn's former ownRod Lapasin is general man- er, Puget Sound Energy, staged ager of the Salish Lodge & Spa. a major remodel in 1988, exHe came to this oasis in Octo- panding it to 84 guest rooms ber 2011 after serving nearly and adding its posh spa, it was a quarter-century as an ex- renamed the Salish Lodge. ecutive at the historic Fairmont There was only one miscalOlympic Hotel in downtown culation: In anticipation of a Seattle. And he came armed recreational trend, a pickleball with ideas, one of which was court was installed next to the that the lodge could be produc- lodge's upper parking area. It ing its own honey. went unused. To Lapasin's mind, this was Lapasin and I crossed a footone way that the Salish Lodge bridge, which spans the highcould connect with the natural way from Snoqualmie Falls environment as well as the lo- Park, and walked over to the cal community, with an eye to- pickleball court. "We put our ward economic practicality. hives here," he revealed, "along In its early years — then with an herb garden, a blueberthe Snoqualmie Falls Lodge, it ry arbor and a rainwater-colopened in 1916 as a way station lection area." and refueling stop, halfway A dozen hives produce more from Seattle to Snoqualmie than 1,900 pounds of honey Pass — the lodge was an eight- annually. A Seattle beekeeper, r oom inn r enowned for i t s Daniel Sullivan of Shipwreck hearty country breakfasts. A Honey, minds the hives. "He part of every meal was "Honey keeps the bees healthy and from Heaven," drizzled onto we keep the herbs and flowers freshly made biscuits from blooming," said Lapasin. "It's
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been a good partnership." Collected in spring, summer and fall, each "vintage" of honey reflectsa seasonal flavor profile of what the insects have ingested, Lapasin said. Typically, that includes the pollen of blackberries, which thrive in 55 acresofadjacentforestland. But I saw many bees enjoying the park's rhododendrons as well. Three days from now, on June 5, the Salish Lodge & Spa is set to observe its 25th anniversary as a luxury inn with the unveiling of a new Hidden Terrace. Located beside the crest of the falls, the Terrace will feature meditation and yoga sessions each morning, couples' moonlight massage each evening. There may be weddings here, as well: The lodge schedules about 140 ceremonies a year. Two restaurants are a draw even for those who don't stay overnight. Culinary d irector Shannon Galusha and associate chef Alex Garmendia offer a gourmet steak-and-seafood menu that includes such surprises as lobster bisque with shaved fennel.Entree prices in The Dining Room range upw ard from $34, but there's casual dining upstairs in a cafelounge aptly named The Attic.
Here, I enjoyed a wood-fired pear-and-fig skillet pizza for a mere $14.
themselves in the deep pool at their base. The trail that now climbs from the bottom of the falls to the top was used to portage canoes past the cascade. During the colder seasons, both groups gathered in at least 18 separate "winter villages" of eight-family longhouses. This was a time of feasting and dancing, calling upon the Great Spirit to bless the tribe in the coming year. In late spring, the clans scattered to hunt, fish
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Tribalmatters Columbia Hospitality, a hotel management company, runs the Salish Lodge onbehalf of its owners, the Muckleshoot Indian Tribe. Puget Sound Energy sold the property in late 2007 to the tribe, previously better known for its ventures into casinos and entertainment. Although the Muckleshoots are not native to the Snoqualmie Valley — their tribe is based in Auburn, a southeast Seattle suburb — t hey m aintain a strong respect for the Snoqualmie tribal culture. Indeed, the waterfall itself is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a "traditional cultural property" of the Snoqualmie people. The falls are so ingrained in tribal values that even the Snoqualmie creation story credits these waters with the transformative powers to turn mythical creatures into plants, animals and
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roveo mi cen u mo ernism
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the nation's cities in 1991 for its architectural innovation and Before he helped bring the design by the American InstiFinnish architect Eliel Saarin- tute of Architects. en to his hometown to design Foryears the Columbus Area one ofthe first contemporary Visitors Center has offered bus churches in America;before tours of the city's innovative he commissioned Eliel's son, public buildings (the Visitors Eero, to design an e legant Center lists some 70 structures midcentury modern house for as "noteworthy"), many dehis young family; and before signed by a litany of important he turned Columbus, Ind., into American architects: I.M. Pei, a living museum of striking Harry Weese, Robert A .M. 20th-century modern archiStern, Richard Meier, Kevin tecture, J. Irwin Miller lived Roche, Robert Venturi, Cesar in a large 19th-century house Pelli and others. thatcould not have been more More recently, visitors can of a contrast to the Modernist experience the architectural buildings that have put this ru- gems of this city o f a b out ral city on the map. 44,000 residents in two addiThe Italianate brick Irwin- tional ways — by staying at the Sweeney-Miller H o u s e i n Irwin-Sweeney-Miller H ouse which Miller grew up, built by and by touring the white, marhis great-grandfatherJoseph ble and glass house, completed L Irwin in 1864, is now a bed- in 1957, that Eero Saarinen and-breakfast called the Inn at built for J. Irwin and Xenia Irwin Gardens (608 Fifth St., Miller. 812-376-3663, i r w i ngardens. At the inn, heavily Victorian com). Spending the night there, with paneled walls and Orias my husband and I and sev- ental rugs,some furnishings eral friends did last fall, is a date back to when it was the physical immersion (with com- family's home. On a small table fortable beds,chocolates on in the hall off the library is an pillows and thick towels) into October 1967issue of Esquire the contrasts and diversity that Magazine with J. Irwin Miller's is Columbus. photograph on the cover under Unless you are an architec- the headline: "This man ought ture buff, when you think of to be the next president of the Columbus, you are more likely United States." (Instead, Miller to think of Ohio's capital, Co- helped persuade Nelson Rocklumbus, not of a southern In- efeller to run.) diana city ranked sixth among It was, in fact, J. Irwin Mill-
like the angular or flat-roofed brick-and-glass e l e mentary schools arescattered on the town's outskirts. In 1953, Miller and his wife had commissioned Eero Saarinen to design a new home for their growing family. This Miller House, considered to be one of the five most important midcentury modern houses still standing in the U.S., was given to the Indianapolis Museum of Art after the couple's deaths. Irwin Miller died in 2004, Xenia in 2008. Now touring of the house is allowed twice daily, but only with small group tours arranged through the Visitors Center (506 Fifth St., 800-4686564, columbus.in.us). Our party of eight, with $20 ticketsreserved more than a month in a dvance, climbed into the van at the Visitors Center. After a five-minute drive, we pulled into the D .5-acre property to view the work of Saarinen (and the principal design associate Kevin Roche), the interior designer Alexander Girard and the landscape architect Dan Kiley. In the front entrance, past a small Eames settee, a large panel was strategically placed to initially conceal the living room. Once past the panel, though, we saw the room's i conic conversation pit w i th its riot of fuchsia, crimson and pink pillows. ("Stay on the run-
New York Times News Service
AJ Mast/ New York Times News Service
The First Baptist Church in Columbus, lnd., was designed by Harry Weese. Columbus is home to a remarkable collection of Modernist buildings by big-name architects. er, scion of the Irwin-Miller family and arts patron, who transformed Columbus into an architecturalmecca. As head of the Cummins Engine Co. for 30 years,Miller reasoned that extraordinary buildings would help Cummins lure top talent to the rural Midwest. (The company was founded in 1919 by Clessie Cummins, the former driverand mechanic of William Irwin, with money put up by Irwin, J. Irwin Miller's great-uncle.) J. Irwin Miller, who studied at Yale and Oxford, persuaded Eliel Saarinen to build a startlingly modern church, First Christian Church ( f ormerly known a s t h e T a b ernacle
Church of Christ), dedicated in 1942. Next came a new headquarters for the Irwin Union Bank, designed by Eero Saarinen. In 1957, the Cummins Engine Foundation began paying architectural fees for new schools and public buildings if distinguished architects were chosen from the foundation's list. This in t urn i n fluenced the design of other Columbus buildings. The surprise that is Columbus often appears suddenly, interspersed among old buildings and houses. Some Modernist buildings are stark and sleek, others playful. Though many are concentrated in the historic downtown area, others
ners, please," instructed our
guide.) Near the living room's grand piano is a sleek contemporary music stand, as if ready for an informal musicale. The white walls were a perfect foil for the Millers' colorful folk art and dazzling art collection that at one point included a Monet painting of waterlilies, which sold at auction for $80.45 million in 2008. Though much of the Millers' art and some of the furniturehas been sold or reclaimed byfamily members, visitors still can see many of the original furnishings and collections. After about an hour the Miller House tour was over and we were back at the Visitors Center, itself housed in a remodeled 1864 house. It sits next door to the I.M. Pei library and across the street from Eliel Saarinen's church. We had come full circle in this remarkable town.
lES SCHNIB
BESTTIRE VAEIIi PRONISi • r r
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From previous page As early as 1855, the tribe's land was removedbythe Treaty of Point Elliott in exchange for
poorly defined "fishing rights." It wasn't until 1999 that the theretofore "landless" people formally regained their status as a federally recognized tribe.
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Nearby towns The towns of Snoqualmie and North Bend, platted and built on the route of the SLS8 E, grew up three miles apart at the top of the falls. Ironically, the railroad itself never reached as far as Snoqualmie Pass. Eventually it was bought by Northern Pacific, which later became the Burlington Northern, and operated as a branch line until the 1970s. But the Snoqualmie Depot, built in 1890 as an arrival point for tourists coming to hunt, fish and view the falls, remains a local landmark as the focus of th e N orthwest Railway Museum. Obviously a railroad town, Snoqualmie's historic h eart is a two-block string of small shops and restaurants that face the train yard across Highway 203, here known as Railroad Avenue. There's an inclination toward the arts — the Black Dog Arts Cafe offers both gallery showings and community theater along with a small
menu — as well as brewing; the Snoqualmie Brewery & Taproom is a popular back-street destination. But it's still the train that packs in visitors, although it hasn't carried raw logs or finished lumber since the Snoqualmie Falls Lumber Co. mill ceased operation. Every weekend day from April through October, trains operate through Snoqualmie, stopping on one end at Snoqualmie Falls, on the other at the foot of Mount Si,
Rattlesnake Ledge rises 1,100 feet above its namesake lake, a few miles south ofInterstate 90. The Snoqualmie Valley is an excellent base for hiking the Cascadefoothills, including 4,167-foot Mount Si, which looms above the town of North Bend.
captured my attention were a Western Fruit Express refrigerator car from 1953, a Shell Oil tank car from 1929 and a Northern Pacific switcher locomotive from 1899. North Bend is an excellent ,i base for hiking trails of the Cascade foothills, including 4,167-foot Mount Si (the elevation gain from town is 3,500 feet) or somewhat less challenging Rattlesnake Ledge (the 1,100-foot climb begins at 980 feet, at picturesque Rattlesnake Lake — and no one's seen a rattlesnake in years). Worth visiting in town is the Snoqualmie Valley Historical Museum, open Saturday to Tuesday afternoons in summer. John Gottberg Exhibits range through the Anderson Native American, logging and For The Bulletin railroad eras to modern times. M ore frequented, however, is Twede's Cafe, which continues o verlooking N o r t h Ben d . to cater to "Twin Peaks" fans Round-trip fares for 70-minute with cherry pie and "a damn excursionsare $15 for adults, fine cup of coffee," as Agent $10 for kids. Dale Cooper (Kyle MacLachBefore or after the ride, and lan) often said. Norma Jennings on weekdays, the museum tells (Peggy Lipton) is not there to the entire story of the SLS8 E. pour the java at what she knew Meanwhile, a long stretch of as the Double R, but this greasy railroad siding between dovm- spoon maintains a mood befittown Snoqualmie and the falls ting television legend. displays a large number of I was so focused on my pie long-abandoned cars in various and coffee, I didn't even hear states of repair, most of them the train. described in track-side inter— Reporter: janderson@ pretive signs. Among those that bendbulletirt.com.
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$93.88
Dinner, The Attic: $26.43 Breakfast, The Dining Room: $23.24
Lunch, Twede's Cafe: $19.33 TOTAL: $744.04
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tournament! Sessions are I lglvl, l2PM and I PM, with the Championshiptound ar. 2 PM.
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Commerce. 38767 S.E. River St., Snoqualmie;425-888-
6362, www.snovalley.org LODGING • Edgewick Inn. 14600 468th Ave. S.E. (at Exit 34 off 1-90), North Bend; 425-888-9000,
www.edgewickinn.com. Rates from $45. • The Roaring River Bed 8 Breakfast. 46715 S.E. 129th St., North Bend; 425-8884834, 877-627-4647, www. theroaringriver.com. Rates from $119.
LEAVE THEDRIVINGTOUS! 25 Miles North of Klamath Falls 35 Miles South of Ciater Lake =
• '- 4
34333Hwy.97 + Chiloquin,Oregon97624 =541'.783.7529 )y888-KLAMOYA ~
Dinner, The Dining Room: Breakfast, The Dining Room:
$20.61
Taproom. 8032 Falls Ave. S.E., Snoqualmie; 425-831-2357, www.fallsbrew.com. Lunch and dinner. Budget. •SnoqualmieCasino.37500 S.E. North Bend Way, Snoqualmie; 425-888-1234,
www.snocasino.com. Five restaurants include fine-dining Terra Vista; moderate to
expensive. • Twede's Cafe. 137 W. North Bend Way, North Bend; 425831-5511, www.twedescafe. com. Three meals daily. Budget.
• Woodman Lodge Steakhouse
• Salish Lodge & Spa.
& Saloon. 38601 S.E. King St., Snoqualmie; 425-888-4441,
6501 Railroad Ave. S.E., Snoqualmie; 425-888-2556,
Dinner and weekend brunch.
www.salishlodge.com. Rates from $199. DINING • The Black DogArt Cafe. 8062 Railroad Ave., Snoqualmie; 425-831-3647, www.
blackdogsnoqual mie.com. Breakfast and lunch daily,
dinner weekends. Budget to moderate. • Snoqualmie Brewery 8
www.woodmanlodge.com. Moderate to expensive. ATTRACTIONS • Northwest Railway Museum. 38625 S.E. King StvSnoqualmie; 425-8883030, www.trainmuseum.org. • SnoqLtalmie Valley Historical Society. 320 Bendigo Blvd. S., North Bend;425-888-3200, www.
snoqualmievalleymuseum.org.
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Call for reservations, location 8 times: 541.783.1529 ext.209
If you go INFORMATION Snoqualmie Valley Chamberof
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Lunch, Snoqualmie Brewery: $15
(round-trip), 685 miles ©$3.90/gallon: $106.86 Lodging (2 nights), Salish Lodge: $432.23 Lunch, en route: $7
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Taos, N.M., is home to the Taos Pueblo, a UNESCO World Heritage site where the Taos native people have lived in adobe dwellings for 1,000 years. Tours of the pueblo describe the community's survival and challenges throughout the centuries.
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Obeying the Law By FRANK STEWART Tribune MediaServices GJ O
Let's feed today's deal to the Law of Total Tricks. The "Law" asserts that the number of trumps both sides have in their best suit equals the number of t r icks available. NorthSouth have 10 hearts, East-West nine spades: 19 tricks should be made at h eart and spade contracts. So i f North-South can make four hearts, East-West will be down one at four
South loses only three tricks. But w ait. If W est's opening lead is a diamond — admittedly, few Wests would find that lead — four hearts is a lways beaten. So the Law i s o n target after all. Maybe you'll agree that laws are fascinating, but deals are played at the table, not in theory. East dealer Both sides vulnerable
spades. Let's see. Against four hearts, East won the first spade and shifted to his singleton diamond. When declarer led a trump next, East won, led a spade to West and got a diamond ruff. Down one. West might have bid more. Some W ests would have leaped to f o ur
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upscale hippie vibe, and home to the Taos Pueblo, a UNESALBUQUERQUE, N.M. CO World Heritage site with Striped balloons dot a bright centuries-old adobe dwellings blue sky. Red rocks silhouette framed by mountains and the a lone dead tree. A white ladbright blue sky. Pueblo tours der leans on a brown adobe led by tribe members tell of the dwelling. Taos natives' participation in On a road trip around New an uprising against the SpanMexico, this mix of motifs and ish conquistadors in 1680 that culturesseems to echo across included the destruction of a the centuries and turn up at pueblo church. The church every stop, whether you're ruins can still be seen, along visiting 1,000-year-old native with a 19th century church villages, churches from the that replaced it. Tours are $10, era of Spanish conquistadors www.taospueblo.com/. or the landscape that inspired Taos also has four art mu20th century painter Georgia seums, a historic square lined O'Keeffe. with souvenir shops, and the Logistically, a trip that inHacienda de los Martinez, an cludes all these attractions is 1804 frontier ranch that is now easy: Fly to Albuquerque, rent a museum. The Mabel Dodge a car, and plan hotel stays in Luhan House, 240 Morada Santa Fe, 65 miles (105 kiloLane, was a magnet for artmeters) away, and Taos, 70 acomaskycity.org/. ists and intellectuals in the miles (113 kilometers) beyond early 20th century, with Luthat. Side trips might include Abiquiu and O'Keeffe han, an heiress, hosting folks Abiquiu, where O'Keeffe lived; If you time your visit to like photographer Ansel AdOjo Caliente, for hot springs; Abiquiu right, you can spend ams, dancer Martha Graham Sky City, a native pueblo about the night, take a morning hike, and psychoanalyst Carl Jung. 60 miles (97 kilometers) west grab a green chile cheese- The Luhan House is now a of Albuquerque, and the Enburger at Bode's General Store conference centerthat offers chanted Circle, a scenic drivfor lunch, and squeeze in two lodging, but anyone may visit ing loop that starts in Taos. O'Keeffetours. the grounds and public areas. O'Keeffe owned a r u stic From outside, look for colorful Driving between Albuquerque and Santa Fe, another scenic home at a remote place called patterns on upstairs windows byway called the Turquoise Ghost Ranch, and a bus tour painted by novelist D.H. LawTrail or High Road offers a takes you around the ranch to rence in the 1920s. nice alternative to Interstate see features in the landscape Historic hotels include the 25, with stops in tiny places that inspired her. A lone dead Taos Inn, which offers charmlike Madrid, a former ghost tree in a field, framed by dis- ing rooms with a rustic feel town, and Cerrillos, a onetant red rocks, is unmistak- and a terrific restaurant, Doc time mining town. ably the subject of her paint- Martin's, named for Taos' first ing RGerald's Tree." A flattop doctor, who began practicing Albuquerue mesa called Cerro Pedernal, in the 1890s Sunrise, sunset. Those are another of O'Keefe's favorite the best times to experience subjects, is easy to pick out as Enchanted Circle and Rio Grande Gorge two of Albuquerque's top at- you gaze atthe Jemez Mountractions: the Sandia Peak tains. And O rKeeffe's famous The Enchanted Circle is an "Ladder to the Moon" shows 85-mile (137-kilometer) loop of tram and hot-air ballooning. The 15-minute tram goes a ladder like the ones outside lovely, varied scenery: mounup 4,000 feet (1,219 meters), adobe homes in the pueblos; tains, valleys, rivers, lakes, with spectacular views of the she used a ladder to climb on small towns, ranchland, and Sandia Mountains, the city her roof for stargazing. the Kit Carson National Forof Albuquerque and, if y ou A separate tour takes you est. From Taos, take 64 West; time your trip right, sunset in inside O'Keeffe's main home then 522 North and 38 East to the western sky; http://sandia and studio, located 18 miles (29 the towns of Questa and Red peak.com, $20. For d i nner, kilometers) from Ghost Ranch River; stay on 38 to Eagle Nest, head to nearby El Pinto, 10500 in a Spanish-colonial era ha- and pick up 64 back to Taos. Fourth St. NW. Try sopapillas, cienda. The decor and setting About 10 miles (16 kilome"little pillows" of fried bread, epitomizes her modernist aes- ters)from Taos on 64 West, and carne adovada, meat mar- thetic: molded Eames chairs, look for the Rio Grande Gorge. inated in a red chile sauce. a paper lantern that was a gift W alk across the bridge to see For ballooning, set y o ur from sculptor Isamu Nogu- the river trickling 565 feet (172 alarm early:Riders assemble chi, and a door in the adobe- meters) below. around 6 a.m. for flights in walled courtyard that inspired Santa Fe May and June. And swallow a series of paintings. your fears. Rides are gentle Both O'Keeffe tours sell Santa Fe Plaza is ground and downright magical. As I out, so reserve early.Ghost zero for t o u rists. Markets, floated serenely above a forest Ranch tours are $25, http:// shops and street vendors sell and the Rio Grande River, the ghostranch.org/okeeffe-land e verything f ro m r e d c h i l e balloon's shadow was perfect- scape-tour/. Abiquiu home and wreaths to turquoise and silly silhouetted in black on the studio tours are $35, www. ver jewelry to decorative cowlandscape below. Other balokeeffemuseum.org/abiquiu- hides. The Palace of the Govloons dotted the skies as chil- home-studio.html. ernors, 120 Washington Ave., dren waved from schoolyards The Abiquiu Inn offers lodg- built in the 1600s as the seat of and drivers looked up. But get ing and a terrific restaurant. government for Spain's Southready forsticker shock. Calls Rooms are also available at western territories, is now one to several balloon companies Ghost Ranch, now a retreat of a half-dozen museums in found $159 was the going rate center owned by the Presbyte- Santa Fe devoted to history, the day I went; eventually I rian Church; be aware that the culture and art. chose World Balloon, http:// cabins are Spartan and hard The Cathedral Basilica of wwwworldballoon.com. Pric- to find after dark. (The ranch Saint Francis of Assissi, 131 es are higher certain times of logo is an ox skull, another Cathedral Place, completed year. familiar O rKeeffe image.) The in 1886, was m odeled on Other Albuquerque stops: ranch's most popular trail goes Europe's Gothic cathedrals, Old Town, a plaza dating to to Chimney Rock, a three-mile but includes a chapel that pre1706, with e ateries, souve- (five kilometers) round trip. servespart of an earlier adobe nir shops, and the San Felipe church, along with a 17th cenChurch; and the Frontier Res- Chimayo tury wooden icon. Nearby, the taurant, 2400 Central SE, by About 30 miles (48 kilome- Loretto Chapel is famous for a the University of New Mexico ters) from Abiquiu or Santa helix-shaped spiral staircase. campus, a lively cafeteria with Fe is Santuario de Chimayo, a The Georgia O'Keeffe Musimple, yummy fare like tortipicture-perfectadobe church seum, 217 Johnson St., ($12) lla soup. with wooden gates. This 200- is another essential stop for year-old N a tional H i s toric her fans, with artifacts, phoAcoma Pueblo at Sky City Landmark attracts 200,000 tos and a r t work i n cluding For nearly 1,000 years, the visitors a year, many of whom from her years in Abiquiu and Acoma people havelived on seek curesand miracles from Ghost Ranch. a sandstone mesa 370 feet a well of holy dirt called el Santa Fe is known for excel(113 meters) above the desert pocito; ww w . elsantuariode lent dining. Expect long lines floor in a pueblo called Sky chimayo.us/. and competition for reservaCity. Tours led by tribe memtions at spots like The Shed, 113 I/z E. Palace Ave., and Cafe bers tell the story of how they Taos have maintained their culture Taos has many identities: Pasqual's, 121 Don Gaspar and traditions through centu- ski town, arts colony with an Ave. The Associated Press
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ries of challenges, including the Spanish conquistadors' violent incursions beginning in the 1500s. San Esteban del Rey Mission Church, a National Trust Historic Site that dates to 1629, was built by Spanish conquistadorsusing the forced labor of natives compelled to drag 20,000tons ofstone,mud, straw and wood to the mesa. A few families live yearround inthe adobe complexes, which are multi-level connected dwellings, with round adobe ovens outside and wooden laddersaccessing upper floors. Beautiful pottery and other nativecrafts are offered for sale throughout the village. The 90-minute, $23 tour is usually offered daily March-November;confirm the schedule and get directions at http://sccc.
SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN C 7
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ers,buckets and anything else that might make a noise. They do their best to follow the band — just a group of friends, really
New York Times News Service
Traffic into Panama City was flowingfor once, so Miguel Fabrega hadonly a moment to point out the crumbling ruins in the distance. They were the remains of a 16th-century New Spanish settlement that the British privateer Sir Henry Morgan eventually s a cked in 1671. Ahead of us rose Old Panama's modern r e placement: a forest of green, blue
and yellow glass skyscrapers that sifted the metallic Central American sky into great vertical columns. "You're going to hear a lot about identity, who we are and where we are going," said Fabrega, a 37-year-old artist, writer and partner in a creative think tank called DiabloRosso, which promotes emerging artists in Panama. We had met over email a few weeks earlier while I was searching for creative residents willing to show me their city, and moments ago hehad picked me up atthe airport. Despite being founded in 1519, Panama is really only 13 years old, Fabrega argued, its birthday being Dec. 31, 1999, the day the United States gave t he Panama Canal and i t s surrounding land back to the Panamanians. For the f i r st time in a century the country was whole and independent. "My generation inherited this blank canvas," said Fab-
rega, his salt-and-pepper hair fluttering slightly in the Audi's air-conditioning. "Now we have the chance to make it our own." Today, that canvas is far from blank,however. Over the past 13 years, Panama City has been racingto become aworldclass metropolis, and for travelers, the changes have been enormous. In 1997 there were perhaps 1,400 hotel rooms in Panama City. Now there are more than 15,000 rooms with 4,582 more in the pipeline, according to STR Global, a London-based agency that tracks hotel markets. In the last two years alone, Trump, Starwood, Waldorf-Astoria, Westin and Hard Rock have opened hotels here. A new biodiversity museum designed by Frank Gehry is nearly complete. The country'sfirst modern dance festival unfolded last year, the same year Panama held its first international film festival. The Panama Jazz Festival is going strong after 10 years. The country even has its own year-old microbrewery. " Panama was t hi s c o mpressed springjust ready to go," said Keyes Christopher Hardin, a New York lawyerturned-developer working to restore the city's old colonial area."When the Noriega dictator years ended and the U.S. returned all that canal land, things just took off. Everything that could go right did go right." Indeed, since 2008, when much of the world was in a recession, the P anamanian economy has expanded by nearly 50 percent. The canal itself, which frames the western edge of Panama City, is undergoing a $ 5 .25 b i llion expansion that is expected to double its capacity and fuel even moreeconomic growth. Yes, Panama still struggles with crime and poverty, but f oreigners ar e c l e arly i n trigued with the way things are unfolding. In 1999 just 457,000 international tourists visited Panama, World Bank figures show. In 2011, more than 1.4 million came. Plenty are staying, too: sun-seeking Americans, Venezuelans and wealthy Colombian expatriates who are buying second homes and retirementproperties all over Panama. In short, this city of about 880,000 people has gone from a ho-hum business center on the navy blue Pacific to a major leisure destination in record time. In doing so it has become a place full of the kind of paradoxes that occur whenever a very old place grinds against the very new. While the capital now has luxury apartments and five-star cuisine, the thing it needs most is a solid sense of identity. "You drive in and see all these skyscrapers and y ou have to wonder, is it just a mirage or does it have any substance?" Johann Wolfschoon, an architect an d d e signer, told me. "What we need to be is amazing. Not amazing for Panama, butamazing."
— which plays pop, reggae and whatever else it feels like. "Who here can drum?" an announcer shouted into a microphone, and the pounding became a roar. P J. Over the next several days, few things I saw or did in the city had quite the same wow factor as this bucket band gathered under an old tree. I sipped cocktails at Barlovento, a new rooftop bar where slinky womi p( ~~ en and V-shaped men swirled around in a cyclone of perfume People walk along the bay In and cigarettes, and I shopped Panama City, April 21, 2013. for tapestries made by Kuna InOver the past13 years, Panama dians along a waterfront paseo. CIty has been racIng to become A hike on a steep, car-less road a world-class metropolis, and up a jungly hill in the middle of for travelers, the changes have the city stood out, but that's bePhotos by Tito Herrera I New York Times News Service been enormous. cause an anteater crossed my A graffiti artist works on a mural in the Casco Viejo area of Panama City. tracks, and I'd never seen one of those before. "Zonians," as they were called, But here on the ground with 'It's beautiful, but it makes T o understand w hat h e a dozen other worthy places could get Guess jeans and Jif wine and cheese and a f at no sense' meant, he suggested I meet like Las Clementinas or Tanta- peanut butter just as on most moon hanging in the trees, I It was late March, my first Nicolas Mercado, a former lo Kitchen, both in Casco Viejo. military bases abroad, but then wondered if a city needs to add day of five in the city, and over gang member who now runs a Maito was nearly full when monkeys might walk with the up to make sense. As absurd as the next few days I hoped to popular bar called La Vecindad Fabrega and I found a table children to school. Huge ships Panama City can feel at times, get a sense of a city as it enters on Avenida A. Mercado, who under paddle fans next to a moved through the Miraflores it is certainly a lot of fun, too, its teenage years. I would hike has a shaved head and thick, window. Outside a gardener Locks just to the west of the and between the cracks of all through slums where street muscled arms, welcomed me in tended to raised beds that were road. the chaos, these mini-miracles "Many Zonians stayed and are burbling through. merchants sold black magic a courtyard at the end of a long bushy with Thai basil, cilantro spices, then change my shirt entryway where two friendly and other herbs that show up some of the bases have beAs if o n c ue, the bucket to sip $15 cocktails in the neon police officers happened to be in the food. come these gorgeous neighbor- band's disparate racket gradu"No one knows what Pana- hoods," Ramesch said. glamour ofa Hard Rock bar.I standing. Graffiti, the artful ally fell into sync until — no would eat terrible chicken and kind with intricate angles and manian cuisine really is," CasClayton is on e o f t h e m. way — "The Girl From Ipanewonderful octopus. I'd spend bold colors, lined the walls. Up- trellon, who is 30, said later. Though it was now getting ma" emerged. It was messy time with locals, expats, art- stairs a singer was working on "Peoplecan name maybe four dark, I could see community and loud and no one knew how ists,entrepreneurs and a for- a Latin pop track in the bar's traditional dishes, but we eat a centers and signs for the City it would end, which made it all mer gangster. recording studio. bit of everything here — Chi- of Knowledge, a compound for the more amazing, too. For now, Fabrega wanted to It was midafternoon and the nese, French, African, Spanish, research, tech companies and show me his interpretation of place was closed, but Mercado Colombian, American." nongovernmental o r g anizasome of the changes afoot. We and I sat outside and talked Fabrega and I shared a sea tions. We parked near a soccer peeled off the freeway, turned about change. In a way, his bass hot dog — fine, flaky fish field and wandered toward a down a boulevard and entered story mirrorsthe turnaround rolled into a sausage shape and massive corotutree where a Costa del Este, a section of the of the entire neighborhood. In l ightly battered and fried crowd had spread out blankets city with a skyline that looked the early days of contemporary which was farmore delicious and lawn chairs. A band was likea concrete comb. Our des- Panama, or 1999, Mercado than it sounds. We tore into an warming up near the trunk. tination was a pop-up gallery was 16 and the head of the Hot order of ropa vieja, literally"old While much of th e city's that had opened the night be- Boys gang, which prowled the clothes," a traditional meal of night life unfolds along Calle fore inside an unfinished retail eastern blocks of Casco Viejo. shredded beef and sauce that Uruguay, every full moon durspace at the bottom of a new There were three other gangs Castrellon h a s i n v i gorated ing the dry months hundreds white skyscraper. Sixteen of in the area. They mostly sold with spicy peppers, annatto of people head out to Clayton to Fabrega's abstract paintings drugs, though robberies and and goat cheese salsa. bang on Tupperware containwith bright yellows, blues and murder were common too. One The crowning analogy came reds hung onthe concrete walls day a man came by ostensibly with the octopus. The creature in an exhibition he called "Ba- to buy some marijuana but had been candied, set upon a nana Republic." It didn't take he shot Mercado with a pistol garbanzo bean paste, and garlong to spot some common mo- four times instead. The man nished with cilantro flowers tifs: finger-shapes that formed got away, and Mercado mostly and other herbs. It was sweet, no hands, faucets that had no recovered. spicy, succulent. "I knew I had to get out," he "Chinese glaze, Spanish pipes and machines that could do no work. said, showing me the scar of beans, local herbs," Castrellon "This is Panama," Fabrega a bullet wound on his hand. said. "Put all these elements said with a shrug. "It's beauti- "This wasn't for me." together, and now you have a ful, but it makes no sense." Panamanian octopus." a • Mishmash cuisine Panama has pretty much "Panama is not a c ulture Canal Zone andbeyond always been a bridge for culthat's built around the table," tures, conquerors and, well, Eager to explore more of the birds, but once that mishmash said David Henesy, a New city, I said a hasty goodbye to gets distilled into the 50-some York restaurateur, who in 2005 Fabrega and met up with JesblocksofCasco Viejo,an eclec- started La Posta, a contempo- sica Ramesch, the Panama tic, almost Noah's Ark-like vi- rary restaurant in the Calle editor of International Living brancy prevails. The Chinese Uruguay area that focuses on magazine. We piled into her run so many small groceries local, environmentally sustain- Hyundai and fought our way Motor aoaf Service here that Panamanians simply able ingredients. It can still be out to a former U.S. military call the shops "Chinos." The difficult to f ind h igh-quality base called Clayton that sits French left their mark on the foods to work with, he said. "If along the canal in the northF„~~ $,„,~«g corner of Avenida A and Calle you want an heirloom tomato west part of the city. Repair on Outboard , ' "All of this area was pretty 4, where a Parisian-style apart- or an organic pig, you pretty ment building displays elegant much have to do it yourself." much closed to Panamanians rounded balconies. You hear Mario Castrellon, is trying when the A m ericans were & Stern drives German, Portuguese and Eng- to do just that. After studying here," she said as we crept lish on the streets. cooking in Spain, Castrellon through the Canal Zone, a I Parts of the area are still returned to Panama in 2005 to Phoenix-size former U.S. terri541-647-1377 I • Battery pretty seedy, though, and an work under Henesy. In 2009 he torywhere Americans working ~< • GearBoxes • Changing System 20571 Empire Ave. elite division o f s t ern-look- started his own venture, Maito, and defending the canal lived a <• Lube Pivot Points • Tilt Fluid&BeedOi Pump aa~d ing police officers patrol the which now competes alongside strange,cross-world existence. area with machine guns and motorcycles. "I was definitely nervous about coming here at first, with t h e shootings I and the gangs," recalled Matt Landau, a New Jerseyan who moved to Panama City in 2006 and now owns Los Cuatro Tulipanes, a boutique hotel and apartment enterprise in Casco Viejo. A stray bullet smashed into the Canal House in 2009, and Landau still warns guests not to wander beyond certain blocks. But Casco Viejo does feel quite safe, even at night, when the neighborhood comes alive with busy r estaurants and rooftop bars. "I can't begin to tell you how much it has all
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changed," he said. Hardin, the developer, has been one of the major players behind that change. His firm buys property in Casco Viejo, renovates it and sells it f or about $2,500 per square meter on average. Along the way, he builds affordable housing and works to get kids off the streets by offering jobs that ultimately improve the neighborhood. "Revitalization always revolves around a culture, not an industry," Hardin said. "You need a place with good bones that's affordable with spaces that people can use to explore pioneering r e staurants, galleries — and then you get events around those spaces. That's what's happening here. So yes, it's like Miami, but Miami in maybe 1989."
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
e i in 'a voi sen in — a ain TV SPOTLIGHT "The Killing" 8 p.m., AMC By Dave Itzkoff New York Times News Service
Even in the depths of a Phil-
ippine jungle, death had a way of finding Veena Sud. It was there that Sud, the show runner of the praised and polarizing AM C c r i me drama "The Killing," had traveled last summer after finishing work on its second season, to escape from c i vilization AMC via The Associated Press and the demands of her job. Joel Kinnaman, as Detective Stephen Holder, and Mireille Enos, as But one morning at 4 a.m., she Detective Sarah Linden, return for a third season of "The Killing."
got a phone call informing her that "The Killing" had been canceled. Still, Sud felt certain her show had life left in it, a mindset she attributed to the eternal optimism o f t e l evision producers. "We always believe we're coming back," she said in a telephone interview from Vancouver, British Columbia, where "The Killing" i s p r o duced. "We're going to believe it 10 years later, and it's not coming back. But I believed it." Later that year, Sud found herself in a less exotic location — a McDonald's drive-through — when she got another call: "The Killing" had been resurrectedfora third season. When it has its season premiere on AMC tonight, "The Killing," a s e r ial n a r rative about Sarah Linden and Ste-
phen Holder, two detectives
ducers of "The Killing" are
(played by Mireille Enos and hoping this third season will Joel K i nnaman) i n vestigating a murder in dismal, raindrenched Seattle, it will be recovering from a combination of seemingly insurmountable events. Despite a first year in which "The Killing" (adapted fromthe Danish series "Forbrydelsen") drew positive reviews and a loyal audience, its following eroded after the season finale failed to solve its central mystery — the murder of the teenager Rosie Larsen — and outrage erupted among critics and rank-and-fil e viewers alike. When AM C canceled the show, the most faithful fans had to believe it was dead and buried. Now as it returns, the pro-
be achance ata clean slate.For them, this is an opportunity to build on its strengths, right the wrongs of its past and, with new cast members and a new story line, offer a different take on a familiar series. "We believed that the show had merits that the audience recognized in Season I," said David Madden, the president of Fox T elevision Studios, which produces the show. "If we could get a third shot at the plate, we could get the audience back. And we could get them back for good." That "The Killing" must once again make its case — after a 2011 debut that Alessandra Stanley of The New York Times described as "bleak and oppressive" but "so
well told that it's almost heartening" — has much to do with that first year, when, Madden said, "we had a very rocky season in terms of the perception of the show." Although the solution to Rosie Larsen's killing was provided the next year, many audience members did not stick around to find out: ratings for "The Killing" declined, to 1.7 million viewers, from about 2.3 million viewers for new episodes in Season I, and this concerned AMC. As the AMC president, Charlie Collier, put it: "We saw some metrics in the second quarter that said the noncore fans were not there in the way they were in Season 1, so we had some decisions to make." Collier acknowledged that the backlash to the Season I finale "was a contributor" to this slump, adding: "It's been well-documented, a lot of this. We never intended to mislead
anybody." When the cancellation of "The Killing" was announced last July, AMC said it was a "difficult decision," and praised its cast and crew. The Fox studio went a step further, saying it would "proceed to try to find another home for the show." Madden said the studio was not yet ready to give up on a series that had two rising stars in Enos (whose coming films include "World War Z") and Kinnaman (who is playing the lead role in a remake of "Ro-
Nei ors won'tsta o ro e Dear Abby: We moved my elderly parents into an adult assisted-living center last year because they were no longer able to safely care for themselves or their home. They have now decided to put their house up for sale. Our problem is that sometimes when we have driven DEAR by the house to check ABBY that everything's OK, we have found some of the neighbors enjoying the afternoon sitting on my parents' front porch. The house has been shown three times, and one of the times another neighbor was in the backyard sitting on the deck. Another time, a neighbor walked into the house during a private showing. We have been as polite as possible in requesting them to please not do this. We finally told them plainly to stay off the property. But it continues. We would hate to post "No Trespassing" signs for fear that a prospective buyer may think there are problems with the neighborhood, and I don't think a sign would deter these perpetrators.Any ideas on how to get them to stay in their own homes'? My sisters and I are starting to think the neighbors don't want the house to sell so they can
enjoy it themselves. — Fed Up in Tennessee Dear Fed Up: Because of the long r elationship your p a rents m ay have had with t hese neighbors, ask them once more, firmly and politely, to stop using the property as an extension of t heirs. If the request is ignored, it will be time to involve your lawyer, who will have to write these nervy people a strong letter on your behalf. Not only is what they are doing illegal, but if an accident should happen while they are on your property, YOUR family would be liable. Dear Abby: Living in New York City, public transport is the way to travel. After picking up my 5-yearold from school, we took the train home as usual. During the ride, my son fell asleep and his head happened to rest on the arm of another
passenger — a middle-aged man who was sitting next to us. As my son's head rested on the man's arm, he reacted by pushing my son's head up violently, waking him from his sleep. Disgusted by the man's reaction, I lost my cool and yelled at him, almost for-
getting my screaming 5-year-old.
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013: This year anelement
YOUR HOROSCOPE
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional feefor 3-D andIMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
Other passengersexpressed their feelings, too, and the man left the train earlier than he wanted. After my boy calmed down, I had time to reflect and concluded I didn't handle the situation correctly. The other passengers suggested I hadn't been assertive enough. What should I have done? — Commuter Mommy in Brooklyn Dear Commuter Mommy: Your seat partner clearly overreacted to having his space invaded. But by screaming at him, you escalated the situation. So your little boy wasn't caught in the crossfire, it would have been better to have moved your seats. If that wasn't possible, you should have switched seats with your son so he wouldn't be near that volatile individual. Dear Abby: If a doctor is present at a party and another guest takes ill, would it be appropriate to ask the doctor to treat the person? — Curious in Dayton Dear Curious: If the problem is not life-threatening, it would be advisable that the guest contact his or her own doctor, who is already familiar with the person's medical history. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069
Tonight: Make sure you are not alone.
of unpredictability runs through your By Jacqueline Bigar day-to-day life. You rarely know what is about to happen next. On apositive note, you will find that a long-term dream could face. Try to remember that not everyone is become a reality. as buoyant as you are. Tonight: Treat time. Stars showthe kind Ifyou are single, Indulge a friend. of day you'll have d on't worry about ** * * * D ynamic meeting someone. CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * P ositive Ap otential suitor ** * * V enus enters your sign, which ** * Average wil l show up when adds to your allure and magnetism. Be willing to express your feelings more ** So-so you least expect it. * Difficult If you are attached, openly, and try not to be such a "crab." Resist building walls in order to protect your life could yourself. Tonight: If you feel pressure, deal be such a whirlwind of activity that your with it. sweetie could feel left out. Include him or LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) her in your life events more often. ARIES ** * * T ake off for the day, and pursue easily could be a force in creating this a favorite hobby. Some of you might opt spirited year. to have a picnic at a favorite scenic spot. ARIES (March 21-April 19) When you are away from your office or ** * * * Y our enthusiasm and energy normal work environment, you feel more markyour plans. Spend time with a relaxed. You'll gain a new perspective as roommate or family member who often well. Tonight: Do something different. feels refreshed by your presence and/or VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) suggestions. Be willing to change your ** * * L isten to news with an open plans in order to participate in a more mind and a sense of excitement. Go with exciting event. Tonight: Live it up. someone else's suggestion, especially if TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** You could be pushed to the max. You you enjoy this person's company. Others might be impulsive right now. Step back, might be best off relaxing or choosing a and let them take the lead. Tonight: Relax favorite stressbuster. Afterward, you will with a loved one over dinner. be able to accomplish a lot more. Others appreciate your easygoing attitude as well. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * A n older friend or relative would Tonight: Just listen. like your company. Even if you simply GEMINI (May 21-June20) appear out of obligation, you might be ** * * Be more direct in your dealings. surprised by how much you enjoy the visit. Recognize what is happening within your immediate circle of friends. A gift, whether Go along with this person's spontaneous idea, and join him or her on anadventure. it is given or received, puts a smile on your
boCop"), and that at one point had a proven ability to draw viewers. When Enos heard rumors that "The Killing" was returning to AMC, before it was made official in January, she said, "I texted Veena, and I was like, 'Whaaaaat?' And she texted back and said, 'Crazy world, huh?"' Sud was prepared to pitch AMC and Fox on her plan for the third season — one that she said she viewed "almost like a pilot" for a new show — that would revisit the lives of Linden and Holdera year afterthe Rosie Larsen case and after theirpartnership has dissolved. Drawing on themes from documentaries like"Streetwise" and the photographs of Mary Ellen Mark, Sud wove in a second plot about teenage runaways living on the streets of Seattle. A third story line focuses on a mysterious death-row inmate named Ray Seward, played by PeterSarsgaard, a star offilm s l ike "Boys Don't Cry" a n d "Kinsey." Unlike the first two seasons of "The Killing," Season 3 also promises an overarching mystery that will be resolved in a single year. But Sud said this was a development that occurred organically and not at the demands of AMC or Fox. The story "definitely could be told" in 12 hours, she said. "It would be very tight, economical, but still allow for really momentous storytelling."
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * * Take care of certain personal matters. Squeeze in someearly exercise. You could find thatyour plans get tossed to thewayside because ofanunexpected surprise. Demonstrate thatyou can flex when you want to.Keepan open mind. Tonight: Go over plans for tomorrow.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Oec.21) ** * * Your fiery energy attracts people — perhaps more than you would like. Whatever you seem to be involved with, it appears thatyou have nothing less than a good time. Others enjoy being around you. Tonight: Forget tomorrow; live for the now.
CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * A loved one or a potential sweetie lets you know how much he or shecares. The wayinwhichthis person chooses to approach you is genuine. You might wonder whether you deserve this sweet treatment. Just accept it and enjoy it. Tonight: Happily nested at home.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * You express your caring by doing somethingto makesomeone feelgood. You value kindness and express it clearly. Someone might be very touched, but he or she could have anodd way of expressing it. Tonight: At a favorite haunt.
PISCES (Fed. 19-March20) ** * C ontinue demonstrating your concern for your budget. After all, if you don't, who will? You can make anidea work, even if at first it appears to be too costly. Tonight: Give in to impulsiveness just a little. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 fl IMAX,680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • 42 (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 2:35, 6:25, 9:20 • AFTER EARTH (PG-13) Noon, 1, 2:45, 3:45, 6:15, 7:15, 9:15, 10:15 • EPIC (PG) 11:55 a.m., 2:30, 6, 9:10 • EPIC 3-0 (PGl 12:50, 3:20, 6:20, 9:35 • FAST 4 FURIOUS(PG-13) 6 11:40 a.m., 1:15, 3, 4:30, 6:05, 7:45, 9:40 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:55, 6:10, 9:25 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 12:10, 1:10, 3:10, 4:10, 6:35, 7:35, 9:30, 10:05 • IRON MAN (PG-13) 3 I2:35, 3:40, 7:10, 10:10 • NOW YOU SEEME (PG-13)12:30,3:30,6:45,9:45 • OBLIVION (PG-13) 12:05, 3:55, 6:55, 9:55 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 12:40, 3:05, 4:20, 6:50, 7:30, 9:50 • STARTREKINTODARKNESS IMAX3-0 (PG-I3) 1215, 4,7,10 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. '
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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • ATANYPRICE(R) 4:15 • DISCONNECT (R) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) Noon, 3, 6 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 1, 4, 7 • THE ICEMAN (R) 1:15, 7 • MUO iPG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 • THE SAPPHIRES (PG-13) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 I
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • THE CALL(R) 9 • THE CROODS (PG) 11:30a.m., 2:30 • OZTHE GREATAND POWERFUL(PG) 6 • After 7 p.m., shows are 2f and older only. Younger than 2f may at tendscreeningsbefore 7p.m.if accompaniedbya legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THE SOURCE FAMILY (no MPAArating) 5:20 • TO THE WONDER (R) 3 I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777
TV TODAY 12:30 p.m. onH A, "IndyCar Racing" — The action continues todayfrom the Motor City, where IndyCar revs upwith Race 2 of the Detroit Belle Isle GrandPrix. A field including Helio Castroneves, Dario Franchitti, Tony Kanaan,Takuma Satoand defending champion Scott Dixon will again do battle on the 14-turn, 2.07-mile temporary road course. 9 p.m. on BRAVO, "Princesses: Long Island" — They aren't "real housewives," but their parents are hoping they will be, the sooner the better. This newseries follows six colle ge-educatedyoungwomen — Amanda, Ashlee,Casey,Coco, Erica and Joey — living with their parents on the titular island that houses some ofNewYork's most affluent suburbs. Their folks would dearly love to seethemfind love and move out, but at this point only Amanda is in arelationship. 9 p.m. on FOOD, "Food Network Star" — Twelve hopefuls arrive in Los Angeles for the ninth season of this competition to meet mentors Bobby Flay,GiadaDe Laurentiis and Alton Brown. Each contestant prepares apitch tape and a signature dish to present to Food Network executives anda focus group of viewers in "AreYou Ready for Prime Time?" 9 p.m. on HIST, "Ax Men" — Two new episodeswrap up the season, starting with "In Too Deep." In Florida, BradandSwilley lose a battle with a gigantic log. The SwampManand his cousin go gar fishing and discover what could be the log raft. A tight landing has everyone's nerves onedge at Rygaard, andCraig's reaction when a loose log takes atumble surprises everyone. 9 p.m. on HBO,"Game of Thrones" — Robb (Richard Madden) presents himself to Walder Frey (David Bradley). Edmure (Tobias Menzes) is introduced to his bride. Jon (Kit Harington) faces his most grueling test to date. As Daario andJorah (Ed Skrein, lain Glen) debate the bestwaytotakeYunkai,House Frey and HouseTully join forces in the new episode "TheRains of Castamere." 10p m onl3 "The Mentalist" — Jane (Simon Baker) comes up with an elaborate plan to get Lorelei Martins (EmmanuelleChriquii out of prison in hopes of getting her to lead him to RedJohn. Brett Stiles (Malcolm McDowell) assists him with this plan in "RedSails in the Sunset," which Baker directed. Robin TunneyandTim Kangalso star. ©Zap2tt
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Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • AFTER EARTH (PG-13) 12:20, 2:40, 5, 7:20 • EPIC (PG) 2: l5, 6:50 • EPIC 3-0 (PG) Noon, 4:30 • FAST & FURIOUS 6 (PG-13) 1, 3:45, 6:40 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 2:05,4:35, 7: IO • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 1:05, 4 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS3-0 (PG-13) 7 •
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Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • AFTER EARTH (PG-13) 1, 4, 7 • EPIC (UPSTAIRS — PG)1:10, 4:10 • STAR TREKINTO DARKNESS (UPSTAIRS — PG-13)7:20 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/sports
COLLEGE BASEBALL
PREP BASEBALL: CLASS 5A STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
Beavers win again in regional CORVALLIS — Danny Hayes drew a walk with the bases loaded in the ninth inning and the
Oregon State Beavers defeated UC Santa Barbara 3-2 on Saturday in the Corvallis regional. Dylan Hecht walked Hayes with two outs,
n
• I'
scoring Andy Peterson, who reached on abunt single. TheBeavers (4710) will play today at 5
+Ye-t iF'~
p.m. against the winner
of the preceding elimina-
• ,H ~ .
tion game between UC
. us k
Santa BarbaraandTexas A&M. The Gauchos and
the Aggies play at noon. The OSU game will be broadcast on the radio at KICE-AM 940.
Photos by Matthew A!monetti / For The Bulletin
A stunned dugout and Lava Bear fans watch as Sherwood's Joseph Balfour scores on a double that cut Bend's lead to one run in the top of the sixth inning on Saturdayat Volcanoes Stadium in Keizer. The Bowmen scored 11 unanswered runs en route to an 11-4 victory in the Class 5A state championship.
• Sherwood overtakesBendfor the 5A title with a late-inning rally
Andrew Moore (13-1) went eight innings, allowing oneearnedrun on five hits. Max Engelbrekt got his fifth save. Ryan Barnes hit a solo home run in the
second andaddedan
By Beau Eastes
RBI single in the sixth for the Beavers. Oregon State is12-2
in one-run gamesthis season. In their post-
season opener onFriday night, Dylan Davis hit a walk-off two-run double to give the Beavers a 5-4
3"
comeback victory over
r,
Texas-San Antonio.
"Itis breeding some energy, weare not attempting to make them this close," Oregon State
head coachPatCasey said. "Again, why is San Antonio here, why is Santa Barbara here, and why is A&M here,
because theyarevery good ball clubs. Welove the challenge, asevery team in this tournament
has played really well."
F
w/
— The Associated Press
! .'!
Oregon falls to Rice in regional EUGENE — Oregon
managed just two hits in a1-0 loss to Rice in
the Eugeneregional on Saturday. The Ducks play San
the bottom of the sixth when the score was 4-3, but they left the bases loaded. In the seventh, down 11-3, Justin Erlandson knocked in a run with a sacrifice fly, but Bend left two more runners on base when Sami Godlove grounded out to shortstop to end the game. "We stranded too many runners today," said Lava Bear coach Bret Bailey, whose team outhit the Bowmen 11-7 but left 13 runners on base for the game. "We had a chance to really break open thegame early but we
The Bulletin
Bend High's Sami Godlove is hit and drops the ball when Sherwood runner Logan Dix returns to second base during Saturday's Class 5A state championship.
KEIZER — For five innings Saturday, Bend High looked like the club that has been almost unbeatable the past two months. The last two innings, though, decided the Class 5A state baseball championship. Sherwood, which trailed the Lava Bears 3-0 after five innings, scored 11 runs in the sixth and seventh innings to stun Bend 11-4 in the 5A state final at Volcanoes Stadium. "We've been playing that way all year," said Sherwood coach Jon Strohmaier, who also guided the Bowmen to the 2011 state title. "We've been behind in every game of the postseason. The kids don't panic." With two outs in the top of the sixth, the Bowmen (25-6 overall) scored four runs to take a 4-3 lead; two of those runs scored on bases-loaded walks. The Northwest Oregon Conference champions put the game away with seven runs in the top of the seventh, taking advantage of
+'I '
left guys on." I
Bend pitcher Caleb Gardner
catches a pop-up during Saturday's game in Keizer. four walks and a hit batter in the inning.
Bend (20-9), which was making its first state final appearance since the Bears won the old AAA title in 1987, had a chance to pull even or retake the lead in
Bend jumped on Sherwood starter Riley Moore early, scoring two runs in the bottom of the first inning to take a 2-0 lead. Erlandson led off the Bears' first turn at bat with a double and scored three batters later on Jonah Koski's RBI single. Duke DeGaetano drove home another run with a sacrifice fly to make the score 2-0, but Bend ended the inning with two runners on base. See Bears/D6
Francisco in an elimina-
tion game today at noon after the Dons defeated South Dakota State 4-3 on Saturday. If the Ducks win, they would play Rice at 4 p.m. Or-
egon would need to beat the Owls twice to ad-
vance to SuperRegionals, with an additional
game, if necessary, on Monday at 6 p.m. On Saturday, Oregon starter Tommy Thorpe
HORSE RACING
Myriad factors lead to Triple Crown drougbt
tookthe loss, going seven innings, giving up
By Beth Harris
eight hits while striking out four. Rice scored its only run in the first inning on a double
Thirty-five years. Thirty-six by the time the Belmont Stakes rolls around next June and there's a chance — maybe — of horse racing's first Triple Crown winner since Affirmed. It's the longest dry spell in history. Everyone who loves the sport has a theory on why a 3-year-old thoroughbred hasn't been able to sweep the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont. Changes in breeding. A tougher road to the Derby. Bigger fields in the three races. And then there's luck. "It takes a special horse," said Steve Cauthen, who rode Affirmed in 1978. "And you need things to not go wrong for you." It's not impossible, or at least it wasn't. Since Sir Barton won what later became known as the Triple Crown in 1919, 10 other thoroughbreds have completed the feat, including three each in the '30s,'40s and '70s.Most recently, Secretariat set track records on the way to his sweep in 1973, followed by Seattle Slew in '77 and Affirmed the next year. Back then, the question was whether the series had become too easy. Not anymore. Sure, there have been 11 Triple possibilities since Affirmed, and there could have been 12 except that I'll Have Another was scratched the day before the Belmont last year with a tendon
by Shane Hoelscher. Rice's Jordan Stephens pitched a complete game, striking out11. — From wire reports
CORRECTION A brief headlined "Timbers captain to visit
Bend" that appeared in Friday's Bulletin on page C1contained an incorrect date and other
incorrect information aboutthe Bend FC Timbers Golf Tourna-
ment. The tournament, a four-person scramble at Bend's Tetherow Golf
Club, takes placetoday starting at1:30 p.m. Will Johnson, captain of
Major LeagueSoccer's Portland Timbers, will
play in the tournament and is expected to be available starting
at noon to sign autographs. Theevent is a fundraiser for Bend FC Timbers Soccer Club
scholarships. For more information, visit www. bendfctimbers.com. The
Bulletin regrets the error.
TENNIS
Coaches learn to put video in play
The Associated Press
injury. Hopes were dashed again this year, as Kentucky Derby winnerOrb lostin the Preakness to Oxbow, leaving Saturday's Belmont Stakes almost an afterthought despite its $1 million purse. "It would be great for racing if a horse wins it and at the same time the fact no one has been able to do it for so long makes it that more exciting, that much more intriguing," said trainer Todd Pletcher, who won the 2010 Derby with Super Saver. SeeDrought/D5
By Christopher Clarey New York Times News Service
Don Ryan /The Assoaated Press
Mary Cain, 17, right, reacts as coach Alberto Salazar tells her she had just broken the American high school 800-meter record during the Prefontaine Classic in Eugene on Saturday.
Age not a factor asathletes shine at Prefontaine Classic By Anne M. Peterson
TRACK 5. FIELD
The Associated Press
EUGENE — Justin Gatlin and Mary Cain both defied their ages Saturday in the Prefontaine Classic. Gatlin won the 100 meters at the Diamond League meet ina windaided time of 9.88 seconds, besting fellow Americans Michael Rodgers and Ryan Bailey. The 31-year old, who won the bronze medal at the London Games, joked afterward: "I just age like wine." Then 17-year-old Cain broke the high school record in the 800 in I:59.51, placing fifth in an elite field that included Olympic bronze medalist Yekaterina Poistogova and Janeth Jepkosgei, third in last year's world championships. C ain, f ro m B r o n xville H i g h
School in New York, topped the record of2:02.04 setby Amy Weissenbach of Harvard-Westlake high in 2011. She also is the first American junior athlete to run the 800 under 2 minutes, breaking Kim Gallagher's junior mark of 2:00.07 in 1982. "Down that backstretch I think I was the most determined person out there," said Cain, who battled fellow American Alysia Montano to the finish. "I said to myself, 'I'm going to break that two-minute barrier.' " Francine Niyonsaba of Burundi won the 800 in I:56.72, a meet record and a world best this season. See Prefontaine/D5
PARIS — When Gilles Simon faces Roger Federer today in the fourth round of the French Open, he will have multiple weapons at his disposal. He will have his speed, his signature two-handed backhand down the line and his world-class ability to absorb world-class power and snuff out attacks that would sink less resilient men. He will also, if he so chooses, have the benefit of extensive video analysis of Federer's tactical patterns and tendencies. Tennis has long been slow to embrace the game-film culture pervasive in other professional sports. But that is changing. Tennis Australia, the governing body of the sport in Australia, now has an extensivevideo performance analysis unit that can deliver up-to-date footage and pattern breakdowns on coming opponents to its players whether they are playing in Wimbledon or in a challenger in Tashkent. The other Grand Slam nations — France, the United States and Britain — have similar, if less extensive, systems. SeeVideo/D5
D2 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
COREBOARD Saturday,June 1 Valparaiso5, Florida4, Floridaeliminated Indiana15,AustinPeay6 Baseball Today,June 2 Game5 —Valparaiso (32-27) vs.Austin Peay(46Saturday's results 14), 10a.m. Class 5A Game 6 Indiana (45-14) vs. Game5 winner, Championship final Summary 4 p.m. Monday, June3 Sherwood11, Bend4 x-Game 7— Indianavs. Game5winner,4 p.m. Nashville, Tenn. Sherwood 000 004 7 — 11 7 1 Friday, May31 Bend 200 010 1 — 4 11 2 fflinois 6,GeorgiaTech4 Moore, Balfour (6) and Urbach;Gardner,De- Vanderbilt 9,ETSU1 Gaetano (6), Hurd(6), Anthony(7) andMartorano. W Saturday,June 1 Moore. L DeGaetano.28 Sherwood:Barzee; GeorgiaTech5, ETSU1, ETSUeliminated Bend:Erlandson. Vanderbilt10, lffinois 4 Today,June 2 Sherwoo d (26-6) Game5—GeorgiaTech(35-26) vs.Illinois (35-19), Player ab r h r bi noon Balfour,JosephI bfp I 3 2 Game6 — Vanderbilt (53-9) vs. Gam e 5 winner, 5 Urbach,Jacob c 0 0 0 p.m. Dix,Loganpr 21 1 0 0 4 0 3 5 Monday, June3 Tay or,Zak ss 1 2 0 x-Game 7 Vanderbilt vs.Game5winner, 4p.m. Reimer,Jakedh 1 0 0 Starkville, Miss. Chamberlain,Joseph dh 0 0 0 Friday, May31 Lawrence,Keeganpr 1 0 0 SouthAlabama9, Mercer 4 Barzee,Alex 3b 2 2 4 MississippiState5, Central Arkansas3 Baffarche',LoganIf 2 0 0 Saturday,June 1 Moore,Rileyp/tb 1 0 1 Central Arkansas6, Mercer 5, 11 innings,Mercer Sherwood,Anthonyrf 0 0 1 eliminated Mooney,Cyruscf 0 I 0 2 2 3 MississippiState6, SouthAlabama2 Waker,Colton2b 0 0 0 Today,June 2 Totals 28 11 7 10 Game5— Central Arkansas(40-21) vs.SouthAla-
PREP SPORTS
Bend (20-9) Player ab Erlandson, Justin cf 4 Godlove,Samiss 4 Hurd,Dalton3bfp 4 Koski,Jonah1b 3 DeGaetano, Lucas2b/p 3 Bailey,KyleIf 3 Miller, Nathanrf
Martorano,Coreyc Bartlett, Brandon dh/2b Anthony,Codyp Gardner, Calebp Totals
4 2 2 1 0 30
Miami 3, Indiana3 Wednesday, May22: Miami103, Indiana102, OT Friday,May24:Indiana 97,Miami93 Sunday,May26: Miami114, Indiana96 Tuesday ,May28.Indiana99,Miami92 Thursday,May30: Miami90, Indiana79 Saturday, June1: Indiana91,Miami77 Monday, June3:IndianaatMiami,5:30p.m. Saturday's Summary
Pacers 91, Heat77 MIAMI (77)
James10-217-829, Haslem0-2 0-0 0, Bosh1-8 2 2 5, Chalmers 3 82 210, Wade3 113 510, Cole 4-7 0-0 9,Anthony1-50-0 2,Allen2-81-2 6, Battier 0-00-0 0,Mi0er2-2 00 6,Lewis0-0 0-0 0.Totals 26-72 16-19 77. INDIANA(91) George11-193-428, West5-141-211, Hibbert 11-20 2-424, Hill 6-12 2-216, Stephenson1-42-2 4, Augustin1-10-02, THansbrough1-21-43, Young 1-20-03,Mahinmi0-0 0-0 0,Johnson 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 37-74 11-18 91. Miami 23 17 15 22 — 77 Indiana 21 18 29 23 — 91
WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION All Times PDT
bama(43-19),noon
r
h rbi
1 1 1 0 0 3 1 3 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 4 11
I 0 0 1 I 0 1 0 0 0 0 4
Class 6A Championship final Sheldon6, Clackamas5 Class BA Championship final At VolcanoesStadium, Keizer Sherwood11,Bend4 Class 4A Championship final At VolcanoesStadium, Keizer Henley12,Newport5
Softball Class BA Championship final At OSUSoftball Complex, Corvallls North Medford 2, Glencoe1(8inn.) Class BA Championship final At OSUSoftball Complex, Corvallls Sandy1, Hermiston 0 Class 4A Championship final At OSUSoftball Complex, Corvallis Banks1, McLoughlin0
BASEBALL College NCAADivision I Baseball Regionals All Times PDT Double Elimination
x-if necessary
Blacksburg, Va. Friday, May31 Oklahoma 7, Coastal Carolina3 IJConn5, Virginia Tech2 Saturday, June1 Virginia Tech 9, Coastal Carolina 1, Coastaleliminated Oklahoma 5, LIConn3,12innings Today,June 2 Game 5—Virginia Tech(39-21) vs. UConn(35-27), 10a.m. Game 6 —Oklahoma(42-19) vs. Game5 winner, 2:30 p.m. Monday, June3 x-Game 7—Oklahomavs. Game5winner, 4p.m. Charlottesville, Va. Friday, May31 Virginia 2,Army1 Elon10, UNC Wilmington 7 Saturday, June1 LINCWilmington9 Army5,Armyeliminated Virginia 2,Elon0 Today,June 2 Game 5—UNCWilmington(38-22) vs. Elon(33-29), 10a.m. Game 6 — Virginia (49-10) vs. Game 5 winner, 3 p.m. Monday, June3 x-Game 7—Virginia vs.Gam e5winner, 3p.m. Chapel Hill, N.C. Friday, May31 Towson 7, FloridaAtlantic 2 North Carolina 6, Canisius3 Saturday, June1 FloridaAtlantic14, Canisius6, Canisiuseliminated North Carolina 8, Towson5 Today,June 2 Game 5 —Florida Atlantrc (40-21) vs.Towson(3029),1 p.m. Game6—North Carolina (54-8) vs.Gam e5winner, 6 p.m. Monday, June3 x-Game 7 —North Carolina vs. Game5 winner, 3 p.m. Raleigh, N.C. Friday, May31 William 8Mary4, Mississippi 2 N.C. State4, Binghamton1 Saturday, June1 Mississippi 8,Binghamton4, Binghamton eliminated N.C. State1,William 8Mary0 Today,June 2 Game 5 — Mississippi (38-23) vs William 8Mary
(38-23), 10 a.m. Game6 — N.C.State(46-14) vs. Gam e 5 winner, 3 p.m. Monday, June3 x-Game 7 N.C. Statevs. Gam e5winner, 4p.m. At Carolina Stadium Columbia, S.C. Friday, May31 Liberty 8,Clemson3 SouthCarolina 7SaintLouis3 Saturday, June1 Clemson10,SaintLouis 2,SLUeliminated SouthCarolina19,Liberty3
Today,June 2 Game 5 —Clemson(40-21) vs. Liberty(35-28), 10 am. Game6 —South Carolina (41-18) vs.Gam e5 winner,4 p.m. Monday,June3 x-Game7 — South Carolinavs. Game5 winner, 4 p.m. Louisville, Ky. Friday, May31 Miami 7,OklahomaState1 Louisville 8,BowlingGreen3 Saturday, June1 Oklahoma State 7, Bowling Green3, Bowling Green eliminated Louisville 6,Miami4 Today,June 2 Game 5 — OklahomaState (40-18) vs. Miami(3724),9a.m. Game 6 Louisville (48-12) vs.Game5 winner, 1 p.m. Monday, June3 x-Game 7—Louisville vs.Game5winner, 3 p.m. Tallahassee, Fla. Friday, May31 Troy 5,Alabama2 FloridaState10,SavannahState0 Saturday, June1 Alabama 3, SavannahState 2 FloridaState11,Troy0 Today,June 2 Game 5 — Alabama (35-27) vs. Troy (41-19), 9a.m. Game6 —Florida State(46-15) vs Gam e 5winner, 2 p.m. Monday, June3 x-Game 7 — Florida Statevs. Game5 winner, 1 p.m. Bloomington, Ind Friday, May31 Austin Peay 4, Forida 3 Indiana5,Valparaiso 4
Game6—Mississippi State(45-17) vs. Game5winner,5 p.m. Monday, June3 x-Game7 — Mississippi State winnervs. Game5
winner,noon Baton Rouge,La. Friday, May31 LSU11,JacksonState7 SamHoustonState4, Louisiana-Lafayette2 Saturday,June 1 Louisiana-Lafayette15, JacksonState1, JSUeliminated LSU8,Sam HoustonState5 Today,June 2 Game 5 — Louisiana-Lafayette(42-19) vs. Sam HoustonState(38-21), noon Game6— LSU(54-9)vs.Game5winner,5p.m. Monday,June3 x-Game 7— LSLIvs Game5winner, 5p.m. Manhattan, Kan. Friday, May31 KansasState20, WichitaState11 Bryant 4,Arkansas1 Saturday,June 1 Arkansas3, WrchrtaState1, WSUelrminated KansasState7,Bryant I Today,June 2 Game5 — Arkansas(38-21) vs. Bryant (45-17-1), noon Game6—Kansas State(43-17) vs.Gam e5 winner, 5 p.m. Monday, June3 x-Game 7 — KansasState vs. Game5 winner, 5 p.m. Eugene Friday, May31 Rice 3,SanFrancisco 2, 11innings Oregon3, SouthDakota State2 Saturday,June 1 San Francisco4, SouthDakotaState 3, 13 innings, SD St.eliminated Rice1, Oregon 0 Today,June 2 Game5 — SanFrancisco (35-23) vs. Oregon(4615),noon Game6—Rice (43-17) vs.Game5winner, 4p.m. Monday,June3 x-Game 7— Rrcevs. Game5winner, 6p.m. At GossStadium Corvallls Friday, May31 UC SantaBarbara 6,TexasA8M4 OregonState5, UTSA4 Saturday,June 1
Eastern Conference Atlanta Chicago Washrngton Indiana NewYork Connecticut
W 2 2 1 1 1 1
SOFTBALL College NCAADivision I World Series At ASAHall of FameStadium OklahomaCity All Times PDT Double Elimination x-if necessary
Thursday, May30 Washington4,Nebraska3,8 innings Tennessee 9, Florida 2 Texas6,ArizonaState 3 Oklahoma 7,Michigan1 Friday, May 31 Washin gtonvs.Tennessee,ppd.,tornado Texas vs.Oklahoma,ppd,tornado Saturday, June1 Tennessee1,Washington 0 Oklahoma10,Texas2 Florida 9,Nebraska8, 15 innings, Nebraskaeliminated Game8— ArizonaState (50-11) vs. Michigan(5012),late Today,June 2 Game9 — Washington (44-16) vs. Florida(58-8), 10 a.m. Game10 Texas (50-9) vs Game8winner, 12:30 p.m. Game11— Tennessee (51-10) vs.Gam e 9 winner, 4 p.m. Game12 — Oklahoma(54-4) vs.Gam e 10 winner, 6:30 p.m. Monday, June4 x-Game13— Game 11winner vs. Gam e 11 loser, TBA x-Game14— Gam e 12winner vs. Gam e 12 loser, TBA Championship Series
(Best-of-3)
Monday,June4: TeamsTBD,5 p.m. Tuesday,June5: TeamsTBD,5 p.m. x-Wednesday, June6: TeamsTBD,5 p.m.
BASKETBALL NBA NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-of-7)
EASTERNCONFERENCE
Pct GB 1.000 1.000 1.000 r/~
Western Conference
.500 1 .500 1 .333 t'Ir
W L Pct GB I 0 1.000 1 1 500 I/2 1 1 500 I/2 0 1 000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 3 .000 2
Minnesota Los Angeles SanAntonio Phoenix Seattle Tulsa
Saturday's Games Minnesota 90, Connecticut 74 SanAntonio83, LosAngees78 Today's Games Atlanta at Washington,1 p.m. Tulsa atChicago,3p.m. PhoenixatSeatle, 6p.m.
NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE
Boston 1, Pittsburgh 0 Saturday, June1: Boston3, Pittsburgh0 Monday,June3: Bostonat Pittsburgh, 5p.m. Wednesday,June5: Pittsburgh atBoston, 5 p.m. Friday,June7: Pittsburgh atBoston, 5p.m. x-Sunday, June9: Boston atPittsburgh, 5 p.m. x-Tuesday, June11: PittsburghatBoston, TBD x-Wednesday, June12: BostonatPittsburgh, TBD WESTERN CONFERENCE
Chlcago 1,LosAngeles0 Saturday, June1: Chicago2, LosAngeles1 Today, June2:LosAngelesatChicago,5p.m. Tuesday ,June4:ChicagoatLosAngeles,6p.m. Thurs day,June6:ChicagoatLosAngeles,6p.m. x-Sat urday,June8:LosAngelesatChicago,5p.m. x-Monday ,June10:ChicagoatLosAngeles,6pm. x-Wedne sday,June12:Los Angeles atChicago, TBD
GOLF PGA Tour The Me morial Saturday At Muirfield Village Golf Club Dublin,Ohio Purse: $6.2 million Yardage: 7,352; Par: 72 Third Round Matt Kuchar 68-70-70—208 KevinChappeff 71-71-68 —210 Kyle Stan ey 67-70-73—210 Matt Jones 69-72-70 —21I Justin Rose 70-70-71 —211 Biff Haas 68-67-76 —211 J.J. Henry 72-72-68—212 AdamScott 73-70-69—212 Scott Prercy 66-75-71 —212 Charl Schwartzel 65-71-76 —212 GaryWoodland 70-73-70 —213 Pat Perez 72-69-72 —213 BubbaWatson 71-67-75 —213 RussellHenley 67-77-70 —214 Jim Furyk 75-70-69 —214 BrianDavis 75-70-69—214 Davis Loveff l 73-69-72 214 CharleyHoffman 73-69-72—214 Bo VanPelt 73-69-72—214 FredCouples 70-75-70—215 MichaelThompson 69-76-70—215 Carl Pettersson 71-71-73—215 CharlesHowell ffl 72-70-73 215 RyanMoore 70-72-73—215 Chris Stroud 69-77-69—215 Scott Staffings 70-70-75—215 RichardH.Lee 73-71-72—216 KenDuke 75-69-72 216 BenCurtis 73-70-73—216 Cameron Tringale 71-71-74—216 GrahamDeLaet 70-72-74—216 74-71-71—216 George McNeiff DavidHeam 71-71 74 21 6 TrevorImmelman 70-72-74 —216 K.J. Choi 72-74-70 —216 HunterMahan 73-68-75—216 71-70-75—216 RobertoCastro 69-71-76 216 RobertKarlsson 73-70-74—217 ErnieEls 70-75-72—217 GeorgeCoetzee David Lingmerth 75-70-72—217 WilliamMcGirt 73-73-71—217 Martin Laird 71-75-71 21 7 73-73-71 —217 LukeDonald 73-70-75 —218 TomGiffis 70-72-76—218 StewartCink 70-75-73—218 James Driscoll 67-74-77 218 Charlie Wi 72-74-72—218 LukeGuthrie 71-73-75—219 HenrikStenson 71-72-76 —219 JohnSenden 72-71-76—219 CamiloViffegas 72-71-76—219 RickieFowler 70-76-73 —219 Justin Leonard 74-73-72 —219 Robert Affenby 72-75-72 —219 JasonDay 71-73-76—220 BudCauley
Keegan Bradley DerekErnst FabranGomez Billy Horschel JoshTeater Ryo Ishikawa MikeWeir RoryMcffroy BrandtJobe GonzaloFernandez-Castano MarcLeishma n TigerWoods JimmyWalker ZachJohnson JordanSpieth Justin Hicks
71-74-75—220 70-73-78—221 76-68-77 —221 70-75-76 —221 67-79-75—221 74-73-74—221 75-72-75—222 78-69-75 —222 70-75-78 —223 72-74-77—223 74-72-77—223 71-74-79 —224 72-75-77 —224 73-72-81 —226 72-73-82—227 73-73-81—227
LPGA Tour ShopRite LPGA Classic Saturday At StocktonSeaviewHotel andGolf Club, Bay Course Galloway Township,N.J. Purse: $1.6 million Yardage: 6,166;Par: 71 SecondRound 69-67—136 ShanshanFeng 70-69—139 HaejiKang 66-73—139 MoriyaJutanugarn Chie Arimura AnnaNordqvist KarineIcher KarrieWebb
HeeYoungPark MicheffeWie Amanda Blumenherst JennieLee
So Yeon Ryu YaniTseng Jill McGiff
JennyShin AyakoUehara ChristelBoeljon JeongJang AlenaSharp JulietaGranada Ai Miyazato PornanongPhatlum Na YeonChoi Lisa McCloskey CarolineHedwaff MeenaLee BeckyMorgan ChristinaKim LindseyWright Che laChoi Mo Martin GerinaPiler Jodi Ewart Shadoff RyannOT ' oole SunYoungYoo NicoleCastrale InbeePark PaigeMackenzie MoiraDunn MinaHarigae VickyHurst JeeYoungLee SeonHwaLee HeatherBowieYoung PaolaMoreno MarcyHart JanePark HeeKyungSeo AzaharaMunoz JenniferRosales Jiyai Shin NicoleJeray Mi HyangLee StacyLewrs JessicaShepley AlisonWalshe IreneCho StacyPrammanasudh DewiClaireSchreefel Kris Tamulis Lisa Ferrero Pat Hurst Jin YoungPak
HOCKEY
TexasABM6, IJTSA1, UTSAeliminated
OregonState3, UCSantaBarbara 2 Today,June 2 Game 5 TexasABM(33 28)vs. UCSantaBarbara (35-24),noon Game6—OregonState (47-10) vs.Gam e5 winner, 5 p.m. Monday, June3 x-Game7 Oregon Statevs. Game 5 winner, 5 p.m. Fullerlon, Calif. Friday, May31 ArizonaState4, NewMexico 3 Cal StateFufferton4, Columbia1 Saturday,June 1 Columbia6, NewMexico 5,13 innings,NewMexico eliminated Game 4 —ArizonaState (36-20-1) vs.CalStateFullerton(49-8), late Today,June 2 Game 5 — Columbia(28-20) vs. Game4 loser, 4 p.m. Game6—Game4wrnner vs. Game5winner,8 p.m. Monday, June3 x-Game 7—Game4winnervs. Game5winner, TBA Los Angeles Friday, May31 Cal Poly 9,SanDiego2 UCLA5,SanDiegoState 3 Saturday,June 1 San Diego6, SanDiego State3, SDSt. eliminated UCLA6, CalPoly4 Today,June 2 Game5— San Diego(36-24) vs. CalPoly(40-18), 2 p.m. Game 6 — UCLA(41-17) vs. Game5 winner, 6 p.m. Monday,June3 x-Game 7— UCLAvs. Game5 winner, TBA Super Regionals June 7-10 ChapelHill championvs. Columbiachampion Ralei ghchampionvs.Eugenechampion Fuff ertonchampionvs.LosAngeleschampion Black sburgchampionvs.BatonRougechampion Nashvillechampionvs. Loursvrffechampion Bloomingtonchampionvs. Talahasseechampion Charlottesville championvs. Starkviffechampion Manhat tanchampionvs.Corvaff ischampion
L 0 0 0 1 1 2
I.K Kim Mika Miyazato BeatrizRecari
73-67 140 72-68—140 74-67—I41 72-69—141 69-72—141 68-73 141 66-75 — 141 73-69—I42
PaulaCreamer Julilnkster 0ristieKerr KarenStupples Eun-Hee Ji LizetteSalas SaraMaudeJuneau Ji YoungOh Failed to pualify SandraGal CindyLaCrosse GiuliaSergas CatrionaMatthew JaneRah Pernil aLindberg NatalieGulbis Momoko Ueda Dori Carter LorieKane ThidapaSuwannapura MorganPressel Meaghan Franceffa DanahBordner NumaGulyanamitta KatherineHull-Kirk SarahKemp AmyHung JenniferJohnson Lexi Thompson JenniferSong JacquiConcolino VeronicaFelibert MindyKim f heeLee Julia Boland BrittanyLang Stephanie Sherlock MariajoUribe Kim Welch AustinErnst SandraChangkija MarinaAex SuzannPetersen Danielalacobeffi TayloreKarle SarahJaneSmith DanieffeKang Hee-Won Han MariaHjorth HannahYun KathleenEkey JenniferGleason Silvia Cavafferi Maude-Aimee Leblanc BrookePancake SophieGustafson FelicityJohnson Kristy McPherson Reiff eyRankin WendyWard LauraDiaz SydneeMichaels AngelaStanford MiJungHur KatieFutcher RebeccaLee-Bentham Katie M.Burnett TiffanyJoh
BirdieKim VictoriaTanco DinaAmmaccapane NicoleSmith KaylaMorteffaro VictoriaElizabeth Karlin Beck LaurenDoughtie CandieKung MarinaStuetz
72-70 — 142 72-70 — 142 69-73 — 142 74-69—143 74-69 — 143 73-70 — 143 70-73—143 75-69 144 73-71 —I44 73-71 — 144 72-72 — 144 71-73 —144 70-74—144 69-75 — 144 74-71 — 145 74-71 —I45 73-72—145 73-72 145 72-73—145 71-74—145 71-74 — 145 70-75 — 145 70-75—145 70-75 — 145 76-70 — 146 76-70 — I46 76-70 — 146 74-72 — 146 74-72—146 73-73—146 72-74 — 146 72-74 — 146 72-74—146 72-74 — 146 72-74 146 71-75—146 71-75—146 78-69—147 77-70—147 75-72—147 73-74—147 72-75 147 71-76 —I47 70-77 — 147 70-77 — 147 67-80 — 147 77-71—148 77-71 — 148 76-72 — 148 76-72 —I48 76-72 — 148 76 72 148 75-73—148 75-73—148 75-73—148 74-74—148 74-74—148 73-75—148 73-75 148 72-76—148 72-76—148 69 79 148 69-79—148 78-71 — 149 76-73 — 149 76-73—149 75-74 — 149 75-74 149 74-75—149 73-76—149 73-76—149 72-77—149 72-77—149 71-78 — 149 77-73 — 150 76-74—150 75-75—150 75-75 150 75-75—150 74-76—150 73-77—150 72-78—150 72-78—150 69-81—150 77-74 151 77-74—151 77-74—151 76-75—151 75-76—151 75-76—151 75-76—151 75-76—151 74-77—151 73-78—151 79-73 152 76-76—152 76-76—152 75-77—152 75-77—152 79-74—153 76-77 — 153 75-78 153 73-80—153 80-74—154 78-76—154 77-77—154 76-78—154 75-79 — 154 75-79 — 154 74-80 — I54 83-72 — 155 79-76 155 77-78—155 77-78—155 76-79—155 76-79—155 76-79—155 79-77 — 156 74-82 156 80-77—157 78-79—157 81-77 —158 80-78 — 158 74-84—158 82-77 — 159 78-81 — 159 79-82 —I61 82-81—163 84-80 — 164 87-78 — 165 79 — WD 81 —WD
Champions Tour Principal Charity Classic Saturday At WakondaClub Des Moines, lowa Purse: $1.75 million Yardage: 6,910; Par:72 SecondRound DuffyWaldorf 69-67 — 136 Bart Bryant 73-64 — 137 Jay DonBlake 71-66 — 137 RussCochran 71-67—138 PeterSenior 74-65 — 139 MichaelAllen 72-67 — 139 71-68 — 139 DavidEger 70-69 — 139 LorenRoberts 69-70 — 139 TomLehman Kirk Triplett
MarkCalcavecchia GeneSauers Jay Haas LarryNelson BarryLane CoreyPavin DougGarwood Hale Irwin Scott Hoch RogerChapman Jim Ga lagher, Jr. MarkO'Meara lan Woosn ma Dick Mast SteveLowery Kirk Hanefeld BobbyWadkins MarkMcNulty Jeff Sluman RoccoMediate Joe Edwards BrianHenninger BobbyClampet StevePate SandyLyle JohnCook Neal Lancaster Biff Glasson TomPerniceJr. DanForsm an GaryHaffberg Jim Rutledge TomJenkins SteveElkington
Larry Mize Gil Morgan DavidFrost John Inman Tommy Armour ffl ChienSoonLu TomPurtzer EstebanToledo
72 68 140 70-70 — 140 71-70 — 141 71-70 — 141 71-70 — 141 71-70 — 141 70-71 — 141 70-71 141 70-71—141 69-72 — 141 74-68 142 74-68—142 74-68—142 73-69 — 142 72-70 — 142 72-70 — 142 72-70 — 142 71-71 142 71-71 — 142 70-72 — 142 72-71 — 143 71-72—143 71-72 — 143 70-73 — 143 75 69 144 75-69 — 144 74-70 — 144 72-72 144 72-72—144 71-73 — 144 69-75 — 144 75-70 — 145 74-71 — 145 73-72 — 145 72-73 145 72-73—145 71-74 — 145 77-69 — 146 77-69 — 146 73-73—146 73-73 — 146 73-73 — 146 70-76 — 146
TrevorDodds MikeGoodes Scott Simpson Mark Mouland AndrewMagee BemhardLanger Rod Spittle Jeff Hart Bob Gilder Chie-I-IsiangLrn TomKite Jim Thorpe BlaineMcCaffister GeneJones AndyBean DanaQuigley Willie Wood AndersForsbrand VicenteFernandez MarkBrooks Curtis Strange Bob Niger Joe Daley Jerry Pate Morris Hatalsky WayneLevi MarkWiebe Fuzzy Zoeffer FredFunk
77-70 147
76-71—147 75-72—147 75-72 — 147 73-74 147 72-75—147 72-75 — 147 74-74 — 148 78-71 149
80-69—149 77-72 — 149 77-72 — 149 76-73 149 76-73—149 75-74—149 76-73—149 74-75—149 77-73 — 150 76-75 — 151 76-75 — 151 75-76—151 79-73 — 152 73-79 — 152 76-78 — 154 75-79—154 80-75 — 155 81-75 — 156 84-76 — 160 76-WD
TENNIS Professional FrenchOpen Saturday At StadeRolandGarros Paris Purse: $28.4 million (GrandSlam) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men Third Round Kei Nishikori (13),Japan,def. BenoitPaire(24), France,6-3,6-7(3), 6-4,6-1. MikhailYouzhny(29),Russia,def.Janko Tipsarevic (8), Serbia,6-4,6-4, 6-3. RichardGasquet(7),France,def. NikolayDavydenko, Russia6-4, , 6-4,6-3. RafaelNadal(3), Spain, def.FabioFognini (27), Italy, 7-6(5), 6-4,6-4. StanislasWawrinka(9), Switzerland, def. Jerzy Janowic(21), z Poland,6-3, 6-7(2), 6-3, 6-3. Tommy Haas(12), Germany, def. JohnIsner (19), UnitedStates,7-5,7-6(4), 4-6, 6-7(10),10-8. NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia,def.GrigorDimitrov (26), Bulgaria6-2, , 6-2, 6-3. Philipp Kohlschreiber(16), Germany, def. Victor Hanescu,Romania, 6-0, 7-6(0) 6-1. Women Third Round Victoria Azarenka(3), Belarus,def. AlrzeCornet (31), France, 4-6, 6-3,6-1. SloaneStephens(17), UnitedStates, def. Marina Erakovic,NewZealand,6-4,6-7 (5), 6-3 MariaSharapova(2), Russia, def.ZhengJie, China, 6-1, 7-5.
FrancescaSchiavone, Italy, def. Marion Bartoli (13), France, 6-2,6-1. BethanieMattek-Sands UnitedStates, def. Paula Ormaechea, Argentina,4-6, 6-1, 6-3. MariaKirilenko(12), Russia,def. StefanieVoegele, Switzerland,7-6(3), 7-5. JamieHampton, UnitedStates, def. PetraKvitova (7), Czech Republic, 6-1,7-6(7). Jelena Jankovic (18), Serbia,def. SamStosur(9), Australia,3-6,6-3, 6-4. FrenchOpenShowCourt Schedules Today At StadeRoland Garros Paris Playbeginsat2 a.m .PDT Court PhilippeChatrier SvetlanaKuznetsova, Russia,vs. AngeliqueKerber (8), Germ any SerenaWiliams(1), UnitedStates,vs. RobertaVinci (15), Italy Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (6), France, vs. Viktor Troicki, Serbia Giffes Simon(15), France,vs. RogerFederer (2), Switzerland
Court Suzanne Lenglen Kevin Anderson(23), South Africa, vs. DavidFerrer
(4), Spain
TommyRobredo(32), Spain, vs. Nicolas Almagro (11), Sparn CarlaSuarezNavarro (20), Spain,vs.SaraErrani(5),
31. (98)MichaelMcDoweff, Ford,154 573. 32. (19)MikeBliss, Toyota,154.5. 33. (43)AricAlmirola, Ford,154.48. 34. (30)DavidStremme, Toyota, 154.295. 35. (34)DavidRagan,Ford, 153.984. 36. (87)JoeNemechek, Toyota,153.636 37. (7)DaveBlaney,Chevrolet, Owner Points. 38. (93)TravisKvapil, Toyota,Owner Points. 39. (10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet,OwnerPoints. 40. (36)J.J.Yeley,Chevrolet, Owner Points. 41. (35)JoshWise,Ford, Dwner Points. 42. (32)TimmyHil, Ford,Owner Points. 43. (44)ScottRiggs,Ford,Owner Points.
IndyCar Chevrolet Indy Dual in Detroit Race 1Results Saturday At The Racewayat Belle Isle Park Detroit, Mich. Lap length: 2.346 miles (Starting position in parentheses) 1. (2) Mike Conway, Daffara-Honda,70,Running. 2. (4) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Daffara-Chevrolet, 70,Running. 3. (16)JustinWilson, Daffara-Honda,70, Running. 4. (15)ScottDixon,Daffara-Honda,70,Running. 5. (12) Helio Castroneves,Daffara-Che vrolet, 70, Running. 6. (11)DarioFranchitti, Daffara-Honda,70,Running. 7. (24) JosefNew garden, Daffara-Honda, 70, Running. 8. (9) Will Power,Daffara-Chevrolet, 70, Running. 9.(23)GrahamRahal,Daff ara-Honda,70,Running. 10.(3)JamesJakes,Daff ara-Honda,70,Running. 11. (6)TristanVautier, Daffara-Honda,70,Running. 12.(8)Simon Pagenaud,Daff ara-Honda,70,Running. 13. (19) TonyKanaan, Daffara-Chevrolet, 70, Run-
nrng.
14. (25) Charlie Kimbaff,Daffara-l-londa, 70, Running. 15 (20) JamesHinchcliffe, Daffara-Chevrolet, 70, Running. 16. (17)SimonadeSilvestro, Daffara-Chevroet, 70, Running. 17.(1) E.J.Viso, Daffara-Chevrolet,70, Running. 18. (22) EdCarpenter, Daffara-Chevrolet, 69, Running. 19.(7)TakumaSato,Daff ara-Honda,68,Running. 20. (18)MarcoAndretti, Daffara-Che vro et, 67, Running. 21. (21)RyanBriscoe,Daffara-Chevrolet,66, Contact. 22. (10) SebastianSaavedra, Daffara-Chevrolet, 32, Contact. 23. (5)AlexTagliani, Daffara-Honda,28, Contact. 24. (14) SebastienBourdais, Daffara-Chevrolet, 19, Mechanical. 25. (13) A J Affmendinger,Daffara-Che vrolet, 0, Contact.
Race Statistics Winners averagespeed: 90.753.
Time of Race:1.48.45.4309. Margin of Victory: 12.9707 seconds. Cautions: 3for14 laps.
Lead Changes: 4 among3drivers. Lap Leaders: Conway1-23, Hunter-Reay 24-43, Conway 44-52, Wilson53-55, Conway56-70. Points: Castroneves182,Hunter-ffeay179,Andretti 178, Sato168,Wilson161, Dixon154,Hinchcliffe 143, Kanaan141, Pagenaud126, Kimbal 122.
Chevrolet IndyDual in Detroit Race 2Lineup After Saturdayqualifying; race today At The Racewayat Belle Isle Park Detroit Lap length: 2.346miles (Car number inparentheses) All cars Dallara chassis 1.(18) MikeConway, Honda,108.326 mph. 2. (16)JamesJakes, Honda,108.225. 3. (12)WilPower,Chevrolet,107.492 4. (1)RyanHunter-Reay, Chevrolet,108.143. 5. (5) EJ.Viso, Chevrolet,107.386. 6. (77)SimonPagenaud, Honda,107.34. 7. (9) ScottDixon,Honda,107.379. 8 (19) JustinWilson Honda107149 9. (3) HelioCastroneves,Chevrolet,107.311. 10. (27)JamesHinchcliffe, Chevrolet,107.124. 11. (
Italy Agnie szka Radwanska (4),Poland,vs.Ana Ivanovic
(14), Serbia
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT
Eastern Conference
W L T Pts GF GA Montreal 8 2 2 26 22 15 NewYork 7 5 4 25 23 19 Houston 6 4 4 22 19 14 S porting KansasCity 6 5 4 22 18 13 Philadelphia 5 5 4 19 19 24 Columbus 4 4 5 17 16 13 NewEngand 4 4 4 16 10 9 TorontoFC 1 7 5 8 12 19 Chicago 2 7 2 8 7 17 D.C. 1 9 2 5 6 22 Western Conference W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 8 2 4 28 23 17 RealSaltLake 7 5 3 24 21 15 Portland 5 1 7 22 22 14 Los Angeles 6 4 2 20 21 10 Colorado 5 4 5 20 15 12 Seatte 5 4 3 18 16 13 Vancouver 4 4 4 16 16 17 SanJose 3 6 6 15 13 23 ChivasUSA 3 8 2 11 13 26 NDTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepointfortie.
DEALS
Saturday's Games TorontoFC1,Philadelphia1, tie Vancouver2,NewYork 1 Columbus I, HoustonI, tie Montreal2,Sporting KansasCity1 Colorado 2, FCDallas2,tie RealSaltLake3, SanJose0 Seattle FC 2,Chivas USA0 Today's Games LosAngelesatNew England,1:30p.m. D.C. UnitedatChicago,2p.m. Wednesday,June 5 Columbusat Philadelphia 4.30p.m. Saturday, June8 D.C. UnitedatNewEngland,4:30 p.m. PortlandatChicago,5:30p.m. Los Angeleat s RealSalt Lake,6:30p.m. Vancouverat Seatle FC,730p.m.
MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup FedEx400Lineup After Friday qualifying; racetoday At Dover International Speedway Dover, Del. Lap length: 1 miles (Car number inparentheses) 1. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota,157.978 2 (56) MartiTruex n Jr., Toyota,157.798. 3. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota, 157.756. 4. (20)MattKenseth, Toyota,157.736. 5 (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 157.715. 6. (55)MarkMartin, Toyota,157.604. 7. (29)KevinHarvick Chevrolet 157.549. 8. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford,157.48. 9 (22) Joey Logano, Ford,157.46. 10. (I) JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet,157.405. 11. (5)KaseyKahne,Chevrolet,157.35. 12. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,157.24. 13. (78)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,157.054. 14. (42)JuanPaboMontoya, Chevrolet, 156.713. 15. (15)Clint Bowyer,Toyota,156.556. 16. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,156.175. 17. (13)CaseyMears, Ford,156.169. 18. (99)CarlEdwards, Ford,156.054. 19. (16)GregBiffle, Ford,155.952 20. (24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet,155.696. 21. (33)LandonCassiff, Chevrolet,155.44 22. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 155.407. 23. (17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,155.239. 24. (48)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,155.206. 25. (51)AustinDi lon,Chevrolet,155.146 26. (47)BobbyLabonte,Toyota, 155086. 27. (83)DavidReutimann, Toyota,155059. 28. (38)DavidGiffiland,Ford,154.972. 29. (31)JeffBurton,Chevrolet,154.679. 30. (9)MarcosAmbrose,Ford,154.619.
FISH COUNT
SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY TENNIS French Open, third round
Time
French Open,third round
10 a.m.
NBC
5 a.m. 9 a.m.
Golf Golf Golf CBS Golf
2 a.m.
Conway wins first of two
TV/Radio Tennis
GOLF
European Tour,Nordea Masters PGA Tour, Memorial Tournament LPGA Tour, ShopRite LPGA Classic PGA Tour, Memorial Tournament
11 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
Champions Tour, Principal Charity Classic 4 p.m. MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR, Sprint Cup, FedEx400 IndyCar, Chevrolet Indy Dual, race 2
F-
r
r
'.t 'asttrq' l .;~ se
),
,
Fox ABC ESP N 2
'1.
s
The Associated Press
College, World Series, 10 a.m. 12:30 p.m.
College, World Series, Tennesseevs. TBD 4 p.m. College, World Series, Oklahomavs. TBD 6 :30 p.m.
ESPN ESP N ESPN2 ESP N 2
SOCCER Men, United States vs. Germany MLS, Los Angeles at New England RUGBY
11 a.m. 1 :30 p.m.
ESPN2 NBC S N
Collegiate SevensChampionship Collegiate SevensChampionship
11 a.m. 1 p.m.
NBCSN NBC
9 a.m.
1 p.m. 5 p.m. 5 p.m. 8 p.m.
ESPNU Root TBS ESPNU ESPN ESPNU ESPNU
5 p.m.
NBCSN
Criterium Dauphine Libere, Stage1 (taped) 8 p.m.
NBCSN
BASEBALL College, NCAA regional, teams TBD MLB, Seattle at Minnesota MLB, San Francisco at St. Louis
11 a.m. 11 a.m.
College, NCAAregional, teams TBD MLB, Boston at NewYork Yankees College, NCAA regional, teams TBD College, NCAA regional, teams TBD HOCKEY NHL, playoffs, Los Angeles at Chicago CYCLING
MONDAY TENNIS
French Open, round of16 French Open, round of16 French Open, round of16
2 a.m. 6 a.m. 7 a.m.
ESPN2 ESPN2
BASEBALL MLB, Cleveland at New York Yankees MLB, Chicago White Sox at Seattle HOCKEY
4 p.m. 7 p.m.
ESPN Root
NHL, playoffs, Boston at Pittsburgh
5 p.m.
NBCSN
5 p.m.
ESPN2
SOFTBALL College, World Series, teams TBD BASKETBALL NBA, playoffs, Indiana at Miami
Indy races
/k-
9:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m. NHRA, Summernationals (same-day tape) 1 :30 p.m. SOFTBALL Washington vs. Florida College, World Series, Texas vs. TBD
Tennis
5:30 p.m.
TNT
Listings arethemostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmade by TVor radio stations.
/' "
A.J. Mast I The Associated Press
Indiana forward David West battles for the ball with Miami forward LeBron James during the second half of Game 6 of the NBA Eastern Conference finals in Indianapolis.
Strasburg hasslight SiYBlil —Washington manager Davey Johnson said Saturday
acers even series NBA PLAYOFFS
By Michael Marot
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana staggered Miami with one more big punch Saturday night. Now the Pacers have a fighting chance to pull off a stunning playoff upset. Roy Hibbert did everything but pull out the boxing gloves in Game 6, finishing with 24 points and 11 rebounds, and continually contesting Miami's shots to help Indiana stave off elimination with an emphatic 91-77 victory over the defending champs. Paul George scored 28 points, had eight rebounds and fiveassists,and the Pacers held Miami to 36.1 percent shooting as they booked a trip back to Miami for Game 7 on Monday night. "Myself and David (West), we throw ourselves in the fray, in the paint. We like to muck it up," Hibbert said. "Paul and myself, we wanted to make sure we got this for him as well. We didn't want this to be our last game." It wasn't. Instead, after winning their first division crown since 2004, the Pacers are one win away from advancing to the NBA Finals for only the second time in franchise history. They lost to the Lakers4-2 in 2000. They haven'tplayed a decisive seventh game in the conference finals since losing to Chicago in 1998. And amazingly, they've done it this time against the defending champions who many considered virtually invincible after winning 27 straight during the regular season, finishing with a franchise-record 66 wins and having won 23 of their past 24 road games before losing Games 4 and 6 in Indianapolis. But the Pacers have pushed four-time MVP
LeBron James and his high-scoring, highprofile teammates to the brink of elimination by punchingback,and Game 6 followed a familiar story line. The Pacers had a 53-33 rebounding advantage, outscored Miami 44-22 in the paint and limited Miami's shooters to 16 of 54, 29.6 percent,from inside the arc. James led the Heat with 29 points on 10-of21 shooting. Nobody else scored more than 10. How have the Pacers done it? With Hibbert controlling the inside after adding MMA training to his offseason regimen. "Roy Hibbert i s m a k ing extraordinary plays in the pocket, poise in the pocket we call it," coach Frank Vogel said. "He's getting paint catches and just having great poise, great reads. He's not plowing over guys. He had a chargein Game 5, but has been under control." It was everything an elimination game should be. The teams traded baskets and jabs, sometimes literally, and players ignored the bumps and bruises of yet another wrestling match that has made this tough-guy series
compelling. Both teams attacked the basket, sometimes with problematic results. Indiana missed about five dunk attempts in the first half and a series of short jumpers, too, costing them precious points. The Heat struggled, meanwhile, starting the game just 3 of 22 from inside the 3-point line. Miami's Big Three — James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh — went just 14 of 40. Excluding James, Miami managed only 16 baskets — eight 3s and eight 2s.
broke an ankle.
Hill retires fromNBA
an MRI showed a slight strain in
Stephen Strasburg's right side,
19 seasons, ending aninjury-
and the team is hoping the righthander can avoid the disabled
plagued career that included an Olympic gold medal. The Los
list. Strasburg left Friday night's
Angeles Clippers announced
game against the Braves after two innings. Strasburg was
the news on Saturday. The
examined in Washington on Saturday. Johnson said there is
no need to rush adecision on Strasburg's status for his next start on Thursday. The Nation-
alshaveanoffdayonMonday, and Johnson said Saturday Strasburg's next start could be
pushed back if necessary.
GOLF Illinois, Aladamareach NCAA final —Thomas Pieters of lllinois beat MaxHoma with a par on the 20th hole to give lllinois a 3-2 victory over
top-seeded California on Satur-
40-year-old forward averaged 16.7 points, 6.0 rebounds, 4.1 assists and 1.2 steals during his NBA career that included stints with the Clippers, Detroit, Orlando and Phoenix. Hill spent last season with the Clippers,
appearing in 29 games.Gary Sacks, the team's vice president of basketball operations, calls
Hill "the embodiment of class, a true professional."
Kings pick newcoach — The Sacramento Kings will introduce former Golden State
assistant Mike Malone astheir head coach onMonday. Ateam official says the hiring can hap-
pen now that incoming owner
day in the NCAA golf semifinals in Milton, Ga. The 15th-seeded
Vivek Ranadive has taken over control of the team from the
l lini will face No. 2Alabama in
Maloof family. The official spoke
the final today, with both seeking their first title. The Crimson Tide
on condition of anonymity
beathostGeorgiaTech3-0-2on the Capital City Club's Crabapple
Course.
because noannouncement had beenmade.Malonereplaces Keith Smart, who was officially fired on Friday shortly after the
sale of the teamwas completed. Ranadive has been a minority owner of the Warriors the past BASKETBALL three seasons. Maloneworked Blaylock's condintion im- under coach Mark Jackson the Pl'NfeS — Former NBA All-Star
past two years in Golden State.
guard Daron "Mookie" Blaylock has been upgraded to serious condition a day after his SUV killed a woman. Atlanta Medical
FOOTBALL 49ers hire consultant
Center spokeswomanNicole
— A person with knowledge of
Gustin said Saturday that the 46-year-old Blaylock had been
the negotiations says theSan Francisco 49ers haveagreed to
upgraded to serious condition.
terms with Eric Mangini to be
On Friday, the hospital listed Blaylock in critical condition, and police said the former Atlanta
an offensive consultant for the
Hawks player hadbeenplaced
Jets coach will work on Jim
on life support for a short time. Jonesboro Police Chief Franklin
Harbaugh's staff for the twotime reigning NFC West winners, who lost 34-31 in the Super Bowl to the Baltimore Ravens. With a defensive expertise and
crashed head-on into a vanand
Allen said Blaylock was driving Friday afternoon in the Atlanta
suburb of Jonesboro whenhis SUV crossed the center line and
TENNIS: FRENCH OPEN
Murphy, was killed. Her husband
— Seven-time All-Star Grant Hill is retiring from the NBA after
NFC champions. The former Cleveland Browns and New York
crashed head-on into a van with
experience as an assistant, he might help gameplan for oppos-
two people inside. Thevan's passenger, 43-year-old Monica
ing defenses in the new role. — From wire reports
DETROIT — Mike Conway went from watching to winning IndyCar races in l ess than a week. The English driver dominated the first of two races at the Detroit Grand Prix, finishing nearly D seconds ahead of de-
fending series champion Ryan
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL
D3
Nadal strugglesdespite victory By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press
PARIS — For the third time in three matches this year in the French Open, Rafael Nadal hardly looked himself for a set. U nlike in t h e f i rst t w o rounds, Nadal won his opening se t S a t u rday, a l beit barely. The takeaway, even after another victory, was the same: The owner of a record seven titles at Roland Garros is not the dominant force he usually is at the clay-court tournament. "If I w a n t t o h ave any chance," N adal a c k nowledged after beating 27thseeded Fabio Fognini of Italy 7-6 (5), 6-4, 6-4, "I really need to play better." Hours later, the man Nadal beat in last year's final and could meet in this year's semifinals, No. 1 Novak Djokovic, seemed vulnerable, too. Walking to his changeover chair at 4-3 in the third set of a 6-2, 6-2, 6-3 win against No. 26 Grigor Dimitrov, Djokovic stretched his right arm — the one he has used to win six Grand Slam titles — several times. He then was treated by a trainer, who applied ointment and gave Djokovic a massage near the shoulder. Two games later, the match was done, Djokovic was into t he fourth r ound, and h e raised that arm in his typical victory celebration. H is m ood w o ul d s h i f t d ramatically s o on. W h e n Djokovic left the court and went to the locker room, he was told that his first coach — Jelena Gencic, 76, who began working with little Nole when he was 6 — had died in Belgrade, Serbia, earlier Saturday. Djokovic issued a statement through the tournament saying that he would not be able to attend a postmatch news conference. "His team kept the news
Michel Euler/The Associated Press
Jamie Hampton returns against Petra Kvitova in their third-round match at the French Open in Paris on Saturday. Hampton is one of four U.S. women going to the fourth round. secret from him until after the match," ATP spokesman Nicola Arzani said. "He just broke down.... He was very, very, very close to her." As they approach each other in the draw, Nadal now meets No. 13 Kei Nishikorithe first Japanese man in the fourth round of the French Open in 75 years — while Djokovic faces No. 16 Philipp K ohlschreiber. Th e o t h e r matchups on that half of the bracket after a wild Saturday in Paris: No. 12 Tommy Haas against No. 29 Mikhail Youzhny, and No. 7 Richard Gasquet against No. 9 Stanislas Wawrinka. Haas let a record 12 match p oints get away from h i m in the fourth set, then saved one in the fifth. He eventually
would have been better to lose in straight sets," he added, "because I feel terrible right now." In Nishikori's victory, his opponent, France's Benoit Paire, was assessed a point penalty for getting coached. The same thing happened to Marina Erakovic during her loss to No. 17 Sloane Stephens, one of four U.S. women into the fourth round. That's the most since four also made it in 2004; five made it ayear earlier. She's joined by 54th-rankedJamie Hampton, who stunned 2011 Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova 6-1, 7-6 (7); 67th-ranked Bethanie Mattek-Sands, who also won Saturday; and 15-time major champion Serena Williams, whose fourth-round match is pulled out a 7-5, 7-6 (4), 4-6, 6- today. 7 (10), 10-8 victory over 19thStephens gets the m o st seeded John Isner, the last intriguing matchup with a American man in the field quarterfinal berth at stake, and the player best known for taking on defending chamwinning a 70-68 fifth set at pion Maria Sharapova on Wimbledon three years ago. Monday. "These longmatches seem Sharapova, who completed to follow me," said I sner, a career Grand Slam in Paris whose past five Grand Slam last year, dealt with eight appearances ended with loss- double-faults against unseedes in five-setters. ed Zheng Jie before winning "In h i n dsight, p r obably 6-1, 7-5.
Hunter-Reay on Saturday to easily win the 70-lap race on the 2.36-mile Belle Isle street course. Dale Coyne Racing picked C onway to drive one of it s two cars this weekend — after he didn't have a ride during the Indianapolis 500 — and wasted no time offering him another opportunity. "You want to go to Toronto now?" team owner Dale Coyne asked Conway after the race. Yes, he does because the S treets of Toronto race i n July suits h i s r o a d-racing
preference. Conway backed out of last September's season finale at Fontana because he decided he's uncomfortable racing on ovals. He had serious leg and back injuries after a 2010 crash at Indianapolis and wrecked there again in 2012. In his only other IndyCar race since then, he qualified fifth and finished 25th this year at Long Beach for Bobby Rahal. Conway's only other I ndyCar win w a s a t L o n g Beach in 2011. The open-wheel series is running a second, full-length race in the same weekend for the first time today when Conway will start up front for the first time in his career. "The car has been great all weekend," he said. Conway's Dale Coyne Racing teammate, Justin Wilson, was third and Scott Dixon was fourth. Helio Castroneves finished fifth, to make him the points leader just ahead of Hunter-Reay. Also on Saturday: Logano wins Nationwide race: DOVER, DeL — Joey Logano led the final 34 laps to win the Nationwide Series race at Dover International Speedway. Logano has won the past three Nationwide races at Dover. Unlike the past two, Logano won for Penske Racing. His last two Dover victories came with Joe Gibbs Racing. This time, Logano held off JGR drivers Brian Vickers, Matt Kenseth and Kyle Busch for the checkered flag. Busch, who won the Truck Seriesrace Friday, dominated most of the race and led 72 of the 200 laps. But he was 10th off the final restart, couldn't drive his way to the front of the field and was fifth. Vickers was second, Kenseth third and Trevor Bayne fourth. Millican takes NHRA No. 1 qualifying position: ENGLISHTOWN, N.J. — Clay Millican raced to his first career No. I qualifying position in t h e NHRA Summernationals at Old Bridge Township Raceway Park. Millican claimed the top spot in Top Fuel with a run of 3.792 seconds at 321.27 mph. He will face Brandon Bernstein in the first round of eliminations. Matt Hagan topped the Funny Car field, Mike Edwards qualified first in Pr o Stock, and Steve Johnson led the Pro Stock Motorcycle order.
I
5 Paul Sancya/The Associated Press
Mike Conway celebrates his victory after the first of two IndyCar Detroit Grand Prix auto races on Belle Isle in Detroit, Saturday.
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL T otals 4 4 111811 Totals 3 1 1 6 1 Boston 005 000 033 — 11 New York 0 00 100 000 — 1 DP — Boston 1, New York 1. LOB—Boston 9,
Standings All Times POT
Boston NewYork Baltimore TampaBay Toronto
AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L 34 23 31 24 31 25 30 25 23 33
Central Division
W L 30 24 30 25 24 29 24 29 23 30 West Division W L 34 21 33 24 25 31
Detroit Cleveland
Chicago Minnesota Kansas City Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Houston
24 32
19 37
Pct GB 596 .564 2
Pct GB .618 .579 2 446 92/2
.429 10'/z .339 15H2
Friday's LateGames
Tampa Bay9, Cleveland2 San Diego 4,Toronto 3,17innings
Saturday'sGames Cleveland5,TampaBay 0 Minnesota 5, Seattle 4 Oakland 4, ChicagoWhite Sox3,10 innings Detroit10, Baltimore 3 Kansas City4, Texas1,10 innings Boston11,N.Y.Yankees I Houston2,L.A.Angels 0 San Diego 4,Toronto 3 Today's Games Tampa Bay(Heffickson 2-2) at Cleveland(McAgister 4-4), 10:05a.m. Detroit (Porceffo2-2) at Batimore(Gausman 0-2), 10:35a.m. Seattle(Bonderman0-0) atMinnesota(Diamond3-4), 11:10 a.m.
KansasClty (E.Santana3-5) at Texas(Darvish 7-2), 12:05 p.m.
Houston(Lyles2-1) at LA. Angels(CWilson 4-3), 12:35 p.m
Chicago WhiteSox(Sale 5-2) atOakland(Parker3-6), 1:05 p.m. Boston(Buchholz7-0) at N.Y.Yankees(Kuroda6-3), 5:05 p.m. Toronto (R.Ortiz1-2) at SanDiego(Volquez4-5), 7:10 p.m. Monday'sGames ClevelandatN.Y.Yankees, 4:05p.m. OaklandatMilwaukee,5:10 p.m. Houston at LA. Angels, 7:05p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxatSeat e,7:10p.m.
3
HBP —byRRoss (Lough). PB—Pierzynski. T 3:19. A 36,107(48,114)
New York 7. 28—Carp (8), Saltalamacchia (14), BradleyJr. 2(3). HR —Nava(8), Napoli (9), Drew(4). Astros 2, Angels 0 SF C Stewart. Boston IP H R E R BB SO
DoubrontW,4-2 6 6 .554 2'/2 Tazawa 1 0 .545 3 Breslow 1 0 .411 10H2 uehara 1 0 New York Pct GB PHughesL,2-4 4 1 - 3 7 556 Claiborne 12-3 3 545 I/2 Warren 3 8 453 51/2 453 5 1/2 .434 6H2
R.RossL,2-1 1 3 3 3 1 Cotts pitched to I batterinthe8th.
WP — PHughes. T—3:25. A—48,784(50,291)
1 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
6 1 1 2
5 5 2 0 0 0 6 6 1
7 2 3
Indians 5, Rays0 CLEVELAND — Ubaldo Jimenez pitched eight scoreless innings
andClevelandbeatTampaBay. TampaBay Cleveland ab r hbi ab r hbi J oycerf 3 0 0 0 Bourncf 4 0 0 0 KJhnsnli 4 0 00 Kipnis2b 4 2 2 0 Longori 3b 4 0 0 0 Acarer ss 4 1 1 2 Loney1b 3 0 0 0 Swisher1b 2 1 1 0
D Jnngscf 4 0 I 0 Giambidh 4 I 2 3 S cottdh 3 0 1 0 CSantnc 4 0 0 0 R Rorts2b 3 0 0 0 Brantlylf 3 0 0 0 JMolinc 3 0 1 0 Aviles3b 3 0 2 0 YEscorss 3 0 1 0 Stubbsrf 4 0 0 0 Totals 3 0 0 4 0 Totals 3 25 8 5 T ampa Bay 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 Cleveland 021 0 2 0 Ogx — 5 E Kipnis (4). DP—Cleveland 1. LOB Tampa Bay 5, Cleveland 7 2B DeJennings(14), Kipnis
ANAHEIM, Calif.— Bud Norris
dominated the Angels' high-priced lineup for the third time this season with six innings of four-hit ball and Chris Carter hit a two-
S an Francisco 000 000 000 — 0 T 3:25. A 31,465(41,019) St. Louis 007 000 01 x — 8 LOB— San Francisco 9,St.Louis 3.28— Posey Brewers 4, Phillies 3 (13), Tcruz 2(2), Descalso(8). S—SMiller. SFDescalso. San Francisco I P H R E R BB SOPHILADELPHIA — Jonathan M.cain L,4-3 6 9 7 7 0 9 Lucroy homered, Wily Peralta Mijares 1 0 0 0 0 I strong innings and Kontos 1 1 1 1 1 0 pitched seven St. Louis Milwaukeeheld off a ninth-inning S.MifferW6-3 7 6 0 0 I V.Marte 1 0 0 0 0 K.Butler 1 1 0 0 1 T—2:42. A—42,359(43,975).
run homer in the seventh against Cardinals 7, Giants1 Jerome Williams, leading Houston (Second Game) past Los Angeles. Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi B Barnscf 3 0 0 0 Aybarss 5 0 2 0 Houston
A ltuve2b 4 0 I 0 Troutcf
5020
JCastro c 4 0 1 0 Pujols dh 3 0 0 0
JMrtnzlf 4 1 1 0 Trumo1b 3 0 0 0 C .Penadh 3 0 I 0 Hamltnrf 4 0 I 0 Carter1b 4 1 1 2 HKndrc2b 3 0 0 0 Paredsrf 2 0 0 0 Caffasp3b 4 0 1 0 C rowerf 0 0 0 0 lannettc 4 0 I 0 D mngz3b 4 0 0 0 Shucklf 3 0 0 0
Rcedenss 3 0 0 0
T otals 3 1 2 5 2 Totals 3 40 7 0 Houston 0 00 000 200 — 2
7 0 1
T 2:21. A 40,403(42,524).
Padres 4, Blue Jays3 (17 innings) SAN DIEGO — Clayton Richard earned his firstwin of the season
by pitching two innings in relief andJesusGuzman singledhome
rally for a victory over Philadelphia.
the winning run with two outs in the17th to lift San Diego to a victory over Toronto tn a game
Milwaukee Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi Aokirf 4 1 1 0 Reverecf 4 0 1 0 Segurass 4 0 1 1 CHmdz2b 5 0 3 0
that wrapped upearly Saturday.
B raunlf 4 0 0 0 DBrwnlf 4 1 1 0 A rffmr3b 3 I I 0 Howardlb 3 0 I 0 Lucroy c 4 2 2 1 Mrtnz pr-rf 1 0 0 0 San Francisco St. Louis L Schfrcf 4 0 3 1 DYongrf 4 1 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi G Blanccf 4 0 1 0 Jaycf 4 1 0 1 YBtncr1b 4 0 0 0 Mayrry1b 0 0 0 0 B ianchi2b 4 0 I 0 Frndsn3b 4 0 I I B crwfrss 4 0 0 0 YMolinc 4 1 1 0 W Perltp 2 0 0 0 Kratzc 4011 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 Beltranrf 4 1 2 2 Grzlnyp 0 0 0 0 Galvisss 3 1 1 1 Scutaro 2b 4 0 2 0 Freese 3b 3 I 2 0 K intzlrp 0 0 0 0 Cloydp 2 0 0 0 Pencerf 4 0 1 0 Wggntn1b 3 1 2 2 Belt1b 4 1 1 0 Descals2b 4 0 1 1 W eeksph 1 0 0 0 LNixph I 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 MAdmsp 0 0 0 0 AnTrrslf 4 0 1 1 SRonsnlf 3 0 0 1 B astrdp 0 0 0 0 Arias3 b-ss 3 0 I 0 Kozmass 3 I 0 0 Roffins ph 1 0 1 0 Quirozc 3 0 0 0 Wnwrgp 4 1 1 0 Kndrck pr 0 0 0 0 Bmgrnp 2 0 1 0 Totals 3 4 4 9 3 Totals 3 63 11 3 RRmrzp 0 0 0 0 M ilwaukee 020 0 1 0 010 — 4 Noonanph-3b1 0 0 0 P hiladelphia 0 0 0 1 0 1 001 — 3 T otals 3 3 1 8 1 Totals 3 27 9 7 E—Bianchi (I), D.Young(2). DP—Milwaukee 1. S an Francisco 000 000 100 — 1 LOB —Milwaukee5, Philadelphia10. 28—Ar.Ramirez St. Louis 7 003 002 20x
Toronto
San Diego ab r hbi ab r hbi Mecarrlf 8 0 1 0 Evcarrss 7 0 2 0 Bautist rf 7 0 0 0 Denorfi rf-cf-rf 7 0 2 0 Encrnc3b 6 1 2 1 Headly3b 6 0 0 0 L ind1b 7
0 3 0 Quentinlf 3 1 0 0
Arenciic 6 1 0 0 Grgrsnp 0 0 0 0 C IRsmscf 7 1 4 2 Stauffrp 1 0 0 0
B onifac2b 7 0 2 0 Hundlyc 2 0 0 0 Kawskss 5 0 0 0 Alonso1b 2 1 1 0 Jenki nsp 2 0 0 0 Amarstcf 4 0 0 0 Mlztursph 0 0 0 0 Grandlc-1b 6 0 0 0 Loupp 0 0 0 0 Gyorko2b 7 2 3 2 Wagnerp 0 0 0 0 Venalecf 2 0 0 0 Goseph 1 0 0 0 Blanksph-rf-1b2 0 0 0 Delaarp 0 0 0 0 Vincentp 0 0 0 0 C ecilp 0 0 0 0 Stultsph 1 0 0 0
L os Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 E—J.Martlnez(2). LOB —Houston6, LosAngeles DP — San Francisco 1, St. Louis 2. LOB—San (9), L.Schafer 2 (4), Bianchi (3), Revere (4), DeRosaph 1 0 0 0 Richrdp 0 0 0 0 11. 28 —C.Pena(11), Trout2 (16). HR —Carter (11). dez(1). 38—Segura (6). HR—Lucroy (6), Janssnp 0 0 0 0 Marqusp 2 0 0 0 Francisco 5, St. Louis 5. 28—Scutaro (14), Belt C.Heman SB J.castro(2) CS C.Pena(2). Galvis(4).SB—D.Brown(4). S—W.Peralta, Revere. J.Perezp 0 0 0 0 T.Rossp 0 0 0 0 Houston IP H R E R BBSO (12), Freese(7), Wainwright (1). SB—Descalso (4). Milwaukee IP H R E R BB SO E Rogrsph 1 0 0 0 Thtchrp 0 0 0 0 SF — S .R obi n son. B.NorrisW,5-4 6 4 0 0 3 6 8 2 2 1 6 Rdmndp I 0 0 0 Kotsayph 1 0 0 0 H R E R BB SOW.PeraltaW,4-6 7 CisneroH,1 2 2 0 0 0 1 San Francisco I P Thayerp 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Bumgamer L,4-4 6 6 5 5 I 6 Gorzelanny VerasS,10-13 1 1 0 0 0 I G uzmnlf 4 0 1 1 R.Ramirez 1 3 2 2 1 0 KintzlerH,9 I 0 0 0 0 I Los Angeles F r.Rodri g uez S, 3 -3 1 3 1 1 1 0 T otals 5 9 3 123 Totals 5 74 9 3 Kontos 1 0 0 0 0 2 (11), Aviles (6). HR —A.cabrera (5), Giambl (5). WiiliamsL,4-2 7 3 2 2 3 6 Philadelphia Toronto 020 100 000 000 000 00 — 3 SB — Aviles(4). Jepsen I 2 0 0 0 2 St. Louis 000 01 — 4 Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO Coeffo 7 8 3 2 1 3 San Diego 000 030 000 000 8 1 1 0 10 CloydL,1-2 1 0 0 0 1 0 WainwnghtW,8-3 9 ArcherL,0-1 4 7 5 5 3 4 HBP —byBumgarner(Wigginton). Mi.Adams I I I 1 0 0 Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. HBP —byVeras(Shuck). E—Encarnacion (2), Arencibia (3), Loup (2). Al. Torres 4 1 0 0 1 6 T—3:14. A—40,087(45,483). T—2:33. A—42,175(43,975). Bastardo 1 0 0 0 0 2 DP — Toronto3, SanDiego 3. LOB—Toronto10, San Cleveland Gorzelanny pitchedto1 batter inthe8th. WP — WPeralta, Kintzler. U.Jime nezW,4-3 8 4 0 0 I 7 Diego 9. 28 —Gyorko (13). HR —Encarnacion (15), Reds 2, Pirates 0 T — 3: 0 0. A — 41,11 4 (43, 6 51). Pestano I 0 0 0 1 1 Col.Rasmus(9). SB Denorfia (6). CS—Arencibia Archerpitchedto 3 baters inthe5th. Rays 9, Indians 2 (1) S — Kawasaki, Richard. T—2:49. A—22,748(42,241). Toronto IP H R E R BB SO PITTSBURGH — MikeLeake Marlins 8, Mets1 Jenkins 5 3 3 2 0 2 CLEVELAND — James Loney continued his recent run of strong Loup 1 13 2 0 0 0 0 Tigers10, Orioles 3 homered twice, four Tampa Bay pitching by working six scoreless MIAMI — Jose Fernandez pitched Wagner 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Delabar 2 1 0 0 0 3 pitchers combined on a one-hitter innings as Cincinnati shut out seven scoreless innings and had BALTIMORE — Miguel Cabrera's Cecil 1 0 0 0 I I and the Raysendured nearly five Pittsburgh for the second straight two hits with an RBI to help Miami Janssen 1 0 0 0 0 2 grand slam capped awild fourth
inning in which Detroit hit four home runs and Baltimore pitcher
hours of rain delays before beating night. Cleveland in a game that stretched into early Saturday morning.
J.Perez RedmondL,O-I 3
beat New York.
2 1 0 0 0 2-3 2 1 I 2
2 I
San Diego Pittsburgh New York Miami Marquis 5137 3 3 4 6 ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi T.Ross 1 1 0 0 0 0 C hoocf 5 1 1 0 Presleylf 5 0 3 0 Q untnffss 3 0 2 0 Pierrelf 4 1 0 0 Thatcher W L Pct GB 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Cozartss 3 1 1 0 Walker2b 4 0 1 0 JuTrnrph-ss 1 0 1 1 Polanc3b 4 1 2 0 Atlanta 33 22 .600 Thayer 1 0 0 0 0 3 Votto1b 4 0 1 1 Mcctchcf 4 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 4 0 0 0 Dietrch2b 4 1 2 2 Washington 28 28 500 51/2 Gregerson 2 0 0 0 0 2 Phiff ips2b 3 0 2 I GJoneslb 4 0 2 0 D Wrght3b 4 0 0 0 Ozunarf 3 1 0 0 Philadelphia 26 30 .464 7'/z 2 0 0 0 0 0 Joycerf 4 1 1 2 Aviles2b 4 0 0 0 Broxtnp 0 0 0 0 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Dudalf 4 0 1 0 Coghlnci 4 1 3 2 Stauffer NewYork 22 31 .415 10 Detroit Baltimore Vincent 3 2 0 0 0 2 SRdrgzph-It 1 0 0 0 Acarerss 4 0 0 0 Chpmnp 0 0 0 0 RMartnc 4 0 1 0 B uckc 4 0 0 0 Dobbslb 4 I I 0 Miami 15 41 .268 18'/2 ab r hbi ab r hbi RichardW,1-5 2 1 0 0 0 2 KJhnsnli 2 1 0 0 Swisher1b 3 1 0 0 Brucerf 4 0 0 0 PAlvrz3b 2 0 0 0 Ankielcf 2 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 3 0 1 2 Central Division I nfante2b 5 1 2 1 McLothlf 5 0 2 0 HBP—by Jenkins(Quentin),by Loup(Alonso). Fuldlf-rf 1 0 1 1 MrRynl3b 3 1 0 0 Frazier 3b 3 0 2 0 SMarte ph I 0 I 0 I.Davis 1b 3 0 0 0 Mathis c 3 1 1 1 W L Pct GB Dirksrf-I 4 1 1 0 Machd3b 3 1 0 0 T—4:58. A—24,219(42,524). Longori 3b 5 I I I CSantn dh 3 0 0 0 M esorcc 3 0 0 0 Sniderrf 3 0 0 0 Vldspnrf 2 0 0 0 Frnndzp 3 1 2 1 St. Louis 37 18 673 M icarr3b 4 I 1 4 Markksrf 4 0 I 0 Loney1b 5 2 2 3 YGomsc 2 0 0 1 Byrdph-rf 1 0 I 0 DJnngsp 0 0 0 0 DRonsnlf 4 0 1 0 GSnchzph 1 0 0 0 Cincinnati 35 21 625 2'/2 Fielder1b 5 1 1 1 A.Jonescf 4 0 1 0 S cottdh 3 0 0 0 Raburnlf 3 0 1 1 Leakep 2 0 0 0 Barmesss 3 0 1 0 McHghp 2 0 0 0 JBrownph 1 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 34 22 607 3 1/2 VMrtnzdh 3 2 1 1 C.Davis1b 4 0 1 1 Leaders D Jnngscf 4 I I 0 Stubbsrf 2 0 0 0 Hannhnph 1 0 0 0 McKnrph 1 0 0 0 C arsonp 0 0 0 0 Webbp 0 0 0 0 Chicago 23 31 .426 13H2 JhPerlt ss 5 1 2 1 Wieters c 4 0 1 0 Loatonc 4 1 1 0 Through Saturday'sGames Lecurep 0 0 0 0 Lirianop 1 0 1 0 B urkep 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee 21 33 .389 15'/2 A vilac 5 1 1 1 Hardyss 3 2 2 2 YEscorss 4 2 2 1 AMERICANLEAGUE Clzturs 2b 1 0 0 0 Mazzar p 0 0 0 0 Lagars ph 1 I 0 0 West Division Tuiassplt 3 I 2 I Dickrsndh 3 0 I 0 T otals 3 8 9 I I 9 Totals 2 7 2 I 2 BATTING — Micabrera Detroit, .369; CDavis, I ngeph 1 0 0 0 Lyonp 0000 W L Pct GB D.Keffycf 1 0 0 0 Valenciph 1 0 0 0 T ampa Bay 0 0 5 0 0 0 013 — 9 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 1 1 5 1 Totals 3 38 128 Baltimore,.354;Pedroia, Boston,.333,Mauer,MinArizona 31 24 564 AGarcici-rf 3 1 1 0 Flahrty2b 3 0 0 0 C leveland 000 0 2 0 0 00 — 2 Mercerlb 0 0 0 0 N ew York 000 0 0 0 0 10 — 1 nesota,.332;JhPeralta, Detroit, 328; Machado,Bal29 27 .518 2'/2 Acasig ph 1 0 0 0 Colorado E—Loney (3) Longoria(5). DP—Tampa Bay 1. Totals 3 3 2 8 2 Totals timore,.326;Loney,TampaBay,.326. 3 40 100 Miami 110 200 40x — 8 San Francisco 29 27 .518 2'/2 Totals 3 8 101210 Totals 3 5 3 9 3 LOB — T am p a B ay 5, C le ve l a nd 2. 28 — Lon gori a (17), RBI — Micabrera, Detroit, 65; CDavis,Baltimore, C incinnati 000 10 0 0 1 0 — 2 E—Ju.Turner (2), Dan.Murphy(3). DP—New Detroit 010 801 000 — 10 San Dlego 26 29 .473 5 Lobaton (6), R abu m ( 8). HR Joyce (10), Lone y 2 ( 7) P ittsburgh 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 York1. LOB —New York4, Miami 7. 2B—Ju.Turner 51; Encarnacion,Toronto, 46; Napoli, Boston, 44; 001 11 0 0 0 0 — 3 Los Angeies 23 31 426 7H2 B altimore CS — Bourn (3). SF—Y.Gomes. Detroit, 43; MarReynolds, Cleveland, 41; DP — Cinclnnati 1, Plttsburgh 1. LOB—CincinDP — Detroit1, Baitimore1.LOB —Detroit7, Baiti(5), Fernandez (1). 38—Mathis (1). CS—Ankie (1). Fielder, Bay IP H R ER BB SO nati 8, Pittsburgh10. CS Ncruz,Texas,39. —R.Martin (2). S—Cozart, S—Pierre. SF—Hechavarria. more 7.2B—Infante(9), Tuiasosopo(3) Wieters(14). Tampa Saturday'sGames MMoore HOME RUNS—CDavis, Baltimore,19; Micabre1 0 0 0 0 1 Liriano. New York IP H R E R BB SO HR — Mi.cabrera (17), Fielder(10), VMartinez(3), St. Louis 8,SanFrancisco 0,1st game W,1-1 3 0 2 0 I 4 Cincinnati IP H R E R BB SO McHughL,0-1 4 6 4 4 3 1 ra, Detroit, 17;Encarnacion,Toronto, 15;Cano,New Jh.Peralta(6), Avila (5), Hardy2(12). SB—McLouth J.Wright Milwaukee 4,Philadelphia 3 Lueke 2 1 0 0 1 1 LeakeW,5-2 6 7 0 0 1 5 Carson 21-3 3 3 2 0 0 York, 14;Ncruz,Texas, 13;MarReynolds, Cleveland, (18), A.Jones (9), Dickerson(3). Colorado 7, L.A.Dodgers6,10 innings 0 0 0 1 2 LecureH,9 13; 5 tiedat 12. I 0 0 0 0 0 Burke 2-3 2 I 1 I I Detroit IP H R E R BB SO CRamosS,1-1 3 Miami 8,N.Y.Mets1 STOLEN BASES—Effsbury, Boston,21, McLouth, BroxtonH,10 1 2 0 0 0 0 Lyon 1 1 0 0 0 0 VerlanderW,7-4 7 8 3 3 1 5 Cleveland Arizona12,ChicagoCubs4 Baltimore, 18;Andrus,Texas, 13; Trout, LosAngeles, Kluber 2 0 0 0 1 3 ChapmanS,14-16 1 1 0 0 1 2 Miami Smyly 2 1 0 0 1 2 Cincinnati 2,Pittsburgh0 S.BarnesL,0-1 1 4 5 5 1 2 Pittsburgh Fernandez W,3-3 7 3 0 0 1 8 12; Crisp, Oakland,11;AEscobar,KansasCity, 10; Baltimore St. Louis 7,SanFrancisco1,2nd game 2 0 0 0 I 0 LirianoL,3-2 6 4 1 1 I 11 Da.Jennings I 2 I I 0 0 Kipnis, Cleveland,10;AIRamirez, Chicago,10. HammelL,7-3 3 5 5 5 3 0 Albers Atlanta 2,Washlngton1,10 innings 2 1 0 0 0 1 Mazzaro STRIKEOUTS —Darvish, Texas,105; Scherzer, 1 2 0 0 0 0 Webb 1 0 0 0 0 1 McFarland 3 5 5 5 2 2 Hagadone San Diego 4,Toronto 3 Shaw 1 1 1 1 0 1 Detroit, 91;AniSanchez,Detroit, 89;FHernandez, SeWatson 1 2 1 1 0 0 McHugh pitchedto1 batterinthe5th. Today's Games Patton 2 2 0 0 0 3 RHill 1 5 3 3 0 3 attle, 87; Verl a nder, Detroit, 87;Masterson,Cleveland, JuWilson 1 0 0 0 0 1 T — 2;41. A — 16,283 (37, 4 42) 1 0 0 0 0 1 N.Y.Mets(Harvey5-0) at Miami(Slowey1-5), 10.10 Tom.Hunter J.Wrightpitchedto 2baters in the5th. 83 Shields Kansas City 78 HBP —byWatson(Phiffips, Frazier). Hammelpitchedto 4baters in the4th. a.m. WP — Lueke. T—3:14. A—33,912(38,362). HBP —byHamme (Tuiasosopo). Cincinnati (Latos5-0) at Pittsburgh(J.Gomez2-0), Interleague T — 2:59 (R ai n del a y: 4: 4 9). A — 29,603 (42, 2 41). NATIONAL LEAGUE T—3:06. A—38,945(45,971). 11:35 a.m. BATTING —Segura, Mdwaukee,.352; YMolina, St. Milwaukee (Fiers1-3) atPhdadelphia (Lee6-2),10:35 Braves2, Nationals1 Louis,.351,Tulowitzki,Colorado,.339;Votto,Cincina.m. Padres 4, Blue Jays3 National League nati,.338;Scutaro,SanFrancisco,.335; Goldschmidt, (10 innings) Washington(Karns0-0) at Atlanta (Maholm6-4), Athletics 4, White Sox 3 Ariz ona,332;AdGonzalez,LosAngeles,.326. 10:35 a.m. (10 innings) SAN DIEGO — Robbie Erlin won RBI — Goldschmidt, Arizona, 45; Phillips, CinSan Francisco (Gaudin 0-1) at St. Louis(Lyons2-0), Rockies 7, Dodgers 6 ATLANTA — B.J. Upton returned cinnati, 45; Tulowitzki, Colorado,43; AdGonzalez, his first major league start after 11:15 a.m. — Hector OAKLAND, Calif. Los Angeles,41; Craig, St. Louis,38;Sandoval,San to the lineup with two hits, (10 innings) Arizona(Corbin 8-0) at ChicagoCubs(E.Jackson1being called up to help adepleted Francisco,37;DBrown,Philadelphia, 36, CGonzalez, SantiagowalkedJosh Reddick including a game-ending single in 7), 11:20a.m. Colorado,36; Rizzo,Chicago,36. staff, Everth Cabrera had three L.A. Dodgers(Ryu6-2) at Colorado(J.De LaRosa with the bases loaded and two DENVER — Dexter Fowler's RBI the10th inning that lifted Atlanta HOMERUNS —DBrown, Philadelphia,15; CGon6-3),1:10p.m. hits and two RBls, and San Diego zalez,Colorado,14;Jupton,Atlanta,14; Goldschmidt, outs in the10th inning to force in single down the first base line in to a win over Washington. Toronto (R.Ortiz 1 2) at SanDiego(Volquez4-5), beat Toronto. Arizona,13;Beltran, St.Louis,12; Gattis,Atlanta,12; 7:10 p.m. the winning run as Oakland topped the10th inning lifted Colorado Harper,Washingfon, 12;Tulowitzki, Colorado,12. Monday's Games Washington Atlanta Chicago. past Los Angeles. STOLENBASE S—Ecabrera, San Diego, 19; Toronto San Diego Miami atPhiladelphia,4:05 p.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi Segura,Mdwaukee,15, SMarte, Pittsburgh, 14; Mcab r hbi ab r hbi Colorado at Cincinnati, 4:10p.m. Spancf 5 0 0 0 Smmnsss 4 0 1 1 onzaLos Angeles Colorado Chicago Oakland Gose If 4 0 2 0 Denorfi cf-rf-If 4 0 1 0 Cutchen,Pittsburgh,14; Pierre,Miami, 13; CG PittsburghatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. Lmrdzzli 4 1 0 0 Heywrdrf 3 0 0 0 lez, Colorado,12; CGomez, Milwaukee,11; DWright, ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi Wagnerp 0 0 0 0 Evcarrss 4 0 3 2 OaklandatMilwaukee,5:10 p.m. Zmrmn 3b 4 0 2 0 RJhnsn ph-rf 1 0 1 0 New York,11. C rwfrdlf 2 0 2 0 Fowlercf 6 1 2 2 DeAzacf 5 1 2 2 Lowrie2b-ss 5 1 4 0 Bonif acph I 0 0 0 Headly3b 4 0 0 0 ArizonaatSt.Louis,5:15p.m. LaRochlb 3 0 I 0 J.uptonlt 4 0 0 0 STRIKEOUTS —Samardzija, Chicago,91; AJBurVnSlykpr-If 2 I 0 0 LeMahi2b 5 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 5 0 1 0 CYoungcf-If 6 1 3 1 Bautistrf 5 0 0 0 Quentinli 3 0 2 0 San Dlego atL.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m. Dsmndss 4 0 I 1 FFrmn1b 4 0 0 0 nett, Pittsburgh,89;Harvey NewYork,84; Wainwright, Riosrf 4 0 2 0 Cespdsdh 5 0 2 1 M .Effis2b 4 0 0 0 CGnzlzlf 5 1 2 2 Encrnc3b 4 0 0 0 Venalepr-rf 0 0 0 0 B erndnrf 4 0 0 0 Gattisc 30 00 S t. Louis, 84; Kershaw, LosAngeles, 82; Bumgamer, A dGnzl1b 2 0 1 1 Tlwtzkss 5 1 2 0 A.Dunn1b 5 0 1 1 Dnldsn3b 5 1 2 0 Arencilc 4 0 1 0 Gyorko2b 4 1 I 0 Espinos 2b 4 0 0 0 JSchafr pr 0 1 0 0 SanFrancisco,75; Strasburg,Washington, 73. American League Konerkdh 2 0 0 0 Freimn1b 3 0 1 1 Ethierrf 5 0 0 0 Cuddyrrf 4 2 2 2 KSuzuk c 4 0 0 0 CJhnsn 3b 3 0 I 0 L ind1b 4 2 2 I Grandlc 4 I 1 0 HrstnJr3b 5 1 2 1 Helton1b 5 0 1 0 C.Weff sph-dh2 0 0 0 Mossph-1b 1 0 0 0 DeRosa2b 3 0 2 0 Blanksrf-1b 4 1 2 1 GGnzlz p 2 0 I 0 R.Pena ph 1 0 0 0 V iciedolf 4 0 1 0 Reddckrf 5 0 2 1 Guerrirp 0 0 0 0 Arenad 3b 5 0 2 1 Kawskph 1 0 0 0 Guzmn1b 3 1 1 0 Koerns ph 1 0 0 0 uggla 2b 2 1 0 0 Giffaspi 3b 4 0 0 0 DNorrs c 4 1 1 0 S chmkrcf 5 1 2 1 Torrealc 4 2 2 0 Storen p 0 0 0 0 Bupton cf 4 0 2 1 Twins 5, Mariners 4 CIRsmscf 4 1 2 1 Amarstcf 1 0 0 0 Kppngr2b 4 I 2 0 S.Smithlf 4 0 0 0 P untoss 5 1 1 0 Chacinp 1 0 0 0 M lztursss 4 0 1 0 Erlinp 2000 Abad p 0 0 0 0 THudsn p 1 0 0 0 Gimenzc 4 I 1 0 Crispph-cf 0 0 0 0 Fdrwcz c 5 1 2 3 Pachec ph 0 0 0 0 Buehrlep 2 0 0 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 T racyph 1 0 0 0 Avilanp 0 0 0 0 MINNEAPOLIS — Ryan Doumit's Rosales ss 3 0 1 0 G reinkp 3 1 1 0 Outmnp 0 0 0 0 Mecarrph-Ii 2 0 1 1 Kotsayph 1 010 HRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Mccnnph 1 0 0 0 two-run triple off TomWilhelmsen Sogardph-2b 2 0 0 0 P Rdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Escalnp 0 0 0 0 Grgrsnp 0 0 0 0 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 9 3 103 Totals 4 34 164 Belisarip 0 0 0 0 EYongph 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 8 3 113 Totals 3 4 4 123 Waldenp 0 0 0 0 with one out in the ninth inning Chicago 001 000 200 0 3 Lcruzph I 0 0 0 Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 Toronto 0 10 100 001 — 3 T otals 3 6 1 5 1 Totals 3 12 5 2 sent Minnesota past Seattle. This O akland 110 010 000 1 4 H owellp 0 0 0 0 Belislep 0 0 0 0 San Diego 030 1 0 0 Ogx4 Washington 000 100 000 0 1 Twooutswhenwinning runscored. uribe3b 0 0 0 0 WRosrph 1 0 1 0 E—Buehrle (2). LOB —Toronto 8, SanDiego9. was the third blown save of the A tlanta 0 0 1000 000 1 2 DP — Chicago 1, Oakland 1. LOB—Chicago 7, 3 9 6 116 Totals 4 2 7 147 28 — Gose (2), Lind(11), Quentin 2 (11), Grandal Oneoutwhenwinning runscored. season for Wilhelmsen (0-1), all in Oakland18. 2B De Aza(11), Gimenez(2), Lowrie Totals Los Angeles 003 002 100 0 6 (1), Guzman (4). HR—Lind (5). CS—Venable (3). E—F.Freeman (5). DP—Washington 1. LOB(17), C.Young 2 (8), Cespedes(8), D.Norris (9). 3BColorado 010 030 200 1 7 his past four tries. S Erlin. Washington6,Atlanta5. 28—LaRoche(6), C.Johnson Freiman(I). SB—DeAza(6). CS—Cespedes(5). Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. Toronto IP H R E R BBSO (11) SB —J.schafer (7). S—T.Hudson. Chicago IP H R E R BB SO E—M.Effis (2), Federowicz(1), LeMahieu (1). Washing 6 10 4 3 1 2 ton I P H R E R BB SO BuehrleL,2-4 Seattle Minnesota 5 1-3 10 3 3 3 4 Quintana D P — Lo s An gel e s1, Col o rado1. LOB — Los Ang eles 2 2 0 0 1 0 GGonzalez 7 3 1 1 1 7 Wagner ab r hbi ab r hbi 12-3 1 0 0 0 1 8, Colorado10. 2B Lindstrom — C .cr aw f o rd 2 (12), Hai r ston Jr San Diego Storen 1 0 0 0 0 2 EnChvzrf 4 0 1 0 EEscor3b 4 1 0 0 Crain 1 2 0 0 0 1 (3), Federowi c (1), z Are nad o (8). 38 — C .G onz a l e z (3 ). Eriln W,I-O 62-3 82 2 0 4 Abad 1 1 0 0 0 1 Baylf 5 2 2 2 Mauerdh 3 1 1 0 N.Jones 0 1 0 0 0 0 HR — Federowicz (1), C.Gonzalez (14), Cuddyer (9). H.RodriguezL,0-1 1-3 1 I 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 ThayerH,9 S eager3b 5 2 2 I Wlnghlt 4 0 0 I H.Santi a go L,1-4 12-3 2 1 1 5 1 S B Fowler (10). S — C hac i n . SF — A d G onz a le z GregersonS,1-2 1 3 1 1 0 0 Atlanta P K Morls1b 4 0 1 0 Doumitc 5 1 3 2 Oakland LosAngeles IP H R ER BB SO T.Hudson 71-3 3 1 0 1 4 I banezdh 4 0 1 1 Parmelrf 3 1 1 0 Straily 6 6 1 1 0 8 Greinke 5 1-3 9 4 4 3 3 Avilan 2-3 0 0 0 0 I Frnkn2b 3 0 0 0Col aeff lb 4 0 1 0 Doolittle BS,2-2 1 3 2 2 1 0 PRodriguezH,7 1 0 0 0 0 1 Kimbrel 1 2 0 0 0 1 MSndrscf 4 0 2 0 Dozier2b 3 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 I Belisario 86,3-4 2- 3 2 2 2 0 1 WaldenW,2-1 1 S hppchc 4 0 0 0 Hicksci 4 0 0 0 Cook 0 0 0 0 0 Baltour I I 0 0 0 0 Howell 21-3 0 0 0 0 4 T—3'07 A—46,910(49,586) Ryanss 4 0 1 0 Flormnss 3 1 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Guerrier L,1-2 Neshek 1 3 3 1 1 0 0 T otals 3 7 4 104 Totals 3 3 5 7 4 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Colorado Seattle 2 00 000 200 — 4 BlevinsW,4-0 pItched to1baterin the9th. Diamoitdbacks 12, Cubs 4 Chacin 6 9 5 5 2 2 M innesota 010 0 0 1 003 — 6 N.Jones Balk—Qui n tana. 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Outman Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. I 1-3 2 I 1 0 2 Escalona CHICAGO — Paul Goldschmidt E—Harang (I), Ryan (4), E.Escobar (3). T—3:49. A—26,646(35,067). Brothers 1 0 0 0 1 2 DP—Minnesota1. LOB—Seatle 8, Minnesota 10. hit a tiebreaking grand slam in the elisleW,3-2 1 0 0 0 0 0 2B M Saunders (6), Doumit(11). 3B Doumit (1). Royals 4, Rangers1 (10 innings) BHBP —by Chacin (M.Effis). PB—Federowicz, Tor- eighth inning, leading Arizona past HR — Bay2(8), Seager (7). SF—Wil ingham. realba. Seattle IP H R E R BB SO Chicago. T—3'39 A—36,703(50,398) Harang 6 4 2 1 2 4 ARLINGTON,Texas — Robbie I O.Perez H,2 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Ross hit David Lough with a pitch I I I p 0 p P Arizona Chicago CappsH,5 1-3 I 0 0 0 0 with the bases loaded to score the Cardinals 8, Giants 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi FurbushH,3 1 0 0 0 1 1 GParra rf 3 2 2 2 DeJess cf 4 1 1 0 (First Game) WilhelmsenL,0-1 BS,31-3 1 3 3 3 0 go-ahead run in the10th inning Gregrsss 5 3 2 0 Scastross 3100 Minnesota and Kansas City beat Texas. Gldsch1b 5 3 2 4 Rizzo1b 3 1 0 0 Pearl District Location Correia 62-3 7 4 4 2 3 ST.LOUIS — Rookie Shelby 0 M Mntrc 4 0 2 0 ASorinlt 3 0 0 I Duensing 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 P rado 3b 5 1 1 1 Schrhlt rf 4 1 2 2 Texas Miller pitched six-hit ball for seven Fien 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 KansasCity 'w ab r hbi ab r hbi Kubelli 6 0 2 4 Castiffoc 3 0 0 1 ThielbarW,1-0 I 1 0 0 0 I innings and backupcatcher Tony AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 Andrusss 4 0 0 0 Poffockcf 6 0 1 0 Vauen3b 3 0 0 0 Includes: Cappspitchedto I batterinthe 8th. A Escorss 5 I I 0 DvMrplt 5 0 I 0 Cruz hit two doubles and drove Blmqst2b 4 2 3 0 Barney2b 3 0 0 0 WP — Wilhelmsen. Hosmer1b 5 1 3 0 Brkmndh 1 0 0 0 Kenndyp 2 0 1 0 Smrdzjp 2 0 0 0 T—3:05.A—33,417 (39,021) in a pair of runs for St. Louis in — COntinental BreakfaSt ~ W I h u ' ~ r r,M BButlerdh 4 1 0 0 JeBakrph-dh 3 0 0 0 Hinskeph 1 0 0 0 Russellp 0 0 0 0 ,~ „'t o P the opener of a doubleheader DHmdzp 0 0 0 0 Viganvp 0 0 0 0 Mostks 3b 5 0 0 0 Beltre 3b 4 1 1 0 — 24/7 Espresso L.caincf 4 0 2 0 LGarci3b 0 0 0 0 P nngtnph I 1 1 1 Marmlp 0 0 0 0 Red Sox11, Yankees1 sweep of San Francisco. Adam L oughrf 4 I I I N .cruzrf 4 0 I 0 M tRynlp 0 0 0 0 BParkrp 0 0 0 0 Wainwright struck out10 in his Francrpr-rl 0 0 0 0 Morlnd1b 3 0 1 1 Borbon ph 1 0 0 0 - NY Times NEW YORK — Mike Napoli hit a ~222 rvu I 'g >~ ir . Zt AMoorec 3 0 2 0 Przynsc 4 0 2 0 Putnmp 0 0 0 0 14th complete game and third this i 2.' grand slam right after a mound Kottarsph-c 2 0 1 2 Profar2b 4 0 0 0 Totals 4 2 121712 Totals 2 9 4 3 4 season in the late game. 1 0 0 0 Arizona 100 000 344 — 12 conference, Felix Doubront stifled EJhnsn2b 5 0 1 0 LMartncf Gentryph-cf 2 0 0 0 Chicago 3 00 000 100 — 4 Tpg , the Yankeesonceagain and San Francisco St. Louis LOB —Arizona13, Chicago1. 28—G.Parra (17), L% T otals 4 1 4 113 Totals 3 5 I 6 I ab r hbi ab r hbi Kansas City 000 010 000 3 4 Gregorius(9), Kubel (4), Pennington(6), DeJesus Boston sent New York to its sixth — Wine & CheeSe ReCePtiOn GBlanc cf 4 0 0 0 Mcrpnt3b 4 1 1 1 T exas 0 0 01 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 (14), Schierho tz (15). HR —G.Parra (5), Goldschmidt loss in sevengames. 4111 E A Moore(1), L.Martin(2). LOB KansasCity Milares p 0 0 0 0 Jaycf (13), Schierholtz (7). S — Kennedy. SF—G.Parra, Quirozc 0 0 0 0 Hoffidylf 4 0 0 0 11, Texas7. 2B—Kottaras (3), Pierzynski(3). SBA.Soriano. Boston New York Hosmer(4), A.Moore(I), E.Johnson(8), L.Martin (8). 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Drought Continued from D1 T he Triple Crown is r u n on a compressed schedule, just five weeks from start to finish. Each race varies in distance, from I 'r~ miles at the Derby to 1/i6 miles at the Preakness to I'/~ miles at the Belmont — different tracks and crowded fields, with 20 horses typically c ontesting the rough-and-tumble Derby. To understand what a Triple try means to racing fans, just look at Belmont attendance. The track on Long Island might draw in the neighborhood of 50,000 fans when racing's greatest prize isn't on the line. But when it is, the numbers soar. F rom 2002-04, th e r a c e attracted its three largest crowds — more than 100,000 each year — an d i n 2 0 08, more than 9 4 ,000 p acked Belmont Park only to see Big Brown fail to finish his Triple bid as Da'Tara pulled off an upset. Those years also netted the most eyeballs for NBC and ABC's telecasts of the race. The networks posted monster viewership each year, with the highest number of 21.86 million tuning in for Smarty Jones' attempt in 2004. The small chestnut colt h elped bring in a record 120,139 fans to Belmont that day. Seattle Slew is the only Triple Crown winner to account for one of the top-10 crowds on Belmont day. His winning bid in 1977 attracted 71,026 back when the feat wasn't as p ublicized because TV w as primarily t h r e e c h a nnels, cable was in its infancy, and the Internet and social media didn't exist. T hat's not a l l t h a t h a s changed about t h e r a c ing landscape. Tracks were once among the few o u tlets for gambling, but now c asinos dot the landscape, wagers can be placed online from home, p oker tournaments ai r i n prime time and lottery jackpots are in the hundreds of millions. It's easy to make a case that it's become harder to win a Triple Crown since the 1970s, too. Under a new system instituted this year by Churchill Downs, there i s i n c reased p ressure to qualify fo r t h e Kentucky Derby by racking up points in designated races. If a horse doesn't have enough points,then those prep races turn into must-wins. Qualifying was previously based on earnings in graded stakes
said. "They were not only fast and really good horses, they were made of iron." Trainers have to adjust their methods to their horses, making sure the four-legged athletes are rested yet fit enough to run on the three big days. "Once you get into the Triple Crown series then it is really difficult to keep the energy level up, the soundness, keep them focused and keep them happy," Lukas said. "Time is your ally when you're training horses and you don't get it. If we had more spacing it would be a lot easier. It makes it difficult and that's why the Triple Crown is such a special and hard-to-achieve honor."
Breeding ha s
c h anged
since the glut of Triple Crown winners in the 1970s, when the industry was focused on breeding horsesto race them as opposed to today's emphasis on sales. "I think t h at's legitimate and that goes to the whole sales theory that you have to have something perform quickly for the new buyer," said Ogden Mills "Dinny" Phipps, a prominent breeder and co-owner of Orb. "That can be a small thing, but I don't think it's THE reason." While foal crops are greater these days, the number of horses being bred and trained to race has been dropping in the past five years due to the recession, reduced purse m oney, breeding fees a n d sales prices. "The guys i n K e n tucky h ave figured out t h a t t h e horses that sell well, those are the ones they want to breed," Lukas said. "They don't get too concerned about step two, that's how are they going to turn out as racehorses. They want them to look good, and they breed them that way." Yet even with racing deemphasized,the horses comp eting for t h e T r i ple f i n d the going tougher. Previous winners faced much smaller fields, creating fewer traffic problems. "I don't like 20-horse fields," Phipps said. "I don't think it's fair on the horse, and I don't think it a l ways creates the right winner." Only Omaha (1935), War Admiral (1937) and Assault
(1946) began their Triple
Crown bid i n a K e n t ucky Derby that had more than 15 starters. Affirmed faced 22 rivals in the whole series. Big Brown? Try 38. There also have long been questions about how medications affect racing, not only illegal drugs but those allowed races, a bigger pool. on race day, including Lasix, H all of F ame t r ainer D . an anti-bleeding medication. Wayne Lukas, who owns a There has been a movement record 14 victories in Triple to ban Lasix in the U.S.— like Crown races, views the se- it is in other countries — but ries as five races, including prominent Kentucky veteria couple of preps, instead of narian Dr. Larry B r amlage just the Derby, Preakness and doesn't think it has affected Belmont. the Triple Crown. "It's becoming increasingly "I don't think on that issue more difficult to perform," he that it's played any role at said. "You can't take a soft ap- all," he said. "It's duration is proach to the Derby. You've so short-lived that as long as got to have two or three tough the horse is eating a normal races to get i nto th e d a rn diet and has access to water, thing. When you get here (at it would never have a residual the Derby), you've used up a effect from the Derby to the certain amount of energy." Preakness and to the Belmont Still, horses today h a ve Stakes to affect the likelihood lighter schedules than their of a Triple Crown winner." a ncestors, w i t h t rai n e r s Bad racing luck, however, choosing torun their horses has done in some potential sparingly and allowing ample history-makers. time between races. A nose was all that sepaOrb made just three starts rated Real Quiet from racing this year before winning the immortality. He was beaten Derby, typical of many Triple by the smallest of margins in Crown c o ntenders. V erra- the 1998 Belmont, when Viczano, who finished 14th in the tory Gallop stuck his nose in Derby, didn't run at all as a front at the wire. 2-year-old. "Real Quiet is the one I've " They don't seem t o b e always felt got away from me," overall quite as tough or dura- said Baffert, who also had his ble as horses in the past," said Triple Crown hopes dashed in Cauthen, who no w b r eeds 1997 with Silver Charm. "He horses on his farm in Verona, was ready to do it." Ky. "Affirmed ran nine or 10 On the morning of the 1979 times as a 2-year-old and he Belmont, a safety pin was disthrived on his racing. covered embedded in Spec"Thirty years ago, it was tacular Bid's hoof. He didn't nothing to race a horse every appear lame, so he ran in the couple of weeks and some- race. His teenage jockey, Ron times you might race them Franklin, gunned the colt to twice in a week. You don't the earlylead before he evensee that much anymore. I'm tually faded to third. not saying t h ey're w r ong, In the end, it may just come but it's a different mindset. down to waiting for a horse They want their horses to be that's more durable andtoughas fresh as possible and are er than all the competition. "We haven'thad a dominant priming them for a c ertain race, and some of the horses horse like Secretariat or Slew a re racing just four or f i v e lately," Lukas said. "We'll get times (overall) before they get a Triple Crown winner when to the Derby." we get a dominant horse." By comparison, 1948 Triple Until then, expect owners, Crown winner Citation raced trainersand jockeys to keep 16 times before the Kentucky chasing the dream. "I guess it is (disappointDerby. Secretariat raced 12 times before the Derby, while ing) with the fans," said Orb's Seattle Slew raced six times. trainer, Shug M c G aughey, "I have so much respect "but it's not to me because for those (11) horses," Hall there's always the pursuit. It of Fame trainer Bob Baffert makes you want it more."
Prefontaine Continued from D1 But the sellout crowd of 12,816 erupted into cheers when Cain's record was announced. One fan shouted to the high school junior: "Come to Oregon!" "I'm not really used to this. I'm still a star-struck little kid out there, so it's really cool," Cain said. Gatlin won the Olympic gold medal at the Athens Games, but his promising career was derailed in 2006 by a positive drug test that led to a four-year ban. He has sinceworked hard to repair his past and was the defending champion at the Prefontaine, winning last year in 9.9 in a tuneup for the U.S. Olympic trials. "I felt like I had a pretty good start, and I brought it home pretty good," Gatlin said."Last year, my 20 meters before the finish line wasn't as strong as I wanted it to be. That's what we've been working on." Gatlin took longer than any other athlete on his victory lap, stopping frequently to sign autographs and pose for pictures. In the women's 400, Olympic gold medalist Sanya-Richards Ross finished last in her first race since having surgery on her right big toe last September. The event featured all three medalists from the L o ndon Games, RichardsRoss, Christine Ohuruogu and DeeDee Trotter. "It was rough today," Richards-Ross
Video Continued from D1
"They've got a bigger
the 400 in 50.01 seconds. In other events, Hellen Obiri of Kenya won the women's 1,500 in 3:58.58, and Ethiopian Tirunesh Dibaba took the 5,000 in 14:42.01. Jamaican Shelly-Ann F r aser-Price won the women's 100 in 10.71. American Allyson Felix fell to seventh. "I still have some work do," said Felix, who says she's working to get ready for the U.S. championships in Des Moines later this month.
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Don Ryan /The Associated Press
Justin Gatlin wins the100-meter race during the Prefontaine Classic In Eugene on Saturday. said. "I realized I wasn't going to really push it as well as I wanted to." Armantle Montsho of Botswana won
"You've got to get the match loaded ona computer and then go through it and stop it, so the course of a three-hour match, it can take you six or seven hours to break it down and to think what you're looking for as well," Cahill said. "In football, one camera is allocated to the defenders, one for the centerplayers,one for the onball players and then for the attacking players. "So for tennis obviously being one-on-one, it was a lot of man hours, but it was ultimately worth it," he said. "Because you can sit a t ennis player down and watch a three-hour match and it sort of gets lost in the wash, but if you can sit a player down and say there are three specific things I need you to look at, and it's going to take a matter of 11 minutes and you can go to each of those specific things, I think the message goes home much quicker." Analysis systems have since becomemore sophisticated and nimble but long hours remain part of the job description. In Melbourne, Australia, at Tennis Australia's new video performance analysis center, Darren McMurtrie, head of the program, said he had only one day off in December and January — Christmas Day. "We're the only ones to my knowledge who d o c o d ed matches to this degree," McMurtrie said in an interview in Melbourne this year. "So you can say, 'OK, show me where Serena Williams serves on a break point,' and we can give you the video of that over so many matches." McMurtrie said Australia's top-ranked women's player, Samantha Stosur, to cite an example, would receive a link to the footage that she could then access through a touchscreen tablet computer. What is unusual about Tennis A u stralia's p r oprietary system is the depth of its database and its ability to provide footage and analysis of even
g ol d m e dalist
LaShawn Merritt won the men's 400 in 44:32,and Jamaican Nickel Ashmeade ran the 200 in 20:14 to best Walter Dix in 20:16. "This is just my second 400 in nine months. But I'm a competitor and I know every time I line up against that field I'm going to have to run, so I wanted to put a race together," Merritt said. In the 5,000, Kenyan Edwin Cheruiyot Soi won in 13:04.75, just in front of Olympic gold medalist Mo Farah of Britain in 13:05.88. Farah, who won gold medals in both the 5,000 and 10,000 at the London G ames, was supposed to run i n t h e 10,000 at Hayward Field on Friday night but withdrew from the race a day earlier because ofa stomach bug he picked up two weeks ago at a meet in California. He decided to run the 5,000 instead with training partner and friend Galen
Rupp. Rupp, who won the silver in the 10,000 in London, came in sixth.
"We're starting to r ecord off all the streaming around the world," McMurtrie said. "We do as much as we can ourselves, too, on court. Sometimes you're out on some outer court and it's 10:30 at night and you're thinking, 'What am I filming this for?' And then the next week it comes in
lot more coaches, myself included, who are using it to see patterns and how opponents play when they are tight and how they play when they are leading. It's getting absolutely more popular in tennis." But Simon cautioned that video analysis should be handled with care. "The video really can be a plus, but you have to really use it right otherwise it's too much information, and it can be almost paralyzing," he said. "Tennis is in the moment. It's about instinct, too. When the ball comes, you've got to hit it and perhaps your video analysis determined it was better to return serve to a certain spot but if at that moment, you really feel you want to put it somewhere else, you still need to listen to that. And you need to do that."
budget than we do," Patrick McEnroe, head of player development at th e U . S. Tennis Association, said of the Australians. P rivate c o aches a r e also turning in increasing really handy." numbers to detailed video Magnus Norman, the Swedanalysis, including Simon's ish former star now coaching G erman coach, Jan D e Stanislas Wawrinka, said he Witt, whom Simon, a tophad noticed a big change at the 20 player, hired last year in highest reaches of the profespart because of his relentsional game in just the past less tactical focus. three years. "I know that the tactics " We use it m or e a t o u r are very important to him, academy when we work on and they arefor me, too," technique, looking at our own Simon, aFrenchman, said players' strokes and stuff like in an interview after his that because it's much easier to five-set victory over Sam examine all that when it's slow Querrey in the third round. motion," Norman said Satur"I chose Jan because I think day. "But I obviously know a he can make me very comfortable with my choices. I make a lot more choices on the court than most of my opponents in terms of ~ :as c h a c c e n s e . i o ~ s s ~ r u tactics and strategy. I didn't play the same in my first previously the 3:33 CHARITYRUN/WALK couple of rounds as I played against Sam, whereas Sam Saturday, June 15 " played much morethe same style against everyone. register 5 "He has th e w eapons www.BijtteBurner.com he's going to use. His serve, his forehand. Most players 10P/o of proceeds are very focused on what's benefit local charities h appening w i t h the m selves, on their side of the protecting at-nsk children net. I'm much more focused and preserving Pilot Butte on what's happening on the State Park other side of the net. So the Not Abne & Rlot Butte Partnem tactics are very important to me, and Jan is very good with this, especially with the help of the video." Coaches and entourage members have been filming matches and practice sessions on a regular basis since the advent of the video camera. But one of the first tennis coaches at the elite level to make use of video to dissect opponents' tendencies was the Australian Darren Cahill when I • I • he was coaching Lleyton obscure players. Hewitt and Andre Agassi in the early 2000s. He received his inspiration from Australian rules football. "I actually bought a system c a lled S p o rtsCode f rom the A FL," or A u stralian Football L eague, "clubs and the AFL clubs got it from the NFL and basketball in America, and I used it for a lot of the Lleyton Hewitt matches when I was with him and then took it on through with Andre," Cahill said. "You build up a library of m atches. It's different when you go from one player to the next because obviously everyone does not see the same player the same way, but I Free Clinics J Local Breweries j Food used it when I was one-onone my wholecareer.It's a Raffle Prizes to be Given Away great thing. "I think it's under-tapped, P ro u d l y H o s t e d b y : value-added in tennis, and we don't really go after it enough in coaching, and I think we're finding more and more peopleare starting to invest in that." P RO N G H O R N Cahill kept his usage of A n A u b e r g e R e s o rt the system a secret while he was coaching Hewitt o o • • ~ • • • and Agassi. "I did it b ecause I thought it was an F eat u r i n g : edge, simple as that," Cahill v o k e y I C a ll a w a y I C l e v e la n d I Fo o t j o y I K C e r t i f ie d I M iz u n o I N i k e I O a k l e y said. P IN G I S c o t t y C a m e r o n I T it le i s t I T a y l o r M a d e I T h e r a p e u t i c A s s o c . I T P I It was labor intensive.
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G OLF D EM O D A Y S at u r d a y , J u n e
1 0: OOAM — 4: OOPM 1
OPEN TO AL L
D6 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 20'l3 + tw4
NHL PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP
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Blackhawks beat Kings in Game1 'j~l /
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The Associated Press
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Tuesday. "Scoring doesn't simply come from t h e o ff ensive zone," Williams said. "It comes from being good in your own zone, breaking out together and scoring off the rush. We didn't have enough of that." T he B l a ckhawks a n d Kings returned to the ice after surviving strenuous secperiod, helping the Chicago ond-round tests. Blackhawks beat the Los AnTop-seeded Chi c ago geles Kings 2-1 on Saturday stormed back to beat Dein the opener of the Western troit after trailing 3-1 in the Conference finals. series, winning Game 7 on Patrick Sharp also scored Brent Seabrook's overtime and Corey Crawford made goal Wednesday night. Fifth21 saves for the Blackhawks, seeded Los A n geles was who generated just enough pushed to the brink of elimioffense to improve to 7-1 at nation by the Sharks in a sehome in the playoffs. They ries in which the home team also have won four in a row won every game. heading into Game 2 today. For the first period and "It's always great when much of the second of the you win the first game, espe- conference finals o p ener, cially back to back, give you Chicago l ooked h o peless a little momentum," Hossa against Quick and Los Ansaid. "I felt like we did lots of geles' talented defensemen. good things today. We know Drew Doughty, Robyn Rewe have to be better (Sun- gehr and Company kept the day) and keep doing those Blackhawks' fleet forwards things." in check, and Quick made it Jonathan Quick stopped look as if there was a white 34 shots, and Justin Wi lwall moving from side to l iams scored for Los A n side in net. Also on Saturday: geles, which has won just one of seven road games in B ruins 3 , P e nguins 0 : the playoffs. The d efend- PITTSBURGH David ing Stanley Cup champions Krejciscored two more goals got center Jarret Stoll back during his t orrid postseafrom a suspected concus- son and Boston shut down sion, but their offensive funk Pittsburgh in th e opening continued. game of the Eastern Confer"I think the two guys that ence finals. Nathan Horton scored for them are going to added an insurance goal in score goals," Kings coach the third period, and Tuukka Darryl S u tter s a id. "We Rask stopped 29 shots for the have guys that have to score Bruins, who silenced Sidgoals. That's how close it ney Crosby and the rest of will be." the NHL's top-scoring team. Los Angeles has scored Pittsburgh came in averag27 times in 14 playoff games. ing a league-high 4.27 goals The past three have gone to in the playoffs but couldn't Williams, who was respon- solve Rask. The Penguins sible for the Kings' offense hit the post six times and in a 2-1 victory over the San seemed a little bit off followJose Sharks in Game 7 of ing an eight-day break bethe second-round series on tween rounds. CHICAGO Marian Hossa winked when the television camera focused on him during the national anthem, a signal to his friends watching the game back home in Slovakia.Then he g ave them s omething t o cheer about. Hossa tipped in the tiebreaking goal in the second
r /
Matthew Aimonetti / For The Bulletin
Bend High senior Jonah Koski, second from right, is congratulated by his Lava Bear teammates after scoring in the fifth inning. Koski went 3-for-3 in his final game for Bend.
Bears
top of the sixth with a single to left field. Gardner got the Continued from 01 next two batters to fly out, but Working with a two-run lead then he walked pinch hitter after the first inning, Lava Bear Joseph Chamberlain, putting seniorpitcher Caleb Gardner runners on first and second cruised on the mound until the bases. Facing Sherwood's No. sixth. Bend's No. 2 starter for 5 hitter, A lex Barzee, Gardner most of the season, Gardner began to show signs of fatigue, retired the first nine batters he including a wild pitch that alfaced and allowed just one hit lowed the Bowmen runners to and one walk through the first advance to second and third. fiveframes. With the count 2-2, Barzee " I knew I h a d t o t h r ow laced a double into right field strikes,"Gardner said. "They that drove home both runners, walk a lot and get hit a lot. making the score 3-2. (Sherwood batters drew nine That was enough for Baiwalks and were hit five times ley, who replaced Gardner on by pitches in the Bowmen's the mound with DeGaetano, Bend's pitching ace all season, 5-4, 11-inning semifinal win over Redmond.) I really con- who started Saturday's final centrated on getting ahead in at second base. Working on the count." three days' rest — he threw a The Bears made it 3-0 in three-hit complete game Tuesthe bottom of the fifth when day in the Bears' 9-2 semifiNathan Miller lined a two-out nal victory over Wilsonville single to right field that scored — DeGaetano nevergot comKoski from second base. fortable on the hill Saturday "The kids played great for and issued three consecutive (five) innings," Bailey said. walks before being replaced Then the bottom fell out. by Dalton Hurd. Sherwood l eadoff h i t t er DeGaetano and Hurd each Joseph Balfour started the walked in a r un, and Sher-
wood had grabbed a 4-3 lead and all the momentum by the time Bend went to bat in the bottom half of the inning. nYou make decisions and s ometimes they w or k a n d sometimes they don't," Bailey said of the pitching switch. "Caleb looked like he was running out of gas a little bit and he was getting up there in the pitch count." G ardner had t h r own 8 7 pitches. Barzee came up with another big hit in the seventh, knocking in two runs with a base-loaded single to stretch the Bowmen's lead to 6 - 3. Sherwood ended up scoring seven runs in the seventh off three hits, four walks and a hit batter, putting Bend in an 11-3 hole with only one at-bat left. Lava Bear senior Kyle Bailey opened the bottom of the seventh with a single — he eventually scored on Erlandson's sacrifice fly — but Balfour, who took the mound in relief of Moore in the sixth inning, finished off the game by getting Godlove to ground out.
Barzee led the way for Sherwood, ending the game 2-for-4 with two runs scored and four RBIs. Balfour added a 3-for-5, two-RBI performance, but the Bowmen were aided in large part by the 10 walks issued by Bend pitchers. Koski paced the Bears on offense, going 3-for-3 with one RBI in his final high school baseball game. Hurd also had three hits, and Erlandson, DeGaetano and Miller each recorded RBIs. On the m ound, Gardner struck out six batters and allowed three runs on three hits over 5'/3 innings. DeGaetano was tagged with the loss, as the run he allowed gave Sherwood a 4-3 lead. "I'm so proud to be part of this group," said Gardner, adding that "I've played with a lot of these guys for six-plus years." "It's not the way we wanted to end the season," Koski said. "But I loved playing with this team. They're like family." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes~bendbulletin.com.
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GOLF ROUNDUP
Kuchar up two at Memorial The Associated Press DUBLIN, O h io — M att Kuchar couldn't think of conditions more difficult than Saturday in the Memorial, and he had plenty of evidence. T he swirling w i n d t h a t made it difficult to pull the right club. Fast greens that led to 65 three-putts in the third round alone. And a 44 on the back nine for Tiger Woods, the highest nine-hole score of his professional career. "I think most of us would tend to be surprised any time Tiger shoots a number like that, but a lot m ore understandable in these conditions," Kuchar said after hanging on for a 2-under 70 that gave him a two-shot lead. "If you're not on good form, these conditions are really go-
ing to beat you up." Woods rallied on the front nine to salvage a 79, matching his second-worst score on the PGA Tour. And that wasn't even the highest score on a tough day at M u irfield Village. Jordan Spieth shot 45 on the front nine for an 82, while Zach Johnson an d J u stin Hicks each had an 81. Kevin Chappell m atched the best round of the day with a 4-under 68, leaving him two shots out of the lead, along with Kyle Stanley, who had a 70. Chappell loves having a chance to win his first PGA Tour event, which isn't to suggest it was fun getting to that position. "I guess it's like a p r i ze fighter," Chappell said. "He enjoys winning, but I d o n't know if he enjoys getting hit that much." Kuchar was at 8-under 208,
among 10 players separated by four shots. "It was a bit of survival," Kuchar said. "I was fortunate to make a handful of birdies. I think anytime you make a birdie in these conditions, you feel like you're really up on the field here. Most of these holes, you're looking at just getting
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Matt Kuchar reacts while making a birdie on the 10th hole during the third round of the Memorial on Saturday in Dublin, Ohio. Kuchar is up two strokes heading into today's final round. out with a par." Woods didn't get away with anything. Going for his sixth win at the Memorial, and his fourth victory in his past five tournaments, Woods had two double
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GALLOWA Y TOW N S H I P, N.J. — Shanshan Feng shot a marvelous 4-under 67 before the wind picked up and grabbed a three-shot lead after two rounds of the ShopRite bogeys and a triple bogey on LPGA Classic. First-round coleader Moriya Jutanugarn of the back nine for a 44, and he did that without a penalty Thailand and Haeji Kang of shot. South Korea shared second at "The conditions were tough 3 under. Jutanugarn had a 73, and when I m i ssed it cost and Kang shot 69. me," Woods said through a Waldorf leads Champions PGA Tour media official. "I Tour event: DES M O INES, caught the wrong gusts at the Iowa — Duffy Waldorf shot wrong time, made a couple a 5-under 67 to take a onebad swings and all in all, it just stroke lead after the second went the wrong way." round o f t h e Ch a m pions Tour's Principal Charity ClasHe wound up 16 shots out sic. Waldorf had an 8-under of the lead. Woods will tee off late today, but on the opposite 136 total. Bart B r yant and side of the course in the twoJay Don Blake were tied for second. Bryant had a 64, and teestartbecause ofweather. The tournament was happy Blake shot a 66. Finish golfer tops Nordea just to complete 54 holes with m id-afternoon storms t h a t Masters: STOCKHOLM avoided Muirfield Village. Finland's Mikko Ilonen shot a Bill Haas, the 36-hole leader, 7-under 65 in wet conditions ran off three straight bogeys to take a two-stroke lead over late in his round for a 76, and Sweden's Alexander Noren he wasn't all that upset about in the Nordea Masters. Ilonen it. Haas was still only three had an 18-under 198 total at shots back, and it wasn't hard Bro Hof Slott. He shot a 63 on Friday. Noren had a 64. Amerto determine that par was a ican Peter Uihlein was 7 under good score. In other Saturday events: after a 68.
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The Bulletin file
Fans watcha Bend Elksgame atVince Genna Stadium.
2013 Bend Elks schedule The Elks' schedule for the upcoming season, which starts with West Coast Leagueplay on Wednesday: JUNE
JULY
AUGUST
5 Wed., 7:05 at Walla Walla 1 M o/., 6:35~ Kalo tajfr j ~ Tho., 6:35 ~ ottjil l z at B ellingham 6 Thu., 7:05 at Walla Walla 2 Tue., 6:35 Kl a math Falls 2 Fri., 7:05 7 Fri., 7:05 at Walla Walla 3~ Wed., 6:35~ Klamath Falls 3 Sat., 7:05 at Bellingham 8 Sat., 6:35 at Kelowna 4 Thu., 6:35 at Klamath Falls 4 Sun., 3:05 a t Bellingham 9 Sun., 6 05 at Kelowna 5 Fri., 7:35 at Medford 5 Mon., 6:40 at C orvallis 10 Mon.,6:35 at Kelowna 6 Sat., 6:35 at M e dford 6 Tue., 6:40 at C o rvallis 12 Wed.,6:35 Cowlitz 7 Sun., 5:05 at M e dford 7 Wed., 6:40 at C orvallis 13 Thu ., 6:35 Cowlitz 9 Tue., 6:35 To p Speed-x9 Fri., 6:35 ~ Wal l a Walla 14 Fri., 6:35 Cowlitz 10 Wed.,6:35 Medford 10 Sat.,6:35 Wall a Walla 15 Sat., 6:35 Kitsap 11 Thu., 6:35 Medford 11 6oo., 5:65 ~ W a l la Walla 16 Sun.,2:05 ~ Medford Ki t sap (DH) 12 Fri., 6:35 POSTSEASON 18 Tue.,6:35 at Kitsap 13 Sat., 6:35 San Francisco-x 13 Tue South Division Playoffs 19 Wed.,6:35 at Kitsap 14 Sun., 5:05 San Francisco-x 14 Wed South Division Playoffs 20 Thu.,6:35 at Kitsap 16 Tue., 6:35 K l a math Falls15 Thu South Division playoffs 21 Fri., 7:05 at Victoria 17 Wed.,6:35 vsPugetSound-x 17 Sat W C L Championships 22 Sat.,7:05 at Victoria 19 Fri., 6:35 at Cowlitz 19 Mon WCL Championships 23 Sun.,1:05 at Victoria 20 Sat.,6:35 atCowlitz 20 Tue W CL Championships 25 Tue.,6:35 Corvallis 21 Sun., 5:05 at C o wlitz 26 Wed.,6:35 Corvallis 23 Tue., 6:35 Thurston County-x All times p.m. 27 Thu., 6:35 Corvallis 25 Thu.,6:35 at Klamath Falls Homegames 29 Sat.,6:35 Kelowna 26 Fri.,6:35 a t K lamathFalls x-nonleague; (DH)-doubleheader 30 Sun.,5:05 II gg Kelowna 27 Sat.,6:35 ~ Wen atchee • Tuesday home games: Tickets, 28 Sun., 5:05 Wen a tchee beers and hot dogs cost $2 each 29 Mon., 6:35 Wen atchee • Wednesday home games: Kids Cowlitz under 12 get free tickets 30 Tue.,6:35 31 Wed., 6:35ggL Cowlitz
Qg
The Elks, in their 14thyear of competing in summer collegiate baseball, will havealmost anentirely new roster heading into theWest Coast Leagueseason The 2013 season is one of change for the Bend Elks. After finishing 24-30 last summer and fourth in the West Division of the West Coast League, the Elks, now in their14th year, handed the player recruiting reins
tosecond-yearheadcoachJoeDominiak and assistants Scott Anderson andAlan Embree. The lone notable returner is Grant New-
ton, a BendHigh graduate who led Seattle University with a.313 batting average this
spring, logging three homeruns and10 extra-base hits. Infielder Keach Ballard batted .365 for Oklahoma's Murray State College, finish-
ing the seasonwith10 home runs and40 runs batted in. Providing some firepower for Bend this season should be Kyle Giusti, who led Abilene Christian University with a.358 batting average to go along with 40 RBls and15 stolen bases. Feather River
College's Justin Bohn, whowill transfer to Oregon State University for next season, ranked third in the Golden Valley Confer-
ence with a.335 averagewhile stealing 30 bases. Excitement and anticipation surround
Going to the games
t I
V ce Genna Stad m
/ Wilson Ave 6/3j
Roosevelt ve.
All Bend Elks gamesare played at Bend's Vince
O
Lj
Reed MarketRoad For more information or for season ticket pricing, contact the Bend Elks at 541-312-9259 or visit www.bendelks.com/Tickets. For group tickets,
preferred level seats cost $8 each.Seasonticket packages for these seats areavailable.
contact Randi Holm at randi©bendelks.com.
Follow the Bend Elks, online This summer, the BendElks'
flat rate of $200.
following will grow courtesy of an innovative offering that will be a first for the West Coast
He started just 30 games for the Division-I Tigers this spring, but he hit.278 with19 RBls in 2012. On the mound, the Elks look strong.
2.77 ERA and 57 strikeouts.
A dash of local flavor could beseenon the Elks as well, with Summit High grad after notching a Northwest Conference-best seven saves for Linfield College, the NCAA
1.98 earned-run average in 22appearances
Division III national champion. Turner Gill,
and Taylor Elman limiting opponents to a.266 batting average in17/3 innings of
a graduate of Madras High School, returns to the Elks after a two-year hiatus. The
work.
University of Portland outfielder was limited
Left-hander Jace Puckett went 10-3 with a conference-leading 71 strikeouts and a1.35
to just seven games this spring due to injury, but in his first two seasons with the Pilots, Gill was twice named to the all-West Coast Conference first team and earned a Louisville Slugger Freshman All-American
earned-run average to guide Feather River College of Quincy, Calif., to its seventh straight Golden
selection. — Grant Lucas
Valley Conference title, and GeorgeFox
On the flip side
University's Clay
Gartner comes
• Turn the page overfor a breakdown
to Bend after
In addition to video feeds for
of the Bend Elks' roster and a look at
recording a
the rest of the WestCoast League
matchups at VinceGennaSta-
0
dium, the Elks will offer audio
League. Teamline Sports to makeall
coverage of all road gamesand home contests via a free internet stream through the Elks' website
2013 home games available to watch live online, starting with
and Teamline. Elks broadcaster Stephen Gall
The Elks have partnered with
Bend's homeopener against
will provide the play-by-play call
Cowlitz on June 12. Teamline, which will host the video feed, will
for audio and video streams, and Tris Reisfar will join Gall in the booth for all home games.
allow fans nearandfar to log in through the Elks' website and purchase either individual games for
For more information or to purchasegameand seasonpasses,visitwww.bendelks.com or
$8 per contest or a passfor the entire season for a
www.teamline.cc/bend.
Bulletin photo illustration
t
3665eahjhh %0 I R PRO N O TIONA L N I O H T S WED JUNE12 6:35PM Cowlitz BlackBears FRI JUNE 146:35PM Cowlitz BlackBears SUN JUNE166:35PM Kitsap (DH)Bltjeittckets THURS JUNE27 6:35PM Corvallis Knights INED JULY 3 6:35PM KlamathFallsGems FRI JULY 12 6:35PM Medford Rogues SAT JULY 13 6:35PM San Francisco Seals SUljl JULY 14 5:05PM San Francisco Seals TUES JULY16 6:35PM KlamathFallsGems WED JULY17 6:35PM PugetSound SAT JULY27 6:35PMWeffatcheeAPPlesox MON JULY29 6:35PMWenatcheeApplesox INED JULY 30 6:35PM Cowlitz BlackBears THURS AUGI 6:35PM j(owlitz BlackBears FRI AUG 9 6:35PM Walla WallaSweets SUN AUG I 1 5:05PMWalla WallaSweets
OPENING NIGHT« FREEKid's Wednesday Silipiat Night-Free Silipint to first 1,000 guests +>"'f"5 M"6 Father's Day Special - Dads inFREEwith their families! Barklothe patk jjjghj </jft Fireworks in thePark Night! CaP Night to the first 1,000 fans ell
SHAR( Night @4"OI Ice (ream Social, FREE Ice (ream! +"'„"~"'„' $2 Tuesday, 811 (all Before yoe DigAwarenessNight Irish Heritage Night - FREEKidsWednesday
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Free HotDogNight Free Lunch Cooler Bagto first 1,000 guests! CC AirUak EMSNight P AarK»k
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aej" Cap Night tO the firSt 1,000 fanS +'"" R t t p t tjaeaa Free Gate Night - 2,000 General Admissiontickets Free!! Fan Appreciation Night pi no®ezft
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Kids under 12 admitted FREE when accompanied by an adult.
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G A M E T O N IG H T
5,0o36 COC8EZI C8MMIXN Wednesday, June12th 6:35pmvs. Cowlitz Bears Kids get inFREEtonight! TI(KiT INFO: 541.312.9259 0 www.BENDiLKS.(OM .r
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$ 8 T U E S D AY S f
K I D S W E D N E S D AY S !
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General AdmissionTickets or Hot Dogs &Sodas andMore! Just $2 each! June25, JULY2, 9, 16, 23, 30 (All gamesstart at 6:35PM)
F RE E
team-high sevenwins to go along with a
A pair of Creighton University hurlers are and pitcher Justin Huckins returning home
andarejust$2onTuesday.Youcanalsoget10 G.A. tickets for $40, or 30 for $100. Field-level box seats cost $11.25 each, and
Princeton University catcher Tyler Servais, son of former major leaguer Scott Servais.
expected to stand out in Bend this summer, with Nick Highberger having recorded a
Genna Stadium, located at 401 S.E. Roosevelt Avenue. The stadium, which originally opened in 1946, has a seating capacity of 3,500. General admission tickets to all games are available at the stadium, as well as online at www.ezticketlive.com. G.A. tickets cost $5 each
Reh Kerr /The Bulletin file
Madras High graduate and University of Portland standout Turner Gill, shown here with the Elks in 2010, is back with the team after a two-year hiatus.
Nfj ( jpjer
First 1,000 Fans receive a FREE Silipint. Sponsoredby: Pacific Source @PacificSource Medicare •
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Friday, June 14th6:35pmvs. Cowlitz 8ears •
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The Bulletin • Sunday, June 2, 2013 • Bend Elks season preview
The West
Coast League: Team by team North Division
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South Division
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Bellingham Bells:The Bells should
Bend Elks: Several players
be solid up the
with Central
middle with UCLA freshman
Oregon roots are expected to play for the Elks this season.
second basemanTrent Chatterton in Bellingham. Chatterton started 30 games for the Bruins this
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University of Portland outfielder
p~og
Andrew Moore, who led the Pac-12 with12 wins this spring, highlights the Knights'
Elk, who helped the Mavericks to the NCAA Division II championship
game this spring. Johnson led MSU with a.356 batting average and 37 RBls, while Olson hit.286
with a team-leading eight home runs and 37 RBls.
State's Chris Lewis, who was the 2013 Western Athletic Conference
freshman of the yearafter hitting .349 with 46 RBls in 57 games this
spring.
' F." .LE
State's Jason Monda, a preseason allAmerican, joins the AppleSox
on a limited basis while hetakes summerclassesbutshould be available full time by July. A two-
way player, Monda hit.294 this spring with a team-high 40 RBls
and seven homeruns. Healso was
T RT
River College, so.:In his first
AVAILABLE
season with the Golden Eagles, Bray appeared in10 gamesand recorded a 3-0 record with three
compiled a 2-2 record in sevengamesstarted and a total of 10 appearances,
outfielder Austin Grebeck. — Beau Eastes
hurler led the Aggies with a 7-3
Conference.
Melbostad appearedinseven
record and six complete games,
Clay Gartner, RHP, GeorgeFox
Justin Huckins,
games and started two after being named to the all-state
recording 78 strikeouts and a 3.23 ERA in14 starts.
University, sr.:
College, sr.:The
Gartner's teamhigh seven wins
2010 Summit
RHP, Linfield
grad recorded seven saves for the Division III-champion Wildcats, the highest mark in the Northwest Conference, and finished with a 2.11 ERA in17
in 25 innings pitched to help the Red Wolves reach their fourth straight Sun
Belt Conference tournament.
MichaelJordan, RHP, University of California, so.:Jordan appeared in just two games for the Golden Bears, but he was a
two-time first-team all-league
honoree while at Murietta High School in California, striking out 55 in 55/3 innings of work during
year at Pinnacle High School in Arizona.
Tanner Ring,
David MuriHo, RHP, Lewis-Clark
so.: Ring held
State College, appeared in 17 games forthe
a.196 batting average while striking out 32 in 26/3 innings pitched and finishing with a 2.70 ERA.
Warriors, compiling a 4-0 record and a 2.80 ERA while striking out 35 in 35/I innings.
Jesse Scholtens, RHP, University
Collin Nilson,
of Arizona, so.: The 6-foot-4,
RHP, Arkansas State University, opponents to
sr.: Murillo
~p
RHP, Pacific Lutheran
205-pound pitcherappeared
University, jr.:
in just two games for the
The 6-foot-3 right-hander went
Wildcats, but Scholtens recorded
2-2 in nine appearanceswith 25 strikeouts while leading the Lutes' offense with three home
five no-hitters at Rodriguez High School in California and finished
his senior season with a1.21 ERA and 122 strikeouts.
Curtis Wildung, C,Pacific
University, jr.:Servais started 30 games for the
Lutheran University, jr.: The first-team all-Northwest
Tigers, throwing out11 base
Conference selection batted
runners and collecting 10 RBls a season after batting .278 with19 RBls.
.275 with a team-leading 25 RBls and14 doubles while
Jordan Adoites, INF,Arizona State University, so.:Aboites appeared in11 gamesin
Jo Carroll, INF, Linfield
Grant Newton, INF,Seattle University, jr.:The Bend
team all-Intermountain
his first season with the
Conference infielder and honorable mention all-state
High product played in 32 of 54 games for the Redhawks, starting in 27. Newton tied for the team lead with a.313 batting average and had10 extra-base hits,
Rancho CucamongaHigh School grad and relative
Sun Devils after twice being named Suburban League
Sooner transfer logged a.365
Tacoma
batting average with10 home runs and 40 runs driven in.
Yakima
College, jr.:The 2011first-
selection out of Mountain View High returns to Bend after playing
primarily on the Wildcats' junior varsity squad.
committing just three errors in 40 games played.
including three homeruns. Seth Spivey, INF, Adilene
Derek Dixon, INF,George
Christian University, sr.:
Fox University, jr.:With 43 RBls and five home runs, Dixon sat in the top five in the Northwest Conference in both categories while hitting .355
Spivey started 52 games for the Wildcats, batting .314 with12 extra-base hits and 32 RBls.
and starting all 38 games.
C)
Anthony Villa, INF, Saint
Mary's College, so.:The
Justin Bohn, INF, Oregon
State University, jr.:Bohn ranked third in the Golden
Kyle Giusti, INF, Adilene
6-foot-2-inch, 200-pound
Christian University, sr.:The
infielder racked up a.268
Valley Conference with a.335 batting average to go with a
Division II first-team all-South
batting average in 54 games played to go along with 32
league-high two homeruns
led the Wildcats with a.358 batting average to go along
and 30 stolen bases for Feather River College
Central Region selection
RBls and14 doubles, both second-highest for the Gaels.
with team highs in RBls (40) andstolen bases
CS
(15).
Klamath Faus gems
I
2012 WCL season Kelowna Falcons Walla Walla Sweets
second teamduring his senior
Tyler Servais, C, Princeton
Keach Ballard, INF, University of Oklahoma, jr.:In 61 gamesplayed for
' Walla Walla-
22 26 30
conference-leading 1.35 ERA.
State University, fr.:The
while at Mayfair High School in California.
Falcons~
Walla Walla Corvaliis• Corvaius 0 R E G 0 N Sweets Ku,.ghts Eugene Bend Be nd Elks
32 28 24
record and aleague-high 71 strikeouts to go along with a
Mason Fishback, C,Oregon
MVP and garnering first-team all-CIF honors
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ifalem
Bellingham Bells
r
season with the Sun Devils,
homers while hitting .477 as a freshman.
I A S H I < < T0
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Seattle University transfer
jr.: Puckett led the Golden Eagles to their
a1.98 ERA to help the Blue Jays finish third in the Missouri Valley
opponents to a.266 batting average.
home runs asajuniorandsmackedsix
Kitsap
EAST DIVISION 37 Wenatchee AppleSox W
River College,
College, jr.:The
State College, so.:The lefty
Murray State College, the
MRd fP
LHP, Feather
LHP, Westmont
LHP, Murray
his first season
Nick Highberger, RHP, Creighton
of former MLB pro Greg Colbrunn hit.250 with two
Wenatchee ~~' Applesox
Rogues
Cory Mack,
State University, so.:In his first
striking out 38 and finishing with a 3.62 ERA in his first season for
CANADA
Medford
a.143 batting average.
runs.
Paddon andCody Bellinger have
~Portland
Y
his senior year.
Cowlitz Black
Longvlew
pitched and limiting opponents to
Hunter Raley,
Rrrrlrr TRllr
while starting all 50 games. Lindell all committed to the Ducks, as has
Cowlitz Black Bears
the Pac-12-champion Beavers, striking out10 in15 innings
RHP, Arizona
so.:Grantham struck out 30
Black Bear uniforms this summer. Pitchers Brett Nielsen, Trent
.
six complete games in ninestarts
Eric Melbostad,
last year's14-40 mark, expect big things out of a pair of NCAA Division II teammates. Yuto Kata hit.325 in 46 games for Dixie State in southern Utah, and Kort Christoffersen went 6-1 with a 3.95 ERA for the Red Storm.
and a.642 slugging percentage.
@
career with a1.71 ERA, recording
University, so.:Highberger appeared in 22 games and had
RHP, Creighton
RHP, Arkansas State University,
of Oregon ties could end upin
BlueJacke s
appeared in 11 games for
his high school
Jace Puckett,
appearances.
spring, leading the Wildcats with 66 RBls, eight home runs
Victoria HarbourCats
jr.: Painton
Conference title with a10-3
Adam Grantham,
Bellingham Bells
University, fr.: Kinzler closed
College, so.: The Summit High graduate
the Penguins.
who hope to rebound from
with University
LHP, Oregon State University,
seventh straight GoldenValley
The BlueJackets,
48 of Linfield's 50 gamesthis
Christian
redshirted in
also logged a 2.77 ERA and 57 strikeouts.
Bears:As many as four players
Tyler Painton,
2013 after appearing in12 games for the Redhawks and limiting opponents to 11 hits in 11/3 innings pitched.
Kitsap BlueJackets:
to play in Walla Walla. Catcher Jake Wylie hit.396 and started
Scott Kinzler, RHP, Adilene
with five wins to lead Texas' Brownwood High School to a 2013 overallrecord.
Kevin Hamann, RHP, Clark
Jake Bray,
Northwest Conference. Gartner
spring as a junior, Carroll led the Spartans in batting average (.341), hits (72), doubles (15), total bases (93) and runs batted in (40).
percentage andstole17 bases.
Redhawks, striking out 34 in 61 Y3 innings pitched.
paced the Bruins, who finished second in the
State, should anchor the Gems' infield. This
led Linfield with a.471 on-base
made17 appearances for the
5.36 ERAthis spring.
from San Jose
Outfielder Kramer Lindell was just as impressive, batting .389
started, but the lefty fanned 78 batters, tied for a team high, in 82 innings pitched.
17'/3 innings of work and limiting
Sweets:The Sweets hope
III championship squadexpected
11 starts and
as a BlueJay, striking out11 in
Walla Walla
this summer, with two players from the Wildcats' NCAA Division
4-4 in13 games
University, so.: Elman made12 appearancesin
Klamath Falls Gems:Matt Carroll, a 6-foot6 first baseman
success of Linfield College
Griset went just
Andersonlogged
hitters to a.193 batting average.
2-2 on the mound with a1.57 ERA in 34/3 innings pitched.
to tap into the
LHP, Seattle University, jr.:
Taylor Elman,
talent from Southern Oregon. The best of the bunch may be former North Medford standout Matt Maurer, a left-handed senior-to-be at Pepperdine. Maurer, who led the Waves with 59 strikeouts as a freshman, went 6-1 with a 3.56 ERA lastyearand was 2-4 with a
this spring. Victoria also expects big things from Sacramento
Saint Mary's College, sr.:
of the year after posting a1.22 ERAwhile holding opposing
Rogueslookto rely heavily on
should be a primary contributor for the expansion HarbourCats after hitting .329 in 44 games with the NCAA tournament-bound Broncos
Ben Griset, LHP,
Anderson,
saves and a1.32 ERA.
WCL club, the
Victoria HardourCats:Cal Poly sophomore outfielder Jordan Ellis
Garrett
projected pitching rotation. Moore was namedthePac-12freshman
Medford Rogues: A first-year
VICTORIA
Washington
I
'
T
Turner Gill (Madras) andSeattle spring and hit.260. Catcher R.J. University third basemanGrant Ybarra, who as a freshman hit.315 Newton (Bend High) could be in 36 games for Arizona State this some of Bend's stronger bats this year, could be one ofthe better summer, andClark College's Kevin backstops in the league. Hamann (Summit) and Linfield's Justin Huckins (Summit) both should see time onthe mound. Kelowna Mountain View grad Jo Carroll Falcons:Baylor (Linfield), an infielder, andCrook outfielder County grad ZachClose (AIB Grayson Porter College of Business), anoutfielder, looks to provide also expect to compete for at-bats. the Falcons with some pop after hitting a team-high five home runs Corvallis Knights: for the Bears in 2013. Kelowna also expects to rely on Minnesota Standout Oregon State State teammates Nolan Johnson and Stetson Olson, a former Bend freshman
Wenatchee AppleSox:
'
WEST DIVISION Corvallis Knights Cowlitz Black Bears Klamath Falls Gems Bend Elks
Kitsap BlueJackets West Divisional Series:Corvallis def. Cowlitz, 2-0 East Divisional Series:Wenatchee def. Bellingham, 2-1
WCL Championship Series: Wenatchee def. Corvallis, 2-1
W L 32 22 26 28 26 28 24 30 14 40
R
Zach Close, OF, AIB College of Business, jr.:A 2012 NWAACC Southern Region all-star, the Crook County product hit.262 in 2013 with a home run and18 RBls.
Chase Fields, OF, Seattle University, sr.:Fields hit.305 while starting 44 games for the Redhawks. The 5-foot-8inch outfielder led Seattle and ranked fourth in the Western Athletic Conference with14 stolen bases.
University, so.:The 5-foot-
Turner Gill, OF,University of
8-inch outfielder led the Redhawks with a.313 batting
Portland, jr.:A 2010 graduate of Madras High, Gill was a two-time first-team all-West
Chimacum, Wash., that saw Cray earn firstteam all-state honors three times.
team all-state in NewMexico as asenior at Eldorado High School.
LandonGray,OF,Seattle
average in 48gamesplayed after a high school career in
Cullen O'Dwyer, OF, Arizona State University, so.: O'Dwyer was a 39th-round selection by the Atlanta Braves in the 2012 MLB Draft after being named first-
Coast Conference selection in his freshman andsophomore seasons andwas namedto the Louisville Slugger FreshmanAll-America team.
Head coach:Joe Dominiak Assistant coach:Scott Anderson Assistant coach:Alan Embree
Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
Tech ush trans
ron ines Oo sa
TV viewing experience
O
By Dawn C. Chmielewski
aims to prevent contamination in produce
• With trainingandbetter wages,program
Los Angeles Times
For decades we've been watching TV. Now a new generation of TV is beginning to watch us. Technological advances are giving the old clunky "boob tube" an IQ injection. Some of the new breed of smart TVs comes equipped with facial recognition technology of the kind used by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, to "see" the images flickering on the screen and suggest new shows based on what you've been watching. Building on advances pioneered by the video game industry, some of the new TVs change channels with the sweep of the hand. Others allow viewers to ask, "What movies are on tonight?" and get an answer. Instead of turning on the TV in the morning and finding it tuned to the "Today" show because last night you watched NBC's "The Tonight Show With Jay Leno," you'll see a tile of images presenting options that include shows that you've recorded, shows currently airing and a list of options offered through on-demand services such as Netflix or Amazon Instant Video. The TV's heightened awareness of your viewing habits might send an Orwellian chill up the spine ofsome viewers.But manufacturers say they're solving a serious problem for couch potatoes who are inundated with hundreds
of programming choices. Some inthe consumer electronics industry note the recommendation feature is hardly radical: Devices and software have been making suggestions since 1999, when the TiVo digital video recorder started recording shows it assumed its owner might like. Still, you might say a revolution is brewing in the living room — and this one will be televised. It portends not only a change in the TVviewing experience but also poses a threat to cable and satellite TV distributors. Even network executives' notions about scheduling — how positioning a new show adjacent to a popular program in the evening lineup to drive ratings — look anachronistic at a time when Nielsen estimates that 47 percent of all American households have DVRs and can watch recorded shows whenever they choose, and 55 percent of broadband homes have at least one TV connected to the Internet, according to market researcher the Diffusion Group. SeeSmart TV/E2
More thanone way toconnect It's not enough these days to wonder what to watch on your TV; a
growing question for many is how to watch. Just like any device in your life, TVs can now connect to the Internet. This lets you grab shows from the Internet and watch
content whenever you want. Most new TVs come with the ability to connect to the Internet, but there are a number of ways to easily turn an existing TV into a socalled smart TV. Here's
a primer. See Connect/E2
By Stephanie Strom
and Steven Greenhouse New York Times News Service
M ~i
MOSS LANDING, Calif. — With piles of fresh strawberries beckoning consumers at markets and stores this season, an alliance of a major retailer, fruitgrowers and farm workers has begun a program to promote healthy produce and improve working conditions. The initiative, unfolding along neatly planted rows of berries at the Andrew 5 Williamson Fresh Produce's Sierra Farm here, is an effort to prevent the types of bacterial outbreaks of salmonella, listeria or E.coli that have sickened consumers who ate contaminated cantaloupes, spinach or other produce. One of the workers,
Valentin Esteban, is on the front lines of the new effort, having gone through a training program that helps him avoid practices that lead to possible bacterial contamination that could undermine the safety and quality of the strawberries he picks. In exchange, Andrew & Williamson is providing Esteban better pay and working conditions than many migrant farmworkers receive, $9.05 an hour versus $8, plus $1.70 for every eight pints of bright, red berries that he picks. "Sure, the money is important, but I also feel good because I am helping to improve quality and safety," Esteban said. "Those things are important to my family, too." SeeSafety /E3
Andy Tullis /The Bulletin
Michael Taus, left, and partner Darren Powderly have co-founded CrowdStreet Inc., an online crowd-funding platform for investment real estate, which will officially launch this summer.
• New Bend companyCrowdstreet Inc. opens tJpcommercial real estate investment By Rachael Rees and Elon Glucklich •The Bulletin
ajor players in Bend's commercial real estate and entrepreneurial/high-tech sectors have created an online crowd-funding platform for real estate investment across the West. "We're like Match.com, but for real estate, without the awkward first 15 minutes of the date," said Darren Powderly, cofounder of CrowdStreet Inc., and also partner and president of Compass Commercial Real Estate Services. "(CrowdStreet) connects investors with investment real estate opportunities in their community or other communities that they like." The company has j umped into crowd funding — raising money by attracting relatively small individual contributions from a large number of people. Total donations and revenue brought in through crowd funding rose from $530 million in 2009 to $2.8 billion last year, according to industry research firm Massolution. "Everyone from Wall Street to Main Street is evaluating how equity crowd funding can be applied to their business," Powderly said. Crowd funding began as peer-topeer lending, and transformed into websites like kickstarter.com, which allows people to donate to entrepreneurs in exchange for an early version of a product or other reward. It has since evolved into websites such as AngelList and CrowdStreet that connect investors with investment opportunities ranging from startup companies to real estate. Congress opened up crowd funding forsecurities, such as an ownership interest or share of profits in a business, last year with passage of the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, or Jobs Act, although the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has not finalized rules for how it will work. But, as written today, the rules are unlikely to impact CrowdStreet, which for now plans to allow only accredited investors — i n dividuals whose incomes exceed $200,000 annually, or whose net worth is more than $1 million — access to the investment opportunities. CrowdStreet's goal is to help accred-
ited investors access a variety of real estate investments across the western United States with a capital minimum of $25,000, Powderly said. "What we envision is that an investor can create their own custom real estate portfolio in increments as low as $25,000," said Powderly. "If you had $100,000 to invest in commercial real estate, you could diversify that over four different properties. Those properties could all be located in Bend. Or, one could be in Bend, Portland, Denver and Phoenix so you get additional diversity." Powderly came up with the idea in April 2012 with Dino Vendetti, a venture capitalist and c o -founder, investor and mentor for FoundersPad, Bend's entrepreneur-training
Jim Wilson / New York Times News Service
Workers at Sundance Berry Farms in Watsonville, Calif., are learning ways to enhance food safety, like not wearing jewelry that might fall into boxes of berries.
What's in a miennia's wa et? Notcredit cards By Emily Alpert Los Angeles Times
Ringed by the posh shops of Los Angeles' Beverly Center, Tim Ratliff said no — he didn't have a credit card. He didn't need one. "I just hear so many horror stories about people being in debt," said Ratliff, 21, who studies psychology at Ohio State University. "When you have a credit card, you feel like you have a lotof money when you don't." Ratliff is like many young adults, emerging data show. His generation, dubbed millennials by academics and marketers, grew up during the boom and bust cycles
of the U.S. economy over the last decade and a half — crises that appear to have reshaped their attitudes toward spending and debt. Millennials, who range from teenagersto people in their early 30s, are more financially cautious than the stereotype of the spendthrift 20-somethings, several studiessuggest.Many embrace thrift. Some experts say the>r habits echo those of another generation, those who came of age during the Great De-
pression and forged lifelong habits of scrimping and saving — along with a suspicion of financial risk. See Millennials/E5
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program. And after developing the idea in FoundersPad, Powderly o f f i cially started the company in D ecember with Michael Taus, co-founder of both Code Benders, a software development and consulting company, and rent.com, which was bought by eBay. Vendetti has also taken the role of executive chairman of CrowdStreet. The company, which is currently in beta-stage, plans to fully launch this summer. Vendetti said CrowdStreet fills a gap in the current real-estate investment market created by banks, which are not lending. "There's definitely an opportunity in the real estate market for businesses like CrowdStreet," Vendetti said. "It is certainly a cutting edge idea." SeeCrowd /E3
Integrity, Experience, Research and Results To learn more call Peggy Foutz Registered Client Service Associate 541-322-6130
uus.mm/team/rtveragroup
@UBS
Crt/BS 2012 All rights reserved. UBS Financial Services Inc is a subsidiary of UBS AG Member SIPC. 700 adQ458 5 rv1226 RvKs
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 days before publication date to business©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
INFO SESSION:Learnabout this unique14-module course presented KNOWDIGITALBOOKS: 10-11:30 a.m.; by The Nutritional TherapyAssociation Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Inc.; class is taught over eight months; qualifying students will be certified by Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. the Nutritional TherapyAssociation; KNOW MORE EMAIL: 10:30 a.m.registration required; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 Central OregonCommunity College, S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. Chandler Building,1027 N.W.Trenton CENTRAL OREGONREAL ESTATE Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. INVESTMENTCLUB: Free; 11a.m.; HOW TO STARTA BUSINESS: ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Registration required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 Central Oregon Community College, or bobbleile©windermere.com. Madras Campus,1170 E. Ashwood SAGE AWARDSGALA: Dinner, Road, Madras; 541-383-7290. music and awards; registration required; $75 per person, $750 for a THURSDAY table of10; 6 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. WOMEN'S ROUNDTABLESERIES, Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-382BUILDINGA VISION OF SUCCESS: 3221 or www.bendchamber.org. An effective vision, whether foryour life, career, relationships, or business, MONDAY acts as the compass that guides your decisions and actions; registration IOS APP DEVELOPMENT II , required; noon-1:30 p.m.; Bend's ADVANCED SKILLS: Advanceyour Community Center,1036 N.E.Fifth skills bytaking this second class St.; 541-382-322 I. and dive deeper into Xcodeand ANNUAL SPRINGSOCIAL: Objective-C to create apps that are Registration required; $15; 5-6:30 more complicated; prerequisite iOSApp I class is required or p.m.; The Oxford Hotel,10 N.W. some exper iencewithXcodeand Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-318Objective-C; registration required; 4650, info©opp-knocks.org orwww. classcontinuesWe dnesdayandJune eventbrite.com/event/5514582264. 10; $89; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College — CrookCounty FRIDAY Open Campus,510 S.E.Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-383-7270. MASTERGMAIL TOMAXIMIZE PRODUCTIVITY:Online webinar; TUESDAY learn strategies andsolutionsto boost productivity and efficiency with Gmail, OPEN COMPUTERLAB:3-4:30 p.m.; Google tasks, contacts andcalendar; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. hostedby SIMPLIFY;registration Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. required; $65; 8:30-10a.m.; Camp MTA DATABASEADMINISTRATION Sherman; 503-260-8714 or info© FUNDAMENTALS:This course simplifynw.com. covers introductory knowledge and CENTRAL OREGON REAL ESTATE skills including: relational databases, INVESTMENTCLUB: Free; 11 a.m.; core database concepts, relational ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 database concepts, security Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 requirements for databases and the or bobbleile©windermere.com. data stored in them; prep for the Microsoft 98-364 certification exam; LIBERATINGTHESPEAKER registration required; class continues WITHIN, EMPOWERINGWOMEN Tuesdays and Thursdays through TO SPEAK,ACT & LIVEWITH June 27; $149 includes textbookand CONFIDENCE:Seminar incorporates test fee; 4-6 p.m.; Central Oregon lecture, group discussion, individual Community College —Crook County cognitive activities and experiential Open Campus, 510S.E. Lynn Blvd., activities; registration requires; Prineville; 541-383-7270. continues June 8; $297; 7-9 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-617-0340, diane© WEDNESDAY eloquentexpression.com or www. NUTRITIONTHERAPYTRAINING eloquentexpression.com.
TODAY
DEEDS Deschutes County • Gary D. andMerrily Nelson, trustees for Garyand Merrily Nelson Revocable Trust, to Harold M.and Myrna L. Nix, Wallace Acres,Lot 9,Block1, $369,000 • William M. andRebeccaS.Timson to Gary E.andSami R.Dehm,Vilage at Oaktree Phase 2,Lot 7,$344,000 • Michael A. and Nicole M. Hasenoehrl to Glenn R.andAntoinette E. Van't Hoff, Three Pines PU.D., Phases7-10, Lot 70, $479,000 • James E. Parkerto Helen S.Crawford, Desert SandArabian Ranch,Lot4, Block 3, $469,000 • Hayden Homes LLCto Kathryn A. Kranzush, North Village, Lot 7,$152,924 • Washington FederalSavings to Kristopher J.andTristan L. Dawson, Township14, Range13, Section 34, $219,000 •GarySandstoRogerandTammie M. Birkeland, Roaring Springs, Lot10, $187,500 • Kathryn L. Jensen, trustee for Kathryn L. JensenTrust, to JosephW. Burghardt Jr. and Amanda M.Burghardt, Ironwood Court, Lot 6, $253,000 • Westland Construction Corporation to Cindy S. Sniderand Terry B. Hubbard, Timber Creek2, Phase1, Lot41, $269,000 • Jeffrey N. Ericksento WhyBecause LLC, Island Park, Lot 4,$187,227 • Chester A. Mitchell Jr. and JuneE. Mitchell to Michael T.and Roberta L. McBride, Township14, Range13, Section 9, $260,000 • Sheron LLC toAnnunziata 0. and James S.Guild, Replat of Blocks1,2 and 3 KenwoodGardens, Lot 8, Block 3, $252,000 • Kent S. andKatherine S.Beebeto Elwin G. andMarilyn B. Larson, Indian FordRanchHomes PlatNumberOne, Lot 9, Block1, $466,500 • Roy D. and Ann P.Bredfield, trustees for Bredfield Family Trust, to William A. and Diane M.Miller, Mountain Village East 2, Lot16, Block 8, $229,500 • Matthew and Patricia Leahyto Bob and KarenSours, HomesteadFourth Phase, Lot 2, Block11, $279,900 • Timothy P. and Jennifer A. Lynch, trustees for LynchFamily Living Trust, to Richard W.and Cherry M. Williams, North Rim onAwbrey Butte Phase1, Lot 3, $217,500 • Kathy D. Gasper to Joseph D.Griffin and TracyHankins, Kenwood,Lots15 and16, Block11, $170,000 • Janet L. Merrell to David B.andAmy B. Nader, trusteesfor NaderFamily Trust, NorthWest Crossing Phase13, Lot 615, $312,600 • David and Linda Millerto Jeffrey D. and Kelsie J.Woodford, Township16, Range11, Section 24,$320,000 • Micki W. Bartlemayto WardR.Cowan, Bluffs at River Bend,Phase1, Lot1, $192,500 • Benjamin T. and SusanD. Hopkins, trustees for BenjaminandSusan Hopkins Trust, to Brian R.and Kerri L. Ely, First on the Hill Sites, Lot 4, Block 5, $450,000 • Gary and Patricia I. Johnson to Amy E.and John R.Lowe,Marea2, Lot28, $279,900 • James L. andBrendaA. Speirs to Heather L.andNathan T. Chesbro, City View, Phase 2,Lot 5, $428,500
• Nathan T. andHeather L. Chesbro to Kandra L., Darryl T.and Shelly S. Kent and Ryan W.Heltemes, Tri Peaks2, Lot 22, $193,800 • Stephen F. Lieberman, Virgina G. HensenandRichard W.and MaryA. Steinberg, trustees for Richard W.and Mary A. SteinbergRevocableLiving Trust, to James B.Ravelli and Shawna R. Meyer-Ravelli, Fairway Point Village 1, Lot1, Block6, $380,000 • Philip E. and Cynthia R. Marcouiller to Richard D.andCecilia J. Larsen,Golden Mantle Third Addition, Lot 8, Block 6, $285,000 • Patrick J. andPauline J. Mahody to Lee H.and Jennifer L. Haugan, Equestr ian Meadows,Phase2,Lot25, Block1, $625,000 • Michael J. Tennantand Jim St. John to HeatherJackson, Cottagesat NorthWest Crossing, Lot19, $295,000 • David J. and Jennifer L. Kremers, trustees for DavidandJennifer Kremers Trust, to CrawdadLLC,Riverside, Lots 2-5, Block19, $515,000 • SFI CascadeHighlands LLCto Kevin and BreannaBoss, Tetherow, Phase3, Lot142, $325,000 • Barry D. andKimberly S. Beddor to David W.Wittman andLinda M. Bland, Greyhawk, Lot 9, PalmerAddition to Awbrey Road,Lots19and 20, $379,900 • Irene M. Churchill to Richard W. and Glenna G.Dimmig, NorthWest Crossing, Phases 9 and10, Lot 489, $390,000 • Phillip R. andTheresaM. Lee,aka Theresa M.DeWitz, trustees for H.A.W. Trust, to Won and Jung S. Kim, Partition Plat1992-44, Parcel1, $165,000 • Loren A. andAmber N.Anderson to Richard D.Noonan, Forest Meadow, Phase1, Lot1, Township18, Range12, Section18, $319,000 • Anne M. Barrazato Vallerie R. Ballantine, Mountain ViewPark Phase 2, Lot 60, $165,000 • Roy M. Chapman to RyanM.and Shannon K.Johnson, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 27, $200,000 • Washington FederalakaWashington Federal Savings to Kolbyand Dannielle Callantine, DeschutesRiverWoods, Lot 40, $175,000 • Stephen McDermott, personal representative for Estate ofNancyA. McDermott, to Ricci S.Pardini and Lisa R. Reynolds, WestHills, Lot8, Block4, $263,800 Crook County • Georgia H. Merrick, trustee for Georgia's Living Trust, to Kenneth A. and NancyE.Proctor, Northridge Subdivi sion,Phase2,Lot62,$200,000 • Jeanne M. Scharlund, trustee and successor trustee ofRandyA. Scharlund for Scharlund Living Trust, to Gregory S.and Cheryl A. Buchanan, Township16, Range14,Section15, $460,000 • Carl A. and Mary B. Kittelson, trustees of Kittelson Living Trust, to DonaldR. and Diana L.DeLand, SevenPeaks Estates, Lot 4, $455,000 •DuaneandSonda Balcom toDennisF. and Laura J.Olson,West Powell Butte Estates, Lot 32,$589,000 • Clarence J. and Darlene Y.Avilato Christopher M.Seber,Township16, Range14, Section 9, $335,000
Smart TV Continued from E1 Indeed, the TV industry is grappling with seismic change. Video consumption is on the rise, but the audience is fragmented as never before. Some 5 million U.S. households now get their entertainment via Internet-connected devices and, notes Nielsen, the majority of t hese mostly young viewers don't pay a monthly cable or satellite bill. Concerns about how to reach this group known as the "never connecteds" and count their v iewing in a show's ratings adds to a list of headaches that includes slumping primetime broadcast ratings. These supercharged TVs may not be for everybody, especially those with gadget fatigue. What's more, these new smart TVs may look dated compared with what Silicon Valley giant Intel has in store for later this year, not to mention w hatever Apple I n c . i s planning with its mysterious but hotly anticipated flat-screen TV. "We're in a golden era of television. Never in the history of the media has so much money been spent
producing
h i g h-quality
content," said Eric Huggers, general manager of Intel Media. "If you look at the technology that is used to deliver that, it feels stuck in the past. We think we need to put the technology on a par with the quality of the editorial." The chip-maker is testing an Internet-connected box that you could connect to the TV and home network and start watching shows within 10 minutes. It will come with its own subscription service that will offer local and national programs as wellas cable shows, catchup v i ewing and access to online movie and TV services. Pricing has not been disclosed. "This is going to be the first true cable TV replacement servicedelivered over broadband," said Michael Greeson, president of the T exas-based medi a r e search firm the Diffusion Group. "It's going to tell us so much about the television industry and what relationships have been bent or broken in terms of (Intel) being able to bring first-run content ... as opposed to delayed, on-demand."
The Roku 3also has amotion-sensor control that can be used for somegames,
Connect Continued from E1
The simplest way to do sois to connect a TVto a laptop or computer using either a VGAor HDMI cable. In most cases, this
will give users either asecond screen for their computer or it will mirror what they see on
their machines. Fromthere they can play digital content they own or they can visit websites with video such as Netflix, Hulu, YouTube and HBOGO.Of
course, using acomputer as a TV involves alot of work by the user, who has to move the
mouse andtype out eachwebsite to go to. This is why digital media receivers exist. The two most popular right
either through Wi-Fi or ethernet cables. Once set up, they can log into all their accounts
and begin streaming content. Both Roku and Apple TV have
access to a variety of similar channels, including Netflix, Hulu and the NBA, NHL and MLB. However, there are pros
and cons to eachdevice. For Apple, one bigadvantage is it has a YouTube
channel, which Rokudoes not. Apple fans canalso use AirPlay, a feature that lets them
easily send content from their Apple devicesandcomputers to Apple TV. Using this feature,
users can quickly find content on their phone and send it to their TV or they can give a
presentation on their iPad that is then shown on a TV's big
screen. Apple users also have accesstothecompany'slarge catalog of content from iTunes. For Roku, there are a vari-
ety of advantages, including that it has hundreds of more
channels than Apple does. The most important among those channels areAmazon Instant Video and HBO GO.
Apple users can useAirPlay for HBO GO, but they cannot
access it through a channel the way Rokuusers can. Apple users also don't haveanyaccess to Amazon, which hasa large collection of watchable content that can be purchased or rented.
controls. To do this, both the
receiver and thesmartphone must be connected to the same Wi-Fi network.
However, manyusers can turn their TVs into "smart" TVs
by usin gthegameconsoles that they might already own. Besides playing gamesthe 3, can both be used tostream digital content from the Internet by connecting to Wi-Fi or
with an ethernet cable. Once other channels. Although using an Xbox or PS3maynot be as simple or seamless asusing a device like theApple TVor Roku, it's an alternative and for
many people, especiallythose with teenagers, it's a wayto do so without having to buy another product.
I recommend theApple TV or Roku 3 for those who want to turn their TVs into Internet-
connectedmachinesandwant the best experience — with quick loading, in-depth TV
menus and asmooth interface. But viewers will need to pay for a few subscriptions: For Netflix
and Hulu, it's $7.99 per month for each service. Thegood thing is the subscription allows
access to the content from all of their devices. They can also
pay for other devices or payto rent movies. My personal setup includes both the Apple TVand Roku
3. I connect the two using WiFi, and I pay for Netflix each
month. I don't pay for cable, so for new shows such as"Mad Men" I buy the seasonpass from Amazonand I canwatch each episode as it comesout. Ialsohaveanantennaso Ican watch local NFL games in the fall. When I want to watch my own digital content, I simply stream it through the Apple TV
using AirPlay. — Salvador Rodriguez, Chicago Tribune
Interactive evolution One f a m iliar a c cessory (when i t is n ' t mi s p laced) seems destined to go the way of rabbit ears and cathode-ray tubes: the remote control. Manufacturers like Pana-
sonic already offer applications that convert your tablet computer or smartphone into a TV remote, allowing you to change channels or search the Internet to find that particularly funny "Cat Jump Fail" video and transfer it to the TV screen for the amusement of the entire family. I ncreasingly t h ough, T V makers are introducing other ways to interact with the living room screen. Samsung and others offer TVs that respond to gestures and spoken commands. Such advances in searchand navigation become i ncreasingly i m p ortant, a s Internet-connected TVs pour a fire-hose of video into the home. At the moment smart TVs' search capabilities are limited. They fail to reflect the movies and TV shows available through Internet video services such as Netflix, Amazon. com and Hulu. Such over-thetop services, which bypass cable and satellite TV providers, remain locked in p r ogramming silos. That's where Intel comes in. The as-yet-unnamed Intel TV service would deliver a comprehensive video experience that collects all the entertainment options into a single interface. It joins a number of Internet-connected boxes that stream videoto the TV screen — including dedicated devices from Roku, Apple and Boxee, video game consoles and Blu-
and five or six upcoming programs airing within the next two hours. "Basically, the goal is to allow consumers to spend more time watching TV and less time searching," said Dave Das, Samsung's vice president of home entertainment. Recommendations, though, are an evolving science. And ray players. even the best algorithms can sometimes miscalculate, as one journalist h u morously recounted in an article headlined: "If T iVo T hinks You Are Gay, Here's How to Set it OFFICE SYSTEMS Straight." Viewers who are repelled by the notion of their TV Color and B&W playing the role of Big Brother can disable recommendations Scan, Print, Copy &Fax — or simply program the set to display popular content. Naturally there are enticing AUTHORIZEDDEALER commercial applications beyond just helping the hapless Low Monthly viewer. Yes, dear consumer: Payments The commercials will be targeted as welL Local Since Gracenote is working with 1989 several television manufacturers and broadcasters to test a new technology for delivering customized ads into the home.
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noware the Roku 3and the Apple TV (both for $99). Users can easily connect these small devices to their TVs
reflect that." For now, the devices have an early-adopter patina. The Wall Street Journal's influential personal technology columnist, Walter Mossberg,pronounced the latest crop of sets on display A greater guide at the Consumer Electronics T he t e levision g u i d e Show this year "clumsy," add— the spreadsheetlike grid ing that their smart TV functhat lists TV shows accord- tions "haven't taken off with ing to time and channel consumers yet," but "This may — hasn't changed much be the year they do." in format since TV Guide There's no q uestion that published its first issue in smart TVs are moving from 1953. But that's hardly true a novelty to the mainstream, of the number of choices with shipments expected to confronting viewers, who grow 25 percent worldwide every year are faced with this year, according to NPD exponentially more enter- DisplaySearch. Some 76 miltainment options. lion of these devices are exThis video overload set pected to ship globally this the stage for a wave of in- year. Prices range from about novation aimed at improv- $525 for a 40-inch Samsung ing how people search for TV to as much as $7,000 for a and discover shows. The 65-inch smart TV from Sony. Internet-connected smart Panasonic lets up to four TVs that began arriving family members pick t h eir in stores this spring take favorite TV shows and Intera radically different apnet-connected a p p lications, proach. The l a test s ets be it YouTube videos, Pandora from Samsung, Panasonic radio or Facebook. A built-in and others offer a "home camera uses facial recognition screen" customized to re- technology to determine who's flect individual tastes. on the couch for the most rel" What w e ' r e talking evant programming. about here is an evolution Samsung's sets monitor the in terms of guidance," said shows you've watched so that Stephen White, president when you turn on the TV its of Gracenote, a Bay Area "smarthub" presents a curated company whose voice and list of programs — much the video recognition technol- way A mazon.com suggests ogy powers many of the items basedon pastpurchases. new services. "We live in While live TV is playing in one a world where there are so corner ofthe screen, the Sammany content choices .... sung set will present a handWe're evolving the guide to ful of shows you might like
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The software incorporates information available through public databases, including c redit i n f o rmation, h o m e ownership and car registration data, to help brands deliver targeted messages during commercial breaks. At the same time, the privacy implications loom large. "One of the immediate reactions we get around this is, 'Wow, this is pretty creepy,'" acknowledged White. "The consumer has the ability to say, 'I want this targeting ... or I don't." W e are entering an O r wellian world when the TV you are watching is increasingly watching you. "Advertising companies need to be much more open about their profiling practices," said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington. "And consumers should have the right to know how information about them is used."
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SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Covers: Homage or irksomemarketing ploy'? By Ryan Nakashima The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — There are about 600 v ersions of Adele's Oscar-winning song "Skyfall" on the Spotify subscription music service. Not one of them features Adele. Adele's label, XL Record-
ings, keeps her music off of all-you-can-listen subscription plans until download sales peter out. In the meantime, copycat artists fill the void, racking up royalty revenue, often beforecustomers realize they've been listening to someone else. Alice Bonde Nissen found that out the hard way. She once paid 99 Krone ($17) a month for Spotify's premium service in Denmark. Nissen found a version of "Skyfall" and mistakenly clicked on a "follow" button to become a fan of GMPresents and Jocelyn Scofield, the name for a cover-song specialist with some 4,600 Spotify followers. Scofield, who didn't respond to a message seeking comment for this story, has the most listened-to cover of "Skyfall" on the service. "When I found out ... that I couldn't find the original 'Skyfall' (and some other hits) I decided to quit Spotify," Nissen said. Thousands of cover songs crowd digital music services such as Spotify and Rhapsody, and listeners are getting annoyed. The p henomenon threatens the growth of these services — which have mil-
lions of paying subscribersand could hold back the tepid recovery ofa music industry still reeling from the decline of the CD. Streaming services put a world of music at listeners' fingertips with millions of tracks, everything from the latest pop hits to age-old violin concertos. For a flat fee — usually about $10 a month in the U.S. — users can listen to as many songs as they wish. The music resides on the provider's serv-
Safety Continued from E1 Last summer, more than 250 people in 24 states were sickened and three died after eating cantaloupes contaminated with salmonella. A year earlier, c antaloupe t a inted with listeria killed 33 people. T he Food and D rug A d ministration laid the blame on conditions like stagnant pools of water and dirtysurfaces
in packing areas, problems that farm workers could help prevent. "In those cases, the workers weren't trained to address it or even recognize that those conditions might be problematic," said Peter O'Driscoll, p roject director o f O x f a m America's Equitable Food Initiative. "Farm workers can be the eyes and ears of the farm, helping to improve food safety and pest contamination." Under the new p r ogram, with Andrew 8 W i l l iamson the first grower t o p a rticipate, berries sold under the label "Limited Edition," would carry certification to inform consumers that food safety protocols had been followed and that the workers who harvested thecrop were treated
fairly. With Andrew gr Williamson paying higher wages than almost all its competitors, the participants in the program h ope that t h e p r o mise of better-quality, safer fruit and better conditions for workers will entice distributors, retailers and consumers to pay a little more, too. Costco has agreed to play a major part and will sell only these berries i n p a r t icular stores. "Who is it that's delivering the result — s afer, higherquality berries? Those workers," said Jeff Lyons, the company's seniorvice president forfresh produce. "So yes,I'm willing to pay more, so long as the certification really means something." Costco's participation was critical, said Dan Glickman, an Oxfam A m erica b oard member who was agriculture secretary during the Clinton administration. "This can't be a field of dreams, where if we grow it this way, they will buy it no matter the cost," Glickman said. "Having a retailer like Costco buy into it was key." Ernie Farley, a p a r t n er of Andrew 8 z W i l l iamson,
There are hundreds of copycat versions of Adele's Oscar-winning song "Skyfall" on the Spotify subscription service, confusing customers who think they are buying Adele's version.
"It doesn't feel bad that they were lookingforsomeone else, because they didn't even know I existed," said Grannis, whose original song video "In Your Arms," has racked up 9.2 million views. "They're not going to search for Kina Grannis if they've never heard of you." cover artists don't require the original artist's permission, as
ers and make a fast buck. A recent search for popular artists on Spotify reveals plenty of me-too bands who pick deceptive artist names like the "Bruno Mars Tributors" or song names like "Firework (As M ade Famous By Katy Perry)." The artwork and graphics used for theirsongs are sometimes a mirror image of the
long as they get a license, pay
originals.
U.S. copyright law says
royalties and let the original The Associated songwriters release their verPress file photo sion first. Streaming services like Spotify are obligated by law to h a ndle songwriting ers and gets transmitted, or the notion that anyone with a royalties on behalf of cover streamed, to subscribers as decent voice can be a star. artists. they listen on smartphones, Spotify's head of developObtaining a licenseto record tablet computers and PCs. ment and a n alysis, Sachin a cover is easy and inexpenThe services allow users to Doshi, acknowledges that find- sive. Services like Google Inc.'s store songs on theirdevices ing covers instead of originals Limelight, which launched in as long as they keep paying. can be frustrating. "We recog- late 2009, offer commercial But because such a vast selec- nize it's a problem we haven't song licenses to anyone who tion can be stored online in the fully solved yet," Doshi said. fills out a form. For each song so-called cloud, when listeners Jon M aples, R h apsody's they cover, artists pay a $15 search for popular songs, they vicepresident ofproduct manfee. By law, Limelight also often find oddball renditions. agement, says customers have charges $9.10 in advance for Cover songs are perfectly asked that cover songs be re- every 100 downloads the artlegal in the U.S. and have a moved and the company has ists may sell. TuneCore, which long tradition in the music in- targeted 10,000 for deletion. "It launched in 2006, distributes dustry. Some covers are even just clutters the experience," songs on outlets like iTunes for more famous than the origihe said. $10 per track. Selling a couple nals. Which do you think of hundred tracks — because of first, Aretha Franklin's soar- When it helps consumer confusion or othering 1967 version of "Respect," Some independent artists wise — can earn cover artists or Otis R edding's original insistcover songs are a fast enough money to pay the bills. from two years earlier? How way to achieve fame. Kina The hurdle is so low for the about Jimi Hendrix's funky Grannis says covers are help- average amateur that once a 1968 rendition of "All Along ing her build a fan base. The hit song comes out, it's covered the Watchtower"? Does any- 27-year-old Los Angeles-based quickly. Take"Suit 8z Tie," a Jusone even remember thatBob singer won the 2008 Doritos' tin Timberlake song released Dylan wrote and sang it in a Crash the Super Bowl contest. by RCA Records in January. release six months before? As part of th e competition, There are already around 180 The difference today is that fans were asked to vote for an covers on Spotify in addition to anyone with a computer, a mi- aspiring musician's music vid- Timberlake's version. crophone and an Internet con- eo. The winner got to air their Since A d ele's "Skyfall" nection can create and distrib- creation before 100 million was released in October, it ute a cover. New technology, viewers on game day. Grannis has sold more than 1.9 milfrom affordable digital record- says she wouldn't have earned lion copies in the U.S. Cover ing equipment and sound-mix- e nough votes to win i f s h e artists sold more than 54,000 ing programs to convenient hadn't seeded her YouTube copies, according to Nielsen online services are making channel every day with covers SoundScan. homemade covers an e asy of artists like Jason Mraz and and profitable endeavor. And Death Cab for Cutie. Many of Sound-alikes sing-it-yourself shows such as her currentfollowers on YouWhile some people make "American Idol," "The Voice" Tube stumbled upon her while covers toget discovered, othand "The X Factor" are fueling searching for originals. ers seem to be in it to trick buy-
worker, said he liked that the program encouraged pickers to tell supervisors about any safety issues in the fields. Now they also know their aboveaverage pay is also tied to the success of this food safety initiative. Before the initiative, "we didn't have any system for dealing with things like when we found deer droppings in the field," said Jorge Piseno, one of the farm workers' representatives who is part of the project's worker-management leadership. " Now I k now i f we find a dead animal or aniJim Wilson / New York Times News Service mal waste, we should put up a Workers inspect freshly picked strawberries for signs of contami6-foot perimeter to quarantine nants at Sundance Berry Farms. the area." Rosa Cortez, a quality control worker, added, "The best pointed to the important role brainstormed and came up thing about this program is that farm workers play. "This with a win-win proposal that that it has increased the unprogram means that, instead would increase workers' pay derstanding of the importance of one auditor coming around and growers' profits and im- of the quality of the fruit." And once in a while to check on prove safety. Sanchez said the p r actices " We thought, what if w e extended beyond the fields. things, we have 400 auditors on the job all the time." started educating workers to "Now the hygiene I've learned The company, which grows make them a little more aware here I take home to my family berries, tomatoes and cucum- of things like listeria and sal- so they will be healthier, too." bers, pays a higher base wage monella, potential pest issues Bruce Goldstein, president than most growers, according like birds and wild pigs, the of Farmworker Justice, an to the United Farm Workers danger to their own health advocacy group, said: "It's a union. Andrew & W i l l i am- and the environment of over- courageous move on the part son also provides clean bath- using pesticides'?" Lyons said. of the farm labor unions that rooms, gloves to protect pick- "Such training would make an are involved in the project. ers' hands, folding chairs to impact that's positive for the They're saying they are willsit on at lunchtime and other consumer and increase pro- ing to engage with employers seemingly small but much ap- ductivity for growers." on something other than a preciated perks, such as cups Lyons floated the plan with collective bargaining basis" to for waterfrom coolers,a rare some of Costco's biggest pro- improve wages and working luxury for the workers. duce suppliersata conference, conditions. In the program, the workers explaining that because the An unexpected benefit of are trained in practices that workers would be responsible the program is worker retenenhance food safety — from for delivering better, safer tion — a constant headache n ot w e aring j e w elry t h a t fruits and vegetables, they de- when pickers can swap informight fall into boxes of berserved better pay. "Jeff intro- mation via cellphones about ries to spotting signs of conduced the project and started better pay elsewhere. Andrew taminants and insects or other listing all these wacko social- 8 r Williamson offers a b o pests that might spoil crops. ists who were involved," Farley nus to workers who stay the These practices can reduce the of Andrew 8r Williamson said, whole season — and the food use of pesticides, something pointing an elbow at Nichol- initiative has persuaded many that the environmental groups son. "Hearing those names workers to stay on. participating in the project are was scarytomost ofthe people One big question remains, pushing for. in that room, but Jeff made it though: How many retailers clear Costco believed this was and restaurants will be willA win-win proposal the right thing to do — and ing to cover the initiative's inL ike many gr ow e r s, Costco is a big customer." creased costs by paying more Andrew lL Williamson says it In the past, workers had for fruit? "One of the trends gets just 9 cents of each dol- little incentive to report safety we're seeing in food and aglar that its strawberries sell problems. They were paid at a riculture is more and more for at retail. With most of the piece rate, seeking to fill their consumers wanting to know revenue going to retailers, the boxes as quickly as they could, things about their food and farmworkers and th e c om- and taking even 10 minutes to where and how it's grown and pany were eager to increase report a safety problem would what's in it," Glickman said. their meager share. So when in effect reduce their pay. One "This plays into that, but it's Erik Nicholson, vice president manager said that if workers not an easy thing to do. It can of the United Farm Workers, s potted animal feces in a n be successful,and it can be met with Lyons at Costco, he area where ripe strawberries replicated — but will it'?" learned that food safety was were ready to be plucked, they So far, only the Bon Appetit a top issue for consumers and might have still picked those Management Co., which operthe two embarked on a plan berries. ates 550 cafes in 32 states, has to improve conditions. They P edro Sanchez, a f a r m - joined Costco in agreeing to
The p r oducer b e hmd that Katy Perry cover says he's not out to deceive. "It's not about trying to live in somebody's shad-
E3
Crowd Continued from E1 Owners or others with an interest in a commercial property who need capital contract with CrowdStreet to list the potential property investment on the website. Once CrowdStreet approves the property for l i sting, all investor members whose profiles,or preferences, match the property will receive email and social media notifications. Interested investors identify how much they are willing to put up. When t o ta l i n v estments match the capital target, the deal closes and the process
goes offline.
ow or faking people out," said Michael Vail B lum, the Sherman Oaks, Calif.based owner of Titan Music Inc. Blum says the cover song business is about taking great material — sometimes written by someone else — and making a great
recording. Technology has just evened the p l aying field for artists who aren't signed to major labels, he
says. But sounding similar is often the whole point, explains a person familiar with how th e subsidiary of music publishing giant BMG works. The executive spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak publicly about it. The soundalike can take the place of the original for businesses like malls and restaurants that want to use the song but can't afford the original. For example, TV show " Two and a H a l f M e n " licensed Movie S o unds' sound-alike of "Gonna Fly Now," the theme song from the movie "Rocky," for an episode from 2010. It's a big business, with millions of dollars invested, and Movie Sounds' parent Countdown Media has a catalogofmore than 50,000 covers.
buy Andrew 8r W i lliamson's Limited Edition strawberries, though O'Driscoll of Oxfam said other buyers were interested. The strawberries that Bon Appetit now uses in its roughly 100 cafes in Northern California are exclusively Limited Edition. If the pilot goes well, the company will extend the program to all its stores. Maisie Gree n awalt, Bon Appetit's vice president for strategy, said the additional cost the com-
pany would pay for Limited Edition berries was "negligible" and would be offsetby those customers convinced by the quality of the fruit and better working conditions. "It's no longer a bout who has the lowest price," G reenawalt s a i d . "It's about, who do we feel good buying from regardless of price?"
Investors receive quarterly d istribution c h e ck s fr o m tenant rent, as well as a portion of th e p r oceeds when the property is either sold or refinanced. Unlike real estate investment trusts, typically large publicly t r aded c o mpanies that manage a large variety of properties, CrowdStreet allows investors to choose the properties and locations in which they want to invest, according to its website. Powderly said CrowdStreet provides investors with all of the appropriate information and documentation in a secure online setting, sort of a virtual deal room, where the investors can determine on their own whether a project is worthy. "All investing is risky, period," Powderly said. "Investing in real estate is risky. The investment opportunities that an investor will find on the C rowdStreet p l atform a r e
equally as risky." Because CrowdStreet only takes investments from accredited investors, he said, the business model is 100 percent
legaL Current SE C g u i d elines state that an online platform catering to these accredited investors, rather than the general public, doesn't need to be regulated by the agency. But he hopes the Jobs Act is finalized so guidelines are clear on how the CrowdStreet platform could potentially be offered to everybody. "We're unableto offer our platform to unaccredited investors due to the SEC, but it's something we're keeping our eye on as a future growth en-
gine," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rreesNbendbulletin.com — Reporter: 541-617-7820 egiuchlichC<bendbulletin.com
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Millennials
Martin Martinez puts a new rim liner on his bike at the Bicycle Kitchen in Los Angeles. The nonprofit repairs bikes with spare parts and elbow grease, dovetailing with the millennial generation's penchantfor thrift.
2,
Continued from E1 " Both generations had a childhood memory of wealth and then saw t hat w e alth yanked out from under them" in or a r ound their teenage years, said Morley Winograd, who has co-written several books on the millennial generation. Though the pain was much more severeduring the Depression,"Both generations are very conservative spenders," Winograd said. During th e eco n o m ic downturn, while older households ran up credit card debt, younger households whittled it down, a Pew Research Center analysis of federal data found earlier this year. More y o ung h o useholds had no credit card debt in 2010 than was the case in 2001, the data show. Among those who did owe on their credit cards, the median amount fell from roughly $2,500 to less than
f3t M
Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times
They cook f r o m s c ratch more often than older adults, are more likely to try homemade beauty treatments, and are more apt to use coupons to find deals, the market research firm Information Resources Inc. found in a survey last year. $1,700. In recent years, Bureau of Maria Garcia,30, said she Labor Statistics data reveal, gave up her credit card seven young adults between the ages years ago. "The fees — they of 25 and 34 spent less annuget you," said Garcia, a mother ally on e ntertainment than studying Web development at those ages 65 to 74. Los Angeles Harbor College. Even as they cut back on Her attitude these days is, "If I spending, millennials started can do without it, I'll do with- saving for retirement earlier out it." than older generations, according to studies by Merrill Thrifty generation Edge, Fidelity and TD AmeriOther studies hint that Gar- trade Holding Corp. "It's not that we're more picia is not alone in that attitude: Young adults were less likely ous about saving money," said to report using a credit card Nona Willis Aronowitz, a 28for everyday expenses than year-old Pipeline fellow with the average adult, a National the p r o gressive R o osevelt Foundation for Credit CounInstitute who w r i tes about seling survey found. Another generational issues. "It's more survey from th e C orporate that we have no idea what the Executive Board, a business future looks like. We're not advisory company, found that sure if we'll have our jobs in millennials with credit card six months." debt feel worse about it than Aronowitz added that many older adults do. millennials who went to col"They're k eenly a w a r e lege also are burdened by balthat the decisions made by looning student loans, making their parents, politically and them loath to load up more economically, have put them debt. behind the eight ball," said Yet despite their t h inned Michael D'Antonio, co-author wallets, young adults were of "Spend Shift," which draws more likely than any other upon an international opin- group — including households ion survey about values and making $90,000 or more — to spending. "This is the screwed say they were happy with their generation — and I think they standard of living, a Gallup know it." survey found two years ago. Many young adults have In another Gallup survey last forgone big purchases. Mil- month, they were more likely lennialsbuy fewer cars and than adults ages 30 to 64 to say own fewer homes, federal data that their financial situation show. was good or excellent — which
nearly half of them asserted. In some quarters, thrift has become cool, reflected in the do-it-yourself stylings of hipsters and economical new applications and websites. "As a kid, if you had a patch on your jeans it wasn't coolpeople made fun of me," said Jonaya Kemper, a 27-year-old preschool teacher who grows her own vegetables and sews her own sundresses. "Now they ask, 'Can you teach me?'" On a recent Monday night, Kemper was learning to adjust brakes at the Bicycle Kitchen, a Silver Lake nonprofit group that tends to batteredbikes with spare parts and elbow grease. Across the room, a friendly, tattooed volunteer showed a 13-
year-old and her mother how to shorten the chain on a longneglected bicycle. Kemper was fixing up a bike handed off to her by a friend. "Paying $600 or $700 for a bike — it's ridiculous," Kemper said. As for repairs, "If I can't fix it myself, I won't own it. I don't own a car. I would want to know how to fix it myself." The Internet has provided more ways to save. Carless millennials can g rab r i d es with Lyft, a ride-sharing service known for its discount rates and the cheeky pink mustaches gracing its cars. Those short on cash can pick up a campingtentor a blender by logging onto N eighborGoods, a Los Angeles-based
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34
32 M A M 52-week range $28 4D ~ $3 9 82
but also those that depend on corporate spending for their sales. Businesses look to be good customers, as many are sitting on healthy amounts of cash. Companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 index ended 2012 with $1.09 trillion in cash and shortterm investments, a record 52-WK L OW HIG H
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Sonus Networks SONS
$ CHG %CHG 1WK 1 W K
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Omthera Pharma
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3.39
26.4
30.6
197. 1
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0.23
23.7
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1.21
23.6
18.5
173. 5
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0.32
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21.4
23.9
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1.57
21.2
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Wk. vol.: 16.7m (2.3x avg.) PE: ... Mkt. Cap: $905.97 m Yiel d : ...
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0.53
20.3
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8.47
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19.3
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Caplease Inc LSE Regulus Therapeutics RGLS sinovac Biotech Ltd svA D yax Corporation DYA X Rubicon Technology R BC N T anzanian Roy Expl TRX
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2 4 1 .0
-4.46
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FRO
1.86
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-18.8
2.8
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Fuelcell Energy Glbl Geophys svcs Dole Food Co Unilife Corp
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riday close: $3.21 g $3,00
2.00
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$1.36 ~
$3 .3 1
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1-week change ~ $1.59 or -14.4%
Stock in the fruit and vegetable company sank after it said it would suspend its share repurchase plans. Friday close: $9.47
-58.7
-75.2
$11 10
52-week range $839 ~
$15.19
Wk. vol.: 6.5m (1.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $847.92 m Yiel d : ...
Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are $100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8 billion (large).
amount. The figure doesn't include cash held by financials, utilities and transportation companies, which typically carry large amounts of cash as part of their day-to-day business. All the stocks in this screen also have "Outperform" ratings from Credit Suisse analysts.
1-YR PRICE CHANGE
3 - YR PRICE cHANGE*
34
58
60.5
10.9
62
Ingersoll Rand (IR) Parker-Hannifin (PH) Microsoft (MSFT)
57.53
38
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41.3
16.9
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99.76
70
102
24 5
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34.90
26
35
23.2
13.6
54
EMC (EMC)
24.76
21
28
3.8
10.0
53
3.9%
100%
Index closing and weekly net changes for the week ending Friday, May 31, 2013
- 14
GlobalMarkets INDEX SB P 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100
Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Nikkei 225
WILSHIRE 5000 ~ -180 44 17,212.40 ~
LAST FRI. CHG FRL CHG WK MO QTR YTD 1630.74 -23.67 -1.43% j j +14.34% 8348.84 -51.36 -0.61% +9.67% -1.11% 6583.09 -73.90 j +11.62% -92.15 -0.41% -1.17% 2239z16 -1.19% 3948.59 -47.72 +8.45% 13774.54 +185.51 +1.37% +3z51%
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA
% O F SALES Buenos Aires Merval FROM U.S. Mexico City Bolsa
57.01
RUSSELL 2000 ~ 984.14
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$16.61
3,455.91
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Uni-Pixel Inc
Friday close: S31.34
CLOSE
National Cinemedia (NCMI) Jacobs Engineering Group (JEC)
N Asoaa ~
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annualized Data through May 31 Sources: Credit Suisse; FactSet
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10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
Wk. vol.: 40.0m (1.5x avg.) PE: 28.0 23.1 Mkt. Cap: $26.S2 b Yie l d : 4.0%
COMPANY
Stock Screener
•
15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
The utility's stock tumbled after a downgrade by a Deutsche Bank analyst, who said the company's profits will take a hit starting in 2016.
31.34
The U.S. economy is still looking better than other areas ol the world, even though its recovery is only modest. European countries are struggling, the U.K. economy is flirting with a triple-dip recession and China's economic growth is slowing. These are the main
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10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS
Hlth Care REIT
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included roughly 300 young
adults projected that w h i le they owed less on credit cards, they repaid it so slowly that fore buying, marketing groups they could face far deeper debt say. Atthe grocery store,they than their parents and grandgive generic brands a chance parents in the future. but will also pay more for orRatliff is wary of that risk. ganic or local foods, the Hart- Maybe a credit card is in his man Group consumer trends future. But the Ohio State stuconsultancy found. dent sees using one as "a last"They're looking for , resort kind of thing." 'What's the best investment "I don't want to put myself in for the dollar I have'?'" said a situation of being crushed," Tina Wells, CEO and founder he said.
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of Buzz M a rketing Group, which studies millennials. Experts caution that many in this generation may not be thrifty by choice. Nearly I in 4 young adults surveyed by the National Foundation for Credit Counseling said they had applied for a credit card in the previous year; more than half as many were rejected. Fewer college s t udents r e p orted owning credit cards at all after a federal law made it tougher to issue them to consumers younger than 21, Sallie Mae and Ipsos found. Others warn d ebt c o uld still be trouble for strapped millennials. An earlier Ohio State University study t hat
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Weekly Stock Winners and Losers COMPANY
startup that helps people borrow items from neighbors and friends. "The recession made thrift cool," said Micki Krimmel, the 35-year-old founder and chief executive of NeighborGoods, which has nearly 30,000 members of all ages. In Los Angeles, 20- and 30somethings flock to classes to craft chandeliers out of Mason jars or salvage old clothes with a bit of sewing at the Classroom LA. They fork over upward of $150 to learn to make garden b e nches, w o o den spoons or electric ukuleles at Knowhow Shop, a warehouse equipped with saws and a computerized mill. As the price of such classes underscores, young adults are still willing to spend, but they think carefully about value be-
Sao paolo Bovespa Toronto S&p/TSx
3489.43 -25.17 41588.32 +603.82 53357.13 -1277.56 12650.42 -96.13
-0.72% +1.47% -2.34% -0.75%
+22.25% -4.84% -1 2.46% +1.74%
EUROPE/AFRICA
Amsterdam Brussels Madrid Zurich Milan Johannesburg Stockholm ASIA Seoul Composite Singapore Straits Times Sydney All Ordinaries Taipei Taiex Shanghai Composite
363.38 2649.36 839.10 7947.01 17214.08 42016.45 1216.82
-4.31 -35.19 -10.62 -74.56 -136.88 +74.57 -8.36
-1.17% -1.31% -1.25% -0.93% -0.79% L +0.18% -0.68%
2001.05 3311.37 4914.00 8254.80 2300.60
+0.95 -24.64 -3.10 +11.51 -17.15
+0.05% -0.74% -0.06% +0.14% -0.74%
+6.03% +7.01% +1.75% L
+16.48% +5.78% +7.05% +1 0.1 5%
+0.20% +4.56% +5.35% +7.21% +1.39%
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
UNDAY DRIVER
Qhpyy [~pgfg Off p~ Qgdjffgg fgxgyy Chevrolet Suburban has a smo startup
BloombergNews
You've hit that point when you deserve a little leather in your life. You've logged countless hours during the daily commute, staring at a h a rd plastic dashboard, and it's time to move onward and upward. You're not a person of pretensions though. No sports car for you, middle-age crisis or not, and perhaps you'd like to buy American. I have a proposition: A Chevy. The Impala, specifically: a full-sized sedan with a long and storied hisREV(EW to ry, some of i t s t ylish a n d
g rand,
The fully equipped Impala even has LED running lights at the corners of the fascia, proving that automobile fads are a lot l ik e fashion fads. They begin at the top (in this case, Audi was the first major carmaker to use them as a design element) and eventually trickle downward. The Impala got its start in the late 1950s, and it was a stylish machine indeed. Various model yearshad long,extended trunks, with expressive design cues like wild rear fins some-
heads from your original engine reused? If so, this could be the source of oil smoke. I would not expect oil smoke from valve guides or seals to "seal itself" in 10,000 miles. Since the oil smoke isn't harmful to the engine and you have a three-yearwarranty, Iw ould suggest documenting the oil smoke and consumption at this time and mileage, monitoring the oi l c o nsumption carefully in the next two oil changes, and if the blue smoke and oil consumption continue, I'd press the dealer for help.
(Minneapolis) Star Tribune irrai yI I
Q
• I just had a new en• gine put into my 2005 Chevrolet Suburban. When I start my truck after it sits for afew days, Igetblue exhaust smoke out of my tailpipe. I've been monitoring my oil and the level has been going down. It was down l i/2 quarts when I brought it in for an oil change. There is no leaking. A mechanic friend said it is either my valves or valve seals. The mechanic at the dealer said I need to give it 10,000 miles and he said it should seal itself. Does that sound correct'? I have a three-year warranty on the
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not. The new incarnation, the 2014-model year, falls on the good side, mostly. While the base price is $27,500, the 2LTZ is the package you'll want, with leather and great safety features and a V - 6 e n gine that'll get you places, starting at$36,500. The Impala has been totally r edesigned, and a l ong t h e way it filched technology and features from upscale General Motors brethren Cadillac and Buick. While a luxurious Chevy may sound like an oxymoron, the Impala certainly tilts in that direction. With front-wheel-drive and no option for all-wheel-drive, it's no sports car. Yet the 3.6-liter V-6, married to a six-speed automatic transmission, has plenty of pull at 305 horsepower and the overall drive is pleasant. The sedan is roomy, seating five comfortably. The trunk is huge. And it has a real sense of road presencewith masculine lines, a tall hood and authoritative grill.
By Paul Brand
, IIIII
Q
. I have a 2000 Chrysler . minivan w i t h 6 5 ,000 miles. The last time I filled my new engine. gas tank, the dash gauge went • Based on consuming to full and would not move, • 1.5 quarts in 3 ,000- afterbeing driven 200 to 300 plus miles, the engine's oil miles. What is wrong? consumption falls into ac• Does the needle on the ceptable limits of I q u art • fuel gauge move when per 2,000 miles. Normal oil the ignition is first switched to consumption occurs when on'? If not, the problem could be a very small percentage of in the instrument cluster. Acthe oil film left on cylinder cording to my Alldata automowalls is burned as the pis- tive database, Chrysler built in ton is driven downward on a simple self-test for the instruthe combustion stroke. This ment cluster. With the ignition level of oil use would not in the off position, press and generate significant smoke hold the "trip" and "reset" buton startup. tons simultaneously. Turn the It is far more common for ignition switch to on and conthat puff of blue oil smoke tinue to hold the trip and reset on startup to be caused by buttons until the word "code" oil that has collected on the appears in the odometer winvalve stems after the en- dow. If there's a problem with gine is shut off. If there is a the cluster, a three-digit DTC problem with the oil seals fault code will show. If there or valves/guides, this oil can are no problems with the clusdrain past the oil seal and ter, "Code 999" will appear. down the valve guide where Next, have a scan tool check it collects on top of the valve for any BCM fault codes. Also, head. Then, when the en- the function and calibration of gine is first started, this oil is both the fuel gauge and sending drawn into the combustion unit can be checked. chambers and burned, cre— Brand is an automotive trouating blue smoke from the bleshooter andformer race car tailpipe. Were the cylinder driver. Email questions to paulheads on the replacement brand@startribune.com. Include a engine new'? Or were the daytimephone number.
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GM via Bloomberg News
The 2014 Chevrolet Impala LTZ adds comfort and luxury to your dally commute.
2014 Chevrolet Impala 2LTZ Base price:$27,500 As tested:$39,510
Type:Six-speed automatic full-sized sedan Engine:3.6-liter V-6 with 305 horsepower rand 264
pound- feet of torque Mileage:18 mpgcity, 28 mpg highway
had to work around a number of complicated interior angles, and while the fit and finish wasn't perfect, it was still pret-
model starts at j ust u n der $50,000 and is about $55,000 with a technology package. The Acura's 3.5-liter V-6 has ty darn good. 310 hp, only five more horses The array of convenience than the Impala's. The RLX, features on th e 2 LTZ a l so wider and shorter than the struck me. It has one-touch Impala, has a more athletic power windows throughout, stance. And it gets better gas a rear-vision camera, lane- mileage (20 city, 31 highway, departure warning and rear versus 18 and 28). c ross-traffic a l e r t (which In terms of overall comproved quite helpful w h en fort, luxury and d r ivability, backing out of a tricky park- in many ways I preferred the ing spot). A power sunroof Impala. Both are front-wheeland second-row skylight are drive. The steering and feel of standard on t h e u p m arket the pedals were firm on the model, asare the heated seats. Impala and far too slack on You get 10 airbags, too. the RLX. The Impala's exteThe GPS and infotainment rior was more interesting than system, called MyLink, is sim- the RLX's generic lines. ilar to Cadillac's CUE, with an And ultimately the Chevroeight-inch touchscreen. let is less expensive. There's Unlike the Cadillac, though, value at that $36,500 price, it still has buttons and knobs, making it a pretty good way to making the controls far easier introduce some leather to your to access. You want to turn up daily commute. the air? There's a knob with a digital readout inside. Simple
times described as "bat wings." By the late 1970s the Impala was downgraded to an entrylevel car, its stylish days at an end. (The 2013 model-year Impala'? Not a pretty thing.) Today, the all-new interior is perhaps the best return to form. My test model, pushing $40,000 with options (a ticket of $39,510) had a black-andtan colorscheme. A swathe of tan-stitched leather sat atop the dashboard, spread over soft-touch plastic as if it were and genius. a bear-skin rug thrown over Still, many buyers might flooring. Th e l e ather p an- balk at a Chevy sedan at this els were thick, begging to be price. (The Spark, Sonic and squeezed. Cruze all start at w ell less There was laminated wood than $20,000.) I couldn't help on the doors, hide-bound seats but compare it to another flagand a steering wheel of wood ship sedan I recently tested, and leather. Chevy craftsman the Acura RLX. That all-new
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Eor Ran er'sstart ro em By Brad Bergholdt
nostic search. A faulty crankMcClatchy-Tribune News Service shaft or camshaft sensor could (MCT) extinguish spark or fuel injec• I have a hot-start probtors. An inoperative fuel pump • lem in my 2 0 03 Ford could be caused by a faulty Ranger. The Ranger will start pump relay or the pump itself. cold, but after being driven An erratic electrical connecfor a while and shut down, the tion in perhaps a half-dozen engine will not restart. The possible places could also restarter is OK. sult in any of these systems — Jean Wettstein performing poorly or not at • This is certainly a frusall. Since the fault comes and • trating problem, but it goes with temperature and the shouldn't be too tough to fix if (run only, not cranking). You truck apparently runs well beyou're willing to become part should hear a hum for about tween bouts, the fault is highly of the diagnostic team. By two seconds, then it will stop. unlikely to be mechanical in your description, it sounds like Learn this sound. nature. during a hot-soak restart the Another important sound is If I w e r e t h e t echnician Ranger starter cranks fine, but fuel-injector clicking. This one checking this, I'd make a prethe engine fails to start. "Hot is a little more tricky — find a arranged shopping list of test soak" refers to the elevated friend with under-hood savvy points, such as the crankshaft under-hood temperature that to point out t h e e asiest-to- sensor and other terminals at can occur during the first fif- reach injector, and the safest the power-train control modteen minutes or so after engine way to observe it clicking. A ule. I'd also take a close look shut-off. Our three categories long hardwood stick or screw- at all scan-tool engine data of concern will be: driver held t o t h e i n jector during a normal start, and be • Fuel pressure, particularly while the engine is cranked or poised to take a data snapshot the fuel pump an d r elated running should yield a notice- during an episode for comparparts; able clicking or vibration. If ison. A fuel pressure gauge, • Fuel injector drive, or cor- you do not have a clear under- noid light (injector signal tesrect pulsing/clicking; standing of moving parts and ter), and spark tester would • Spark, or the ignition sys- other under-hood hazards, do also be ready for action. tem delivering h igh-voltage not attempt this! During an episode, it will pulses to the spark plugs. Checking for ignition spark be necessary to work quickly First, some questions: Does is also a great clue to the noand decisively to zero in on the the "check engine" light come start puzzle, but this is best cause before things return to on while driving? If so, helpful left to a pro, or perhaps the normal. Problems like these troublecodes may be stored. process could be taught by a a re challenging, yet fun t o Does the no-start condition skillful friend. During a notrounce. happen in a regular or predict- start episode, checking for a — Bergholdt teaches automotive able manner? That is, can you missing hum, click or zap can technology. Email questions to learn its habit so the fault can help a lot to narrow the diagunder-the-hood@earthlinh.net.
Q
A
be duplicated? If you can duplicate the condition, do so for a professional technician. If the fault is difficult to duplicate, let's spend a little time learning two normal sounds when the truck isn't acting up, so you can report your findings to the tech. Fuel pump: With the gas cap removed, listen carefully near the filler neck while a h e lper t u rns the key to the run position
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INSIDE: BOOICSW Editorials, F2
Commentary, F3 O» www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
DAVID BROOKS
A romantic economic advantage
s
By David Brooks New York Times News Service
n the race to be the world's dominant economy,Americans have at least one clear advantage over the Chinese. We're much better at branding. U.S. companies have these eccentric failed novelists and personally difficult visionary founders who are fantastic at creating brands that consumers around the world flock to and will pay extra for. Chinese companies are terrible at this. Every few years, Chinese officials say they're going to start an initiative to create compelling brands, and the results are always disappointing. According to a recent survey by HD Trade services, 94 percent of Americanscannot name even a single brand from the world's secondlargesteconomy. Whatever else they excel at, Chinese haven't been able to produce a style of capitalism that is culturally important, globally attractive and spiritually magnetic. Why? Brand managers who've worked in China say their executives tend to see business deals as transactions, rather than being about relationships. As you'd expect in a country that has recentlyemerged from poverty,where competition is fierce, where margins are thin, where corruption is prevalent and trust is low, the executives there are more likely to take a shortterm view of their exchanges. But if China is ever going to compete with developed economies, it'll have to go through a series of phase shifts. Creating effective brands is not just thinking like a low-end capitalist, only more so. It is an entirely different mode of thought. Think of Ralph Lifshitz longing to emulateWASP elegance and creating the Ralph Lauren brand. Think of the young Stephen Gordon pining for the graciousness of the Adirondack lodges and creating Restoration Hardware. Think of Nike's mythos around the ideal of athletic perseverance. People who create great brands are usually seeking to fulfill some inner longing of their own, some dream of living on a higher plane or with a cooler circle of friends. Many of the greatest brand makers are in semirevolt against commerce itself. The person who probably has had the most influence on the feel of contemporary American capitalism, for example, is the aptly named Stewart Brand. He was the hippie, you will recall, who created the Whole Earth Catalog. That compendium of countercultural advice appeared to tilt against corporate America. But it was embraced by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and many other high-tech pioneers. Brand himselfcreatedthe term personalcomputer.As early as 1972, he understood that computers, which were just geeky pieces of metal and plastic, could be seen in cool, countercultural and revolutionary terms. We take the ethos of Silicon Valley and Apple for granted, but people like Brand gave it the aura, inspiring thousands of engineers and designers and hundreds of millions of consumers. Seth Siegel, the co-founder of Beanstalk, a brand management firm, says branding "decommoditizes a commodity." It coats meaning around a product. It demands a quality of experience with the consumer that has tobe reinforced atevery touch point, at the store entrance, in the rest rooms, on the shopping bags. The process of branding itself is essentially about the expression and manipulation of daydreams. It owes as much to romanticism as to business school. It is very hard for a culture that doesn't celebrate dissent to thrive in this game. It's very hard for a culture thatencourages a natural deference to authority to do so. It's very hard for a country where the powerful don't instinctively seek a dialogue with the less powerful to keep up. It seems likely that the Chinese will require a few more cultural revolutions before it can brand effectively and compete at the top of the economic food chain. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times. John Costa's column will return.
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Jim Wilson /The New York Times
Attendees wear Google Glass last month at Google I/O in San Francisco. While most agree that a smartphone-linked display and camera in the corner of your vision is intriguing and potentially revolutionary, some worry that Google Glass may disrupt cognitive ability, with potentially dangerous consequences.
By Daniel J. Simons and Christopher F. Chabris
Thrnkslock
The New York Times
ews about Google Glass is everywhere these days, and so are its critics. Some charge it only with fashion crimes. Others worry about invasion of privacy: When out on a date with a Glass wearer, you won't know if they are recording you — or Googling "seduction tips," for that matter. Nonetheless, most agree that a smartphone-linked display and camera placedinthe corner ofyour vision is intriguing and potentially revolutionary — and like us, they want to try it. But Glass may inadvertently disrupt a crucial cognitive capacity, with potentially dangerous consequences. In an impromptu TED talk and interview in March, Sergey Brin,
one
circles. To their credit, Google's designers have recognized the distraction caused by grabbing someone's attention with a sudden visual change. Brin explained that Glass doesn't flash an alert in its users' visual field when a new text message arrives. Instead, it plays a sound and requires them to look up to activate the display. The "eyes-free" goal addresses an obvious limitation of the human brain: We can't look away from where we're heading for more than a few seconds without losing our bearings. And time spent looking at a cellphone is time spent oblivious to the world, as shown in the viral videos of distracted phone users
of Google's founders, described a motivation for the new product. "We questioned whether you should be walking around looking down" at a smartphone, he said. Instead, the company's designers asked, "Can we make something that frees your hands" and "frees your eyes"? Google isn't the only company selling a technology that makes it easier to use your phone while you do other things. Last month Chevrolet released a commercial touting"eyes-freeand hands-free integration" with the iPhone's Siri interface, showing a woman checking her text messages using voice commands while she drives in
who stumble into shoppingmall fountains. Most people intuitively grasp the "two-second rule." When driving, for example, we glance only briefly at the radio or speedometer. But some distractions overwhelm this intuition. Researchers at the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute outfitted carsand trucks with cameras and sensors to monitor real-world driving behavior. When drivers were communicating, they tended to look away for as much as 4.6 seconds during a 6-second period. In effect, people lose track of time when texting, leading them to look at their phones far longer than they know they should. Two-way communication is especially engaging, and time flies when we are reading and typing. See Glass/F6
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owman Dam's issues didn't get fixed in the last Congress. They should get fixed in this one. The issues are simple enough. We don't know who said this first, but there is nothing wild and scenic about a dam. When the Crooked River was designated wild and scenic under federal law, Bowman Dam was included. It's an earthen, man-made dam. Becausethe dam is so very "wild and scenic" that means no hydropower can be built. The fix would betomove the boundary. Prineville could also use access to more water to supply homes and businesses. The city can't pump more water without replacing the water in the aquifer. So the fix is to release more water from behind the dam so Prineville could pump more for its community. Fish andwildlifebehindthe dam could use increased stream flows. The fix is to increase the amount of water released downstream. Those aren't the only issues and there are differences of opinion about them. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., had one version of a solution. His
The Bowman Dam bills
died as Congress tussled over the sequester. What we hope we can count on is that our legislative delegation will come up with
ways to resolve problems. passed the House. Sens. Jeff Merkley andRon Wyden, both Oregon Democrats, had another version. The Bowman Dam bills died as Congress tussled over the sequester.What we hope we can count on is that our legislative delegation will come up with ways to resolve problems. If they can't agree on a comprehensive fix for all of the issues, think small. They need to pass what they can agree on. It's not too much to ask to release more unallocated water from behind the dam so Prineville can get the water it needs for its community. Start with that.
It shouldnot be against the law to ask for information
p
resident Obama made an attempt in his recent speech on terrorism to quash any suspicion that he is out to intimidate the press. "I'm troubled by the possibility that leak investigations may chill the investigative journalism that holds government accountable," he said. "Journalists should not be at legal risk for doing their jobs. Our focus must be on those who break the law." It's not a lullaby that should put anybody at ease. It should make any Oregonian uncomfortable when a J u stice Department affidavit argues that a journalist had broken the law, "either as an aider, abettor and/ or co-conspirator" by asking for information. As many news outlets have reported, there was a leak investigation of a State Department employee. The employee allegedly provided James Rosen of Fox News with classified information. The Justice Department obtained a search warrant for his personal emails. The application for the
warrant accused the reporter of breaking the law because he was seeking information. In his speech, Obama offered as a solution what is called a shield law to protect journalists as they perform their duties. He called on the Justice Department to review its guidelines for dealing with reporters. That may please some, particularly journalists. But do we want the government defining what a journalist is'? No. And what about other Americans? If somebody does not fit the government's definition of "a journalist" and is trying to hold the government accountable, is the individual considered to be breaking the law by asking for information? There is a fragile balance between keeping Americans informed and keeping some information secret. Of course, there can be harm created by printing articles based on classified information. But any American should not be accused of breaking the law by asking for information.
Public investment helps private business By Robert Hamerly have been in business as a residential contractor fo r s e ven years. I started my business with the specific focus on Home Performance. Three years ago we were growing, but the market seemed to have a ceiling. Homeowners wanted to upgrade theirhouses, but were hesitant to use up all their limited cash to invest in a remodel. And banks weren't lending. The Home Performance industry was capped. Lucky for my company, CleanEnergy Works Oregon (CEWO) started petitioning banks to lend to this sector. Today, we continue our growth trajectory in part because of our partnership with CEWO. CEWO is a nonprofit focused on making it easy for Oregon residents to make comprehensiveenergy efficiency upgrades to their homes. CEWOdoesthisbyconnectinghomeowners to local lenders for low-cost financing, to local utilities for cash incentives and to certified energy efficiency contractors like us to do the work. The CEWO model is a win for homeowners and the economy. Working with CEWO, we have been able tohelp 47 homeowners here in Bend, make theirhomes m ore comfortable, less expensive to run and more effi cient.We've done
t
IN MY VIEW e verything from sealing air a n d duct leaks, to installing insulation
to replacing aging, ineffective and sometimes highly-unsafe equipment like old furnaces and hot water systems. We even replace old windows with new ones. What this has meant for my business is sales growth and the need to bring on more skilled workers. Specifically, I have hired three individuals locally and currently have two openings I am working to fill. GreenSavers provides steady work for previousunemployed localresidents, full healthcare benefits and a chance to make a difference in our community and for homeowners. Because you are improving the community, this is a rewarding occupation. We have many interested applicants who are changing careers and would like an opportunity in this industry. None of this would be possible without public investment. In fact through e f fective p u blic-private partnership, CEWO h a s h e lped thousands of O r egonians make their h ouses m or e c o mfortable while reducing wasteful energy expenses and improving the value of their largest asset, their home. And equally as important, CEWO has
helped more than 1,000 workers receive a paycheck and 300 new workers build a promising construction career. As a small business owner and an employer, I know how important that is. The public funds that first helped seed this effort came from the U.S. Department of Energy. Those funds successfully unlocked millions of dollars of private capital now being circulated in the local economy. Private lenders like Umpqua Bank are now helping finance energy remodels in communities throughout our state. All those remodels mean a stronger job market for construction professionals. Now the State of Oregon has the opportunity to expand this job creation machine. After all, there are 600,000 homes throughout Oregon in need of an energy upgrade. That represents the potential for 60,000 jobs and $8 billion in economic development. I am encouraging my legislators to make smart decisions in this time of tight budgets and continued economic challenges. Now, more than ever, we need to fund efforts like Clean Energy Works Oregon that have a proven track record of creating jobs,growing businesses and increasing private investment. — Robert Hamerly, who lives in Bend, isthefounder ofGreenSavers USA.
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Don't accept the Dorothy Doctrine for foreign policy "This war, like all wars, must end. That's what history advises ..." — President Baraclz Obama,May 23
WASHINGTONi ce thought. But m uch a s Obama would like to close his eyes, click his heels three times and declare the war on terror over, war is a two-way street. That's what history advises: Two sides to fight it, two to end it. By surrender (World War II), by armistice (Korea and Vietnam) or when the enemy simply disappears from the field
(the Cold War). Obama says enoughn is enough. He doesn't want us on a perpetual wartime footing." Well, the C old War lasted 45 years. The war on terror, 12 so far. By Obama's calculus, we should have declared the Cold War over in 1958 and left Western Europe, our Pacific allies, the entire free world to fend for itself — and consigned EasternEurope to endless darkness. John F. Kennedy summoned the nation to the burdens of the long
twilight struggle. Obama, agonizing publicly about the awful burdens of command (which he twice sought in election), wants out. For him and for us. He doesn't just want to revise and update the September 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force, which m any c o nservatives have called for. He wants to repeal it. He admits that the AUMF establishes the basis both in domestic and international law to conduct crucial defensiveoperations, such as drone strikes. Why, then, abolish the authority to do w hat we sometimes need to do? Because that will make the war go away? Persuade our enemies to retireto their caves? This is John L ennon, bumpersticker foreign policy — I m agine World Peace. Obama pretends that the tide of war is receding. But it's demonstrably not. It's metastasizing to Mali, to the Algerian desert, to the North African states falling under the Muslim Brotherhood, to Yemen, to the savage civil war in Syria, now
CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER spilling over into Lebanon and destabilizing Jordan. Even Sinai, tranquil for 35 years, is descending into chaos. It's not war that's receding. It's America. Under Obama. And it is precisely in the power vacuum left behind that war is r ising. Obama declares Assad must go. The same wish-as-policy f ecklessness from our bystander president. Two years — and 70,000dead — later,Obama keeps repeating the wish even as the tide of battle is altered by the new arbiters of Syria's future — Iran, Hezbollah and Russia. Where does every party to the Syrian conflict go on bended knee? To Moscow, as Washington recedes into irrelevance. But the ultimate expression of Obama's Dorothy Doctrine is Guantanamo. It must close. Must, mind you.
OK. Let's accept the dubious proposition that the Yemeni prisoners could be sent home without coming back to fight us. And that others could be convicted in court and put in U.S. prisons. Now the rub. Obama openly admits that "even after we take these steps one issue will remain — just how to deal with those Gitmo detainees who we know have participated in dangerous plots or attacks but who cannot be prosecuted." Well, yes. That's always been the problem with Gitmo. It's not a question of geography. The issue is indefinite detention — whether at Gitmo, a Colorado supermax or St. Helena. Can't try 'em, can't release 'em. Having posed the central question, what is Obama's answer? "I am confident that this legacy problem can be resolved." That's it! I kid you not. He's had four plus years to think t his one through — and he openly admits he's got no answer. Because there is none. Hence the need for Gitmo. Other wars end, at
which point prisoners are repatriated. But in this war, the other side has no intention of surrender or armistice. They will fight until the caliphate is established or until jihadism is as utterly defeated as fascism and communism. That's the reason — the onlyreason — for the detention conundrum. There is no solution to indefinite detention when the detainees are committed to indefinite war. Obama's fantasies are twinned. He can no more wish the detention away than he can the war. We were defenseless on 9/11 because, despite bin L a den's open written declaration of war in 1996, we pretended for years that no war against ushad even begun. Obama would return us to pre-9/11 defenselessness — casting Islamist terror as a law-enforcement issue and removing the legal basis for treating it as armed conflict — by pretending that the war is over. It's enough to make you weep. — Charles Krauthammeris a columnist for The Washington Post.
SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN F 3
OMMENTARY
or er is nowo soe e deas of th e 1960s have now grown reactionary in our world that is vastly different from a half-century ago. Take well-meaning subsidies for those over age 62. Why are there still senior discounts, vast expansions in Social Security and Medicare, and generous public pensions? Five decades ago all that made sense. There was no such thing as double-dipping. Seniors often were physically worn out from blue-collar jobs. They were usually poorer and frequently sicker than society in general. The aged usually died not long after they retired. Not now. Seniors often live a quarter-century or longer after a mostly white-collar r e tirement, d r awing subsidies from those least able to pay for them. Seniors ar e n o t l i k e t o d ay's s trapped youth, scrimping for a down payment ona house. Most are not struggling to find even part-time work. None are paying off crushing student loans. In a calcified economy, why would an affluent couple in their early 60s earn a "senior discount" at a movie, while the struggling young couple with three children in the same line does not? Affirmative action and enforced "diversity" were originally designed to give a boost to those who were victims of historical bias from the supposedly oppressive white-majority society. Is that still true, a halfcentury after these assumptions be-
t
Berkeley, is it because of the stubborn institutional prejudices that also somehow have been trumped by Asian-Americans enrolling at three times their numbers in the state's general p o pulation'? Are came institutionalized? women so oppressed by men that Through greater intermarriage they graduate from college in higher and immigration, America has be- numbers than their chauvinist male come a m u ltiracial nation. Skin counterparts? color, general appearance, accent or Consider also the calcified asthe sound of one's name cannot so sumptions about college education. easily identify either "oppressors" or The expanding 1960s campus was "victims." touted as the future gateway to a So who exactly should receive smarter,fairer, richer and more privileges in job-hiring or college ad- ethical America. Is that dream still missions — the newly arrived Paki- valid'? stani immigrant, or the third-genToday, thecollege-educated owe eration, upper-middle-class Mexi- a collective $1 trillion in unpaid stucan-American who does not speak dent loans. Millions of recent graduSpanish? Both, or neither? What ates cannot find jobs that offer much about someone of h a lf-Jamaican chance of paying off their crushing ancestry'? What about the children student debts. of Attorney General Eric Holder or College itself has become a sort self-proclaimed Native A m erican of five- to six-year lifestyle choice. Sen. Elizabeth Warren'? What about Debt, joblessness or occasional partthe poor white grandson of the Okla- time employment and coursework homa diaspora who is now a minor- eat up a youth's 20s — in a way that ity in California'? military service or vocational trainEven if the 21st-century state could ing does not. define who is a minority, on what In reaction, private diploma mills moral grounds does the targeted are springing up everywhere. But beneficiarydeserve special consid- there are no "diversity czars" at eration? Is his disadvantage defined DeVry University. There is no time by being poorer, by lingering trauma or money forthe luxury of classes from his grandparents' long-ago or- such as "Gender Oppression" at deals, or by yesterday's experience Phoenix University. Students do not with routine racial prejudice'? have rock-climbing walls or have If Latinosare underrepresented Michael Moore address them at at the U n iversity o f C a l ifornia, Heald College.
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON
The private-sectorcampus makes other assumptions. One is that the hallowed liberal arts general-education requirement has been corrupted and no longer ensures an employer that his college-graduate hire is any more broadly educated or liberally minded than those who paid far less tuition for job-training courses at for-profit alternative campuses. Scan the government grandees caught up in the current administration's ballooning IRS, Associated Press and Benghazi scandals. In each case, a blue-chip Ivy League degree was no guarantee that our best and brightest technocrats would prove transparent or act honorably. What difference did it make that White House Press SecretaryJay Carney, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Attorney General Eric Holder, President Barack Obama and U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice had degrees from prestigious universities when they misled the American
people or Congress? The now-aging idealists of the 1960s long ago promised us that a uniformly degreed citizenry — shepherded by Ivy League-branded technocrats — would make America better by sorting us out by differences in age, gender, education and race. It is now past time to end that ossified dream before it becomes our collective nightmare. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution,
Stanford University.
Agencies: the 4th branch of government By Jonathan Turley
1984 that agencies are entitled to heavy deference in their interpretahere were t imes t hi s p ast tions of laws. The court went even week when it seemed like the further this past week, ruling that 19th-century K n ow-Nothing agencies should get the same heavy Party had returned to Washington. deference in determining their own President Barack Obama insisted jurisdictions — a power that was he knew nothing about major deci- previously believed to rest with Consions in the State Department, or the gress. In his dissent in Arlington Justice Department, or the Internal v. FCC, Chief Justice John Roberts Revenue Service. The heads of those warned: "It would be a bit much agencies, in turn, insisted they knew to describe the result as 'the very nothing about major decisions by definition of tyranny,' but the dantheir subordinates. It was as if the ger posed by the growing power of government functioned by s o me the administrative state cannot be hidden hand. dismissed." Clearly,there was a degree of The judiciary, too, has seen its willful blindness in these claims. authority diminished by the rise of However, the suggestion that some- the fourth branch. Under Article one, even the president, is in control III of the Constitution, citizens facof today'sgovernment may be an ing charges and fines are entitled illusion. to due processin our court system. The growing dominance of the As the number of federalregulafederalgovernment over the states tions increased, however, Congress has obscured more f undamental decided to relieve the judiciary of changes within the federal govern- most regulatory cases and create ment itself: It is not just bigger, it is administrative courts tied to indidangerously off kilter. Our carefully vidual agencies. The result is that a constructedsystem of checks and citizen is 10 times more likely to be balances is being negated by the rise tried by an agency than by an actual of a fourth branch, an administra- court. In a given year, federal judges tive state of sprawling departments conduct roughly 95,000 adjudicatory and agencies that govern with in- proceedings, including trials, while creasing autonomy and decreasing federal agencies complete more than transparency. 939,000. For much of our nation's history, These agency proceedings are ofthe federal government was quite ten mockeriesof due process, with small. In 1790, it had just 1,000 non- one-sided presumptions and promilitary workers. In 1962, there were cedural rules favoring the agency. 2,515,000 federal employees. Today, And agencies increasingly seem to we have 2,840,000 federal workers chafe at being denied their judicial in 15 departments, 69 agencies and authority. Just ask John Brennan. 383 nonmilitary sub-agencies. Brennan, a 50-year-old technology This exponential growth has led to consultant, was charged with disincreasing power and independence orderlyconduct and indecent expofor agencies. The shift of author- sure when he stripped at Portland ity has been staggering. The fourth International Airport last year in branch now has a larger practical protest of "invasive" security meaimpact on the lives of citizens than sures by the Transportation Secuall the other branches combined. rity Administration. He was cleared The riseof the fourth branch has by a federal judge, who ruled that his been at the expense of Congress's stripping was a form of free speech. lawmaking authority. In fact, the The TSA was undeterred. After the vast majority of "laws" governing ruling, it pulled Brennan into its own the United States are not passed by agency courts under administrative Congress but are issued as regula- charges. tions, crafted largely by thousands The rise of the fourth branch has of unnamed, unreachable bureau- occurred alongside an unprecedentc rats. One study f ound t hat i n ed increase in presidential powers2007, Congress enacted 138 public from the power to determine when laws, while federal agencies final- to go to war to the power to decide ized 2,926 rules, including 61 major when it's reasonable to vaporize a regulations. U.S. citizen in a drone strike. In this T his r u lemaking c omes w i t h new order, information is jealously little accountability. It's often imguarded and transparency has depossible to know, absent a major clined sharply. That trend, in turn, scandal, whom to blame for rules has given the fourth branch even that are abusive or nonsensical. Of greater insularity and independence. course,agencies owe theircreation When Congress triesto respond to and underlying legal authority to cases of agency abuse, it often finds Congress, and Congress holds the officials walled off by claims of expurse strings. But Capitol H i ll's panding executive privilege. relatively small staff is incapable of Of course,federal agencies ofexerting oversight on more than a ficially report to the White House small percentage of agency actions. under the umbrella of the executive And the threat of cutting funds is a branch. But in practice, the agencies blunt instrument to control a mas- have evolved into largely indepens ive administrative state — l i k e dent entities over which the presirunning a locomotive with an on/ dent has very limited control. Only I off switch. percent of federal positions are filled The autonomy was m agnified by political appointees, as opposed when the Supreme Court ruled in to career officials, and on average Special to The Washington Post
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Exponential growth has led to increasing power
and independence for
dray, nominated to serve as the first director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Cordray is
highly qualified, but Republican
senators oppose the independence of the new bureau and have questions about its jurisdiction and funding. After those senators repeatedly staggering. The fourth blocked the n omination, Obama branch now has a larger used a congressional break in January to make a recess appointment. practical impact on the then, two f ederal appeals lives of citizens than a/I the Since courts have ruled that Obama's reother branches combined. cess appointments violated the Constitution and usurped congressional authority. While the fight continues in the Senate, the Obama adminisappointees serve only two years. At tration has appealed to the Supreme an individual level, career officials Court. are insulated from political pressure It would be a mistake to dismiss by civil service rules. There are also such conflicts as products of our dysentire agencies — including the Se- functional, partisan times. Today's curities and Exchange Commission, political divisions are mild compared the Federal Trade Commission and with those in the early republic, as the Federal Communications Com- when President Thomas Jefferson mission — that are protected from described his predecessor's tenure as "the reign of the witches." Rather, White House interference. Some agencies have gone so far as today's confrontations reflect the seto refuse to comply with presidential rious imbalance in the system. orders. For example, in 1992 PresiThe marginalization Congress dent George H.W. Bush ordered the feels is magnified for citizens, who U.S. Postal Service to w i thdraw are routinely pulled into the vortex a lawsuit against the Postal Rate of an administrative state that alCommission, and he threatened to lows little challenge or appeal. The sack members of the Postal Service's IRS scandal is the rare case in which Board of Governors who denied internal agency priorities are forced him. The courts ruled in favor of the into the public eye. Most of the time, independence of the agency. such internal policies are hidden It's a small percentage of agency from public view and congressional matters that rise to the level of presi- oversight. While public participation dential notice. The rest remain the in the promulgation of new regulasoleconcern ofagency discretion. tions is allowed, and often required, As the power of the fourth branch the process is generally perfunctory has grown, conflicts between the and dismissive. other branches have become more In the new regulatory age, presiacute. There is no better example dents and Congress can still change than the f ights over presidential the government's priorities, but the appointments. agencies effectively run the show Wielding its power to confirm, based on their interpretations and block or deny nominees is one of discretion. The rise of this fourth the few remaining ways Congress branch represents perhaps the sincan influence agency policy and gle greatestchange in our system of get a window into agency activity. government since the founding. Nominations now commonly trigger We cannot long protect liberty congressional demands for expla- if our leaders continue to act like nations of agencies' decisions and mere bystanders to the work of disclosures of their documents. And government. — Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro that commonly leads to standoffs with the White House. professor of public interest law at George Take the fight over Richard CorWashington University.
agencies. The shift of authority has been
THOMAS FRIEDMAN
How to
get a job U
nderneath the huge drop in demand that drove unemployment up to 9 percent during the recession, there's been an important shift in the education-to-work model in America. Anyone who's been looking for a job knows what I mean. It is best summed up by the mantra from the Harvard education expert Tony Wagner that the world doesn't care anymore what you know; all it cares "is what you can do with what you know." And since jobs are evolving so quickly, with so many new tools, a bachelor's degree is no longer considered an adequate proxy by employers for your ability to do a particular job — and, therefore, be hired. So, more employers are designing their own tests to measure applicants' skills. And they increasingly don't care how those skills were acquired: home schooling, an online university, a massive open online course, or Yale. They just want toknow one thing:Can you add value? One of the best ways to understand the changing labor market is to talk to the co-founders of HireArt (www. hireart.com): Eleonora Sharef, 27, a veteran of McKinsey; and Nick Sedlet, 28, a math whiz who left Goldman Sachs. Their startup was designed to bridge the divide between job-seekers and job-creators. "The market is broken on both sides,"explained Sharef."Many applicants don't have the skills that employers are seeking, and don't know how to get them. But employers also have unrealistic expectations." They're all "looking for purple unicorns:the perfect match. They don't want to train you, and they expect you to be overqualified." In the new economy, "you have to prove yourself, and we're an avenue for candidates to do that," said Sharef. The way HireArt works, explained Sharef (who was my daughter's college roommate), is that companies come with a job description and then HireArt designs online written and video tests relevant for that job. Then they cull through the results and offer up the most promising applicants to the company, whichchooses among them. With 50,000 registered job-seekers on HireArt's platform, the company receives about 500 applicants per job opening, said Sharef, adding: "While it's great that the Internet allows people to apply to lots of jobs, it has led to some very unhealthy behavior. Job-seekers tell me that they apply to as many as 500 jobs in four to five months without doing almost any research. One candidate told me he had written a computer program that allowed him to auto-apply to every single job on Craigslist in a certain city. Given that candidates don't self-select, recruiters think of resumes as 'mostly spam,' and their approach is to 'wade through the mess' to find the treasures. Of these, only one person getshired — one out of 500 — so the 'success rate'isvery low for us and for our candidates." How do they test people? What are the key performance indicators you would measure? How would you measure them'?" If you want to be a social media manager, said Sharef, "you will have to demonstrate familiarity with Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, Google+, HTML, On-Page SEO and Key Word Analysis." Sample question: "Kanye West just released a new fashion collection. You can see it here. Imagine you had to write a tweet promoting this collection. What would your tweet be?" Someone applying for a salesjob would have to record a sales pitch over video. Sharef pointed to one applicant, a Detroit woman who had worked as a cashier at Borders. She realized that had no future, so she taught herself Excel. "We gave her a very rigorous test, and she outscored people who had gone to Stanford and Harvard. She ended up as a top applicant for a job that, on paper, she was completely unqualified for." The most successful job candidates, Sharef said, are "inventors and solution-finders," who are relentlessly "entrepreneurial" because they understand that many employers today don't care about your resume, degree or how you got your knowledge, but only what you can do and what you can continuously reinvent yourself to
do. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.
F4 © www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLET!N • SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
Newbook to feature
Ringo's
Beatles pics
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Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Ringo Starr has decided to share his photographs taken before,during and after his time as a member of the Beatles in "Photograph," first to be published June 12 as an e-book, and later this year in physical form. "These are shots no one else could have," Starr said in a statement with the announcement of the book, coming in conjunction with the G rammy M u seum's new"Ringo: Peace 8 Love" e xhibition f o c using o n Starr'scareer, the first major museum look devoted to the drummer's life and music. It also is scheduled to open June 12. " Photograph" w i l l in clude candid shots of bandmates John Lennon, Paul McCartney an d G e orge Harrison as well as images
from Ringo's days before joining the Fab Four, when he was one of Liverpool's
most popular a spiring rockers. The e-book will be available exclusively at Apple's i Bookstore, and the l i mited-edition h a n d -bound version, due in December, will be published by Genesis Books, publisher of high-end celebrity books, including a previous book Starr a ssembled, "Postcards From the Boys."
"Rhapsody in Black: The Life
and Music of Roy Orbison"
Ronstadt ("Blue Bayou"), The
manager Wesley Rose com-
Cramps ("Domino") and k.d. mitted Orbison to an imposlang ("Crying") have recorded sible three albums a year for
Books,256 pgs., $27.99)
excellenttakes on songs associated with him. By Jim Higgins Orbison adopted his tradeMitwauhee Journal Sentinel mark accessory — the dark W hen b i o grapher J o h n Ray-Bans — b y a c c ident, Kruth writes that Roy Orbi- when he forgot his prescripson's "life seemed to mirror tion sunglasses at an Alabama that of Job's from the gig, Kruth reports. Old Testament," he is They added a touch not stretching too far o f mystery t o h i s to make a point. The h omely face, a n d singer's first wife died audiences came to in a motorcycle acexpect it. cident with Orbison B orn i n sm a l l just a few h undred town w est T exas, yards down the road Orbison made it to ahead of her; two of the famed Sun Stuhis sons died as boys dios i n M e m phis, in a house fire while the singer early home of Elvis Presley, was overseas. Poor manage- Jerry Lee Lewis and Johnny ment contributed to a series of Cash. His sound was a poor bad albums and to Orbison be- fit with their more muscular ing nearly forgotten. music, though he r ecorded Yet, like Job, as Kruth tells some credible rockabilly there thetale in"Rhapsodyin Black," ("Ooby Dooby," "Go! Go! Go!"). Orbison hada nice comeback, He hit his stride with Monuwith a doting (if strong-willed) ment Records, with "Only the second wife, admiring friends Lonely," "Running Scared" in the Traveling Wilburys and (which Kruth notes was inthe hit single "You Got It." Un- spired musically by R avel's fortunately, that 1989 hit was "Bolero"), "Crying," "Dream posthumous; Orbison died the Baby," "In Dreams" and "Oh, year before at 52. Pretty Woman" (a rare OrbiHis arias of l onging and son classic with a happy endheartbreak, such as "Blue Bay- ing). String sections, backing ou," "Crying" and his magnum singers and additional muopus, "Oh, Pretty Woman," sicians crowded the studio won him election to the Rock spaces in his sessions, as Orand Roll Hall of Fame, as well bison and his production team as the admiration of Bruce strove to create a fitting quasiS pringsteen, w h o n am e - operatic sound. checked Orbison and quoted Kruth argues that Orbison's him in "Thunder Road," one of big sound prefigured some of the Boss' biggest hits. the later studio moves of Phil While it's hard to call OrSpector, Brian Wilson and the bison a major rocker, he's a Boss himself. "Yet for all their tributary wh o k e eps f eed- divine excess, there was never ing the great river of music. a wasted note on Roy's MonuP erformers as d i f ferent as ment recordings." C reedence Clearwater R e Unfortunately, the hit streak vival ("Ooby Dooby"), Linda petered out, especially after
MGM. "Orbison's MGM r ecords all too often lacked the rarified atmosphere that made his Monument recordings so timeless," Kruth writes. Cultural changes would no doubt have dimmed Orbison's star anyway, but Kruth apportions some blame to Rose's management. As Kruth describes him, Orbison also had a passive streak that sometimes led him to yield decisions to others. After years on the oldies circuit, Orbison popped back into view with the Traveling Wilburys, surely one of the most r e laxed s u pergroups ever.Fellow Wilburys George Harrison, Bob D y lan, Tom Petty and producer Jeff Lynne shared a genuine respect for their elder in sunglasses. Petty and Lynne also co-wrote with Orbison the singer's final hit, "You Got It." Kruth is the rare musician who writes well about music for a popular audience. His biography is sympathetic and enthusiastic, though he does not let Orbison and his producers off the hook for the bad albums or the laughable movie he made, "The Fastest Guitar
Alive" (1967). His previous books included biographies of jazz multi-instrumentalist Rahsaan Roland Kirk an d s i nger-songwriter Townes Van Zandt. "Different as my subjects might seem — all three of these men were great lemonade makers," Kruth wrote in an email message. "They took the lemons fate/life whatever you want to call it dealt them and transmuted pain and suffering into something beautiful that refreshed people's spirits."
'GlassCastle' author movesfully TheAssociated Press file photo
British musician Ringo Starr will release "Photograph," a collection of photos taken by Ringo and exclusive images from his personal archives.
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks thebestsellersfor the week ending May26. Hardcover fiction
1. "Inferno" by DanBrown (Doubleday) 2."And theMountainsEchoed"by Khaled Hosseini (Riverhead) 3. "12th of Never" by Patterson / Paetro! Little, Brown) 4. "Dead EverAfter" by Charlaine Harris (Ace) 5."Silken Prey" by JohnSandford (Putnam) 6."The Hit" by David Baldacci (Grand Central) 7. "A Chain of Thunder) by Jeff shaara (Ballantinel 8."Whiskey Beach" by Nora Roberts (Putnam) 9. "Gone Girl" by Gillian Flynn (Crown) 10."Vader's Little Princess" by Jeffrey Brown (Chronicle) Hardcover nonfiction
1. "Happy, Happy,Happy" by Phil Robertson (Howard Books) 2."ElevenRings"by PhilJackson (Penguin) 3. "Lean In" by Sheryl Sandberg !Knopfl 4. "The Duck CommanderFamily" by Willie & Korie Robertson (Howard Books) 5. "Let'sExploreDiabetes with Owls" by David Sedaris!Little, Brown) 6. "Keep It Pithy" by Bill O'Reilly !Crown Archetype) 7. "The Guns at Last Light" by Rick Atkinson (Henry Holt) 8. "The100" by Jorge Cruise (William Morrow) 9. "My GreekDrama" byGianna Angelopoulos (Greenleaf) 10. "Life Code" by Dr. Phil McGraw !Bird Street Books) — McClatchy-Trt'buneNewsService
at our recent history "The Unwinding: An Inner
foreclosing on overextended
History of the New America" homeowners. The injustices by John Kruth (Backbeat
By Randy Lewis
esun asses
A sad, uplifting look
into fiction with 'The SilverStar' "The Silver Star" by Jeannette Walls
that'? I'm your mother." And Bean, the 12-year-old heroine, (Scribner,269 pgs., $26) replies: "Then act like one for a change. We wouldn't be in this By Janet Masiin whole mess if you had been New York Times News Service acting like a mom all along." Jeannette Walls' new novel, Here is Walls' chance to elicit "The Silver Star," is system- cheersfrom the bleachers. atically built, each brick put in There are elements of Dickplace for a reason. It's easy to ens, as befit Walls' truly Dickunderstand why writing ficensian girlhood, and Lewis tion makes Walls so methodi- C arroll, wh o k n e w cal. Her memoir, "The Glass how to make illogic Castle," told a far more painful seem perfectly sane. story, and Walls surely knows Bean's older half-sisthat her personal history col- ter, L iz , e s pecially ors perceptions of whatever loves "Through the else she writes. "The Glass Looking-Glass." And Castle" remains on best-seller both girls use Carroll's "bandersnatch" as a lists eight years after it first appeared. label for "do-gooding I n her case, the truth i s government busybodies" who, stranger and messier than fic- given Mom's tendency to run tion. Those feckless, self-in- away from home, might try to volved parents helped (if that's seize them. "The Silver Star"takesplace the word) make her famous. They also unwittingly gave early in the Nixon presidency, her affinities for structure and w hen the V ietnam War i s order. roiling, Janis Joplin and Joni Walls' tough, uncluttered Mitchell are all the rage and narrative style saved a poCharlotte Holladay, the girls' tentially tear-jerking horror mother, thinks she ought to story from v o yeurism and be a singer. "Mom was going s entimentality. T h a t s a m e through a rough period at the good sense and moxie got her time and had a lot on her mind through "Half Broke Horses," — craziness, craziness, craziin which she faced down the ness, she'd say later," Bean exdreaded challenge of following plains on the first page. That up a monster hit. But to tell the page also cites "the night the story of one of Walls' grand- whole mess started," in a textmothers, "Half Broke Horses" book display of Walls' blunt had to walk an uneasy line way of snagging the reader's between memoir and fiction. attention. It wound up qualifying as a When Mom runs off, the novel — just barely. Not until g irls quickly d ecide to g o now, on her third go-round, is from California to Byler, Va., she ready to make things up. the Holladay family's home"The Glass Castle" haunts town. They discover a lonely "The Silver Star." Once again, relative in a neglected family the narrator is a girl with an er- manse (see "Great Expectaratic mother, and that girl has tions"), but U n cl e T i n sley to raise herself without much quickly morphs from a curhelp. But now Walls can deliv- mudgeon into a treasure. And er the wish-fulfilling version Bean finds out the identity of her girlhood. So the mother of her father: He was Charin this novel exclaims: "How lie Wyatt, whose Silver Star d are you speak to m e l i k e from the Korean War gives
the book its title. "This ain't a shaking family, it's a hugging family!" a W y att aunt exclaims when Liz extends a hand to her. Spunky Bean is also told about Charlie Wyatt: "You got his spark, I do believe." Mom drops back into the book for a bipolar, borderline abusive episode or two. ("No one understands how hard it is to be me.") B ut Li z a n d B e a n s oon r e a liz e t h a t they've got to make t heir ow n w a y . S o they need jobs. And the story needs a villain. Along comes the w icked Jerry M a d dox, who talks about himself in the third person ("You can trust Jerry M a ddox"), has arms like hams, mistreats his wife and generally has more e vil traits than a d o g h a s fleas. It's very easy to fall into Walls' country idiom w hile reading her. Ultimately, the half-sisters come of age, taking responsibility for themselves and harnessingevery metaphor Walls sets up for them. The emus in this book yield not just a fun emu-chasing scene but Bean's chance to say, about Liz: "Both she and the emus wanted to fly — they just didn't have the wings they needed." Also, from Bean: "They look like they shouldn't exist." From Liz: "That's what makes them so special." Not even a chestnut tree in "The Silver Star" gets to s tand around w i t hout d o ing double duty. "Trees don't wonder about things," Bean's cousin says. "They just grow." And not even the dog named Dog lacks a p lot f u nction. As for the Silver Star medal, it's bound to reappear at mom ents when B ea n t h i n k s aboutcourage.
by George Packer (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 448
Weidner sees in one Tampa c ourthouse anger h i m . I n Packer's hands, his rage bepgs., $27) comes a long, dark soliloquy By Hector Tobar about the direction his counLos Angeles Times try i s h e a ded: "America's G eorge Packer's n ew masses fed on processed poinonfiction book, "The Un- son bought with a food stamp w tndkng. An I n s wipe card . . . t h e ner History of the b anks i n Go t h a m U NWI N D I N G New A me r i ca," l eeching t h e las t h as many of t h e drops of wealth out qualities of an epic of the country, corponovel. rations unrestrained Packer's subject by any notion of the is the last 35 years national interest, the of U.S. history, the system of p r operty decades that gave law in shambles...." us the conservative "ConThe modern U.S. isn't quite tract With America," an In- a kleptocracy, but it is a counternet boom and bust, two try spinning out of control as wars in Iraq and a Great its leaders embrace the noRecession. They were the tion that what's good for Wall best of t i mes, and t hey Street must be good for Main were worst of times, and in Street. In "The Unwinding," Packer's able telling it's as if Weidner is one of several Dickens himself were tak- peopletrying to keep career ing a first crack at fitting all and family together through that history into a book. boom times and bad times. Packer, a staff writer at Packer's other subjects include the New Y orker, begins a Youngstown, Ohio, factory with a series of newsreel worker; a family on the verge h eadlines i n the fa t e - of homelessness in Tampa; a ful year of 1978 and fol- gay, conservative Silicon Vallows the stories of several ley entrepreneur; and an ideAmericans to the present. alistic lawyer whose earnestIt's a book about all sorts of ness takes him, fleetingly, to people, rich and poor, get- the highest circles of political ting caught up in a constant power. storm of economic upheavPlenty of other writers have al and social revolution. told the story of A m erica's Everything around them is economic decline. The late changing, and much that's Pax Americana has produced dear to them is being de- reams of books in which austroyed. Packer tells their thors use real people to tell stories in a thoroughly pro- anecdotes that illustrate this fessional work of journal- or that theory of our modernism that also happens to be day malaise. What d i stinmore intimate and textured guishes "The Unwinding" is — and certainly more am- the fullness of Packer's porbitious — than most con- traits, his willingness to show temporary works of U.S. his subjects' human desires fiction dare to be. and foibles, and to give each "His mind filled with vi- of his subjects a fully throated sions of a decadent klep- voice. tocracy in rapid decline," Packer writes, describing the thoughts of one of the many people whose story Azszxmwg he tells — in this case, Matnvns IQ "; thew Weidner, a small-time 'D t« r 24 t e e t L fe tyfes Florida attorney waging a Retire with us Today! solitary fight against the facelesscorporate lenders 541-312-9690 J-IIIJ
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SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
FS
iveii i n osummei oo s Jimm Connors By Jane Henderson St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Summer books aren't only notorious potboilers or "beach reads." They can b e f i nely composed and serious. But more often than not, they offer the chance to escape into another world — say, pre-Revolutionary Afghanistan or the crowded streets of Shanghai. Reading about trouble in the frigid woods of the Ukraine can be a fascinating way to block out the sounds of noisy kids lining up at the diving board or feelings that Midwest humidity is heavier than a soaked beach towel. Although nonfiction examinations of everything from the latest presidential election to the life of actress Ava Gardner will b e available, what many readers look for during the languid summer months are something like a literary trip to riding camp in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Here's a selection of titles coming this summer. Summaries are taken from publishers' information and advance reviews. Some "summer" books have already been released; check online booksellers for specific on-sale dates. Titles are listed by month and organized alphabetically by the author's last name.
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new British author finds danger when a young woman falls under the influence of an online charmer. "Visitation Street" by Ivy Pochoda (Ecco) On a summer evening, two Brooklyn teens set sail on a raft, but only one makes it back to shore. "The English Girl" by Daniel Silva (Harper) Gabriel Allon must find out what happened to a y oung woman who disappears on the island of Corsica.
"Unseen"
by Karin Slaughter
(Delacorte) Popular thriller writer sends her detective, Will Trent, undercover asa motorcycle-riding ex-con.
yW
"Byzantium" by Ben Stroud (Graywolf)
Collection o f s t o ries set in various locales, including ancient Constantinople and slave-era Havana. Nonfiction: "Ava Gardner" Thinkstock by Peter Evans (Simon & New York Times called "CSI: Runs the World" Schuster) Georgian England." by Adam LeBor Revealing book based on "Big Brother" (PublicAffairs) conversations the author had by Lionel Shriver The story of the Bank for with the actress before she (HarperCollins) International Set t l ements, died. Gardner, who married Shriver, who added to par- where bankers from around Mickey Rooney, Artie Shaw ents' angst with "We Need to the world have met since 1930. and Frank Sinatra, also count"Margaret Thatcher: The Talk About Kevin," now takes ed Howard Hughes among her a sharp look at Americans' obAuthorized Biography From lovers. May and june "Her Best-Kept Secret" session with food and how it Grantham to the Falklands" Fiction: affects families. by Charles Moore (Knopf) by Gabrielle Glaser "The Ocean "Sisterland" This biography i s e v en(Simon & Schuster) at the End of the Lane" by Curtis Sittenfeld handed but "not likely to sway Are women drinking more by Neil Gaiman(William (Riverhead) either detractors or admirers to cope with the stresses of Morrow) Twin sisters seem to have one way or another," Kirkus motherhood and jobs? GlaA m i ddle-aged man r e - sixth senses, and one cashes Reviews predicts. ser says more are downing turns home and sitting by a in on hers as an adult psychic. bottles of wine at an alarming July "The Child Thief" pond, remembers a strange rate and entering treatment encounter from his childhood. by Dan Smith Fiction: centers. "The Highway" Gaiman's first book for adults (Pegasus Crime) August since 2005. The mutilated bodies of chilby C.J. Box (Minotaur) "Flora" dren are found during a cold Two girls, and even their Fiction: "Archangel" by Gail Godwin (Bloomsbury) winter in 1930 in the Ukraine. car, disappear on a r emote A wry adolescent and her W hen another c h il d g o es country road. by Andrea Barrett (Norton) "Light of the World" y oung caretaker deal w i t h missing, a war veteran must New collection from the adheartbreak during the sum- investigate. by James Lee Burke mired story writer. "The Silver Star" "The Girl You Left Behind" mer of 1945. (Simon & Schuster) "The Black Country" by Jeannette Walls A serial killer escapes prisby JojoMoyes (Viking) by Alex Grecian (Putnam) (Scribner) on andheads toward Montana, A mystery and love story reScotland Yard's new MurThe author of t h e g r eat which just happens to be the volve around a World War I solder Squad has its hands full memoir "The Glass Castle" summer vacation spot of New dier's portrait of his young wife, with a family missing in the knows n e g ligent m o t hers Orleans' Dave Robicheaux. Sophie, who isdesperate to see "Affliction" coal-mining midlands in this from her own life. In her new her husband. Decades later, the historical thriller. novel, one leaves her 12- and by Laurell K. Hamilton portrait resurfaces when a hus"Bad Monkey" 15-year-old daughters to fend (Berkley) band gives it to his wife. "Night Film" by Carl Hiaasen (Knopf) for themselves, and, they do Micah's father seems to be Will Hiaasen ever run out of — even moving across coun- dying from a new, strange by Marisha Pessl "zombie disease" that chalgoofy gatorland-inspiration for try and finding jobs. (Random House) "Revenge Wears Prada" his South Florida satires? Aplenges stalwart vampire huntHas it r eally been seven parently, and thankfully, not. by Lauren Weisberger er Anita Blake. years since Pessl's "Special "The Flinch Factor" "Chose the WrongGuy, Gave (Simon & Schuster) Topics in Calamity Physics"'? by Michael Kahn (Poison Pen) Years after she quit working Him the Wrong Finger" Her new novel is billed as a St. Louis sleuth Rachel Gold for dragon lady Miranda Priestby Beth Harbison (St. literary thriller that involves a returns to face a powerful de- ly, Andy has started a bridal Martin's) reclusive cult-film director faveloper, a wacky judge and a magazine and is engaged herH umorous chick li t f r o m ther and the suspicious suicide corpse found on "Gay Way." self. But everything doesn't the author of "When in Doubt, of his daughter. "Joyland" seem right to the heroine of Add Butter." Nonfiction: "The Last Word" "Lawrence in Arabia: War, Deby Stephen King (Hard Crime) "The Devil Wears Prada." "The Enigma of China" Pulpy paperback about a by Lisa Lutz (Simon & ceit, Imperial Folly and the Makcollege student who works as by Qiu Xiaolong (Minotaur) Schuster) ing of the Modern Middle East" a carny in 1973 and confronts Chief Inspector Chen invesIzzy Spellman's professional by Scott Anderson things that will change his life. tigates the hanging death of a life is never easy, but she didn't (Doubleday) "TransAtlantic" Shanghai city official — did he help it by staging a hostile takeTitle seems to say it all in by Colum McCann really commit suicide? over of the family business. We this new look at adventurer (Random House) Nonfiction: learn what happens next in the T.E. Lawrence. "The Center Holds" "Collision 2012" From the winner of the Nalatest episode of the humorous tional Book Award for "Let by JonathanAlter mystery series. by Dan Balz (Viking) "Kiss Me First" the Great World Spin," this (Simon & Schuster) The Washington Post's chief puddle-hopping novel links A campaign study of Presiby Lottie Moggach political correspondent puts imagined and r ea l e v ents, dent Barack Obama's fight for (Doubleday) the latest presidential election such as Frederick Douglass' a second term. Psychological thriller by a in context. "The Guns at Last Light" trip to Dublin and Sen. George Mitchell's Good Friday peace by Rick Athinson (Holt) talks. The master of narrative mil"A Constellation itary history ends his Liberaof Vital Phenomena" tion Trilogy with this admired by Anthony Marra (Hogarth) account of the 1944-45 fightSet in 2004 Chechnya, a girl ing in Western Europe. "Mickey and Willie" must survive after her father is hauled off and her country by Allen Barra(Crown) disintegrates. The similarities and secret "Red Sparrow" lives of New York baseball by Jason Matthews (Scribner) icons Mantle and Mays. "Here Is Where" A CIA v eteran publishes his first novel about a Russian by Andrew Carroll "Sparrow School" that teaches (Random House) young women how to use sex Carroll explores America's to learn secrets. unmarked historic sites and "The Son" forgotten events. "Hitchhiking With Larry David" by Philipp Meyer(Ecco) In 19th-century Texas, Coby Paul Samuel Dolman manches raid a h omestead, (Gotham) kidnapping a 13-year-old boy Memoir by an aging writer who is adopted and nurtured who spent a summer on Marby the chief. After living as an tha's Vineyard and meets a fair Indian, Eli McCullough goes number of notables by sticking on to become a ruthless oil his thumb out for rides. "The Astronaut Wives Club" man and father. "Choke Point" by Lily Koppel by Ridley Pearson (Putnam) (Grand Central) The team of Knox and Chu Maybe their experiences work to shut down a nasty weren't as thrilling as those Amsterdam sweatshop that of John Glenn and other Merenslaves young girls. cury Seven heroes, but the "Red Moon" astronauts' wives also became by Benjamin Percy instant celebrities and fashion (Grand Central) icons during the early days of Werewolves, an oppressed the space program. "The Tao of Martha" minority, turn t o t e r rorism while trying to reach equality by Jen Lancaster (NAL) in this supernatural thriller. Can hapless humor writer "Circle of Shadows" learn to a r range a p e rfect by Imogen Robertson charcuterie platter a la Martha (Viking) Stewart'? "Tower of Basel: The Shadowy The fourth novel in the historical suspense series The History of the Secret Bank that
UNITED WAY CHARITY GOLF CLASSIC I
•
•
•
•
ets e ensive
"The Outsider" by Jimmy Connors
big-time business that fought f ootball and boxing for t he
(Harper,416 pgs., g8.99)
regular-guy audience, and
By Joe Williams St. Louis Post-Dispatch
The St. Louis area has produced several w orldclass tennis players, including Wimbledon champions Arthur Ashe and the doubles team of K en Flach a n d Robert S e guso. But t h e p l a y er who scrawled the name St. L o uis on the map was tennis' o r i g inal bad boy, Jimmy Connors. A ctually, h is place on the map was on the wrong side of the river. As Connors recounts in his new memoir, "The Outsider," he was born in 1952 in East St. Louis, where his g randfather, John C o n nors, had been the mayor and his father, Jim Connors Sr., was in charge of collecting tolls on the Veterans Bridge. While some juicy stories about his grandfather, father andbrother John associating with criminals get brief mentions, Jimmy devotes a lot more ink to two women in his life: his ten-
Connors was the sport's illmannered mascot. On the court, the lefty popularized the two-fisted backhand, the metal racket and the temperamental outburst. Off the court, the nightclub-and-casino denizen made headlines by dating the best female player in the world (Chris Evert), a Miss World
(Marjorie Wallace)
and a Playboy Playm ate of t h e Y e a r (Patti McGuire). McGuire, w ith whom Connors has t wo c h i ldren a n d is still married despite his admitted infidelities, is treated respectfully in the book. But Connors' former fiancee Evert is not so lucky. Without consulting her, Connors has chosen to reveal in this book that she terminated a pregnancy while they were the darlings of t h e t e nnis world. Connors also d evotes a chapter to the cocaine habit of his late friend Vitas Gerulaitis and accuses opponents such as the great Guillermo Vilas and Ivan Lendl of cheating the paying customers with inferior play. Connors is not nearly so nis-playing grandmother, critical of his own behavior, Bertha Thompson, and her which entailed bullying other equally sporty d aughter, players, the chair umpires and Gloria Thompson Connors. even the fans who funded the Gloria had been a touring lifestyle about which he is not tennis player and coached insightful. celebrities in H o l lywood C ompared to t h e s m a r t before settling with Jim Sr. memoirs by Connors' youngin East St. Louis (and later er alter-ego, John McEnroe, Belleville). But she lived and successor, Andre Agassi, her tennis dream through "The Outsider" is a d i sapher son Jimmy. p ointment. W h il e w e ge t Among the many things blow-by-blow accounts of epic that Jimmy shrugs off in matches, we never get inside this plain-spoken book is Connors' cranium. But that's the notion that he was a not surprising, because he mama's boy. True, Gloria made a fortune as a defensive was his coach and business counter-puncher. manager, and even after If tennis fans want susJimmy climbed the rungs t ained an d g r a ceful f l o w , to the No. 1 ranking (where they can hope for an autobihe remained for a record ography by Bjorn Borg, the five years), mother and son baselining Swedish rival who spoke 10 times a day, but retired at age 26 and hasn't Gloria wasn't a tyrant. found itnecessary to defend That was Jimmy's role. himself since. Anyone wh o r e m embers the white-collar world of tennis before Connors came along knows t h at he was a workhorse of a & HEARING AID CUNK different color. In the '70s, tennis was evolving from www,centraloregonaudiology.com an amateur pastime to a Bend• Redmond• P-ville • Burns 541.647.2884
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013
Seeing Chechnya'swonders, Modern-day 'Moby Dick' story fascinates, teaches long before getting there 'Archipelago' "Archipelago: A Novel" by MoniqueRoffey (PenguinBooks, 384 pgs., $16)
"A Constellation of Vital
Phenomena" by Anthony Marra
(Hogarth,400 pgs., $26) By Charles McGrath New York Times News Service
Six years after starting to think about Chechnya, the disputed Russian r e public that became the setting for his acclaimed ne w n o v el, Anthony Marra v i sited for the first time last summer, signing up on the Internet for something called "The Seven Wonders of Chechnya Tour." "I didn't know what to expect," he said r ecently. "It could have been a gigantic scam, but as it turned out, I could not have been treated better." He traveled with a g uide and t a l ked t o Ch e chens, many of whom, he said, were still trying to r ecover from years of war and occupation. While in Chechnya,though, Marra discovered that he had made a factual error in the book, "A Constellation of Vital Phenomena" (Hogarth), w hich wa s p u b lished t h i s month: The f i rs t e scalator there was not installed until 2007, when it became a sort of tourist attraction. So Marra had to do some e scalator-elimination in t h e final d r aft. O t herwise, he found that his knowledge of Chechnya, gleaned m ostly from books, held up. From j ournalistic a c c ounts, h e learned details like how the Chechens would upend toilet bowls over unexploded artil-
lery shells. For a grisly amputation scene, he read medical journals and watched YouTube videos. " Research is not a n o b stacle, s omething t o b e frightened of," M arra said. "It can be one of the real joys of wr iting. Someone once said, 'Don't write what you know, write what you want to know.'" He added: "But to make a book convincing, it's less important that the right tree be in the right place than that the characters are emotionally real. I did the best I could to make the environment and the setting as realistic as possible, but I hope it's the characters and the emotional reality that make the book true." Marra is 28 but seems s imultaneously o l de r a n d younger. He has an earnest, boyish manner, yet his hair is already flecked with gray. He has yet to finish writing school — he is finishing up the second year of a Wallace Stegner Fellowship at Stanford — but has already published a book, and, unusual for a first novel, it is purely a work of research and invention, without even a hint of
Robert Wright/The New York Times
Author Anthony Marra in New York last month. Marra's first novel, "A Constellation of Vital Phenomena," takes place in Chechnya, a war-weary landscape he visited only last year, after most of the book was written. Chechen wars hanging out, d rinking an d b e gging f o r
change. "Chechnya was sort of in the ether then," he said, "but I realized that like most Americans, I didn't know the first thing about it. I didn't know where it was on the map. I didn't know a single person who had ever been there. I wasn't even sure how to spell Chechnya."
'Life' in Russian
" A Constellation of V i t al Phenomena" — the title comes from the definition of "life" in a Russian medical dictionary — mostly takes place during just five days in 2004, during the second Chechen war, but every other chapter toggles back to 10 years earlier, during the first war, and within the chaptersthere are flashbacks and sometimes flashforwards toa time decades in the future. The novel tells several interlocking stories, mostly about ordinary C h echens simply trying to stay out of the way of the Russian occupiers,on the one hand, and the rebel insurgents, on the other; it is a tossup which faction is more brutal. The main characters are a pair of doctors — one famously incompetent, the other a resolute female surgeon trying to keep an abandoned hospital going practically by herself — who are protecting a young girl from Russians who have already abducted her father. autobiography. Dwight Garner, writing in Until the Boston Marathon The New York Times, called bombings most A m ericans the book "ambitious and inpaid little attention to Chech- tellectually restless." Another n ya. Over lunch at a N e w fan is Sarah Jessica Parker, York r e s taurant r e c ently, who in a review for EntertainMarra said that his own inter- ment Weekly described it as est began during an under- "full of humanity and hope." graduate semester studying Mature writer in St. Petersburg, Russia, in 2006. One of Marra's teachers at He arrived not long after Stanford, Pulitzer Prize-winthe murder of A n n a P olit- ning novelist Adam Johnson, kovskaya, a journalist who said that he arrived on camexposed Russian atrocities pus "fully formed." "I don't know how much in Chechnya. At a metro stop near his apartment, he would credit we can take for Tony," see Russian veterans of the Johnson said. "Most people
Glass
when they're paying attention to something else." Continued from F1 Y et experiments that w e H eads-up d i s plays l i k e and others have conducted Google Glass, and voice inter- showed that people often fail faces like Siri, seem like ideal to notice something as obvious solutions, letting you simul- as a person in a gorilla suit in taneously interact with your situations where they are desmartphone w h il e s t a ying voting attention to something alert to your surroundings. If else. Researchers using eyeyour gazeremains directed at tracking devices found that the world, then presumably if people can miss the gorilla something important happens even when they look right at it. in your field of vision, it will This phenomenon of "inattencapture your attention and take tional blindness" shows that over your consciousness, let- what we see depends not just ting you respond to it quickly. on where we look but also on The problem is that looking how we focus our attention. is not the same as seeing, and If you think the situation people make wrong assump- would improve if the computer t ions about what w il l g r ab display appeared superimtheir attention. posed on the world itself, think According to the results of again. Perception r e quires two representative national both your eyes and your mind, surveys we conducted, about and if your mind is engaged, 70 percent ofAmericans be- you can fail to see something lieve that "people will notice that would otherwise be utwhen something unexpected terly obvious. enters their field of view, even Research with commercial
his age are still learning the conventions, the t r aditions, the craft, and here he is leveraging the full power of the novel. When I was writing my first novel I was struggling with c onventional r ealism, traditional structure, but he has abandoned all that right out of the gate. He looks like a very mature writer, with profound concerns, at the height of his powers."
Marra grew up in Washington, where both his parents were corporate lawyers. He was an unambitious, "solid B" student, he said, smiling, and didn't discover novels until he was caddying one summer at a country club in Chevy Chase, Md., and needed to pass the time waiting in the caddie yard for a loop. He took a year off between high school and college, during which he worked in a UPS store, missed his girlfriend a nd began w r i t in g s h o r t stories about a lovelorn guy working in the same store. "One of t hem had t h r ee
pages on a single kiss," he sa>d. But Marra no longer has much i nterest i n a u t obiographical fiction. " I quickly realized I l i v e the least interesting literary life imaginable," he said. "My parents are happily married. There haven't been any major traumas. I'm not sure that the story of my life would be much fun to read." While a n u n d ergraduate at the University of Southern California, he began writing a historical novel, 250 words a day, about, of all t h i ngs, Bobby Sands and the 1981 hunger strike at Long Kesh. "It will never see the light of day," Marra said emphatically, but added that the book sprang from a preoccupation with religious and political violence. " I was a j u n ior i n h i g h school when 9/11 happened," he explained, "and I've spent my entire adult life in a world where terror is present in a way it may not have been before."
airline pilots suggests that displaying instrument readings directly on the windshield can make pilots less aware of their surroundings, even leading to crashes in simulated landings. Google Glass may allow users to do amazing things, but it does not abolish the limits on the human ability to pay attention. Intuitions about attention lead to w r ong assumptions about what we're likely to see; we are especiallyunaware of how completely our attention can be absorbed by the continual availability of compelling and useful information. Only by understandingthe science of attention and the limits of the human mind and brain can we design new interfaces that are both r evolutionary and safe. — Daniel J. Simons and Christopher F. Chabris are the authors of "The lnvisible Gorilla: And Other Ways Our Intuitions Deceive Us."
rained destruction down on Who gave the region slavery, his old life. racism and oil refineries. And yet what was true in Even on those rare occaMelville's novel is also true in sions when such asides aren't By Mike Fischer this one: The natural world fully integrated or Roffey's Milwaukee Journal Sentinel gives as much as it takes, of- analogies and symbolism feel "Whenever it is a damp, fering us beauty and forced, they broaden drizzly November in my solace of a sort I'd norher s cope w i t hout soul," declares Melville's mally call indescribever swamping her Ishmael in t h e o p ening able — except that Rofstory. Like Roffey's paragraph of "Moby-Dick," fey describes it so well, intrepid voyagers, she "I account it high time to get magically unspooling observes and moves to sea as soon as I can." what Gavin imagines on, in a book that has as a "drive-in movie of G avin Weald, the 4 6a lot of miles to cover. Like "The Odyssey" year-old protagonist of Mo- the cosmos." — a vital precursor nique Roffey's "ArchipelaT he s e a mo v e s go" — a novel that openly "gently up and down in a way for both Melville and Roffey grapples wit h M e l v ille's that looks like it's breathing." — that book unfolds over 24 g reat whale o f a b o o k Awkward f lamingos taking chapters; also like "The Odys— knows what I shmael flight are "pilots of their own sey," "Archipelago" is ultimatemeans. crafts, each hoisting up the un- ly a journey toward home. For As "Archipelago" opens, dercarriage of its legs." Tufted even as Gavin and his someit's November 2010, and islands are a"lake of upturned times petulant, always precoi t isn't just d r izzling i n toothbrushes." Tortoises are cious daughter drift f arther Gavin's Trinidad. It's pour- "scholars walking across an from Trinidad, he is also learning buckets, conjuring up Oxford q u ad , r u m i nating, ing that one can't ever truly esmemories of the late 2009 heads down." cape one's past or one's life. flood that had drowned his Roffey lets us see that much The wrap-up following this baby boy and sunk his wife of what's cruel or harsh in epiphany is plot-driven and a into a seemingly bottom- this seeming paradise — one bit too tidy, but the epiphany less depression. that allows Ocean, at various itself is hard-earned and real. Along with his 6-year-old points, to swim with turtles As is true in the archipelagos daughter (Ocean) and their and dolphins w h il e b e ing Gavin sails through, we are aging dog (Suzy), Gavin, kissed by seals — is caused n ecessarily i s l anded f r o m too, is in a funk. He has by people. one another. But as Gavin exrebuilt his family's house, It is we, Roffey reminds us, plains to Ocean, that doesn't but he can't seem to rebuild who introduced foreign, preda- mean we are alone. "Everyhis life. He hates his office tory species. Who denuded the thing on the planet," he tells job as an executive. He has forests— exacerbating floods her, "is related to everything psoriasis. He is fat. None of like those afflicting Trinidad. else." it correlates with his image of himself as a young, carefree man and accomplished sailor, in love with his boat and the sea. And so Gavin does the seemingly sensible thing. He scoops up Ocean and Suzy, clambers a b oard his long-neglected boat, throws his mobile phone servicing central c3~ overboard and heads for e Eastern oregon open water. His destinaSEAF OO D LLc tion, by way of the Panama Wholesale Fishl3ealer Licensett1122 Canal, is th e G alapagos Islands. Man, daughter and dog will e n counter e x ternal From the Boatto Your Door in 24 hours. dangers and distractions along the way, including Novelli Brothers specialize in bringing pirates, rough seas, an improbable packet of floating you the freshest Wild Caught Salmon, cocaine, unexpected injuHalibut and Tuna in Season. ries and a renewed sense of unfathomable loss. But it quickly becomes clear t ha t t h e bi g gest threat to Gavin's voyage is what he had tried to leave behind: Memories of last year's flood. A dead son. A mother catatonic with grief. His rage — so reminiscent of Ahab's fury toward the white beast that maimed him — at inscrutable nature, which has l iterally •
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Over 60 youth and family activities a week in addition to... 4 pools, Pilates, 25 yoga classes a week, over 40 cardio/strength group exercise classes a week, cycling, cardio, tennis, basketball, racquetball, private women's only Atness center, and exceptional service from Bend's Best Professionals.
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ON PAGE 2 NYT CROSSWORD ~ The Bulletin
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Buying Diamonds /Go/d for Cash US Army Colt 1911 Largest 3 Day 45ACP, 1 8 7 4 C Saxon's Fine Jewelers ITEMS FORSALE 264-Snow RemovalEquipment 541-389-6655 GUN & KNIFE Sharps 4 5-70, (2) 201 - NewToday 265 - Building Materials 45-70 SPFD trap door SHOW BUYING 202- Want to buy or rent 266- Heating and Stoves carbine, REM model Lionel/American Flyer June 7th, 8th, 9th 8 3 0-30 c a l . I M R 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood Portland Expo trains, accessories. Freezer 19.3 cf Frigidpowder 4831. Good 204- Santa's Gift Basket 541-408-2191. aire, you haul, works grt, Center 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers Estate Sales • Sa l es Southwest Bendl selection of shotguns. BUYING & SEL L ING 205- Free Items 1-5 exit ¹306B 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment $150. 541-408-2338 H & H Firearms 8 Tack All Admission $10 208- Pets and Supplies gold jewelry, silver Estate/Shop/Tools Sale Sat. 8 Sun. 8-5. 61094 270 - Lost and Found 541-382-9352 Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, 210- Furniture & Appliances and gold coins, bars, Fri/Sat/Sun 5/31-6/1-6/2, Honkers Ct. Car enGARAGESALES Sun.10-4 rounds, wedding sets, aam-4pm 211 - Children's Items g ine parts, hot r o d Wanted: Collector 275 - Auction Sales I 1 - 800-659-3440 I class rings, sterling silRiding mower, utility DtfllZrt books ti r es , p o ol 212 - Antiques & Collectibles seeks high quality 280 - Estate Sales l CollectorsWest.co~m ver, coin collect, vintrailer, '81 Yamaha, table, recliner, nightVisit our HUGE 215- Coins & Stamps fishing items. tage watches, dental metal/wood/welding/ 281 - Fundraiser Sales stands, clothes, misc. home decor 240- Crafts and Hobbies Call 541-678-5753, or gold. Bill Fl e ming, auto-motive/aircraft consignment store. 282- Sales Northwest Bend 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 503-351-2746 541-382-9419. equipment 8 parts. Gold Yard Sale - 8-4 Sat, 10-3 New items 284- Sales Southwest Bend Guns, Hunting 242 - Exercise Equipment bikes, pool table, Sun, 207 SW Granite Dr. arrive daily! Cast iron skillet, 10", dredge, 286- Sales Northeast Bend 8 Fishing 253 243 - Ski Equipment building materials, home Hagglers welcome! 930 SE Textron, with lid, 10", $25. decor, tons of misc. free 244 - Snowboards 288- Sales Southeast Bend 541-383-5060 TV, Stereo & Video Bend 541-318-1501 541-388-6846 Bend local pays CASH!! scrap. Hwy 97, Sunriver 290- Sales RedmondArea 245 - Golf Equipment www.redeuxbend.com for all firearms 8 Elite gen., 700 watts, exit, Springwater to SAVE on Cable TV-In246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 292- Sales Other Areas ammo. 541-526-0617 56335 Stellar Dr. new in b ox , $ 725. ternet-Digital Phone247- Sporting Goods - Misc. Sales Northeast Bendl People Look for Information FARM MARKET 541-306-0166. Satellite. You've Got CASH!! Look What I Found! 248- Health and Beauty Items About Products and 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery For Guns, Ammo & A C hoice! O ptions You'll find a little bit of GENERATE SOME 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs Services Every Daythrough 316 - Irrigation Equipment Reloading Supplies. from ALL major ser** FREE ** EXCITEMENT everything in 251 - Hot TubsandSpas The Buiietin Classifieds 541-408-6900. 325Hay, Grain and Feed vice providers. Call us IN YOUR The Bulletin's daily 253- TV, Stereo andVideo Garage Sale Kit to learn more! CALL 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies NEIGBORHOOD. garage and yard sale GENERATE SOME ex- Collection: REM M 37 Place an ad in The 255 - Computers 888-757-5943. Plan a garage sale and section. From clothes 341 - Horses and Equipment citement i n your Rangemaster; Cimar- Today. Bulletin for your ga256- Photography (PNDC) don't forget to adverto collectibles, from 345-Livestockand Equipment neighborhood! Plan a ron "Evil Roy" 45LC; rage sale and re257- Musical Instruments tise in classified! housewares to hardgarage sale and don't COLT Officers . 22; ceive a Garage Sale 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 258 - Travel/Tickets Turntable, professional 541-385-5809. ware, classified is forget to advertise in Rugers: B l ackhawk q uality model 5 2 1 , Kit FREE! 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 259- Memberships always the first stop for classified! F lattop 44 ; Su p e r GET FREE OF CREDIT 358- Farmer's Column $60. 541-389-0049 cost-conscious 260- Misc. Items 541-385-5809. KIT IN CLUDES: Blackhawk 44; 1's in CARD DEBT NOWi 375- Meat and Animal Processing consumers. And if • 4 Garage Sale Signs 261 - MedicalEquipment 6 mm, 2 7 0 , 7m m . Cut payments by up NEED TO CANCEL you're planning your 383 - Produce andFood 255 • $2.00 Off Coupon To 541-389-1392 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. to half. Stop creditors YOUR AD? own garage or yard Use Toward Your Computers 263- Tools from calling. The Bulletin Colt LE6920 M4 CarNext Ad sale, look to the clas866-775-9621. Classifieds has an bine, N lB . R o g ers sifieds to bring in the • 10 Tips For "Garage 208 T HE B U L LETIN r e (PNDC) "After Hours" Line stock, MagPul flip-up buyers. You won't find Sale Success!" Pets 8 Supplies Call 541-383-2371 rear sight and one 30 quires computer ad- Picnic table canopy with a better place 0 24 hrs. to cancel rnd magazine, plus vertisers with multiple netted siding, $25. for bargains! PICK UP YOUR 2-20 r n d P r o Mag. ad schedules or those your ad! 541-388-6846 Call Classifieds: GARAGE SALE KIT at C omes w it h 1 , 0 00 selling multiple sys541-385-5809 or Sofa blue sectional 3 tems/ software, to dis*REDUCE YOUR 1777 SW Chandler P eople g i ving p e t s pce, heavy foam pil- rounds ammo in two close the name of the email CABLE BILL! Get an classified@bendbullatin.com Ave., Bend, OR 97702 away are advised to MTM cans. $2,150. lows, clean no rips, business or the term All-Digital Sat e l lite C all or t ext B ill a t be selective about the $175. 541-389-1922 "dealer" in their ads. system installed for Just bought a new boat? owners. For the (541) 410-8288 CORGI PUPS - Pem- new Private party advertis- FREE and program- Sell your old one in the Washer Roper/GE heavy protection of the aniAsk about our broke AKC $800. 1 tdi mal, a personal visit to duty extra large capacity, ers are d efined as ming s t a rting at classifieds! DON'T II SS I HI S Super Seller rates! those who sell one Moving Sale - Saturday / Want to Buy or Rent male 8 wks. Vet checked, the home is recom- $150/obo. 541-480-8060. $ 24.99/mo. FRE E 541-385-5809 1st vac/worming, micro- mended. computer. HD/DVR upgrade for only, 2937 NE Red chip. Champ. lines; parOak Dr. HANDBAGS new callers, SO CALL Cash for dressers, 282 DO YOU HAVE ents on site 541-604-4858 NOW (877)366-4508 t o FURNITURE - a kitchen chairs, diAntiques & 260 Sening Central Oregon smte 1903 SOMETHING TO Sales Northwest Bend sale no woman should (PNDC) nettes. 541-420-5640 Donate deposit bottles/ SELL Collectibles Misc. Items miss! 541-388-0382 to local all vol- Just bought a new boat? FOR $500 OR Wanted: $Cash paid for cans RUG, oval braided 5'x7' Estate Sale, Everything non-profit res- Sell your old one in the LESS? Advertise V A CATION must go! F u rniture, vintage costume jew- unteer, hunter green, $ 2 5. to h e l p w / cat classifieds! Ask about our Non-commercial SPECIALS to 3 m i ldishware, quad, RV elry. Top dollar paid for cue, 541-390-8720. Super Seller rates! Gold/Silver.l buy by the spay/neuter vet bills. advertisers may lion P acific N o rthbus, antiques, horse Sales Redmond Area l 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Offers Estate, Honest Artist Cans for Cats trailer is place an ad westerners! 29 daily tack, Hock e y/LaElizabeth,541-633-7006 at Bend PETCO (near with our HUGE YARD SALE! newspapers, six Free Private Party Ads crosse. Sat. 8 S u n. Applebee's). Donate "QUICK CASH Exercise equipment, states. 25-word clas- • 3 lines - 3 days 8-3, 67580 Hwy 20. gt Mon-Fri at Smith Sign, Q • Private Party Only antique radio, saddle, SPECIAL" sified $525 for a 3-day • Total of items adver- Household, tools, NaBeautiful handPomeranian/long haired 1515 NE 2nd; or at clothing, and a WHOLE Pets & Supplies 1 week 3 lines 12 a d. Cal l (916) tised must equal $200 carved coffee table CRAFT i n T u m alo Chihuahua puppies, tive American stuff. LOT MORE! Friday oi' 2 88-6019 o r vis i t (44" x 19'7t" x 17~72" ) anytime. 3 8 9 -8420.$180 cash.541-678-7599 Sat. & Sun. 9-5, [5/31] 8 Saturday [6/1] www.pnna.com for the or Less ~2 e e k t 2 0! and 2 matching end The Bulletin recom8am-5pm; Sunday [6/2] For more info/map, 65036 92nd St. off Ad must Pacific Nort h west FOR DETAILS or to P omeranian pup p y mends extra caution tables (shown) 24'It" Tumalo Road. 8am-2pm, 2055 NE 13th visit www.craftcats.org male wolf sable great include price of Daily Con n ection. PLACE AN AD, x 15" x 24'/4". Built in when purc h asStreet [Off Negus Ave] . Call 541-385-5809 t~l e t e o t $500 (PNDC) Huge multi-family yard ing products or ser- English Bulldog, beauti- personality 10 weeks Taiwan between Redmond, OR. Fax 541-385-5802 or less or multiple ful white, female, 4 yrs old. $350. sale, Fri-Sat 9-4; Sun 9-2 1940-1950, all glass vices from out of the old. spayed. Needs items whose total 541-480-3160 Baby/toddler clothes/toys area. Sending cash, covered, in exceldoes not exceed bulldog-knowledgable TEN MOUNTAIN RANCH AUCTION /equip; furn, small appls. lent condition. checks, or credit inSales Other Areas family, air conditioned POODLE "My name is $500. 20295 Birdsong Ln; folf ormation may b e $1900. Sat., June 8 • 10: 00 a.m. • Previ ew 9:00 a.m. home, no small chillow signs from Swalley Rd Gracie. I'm a 3-year old 541-382-6731 subjected to fraud. HUGE YARD SALE 8-4, Call Classifieds at V er y a c t ive.white miniature female For more i nforma- dren. FURNITURE • PERUVIAN SADDLES 284 541-385-5809 Sat. 8 Sun., Prineville. $500. 541-350-1965. poodle with all my shots, • 15" CIRCLE Y FLEX TREE SADDLE tion about an adver8 I'm spayed. I don't go Rattan loveseat, www.bendbulletin.com Sales Southwest Bend C amping, tents, 8 tiser, you may call • POWDER RIVER PANELS • DECK MOWER mid-century era, giving my heart away at more! 603 SE Elm St. the O r egon State • MANURE SPREADER $100. 541-390-8720. the drop of a hat, but if HUGE ara esale! SHOW Attorney General's you'll give me some time The Bulletin reserves JuneGUN PRINEVILLE NeighborFurniture, kid stuff, 1st & 2nd, 2013 Office C o n sumer Auction is on Hwy 20 about 3 172 miles clothing, bikes, tv's, skis, hood Sale June 1 8 2, 8 space to settle in and the right to publish all Deschutes Fairgrounds Protection hotline at adjust to my new life, we ads from The Bulletin west of Tumalo towards Sisters just as Buy! Sell! Trade! camping gear and LOTS Sat. 9-3, Sun. 10-3, 1-877-877-9392. can be buddies once I'm 10500 SE Ridgeview 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 the highway turns into 4 lanes. MORE! 19978 Powers E nglish Mastiff A K C comfortable! I will love newspaper onto The SAT.$8 Rd off Juniper Canyon. Admission, Rd Fri/Sat 9-4; Sun 9-1 puppies, dam 8 sire my walks with you and Bulletin Internet web12 8 under free! '99 Kawasaki 400 4-wheeler, automatic • '85 Serving Central Oregon ttre 1903 fully OFA tested, litter my time curled up besite. Moving Sale! F u rn., People Look for Information OREGON TRAIL GUN Chev ~72 ton pickup 350 automatic, low miles is champion sired with you. I'm quiet, easyking size bed, TVs, SHOWS, 541-347-2120 About Products and on rebuild • Millcreek md 50 ground drive maAdopt a nice cat from incredible pedigrees! side freezer, tools, BBQ, but SHY." $175 to servtg centraloregon since a03 or 541-404-1890 nure spreader• JD 413 deck mower • 3 pt disc Services Every pay through Petco, PetSmart or S mall litter, only 5 going the right child-free home. Sat. & Sun. 10-4 60254 Tumalo sa n ctuary! pups avail. $ 2000. I love Gracie dearly, but The Bulletin Classineds M arlin Model 4 0 . 2 2 • 17' Newhouse hay elevator• 12'x6 rail Noble Agate Rd., DRW. Fixed, shots, ID chip, Chris, 503-577-7185. due to health issues, I'm semi-auto, sc o p e, panels • 5'x10' Powder River panels • Plastic Crafts & Hobbies • hay feeders • Peruvian saddles • Like new tested, more! Sanc- English Springer Span- unable to provide her h ard c a se , $ 1 5 0. The Children's Vision Foundation Circle Y 15" flex seat western saddle • Newer 541-728-1900 tuary open Sat/Sun iels, AKC, Tri-colored, with 2 da i l y w a l ks.Sewing machine, old halters and lead ropes • Leather living room is now accepting new and gently 1 -5, other days by 541-312-4633, after 3pm. Westinghouse brand, Saiga semi auto 12 ga. Will travel to Sisters furniture • Oak dining table with bench seats a ppt. 6 5 48 0 7 8 t h , 6/7 will deliver M$450 used items for their annual $35. 541-408-2338 shotgun, never fired, • Oak and glass dining table w/4 chairs • Sony Bend. Photos, map at F$500. 509-244-6080 Queens/and Heelers SteP AbOve YOur AVerage 15 rd, (2) 12 rd SGM Trinitron TV • Matching Kenmore washer and www.craftcats.org. Standard & Mini, $150 Tact III mags, $850 dryer • 23 cu. ft. chest freezer • Newer GE Garage Sale! 541-389-8420, or like & up. 541-280-1537 Bicycles 8 obo. 541-306-0166. 5'x23~72" refrigerator • Some kitchen items May 17, 18, & 31 us on Facebook. www.rightwayranch.wor Accessories • Fullsize bed • 2 Queen size beds • Oak June1 &2 dpress.com Savage Model 110E cal. Adult b arn/shop/work10 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. 30-06 w/Burnell 9x scope wardrobe • Bev Doolittle prints • Paragon poping cats, fixed, shots, Scottish Terrier p up- Ladies Schwinn moun- & m i litary a djustable corn machine on cart • Budweiser mugs at the Bend Factory Stores some friendly, some tain bike, used once. sling, $380 obo. Call • Game Well Co. fire alarm station • Onyx pies, AKC, born 4/2. (61334 S. Hwy 97, Bend) not. No fee & free de- Fila/Bull Mastiff pupshots & wormed, par- $110. 541-389-1922 541-593-7438 before 5pm spear head • Director chairs • Picnic table livery. 541-389-8420 • Weight bench • Large dogloo • 600+ sq. ft. Items Wanted: pies good looking gients on site, Ready A pet sitter in NE Bend, ant breed dogs very now! 541-317-5624. harvest oak laminate flooring• Tow hitch Furniture, decor, household and kitchen Dog Food Monthly Specials warm and loving home affectionate also good • Fold it carts • CHritter cages • Prather deep items, sports equipment, tools, jewelry, farm dogs. $500. Wolf-Husky-Malamute with no cages, $25 day. vee 47" boat • 600v wire • Bicycle cart for two • collectibles, plants, garden items Taste of the Wild Do Food 1-541-861-2170 Linda at 541-647-7308 pups, only 3 left! $300! Collector plates • Plus much more! and office items. 30lbs. = $41 541-977-7019 BOXER AKC puppies, German Shepherds AKC LARGE LIST AND PHOTOS AT Diamond Do Food Lamb 8 Rice reat litter, 1st shots, www.sherman-ranch.us Yorkie AKC pups, big Your donations will go directly 40 lbs. - $26.99 WW W .DESCHUTESAUCTION.COM 700. 541-325-3376 541-281-6829 towards supporting eyes, short-nosed, health Central Oregon's Children Vision Terms: cash or good check Bull Terrier, 1 yr neutered Lab mix female 1 y r. guar. Taking deposits, Canidae Do Food All Life Sta es Screenings. Everything must be removed sale day! male, free to good, cat- FREE to good home ready 6/28. 541-777-7743 (Buy 12 get 1 FREE) 44 lbs. - $46. Your donations are tax deductible. free home. 541-420-5602 only. 541-420-5602, Joe. Yorkie-Maltese c r oss Quarry Ave. Hay & Feed DESCHUTES AUCTION Chihuahua pup female Mini Aussie pups reg., tiny puppies, male $250, 4626 SW Quarry Ave., Redmond For more information, Ken Nolan, Auctioneer born 4/4 $200 obo. family raised, $400- females $300. CASH. 541-923-2400 www.quarryfeed.com Redmond 541-548-7171 please call 541-330-3907 541-497-3666 $500. (805) 652-1562. 541-546-7909 A1 Washers&Dryers
$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355
RC, BIIX,
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G2 SUNDAY JUNE 2 2013 • THE BULLETIN
THE NE W Y O R K T I M E S C R O S S W O R D MADE-FOR-TV MOVIES By Joon Pahk and Jeremy Horwitz / Edited by Will Shortz
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I Friends in a pub
5 7 Janis's cartoo n husband
1 15 Yasir Ar a f at , b y birth
6 Openly disdain
5 8 NBC new sman H o l t
116 State symbol of
13 Baroque French dance
60 Step
20 Cognizant
21 Relaxing soak 2 2 Alma mater of E l i Manning 23 T V mov ie a b o ut . . . where I c a n e a s i l y g et a cab ? 2 5 "I' m n o t k i d d i n g "
26 Mind-numbing 27 Kind of p r e ssure i nvol ved i n w a t e r f ilt r a t i o n
Massachusetts
61 Specter of the Senate, once 62 ... t r y i n g t v g e t a f riar
to vi o late his
v ow of si l e n c e ? 71 Soak 7 2 Farfall e and or z o 7 6 Old Fr ench l i n e
7 8 Foll o wer o f L a s V egas or New Y o r k
2 9 French wor d w i t h two accents
81 Back
30 ... whe re to go i n
37 Home-run pace
83 ... a sin g i n g g r v u p that meets for b acon and eg g s ?
4 0 Arr i v i s t e
8 7 Bursts (i n )
4 1 Greek vo w e l s
89 Russians, e.g.
4 2 Netw or k w i t h t h e
9 0 "Sto u t l y - b u i l t "
TvÃ0?
s logan "N o t R eality. A c t u a l i t y " 4 4 "Me and B o b b y "( p o sthumous J anis Joplin No . I ) 46 Pants measure 47 ... a His p a n ic " h i p h ip ho o r a y " ?
53 Cousin 5 4 Nikkei u n i t 55 Epitome of t h i n n e ss 5 6 Greet sil e n t l y
For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.
19 Ogee's shape
love"
D ickens vi l l a i n 9 1 Concave object o f re f I e c t i o n? 9 2 Not m i x i n g w e l l ? 9 6 School o r g s. 97 ... S kywat k e r ' s t rendy hygi en e
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4 Pennsylvani a ' s Flagship Cit y
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7 7 Comment t ha t m i g h t get the response "de rien"
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Ohio Valley Conf.
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119 White Castle offerings
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6 3 James who di e d t hree years befor e w inning a Pu l i t z e r 6 4 "A D o l l ' s H o u s e" wi fe
16 Original opening to Homer' s " 0 d y s s e y"?
6 5 "Do no t l i k e "
17 Hermano del padre o de la madre
6 7 Antho n y' s p a r t ner i n radio
66 Worker' s w e ekend whoop
6 8 Language fr o m w hich " c o t t o n " " candy" a r e derived 6 9 See 10-Dow n
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7 0 Day, to da V i n c i 7 3 Has an ad u l t c o n v e r s a t i o n? 7 4 Feverish f i t 75 Doesn't j u s t t ear up 77 Pi gg l e - W i g g l e (children' s character)
79 French high-speed r ail i n i t s . 8 0 Literary i n i t s . 83 Retro dos 8 4 Where the wo r l d ' s
9 4 Oklahoma In d i a n s 9 5 "I N e ver Pl a yed th e G ame" m e m o i r i s t
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96 Prominent beefcake features 9 8 "I' d l i k e t o s e e
100 tall e st mountains ar e found 8 5 It' s an a f f r o n t
99 Surname appearing n ine ti mes i n a l i s t of Indy 500 winners
8 6 "Homeland" or g . 8 8 Basketball H a l l - o f F amer Art i s 92 Positive ends 9 3 '60s acti v i s t o r g .
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1 00 Long-t ai le d b e a c h fliers
103 Urban , 2004 and 2012 u ndefeated col l e g e football c o ach 106 l aw 107 Sweat 1 08 Former ra i l r o a d regulatory agcy. 109 Blemi sh 1 10 Italian m i n e ? 112 "I di d N O T n eed to hear that" 113 Former Ford m o d el
no us
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PLEASE NOTE; Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 ormoredays will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday. 267
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Misc . Items
Hay, Grain & Feed5
Fuel & Wood
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Wanted- paying cash All Year Dependable Lost Fri., male wedding Want to b u y A l falfa, for Hi-fi audio & stu- Firewood: Seasoned band with inscription, grass and grain hay, Home cleaning crew Office Clerk I Recep- Sales -Counter person dio equip. Mclntosh, Lodgepole, Split, Del. n ear F re d M e y e r standing, in C entral DO YOU NEED member needed week tionist - Graveyard Seeking hard worker Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 J BL, Marantz, D y (Bend) or i n B e nd Ore. 541-419-2713 A GREAT days only. No week- shift, 30-40 hrs/week. with great attitude naco, Heathkit, San- for $335. Cash, Check a rea. P l ease c a l l EMPLOYEE ends, eves or holidays. seasonal, must be 18 and people skills. or Credit Card OK. 541-388-8942. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 541-815-0015 RIGHT NOW? or older. Apply in perNeed clean/valid 541-420-3484. Call 541-261-1808 Call The Bulletin son between BamODL, and able to do Lost kitty Sydney, black & Housekeeping before 11 a.m. and 3pm, Mon-Fri., Albina some heavy lifting. 269 white long-hair, white spot 421 Wig, beautiful wavy auget an ad in to pub- Seasonal Housekeep- Asphalt, 400 NW Paul Fax resume to chin, microchipped, at ers N eeded. M u st burn color, new, $25. Gardening Supplies on 541-388-4055. Schools & Training lish the next day! Jasa Way, Madras. 1000 Trails o n 5 / t 0. Baby Serama Chicks! 541-728-0105 work weekends and & Equipment Reward! 541-923-6948 541-385-5809. Great for 4H or FFA A IRLINES AR E H I R holidays. M i n imumPeople Look for Information VIEW the projects. $5 each. BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS wage while training WANTED: Lost prescription sunAbout Products and ING Train for hands Classifieds at: 541-433-2112. then to p iece rate. Services Every Daythrough LAWN SWEEPER Search the area's most glasses on chain with on Aviation Maintewww.bendbulletin.com I Medical Equipment Must have r e liable The Bulletin classi0eds comprehensive listing of manual or powered. pearls. 541-678-0148 nance Career. FAA transportation, ODL, 541-318-1233 341 classified advertising... approved p r ogram. Father's Day is coming! Lost wedding ring Me- Horses & Equipment current Ins, over 18 Remember.... real estate to automotive, Financial aid if qualiPower lift chair Ultra morial weekend posyears of age. Please A dd your we b a d - merchandise to sporting BarkTurtsoil.com fied - Housing availComfort UC540, fully sibly at Sugarloaf Mtn. call Car o l I able CALL A viation GENERAL dress to your ad and goods. Bulletin Claaaifieds recline to standing poMotel, High D e sert 541-749-1296; appear every day in the Institute of M a i ntereaders on The sition. 541-550-7913 MANAGER PROMPT D E LIVERY Middle School, Pilot Village Properties print or on line. nance 877-804-5293 Lake Creek Lodge Bulletin' s web site 541-389-9663 Butte o r Bo r d en's Sunriver O (PNDC) will be able to click Call 541-385-5809 A Camp Sherman Resort 263 Corner. Cash reward. 0 through automatically www.bendbulletin.com 253-653-5296 Craftsman chainsaw Check out the Tools to your site. Experienced, r espon18" runs good $70. Attend College Online classifieds online The Bulletin REMEMBER: If you sible professional will www.bendbulletin.com 541-408-4528 SernagCentral Ongon sn«e 1903 100%. *Medical, Estate/ShopiTools Sale RN have lost an animal, TACK & SADDLE coordinate all lodge *Business, *Criminal PreiPost -Op Fri/Sat/Sun 5/31-6/1-6/2, don't forget to check Updated daily AUCTION Sam-4pm Justice, *Hospitality, departments, includFor newspaper The Humane Society Security Sat. June 15, 7 p.m. *Web. J o b Pl a c e- ing: personnel, book- Medical i Endoscopy Riding mower, utility delivery, call the See our website for our in Bend 541-382-3537 Preview 5:30 p.m. B~ S U RGERv keeping, front desk 8 trailer, '81 Yamaha, ment Assi s tance. Circulation Dept. at available Security poRedmond, Nurse C • F • t st • T • I t • t t Liquidating 70 guest services, marmetal/wood/welding/ 541-385-5800 Computer and Finan541-923-0882 htctran tkeetarcarntsn sitions, along with the Saddles + an entire keting & media, opauto-motive/aircra I cial Aid If Qualified. To place an ad, call Prineville, store's worth of inBENbSURGERY On-call, 10 hr . s hifts, 42 reasons to join our erations & m a i nteequipment 8 parts. Gold 541-385-5809 Schev Au t h orized. 541 -447-71 78; C • F. • N • T • La • R Mon.-Fri. Critical Care team! ventory at public dredge, bikes, pool table, Call 866 - 6 88-7078 nance, housekeeping, or email iaistCas'liaartisrCrrrrkn OR Craft Cats, auction, regardless or ASC e xperience www.securityprosbend.com restaurant, sp e c ial building materials, home claaaified@bendbulletin com www.Centuraonline.C 541-389-8420. of loss or cost. Top Full-Time, 4 - 1 0 hr. preferred; endoscopy O sasantraaos decor, tons of misc. free events & weddings, om (PNDC) brand and custom scrap. Hwy 97, Sunriver The Bulletin HOA and cabin sales. shifts, Mon.-Fri. Appli- e xperience a p l u s . Serving Central Oregon since 1903 cant must have EndoWage premium paid made Saddles, exit, Springwater to Our leader will be an Bridles, Blankets, exp e rience for on call status, and 56335 Stellar Dr. BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS i nspirational, en e r - scopy Lawnmower self-prop. too much to list. Find exactly what getic and highly moti- preferably in an ASC eligible for Bonus proSearch the area's most Mastercraft, bag, 5HP, setting. Propofol seEverything used on gram. Interested per- you are looking for in the Sears Craftsman vated "people person" comprehensive listing of $200. 541-408-4528. sons should e mail 8 around a horse! who will host families dation a plus, but not table saw, $90. classified advertising... CLASSIFIEDS required. Job offers resume Cash, Cards, NO to: and guests that have 541-388-6846 Petunia hanging basreal estate to automotive, CHECKS 10% Buye xcellent bene f i t jobs© bendsurgery.com been returning to the kets, ready to go, $15 merchandise to sporting ers Premium each. 541-433-2112 for generations. package. I n terested goods. Bulletin Classifieds resort Find exactly what Elks Lodge ¹. 1371 Full time position, for persons should email appear every day in the Prompt Delivery resume to: 63120 Boyd Acres immediate hire. you are looking for in the Rock, Sand & Gravel print or on line. Rd., Bend, OR Please email resume jobs©bendsurgery.com CLASSIFIEDS Multiple Colors, Sizes Call 541-385-5809 (541) 362-1150 and salary require- Just bought a new boat? Farm Equipment Instant Landscaping Co Auctioneer www.bendbulletin.com ments to: Sell your old one in the 541-389-9663 & Machinery Mike Murphy s dne LCLO mail.com classifieds! Ask about our The Bulletin SUPER TOP SOIL Sernng Ce rral Ongon stnre r903 Super Seller rates! I Building Materials www.hershe souandbartc.com AC WD45 tractor w/wide 541-385-5809 front, power lift 8 steer345 Screened, soil 8 comREDMOND Habitat post m i x ed , no ing; needs head gasket. Livestock & Equipment RESTORE rocks/clods. High hu- $1200. 541-410-3425 I I t I Building Supply Resale mus level, exc. f or 'j Replacement-quality Quality at flower beds, lawns, purebred y e a r ling c LOW PRICES gardens, straight Angus heifers, Final 1242 S. Hwy 97 s creened to p s o i l . Answer and Danny 541-548-1406 Bark. Clean fill. DeBoy bloodlines. Good Open to the public. liver/you haul. disposition. Raised in 541-548-3949. Fresh strawberries! long-established herd. Picked daily 7 days $1000 ea. Del. avail. 270 week. Open Mon. 541-480-8096 Madras Heating & Stoves Lost 8 Found Sat., 9-7, Sun. 10-6 Wholesale avail. AdNOTICE TO 358 Found a furniture item vance orders. ADVERTISER Farmers Column Brookswood Ave. We pick or U-Pick Since September 29, on in Bend on Sat. 5/25. K Family Farm 1991, advertising for o cl a im , ema i l 33427 Seven Mile used woodstoves has T For Sale, Lowiine coveredinmud23O gm Lane SE, Albany, OR. been limited to modAngus and Dexter's Immediate job opportunity for ail.com 541-286-2164. els which have been Heifers. (pregnant or c ertified by the O r - Found cashoffOld Bendwith calf) NO steers Qualified and Trained Person egon Department of Redmond Hwy near Tuavailable except for Environmental Qual- malo. To claim, contact cow/calf pairs. It takes a special person to become a Home Service Technician: Must have ity (DEQ) and the fed- Shari, 541-633-2010; adGrass fed/raised. Instead CAREGivers" not a special degree. eral E n v i ronmental dress: 475 Bellevue Dr, 1st quality grass hay, Irg Reasonable prices. pervious experience in Ag Equipment. Working with seniors in their homes can be Protection A g e ncyBend. Final date to claim: 3'x3'xs' bales, approx Must sell as challenging but, at the same time, tr emendously Resume with references required. 750lbs ea. $240/ton, barn (EPA) as having met 8/20/2013. I am retiring. rewarding. Enjoy training, support, flexible shifts smoke emission stan- Found: Woman'sfleece stored. Patterson Ranch, Leo 541-306-0357 Call Ron Weatherby, for appointment. Sisters, 541-549-3831 thatfityour life,and a Iob thatnurtures the soul. dards. A cer t ified dropped from w oodstove may b e jacket, baby bike trailer in Baler Twine identified by its certifiIrrigated farm HOLLINGSWORTHS' INC. Park. Most Common Sizes Wanted: cation label, which is Drake ground, under pivot ir541-383-3483. Quarry Ave. Hay 8 Feed • No medical degree necessary rigation, i n C e n tral permanently attached 541-923-2400 ' Training and support provided Flexible shifts Burns, Oregon OR. 541-419-2713 to the stove. The Bul- LOST dog on Commer- www.quarryfeed.com letin will no t k n ow- cial St., Madras. Small Find out more at homeinsteadaend.com, (541-573-7254) ingly accept advettis- red, deaf, old. R e- Wanted: Irrigated farm Want to b u y A l falfa, Become a CAREGiver link mmmmKII' ing for the sale of ward. 541-475-3889, ground, under pivot ir- grass and grain hay, 541-280-3629, or i?r ue rgi prernrrra/: uncertified rigation, i n C e n tral standing, in C entral Call 541.330.6400 woodstoves. 541-325- 6212 OR. 541-419-2713 Ore. 541-419-2713 Each Home InsteadSemor Caraa office is inde endentl owned and o erated © 2013 Home InsteadInc.
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Employment
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Opportunities T T E I S S The Bulletin O U S I Recommends extra
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I T G I R L
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caution when pur- I chasing products or I services from out of I the area. Sending c ash, checks, o r I credit i n f o rmation I may be subjected to FRAUD. For more information about an adver-
I A I S I H I T I O I I N I tiser, you may call I
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PSMILIIQ
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Truck Drivers with experience needed. Seeking dump truck, belly dump, flatbed, lowboy & c o ntainer d rivers. Local a n d over the road positions. Must have 2 years experience and valid Class A CDL.
Can be found on these pages:
Z0~0~
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraini ng 454- Looking for Employ ment 470 - Domestic & In-Hom e Posit ions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositi ons
514
Insurance
FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 52 8 - Loans and Mortgages 543-Stocksand Bonds 5 5 8 - Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
Wages based on ex- SAVE $$$ on AUTO perience. Benefits inINSURANCE from the 528 573 573 clude health i nsur- m ajor names y o u Loans & Mortgages Business Opportunities Business Opportunities ance, 401(k) p lan, know and trust. No the Oregon S tate paid vacation, inspec- forms. No hassle. No BANK TURNED YOU WARNING The Bulletin A Classified ad is an I Attorney General's tion bonus program. obligation. Call DOWN? Private party recommends that you EASY W AY TO A R G T A S Office Co n s umerI Call Kenny, READY F O R MY will loan on real esi nvestigate ever y REACH over 3 million Protection hotline at I Western Heavy Haul, QUOTE now! CALL tate equity. Credit, no phase of investment Pacific NorthwesternR 0 I S A G O I 1-877-877-9392. 541-447-5643 1-888-706-8256. $5 2 5 /25-word problem, good equity opportunities, e s pe- ers. AM O T L U B (PNDC) is all you need. Call c ially t h os e fr o m c lassified ad i n 2 9 LThe Bulletin Oregon Land Mortout-of-state or offered daily newspapers for B A R A K E S USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! gage 541-388-4200. by a p e rson doing 3-days. Call the Pa528 I N N L S business out of a locific Northwest Daily Door-to-door selling with Find exactly what Loans & Mortgages cal motel or hotel. In- Connection (916) C O O L D E M BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS you are looking for in the fast results! It's the easiest vestment o f f e rings 2 88-6019 o r e m a il Search the area's most O T I N E WARNING way in the world to sell. must be r e gistered elizabeth@cnpa.com CLASSIFIEDS comprehensive listing of The Bulletin recomwith the Oregon De- for more info (PNDC) I M M O H O R T Y classified advertising... mends you use caupartment of Finance. The Bulletin Classified real estate to automotive, tion when you proR M I T R E We suggest you conC A I 541-385-5809 Truck driver: Home merchandise to sporting vide personal sult your attorney or Extreme Value AdverC R O E S L Y E R w eekends, mos t information to compa- goods. Bulletin Classifieds call CON S UMER tising! 29 Daily newsweekdays. Flatbed, nies offering loans or appear every day in the HOTLINE, papers $525/25-word doubles, tar p ing. print or on line. Looking for your next credit, especially PUZZLE IS ON PAGE GZ 1-503-378-4320, c lassified 3-d a y s. COT experience will employee? those asking for adCall 541-385-5809 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. Reach 3 million Paget you in, but not a Place a Bulletin help vance loan fees or 476 476 476 www.bendbulletin.com cific Northwesterners. must. Based out of wanted ad today and companies from out of For more information Employment Employment Employment Prineville. Make no reach over 60,000 state. If you have The Bulletin (916) 288-6019 or Ser ingCeneei Omgon rinre iggg Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities mistake this is hard readers each week. Just bought a new boat? call concerns or quesemail: work! 8-14 hrs day. Sell your old one in the Your classified ad tions, we suggest you elizabeth©cnpa.com Only serious should will also appear on consult your attorney LOCALMONEYrWe buy classifieds! Ask about our for the Pacific NorthOrganics& Recycling Service Tech a pply. F ul l t i m e , Super Seller rates! secured trust deeds & bendbulletin.com or call CONSUMER west Daily ConnecImmediate Job opAttendant 541-385-5809 possible part- time. note,some hard money which currently HOTLINE, tion. (PNDC) portunity for q ualiloans. Call Pat Kelley Medical card, DMV receives over 1.5 1-877-877-9392. fied and trained per541-382-3099 ext.13. Full Time printout. I'll pay for million page views +nvce:e+ son. See the display Summer Seasonal drug screen. Conevery month at ad in our classified tact Earl P eterson no extra cost. Associate Professor Senior Researcher, www.deschutesrecycli ng.com s ection today f o r General 541-410-7811. Bulletin Classifieds part time. more information. Jefferson Count Job 0 or t unit Get Results! Position June - August Hoiiingsworths' inc. Call 385-5809 Oregon State University (OSU) - Cascades in Corrections Officer - $2,845.00 to • Provide excellent customer service Burns, OR Check out the or place Bend invites applications for a part-time (.49 • Cash handling experience a must 541-573-7254 $3,046.00per month DOQclassifieds online your ad on-line at FTE), 12-month, Associate Professor Senior • Assist public with recycling Closes June 7th, 2013 www.bendbulletin.com bendbulletin.com Researcher position. • Must frequently lift 50 lbs. Updated daily People Look for Information • Maintain a safe work area Current DPSST Corrections Officer Duties include, but are not limited to, bringing About Products and • Outdoors Certification Preferred multiple stakeholders together to pursue, se• Forklift experience a plus Services Every Daythrough Human Resources Consultant 1 (HRCf) cure, and implement external funding opporF or c o mplete j o b des c ription a n d TheBulletin Classifieds tunities, including at the state and federal Apply at our office location at: application form go to Oregon State University — Cascades in Bend www.co.jefferson.or.us; click o n H uman level, in the public health sector, and dissemiBend Garbage 8 Recyiing, is seeking applicants for a 12-month, full-time nating results to both scholarly and practitioTechnical 20835 NE Montana M/ay, Bend, OR Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call (1.0 FTE) professional faculty position as a ner audiences. Or High Desert ESD is 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson Human Resources Consultant 1 (HRC1). The Mail your resume to: hiring for two posiCounty Application forms to: Human Resources Consultant 1 performs a A minimum requirement includes a PhD in one Bend Garbage & Recyciing, t ions w i t hi n ou r broad range of professional human resources of the following disciplines or related disciTechnology D e pt. Jefferson County Human Resources, P.O. Box 504, Bend, OR 97709 management and administration responsibiliplines: Public Health, Counseling (Clinical Or (1) Desktop S u p 66 SE D Street, Suite E, ties including, but not limited to, recruitment Mental Health), Epidemiology, Health EcoFax resume to: 541-383-3640 Attn: Molly port Specialist 40 Madras, OR 97741. and selection duties including job candidates nomics or Nutrition. Additional minimum reAn Equal Opportunity Employer hrs/wk, M o n .-Fri., travel arrangements and managing time and Jefferson Countyis an Equal Employment quirements include a record of scholarship to 250 days/ year. reporting/payroll functions © OSU-Cascades. Opportunity Employer support the granting of the rank of Associate f2)C!assroom TechProfessor, successful record i n s e curing nology Support SpePreferred qualifications include experience in ACCOUNTANT health-related grants from multiple sources incialist 4 0 hr s / wk, performing duties in human resources manEstablished CPA firm in Klamath Falls, OR is Nurse Manager: cluding at the state and federal levels and exMon.-Fri., 220 days/ seeking a CPA with 3-8 years' experience in pubagement in an institution of higher education, Pre-Op/Post-Op/Caii Room perience working within higher education. year. Paid leave, full lic accounting. The successful candidate shall or comparable environment. benefits. have a strong technical background in tax and fiB~ S U RGERV The anticipated start date is July 1, 2013. To For details 8 nancial accounting, as well as excellent commuTo see complete position description w/addiC • F. • N • T • e • R apply for this position, please go to http://orapplication: nication skills. The applicant should be able to inkegac Iioeneloegongere tional required qualifications and to apply egonstate.edu/jobs/ and view posting numwww.hdesd.org work both independently and as a team player. on-line go to http://oregonstate.edu/jobs and Job Summary: We are looking for a strong ber 0010719. The closing date is 6/7/13. OSU Candidate should have experience preparing & review posting ¹ 0010766. The closing date is leader to fill the Nurse Manager role for the is an AA/EOE. reviewing complex individual, corporate, and 6/14/13. OSU is an AA/EOE. Pre-op / Post-Op / Call Room. This position Just bought a new boat? partnership returns. Responsibilities will also inrequires an individual capable of providing diSell your old one in the clude tax planning, business consulting and ac- classifieds! ~gEs o rect oversight of Pre-Op, Post-Op and the call Ask about our counting services. We a r e a p r o fessional yard Maintenancel "z DESCHUTES COUNTY Super Seller rates! room while managing 20-25 FTE's. The posifamily-like team and offer a competitive salary Cart Washing 541-385-5809 tion reports directly to the Clinical Director. CI and a complete fringe benefit package. Duties will include, but not be limited to, perCAREER OPPORTUNITIES RiZKS Part Time Summer formance evaluations and performance manPlease send cover letter and resume to: CAUTION READERS: ggo Position for High agement as well as new staff orientation. This risaksonO iscoc as.com position is a member of multiple committees. Country Disposal ASSOCIATE PLANNER — LONG RANGE
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Ads published in eEmployment Opportuni-
General
Central Oregon Community College
has o p enings l i sted b e l ow. Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383-7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Instructional Technical Systems Specialist / Trainer Provide a d ministration o f ins t ructionaltechnical systems in vendor-hosted environments, provide training in virtual environments, and troubleshoot issues. Requires Master's degree + online web-based course development exp.$3,558-$4.235/mo. Closes June 16.
Assistant Professor, Culinary Arts Provide instruction for C ulinary Arts a nd restaurant operations, both in lecture and lab mediums. Bachelor's req. + 3-yr. field exp. Start F al l T e r m S e ptember 2013. Closes June 24. Part Time instructors New: Manufacturing Technology Looking for t alented individuals to t e ach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our Web site https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $500 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
Web Developer Are you a technical star who can also communicate effectively with non-technical executives and employees? Would you like to work hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, the recreation capital of the state? Then we'd like to talk to you. Our busy media company that publishes numerous web and mobile sites seeks an experienced developer who is also a forward thinker, creative problem solver, excellent communicator, and self-motivated professional. We are redesigning all of our websites within the next couple of years and want you in on the ground
t ies" i n clude e m ployee and i ndependent pos i tions. Ads for positions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, p l ease investigate thoroughly.
Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme caution when r esponding to A N Y online e m p loyment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity L aws: Oregon B u reau of Labor & Industry, C i vil Rights Division, 971-673-0764
If you have any questions, concerns or comments, contact: Classified Department The Bulletin 541-385-5809
The Bulletin Check out the classifieds online www.bendbuiietigLcom
Updated daily
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www.highcountrydisposal.com
Qualifications: Must be able to demonstrate strong leadership and communication skills. Must be a licensed RN in the state of Oregon, or able to obtain licensure upon hire. 3-5 years of Peri-Operative experience, preferably in an ASC setting. The ideal candidate will have management experience in an ASC setting.
• Wash, repair, maintain and organize all carts & containers • Help in the yard where needed • Maintain a safe work area • Outdoors •Monday-FridayBam- 12pm
Position details: This is a full time exempt position; Monday through Friday. Competitive salary, benefit package, retirement and bonus plan Position closes June 15, 2013.
Apply at our office location at: 1090 NE Hemlock, Redmond, OR Or Mail your resume to: Bend Garbage &Recyciing, P.O. Box 504, Bend, OR 97709 Or Fax resume to: 541-383-3640 Attn: Molly An Equal Opportunity Employer
Email resume to jobs@bendsurgery.com
Public Services SpecialistDowntown Bend Library
The Bulletin
(part-time positions) Are you committed to providing excellent customer service? Check this team-oriented opportunity. It's a great chance to grow in a fun environment and to make a difference in the lives of children, teens and adults. Part time. Deadline: z:oo on June 6.
Advertising Account Executive The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of m edia sales experience is preferable, but we will train the right candidate. The p o sition in c ludes a com p etitive compensation package including benefits, and rewards an a ggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential.
http://www.deschuteslibrary.org/ employment.asp for more details, application, and supplemental questionnaire. Or call 541-312-1025
D ES C I I U T E S
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P UB L I C
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EOE / Drug Free Workplace
floor. Fluencywith PHP, HTML5, CSS3, jQuery and JavaScript is a must. Experience integrating third-party solutions and social media applications required. Desired experience includes: XML/JSON, MySQL, Joomla, Java, responsive web design, Rails, WordPress. Top-notch skills with user interface and graphic design an added plus.
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Join us for a Hiring Event!
Opportunities currently exist in RedmondIo Bend, ORfor:
TueSday, June 4th,2013 10am -2pm
Retail Sales Representatives
Delivery
TOWnePlaCe SuiteS Bend
$upplement Your Income Now taking bids for an Independent Contract Hauler to deliver bundles of newspapers from Bend to LaGrande, Oregon (with some delivery drops en route) on a weekly basis. Must have own vehicle with license and insurance and the capability to haul up to 6000 lbs. Candidates must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. Selected candidate will be i ndependently contracted. To apply or for more info contact James Baisinger at jbaisinger@bendbulletin.com
HUMAN RESOURCES DIRECTOR,Personnel Dept. Full-time position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON 06/30/13. MEDICAL DIRECTOR, Behavioral Health Division. Will consider full-time, part-time or Personal Services Contract. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE P RACTITIONER, Behavioral Health Division. One full-time and one part-time position, will also consider 8 Personal Services Contract. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED.
PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE II, CaC00!t with Maternal Child Health, Public Health Division. Position will start as half-time position but will become full-time in the future. Bilingual Spanish/English required. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON 06/17/13. PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE II, Nurse Family Partnership with Maternal Child Health, Public Health Division. Full-time position. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED.
On-call positions. Deadline:THIS IS AN ONGOING RECRUITMENT.
resume@wescompapers.com.
EOE/Drug Free Workplace
CORRECTIONS NURSE,Adult Jail. Full-time position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRSTREVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON 06/1 7/1 3.
RESERVE DEPUTY SHERIFF,Sheriff's Office.
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Background in the media industry desired but not required. This is a full-time position with benefits. If you've got what it takes, e-mail a cover letter, resume, and portfolio/work sample links a n d/or re p ository ( GitHub) t o This posting is also on the web at www.bendbulletin.com
BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II, Older Adult. Full-time position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED.
PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER tN NURSE PRACTITIONER,Adult Jail. Full-time position. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED.
for assistance. EOE
Email your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Jay Brandt, Advertising Director jbrandt@bendbulletin.com or drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Or mail to PO Box6020, Bend, OR 97708; No phone inquiries please
PLANNING,Community Development Dept. Full-time position. Deadline: SUNDAY, 06/23/1 3.
755 SW 13th Place Bend, Oregon 97702
Coiiege degree or opp!icable experience preferred. Enjoybenefitsworthy of the name Total Rewards including: • BilingualPay Differential • Medical, dental and vision from day one • Award-winning training • Generous tuition assistance program
• Company matching 401(k) • Paid vacation and holidays
Visit verizon.com/jobs to apply today. Must apply online within the last30 days to be considered.
DESGHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONSONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS,PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITEAT www.deschutes.org/jobs.
All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed and applications have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent via emailonly. If you need assistance, please contact the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 617-4722.
Deschutes County provides reasonable accommodations for p e rsons w i th disabilities. This material will be furnished
in alternative format if needed. For hearing impaired, please call TTY/TDD 711.
Verizon Wireless ig an equal opportunity employer m/f/d/v.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G4 SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719- Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
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Motorcycles & Accessories
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16' Harley Limited 103 2011, many extras, stage 1 8 air cushion seat. 18,123 mi, $20,990. 541-306-0289
OOO 20.5' Seaswirl Spy-
O ld T o w n der 1989 H.O. 302, Camper C a n oe, 285 hrs., exc. cond., exc. cond, $900. stored indoors for 541-312-8740
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C all 54/ - 3 8 5 -5 8 0 9 to r o m ot e o u r service
life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530
NOTICE: Oregon state 17.5' Glastron 2002, law req u ires any21' Bluewater Mirage (2) 2000 A rctic C at HDFatBo 19 9 6 Chevy eng., Volvo one who co n t racts Z L580's EFI with n e w MUST SELL. outdrive, open bow, for construction work covers, electric start w/ Worth $8315stereo, sink/live well, to be licensed with the reverse, low miles, both d Will sacrifice for w/glastron tr a i ler, C onstruction Co n excellent; with new 2009 $4,900 for quick sell. incl. boat c o v er, tractors Board (CCB). Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, Mv To see video, go to: Like new, $ 8 500. A n active lice n se drive off/on w/double tilt, www.u2pro.com/95 541-447-4876 means the contractor SERVING CENTRAL OREGON lots of accys. Selling due 541-815-9981 Completely i s bonded an d i n to m edical r e asons. Since 2003 Rebuilt/Customized s ured. Ver if y t h e Residential 8 Commercial $6000 all. 541-536-8130 21' Crownline 215 hp 2012/2013 Award in/outboard e n g i ne contractor's CCB Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, LANDSCAPING Winner 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin c ense through t h e short track, variable Showroom Condition Cons u mer e Landscape Construction sleeps 2/ 3 p e ople, CCB exhaust valves, elecMany Extras Website portable toilet, exc. te Water Feature tric s t art, r e v erse, Low Miles. cond. Asking $8,000. www.hirealicensedcontractoc Installation/Maint. com manuals, rec o rds, 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 OBO. 541-388-8339 $77,000 e pavers or call 503-378-4621. new spare belt, cover, 541-548-4807 Volvo Penta, 270HP, The Bulletin recome Renovations heated hand g rips, low hrs., must see, Ads published in the mends checking with e Irrigations Installation "Boats" classification nice, fast, $999. Call HD Screaming Eagle $15,000, 541-330-3939 the CCB prior to coninclude: Speed, fishTom, 541-385-7932, Electra Glide 2005, Sprinkler tracting with anyone. ing, drift, canoe, 103" motor, two tone Activation/Repair • Yamaha 750 1999 house and sail boats. Some other t rades candy teal, new tires, also req u ire addi- Back Flow Testing Mountain Max, $1400. 23K miles, CD player For all other types of • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 atercraft, please see tional licenses a nd hydraulic clutch, excertifications. MAINIENANCE EXT, $1000. Class 875. cellent condition. IS 1'hatch & Aerate • Zieman 4-place 541-385-5809 Highest offer takes it. 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L trailer, SOLD! e Spring Clean up Find exactly what 541-480-8080. Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 All in good condition. you are looking for in the iy Weekly Mowing & Edging hp Bowrider w/depth Located in La Pine. e Bi-Monthly & finder, radio/ CD player, CLASSIFIEDS Call 541-408-6149. Monthly Maintenance rod holders, full canvas, 659 745 e Bark, Rock, Etc. EZ Loader trailer, exclnt 860 cond, $11,500. Concrete Construction Houses for Rent Homes for Sale Motorcycles & Accessories 707-484-3518 (Bend) Senior Discounts Sunriver Bonded and Insured 18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, Victory TC 2002, FOR SALE VILLAGE PROPERTIES 541-815-4458 runs great, many 1984, 185hp, V6 Mer- Beautiful h o u seboat, Sunriver, Three Rivers, LCB¹ 8759 accessories, new Cruiser, full canvas, life $85,000. 541-390-4693 When buying a home, La Pine. Great vests, bumpers, water www.centraloregon tires, under 40K skis, swim float, extra 83% of Central Selection. Prices range houseboat.com. OTICE: ORE G O N Oregonians turn to miles, well kept. prop 8 more. EZ Loader Qxl55cbmsuMM N Landscape $425 - $2000/mo. Contrac$6500 OBO. For trailer, never in saltwater, GENERATE SOME ex- Over30 Years Experience View our full 2002 Harley Davidson The Bulletin Heritage Softail - Fl, em- m ore i nfo. c a l l always garaged, very citement in your neigtors Law (ORS 671) 630 • Sidewalks inventory online at r equires a l l bu s i erald green & black, lots 541-647-4232 clean, all maint. records. borhood. Plan a gaVillage-Properties.com • RV Pads Rooms for Rent nesses that advertise Call 541-385-5809 to of chrome 8 extras, 9K $5500. 541-389-7329 rage sale and don't 1 -866-931 - 1 061 • Driveways t o p e r form L a n dplace your mi, perfect cond. $9995. forget to advertise in • Color & Stamp Room for rent, Redmond, scape C o n struction 660 Real Estate ad. Call 503-999-7356 (cell) Find exactly what Work Available classified! 385-5809. very nice location, $500 which includes: Also — Hardwood ffoorind Houses for Rent you are looking for in the per mo + small utility. 746 p lanting, dec k s , at affordable prices! 541-279-9538. La Pine CLASSIFIEDS sewrng central oregon vn<e 19IB fences, arbors, Northwest Bend Homes cce ¹190612 w ater-features, a n d Studios & Kitchenettes La Pine - 2/1.5, in Cresinstallation, repair of 865 Call Grant Furnished room, TV w/ cent Creek subdivision. Beautiful NW cottage, 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, systems to Watercraft cable, micro & fridge. Fitness center, park. c lose to C O C C 8 ATVs 541-219-3183 irrigation inboard motor, g r eat be licensed with the shops Master bdrm w/ Utils & linens. New Natural gas appl., & Landscape Contracwalk-in closet. BMW K1200 GT, 2007, Suzuki Ei er 2004 cond, well maintained, Ads published in "Waowners. $145-$165/wk fireplace. $ 7 5 0/mo. large t ors B o a rd . Th i s Upstairs perfect for crystal gray metallic, Quadrunner ATV, auto- $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 tercraft" include: Kay541-382-1885 Debris Removal $850/dep. Rick family 4-digit number is to be room, 2nd bdrm less than 20K mi, peraks, rafts and motormatic, new tires, 2215 541-815-5494. included in all adver634 or office. Large attic fect cond, large 43 liter Ized personal miles, covered dog tour box, new Michelin tisements which indifor storage or easy P3 tires, factory battery carrier platform, nylon watercrafts. For Apt./Multiplex NE Bend cate the business has conversion to l i ving "boats" please see dust cover, set of 4 1 8' Seaswirl 1984, a bond, insurance and space. Oversized ga- charger/maintainer. lass 870. *'No Application Fee ** snow chains. $2899. open bow, V6, enworkers c ompensarage w/ space for your $14,500. 541-550-6809 Contact Larry at 541-385-5809 2 bdrm, 1 bath, gine & outdrive retion for their employcar, skis & k a yak. CRAMPED FOR • 971-678-3196 or built, extras, $2495. $530 8 $540 w/lease. ees. For your protecComes with all appli. nortonjack©comcast.net 541-546-6920 Will Haul Away Carports included! CASH? tion call 503-378-5909 i ncluding W/D. A p - Use classified to sell 4N FREE ~ or use our website: FOX HOLLOW APTS. pointments on weekthose items you no www.lcb.state.or.us to ends only. $218,000 For Salvage NF' (541) 383-3152 longer need. check license status John 503-804-4681. • Moto r h omes Cascade Rental Call 541-385-5809 • Any Location before co n t racting Management. Co. 705 748 . 4 Removal with t h e b u s iness. Fleetwood 31' T i o ga Persons doing land2210 NE Holliday,3bdrm, Real Estate Services Northeast Bend Homes servng cenual oregon s nce i903 Also Cleanups Class C 1997, 25.000 Yamaha Banshee 2001, scape maintenance 2 bath, new carpet, gas custom built 350 motor, 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, mi. V-10, Onan 4000 jes CfeanoutsFI~ do not require a LCB heat, fireplace, quiet; no Boise, ID Real Estate race-ready, lots of extras, g enerator 275 h r s . new upholstery, new eleclicense. smoking. $800 mo; For relocation info, No leaks. Excellent $4999/obo 541-647-8931 tronics, winch, much more. call Mike Conklin, 541-317-0867 tires. $25.000 $9500. 541-306-0280 208-941-8458 870 Check out the 541-447-3425 Call for Specials! Silvercreek Realty classifieds online Boats & Accessories Check out the Limited numbers avail. 865 NE Robin Ct. 744 classifieds online BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS www.bendbullefin.com 1, 2 & 3 bdrms 3 bdrm/2.5 ba.1992 sq ft. Harley Davidson 1991 Updated daily Open Houses wwsv.bettdbulletitLcom Search the area's most w/d hookups, Multiple mountain views. Custom Softail, 39k comprehensive listing of patios or decks. MLS ¹201108518 Updated daily miles, garaged, bags, 14' 1982 Valco River classified advertising... Mountain Glen 641-410-7474 Open 12-3 cover, Vance exhaust, Sled, 70 h.p., Fish- 20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish L=. real estate to automotive, Brokers welcome 541-383-9313 LOTS of Chrome, SS Finder. Older boat but 8 Ski, 50 hrs on new 2341 NW Floyd Professionally managed by D i s covery merchandise to sporting bars, windshield and price includes trailer, engine, fish finder, chart Fleetwood Ln. BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Norris & Stevens, Inc. 40' 2003, diesel mo- goods. Bulletin Classifieds extras! $6,500. NorthWest Crossing 3 wheels and tires. All plotter & VHF radio with torhome Search the area's most w/all appear every day in the 541-788-3144 648 Gorgeous New f or $1 5 00 ! Cal l antenna. Good shape, options-3 slide outs, print or on line. comprehensive listing of full cover, heavy duty satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Home classified advertising... Harley Davidson Soft- 541-416-8811 Houses for Call 541-385-5809 trailer, kicker and electric Shelley Griffin, real estate to automotive, Tail D e luxe 2 0 0 7, etc. 3 2,000 m i les. www.bendbulletin.com Rent General Broker 15' older Seaswirl, motors. merchandise to sporting — ProvidingWintered in h e ated white/cobalt, w / pas$7500 or best offer. 541-280-3804 goods. Bulletin Classifieds senger kit, Vance & 35HP motor, cover, The Bulletin shop. $89,900 O.B.O. Yard Maintenance PUBLISHER'S 541-292-1834 sewing centrai oregonsnce fss appear every day in the d epth finder, a s 541-447-8664 NOTICE Hines muffler system sorted live v e sts, & Clean-up, print or on line. All real estate adver& kit, 1045 mi., exc. $1400. OBO. Handyman • Thatching, Plugging Call 541-385-5809 tising in this newspac ond, $16,9 9 9 , 541-548-7645 or www.bendbulletin.com & much more! per is subject to the 541-389-9188. 541-408-3811. 20.5' 2004 Bayliner F air H o using A c t I DO THAT! The Bulletin Contact Allen 205 Run About, 220 which makes it illegal Harley Heritage Meet singles right now! to a d v ertise "any Softail, 2003 HP, V8, open bow, 15' older Seaswirl, No paid o perators, exc. cond with very preference, limitation $5,000+ in extras, 750 just real people like 35HP motor, cover, low hours, lots of or disc r imination $2000 paint job, you. Browse greetRedmond Homes d epth f inder, a s 30K mi. 1 owner, extras incl. tower, based on race, color, www.thegarnergroup.com ings, exchange messorted live v e sts, For more information Bimini & custom religion, sex, handisages and connect $1400. OBO. please call trailer, $17,950. COLLINS cap, familial status, Looking for your next live. Try it free. Call Handyman/Remodeling 541-548-7645 or 541-385-8090 541-389-1413 marital status or naemp/oyee? now: 8 7 7-955-5505. Open 12-3 541-408-3811. or 209-605-5537 Residential/Commercial tional origin, or an inPlace a Bulletin help (PNDC) 2374 NW Lemhi tention to make any Call Now to Schedule wanted ad today and Small Jobs Ir> Pass Dr. such pre f erence, NorthWest reach over 60,000 Spring Cleanup Enlire Room Remodels Crossing limitation or discrimireaders each week. and Aerate/Thatch, GarageOrganizalion Bright and Cheery nation." Familial staYour classified ad Home rnsPcclion RePairs Weekly or one time Sean Haidef, tus includes children will also appear on Broker Grounds Keeping Service Qualily, Honesi Wr>rk under the age of 18 bendbulletin.com 541-846-7448 • Mowing • Edging living with parents or which currently reDennis 541.317.9768 • Hedge Trimming legal cust o dians, ceives over c.cuv15i573Bvllr/w/dsellv¹ • Pruning ~ Weedeating pregnant women, and 1.5 million page people securing cusviews every month • Fertilizing • Hauling tody of children under at no extra cost. • De-thatchtng ERIC REEVE 18. This newspaper Bulletin Classifieds HANDY will not knowingly acGet Results! cept any advertising Call 385-5809 or BONDED & INSURED k SERVICES J for real estate which is place your ad on-line in violation of the law. at All Home & O ur r e a ders ar e www.thegarnergroup.com bendbulletin.com MAVERICK Commercial Repairs hereby informed that Carpentry-Painting ANDSCAPING all dwellings adver753 Honey Do's. LCB ¹S671 tised in this newspaA'Licensed*Bonded *Insured Open 12-3 Small or large jobs, Sisters Homes per are available on 63780 Crooked no problem. Specialiiing in an equal opportunity Fire Perimeter Clearing Rocks Rd. Senior Discount PANORAMIC basis. To complain of Mowing/Yard Detailing Services Estate, Cascade Au work guaranteed. Mountain View Home! discrimination cal l Weedeiuing/ChainsawWork View at Edge of 1800 sf single-level on1.2 541-389-3361 HUD t o l l -free at Landscape, Construction/Installs Bend acres (see craigslist for 1-800-877-0246. The 541-771-4463 Fencing & More! info). FSBO, $399,900. toll f re e t e lephone Carol Donohoe, Bonded - lnsured Bend/Redmond/Powell Butte Open Sat-Sun, 12-3 pm, Broker number for the hearCCB¹I49468 Terrebonce/CrookedRiver Ranch 541-410-1773 69837 Pine Ridge Rd, ing im p aired is Sisters, or walk property Senior & VeteranDiscounts 1-800-927-9275. without appt. .a LandscapingNard Care Bret Stormer Call Dave, 541-280-8291 Rented your Cell:(503) 302-2445 Property? 773 k The Bulletin Classifieds Office:(54 I) 923-4324 Acreages has an Z~oe z guaEup "After Hours" Line. Call 541-383-2371 Za~<0a ~/,. Painting/Wall Covering CHECK YOUR AD 24 Hours to More Than Service Please check your ad «I. Peace of Mind www.thegarnergroup.com pf,i$,® on the first day it runs 654 to make sure it is corSpring Clean Up rect. Sometimes in746 Houses for Rent •Leaves s tructions over t h e •Cones Homes for Sale SE Bend phone are misunder• Needles stood and an e rror • Debris Hauling European Close to Bend 18.3 acre 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, can occurin your ad. ranch w/4 bdrms, 2 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, If this happens to your Professional Cute black and white Shepherd view. By owner, ideal for Weed Free Bark b ath, 3100 s q . f t . ad, please contact us & Flower Beds farmhouse, 3-car ga- extended family. Painter the first day your ad rage + numerous out- $590,000. 541-390-0886 appears and we will Lawn Renovation Repaint buildings for storage, be happy to fix it as together with. 555-9999 NOTICE h orses, dogs, a n d Aeration - Dethatching s oon as w e c a n . Specialist! Overseed cats OK. Great views All real estate adverDeadlines are: Weekof Cascades, $1450. tised here in is sub- days 11:00 noon for Compost Oregon License ject to t h e F e deral Top Dressing Call 541-610-5882 ¹186147 LLC day, Sat. 11:00 F air Housing A c t , next for Sunday and which makes it illegal a.m. Landscape 541-81 5-2888 Call a Pro to advertise any pref- Monday. 541 -385-5809 Maintenance erence, limitation or Whether you need a Full or Partial Service Thank you! discrimination based The Bulletin Classified •Mowing ~Edging fence fixed, hedges on race, color, reli•Pruning ~Weeding trimmed or a house gion, sex, handicap, Sprinkler Adjustments familial status or nabuilt, you'll find 775 tional origin, or intenFertilizer included professional help in Manufactured/ tion to make any such with monthly program The Bulletin's "Call a Mobile Homes preferences, l i m itaWestern tions or discrimination. Service Professional" Weekly, monthly We will not knowingly FACTORY SPECIAL www.bendbulletin.com Painting Co. Directory or one time service. New Home, 3 bdrm, accept any advertis- Richard Hayman541-3B5-5B09 $46,500 finished ing for r ea l e s tate a semi-retired painting on your site. EXPERIENCED which is in violation of J and M Homes Commercial contractor of 45 years. Newer, beautiful 3 bed- this law. All persons 541-548-5511 & Residential room 2ys bath, new car- are hereby informed Small jobs welcome. pet, gas furnace / water that all dwellings ad- People Look for Information Interior & Exterior vertised are available heater / f i replace. No About Products and 541-388-6910 Senior Discounts smoking, no pets. 1-year on an equal opportu541-390-1466 Fax: 541-30$4IT37 lease; 1st / last / security. nity basis. The Bulle- Services Every Daythrough TheBulletin Classifieds CCB¹51B4 $1250/mo. 541-420-0579 tin Classified Same Day Response
The Bulletin
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541-536-1294
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seeks a young friend to grow up
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THE I3ULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
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T r a vel Trailers • 0 0
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932
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Antique & Classic Autos
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Jayco Seneca 34', 2007 28K miles, 2 slides, Du ramax diesel, 1 owner excellent cond, $84,995 Trade? 541-546-6920
Weekend Warrior Toy Fleetwood 31' W ilder- Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, n ess Gl 1 9 99, 1 2 ' fuel station, exc cond. slide, 2 4 ' aw n i ng, sleeps 8, black/gray queen bed, FSC, out- i nterior, u se d 3X , side shower, E-Z lift $19,999 firm. s tabilizer hitch, l i ke 541-389-9188 new, been stored. $10,950. 707-688-4253
.e Hk ~I Monaco Windsor, 2001, loaded! (was $234,000 new) Solid-surface counters, convection/ micro, 4-dr, fridge, washer/dryer, ceramic tile & carpet, TV, DVD, satellite dish, leveling, 8-airbags, power cord reel, 2 full pass-thru trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 Diesel gen set. $85,000 obo. 541-233-7963
Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000 Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat
& air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003
NNor
appearancein good
condition. Smoke-free. Tow with ~/2-ton. Strong suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593-6266
Fifth Wheels CHECK YOUR AD r
9
NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1
slide, Corian surfaces, wood floors (kitchen), Keystone Sprinter 31', 2008 2-dr fridge, convection King size walkmicrowave, Vizio TV 8 around bed, electric roof satellite, walk-in awning, (4) 6-volt shower, new queen bed. White leather hide-a- batteries, plus many bed & chair, all records, more extras, never no pets or s moking. smoked in, first $28,450. owners, $19,900. CalI 541-771-4600 Call 541-410-5415 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:
batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $16,000 OBO. 541-382-9441
541-548-5254
L~ Southwind 35.5' Triton, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dupont UV coat, 7500 mi. Bought new at $132,913; asking $91,000. Call 503-982-4745
WANTED! RV Consignments Paid for or Not!
BIG ~
Orbit 21'2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual
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CDllNTRY RV • 90% of all RV buyers are looking to finance
or trade. • We have a dozen finance options. • We take anything on trade, paid for or not. • We do all of the workyou et the CASH
W5~oW~
)
skslra@msn.com RV CONSIGNMENTS
We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Winnebago Suncruiser34' FtntD IT! 2004, only 34K, loaded, BUY IT! too much to list, ext'd SELL ITr warr. thru 2014, $54,900 The Bulletin Classifieds Dennis, 541-589-3243 Terry Lite 2000, great cond, see on craiqslist, $6500. 541-382-0964 Travel Trailers
Fleetwood 10' Tent Travel Trailer, 2004 1 queen bed, 1 regular bed + dining area bed; gas s tovetop, 2.5 cu. ft. refrigerator, portable toilet, awning/grass mat, BBQ, receiver for bike carrier. Original owner, m otivated t o se l l ! $5500. 541-389-2426
541-749-0724
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
approval team,
web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
4
Sport Utility Vehicles Toyota Sienna XLE 2010 35.2k mi. silver ¹314822 $32,995
a,5cK!
Oregoo AtrtoSoorce
Delivery Truck Restored 8 Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in & out. Asking
541-220-7808
Ford Aerostar 1994 Eddie Bauer Edition Fully Loaded, Mint Condition! Runs Excellent! $3000. 541-350-1201
BUBBBUOBBBNO CQN
VW BUG 1972 rebuilt
eng, new paint, tires, chrome whls, 30 mpg, $3800. 541-233-7272
$8,500. 541-480-3179
VW Super Bug, 1974 major tune-up, new paint, interior, tires, r unning boards, roof rack. $4500.
Buick Riviera 1991, classic low-mile car, driven about 5K/year. Always garaged & p ampered, non-smoker, exclnt cond, $4300. 541-389-0049 Chev Cheyenne 20 1972 Custom Camper, new TaretMaster eng., 1 owner,
541-389-5760
Ford T h underbird 1955, new white soft top, tonneau cover and upholstery. New chrome. B e a utiful Car. $25,0 0 0 . 541-548-1422
1350 obo. 541-350-6235
UBB
933
Pickups GMC 1966, too many extras to list, reduced to $7500 obo. Serious buyers only. 541-536-0123
~i ~em c GMC b ton 1971, Only $19,700i Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171 MOVING - NO ROOM!
Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model CST /all options, orig. owner, $19,950, 541-923-6049 Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all. 541-389-7669.
GMC 1977 Sierra Classic 4x4 Original owner, a show truck. Never restored or o ff-road. AT, 400 V 8 , many extras, plus free custom 8' matching utililty trailer, and Alpine canopy. Collectors welcome! Sorry, no trades. Firm, cash. $6995. 503-860-5020
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin + ' .i ~
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Lumina V a n 1 99 5 , LNT c o nd., w e l l GMC Yu kon D e n ali X cared for. $2000 obo. 2004, 4x4, l o a d ed, 541-382-9835. third row, tow. Vin¹163244
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$11,988
Automobiles
S UB A R U . 9UBBBUOl BBNO CCN
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
541-385-5809 Chevrolet Cameo Pickup, 1957, disassembled, frame powder coated, new front sheet metal, cab restored. $9995 firm. Call for more info, 541-306-9958 (cell)
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Ford 1-ton extended van, 1995, 460 engine, set-up f or c o n tractor w i t h shelves & bins, fold-down ladder rack, tow hitch, 180K miles, new tranny & brakes; needs catalytic converter & new windshield. $2200.
935
1952 Ford Customline Coupe, project car, flathead V-8, 3 spd extra parts, & materials, $2000 obo. 541-410-7473
ways hangared since new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest Ar- j~ cher around. 1750 total t i me . $ 6 8 ,500.
Vans
Sport Utility Vehicles
1974 Bellanca 1730A
One Half Interest in RV-9A for SALE 2005 Vans RV-9A, 0-320, Dynon, GPS, ICOM's, KT-76C, Oxygen. Flies great, no damage history. 300 plus Hours tach, kept in Redmond C Hangar. Reduced to $35K, OBO: Dick Hansen, 541-923-2318 dkhansenobendbroadband.com or
541-598-3750 aaacregonautcsource.com
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877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 '~
UVNONtOB~
g%9
Buick LeSabre Custom 2004, rare 75k, $6000, worth way more. Ieather, heated seats, nice wheels. Good tires, 30 mpg, white. Convinced? Call Bob 541-318-9999
P orsche Cay e n ne Buick Century Limited Turbo 2005, t wi n 2000, r u n s gr e at, t urbo, l oaded, l o w beautiful car. $3400. miles. 541-312-3085 Vin¹A92123 $24,888
Buick Lucerne CXS 2006 sedan, V8, ifeM S UB A R U . Northstar 4.6L engine, silver, black 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. leather, new $36,000; 877-266-3821 92K miles, 189 wheels Dlr ¹0354 Chevy 2500 HD 2003 & much more, best 4 WD w o r k tru c k , offer over $7900. 140,000 miles, $7000 Subaru Forester 2013 Bob, 541-318-9999 1 3,750 m i . , bl a c k obo. 541-408-4994. ¹407179 $ 2 4,995 CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad Oregon on the first day u runs AutnSource to make sure it is cor541-598-3750 rect. Sometimes inwww. aaaoregonautos tructions over t h e source.com Dodge Dakota Quad phone are misunderCab SLT 2006, 4x 4, stood and an e rror bed liner, tow pkg., can occur in your ad. premium wheels. If this happens to your Vin¹653072 ad, please contact us $15,988 the first day your ad appears and we will S UBA R U . BUBBBUOBBBNO COH be happy to fix it as Toyota F J Cru i ser 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2007, 6 speed, 4x4, s oon as w e c a n . 877-266-3821 TRD, roof, grill guard, Deadlines are: WeekDlr ¹0354 days 12:00 noon for low miles next day, Sat. 11:00 Vin ¹074880 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. $25,988 12:00 for Monday. If we can assist you, ~ S UBUBBBUOBBBNO BA R CCN U. please call us: 541-385-5809 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend 877-266-3821 The Bulletin Classified D odge R a m 250 0 Dlr ¹0354 Quad Cab SLT 2005, 4x4, auto trans, tow, bed liner.
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9UBBBUOl BBNO CCN
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WOW!
Rob Berg.
Lance Camper 1994, fits long bed crew cab, tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 OBO. 541-580-7334
Pickups
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541-475-6947, ask for
w/tinted windows 8 slider window. $500. 541-580-7334
AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
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Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, based in Madras, al-
Canopy for long bed great c ond., w h ite
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m-
541-548-5254
Canopies & Campersi
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a sg
Tod, 541-350-6462
Redmond:
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2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & I nternational Fla t Chevy Coupe 1950 rolling chassis's $1750 Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, t on dually, 4 s p d. complete car, $ 1949; trans., great MPG, 'I Peterbilt 359 p o table Cadillac Series 61 1950, could be exc. wood water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, 2 dr. hard top, complete hauler, runs great, 1/3 interest i n w e l l- 3200 gal. tank, 5hp Ford Galaxie 500 1963, w/spare f r on t cl i p ., new brakes, $1950. equipped IFR Beech Bo- p ump, 4 - 3 9 hoses, 541-419-5480. nanza A36, new 10-550/ camlocks, $ 2 5,000. 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, $3950, 541-382-7391 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & prop, located K BDN. 541-820-3724 radio (orig),541-419-4989 $65,000. 541-419-9510 925 Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, Utility Trailers V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO. 4 x4 Utility t railer o n 4 .80x8 t ires, $ 1 0 0 530-515-81 99 T-BIRD 1988 S p ort obo. 541-382-5279 coupe, 34,400 orig. Subaru B aja 2 00 5 , Ford Ranchero mi., A/C, PW, PL, new AWD, leather, b ed 1/5th interest in 1973 932 tires/brakes/hoses/ liner, tow. I979 Cessna 150 LLC Antique & belts 8 exhausts. Tan with 351 Cleveland Vin ¹103619 150hp conversion, low w/tan interior. Classic Autos modified engine. $16,988. time on air frame and Immaculate! $4,995. Body is in engine, hangared in Days 5 4 1-322-4843, S UBA R U . excellent condition, Bend. Excellent perEves 541-383- 5043 $2500 obo. formance &afford2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-420-4677 877-266-3821 able flying! $6,500. 1921 Model T 541-382-6752 Dlr ¹0354 - ~
Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds
BOATS & RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890 - RVs for Rent
top. Just reduced to
541-350-8629
Reach thousands cf readerai
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$3,750. 541-317-9319 PROJECT CARS: Chevy or 541-647-8483
f~@p,i~a.
541-390-1122
FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, door panels w/flowers 8 hummingbirds, white soft top 8 hard
Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call
F
541 -365-5609 The Bulletin Classified
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000.
%%%.JM
400, $150,000 (located @ Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, O $400/mo. 541-948-2963
2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always P ioneer 23 ' 19 0 F Q 541-420-3250 hangared, 1 owner 2006, EZ Lift, $9750. NuWa 29 7LK H i t c h- for 35 years. $60K. 541-548-1096 Hiker 20 07, All seasons, 3 s l ides, 32' In Madras, perfect for snow birds, call 541-475-6302 l eft k i t chen, re a r lounge, extras, must see. $27,499 Prineville Executive Hangar 541-447-5502 days & at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' d eep, 541-447-1641 eves. Prowler 2009 Extreme w/55' wide x 17' high biE dition. Model 2 7 0 fold dr. Natural gas heat, RL, 2 slides, opposbathroom. Adjacent ing in living area, ent. t offc, to Frontage Rd; great center, sep. bedroom, visibility for aviation busi2 ne w e x tra t i res, ness. Financing availhitch, bars, sway bar 541-948-2126 or included. P r o-Pack, Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th able. email 1jetjockoq.com anti-theft. Good cond, wheel, 1 s lide, AC, 'til TV,full awning, excelc lean. Req . 4/20/15. $19 , 900. lent shape, $23,900.
WANTED
Call Safari Cliff at 541-615-6144
G K E AT
1/3 interest in Columbia
Please chec your a on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes instructions over the phone are misunderstood and an errdl' can occur in your ad. If this happens to your ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will Call The Bulletin At be happy to fix it 541-385-5809 as soon as we can. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail If we can assist you At: www.bendbulletin.com please call us:
MONTANA 3585 2008
Call 541.382.9835
OBO. 503-298-9817
I•~ v WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/
FAST66 Ranchero! $7500 invested sell for $4500!
F reightliner FL 6 0 1995, midsize hauler, must see to appreciate. $19,000
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Chevy Wagon 1957, Vin¹716973 Chevy Malibu 2009 4-dr., complete, $15,988 Mercedes 450SL, 1977, 43k miles, loaded, $7,000 OBO / trades. 113K, 2nd owner, ga- 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Trucks & studs on rims/ Please call 877-266-3821 r aged, b o t h top s . Asking $12,900. Heavy Equipment 541-389-6998 Dlr ¹0354 $10,900. 541-389-7596 541-610-6834. Toyota F J Crui s e r Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe 2007, 6 speed, 4x4, Chrysler 300C. 2012 4 h@SU B A R U . 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, roof rack, tow, alloys. w hite, 1 8 ,500 m i l es auto. trans, ps, air, Vin¹056099 ¹196028 $32,988 frame on rebuild, reG MC Sierra S L T $17,988 painted original blue, 2006 - 1 500 Crew original blue interior, S UB A R U . Oregon Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. Diamond Reo Du mp original hub caps, exc. Plymouth AulnSnurce B a r racuda Truck 19 7 4, 12 -14 chrome, asking $9000 1966, original car! 300 cond., 82 k m i les, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-598-3750 $19,900. 877-266-3821 yard box, runs good, or make offer. www. aaaoregonautohp, 360 V8, center- 541-408-0763 Dlr ¹0354 $6900, 541-548-6812 541-385-9350 source.com lines, 541-593-2597
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9UBBBUOl BBNO CCN
IMPROVING YOUR HEALTH AND WELL-BEING r g
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' Health Datebook keeps you informed on all local health happenings & classes ' Nutrition, Fitness, Money & Medicine '
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THUR - SUN 12PM - 4PM
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Model Home — Inviting and o p e n f r o m t he moment you step ta the
door, experience all of the toaches you've come to expect from Pchlisch Homes. Slab countertops,
20768 NE Smoke Stack Ln
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G6 SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 975
Automobiles
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Chrysler Sebring 2004 84k, beautiful dark gray/ brown, tan leather int.,
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1000
Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The Deschutes County Hearings Officer will hold a Public H earing on July 2 , 2013, at 6:30 p.m. in the Barnes and Sawyer Rooms of the Deschutes Ser v i ces Center, 1300 NW Wall St., Bend, to consider the following request: F ILE NUMBE R : CU-13-13. SUBJECT: A c o nditional u s e permit to establish a private park in the Exc lusive Far m U s e
(EFU) zone for wedding u s e . AP P L IC ANT: John S h e p herd. OWNERS: John and Stephanie Shepherd. LOC A TION: 71120 Holmes Road,
Sisters. The property is also identified on Deschutes Co u n ty Assessor's Map 14-11 a s Ta x L o t 10 3 . STAFF C O N TACT: K evin H a rrison a t (541) 385- 1 401. Copies of the staff report, application, all documents and evidence submitted by or on behalf of the applicant and applicable criteria are available for inspection at the Planning Division at no cost and can be purchased f o r 25 c ents a page. T h e staff report should be m ade avail able 7 days prior to the date set for t he hear i ng. Documents are also a vailable online a t www.deschutes.org. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE
Legal Notices
•
Leg a l Notices •
SEIZING AGENCY: LEGAL NOTICE Oregon State Police STATE vs. $4407 CASE ¹: 13-003397, PERSON FROM Address: 255 Capitol WHOM PROPERTY St. NE, 4th floor, SaSEIZED: l em, O R 9731 0 , James William Vasil Phone: NOTICE OF SEIZURE 503-378-3720. FOR FORFEITURE N OTICE O F R E A - You must "claim" an SON FOR SEIZURE interest in the FOR FORFEITURE: above-described T he p r operty d e - seized property or you scribed in this notice will automatically lose was seized for forfei- any interest you may ture because it: ( 1) have. Th e deadline Constitutes the pro- for filing is 21 days ceeds of the violation from the date of the of, solicitation to violast publication of this late, attempt to vionotice. To "claim" you late, or conspiracy to m ust file w i t h t h e violate, the c riminal "forfeiture counsel" laws of the State of listed below, a legal Oregon regarding the paper called a "claim". manufacture, distribu- T he claim must be tion, or possession of signed by the claimcontrolled substances ant and sworn to un(ORS Chapter 475); der penalty of perjury and/or (2) Was used before a notary public. or intended for use in The claim shall set committing or f acili- forth all of the followtating the violation of, ing: a ) Y o u r t r ue solicitation to violate, n ame; b) T h e a d attempt to violate, or dress at which you will conspiracy to violate accept future mailthe criminal laws of ings from the court or the State of Oregon forfeiture counsel; and regarding the manu- c) A statement that facture, distribution or you have an interest possession of c o nin the seized property. trolled su b stances FORFEITURE (ORS Chapter 475). COUNSEL: DesPROPERTY SEIZED chutes County DisFOR FORFEITURE: trict Attorney, 1164 $5010.00. DATE NW B o n d St r e et, PROPERTY SEIZED: Bend, OR 97701. 02/13/2013. S EIZING AG E N C Y : PERSON FROM Oregon State Police
Legal N o t i ces • under
ORS
1 31.550-131.600 a s
proceeds and/or instrumentalities used in the following prohibited conduct, and/or the s olicitation, a ttempt, or conspiracy to commit the following prohibited conduct: X possession of a c o ntrolled s u b stance, d e l i very of a c o n trolled s u b stance, manufacture of a c o ntrolled substance. Forfeiture means that the property will be transferred t o the government and persons with an interest in the property will be deprived of that interest without compensation because of the use or acquisition of t he property i n o r through pr o h ibited conduct as defined in ORS 131.550-131.600.
LEGAL NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS Terri Lynn P o lley has been appointed Administrator of the
Legal Notices
e state o f J a m es Lawson Polley, deceased, by the Circuit Court, State of Oregon, Deschutes County, Case No. 13PB0050. All perW HO M PR O P E R T Y CASE ¹: 11-445761, having claims SEIZED: Jeremy M. Address: 255 Capitol sons against the estate Foust St. NE, 4th Floor, a re r e quired t o For further informa- Salem, OR 9 7 3 10, present them, with tion concerning the Phone: vouchers attached, seizure and forfeiture 503-378-3720 to the undersigned of the property deSUMMARY S T ATEat scribed in this notice M ENT O F BA S I S Administrator 1431 Liberty St. SE, contact: F OR CRIM I N AL Salem, OR 97302, Oregon State PoliceFORFEITURE Drug En f o rcement On the 7th day of De- within four months fter the d ate o f FOR FORFEITURE Section, Asset Forc ember, 2011, t h e a June 2, 2013, the Notice to Potential feiture U n i t , 255 above-described first publication of ClaimantC apitol St. NE , 4 t h property was seized this notice, or the Read Carefully!! F loor; S a lem, O R by the Oregon State be If you have any inter- 97310 Phone: Police. The property claims m a y est i n t h e s e i zed (503) 934-0161. is subject to forfeiture property described in this notice, you must 1000 1000 claim that interest or Legal Notices • Leg a l Notices • Legal Notices • Legal Notices you will automatically l ose that interest. I f you do not file a claim for the property, the FORM Le-1 NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING property may be forA publicmeeting of tha LR pine Rural Fire protection Dtatnct Rnll tM heldon June 13, 2013 st 9 30 am al 51eg Huntrnglon Rd, Ls plns, oregon The purposs of this feited even if you are meetingMlo Ctscoss the tsudgel for the fiscal year Dagtnnmg Juty 1, 2013 as approved Dy the Ls Pine Rural Fire Protection Budget Ccmmatae A summatg of the budget IB not convicted of any presanlad Dalow A copy of Iha budget may tMinspected or obtained at 51590 Huntrngton Road, Detwsen Iha hours of 8 a m Rnd 5 p m or online at www lagtnsttre org This bodgelis for sn annual budget Danod Thra bodgst was preparedon a basts of accounttng that IB the Bame as the precedingyear changesBndtheir effect on the crime. To claim an budget are interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel Tele hona 541536-2935 E mai l c htsfaoptoalapinaftracom n amed below. T h e Contact Mike SU kis.Fire Chtaf FINANCIAL SUMMARY -RESOURCES written claim must be Approved Budget TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS Actual Amounl Adopted Budget signed by you, sworn 2011-12 TDIB Year 2012-t3 NextYsar2013-14 to under penalty of Beginning Fund BRIROOBINstWorking Capttal ggz817 832,000 872,979 perjury before a noFees Licenses, Permits, Fines, Assessmentstt Other Service Charges FMteral. State Bnd All Other Grants, Gifts, Allocations Rnd Donations 34,779 tag.600 tary public, and state: Revenuefrom Bonds Rnd Other Debt (a) Your true name; tntBrlundTransfers i tntamal Service Reimbursements 289.15D (b) The address at Alt OlherResourcesEsce t Currsnl Y aar Pro T a x e s 841,706 846,500 829.000 2 334.691 which you will accept CorrantYear Pro T a x e s Esttmated to tM Received 2,322,388 2,305 895 TotslRssources 3,891,690 S,S23,taa 4,036,670 future mailings from the court and forfeiFINANCIAL SUMlttARY - REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLAggtFICATION ture counsel; and (3) 2,784,148 PersonnelServices 2,519,080 2,642,417 A statement that you Matanals RndServices 418,156 458.051 354,543 CS ItalOUIIS 81,475 SSD,677 have an interest in the Debt Sannca seized property. Your IntatfondTransfers deadline for filing the Contin DOCABB 50,000 25,000 claim document with g BI P Rments 872 979 832.000 872 979 the forfeiture counsel Una ro nated EOCIOBalance Bnd RRSSIUMtfor Future Ex ndaure Total Re Uiremsnts 3,891,690 S,423,145 4,036,670 n amed below is 2 1 days from the l ast FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES FTE BY ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT ORPROGRAM publication date of this Name ofOrganizaaonal Unitor Program notice. T h i s n otice FTE for that Unitor pr rsm 25 25 will be published on FTE 25 Total Re «irements 25 25 25 four successive Total FTE 25 25 25 weeks, beginning May 19, 2013 and ending STATEMENT OF CHANGES INACTIVITIES Bnd SOURCES OF FINANCING Therehsabaennochsn atnthaactvitasoraourceaoffinsnon fortaptnearaprotstsenDIstnctforthau mt n f iscal aar2012-13 June 9, 2013. If you have any questions, PROPERTY TAX LEVIES you should see an Rate cr A mount Im RMt R at e or Amount Im Rsd Ra t ecr Amcunt A roved t 5397/$1,000 t 5397/$1,000 t 5397/$1,000 Permanent Rate Ls ra t e limit 1 5394 r gt,ogo attorney immediately. LccalO ttonLa 0 SS/$1.000 0 64/$1,000 0 64/$1.000 FORFEITURE $199,475 $214,400 $226,087 Le For GeneralObligation Bonds C OUNSEL: Ass e t STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS Forfeiture C o unsel, LONG TERM DEBT Ealimated Debt Otastangtng Estimated Debt Authonzed, But Oregon Department of cn JUI t Not tnCUIIMt OflJoi t J ustice, 610 Haw GeneralObli ation Bonds $208,000 Otaerttonga gg thorne Avenue, S.E., Other BCIIOMO s Suite 210, Salem, OR Tolsl $208,000 97301, Phone: (503) ' lf more space Is neededto complele any Bectionof thts form, Ineert lines (Iows) on thts sheet or Rddsheets Yoo may delete unusedlines *
*
378-6347.
Legal Notices
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Leg a l Notices
Legal Notices
•
Legal Notices
$1,314.00 beginning that the undersigned return r e c eipt re trustee's and 0 5/01/12; plus I a t e trustee will on August quested, addressed to a ttorney's fees n o t charges of $0.00 each 16, 2013 at the hour the trustee's post of exceeding the month begi n ning of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. fice box address set amounts provided by 05/01/12; plus prior i n accord w ith t h e forth in t hi s n otice. said O R S 8 6 . 753. accrued late charges standard of time es Due to potential con R equests from p e r flicts with federal law, of $244.90; plus ad t ablished b y OR S sons named in ORS vances of $6,238.75; 187.110, at the follow p ersons having n o 86.753 for r einstate together with title ex ing place: inside the record legal or equi ment quotes received pense, costs, trustee's main lobby of the De t able interest in t he less than si x d a ys fees and a ttorney's s chutes Coun t y subject property will pnor to the date set fees incurred herein Courthouse, 1164 NW only receive informa for the trustee's sale by reason of said de Bond, in the City of tion concerning the will be honored only at fault; any further sums Bend, County of Des lender's estimated or the discretion of the advanced by the ben c hutes, State of O r actual bid. Lender bid b eneficiary or i f r e eficiary for the protec egon sell at p ublic i nformation is a l s o quired by the terms of tion of the above de auction to the highest available at t he the loan documents. scribed real property bidder for cash the in trustee's webs i te, In construing this no and i ts inte r est terest i n the de www.northwesttice, the singular in therein; and prepay scribed real property trustee.com. Notice is cludes the plural, the ment penalties/premi which the grantor had further given that any word " grantor" i n ums, if applicable. By or had power to con person named in ORS cludes any successor reason of said default vey at the time of the 86.753 has the nght, i n i nterest t o th e the beneficiary has execution by grantor at any time prior to grantor as well as any declared all sums ow of the trust deed, to five days before the other person owing an ing on the obligation gether with any inter date last set for the obligation, the perfor secured by the trust est which the grantor s ale, to h a v e t h i s mance of which is se deed immediately due or grantor's succes foreclosure proceed cured by said trust a nd p ayable, s a i d sors in i n terest ac ing dismissed and the deed, and the Swords sums being the follow quired after the execu trust deed reinstated "trustee" and benefi wit: tion of the trust deed, ciary" include their re ing, to b y payment to t h e $ 109,123.97 with i n to satisfy the forego beneficiary of the en spective successors terest thereon at the ing obligations tire amount then due in interest, if any. The rate of 5 percent per thereby secured and (other than such por trustee's rules of auc annum beg i nning t he costs a n d e x tion of the principal as tion may be accessed 04/01/12; plus prior penses of sale, includ would not then be due at www . northwest accrued late charges ing a rea s o nable h ad no d e fault o c trustee.com and are of $244.90; plus ad charge by the trustee. curred) and by curing incorporated by t his d e f ault reference. You may vances of $6,238.75; Notice is further given any o t he r (5) in block two (2), together with title ex that for reinstatement complained of herein also access sale sta replat of a part of the pense, costs, trustee's or payoff quotes re that is capable of be tus at www.northwest original plat of Bitter fees an d a t torneys quested pursuant to ing cured by tender trustee.com and brush Su b d ivision, fees incurred herein O RS 8 6 .757 a n d ing the performance www. USA-ForecloDeschutes C o u nty, by reason of said de 86.759 must be timely required under the ob sure.com. For further Oregon. PROPERTY fault; any further sums c ommunicated in a ligation or trust deed, information, p l e ase ADDRESS: 16715 Bit advanced by the ben written request that and in addition to pay contact: Nanci Lam terbrush Lane Sisters, eficiary for the protec c omplies wit h t h a t ing said sums or ten Northwest bert OR 97759 Both the tion of the above de statute addressed to dering t h e pe r f or Trustee Services, Inc. b eneficiary and t h e scribed real property the trustee's "Urgent mance necessary to P.O. Box 997 Belle trustee have elected and it s inte r e st Request Desk" either cure the default, by vue, WA 98009-0997 to sell the real prop therein; and prepay by personal delivery paying all costs and 5 86-1900 Lusb y , erty to satisfy the obli ment penalties/premi to the trustee's physi expenses actually in Kevin W. and Karla D. gations secured by ums, i f ap p licable. cal offices (call for ad curred in enforcing the (TS¹ 767 0 .20081) the trust deed and a WHEREFORE, no d ress) o r b y fi r s t obligation and t r ust 1002.247346-File No. notice of default has tice hereby is given class, certified mail, deed, together with been recorded pursu a nt to O r egon R e 1000 1000 vised Statutes Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclo sure i s ma d e is FORM Ls 1 grantor's failure to pay A meeting of the Deschuteg County Rural FireProtection District ¹2 Board of Directors will be held on June 11, 2013 at when due the follow ing sums: m o nthly 11:30 AM at the North Fire Station, 63377 Jamison St. The purpose ofthis meetmg is to discuss the budget for the fiiscal year beginning July 1 as approved by the Budget Committee. A copy of the budgetag presented below ma~ tsg payments of inspected or obtained at the Fire Department Administration Building 1212 sw simpson St. between the hours of 8:00 A M. barred. A d ditional information may be obtained from t he records of the court, the Administrator, or the lawyer for the Administrator, James Ham e rs, 1431 Liberty St. SE, Salem, OR. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7 670.20081 Ref e r ence is made to that c ertain t r us t d e e d made by K evin W Lusby and Karla D Lusby, as grantor, to Amerititle, as trustee, in favor of S ecurity Bank, its successors a nd/or assigns, as b eneficiary, dat e d 02/06/98, r e c orded 02/13/98, in the mort gage records of Des c hutes County, O r egon, as 4 8 0-0642 and subsequently as signed t o U m p qua Bank by Assignment recorded as 2 0 1 106913, covering the following d e s cribed real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Lot five
and 5:00 p M. The budget wag preparedon a basis ot accounting that ig consistent with the basis Of accounting used during the precedin~ear. Major cha~nes, if any, areexplained below. This budget ig annual I . AI - B I A MI P P- I : Menns. CN N I P I Il sh ~ A roved Bud et Actual Amounts Ado tedBud et TOTAL ALL FUNDS 2011-2012 Next Year 2012-13 Next Year 2013-14 1 B i n nin Fundaalance/Networkin ca ital 562,535 704,003 896,466 2,820 7,000 7,500 2. Fees, ac, r mttg, fines, aggmnts & other getv ch 15,000 10,000 2. Grants, iftg, allocations and donations 4 Revenue from bonds and other debt 275,000 345,000 a Interfund transfers/internal service reimbursements 60,000 142,100 6 . Allotherregourcegexce t ro taxe s 126,946 147,600 7 . Pro Tax e s z,eee,efe 2,870,929 3,024,300 3,61e,ezo 4,019,532 4,425,366 9. Total Resourctstt~dd lines 1 through 7 FINANCIAL SUMMARY-RE uIREMENTS BYos JECT CLASSIFICATION 154,a40 155,000 9 P ersonnel Services 2,522,a56 2,636,760 10. Materials and Services 100,000 11 ca italoutla 12 Debtservice 139,659 138,000 60,000 275,000 13. Interfund Transfers 60,111 14 Contin encieg 15. S I al pa ments 741,465 654,661 16. Una ro riated Endin sal and Reg for Future Ex 3,618,820 4,019 I532 17. Total Tax Re uired-add lines 9 throu h 16
235,500 2,683,933 100,000 127,873 345,000 63,368
869,692 4,425,366
FINANCIAL SUMMARY-RE RMENTS s,FULLTIME E u IVALENT EMP FTE BY ORGANIZATION UNIT OR PROGRAM 220,300' 231,250 Name Administration 193,494 u 1 1 FTE 2,40e,303I 2,466,460 2432,683 Name Fire Protection 0 0 0 FTE 105,000 e5,000 Name. Fire Educatton 77,29a 0 0 0 FTE 1,576,433 941,725 1,227,772 Name: Non Depertmental/Non-Program FTE 3,618,820 4,01eg532~ 4,425,368 Total Requirements 1 1 1 Total FTE STATEMENT OF CHANGESIN ACTIVITIES ANO SOURCES OF FINANCING Reserves for Ca ital Im rovements conttnues to increase and tg reflect d tn Non De attmental/Non-Pro ram Re utrements PROPERTY TAX LEVIES I • IS I R I I I I ~R t 1.4366 1.4366 1.4366 permsnent Rate Le . Rate Limit 1A366 r 1 0 00 0 0 O B I ~I 0 0 Le for General Obli ation Bonds STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS Estimated Debt Lon Term Debt Estimated Debt Authortzed but not Outgtandtn
on Juylt General~Obli abon Bonds Other Bonds Other Borrowingg Total
1,525,000 i
1,525,000
mcurred on July 1