Serving Central Oregon since1903 75 $
THURSDAY May9,20t3
eicmoion,su ie a en
Preproundup
HEALTH• D1
SPORTS• C1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Rental squeeze —if you're looking to rent in Cen-
tral Oregon ... good luck.C6 By Sheila G. Miller
2 with the U.S. District Court in Eugene by Judge Thomas Coffin A federal lawsuit pitting three indicates the lawsuit "has settled dismissedprosecutors against Des- in principle." When the settlement chutes County District Attorney agreement has been completed, Patr i c k F laherty has been settled, the order states, the parties will file according to court records. a notice of dismissal. If that hasn't A scheduling order filed May been done by June 3, a status reThe Bulletin
NBA —The teardrop shot — new weapon of the little
guy.C1 Flaherty
Allergies up —parentsare
port will be due on the settlement negotiations. Former deputy d i strict attorneys Phil Duong, Brentley Foster and Jody Vaughan filed a l awsuit against Flaherty, the county and the c ounty c ommissioners in April 2011 alleging they were
fired because they tried to form a union.
They alleged wrongful discharge, sex discrimination, unfair labor practices and violations of their First Amendment rights to freespeech and association. See Lawsuit/A5
reporting more skin andfood allergies in their children, but why?D1
Merkley's aim: tighter forestry hiring rules
Plus —A new idea to potentially cut allergy risks.D4
rew an
OU
Food safety —Howbestto store your poultry.D2
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
Conscientious clothing
WASHINGTON — As he did during the last session of Congress, Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., introduced legislation Wednesdaythat would tighten loopholes that Oregon companiesused to hire foreignworkers to complete local forestry projects. Under the American Jobs in American Forests Act, companies would have to make an extensive effort to hire American workers before they could apply for an H-2B visa. The H-2B visa program, which received a major injection of stimulus fundingfrom the2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, authorizes companies to import workers for nonagricultural seasonal work if they are unable to find U.S. citizens to fill the positions. Under the current rules, four Oregon companies received more than $7 million in federal funds to hire foreign workers for forestry projects through the H-2B
— Consumer pressure is forcing some retailers to do what was once unthinkable — share exactly how and where their
products were made.A6
The castle's comedack — They have new importance in Syria, but historians worry
how these relics of another era will hold up to modern war.A3
And in national news
— More details emerge, anda man is charged, in the Cleveland kidnapping case.A2 nj n
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Envoysays Benghazi questions hurt career
program in 2010. Oregon had double-digit unemployment at the time. "There really is no excuse for what happened, and this makes sure that it will never
By Scott Shane,Jeremy W.
happen again," Merkley
u
Peters and Eric Schmitt
sald.
New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — A veteran diplomat gave a riveting minute-by-minute account on Wednesday of the lethal terrorist attack in Benghazi, Libya, last Sept. 11 and described its contentious aftermath in nearly five hours of testimony at a charged congressional hearing that reflected the weighty political stakes perceived by both parties. During a chaotic night at the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli, hundreds of miles away, the diplomat, Gregory Hicks, got what he called "the saddest phone call I've ever had in my life" informing him that Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens was dead and that he was now the highest-ranking American in Libya. For his leadership that night when four Americans were killed, Hicks said, he subsequently received calls from bothSecretary of State Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama. But within days, Hicks said, after raising questions about the account of what had happened in Benghazi offered in television interviews by Susan Rice, the United Nations ambassador, he felt a distinct chill from State Department superiors. SeeBenghazi /A4
SeeWorkers/A4
Hospital bills seento vary widely By Connie Cass and Lauran Neergaard The Associated Press
Andy Tullte/The Bulletin
A crane lowers a fermentation tank as R&H Construction work-
February and were shipped out of the port of Vlissingen, Netherlands,
ers guide it into place Wednesday at the Deschutes Brewery pro-
to Surrey, British Columbia, and then to Bendvia truck. Special per-
duction facility in Bend. Five fermentation tanks are being added to complete a new,
mits on the road were required, and power lines had to be raised in
I0-tank system at the brewery. The newsystem has the potential
some areas. Thetanksweighabout29,000poundseachwhenempty.Each
to increase the brewery's capacity to 460,000 barrels annually, or about14.2 million gallons. The first five tanks came online last
tank will hold about1,300 barrels of beer. Piping, wiring, integration and commissioning still remain and will
year.
take place in May,June andthe first part of July. Deschutes Brewery
The tanks were made in Burgstadt, Germany. They left the plant in
TODAY'S WEATHER Late-day storms High 79, Low 46
Page B6
hopes to be fully functional with this new addition by mid-July.
4 P We userecycled newsprint
INDEX D1-6 Obituaries Business/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 Sports Classified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Lo c al/State B1-6 TV/Movies
For the first time, the government is publicly revealing how much hospitals charge,and the differences are astounding: Some bill tens of thousands of dollarsmore than others for the same treatment, even within the same city. Why does a joint replacement cost 40 times as much at one hospital as at another across the country'? It's a mystery, federal health officials say. "It doesn't make sense," JonathanBlum, Medicare deputy administrator, said Wednesday. See Bills/A5
B5 Cf-4 D6
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 110,No. 129, 30 pages, 5 sections
: IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
88 267 02329
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
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BOStOn SuSpeCt'S Wife —The widow of Boston Marathon bombing suspect TamerlanTsarnaev has hired a prominent criminal lawyer with experience defending terrorism cases as she continues to face questions from federal authorities. Katherine Russell added New
York lawyer Joshua Dratel, who hasrepresented anumber of terrorism suspects in federal courts and military commissions, including GuantanamoBay,Cuba,detainee David Hicks,wh o attended an al-
Qaida-linked training camp inAfghanistan. OVertime IegiSIa'tiOII —The Republican-led House onWednesday approved ameasure that would give private sector workers the
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New York Times News Service CLEVELAND — About the time that neighbors kicked in a frontdoor to free three women abducted and long imprisoned, the man charged with their kidnapping was idling away a spring afternoon at his mother's home. The man, Ariel Castro, 52, had crossed the street to borrow a lawn mower Monday afternoon from a neighbor to cut his mother's postage-stamp lawn, then left with a brother to spend the afternoon drinking, neighbors said. It was typical of the outwardly mundane life Castro led, which apparently included outings with a daughter he is believed to have fathered with one of the captives. Meanwhile, inside his house on Seymour Avenue, the three women, who last celebrated birthdays with their families about a decade ago, saw year after year perversely marked by C astro's serving of a cake on each woman's "abduction day," according to one victim's cousin. On Wednesday, as new de-
tails of the women's horrific ordeal emerged, Castro was charged with the r ape and kidnapping of Amanda Berry, held 10 years; Gina DeJesus, held nine years; and Michelle Knight, held ll years. He was also charged with k i d napping the 6-year-old daughter to whom Berry gave birth, and the authorities said he would undergo a paternity test. In their years as prisoners, the women neverleftthe house except for two brief visits to the adjacent garage, the police said. No charges were brought against Castro's two brothers who were arrested with him: Onil Castro, 50, and Pedro Castro, 54. Ed Tomba, deputy chief of the Cleveland police, said investigators were convinced after interviewing the victims that the two brothers had no involvement or knowledge. "All three women victims stated that Ariel chained them up in the basement, but eventually he let them free from the chains and let them live upstairs on the second floor," according to a Cleveland police
report obtained by The New York Times. Knight told o ff icers that Castro had impregnated her multiple times. In each case, the reportsaid,he starved her and then punched her repeatedly in the stomach until she miscarried. As DeJesus, now 23, and Berry, 27, returned joyfully to their families' homes Wednesday, other details of their ordeal emerged. Neighbors of the Castro family — which owns at least two other homes in the Tremont district of Cleveland — recalled visits by Castro accompanied by a young girl they now suspect was Berry's daughter. The police report said that Berry had delivered her baby in the house into a plastic pool and that Knight acted as the midwife. According to the report, Knight told the police that Castro had warned that he would kill her if the baby died. The child was never told the names of the two other women in the house in case she uttered the names in public.
option of trading overtime pay for extra time off weeks or months later. The bill, approved on a 223-204 vote, would allow employees
who work more than 40hours aweekto save upto160 hours of earned time off for future use.
Syria conflict —As new reports of violence flowed from Syria, Secretary of State John Kerry telephoned leaders in Europe and the Middle East on Wednesday to lay the ground for a conference
between rebels andthe Syrian government, sponsored by theUnited States and Russia, that he hoped would begin within a month.
Syria Internet —A problem with a fiber optics cable wasresponsible for an Internet outage that cut off civil war-ravaged Syria from the rest of the world for nearly 20 hours, state media said Wednesday.
Internet service stoppedabruptly Tuesday evening, prompting speculation that the regime had pulled the plug, possibly as a cover for military
action. However, nolarge-scale military offensives were reported Wednesdayandthe opposition did not accuse the regime of sabotage. BraZil miraCle —A28-year-old womanmiraculously survived after her husbandaccidentally shot her in the mouth with a harpoon, Brazilian officials said Wednesday. The Rio de Janeiro State Health Department said in a statement that the woman's husband was cleaning his
spear gunwhen it went off, firing a harpoonthat hit her cervical spine. Enren GEO —Convicted ex-Enron Corp. CEDJeffrey Skilling's more than 24-year prison sentence for his role in the oncemighty energy giant's collapse could be reduced by as many as10 years if a federal judgeapprovesanagreement reachedWednesdaybetween prosecutors and defenseattorneys. Cheerleader VerSe —A judge ruled Wednesdaythat cheerleaders at a Southeast Texashigh school can display banners emblazoned with Bible verses at football games. State District Judge Steven Thomas determined the Kountze High School cheerleaders' banners
are constitutionally permissible. In the ruling, Thomasdetermined that no law "prohibits cheerleaders from using religious-themed ban-
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manslaughter after his vessel slammedinto the dock at Genoa's busy seven people. — From wire reports
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A police officer uses his baton to beat back supporters of former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand
The founder and head ofFanmi Lavalas,once the most powerful political party in Haiti, Aristide was
Aristide who gathered outside the courthouse where
twice exiled during his two separate presidencies.
Aristide arrived earlier in the day Wednesday in Portau-Prince, Haiti.
Today, two years after his surprise return to Haiti following seven years in exile in South Af-
The two-time president showed up atthecourthouse to testify before a judge investigating the 2000
slaying of JeanDominique, one of the Caribbean country's most prominent journalists.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org
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Tearful, convicted Arias says she'd prefer death By Brian Skoloff
more alluring than any madefor-TV movie. The crime itself P HOENIX — J od i A r i a s was enough to g rab headspent 18 days on the stand lines: Arias, a 3 2 -year-old sharing intimate, emotional high school dropout, shot Traand oftentimes X-rated details vis Alexander in the forehead, of her life before a rapt televi- stabbed him nearly 30 times sion and online audience. She and slit his throat from ear to had hoped it all might conear, leaving the motivational vince a jury that she killed speaker an d b u s inessman h er one-time boyfriend i n nearly decapitated. self-defense. She claimed he attacked But the eight men and four her andshe fought forher life. women on the panel didn't buy Prosecutors said she k i lled it, convicting Arias of first-de- out of jealous rage after Algree murder after only about exander wanted to end their 15 hours of deliberations. Ju- affair and planned to take a rors will return to court today trip to Mexico with another to begin the next phase of the woman. trial that could set the stage A rias' f o u r-month t r i a l for Arias receiving a death quickly became a media sensentence. sation — ratings gold for cable It's a punishment that Arias networks that could broadcast herself says she wants, telling from inside the courtroom and a TV station minutes after her feed an insatiable public apconviction that she would "pre- petite for true-crime drama fer to die sooner than later." delivered live and up-close. "Longevity runs in my famIt was, for many, the horrible ily, and I don't want to spend train wreck they just couldn't the rest of my natural life in turn away from, even though one place," a tearful Arias told they know they should. Fox affiliate KSAZ. "I believe Arias fought back tears as death is the ultimate freedom the verdict was announced and I'd rather have my free- Wednesday in t h e h u shed, dom as soon as I can get it." p acked c o u rtroom, w h i l e The case elevated the unAlexander's family members known waitress and aspiring wept and hugged each other. photographer to a household They wore blue ribbons and name, with a real-life story of wristbands with th e w o rds "Justice For Travis." love, betrayal and murder far The Associated Press
r P
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Join Oregon State University President Edward J. Ray for a compelling update on the university's signihcant worldwide accomplishments in the past year. Ray will also look forward, highlighting the expansion of OSU-Cascades into a fouryear university and how that will have an even greater educational, economic and community impact in Central Oregon. RSVP at osualum.com/sou or call 877-678-2837. Free to the public.
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THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Thursday, May 9, the129th day of 2013. There are 236 days left in the year.
CULTURE
RESEARCH
HAPPENINGS
Europeanbloodlines
ImmigratiOn —Members of the SenateJudiciary Com-
closer than thought
mittee will get their first crack Thursday at modifying the
immigration overhaul proposed bythe bipartisan Gang of Eight.
1'%%%4Citt
By Frank Jordans
Environmental summit — The Dalai Lama offers a public address at the Univer-
sity of Portland, followed by a question-and-answer session.
The Associated Press
ilfsflf; New York Times News Service file photo
The citadel in Aleppo has proved critical, allowing regime forces to cement a front line that roughly dissects the city in half.
HISTORY Highlight:1754, a political cartoon in Benjamin Franklin's
Pennsylvania Gazette depicted a snake cut into eight pieces, each section representing a part of the American colonies; the caption read, "JOIN, or DIE." In1712, the Carolina Colony was officially divided into two entities: North Carolina and South Carolina.
In1883,Spanish philosopher JoseOrtegayGassetwas born in Madrid. In 1936, Italy annexed Ethio-
pia. In 1945, U.S. officials an-
nounced that a midnight entertainment curfew was being lifted immediately. In1951, the U.S. conducted its first thermonuclear experiment as part of Operation
Greenhouse bydetonating
a 225-kiloton device on Enewetak Atoll in the Pacific
nicknamed "George." In 1958, "Vertigo," Alfred Hitchcock's eerie thriller star-
ring James Stewart and Kim Novak, premiered in San Fran-
cisco, the movie's setting. In 1961, in a speech to the National Association of
Broadcasters, Federal Communications Commission Chairman Newton N. Minow decried the majority of televi-
sion programming as a"vast wasteland." In1962, scientists at the Massachusetts lnstitute of Tech-
nology succeeded in reflecting a laser beamoff the surface of the moon. In1974, the House Judiciary Committee opened public hearings on whether to rec-
ommend the impeachment of President Richard Nixon. In1978, the bullet-riddled body of former Italian prime minister Aldo Moro, who'd been abducted by the Red Bri-
gades, was found in anautomobile in the center of Rome. In1980, 35 people were killed when a freighter rammed the
Sunshine Skyway Bridge over Tampa Bay in Florida, causing a 1,400-foot section of the
southboundspantocollapse. In1987, 183 people were killed when a New York-bound Polish jetliner crashed while
attempting an emergency return to Warsaw.
Ten years ago:A camouflageclad gunman fired hundreds
of rounds as heroamed the halls of Case Western Reserve
University's business school in Cleveland, killing one person (Biswanath Halder was later convicted and sentenced
to life in prison). The United States and its allies asked the U.N. Security Council to give
its stamp of approval to their occupation of lraq. Five years ago:Jury selection began in the Chicago trial of R8 B superstar R. Kelly, ac-
cused of videotaping himself having sex with a girl as young
as13. (Kelly was later acquitted on all counts.) One year ago:President Barack Obama declared his
unequivocal support for samesex marriage in a historic announcement that came three days after Vice President Joe
Biden spoke in favor of such unions on NBC's "Meet the Press."
BIRTHDAYS Producer-director James L.
Brooks is 76. Singer Billy Joel is 64. Actor John Corbett is 52. Actress Sonja Sohn is 49.
Rapper Ghostface Killah is 43. Actress Rosario Dawson is 34. — From wire reports
Now archaeologists worry that what withstood ancient armies and earthquakes may now fall victim to airstrikes, shelling and other forms Of 21st-century warfare. By Abigail Hauslohner
rebels say they only recently routed regime troops from the The Washington Post heavily fortified walls of Crak BEIRUT — A S h iite king des Chevaliers— one of the ruled northern Syria more than Middle East's most fantastic a millennium ago from behind crusader castles. the towering walls of the citaIn the center of the old city of del in the city of Aleppo. In later Homs, the citadel has changed centuries, Arab armies repelled hands at least three times in medieval crusadersfrom the recent months, although some hilltop fortress, Mongol invad- fighters say they only managed ers damaged it and Ottomans to hold it for a day. There, oppoused it as a military barracks. sition forces say the regime has By2011,the citadelhadsettled used the fortress to maintain its into what seemed a comfortable stranglehold on one of Syria's retirement as a UNESCO world most important and most viruheritage site and tourist attrac- lently anti-Assad cities. "If the rebels got control of tion, illuminated at night by artistic ground lights and sur- this citadel, it would mean that rounded below by the bustling the direct shelling on the areas cafes of Aleppo's old city. in old Homs would stop," said But today, in the third year of Jalal Abu Soliman, a member abloody civil war that has killed of the Local Coordination Commore than 70,000 Syrians, the mittees, a Syrian activist group. hulking citadel has resumed That, he said, would allow the its strategic role of earlier eras. rebels to take full control of the President Bashar Assad's forces city. have taken position in it to shell Opposition activists in Hama their enemies, and Syrian op- say regime forces occupying position fighters say they are the medieval al-Madiq citadel desperate to capture it. For both have maintainedan upper hand sides, what was true in war then by using the structure to shell is true now: Those who control villages to the north that are the citadel have the power to al- sympathetic to the opposition ter the front lines. and might otherwise rise up to Modern Syria is dotted with fight. medieval castles and citadels, W ars often carry eerie paralmany built high upon the ruins lels to a region's earlier history, of earlier Roman or Mesopota- but Middle Eastern historians mian dynasties in an archaeo- are fearful about what the curlogical landscape that experts rent fight may bring to Syria's say is among the richest in the rich historical sites. world. But as the fortified strucIn Aleppo, Syria's former turesgainnewstrategicpurpose commercial capital and a viin Syria's devastatingly modern brant gem of the region's historicivil war, archaeologists worry cal heritage, successive battles that what withstood ancient between forcesloyal to Assad armies and earthquakes may and rebels have left the Islamic now fall victim to airstrikes, old city ravaged by fire and torn shelling and other forms of 21st- downby artillery shells. Assad's century warfare. tanks blasted through the 11thBecause of limited access, ar- century minaret of a treasured chaeologists and other experts mosque, activists say. And Alepsay it is close to impossible to po's 14th-century souk — once a confirm reports of damage and coveredmaze ofwell-preserved looting to Syria's castles and stone and wooden shops — has citadels, including the famed gone upin fl ames. "We create these heritage crusader castle Crak des Chevaliers, whose south wall has sites in times of peace, and then been nearlydestroyed in the we destroy them much faster fighting, according to Syrian than we built them," said Helga rebels. Seedan, an archaeologist at the But it is certain that they and American University in Beirut. many other historical and arBut even amid the destrucchaeological sites "have been tion, Aleppo's citadel is still affected by violent fights or oc- standing, and it remains a prize cupation by armed forces for worth fighting over. "It's a center for more than a military purposes," said Veronique Dauge, chief of the Arab hundred snipers," said Majed States Unit at the UNESCO Abdul-Nour, the alias of a local World Heritage Centre. opposition activist interviewed Both the rebels and the Syr- via Skype. "There have been many atian government have pledged publicly to protect the nation's tempts by the rebels to liberate ancient structures. But they the citadel," he said. But the are intensely battling for their high ground and high walls, control. and the bullets fired so easily In Aleppo, the citadel has through its arrow slits, he said, proved critical over months of "make the mission to liberate it fierce fighting. Syrian opposi- too difficult for now." tion fighters say regime snipOnline images that have cirers have staked out positions culated over the past year show in the arrow slits of the ancient shell damage and alleged lootfortress, rendering the hilltop ers digging holes around the impregnable and allowing the al-Madiq citadel in Hama, the snipers to cement a front line Aleppo citadel, the Crak des that roughly dissects the city in Chevaliers and the Palmyra half — one swathe controlled by citadel in Syria's central desert rebels, the other by the state. — the latter three of which are Near the city of Homs, in the UNESCO world heritage sites. strategic Orontes River valley, But while Syrian officials which has served as a battle- have acknowledged some of ground of clashing empires for the destruction,they have cast more than 4,000 years, Syrian the blame for it on "terrorist and Ahmed Ramadan
groups," the catch-all phrase that the state has assigned to itsopponents, whether peaceful protesters or armed Islamist extremists. Opposition groups attribute the damage to the
regime. In H a ma, a c tivists said government forces had transformed the third-century alMadiq citadel into a military garrison. "Inside the citadel there are
heavy and mid-range weapons," said Ahmed Radoun, a local activist. But the rebels have never tried to storm it because displaced local residents are believed to have also sought refuge behind its powerful walls, he said.
B ERLIN — E u r o peans appear to be more closely related t h a n p r e v i ously thought. Scientists who compared DNA samples from people in different parts of the continent found that most had common ancestors living just 1,000 years ago. The results confirm decade-old math e m atical models, but will nevertheless come as a surpriseto Europeans accustomed to thinking of ancient nations composed of distinct ethnic groups like "Germans," "Irish" or "Serbs." "What's r emar k a ble about this is how c losely everyone is related to each other," said Graham Coop of the University of C alifornia, Davis, who co-wrote the study published Tuesday in t h e j o u rnal PL oS
Biology. Coop and his fellow aut hor Peter R alph o f t h e University o f Sou t h e rn California used a database containing more than 2,250 g enetic samples t o l o o k for shared DNA segments that would point to distant shared relatives. W hile t h e n u m ber o f common genetic ancestors is greater the closer people are to each other, even individuals living 2,000 miles apart had identical sections of DNA that can be traced back roughly to the Middle
Ages. The findings indicate that
ot ers a
there was a steady flow of genetic material b etween c o u n t ries as far a part a s Turkey and Britain, or Poland and P o rtugal, even after the great population movements of the first millennium A.D. such as the S axon and V i k i n g i n v as ions of B r itain, and t h e westward drive of the Huns and Slavic peoples. The study did find subtle regional variations. For reasons still unclear, Italians and Spaniards appear to be less closely related than most Europeans to people elsewhere on the continent. "The analysis is p r etty convincing. It comes partly from the enormous number of ancestors each one of us have," said Mark Jobling, a professor of genetics at the University of Leicester, E ngland, who w a sn't i n volved in the study. Since the number of anc estors each p erson h a s roughly doubles with each generation, "we don't have to go too far back to find someone who features in all of our family trees," he said. Jobling cited a scientific p aper published i n 2 0 0 4 that went so far as to predict that every person on the planetshares ancestors who lived just 4,000 years
ago. Coop and Ralph said the findings might change the way Europeans think about their neighbors on a continent that has had its fair share of struggle and strife.
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Workers Continued from A1 His proposed legislation would require companies to beef up their efforts to recruit locallybyadvertisingonlocal radio and Internet job sites, as well as consulting with the stateworkforce agency to make sure that local job seekers are aware of the opportunities. The state workforce agency would have to certify that a robust effort had been made before a com-
pany could apply to bring in
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Drew Angerer/ New York Times News Service
From left: Mark Thompson, the State Department's acting deputy assistant secretary for counterterrorism; Gregory Hicks, the former deputy chief of mission in Libya; and Eric Nordstrom, the State Department's former regional security officer in Libya, are sworn in before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee in Washington to give testimony on whether the Obama administration mishandled the events.
Benghazi
State Clinton. Is that accurate?" asked Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio. H i ck s r e s ponded, "Yes, sir." In a statement late Wednesday, a S t a t e D e p artment spokesman, Patrick Ventrell, s aid th e d e p artment h a d not and would not retaliate against Hicks. Ventrell noted that Hicks "testified that he decided to shorten his assignment in Libya following the attacks, due to understandable family reasons." The spokesman said that Hicks' current job was "a suitable temporary assignment" at the same salary, and that he had submitted his preferences for his next
statements from the Defense Department and t h e S t ate Continued from A1 Department — neither unit "The sense I got was that I could have reached Benghazi needed to stop the line of quesbeforethe attacks were over. tioning," said Hicks, who has The team in Tripoli worked been a Foreign Service officer much of the night on movfor 22 years. ing U.S. Embassy personnel He was soon given a scathto a secure annex and was ing review of his management not ready to leave for Bengstyle, he said, and was later hazi until the early morning. "effectively demoted" to desk The emergency support team officer at h e adquarters, in would have deployed from the what he believes was retaliaUnited States and would have tion for speaking up. arrived many hours after the House Republican leaders last Americans were evacumade the hearing the day's ated from Benghazi. top priority, postponing floor The three witnesses chalvotes so that the Committee lenged both the Obama adon Oversight and Government ministration's initial version of Reform could continue with- job. events — long ago withdrawn out interruption. The Obama The accounts from Hicks — and its claim to have exadministration appeared fo- and two other officials, Mark h austively i n vestigated t h e cused on the testimony, with Thompson, the former deputy attacks. senior officials at the White coordinator for operations in When Rice suggested on House, the State Department the State Department's Coun- Sunday talk shows days afand the Pentagon responding terterrorism Bureau, and Eric ter the attack that it had bethroughout the day to Repub- Nordstrom, an official in the gun with protests against a lican accusations of i ncomState Department's Bureau crude anti-Muslim video that petence and cover-up in cam- of Diplomatic Security who had been posted on YouTube, paign war room style. had testified previously, added Hicks said, "I was stunned. In the balance, in the view of some detail to accounts of the My jaw dropped and I w as both Democrats and Republi- night of Sept. 11 in Benghazi, embarrassed." cans, is not just the reputation where armed Islamic militants Her remarks angered the of Obama but also potentially penetrated t h e di p l omatic president of Libya's National the prospects for th e 2 016 c ompound, started the f i r e Assembly, Mohamed Magarpresidential election as well, that killed Stevens and an iaf, who had said on one of since Clinton, who stepped aide and later killed two se- the Sunday shows that the atd own i n F e bruary, i s t h e curityofficers in a mortar at- tack was the "preplanned" act Democratic Party's l eading tack; in Tripoli, where frantic of militants, including some prospect. If the testimony did diplomats fearing a s i milar from aI-Qaida, Hicks said. not fundamentally challenge invasion used an ax to destroy He asserted that Magariaf's the existing facts and timeline classified hard drives; and in fury at being undercut caused of the Benghazi attack and the Washington, where officials Libyan officials to drag their administration's response to it, s truggled to k eep u p w i t h feet on cooperating with FBI it vividly illustrated the anxi- events. investigators. ety of top State Department The witnesses also said they officials about how the events View from the ground felt that the administration's would be publicly portrayed. The hearingoffered a comown official investigation, led Hicks offered an unbecom- pelling, often emotional view by a veteran retired diplomat, ing view of political supervi- from the ground, where ofThomas Pickering, and a forsion and intimidation inside ficialswere desperate for a mer chairman of t h e J oint the Obama a dministration. rescue mission. Hicks, f or Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike When Rep. Jason Chaffetz, i nstance, described his ex Mullen, was inadequate. "They stopped short of inR-Utah, visited Libya after the change with the furious leader attack, Hicks said his bosses of a four-member Special Op- terviewing people who I pertold him not to talk to the con- erations team that wanted to sonally know were involved gressman. When he did any- fly from Tripoli to Benghazi in key decisions," Nordstrom way, and a State Department to help but was ordered not to. said. lawyer was excluded from one Thompson wanted to see his Hicks also said the State meetingbecause he lacked the Foreign Emergency Support Department's Accountability necessary security clearance, Team sent to the scene and Review Board, as the inquiry Hicks said he received an an- could not understand why his was called, failed to hold highgry phone call from Clinton's superiors did not agree. level political appointees at chief of staff, Cheryl Mills. But from the more detached the department responsible "So this goes right to the standpoint of senior officials f or inadequate security i n person next to Secretary of in Washington — offered in Benghazi.
foreign labor, and would put in stricter recruiting rules for multi-state projects. Under the current system, companies have to advertise only in states where the jobs "originated," which often are not the states in which the work was to be performed. The companiescan self-attest that they were unable to find U.S. workers before asking permission to hire foreign labor. Consequently,unemployed workers in Oregon, many with forestry experience and expertise, might never learn about job openings for local forestry projects. There are currently 3,492 forest an d c o n servation workers and1,489 forest and conservation t e c hnicians
2009 to 47,403 in 2010 and 50,826 in 2011, according to the U.S. State Department. Figures for 2012 were not available. Oregon is not one of the top 10 states in terms of total positions certified, according to Department of Labor figures. In 2012, forest worker was the second highest H-2B worker category, behind landscaper. For 20D, forest worker ranks fourth, b e hind l a n dscaper/ groundskeeper, m aid/housekeeper/cleaner, and amusement and recreation attendant. Merkley said the Forest Service is being much more careful about how it oversees its projects involving H-2B labor, basedonmultipleconversations with Forest Service officials. The new rules proposed under his legislation would remove any possible conflict of interest by having the state workforce agencies determine when a
company had made asufficient effort to recruit locally. "This legislation makes it m uch easier for(the ForestService), because it lays out very clear boundaries about the process," he said. The legislation would also crack down on multi-state projects that never recruit locally, but instead advertise jobs in the state where the project "originated." If a project involves seven days of work in the non-primary state, the employer would have to submit a separate H-2B application. Merkley said he hopes to fold his H-2B bill into the larger immigration package currently being developed by abipartisan group of senators known as the "Gang of Eight." He has spoken to members of the group about it and received positive responses, he said. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevengerC<bendbulletin.com
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looking for work, according to the Oregon Employment Department. After a series of articles in The Bulletin revealed that millions in f ederal funds went to import foreign labor under the H-2B program for Oregon forestry jobs, Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Springfield, asked the Department of Labor to investigate the situation. In October 2011, the department's inspector generalissued a scathing report, concluding it could find no evidence that the four Oregon companies made any effort to recruit in Oregon at all. "We couldn't find any evidence thatany Oregonian was ever contacted about a job," Merkley added. In the meantime, the program continues to grow under the old rules. Over the past four years, the number of visas issued has grown from 44,847 in fiscal year
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THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S
Lawsuit Continued from A1 The lawsuit asked for $22 million in damages and reinstatement to their jobs. In October 2011, the county and it s c o mmissionerswere released from liability. Amy Velez with the Ore gon Department of A d ministrative Services said no final documents had yet been submitted to her office. Until the office signs for the final settlement, she said, no information can be released. Flaherty said Wednesday he had not seen details o f t h e s e t t lement and couldn'tcomment on pending litigation. His attorney, Keith Bauer, is out of the office for at least a week. Citing ongoing mediation, the plaintiffs' attorneys involved in the case declined to comment until the settlement is finalized.
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Medical bills spread out on the kitchen table of a cancer patient in Salem, Va. Hospitals across the country, and even within the same city, sometimes charge tens of thousands of dollars more for the same procedures, according to figures the government released for the first time Wednesday.
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And consumers will get insight into a mystifying system nr about newly insured low-income that too often leaves them with Continued from A1 Oregonians, B1 The higher charges don't relittle way of knowing what a flect better care, he said. hospital will charge or what • A single bill for surgery,B1 Factory Reps and Demonstrations And the amounts are too theirinsurance companies are Great discounts on new & used equipment... huge to be explained by obvipaying for treatments, Sebel— Reporter:541-617-7831, Some items are limited to stock-on-hand! ous differences among hospi- they don't know they can seek lus Sald. smiller@bendbulletin.com tals, such as a more expensive a discount, White said. Previously, the price inforregional economy, older or And even for those who do mation that the government sicker patients, or the extra bargain, the listed charge "is collects from hospitals wasn't costs of running a teaching the opening bid in the hospi- available to the average contal's attempt to get as much hospital, he said. sumer, although the data could The average charges for money as possible out of you," be purchased for uses such as joint replacement range from he said. research, officials said. about $5,300at an Ada, Okla., At Suburban Hospital in T he department a lso i s hospital to $223,000 in Mon- Bethesda, Md. — serving an making $87 million in federal Join AAA Travel and Ben Stanford terey Park, Calif., the Depart- a ffluent community a t t h e money available as grants to from AAA Member Choice ment of Health and Human gates of the National Instistates to improve their hospiVacations for this vacation planning Services said. That doesn't tutes of Health — the average tal rate review programs, reevent featuring smaller groups to includedoctors'fees. charge for simple pneumonia search why hospital charges fully immerse yourself in your travel Hospitals within the same was $5,284. Compare that to vary so much, and get more destination. Come learn more and city also vary greatly. At Beth $79,365 at Hahnemann Univer- information to patients. Israel Medical Center in New sity Hospital in Philadelphia. Todd Park, an assistant to hear about special booking offers York, the average charge to The database lists the aver- President Barack Obama on available to those that attend. treat a blood clot in a l u ng age charges for the 100 most technology issues,said he enis $51,580. Down the street common Medicare inpatient visions entrepreneurs creating at NY U H o s pitals Center, services atmore than 3,000 apps to help consumers comAAA Travel the chargefor the same care hospitals. The prices, from pare hospitals and research20350 Empire Blvd., Suite A5, Bend would be $29,869. 2011, represent about 60 per- ers combing through the data At the Mayo Clinic in Min- cent of M e dicare i npatient to explain the cost differences. Tuesday, May 14th "Transparent marketplaces nesota, the list price is $16,861. cases. at 6:Oopm "Hospitals that charge two That isn't necessarily what are more competitive, and RSVP: 541-383-0069 you pay. or three times the going rate more competitive marketplacMedicare pays hospitals on will rightfully face scrutiny," es drive down costs," Park told A AA M em b e r C h o i c e its own fee schedule that isn't Health and Human Services reporters at the White House. An events are open to the public ahd free to attend, Travel but space is limited. Please RSVP. based on the listed charges, Secretary Kathleen Sebelius "And that's certainly the hope Blum said. A n d i n s urance told reporters. here." companies routinely negotia te discount rates with t h e • • g •a • 5 a • a • a hospitals. But patients who are uninsured can be billed the full SPECIAL SPECIAL amount. And some with pri50% OFF EXTRA 20% OFF vate insurance may find their ALL NON-IRON DRESS SHIRTS FAVORITE JEANS share of the bill is inflated as From Eagle, a famous American Special 19.60-39.99. a result of a hospital's higher designer, our Tasso Elba • > Reg. $49-69.50, after special (+ Weblo 811685) & 24.50-49.99. By Calvin Klein Jeans, charges, officials said. DonaldJ. Trump Signature DKNY JeanS, Our Style ar CO., mOre. Blum said the Obama adCollection. Special 34.75. Misses & petites. Women's prices m inistration hopes that r e Reg. 69.50, after special 49.99. slightly higher. leasing the information, at the website www.cms.gov, will SPECIAL 159.99 SPECIAL 12.99 help lead to answers to the ridSUITS & SUIT SEPARATES TOPS OR SHORTS dle of hospital pricing — and Only at Macy's. Alfani Red Reg. $36, after special $27. pressure some hospitals to selections. Suits. Special 159.99. Only at Macy's. Reg.$495,afterspecial199.99. By Karen Scott. lower their charges. Jacket. Special 105.99. Misses & petites. The database also will help Reg.$360,afterspecial129.99. REGULAR & SALE PRICES consumers shop around, he Pants.Special$54. Reg.$135, LOOK FOR THE SIGNS ON SELECT ITEMS STOREWIDE. said. after special $70.*WeblD SAVINGS PASS DISCOUNT DOES NOT APPLY TO SPECIALS. 449330. The v ariations shouldn't be a surprise, since hospitals SPECIAL 10.99 SPECIAL 49.99 SPECIAL $99 SPECIAL 25% OFF might violate antitrust regulaPOLOS DIAMOND** BRACELET CULTURED ALL SHORTS FOR JUNIORS tions if they shared "proposed FRESHWATERPEARLS Reg.$25, afterspecial 12.99. Reg. $200, afterspecial $80. Special 14.63-37.13. or negotiated rates" with each Only at Macy's. 1/2 ct. t.w.' in silverplated Reg. $400, Reg. 19.50-49.50. other, said Rich Umbdenstock, after special $160. From John Ashford. S-XXL brass by Victoria Townsend. From Celebrity Pink, Only at Macy's. *Weblo 535248. *WeblD 757634. Dollhouse ar president of t h e A m e rican 3-row strand with more favorites. Hospital Association. Forty sterling silver clasp. *Weblo 822542 states do require or encour*Weblo 528195. age hospitals to make some payment information publicly available, he said. SPECIAL $199 SPECIAL $199 SPECIAL EXTRA 20% OFF "The complex and bewilderDIAMOND STUDS CLEARANCE ~cN. SHORTS DIAMOND PING Reg. $600, SHOES 8( SANDALS ing interplay among 'charges,' Reg. $44, Reg. $600, after special $336. Special 11.60-111.40. 'rates,' 'bills' and 'payments' Orig.* $29-$199, after special 26.99. after special $288. 1/2 ct. t.w.' in across dozens of payers, pubPleated & flat-front In 14kgold. 14k white gold. after special 14.50-139.30. selections. Cotton. *WeblD 370580. *Weblo 652521. From Anne Klein, lic and private, does not serve Waists 30-44. Nine West, EasySpirit any stakeholder well, includ*Weblo 651251. ar more. ing hospitals," Umbdenstock sard. Consumer advocates said SPECIAL 30% + 10% OFF SPECIAL 19.99 SPECIAL 60% OFF SPECIAL 49.99 making the charges public is 4- P C. LUGGAGE SET MIXERS & FOOD PROCESSORS YOUR CHOICE ALL PILLOWS Itt ~ significant, even if most paSpecial 24.99-377.99. Reg. 39.99-599.99, Reg. 39.99-59.99, after special 29.99. From Calvin Klein, Ralph duren, Reg. $160, after special 29.99-449.99. From left: Presto skillet, ¹6626 (ttr WeblD our CharterClub ar after special 79.99. tients don't pay those rates. KitchenAid Artisan, 548617) or Black & Decker Martha Stewart Only at Macy's. " I think t h e p o int i s t o ¹KSM150PSER blender, Collection™. Travel Select shame hospitals," said Chapin fftr WeblD 77589) ¹BL2010WG F ™ Special 7.99-155.99. Journey.*WeblD White of the nonprofit Center & Cuisinart, (+ 550991). Reg. $20-$390, 578321. ¹DLC-8SBC after special 9.99-194.99. for Studying Health System +786202). *Weblo 139810. Change. Dr. David Goodman, co-auFREE SHIPQING A T M A C Y S . C O M w i th S99 online purchase. No PrtoMo CODE NEEDED; Excl.usloNs APPL thor of the Dartmouth Atlas "It does of Health Care, said, show how crazy the system really is, and it needs some 'v • • reform." I I I 'I ' r I' r Goodman argues that hos' 'I I I Ir I I I I pitals should be required to go Ir furtherand post the charges that patients actually pay outof-pocket, depending on what medical coverage they have. SAVINGS PASS DISCOUNT The Dartmouth Institute for DOES NOT APPLY TO Health Policy has long found SPECIALS. 00013102107518026113 wide geographic variation in Medicare payments for the similarly ill, yet people who receive more expensive care don't necessarily receive better care. Sometimes hospitals com BEND RIVER P R O M E N A D E, B EN D • 5 4 1. 3 1 7 . 6 0 0 ~m g l t Pg g just add tests or treatments they don't really need. Fine jewelry specials are only available at stores that carry fine jewelry. W REG. & ORIG. PRICESARE OFFERING PRICESAND SAVINGSMAY NOT BEBASEDON ACTUAL SALES.SOMEORIG. PRICESNOT IN EFFECT DURINGTHE PAST 90 DAYS.ONE DAYSALEPRICESIN EFFECT A hospital's charges are 5/10 ar 5/11/13. *Intermediateprice reductions may have been taken. **May contain rose-cut diamonds. fAll carat weights (ct. t.w.) are approximate; variance maybe.05 carat. Jewelry photos maybe enlarged or akin to a car dealership's "list enhanced toshowdetail. Fine jewelry at select stores; log on to macys.com for locations. Almost all gemstones have been treatedto enhance their beauty & require special care, logon to macys.com/gemstones price." Hospitals say they freorask your salesprofessional. Extra savings taken off of alreadyreduced prices; "special" prices reflect extra savings. Specials are available whilesupplies last. Advertised merchandise maynot be carried at your quently give discounts to the localMacy's & selection may vary by store. Prices 8c merchandise may differ at macys.com. Luggage & electric items carry mfrs' warranties;to see a mfr's warranty at nocharge before purchasing, visit a store or write to: Macy's WarrantyDept., PO Box 1026, Maryland Heights, MO 63043, attn: Consumer Warranties.*Enter the WeblD in the search box at MACYS.COMto order. N3040184. uninsured — $41 billion in financial aid in 2011. • OPEN A MACY'5 ACCOUNT FOR EXTRA 20% SAVINGS THE FIRST 2 DAYS, UP TO $100, WITH MORE REWARDS TO COME. Macy's credit card is available subject to credit approval; new account savings valid the day youraccount is opened and the next day; excludes services, selected licensed departments, gift cards, restaurants, gourmet food sr wine. The newaccount But some people pay full savings arelimited to a total of $100; application must qualify for immediate approval to receive extra savings; employees not eligible. price, or tryto afford it, because • What a national study shows
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
IN FOCUS: GARMENT FACTORIES
HIGH DESERT BANK
acin ressLire, cot in retaiers revea more By Stephanie Clifford New York Times News Service
T he revolution t hat h a s s wept the food i ndustry i s expanding to retail: origins matter. With fair-trade coffee and organic fruit now standard on grocery shelves, consumers concerned with working conditions, environmental issues and outsourcing are increasingly demanding similar accountability for their T-shirts. The issue has been brought to the forefront by the garment factory collapse in B angladesh, which killed more than
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800 people. And some retailersare doing what was once unthinkable, handing over information about exactly how, and where, their products were made. Everlane, an online boutique, last week added paragraphs to its website describing the factories where its products are made. Nordstrom says it is considering adding information about clothes produced in humane working conditions. An online boutique breaks down the number of workers involved in making each item and the cost of every component, while a textiles company intends to trumpet the fairtrade origins of its robes when Bed Bath 8 Beyond starts selling them this month. And a group of major retailers and apparel companies, including some — like Nike and Wal-Mart — with a history of controversial manufacturing practicesoverseas, says it is developing an index that will include labor, social and environmental measures. New research indicates a growing consumer demand for information about how and where goods are pr oduced. A study last year by professors at the Massachusetts Institute o f T e chnology and Harvard showed that
Michal Czerwonka/New YorkTimes News Service
Michael Preysman, the chief executive of Everlane, walks the sewing floor at the factory where the company's T-shirts and sweatshirts are sewn in Vernon, Calif. After the factory collapse in Bangladesh, more consumers are demanding to know where and how clothing is made, and retailers are taking notice. some consumers — even those who were focused on discount prices — were not only willing to pay more, but actually did pay more, for clothes that carried signs about fair-labor practices. "There's real demand for sweat-free products," said Ian Robinson, a lecturer and research scientist at the University of Michigan who studies labor issues. Consumers "don't have the information they need, and they do care." The garment factory collapse i n B a n g ladesh l a st month has added urgency to the movement, as r etailers have seen queriesstream in from worried customers. "In the clothing industry, everybody wears it every day, but we have no idea where it comes from," said Michael Preysman, Everlane's chief executive and founder. "People are starting to slowly clue in to this notion of where products are made." Major retailers have long balked at disclosing the full trail, saying t ha t s o urcing i s inherently complex — a sweater made in I t aly m ay
have thread, wool and dye from elsewhere. Another reason: Workplace protections are expensive, and c h eap clothes, no matter where or how they are manufactured, still sell, as H&M, Zara and Joe Fresh show through their rapid expansion. But labor advocates note that c o n sumers' a p p etite for more i n formation may put competitive pressure on retailers who are less than forthcoming. In recent weeks, government officials, including Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, and labor and c onsumer a d vocates h a ve cited the Bangladesh collapse in calling for the adoption of fair-trade standards or labeling. In direct response to what happened i n Ban g l adesh, Everlane added information to its website about the factories where its clothing is made. "This factory is l ocated 10 minutes from our L.A. office," one description for a T-shirt reads. "Mr. Kim, the owner, has been in the L.A. garment business for over 30 years." Everlane says it will soon add cost breakdowns for all of
its clothing, along with photographs of factories where that clothing is made and information about the production. Preysman says Everlane has long received questions from customers "around where the products are sourced from and how we can tell that the labor is good." It is an inexact science, he said. But he added that he looks for factories certified by independent outside organizations and has executives spend time with a factory's owner to see if he or she "is a decent human being."
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Nordstrom said it had provided factory information in response to shoppers' calls, and was considering going a step further, said Tara Darrow, a s p okeswoman. The Nordstrom website specifies eco-friendly products, "so how can we do the same with p eople-friendly'?" Dar r o w asked. "Hearing from customers and knowing they care definitely compels us to want to do more." A variety of g r oups are working on new apparel industry labor standards. The Sustainable Apparel Coalition, which includes big names like Nike, Wal-Mart, Gap, J.C. Penney and Target, has been testing an i n dex called the Higg Index. It started last year with environmental goals, but the new version due this fall will include social and labor measurements.
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 9, 201 3
BRIEFING
Plea delayed in fatal shooting A man accusedof fatally shooting an
acquaintance inearly February declined to enter a plea to acharge of murder onWednesday. Luke Wirkkala, 32, is accused of killing David Allen Ryder, 3f, in the
early morning hours of Feb. 4 at Wirkkala's home in southeast Bend. Wirk-
kala wasarrested that same day,andhas been
Hazar ous waste lea s to 1 K ine State By Dylan J. Darling
742 S.E. Glenwood Drive, illegally transported and stored hazardous waste in corroded, leaky containers. Reynolds was the principal owner and chief executive officer of the company, which closed in 2006. The company atone point had researchcontracts with the U.S. Department of Defense, the Department of Energy and NASA, said Brian Allen, a DEQ hazard-
The Bulletin
The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality has fined a Bend man more than $60,000 for hazardous waste the agency says he left behind at his old lab and a storage unit in town. Thomas Alan Reynolds faces a $61,222 penalty from the DEQ, the agency announced Wednesday. The DEQ claims his company, Reytech Corp.,
ous waste inspector in Bend. The waste wasn't found until spring 2012. Reynolds was not immediately available for comment. The wasteisfrom 2002 and 2007, when Reynolds operated a researchlaboratory atthe Glenwood address, Allen said. The DEQ issued the penalty last month because the improper storing and moving of the wastes caused a threat to the environment and public health,
according to the agency. Reynolds abandoned about 1,100 pounds of chemicals at the lab, the agency claims, while also illegally moving another 2,400 pounds of chemicals to a nearby Bend storage facility. The storage unit contained several five-gallon plastic bins filled with a variety of chemicals not meant to be mixed, Allen said. SeeWaste /B6
held at the Deschutes
The Bulletin
Wednesday, Wirk-
SALEM — A national study showing that newly insured low-income Oregonians saw no improvement in their physical health has thrust the state into the spotlight at a time Oregon is betting it can improve health care for the same population. The study, recently published in The New England Journal I of Medicine, • tracked those newly insured on the Oregon Health Plan,
kala appeared byvideo in Deschutes County Circuit Court. Public defender Joel Wirtz told Judge
Wells Ashbyhis client would not be entering
a plea asscheduled, as he will soon beretaining
gMPP,'/ b: , ;
defense attorney Walter Todd, of Salem. Wirkkala
is now scheduled toenter a plea onJune6. — From staff reports
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More briefing, B2
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MAY 21 ELECTION
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IN the state's ver5ALEM s ion of Medic-
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Events Another spring election is just ahead. The May 2f ballot car-
ries contests extremely
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close to home, from
school boardsto parks and recreation directors
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to water districts. Bond
measuresandtax levies for new school buildings,
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fire equipment and emer-
gency dispatch services are also atstake.
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The Bulletin will publish a daily calendar of
election-relatedevents,
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including candidate
forums andissue-related town halls. Areyou planning an event? Please submityour notice to bul-
letin©bendbulletin.com,
To qualify for publication in The Bulletin
calendar, theevent must be open to the general
public by freeadmission. Fundraising eventsdo not qualify, nor do strictly
defends health plan after study By Lauren Dake
County jail since.
or by conventional mail to PO. Box 6020, Bend OR 97708-6020.
www.bendbulletin.com/local
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Erin Sayer, an artist from Minneapolis, uses a stencil to paint a mandala onto a mural Tuesday on the back of the stage wall at the Les Schwab Amphitheater in Bend. Sayer plans to have the front and back of the stage wall completed by May 20 for the commissioned mural. Work by Sayer and other artists will be on display from 6-10 p.m Saturday in the white house behind the Les Schwab Amphitheater at 344 S W. Shevlin Hixon Drive as part of the Cult Status Gallery On Tour show.
partisan gatherings.
aid, between 2008 and 2010. The study showed the coverage did help decrease depression and financial hardships, but physical health did not improve. Mike Bonetto, the governor's health care adviser, said it's important to note the study tracked people before the state set out to overhaul its health care system. If anything, he maintained, the study reinforces the state's current efforts. "We feel like our reform efforts are getting at the heart of getting better value and better outcomes at lower costs," he said. He also noted that Oregon'ssystem, under the coordinatedcare model, will have accountability measuresto ensure targets are being met. "There is a need for us to hold organizations and contracts accountable for actually improving health," Bonetto said. See Health /B2
Who's running A complete list of candidates for Crook,
Deschutes and Jefferson counties can befound at www.bendbulletin.com/ may2f candidates
Measures andlevies • Deschutes 91 f • Madras Aquatic Center
operating levy • Bend-La Pine School bond • La Pine Fire District
operation andequipment levies • Culver school bond
• Crook County school bond
Inmate who allegedlyescapedwork crew isstill missing By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
An inmate who walked away from a work site west of Bend on Tuesday afternoon was still at large as of Wednesday night. Jason Michael Donaldson, 36, was working on a fuels reduction project in the Phil's Trail area with other inmates from the Deer Ridge Cor-
rectional Institution when he went missing at around 2 p.m., according to the state Department of Corrections. Donaldson was with one of two crews of 10 inmates each, each supervised by a single guard as required by department policy, according to Deer Ridge spokeswoman Marissa Wilson. Donaldson was sent to Deer
Ridge in December, after he was sentenced in Lane County on charges of theft, burglary and criminal mischief. He was due to remain in prison until at least June 2016. Wilson said Donaldson met all of the criteria for being part of a crew working off prison grounds. Eligible inmates must be housed in a minimum security facility, be
within four years of their projectedrelease date and have a clean disciplinary record in the prison, she said. Donaldson's disappearance was discovered during a routine inmate head count, Wilson said, which under Department of Corrections policy must take place at least every 30 minutes. Wilson said w hen the corrections officer
discovered Donaldson was missing, all of the inmates were gathered together and taken back to Deer Ridge. Wilson said she did not know if Donaldson had been part of a work crew that left the prison previously, or if he had friends or family members in Central Oregon who could be assisting him. SeeInmate /BG PAID ADVERTISEMENT
Ballots Ballots must be received
by county elections officials no later than 8 p.m. on Election Day. Post-
marks do not count. If you didn't receive a ballot in the mail with
a voter guide, call your county clerk's office: • Deschutes: 541-388-6546 • Crook: 54f-447-6553 • Jefferson: 541-475-445f
Read ourstories Coverage leading up to the election is at www.bendbulletin.com/ election2013
Well shot! reader photos • We want to see your photos of Pole Pedal Paddle training for Well shot! Submit your best work at www. bendbulletin.com/ wellshot/ppptraining.
Bend has little luck recruiting members for clean water panel Bulletin staff report Help Wanted: concerned citizens for longish meetings on technical subjects. No pay, but expect a hearty thanks for doing your civic duty. The city of Bend is accepting applications to serve on a water treatment advisory group to consider the best way to treat the Bend surface water supply for cryptosporidium. Deadline to apply is May 17, said assistant city manager Jon Skidmore. The deadline has been extended once, so far. "The reason is that as popular as the overall water project is in public debate, we haven't seen a lot of applications for the water treatment group," Skidmore said. "At last count, there were at least six." City Council expects to
appoint at least seven and as many as nine to meet four or five times between June and September and suggest the best option for Bend in terms of treating its water, he said. The city encourages "individuals with experience in finance or engineering, rate payers, large water users, and business owners to apply." Interested applicants must submit a separate cover letter stating how their experience and skills are aligned with the ideal candidate member profile, according to a city announcement. Say "surfacewater" in some Bend circles and expect an extended discussion on the merits of the Surface Water Improvement Project, a topic that's burned up hours of City
Council meetings. SWIP, a $38.7 million project, would replace aging pipes taking water from Bridge Creek and addressfederal requirements to treat surface water forcryptosporidium, a microscopic parasite. The advisory group, appointed by City Council, will be expected to review the two likely options and any others that arise and recommend to City Council the best treatment option for Bend, said Mayor Jim Clinton. The city has won extensions, while it wrestles with the overall water improvement plan, to a deadline imposed by the federal government in 2003 to have a treatment plan in place. SeeWater /B2
gc C~~
D ttttt
f Sunday, May I2th J oin us to celebrate the most im p o r t ant lady in your l i f e by bringing Mom to our special Mother's Day Brunch. Executive Chef Kevin L i n d e will pr epare a fabulous buffet menu that is sure to delight all. The Brunch in cludes a glass of champagne or a mimosa, antI mom will re c ieve a special gift antI a flower.
$38/adults, $i8/ages 6-iz, children 5 R. under Free Seatintts available at 1 lt Ooam tIelt OOPm
P RO N G H O R N A n Au b e r g e R e s o r t
656oo Pronghorn Club Dr. I 5 4 t - 6 9 3 - 5 3 00 I ww w.pront,hornclub.com
Reservations at 54.1-69$-5300. Menu 0 additional information available online.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
E VENT
AL E N D A R
Room 204; free;10-11 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeWay, Bend;541-330LUNCH ANDLECTURE:Discover 4357. how John Muir and William Gladstone Steel advocated for Crater SPROUT FILM FESTIVAL:Films Lake as Oregon's first National Park; featuring people with developmental disabilities as subjects and bring a sack lunch; included in the performers; $6 plus fees; 11:30 price of admission; $12 adults, $10 ages 65 and older, $7 ages 5-12, free a.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. ages 4 and younger; noon-1 p.m.; HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. towertheatre.org. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or TIGHT LINESAUCTION 8tBBQ DINNER:The Deschutes River www.highdesertmuseum.org. Conservancy hosts an evening of "RACE TONOWHERE":A screening food, fishing lore, an auction, drinks of a documentary film about and more; registration requested; preparing children for success followed by panel discussion; $5 in $50; SOLD OUT;5:30 p.m.; Aspen advance, $10 at the door; 6:30 p.m., Hall, 18920 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-382-4077, ext. 25 or doors open at 6 p.m.; Bend High www.deschutesriver.org. School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541AUTHOR PRESENTATION:John 390-6469 or www.racetonowhere. Marzluff presents his book, "Gifts of com/epostcard/6825. the Crow: How Perception, Emotion, DANNY BARNES: The eclectic and Thought Allow Smart Birdsto banjo master performs; free; 7 Behave Like Humans"; $5; 6 p.m.; p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. 541-382-5174. "YOU CAN'TTAKE IT W ITH YOU": "SHOOTINGSTAR":Cascades The Summit High School theater Theatrical Company presents department presents a play by the romantic comedy about two Pulitzer Prize winners Moss Hart former lovers who reunite in an and George S. Kaufman about a airport; $24, $18 seniors, $12 man who does as he pleases; $8, students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood $5 seniors and children; 7 p.m.; Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. Summit High School commons, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; cascadestheatrical.org. 541-322-3300. "SHOOTINGSTAR": Cascades Theatrical Company presents FRIDAY the romantic comedy about two "BEHOLD THEPOWER OF PLAY!": former lovers who reunite in an Explore the power of play and why airport; $24, $18 seniors, $12 it is critical to young children's students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood learning and development; Ochoco Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvtv.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Bendite Eric Tollefson; $8 advance plus fees; $12 at the door; 9:30 p.m., doorsopen 8:30 p.m.;Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend; www..p44p.biz
TODAY
Water Continued from B1 The city obtains about half its water supply fr om s u rface water like Bridge Creek and half from groundwater. Bend is among the last cities required to treat its water for the parasite to come into compliance, Clinton said. The committee should have a short life, he said. The city expects to have a plan within the year. " The intent i s t o g e t a s many people involved — the water project is high-profile and controversial — and get
SATURDAY
Submitted photo
Paul Chasman is among the performers in Masters of Guitar at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Tower Theatre in Bend. Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. "THE APARTMENT":A screening of the1960s film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541475-3351. "THE SUNSETLIMITED": Stage Right Productions presents the Cormac McCarthy play about an encounter on a NewYork subway platform that leads two strangers to a tenement where a life-or-death decision must be made; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m., opening night champagne reception at 6:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-3129626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. SPROUT FILM FESTIVAL:Films featuring people with developmental
disabilities as subjects and performers; $10 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. CASEY NEILL &THENORWAY RATS:The Portland band performs folk and Americana; $10; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122. TYLER, THECREATOR:The rising star rapper and OddFuture leader performs; $22 plus fees in advance, $25 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-4084329. THE QUICKANDEASYBOYS& ERIC TOLLEFSONBAND:The Portland band plays rock in a CD release performance, with former
"OUILTEDOREGON" EXHIBIT OPENS:Featuring quilts representing the geographic features of the state on loan from the Studio Art Quilt Associates; included in the price of admission; $12 adults, $10 ages 65 and older, $7 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. HIGH DESERTCRUISE-IN:The High Desert Mopars host a car show featuring classic cars, rods, trucks and bikes, a raffle and barbecue; free to the public, car entry $10; 8 a.m.3:30 p.m.; Wagner Square, South U.S. Highway 97 and Southwest Odem Medo Road, Redmond; 541350-3036. CHILDREN'SFISHING EVENT:
I
others to take a fresh look at it," the mayor said. City Council once preferred a filtration method that relied on dense membranes to catch themicroscopic organisms, and anything l arger, as water passed through the membrane under p ressure. That option has benefits over the long run but is expensive at a cost as high as $30 million. Another option involves treating the water with ultraviolet light, which ki l ls t h e organism, a cheaper option at around $15 million, Clinton sa>d. Clinton said he's critical of
Health
the study is nuanced. "We've given policy makers Continued from B1 and researchersa lotmore inAnd he said, two of the big formation about the multifacettakeaways from the study are ed effects in Oregon,"she said. positive, showing that coverIn 2008, Oregon expanded its age doesdecrease the level of Medicaidcoverage. Itoffered a financial insecurity in people rare opportunity to compare and helps with mental health. those who were newly covered The research has been used to to those who remain uninfuel the national debate when sured. Research compiled from millions more w il l b e c o v- 6,387 adults randomly selected ered under President Barack and covered by Medicaid was Obama's health-care plan. compared to 5,842 adults who Katherine Baicker, a pro- weren't covered. fessor at the Harvard School Researchers looked at blood of Public Health and lead re- pressure, cholesterol and glysearcher on theproject,said cated hemoglobin levels. They
Children can learn how to fish using two different techniques howto tie flies, cast and identify insects at the pond; free for children13 and under, $9 fishing license for ages13-17 from ODFWfield stations; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Pine Nursery Park, 3750 N.E. Purcell Blvd., Bend; 541-633-1113. MASTERS OF GUITAR: Features Terry Robb, Paul Chasmanand Brooks Robertson; $20-30 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.
the reason behind the rule in the first place. The city must
or LT2, based on continued testing, but was not exempt pay a great deal of money to from the rule, Clinton said. filter water that doesn't have Testing in Bend does not much in it that needs remov- discriminate between types al, he said. of cryptosporidium. "It gets complicated," said Bend has tested positive for cryptosporidium, which Tom Hickmann, engineering causes a s o metimes f atal and infrastructure planning form or diarrhea, but no one director for B end. "There's in the city has fallen ill of a lot of discussion and argucryptosporidiosis, he said. ment over the genus of crypPortland, for example, ar- tosporidium and what type of gued that not al l f o rms of crYptosporidium. There's a the organism are harmful to lot of types and not all types humans, he said. That city a re necessarily harmful t o obtained a variance from the humans. But the (EnvironLong Term 2 Enhanced Sur- mental Protection A gency) face Water Treatment Rule, doesn't recognize that."
also screened for depression. There were substantial reductions in the rate of depression but no measurable improvements in high blood pressure. The study also showed costs increased with a rise in the use of services. Rep. Jason Conger, R-Bend, who sits on the House Health Care committee, said the study doessend "mixed messages." "But it certainly undermines the argument for expanding M edicaid without more r e forms," he said. — Reporter: 541-554-1162, Idake~bendbulletin.com
BRIEFING
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Continuedfrom Bf
Flags ordered at half-staff Friday Gov. John Kitzhaber has or-
but we will not forget his legacy of
Boulevard from Reed Market Road to Amber Meadow Drive starting
service and sacrifice."
Monday through May23.
ic and he will be missed bymany,
Prescott, 24, died in Kandahar dered all flags at public institutions Province, Afghanistan, of injuries to be flown at half-staff from sun- sustained when his vehicle was rise to sunset on Friday in honor of attacked by anenemy improvised Spc. Brandon Prescott, a soldier
from Bend whodied Saturday in Afghanistan. "Spc. Prescott enlisted from Or-
egon and wasproudly serving this state and nation," said Kitzhaber in a prepared statement Wednesday. "My thoughts are with his family and his unit during this difficult
explosiv edevice.Hewasassigned to the 1st Battalion, 36th lnfantry, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, Fort Bliss, Texas.
Brookswoodroadwork starts Monday Bend city officials announced
time. Spc. Prescott's death is trag- lane closures on Brookswood
That stretch of Brookswood is
scheduled for pavement overlay work as part of the city Street
Maintenance Program. Construction will take place from 8:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Two-way traffic
will be maintained with flaggers, signs and cones, the city an-
nounced. Travelers should expect delays or plan alternate routes. For more information online, visit www. bendoregon.gov/streets. — From staff reports
NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358. Bend Police Department
Theft —A theft was reported at 9:39 a.m. April 30, in the 1000 block of Southeast Ninth Street. DUII —Joann Lee Overbay, 45,
was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:52 p.m. May1, in the area of Northeast15th Street and Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:30 a.m. May 6, in the 19700 blockofSimpson Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at4:51 p.m. May6, inthe area of U.S. Highway 20. Criminal mischief —An
act of criminal mischief was reported at10:42 p.m. May 6, in the 1600 block of Northwest Fresno Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:31 a.m. May 7, in the 1800 block of Northeast Monroe Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:08p.m.May 7,in the 63000 block of Wild Buckwheat Court. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:16 p.m. May 7, in the 200 block of Northeast Sixth Street.
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet Clas'sifteds www.bendbuneun.com
Full defails at: www.DrRow.com *Includes The Bulletin Interview with Dr. Row
Oe Cott5 41-526-0 0 1 9 850 SW 7thStreet,Redmond, Oregon 97756 Located next to Fred Meyerin Redmond
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN B 3
REGON
Bill proposes tbat voters be registered automatical
COal eXPOrt — An energy company hasdropped plans for a coal export terminal
By Jonathan J. Cooper
Wednesday. Kinder Morgan Inc. decided not to seekper-
AROUND THE STATE
downstream of Portland along the Columbia River and will
tgp
look for another site in the Northwest, a spokesman said
to register to vote but missed The Associated Press the deadline over the last three SALEM — Oregon's chief elections, Brown said. elections official wants almost The debate comes amid a everyone with a driver's license fierce disagreement between to be automatically registered activists in both parties over to vote. the mechanics of voting — how T he p l an, p r oposed b y a ballot is cast, and how much Democratic Secretary of State proof of i dentity should be Kate Brown, would signifi- required. cantly redesign Oregon's votDemocrats worry that strict er-registration practices and registration and identification potentially add hundreds of requirements disenfranchise thousands of newly registered voters, particularly young, old voters to the state. and low-income voters who Combined with Oregon's all- may have moretrouble providmail elections, the bill would ing proof of their identity and mean that most adult state address. Republicans fear that residents would automatically lax restrictions would make it get a ballot in their mailbox. easier for someone to illegally Republicans have reacted with cast a ballot. "Voter registration should be caution, saying they're concerned about the potential for the responsibility of citizens, fraud. not the responsibility of state The House Rules Commit- agencies," said Sandy Raddue tee heard public testimony on of Beaverton, who leads the OrBrown's proposal Wednesday egon Republican Party's elecbut did not decide whether to tion integrity efforts. advance it. Brown survived a tough re"Voting is a right and a pow- election challenge last year and er afforded every eligible citi- is widely viewed as a potential zen in this state," Brown told candidate for higher office. the committee. "The purpose T he measure w ould r e of registration is to identify quire the Driver and Motor eligible people, not to exclude Vehicle Services Division to them." send names, ages, addresses, Nearly 40,000 people tried citizenship details and digital
signatures to the Secretary of State's Office, the state agency in charge of elections. People who meet the legal requirements to vote would be registered if they aren't already, and they'd receive a letter with instructions to cancel their registration or join a political party if they wished to do so. The move would significantly swell the voter ranks — Brown's office estimates an influx of about 500,000 new registered voters. With a population of 3.9 million, Oregon had about 3 million adult licensed drivers at th e e nd of 2011, the most recent year available. There are currently 2.2 million registered voters. Some of the licensed drivers who aren't registered to vote would be ineligible to cast a ballot because they're not U.S. citizens or were convicted of a
mits at the Port of St. Helens industrial park because of the
site's logistics, not becauseof the debate over coal exports from the Pacific Northwest to
Asia, a spokesmansaid.
~
'Sit-lie' dill — A state Senate committee hasheard
.e
ma
Purchase a Gift Certti6cate for $85 I'or any Service
testimony on a bill that's reviving the debate over whether people should be allowed to sit or lie on Portland's sidewalks.
A judge four years agonullified n n Portland's sit-lie ordinance, saying it conflicted with state law. A bill in this legislative session would allow cities to come up with their own sidewalk rules.
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felony. Oregon's voter turnout is among the highest in the nation. Last year, 83 percent of eligible voters returned their ballot. Eight states and the District of Columbia allow voters to register on election day, and North Dakota doesn't require voter registration.
/
Oregon Regional Airport at
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Pendleton. TheEastOregonian reports the Federal Aviation Administration has approved the Guard's plan to fly un-
BEND'S FIRST MEDICAL SPA
manned aerial vehicles over a100-square-mile areaof
541-317-4894
mostly wheat fields north of
the airport to train troops.
www.enhancementcenterspa.com
— From pvire reports
House asses bi easin enat for someyounger sexoffenders By Lauren Gambino The Associated Press
SALEM — Some young offenders convicted of having sex with underage partners would be able to request the crime be removed from their records under abill narrowly passed by the Oregon House on Wednesday. Voting 31 to 27, the House sent the bill to the Senate with little discussion. Under the bill, in order for a dult offenders to apply t o have their records erased, coercion orforce could not have been usedinthe sex act.O ther conditions include completion of allrequired court-ordered programs and treatments. Proponents say the current punishment for such sex offenders does not fit the crime. Opponents say people convicted of sex crimes often re-offend and should not be able to have their records expunged. "Individuals who c ommit sex offenses ... this isn't their first time and it won't be their last," said Crook County District Attorney Daina Vitolins, who opposes the bill on behalf of the Oregon District Attorneys Association. To say an act is consensual when it involves a person who is too young to give consent is indefensible and m i n imizes the law, Vitolins said. The age of consent in Or-
egon is 18. For offendersto have their r ecords cleared under t h e proposed law, they could be no more than five years older than the victim, and the victim must be at least 14. For sex crimes committed by a minor, the victim must be at least 12 and theage diff erence can be no more than three years. House Speaker Tina Kotek, a sponsor, brought the legislation forward after hearing from a constituent who was 14 when his friend's parents reported him to the authorities
for engaging in inappropriate behavior — which did not involve intercourse — with their
young daughter. "This is the difference between a life of hopelessness and a future for this individual," the Portland Democrat told lawmakers last month. Among those testifying for the bill was Matthew Shettles, who served three years' probation on a charge of sex abuse for having sex with his girlfriend in 2004 on the night of his high school graduation. In written testimony, Shettles said he had just turned 18 at the time and she was five weeks shy of 15. A counselor learned ofthe encounter and was required by a mandatory reporting law to inform authorities, he said. He said having a sex crime
F or A W o n d e r fu l M o t h e r 's D a y !
on his record has made it difficult to get hired and rent an a partment. Employers a n d housing agencies often run criminal background checks. "It doesn't seem reasonable that a guy who had sex with his girlfriend should h ave to pay for the rest of his life," Shettles said in the w r itten testimony. Under the bill, o nly s ex crimes that meet a specific set of requirements could be erased from an offender's record. Among other things, the person musthave successfully applied to be removed from the state's sex offender registry and cannot have been convicted of other serious crimes. In 2007, th e L e gislature eased the requirement of lifetime sex-offender r egistra-
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Just Arrived.' Great Selection of Fountains 6z Bird Baths.'
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Nursing Home costs range between $4000.00 and $6000.00 per Month! • Does your Trust protect yott from the Nursing Home?
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
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students "for their future, not our past," as the nowpopular phrase goes. To that end, the district is making plans to dump traditional textbooks and hand a digital device — likely an iPad or other tablet — to every student in grades three-12. The localeducators arefocused on the right goal: increasing student achievement. We're not so sure they're on the right path, or at least the right pace. Although no f i nal decisions have been made, Bend-La Pine is making plans to join a modest list of districts that have made this so-called one-to-one digital conversion, which a key study calls a "blueprint for remaking American education" by "fundamentally altering how we do education, the first real change in the process of education itself in a thousand years." Unlike other districts that have required additional funding to make the switch, Bend-La Pine believes it can shift resources and make the transition at little or no additional cost. It would save money on other technology that would no longer be needed, such as desktop computer labs, and by spreading digital textbook costs over several years. Copying costs would be less, as would spending on other instructional materials. It seems an overly optimistic calculation to us, given the innumerable unknowns and the experience of districts such as San Diego, which needed proceeds from a bond, or Mooresville. N.C., which had to eliminate 65 jobs, including 37 teachers. A 2012 study in Education Week casts serious doubt on the contention from U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan that districts can save money by switching from print to digital textbooks. Still, if the educational gains were as significant as advocates believe, we wouldn't argue with some additional spending. The plus side is indeed impressive. Digital textbooks would be updated every year, while the district now has some hard-bound books that are a decade old. They would be interactive, giving students and teachers immediate feedback and l etting s tudents delve deeper and gain context. Instruction could be individualized, allowing students to move at their own pace.And compared with stodgy old paper textbooks, they're fun and engaging. Some educators arealso excited about the opportunity to "flip" the classroom. Students could watch lectures on their own, and classroom time could be spent with
the teachers guiding individual or small-group projects that reinforce and develop the lesson. There's also no doubt that electronic literacy is critical to students' futures, in college and in employment. The con side, though, is also substantial. Digital textbook development is still in its infancy, and some districts have depended on free programs and their own teachers to create materials. Tremendous amounts of time and energy must be spent on the technology instead of the content. Most important to us is the evidence that tablets increase distraction and shorten students' attention span. And it's still unknown if all this investment would increase student achievement. Bend-La Pine is making plans for a one-year pilot project this fall involving about 3,500 students, and it's aiming for a full rollout in fall 2014. More than 12,000 students could be involved. This is in the same time period when teachers have significant other projects underway, including the first tests for the new national Common Core content standards, which replace Oregon's OAKS achievement tests in spring 2014. BLP is launching a new student information computer system this fall, and the district is still working through the revamped teacher evaluation process as well as numerous otherprojects. Bend-La Pine is full of hardworking, dedicated educators who want the best for their students, and some are raring to go with this change. Others, however, are questioning such a large investment when the educational benefits are unproven. The district has also done little to prepare parents and the community for such a massive change. There's been no public outreach. I f the district sticks with t h e planned timetable, there will be little chance for parents to absorb and react before the project is well underway. It's too much, too fast, with too many unknowns. The district will make better choices if it does more limited pilot projects and then pauses to learn from those and the experience of other districts. If we are "fundamentally altering how we do education," it deserves a more measured process that engages the community.
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M Nickel's Worth Support Corbin for Redmondschools
Re-elect Ford to COCCboard
Vote no on bonds for schools and911
P roponents of B e n d-La P i n e Schools and 911 bond measures clamor that these measures are for the children and public safety. They are not for the children and public safety; they are to help fund PERS. Your no vote on these measures will help send a strong message to the public employee unions and legislators for the need to reform PERS. If public officials did not have to pay such high amounts into the school diploma (Oregon Employ- PERS system, there would be sufment Department, Fall 2012 Survey). ficient money in the school and He feels that most of Redmond's ed- public safety budgets. The outraucational efforts have been directed geous PERS benefits have been toward kids who want to attend documented many times in this pacollege. per, so it is unnecessary to repeat Corbin also wants the district to them here. A r e asonable retireput more focus on the SMART Pro- ment system for public employees gram (Start Making A Reader To- is desirable, but PERS (especially day). Not all Redmond elementary tier 1 and 2) is not reasonable, nor schools have implemented this high- desirable. ly effective program — and Johnny Bond issues such as Measures 9believes they should. If a child learns 92 and 9-93 are one continuous line to read "at grade level" beginning in of measures put before the public elementary school, his or her chanc- because public unions and legislaes forsuccess in school and later in tors are merely "kicking the can life are much greater. down the road" on PERS. We can Another advantage of electing expectfewer public works such as Corbin is that, unlike his opponent, parks, road repairs, law enforcehe does not draw a P ERS pen- ment, etc. ,and more tax increases sion. With Corbin, you can be sure through these types of bonds until there's no potential "conflict of inter- PERS is reformed. est" when PERS matters are being Please vote no on 92 and 93. It is discussed. the only way to get the unions' and Vote for Corbin and get the en- legislators' attention to address a lightened, honest r e presentation serious problem that needs to be Redmond desperately needs. fixed now. There is one candidate for Redmond School Board who makes a lot of sense. He doesn't talk in "educator-speak" or platitudes — instead he truly understands what many of our kidsneed to succeed aftergraduation. His name is Johnny Corbin. Corbin is well-known for supporting improved vocational education in our schools. This makes a lot of sense considering that only 14 percent of the job vacancies in Central Oregon require more than a high
Don Brigham
Larry Hinkle
Redmond
Bend
David Fordisrunning forre-election to the Central Oregon Community College Board of Directors. We, as citizens and voters, should be delighted he is willing to continue to spend the time and effort to help keep this great institution at the top of its game. I have worked closely with Ford for more than 12 years and have always found him
hardworking, thoroughly prepared, open to all rational points of view, sensitive to all constituencies and striving to reach the best possible decisions for all stakeholders. He is an effective leader, able to build c onsensus and respected by h i s peers and subordinates. COCC has seen unprecedented g rowth an d s u ccess under t h e m uch-admired leadership of J i m Middleton and its board. The college has an excellent faculty and a strong board and executive team. It has good labor relations and is in sound fiscal condition. It recently achieved accreditation with commendations. COCC needs the continuity of its experiencedboard leaders like Ford to conclude a successful search for a new president, to respond to PERS issues and state funding uncertainty and to provide continuing effective oversight to COCC, one ofour region's most respected institutions. Please join me in voting to reelect Ford to the COCC Board of Directors. Mike Hollern Bend
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Vote yes to help renew fire, EMS in south county By Jerry Hubbard
the same and sustain the current level of fire and emergency medical services. It replaces an expiring 10-year capital bond levy with a tax r ate of $0.23/$1,000 assessed valuation with a capital local option levy with the same tax rate starting in July rently paying. 2014. If approved, a home valued at This measure is a r e placement $100,000 would continue to pay $23 of a 10-year capital bond for appa- per year ($1.92/month). Estimated ratus and equipment. The existing annual tax to be received by the disbond expires in July 2014 and the trict is $214,000. proposed measure would extend the The advantage of a local option current tax rate of $0.23/$1,000 for 10 levy is the taxpayers do not pay for years as a levy rather than a bond. the cost of issuing a new bond and In doing so, the district would there is no interest payment. The be debt free and save the taxpay- district will a lso be debt-free for ers more than $336,000 in interest the first time since its inception. and feesassociated over the life ofa This proposal will save more than bond. The district has used 10-year $336,000over the life ofthe measure bonds since 1974 to purchase appa- while maintaining levels of service. ratus, equipment and facilities for The district has $8.1 million in the district, which the voters have capital assets and a l o n g-range renewed four times with the last be- capital plan to replace facilities, fire ing in 2004. trucks, ambulances and equipment The proposed 10-year capital levy in a responsible, efficient and syswill keep district t axpayer rates tematic manner. s a director of the La Pine Rural Fire Protection District and a resident in the district, I urge my fellow voters to vote yes on Measure 9-90 to renew funding for the replacement of equipment at thesame tax rate as we are cur-
A
IN MY VIEW The local option capital levy is projected to fund over 10 years: • Replacement of three paramedic ambulances, which each average 150,000-200,000 miles at replacement. • Replacement of three25-yearold wildland fire engines. • Replacement ofone 20-year-old structural fire engine. • Replacement ofone 25-year-old water tender/tanker. • Replacement of o ne 2 5-yearold first response/quick attack fire truck. • Replacement of t wo 1 5-yearold utility vehicles with more than 160,000 miles at replacement. • Replacement of 15-year-old selfcontained breathing apparatus for firefighters. • Replacement of 10-year-old firefighter protective clothing and gear. The La Pine Fire D i strict has weathered th e r e cent e c onomic downturn by prioritizing and fru-
The proposed 10-year capital levy will keep district taxpayer rates the same and sustain the current level of
fire and emergency medical services.... The advantage of a local option levy is the taxpayers do not pay for the cost of issuing a new bond and there is no interest payment. The district will also be debt-free for the first time since its inception. This proposal will save more than $336,000 over the life of the measure while maintaining levels of service.
gality. The district continues to improve with the efficient and effective use of taxpayer funds by the use of best management practices,on-
cant public emergency management and business experience. The directors set district service goals and provide oversight of fire/EMS opergoing strategic planning processes, ations. The district has a yearly ex10-year budget planning and conternal audit of its finances and protinually analyzing and improving cedures, which is open for review by expense and revenue structures. the public. I urge you to support the The district has highly trained local option levy for equipment. and professional career and volun— Jerry Hubbard is the Director teer staff. As one of the district's five of the La Pine Rural Fire Protection elected directors, we have signifiDistrict and livesin Sunriver.
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BS
OREGON NEWS
UO contract fight dragson
BITUARIES Dale Allen Austin
DEATH NOTICES
The Associated Press EUGENE — B a r gainers working on a n e w f aculty contract at the University of Oregon are debating breadand-butter issues such as pay and benefits along with questions about who's in charge at the Eugene school, officials sard. Negotiating sessions have been held every other week since last year, but both sides say progress has been slow on a new deal for the 1,800member United Academics of the University of Oregon. About 100 professors, instructors and supporters demonstrated Tuesday outside Knight Library, the Eugene Register-Guard reported. As bargaining got underway, the union asked for 7.5 percent acr o ss-the-board raises over three years and other increases that would cost the university about $26 million. The university pro-
June 2, 1960 - April 29, 2013
Chris Marvin Williams, of Wasilla, AK (formally
of Bend) Dec. 29, 1938 - May 4, 2013 Arrangements: Valley Funeral Home, 1-907-373-3344 Services: Memorial Services will be held Saturday May 18 at 1PM at the Matanuska Assembly of God in Palmer, AK. A service will be held at a later date in Bend.
Doris Jean Drew, of Redmond Dec. 21, 1930- May 5,2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funeral, Redmond, 541-504-9485, www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Graveside service at Redmond Memorial Cemetery on Saturday, May 11 at 10:30 AM.
Harry B. Fisher, of Bend Feb. 26, 1916- May4,2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592
www.deschutesmemonalchapel.com
Services: A graveside service will be held at 1:00 pm on Friday, May 10, 2013 at Deschutes Memorial Gardens in Bend, Oregon. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.
Jessie Mason Taylor, of Redmond Jan. 24, 1920 - May 6, 2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com
Services: Services will be held at a later date.
Michael Scott Baker, of Bend Nov. 13, 1949- May 5,2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Private services will be held for family and friends Saturday, May 11, 2013 at 5:30 P.M. Please call family for details. Contributions may be made to:
Central Oregon Veteran's Outreach Fund www. covo- Us. 0 I'g 541-383-2793
Daniel Dacey Stack June 22, 1960 - May 4, 2013 Daniel Dacey Stack, born June 2 2 , 19 6 0 , p a s s ed a way May 4 , 2013, at t h e age of 52. Dan was born in Bend at S t. Charles H o spital, t h e first of four children of Dr. Roger and Meme Stack. He graduated from R edmond High school in 1978, and attended Oregon State University, where he was a life-long Beaver Fan. D an i s s u r v ived b y h i s three children — daughter, Scarlett Stack of Brooklyn, NY; daughter, Ariel Stack of Portland, OR; and son, Roger Stack of San Fr ancisco, CA. He i s p r eceded in death by his parents. Dan had a love of life, his family and friends. He will be missed by all. A f uneral M a s s w i l l b e h eld 1 1 :00 a . m. , F r i d a y , M ay 10 , a t S t . Th o m a s C atholic C h u rc h i n R e d mond. Please sign our online guest book www.redmondmemorial.com
Thomas Edward MCCarthy, of Redmond April 25, 1940 - May 6, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held.
Lucille Violet O'Keeffe, of Redmond Nov., 23, 1919- May 5,2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com
Services: No services will be held.
Carol Jean Tade September 7, 1937 - May 3, 2013 Carol Jean Tade, age 75, w ent home to be w it h t h e L ord o n M a y 3 , 2 0 1 3 i n Ukiah, CA. C arol w a s t h e f i r s t o f seven children born to Lee a nd Minnie T ade i n C h i cago, IL on Sep t ember 7 , 1937. She lived t here u n t il h er graduat ion f r o m Fenger Hieh Carol Tade Scgooi in 1 955, w h e n h e r fam i l y moved to San D i ego, CA . Carol married and started h er f a mily , w h i c h w o u l d eventually g r o w t o fiv e c hildren, b u t s h e tr a g i cally lost both of her hu sbands to t e r m i nal h e a lth conditions. In tragedy and good t i mes, he r s t r ength a nd commitment t o G o d and f a m il y w e r e e v i d ent throughout her life. C arol w a s a dev o t e d mother and a homemaker until she decided to enter t he wor k f orce w h er e s h e first worked selling ladies f oundation garments w i t h Figurette's. Sh e t hen moved to the medical field where she found her p assion. First working for D r . Story in S a n D i e go, th en Dr. Bloom i n S a ntee, she e xpertly m a n aged th e f i n ancial side o f t h e b u s i ness so her doctors could focus on patient care. She later moved on t o G r o ssmont OB/GYN in La Mesa, and then "retired" to Bend, O R where she w o r ked at Central Oregon Pediatrics. S he is s u r vived b y h e r daughter, Robbin Andersen a nd he r h u s band Ji m i n Ukiah, CA; her son, Aaron M cDaniel and w i f e C i n dy in San Di e g o , C A; 13 grandchildren; and 8 g reatg randchildren, as w e l l a s many nieces and nephews. Her six l i v in g si blings in c lude Bud T ade an d w i f e C heryl o f Gr a s s V a l l e y , C A; Jack T a d e a n d w i f e Clairon of San Diego, CA; Robert T a d e a nd w i fe Cheryl o f San t e e , C A; Sharon M cD a n i e l and h usband B o b of Ol a l l a , WA; Sara J ean S i m m ons a nd her h u sband Da n o f Olalla, WA; baby b r other, L ance Tade an d h i s w i f e Jaime of Alamogordo, NM; and finally, her many f i sh and dog, Mr. Wilson. Her family i s c o m f orted that she will be joining the f ollowing l o v e d o n e s i n heaven - her p arents, Lee and Minnie Tade; her first h usband, D a v i d Er w i n , a nd sec o n d h usb a n d , David McDaniel; and three o f h e r chi l d r en , T e r r y Gillespie, David Erwin and Kevin Irick. H er famil y w i l l h a v e a p rivate m e m o ria l o f t e a and lemon meringue pie to help keep her in our hearts a nd memories. In l i e u o f flowers, please consider a donation t o w w w . P r isonFellowship.org. Arrangements are under t he direction of t h e E v ersole Mortuary; www.eversolefs.com
Dale A l l e n A us t i n of B end, OR d i e d A p r i l 2 9 , 2013 at the age of 52. Dale was born June 2, 1960 in Springfield, OR to Samuel and C h r i stin e ( S p r ague) A ustin. Dal e m o v e d t o Central Oregon from Brooki ngs 22 years ago. W hile in B end he owned and operated Dale Austin Austin's R omancing t h e S t o n e i n B end, formerly k n ow n a s A ustin T i l e a n d M a r b l e . He also enjoyed b o ating, diving, car r acing, fishing and flying. Dale is survived by his fia nce o f 6 y e a r s , K e l l ey Mears; son, Austin Austin; d aughter, Renae Y ell; f a ther, Sam Austin; mother, Chris Thorne; brother, Dave; sister, Paula; s tep-siblings, Mike, Chuck and Gordon Inman and S uzanne Austin; and 5 grandchildren, Abby, Taylor, Connor, Mikah and Ethan. He was preceded in death by a g r a ndson, Dyl an Zane Y ell ag e 4 , a n d stepmother, Nancy Austin. A Celebration of Life will be held 3:00 p.m. Saturday, May 11, 2013 at D ale and K elley's r e s i dence, 2 9 7 5 N W Lucus Ct., Bend O R . Donations can be made to the Bend Humane Society, 6 1170 S E 27 th St r e e t , Bend, O R 9 7 7 02. P l ease sign our online guestbook, www.redmondmemorial.com
FEATURED OBITUARY
Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
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DEATHS
architecture. However, Gleason said negotiations were being slowed b y th e d e bate over l a n guage and the nature of the university. The faculty members say the university charter and Oregon law define the school in two elements — the university president and the faculty. The faculty members want the contract to refer to management as either "administration" or " university administration." Gleason said the university — not the administration — is the legal entity that's forging a contract with the union, and
bargainers won't sign "anything that refers to us as anything but the university." Union officials insist progress has been slowed because the administration takes issues to a behind-the-scenes committee, not by the lan-
guage question.
5pectacular Ocean Views From Every Room.
ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: Otis Bowen, 95: Two-term governor of Indiana and later the first physician appointed as secretary of health and human services, serving under President R o nald R e agan amid the rising debate about AIDS. Died Saturday in Donaldson, Ind. Bryan Forbes, 86: British f ilm d i rector w h ose w o r k includes the original 1970s horror classic "The Stepford Wives"; he was screenwriter for "Chaplin," the 1992 biopic of Charlie Chaplin, and also wrote several n ovels. Died Wednesday in Surrey, England.
Cooper was a longtime soap star
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Receive 20% off room rate when you bring this ad and donate a can of food for each night of your stay. valid Sun-Thurs, Now- May 23, 2013
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roffer is not good with other discounts. Food donated to Lincoln county Food share.)
By Lynn Elber The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Jeanne Cooper, the enduring soap op-
era star who played grande dame Katherine Chancellor for nearly four decades on "The Young and the R estless," h a s died. She was 84. I C ooper d i ed Cooper W edn e s d a y
morning in her sleep,her son the actor Corbin Bernsen wrote on Facebook. The family confirmed the death to CBS,according to a network spokeswoman. She was in a Los Angelesarea hospital, according to Bernsen's spokesman, Charles Sherman, who said the cause of death was not immediately available. "One of the last great broads in our business — Jeanne Cooper, Mom — is now stirring up trouble in great beyond," her family said in a statement. Cooper will be remembered "as a daytime television legend and as a friend who will truly be missed by all of us here at the network," said Nina Tassler, president of CBS Entertainment, adding that the actress brought "indelible charm, class and talent to every episode." Cooper joined the daytime serial sixmonths after its March 1973 debut, staking claim to the title of longest-tenured cast member. The role earned her 11 Daytime Emmy nominations and a trophy for best actress in a drama series in 2008. "The Young and the Restless" has topped the daytime serial ratings for more than 24 years,in part because of the continuity provided by Cooper and its other longtime stars. It held its ground as the genre diminished in popularity and the majority of soaps vanished.
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
posed 4.5 percent across-theboard raises and merit pay that would cost about $14 million, the newspaper said. To offer more, administrators would have to cut programs or raise tuition, said Tim Gleason, an administration representative and dean of the School of Journalism and Communication. The university already has proposed a 6 percent increase in tuition and fees for the fiscal year starting July 1. The union contends the administration has access to $100 million in unrestricted net assets that it could tap to pay for raises. F aculty m e m bers a l s o want a contract that recognizes their voice in how the university i s g o verned so they can fight what they see as damaging trends such as cheap online courses, said Peter Keyes, union spokesman and an associateprofessor of
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,and by 9 a.m . Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.
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Wolf Creek, Colo
• 3.02
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72/48 e
51/30 •
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Quebec
Thunder Bay4ps
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• 21'
Winnipe 58/41 •
i
• 94' Yakima, Wash.
Saskatoon
78/46
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New York, N.Y.
+ D enver + Je • o= -
76/58 t+ + oe e t + 5t t • 1ouisvule V e gas 73/So + t 59/47 + e 4 ssas Ctty e' e eo e ' c~ 82/62 e ee + e e e e e i mt ' t e e e yt/ 5 6 Tg/60 St Lourse, - - - iee'ev Veee e ..Leee e e e' e ') • 80 /59 Albuquw~ OJStghchrm Los Angeles, 66/57 ~ ,7tyeq p«" """ I ' 7 1 /52; ', , 79/6 '82/63 1 'hoenix . ++ e ei « e+ +t . . ' tt' l e et e Bir m ingham 8 1 /61 82/65 E 65/57 • New Orleans lando 80 Houstou + 8 3/68 He • 7/64 Chihuahua ~ 83/69 o 905 92/54 • Miami
+ t
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~
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•
•
Honolulu toH, 85/71
HAW A I I
Monterrey La Paz 96/71• l 9LV62 M a zatlan o 86/73 • Juneau 63/35 FRONTS
Anchorage 57/43 S
ex
.
I •
87/74
40s
CONDITIONS o4 d 4 d
KPA LAS KA
e 4 x
Cold
Inmate
* * ** * e *** * * * e
:eg
W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
encountered the officer supervising Donaldson's group, then saw several inmates Donaldson w o r k in g in grOuPS Of tWO and threescattered out over a few hundred yards. Wilmot said th e D epartment of C o r rections could have made a better effort to inform people using the trails in thearea of the presence of the inmate work crew. "I'm surprised they didn't have a sign up, you're out there with all the girls ridi ng bikes and r u n ning b y themselves," Wilmot said. "I know they screen them for sexual crimes and all of that, but knocking somebody off a bike and stealing their bike, that'd be a way to make a lot of distance really quickly." Sgt. Eric Judah, a spokesman with Oregon State Police, said his agency is continuing to i n vestigate D o naldson's disappearance, though less visibly than on Tuesday when tracking dogs and a search plane were deployed in the
Continued from B1 The e s c ap e p ro m pted B end-La P in e S c hools t o share information about Donaldson with all schools in the district. Employees at schools on the west side of Bend were advised to be extra vigilant on playgrounds and common areas, said district spokeswoman JulianneRepman. S teven Hill, p r i ncipal at Miller E l ementary S c hool, said he took extra precautions Wednesday; his school is less than two miles from where Donaldson went missing. Hill said doors and gates t hat w o ul d o r d i narily b e left unlocked were secured Wednesday, though students and staff were not subjected to a full lockdown. Parents of Miller students also received automated phone messages alerting them of the situation. J eff W i l mot p a ssed t h e i nmate work crews on h i s m ountain bike a r ound t h e time D o n aldson e s caped. While riding along the KGB trail around 1:30 p.m., Wilmot
Waste
l ized t etrahydrofttran, a n d an explosive, sodium azide, Continued from B1 according to the DEQ. The "There were several incom- waste also included 60 pounds patibles stored in the same of nitric acid and 17 pounds of containers and leaking," he cyanides. sard. Inspectors deemed hazardWaste included a h i g hly okts 80 pounds of the 1,100 flammable solvent, crystal- pounds of chemicals found at
F in It All
Ice
Phil's Trail area. " An investigation can b e boots on the ground looking behind trees, or on the Internet, or following leads, things like that," Judah said. "There is an active investigation going On.u Wilson said it would be up to Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Flaherty to
a service to irrigators and sportsmen.
Reservoir Acre feet C a p acity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 50,457...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 171,836..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 76,049 . . . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 31,178 . . . . 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 145,416..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i o n Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 305 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,570 C rescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 11 LOW MEDIUM HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 54.5 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 100 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 2,058 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res..... . . . . . 69 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 226 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 13.2 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 54.5 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 LOWI or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
To report a wildfire, call 911
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
IPOLLEN COUNT
Qy MED Qi IU
g% g
*
To Blooms & Sweets!
bring charges against Donaldson for escape. When he wa s l ast seen, Donaldson was w earing a blue undershirt, an o r ange long-sleeve shirt, blue jeans — all of which were stenciled with the word "inmate" and the Department of C o rrections logo — and brown work boots. He is a pproximately 5 feet 7 inches tall and 175 p ounds w it h b r o w n h a i r , brown eyes and tattoos on his arms, shoulder and right ankle. Anyone with i n formation about Donaldson is advised to COntaCt t h e D e SChuteS C ounty Sheriff's O f fice at 541-693-691L — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammersCmbendbufletinocom
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' Exp e r i e n ced B o a r d - c e r t i f i e d D e r m a t o l o g i s t ' Reco g n i ze d as a Ski n C a n c e r E x p e r t
' C o n t i n u i t y o f G a r e , D r . H a l l p e r f o r m s al l e v al u a t i o n s ' Ski n C a r e f o r t h e E n t i r e F a m i l y . \
•
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— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarfingCmbendbulletin.com
- APPointmentstyPicatyl within 1 week-
Mark Hall, JVLD
moto r
FAST OILCHAHGES & MORE
the lab and 1,100 pounds of the 2,400 pounds found at the storage unit, said Susan E1Worth, a DEQ environmental law specialist in Portland. Reynolds has until May 22 to appeal the penalty, she said.
N OW A C C E P T I N G N EW PATI E NTS
Derm a t o logy
Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme
All Moms Get A Flower Gift Card
~ ~ ~ pq~
•
WATER REPORT
Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday 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......81/62/000..89/62/pc...78/55/t Grand lapids....80/52/0 02... 71/51/t. 61/47/sh RapidCity.......74/38/000...67/46/t. 76/43/pc Savannah .......81/52/0.00..84/62/pc. 84/63/pc Akron..........73/58/001 ...76/57/c...68/52/t GreenBay.......79/45/000...59/41/t. 56/41/pc Reno...........70/48/0.01...75/53/t...84/55/t Seattle..........65/52/0.00...75/52/s. 79/53/pc Albany..........74/55/017...70/52/t...72/54/t Greensboro......69/52/027..80/59/pc. 82/60/pc Richmond.......70/52/019..80/58/pc. 85/63/pc Sioux Fass.......65/55/0.89...65/40/c. 69/42/pc Albuquerque.....72/47/000 ..71/52/pc...63/50/t Harssbvrg.......72/57/048... 73/54/t...77/56/t Rochester, NY....70/55/0.19.. 74/54/sh...61/51lt Spokane ........82/55/0.00...84/51/s.. 84/52/s Anchorage......52/31/000 ..57/43/pc .. 54/41/c Hartford CT.....73/56/0 24... 70/51/t. 77/54/sh Sacramento......74/55/0.03..83/57/pc.. 88/58/s Springfield, MO ..73/52/0.04... 74/57/t...68/51/t Atlanta........ 76/52/trace...81/61/s...81/61/t Helena..........77/45/0.00..75/48/pc. 71/43/pc St.Louis........ 84/57/trace...79/60/t...67/54/t Tampa..........80/65/0 00... 83/65/s. 87/70/pc Atlantic City.....71/57/000..65/52/sh. 68/55/pc Honolulu........80/67/000...85/71/s. 83/71/pc SaltLake City ....65/47/0 03..73/55/pc. 73/54/pc Tucson..........83/58/0.00..82/57/pc. 84/59/pc Austin..........85/61/0.00...83/67/t...83/62/t Houston........85/60/0.00... 83/69/t...85/68/t 580Antonio .....85/62/0.00..85/68/pc...83/65/t Tulsa ...........83/57/0.00... 76/60/t...74/55/t Baltimore.......71/57/0.16..74/55/sh...79/60/t Huntsville.......79/52/0.00 ..83/61/pc...7I61/t 580 Diego.......70/60/000..65/59/pc. 67/60/pc Washington, DC..72/60/0.04..76/5ipc...sl/61/t silliogs.........71/44/000 ..75/47/pc...74/44/t Indianapolis.....78/57/0 00... 78/60/t...6555/t 580 Francisco ....61/53/0.00..64/51/pc.68/51/pc Wichita .........78/57/0.58..74/55/pc. 71/51/pc Birmingham.....79/50/000 .85/63/pc...79/62/t Jackson, MS.... 82/51/000. 85/65/pc 83/65/t SaoJose........67/56/000..71/51/pc 75/53/s Yakims .........94/50/0 00 89/55/s.. 90/57/s Bismarck........69/40/000..61/40/pc...75/37/t Jacksonvile......81/54/000..84/62/pc. 87/64/pcSantaFe........67/41/0.00..65/43lpc.58/42/pc Yvma...........83/61/0.00...86/63/s. 91/67/pc Boise.......... 79/52/trace ..84/52/pc. 84/53/pc Juneau..........60/32/000..63/35/pc. 69/39/pc INTERNATIONAL Boston..........66/53/000 ..67/53/sh. 72/56/pc Kansas City......75/55/0.02... 71/56/t. 67/48/pc Bodgepoit,CT....63/55/OA4...65/52/t. 69/54/pc Lsnsing.........80/50/0.00... 72/51/t. 57/46/sh Amsterdam......70/54/0 81 .. 59/49/pc 57/45lsh Mecca.........1 06/84/000 102/80/s. 102/81/s Buffalo.........69/59/016..73/54/sh...60/50/t Lssyegas.......76/59/000..79/60/pc.. 87/67/s Athens..........75/60/0.00... 75/60/r. 68/59/pc Mexico City .....82/59/000 .80/54/pc 80/58/pc BurlingtonV1....81/57/002 ..69/54/sh. 70/48/sh Lexington.......75/55/0 04..79/60/pc...73/59/t Auckland........59/50/0.00.. 63/56/sh.64/52/pc Montreal........82/55/0.00... 70/48/t. 59/46/sh Caribou,ME.....83/45/000 ..63/52/sh. 63/43/sh Lincoln..........70/56/0.02... 71/48/t.70/50/pc Baghdad........89/68/0 00 .. 98/78/pc. 103/82/s Moscow........75/46/0.00 ..72/52/pc. 76/54/pc Charleston, SC...81/51/000 ..83/62/pc. 83/62/pc Little Rock.......83/56/0.00 ..81/62/pc...81/60/t Bangkok.......100/82/0.00101/82/pc.98/83/pc Nairobi.........77/57/0.03... 74/61/t...72/61/t Charlotte........76/51/000...80/59/s...83/60/t LosAngeles......69/61/0.00 ..66/57/pc. 70/60/pc Beiyng..........75/61/000..85/63/pc .. 87/61/s Nassau.........84/73/0.00 ..83/72/pc.. 79/72/c Chattanooga.....78/51/000 ..83/61/pc...78/60/t Louisville........80/57/0 00..82/62/pc...73/59/t Beirvt..........75/66/000..77/65/pc. 77/65/pc New Delhi......106/77/0.00 ..109/84/s 109/86/pc Cheyenne.......63/41/0.03... 5I38/t...65/38/t Madison, Wh....80/47/0.00... 63/42/t .. 64/45/s Berlin...........73/59/000 ..76/49/sh.66/49/sh Osaka..........68/48/0.00 76/60/pc. .. 75/61/sh Chicago.........79/48/000... 66/47/t.56/47/pc Memphis....... 82/55/00084/66/pc ..80/62/t Bogota.........68/50/0.26... 76/54/t...79/54/t Oslo............68/41/000 ..54/46/sh. 55/42/pc Cincinnati.......79/48/006..80/61/pc...70/56/t Miami..........86/67/000..87/74/pc.87/75/pc Budapest........75/55/000 ..80/55/pc. 79/59/pc Ottawa.........81/52/0.00... 70/46/t. 59/45/pc Cleveland.......72/55/000..70/57/pc...59/53/t Milwaukee......76/46/000...59/41/t. 51/44/pc Buenos Aires.....75/52/0 00.. 69/53/pc.. 68/54/c Paris............70/52/0.22..65/42/pc..59/48/c ColoradoSpnngs.52/44/024...55/38/t.61l40/pc Minneapolis.....78/58/000..66/41/sh .. 66/43/s Csbo580Lucss ..88/68/0.00...90/64/s .. 86/63/s Rio deJaneiro....79/59/0.00...73/61ls.. 75/61/s Columbia,MO.. 78/55/trace... 74/57/t...68/52/t Nashville........80/51/0.09..82/63/pc...77/60/t Cairo...........90/68/0.00..91/67/pc 94/66/pc Rome...........75/55/0.00...67/59/s. 72/60/pc Columbia,SC....82/52/0.00...83/60/s...85/62/t New Orleans.....82/61/0.00..83/68/pc...80/68/t Calgary.........70/41/0.00... 78/46/s.59/45/pc Santiago........68/39/0.00..64/57/pc.. 66/59/s Columbus, GA....81/50/000...84/60/s...83/61/t New York.......63/57/3.02... 70/59/t. 77/58/pc Cancvn.........84/72/000..87/77/pc. 86/77/pc SaoPaulo.......66/55/0.00...70/50/s.. 73/54/s ColumbusOH....72/56/000..78/60/pc...70/56/t Newark,Nl......68/59/1.11... 71/58/t. 78/58/sh Dublin..........61/46/0.23 ..52/41/sh. 55/39/sh Sapporo ........55/38/0.00..53/42/pc. 49/49/pc Concord,NH.....75/49/001 ..70/49/sh.73/51/sh Norfolk VA......75/53/002..78/6vpc.84/62/pc Edinburgh.......59/46/0.00 .. 52/44/sh. 57/39/sh Seoul...........77/50/0.00..73/52/sh. 59/48/sh Corpus Christi....87/68/000 ..85/72/pc. 83/71/pc Oklahoma City...84/58/0.00... 79/62/t...74/56/t Geneva.........73/43/000..64/50/pc. 57/45/sh Shanghai........68/63/0.03..69/59/sh.. 74/57/c DallasFtWorrh...85/61/0.00... 82/65/t...82/62/t Omaha.........71/58/0.00... 70/49/t .. 69/50/5 Haiare..........70/45/0 00 .. 71/50/pc.71/56/pc Singapore.......88/77/202..90/sllsh. 87/81/sh Dayton .........76/52/000..79/60/pc...70/55/t Orlando.........83/58/000...87/64/5.89/68/pc Hong Kong......77/73/011 ..81/75/sh. 82/75/sh Stockholm.......72/45/0.00..72/50/pc. 61/43/pc Denver....... 62/45/0.15... 59/42/t. 67/43/pc PalmSprings.... 84/60/0.00. 85/63/s .. 94/69/s Istanbul.........72/59/000 ..71/58/pc.. 68/58/c Sydney..........72/54/0.00..70/54/pc.. 78/52/c DesMoines......71/54/0.14... 69/50/t .. 69/49/s Peoria..........81/52/0.00... 74/55/t .. 64/50/c leiusalem.......81/64/000.. 78/61/pc. 84/64/pc Taipei...........84/75/0.00..85/76/pc.. 86/68/c Detroit..........79/58/001..76/53/pc. 59/49/sh Philadelphia.....73/60/040... 75/59/t. 82/61/sh Johannesburg....84/71/000...65/45/s. 63/45/pc TelAviv.........84/64/0.00..82/62/pc. 88/64/pc Duluth..........74/42/000 ..48/32/pc. 50/31/sh Phoesix.........84/66/0.00..87/66/pc. 91/70/pc Lima...........70/63/0.00 .. 73/65/pc.73/64/pc Tokyo...........70/50/0.00...69/61/s. 78/61/pc ElPaso..........82/65/000..82/60/pc. 77/58/pc Pittsburgh.......73/54/011..70/54/sh...68/56/t Lisbon..........73/59/000 68/52/c 70/50/pc Toronto.........72/55/000...77/50/t. 57/46/sh Faiibanks........49/23/000... 56/26/s. 57/33/pc Portland,ME.....69/47/0 00..64/50/sh. 68/50/sh London.........64/48/0.03 58/50/sh. .. 60/44/sh Vancouver.......64/52/0.00...70/50/s.. 70/57/s Fargo...........78/46/000..64/39/pc. 70/38/sh Providence......72/55/0.00..69/49/sh.73/53/pc Madrid .........77/61/000..80/58/pc.74/52/pc Vienna..........73/57/0.00...82/60/s.. 70/55/c Flagstaff........57/28/0.00... 59/33/t.64/35/pc Raleigh.........72/52/0.02 ..81/60/pc. 84/62/pc Manila..........97/82/000..96/81/sh. 96/81/sh Warsaw.........81/57/0.06...83/60/s. 71/54/sh
bendbulletin.com
Cen tra I Oregon
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 79/45 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........88m1987 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Recordlow......... 20in1930 Average monthtodate... 0.20" Average high.............. 63 Year to date............ 2.57" Average low .............. 34 Average year to date..... 4.33" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.00 Record 24 hours ...1.65 in1956 *Melted liquid equivalent
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Vancoulvr
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:42a.m......8:13 p.m. Venus......6:19 a.m...... 9:17 p.m. Mars.......5:33 a.m...... 7:50 p.m. Jupiter......726am.....1043pm. Satum......654 p m...... 533 am. Uranus.....4:15 a.m...... 4:48 p.m.
Legend Wweather, Pcp precipitation,s sun,pcpartisl clouds,c clouds,h haze,shshowers, r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i-ice, rs-rsin-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
ee
Yesterday's extremes
HIGH LOW
PLANET WATCH
Redmond/Madras........Low Prineville..........................Low
Astoria ........60/52/0.00....63/46/pc.....63/46/pc Baker City..... 80/42/trace....81/44/pc.....86/48/pc Brookings......60/50/0.00....70/48lpc.....57/48lpc Burns......... 77/45/trace....79/44/pc......81/46/s Eugene........70/44/0.00....78/47/pc......81/46/s KlamathFags .. 68/38/008 ....73/45/t ... 79/46/s Lakeview.......63/39/0.05....72/47/pc.....75/47/pc La Pine........77/39/0.00....79/43/pc.....80/43/pc Medford.......77/53/0.00.....84/54/t......88/52/s Newport.......55/50/0.00....58/46/pc.....60/46/pc North Bend.....61/52/0.00....59/48/pc.....58/50/pc Ontario........85/49/0.00....88/55/pc.....88/58/pc Pendleton......85/49/0.00.....87/52/s......88/54/s Portland .......69/53/0.00.....81/52/s......84/51/s Prineville.......76/44/0.00.....80/47/s.....83/52/pc Redmond....... 83/42/0.00..... 82/45/t......83/50/s
84/48
t t t o
Roseburg t e e Chbmult +t + w + e Chdstmas Vagey+++ s3/si .+t t77/di+ ++ + +m i l ves+ 82/46
cooler.
69 42
FIRE INDEX
City Precipitationva1vesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
•
Juntura
e + + <@ t + + iii/44 e rescentO t to+ e " t ... t t Riley t + +Lakeet e et Crescent t • Fort Rocksi/46t 't t t 77 145 t
Off and on showers,
Afternoon thunderstorms, widespread rain late in the day.
Yesterday Thursday F riday Bend,westoiHwy 97.....Low Sisters..............................Low The following was compiled by the Central Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,eastoiHwy.97......Low La Pine...............................Low Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as
Nyssa
, , t-t-e-ehs qxjne 79~ T l a m ptont + + e • Rurns
+
$
Port Orfor
•
.
tq
COttage Go r/odvze 8
Ii ,,
U„lty
•
OREGON CITIES
EAST Scattered showers and thunderstorms possible today.
•
O
•
Coos Bay
p
6 6aI<erC' Ci
e t +~unrtuete eBend ++ t + + + -.
78/47
63/45
Scattered showers and thunderstorms possible today.
6/4 7
81/44
t t + + wJohn
Pi •
CENTRAL
79/50 • U niii 7
++t
ee+
Sunsettoday.... 818 p.m. N ew First F u l l Last Sunrise tomorrow .. 5:44 a.m. Sunset tomorrow... 8:20 p.m. Moonrise today.... 5:34 a.m. Moonsettoday .... 8:18 p.m. May 9 May17 May 24 May 31
•
/ee e re edmood*; ' " '27/43+ ' ' ' ev" , + e ,t„4...' e 'Re mOn e + '• Paulllla
Eugene ugene•
Florence•
t e
7 5/44 L
t +t 82148 e e o M itcheg'M/48et++
C ampshermanbt t +
1/4 9
.t
>
•
COrValhS ~8
81/51 . eet t
r
+ ++ e o sprayss/47t e gdcds ~ •
Albany~
•
Wallowa • Pendleton L 73«3 • Enterprisq 87/52 • Meacham • 73/43
9/st
80/50•
Newpprt
rm i S On
Ruggs
•
86/52
•
00/»
Maupin
•
Govemment Camp o/ o
•
5I
•
'
80/52
w/54 •
B,gg, • D a iles 81156 vkdington
/54
~~
•
McMinnville
72 45
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 5:46 a.m. Moon phases
WEST Chance for showers and thunderstorms in the south today.
Umatilla
•
River Th
«81/52 and Higsboro P
66/45
58/46
Hood
'""'" p"'"
Tigamook•
HIGH LOW
80 47
BEND ALMANAC
As t o ria
57/47 •
HIGH LOW
81 49
IFORECAST: 5TATE Seasideo
chance for p.m. storms.
gs
A sunny, dry, and warm day.
warm, very small
cloudy.
LOW
79 I,
gs
HA NN E Z
.
9 9»
9
IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 ML B , C3 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C3 NHL, C2 Prep sports, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
PREP SOFTBALL
YOUTH LACROSSE
NBA
corin
Sisters hosts annual tourney SISTERS — Some 75
teams from around Oregon and beyondmake
one ort e
up the field for the 2013
Sisters Annual Lacrosse
; pfrp""'
Invitational (SALI) tournament. The three-day
competition gets underway Friday and will be
staged on nine playing fields in Sisters.
(/
itt e
Among the featured contests will be High
Desert League high school playoff matches at5 p.m. and 7p.m. on
a I
Friday at the stadium field. Admission will be charged for the
league playoff games,
• The teardrop shot has becomethe antidunk for finesse players in theNBA
but spectators will be admitted free to other
SALI matches throughout the weekend. Tournament divisions
will include Varsity, JVA, JVB, Girls JV, and grades 7-8, 5-6, 3-4 and
By Scott Cacciola
1-2. Friday's schedule of gamesbeginsat5p.m.;
New York Times News Service
on both Saturday and
Sunday, the first games of the day are set to start at 8 a.m. Play will
run into the evening on Saturday and into the
Photos by Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Redmond's Alyssa Nitschelm, left, tags Ridgeview runner Shelby Abbas to turn a double play in the fourth inning of the first of two games the two teams played Wednesday afternoon at Redmond High.
afternoon on Sunday. Teams from Oregon, W ashington, Idaho and
Nevada areexpected to take part in the SALI tournament, which is in its ninth year. — Bulletin staff report
up by the smallest player on
• Ridgeviewdropstwo gamesto crosstown rival Redmond
NBA
Denver's Karl named topcoach DENVER — Selfless
and starless. These were the staples of the
exhilarating Denver Nuggets' NBA franchise-record 57-win
regular season. George Karl kept with that theme
Wednesday, sharing the credit far
and wide after being
Redmond's Ashley Pesek delivers a pitch during the first game of a doubleheader againstRidgeview on Wednesday.
named the league's Coach of the Yearfor the first time in his quarter
century as anNBAhead coach. Karl thanked everyone from his middle
Bulletin staff report REDMOND — Redmond High's stellar 2013 campaign continued Wednesday as the Panthers improved to 22-3 overall with a pair of victories against crosstown rival Ridgeview. Host Redmond took the opener of the Intermountain Hybrid doubleheader 115. Senior outfielder Marissa Duchi went 4-for-4 with a home run and eight — yes eight — RBIs in the first game against the Ravens. Kiahna Brown had a home run of her own for the Panthers, who blasted 10 hits in the game. Ashley Pesek earned the victory, striking out seven while allowing seven hits. Kendall Marshall paced Ridgeview
late Rick Majerus, in an
Bulletin staff report Any win is a good win in the eyes of Bend High coach Bret Bailey, no matter
emotional news confer-
how ugly the game.
ence at the PepsiCenter. He credited Nuggets players, assistant coaches, scouts, trainers, front office, ownership and support staff
as he eyedthe bronze Red AuerbachTrophy in front of him. "What I hope is every-
(14-9) with a home run. Pesek carried Redmond High in the second game, again striking out seven while allowing just four hits — all singles — and issuing no walks in the Panthers' 7-1 win. "Ridgeview's a good team," Redmond coach John Ferera said. "They played well. They've got a strong outfield. The difference was that we've got Pesek. She's that good." Brown went 3-for-4 with a double in the late game and Pesek was 2-for-4 with a double to help her own cause. Redmond ends it regular season Friday with its third and final game against Ridgeview.
Lava Bearsra to eatCou ars
school coach whogot him into the game to his good friend, the
MIAMI — The slam dunk has captivated the basketball world for a generation with its combination of raw ferocity and balletic grace, but this year a different shot is sweeping the NBA playoffs. It's called the teardrop. And it's the antidunk. If the slam dunk is all power, the teardrop is all finesse, a dandelion fluff of a shot that is nearly always tossed
On Wednesday, the host Lava Bears trailed 7-3 after three completed innings, and their f i ve-game winning streak seemed in jeopardy. In the bottom of the sixth inning, however, things began to click. Bend piled up six runs in the sixth to jump out in front 9-7 before shutting down visiting Mountain View in the top
PREP BASEBALL of the seventh inning to seal the Class 5A Intermountain Conference victory. "I think any time you can come back like that, it really helps you with character, and it helps you realize that this
game's a special game," Bailey said. "Any givenday,a team can be up orthey can be down. Fortunately, we ended up on top in this one." Jonah Koski went 3-for-3 with a double and two runs batted in to pace the Bears
(16-7 overall, 5-3 IMC), who extended their winning streak to six games. Duke DeGaetano was 3-for-4 with two RBIs, and Justin Erlandson tripled and drove in a run. For Mountain View (5-16, 1-7), which scored four runs in the top of the first inning and three more in the third before falling in the IMC contest, it was John Carroll leading the way with a 2-for-3 performance that included a double and two RBIs. See Bears/C4
the floor. The teardrop floats over defenders'outstretched hands, arcs toward the rafters and then — especially this year — drops through the net with barely a whisper. This week, teardrops have helped fuel an upset in Miami, a rout in New York and a double-overtime classic in San Antonio. Some of the brightest stars of the playoffs — Nate Robinson of the Chicago Bulls, Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors and Raymond Felton of the New York Knicks — stand between 5 feet 9 inches and 6-3, shrubs amid courts packed with redwoods. But each has used the teardrop to take control of a game. "If you have the touch to do it, it's very effective," said Curry, whose teardrops bend so high they can seem like trick shots. "You have to work at it, and it's tough to do when you're trying to get
by a defender; you're going full speed." But when it works, the shot can cause thousands of fans in an arena to hold their breath as the ball floats off the fingertips toward the rim. SeeTeardrop /C4
Inside • Warriors, Heat each pick up a playoff win on Wednesday,C3
body understands this is not about me. It's about
a lot of people and alot of people inmypastand I am proud to have that trophy," Karl said.
Karl worked wonders with a lineup that lacked an AII-Star, was beset by
injuries to several starters and twisted its way through a brutal early-
GOLF: PGA TOUR
Men's fifth major may remain mythical
season schedule in which 22 of the team's
first 32 gameswereon the road. Relying on an old-school up-tempo offense and adeep bench that wore out
opponents, especially at altitude, the Nuggets led
the league in scoring, fast break production
and points in the paint with nary a dominant
scorer — TyLawson led Denver with 16.7 points a game, which ranked 31st in the league.
Miami's Erik Spoelstra was second in voting, while New York's
Mike Woodsonwas third. — The Associated Press
By Karen Crouse
New York Times News Service
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Much will be written and said this week about golf's "fifth major," which is funny, since the Evian Championship is four months off. The PGA Tour for decades has promoted its home tournament, the Players Championship, as real estate belonging on the same historic block as the Masters, the U.S. Open, the British Open and the PGA Championship. Meanwhile, the LPGA Tour made its fifth major official, elevating the stature, beginning this year, of the Evian, its event in Evianles-Bains, France. Will the men one day follow the women's lead?
The Players Championship • When:Today-Sunday • TV:Golf Channel (Today-Friday, 10 a.m.); NBC(Saturday-Sunday, 11 a.m.l The FedEx Cup playoffs and four World Golf Championship events have infused the calendarwith marquee competitions spanning the globe, giving the men a handful of big-money, deep-field tournaments outside the majors. Is it enough that one of the WGC events is in China, or will the
game's shifting demographics at some point demand a step up in class for a tournament in the Pacific Rim'? See Major/C4
Gerald Herbert/The Associated Press
Tiger Woods walks onto the 17th green during a practice round at The Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.,W ednesday.
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY GOLF PGATour, The Players Championship SOFTBALL
Time
College, UCLAat OregonState College, Arizona atStanford
3 p.m. 7 p.m.
Pac-12 Pac-12
HOCKEY NHL, playoffs, N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh NHL, playoffs, Ottawa at Montreal NHL, playoffs, Minnesota at Chicago
4 p.m. 4 p.m. 6:30 p.m.
NHL, playoffs, San Jose atVancouver
7 p.m.
NBCSN CNBC NBCSN CNBC
BASEBALL MLB, Philadelphia at Arizona or
6:30 p.m.
Atlanta at SanFrancisco
7 p.m.
10 a.m.
Golf
MLB MLB
FRIDAY Time MOTOR SPORTS Formula One, Spanish Grand Prix, practice 5 a.m. NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Southern 500, practice 8:30 a.m. NASCAR, Nationwide, Darlington 200, qualifying NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Southern 500, qualifying NASCAR, Nationwide, Darlington 200 GOLF PGATour, The Players Championship SOFTBALL
College, UCLAat OregonState College, Oregon atArizona State College, California at Washington
NBCSN
Sp e ed E S P N2
2 p.m. 4 :30 p.m.
Speed ESP N 2
10 a.m.
HOCKEY NHL, playoffs, N.Y. Rangers at Washington 4 :30 p.m. NHL, playoffs, Anaheim at Detroit 5 p.m. NHL, playoffs, St. Louisat Los Angeles 7 p.m. BASEBALL MLB, New York Yankees at Kansas City or
Los Angeles Angels at ChicagoWhite Sox College, OregonState at Stanford
TV/ Radio
12:30 p.m.
3 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
Golf
Pac-12 Pac-12 Pac-12 NB C SN CNBC NBCS N
5 p.m.
MLB 6:30 p.m. KICE-AM 940 7 p.m. Root
MLB, Oakland at Seattle BASKETBALL NBA, playoffs, Miami at Chicago 5 p.m. NBA, playoffs, San Antonio at Golden State 7:30 p.m. BOXING
Vernon Paris vs. Mauel Perez
7 p.m.
COREBOARD
TV/Radio
ESPN ESPN
ON DECK Today Track: Ridgeview,Mountain View, Bend, Summ it, Redmond, CrookCounty at IMCChampionships at Redmond,3p.m. Boys tennis:CrookCounty, Ridgevrewat district tourney inVale,TBD Girls tennis: Sistersatdistrict cham pionshipsat Black Butte,TBD;Ridgeview,CrookCounty atdistrict tourney inVale,TBD Friday Baseball: Bend atMountain View430p m.;Ridgeview at Redmond, 4:30p.m.; Madrasat North Marion,5 p.m 4 SistersatLaPine,4.30p.m.,KennedyatCulver, 2p.m.;CrookCounty atSummit, 4:30p.m. Softball: MountainViewat Bend,430 p.m.;North Marion/St.Paulat Madras,4:30 p.m.; La Pineat Sisters, 430pm.;Kennedyat Culver 2pm.;Summit at CrookCounly, 4:30 p.m.;RedmondatRidgeview, 430 p.m. Track: Culver at Regis Twilght inStayton,TBD; Sisters at WallyCiochetti Invitational inCottageGrove,TBD; La Prne,MadrasJohnOliver invitational at Central High inIndependence,3:30p.m. Boys tennis: Crook Counly, Ridgeviewatdistrict tourney inVale,TBD;Redmond,MountainView,Summit, Bendatdistricts in Sunriver,TBD Girls tennis:MountainView,Bend, Redmond,Summit at statequahfier in Herm iston, TBD ; Srsters at district championshipsatBlackBute, TBD;Ridgeview, CrookCounlyatdistrict tourneyinVale, TBD Boys lacrosse:HighDesert LeagueplayoffsatSisters, 3/4-seedgame, semifinal losers, 5p.m.; 1/2-seed game,semifinal winners,7p.m.
Saturday Girls golf: Summivs. t Bend(match play,tentative) at Broken Top,130pm. Track: La PineatGilchrist Small School Invite,11a.m. Boys tennis:Redmond,MountainView,Summit, Bend at districts inSunrrver,TBD Girls tennis: Mountain View,Bend, Redmond,Summit at statequalifier inHermiston, TBD
PREP SPORTS Baseball
BASEBALL BeaVerS hold Off PilotS — The OregonState baseball
team utilized a three-run fifth
inning to push past Portland en route to a 4-3 win over the Pilots in front of 3,294 fans at VolcanoesStadium Wednesday night
Sim Gillannounced the charges W ednesday. A homicidebyassault charge is less serious than manslaughter. It carries up to five years in prison for adults,
in Keizer. The win wasOregon
but penalties can be less for juveniles. The district attorney's
State's ninth straightand sent the Beavers to a 38-8 record on
teen as an adult.
back to the 2007 season.Tyler
Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference
Molalla Madras
011 0000 — 2 5 1 010 210 x — 4 7 0
Softball Intermountain Hybrid First game
Ridgeview Redmond
0 00 200 3 — 5 7 0 303 104 x — 11 10 4
Ridgeview Redmond
Secondgame
0 00 100 0 — 1 4 1 003 031 x — 7 10 1
HOCKEY U.S. deats Finlandat WOTIEIS —Craig Smith had
a hat trick and teenager John
He doubledtwice and extended his hit streakto nine games, tied
Gibson was stellar in net to lead the United States over host Fin-
for his longest of the season.
land 4-1 at the ice hockeyworld championshi ponW ednesdayin Helsinki. Gibson, who finished
the win, as well. OregonState
with 31 saves, was abold choice
opens its three-game series with Stanford Friday night at Sunken
which paid off for the Ameri-
uled for 6:30 p.m.
cans, who movedabove Finland in their group — second to Russia. In other matchups, Switzerland won its fourth straight
Halladay to haVe ShOulder game, beating Slovenia 7-1; Surgery —Philadelphia Phil-
612, Robinson3-10 3-611, Belinegi 4-13 3-313,
Gibson4-6 0-0 8, Teague0-3 0-0 0, Cook0-6 0-0 0,Mohammed 3-10 0 0 6,Radmanovic3-3 0 0 9, Thomas1-10-32. Totals 27-7616-21 78. MIAMI (115) James7-124-619, Haslem1-10-0 2, Bosh5-10 3-413, Chalmers 4-81-211, Wade7-111-215, Battier 1-3 0 0 3,Allen5-7 10-1021, Cole7-90-0 18, Andersen2-23-3 7, Mrger1-2 0-0 2,Lewis 2-30-0 4,Jones0-10-00, Anthony0-10-00. Totals 42-70 22-29 115. Chicago 20 21 15 22 — 78 Miami 25 30 30 30 — 116
Warriors100, Spurs 91 GOLDENSTATE(100) Barnes5-143-413 DrGreen2-80-05, Bogut2-3
2-4 6, Curry7-20 6 922, Thompson13-26 0-0 34, Jack 4-70-0 8 Ezeli 1-10-0 2, Landry4-5 2-3 10. Totals 38-84 13-20 100.
0 00 104 1 — 6 6 4 205 010 x — 8 6 3
Perrydale Culver
Class 2A/1A Special District 3 1 40 001 2 — 8 8 0 11 000 0 — 2 4
0 5
BASKETBALL NBA NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT
College Pac-12 Standings All Times PDT
Conference Overall OregonState Oregon UCLA ArizonaState Stanford Arizona Washington SouthernCal California WashingtonState 7
utah
lies pitcher Roy Halladay will
Sweden stuffed Norway 5-1; and Germany posted its first win, 2-0
have arthroscopic surgery to
over Austria.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
San Antonio1, GoldenState1 Monday,May6 SanAntonio 129,GoldenState 127
(2 OT)
Wednesd ay,May8:GoldenSt.100,SanAntonio91 Friday, May10: SanAntonio at GoldenState,7:30
p.m.
Sunday,May12: SanAntonio at GoldenState,12:30 pm. Tuesday,May14: GoldenStateat SanAntonio, 6:30 p.m. x-Thursday,May16: SanAntonio at GoldenState,
W L 17 4 19 5 14 7 12 9 11 10 10 11 8 13 8 13 9 15 14 5 19
W L 38 8 3 7 11 31 14 30 14 26 17
29 17 17 21
17 29 29 26
20 24
Wednesday'sGame x-OregonState4, Portland 3 Friday's Games x-Oregonat OhioState, 4:05 p.m. Utah atWashington, 5p.m. ArizonaatUCLA,6p.m. WashingtonStateatUSC,6p.m. ArizonaStateatCalifornia, 6 p.m. OregonStateat Stanford, 6:30p.m. Saturday's Games Utah atWashington, noon x-Oregonat OhioState,12:05p.m. ArizonaatUCLA,2p m. OregonStateat Stanford, 2 p.m. WashingtonStateatUSC,7p.m. ArizonaStateatCalifornia, 7 p.m. Sunday'sGames x-Oregonat OhioState, 9:05am. ArizonaStateatCalifornia, noon Utah atWashington, noon WashingtonStateatUSC,1 p.m. OregonStateat Stanford, 1 p.m. ArizonaatUCLA,I p.m. x=nonconference
16 26
TENNIS Professional Madrid Open Wednesday At Caja Magica Madrid, Spain Purse: Men,$5.6million, (WT1000);Women, $5.3 million (Premier) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men SecondRound TomasBerdych(6), CzechRepublic, def. Jerzy Janowicz,Poland,6-7(3), 6-3,6-2. Kei Nishikori (14),Japan,dei. Viktor Troicki, Serbia, 7-5,6-2.
TommyHaas(13), Germany, def.TommyRobredo, Spain,6-3, 7-5 RafaelNadal(5), Spain,def. Benoit Paire,France, 6-3, 6-4. KevinAnderson,SouthAfrica, def. JuanMonaco, Argentina,7-6(5), 3-6,6-4. Jo-WilfriedTsonga(7), France,del. RobinHaase, Netherlands,7-6(5), 7-6(2). DavidFerrer(4),Spain,def. DenisIstomin, Uzbekistan, 7-5,6-2. Mikhail Youzhny,Russia, dei. Nicolas Almagro
(11), Spain7-6 , (4), 4-6, 6-2. StanislasWawrinka(15), Switzerland, def.Santiago Giraldo,Colombia,6-3,6-3. Women SecondRound VarvaraLepchenko, United States, def. Julia Goerges,Germa ny, walkover. Kaia KanepiEstoni , a,def.CarlaSuarezNavarro, Spain,6-3, 6-1. EkaterinaMakarova,Russia, def.VictoriaAzarenka (3), Belarus,1-6, 6-2,6-3. Maria Kirilenko(13), Russia,def. KristinaMladenovic,France,6-7(5), 6-1,6-4. DanielaHantuchova,Slovakia, def. PetraKvitova (8), Czech Republic, 2-6,6-2, 6-3. Third Round Angelique Kerber (6), Germany,def. Svetlana Kuznetsova,Russia, 3-6,6-4, 7-5. Ana Ivanovic(16), Serbia,def. LauraRobson, Britain, 5-7,6-2,7-6(5).
SOCCER MLS
HOCKEY
Playoff Glance All Times POT (x-if necessary) (Best-of-7)
Chicago1, Miami1 Monday,May6: Chicago93, Miami86 Wednesd ay,May8:Miami115,Chicago78 Friday,May10:Miamiat Chicago,5p.m. Monday,May13: MiamiatChicago,4p.m. Wednesday,May15: ChicagoatMiami, TBA x-Friday,May17:MiamiatChicago,TBA x-Sunday,May19: ChicagoatMiami, TBA Indiana1, NewYork1 Sunday,May5: Indiana102, NewYork 95 Tuesday, May7.NewYork105, Indiana79 Saturday,May11:NewYork atIndiana, 5p.m. Tuesday,May14:NewYorkat Indiana,TBA Thursday,May16:IndianaatNewYork,5 p.m x-Saturday,May18:NewYorkat Indiana,TBA x-Monday,May20: Indianaat NewYork, 5p.m.
Sunday,May12:Washington at N.Y.Rangers,TBA x-Monday,May13 NYRangersat Washington, TBA Boston 3,Toronto1 Wednesday, May1: Boston4,Toronto1 Saturday,May4: Toronto4, Boston2 Monday, May6:Boston5,Toronto2 Wednesd ay,May8:Boston4,Toronto3 Friday,May10:Torontoat Boston,4 p.m. x-Sunday,May12: BostonatToronto, TBA x Monday, May13:TorontoatBoston, TBA WESTERN CONFERENCE Chicago3,Minnesota1 Tuesday, April 30.Chicago2, Minnesota1,OT Friday,May3 Chicago5, Minnesota2 Sunday,May5:Minnesota3,Chrcago2, OT Tuesday ,May7Chicago 3,Minnesota0 Today, May9:MinnesotaatChicago,6:30p.m. x-Saturday,May11 ChicagoatMinnesota, TBA x-Sund ay,May12:MinnesotaatChrcago,TBA Anaheim 3, Detroit 2 Tuesday, April 30:Anaheim3, Detroit1 Thursday,May2: Detroit 5, Anaheim4, OT Saturday,May4: Anaheim4,Detrort0 Monday,May6: Detroit 3,Anaheim2, OT Wednesday, May8: Anaheim3, Detroit 2, OT Friday,May10:AnaheimatDetroit, 5 p.m. x-Sunday,May12:Detroit at Anaheim,TBA San Jose 4,Vancouver 0 Wednesday, May1: SanJose3, Vancouver1 Friday,May3 SanJose3,Vancouver2,OT Sunday,May5:SanJose5, Vancouver2 Tuesday,May7: SanJose4,Vancouver3,OT Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 2 Tuesday, April 30:St. Louis2, LosAngeles1, OT Thursday,May2: St. Lours2, LosAngeles1 Saturday,May4: LosAngeles I, St.Louis0 Monday, May6:LosAngeles4,St.Louis3 Wednesd ay,May8:LosAngeles3,St.Louis2 Friday,May10:St. LouisatLosAngeles, 7p.m x-Monday,May13:LosAngelesat St.Louis, TBA
SAN ANTO NIO(91)
Leonard5-111-511, Duncan9-205-523, Bonner 1-3 0-02, Parker7-175-720, Da.Green4-12 0-010, Ginobili 5-121-212,Draw0-1 0-00, Joseph1-I 0-0 2, Neal2-91-1 6,Splitter1-23-45, Mills0-10-00, McGrady 0-00-00.Totals35-8916-24 91. GoldenState 28 3 4 2117 —100 SanAntonio 23 20 29 19 — 91
MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT
NHL
CONFERENCESEMIFINALS EASTERN CONFERENCE
who accumulated 10 as a team.
Diamond. First pitch is sched-
Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference
Madras Molaga
office says it will seek to try the
Smith tallied three hits to tie for the team lead for the Beavers,
Andy Peterson and Michael Conforto each had two hits in
CHICAGO (78) Butler 3-81-1 9, Boozer3-92-2 8, Noah3-7 6-
Summit 020 302 5 — 12 12 3 C rook County 0 0 2 000 1 — 3 7 7
the year while Portland dropped to17-29. The Beavers have won 18 straight over the Pilots dating
Heat115, Bulls78
MountainView 403 000 0 7 8 1 Bend 200 106 x — 9 9 2
issued when anattack unintentionally causes death. Salt Lake County District Attorney
Wednesday'sSummaries
BASEBALL
C rook County 100 002 0 — 3 4 4 Summit 021 231 x 9 11 1
SPORTS IN BRIEF
p.m.
x-Wednesday,May15: Memphis at OklahomaCity, TBA x-Friday,May17:OklahomaCityat Memphis, TBA x-Sunday,May19:Memphis atOklahomaCity, TBA
Wednesday's results Class BA Intermountain Hybrid
ESPN2
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by Nor radio stations.
TBA x-Sunday,May19 GoldenStateat SanAntonio, TBA OklahomaCity1, Memphis1 Sunday,May5: OklahomaCity 93, Memphis 91 Tuesday,May7.Memphis 99,OklahomaCity 93 Saturday,May11: OklahomaCity atMemphis, 2 p.m. Monday,May13: OklahomaCity at Memphis, 630
Eastern Conference
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE NHL Playoff Glance All Times PDT FIRST ROUND
(Best-of-7) (x-if necessary)
EASTERNCONFERENCE Pittsburgh 2, N.Y.Islanders 2 Wednesday, May1: Pittsburgh5, N.Y.Isanders0 Friday,May3: N.Y.Islanders 4, Pittsburgh3 Sunday,May5: Pittsburgh 5, N.Y.Islanders4,OT Tuesday,May7: N.Y.Islanders 6, Pittsburgh4 Today,May9: NYIslanders at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Saturday,May11: Pittsburghat N.Y.Islanders, TBA x-Sunday,May12:N.Y.Islandersat Pittsburgh,TBA Ottawa 3, Montreal 1 Thursday,May2 Ottawa4, Montreal 2 Friday,May3: Montreal 3, OttawaI Sunday,May5: Ottawa6, Montreal I Tuesday,May7:Ottawa3, Montreal 2,OT Today,May9: Dttawaat Montreal, 4p.m. x-Saturday,May11 MontreaatOttawa,TBA x-Sunday,May12:Ottawaat Montreal, TBA Washington 2, N.Y.Rangers 2 Thursday,May2.Washington 3, N.Y.Rangers1 Saturday,May4:Washington1, N.Y.Rangers0, OT Monday,May6 N.Y.Rangers4, Washington 3 Wednesday, May8:N.Y.Rangers4,Washington 3 Friday,May10:N.Y.RangersatWashington, 4.30p.m.
W L T Pts NewYork 6 4 2 20 Houston 6 2 2 20 S porting KansasCity 5 4 2 17 Montreal 5 2 2 17 Columbus 3 3 3 12 Philadelphia 3 3 3 12 NewEngland 2 4 3 9 TorontoFC I 5 4 7 Chicago 2 5 1 7 D.C. 1 7 1 4
Western Conference
GF GA 18 14 17 9
14 9 12 9 12 6 12 1 4 5 8 11 15 6 14 4 17
W L T Pts GF FC Dallas 6 1 3 21 16 R eal SaltLake 5 4 2 17 11 Portland 3 1 6 15 1 5 Los Angeles 4 2 2 14 1 2 San Jose 3 3 5 14 1 2 Colorado 3 4 3 12 8 ChivasUSA 3 4 2 11 1 2 Vancouver 2 4 3 9 9 Seattle 2 3 3 9 6 NOTE: Threepoints for victory, onepoint for tie.
GA 10 10 12 5 14 9 15 13 7
Wednesday'sGames Houston4, D.C.United0 NewYork2, Montreal1 RealSaltLake2, NewEngland1 Seattle FC1,SportingKansasCity 0 FC Dagas I, Portland1, tie
San Jose 2, Toronto FC1 Saturday's Games Philadelphia at Chicago,10:30 a.m.
RealSaltLakeat Montreal, 11a.m. San Jose at Seattle FC,1p.m. Los Angeleat s Vancouver, 4p.m. ColoradoatColumbus,4:30 p.m. NewYorkat NewEngland,4:30 p.m. DC UnitedatFCDallas 530pm Sunday's Games ChivasUSAatPortland, 2 p.m. SportingKansasCity at Houston, 5p.m.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
BOSTON REDSOX—Sent LHPFranklin Morales to Portland (EL)fora rehabassignment CHICAGO WHITESOX— Optioned IB Mike McDade to Charlotte (IL) OAKLANDATHLETIC S— PlacedOFJoshReddick on the15-dayDL,retroactive to May7. Selectedthe contractof1BDaric BartonfromSacramento (PCL). Released LHPJordanNorberto. TORONTOBLUEJAYS — PlacedLHPJ.A.Happ on the15-dayDL.Selectedthecontract of RHPEdgar GonzalezfromBufalo (IL).
NationalLeague
ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS— Placed 3B Chris Valai kaandRHPJ.J.Putzonthe15-dayDL.Recaged RHPWil HarrisfromReno (PCL). ATLANTA BRAVES — Sent RHPLuis Ayala to Gwinnett(IL)for arehabassignment LOS ANGELESDODGERS — Pl aced 3B Jerry HairstonJr. onthe15-dayDL,retroactive to May6. Recalled2BElianHerreraandCTimFederowiczfrom Albuquerque(PCL). OptionedINFJustin Sellersto Albuquerque. MIAMIMARLINS—Placed INFChris Valaikaon the 15-dayDL.Selectedthecontract of INFDerekDietrich fromJacksonville (SL). TransferredINFCasey Kotchman to the60-dayDL. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES Agreed to terms with LHP Bobby Bramhag on a minor leaguecontract. PITTSBIJRG HPIRATES— Optioned INFJoshHarrison toIndianapolis (IL). RecalledRHPDuke Welker from Indianapolis.PromotedRHPTimAldersonfrom Altoona(EL)to Indianapolis AssignedRHPQuinton Miller toAltoona. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MINNES OTA TIMBERWOLVES— Fired international scouting coordinatorPetePhilo andscouts Curtis Crawford andWil Conroy. FOOTBALL CLEVEL AND BROWNS— Named Kevin Grifiin vice president-fanexperienceandmarketing. Signed OL Rashad Butler to aone-year contract. SEATTLESEAHAWKS — ReleasedTE Darren Fells. TAMPABAY BUCCANEERS—Announced the retirementof CBRonde Barber. TENNES SEE TITANS — Signed RBJalen Parmele. MOTORSPORTS NASCAR — Reduced driver points deductedto Matt Kenseth from50to 12;thesuspension of crew chief JasonRatcliff irom six racesto one; eliminated the six-racesuspensionfor ownerJoeGibbs; andreinstatedKenseth'sbonuspoints earnedior his April 21 victory atthe STP400. COLLEGE NCAA Named UtahStatevice president and director of athleticsScott Barneschair of the Division I Men'sBasketbal committee. PlacedWingate on one-yearprobation andgave formerwomen's basketball coachBarbaraNelsona two-year showcausepenalty for providing playerswith moneyand prescriptiondrugs. AUGUSTA STATE— Reassigned baseball coach Chris Cooper strengthandconditioning coachfor the athleticsprogram. BERRY — Named Ossie BuchannonandKenneth
Bakerassistantfootbagcoaches. DAVIDSON —Announcedit is leavingthe Southern Conferenceto join the Atlantic 10Conference, effectrveJuly1, 2014. EASTERN MICHIGAN— Announced softball coachKarenBaird wil notreturn. MICHIGAN — Named Nolan Jones director of football operations.PromotedBobLopezto associate athletic directorfor tootball. MOUNT UNION— Announcedthe resignation of tootball coachLarryKehres,who will remain as athletic director. Named Vince Kehresfootball coach. OREGO N—Announcedmen's basketball F Mike Moserwill transferfromUNLV. THIEL—NamedJosh Lott andToddGilchrist assistant footbalcoaches. l TOLEDO —Named Jason Kempmen's assistant basketballcoach. WENTW ORTH TECH —Announced the resignation ofmen'stennis coachEddie Davis.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook, lack chinook, steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdams last updatedonTuesday.
Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd -1 -2 Bonnevil e 2,901 2,633 The DaUes 3,471 2,167 13 4 John Day 1,944 672 6 I McNary 2,039 444 2 0 Upstreamyear-to-date movem ent of adult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelhead at selectedColumbia River damslast updatedon Tuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd B onneville 56,043 13,919 2,771 The DaUes 38,373 8,293 684 John Day 28,574 5,358 796 M cNary 17,432 1,679 1,347
827 32 4 44 1 672
repair a bone spur in his right shoulder. The two-time Cy
Young Award winner madethe announcement before the Phil-
CYCLING Degenkold WinS Giro
NHL PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP
lies played theSanFrancisco Giants onW ednesday.Onthe
fifth Stage —John Degen-
15-day disabled list because of inflammation in his throwing
kolb sprinted to victory on the fifth stage of the Giro d'Italia
shoulder, Halladay metwith Dr. LewisYocum in LosAngeleson
following a crash near the
Tuesday. The 35-year-old righthander is 2-4 with an 8.65 ERA in seven starts this season after
pink jersey on Wednesday.
The Associated Press
Degenkolb, who rides for Argos-Shimano, won in 4'/z hours
finished several bike lengths ahead of Angel Vicioso. Paul
ST. LOUIS — The Los Angeies Kings had every reason to be deflated. Instead, they're going home with a chance to wrap Up their first-round series against the St. Louis Blues because they refused to ie t t h e l e tdown
Maertens was third.
linger.
missing nearly two months last year because of astrained back muscle.
along the mainly flat124-mile leg from Cosenza to Matera in Italy. It is a first stage victory
in the Giro for the German, who
SOCCER Timders get another tieKenny Cooper scored on apen-
alty kick in the 77th minute to lift FC Dallas into a1-1 tie with the Portland Timbers on Wednesday night in Frisco, Texas. The draw
GOLF Singh Suing PGA — Vi)ay
extended the unbeaten streaks
Singh is suing the PGA Tour over
for the two hottest clubs in MLS
the way it handled the investigation of his use of deerantler
to eight gamesapiece. Diego Chara scored andDonovan Ricketts made four saves for the Timbers, who are now 3-0-5 in their last eight matches. It was Portland's first point earned in Dallas, having lost on its previ-
ous three visits bya combined 10-1 margin.
spray. Singh filed the lawsuit in New York onWednesday, one week after the tour said it was
dropping its caseagainst him. It said the World Anti-Doping
Agency said two weeksago it no longer considers the spray a banned substance except for a positive test. The lawsuit says
Teen Charged Withhomi-
cide by assault charge fOr teen in ref death — A Utah teen accused of punching a soccer referee who later died has been charged with
homicide by assault, a count
in s ea
finish, as Italian Luca Paolini retained the overall leader's
the tour had planned to suspend Singh for 90 days. Singh says he wants to reclaim his reputation
and hold the tour responsible for its "unwarranted effort" to
suspend him. — Fromwirereports
Defenseman Siava Voynov scored on an odd-man rush eight minutes into overtime and the defending Stanley Cup champions,after surrendering the lead in the final minute of regulation, beat the Blues for the third straight time with a 3-2 victory Wednesday night. "We are a resilient group," said Jeff Carter, who had the Kings' other two goals. "A lot of guys have been through a lot of d i fferent experiences over their careers and I think we aii kind of draw off that. "We don't get too high, we don't get too low, and that's a
big thing for us." Game 6 is in Los Angeles on Friday night and the Kings h ave won nine in a ro w at home, including the regular season.
u esinove ime
B lues roo k i e Jade n Schwartz took Voynov's winner hard, smashing his stick several times against the sideboards and glass before ieaving the ice. "We l ost a n i mp o r tant hockey game. Frustration is definitely part of it," Schwartz said. "We live to fight another
day."
Coach Ken Hitchcock didn't sound at all defeated, calling Game 5 the team's best overall effort of the series and calling overtime "a crapshoot." "If we play like that again, I like our chances," Hitchcock said. "All we've got to do is win a road game and get it back here." Alex Pietrangelo scored on a wrist shot from the point with 44.1 seconds remaining in regulation and goalie Brian Eiiiott off for an extra attacker. That forced overtime for the second time in the series, and was the third goal in the final minute of the third period in the series. "i saw him release it," Quick said. "Usually when you see it come off the stick you have
a better chance of stopping it, but i just couldn't seem to pick it up, so it was disappointing at the time. "But we were able to bounce back and get one there in overtime, which was huge." The Kings' Justin Williams scored in the final minute of a 2-1 overtime loss in Game 1, also in St. Louis. The Blues had a2-0 series lead after Barret Jackman scored in the final minute of Game 2. Aii five games have been
decided by one goal, the only first-round series with t h at distinction. The Kings ended the Blues' eight-game home win streak in which Elliott allowed one goal each time. Also on Wednesday: Rangers 4, Capitals 3: NEW YORK — Dan Girardi and Derek Stepan scored thirdperiod goals for the New York Rangers, who squandered a two-goal lead and then held on to get even in the best-ofseven playoff series with a victory over Washington. Girardi ripped a shot from above the leftcircle,off a feed from
Derick Brassard, to give the Rangers the lead again with a power-play goal 59 seconds into the third. The advantage was created by Jason Chimera's interference penalty at the end of the second. Bruins 4, Maple Leafs 3: T ORONTO — D a vi d K r e jci scored his third goal of the night at 13:06 of overtime, giving Boston a win over Toronto and a 3-1 lead in their playoff series. Krejci beat James Reimer with a shot from the faceoff circle after coming down the left wing. Ducks 3, Red Wings 2: ANAHEIM, Calif. — Nick Bonino scored 1:54 into overtime, and Anaheim moved to the brink of the second round with a victory over Detroit in Game 5. Defenseman Ben Lovejoytook the puck behind the Detroit net and fed it in front. Bonino scored for the D ucks, who took a 3-2series lead. Game 6 is Friday night at Joe Louis Arena, where the Ducks will attempt to close out just their second playoff series victory since winning the Stanley Cup in 2007.
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C3
NBA PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
~
i~
t%
t
r
Standings All Times PDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Baltimore 21 13 Boston 21 13 NewYork 19 13 TampaBay 15 18 Toronto 13 22 Central Division W L 19 12 Detroit Kansas City 17 13 Cleveland 17 14 Minnesota 15 15
Chicago
14 18
West Division W L
Texas Oakland Seattle Los Angeles Houston
21 13
18 17 16 19 11 22 10 24
Pct GB .618 .618 .594 I 455 5 1/2 .371 8'/t
Pct GB .613 567 0/t
548 2
500 31/2 438 5'/t
Pct GB .618 .514 3'/z
457 51/2
333 g
i/2
.294 11
Wednesday'sGames
Seattle 2,PittsburghI Washington 3, Detroit1 Baltimore 5, KansasCity 3 Cleve land4,Oakland 3 Chicago WhiteSox6, N.Y. Mets 3 Minnesota15,Boston8 Tampa Bay10 Toronto4 Houston3,L.A.Angels1 Texas 4, Milwaukee1 N.Y.Yankees3, Colorado2
12:10 p.m
Detroit(Fister4-0) atWashington (Haren3-3), I:05 p.m. Kansas City (Guthrie4-0) at Baltimore(FGarcia 0-0), 4:05 p.m. Minnesota(Correia3-2) at Boston(Lackey1-2), 4.10
p.m.
Toronto(Dickey2-5) at Tampa Bay(Price 1-3), 4.10 p.m. L.A. Angels(Vargas1-3) at Houston(Harrell 3-3), 5:10 p.m. Friday's Games Cleveland atDetroit, 4:08p.m. SanDiegoatTampaBay,4:10 p.m. TorontoatBoston,4:10 p.m. Baltimoreat Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. LA. Ange sat ChicagoWhite Sox, 5.10 p.m. N.Y.Yankeesat KansasCity, 5:10p.m. Texasat Houston, 5:10p.m. OaklandatSeatle, 7:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE
Atlanta Washington Philadelphia NewYork Miami St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee Chicago
W L 20 13 18 15 16 19 13 17 10 25 Central Division W L 21 12
18 15 19 16 15 17 13 21 West Division W L SanFrancisco 20 14 Colorado 19 14 Arizona 19 15 San Diego 16 18 Los Angeles 13 20
Pct GB .606 .545 2 .457 5 .433 5'/t
.286 11
Pct GB .636 .545 3 .543 3 .469 5~/t 382 8'/z
Pct GB 588 .576 '/t .559 1 .471 4 .394 6'/t
IP H R E R BB SO Griffin L,3-3 62-3 6 4 3 2 4 Doolittle 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Cook 1 0 0 0 0 2 Cleveland MastersonW,5-2 7 4 3 3 2 7 J.smithH,3 1 1 0 0 0 2 C.PerezS,5-6 1 1 0 0 1 1
12:10 p.m.
Detroit (Fister4-0) atWashington (Haren3-3), 1:05 p.m. Pittsburgh(Locke3-1) at N.Y.Mets(Gee2-4), 4:10
p.m. Philadelphia(Ham els 1-4) at Arizona(Corbin 4-0),
6:40 p.m. Atlanta(Teheran1-0) at SanFrancisco (Vogelsong 1-2), 7:15p.m. Friday's Games Chicago CubsatWashington, 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee atCincinnati,4:10 p m. PittsburghatN.Y.Mets, 4:10p.m.
SanDiegoatTampaBay,4:10 p.m. Colorado at St.Louis, 5:15p.m. Philadelphiaat Arizona,6:40p.m. Miami atLA. Dodgers,7:10p.m. Atlanta at SanFrancisco, 7:15 p.m.
American League
Astros 3, Angels1 HOUSTON — Bud Norris pitched
into the ninth inning andChris Carter homered for the second straight game to help Houston to a win over the Los Angeles Angels. The victory gives Houston its third series win of the season. The
Angels dropped to 4-13awayfrom Anaheim. Los Angeles Houston ab r hbi ab r hbi Aybarss 4 0 1 0 Grssmncf-If 4 0 0 0 T routcl 4 0 2 0 Paredsrf 4 0 2 I Pulols dh 4 0 2 0 Altuve 2b 4 0 1 0 LJimnz pr 0 0 0 0 Jcastro c 3 0 1 0 Trumo1b 4 0 1 0 JMrtnzdh 3 0 0 0 Hamltnrf 3 1 1 1 Croweph-dh 1 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 4 0 1 0 C.Pena1b 4 0 0 0 C allasp 3b 3 0 1 0 Carter If 3 1 1 1 lannettc 2 0 0 0 BBarnscf 0 0 0 0 Cousinsph I 0 0 0 Dmngz3b 3 1 2 0 Congerc 0 0 0 0 MGnzlzss 3 1 2 1
seven-run second inning that carried the Twins to a rout over Boston. David Ortiz went zero for 5 with two strikeouts and three hitting streak, dating backto last Minnesota Boston ab r hbi
ab r hbi C arroll2b 5 2 1 0 Ellsurycf 4 0 0 0 M auerc 5 3 3 0 Victornrf 4 2 2 1 W lnghlf 4 1 0 0 Navarf 0 0 0 1 WRmrz pr-If 0 0 0 0 Pedroia 2b 5 2 3 0 Mornea1b 4 1 2 3 D.Ortizdh 5 0 0 0 Plouffe3b 5 2 3 3 Napoli1b 3 1 2 0 Doumitdh 5 3 3 2 Carppr-1b 1 0 0 0 A rciarf 5 1 4 1 JGomslf 4 1 1 5 H ickscf 4 1 1 2 Sltlmchc 4 1 2 0 F lormnss 5 I 2 3 Drewss 4 I 2 I Ciriaco3b 2 0 0 0 Totals 4 2 151914 Totals 3 6 8 128 Minnesota 470 1 2 0 0 01 — 15 Boston 5 10 000 110 — 8 E Ciriaco (5). DP Boston2. LOB Minnesota 9, Boston7. 2B—Mauer 2 (11), Morneau(7), Poufe
CLEVELAND — An apparent
game-tyin ghomer by Oakland's Adam Rosale swasruledadouble by umpires in the ninth inning, and Cleveland held on to beat the Athletics. Rosales sent a drive
off Indians closer Chris Perez that looked as if it cleared the left
field wall. However, second base umpire Angel Hernandez called it
a double, and the crewconcurred after leaving the field to review the
videotape. Oakland
Cleveland
ab r bbi ab r hbi J asoc 4 0 0 0 Brantlylf 4 0 2 I
impressive trip with a victory over the Chicago Cubs. Beltran also
had three hits as St. Louis won for
was okay.
the seventh time in eight games
"She was definitely
and improved to amajor league-
relieved," Happsaid. Wednesday afternoon,
best14-7 on the road. Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi Mcrpnt2b-3b3 2 2 0 DeJesscf 4 0 1 0 Beltranrf 5 0 3 2 Scastross 4 0 0 0 H ollidylt 4 0 I 0 Valuen2b 2 2 I 0 C raig1b 2 1 0 0 Rizzo1b 4 1 3 0 Y Molinc 4 1 2 0 Schrhltrf 4 1 2 2 Jaycf 3 0 1 2 Sweenylf 4 0 1 0 F reese3b 3 0 1 0 DNavrrc 4 0 0 1 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Ransm3b 4 0 2 0 MAdmsph 1 0 0 0 Villanvp 1 0 1 0 Rosnt hlp 0 0 0 0 Russellp 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 Borbonph 1 0 0 0 Mulicap 0 0 0 0 Bowdenp 0 0 0 0 K ozmass 3 1 1 0 Greggp 0 0 0 0 Westrkp 2 0 0 0 Descals2b 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 5 114 Totals 3 24 113 St. Louis 1 00 110 110 — 5 Chicago 1 00 300 000 — 4 E Beltran (1), Schierholtz (1). DP St. Louis 4, Chicago4. LOB —St. Louis 6, Chicago4. 2BSt. Louis
he felt extremely lucky and
blessed to not haveany serious issues. He has afew stitches on his lacerated left ear, and a minor skull fracture just
above it, but CTscans on his brain, neckand spine
were negative. His biggest worry is a right knee injury he suffered falling to the
mound.
— TampaBayTimes (5), Arcia(4), Florimon(3), Pedroia(7), Saltalamacchia (8). HR —Doumit (2), Florimon(1), Victorino (2), J.Gomes(2). SF Morneau 2, Plouffe, Nava, J.Gomes. completed athreeMinnesota IP H R E R BB SO The D-backs PHernandez W2-0 2 7 6 6 1 2 Pressly 4 2 0 0 2 3 Fien 1 2 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 Duensing Perkins 1 0 0 0 0 2 Boston WebsterL,0-1 12 - 3 6 8 8 3 2 51-3 11 6 6 2 4 Doubront A.Miller I 0 0 0 0 3 Tazawa 1 2 1 1 0 1 HBP by Tazawa (Wilingham). PB Saltalamacchia. T—3:42. A—29,969(37,499).
Rays10, Blue Jays4
Toronto
game sweep of the Dodgers, who have dropped a season-high seven straight games. Arizona
TampaBay
Los Angeles
ab r hbi ab r hbi Pollock cf 4 0 1 0 DGordn ss 4 1 2 0 Gregrsss 3 1 0 0 Punto2b 4 1 1 1 G ldsch1b 4 2 2 3 Kempcf 4 0 1 0 C.Rosslf 4 0 2 0 AdGnzl1b 2 0 1 1 P rado3b 4 0 0 0 L.cruz3b I 0 0 0 Nievesc 4 0 0 0 Schmkrph 1 0 1 0 G Parra rf 4 0 1 0 A.Ellis c 4 0 0 0 J oWilsn2b 3 0 0 0 Ethierrf 4 0 1 0 Mileyp 2 0 0 0 uribe3b-1b 3 0 0 0 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 Crwfrd ph 1 0 0 0 B ellp 0 0 0 0 EHerrrlf 3 0 1 0 Kershwp 2 0 0 0 Fdrwcz ph 1 0 0 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 Belisari p 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 2 3 6 3 Totals 3 42 8 2 Arizona 0 00 002 010 — 3 L os Angeles 0 0 0 2 0 0 000 — 2
ab r hbi ab r hbi Lawrie 3b 5 0 0 0 Jnnngs cf 4 2 1 0 Mecarrdh 4 2 2 0 KJhnsnlf 4 3 3 2 B autistrf 4 0 0 0 Zobrist2b 2 3 I I Encrnc 1b 2 1 1 3 Longori3b 4 1 3 3 Arenciic 5 1 2 0 Loney1b 5 1 2 2 RDavislf 4 0 2 0 YEscorss 5 0 1 0 Giants 4, Phiiiies 3 (10 innings) D eRosa 2b 3 0 I 1 Scottdh 3 0 I 2 Mlzturs ss 3 0 0 0 Loaton c 4 0 1 0 B onifaccf 4 0 1 0 Fuldrf 4000 SAN FRANCISCO — Andres Totals 3 4 4 9 4 Totals 3 5101310 Torres lined agame-ending single Toronto 2 00 000 200 — 4 Tampa Bay 3 1 0 2 0 4 Ogx— 10 to right field with two outs in the DP — Toronto 1. LOB —Toronto 11,Tampa Bay9. 10th inning, lifting San Francisco
2B — Me.cabrera (4), K.Johnson(2), Longoria(7), Loney(11). HR—Encarnacion (10), K.Johnson(5), to a victory against Philadelphia to Longoria(8). — S M.lzturis. SF—Encamacion Scott. avoid a sweep.Javier Lopez(1-Oj Toronto IP H R E R BB SO RomeroL,0-2 1 - 3 4 3 3 2 0 pitched the 10th for the win after 42-3 6 5 5 2 1 Sergio Romo blew his second E.Gonzalez I 2-3 2 2 2 I I E.Rogers 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 save in14 opportunities, failing to Cecil finish off Barry Zito's gem. TampaBay M.MooreW,6-0 5 6 2 2 4 12-3 2 2 2 1 J.Wright 2 1-3 10 0 0 C.Ramos E.Gonzalezpitchedto 2baters inthe6th.
2 1 2
HBP —byE.Gonzalez(Scott), byE.Rogers(Zobrist), by J.Wright(Bautista).WP —M.Moore. PB—Lobaton. T—3;23. A—11,075(34,078).
Orioies 5, Royais 3 BALTIMORE — J.J. Hardy
homered, Chris Tillman wonhis third straight start and Baltimore took advantage of three errors
by Kansas City.MannyMachado scored a run and hit an RBI single
for the Orioles, whoseseason-high fourth consecutive win moved them eight games over.500 (2113) for the first time this year.
Philadelphia San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi Rollinsss 4 1 2 0 GBlanccf 4 1 2 0 Frndsn1b 4 1 1 1 Scutaro2b 5 0 3 1 MYong3b 3 1 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 I 0 u tley2b 4 0 1 1 Pencerf 4 1 1 1 D Yongrf 3 0 0 1 Belt1b 2100 Ruizc 4 0 1 0 Poseyph 1 1 1 0 M ayrrylf 2 0 0 0 FPegurlf 4 0 0 0 H oward ph 1 0 0 0 Affeldtp 0 000 D urbinp 0 0 0 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 MAdmsp 0 0 0 0 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 G alvisph 1 0 0 0 Ariasph 0 0 0 0 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 4 0 1 0 R everecf 4 0 2 0 Quirozc 4 0 0 0 Pettionp 2 0 0 0 Zitop 3011 H orstp 0 0 0 0 Scasilp 0 0 0 0 A umontp 0 0 0 0 Torreslf 2 0 I I DBrwn ph-If 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 3 7 3 Totals 3 74 114 P hiladelphia 000 100 002 0 — 3 San Francisco 010 011 000 1 — 4 Twooutswhenwinning runscored. DP — Philadelphia 1. LOB—Philadelphia 3, San Francisco12.28—Rollins 2(11), Revere(1), Scutaro
(8). HR —Frandsen(1), Pence(7). SB—G.Blanco (3), Pence(6). CS Rollins (2),Revere(3), G.Blanco (1) S—Arias. SF—D.Young. Philadelphia Pettibone Horst Aumont Durbin MuAdams BastardoL,1-1
San Francisco
IP H R 52-3 7 3 3 1-3 0 0 1 0 0 I 0 0 1 2 0 2-3 2 1
Zito 7 4 S.casilla H,6 2-3 0 Affeldt H,5 1-3 0 0 RomoBS,2-14 1 2 J.Lopez W,1-0 I I (1). HR —A.Gordon (5), Moustakas(2), Hardy(6). Zito pitched to 1baterin the8th. SB—McLouth(11),Machado(4). WP—Bastardo. KansasCity IP H R ER BB SO T—3:21.A—41,048(41,915). MendozaL,0-2 6 5 5 3 3 2 Bchen 2 0 0 0 0 0
Baltimore
TillmanW,3-1 6 PattonH,2 O'DayH,5 MatuszH,6 Ji.Johnson S,13-13
ER BB SO 4 I 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 1
1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 0 0 0
3 I 0 0 1
Padres1, Marlins 0
5 3 3 3 1 0 0 0 0 2-3 1 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0
HBP —byO'Day(L.cain). WP —Mendoza, Tilman. T—2:17. A—12,344(45,971).
National League
Diamondbacks 3, Dodgers2 LOS ANGELES — Paul Goldschmidt homered twice, including a tie-breaking shot for the second straight game, lifting
Arizona to a victory over the slumpingLosAngelesDodgers.
2 1 2 0 1
SAN DIEGO— Jason Marquis outpitched Ricky Nolasco, Yonder Alonso had a sacrifice fly in the sixth inning and San Diego beat Miami to complete a three-game
sweep. Marquis (4-2) allowed five hits, walked one and struck out three in eight innings, his longest stint since last Aug. 11th when he had a 5-0 shutout at Pittsburgh. San Diego ab r hbi ab r hbi Pierre If 3 0 I 0 Evcarrss 4 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 0 0 Venalerf 4 1 2 0 Polanc3b 4 0 0 0 Headly3b 4 0 2 0 Miami
and walked none, yielded10 hits
'a
— including two in the second, three in the third and three in the sixth. Texas
Murphy(5), Ar.Ramirez (4), C.Gomez(9). 38—Braun (1), C.Gomez(3). HR Kinsler (7), Moreland (6). SB — Andrus(7). Texas IP H R E R BB SO DHollandW,3-2 7 ScheppersH,7 I NathanS,9-9 1
Milwaukee
LohseL,1-4 Badenhop Mic Gonzale z 1
10 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
61-3 9 4 1-3 0 0 3 1 0 2 2 0
Figaro WP — Nathan. T—2:55.A—22,616(41,900).
4 0 0 0
2 0 1 0
6 I 0
6 1 1 I
Nationals 3, Tigers1 WASHINGTON — Bryce Harper hit a solo homer and drove in another run with a sacrifice
fly, Jordan Zimmermannwon his NL-leading sixth game and Washington beat Detroit.
Washington ab r hbi ab r hbi A Jcksncf 5 0 1 0 Spancf 4 1 2 0 TrHntrrf 4 1 I 0 Dsmndss 4 0 0 0 Micarr3b 4 0 1 1 Harperrf 3 1 1 2 M.carpenter(12), Rizzo(10), Schierholtz (12). CSFielder1b 3 0 1 0 Zmrmn3b 4 0 0 0 Kozma(1),Rizzo(2).S—Viganueva. SF—Jay. D irkslf 3 0 I 0 LaRochlb 3 I 2 0 St. Louis IP H R E R BB SO JhPerltss 3 0 2 0 TMoorelf 3 0 0 0 Westbrook 5 1-3 9 4 3 1 1 A vilac 3 0 0 0 Berndnlf 0 0 0 0 Maness W,2-0 I 2-3 I 0 0 0 0 Infante2b 4 0 0 0 Esprnos2b 3 0 2 0 RosenthalH,9 13- 0 0 0 1 1 AnSnchp 2 0 0 0 KSuzukc 3 0 1 0 ChoateH,4 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 D.Kellyph 1 0 0 0 Zmrmnp 2 0 0 0 MuiicaS,9-9 1 0 0 0 0 1 Ortegap 0 0 0 0 Lmrdzzph I 0 0 0 Chicago Benoitp 0 0 0 0 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 Villanueva 6 2-3 7 3 3 3 2 V Mrtnzph 1 0 0 0 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 RussellBS,2-2 1 - 3 2 1 1 0 1 T otals 3 3 1 7 1 Totals 3 03 8 2 BowdenL,1-2 1 2 1 1 0 0 Detroit 0 01 000 000 — 1 Gregg 1 0 0 0 1 2 Washington 001 110 Ogx — 3 HBP—byVillanueva(Craig). WP—Bowden. E—Tor.Hunter (1), LaRoche(2). DP—Washington T—2.53. A—26,354(41,019). 2. LOB —Detroit 9, Washington 4. 28—Tor.Hunter Detroit
Darren Abate/The Associated Press
Golden State Warriors' Klay Thompson dunks against the San Antonio Spurs during the second half of Game 2 in their Western Conference semifinal Wednesday night in San Antonio.
Golden State gets rare win in San Antonio
M Sndrscf 1 1 0 0 SMartelf 4 1 2 0 B aylf 3 0 0 0 Snrderrf 4 0 0 0 S eager3b 4 0 0 0 Mcctchcf 4 0 I 1 KMorls1b 4 0 0 0 GJones1b 3 0 1 0 A ckley2b 4 0 0 0 McKnrc 4 0 1 0 JMontrc 4 1 1 1 PAlvrz3b 3 0 0 0 Enchvzrf 4 0 2 0 Mercer2b 3 0 I 0 Andinoss 3 0 0 0 Barmesss 3 0 1 0 F Hrndzp 3 0 0 0 AJBrntp 2 0 0 0 Wlhlmsp 0 0 0 0Mazzarp 0 0 0 0 Tabataph 1 0 0 0 M orrisp 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 0 2 3 1 Totals 3 11 7 1 Seattle 0 00 100 100 — 2 P ittsburgh 100 0 0 0 0 00 — 1 E—Mercer (1). DP—Seattle 2. LOB —Seattle 6,
Field with a win over Colorado.
The Associated Press S AN A N T O N I O Golden Statecoach Mark Jackson insisted the Warriors' historic collapse in the opener of the Western Conference sem i f i nals would only help his team's growth. The young Warriors took a big step in their development Wednesday n ight, withstanding another furious rally by the San Antonio Spurs for a 100-91 victory to even their series at one game apiece and snap a 30-game skid in the Alamo City. Klay Thompson had a career-high 34 points and 14 rebounds, and Stephen Curry added 22 points for Golden State, which had not won in San A ntonio since Feb. 14, 1997. None of the losses was as painful as the one Monday. "I truly believe the trials and t r ibulations are transportation for w h ere you're going," Jackson said. "Game 1 made us better. We didn'tpanic. We made plays. That's a heck of a basketball team that's extremely well-coached and has no quit in them. We don't have any quit in us, either. The bottom line is we made the plays we needed to make." Tim Duncan scored 23 points and Tony Parker added 20 for San A n tonio, which had won five straight i n t h e p o stseason. Manu Ginobili had 12 points and Kawhi Leonard had ll p oints and 12 rebounds. The Warriors blew a 16point lead with 4 minutes l eft in r egulation in t h e series opener and lost 129127 >n double overtime. No NBA team had blown such a big lead with such little time left in a playoff game. It appeared Golden State was headed for a similar collapse Wednesday night, but the heartbreaking loss actually helped settle the players' nerves. "Coach told us to have amnesia at halftime," Curry said. aWe're a young team so that might help that we can forget about it and just
New york
keep playing and having
allowed one runover seven shaky
Nicasio
Braves 7, Reds2 CINCINNATI — Dan Uggla hit
a pair of solo homers andJuan Francisco addedhis first career grand slam as Atlanta recovered
from a stunning last-swing loss
by beating Cincinnati. Atlanta took two of three, the first series the Reds lost at home this season. Atlanta
Cincinnati
E—unbe (1), Kershaw (1), D.Gordon (1). ab r hbi ab r hbi DP—LosAngeles2. LOB —Arizona 4, LosAnge- J Schafrcf 5 1 3 0 Choocf 4 0 0 0 les 5. 28—Pollock(12), G.Parra(11), Punto(4), Smmnsss 5 0 4 0 Cozartss 4 1 2 I Ad.Gonzale(8), z Schumaker (2). HR Goldschmid2 t F Frmn1b 4 1 1 1 Votto1b 4 0 0 0 (9). CS —D.Gordon (I). S—Miley. Gattislf 3 0 0 0 Phillips2b 4 0 1 0 Arizona IP H R E R BB SO J .uptonlf 1 1 0 0 Brucerf 3 1 1 1 Miley W,3-1 72-3 7 2 2 0 4 uggla2b 4 3 2 2 Frazier3b 3 0 I 0 ZieglerH,5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 JFrncs3b 4 1 1 4 Lutzlf 40 10 BellS,34 1 1 0 0 0 1 RJhnsnrf 3 0 0 0 Mesorcc 3 0 0 0 G .Lairdc 3 0 0 0 Leakep 3 0 10 Los Angeles Kershaw 7 5 2 1 1 4 Minorp 3 0 0 0 Marshllp 0 0 0 0 JansenL,1-1 1 1 1 1 0 2 CJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 Belisario I 0 0 0 0 0 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 Simonp 0 0 0 0 T—2:35.A—31,512(56,000). Hannhn ph 1 0 0 0
allowing two runs, six hits and four walks in five innings. The left-hander threw104 pitches, including 56 strikes, during his seventh start of the year.
Kansas City Baltimore ab r hbi ab r hbi A Gordnlf 4 I I I M cLothlf 4 I 0 0 AEscorss 4 0 0 0 Machd3b 4 1 1 1 Butlerdh 3 0 0 0 Markksdh 3 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 1 0 A.Jonescf 4 0 1 0 Lcainrf 2 1 0 0 C.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 BB SO Mostks3b 4 1 3 2 Wietersc 4 1 1 0 0 6 EJhnsn2b 4 0 2 0 Hardyss 2 1 1 2 1 1 Kottarsc 3 0 0 0 Flahrty2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 Dysoncf 4 0 0 0 Dickrsnrf 3 1 1 0 T otals 3 2 3 7 3 Totals 3 05 5 3 1 2 K ansas City 0 0 0 0 1 2 000 — 3 0 1 Baltimore 020 0 3 0 Ogx — 5 E Kottaras(1), A.Escobar2 (5). DP Baltimore 1. LOB —KansasCrty 6, Baltimore4. 2B—Dickerson
Indians 4, Athletics 3
apiece, and St. Louis cappedan
coherent and wanted to let his mother, Sue, know he
and rejoined his teammates at Tropicana Field, saying
season.
3 23 9 3
Los Angeles IP H R ER BlantonL,0-6 62- 3 8 3 3 2-3 1 0 0 Kohn DDe LaRosa 2 - 3 0 0 0 Houston B.NorrisW,4-3 8 9 1 1 VerasS,46 1 0 0 0 B.Norris pitched to2 baters inthe9th. HBP—byVeras(Hamilton). WP—Blanton. T 2:30. A 12,906(42,060)
Center on Tuesdaynight, when a phonewas placed over his ear. The scary sight of Happ,
Happ walked out of the hospital, albeit on crutches,
groundouts tosnaphis27-game
L os Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 0 100 — 1 Houston 002 010 Ogx — 3 DP — LosAngeles1, Houston4. LOB—LosAngeles 5,Houston6. 28—Trout (11), Puiols(6), Paredes 2 (3), Dominguez (8), Ma.Gonzalez(6). HR—Hamil-
ton (3),Carter(8). CS—Trumbo(2).
way to Bayfront Medical
ear, was conscious and
Holland (3-2), who struck out six
Milwaukee ab r hbi ab r hbi K insler2b 5 2 3 1 Aokirf 4020 Andrusss 5 1 3 0 Segurass 4 0 0 0 Beltre3b 4 0 2 I Braunll 4I 20 CS — Pierre (2). SF—Alonso. N.cruzrf 5 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 3 1 Miami IP H R E R BB SO M orlnd1b 4 1 2 2 Lucroyc 4 0 1 0 NolascoL,2-4 7 4 I I I 9 Sotoc 3 0 0 0 CGomzcf 4 0 4 0 M.Dunn 1 0 0 0 0 1 DvMrpll 4 0 1 0 Weeks2b 3 0 0 0 San Diego LMartncf 3 0 1 0 McGnzlp 0 0 0 0 MarquisW,4-2 8 5 0 0 1 3 G entryph-cl I 0 0 0 Figarop 0 0 0 0 StreetS,B-B 1 0 0 0 0 2 DHllndp 3 0 0 0 LSchfrph 1 0 0 0 HBP —byNolasco(Quentin). Brkmnph 1 0 0 0 YBtncr1b-2b 4 0 0 0 T—2.21. A—16,730(42,524). S chprsp 0 0 0 0 Lohsep 2 0 0 0 Nathanp 0 0 0 0 Badnhpp 0 0 0 0 AIGnzlz1b 2 0 0 0 Cardinals 5 Cubs 4 Totals 3 8 4 124 Totals 3 6 1 121 Texas 1 11 000 100 — 4 CHICAGO — Carlos Beltran M ilwaukee 000 0 0 1 0 0 0 — 1 E Segura (2). DP —Texas 1, Miwaukee 1. and Jon Jay drove in two runs LOB —Texas 10, Milwaukee8. 28—Kinsler (9), Dav.
was strapped to astretcher inanambulance,onhis
BOSTON — Pedro Florimon had a
T 2:26. A 11,125(42,241).
Longoria drove in three runs, and TampaBaybeatToronto.Moore (6-0) overcamecontrol issues,
Today's Games N.Y.Yankees(Sabathia 4-3)at Colorado(Francis1-2),
ST. PETERSBURG — Blue Jays left-hander J.A. Happ
Twins15, RedSox8
HBP —by C.Perez(Sogard), byMasterson (Rosales). WP — Griffin, Masterson.
Ozunarf 4 0 0 0 Quentinlf 1 0 0 0 R uggincf 3 0 1 0 Denorfilf 0 0 0 0 Dobbs1b 3 0 1 0 Alonso1b 2 0 0 1 Dietrch2b 3 0 1 0 Gyorko2b 3 0 0 0 O livoc 3 0 1 0 Hundlyc 3 0 0 0 Nolas cop 2 0 0 0 Amarstcf 3 0 0 0 Coghlnph 1 0 0 0 Marqusp 3 0 0 0 M Dunnp 0 0 0 0 Streetp 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 0 0 5 0 Totals 2 71 4 1 Miami 0 00 000 000 — 0 San Diego 000 0 0 1 Ogx — 1 DP — San Diego 1. LOB —Mramr 4, SanDrego 5. 2B — Olivo (2), Headley (7). SB—Venable (5).
PitcherHapp feeling 'dlessed'
30, getting struck in the head with a line drive in the second inning against the Rays had many fearing the worst. But Happ, other than the obvious pain and loud ringing in his left
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Matt Moore won his sixth straight decision to start the season, Evan
Wednesday'sGames Atlanta 7, Cincinnati2 Seattle 2,Pittsburgh1 St. Louis 5,ChicagoCubs 4 San Diego1,Miami0 SanFrancisco4, Philadelphia 3,10innings Washington 3, Detroit I Chicago WhiteSox6, N.Y. Mets 3 Texas 4, Milwaukee1 N.Y.Yankees3, Colorado2 Arizona3,L.A.Dodgers2
S hucklf 2 0 0 0 T otals 3 1 1 9 1 Totals
SB — Brantley (2). Oakland
solo homer and atwo-run double in Minnesota's season-high,
Today's Games Oakland (Colon3-1) at Cleveland(Kazmir 1-1), 9:05 a.m. N.Y.Yankees(Sabathia 4-3)at Colorado(Francis1-2),
East Division
S.Smithlf 5 1 2 0 Kipnis2b 4 0 0 0 Lowriedh 3 0 1 0 Acarerss 4 0 0 0 C espdscf 4 I 0 0 Swisherlb 4 I I I Mossrf 4 1 1 1 MrRynldh 4 0 0 0 D nldsn3b 4 0 0 0 CSantnc 2 1 1 1 B artonlb 3 0 I 2 Raburnrf 2 I 0 0 Rosalesss 3 0 1 0 Chsnhll3b 3 1 1 0 Sogard2b 3 0 0 0 Stubbscf 3 0 1 0 T otals 3 3 3 6 3 Totals 3 04 6 3 Oakland 0 00 300 000 — 3 Cleveland 000 0 2 2 Ogx - 4 E—Rosales (2) LOB—Oakland 8, Cleveland4. 28 —Rosales (4). HR—Swisher (4), C.Santana(7).
4
(10), Fielder(7). 3B—Span (2). SF Harper. Detroit IP H Ani.Sanchez L,3-3 6 8 Ortega 1 0 Benoit 1 0 Washington Zimmermann W,6-1 7 ClippardH,5 1 RSorianoS,11-12 1
HR —Harper (10). R 3 0 0
E R BB SO 2 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 2
7 1 1 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0
T—2:47(Raindelay: 0:57). A—34,893(41,418).
7 2 0
White Sox 6, Mets 3 NEW YORK — Jake Peavy pitched three-hit ball in his return from a balky back, Alejandro De Aza had a leadoff homer and the Chicago White Sox beat the New York Mets
to split their two-game interleague series. Alex Rios homeredamong his three hits and knocked in two runs for the White Sox.
New York ab r hbi ab r hbi T otals 3 6 7 11 7 Totals 3 3 2 7 2 D eAzalf 5 2 3 1 Vldspncf 3 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 5 1 1 0 ABrwnph 100 0 Atlanta 0 00 101 050 — 7 Riosrf 5 3 3 2 Lagarscf 1 0 0 0 C incinnati 001 00 0 0 0 1 — 2 Gillaspi3b 4 0 2 2 DnMrp2b 4 0 0 0 DP — Atlanta 1, Cincinnati 2. LOB —Atlanta Konerk1b 5 0 1 1 DWrght3b 2 0 0 0 6, Cincinnati 7. 2B —Simmons (6), Philips (9) 38 — J.Schafer (I). HR—uggla2(7), JFrancisco(5), W isecf 4 0 1 0 Dudalf 4 1 1 1 T hrntnp 0 0 0 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 Cozart(5), Bruce(2). Atlanta IP H R E R BB SO C rainp 0 0 0 0 Buckc 4 0 0 0 C Wegsph 1 0 0 0 Baxterrf 3 1 2 0 Minor W,4-2 7 4 1 1 3 7 A.Reedp 0 0 0 0 I.Davislb 4 0 0 0 Varvaro 2 3 1 I 0 3 Greene2b 4 0 1 0 RTeiadss 4 1 2 1 Cincinnati LeakeL,2-2 7 8 4 4 1 6 F lowrsc 3 0 1 0 Hefnerp 1 0 0 0 Marshall 0 1 1 1 0 0 P eavyp 3 0 0 0 Byrdph 1 0 1 0 Hoover 1 1 2 2 2 1 J rDnkscf 1 0 0 0 Atchisnp 0 0 0 0 Ricep 0000 Simon I I 0 0 0 0 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 Leakepitchedto2 baters inthe8th. Tumerph-If 2 0 2 0 Marshall pitched to1 batter inthe 8th. Totals 4 0 6 136 Totals 3 4 3 8 2 HBP by Leake(G.Laird). WP Varvaro. PB MeChicago 1 03 000 101 — 6 soraco. New york 0 10 000 011 — 3 T—3:04. A—32,640(42,319).
Interleague
Mariners 2, Pirates1 PITTSBURGH — Feli x Hernandez scattered six hits and Jesus Montero broke a tie with a solo
home run in theseventh inning off A.J. Burnett to help Seattle beat Pittsburgh. Hernandez (5-2) struck
out five andwalked one to improve to 4-0 in his past five starts while shaving his ERAto1.53. The righthander shook off a shaky first inning then settled down to allow
Chicago
E—Rios (2), Buck(2). DP—Chicago 1. LOBChicago9, NewYork7. 28—Rios (5), Gilaspie (4), Greene(1),Byrd(6). 3B—Baxter (1). HR —DeAza(6), Rios(8),Duda(7). SB—DeAza(5). IP H R E R BB SO Chicago 62-3 3 1 I 2 6 PeavyW,4-1 1-3 2 1 0 0 0 Thornton Crain H,9 1 0 0 AReed 1 3 1 New York HefnerL,0-4 6 8 4 Atchison 2-3 3 I 1-3 0 0 Rice Hawkins 1 1 0 Familia 1 1 1 Thorntonpitchedto2 baters inthe8th. T—3.09.A—21,470(41,922).
0 1 I 0
3 3
4 I 0 0 1
5 0 I 2 0
1 0 0 0 1
Yankees 3, Rockies 2 DENVER — Pinch-hitter Brennan
four base runners in his final seven Boesch hit a tiebreaking infield innings of work. Tom Wilhelmsen worked the ninth for his ninth save. Seattle
ab r hbi
Pittsburgh
ab r hbi
single with the bases loaded in the ninth off closer Rafael Betancourt and the New York Yankees
snapped a five-gameskid at Coors
Colorado ab r hbi ab r hbi Gardnr cf 3 1 1 0 Fowler cf 3 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 0 0 0 Rutledg2b 4 0 1 0 V Wellslf-3b 4 2 3 2 CGnzlzlf 4 0 0 0 Overay1b 3 0 0 0 Cuddyrrf 4 0 1 0 I Suzukirf-If 3 0 0 0 WRosrc 4 1 1 0 J .Nixss 3 0 0 0 Heltonlb 3 I I 2 Nelson3b 3 0 1 0 Arenad3b 3 0 0 0 Hafnerph 1 0 0 0 Brigncss 2 0 0 0 Riverap 0 0 0 0Outmnp 0 0 0 0 DPhlpsp 2 0 0 0 Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 BFrncsph 1 0 0 0 Tlwtzkph 0 0 0 0 Claromp 0 0 0 0 EYongpr 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 4. 2B —S.Marte (7), Mercer (2). HRJ.Montero(3). SB—M.Saunders (6). CS—S.Marte D Rrtsnp 0 0 0 0 RBtncrp 0 0 0 0 Boeschph-rf 1 0 1 1 Nicasiop 1 0 0 0 (3) Seattle IP H R E R BBSO AuRmnc 3 0 0 0 JHerrrss 2 0 0 0 T otals 3 1 3 6 3 Totals 3 02 4 2 F.Hemandez W,5-2 8 6 1 1 1 5 2 00 000 001 — 3 WilhelmsenS,9-9 1 1 0 0 0 0 New York Colorado 0 20 000 000 — 2 Pittsburgh E—Fowler 2 (2). DP—New York 1. LOB —New A.J.BurnettL,3-3 7 2 2 2 4 9 Mazzaro 1 0 0 0 1 1 York 5,Colorado3. 2B—W.Rosario (5). HR—VWells (2).SB—Gardner (5), VWells (4), Cuddyer Morris 1 1 0 0 0 0 (7), Helton (3), E.Young (3). S—I.Suzuki. WP A.J Bumett2. New York IP H R E R BB SO T—2:48. A—18,877(38,362). DPhelps 6 3 2 2 1 4 Claiborne I 0 0 0 0 I Rangers 4, Brewers1 D.RobertsonW,2-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 RiveraS,12-12 1 1 0 0 0 0 Colorado MILWAUKEE — Derek Holland
innings and Texas benefited from two Milwaukee baserunning blunders to beat the Brewers.
5
2 2 2 1
5
Outman 2 2 0 0 0 3 Brothers 1 0 0 0 0 I RBetancourtL,1-1 1 2 1 1 2 I HBP —byD.Robertson(Tulowitzki). Balk—Nicasio. T—2'53.A—40,148(50,398).
fun, not worry about that 19-point lead getting cut to six. That's going to happen; you're on the road against a great veteran basketball team, so you can't get too rattled." Also on Wednesday: Heat 115, Bulls 78: MIAMI — Ray Allen scored 21 points, LeBron James had 19 and Miami embarr assed Chicago w it h a blowout victory in Game 2 of the teams' Eastern Conference semifinal series. The Bulls had six t echnical fouls, and Joakim Noah and Taj Gibson were ejected late a s M i a m i's lead reached as much as 46 points. The Heat knotted the series at 1-1, with Game 3 inChicago on Fri-
day night.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
a ras ase a ea e • A 4-2 win overMolala helpsthe White Buffaloes secure athird-place finish in theTri-Valley Conference Bulletin staff report MADRAS — I t w a s a n u p h ill battle, Madras coach Joe Dominiak said, but on Wednesday, with a 4-2 Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference baseball win against Molalla, the White Buffaloessecured a spot in the 4A
play-in round.
"I told the kids, 'It's not how you start or where you're predicted (to finish),' " Dominiak said. " 'It's where you finish.' " Devon Wolfe went 2-for-3 with two RBIs, Jack Fine was 1-for-3 with a double and an RBI, and Madras (1310 overall, 7-7 TVC) did just enough to earn third place in the conference. Robert Fine pitched a gem for the Buffs, Dominiak said. Although Fine only struck out three, the senior kept Indian batters offbalance throughout the contest en route to a complete-
game win.
"Guy's just been coming on these last few w eeks," Dominiak said, noting that Fine picked up the save on Monday as well as the win on Wednesday. "This is a good week for him." In other Wednesday action: SOFTBALL Summit 9, Crook County 3: The Storm snapped a three-game losing streak as Jacqueline Manley held the visiting Cowgirls to just four hits
Major Continued from C1 "I can't imagine having
a fifth major in men's golf,"
PREP SPORTS ROUNDUP
final with a playoff win over Sisters at 15th Street Field. Brandon Fitzthe Indians benefited from three un- team of Wendy Galan and Lorena patrick scored three goals to lead the Lava Bears, who trailed 2-0 early but earned runs. Azur Rice went 2-for-3 Alonso won a consolation quarterfiwith two RBIs and Shelby Mauritson nal match before falling in the semi- rallied to lead 5-3 by halftime. The was 1-for-4 with an RBI to lead the final round. The Galan/Alonso duo match was delayed for 30 minutes Buffs (14-11 overall, 6-8 TVC). beat Olivia Richardson and Johanna by lightning early in the second half. Perrydale 8, Culver 2: CULVER Wilborn of Blanchet Catholic by an James Rockett and Cade Hinder— The Bulldogs' losing streak is 8-1 score in the quarterfinals, then liderscored two goals each for Bend, now at six games after falling to the lost 8-3 to Molalla's Molly Danforth Geoff Mouser added a goal, and Pirates in Class 2A/1A Special Disand Bronwyn Horn. Also in conso- Rockett and Hayden Baney had two trict 3 play. Culver (3-19 overall, 2-8 lation play, the White Buffaloes' Pali assistsas the Lava Bears improved league) managed just four hits and Kaloi Jordan won a q u a rterfinal to 11-5. For the visiting Outlaws (7was charged withfive errors. Sara match over Santiam Christian's Ra10), Isaiah Glatz scored three goals, McKinney led the Bulldogs with an chael Van Beek, 8-1, then fell 8-2 in a Mitch Keranen and Jens Stadeli RBI double. semifinal against Philomath's Zoey scored one apiece, and Zach Valoppi BASEBALL Snyder. and Gabe Rietmann each had two Summit 12, Crook County 3: BOYS TENNIS assists. Friday at Sisters stadium, PRINEVILLE — The Storm banged Madras pair eliminated at dis- Bend will play Summit in the HDL out 12 hits and took advantage of tricts: PORTLAND — The tandem final at 7 p.m. Sisters will play Harseven Cowboy errors to cruise to of Caleb Freshour and Alexsis Pen- ney County for third place and the victory in t h e I ntermountain Hy- aloza strung together three straight league's No. 3 seed to state starting brid contest. Tyler Mullen went the wins in the doubles bracket of the at 5 p.m. distance on the mound for SumClass 4A/3A/2A/1A Special District Summit 16, Harney County 3: The mit (14-11 overall), scattering seven 2 championship, but they were de- Storm earned a spot in the High Desert League championship game with hits, while Duncan MacDougall had nied an OSAA state championship three hits and three RBIs to lead berth in the quarterfinals, losing 6- its rout over Harney County at Sumthe Storm on offense. With the loss, 0, 6-2 and ending Madras' season. mit High. Cole Gaines led the HDL Crook County fell to 8-17 on the Kody Turner and Jesus Vazquez regular-season champions with five season. lost in the first round of the doubles goals. Griffin Reinecke added three GIRLS TENNIS c hampionship bracket, bu t w o n scores and Dylan Smith and Dylan W hite Buffalo ousted i n d i s - their next three matchups in th e Seefeldt contributed two goals apiece trict q u a rterfinal: PO R T L AND consolation bracket to advance to in the game that was delayed three — Madras' Itzel Romero lost 6-0, 6-2 the finals. That is where the road times because of lightning. Summit to La Salle's Eliza Minculescu in the ended for the pair, however, as they (12-7 overall) plays Bend High at Sischampionship quarterfinal round of fell 6-4, 6-3. ters stadium on Friday at 7 p.m. for BOYS LACROSSE the Class 4A/3A/2A/IA Special Disthe league's No. I seed in the Oregon trict 2 championships at Portland Bend 8, Sisters 5: Bend High adHigh School Lacrosse Association Tennis Center. The Madras doubles vanced to the High Desert League state playoffs.
in the Intermountain Hybrid contest.
Summit (4-18 overall) exploded for 11 hits in the first of its three games against Crook County (10-14). Raja Char went 3-for-4, Morgan Watts was 2-for-3 with two RBIs and Alex Popp finished the day 2-for-4 and scored two runs. The Storm led 4-1 in the top of the third inning of the second game beforethe contest was
suspended because of lightning. On Friday, the two teams will meet in Prineville and pick up where they left off before their third and final game of the series. Bend sweeps Mountain View:The visiting Lava Bears squeaked by the Cougars 6-4 in the first game of an Intermountain Conference doubleheader before defeating Mountain View 13-7 in eight innings in the second contest. In that matchup, the Bears and Cougars went into the eighth knotted up 6-6, but Bend (15-8 overall, 6-2 IMC) put up seven runs in the top of the inning en route to the victory. Mountain View dropped to 321 overall and 1-7 in IMC play. Molalla 8, Madras 6:MOLALLAA destructive third inning that saw the White Buffaloes commit three errors and hit two batters proved too much to overcome for Madras. Molalla only recorded six hits in the Tri-Valley Conference victory, but
This year's field has 46 of the top 50 in the world rankings, including No. 3 Adam Scott, the 2004 champion, who is making his first start since winning the Masters. "The TPC is th e strongest field of any tournament played on the same course," the Swede Robert Karlsson said. "Otherwise, if you want to consider a fifth major, you can go anywhere there's a
said Rory Mcllroy, the world No. 2, from Northern Ireland. "I like the traditions of the game." He added, "I don't see why there would be a need to add more." T revor I m m elman, t h e 2008 Masters champion,is proper golf course." from South A f rica, which The Harry Colt-designed has six p l ayers currently course at Wentworth Golf ranked in the world top 50. Club, site of the European Tour-sanctioned PGA ChamAs much as it would thrill Immelman to see his coun- pionship, is c o nsidered a try host a major one day, his classic. Riviera Country Club opinion is that if the calendar in Los Angeles is regarded as flows, why clog it up? timeless. Pete Dye's layout at "I'm about upholding the Sawgrass, which measures traditions of the game," he 7,215 yards, has a reputasaid. "As an aspiring young tion that is more ruffian than golfer who grew up in a refined. small town on the western When i t fi r s t o p e ned, Cape, I k n e w t h a t t h ere Fuzzy Zoeller took a long were four tournaments by look at the pot bunkers and which the best players were railroad t ie s a n d a s k ed, "Where are the windmills measured." He added: "I think using and animals?" Ben Crenthe term 'fifth major' is rishaw, an unabashed historian and traditionalist, dediculous. There is no such thing." scribed it as "Star Wars golf The Players Champion- designed by Darth Vader." ship began in 1974 at AtThe course has g r own l anta Country C l u b a n d on players like Spanish produced a boldface cham- moss. On Tuesday, Woods pion in Jack Nicklaus, who described TP C S a w grass joked that he had won "just as "a tricky kind of course." Brandt Snedeker, the reignin case"the event became a major. Nicklaus won two ing FedEx Cup champion, more Players titles, in 1976 said, "It's just a golf course at Inverrary, near Fort Lau- that really baits you i n to derdale, Fla., and in 1978 at making mistakes, very simiSawgrass Country Club in lar to a major championship Ponte Vedra Beach. Since in that aspect." the tournament moved to It remains a place where TPC Sawgrass in 1982, the bad results happen to good quality fields have produced shots. Balls landing in the some quirk y c h a mpions, middle of the island green with Craig Perks winning at No. 17 have ended up in as many titles (one) as Tiger the water, as Mickelson can Woods or Phil M i ckelson. attest; it happened to him in Perks never won again on 2011 on his way to a tie for the tour; Woods and Mick- 33rd place. "It's golf's version of the elson have a combined 118 tour victories. Daytona 500," said Frank Of the eight players in this Nobilo, a Go l f C h a n nel week's field with m u ltiple analyst who never finished major championships, only higher than 60th in six starts Woods and Mickelson have here."Some people come for won here, and no winner in the racing; others come for the tournament's 39-year the wrecks." Tim Finchem, the t o ur history has successfully defended his title. commissioner, was a sked "As long as this game is Tuesday whether he worried played, there will be debate that his flagship event would a bout whether or not t h i s be passed in prestige by the golf tournament should be a WGC events andthe FedEx major championship," said Cup playoffs. "I've never thought about Brandel Chamblee, a Golf Channel analyst and former it that way," he said, adding: touring pro whose best fin- "We don't worry about, 'Is ish here in nine starts was this tournament going to be a tie for 42nd. "But there is better than the other one?' no debate that this is one of As long as they're all getting the six premier events in the better, then we're headed in world." the right direction."
o a - i nroun
Teardrop
was for a layup.
Continued from C1 Curry in particular "throws it up there like a feather," said Bob McKillop, who coached Curry at Davidson College. The teardrop, also called a floater, is not new, but it appears to be having its moment this year. It is akin to a drop shot in tennis or a knuckleball in baseball — a cleverly effective move that can prove maddening to the opposition. Many basketball players consider it the most difficult shot in the game, and the true teardrop artists say a complex calculus is involved. Robinson, the 5-9 catalyst for Chicago, has had some of the year's most memorable teardrops, which he launches like a track and field shot put aimed at the sky. Robinson's grit has made him this year's most unlikely star, a turn as surprising as his trademark shot. He played Monday with 10 stitches in his lip after a collision with LeBron James, who outweighs him by 70 pounds; he played another game in the last round despite having an illness and vomiting into a trash can during breaks in
on your team doing floaters, y ou're probably not a v e r y good team," Manning said. "But for the guys who are specialists at it, the shot can be an incredibly effective tool." G eorge Gervin, a Hall of Fame player who turned the finger-roll layup into an art form in the late 1970s, is regarded as a teardrop visionary. In his modified version, he extended his arm toward the basket and simply let the ball trickle off his hand, almost as an afterthought. If a defender got in the way, Gervin flicked his wrist just so, sending the ball on a high-arcing parabola. It was an underhand scoop so delicate and precise that the basketball could have been an
"If you have everybody
egg. Basketball experts will endlessly debate the finer points of a fingerrollversus a tear-
Darren Abate /The Associated Press
Golden State Warriors point guard Stephen Curry puts up a teardrop shot over San Antonio Spurs center Boris Diaw (33) during Monday night's game in San Antonio.
from the 1930s known for his running one-handed shot. The San A n tonio Spurs' Tony Parker, generally viewed astheleague'scurrentteardrop play. master, insisted that he came "He's fearless," said Lorenzo up with the shot as a child. Romar, Robinson's c ollege "I got copyrights on that," he coach at th e U n iversity of said. "I did that because I was Washington. small and it was the only way I Robinson said there are two could get a shot off on the bigs. keys to the teardrop: Shoot it I grew a little bit later." For practitioners, the shot fast, before the defender can react, and shoot it high. "Then, has become as practical as it is just watch it float," he said. stylish. Even misses can proHe has been working on his duce points. Bulls guard Kirk version ofthe shot for years Hinrich considers the teardrop — "and it's still not perfect," he a good way to draw defenders sa>d. away from the hoop — and, It is unclear who first shot a crucially, to create opportuniteardrop, or who first called it ties for rebounds. "It's almost like an assist," that. Some credit Bob Cousy, Hinrich said. "Once you get a Boston Celtics star of the 1950s. Others point to Hank that big man to overcommit, Luisetti, a S t anford p layer you have a teammate waiting
drop: broadly speaking, a finger roll is underhanded, and a teardropistossed from a high point. Still, Gervin said he was transfixed by Game 1 of the Warriors-Spurs series, and
under the basket for the tip." As a result, the teardrop has become a near necessity for the league's top guards. With more lenient rules allowing zone defenses,many teams try to trap ballhandlers along the baseline. That often opens the lane for teardrop runners, said Ivorie Manning, a shooting coach who has worked with teardrop stars like Felton of the Knicks. Coaches not only teach the teardrop these days, they extol its virtues, which was not always the case. Players were once taught to stick to fundamentals by coming to a jump stop before shooting, unless it
xer r
prepared. "He was like Fred Astaire," Gervin said. "He was dancing
and twirling around, gliding across the floor. We ain't seen that in a while."
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Retire with us Today! 541-312-9690
Bears
host a first-round state playoff contest. The top-eight ranked teams in 5A ar e granted a Continued from C1 Devin Haney wa s 2 -for- home game in the first round. "The expectations are high," 3 with a run driven in, and Conor Street went I-for-3 with Bailey said. "We were able to two RBIs. do well last year and go deep The win solidifies Bend's in the playoffs (a semifinal applace as the No. 2 team in the pearance). Hopefully, we'll be IMC, and if its OSAA rank- able to go one game deeper ing as the No. 2 program in 5A this year. That would be pretty holds firm, the Lava Bears will special."
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18707 SW Century Dr., Bend
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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsosee8recapin Sunday's Businesssection.
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
+
+
S&P 500
NASDAO ~ +16.64
15,105.12
3,41 3.27
Toda+
1,640
Thursday, May 9, 2013
Restocking rebound? The Commerce Department reports March figures for stockpiles at the wholesale level today. U.S. wholesalers cut their restocking in February by the most in 17 months. The decline was the first in eight months and the biggest since September 2011, with farm products and gasoline leading the drop. Agricultural stockpiles have fallen in recent months because of a drought in the Midwest. Wholesale inventories
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$1 473 90 .
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SILVER
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+24. 90
Close: 15,105.12
1 0 DAY S
14,400
1,520
13,600 1,440 12,800
1,360 1,280
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StocksRecap
F
M
DOW DOW Trans. DOW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
A
M
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N
HIGH LOW CLOSE 15106.81 15021.87 15105.12 6416.15 6341.77 6411.14 526.49 518.50 520.26 9463.38 9406.99 9463.32 3413.27 3389.80 3413.27 1632.78 1622.70 1632.69 1186.54 1178.17 1186.54 17232.38 17125.11 17232.38 970.41 970.41 963.79
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J
CHG. +48.92 +13.80 -6.23 +54.31 +16.64 +6.73 +5.34 t71J5
+2.59
A
M
%CHG. WK Mo OTR YTD +0.32% L +15.27% +0.22% +20.81% -1.18% T L L +1 4.82% L +1 2.08% +0.58% +0.49% L +1 3.04% +0.41% L +1 4.48% +0.45% L +16.28% +0.41% L +1 4.92% +0.27% L +1 4.25%
-0.3
NorthwestStocks -0.4
3
0
N
D
NAME : J F Source: FactSet Alaska Air Group
DNDN
$4.74
S12
$11.69
'13
Operating EPS
1 Q '12 I
I
1 Q' 1 3
-$0.48
JCP Close $17.61L1.21 or 7.4% A Maxim Group analyst said that the struggling retailer'8 return to discounting should drive traffic back into stores. $25
40 35 M
$31.68
based on trailing 12 months' results
MARKET LEADER(LEDR) 10.84
Dividend: none
AP
FundFocus
4
F
M
A
P/E RATID*
YTD
M
52-week range
$13.55~
$34.99
$24.99 ~
$43.93
LYV
Close:$13.91 %0.68 or 5.1%
The concert promoter posted a slightly narrower first-quarter loss as revenue grew 6 percent and corporate expenses fell. $14 12
Whole Foods Market
WFM
Close: $102.1 9%939 or 10.1% The natural foods store chain's fiscal second-quarter net income rose 20 percent and it boosted its full-year profit forecast. $110 100 90
F
80-
M A M 52-week range $8.01~ $13.91 Vol22.4m (1.7x avg.) P E: .. . Mkt. Cap:$2.71 b Yield:...
Vol28.6m (3.4x avg.) P E: 38 .6 Mkt. Cap:$18.94 b Yiel d : 0. 8%
SkyWest
Wendy's
SKYW Close:$14.37 V-0.88 or -5.8% The regional flight operator posted a 13 percent drop in first-quarter revenue due to flights canceled because of bad weather. $18
F
M A 52-week range
$81.39~
M $103 .72
WEN Close:$5.78 V-0.34 or -5.6% The fast-food chain's first-quarter net income fell 83 percent from year-ago results that included a big gain on the sale of an investment. $6.5
6.0 5.5
16 14
F
M
A
M
F
52-week range $8.25~
M
A
M
52-week range $18.32
$4.09~
$8.19
Vol2674.5k (1.7x avg.) PE: 1 4 . 5 Vold14.5m (3.1x avg.) PE :289.0 Mkt. Cap:$745.47 m Yi eld: 1.1% Mkt. Cap:$2.27 b Y ield:2.8%
WebMD Health
WBMD
Close:$27.94 X2.43 or 9.5% The health information company said that its CEO Cavan Redmond is leaving the company after less than a year on the job. $30
Cognizant Tech. CTSH Close:$68.15 %3.27 or 5.0% The provider of information technology, consulting and outsourcing services, said that its first-quarter net income rose 17 percent. $90
25
80
20
70
F
M A M 52-week range $13.13~ $30.59 Vol23.3m (6.7x avg.) PE: .. Mkt. Cap:$1.4 b Yield:..
F
M A 52-week range
$53.92 ~ Vol2 6.5m (2.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$20.61 b
M
$81.08 P E: 19 . 8 Yield: ... AP
SOURCE: Sungard
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
. 0 4 .03 . 07 .07 .10 .10
2 -year T-note . 22 .22 5-year T-note . 7 4 .75 10-year T-note 1.77 1.78
30-year T-bond 2.99 3.00
BONDS
+0 .0 1 V ... V ... ~
V V V
Y V V
... -0.01 -0.01 -0.01
V L T V
T .26 T .76 V 1.84 V 3.03
L L L L
.08 .14 .17
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO
Barclays LoogT-Bdldx 2.68 2.70 -0.02 L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.06 4.06 . . . L K R 38 Lost money 95% N/ A Barclays USAggregate 1.81 1.81 . . . L PRIME FED Barclay s US High Yield 4.97 5.02 -0.05 V V 11 Lost money 66 183% RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 3.79 3.78 40.01 L *based on past 12 months' results Sour c e: FactSet YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.03 1.03 . . . L 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2 .66 2.66 ... L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualFunds
52-WEEK RANGE
$15 R Q
M
Vol228.8m (1.5x avg.) P E: . . . Vol2 4.0m (2.4x avg.) P E: 3 . 4 Mkt. Cap:$3.87 b Yiel d : 4 .5% Mkt. Cap:$2.91 b Yie l d : 13.6%
Real estate website operator Trulia is seeking to C O <pany Tuesday of $9.61.The companies saidM arket provide more extensive services by buying real S ti • ht L e a der shareholders will receive $6 per share in estate software provider Market Leader for more cash and 0.1553 shares of Trulia's common than $300 million in cash and stock. stock for each share they own. The yield on the Market Leader teams up with real estate brokerages Mar k et Leader will become a Trulia subsidiary, with 10-year Treaand franchisors to help their agents manage their leads the combined company based in San Francisco. Market sury note fell to 1.77 percent and convert those leads into closings. Leader will still keep offices in Kirkland, Wash. Wednesday. Trulia will pay $11.33 per share, which is an 18 The deal is expected to close in the third quarter. It Yields affect inpercent premium to Market Leader's closing price still needs approval from Market Leader shareholders. terest rates on consumer loans. WEDNESDAY'8 — TOTAL RETURNTRULIA (TRLA)
A
52-week range
trulia to acquire Market Leader
CLOSE
AOL Close:$37.74V-3.68 or -8.9% The Internet company's first-quarter net income jumped 23 percent, but its adjusted earnings fell short of Wall Street predictions. $45
15
InterestRates
COMPANY
EURO 1.3159
AOL
20
F
+16. 9 + 163.2 2174 2 0 . 08a
L + 17.7 +31 .7 2 2 28 1 8 0 .80a V +25 9 -03 14 dd V +17.5 +3 5 .8 6 7 3 3 7 1. 7 6f L +1.4 +12. 3 507 21 0.1 2 V + 34. 0 +2 7 .1 4 8 20 9 0.70 L -11.4 - 27.5 29 7 4 1 0 . 7 5 L +23.3 +57 .0 44 3 2 9 2. 0 0 L +21.0 +23 . 9 11 0 13 0. 9 3f L + 16.4 +13 .5 2 6 76 3 2 0. 8 4 L +22 8 +24 7 14 4 8 d d V +6.4 ... 478 14 0.4 0 f V +4.4 +6.6 88 4 2 1 1 0. 7 8 V +2.5 -2.6 32 0 1 3 0 .36f L +12.5 +16 . 7 18374 11 1 . 20f V +12,6 +5 8 ,4 3 0 06 3 5 0 , 80f
Dividend Footnotes: 2 Extra - dividends were paid, ttut are not included. tt - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. 1 - Current annual rate, wh>cttwas mcreased bymost recent dlnadendannouncement. i - Sum ot dividends pa>dafter stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dwidends pa>d tns year. Most recent dradend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pa>dtns year, a cumulative issue with dividends m arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. 7 - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock approtcmate cash value on ex-distrittution date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no PiE ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months
Price-earnings ratio: lost money
Source: FactSet
+ 56.3 +101.2 88 6 1 6 L +20.1 +17 .6 3 6 2 2 1 1. 2 2f L + 12 . 1 +6 2 .614657730 0 . 0 4 L +51. 6 t t 7 7 .8 35 32 0.52 L +24.8 427 . 2 3 1 24 1 8 1. 9 4 V -4.3 -1.0 8 46 v +19 8 +12 2 197 17 0 40 L +11.7 +2 9 .3 95 19 0.88 L + 11.0 +41 . 7 856 25 1. 2 4f L +23.5 +5.1 25 62 V +10. 7 +15 .2 7 0 7 1 6 0. 3 6f V + 47.9 -11.9 12731 dd 0.58f V -1.4 +31.6 13 cc 0. 2 4a L +17.6 -9.8 24541 12 0 .90 L +22 9 +31 7 77 8 7 1 2 0 20 L + 33 5 +54 , 4 3 4 57 1 3 0, 6 0 V +23.8 - 0.2 60 7 d d V + 2.1 +98. 9 4 4 17 2 7 L +26.2 +21 .0 1 0 34 c c 0. 6 9 L +7.5 +31 .4 49 1 1 6 0. 1 8 L +23.5 +11 .5 49736 17 0 . 9 2 L + 23.8 +16 .1 3 0 56 2 6 0. 8 4 L + 10.3 +8.1 12 3 6 1 7 1 . 20f L +3.0 +1.3 145 22 1.8 2
v
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StoryStocks
Live Nation Ent.
52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO HI C LOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
ALK 31.29 67.66 67 .33 -.14 -0.2 Avista Corp AVA 22.78 29.00 28 .95 +.10 +0.3 L L Bank of America BAC 6 . 72 13.11 13 .02 +.12 +0.9 L Barrett Business BBSI 19.10 59.32 57 .76 +.76 +1.3 L Dish update Boeing Co BA 66. 8 2 95.04 94 .04 26 -0.3 L L Dish Network is trying to branch CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 7.18 5 .9 9 +.01 +0.2 L V into wireless services as the Columbia Bukg COLB 1618 — 0 2208 2150 ... ... L L growth in satellite TV viewing has Columbia Sporlswear COLM 45.37 ~ 61.6 8 5 9. 6 1 -.31 -0.5 V L dissipated. CostcoWholesale COST 81.98 — 0 11 0 .41109.61 -.10 -0.1 Y L That prompted the satellite-TV Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 8.92 8.0 0 +.0 2 +0 .3 L L company last month to launch an FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 27.16 24 .71 . .. ... L V unsolicited bid for wireless carrier Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 24.23 21 .07 + . 57 + 2.8 L V Sprint Nextel, which has already Home Federal BucpID HOME 8.67 14.00 12 . 26 +. 0 3 +0 .2 V L agreed to sell itself to the JapaIntel Corp INTC 19.23 27.98 24 .25 + . 1 0 +0.4 L L — 0 nese company Softbank. Investors Keycorp K EY 6 8 0 1026 10 3 5 + 12 +1 2 L L will be listening today for an Kroger Co KR 2 0 98 — 0 35 24 34 .73 -.26 -0 7 L L 4y Lattice Semi LSCC 3. 17 5.71 4.94 -.01 -0.2 Y V update on the takeover bid, as LA Pacific L PX 8 . 3 6 $$- 22. 5 5 19.73 +.85 +4.5 L V well as the latest subscriber MDU Resources MDU 1959 0 27 00 26.80 +.09 +0.3 L L figures for Dish, when the comMentor Graphics MENT 12,85 — 0 18,69 18.30 -.08 -0.4 ~ L pany reports its latest quarterly Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 ~ 33.91 32.99 -.32 -1.0 Y L results. Nike Iuc 8 NKE 42,55 — 0 6496 63.90 -.01 . . . V L Nordstrom Iuc JWN 46.27 ~ 58.66 59.00 +.41 +0.7 L L Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.01 ty— 5 08 0 45.52 +.47 +1.0 L L OfficeMax Iuc OMX 4.10 14.92 11 .41 -.11 -1.0 v v PaccarIuc PCAR 35,21 — 0 53.12 53 .19 +.72 +1.4 L L Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 2.36 1 .8 0 V Plum Creek PCL 35.43 — o 53.68 52 .12 +.62 +1.2 L L Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 — 0 196.00 192.02 1.50 -0.8 L L Safeway Inc SWY 14.73 28.42 24 .24 +.11 +0.5 L V Schuitzer Steel SCHN 22.78 38.16 26 .86 +.57 +2.2 L L Sherwin Wms SHW 114,68 — 0 189.69 189.62 +.34 +0.2 L L Staucorp Fucl SFG 28.74 — 0 44.44 44 .38 -.02 . . . L L StarbucksCp SBUX 43,04 — 0 62.53 62 .41 +.22 +0.4 L L Triquint Semi TQNT 430 — 0 610 5 93 + 0 2 + 03 Y L UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.17 ~ 13.8 8 12. 5 5 ... ... L L US Baucorp USB 2 8.58 ~ 35.46 33.3 3 +.1 8 + 0 .5 L V WashingtonFedl WAFD 1 4.30 ~ 1 8.42 17.2 9 +. 0 5 +0 .3 L L Spotlight on Dendreon Wells Fargo & Co WFC 29.80 — 0 38.56 38 . 45 + . 3 5 +0 .9 L L Dendreon's first-quarter earnings Weyerhaeuser WY 1 8,60 — 0 32,00 31 .33 + . 1 5 + 0,5 L V
should provide insight into how its sales of prostate cancer therapy Provenge are faring. The biotechcompany, due to report its latest financial results today, has said that Provenge is being used more often in community oncology and urology practices. That helped increase sales of Provenge in the fourth quarter. Did the trend continue in Dendreon's latest quarter?
+
J.C. Penney
0.1
12:
CRUDEOIL $96.62
Stockindexes rose Wednesday, and the Standard & Poor's 500 index climbed higher for a fifth straight day. Both the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones industrial average extended their record highs. Raw material producers had some of the market's biggest gains after prices rose for gold, copper, natural gas and other commodities. Technology and telecommunications stocks also rose more than the rest of the market. Stock prices have followed corporate earnings higher since the recession's end. Earnings per share for companies in the S&P 500 rose 5 percent last quarter from a year earlier, and they're at a record high, according to S&P Capital IQ.
Change: 48.92 (0.3%)
•
1,600
)2
$23.89
Dow jones industrials
.
14,640
+
15,200
Vol. (in mil.) 3,471 1,689 Pvs. Volume 3,223 1,664 Advanced 2009 1419 Declined 1021 1018 New Highs 5 37 2 3 9 New Lows 6 21
0. 4
14 880
1,680
NYSE NASD
0.4
15,120.
Close: 1,632.69 10 DA Y S
1.2% 11
0.8
S&P 500 Change: 6.73 (0.4%)
1 ,560
seasonally adjusted percent change
0.8
10 YR T NOTE 1.77%
1,632.69
1 YR
+ ++ +
V V L V L L V
V 2.52 L 4.48 V 2.05 6.97 V 3.90 V 1.01 V 3.26
AP
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 22.54 +.09 +11.0 +18.5 +13.7 + 66 A A A 1 2.94 +0.7 +3.7 +5.6 + 42 D D E 57.59+.25 +10.1 +17.5 +12.9 +38 A A C 41.57+.37 412.2 +24.3 t13.4 + 23 A B C 44.78+.57 +8.6 +20.2 +10.6 + 09 D C A S&P500ETF 880896 163.34 +.74 FnlnvA m 4 6.42 +.29 +14.2 +24.0 +15.3 + 42 A B C SPDR Fncl 624730 19.31 + . 16 Vanguard EmMktlAdm VEMAX GlthAmA m 3 8. 9 1 + 23 413 3 +23.4 +14.2 + 39 A C D AMD 564788 3.83 + . 29 IncAmerA m 19 .79+.06 +10.5 +18.6 +13.9 +61 A A A Microsoft 497362 32.99 —.32 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH InvCoAmA m 34.48+.14 +14.8 +22.8 +13.9 + 47 8 D C iShEMkts 447708 44.23 + . 34 NewPerspA m 34.93 +.34 t t t . 7 +22.8 +14.3 + 44 8 B A iShJapn 419728 11.85 + . 10 cC o Fusion-io 418927 14.60 -3.40 03 WAMutlnvA m 35.70 +.12 +15.0 +21.9 +16.4 + 54 D A B 0O 1.44 + . 29 Affymax 404657 5L Dodge &Cox Inc o me 13.93 +.01 + 1 .3 + 5 . 0 + 6 .1 +6.8 C C 8 G80Elec 396823 23.01 + . 33 IntlStk 38.61 +.53 + 11.5 +27.8 +11.8 +0.9 A B A Stock 141.62 +.83 + 16.7 +31.2 +15.9 +3.9 A B C 5L Gainers cC 03 Fidelity Contra 8 7.54 +.42 +13.9 +18.5 +16.2 +5.7 B B 8 C3 NAME L AST CH G %CHG GrowCo 106.3 9 +.49 + 14.1 +18.2 +18.3 +7.1 8 A A LowPriStk d 46 . 04 +.31+ 16.6 +26.6 +17.4 +8.5 B 8 A Torm rs 3 .15 +1. 9 0 +152.0 Fidelity Spartan 50 0ldxAdvtg 57 . 92 +.26+15.3 +22.4 +16.1 +5.5 B A B Syntrol rs 5 .51 +1 . 3 5 +32.5 «C TwoHrb wt 2.89 +.67 +30.2 03 FrankTemp-Fraukliulncome A m 2.3 8 +.01 +8 .9 +18.2 +12.3 +6.1 A A 8 CSP Inc 7 .45 +1. 6 2 +27.8 «C Income C m 2.4 0 + .01 + 8 .6 + 17.5 +11.8 +5.5 A A 8 PionSwEn 3 2.20 +6. 1 5 +23.6 Oppeuheimer RisDivA m 19.6 0 +.09 +13.0 +18.1 +14.4 +4.3 E C C 4o Alexza rs 5.31 +.96 +22.1 RisDivB m 17.7 4 +.08 + 12.6 +17.0 +13.3 +3.4 E D D Morningstar OwnershipZone™ ChiMobG 0 1 4.20 +2 . 4 5 +20.9 RisDivC m 17.6 6 +.09 + 12.7 +17.2 +13.5 +3.5 E D D DexMedia 0 1 6.55 +2 . 8 4 +20.7 O e Fund target represents weighted SmMidValA m 37.87 +.20 +16.8 +23.8 +12.2 +1.8 D E E ElectArts 2 1.56 +3. 1 5 +17.1 average of stock holdings SmMidValB m 31.89 +.17 + 16.5 +22.7 +11.3 +1.0 D E E Pretium g 7 .73 +1. 1 2 +16.9 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings PIMCO TotRetA m 11.3 0 . . . + 1. 4 +6 . 3 + 6 .5 +7.3 B B 8 Losers CATEGORY Diversified Emerging T Rowe Price Eqt y l nc 30.18 . . . +1 4.6 + 24.1 +14.4 +5.3 NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR GrowStk 42.40 + . 26 + 12.2 +15.7 +16.3 +6.2 D A B RATING™ *** y ryr HealthSci 49.02 + .22 +18.9 +32.9 +27.1+15.6 B A A -3.40 -18.9 Fusion-io 14.60 Lionbrdg 2.84 —.62 -17.9 ASSETS $7,279 million Vanguard 500Adml 150.74 +.69 415.3 +22.5 +16.1 +5.5 8 A 8 -2.71 -17.7 CapM pfB 12.59 500lnv 150.72 +.69 415.2 +22.3 +16.0 +5.4 C A 8 EXP RATIO Mkts Axiall 47.28 -9.23 -16.3 CapOp 40.84 +.29 421.5 +35.3 +15.2 +6.8 A 8 A MANAGER 0.18% -.80 -16.0 Oculus rs 4.20 Eqlnc 27.84 +.13 +16.0 +23.8 +18.5 +7.2 C A A SINCE Michael Perre GNMAAdml 10.83 -.02 +0.2 tt.4 +4.7 +5.5 C 8 A RETURNS 3-MO +1.2 Foreign Markets STGradeAd 10.82 +0.8 43.2 +3.4 +4.0 8 B B YTD +1.1 StratgcEq 25.34 +.06 +18.1 +28.0 +18.9 +6.6 A A C NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1- YR +10.5 Tgtet2025 14.88 +.06 49.5 +16.5 412.1 44.7 8 B A Paris + 34.96 + . 8 9 3,956.28 3-YR ANNL +7.5 TotBdAdml 11.04 +0.5 42.9 +5.2 +5.6 E D D London 6,583.48 + 26.18 + . 40 5-YR-ANNL -0.1 Totlntl 16.22 +.16 +8.5 +21.0 +10.4 -0.9 D D C Frankfurt + 67.93 + . 8 3 8,249.71 TotStlAdm 40.98 +.18 t15.5 +22.9 +16.4 +6.1 8 A A Hong Kong 23,244.35 t t97.26 t .86 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico -.72 2008-08-29 TotStldx 40.96 +.18 t15.4 +22.7 +16.3 +6.0 8 A A 42,102.14 -304.53 Milan 17,255.57 + 133.70 + . 78 USGro 24.07 +.16 t13.2 +18.9 415.5 45.7 8 B B Samsung Electronics Co Ltd GDR 2.53 Tokyo t-t 05.45 $ .74 14,285.69 Welltn 37.28 +.14 +10.8 +17.7 +12.8 +6.6 A A A 1.8 Stockholm 1,221.83 t 13.73 t 1 . 14 China Mobile Ltd. Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs 1spaid from lund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption Sydney +55.20 +1.08 China Construction Bank Corp H Shares1.5 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 5,177.90 Zurich 8,093.02 +115.48 +1.45 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing ADR redemption fee. Source: Morn1ngsta7.
This fund is a low-cost way to FAMILY FUND invest in the world's developing MarketSummary American Funds BalA m markets. Like most of its peers, it Most Active BondA m does not hedge its foreign currency CaplncBuA m NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG exposure, so a stronger dollar can CpWldGrlA m BkofAm 1465774 13.02 +.12 hurt its returns. EurPacGrA m
Commodities
FUELS
The price of oil rose after a government report showed that the amount of supplies in inventory last week was lower than analysts expected. Natural gas,
METALS
copper and gold also rose.
Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against the euro, reaching its lowest level against the shared currency in a week. It
also fell against the British pound, but it
rose against the Japanese yen.
h5N4 QG
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 96.62 95.62 + 1.05 + 5 . 2 Ethanol (gal) 2.58 2.57 -0.12 + 17.8 Heating Oil (gal) 2.91 2.93 -0.44 -4.3 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.98 3.92 +1.48 +18.7 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.85 2.83 + 0.72 + 1 . 5
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1473.90 1449.00 23.89 23.77 1504.90 1481.20 3.37 3.30 697.15 679.50
%CH. %YTD +1.72 -12.0 +0.51 -20.8 +1.60 -2.2 -7.4 +2.14 +2.60 -0.8
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.5 1.20 1.21 -0.51 1.44 1.42 + 1.30 + 0 . 2 6.75 6.77 -0.22 -3.3 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.86 0.86 +0.22 +14.7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 334.60 334.70 -0.03 -10.5 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.47 1.42 +4.06 +27.0 Soybeans (bu) 14.79 14.64 + 1.06 + 4 . 3 Wheat(bu) 6.97 7.00 -0.39 -10.4 AGRICULTURE
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5543 +.0055 +.35% 1 .6165 C anadian Dollar 1.0 0 3 1 —.0015 —.15% .9986 USD per Euro 1.3159 +.0075 +.57% 1 .3030 —.17 —.17% 79.79 Japanese Yen 98.82 Mexican Peso 12.0 621 + .0286 +.24% 13.3794 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5521 —.0147 —.41% 3.8071 0959 -1 . 67% 5.8243 Norwegian Krone 5. 7463 —. South African Rand 9.0062 —.0281 —.31% 7.8910 6. 5048 —. 0235 —. 36% 6.8423 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9355 —.0046 —.49% .9219 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar .9830 + .0011 +.11% .9 8 77 Chinese Yuan 6.1458 -.0130 -.21% 6.3092 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7598 -.0010 -.01% 7.7618 Indian Rupee 54.095 +.030 +.06% 5 3.146 Singapore Dollar 1.2275 -.0046 -.37% 1.2473 South Korean Won 1083.48 -3.92 -.36% 1139.35 -.17 -.58% 2 9 .33 Taiwan Dollar 29.37
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
BRIEFING
RedmondAirport doardingssteady Passengerboardings at Redmond Airport last
month werenearly the same asthe number from April 2012, according to
figures releasedWednesday by theairport. Last month, 17,561
passengers flew out of Redmond Airport, an increase of 28 from April 2012. For the first four months of this year,
boardings havedeclined less than 2 percent over the same period last
year, according to airport figures.
Coke unveils anti-odesity push
eo
ae ac s rans aren
• Information on business subsidies isnot publicized in atimely manner,OSPIRGsays Bulletin staff report The state of Oregon is keeping critical details about millions of dollars in business subsidies from the public, according to a report released Wednesday. "Revealing Tax Subsidies 2013," published by the Oregon State Public Interest R esearch Group, outlines the failure of most state agencies that offer economic development incentives to release timely information about subsidies, which are funded
The reports are supposed to be published by the end of each year on the Oregon Transparency Website, which was launched in 2009. But OSPIRG found that just six of the 18 subsidy
by Oregon taxpayers and expected to cost more than $665 million in the 2013-15 biennium. OSPIRG monitored 18 corporate tax subsidy programs required by the Legislature to submit annual reports to the state. Those subsidies include property tax breaks for companies that set up in enterprise zones, tax breaks for out-of-state companies that move toOregon, energy conservation subsidies and others.
programs published any information on the website. Only one — a subsidy for film and TV production companies that spend more than $1 million in Oregon
— provided enough information to evaluate whether the program was using funds effectively. Some economic development officials have argued that such details are exempt
from disclosurebecause they amount to "trade secrets" under Oregon law. OSPIRG in its report argued that the public can't gauge the effectiveness of these programs without more disclosure. "The ability of the public to see how their government uses the public purse is fundamental to democracy," wrote the report's author, OSPIRG Consumer and Taxpayer Advocate Celeste Meiffren. "When public subsidies are given to private companies to advance goals related to economic growth, the public should see a timely
and full accounting of the results of its investment." Paul Warner, the state's Legislative Revenue Officer, said Wednesday that he hadn't yet read the report. But he and other lawmakers would fully review it, likely after ongoing talks about the state budget wrap up. "We have a definite interest throughout the Legislature in transparency," Warner said. The report also recommends that Gov. John Kitzhaber actively remind state agencies about transparency and their roles in
handling public money.
In a sign of how health concerns have
shaken the beverage industry, Coca-ColaCo. used a boisterous anniversary celebration on Wednesday to pledgeto make low-calorie drinks and clearer nutritional
information more available across the world.
Coca-Cola Chief Executive Muhtar Kent
Foreclosure en ra re onren a s settlement ercen vacan still coming up short
saidthecompany would offer low and no-calorie drinks in every market, provide nutritional information on all of its pack-
aging, invest in physical activity programs, and restrict all marketing to
children under12 years old.
Target partners with Facedook In its boldest foray into digital retailing,
Target on Wednesday I
launched a test version of Cartwheel, an
ambitious collaboration
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with the world's largest social network that will
allow users to earn savings via Facebookand then use their smart-
phones to redeemthose savings in stores.
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Though retailers have
e
used social networks like Twitter and Pinter-
est to promote products and influence opinion, generating real sales has so far proven elusive. By using mobile devices to help drive
t.
Tim Doran /The Bulletin
This Awbrey Butte rental home may be among a shrinking number of rentals available in Central Oregon, according a recent survey. The vacancy rate for rentals is at the lowest by far for the past 6 years.
people to its stores, Cartwheel might be the missing piece to the puzzle, Target officials
say.
— Staffand wire reports
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • COVA andEDCOribdon cutting:Celebrate the kickoff to National Travel and Tourism Week; free; 4:30-6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Visitors Association, 705 S.W. Bonnett Way, Suite1000, Bend; 541-389-8799. • Link Building101: What ls it? Whydoesit matter? Bend WebCAMWebinar Series presents Jon Ball, CEO ofPageOnePower; free webinar; 11a.m. registration required; www. pixelsilk.com/webinar-series. FRIDAY • Project Management 101, ManagingInitiatives for Results:Central Oregon BusinessEducation Network will discuss applying a structured systemfor managing initiatives; registration requested; $7 includes lunch;11:30a.m.1 p.m.; EastBendPublic Library, 62080DeanSwift Road; 503-805-6524, Lynn©ALJ-LLC.comor www.meetup.com/COBEN12. • Brown-BagBrainBooster:BendWebCAM presents Andy Grayof Black Crater Software Solutions discussing Xamarin, sharedcodefor cross-platform mobile apps; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library; registration required; www. bendwebcam.com/brownbag-brain-booster.
For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin er visit bendbulletin.comlbizcal
By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
Austin Property Management received 21 messages last weekend from people looking for rentals. Company officials had to give them the bad news. "We had to call them back Monday and tell them we had nothing," said David Furlan, Austin Property Management's owner. Out of the company's 340-property portfolio, only one or two are available, he said.
Central Oregon rental vacancyrate 15% 12.43%
12% 9% 7.04% 6%
5.17'/o
4.41%
3% 1%
His company is hardly alone. A recently released survey of more than 4,618 rental propertiesacross the region during the first quarter of the year found just 46 vacancies. Conducted annually by the Central Oregon Rental Owners Association, the survey for 2013 put the region's rental vacancy at I percent, the lowest by far in the last six years. Just one of the 204 Bend apartments surveyed this year was available. Six of 251 Redmond apartments were available. "This is the tightest rental m arket I've ever seen," said Kevin Restine, the rental
0 2008 *
2009 2 0 10 *
2 011
2 012
201 3
vacancy rates were not compiled in 2010
Source: Central Oregon Rental Owners Assoaation
owner group's president and general manager of Plus Property Management in Bend. Foreclosuresforcing people out of their homes, a lack of new rental construction and continued population growth in Bendhave combined to
push down the supply of available rentals, some rental officials said. The I percent vacancy rate is down from 4.4 percent in 2012, and a reces-
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
sion peak of 12.4 percent in 2009. Low vacancy means rising rents. The average monthly rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Bend was$22 more this year than last. Rates for twobedroom apartments in Bend were $76 more, on average. The numbers aren't precise, as the surveys don't cover every property, and are conducted over the first three
months of each year. But the 2013 survey results highlight just how few properties rental companies have available right now. Just three of the 132 propertiesatFree Property Management are vacant right now, owner Matt Free said. Recently, properties listed by Free have gotten anywhere from six to 30 calls from interested renters on the first day. Supply and demand will eventually lead to more rental homes and apartments, said Restine with Plus Property Management. Several duplex, triplex and apartment complexes have been proposed over the last six months. Most notable is the 104-unit Sage Springs apartment complex near the intersection of Boyd Acres and Ross roads, expected to be ready later this year or in early 2014. "I think long-term, it'll turn out to be positive for everyone. When landlords, investors and builders see this type of security in the market, we'll see more housing," Restine said. — Reporter: 541-617-7820 egluclzlich@bendbulletin.com
New York Times News Service When homeowners discovered that an account that was supposedto compensate them forforeclosure abuses lacked sufficient money to cash their checks, the consulting firm at the center of the mishap promised that the problem was fixed and that the checks were valid. Three weeks later, though, that promise fell short. This time, according to officials briefed on the matter, the consulting firm, Rust, issued a raft of checks with wrong amounts. The mistake, officials said, cheated struggling homeowners out of thousands of dollars. Federal authorities are ordering Rust, which is based in Minnesota, to fix its mistake, the officials said, though the problems continued as of Wednesday. Rust did not immediately return calls for comment. The incident cast a harsh spotlight once again on Rust. Despitea mixed track record, it was selected as the distributor ofchecks as partofa $3.6 billion settlement deal between federal regulators and the nation's largest banks. The settlement deal, struck in January,came afterregulators accused 13 lenders, including JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, of wrongful evictions, bungled loan modifications and other abuses. The problem stems from last week, when Rust issued checks to customers of Morgan Stanleyand Goldman Sachs.Unlike the other banks involved in the settlement, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley's foreclosures were not part of a long independentassessment by outside auditors. As such, the banks agreed to pay some of its customers an extra sum. But Rust, according to the officials briefed on the matter, failed to follow the banks' payout plan. Instead, it issued checks to customers of Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley based on a metric adopted by the 11 other banks. The misstep deprived the homeowners of thousands of dollars. For example, some customers in bankruptcy who were evicted wrongfully deserved $4,650. They received $3 750 instead
PERMITS City of Bend • Hayden HomesLLC, 61128 S.E. BrownTrout, $230,035 • Hayden HomesLLC, 2788 N.E. Springwater, $199,275 • Greg Welch Construction Inc., 2192 N.W.Lemhi Pass, $158,724 • FC Fund LLC,619S.E Gleneden, $153,803
• Lambert Neighbour, 20709 N.E.Tango Creek, $18 l,657 • Kerry Veal, 2832 N.W. McDermott, $30 I,064 • Priscilla Martin, 2494 N.W. Awbrey, $196,356 • Priscilla Martin, 2500 N.W. Awbrey, $196,356 • Sage Builders LLC, 2466 N.W. Crossing, $202,825 • FC Fund LLC, 3014 N.E
Red Oak, $205,406 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20800 N.E. Smoke Stack, $187,771 • GLW Ventures LLC, 1789 N.W.Wild Rye,$438,544 • Hayden HomesLLC, 61129S.E Brown Trout, $27 I,073 • ML Bend USALimited Partnership, 20796 N.E Smoke Stack, $239,189
• Chet Antonsen, 21273 S.E. Bellflower, $198,028 • Alan Nunes, 6 l525 Alstrup, $237,369 • Brookswood Bend LLC, 61145 Teton, $219,851 • Brookswood BendLLC, 61153 Teton, $271,073 City of Redmond • American Energy lnc., 2005 South U.S. Highway 97, $260,000
• Central Oregon Community College, 2324 S.E College Loop, $6,400,000 Deschutes County • Central Oregon Land Holdings LLC, 890 Cinnamon Teal Drive, Redmond, $310,930.88 • Roger Farnand, 5991 N.W. 61st St., Redmond, $223,692.64
• James C. Robertson, 60555 Sunset View Drive, Bend, $337,483 • PWD Associates LLC, 60471 Snap Shot Loop, Bend, $288,390 • PWD Associates LLC, 18673 Coffee Court, Bend, $288,390 • Tetherow Golf Course LLC, 61240Skyline Ranch Road, Bend, $487,223
• John and Kathleen Flanigan Family Revocable Trust, 56703 Glowstone Loop, Bend, $643,102.28 • Pacwest II LLC, 9400 12th Lane, Terrebonne, $310,562 • O'Neill Construction and Design lnc., 18125 Modoc Lane, Sunriver, $323,663.1 2
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Nutrition, D2
Medicine, D4 Money, D5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
FITNESS
ioce uIe, medication, post-op • Doctors test drive surgery, recovery and unlimited physi-
a pay-one-price approach tobiling
cal therapy appointments. And it came on a single bill he could submit to his insurance
company. By Jackie Crosby (Minneapotis) Star Tribune
MINNEAPOLIS — Dr. Richard Goldendescribes himself as an "avid but poor athlete." His bum knee, however, was making it too painful to jog,
downhill ski or play golf.
• Researchers, therapists usetechnology to study movementsof athletes revor Roberts, a Mountain View High School senior and threesport athlete, was wrestling in February when an opponent's hit blew out his right knee. The impact tore the anterior cruciate ligament, lateral collateral ligament, meniscus and quadriceps tendon. He had surgery a week later, and has been doing intensive physical therapy ever since. "We know he's at risk of re-injury and osteoarthritis," said Christine Pollard, who has a Ph.D. in biomechanics and is anassociate professor and the exercise and sports scienceprogram leader at Oregon State UniversityCascades Campus. That's why Roberts is among the first to use OSU-Cascades' research laboratory, one of two new biomechanical labs in Bend that are using cutting edge technology to understand and improve injuries in athletes. Roberts plans to play football next year at college, so it really matters that he moves his body in ways that minimize stress on his joints and to reduce his risks. Because of the severity of his injury and the demands he will put on his legs when he plays football, Roberts visited the new FORCE lab (Functional OrthopedicResearch Center of Excellence Laboratory) for a 3-D motion analysis that can influence his treatment and monitor his movement patterns throughout his recovery. The FORCE lab, which is celebrating its official opening Monday, is dedicated to exercise science research. The lab's first major grant will fund a study that looks at howto reduce risk for arthritis and re-injury after someone hasreconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament in the knee, a common injury site, Pollard said. See Biomechanics/D3
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Associates BendPhysical
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Dick Golden, right, works with physical therapist Brandon Schomberg to strengthen his knee replacement in Edina, Minn. Golden took advantage of a new offer from Twin Cities Orthopedic that offers a one-price option for knee surgery.
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Parents seemorefood, skin allergies inchildren .',raI
By Mike Stobbe The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Parents are reporting more skin and food allergies in their children, a big government survey found. Experts aren't sure what's behind the
MEDICINE in crease. Couldit bethat children aregrowlng UP ln households so clean that it leaves them more sensitive to things that can trigger allergies? Or are mom and dad paying closer attention to rashes and reactions, and more likely to call it an allergy?
call 541-322-3100.
REBOUND'S LAB To learn more about Rebound Physical Therapy's biomechanics lab in Bend, visit www.reboundoregon.
com/biomechanics-lab or call 541-322-9045.
emergencyallergy medicine. SeeAllergies/D4
Tired ef those jiggly arms, want to get rid of that
Photos byAndy Tullis/Tbe Bulletin
Andy Hayes, manager of the new FORCE biomechanics laboratory, left, observes as Mountain View High School senior Trevor Roberts jumps off a box onto force-measuring platforms embedded in the floor in the biomechanics lab. Roberts' movements will be recreated on a computer screen, illustrated by a model of his skeleton. The lab is a partnership between Oregon State University-Cascades Campus, The Center Orthopedic & Neurosurgical Care and Research, and Therapeutic Associates Bend Physical Therapy.
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therapists will celebrate
osucascades.edu/force-lab or
"We don't really have the answer," said Dr. Lara Akinbami of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the senior author of the new report released last week. The CDC survey suggests that about I in 20 U.S. children have food allergies. That's a 50 percent increase from the late 1990s. For eczema and other skin allergies, it's 1 in 8 children, an increase of 69 percent. It found no increase, however, in hay fever or other respiratory allergies. Already familiar with the trend in food allergies are school nurses, who have grown busier with allergy-related duties, like banishing peanuts at school parties or stocking
PAIDADVERTISEMENT
operational, the partners and local physicians andphysical Monday. For information about the FORCE lab, visit www.
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Therapy, in Bend. Although the lab has already been
the lab's official opening on
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Biomechanicslabs in CentralOregon OPENING OFTHE FORCE
wi n ter, the
62-year-old Excelsior, Minn., resident decided to stop putting off surgery and signed up for a new program through Twin Cities Orthopedics that aims to make getting a new knee as uncomplicated as buying a carton of milk. Golden was quoted an upfrontprice of$21,000 that covered the entire operation — including
By Anne Aurand The Bulletin
This
M P NEg
"This is the way to go," said Golden, a neurologist who knows how complicated the medical system can be. "It's like getting an all-inclusive vacation where they think of everything." The Affordable Care Act is spurring a host of efforts to make healthcare more patient-friendly and less costly, and the pay-one-price approach is among them. Afterdecades of discussions and small-scale tests, the federal government in February launched a nationwide pilot with 450 health care organizations to see if bundling payments for a "single episode of care" could help transform a system in which doctors have long been paid for each discrete encounter with patients. SeeOne/D5
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Jay Dicharry, a physical therapist and director of biomechanics at Rebound Physical Therapy, talks to Kelsey Bell, of Bend, about her running mechanics during an
muffin top? Purchasea package of any body area and receive your stomach
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assessment on an instrumented treadmill, a hightech biomechanical analysis tool that Dicharry uses to help athletes resolve chronic pains and improve performance.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
HEALTH EVENTS TRAINING 201 CLINIC: Max King will discuss specific running training functions; free; registration required; 7 tonight; FootZone, Bend; 541-317-3568 or footzonebend. com/events/training-201-clinicwith-max-king. BABYSITTINGBASICS ANO BABYSITTER'STRAINING: $85, registration required; 9 a.m.3:45 p.m. Saturday; DMR Bend Classroom, 2570 N.E.Twin Knolls Drive, Bend; www.redcross.orgl bend, click on "Take AClass". MEET THEOOULAS: Talk with each doula individually about labor support and postpartum; free; registration required; 10 a.m.-noon Saturday; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 N.W. Louisiana Ave., Bend; 541-420-2051. IMPACT CONCUSSIONTESTING: Baseline testing for children, ages 11 through 17; $10, registration required, 9 a.m., 10 a.m., 11 a.m. Tuesday; The Center, 2200 N.E. Neff Road, Bend; 541-322-2321.
How to submit Health Events: Email event information to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days
before the desireddate of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated
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PEOPLE • Bethany Davidson, Barbara Dersch, Marta Gurule, Megan Hooker, AmandaLink, Sarah Machado, Kristina McConnell, Maeve Perle, Michelle Torsenand Lori Willis recently graduatedfrom Central OregonCommunity College's Heart of theCascadesYogaTraining Program.COCCis aYogaAllianceregisteredyogaschool offering the teacher trainingthroughthe continuing educationdepartment. • DickSharp isthe new humanresources director for Mosaic Medical. Sharpserved in senior human resourcesleadership positions for almost20years for companies suchasNIKE,Kaiser PermanenteandVail Resorts. He has also ledhumanresource departments for T-MobileandClear One Health Plans inCentral Oregon. • Dr. Mattie Towle hasjoined the BendMemorial Clinic FamilyMedicine Department. She completedmedical school at theUniversity of Vermont,Collegeof Medicine followed byaresidency and internship atFletcher-Allen HealthCare-University ofVermont.Towle spent thepreviousyear ofher practice in Southland,NewZealandas the generalpractitioner atTuatapere Medical Center.Sheis board certified by the AmericanBoardof Family Medicine.Towlewill be practicing at the EastsideClinic,1501 N.E.Medical Center Drive,Bend.
NUTRITION SAFETY TIPS p(
Keep poultry bacteria confined ln four weeklyinstallments, Glenda Hyde, family community health staff with the Oregon State VniversityExtension
3
Servicein Redmond, offers practical and safe food storageand handling tips for common household perishables. WEEK THREE:POULTRY Thaw chicken or turkey in the refrig-
erator. Washingpoultry is not recommended. If salmonella, abacteria that causes illness, ispresent, itcan spread
all over theareawhere it's washed. Minimize surfaces that the chicken touches. The salmonella can be killed in
the cooking process.Cookpoultry to an
(Then clean andsanitize counter tops and other equipment used to prepare the poultry with a solution of
1 tsp bleach to1 quart of water.)
internal temperature of165 degrees F.
— Anne Aurand, TheBulletin
ave oui' aean ea i , 0 0 • Invest in wellness nowfor wealth jn Ijfe — and yoUrwallet — later By Gabriella Boston
one hour a week to chop up
Special To The Washington Post
vegetables and prepare a big
W ASHINGTON — W e pot of brown rice and a big pot hear it daily, it seems: "Cut of quinoa, and you are set for down processed food and the week." e at more p r o duce a n d Both quinoa and brown rice grains." are great basics that can be OK, fine.But processed dressed up with raw or cooked has its upside (easy and vegetables and proteins for an cheap), while produce and easy meal, says Pugh. "I see grains have their down- them as thebasic black dress. side (prep-heavy and You can jazz them up with acexpensive). cessories — in this case, vegRight? gies, nuts, avocado. The posNot so, says Allison Sos- sibilities are endless." na, a chef and founder of And to really stretch your MicroGreens,a group dedi- dollar,practice proper food cated to teaching families prep to ensure that produce — in p articular children doesn't go bad, says Ebeth — how to prepare healthful Johnson, a plant-based culimeals on a teeny budget (as nary nutritionist. "Many people say one of little as $3.50 per meal for a family of four). the reasons they find healthy "Produce is never too eating expensive is due to proexpensive, no matter what duce spoilage," said Johnson, time of year it is. You just who teaches wellness and have to learn how to pre- healthful cooking. But, she pare it," Sosna said. says, you can get around this For example, learn how issue by buying "fresh fruits to make a mirepoix — the and vegetables on sale, cook h oly aromatic t r inity o f them and then freeze them." c elery, onion a n d c a r Packaged frozen veggies rots — and you can create and fruits are another often amazing flavors whether cheaper option, especially in preparing a soup, stew or the winter, Sosna says.(Even sauce, she says. on a recent trip to the store, I And t h ose p a r ticular found freshspinach for $3.29 veggies are pretty cheap. for 16 ounces, compared with One local grocery store $1.99 frozen.) recently listed the followBut with summer coming, ing prices: yellow onions frozen options might be less at $2.49 per three-pound a ppealing. Instead, look t o bag (or about 83 cents per farmers markets, Pugh says. pound), carrots at $3.99 per Here, too, there are tricks of five-pound bag (or about 80 the trade. Arrive late, and, cents per pound) and celery though you might get a slimat $3.49 per pound. mer selection, prices are often But let's face it, one can- cut significantly. "You can get some great not live on mirepoix alone. "Then I would look for deals that way," Pugh said, items on sale. Kale can be all w h il e s upporting l ocal quite reasonable. Look for farmers. beans and brown rice and Question of organic barley," Sosna said. "Look at the perimeter of the groWhich brings us to the quescery store and you will find tion of local and organic foods. the less processed foods." Is it important to buy organic? The same local grocery Johnson and Pugh say yes, store had dried black beans but Sosna, who "eats what she at $1.69 per pound (13 serv- preaches," said that to her, eatings) and two pounds of ing more produce in general brown rice (22 servings) for and eating locally grown pro$2.69. duce in particular are more Still, it means prepara- i mportant than s t icking t o tion. "It's true there is no organic. "I also know of a lot of farmway around that. It takes more time than heating up ers who are growing sustaina pizza," said Kathy Pugh, ably but who can't afford to be a holistic health coach in organic-certified," she said. "I Washington. " But if y o u feel like it's a whole minefield want to be efficient, take of its own."
a httle more of your money and definitely more of your time than TV dinners, frozen pizza or fried chicken. But you either pay now or later, Johnson says. Eating healthfully might cost more in the short term, but in the long term it helps cut medical costs while improving your general well-being, she says, adding: "What people often forget about the cost of delicious, nutritious food is that the rewards
When it comes to animal protein, though, Sosna agrees with Johnson and Pugh: Go with high-quality, grass-fed, nonantibiotic, n o nhormonetreated and organic whenever possible. The issues with traditional meat are numerous: hormones, antibiotics, fat and protein content, factory farming and feeding practices. The only way to get around these issues, they say, is to pay for for eating healthy — energy, better quality — i n s m aller vitality, long life and glowing quantities, if cost is an issue. skin — are priceless." "I seemeat more as a garnish. Use it sparingly, but go with high quality," said Pugh. Mountain Medical Sosna recommends preparing a whole chicken, which Immediate Care can lead to two or three meals 541-3SS-7799 including a soup. 1302 NE 3rd SPBend Protein, though, can be had www.mtmedgr.com in many ways. Johnson suggests nuts, seeds and beans, which can be bought in bulk at places like Costco, where almonds recentlywere $12.99 for three pounds. That is less than half the price at most grocery stores, Pugh says. HHPIIE STONE Reasonably priced fish can COMPANV g i be found in the frozen section or in cans — such as canned tuna in water, Sosna says. It can be used for "a summer f +0% C,~s salad of tuna, sauteed kale, shaved carrots, oranges and pe orange vinaigrette." By the way, oranges sell for
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$5.99 per eight-pound bag at one local grocery store; that's about 37 cents an o r ange. Hard to beat. Another r elatively cheap seafood that's high in protein and omega-12 is the mussel, which Pugh prepares once a week — Mussel Monday — for her family of three. This includes two or three pounds of mussels (about $3.99 per pound), served with scallions and garlic, and paired with a fresh bakery-bought baguette. "It's quick, easy and cheap, and you end up with a $15 gourmet meal for three peo-
•
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SATURDAY ONLY! Iil •
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ple," Pugh said. In the end, eating health-
•
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HIGH LAICES WELCOMES a
PPACTICES: Family Medicine
By Carolyn O'Neil
LOVES: cross-country skiing,
even coffee bars can show on The Atlanta Journal-Constitution your face. Avoid excess alcoJust in time for shopping hol and caffeine, which dries tripsto buy warmer weather's a nd dehydrates ski n a n d skin-baring fashions, here's causes fine lines to be more advice on what to eat to nourvisible. ish your skin from the inside Drink t h e e q uivalent of out. Nutrition plays a starring eight glasses of water a day. role in skin health and anti- red peppers for lycopene. Note that some of the fluid can aging becauseskin cells need This carotene-like compound come from water in fruits and certain nutrients to repair and may even help blunt sunburn vegetables. regenerate. damage. Protein and t h e m i n eral We found some inspiration A study in the British Jour- zinc are also essential for cell by checking spring fashion nal of Dermatology showed repair and w o und h ealing. trends. The Pantone Color In- that ly c o pene pro t ected Sources of p r otein i nclude stitute, known for predicting against ultraviolet light expo- poultry, fish, beef, pork, eggs, the exact hue and shade of col- sure and reduced premature fat-free or low-fat milk, soy ors to hit runways, chose a pal- signs of aging in the skin. foods, beans, nuts, seeds and ate for spring 2013 that sounds A ntioxidants found i n a nut butters. pretty food friendly. wide variety of plant foods in Sources ofzinc include oysLemon zest, nectarine and a kaleidoscope of colors pro- ters,legumes or beans, nuts tender shoots green are on tect against the oxidation or and seeds, oatmeal, poultry, their top color list, along with breaking down of cells in the wheat bran and wheat germ. poppy red for lips and fabrics. body, including the skin. Don't Healthy mono-unsaturated They're on the top list for skin want to look like a prune'? Eat oils in olive oil and avocados health, too. more of them. help keep skin m oisturized by regulating water content Color me healthy Skin friendly within the cell wall and help Citrus f r u i t , ne c t arines There's something to that the body absorb fat-soluble and green leafy vegetables "fountain of youth." Drinking vitamins A, D, E and K. The are good sources of vitamin water keeps skin moisturized fats found in fish and seafood, C, which is vital for building from the inside. omega-3 fats, help boost skin collagen, which is a spongy Overdoing it at the bars or health, too.
/
•
Nourish yourskin from the inside out network of fibers that keeps s kin p l u mp , e l a stic a n d wrinkle-free. Other sources of vitamin C includered peppers, tomatoes, strawberries and kiwi fruit. For more skin health, think deep red tomato sauce and
Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin file photo
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THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
D3
FITNESS STUDY
Study: Exercisecuts kidneystone risk in women Women haveanother reason to exercise: It may
take after menopause.
help prevent kidney stones. They don't have to break a sweat either. Even walking for a couple of hours a week can cut the risk of developing this
The new research involved nearly 85,000 women 50 and older in the government-funded Women's Health lnitiative study. All had an exam to measure weight and height so doctors painful and commonproblem by about one-third, a large study found. could figure out their body mass index. They "Every little bit makes a difference" and the also filled out annual surveys on what they ate, intensity doesn't matter — just getting a miniso researchers could take into account things mum amount of exercise does, said Dr. Matthew known to lower the risk of kidney stones, such Sorensen of the University of Washington School as drinking a lot of fluids and eating less salt of Medicine in Seattle. or meat. About 9 percent of people will get a kidney Participants said how much exercise they usustone sometime in their life. Obesity raises the risk ally got and that was translated into "METs" — a as do calcium supplements,which manywomen measure of how much effort an activity takes. For
Biomechanics Continued from 01 At the lab, eight infrared c ameras hanging from t h e ceiling aim at a floor embedded with force-measurement platforms. Roberts, with reflective markers strapped to important landmarks on his body — hips, pelvis, knees, ankles, etc.— ran and jumped on the platforms while the cameras recorded from above. Using mathematical calculations, software for this biomechanical lab equipment can recreateRoberts'3-D skeleton on a computer screen. The skeleton model can show exactly how Roberts' joints move front to back, side to side and r otationally when h e r u n s, jumps, lunges — movements that happen on the field. "We want to make sure his mechanics are at their best," said Pollard, who is also the lab director. Clinicians — physicians or physical therapists — can use this analysis to help shape Roberts' treatment and rehabilitation plans. Most p hysical t h erapists can analyze an athlete's movements by eye or by video playback, said Roberts' therapist, Chuck Brockman, a physical therapist and clinic director at Therapeutic Associates Bend P hysical Therapy. But t h i s kind of high-tech analysis provides a much higher level of detail and accuracy.
Biomechanics in Bend Biomechanics is a field in sports science that applies the laws of physics to human performance. In m e asuring a nd modeling m otion a n d forces,biomechanics experts can understand the mechanical cause-and-effectaspects of exerciseand sports. Biomechanics has been around for a long time, but new technological tools are becoming available to make assessments more detailed and accurate for all kinds of athletes. And as of recently, there's quite a bit of this technology right here in Bend. The FORCE lab, although primarily used for research, will also become a facility for community use, Pollard and Brockman said. P r ograms, for example, will target young athletes to see if their movement p a t terns p r e dispose
them to certain injuries. Group programs might be tailored to specific sports, such as golf or skiing. Individuals will be able to get biomechanical assessments. How a fee structure will work for these services has not yet been established. Across t o w n , R e b ound Physical Therapy on Bend's west side, operates a different kind of biomechanics lab that features, among other tools, an "instrumented treadmill" used to help people run more safely and efficiently. Jay D i c h arry, p h y sical therapist and director of biomechanics at Rebound, said there's a growing interest from the general public in biomechanics. "People are thinking more about how they're doing things," he said. He estimates that about 75 percent of the patients he put on the special treadmill are trying to relieve some chronic injury. The others are elite athletes working to maximize their performance. Dicharry, who is widely published on the topic of gait research, has also written a book for runners to improve performance while minimizing injury. "There's no 10 0 p ercent (certain) diagnostic test that answers 'Why am I getting hurt?' We look at the body and all t h ese factors," he said. "But this treadmill lets me see the problem behind the pain, the causative biomechanical mechanism behind the pain." The floor plate of the treadmill — flush with the ground — measures verticalforces andtorque andtwisting forces. It can tell the time of contact a foot has with the ground, the angle of each rise and fall, how stable or wobbly a foot is on impact. It can measure how fast lower leg muscles kick in to stabilize the body, among other things that can't be picked up by eye alone, Dicharry said. He wrote the software for this analysis system. The program offers instant feedback on which Dicharry can base an assessment and treatment plan. A t w o-hour evaluation by Dicharry usually costs about Q50, although it can be covered by insurance plans as part of physical therapy. Peoplewho come in for evaluations leave with a plan for improvement.
A running analysis Kelsey Bell, 41, who works in human resources at BendLa Pine Schools, used to run three or four times a week for sanity and stress release, she said, until she tore her Achilles tendon last fall. In checking out the injury, her doctor also found bursitis under the tendon. She stopped running for a few months. It was a difficult thing to give up. Bell first started running a few yearsago aftershe was diagnosed with the autoimmune disorder lupus. "I have been symptom free since running, which is why I'm terrified of not running," she said. Her physical therapist sent her to Dicharry, who collected data on her as she ran on the treadmill last month. On a large screen in front of t he treadmill, lines jumped and arced in the shape of jagged mountains with each stride she took,representing different elements of her movement. For example, the shape of the lines told Dicharry that Bell was striking her foot too far in front of her, an inefficient movement that can increase the odds of injury or exacerbate an existing one. To decrease the stress on the body, he told her, contact the ground closer to your body instead of so far out front. S he brought t h r e e d i f ferent pairs ofshoes, ranging from more supportive to minimal support, and ran for a few minutes in each on the treadmill. The shoes are the filter between the foot and the ground, but "shoes don't stabilize the foot, you stabilize your foot," Dicharry told her. He discoveredthat regardless of shoes,one of her feet was really unstable, part of a chain of imbalances involved in developing pain. After a t h o rough analysis and conversation, he told her: eYou don't have enough strength to be running correctly because of the left foot and ankle. It can be f ixed. We'll get your foot, ankle and Achilles stronger. We want a strong platform." He gave her a plan of action that included exercises, stretches and running tips. He told her which shoes suited her needs best. A couple of weeks later, Bell felt better. "It's pretty amazing. The
example, 10 METs per week is about2t/2hours of walking ata moderate pace, four hours of light
gardening or onehour of jogging. After about eight years, 3 percent of the women
haddevelopedakidneystone.Comparedto women who got no leisure-time exercise, those who got up to five METs per week had a16 percent lower risk for stones. The risk was 22 percent lower with five to 10 METs per week and 31 percent lower for10 METs or more. Exercise beyond 10 METs added no additional benefit for kidney stone prevention. Exercise intensity didn't matter
— just how muchwomengot eachweek. — Marilynn Marchione, TheAssociated Press
recommendations he made and the shoe analysis were priceless," she said. "I ran a five-mile loop for the first time since Thanksgiving. It's pretty phenomenal."
The Associated Press file photo
Nicole Wells works in a community garden in Sherwood. Simple activities like gardening may help prevent kidney stones in woman.
DEFECTIVE OR RECALLED H IP IMPL A N T ?
What's next Stasinos Stavrianeas, a past president of the Northwest Regional Chapter of the American College of Sports Medicine and an exercise p hysiology teacher at W i l lamette University in Salem, said the breadth of Bend's exercisescience expertise and biomechanics technology is unusual for a town this size. Pollard said it's an indication of the kind of people who live in this community as well as OSU-Cascade's growth. This kind of b iomechani-
cal analysis technology originated for c l i nical r esearch and elite athletic performance, Stavrianeas said. But its uses are expanding. For example, such toolscan also assess the
mechanicsof elderly people, in an attempt to prevent or rehabilitate broken hips due to falls. "It started w it h a t h letic populations but now every venue is viable," Stavrianeas said. "What about p eople who have a stroke? Or are r ecovering from a c a r a c cident'? These people have mechanical deficiencies." If identified, deficient muscles can b e s t r engthened better, thanks to biomechanical analysis technology, he said. But the challenge is getting clinicians trained o n s u ch equipment and knowledgea ble about i n d ividual a g e groups and needs. "It's really high-tech and cutting-edge stuff," he said.
YOU MAY BE ENTITLED TO COMPENSATION
FREE CONSULTATION: 1-800-783-2434 Eugene, Oregon E-mail: jjIs@jjlslaw.com Website: www.jjlslaw.com
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— Reporter: 541-383-0304, aaurand@bendbulletin.com
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D4 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
MEDICINE Pneumococcal vaccine promoted for heart patients
VITAL STATS
How tired areyou?
18%
Men
During 2010-11,women (15.3 percent) weremore
Women
The National Foundation for
of the heart-healthy preventive
Akron cardiology practice to
Infectious Diseases is aiming toboostpneumoniavac-
measures." The pneumococcal disease vaccine is recommendedfor
develop an educational sheet that can beshared with pa-
people older than18 who have
macies andWalgreens then will report whether the number ofpneumococcalvaccines they administer increases. The vaccine is often covered by insurance companies for at-
cination rates among at-risk
likely than men (10.1
patients. Northeast Ohio Cardiovascular Specialists is among
12%
percent) to saythat they often feel "very tired" or "exhausted." These results
are based onresponsesto the following question: "In the past three months, how
6%
cluding chronic heart disease — that put them at higher risk
national nonprofit, led by
for complications from infec-
Dr. Thomas File, chair of the infectious disease division
tion, File said. The vaccine also
Akron, Ohio. The goal of the project is Overall
Those who said they felt
tiredness or exhaustion on most days or every daywere
18- 4 4
45- 64 Age group
65-74
75+
Source: National Health Interview Survey, 2010 Quality of Life and 2011 Functioning and Disability supplements, The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
categorized as often feeling very tired or exhausted.
Greg Cross I The Bulletin
Allergies
to educate patients "to see what we can do to increase the uptake of utilization of this
vaccine for patients who areat greater risk for complications," said File. "I consider this part
Sucking child's pacifier maycut allergy risk
Continued from D1 Sally Schoessler started as school nurse in 1992 in New York state, and didn't encounter a child with a food allergy for a fewyears. But bythe time she left school nursing in 2005, "there were children in the majority of classrooms" with the disorder, said Schoessler, who now works at the National Association of School Nurses in Silver Spring, Md. Food allergies tend to be most feared; severe cases may cause anaphylactic shock or even death from eating, say, a peanut. But many food allergies are milder and something c hildren grow out of . S k in conditions like eczema, too, can be mild and temporary. It's been difficult getting exact numbers forchildren's allergies, and the new report isn't precise. It uses annual surveys of thousands of adults interviewed inperson. The report compares answers from 1997-99 to those from 2009-11. Parents were asked if — in t he previous year — t h e ir child had any kind of food or digestive allergy, any eczema or skin allergy, or any kind
For years, health officials have told parents not to share utensils with their babies or
reduced allergies. Thepractice may be amarker for parents who
child with her ownspoon might
are more relaxed about shield-
be providing similar protection is something that had not been
clean their pacifiers by putting
ing their children from dirt and
closely studied, said Dr.Bill Hes-
them in their mouths, arguing that the practice spreads harm-
germs, said Dr. William Schaff-
selmar, the lead author. In the new study, doctors at
ful germs between parentand child. But new research may turn that thinking on its head.
ner, an infectious diseasesexpert at Vanderbilt University whowas
the University of Gothenburg and elsewhere followed agroup
in the journal Pediatrics, scientists report that infants whose
not involved in the research. The study"adds to this idea that a certain kind of interaction with the microbial environment is actually a good thing for
parents sucked ontheir paci-
infants and children," he said.
keep diaries recording details
fiers to clean them developed fewer allergies than children
"I wonder if the parents that
about food introduction, wean-
In a study published Monday
whose parents typically rinsed or boiled them. They also had
lower rates of eczema,fewer signs of asthma andsmaller
saying that you've got to eat a peck of dirt. Maybe they just ment in their homes."
blood cell that rises in response Studies show that the mito allergies and other disorders. crobial world in which achild The findings add to growing is reared plays arole in allergy evidence thatsome degreeof development, seemingly from exposure to germs at anearly birth. Babies deliveredvaginally age benefits children, and that microbial deprivation might
of about180 children from birth.
is recommendedfor everyone 65 and older.
risk patients, File said.
"One of our goals is to increase public awareness of the importance of these preventive vaccines," File said.
However, File said, studies
have shown less than 20percent of patients with underlying disease whoare younger
If the pilot project is suc-
cessful, he said, "it can potentially be usednationwide."
than 65 get the vaccine, de-
spite the recommendations. To raise awareness, the
— Cheryl Poyirell, Akron Beacon Journal
national group worked with the
Find It All
lES SCHNIB
Online
SiSTTIRE
bendbulletin.com
UAi.ui
mplements
PRONISi
The children wereexamined regularly by a pediatric allergist, and their parents were instructed to
HOME INTERIORS
• r
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cleaned the pacifiers orally were ing and other significant events. just more accepting of the old By the ageof18 months, had a less 'disinfected' environ-
amounts of a type of white
underlying conditions — in-
the groups working with the
at SummaHealth System in
often did youfeel very tired or exhausted?Wouldyou say never, somedays, most days or every day?"
tients, File said. Ritzman Phar-
accumulate markedly different bacteria on their skin and in their
about a quarter of the children
had eczema,and 5percent had asthma. Thosewhose parents reported at least occasionally cleaning their children's pacifiers
•
•
by sucking themweresignificantly less likely to develop the
"It ought to"
conditions — particularly eczema —andbloodtestsshowed
Nursing Home costs range between $4000.00 and $6000.00 per Month!
that they had lower levels of a
backfire, preventing the immune guts than babiesdelivered byce-
type of immunecell associated with allergies. Analyses of the
system from developing a tolerance to trivial threats.
sarean section, and that, in turn, has been linked in studies to a
children's saliva also showed patterns that suggested the
• Does your Trust protect you from the Nursing Home?
• Can we keep our Home and Money?
The study, carried out in
lower risk of hayfever, asthma
practice hadaltered the kinds of
Sweden, could not prove that the pacifiers laden with parents'
and food allergies. But whether a mother who puts a child's
saliva werethe direct cause ofthe
pacifier in her mouth or feedsthe
microbes in their mouths. — Anahad O'Connor, New York TimesNews Service
• We do not qualify for nursing home insurance, What do We do?
Come andgetthe answers to these and many more questions by a Qualified Elder Law Attorney.
of respiratory allergy like hay fever. T he researchers did n o t ask if a doctor had made the diagnosis or check medical records. So some parents may have been stating a personal opinion, and not necessarily a correct one. "We see a lot of kids in clinic that really aren't" allergic to the foods their parents worry about, said Dr. Morton Galina, apediatric allergist at Atlanta's Emory School of Medicine. F or example, h ives a r e sometimes blamed on a certain food when a virus was the actual cause, he added. But experts also said they believe there is a real — and unexplained — increase going on, too. One of the more popular theories is "the hygiene hypothesis," which says that exposure togerms and parasites in early childhood somehow prevents the body from devel-
oping certain allergies. Lio said tests haven't supportThe hypothesis argues that ed that. E mory's Galina said t h e there is a downside to America's culture of disinfection and new CDC statistics may reflect overuse of antibiotics. The ar- a recent "sea change" in the gument has been bolstered by r ecommendations for w h en a range of laboratory and ob- young children should first eat servational studies, including certain foods. some that have found lower In families with a history of ratesof eczema and food aller- eczema orfood allergies, pargies in foreign-born children ents were advised to wait for in the U.S. years before introducing their There could be other ex- young children to foods tied to planations, though. Big cities severe allergies, like peanuts, have higher childhood allergy milks and eggs. But profesrates, so maybe some air pol- sional associations changed lutant is the unrecognized trig- that advice a few years ago ger, said Dr. Peter Lio, a North- after research suggested that western University pediatric allergies were more likely in dermatologist who specializes those kids when the foods in eczema. were delayed. Some suspect the change The old advice "was exhas something to do with the actly the wrong thing to do," evolution in how f oods are and could have contributed to grown and produced, like the some of theincreased cases, crossbreeding of wheat or the Galina said. use of antibiotics in cattle. But The CDC report also found:
• Food and respiratory allergies are more common in higher-income families than the poor, • Eczema and skin allergies are most common among the
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THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DS
MoNEY AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
Obamaadministration simplifies health care application form WASHINGTON — The first draft was as mind-
numbing and complex astax forms. Now the Obama administration is unveiling a simplified
tion, applying online. The ease or difficulty of
applying for benefits takes onadded importance because Americans remain confused about what
application for health insurance benefits under the the health care law will mean for them. federal health care overhaul. At his news conferenceTuesday, President
The biggest change: afive-page short form that
signed up in their employer's plan don't need to bother with the forms.
Filling out the application is just the first part of the process, which lets you know if you qualify for
Barack Obamahailed the simplified forms as an
financial help. Thegovernment asks to seewhat you're making becauseObama'sAffordable Care
steps, plus a basic understanding of insurance jargon. Benefits begin Jan.1, and nearly 30 million uninsured Americans are eventually expected to get coverage. While the first drafts
of the applications were widely panned, the new
single people can fill out. That form includes a cover
example of how his team listened to criticism from Act is means-tested, with lower-income people
forms were seen as an improvement. Still, con-
page with instructions andanother page if youwant to designate someoneto helpyouthrough the pro-
consumergroupsand madeafix. The applications will start becoming familiar
getting the most generous help to paypremiums. Consumers who aren't applying for financial help
cess. But the abridged application form for families
to consumers less than six months from now,
starts at12 pages,andgrows asyou addchildren. Most people areexpected to takeanother op-
on Oct.1, when newinsurance markets open for enrollment in every state. Most people already
still have to fill out a five-page form. Once you're finished with the money part, actu-
sumers must provide asnapshot of their finances. That potentially includes multiple sources of income, from alimony to tips to regular paychecks.
One
shoulder and hip replacement as well as conditions such as carpal tunnel syndrome and chronic back pain. Chris Blegen, a 49-year-old firefighter w h ose w o r kers' comp insurer covered his new knee, said the one-on-one care took the stress out of the suras the billing goes, gery. His wife, Cheryl, relaxing in a giant recliner chair not hearing from six recently at York Gardens, said or seven different she was grateful to avoid the entities." beeping and constant disruppay-one-price c olonoscopy tions of a hospital stay. — Troy Simonson, CEO of program that has a d i r ect They could eat at the bistro Twin Cities Orthopedics contract wit h W i l son T ool downstairs or bring in grocerInternational. ies and cook in the efficiency When businesses foot the kitchen. stay. And it isn't covered by bill, Sorenson said, they have Even the bus driver who Medicare, because the fed- an incentive to k eep costs brought the couple to York eral healthcare program for down. He said a number of Gardens after th e s u rgery seniors only covers hospital firms with 500 or more em- knew to go slow over potholes stays. Since June, when the ployees have shown an inter- to avoid jarring pain. "You don't feel like a numbundled-care Excel program est in the Twin Cities Orthopelaunched, just 21 patients have dics program, which Sorenson ber," Blegen said. "You feel like gone through it. would like to expand to cover you're important to them." Still, the program appears to be delivering. The $21,000 sticker price is about 30 per= Hearing -Center cent less than what insurance companies in the Twin Cities pay for a typical knee replacement, Simonson said, and in line with what Medicare pays > Advanced Technology• Best Prices• Personalized Service overthe course ofsix months. "It's w here health c a r e FREE Video EarExam • FREE Hearing Test should go," he said. "Patients love it. We give full disclosure FREE Hearing Aid Demonstration on the price, and they're only We Bill lnsurances • Workers Compensation• 0% Financing (withapprovedcredit) dealing with us as far as the 541-389-9690 • 141 SE 3rd St. • Bend • (Corner of 3rd & Davis) billing goes, not hearing from six or seven different entities." Still, Twin Cities insurance companies have yet to embrace the one-price, one-bill offer. So far, only Medica has agreed to work with Twin Cities Orthopedics. Medica officials consider it a pilot and declined requests to talk about the program. HealthPartners HEALTH SYSTEM is still considering it, Simonson said. The hurdle? Bookkeeping. The a r cane c o mputerized billing system that girds the nation's health c ar e i n f r astructure is built around a feefor-service model. That means there's one code used to pay the surgeon, another to pay the person who reads X-rays, another to pay the pharmacist, and so on. To get around this, Medica handles each claim for Twin Cities O r t h opedics E x c el program by hand. "Health care loves to overcomplicate things," Simonson said. One approach that Twin Cities Orthopedics and other providers are using is to pitch their medical services directly to large businesses that insure their own workers. Wal-Mart cut a b u ndledcare deal in October with six top hospitals, including the Mayo Clinic and Cleveland
"It's where health care should go. Patients love it. We give full disclosure on the price, and they're only dealing with us as far
Continued from D1 M inn e t o n k a - b a se d UnitedHealthcare is involved in a bundled-price pilot for cancer treatment, while other hospitals and insurers around the country are focused on such ailments as d i abetes, heart disease or pneumonia. "This is just the beginning," said Rajeev Kapoor, a partner in the health practice at global management consulting firm A.T. Kearney. "We will see many more of these programs across the nation." Total k n e e r e p lacement surgery has emerged as a frequent candidate for package pricing because it's a common procedure with wide variation in costs. Wisconsin has launched a three-year bundled care pilot project to study hundreds of knee replacementsurgeries at nine hospitals in seven health care systems. The Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., launched its f i rst b u n dled p ayment for knees i n D e cember in partnership wit h B l ueCross BlueShield of Florida. The key tomaking bundled payments work is control over as much of patient care as possible from start to finish. Twin Cities Orthopedics, a doctor-owned practice,takes all of the risk of covering the procedure, CEO Troy Simonson said. "We've won some and we've lost some, too." A team of on-staff nurses and a nurse practitioner counselspatients before surgeryand caresforthem afterward. Twin Cities Orthopedics handles the lab work and the medications, and performs the surgery at an outpatient clinic, which takes much of the guesswork out of anticipating the cost of the medical staff and keeping the lights on. Instead of a c o stly h o spital stay, Twin C i ties Orthopedics s e nd s p a t i ents t o a n a p a rtment a b l o c k away at York G ardens, an assisted-living f a c i l it y in Edina. Surgeons make daily rounds, nurses provide roundthe-clock care and a physical therapist gets patients moving within hours of surgery. "We have ownership of all aspects," said Justina LehmanLane, a doctor of nursing practice who was hired to develop and oversee the program for Twin Cities Orthopedics. She makes sure every patient has her cellphonenumber. "We're like the small-town clinic." B ut the program i s l i m ited to people who don't have other serious medical issues that might require a hospital
— Ricardo Atonso-Aaidi var, The Associated Press
ally picking a health plan will require additional
Clinic. The program covers certaincardiac and spine procedures as well as transplants at no additional cost for about 1.1 million employees and their families enrolled in the retailer's health plan. Grocery chain Kroger Co. has flown employees around the country to get the best value for common orthopedic procedures. Locally, Minnesota Gastroenterology, a physician-owned practice in St. Paul, offers a
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
ADVICE de E1VTERTAINMENT TV TODAY
essons rommom,in iean in ea TV SPOTLIGHT
ing with the grief herself. It was her mother who'd first By Luaine Lee inspired her to greater things. McClatchy-Tribune News Service A divorced mom, she raised HOLLYWOOD — Dr. Lisa Lisa alone. "She was always Masterson is one of those very much i Go for it. Follow women who's done it all, and your dreams, whatever you almost all at once. But the ob- want to do you can do it.' My s tetrician-gynecologist w h o mother was always my bigrepresents the distaff side on gest advocate ... She said go the syndicated TV show "The for whatever you want. She put Doctors" did it the hard way. that in my mind, and I believed She married her first year it hook, line and sinker and just of medical school, had her son figured I could do whatever I the secondyear and then heard wanted to do," she said "I was very, very studious, the worst news of her life. Her mother, who'd been her muse very driven. I skipped fourth and mentor all her life, was grade. I always wanted to be dying of breast cancer. the best in school and that was Masterson had a brother, 13 the drive. My mother always years her junior, and when her said to give 110 percent and that's what I did." mom became ill forthe second time, they moved in with MasWith her mother's passing, terson and her family. "It was Masterson recalled, "I almost very difficult being a physi- didn't make it from my mothcian and not being able to save er's loss. I stopped eating afterher," she said. wards and my family were all "That's one of my biggest worried about me — I was that disappointments in life ... I'd close to my mother — whether give anything if t hat never I would be able to go on afhappened. I was told when she ter her loss. And my son was had about a year left. So when the one who actually made I got that i n formation, she that happen. He came to me moved in with us. And when and said, 'You need to be my my mother passed, my hus- mother now.' I sort of equated band and I tried to raise my that with my m other being brother," she said. there for me and my child now "But I w a s i n r e sidency needed me in that way. He was then, so I wasn't around a lot. 3. He's like that to this day. "He's taught me many, many And he rebelled. His mother had just passed away, and he things. I don't know who raisrebelled at me trying to raise es who, really. He's taught me him." even more things in raising Her brother was sent to live him. He snapped me out of it with his stepfather, but Mas- with almost one sentence." terson was having trouble copHer son is 21 now and grad-
uating this month. Her brother is also graduating, a time for celebration, she thinks. But she also admits that she's going to suffer from the emptynest syndrome. Divorced, she says she and her ex remain f riends. But she'snot eager to try marriage again. Still, she has plenty to keep her busy. Besides filming "The Doctors" two days a week and a day of preparation for the show, she maintains her private practice and is oncall on weekends. She's also a tireless advocate for women's issues and travels to various countries in Africa in an effort to stem maternal mortality. She conducts seminars on adolescent sexuality, penned
Sp.m. onH f3, "Community" —Remember that Season3 episode "Remedial Chaos Theory," with its alternate timelines? In this season's finale, the study group members revisit the darkest of those scenarios as Jeff (Joel McHale), who has amassed enough credits to graduate, contemplates life after Greendale.
phone day planner and reading his texts'? He doesn't have to account to you for his time. For all you know the man may be in a 12-step program or a therapy group. If he wanted you to know what he's doing, he would tell you. Right now the "friendliest" thing you can do is mind your own business.
about their body changes and has written a book about her own journey. "I've been so fortunate to have the people around me," she sighs."I met my husband in c ollege. W e p r a ctically grew up together. I was fortunate to have the woman of the year or the century for a mom, and my g r a ndmother w as also a phenomenal woman. And to have the support of my husband from college on and then my son, I probably could do even more if my mom was still around. I would say I've had people who've always been in my corner. So any time I felt maybe not so confident, they've been right there McClatchy-TribuneNews Service to push me back up and that's Dr. Lisa Masterson, an OB-GYN, is a co-host on the daytime talk show "The Doctors." which airs on CBS. what you need in life."
Dear Abby:I have worked at my job almost 10 years. Most of the owners are nice, and the staff is great. I like my job most days. I had a really bad week recently. I felt like I couldn't do anything right. The week ended with a really angry text from my b o ss. He was right. I was in the
wrong, and I apologized. He sent me another text, still angry, and my whole weekend was ruined by it. I kept thinking how mad he was, and how in a few days, I'd start my week in the doghouse. I can't figure out how not to take work home with me. Also, I can't help but think he was wrong using a text as a means of discussing the issue. How do I confront this issue? — Still Upsetin Oregon Dear Still Upset: It would have been much better management if your boss had talked with you face to face about what was wrong with your performance. By now, your boss should have cooled off, and I suggest that you have a private chat with him and say that if he has a bone to pick with you, you would prefer to hear it from his lips rather than have it communicated in a
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR
YOURHOROSCOPE
year, if a part of your life is out of sync, By Jacqueline Bigar you will opt to let go and change that experience to a more positive one. Your sign's stubbornness will be used well, as of attraction. Tonight: Happily head home. you will not give CANCER (June21-July22) Stars showthe kind up once a decision of dayyou'll have is made. If you are ** * * * Y our circle of friends could ** * * * D ynamic single, your appeal go from being active to being very quiet, ** * * P ositive so a rs; however, which will leave you wondering what is ** * A verage you might not be next. Re-evaluate certain life goals. You might be aiming for a desire that is no ** S o-so up for the dating longer valid, and you'll want to revise your * Difficult game. Fortunately, wish list. Tonight: Go for what you want. you have the option LEO (July23-Aug. 22) to decide. A fellow TAURUSlets you know ** * T ension builds. The idea of that he or she does not see eye to eye throwing in the towel could go through with you. your mind. Avoid making any definite ARIES (March 21-April19) decisions right now. A friend will support ** * * You might want to keep a closer you in whatyou want, even if it's not eye on your finances. An opportunity necessarily what is best; that knowledge could appear that allows unusual growth. might not be available. Tonight: Till the Avoid quickactions and decisions right wee hours. now. You need to give this decision time. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) Reach out to someone for his or her ** * * Reach out to someone you really feedback. Tonight: Indulge a loved one. care about. Understanding evolves to a TAURUS (April 20-May20) new level, which allows greater give-and** * * * L u nar eclipses generally take. Recognize that if you back off and bring surprises — if not now, then in the look at the big picture, you will see another following months. Today's eclipse brings option. More information also will come youthechanceto havea new beginning. You'll zero in on issues, butyou might not forward. Tonight: Opt for a distraction. want to act for several days in order to let the intensity level out. Tonight: Out late.
GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** You might wonder what is going on. Your natural response is to observe, take in information and see what opens up. Give yourself time to sort through the details of a project. Venus moving into your sign allows you to use the principle
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
** * * * D i scuss a change with a key partner or an adviser. Your finances go up and down as they rarely have before. You see life in a new light as a result. Look at the long term, and make it a point to have a long-overdue discussion with a loved one. Tonight: Dinner for two.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
9 p.m. on H E3, "The Office" — As the staff prepares for the documentary's premiere, and Dwight (Rainn Wilson) prepares to propose to Esther (Nora Kirkpatrick), Jim (John Krasinski) talks him into agreeing to hire an assistant to the assistant regional manager. Turned away by her day care center, Angela (Angela Kinsey) brings her baby to work. Andy (Ed Helms) auditions for a singing competition.
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text, which was hurtful. Dear Abby:After my best friend of more than 20 years, I'll call him Tim, told me his wife had cheated on him, I confessed that I am in love with him. His response floored me. Tim announced that he has been in love with me all this time and can imagine growing old with only me. A friend told me I'm committing adultery with Tim because he is now in the process of leaving his cheating wife for me. Am I? We haven't been intimate, nor do we plan to sleep with each other until the divorce is final. I have loved Tim far longer than she has been in the picture, and I feel this is a chance for happiness that fate has offered us and we are meant to grow old together. Are we wrong to pursue a relationship'? — Conflicted in California Dear Conflicted:If Tim has been in love with you all these years, he couldn'thave had much of a marriage. His wife's infidelity was his "get out of jail" ticket and he took it. I don't know what your "friend's" definition of adultery is, but according to Webster's dictionary, you're not committing it.
9 p.m. on TRAV,"Monumental Mysteries" —Where did the term "flying saucer" originate? Who was an inspiration for Bram Stoker's"Dracula"? Did John Wilkes Booth escape justice and live out his life in Texas? In this new series, history explorer and museum enthusiast Don Wildman uncovers some ofAmerica's most intriguing events, greatest triumphs, best-known disasters and even some notorious crimes that are linked to many of the nation's monuments.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347
10:01 p.m. on l3, "Elementary" — Fans of the original Sherlock Holmes stories will know the name Irene Adler, an iconic female character in the Holmes universe. This show's modern-day Sherlock (Jonny Lee Miller) has an Irene of his own, and viewers will meet her — played by Natalie Dormer ("Game of Thrones") — in the new epi sode"RiskManagement." Lucy Liu also stars.
• 42 (PG-13)12:55, 3:50, 6:50, 9:50 • THE BIGWEDDING(R) 12:10, 3:05, 6:15, 9: l5 • THE CROODS (PG) 1:30, 4:30, 7:05, 9:35 • G.L JOE:RETALIATION(PG-13) I:20,4:20, 7:35, IO: IO • THE HOST (PG-13) I2:15 • IRON MAN 3 IMAX (PG-13) 12:30, 3:45, 7, 10:15 • IRON MAN 33-D(PG-13) 1, 3, 3:30,4:15, 6, 6:30, 6:45, 7:30,9:10,10, IO:30 • IRON MAN 3(PG-13) Noon, 12:45, 3:15, 4, 7:15, 9:45, IO:30 • JURASSICPARK3-D (PG-13) 1:15, 4:10, 7:10, 10:10 • OBLIVION (PG-13)1:10, 4:05, 7:20, 10:20 • OLYMPUSHASFALLEN(R) 1:35, 4:35, 7:25, 10:25 • OZTHE GREAT AND POWERFUL (PG)12:20,3:20,6:20, 9:25 • PAIN & GAIN(R) 12:35, 3:35, 6:35, 9:30 • SCARY MOVIE (PG-13) 5 1:45, 4:45, 7:45, 10:05 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. t
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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • THE COMPANY YOUKEEP(R) 12:45, 3:45, 6:30 • EMPEROR (PG-13) 12: l5, 3: l5, 7 • MUD(PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6: I5 • THE PLACE BEYOND THEPINES (R) Noon, 3, 6 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 1, 4, 6:45 • STARBUCK (R) 1:15, 4:15, 7:15
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— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com
or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013:This
Sp.m. onl3, "The Big Bang Theory" —When the girls join theguysfora game ofDungeons 8 Dragons, Sheldon and Amy's (Jim Parsons, Mayim Bialik) relationship takes an interesting turn. Koothrappali (Kunal Nayyar) goes on an awkward date — imagine that! — with Lucy (Kate Micucci)
a guidebook for teenage girls
Cellphonesnoopfinds signsof adultery Dear Abby:I have a friend who I believe is having an affair. I have no concreteevidence, only a slew of circumstantial evidence such as odd work hours, blocks of mystery time set aside at night in his cellphone's day planner, and evading quest ions a b out t e x t s DEAR from females. ABBY I have no idea how t o a pproach h i m , or if I even should. I wouldn't know how to begin the conversation with him because I have no solid proof. I always considered him to be a decent individual, but in the back of my mind now I'm thinking, "He's cheating on his wife!" What makes me uneasy is that it's all based on my hunch. I'm usually pretty good with my hunches, though. — Nick in New England Dear Nick: What are you doing going through your friend's cell-
8 p.m. on H C), "Wipeout" — This season "Wipeout" celebrates its 100th-episode milestone with new over-thetop courses and the return of Jill Wagner to the family. The infamous Big Balls are back, along with new obstacles such as Octopushy and Space Podof Doom.
** * * L et someone have his or her way. You might not be sure of the validity of this person's ideas, but in time you will know. This person has a lot of character and a strong personality. You'll want to honor his or her requests. Tonight: Initiate nothing. See what comes forward.
• A GOOD DAY TO DIE HARD (R)6 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 9 • After 7 p.m., shows are 2f and older only. Younger than 2f may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legalguardian.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec.21)
Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271
** * * You are more limited nowthan you might realize. Understand that it might be best to put off taking any action, unless is to make a personal resolution such as starting a diet or cleaning out your desk more often. Tonight: Work out or sit in a hot tub. Letyour stress dwindle.
• UPSTREAM COLOR(no MPAArating) 7
CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * Tap into your creativity if you see problems arise. You might not want to take action just yet; however, there is no reason you can't brainstorm in the meantime. A new friend could seem resistant to you at first, but that will change in time. Tonight: Put on your dancing shoes.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * S tay anchored. You might see a chance for a new beginning where your domestic life is concerned. Ifyou don't see it yet, know that you will in the near future. A change involving a friend or a family member appears to be in the offing. Embrace it. Tonight: Do your thing.
PISCES (Fed. 19-March20) ** * * Reach out to several people whom you have put off calling. Expect a strong reaction. You'll feel much more passionate about a problematic issue than you have in a while. Test out your ideas on a friend who is willing to play devil's advocate. Tonight: Join a pal for dinner. © 2013 by KingFeatures Syndicate
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~, SAGE,» i<ii CAFE ~4j' sA's
541-382-6740 2762 NW Crossing Dr., ¹l01
Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505
• 42(PG-13) 4:10, 6:50 • IRON MAN 3(PG-13) 3:30, 6:20 • IRON MAN 33-D (PG-13) 4, 6:50 • OBLIVION (PG-13) 4: I5, 7 • PAIN & GAIN (R) 4, 6:40 Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014
• THE CALL (UPSTAIRS— R) 6:30 • IRON MAN 3(PG-13) 6:15 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.
E LEVATIO N Elevation Capital Strategies 400 sw BluADrive suite 101 Bend Main: 541-728-0321 www.elevationcapital.biz
ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
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Pets 8 Supplies
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Gardening Supplies & Equipment
Adopt a nice cat from Border Collie Pups, Red Donate deposit bottles/ WHEN YOU SEE THIS Tumalo sanctuary, cans to local all volunand White, 6 weeks Thompson Arms Rototiller, C r aftsman, PetSmart, or Petco! o ld M other's D a y , teer, non-profit rescue, ~ Oo /1 Cotl'a18'tl . < CorlcaPt T CR83, 2 23 , 2 4 3 , 6.5 HP, just replaced Fixed, shots, ID chip, to help w/cat spay/ Degtg 1 $200. 5 4 1-763-4052 30-06 barrels and two M Predator engine. Rear orePixatBendbolletin,cojn tynes, tested, more! Sanctuary neuter vet bills. Cans Delivery Available. Visit our HUGE scopes, $1,500. $225. On a classified ad open Sat/Sun 1-5, other for Cats trailer at new home decor R uger ¹ 1 2 7 0 , 3 - 1 0 541-954-5193. go to days by appt. 65480 Redmond Petco (near Fawn Pugs CKC $400. consignment store. Leopold Gold Ring, www.bendbulletin.com What are you 78th, Bend. Photos, map Wal-Mart) 'til 5/20. Do- Mother and Father on New items SUPER TOP SOIL $1,000. to view additional at www.craftcats.org nate Mon-Fri @ Smith site. Ready for their www.herahe aodandbark.com arrive daily! looking for? 541-728-1568 541-389-8420, or like us n ew h o mes. C a l l photos of the item. Screened, soil 8 comSigns, 1515 NE 2nd; or i Want to Buy or Rent 930 SE Textron, on Facebook. You'll find it in at CRAFT in Tumalo 541-261-9437 post mi x ed , no Bend 541-318-1501 Wanted: Collector 261 rocks/clods. High huwww.redeuxbend.com Wanted: $cash paid for Adult barn/shop cats, The Bulletin Classifieds anytime. seeks high quality Medical Equipment Info: 541-389-8420; or mus level, exc. for vintage costume jewfishing items. fixed, shots, some www.craftcats.org elry. Top dollar paid for friendly, others not so GENERATE SOME ex- Call 541-678-5753, or Jazzy Power Chair mo- flower beds, lawns, straight gardens, Gold/Silver.l buy by the much. No fee & free de503-351-2746 citement i n your 541-385-5809 bility chair 8 attach., s creened to p s o i l . Estate, Honest Artist neighborhood! Plan a livery. 541-389 8420 Just bought a new boat? $325. 541-388-3789 Bark. Clean fill. DeElizabeth,541-633-7006 garage sale and don't liver/you haul. Chihuahua puppies, (2) Sell your old one in the Frenchtons - SPRING forget to advertise in • Com p uters Ask about our 541-548-3949. r eally c u te ! $ 2 5 0 . classifieds! classified! WANTED: Tobacco PUPPIES. Put Super Seller rates! Building Materials 541-771-2606 541-385-5809. pipes - Briars and Laptop: Dell I nspiron deposit down for 541-385-5809 smoking accessories. Mothers Day. $700 to Headboard, Nice queen Windows 7, 1 yr old, Approx 230 feet of 4' Lost 8 Found Cocka-Poo puppy for Fair prices paid. pd $900, sell $500 chain link fence w/1 0' $800. 541-548-0747 size, $49. M other's Day ! F e - English Bulldog, beau- KSMore Pix at 8endbulletin.ci Call 541-390-7029 o bo. C a l l P a m o r gate, 4' gate, some rails, 541-420-2220 wee k s , between 10 am-3 pm Beautiful, big pale or- m ale 11 Mathias 541.923.6303 caps 8 accessories like Found: thimble n e ar white, female, 4 ange Per s ian/Maine blonde, crate-trained, tiful Nottingham Square, in new, $350. 541-410-7473 yrs o l d . sp a y ed,German Shepherd AKC La-Z Boy recliner, burCoon mix, needs quiet housebroken. $ 350. 257 S E Bend. C al l t o c h a mpion gundy leather, l i ke needs bulldog knowl- puppies 205 REDMOND Habitat adult home ASAP. NO 541-382-5127 identify. bloodlines, excellent new cond., orig. $900, Musical Instruments e dgable family, a i r RESTORE Items for Free small kids or other pets. 541-317-3911. temperaments $800 $490. 541-385-8020 conditioned home, no Fee waived for r i ght Dachshund, minicream Building Supply Resale children. Very Emily 541-647-8803 MOVING MUST SELL, Yamaha 88-Keyboard, Found to y in The Quality at Free Dwarf Banana home. Fixed, t e sted, dapple girl, 7 weeks, small DGX-505, w / bench, active. $500. beautiful knotty pine German Shepherd pups, Bulletin's parking lot LOW PRICES T ree p l ant, C a l l groomed, vaccinated, ID $300. Can send pic- 541-382-9334. ent. center+ TV, $500. $350. 541-647-1292 ready May 15th. Fri. 5/3; call to idenchip. 389-8420 or visit tures. 541-408-6762. 1242 S. Hwy 97 541-617-9819. 541-317-5154 Call 541-620-0946 www.craftcats.org. 541-548-1406 tify, 541-382-1811 Open to the public. 212 Husky/Pit puppies, born Lost Cat (Roxy) - RE• Mis c . Items 4/2/13. 5 boys, 4 girls, Antiques & WARD. Small female nice coloring, $250. Tortoiseshell w/white Buying Diamonds Collectibles Fuel & Wood • 541-306-9218. chest & b elly. Last /Gold for Cash seen 4/27 in the vicinLab mix female 1 y r. Circa 1945 -14 place Saxon's Fine Jewelers All Year Dependable of Badger Rd. & FREE to good home setting of C a stleton 541-389-6655 Firewood: Seasoned ity only. 541-420-5602, Joe. China, Sunnybrooke Lodgepole, Split, Del. Parrell. Please call or BUYING text if you see her. Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 pattern, many extra Lionel/American Flyer Labradoodles - Mini 8 541-390-5169. p ieces incl. $4 7 5 . for $335. Cash, Check med size, several colors 541-475-2872 trains, accessories. or Credit Card OK. LOST "Olive" 10-yr-old 541-504-2662 541-408-2191. 284 286 290 541-420-3484. i7a www.alpen-ridge.com The Bulletin reserves spayed f e male Estate Sales Sales Southwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Redmond Area BUYING & SE L LING Corgi r/a Sh i-Tzu, the right to publish all Like cats? Want to help long-hair black, gray, ads from The Bulletin All gold jewelry, silver Gardening Supplies the forgotten cats of ESTATE SALE EVERy- SUPER SIZE SALE! ESTATE SALE white, NE area near newspaper onto The and gold coins, bars, C .O.? Volunteer a t THING GOES! Riding (See craigslist ad.) ** FREE ** & Equipment • Home/Garage/Woodairport. 541-419-6356 Bulletin Internet web- rounds, wedding sets, mower, Gregor boat, Sat, 7-5, 60181 Cinder Garage Sale Kit working shop full! CRAFT & get your kitty site. class rings, sterling silfix! All kinds of help outdoor furniture, anButte Rd., DRW. Quality furniture for all ver, coin collect, vinPlace an ad in The Find exactly what give a l ittle BarkTurfSoil.com tiques, hou s ehold watches, dental rooms! Garage, fish- needed, Bulletin for your gaBulletin tage or a l o t . C a ll The you are looking for in the Servingcen<W 0 eaon r nre raar goods, tools 8 much ing, reloading, Ber- t3ime gold. Bill Fl e ming, 286 rage sale and re89-8420 o r visi t 541-382-9419. more. Thurs. thru Sat. Sales Northeast Bend etta shotgun, shop full www.craftcats.org. PROMPT D E LIVERY CLASSIFIEDS ceive a Garage Sale 246 5/9-5/11, 8 a.m. to 5 of Irg w oodworking 542-389-9663 Kit FREE! P ool table, w/ 3 b a r Guns, Hunting p .m. 538 7 2 P i n e power tools. Take Families. Fri. & Sat., stools, & access. exc. Free Dwarf Banana Lost:Ring, women's gold Grove Road, La Pine. 4 8-4. Hwy 97 N. of Redmond, & Fishing KIT I NCLUDES: filigree w/tiger eye, downWakeboards, raft • 4 Garage cond., 541-408-2188 Sale Signs west at O'Neil Jct., T ree p l ant, C a l l town Bend, 5/1. Reward vests, paddles, ski, • $2.00 Off Coupon To 282 right at NW Way to 500 rounds of 7.62x39 Wanted- paying cash 541-617-9819. offered. 541-688-1629 T hule r a ck , i g l o o Toward Your Montgomery & follow ammo, $250. Sales Northwest Bend cooler, Balance bike, Use for Hi-fi audio & stuNext Ad REMEMBER: If you signs to ... 541-480-9912 For newspaper dio equip. Mclntosh, Strider bike, treadmill, • 10 Tips For "Garage have lost an animal, 2789 NW Lynch Ct. Malamute/Wolf mix pup- Bend local pays CASH!! J BL, Marantz, D y Garage Sale Fri-Sat, 9-4, crafts, delivery, call the Chri s tmas Sale Success!" don't forget to check pies, 6 Weeks old. Low Household items, jewCirculation Dept. at Fri-Sat., 9-4 Numbers Content. Males, $350, naco, Heathkit, Sanhouses, jewelry, lots for all firearms 8 The Humane Society elry, furniture, electron541-385-5800 issued @ 8 a.m. Fr/! F emales, $400. C a l l ammo. 541-526-0617 of household items, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. in Bend 541-382-3537 ics, 3637 NW Falcon To place an ad, call PICK UP YOUR Call 541-261-1808 21624 Paloma Dr. Photos & details on web- 541-241-4914 Bushmaster AR-15 rifle, Redmond, Ridge off Archie Briggs 541-385-5809 GARAGE SALE KIT at site www.atticestate541-923-0882 & s c ope, NIBPeople Look for Information or email 1777 SW Chandler Parrot Cage, 35" tall, mags, BEND'S BEST Y A RD sandappraisals.com Prineville, Multi Family Yard Sale! classified dj bendbulletin.com 37" wide, 24" deep, $1250. 541-647-8931 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 About Products and 26th yr. multi Attic Estates 8 541 -447-71 78; Lower Village Rd, to Bro- SALE! play pen on top and CASH!! Services Every Day through family, something for Appraisals The Bulletin OR Craft Cats, ken Arrow Rd off Archie skirt around bottom. For Guns, Ammo & serving cenlral 0 egon sincel903 everyone, 1 day only! The Bulletin The Bulletin Classifieds 541-389-8420. Briggs. Antique pressed 541-350-6822 Reloading Supplies. $100 OBO. S at., May 1 1 , 7 4 , glass, tools & more, 541 -408-6900. 541-647-4232 May11, 8-4; May12, 8-2. 2889 NE Lotno. Fri-Sat 8-2, lots of mis- HOUSEHOLD Puppies, 3 Factory ammo, 9mm, 40 regon cellaneousgood stuff- SALE Everything Pomeranian Jay & Betty Gage of the cutest, just in S&W, 45acp, 223, 556, YOUR ADWILLRECEIVECLOSETo 2,000,000 m ust see! 3328 NE 308, 380. 541-647-8931 goes! Fri-Sat-Sun 9-4 time for Mothers Day! Classified EXPOSURESFORONLY $2SO! Cruise Loop, off Pur- Large furniture, art ESTATE SALE $350. 541-480-3160 GUNS,GUNS,GUNS cell & Butler Market Rd. Advertising oegor clasrrfirrwre Iewxrer r a a recrce%heomorroaare hbharr Aawralrw 21411 MARGARET LANE, Bend supplies, f ireplace, arms AR-15, POODLE AKC Toys. Olympic more; NW Elm Place, Weekof /Iriay 6, 2013 Network Friday, May 10 • Saturday, May 11 Garage Sale, Sat. 9-5, Redmond 97756 Loving, cuddly com- fully customized w/ extras, $1350. RemSun. 9-3, 2120 NE panions. 541-475-3889 (Take Butler Market Road to ington 870 e xpress Kim Ln, Bend. Deschutes Market Road and follow fo shotgun $250. Marlin Queensland Heelers Margaret Lane-House is on the corner of USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Standard 8 Mini, $150 .17 customized with Serving Central Oregon since 1903 Moving Sale - Fri. 8 Deschutes Market Rd. & Margaret Lane) & up. 541-280-1537 AMMO, $400. 541-3S5-5809 Sat., 9am-1pm. Power Dcor-to-door selling with SHOP AND HOUSE OPEN AT 9:00 AM. Call 541-419-6054 tools, furniture, motor- fast results! It's the easiest www.rightwayranch.wor NO Crowd Control numbers dpress.com cycle, clothes, and R UGER LCR 3 8 c a l House for Sale/Maybe Rent way in the world to sell. more. 20865 89th St., l ightweight rev, n e w . Seniors & Veterans! Suzuki 4-wheel drive Quad with trailer and blade; off of Tumalo Rd. Adopt acompanion cat $450. 541-815-4901 DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, 1953 John Deere 40 tricycle with sickle bar and The Bulletin Classified from Tumalo rescue, fee Sat. & Sun. 8-5 Only! bucket; Frazer/Nash Kit car, completed; Dune Multi-family Moving sale support, property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced 541-385-5809 waived! Tame, fixed, May 11th & 12th Buggy/VW motor; Lots of VW parts and motors; Fri 8 Sat. 9-4; Sun., shots, ID chip, tested, in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295. www.paralegalalternatives.ccm 9th Annual Trout DR Trimmer; Motorized cement mixer; New in 9-noon. Furn.house- Huge Huge Estate Sale, more! 389-8420. Photos: divorceOusa.com Box-Water Heater; sink and toilet; Garden tools; hold items, lots more! Bum FLY SWAP www.craftcats.org. Like three car garage full, wheelbarrow; VW frame; few hand tools; oil fil- 657 NE Seward. Big Bargains on New & us on Facebook. you need it we got it! ters; Ham and CB radio parts and test units; SigUsed, plus great Sat., 8 Sun., 8-4, Furnal generators; oscilloscope; Tubes; Resistors; Shih Tzu mix, very tiny, in-store savings. Neighborhood garage niture, kitchen ware, bulbs; and lots of books o n re p air; 1958 gorgeous. $300 each. Fly & Field Ouffiffers GORDON TRUCKING-CDL-A Drivers Needed! Dedicated and OTR Rounded corner TV — tube turns on; Two twin sale, Sat. & Sun., 9-4, tools, paintings, an541-977-0035 35 SM/ Century, Bend tique lamps, books, Tempur-Pedic massage/lift beds; Large upright 20679 Patriot Lane. 541-318-1 61 6 Positions Now Open! $1,000 SIGN ON BONUS. Consistent Miles, h ousehold appl . , Siamese kittens, raised freezer and older chest freezer; 2 matching sofas Lots of good stuff! 3 037 SW 3 5t h C t . in home. Gorgeous! SAVAGE Mod. 111 7mm Time Off! Full Benefits, 401k, EOE, Recruiters Available 7 days/week! and sectional pieces; Green recliner; China Redmond. Don't miss! Only $20. 541-977-7019 mag, 3x9 scope, $395. h utch; Armoire' s tyle d r esser; 2 Kir b y 288 866-435-8590 541-815-4901 vacuums-one Generation4 model; Coyote & Sales Southeast Bend Siberian Husky pups; 8 Badger skins, mounted; Electrical appliances; Husky-Wolf-Mal. p u ps Scarce Colt L E6940, DRIVERS Get on the ROADFAST! IMMEDIATEOPENINGS!! TOP PAY, Framed wildlife prints; Unique Juniper log mantle Garage/Estate Sale Sales Other Areasg $400 ea. 541-977-7019 NIB; monolithic upper and supports; Unusual Juniper log shelf unit and Fri. Sat. 10-4, 60 665 FULL BENEFITS, CDL-A, Hazmat, Doubles Required! Haney Truck r eceiver, Roge r s table; Oak dining set with 4 chairs; Bookcases; Crockett Way, Hwy 210 s tock, B U IS , 2 - 2 0 Line, CALL NOW1-888-414-4467. WWW.GOHANEY.com NOTICE Computer desk and older computer; 3 printers; 20 east, R. on Gos- Remember to remove Furniture & Appliances round mags, s ling, Men's clothing and belt buckles; Matching dresscleaning gear. Comes L. on Rickard, R. your Garage Sale signs Driver - Two raises in first year. Qualify for any portion of $.03/mile ing table and dresser; 2 toy/entry hall benches; ney, Groff, L. on Chwith black VOODOO (nails, staples, etc.) Linens; Books; Cleaning items; Lamps; side on A1 Washers8 Dryers quarterly bonus: $.01 Safety, $.01 Production, $.01 MPG. 3 months isholm t o C r o ckett. after your Sale event 2-gun tac bag a nd tables; Old Avon Bottles in Boxes; Luggage 2 Glassware, couch, bar $150 ea. Full war200 rounds ammo. OTR experience. 800-414-9569 www.driveknight.com is over! THANKS! older bicycles; Extension ladder; Garden tools; chairs, c o ffee table ranty. Free Del. Also $2,200. From The Bulletin Old trunk; Clinton Apache boat motor; lots and set, dining set. wanted, used W/D's (458)206-8721. and your local utility Owner Operators: Home Daily. Excellent Rates. Paid FSC, loaded & lots of other items!!!! 541-280-7355 companies. Just bought a new boat? empty. 75%Drop &Hook. Great Fuel &Tire Discounts. Lease Purchase Handled by... Multi Family Sale, Sell your old one in the Deedy'8 Estate Sales Co. Available. CDL-Awith1 year experience required. Call 888-703-3889 or Fri. 8 Sat. 8-2, 21065 The Bulletin Dresser good condition classifieds! Ask about our Ser ing CentralOregon since l903 541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves Wilderness Way. No $80. Super Seller rates! apply at www.comtrak.com www.deedysestatesales.com Early's, Cash Only!s www.bendbulletin.com 541-420-2220 541-385-5809 •
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The Bulletin
E2 THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
ED• 541 -385-5809
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
Automotive Receptionist/Title Clerk Oil Can Henry's Bend P ull-time, needed f o r Bend location. Title & and Redmond locaRegistration experience tions is now acceptpreferred. C ompetitiye ing applications for pay & benefits. Please lube techs. Experi528 ence a plus, but not INTERFOR send resume' to necessary. P re-em- Immediate opening for bcrvhire@ mail.com Loans & Mortgages or apply in person at drug test is an experienced • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess ployment r equired. Sto p b y Sawmill Supervisor 63500 N. Hwy 97, Bend. WARNING Bend location; 61160 The Bulletin recom(Gilchrist, OR) Remember.... S. Hwy 97 or Red- Do you want to be part mends you use cauA dd your web a d mond location; 2184 of a "World C/ass" tion when you prodress to your ad and S. Hwy 97; for applivide personal maintenance organireaders on The cation. NO P HONE zation? Do you posinformation to compaBulletin' s web site CALLS PLEASE. nies offering loans or sess the follow expewill be able to click credit, especially riencefskill levels? through automatically those asking for ad•Post-secondaryeduto your site. Banking vance loan fees or cation - minimum companies from out of Grade 12 education Shipping Dept. ) cfirst communit •5+ years of Sawmill state. If you have e d t u o Loader concerns or quessupervisory or similar BRIGHT WOOD We are excited to tions, we suggest you experience CORPORATION announce an avail- •Lumber grading ticket consult your attorney able position for a Bright Wood Corpoor call CONSUMER and familiarization Place a photoin your private party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES ration in Madras OrFinancial S e r vice with Optimization will HOTLINE, for only$15.00 per week. Starting at 3 lines R epresentative i n egon is seeking an 1-877-877-9392. be an asset experienced forklift Bend, Oregon. "UNDER '500in total merchandise We want you to join OVER '500in total merchandise driver/loader to help BANK TURNED YOU Salary Range: our Sawmill team in 7 days .................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 in our growing deDOWN? Private party $10.00- $19.00 Gilchrist, OR. We ofwill loan on real esmand. A valid driver 14 days................................................ $16.00 For more details 7 days.................................................. $24.00 fer a competitive sallicense is required. tate equity. Credit, no please apply online: *Must state prices in ed 14 days .................................................$33.50 ary and benefits Good a t t endance problem, good equity www.myfirstccu.org package. Please ap28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special is all you need. Call EOE ply on line at www.in- and a safe driving (call for commercial line ad rates) Oregon Land Mort4 lines for 4 days.................................. record are a must. terfor.com/careers Starting wage DOE. gage 541-388-4200. EEO/Drug Free WorkPlease apply in the place Employer DO YOU NEED Personnel Depart- LOCAL MONEY:We buy A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: secured trust deeds & A GREAT ment at the address note,some hard money Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. EMPLOYEE Laborer below. Benefits inloans. Call Pat Kellev * RIGHT NOW? clude medical/denBRIGHT WOOD BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) 541-382-3099 ext.13. tal/life insurance. ViCall The Bulletin CORPORATION REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well before 11 a.m. and s ion a n d Afl a c Hiring for entry level a vailable t o pu r as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin get an ad in to pubpositions in all prochase. EOE/On site lish the next day! ductions plants at reserves the right to reject any ad at bendbulletimcom pre-employment 541-385-5809. our corporate headany time. is located at: drug screening reVIEW the quarters location in quired. Classifieds at: Madras. Looking for 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bright Wood Corp., www.bendbulletin.com individuals with good Bend, Oregon 97702 335 NW Hess St., a ttendance and a Madras, OR 97741. strong work ethic. 541-475-7799 Food & Beverage Please apply in perPLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is Bend Golf & C ountry son at 335 NW Hess needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or 627 Club is l ooking for S t. M a dras Or . reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher exp. food and bever- Starting wage Vacation Rentals shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days age servers and bar- $10.00 per hr. Ben& Exchanges will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. tenders. Apply in per- e fit p a ckage i n son at 61045 Country cludes med i cal, chasing products or I ocean front house, Club Drive, Bend, OR dental and life insur- I services from out of • each walk from town, 97702. a nce. Vision a n d l the area. Sending Livestock & Equipment • Farmers Column • 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, c ash, c hecks, o r A flac available t o jLLIQgfg Fireplace, BBQ. $85 purchase. EOE/On l credit i n f o rmation Nubian goats (2), General For Sale, Lowline site pre - employ- l may be subjected to per night, 2 night MIN. wethers, $75 ea. 208-342-6999 FRAUD. Angus and Dexter's ment drug screen541 -41 0-7473 For more informaHeifers. (pregnant or JEL&WEN. ing required. w lNDows s O o o a s 630 tion about an adverwith calf) NO steers Bright WoodCorp., Readyto work! l tiser, you may call available except for Rooms for Rent 335 NW Hess St., J ELD-WEN, i n c . Registered y e arling the Oregon State cow/calf pairs. Madras, OR 97741. Angus bulls, gentle, has the following l Attorney General's 541-475-7799 l Studios & Kitchenettes 421 ood disp o sition. Grass fed/raised. employment opOffice Co n s umert Furnished room, TV w/ prices. opular, proven blood- Reasonable Schools & Training Hay, Grain & Feed portunities availProtection hotline at l cable, micro & fridge. Must sell as lines, $1400 each, dePAiNTER able in K l amath I 1-877-877-9392. Utils & linens. New I am retiring. livery available. Full time position, expeWanted: Irrigated farm 541-480-8096, Madras owners. $145-$165/wk Leo 541-306-0357 Falls, OR: Tired of Your Boring, ie Bulletin ground, under pivot irrienced in all phases of 541-382-1885 LTl Dead-End Job?? riqation, i n C e n tral painting req'd. C all Power Your Career • Service Desk Replacement-quality Wanted: Irrigated farm Chuck, 541-948-8499. OR. 541-419-2713 Check out the with WIND! purebred y e arling ground, under pivot irComputer Tech USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! classifieds online 6 Mo. Turbine PEST CONTROL Want to b u y A l falfa, Angus heifers, Final riqation, i n C e n tral • Data Center www.bendbulletin.com OR. 541-419-2713 Technician Program grass and grain hay, Answer and Danny Door-to-door selling with Tech FREE SEMINAR standing, in C entral Boy bloodlines. Good Want to b u y A l falfa, Updated daily TERMINIX • Release/Deploy fast results! It's the easiest Wednesday, Ore. 541-419-2713 disposition. Raised in grass and grain hay, Service Administrator way in the world to sell. May 15th long-established herd. standing, in C entral 634 2:OOPM OR 7:00PM Technician $1000 ea. Del. avail. Ore. 541-419-2713 Apt./Multiplex NE Bend The Bulletin Classified Holiday Inn Express 541-480-8096 Madras For more info. Competitive pay, mediI Horses & Equipment 20615 Grandview cal & retirement proplease visit 541-385-5809 **No Application Fee** Bend, OR gram. Must h a v e: EXCEPTIONAL Colt www.jeld-wen.com. 358 2 bdrm, 1 bath, 800-868-1816 clean driving record; Starting & Boarding Email resume to TRUCK DRIVER $530 8 $540 w/lease. Farmers Column www.nw-rei.com ability to pass drug CDL needed; doubles www.steelduststable.com Capt. Johnny Halibut jobs@jeld-wen.com test, back g rounde ndorsement & g o o d Carports included! steeldust2@gmail.com Sale! Case price half off 10X20 STORAGE 470 check, and state 541-419-3405 driving record required. FOX HOLLOW APTS. all stores. In Bend & EOE BUILDINGS censing exams. Will Local haul; home every Redmond, call for locaDomestic & (541) 383-3152 for protecting hay, MINIATURE DONKEYS train right candidate. tions: 503-396-9428 day! T r uck leaves & Cascade Rental firewood, livestock In-Home Positions Drop off resume or registered, Red and Management. Co. returns to Madras, OR. G LAZIER WAN T E D $1496 Installed. w hite jack, 9 m o . , etc. pickup application at Call 541-546-6489 or Find It in Experience in r e s i- 40 SE Bridgeford Blvd, 541-617-1133. Personal Caregiver 636 $250, Jennets $400 541-419-1125. pre f e rred. CCB ¹173684. The Bulletin Classifieds! available. Adult lady, very dential and up. Must s ell. Bend. 541-382-8252 Apt./Multiplex NW Bend Must be familiar with kfjbuildersOykwc.net compassionate & caring. TRUCK DRIVER 541-385-5809 541-548-5216. m easuring and i n - Plumber- Ri d geline EXC. references. wanted must have Small clean Studio s talling mirro r s , Plumbing is seeking doubles endorsement. Call 541-420-1836, Downtown area, $495 shower doors, insuplease leave message. Truck is parked in licensed journeyman mo.; $475 dep. all lated units, etc. Pay plumber. Full time poMadras, OR. utilities paid. No pets, D.O.E. 541-389-6293 Local run. Call sition. 541-467-2971 no smoking. 541- 330Employment 541-475-4221 9769 or 541-480-7870 Opportunities Operations and Policy Analyst 3 Truck Mechanic Call 54I-3855809 topromotefatr service' Advertise far28 daysstarting at I4I ilirsspecrot trdatris not rretatlerr rs wetatei (Field Energy Analyst) Journey level h eavy BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS $4,415.00 $6,463.00 Monthly duty truck mechanic, Search the area's most CAUTION READERS: must be experienced comprehensive listing of in all aspects of re- classified advertising... Ads published in "Em- T he Oregon Department o f E n ergy i s IBuilding/Contracting Landscaping/Yardcare Landscaping/Yardcare ployment Opportuni- recruiting for a Field Energy Analyst working in pair except motors. real estate to automotive, Must have own hand merchandise to sporting t ies" i n c lude e m - our Planning, Policy and Technical Analysis NOTICE: Oregon state tools. Com p etitivegoods. Bulletin Classifieds Nelson and Division. This position serves as a resource for ployee law req u ires anywage with b enefits. appear every day in the Landscaping & i ndependent pos i - businesses, citizens and other stakeholders in one who co n t racts Zoof'f Z gr the central region and other parts of the state Inquire wit h B u t ch print or on line. tions. Ads for posiMaintenance ta8rip for construction work e x p ertise, Shields at Gold Coast Serving Central tions that require a fee by providing k nowledge an d Call 541-385-5809 to be licensed with the Zacudg4 e /,. technical assistance and i n formation on Truck Repair, PO Box Oregon Since 2003 or upfront investment www.bendbulletin.com C onstruction Con - More Than Service 537, Coos Bay, OR Residental/Commercial must be stated. With renewable energy resources and technologies. tractors Board (CCB). 97420. 800-211-1450 Peace Of Mind any independent job For more information and to apply, please visit The Bulletin \emmgcentral oregon«nce s03 A n active lice n se Sprinkler opportunity, p l ease us at www.oregonjobs.org, announcement or 541-269-1223. means the contractor Spring Clean Up Activation/Repair investigate thor- ¹ ODOE13-0010. A p p lications m u s t be i s bonded an d i n received by May 13, 2013. Back Flow Testing •Leaves oughly. Millwrights s ured. Ve r ify t h e •Cones contractor's CCB Maintenance The Oregon Department of Energy is an Equal •Needles Use extra caution when SIGNING BONUS: • Thatch & Aerate c ense through t h e Opportunity, Affirmative Action Employer. applying for jobs on•Debris Hauling $3000 FOR LICENSED ELECTRICIANS CCB Cons u m er • Spring Clean up line and never pro$1500 FOR CARDED JL MILLWRIGHTS •Weekly Mowing Website vide personal inforWeed Free Bark ROSEBURG FOREST PRODUCTS CO. www.hireaticensedcontractor. & Edging Mailroom Clerk & Flower Beds mation to any source com DILLARD, RIDDLE (Scenic, Southern) OR •Bi-Monthly & Monthly you may not have reor call 503-378-4621. Maintenance searched and deemed The Bulletin recom- Lawn Renovation •Bark, Rock, Etc. Roseburg Forest Products Co. is a leader in to be reputable. Use mends checking with Aeration - Dethatching the wood products industry. We are growing The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturextreme caution when Overseed the CCB prior to conand looking for individuals to grow with our ~Landsca in r esponding to A N Y day night shift and other shifts as needed. tracting with anyone. Compost •Landscape company. If you are a Licensed Electrician online e m p loyment We currently have openings all nights of the Top Dressing Some other t r ades Construction with PLC experience or you currently have at week but all applicants must be available to ad from out-of-state. also req u ire addi•Water Feature least 4 years wood products Journey level work Saturday nights. Shifts start between tional licenses and Landscape Installation/Maint. Millwright experience, we would like to get to 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m., and end between We suggest you call certifications. •Pavers know you. Maintenance 2:Ooa.m. and 3:30 a.m. Star t i ng pay i s $9.00 the State of Oregon Full or Partial Service •Renovations per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours Consumer Hotline at •Irrigations Installation We offer excellent company paid family ben• Mowing «Edging Drywall Services per shift, as some shifts are short (11:301-503-378-4320 •Pruning Weeding efits, pension, 401 (k), and tuition reimburseRemodels 8 Repairs. No 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting Senior Discounts ment for your professional development in our job too small, free ex- Sprinkler Adjustments machines or stitcher, stacking product onto For Equal Opportunity Bonded & Insured up-grade program. Earn up to $27.79 for Elecact quotes. CCB¹ pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. L aws: Oregon B u541-815-4458 trician and $24.94 for Millwright (plus shift diff) 177336 541-408-6169 Fertilizer included Must be able to stand for long periods of time LCB¹8759 reau of Labor & Independing on your participation in the above with monthly program dustry, C i vil Rights to load machines. Will require repetitive program. P l e as e ap p l y onl i n e at SPRING CLEAN-UP! stooping and bending and must be able to lift Division, Debris Removal http://rfpcojobs.iapplicants.com. Weekly,monthly Aeration/Dethatching 50 lbs. All hiring is contingent upon passing 971-673-0764 or one time service. Weekly/one-time service pre-employment drug screen. JUNK BE GONE avail. Bonded, insured. Human Resources If you have any quesFree Estimates! Roseburg Forest Products Co. I Haul Away FREE EXPERIENCED Please apply by delivering a resume to The tions, concerns or COLLINS Lawn Maint. Equal Opportunity Employer For Salvage. Also Commercial Bulletin at 1777 SW Chandler Ave., 8-5, M comments, contact: Ca/I 541-480-9714 Cleanups & Cleanouts & Residential thru F. Or email a resume to keldred@bendClassified Department Mel, 541-389-8107 bulletin.com. Please include job title in the The Bulletin ALLEN REINSCH subject line. Web Developer Yard maintenance & 541-385-5809 Senior Discounts clean-up, thatching, Handyman 541-390-1466 EOE, Drug Free Workplace. Are you a technical star who can also commuplugging & much more! The Bulletin nicate effectively with non-technical execuSame Day Response Call 541-536-1294 I DO THAT! tives and employees? Would you like to work Home/Rental repairs N OTICE: O R E G O N FULL-TILT CLEAN-UP Athletic Director hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, the recSmall jobs to remodels Landscape ContracDebris Hauling Culver School District reation capital of the state? Then we'd like to Honest, guaranteed tors Law (ORS 671) Soil - Bark - Gravel seeks High S c hool talk to you. work. CCB¹151573 r equires a l l bu s i - 6-yard Dump Truck Athletic/Activities D iAdvertising Account Executive Dennis 541-317-9768 nesses that advertise CALL 541-419-2756 rector fo r 2 0 1 3-14 Our busy media company that publishes nuto p e r form L a n dschool year. Please merous web and mobile sites seeks an experiLandscaping The Bulletin is looking for a professional and scape C o n structionMaverick see our website, culenced developer who is also a forward thinker, weedeating,yd BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS which driven Sales and Marketing person to help our incl u des:Mowing, ver.k12.or.us, for creative problem solver, excellent communidetail., chain saw work, customers grow their businesses with an Search the area's most p lanting, deck s , more information or cator, and self-motivated professional. We are excv., etc! LCB comprehensive listing of expanding list of broad-reach and targeted fences, arbors, bobcat call 541 - 546-2541. redesigning all of our websites within the next ¹8671 541-923-4324 classified advertising... w ater-features, a n d Application deadline is products. This full time position requires a couple of years and want you in on the ground real estate to automotive, installation, repair of Just bought a new boat? May 24, 2013. EOE background in consultative sales, territory floor. merchandise to sporting irrigation systems to Sell your old one in the management and aggressive prospecting skills. goods. Bulletin Classifieds be licensed with the classifieds! Ask about our What are you Two years of media sales experience is Fluencywith PHP, HTML5, CSS3, jQuery and appear every day in the Super Seller rates! Landscape Contracpreferable, but we will train the right candidate. JavaScript is a must. Experience integrating looking for? print or on line. 541-385-5809 t ors B o a rd . Th i s third-party solutions and social media applica4-digit number is to be Call 541-385-5809 You'll find it in The p o sition in c ludes a com p etitive tions required. Desired experience includes: Painting/Wall Covering included in all adverwww.bendbulletin.com package including benefits, and XML/JSON, MySQL, Joomla, Java, responThe Bulletin Classifieds compensation tisements which indisive web design, Rails, WordPress. Top-notch rewards an a ggressive, customer focused The Bulletin cate the business has WESTERN P A INTING skills with user interface and graphic design an se~mgcentrai oreron~mce f903 salesperson with unlimited earning potential. a bond, insurance and CO. Richard Hayman, added plus. 541-385-5809 workers c ompensa- a semi-retired paintEmail your resume, cover letter ERIC REEVE HANDY tion for their employ- ing contractor of 45 Background in the media industry desired but and salary history to: SERVICES. Home & ees. For your protec- years. S m all Jobs • • I I not required. This is a full-time position with Jay Brandt, Advertising Director Welcome. Interior & Commercial Repairs, tion call 503-378-5909 benefits. If you've got what it takes, e-mail a jbrandt@bendbulletin.com Carpentry-Painting, or use our website: Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. cover letter, resume, and portfolio/work sample OI' Pressure-washing, www.lcb.state.or.us to 541-388-6910 Western Washington links a n d/o r re p ository ( GitHub) t o Honey Do's. On-time check license status Guy seeks gal 48-65, drop off your resume in person at resume@wescompapers.com. promise. Senior before co n t racting• slim/average build, to 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; RV/ M arine • Discount. Work guar- with th e b u s iness. share quiet times;• Or mail to PO 8ox6020, Bend, OR 97708; This posting is also on the web at www.bendanteed. 541-389-3361 Persons doing land- Expert Chainsaw and trips, walks, nature, No phone inquines please. bulletin.com or 541-771-4463 scape maintenance hedge trimming opmoon-light, cuddling! Bonded & Insured do not require a LCB erator, 30 yrs. exp. Greg, PO Box 3013 EOE / Drug Free Workplace EOE/Drug Free Workplace CCB¹181595 license. Call 541-633-9895. • Arlington, WA 98223.
Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N oon Mon.
Wednesday •
a
5MR ~
Thursday • • ••. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N o o n Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Saturday • • • • 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri •
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Real Estate Services Boise, ID Real Estate
For relocation info, call Mike Conklin, 208-941-8458 Silvercreek Realty Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com 745
Homes for Sale 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, view. By owner, ideal for extended family. $590,000. 541-390-0886
NOTICE All real estate advertised here in is subject to t h e F e deral F air H ousing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race color r eligion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intentton to make any such preferences li m itations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r ea l e state which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified 750
Redmond Homes Cute, well taken care of home on the NW side of Redmond. 4/2.5 with nice large loft area. Master on main level, open kitchen that overlooks dining area & living room. Large bdrms. 3-car garage, fully land-
scaped, backyard is fenced. $259,900 MLS¹201302289 D&D Realty Group 866-346-7868 755
Sunriver/La Pine Homes 12234 Alderwood Dr. Quality 3 B d , 1 8 36 SF, 1 acr. $110,000. High Lakes Realty &
Property
Ma n age-
ment 541-536-0117 762
Homes with Acreage 139716 Dorothy Lane Located on C rescent Creek. This charming 2 bdrm, 1 bath home boasts 120' of creek frontage, cov e red deck, wood s t ove, new paint inside and out, new roof and new kitchen cabinets. Plenty of storage with w/d hookup, covered RV parking are and m inutes f ro m W i l l amette Sk i P a ss, clear lakes and trails. $275,000. MLS¹ 201207074
Call Kerry at
541-815-6363
Cascade Realty, 541-536-1731
Baker City - 3 Bdrm, 3 bath, 3 100+ s q .ft. semi secluded home, on 5 acre lot w/many
p onderosa
pin e s .
45'x24' Morton built insolated metal shop, $395,000. 541-523-2368
C oming Soon t o t h e Market, beautiful log home on 1 acre w/ s pectacular vie w , 4 0'x60' R V S ho p . $339,000. Lisa Johnson Principal Broker, Horsepower Real Estate 541-510-4601 763
Recreational Homes & Property Cabin in forest, hunting, f ishing, stream, 7 5 miles. 541-480-7215 764
Farms & Ranches
Equine ranch for sale by owner, in Tumalo, $775,000. 619-733-8472 771
Lots
208 2nd Ave, Culver Level city lot. $38,200 MLS 201203505
Juniper Realty,
541-504-5393
Veteran seeking to buy t/a to 1-acre size u tilityready buildable lot, in or near Bend, from private party. 951-255-5013 775
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511
BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
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E4 THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DAILY BRI DG E C LU B
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Will Sh ortz
T hursday,Ma y9,2013
ACROSS 32 Australia's Rock 1Reallygood time 34 Seven-time Wimbledon 4 2006's "Ms. champ New Booty" and others 3s It might prevent you from rising s Gather on a surface, in 4o Counterpart of chemistry Ioui' 14 Hookah 41 Lead-in to component phobia 1s Back muscle, in 42 Bert and Ernle, brief on "Sesame Street" 1e What may go for a buck? 4s Expressed some surprise 17 Downsized 4e Response to a 19 Pyramidpunch, perhaps building people 47 Neighbor of 2o Impersonate Del. 22 Board, 49 Atmospheric informally prefix 23 Bars from the so W ars supermarket, (confllcts of for short? the second and 2s Garden Isle of third centuries the Pacific B.C.) 27 French pronoun s2 Rarely affected 2s Minor blowup by hurricanes, 3o Lama's goal say
Easy in principle By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
I continue a series on counting the distribution of the concealed hands. Counting is a mysterious process to some players, who consider it the domain of the expert. The truth is that t hough coun t in g requ i r e s concentration and practice, it's easy in principle and available to anyone. At today's slam, South wins the first club in dummy and lets the queen of spades ride. West wins and leads another club, on which East pitches a heart. South then has 11 tricks — three spades, two hearts, three diamonds and threeclubsand needs a fourth diamond or an unlikely red-suit squeeze.
do you say? ANSWER: You want to sign off at a club partial (as low as possible). Partnership agreements vary in this situation. M an y p l a yers w o u ld respond two clubs, then bid three clubs next to sign off. Others would jump directly to three clubs as a weak a ction. Some w o ul d e m ploy a transferresponse. Decide with your partner what your method will be. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 41Q J10 QA74 O K 95 2 AAK5
LAST CLUB To get a count, South cashes three spades, his last club and the A-K of hearts. He finds West with only two spades, only one heart and six clubs. Since West had 13 cards, he had four diamonds, and since there are 13 diamonds in the deck, East had two. So South takes the A-Q hopefully, and when East follows with the six and ten, South ca n c o n fidently finesse with dummy's nine next.
WEST 4K7 95 0 J87 4 4 10 9 8 7 3 2
DAILY QUESTION
EAST 46432 ~?7Q J98 6 2 O 106 46
Wes t Pas
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MI K A S N A R E H AN WA E R I E N C AN N O DOM A R S E N A L A N D S L T S O E Y A CO R N R A K E S 8 L I ME
Eas t All P a ss
You hold: 4K 7 9 5 O J 8 7 4 Opening lead — 4 10 4 10 9 8 7 3 2. Your partner opens 1NT. The next player passes. What (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
1
D U T O P R S OM N BA AL L 0 I DE E R F O U O N T R E E
S K T T EN H E R I A LET L L R U A O S R B E A N D G RI T R S C O 0 K I K S T
A E I T L S
N A Y V E E S R E N G A G
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11 It's often the first to be knocked over 12 "Great taste since 1905" drink 13 Petty officers, for short 1s Swiss resort city 21 Convinced 23 Letters on a B-52
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s Supermodel Wek e Hymn 7 Gets ready for company, perhaps s Old sports org. with the Virginia Squires 9 Film character who says "I ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE hate everything you say, but not AM E N WE B B M EA N T enough to kill R AG A A L A I A R R OW you for it" M OO D S W I N G C R E T E 1o s p e ak
SOUTH 4A985 9 K103 O AQ3 4Q J 4 S outh 1 NT
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No. 0404
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PUZZLE BY COREY RUBIN
24 Poet laureate Henry James
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2e Mozart piece 29 Ace in the hole 31 Soft bI a nkets 33 French silk 3e Over, overseas 37 Fiddler's event 3e I T e n orl
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscrlptlons are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytlmes.com/mobllexword for more information. Online subscrlptlons; Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past
puzzles, nytlmes.com/crosswords (S39.95 a year). Share tips: nytlmes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytlmes.com/learnlng/xwords.
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55 Spheres 57 Reid or Robbins 58 Deg. for Dilbert creator Scott Adams 59 Device useful in navigation, or in discovering the hidden theme in the answers to starred clues 65 Honeys 66 Lowly laborer 67 Party animals? 68 Responds to the MAILERDAEMON
genre 54 Parson's home 56 S h ot contents
60 Slangy smoke 6 1" This American Life" airer 62 Speed-skating gold medalist
often 48 Shinbones 501860s Jansen presidential in-law 63 Stop 52 Some Nintendo 6 4 B lockers for consoles QBS
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: D A M AG A I TS S S T
A S K T S S I W I N T H E S T E A P EC K G A S T A N K OT E R I P ON L I N E V I P O L L T O N ORA L B E N G A L T I ST A Y S B I OS P A P E D N A E Z R A E S L DO O M xwordeditor(eaol.com 6
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43 Little piggy 44 Mountaintop homes 45 Unwitting test taker 47 Charge to bank
53 58
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By Mark Blckham (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
49 54
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05/09/13
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 9 2013 E5 881
:o.
Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories
Q
9' Outdoor inflatable pontoon boat, as new, full of extras, deluxe seat, oars, anchors, fish & rod holders, $300, a bargain! Peter, 562-659-4691 Victory TC 2002, Ads published in the "Boats" classification runs great, many include: Speed, fish~ accessories, new ing, drift, canoe, • tires, under 40K house and sail boats. miles, well kept. For all other types of $7000 OBO. For watercraft, please see m ore info. c a l l Class 875.
oQll ( Snowmobiles
Motorhomes
•
933
Travel Trailers
•'ogl
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..I
Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' 2004, only 34K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243
•
0
'Q»
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•
0
Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, fuel station, exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray i nterior, u se d 3X , $19,999 firm. 541-389-9188
908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Atiq
Au tomotive Parts, Service & Accessories
g
pi k p
Classic Autos G MC Sierra S L T 2006 - 1500 Crew Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. cond., 82 k m i les, $19,900. 541-408-0763
o
mag wheels, used 6 mo., w/Toyo s n ow tires. Pd $500, sell $ 300 obo. Pam o r Mathias, 541.923.6303 3 tires, 225/60R-17 off Outback, 500% tread left, $25 ea. 541-318-0766 14
&
Ford Ranchero 1979
with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition,
$2500 obo.
10(&K!
541-420-4677
(2) 2000 A rctic C at I nternational Fla t Z L580's EFI with n e w Travel Trailers • covers, electric start w/ Bed Pickup 1963 1 Good classified ads tell reverse, low miles, both ton dually, 4 s p d. the essential facts in an excellent; with new 2009 541-647-4232 trans., great MPG, 541-385-5809 interesting Manner. Write Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, could be exc. wood from the readers view - not drive off/on w/double tilt, hauler, runs great, Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 865 gerrrog Central Oregon trote 1903 the seller's. Convert the lots of accys. Selling due Aladdin 16' 1968 engine, power every- new brakes $1950. ATVs facts into benefits. Show 1/3 interest in Columbia to m edical r e asons. 1921 Model T camper trailer, thing, new paint, 54K 541-419-5480. $6000 all. 541-536-8130 the reader how the item will 400, $150,000 located Delivery Truck $700. original m i les, runs Kawasaki 700cc quad @ Sunriver. H o urly help them in someway. Restored & Runs great, excellent condiArctic Cat ZL800, 2001, for s a l e , $2 4 0 0. 541-389-6990, rental rate (based upon This tion in & out. Asking short track, variable 541-771-0789 $9000. afternoons only. approval) $775. Also: advertising tip $8,500. 541-480-3179 exhaust valves, elec541-389-8963 S21 hangar avail. for brought to you by tric s t art, r e v erse, Suzuki Ei er 2004 s ale, o r l e as e O Beautiful h o u seboat, manuals, rec o rds, Quadrunner ATV, auto$15/day or $ 325/mo. 1952 Ford Customline 541-390-4693 The Bulletin new spare belt, cover, matic, new tires, 2215 $85,000. gtrrog Caatrai 0 goo t te f903 541-948-2963 Coupe, project car, flatwww.centraloregon miles, covered dog heated hand g rips, N issan Pickup 1 9 91 head V-B, 3 spd extra houseboat.com. carrier platform, nylon nice, fast, $999. Call 2WD/4Cyl Auto. Runs parts, & materials, $2000 Looking for your dust cover, set of 4 Tom, 541-385-7932, great. Extras. $3700. obo. 541-410-7473 next employee? E snow chains. $3200. 541-316-1367 Place a Bulletin help GMC 1966, too many • Yamaha 750 1999 Fleetwood 31' WilderContact Larry at extras to list, reduced to ~oMore Pix at Bendbulletimc Mountain Max, $1400. Chevrolet Cameo n ess Gl 1 9 99, 1 2 ' wanted ad today and 971-678-3196 or $7500 obo. Serious buy• 1994 Arctic Cat 580 Pickup, 1957, slide, 2 4 ' aw n ing, reach over 60,000 nortonjack@comcast.net disassembled, frame ers only. 541-536-0123 EXT, $1000. queen bed, FSC, out- readers each week. 1/3 interest i n w e l lT itan 2 0 0 7 4x 4 Your classified ad powder coated, new • Zieman 4-place side shower, E-Z lift Boat loader, elec. for equipped IFR Beech Bo- front Off-Road, beautiful sheet metal, cab will also appear on trailer, SOLD! s tabilizer hitch, l i ke pickup canopy, extras, nanza A36, new 10-550/ restored. $9995 firm. inside and out, menew, been stored. bendbulletin.com All in good condition. $450, 541-548-3711 prop, located KBDN. tallic black/charcoal Call for more info, which currently reLocated in La Pine. $10,950. 541-419-5060 $65,000. 541-419-9510 leather, loaded, 69k GENERATE SOME ex541-306-9958 (cell) ceives over 1.5 milCall 541-408-6149. mi., $19,995 obo. citement in your neiglion page views ev541-410-6183. 860 Yamaha Banshee 2001, borhood. Plan a gaery month at no GMC 039ton 1971, Only built 350 motor, rage sale and don't Motorcycles & Accessories custom extra cost. Bulletin $19,700! Original low race-ready, lots of extras, forget to advertise in Classifieds Get Remile, exceptional, 3rd $4999/obo 541-647-8931 classified! 385-5809. rt 935 sults! Call 385-5809 owner. 951-699-7171 tioof&' Sport Utility Vehicles or place your ad Hi-Lo 17' TowLite, 2006, on-line at gervtog Central Oregon since t903 Boats & Accessories 2500lbs, easy tow, loaded, 1/5th interest in 1973 Chevy C-20 Pickup bendbulletin.com like new. $9500 obo. Cessna 150 LLC 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; """"".„CERTIFIED 541-385-5781 / 337-6396 .IIIIII'tl Irrrr 150hp conversion, low auto 4-spd, 396, model Watercraft 882 • time on air frame and CST /all options, orig. Cars-Trucks-SUVs 1988 ATK 406, refurFifth Wheels engine, hangared in owner, $19,950, bished by American Dirt 14' 1982 Valco River Ads published in kWaGet your 541-923-6049 Bend. Excellent perMercedes 450SL, 1977 Bike, 1 hour running time Sled, 70 h.p., Fish- tercraft" include: Kaybusiness 113K, 2nd owner, ga on complete overhaul. Finder. Older boat but formance & afford1955 PROJECT ks, rafts and motorb o t h tops $1495. 541-504-7745 able flying! $6,500. Chevy price includes trailer, lzed ar car. 2 door wqn, 350 raged, personal 541-382-6752 3 wheels and tires. All watercrafts. For a ROW I N G small block w/Weiand $11,900. 541-389-7596 for $1 5 00 ! Cal l • "boats" please see dual quad tunnel ram Executive Hangar 541-416-8811 with 450 Holleys. T-10 2005 Chevy SuburClass 870. at Bend Airport (KBDN) with an ad in ban LT, Loaded 16' Reinell, 1975, 4-cyl • 541-385-5809 Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 60' wide x 50' d eep, 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Prostar wheels, Leather, 4x4, The Bulletin's in/outboard motor, by Carriage, 4 slides, w/55' wide x 17' high bi- Weld I Volvo extra rolling chassis + ¹178655 $1 4 , 775 EZ Loader trailer, $3300, "Call A Service inverter, satellite sys, fold dr. Natural gas heat, 2002 Harley Davidson as is. 541-350-0967 $6500 for all. fireplace, 2 flat screen offc, bathroom. Adjacent extras. 2008 Chev SilHeritage Softail - Fl, emProfessional" 541-389-7669. Oldsmobile Alero 2004, Look at: TVs. $54,950 to Frontage Rd; great verado 2500HD LTZ erald green & black, lots classic 4-dr in showroom Directory 541-480-3923 visibility for aviation busiBendhomes.com 4x4 Leather, Diesel of chrome & extras, 9K condition, leather, chrome ness. Financing avail¹131014 $36,995 mi, perfect cond. $9995. for Complete Listings of wheels, 1 owner, low able. 541-948-2126 or 2007 Toyota Avalon Call 503-999-7356 (cell) miles. $7500. Area Real Estate for Sale email 1jetjockOq.com Limited Moon, leather 541-382-2452 B MW K100 L T 1 9 87 Wilderness 16.5' Kayak, ¹ 179439 $22, 9 9 5 52k miles, b r onze, 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 yellow, compass, spray Piper A rcher 1 9 80, 2009 Ford F150 Super extra windshield, Volvo Penta, 270HP, cover, day pack, paddle based in Madras, al- Chevy Wagon 1957, crew 4x4 Platinum. 4-dr., complete, trailer hitch, battery ways hangared since low hrs., must see, 8 paddle float, PDF, Laredo 2009 30' with 2 ¹ 03905 $35, 9 9 charger, full luggage $15,000, 541-330-3939 rack, lots of s torage, new. New annual, auto $7 000 OBO trades. slides, TV, A/C, table AAA Oregon Auto hard bags, manuals pilot, IFR, one piece Please call used very little. $800 obo. Keystone Sprinter & c h airs, s a tellite, windshield. Fastest ArSource 541-598-3750 31', 2008 and paperwork. Al- 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 541-389-7749, after 6pm. 541-389-6998 Arctic pkg., p o wer 97 & w. Empire King size walkways garaged. $3200. 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 cher around. 1750 to- Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe Plymouth B a r racudaCorner awning, Exc. cond! aaaoregonautosource.com I Don, 541-504-5989 around bed, electric 1966, original car! 300 hp Bowrider w/depth $28,000. 541-419-3301 tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, awning, (4) 6-volt 541-475-6947, ask for hp, 360 VB, centerHarley Davidson Soft- finder, radio/CD player, auto. trans, ps, air, batteries, plus many Rob Berg. lines, 541-593-2597 Tail De l uxe 2 0 0 7 , rod holders, full canframe on rebuild, remore extras, never white/cobalt, w / pas- vas, EZ Loader trailer, painted original blue, PROJECT CARS: Chevv smoked in, first 916 cond, $13,000. ~- I I N •t senger kit, Vance & exclnt original blue interior, 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & owners, $21,500. 707-484-3518 (Bend) Trucks & Hines muffler system original hub caps, exc. Chevy Coupe 1950 & kit, 1045 mi., exc. chrome, asking $9000 rolling chassis's $1750 Ford Explorer 2002, Heavy Equipment Call 541-410-5415 cond, $16, 9 9 9, MONTANA 3585 2008, or make offer. ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, XLT A u t o 4 Wheel 541-389-9188. exc. cond., 3 slides, 541-385-9350 complete car, $ 1949; Leather, Power Roof 2003 Fleetwood Dis- P ioneer 23 ' 19 0 F Q Cadillac Series 61 1950, Trailer pkg, one owner king bed, Irg LR, covery 40' diesel mo- 2006, EZ Lift, $9750. Arctic insulation, all 2 dr. hard top, complete n on s moker n e w Harley Davidson XL torhome w/all 541-548-1096 w/spare f r on t cl i p ., Michelins plus set of options $35,000. 1200 2007, Sportsoptions-3 slide outs, e4% $3950, 541-382-7391 541-420-3250 ter Low. Like new, 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, studs brakes differenonly 2800 mi., major inboard motor, g r eat etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. tial guar a nteed. NuWa 297LK Hi t c h- Diamond Reo Dump upgrades and addi- cond, well maintained, Wintered i n h e ated $6400 Jack a !ji ! w Hiker 2007, 3 skdes, Truck 19 7 4, 1 2 -14 tions. Helmets and $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 shop. $89,900 O.B.O. 541-815-7393 32' touring coach, left yard box, runs good, Jackets i n c luded. FAST 66 Ranchero! 541-447-8664 kitchen, rear lounge, $6900, 541-548-6812 $6500.503-508-2367 $7500 invested, 19.5' Bayliner Discovmany extras, beautiful sell for $4500! c ond. inside & o u t , ery 2008, MerCruiser Prowler 2009 Extreme Call 541.382.9835 T-BIRD 1988 S port 135hp motor, open $32,900 OBO, PrinevG R X A T TURN THE PAGE E dition. Model 2 7 0 ille. 541-447-5502 days coupe, 34,400 orig. bow, full canopy, alRL, 2 slides, oppos- & 541-447-1641 eves. For More Ads mi., A/C, PW, PL, new ways garage-stored, ing in living area, ent. tires/brakes/hoses/ used 5 times, new The Bulletin Hyster H25E, runs center, sep. bedroom, belts & exhausts. Tan Ford Explorer Limtags, $14,500 Jayco Seneca 34', 2007. well, 2982 Hours, 2 ne w e x tra t i res, w/tan interior. 541-977-3120 Harley Heritage 28K miles, 2 slides, Du- hitch, bars, sway bar $3500,call Immaculate! $4,995. ited 2006, RV Tow Softail, 2003 ramax diesel, 1 owner, included. P r o-Pack, 541-749-0724 Days 5 4 1-322-4843, Vehicle, Exc. Cond. $5,000+ in extras, excellent cond, $89,995; anti-theft. Good cond, FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, Flat Tow, R emote $2000 paint job, Trade? 541-546-6920 door panels w/flowers Eves 541-383- 5043 Start MBG Air Tow c lean. Re q . 'til Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th 30K mi. 1 owner, & hummingbirds, B rake Syst e m , 4/20/15. St 9 , 900. For more information wheel, 1 s lide, AC, white soft top & hard Lights Wired Break541-390-1122 please call TV,full awning, exceltop. Just reduced to away switch, Roadskslra O msn.com 541-385-8090 lent shape, $23,900. $3,750. 541-317-9319 master Tow H itch or 209-605-5537 1996 Seaswirl 20.1 541-350-8629 or 541-647-8483 3M Clearguard, AlCuddy, 5.0 Volvo, exc RV Peterbilt 359 p o table ways Garaged, 32k cond., full canvas, one Monaco Dynasty 2004, CONSIGNMENTS water t ruck, 1 9 90, RV VW BUG 1972 rebuilt mi., Camel Leather owner, $6500 OBO. • loaded, 3 slides, dieWANTED 3200 gal. tank, 5hp CONSIGNMENTS eng, new paint, tires, Interior $17 , 995. 541-410-0755 We Do The Work ... p ump, 4 - 3 a hoses, WANTED chrome whls, 30 mpg sel, Reduced - now 541-480-7837 camlocks, $ 2 5,000. $119,000, 5 4 1-923- You Keep The Cash! We Do The Work ... $3800. 541-233-7272 t I t t t t t t 541-820-3724 On-site credit You Keep The Cash! 8572 or 541-749-0037 Toyota Highlander 2011 Harley Limited 103 2011, approval team, On-site credit Ford Galaxie 500 1963, Limited AWD, loaded. many extras, stage 1 & air 20.5' 2004 Bayliner 925 web site presence. approval team, 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, RV ¹058474. $35,995 cushion seat. 18,123 mi, 205 Run About, 220 We Take Trade-Ins! web site presence. Utility Trailers 390 vB,auto, pwr. steer & CONSIGNMENTS $20,990. 541-306-0289 Free Advertising. We Take Trade-Ins! radio (orig),541-419-4989 HP, VB, open bow, WANTED BIG COUNTRY RV Free Advertising. Better than most, and Ford Mustang Coupe exc. cond with very We Do the Work... Bend: 541-330-2495 BIG COUNTRY RV w orth the p r ice o f 1966, original owner, VW Convertible 1977, low hours, lots of Oregon You Keep the Cash! Redmond: Bend: 541-330-2495 $500 cash. Evening VB, automatic, great new tires & brakes, reextras incl. tower, On-site credit AutoSource 541-548-5254 Redmond: phone be s t at shape, $9000 OBO. built engine, newer paint, Bimini & custom approval team, 541-598-3750 541-548-5254 541-318-8503. trailer, $17,950. web site presence. $9500. 541-388-5591 aaaoregonautosource.com 530-515-8199 541-389-1413 We Take Trade-Ins! HD Fat Boy1996 Free Advertising. Completely customized BIG COUNTRY RV Must see and hear to Bend: 541-330-2495 appreciate. 2012 Redmond: Award Winner. 541-548-5254 20.5' Seaswirl SpySpringdale 2005 27', 4' $17,000 obo. der 1989 H.O. 302, 541-548-4807 slide in dining/living area, 285 hrs., exc. cond., sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 .Ij I HD Screaming Eagle stored indoors for obo. 541-408-3811 Electra Glide 2005, life $11,900 OBO. 103 o motor, two tone 541-379-3530 j~t candy teal, new tires, 23K miles, CD player, 21' Crownline 215 hp Southwind 35.5' Triton, Streamliner 30' hydraulic clutch, exin/outboard e n g i ne2008,V10, 2slides, Ducellent condition. 1963, good condi310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin pont UV coat, 7500 mi. Highest offer takes it. tion, com p l ete, sleeps 2/ 3 p e o ple, Bought new at 541-480-8080. ready to go. $2000. portable toilet, exc. $132,913; cond. Asking $8,000. 541-306-0383 asking $91,000. HD Screaming Eagle OBO. 541-388-8339 Call 503-982-4745 Electra Glide 2005, o 103 motor, two tone candy teal, new tires, Little Red Corvette 23K miles, CD player, hydraulic clutch, excellent condition. Highest offer takes it. 541-480-8080. tA Honda 750 Nighthawk, '~ ~ g g~ 1991, 17K, pristine conDyrt Corvett dition, 55 mpg, $1795. onver 2004- ~LOADED! 541-279-7092
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solid Features includ e counters, 4-dr rface sur micro, Irid g, e, convection m' built-in washer/drye, ramic tile floor TU DUD satellite dish, air leveling, storage ass-through king size bed da' tray, an - Allfor only $149,000 541-000-000
Road King Classic 2000 22K mi, 1550
stage II EFI, SEI2 cam, new heads/Ig valves, Revtech digital fuel optimizer, Samson true dual headers, Hooker mufflers, HD touring seat/handlebars, backrests, lots of extras, excellent condition. $9700 Call for more info
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~pgetlt~ Ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months (whichever comes first!)
'"pe, 350 a t, 32 fni!~ 4mpg A „, nptip n interesti n $99'i Look gil'I could h ii1 eet car,
$12 5po 541-000 p
Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold italics headline and price.
541-788-3004
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809
•
• Daily publication in The Bulletin, read by over 76,000 subscribers. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace — DELIVERED to over
31,000 non-subscriber households • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads - 15,000 distribution throughout Central and Eastern Oregon Wrertcfl es . Q n e of the t5 th i ngsthat make up & D isaster SuPPl ies K i t . w w w . P r e P &r e F o r L i f e . o r g
Build a kit Make a plan Get trained ~ Prepare Oregon
American Red Cross OregonCaaptara
* A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party merchandise ads only, excludes pets, real estate, rentals, and garage sale categories.
E6 THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
Vans 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 8 brakes; needs catalytic converter & new windshield. $2200. 541-220-7808
Ford Aerostar 1994 Eddie Bauer Edition Fully Loaded, Mint Condition! Runs Excellent! $3000. 541-350-1201
1000
Legal Notices
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LEGAL NOTICE Notice of Budget Committee Meeting Redmond Fire & Rescue
A public meeting of the Budget Committee of the Redmond Fire & Rescue, Des c hutes County, State of Oregon, to discuss the budget for the fiscal Ford E150, 2002, imyear July 1, 2013 to maculate, 144K, $4995; June 30, 2014, will consider trade for nice be held at the Redtravel trlr. 541-610-6150 m ond M ai n F i r e Station located at 341 N.W. Dogwood Ave., Redmond Oregon on May 21, 2013 at 7:00 p.m. The committee will L umina Va n 1 9 9 5, reconvene if necesX LNT c o nd., w e l l s ary on May 2 2 , cared for. $2000 obo. 2013 at 7:00 p.m. The purpose of the 541-382-9835. m eeting is t o r e ceive th e b u dget Automobiles message and to receive comment from t he public on t h e Buick LeSabre Cusbudget. A copy of tom 2004, rare 75k, the budget docu$6000, worth way m ent may b e i n more. Ieather, spected or obtained heated seats, nice on or after Wedneswheels. Good tires, day, May 15, 2013 30 mpg, white. at t h e R e d mond Convinced? Call Bob Main Fire Station lo541-318-9999 cated at 341 N.W. D ogwood Ave . , Buick LeSabre 1996. Redmond Oregon, Good condition, between the hours 121,000 miles. o f 80 0 a m . a n d Non-smoker 5:00 p.m.
$2200 OBO.
541-954-5193.
WOW! Chevy Malibu 2009 43k miles, loaded, studs on rlms/ Asking $12,900. 541-610-6834.
T his i s a pub l ic meeting where deliberation o f the Budget Committee will take place. Any person may appear at the meeting and d iscuss th e p r o posed pr o g rams with t h e Bu d g et Committee.
Publish: The Bulletin May 9, 2013 & May 16, 2013 LEGAL NOTICE Chrysler Sebring 2004 The following units 84k, beautiful dark gray/ will be sold at PubA u c t io n on brown, tan leather int., lic $5995 541-350-5373 Thursday May 16th 2013 at 11 a.m. at
Bend Mini Storage, 1 00 S E 3 r d S t . , Bend, OR 9 7 702. Unit ¹ C120 — Julie Ropkins, U ni t ¹ C184 - Romaine Little Red Corvette Miller, Unit ¹ C216Coupe,1996,350, Travis Cunningham. auto, 26-34 mpg, 132K, LEGAL NOTICE $12,500/offer. TRUSTEE'S NOTICE 541-923-1781 OF SALE Ford Taurus, 1999, 91K, The Trustee under the professionally maint'd, terms of t h e T r ust $2800. 541-306-6937 Deed desc r ibed herein, at the direction of the Beneficiary, hereby elects to sell t he p r o perty d e scribed in the Trust Deed to satisfy the Ford Taurus Wagon 2004, obligations s e cured thereby. Pursuant to 120K miles, loaded, in nice s h ape, $ 4 200. ORS 86.745, the fol541-815-9939 lowing information is provided: 1.PARTIES: Need help fixing stuff? Grantor: HARRIS C. Call A Service Professional KIMBLE AND NANCY find the help you need. KIMBLE. Tru s t ee: www.bendbulletin.com FIRST AM E R ICAN TITLE. Su c c essor Trustee:PATRICK W. WADE. B e neficiary: CLARK J E N NINGS AND ASSOCIATES, 4 INC. 2. DESCRIPg. ~-' %pg; T ION O F PRO P E RTY: The rea l M ini Cooper S is described C lubman 2 0 0 9 , property a s follows: As d e 24K mi., with lots of s cribed i n t h e at good stuff, 6 speed tached Exhibit A. EXauto, w/ paddle and HIBIT "A" - LEGAL manuel shift, exc. DESCRIPTION: utility, pretty, and a PARCEL I: A parcel of B LAST t o dri v e . land located in a por$19,500. Call tion of Section Thir541-504-8770 teen (13), Township Seventeen (17) Mitsubishi Lancer 2008, South, Range Eleven PS, PB, tilt, auto, PW, (11), East of the WilPDL, CD player, 67K mi, lamette Meridian, City $8600 obo. 971-237-7173 of Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, being a portion of those l ands described i n Volume 235, P a ge 768, Desc h utes County Deed Records, being more Nissan Sentra 2012 Full warranty, 35mpg, particularly described 520 per tank, all power. as follows: Beginning at a point on the North $13,500. 541-788-0427 line of said Section 13 Porsche 944 Turbo 1987 which bears S o uth 108k, white/maroon, ga- 89 57'11" W e s t a raged. 541-926-1412 for distance o f 2 2 7 .60 appt., runs & looks great, feet from the N orth $7,000. 541-526-1412 Quarter (N1/4) corner of said Section 13; Porsche Carrera 911 thence leaving said 2003 convertible with N orth l i n e Sou t h hardtop. 50K miles, 00 05'07" W e s t a new factory Porsche distance o f 3 0 7 .10 motor 6 mos ago with feet; thence South 18 mo factory war89 48'56" East a disranty remaining. tance of 427.60 feet; $37,500. thence South 541-322-6928 00'05'07" W e s t a distance o f 3 5 0 . 00 Toyota Camry 1 992, feet to the South line tune it up & drive it, or the North Half of parts car. Transmission & of Northwest Quarengine work; body rough, the of the Northeast good i n terior. $ 4 50. ter Quarter 541-771-6266 (N1/2NW/1/4NE1/4) of said Section 13; Toyota Camrys: t hence a long s a i d 19S4, SOLD; S outh l i n e Nor t h 89 48'56" W e s t a 1985 SOLD; distance o f 2 0 0 .00 19S6 parts car feet t o t h e N o r t honly one left! $500 South centerline of Cali for details, s aid S e c tion 13 ; 541-548-6592 t hence along s a i d North-South c e nterToyota Corolla 2004, line south 00'05'07" auto., loaded, 204k West a distance of miles. orig. owner, non 6 58 01 feet t o t h e smoker, exc. c o nd. Southeast corner of $6500 Prin e ville the Northeast Quarter 503-358-8241 of t h e Nor t hwest Quarter of WHEN YOU SEE THIS (NE1/4NW1/4) of said Section 13 ; t h e nce along the South line of MorePixatBendbulletin,com said Northeast QuarOn a classified ad ter of the Northwest Quarter of go to www.bendbulletin.com (NE1/4NW1/4) North 89'57'30" W e s t a to view additional distance of 1 3 16.00 photos of the item. •
•
~oo
Le g al Notices • feet to the Southwest
corner of said Northeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of (NE1/4NW1/4); thence along the west line of said Northeast Quarter of the Northwest Q u a rte r of (NE1/4NW1/4) North 00'13'45" East a distance of 965.94 feet; thence North 8 9'56'32" E a st , a distance of 24.30 feet to the West boundary line of those lands described i n V o l ume 152, Page 522, Deschutes County Deed R ecords; then c e along said boundary line t h e fol l owing seven courses: South 01'19'10" east a distance of 211.35 feet; North 57'35'56" East a distance of 111.60 feet; North 61 34'56" East a d istance of 250.00 feet; S o uth 28'25'04" East a distance of 150.00 feet; North 61'34'56" East a distance of 300.00 feet; North 28'25'04" West a d istance of 1 50.00 feet ; N o r th 47'43'56" East a distance of 354.60 feet to the North line of said Section 13; t h ence along said North line North 89'57'11" East a distance of 216.96 feet to the point of beginning, the terminus of t hi s d e scription. PARCEL II: All that portion of the following lying within the Northwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter (NW1/4NW1/4) of Section Thirteen (13), Township Seventeen (17) South, Range Eleven (11), East of the Willamette MeridDeschutes ian, C ounty, Oreg o n. T hose portions o f Sections Thirteen (13) and Fourteen (14), Township Seventeen (17) South, Range Eleven (11), East of the Willamette Meridian, Deschutes County, Oregon, described as f o llows: Beginning at the section corner common to Sections 11, 12, 13 and 14, in Township 17 South, Range 11, E .W.M., D.C. O . ; thence South 1 36'20" West, 168.00 f e et; thence South 49'47'20" West, 78.4
feet; t hence N o rth 87'57'35" West, 3 68.00 feet t o t h e Southeasterly line of Johnson Road; thence Southwesterly along said Southeasterly line to the most Northerly corner of the first parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 152, Page 522, Deed Records; thence South 86 04' East, 1128.60 f eet; t hence South 9 0 2 ' East, 3 20.00 f e e t; thence South 73 11' West, 1 26.80 f e et; thence North 89 57' West, 690.80 feet to an angle in the description of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 152, P age 4 4 2 , Dee d R ecords; then c e South 60'02' E a st, 339.69 feet; thence South 65'10' E a st, 208.78 feet; t hence N orth 8 9 ' 05 ' E a s t, 210.19 feet; thence N orth 6 9 ' 28' E a s t, 337.80 feet; t hence South 21'47' W est, 1 093.08 feet to t h e North line of the parcel described in the d eed r e corded i n Book 180, Page 430, Deed Records;thence North 80'25'07" East along said North line, 55.92 feet to the centerline of the Tumalo Irrigation District Canal; thence Easterly and Southerly along the centerline of said canal to t h e N o rthw est corner of t h e
parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 167, Page 450, Deed Records;thence South 85'58' E a st, 4 68 29 feet t o t h e centerline of Tumalo Creek; thence Northe asterly along t h e centerline of said Tum alo Creek t o t h e Southeast corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 222, Page 91, Deed Records;thence North 89'35'45" West, 430 f e e t to the Southwest corner of
Legal Notices • said deed recorded in Book 222, Page 91, Deed Records; thence North 22'51 '30" East, 20.94 f eet; t h e nce North 46'23'30" East, 166.22 feet; thence North 24'32'30" East, 144.06 feet; t hence North 39'59'30" East, 212.60 feet; thence North 8'31'30" East, 403.92 feet; t hence North 30'16'00" East, 4 3 48 feet t o th e Northwest corner of said deed recorded in Book 222, Page 91, Deed Records; thence South 89'35'45" East, 915 feet to the centerline of said Tumalo Creek; thence Northe asterly a long t h e centerline of said Tum alo Creek t o t h e Southeast corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 221, Page 800, Deed Records; thence North 89'35'45" West, 8 91.09 feet t o t h e
most Southerly corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 221, P age 7 9 6 , Dee d R ecords; then c e North 17'35'44" East, 88.60 feet; t h ence North 3 02'49" East, 147.80 feet; t hence North 5 19'24" East, 230.63 feet; thence North 44'22'08" West, 208.94 feet; t hence North 7 17'52" East, 313.50 feet; thence North 76'37'30" East, 74.40 f e et; t h e nce North 72'36'58" East, 329.65 feet; thence North 86'21'14" East, 415.77 feet; t hence South 0'12'25" West, 30.09 feet t o the Northwest corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 165, Page 43, Deed Records; thence South 84'37'00" East, 4 01.64 feet t o th e
Southwest corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 171, Page 934, Deed Records; thence North 0'12'25I E ast, 5 8 0.85 f e e t ; thence South 89'51'15" East, 4 05.44 feet t o t h e most N o r thwesterly corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 157, P age 4 8 6 , Dee d R ecords; then c e South 89'51'15" East, 114.80 feet; thence North 59'04'15" East, 152.05 feet; t hence North 0'47'45" West, 87.74 feet to the most Southerly corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 215, Page 202, Deed Records; thence North 8 9' 51 '15" West, 4 5 4.66 feet; t hence N o rth 6 48.84 feet t o t h e N orth line o f s a i d Section 13; t h ence North 89'51I15" West along said North line to the most Easterly corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 152, P age 5 2 2 , Dee d R ecords; then c e South 47'41' W est, 394.91 feet; t hence South 28'28' E a st, 150 f e et ; th e n ce South 61'32' West, 300 feet; thence North 28'28' West, 150 feet;
thence South 61'32' W est, 2 50 feet ; thence South 57'33I West, 1 11.60 f e et; thence North 1 ' 2 3' West, 213.81 feet to the most S o utherly corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 192, P age 2 1 9 , Dee d R ecords; then c e North 62'19'24" West, 391.31 feet; thence South 76' 40 ' 5 1" West, 2 58.47 f e et; thence South 89'54'13" West, 360.00 feet; thence orth 225.00 feet to the
N orth line o f s a i d Section 13; t h ence South 89'54'13" West along said North line, 3 77.97 feet t o t h e point of b e ginning. EXCEPT that portion described as follows: Commencing at t he Southwest co r ner, Section 13, Township 17 South, Range 11, East of the Willamette Meridian, Deschutes County, Oreg o n; thence East along the S outh line o f s a i d Section, 1,238.19 feet t o a p o in t o n t h e
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center line of Tumalo Creek; thence North 8'52' East along the center line of Tumalo Creek, 345.20 feet; thence North 14'43' West along the center line of Tumalo Creek, 186.00 feet; t hence N orth 4 0 ' 39' W e s t along the center line o fTumalo Cree k , 195.32 feet; t hence N orth 7 1 1 ' Eas t along the center line o fTumalo Cree k , 191.08 feet; t hence N orth 2 2 ' 26 ' E a s t along the center line o fTumalo Cree k , 315.16 feet; t hence North 85 58' W e st, 4 68.29 feet t o t h e center of the Tumalo Irrigation Canal and t he t ru e p o in t o f beginning; the n ce South 85'58' E a st, 2 48.60 feet t o th e
centerline of a 60.00 foot road easement; thence North 22' 51 '30" East along the centerline of said road e asement, 211 . 30 f eet; t h ence N o r th 85 58' West, 409.51
feet to the center of the Tumalo Irrigation Canal, 220.45 feet to t he t r u e p o i n t o f beginning. ALS O EXCEPTING THEREFROM:
Beginning a t the S ection Corne r common to Section Eleven (11), Twelve (12), Thirteen (13) and Fourteen (14), in Township Seventeen (17) South, Range Eleven (11) East, of the Willamette M eridian; then c e along the Section line between Sections 13 and 14 South 01 36'20" West , 168.00 feet; t hence leaving said Section line South 49'47'20" W est, 7 8 .4 0 f e e t ; thence North 87 57'35" W est , 3 68.00 feet t o t h e
along sald Southeasterly line to the most N o rtherly c orner o f th e fi r s t parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 152, Page 522,
Deed Records; thence South 86'04' E a st, 1128.60 feet; thence S outh 9 0 2 ' Ea s t , 320.00 feet; thence South 73'11' W est, 126.80 feet; thence North 89'57' W e st, 690.80 feet t o an angle in the description o f the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 152, Page 442, Deed Records; thence South 6 0 ' 02 I
E a s t,
339.69 feet; thence South 65'10' E a st, 208.78 feet; t hence N orth 89 05' E a s t, 210.19 feet; thence N orth 69 28' E a s t, 337.80 feet; t hence South 21'47' W est, 1 093.08 feet to t h e North line o f the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 180, Page 430, Deed Records; thence North 80'25'07" East along said North line, 55.92 feet t o t he centerline o f the Tumalo Irrigation District C anal; t h ence Easterly and Southerly along the c enterline o f sai d canal to the Northwest corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 167, P age 4 5 0 , Dee d R ecords; then c e South 85'58' E a st, 4 68.29 feet t o t h e centerline of Tumalo Creek; thence Northe asterly along t h e c enterline o f sai d Tumalo Creek to the Southeast corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 222, Page 91, Deed Records; thence North 89'35'45" West, 430 f e e t to t he Southwest corner of said deed recorded in Book 222, Page 91, Deed Records; thence North 22 51'30" East, 20.94 feet; t h ence North 46 23'30" East, 166.22 feet; t hence North 24 32'30" East, 144.06 feet; thence North 39 59'30" East, 212.60 feet; t hence North 8'31'30" East, 403.92 feet; thence North 30 16'00" East, 43.48 f ee t t o t he Northwest corner of said deed recorded in Book 222, Page 91, Deed Records; thence South 89'35'45" East, 915 f e e t to t he c enterline o f sai d Tumalo Creek; thence Northeasterly a l o ng the centerline of said Tumalo Creek to the Southeast corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 221, Page 800, Deed Records; thence North 89'35'45" West, 8 91.09 feet t o t h e most Southerly corner of the parce l described in the deed recorded in Book 221, P age 7 9 6 , De e d R ecords; then c e North 17 35'44" East, 88.60 feet; t h ence North 3'02'49" East, 147.80 feet; t hence North 5'19'24" East, 230.63 feet; thence North 44'22'08" West, 208.94 feet; t hence North 7'17'52" East, 313.50 feet; thence North 76'37'30" East, 74.40 f eet; t h e nce North 72 36'58" East, 329.65 feet; thence North 86'21'14" East, 415.77 feet; t hence South 0'12'25" West, 3 0.09 feet t o th e Northwest corner of the parcel described
in the deed recorded in Book 165, Page 43, Deed Records;thence South 84'37'00" East,
feet to the center of the Tumalo Irrigation Canal, 220.45 feet to t he t ru e p o i n t o f
4 01.64 feet
beginning. EXCEPTING
t o th e
Southwest corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 171, Page 934, Deed Records; thence North 0 12'25" E ast, 5 8 0.85 f e e t ; thence South 89'51 '15" East, 405.44 feet to the most Northwesterly corner of the parce l described in the deed recorded in Book 157, P age 4 8 6 , Dee d R ecords; then c e South 89'51'15" East, 114.80 feet; thence North 59'04'15" East, 152.05 feet; t hence North 0'47'45" West, 87.74 feet to the most Southerly corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 215, Page 202, Deed Records; thence North 8 9' 51 '15" West, 4 5 4.66 feet; t hence N o rth 6 48.84 feet t o t h e N orth line o f s a i d Section 13; t h ence North 89'51 '15" West along said North line to the most Easterly corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 152, P age 5 2 2 , Dee d R ecords; then c e South 47 41' W est, 394.91 feet; t hence South 28'28' E a st, 150 f e et ; th e n ce South 61 32' West, 300 feet; thence North 28'28' West, 150 feet;
thence South 61'32' W est, 2 50 feet ; thence South 57'33I West, 1 11.60 f e et; thence North 1 ' 2 3' West, 213.81 feet to the most S o utherly corner of the parcel described in the deed recorded in Book 192, P age 2 1 9 , De e d R ecords; then c e North 62'19'24" West, 391.31 feet; thence South 76'40 ' 5 1" West, 2 58.47 f e e t; thence South 89'54'13" West , 360.00 feet; t hence North 225.00 feet to the North line of said Section 13; t h ence South 89'54I13" West along said North line, 3 77 97 feet t o t h e point of b e ginning. EXCEPT that portion described as follows: Commencing at t he Southwest co r ner, Section 13, Township 17 South, Range 11, East of the Willamette Mendian, Deschutes C ounty, Oreg o n; thence East along the S outh line o f s a i d Section, 1,238.19 feet t o a p o in t o n t h e center line of Tumalo Creek; thence North 8 52' East along the center line ofTumalo Creek, 345.20 feet; thence North 14'43' West along the center line of Tumalo Creek, 186.00 feet; t hence N orth 4 0 ' 39' W e s t along the center line o fTumalo Cree k , 195.32 feet; t hence N orth 7 ' 1 1 ' Eas t along the center line of T u malo C r e ek, 191.08 feet; t hence N orth 2 2 26 ' E a s t along the center line of T u malo C r e ek, 315.16 feet; t hence North 85'58' W e st, 4 68 29 feet t o t h e center of the Tumalo Irrigation Canal and t he t ru e p o in t o f b eginning; the n ce South 85'58' E a st,
Legal Notices
ALS O
THEREFROM:
Beginning a t the Section Corner common to S ection Eleven (11), Twelve
(12), Thirteen (13) and Fourteen (14), in Township Seventeen (17) South, Range Eleven (11) East, of the
Willamette M eridian; then c e along the Section line between Sections 13 and 14 Sout h 01'36'20" West , 168.00 feet; thence leaving said Section line South 49'47'20" W est, 7 8 .4 0 f e e t ; thence North 87'57'35" West , 3 68.00 feet t o t h e
Easterly right of way for Johnson Road; t hence a long s a i d right of wa y S o uth 36'05'56" West, 85.59 feet; thence leaving s aid right o f wa y South 42 46'05" East, 247.10 feet to a curve to the l e ft; t hence 212.40 feet along said curve with a r adius of285.00 feet and a c hord b e aring o f South 64'07'07" East, 207.52 feet; t hence South 85'28'09" East 1 13.06 feet t o t h e afore mentioned Section line between Sections 13 and 14; t hence along s a i d Section line North 01
plus late charges of $6,731.66; plus advances of $145,825.39 plus interest thereon at 5% p er a n nu m fr o m September 11, 2012; p lus u n p ai d re a l property taxes; plus foreclosure attorney fees and costs. 6. SALE OF PROPERTY. The Trustee hereby states that the property will be sold to satisfy the obligations secured by t he Trust Deed. A Trustee's Notice of Default and Election to Sell Under Terms of Trust Deed has been recorded in the O fficial Records o f Deschutes C o u nty, Oregon. 7. TIME OF SALE. Date: July 11, 2013. Time:11:00 a.m. Place: Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond Street, Bend, Oregon. 8. RIG HT TO REINSTA
'36'20" East, 207.36
feet; thence leaving s aid S e ction l i n e North 89'54'13" East, 1 345.79 feet t o
the
Westerly line of a tract of land described in the deed recorded on P age 522 o f B o o k 152, Desc h utes County Rec o r ds; thence North 62'19'24"
W est ,
391.31 feet; thence South 76' 40 ' 5 1" West, 2 58.47 f e et; thence South 89'54'13" West , 360.00 feet; thence North 225.00 feet to t he Se c t io n lin e between Sections 12 and 13; thence along s aid S e ction l i n e
Easterly right of way for Johnson R oad; t hence a long s a i d right of wa y S o uth 36 05'56" West, 85.59 feet; thence leaving said right ofway South 42 46'05" East , 247.10 feet to a curve to th e l e ft ; t h ence 212.40 feet along said S outh 89' 54 ' 1 3" curve with a radius of West, 377.97 feet to 2 85.00 feet an d a the point of beginning. chord b e a ring of 3.RECORDING. The South 64 07'07" East, Trust D e e d was 207.52 feet; thence recorded as follows: South 85'28'09" East Date Recorded: June 1 13.06 feet t o t h e 25, 2008. Recording afore mentioned No.: 2 008 - 2 7172 Official Records of Section line between Sections 13 and 14; Deschutes C o unty, t hence a long s a i d Oregon. 4.DEFAULT. S ection l in e N o r t h The Grantor or any '20" other person obligated 01 36 East, 207.36 feet; thence on the Trust Deed and leaving said Section Promissory Note line North 89 54' 13" secured thereby is in East, 1345.79 feet to default and the Benthe Westerly line of a eficiary seeks to foretract of land described close the Trust Deed in the deed recorded f or failure t o p a y : on Page 522 of Book Monthly payments of 152, Desc h utes interest only for the County Reco r ds; months of J a n uary thence North through N o v ember 62 19'24" West , 2012, inclusive, com391.31 feet; thence puted at 5 % per South 76' 40 ' 5 1" annum on the then West, 2 58.47 f e et; outstanding principal meet sellers. thence South balance, due the first 89 54'13" West , day of each month, in 360.00 feet; t hence the total amount of North 225.00 feet to $119,734.83; a monthly payment due t he S e c tio n lin e between Sections 12 December 1, 2012, in and 13; thence along the amo u n t of The Classified Section s aid S e ction l i n e $14,898.37; plus late is easy to use. Every South 89' 54 ' 1 3" charges and item is categorized West, 377.97 feet to advances; plus any and every category the point of beginning. unpaid real property is indexed on the ALSO E X C EPTING taxes or liens, plus section's front page. that portion dedicated interest. 5.AMOUNT to Deschutes County DUE. T h e a m ount recorded January 24, due on the Note which 2003 i n I n s trument 2 48.60 feet t o th e i s secured b y t h e 2003-05375, Trust Deed referred to centerline of a 60.00 Deschutes C o u nty foot road easement; herein is: P r i ncipal Records. PARCEL III: thence North 2 2' 51 balance in the amount Thousands ofadsdaily '30" East along the All that portion of the of $2,582,319.19; plus in print andonline. following lying within on that centerline of said road interest the North Half of the e asement, 211 . 30 principal balance at Northeast Quarter of feet; t h ence N o r th 5% per annum from 85'58' West, 409.51 • i l » the Northeast Quarter December 2, 2 0 1 1; (Nl/2NE1/4NE1/4) of 1000 1000 1000 1000 Section Fourteen (14), Township Seventeen Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices • Legal Notices (17) South, Range Eleven (11), East of NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING the Willamette Meridian, Deschutes A publ>c meetingofthe crooked R<verRench Rural Fire proledion ostnct vnll bs hsld on May 16. 2013 at 6 00 pm st the fire stetion lacated at 6971 sw shad Road avsr Ranch, oregon The purpose ofws meet<ng>sto chscuss the budgel for the fiscal year beginning July x 2013 ssepproved by the crooksd River Ranch County, Oregon, more crooked RFPD Budget Committee A summary of thebudget is presented below A copy of the budgetmay be inspected or obteined et the fire station located at 6971 SW Shad particularly described Road. betweenthe hoursof 9 s m and 4 p m or onlle at www urfire Org This budget is for sn annual budget penad This budget was prepared on e basis of eccounting and their effect on the budget are None as follows: Beginning that is ths Same8S uSed the preceding year If dNerent, the ms]or chengesTele hone (541) 923-6776 Emai l t imm c rrfire o at the section corner contact Tim McLaren, are chisf common to Sections FINANCIAL SUMMARY - RESOURCES TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS Adopted Budget Approved Budget Actual Amount 11, 12, 13 and 14, in 2011-12 This Year 2012-13 Next Year2013-14 Township 17 South, Be innin Fund BalancelNet Worlan Ce itel 438,781 406 449 283 816 Range 11, E .W.M., Fees.Licenses,Perm ds,Fines,Assessments S OtherSennce Cherges 151,003 125,100 125,045 D.C.O.; thence South Federal, stateand AIf olhsr Grants,Gifls, Allocations end Donaxons 11.900 1,000 5,000 154,466 141.873 150,712 1'36'20" West, 168.00 Revenus frOm Bonds and Other Debt Other Resources Except CurrentYear Property Taxes 39.100 27 500 3g gg3 feet; t hence S o uth All Current Year Pro T a xes Estimated to be Rece<ved 628.075 613 989 622,997 49'47'20" West, 78.4 TotalResoufces 1,423,325 1,315,911 1,227,563 feet; t h ence N o r th FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIFICATION 87 57'35" West , 535,875 559,262 Services 479,899 3 68.00 feet t o t h e Personnel 228,100 Matensls snd Services 231,949 259,35D Southeasterly line of Ca italOutla O 5,490 5,594
Where buyers
Easily.
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A RE P U B L I C NOTICES IMP O
Johnson Road; thence Southwesterly
Legal Notices •
R TA N I '~
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Debt Service Interlund Transfsrs Contin enaes S i a l Pa ments Una ro nated EnChn Balanceand Reserved for Future Ex nature Total Requirements
59,868
57,150 192,000 112,214 144,136 15 186
0 I0,000 94,217 270,626 1,227,563
1,315,911
FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES FTE BY ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT OR PROGRAM Nameof Organizational Unit or Program FTEfor that unit or program Fire Chief FTE Administrative Assistant FTE Shift Psrsonnel FTE Part-Time Personnel IMechanic, et sJ FTE Total FTE
*
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN ACTIVITIESend SOURCES OF FINANCING * Duringthe current budget year the Bu>ldrng/Equ<pment Reserve Fund wasseparated from the General Fund cash-on hand. Th is correChon was completed wtth a $192,000 one-time transfer from theGeneral Fund to the Builang/Equ<pment RessrveFund enanctng payments for ths purchase of a new water tender were finalized this budget earandfundsallocatedb asu l e mentalbud et
Permanent Rate Le rats limit $1 8379 Locel 0 Uon Le Levy For General Obli alion Bonds
LONG TERM DEBT
The Bulletin
48,178 40,000 150,668 140,036 327,001 1,423,325
General Obli ation Bonds Other Borreen s Total
( $1,000
PROPERTY TAX LEVIES Rate or Amount Im sed 18379 0 69 154,466 STATEMENT OF INDE8TEDNESS Estimated Debt Oulstand>ng on Jul 1 $2.625,000 $90 740 $2.715,740
RateorAmountlm osed R 1 8379 0 69 141,873
at e orAmountx r oved 1 8379 0.69 150 712
Estimated DebtAuthonzed, But Notlncurredon Jul I