Bulletin Daily Paper 06-09-13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.50

SUNDAY June 9,2013

re on's os ornear- ea owns "l05 MORE THAN

IN COUPONS INSIDE

TRAVEL• C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

Bill targets foreclosed properties in disrepair

Wise, and educatedPages from Abraham Lincoln's

math workbook suggest the Great Emancipator wasn't as unschooled as he let on.A3

By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

A bill passed by the Legislature this session gives city governments the powertofix up foreclosed homes at the cost of the property's owner. House Bill 2662 prohibits the owner of a foreclosedhome from letting it fall into disrepair while vacant. Banks often take ownership of a property after it's foreclosed. Some banks hire companies to check up on foreclosureproperties. Others let the homes sit. HB 2662 would give cities and counties the authority to fix up the homes and send the bank a bill through a lien on the property. It passed the House and Senate in late May, and Gov. John Kitzhaber intends to sign it, according to an aide. It's a step cities like Bend and Redmond have already taken, a response to the 2008 foreclosure crisis. HB 2662 gives to cities that have not enacted their own law a state mandate to employ. See Foreclosed/A5

Romney returns —But, being in a position different from other recent failed presi-

dential hopefuls, his future is uncertain.A7

College dasedallOne strike away from another

home win, OSUfalters in the Super Regionals.01

Nation andworld news — An ailing Nelson Mandela,

plus an update onthe Santa Monica shooter.A2

Business news-

Bend-area hourly wageearners make less than thenational average.E1 PluS —Is there anything we can't print 3-D?E1

Bend draws its drinking water from an aquifer 200 to 500 feet underground, trusting gravel and soil to filter pollutants from runoff that is funneled into the ground. The city is working to make this system comply with the Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974 by beginning to get permits for thousands of injection

And a Wed exclusiveCan brain scansexplain crime? A neuroscientist and

wells, which require that they be tested, fixed or phased out.

a psychiatrist debate.

By Hillary Borrud

bendbulletin.com/extras

The Bulletin

EDITOR'5 CHOICE

Achilles' heel of Istanbul's public square By Michael Kimmelman New Yorh Times News Service

ISTANBUL — On a normal day, Taksim Square is a mess of buses and crowds, a tangle of plazas, streets, shops and taxi horns. Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, is determined to clean it up and make it into a pedestrian zone, with a new malland mosque, and tunnels for traffic to move underground. The outrage in response has filled the square with noisy, angry, determined protesters. At midday, the muezzin's call to prayer now mixes with the chants of union workers and bullhorn speeches from the Anti-Capitalist Muslims. At night, drummers and singers agitate the throngs until dawn. After Egypt's Tahrir Square and New York's Zuccotti Park (of Occupy Wall Street fame), Taksim is the latest reminder of the power of public space. The square has become an arena for clashing worldviews: an unyielding leader's top-down, neo-ottoman, conservative vision of the nation as a regional power versus a bottom-up, pluralist, disordered, primarily young, less Islamist vision of the country as a modern democracy. "Taksim is where everybody expresses freely their happiness, sorrow, their political and social views," said Esin, 41, in a head scarf, sitting with relatives on a bench watching the protest in the square. SeeSquare/A6

How wegottothis point

The city of Bend has roughly 5,500 injection wells, into which untreated stormwater travels on its way down to the aquifer. These include the 160-foot-deep drill holes at the bottom of the Third Streetunderpass, where runoff from a 60-acre area drains into the ground. The site is upstream of a city drinking-water well field at Pilot Butte, which is a major reason the city is decommissioning the drill holes this summer. A new pump station and pipeline will carry the water to a new regional stormwater pond, designed to filter out pollution. The project is an example of how, decades • What's going after the Safe Drinking down our Wate r A ct, Bend and citdrains?A4 ies ac r oss the state are • Graphic: How still working to upgrade stormwater is their stormwater systems to meet the federal law. injected into The state Department the ground,A4 of Environmental Quality, which has authority from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to enforce the law locally, moved slowly to require municipalities and private property owners to complywith federal injection-well regulations. In May, the agency finally issued Bend its first permit for the stormwater drains. The permit requires the city to test for stormwater contaminants and decommission or replace its rudimentary drill holes as they fail over time. The city is in the process of determining how much these improvements to the stormwater system will cost, but officials expect it will be significantly less than an earlier estimate of more than $600 million. SeeWater /A4

1974:Congress passes the Safe Drinking Water Act, the main federal law that ensures the quality of

Americans' drinking water. TheEPA sets standards for quality. 1980s:Federal regulators set minimum standards for underground-injection controls, or dry wells and drill holes, with the EPA delegating enforcement to the states. The Department of Environmental

Secret order plans for a cyberwar

Quality has primary enforcement responsibility in Oregon.

2001:The OregonEnvironmental Quality Commission adopts rules to comply with the act. It requires municipalities

with 50 or more stormwater drains that

Bulletin wire reports

inject water into the ground to register with the state, evaluate groundwater

Pres>dent Barack Obama calledon national security leaders to develop destructive cyberwarfare capabilities that could be triggered with "little or no warning" against adversaries around the world, according to a top-secret document obtainedby The Washington Post. The leak could complicate talks between Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping. Experts take it for granted that the U.S. and China

quality, decommission facilities that do not comply and create a stormwater

management plan. Thestate requires other actions, too, such astaking an inventory of the existing stormwater

drains and monitoring for contaminants. 2003:The city of Bend applies for a permit for its dry wells and drill holes. 2008:The DEQ sends more than1,000

letters to the owners of unregistered dry wells and drill holes. The owners must register and seek authorization, which

could include upgrading their systems or establishing a monitoring program. They

could also decommission the systems or get a permit to cover multiple dry wells.

are already engaged in a struggle in cyberspace.

May 2013:The DEQ issues its first permit for Bend dry wells and drill holes, many of which have existed for decades.

SeeCyberwar /A7

Inside

Sources: The Bulletin archives, Oregon Department of Environmental Quahty, city of Bend, Oregon Secretary of State, Environmental Protection Agency

•Obama,Chineseleader talk cybersecurity, climate,

North Korea,A2 Bulletinphoto illustration

Justices'gayclerksare Exhibit A onshifting attitudes By Adam Liptak New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — As Justice Lewis Powell was struggling with how to cast the decisive vote in a 1986 Supreme Court case that would end up devastating the gay rights movement, he told his fellow justices he had never

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 82, Low 45

Page B6

met a homosexual. In truth, one of his four law clerks that term was gay. The atmosphere at the court today is far different, with a pace ofchange that may have surpassed that in the rest

of society. Openly gay law clerks are now common in the chambers of both liberal and

conservative justices. In January, Chief Justice John Roberts formally admitted about 30 members of the National LGBT Bar Association to the Supreme Court's bar, the first time lawyers with a gay legal group achieved that status. As the justices consider two major cases on same-sex

marriage, with decisions expected this month, they are, of course, focused on legal issues. But students of the court say other factors may also

play a role. "In addressing for the first time whether the law must recognize lesbian and gay couples as families," said Da-

gay people as individuals and as members of families." SeeCourt/A7

e p we userecycled newsprint

INDEX Business/Stocks E1-6 CommunityLife C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles Calendar B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts Classified G 1 - 6L ocal/State B 1- 6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies

vid Codell, who served as a law clerk to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, "certain of the justices undoubtedly will reflect upon their real-world experiences of getting to know and to understand Iesb>an and

AnIndependent

vol. 110, No. 160,

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7 sections

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

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0 ama,Chinamovecloser on dimate, not on spying

Building COllapSe arreSt —Sean Benschop surrendered Saturday to face six counts of involuntary manslaughter, 13 counts of recklessly endangering another person andonecount of risking a

New York Times News Service RANCH O M I R A GE, Calif. — Even as they pledged to build " a new m odel" of relations, President Barack Obama and President Xi Jinping of China ended two days of informal m eetings here Saturday moving closer on pressuring a nuclear North Korea and addressing climate change, but remaining sharply divided over cyberespionage and other issues that have divided the countries for years. Broadly, both leaders urged cooperation, not conflict. Although they made no statements Saturday,theirdisagreements — over cyberattacks as well as arms sales to Taiwan, maritime territorial disputes in the South China Sea and manipulation of the Chinese currency — spilled into the open when senior o f ficials from both countriesemerged to describe the meetings. T he W h it e H o u s e a n nounced that the two coun-

and economic secrets and property in cyberspace — the officials seemed to speak past each other. That dominated Saturday's talks here at a secluded estate, but ended without a clear acknowledgment by Xi of any culpability. China's state councilor, Yang Jiechi, said China strongly opposed hacking and was itself a victim, while Donilon warned that the threat from China threatened to constrain the spirit of partnership Obama and Xi publicly declared they wanted. Obama warned that if the hacking continued, Donilon said, it "was going to be a very difficult problem in the economic relationship." Secretary of State John Kerry, who attended the meetings, has previously a n nounced that the two countries would

Zimmerman trial —Was it murder when GeorgeZimmerman shot and killed Trayvon Martin? Orwas it self-defense? That wasthe

discuss cyberspying as part

mote base. It's the vanguard of a plan to grow to 2,000 the staff at the prison camps, where166 captives are being held.

tries had reached at least one concrete accord t hat e n vironmentalists welcomed as a potential step in combating climate change. China and the United States agreed to discuss ways toreduce emissions of hydroflourocarbons, known as HFCs, that are used in refrigerants and insulating foams. Obama and Xi also found areas of agreement over North Korea. Obama's administration has welcomed China's n ew assertiveness with i t s

neighbor and ally, believing that it reflects a new calculation that a constant state of crisis on the Korean Peninsula is destabilizing for the Chinese as well. "They agreed that North Korea has to denuclearize," national security adviser Tom Donilon said. On the most contentious issue in recent months — American accusations that Chinese c orporations linked t o t h e military had pilfered military

catastrophe in the Philadelphia building collapse case. A warrant had

been issued for the 42-year-old and police hadbeensearching for him. Six were killed and13 injured in Wednesday's collapse. Officials

said a toxicology report showedevidence that Benschop was high on marijuana. Benschop's attorney said his client was not at fault.

question16 months ago, and it remains the question as potential jurors file into the Seminole County Courthouse in Sanford, Fla., on

Monday at the start of Zimmerman's trial on charges of second-degree murder. Thecase maycome down to which version of events the jury finds more believable: Zimmerman's assertion that he was

attacked by Martin, or anaccount by ayoung womanwhowas talking to the victim on the phone moments before he was killed.

New JerSey —Cory Booker, who hasbuilt national celebrity from his perch as mayor of Newark, N.J., on Saturday officially declared his campaign for the U.S. Senate seat vacated by Sen. Frank Laut-

enberg's death Monday. Booker, 44, enters the raceheavily favored: Polls earlier in the year showed that he enjoyed far broader name recognition than any of his Democratic primary opponents. Gov. Chris

Christie has declared the seatwill be filled in a special election in midOctober with a primary little more than two months away.

More guards at Guantanamo — Twoweeks after President Barack Obamapledged to appoint two special czars to work on closing the prison camps atGuantanamoBay,Cuba,thejobs have yet to be filled — andthe only jobs announcedare in a plan to surge more troops to the detention center. On Saturday, 124 fresh guards from a military police company in Texas were scheduled to land at the re-

of the annual meetings known as the Strategic and Economic Dialogue, to be held in Washington in July.

Afghanistan deaths —Two Li.S. soldiers and an American civilian working with them were killed in a so-called insider attack Saturday at a base in Afghanistan's Paktika province. A soldier with

the Afghan National Army openedfire during lunchtime, according to Afghan military officers. Last year, 48 insider attacks killed 64 international troops and civilians working with the military. In a second

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PRAYERS FOR AN AILING NELSON MANDELA

attack on international forces Saturday, an Italian soldier was killed. Syrian rebelS —The Syrian opposition will not attend the proposed conference onthe crisis in Syria unless rebel fighters receive new supplies of arms, saysGen.Salim Idris, the top rebel commander. "If we don't receive ammunition andweapons to change the position on the ground ... very frankly I can say we will not go to

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Geneva." Since Secretary of State John Kerry announced in May that

the U.S. andRussia planned to organize ameeting, Syria has been strengthened byarms from lran and the involvement of Hezbollah. DruneS In PakiStan —Just days after taking power, Pakistan's new government summoned atop U.S. envoy Saturday to protest

Traci Donaca ......................

a Li.S. drone strike, suggesting that Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's

TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran..........541-383-0360 City DeskJoseph Ditzler.....541-363-0367 Community Life, Health Julie Johnson.....................541-383-0308 Editorials Richard Coe......541-383-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon........................541-383-0377 Home, All Ages AlandraJohnson................541-617-7860 News Editor Jan Jordan....541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey......541-383-0366 Sporls Bill Bigelow.............541-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou ............541-410-9207

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team fully intends to makegood on its promise to aggressively push for an end to such strikes. Friday night's drone strike near theAfghan border was said to have killed seven militants. Sharif wants to pursue peace talks with militants.

ChineSe duS blaSt —An unemployed manintent on killing himself set off an explosion that engulfed a bus in flames and killed 47 in

Xiamen, in southeastern China, onFriday, according to reports Saturday by state-run news organizations. The reports identified the man as Chen Shuizong, in his 60s and impoverished. He had written a former South African President Nelson Man-

post-apartheid black leader. The South African government said it

dela on a hill overlooking Johannesburg on

would announce anupdate only in the event

Saturday. Mandela, 94, fell ill several days ago, but his condition deteriorated overnight

of a major change in his condition. On previ-

and he wastransferred to a Pretoria hospital

==g

Saturday, when he was listed in serious condition with a lung infection, according to govern-

so the admission that Mandela was in serious condition underscored the fears over the elderly

ment officials. It is the latest in a worrisome seriesof

s t atesman's increasing frailty.

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shooting was premeditated

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which were based on details of the investigation released by officials in Xiamen. Chen was believed to have died in the explosion. — From wire reports

ousoccasions,thegovernmenthasdownp l ayed the seriousness of Mandela's illnesses, =

Mandela

medical ailments plaguing the nation's venerated first

CORRECTIONS

suicide note in which heexpressed deepfrustration, said the reports,

Denis Farrell /The Assoaated Press

Worshippers of a church group pray for

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The Associated Press SANTA M O NICA, C a lif. — Police investigating why a heavily armed gunman plotted a rampage that killed four people and wounded several others were focused Saturday on how the violence began: directed at his own family. What started as domestic violence led to a chaotic street shooting spree and ended less than 15 minutes later in a college library where the gunman was killed Friday by police as students studying for finals ran for cover or hunkered down to avoid whizzing bullets. Investigators were looking at family connections to find a motive because the killer's father and brother were the first victims, an official briefed on the probe said Saturday. The killer, who died a day before his 24th birthday, was connected to the home that went up in f lames after the first shootings, said Police Chief Jacqueline Seabrooks. Seabrooks said he planned the attack and was capable of firing 1,300 rounds. She refused to elaborate Saturday or name the suspect because a surviving family member couldn't immediately be notified. "Any time someone puts on a vest, of some sort, comes out with a bag full of loaded magazines ... carjacks folks, goes to a college, kills more people and has to be neutralized at the hands of the police, I would say that that's premeditated," she said.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

M ART

A3

TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day

TODAY It's Sunday, June 9,the 160th day of 2013. There are 205 days left in the year.

DISCOVERY

PROPOSED

HAPPENINGS KOreaS —North and South Korea meet for the first of several planned talks aimed at easing tensions and restarting

onirme

int 0nmu

joint economic projects and exchange programs.

And then some. The 16th president's wisdom

FrenCh OPen — Themen's

belied a lack of formal education, but notebook

final pits Spaniards Rafael Nadal against David Ferrer.

pages authenticated as his suggest he may have spent more time in school than usually thought.

HISTORY

ddd j~

coming horse racing's first Triple Crownwinner in 25 years. InA.D.68,the Rom an Emperor Nero committed suicide. In1870, author Charles Dickens died in England. In 1940, Norway surrendered to the Nazis during World War II. In1943, the federal government began withholding in-

cometaxfrom paychecks. In1953,94 people died when a tornado struck Worcester, Mass. In1954, during the Senate-

Army Hearings, Armyspecial counsel JosephWelchberated Sen. JosephMcCarthy, R-Wis., for verbally attacking a member of Welch's law firm, Fred Fisher,

asking McCarthy: "Haveyou no sense of decency,sir? At long last, haveyouleft no sense of decency?" In1969,the Senate confirmed Warren Burger to be the new chief justice of the United

States, succeedingEarlWarren. In1978, leaders of the Church

of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints struck down a 148-

year-old policy of excluding black men from the Mormon priesthood. In 1983, Britain's Conservatives, led by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, won a decisive election victory. In1993,the science-fiction film "Jurassic Park," directed by Steven Spielberg, had its world

premiere inWashington, D.C. Ten years ago:As rebels bore down on the capital of Liberia,

French helicopters rescued more than 500 Americans, Eu-

ropeans and other foreigners. Five yearsago:KenGriffey Jr. became the sixth player in baseball historyto reach 600

homers in the first inning of the Cincinnati Reds' 9-4 victory over the Florida Marlins.

Actress Mona Freeman is

87.Comedian JackieMason is 85. Media analyst Marvin Kalb is 83. Actor Joe Santos

is 82. Sports commentator Dick Vitale is 74. Author Letty Cottin Pogrebin is 74. Retired MLB All-Star Dave Parker is

62. Mystery author Patricia Cornwell is 57. Actor Michael J. Fox is 52. Writer-producer

Aaron Sorkin is 52. Actor Johnny Depp is 50. Actress Gloria Reuben is 49. Rock

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switcheroo couldhonor Armstrong By Ahcta Chang The Associated Press

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to school over as many as 2.0 The Associated Press 2ttz /5Nd ~ three to five winters, accord$~ CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Two ing to historian Daniel Stowell, .• <rdd 2/dj5/g/z qe. 5 notebook pages recently audirectorofthe Papers ofAbrays-. 69 thenticated as belonging to h am Lincoln project at t h e ~rs Abraham Lincoln show that Abraham Lincoln Presidential 9r ~ gP~ ' /r~~ d ~',>. a ~r s'. the 16th president, who was Library in S p ringfield. The edg Q <grwgg l/c /><'I<' >s /> i known to downplay his formal library owns one previously r p - / = . ~/g/xrprv~ ~ education, was no slouch. identified page of the book. ,tt, flC "They are arguing with some Q d/C Illinois S t at e U n i versity t rre~ ~ f a .cc ' rn4GB~ fdmr~ / math professors Nerida Eller- merit that a cyphering book +d 4,rurr.M ton and Ken Clements said Fri- would have been created in a day that they'd recently con- school setting," Stowell said. "It Vd' 32 d firmed that the two pages were does at least open the possibilz >< 8-d 20 ~ / d g ( /il L>part of a p reviously known ity that he may have had more //1E / au. 6S- / +s . ld/2 math notebook from Lincoln's formal schooling than origi~ d.oo g . 3 ~ H childhood. It was found in the nally thought. Not a whole lot d 4!S . - c t r d (t fCi >5 S.d ~/WeCt~ archives of Houghton Library more, but still more." c/ 3 s"'~ ~ d I, ~WS/~d~ < g // ) d d IQ'Z at Harvard University, where The pages, attached as a it remains. single leaf, include word probw d z~am ~ ~ d/'~ > Vz/P -= d~ ~ p P ">d4/ This cyphering book, as it lems that are the equivalent of / 'cj.y zry was called back then, is now roughly eighth-grade modern r 2 '5<4' 8~ w E~ the oldest k n ow n L i n coln work, Clements said. "If 100 manuscript. dollars in one year gain 3'/2 Sr/d + 1 Based on the difficulty of the dollars interest, what sum will problems involved and dates on gain $38.50 cents in one year ~c/S4 ~ re some of the pages — 1824 and, and a quarter?" one reads. 4 ~' /' on the recently authenticated Any student doing such / / >c, / ' >GS pages, 1826, when Lincoln was work in the 1820s would have 17 — Lincoln likely worked in been more advanced than the book intermittently over most on the frontier in Indiana, several years while his family Clements said. Houghton Library, Harvard University /The Associated Press "If you got tothat stage, you'd This is one of two pages from Harvard University's library lived in Indiana, the professors said. They think he could have sort of done well," he said. archives that were confirmed to have belonged to Abraham started as early as age 10 and Lincoln is known to have Lincoln. His cyphering book, as it was known in Lincoln's day, believe his w ork h a ppened later studied trigonometry and is the workbook of sorts in which he wrote math problems and while he was in school. geometry on his own. their answers. It's the oldest known Lincoln manuscript. "Most people say he went to The pages have been in the school for anything between Harvard l i b rary's a r chives three months and nine months" since 1954. They were known over the course of his life, Cle- as Lincoln documents, but ments said. "We think he went their origin wasn't known, the to school (up to) two years." professors said. The Illinois And very little of the work is Stateprofessors, who are marwrong, he added. ried, looked at the documents "He made very few errors, as they researched a book and he always knew what he they've written on math books was trying to do," Clements from the period. said. "We've studied thousands A letter from former Lincoln of these cyphering books. You law partner William Herndon don't always get the feeling from 1875 that accompanied that 'this guy knew what he the papers, describing them, was doing.'" made the authentication relaThe professors' find sug- tively straightforward, Clegests Lincoln may have gone ments said. 1

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L OS ANGELES — N e i l Armstrong's name is attached to a lunar crater, an asteroid, more than a dozen schools and a museum. But there's no NASA center named for the man whose "giant leap" made him the first to moonwalk. All t h a t c o u l d c h a nge. Leaders at the space agency's Dryden Flight Research Center in Southern California are mulling the consequences of a proposed name change at the place where Armstrong was a test pilot. The push by some in Congress to strike the name of former NASA executive Hugh Dryden from the facility has brought with i t s ome questions: Is it justified to substitute one accomplished figure for another? At a time of squeezed budgets, is it worth the cost to change logos and nameplates? It wouldn't be the first rebranding of a NASA facility. The Lewis Research Center in Ohio — named for George Lewis, the first executive officer of NASA's predecessor agency — was renamed for astronaut John Glenn, at a total cost of $260,000. Dryden wouldn't disappear entirely. The plan calls for designating the center's test range in his honor as a consolation.

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USDAhasideason food waste The Associated Press A mericans t h ro w a w ay more than a third of the food they buy — that's almost $400 a year per person, or more than an average month's worth of groceries. In 2010, an estimated 133 billion pounds of food from U.S. retailers, restaurants and homes was tossed. Working with food companies, the U.S. Department of A griculture, along with t h e

8

Environmental Pr o t e ction Agency, said last week it wants to bring those numbers down. The USDA wants to make it easier for companies to donate misbranded meat and poultry, plus test out meat composting and increase donations of edible food that may get discarded because of appearance. Read about the agencies' food waste challenge online at http://I.usa.gov/14Kx522.

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

What's in stormwater, and where it endsup

Underground injection control systems control (UIC) systems designed to removestormwater from city streets and inject it into the ground. Thedevices rely gravity-powered pipes and awell sunk into the ground so stormwater

Q Stormwater runs to the lCr.atch biasin

aquifer.

The Bulletin

heavy rains, it can overwhelm the natural cycle. UICs are designed to hold the water and release it slowly into the ground.

on a relatively simple setup of catch basins, can filter into the

By Dylan J. Darling

HOW DRY WELLSWORK Although rainwater naturally soaks into the ground, during

Beneath Bend's streets sit nearly 5,500 underground injection

f

edges of a street, where it is

collected in grated catch basins.

f

Stormwater may not seem like a summertime worry, but it's the

season whensome of theworst water goes down the drain. Start with a long string of dry days, add a surge of rain from a thunderstorm, and the result is stormwater full of whatever it sweeps

Ciaticih btasi~n

off the surface.

1

"That can be the dirtiest water," said Ryan Houston, executive director for the Upper Deschutes Watershed Council. "... It is kind of

like washing a caroff when it is really dirty."

9 Water from catch

When such a rain hits Bend and stormwater rushes down drains, the bulk of the water goes into the ground, and eventually seeps down

basins flows to central

sedimentation manholes.

to the aquifer below. Drill holes and dry wells, which send the water into the ground, are shallow — drill holes range from about10 feet to more than150 feet,

and dry wells are14 to 20 feet, said David Buchanan, stormwater pro-

Although

gram analyst for the city. The aquifer from which Bend draws some of its drinking water starts deeper, between 200 to 500 feet down.

Bend's dry

pvC"=-=-

The drill holes anddry wells don't reach into the aquifer, and the rock between them filters the water.

?

Commoncontaminants

Source: City of Portland

The list of substances in stormwater includes oil and brake dust

wells and drill

holes have been installed for decades, the

0 Water then flows to the UIC, which infiltrates stormwater into subsur-

city received its first permit

for the devices from the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality

face soils. Thewater is filtered by soil and gravel

from cars, pesticides, herbicides andfertilizers from lawns and pet

in May. The permit requires the city to test

and eventually passes into the groundwater.

waste. By taking steps around their homes to control such sources of pollution, he said, Bend can help protect its river water and ground-

for stormwater contaminants and decommission or replace its rudimentary drill holes as they fail over time.

water. From 2004to2009 theWat ershed Council,a Bend-based nonprofit, worked with the city to monitor the Deschutes River in town.

It checked temperature, pHand oxygen levels, and the amount of

Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

nutrients and bacteria. "We didn't find any acute problems linked to the city of Bend,"

Water

Houston said.

Continued from A1 "We've had our (injection wells) for decades and decades," said Bend's stormwater program manager, Wendy Edde. Bend's storm-drain network includes roughly 4,500 dry wells and 1,000 drill holes, Edde said. Dry wells are lined with a perforated barrel with gravel that helps water filter into the ground. Drill holes are simple, unlined holes in the

The city regularly tests river and groundwater, and now also tests stormwater as it flows down the drain, said Drexell Barnes, labora-

tory supervisor for the city of Bend. Thecity tests the river every month during the warm season, and each municipal groundwater source every three months. It is trying for five samples of stormwater

peryear. "We haven't found anything above the contaminant limit," he said. Houston said there is concern about what goes down the drill

holes and dry wells. "We want to make sure what we are putting into the ground is as clean as possible so we don't have contamination problems in the future," he said.

Stormwater drainage

ground.

Stormwater in Bend enters the ground or the Deschutes River, untreated, although it may be filtered by passing through gravel.

While most runoff is funneled into the ground through about 5,500 dry wells and drill holes around town, stormwater from downtown streets and the west side of Bend runs into drains and through 28

drainage lines to the river. "Whether it goes into the river or whether it goes into the ground,

everything that is on the (urban) landscapeends up washing into some sort of storm drain," Houston said. Of the 28 lines that carry stormwater into the Deschutes River — drawn on this

map — two pass through gravel filters that separate oil and

. +efzr

heavier materials, and athirdhas a

I

ra kli Ave

granular cartridge filter.

Water goes through the rest unfiltered and untreated into the river.

C Source: City of Bend

Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

The DEQ adopted rules in 2001 on how property owners must register, obtain permits in some cases, and upgrade and monitor the wells. However, it did not enforce those rules until 2008, after l awmakers a p proved n e w fees and workers in the 2007 legislative session. Eric Nigg, DEQ water-quality manager in Bend, said in 2009 that the agency previously lacked the staff and funding to carry out this part of the Safe Drinking Water Act. Today, the DEQ has just two employees to implement regulations on more than 43,000 dry wells and drill holes across the state. Tom Hickmann, Bend's engineering and infrastructure p lanning director, said t h e estimated $3.4 million Third Street project is the main project the city must complete as a result of federal injection-well regulations. Other work the city must do under the permit includes

was this plan that would cost an estimated $600 million to $650 million, Hickmann said. Since the 2008 draft plan, the city looked at well records from around Bend, as well as information on i t s g eology. This showed that few of the dry wells and drill holes in Bend were close enough to drinking-water wells to cause c oncern. Thi s d i s tance i s known as the two-year time of travel, meaning the length water travels through the ground in two years. David Cole, the underground injectioncontrolhydrogeologist with the DEQ, said the agency also softened what it required of injection-well owners after city data showed stormwater runoff was not as polluted as agency staff previously believed. "We took a conservative approach and made them buy a Cadillac, when it turns out a Volkswagen will do just fine," Cole said. Many of the requirements in the new Bend stormwater permit deal with monitoring

water for pollutants. "Monitoring is a large piece of this," said Greg Aitken, a

DEQ senior hydrogeologist who wrote the city of Bend permit. "To date, the d ata i ndicates there's little to be concerned about, given the stormwater that's been evaluated and the land use going on where those (underground injection controls) are located. But the permit ensures we, and specifically the city of Bend, continue to look at that." After five years, the DEQ will re-examine the list of contaminants it requiresthe cityto monitor. The state could take substances that did not show up on city tests off the list. It could also add pollutants, for example if environmental officials grow concerned that a certain pesticide is getting into runoff around the state. However, the state does not require cities to monitor for c ontaminants at every d r y well. Instead, cities select testing points that are representative of different activities, such

as industrial areas and residential areas, Aitken said. " Especially for a city l i ke Bend, with so many (underground injection controls), it would be cost prohibitive" to test every well, Aitken said. Dry-well owners can keep them as long as the facilities are more than 500 feet away from any water supply wells, or if they are far enough that it would take at least two years for groundwater to travel to wells, Aitken said. — Reporter: 54b617-7829, hborrud@bendbultetin.com

lES SCHNIB

oiSTTIRE VAEui PROMISE • r I

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i

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I

'

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Problem~

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replacing or decommissioning

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

One pipe drains into Mirror Pond, by the footbridge.

Storm drainmaintenance As a stormwater worker for the city, David Oak cleans out the

drains leading to the river and into the ground. Heoccasionally comes across pollutants, particularly paint, but he is mostly con-

cerned with clearing clogs. Clogged drains causepatches of flooding around town during a storm. Clogs range from the expected — dirt, sticks, leaves — to the surprising — cellphones, golf clubs. "I found a full-sized basketball in

there," Oaksaid. City workers respond to reports of spills and dumpings into stormwater drains around town. The reports run from painting and

construction waste to carpet cleaning chemicals andyard debris, Buchanan said. City records show other issues in recent years haveincluded "excessive amounts of dog poop" causing a clog in October 2011,and shattered sheet rock blocking a storm drain in October 2008. The city has a full-time crew of four workers and this year three

seasonal workers dedicated to cleaning out storm drains, Buchanan said. They focus on the catch basins, which are under the grates and openings in street curbs that allow water into the stormwater system.

"We try to get to every (catchbasin) at leaseonceayear and get it cleaned up," hesaid.

— Repofter: 541-617-7812 ddarling©bendbulletin.com

E

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

City stormwater worker David Oak attempts to clear a drill hole on Northeast Franklin Avenue on Thursday. With the light, he could see a metal obstruction several feet down the pipe. After clearing it and testing it by adding water, he rated it a D-minus for its inability to drain.

drill holes when they fail and when water no longer drains from them. The city also has to replace dry wells that fail. The cost to retrofit each well to current standards is approximately $12,000, according to the city Engineering & Infrastructure Planning Department. The city's latest stormwater master plan, which will include a cost estimate for improvements, is almost finished. "We're waiting for the financial analysis to be done on that," Hickmann said. The city recently switched to a new utility rate consultant, so people at the firm are still familiarizing themselves with the stormwater program. Plus, city officials want the rate consultant to focus first on recalculating water and sewer rates, Hickmann said. Bend can probably pay for future stormwater p r ojects without raising utility rates, other than to adjust for inflation. "But we need the consultant to see if they agree," Hickmann said. When DEQ began enforcing its stormwater rules in 2008, it a ppeared the c i ty might be forced to stop putting untreated runoff water into the ground. City officials expected the solution would be expensive. "We basically said, 'All options are on the table for how we deal with stormwater, now and in the future,'" Hickmann said. "One of the options that was looked at and evaluated was to do a whole separately piped stormwater system. Part of what was driving that was we didn't really know how severe the regulation was going to be at that point in time." The first Bend stormwater master plan, which was never finalized, called for the city to treat stormwater to clean it to drinking water standards. It

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SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S

UPDATE:MITT ROMNEY

n oi, a searc orasecon act By Maeve Reston Los Angeles Times

PARK CITY, Utah — Inside the ballroom of a posh resort in Deer Valley recently, the old Mitt Romney was back. Out-

lining the biggest challenges facing the country before an intimate gathering of 200 of his biggest donors, the man whose political career was built on his business success

was dashing through graphs and charts in a power point presentation — one tracing the GDPs of the world's largest nations dating back to 1500. In a departure from some of his recent television interviews, in which he has sharply criticized President B arack Obama, the 2012 Republican nominee did not mention his former rival, according to interviews with guests at the event. Instead, he told the crowd of chief executives and other leaders gatheredfor his "experts and enthusiasts" conference he wanted to keep the focus on ideas, not politics, and brainstorm about how this closeknit network of donors could use its influence and financial muscle to effect policy change on issues from the federal deficit to education. At the end of the second day of the meeting, Mark DeMoss, a close confidant of Romney, said there hadn't "been on e s entence about what would be good for the Republican Party." U nclear, too, w a s w h a t Romney's next act might look like: a biannual gathering of big thinkers? A foundation? A nonprofit political committee? He is in a different position than other recent nominees who lost — John McCain and John F. Kerry were able to go back to the Senate and work from that platform. But Rom-

ney has returned to his charity work and to business, taking an advisory role at a private equity firm that was cofounded by his son Tagg and his former finance chairman, Spencer Zwick. Beth Myers, who organized the gathering with Zwick at Romney's direction, said the former candidate still has time to work through exactly what his role will l ook l i ke. She noted that the gathering in Deer Valley was the first time since the election that he had brought all of his friends and top donors together. "He did it in a way that's very Mitt," said Myers, who was Romney's chief of staff when he was governor of Massachusetts. "He brought everyone together to talk about ideas, to be forward-looking, to talk about issues that are important to him and the people of America, and I think that gives you a sense of what he will be doing going forward." "We wanted it to be bipartisan," she added of the conference, and "we wanted to hear ideas not just from one narrow band where everyone shakes their head but he wanted to have people who would provoke thinking." In his introduction earlier last week, Romney gave the group a list of more than 20 policy areas and asked them to rank which were most important. His team, data-driven as always, crunched the numbers after getting responses from the guests. Topping the list of priorities: deficits and debt, spurring growth in the private sector, education, immigration reform and m ilitary leadership. Polarizing social issues such as abortion and same-sex marriage ranked at the bottom

of the list for the group of 200. DeMoss, who had dinner with Romney and his wife on the night of Obama's second inauguration, said he believed Romney was still w o r king through what role he should take on the policy front. DeMoss and many others cited examples like that of President Bill Clinton, who has embraced arole as a sort ofelder statesman — albeit after two presidential wins, not losses. Romney "just wants to see what people's appetite is for trying to do something significant," said DeMoss, who said he could i magine the group meeting several times a year. "There's no evidence he's come here with a strategy that he wants people to get behind. I reallysense he's convening to find out what people's appetite for engaging and heavy lifting."

In an earlier interview with the Wall Street Journal's Neil King Jr., Romney said he was disappointed by "the lack of any clear White House agenda" during the first 100 days of Obama's second term. His wife, Ann Romney, who was sometimes more blunt than her husband during the 2012 campaign, told CBS News in her first solo interview that the recent scandals in Washington had breached the trust between Americansand their government. Sincehisdefeat, Romneyhas said in interviews that he does not expect to drive the agenda for Republicans as they look ahead to 2016. And in Park City, he seemed determined to act more as a consigliere to all the candidates, introducing them to his donors and inviting the donors to evaluate whom they might get behind.

s-

t

•s

The Associated Press file photo

Since his election defeat seven months ago, Mitt Romney has made few public appearances, but the 2012 Republican presidential nominee met 200 of his biggest donors last week in Utah to talk policy. Although t h e Ro m n eys have made no secret of their affection for Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, Romney's former running m ate, t h e c o uple s pent significant time w i t h Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, and met Thursday with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie for a chat that stretched 45 minutes. Several guests said Romney

had urged Florida Sen. Marco Rubio to come to the gathering, but Rubio declined. Romney als o c o n firmed once more he would never run again, in part because of his wife's assertion that two presidential races were enough. As he joked to one donor, if he ran

again, he'd be running as a bachelor.

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Continued from A1 Whet it dees:Prohibits the More than2 500 Central Orownerofaforeclosedand egon homes were foreclosed vacantresidential property between 2008 and 2012, acfrom neglecting it. cording to figures by the OrStatus:Passed both egon Department of Justice. houses of the Legislature in But local leaders and housMay;awaiting governor's ing officials said the bill ad signature. dresses a lingering issue in the region: long-vacant homes, falling into disrepair and becoming a blight for area resi- F e deral Reserve study. Each dents and visitors. additional foreclosure poses an "I followed the legislation additional 1percenthit,andthat closely. I'm excited," said La c a n i ncrease if the foreclosure Pine Mayor Ke n M u l enex. p r o perty falls into disrepair. Like the rest of Central Or L ong - vacant homes aren't egon, La Pine saw a building a h uge issue in Bend, said Jim boom between 2003and 2007, Long, the city's affordable houswith several new subdivisions i n g manager. Investors and new platted and home construction h o mebuyers snatch them up at a pace not seen in decades. t o o q u ickly. Bend had one of But starting in 2008, "we the country's hottest real estate were faced with severalde- marketsduringtheboomyears, velopments that went under," a n d home sales picked up conMulenex said. More than 13 s i d erably starting last year. percent of the city's 942 homes It' s a d i fferent story across have gone into f o reclosure t h e r egion, where cities like since then. Redmond face a " Some of t h e glut of long-vacant PBOPl6 Com~ h ome s . properties are sitt mg w'th o u d s 50 Cgfltl.gl In Re d m ond, "the lion's share of of dirt and weeds Qf.ggpfl fpy

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RealtyTrac found ment includes a — Ken Mulenex, code-enforcement more than 2,300 mayor of La Pine d ivision, wh i c h Oregon homes in active foreclosure inspects p r operproceedings. That ties across the city, number roseto 3,200 by April, said Heather Richards, the desaid Darren Blomquist, Realty- p a r t ment director. The departTrac'svicepresident. ment has the authority to reThose numbers don't in pa i r those homes and pass the cludehomes that have already cost on, justasHB 2662 does. "But it's good to see that been foreclosed but haven't been resold yet. policy reinforced at the state level," Richards said. Moving on For smaller towns like La Of the 3,200 active fore- P i n e, without the backing of a closure homes, about half of fu l l -fledgedCommunityDevelthem havebeen abandoned by opment Department, the law their owners, according to the c o uld be an important tool. "The truth of it is, people RealtyTrac report. "These ar e h o meowners c o m e to Central Oregon for who, for whatever reason, de- t o u rism," Mulenex said. "They cided they're not going to try c o m e and look at the quality of and save their property from l i f e i n towns. When they see foreclosure," Blomquist said. s o me of these (vacant) proper"They're moving on with their ties, they're put off by it." lives." The new law "is a tool that But that d ecision affects w e can maybe use to twist the other homeowners nearby. A a r m s of these property owners foreclosure property can lower w i t h a little more force." a nearby home's value by about — Reporter: 541-617-7820 1 percent, according to a 2010 egiuc k lich@bendbulletin.com

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

Square Continued from A1 Esin declined to give her surname, fearing disapproval from conservativeneighbors. " The government wants t o sanitize this place, without consulting the people." So public space, even a modest and chaotic swath of it like Taksim, again reveals itself as fundamentally more powerful than social media, which produce virtual communities. R evolutions happen i n t h e flesh. In Taksim, strangers have discovered one another, their common concerns and collective voice. The power of bodies coming together, at least for the moment, has produced a democratic moment, and given the leadership a dangerous political crisis. "We have found ourselves," is how Omer Kanipak, a 41year-old Turkish architect, put it, about the diverse gathering at Gezi Park on the north end of Taksim, where the crowds are concentrated in tent encampments and other makeshift architecture after Erdogan's government orderedbulldozers to make way for the mall. And there's the hitch. The prime minister has emerged as thestrongest leader Turkey has had since Mustafa Kemal Ataturk founded the republic — but he remains not much of an architect or urban planner. Like other longtime rulers, he has assumed the mantle of designer in chief, fiddling over details for giant mosques, planning a massive bridge and canal, devising gated communities in the name of civic renewal and economic development. The goal is a scripted public realm. Taksim, the lively heart of modern Istanbul, has become Erdogan's obsession, and perhaps his Achilles' heel. And it's no wonder. Taksim's very urban fabric — fluid, irregular, open and unpredictable — reflects the area's historic identity as the heart of modern, multicultural Turkey. This was where poor European immigrants settled during the 19th century. It was a honky-tonk quarter into the 1980s, a haven to gays and lesbians, a locus of nightclubs, foreign movie palaces and Frenchstyle covered arcades. Gravestones from an Armenian cemetery at Taksim demolished in 1939 were used to construct stairs at Gezi Park, a republican-era project by the French planner Henri Prost that is like the jumble of high-rise hotels, traffic circles and the nowshuttered opera house on the square, named after Ataturk. It is a symbol of modernity. The prime minister's vision of a big pedestrian plaza, with buried traffic, is intended to smooth out the square — to remake it into a neo-Ottoman theme park and mall. He intends to raze a poor neighborhood nearby called Tarlabasi and build high-end condominiums. Yet another of his proj-

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5:

Kitra Cahana/ New YorkTimes News Service

Turks have set up tents and makeshift shops at the Republic Monument in Taksim Square, Istanbui's main public space. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's plan to redevelop the square has turned Gezi Park, on the north end, into the latest arena for clashing woridviews. party. Politics in the 21st century is about private freedoms and public space. Esin, watching the protest in the square, added that her conservative parents think Erdogan goes too far by banning alcohol and scolding couples for kissing on subways. Near the statue of Ataturk in the middle of Taksim Square, now festooned with protesters' banners and flags, a 24-yearold photography student from northern Turkey who identified herself as Kader said, "I come to hang out here because Thanassis Stavrakis/The Associated Press there are all kinds of people Tens of thousands thronged Taksim Square on Saturday, with pro- and it's fun," she said. As she tests in the first serious challenge to Turkey's leadership entering spoke, a Turkish couple, arm their second week. Clashes broke out in several neighborhoods, in arm, the woman in head prompting the police to fire their water cannons. A youth flashes scarf, passed by. "The prime the "victory" sign in defiance. minister is treating the place as hisprivate property,"Kader said. ects envisions a hygienic pa- d own o n d e m olishing t h e Erdogan's plan for removing rade ground on the southern park, saying he regretted only buses and taxis and installing outskirts of the city, designed that police brutality escalated a single, vast pedestrian zone for mass gatherings as if to the protests. "These actions at Taksim, stripped of its gritty quarantine protests: the anti- that turned into v andalism and unpredictable energy, Taksim. The real Taksim is an and lawlessness must stop turned into a polite shopping unruly commons in the midimmediately," he warned, as area, will sap the square of its dle of the city. Erdogan thousands of his sup- pedestrian vitality, not make has already demolished porters cheered him. it pedestrian-friendlier. After a beloved cinema and Gezi has meanwhile severaldays with few cars or old chocolate pudding evolved into a festive buses getting into Taksim beshop on Istiklal ("Indevillage with tent settle- cause of the barricades, the ilpendence") Avenue, the ments, general stores logic of Erdogan's tunnel is obmain drag and neigh- E r d og an dist r i buting free food vious. There has been no great borhood backbone into a nd clothing, a d a y traffic crisis. Taksim. care center, a library and an This is why it has come as infirmary, even a veterinary little surprise to many Turks clinic and c ommunity garthat Gezi Park was the last den, nasturtiums where the straw. "We need free places," bulldozers ripped out the first Pelin Tan, a sociologist and trees. The architecture is tactiprotester, explained. cal urbanism: bare-bones and "Public space equals an ur- opportunistic, t i n l e a n-tos, ban, cosmopolitan identity," is and spare concrete bollards how Gokhan Karakus, an ar- and cratesused to make picnic chitecture critic here, phrased tables. The park has spawned it. "That's exactly what the its own pop-up economy as prime minister doesn't like. well — street vendors hawkTurkish people who have taken ing Turkish meatballs, vinover Gezi Park in protest feel it egar (for the tear gas) and Guy is truly theirs, not something Fawkes masks. awarded to them by their leadA poll published in the Hurers, so in that sense the move riyet Daily News on Thursday to destroy it has backfired on revealed that 70 percent of the him." protesters insisted they di d But Erdogan has doubled not "feel close" to any political

"We know from the 1960s that pedestrianizing everything doesn't work," agreed Hashim Sarkis, who teaches architecture and urbanism at Harvard. "Managing the balance is better. There is much to be said for loose, indeterminate places like Taksim. Its changeability is its strength, which is the threat perceived by authorities. It's too loose and open." Dolmabahce Tunnel, another of Erdogan'srenewal projects, is akin to the tunnel now being devised under Taksim, where people would descend for buses and taxis. It was no place for pedestrians to go. A taxi driver, Erdal Bas, 42, said it had also done nothing to reduce traffic jams. "It just adds another road into them," he said. Back at Gezi, a placard quotes an old poem by Nazim Hikmet: "I am a walnut tree in Gulhane Park/Neither you are aware of this, nor the police." Kanipak, the architect, said the threat of Erdogan's architectural intervention at Taksim "has for the first time helped to break down the walls of fear about opposing an autocratic state." That said, tensions are swiftly rising after Erdogan's latest speeches. On S aturday, E r dogan's governing party rejected calls for early elections, dismissing the protests as an attempt by the opposition to topple the

government. Indeed, the protests have spread to d ozens of c i t ies across Turkey, including the capital, Ankara. Three people have died — two protesters and a policeman — and thousands have been injured so far. The protests have become a general condemnation of Erdogan, whom many consider to have grown authoritarian in his 10 years in power. A devout Muslim who says he is committed to upholding Turkey's secular tradition, Erdogan vehemently rejects charges of autocracy and points out that he enjoyed 50 percent support in the last elections in 2011. In echoes of the neighboring Syrian conflict, though, Erdogan has said that "terrorists" are involved in the protests, in an apparent reference to the participation of some left-wing g roups s ympathizing w i t h an outlawed, violent far-left organization. On S aturday, I s tanbul's mayor confirmed that the government would go ahead with plans to reconstruct the Ottoman barracks in Taksim, but that it had abandoned plans to build the shopping mall, luxury hotelor residences. He said all projects would progress in consultation with civil society

groups. — The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A 7

Cyberwar Continued from A1 Presidential Policy D i rective 20, issued to n a tional security and intelligence officials in October, includes an array of procedures to ensure cyberattacks are lawful and minimize damage. But in bureaucratic language, the directive indicates the government believescyberattacks, known as "Offensive Cyber Effects Operations," or O CEO, are becoming common and that cyberwar could be just around the corner. "OCEO can offer u nique and unconventional capabilities to advance U.S. national objectives around the world with little or no warning to the adversary or target and with potential effects ranging from subtle t o s e verely d amaging," the document said. "The United S t ates g o vernment shall identify potential targets of national importance where OCEO can offer favorable balance of effectiveness and risk as compared with other instruments of national power." This w e ekend's s u mmit talks with the Chinese president come days after Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, speaking to troops in Hawaii, warned, "Cyber is one of those quiet, deadly, insidious unknowns you can't see. "It's in the ether — it's not one big navy sailing into a

Obama officials: Gongress was briefed13 times Senior Obamaadministration officials said Saturday they have held13 classified hearings and briefings for members of Congress since 2009 to explain the broad authority they say they have

to sweep upelectronic records for national security purposes. The administration, by disclosing the briefings, sought to push

back on claims by Democrats andRepublicans in Congress that they were either not aware of programs to minevast amounts of lnternet data and business telephone records or were insufficiently briefed on the details. Lawmakers said what they knew

was vagueand broad — andthat strict rules of classification prevented them from truly debating the programs or conducting

proper oversight. In separate but identical letters sent Oct.19, 2011, Assistant Attorney General Ronald Weich told two of Congress' most outspoken critics of the efforts, Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Mark Lldall, D-Colo., that in December 2009 and February 2011 the Justice Department and intelligence agencies provided a classified document to Congress describing the surveillance efforts in detail.

The letter said the HouseandSenate intelligence committees had been briefed "on these operations multiple times and have

had access to copies of the classified" orders and opinions of the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. Members of the committee were invited to share the information with other lawmakers. On Friday, Wyden and Udall released a joint statement

repeating that they had "long beenconcerned about the degreeto which this collection has relied on 'secret law.'"

Intelligence director defends online spying Eager to quell a domestic furor over U.S. spying, the nation's top intelligence official stressed Saturday that a previously undis-

closed program for tapping into lnternet usage isauthorized by Congress, falls under strict supervision of asecret court and cannot intentionally target a U.S. citizen. And he decried the revelation

of that and another intelligence-gathering program asreckless. For the second time in three days, Director of National Intelli-

gence JamesClapper tookthe rare step of declassifying some details of an intelligence program to respond to media reports about counterterrorism techniques employed by the government. "Disclosing information about the specific methods the government

uses to collect communications can obviously give our enemiesa 'playbook' of how to avoid detection," he said in a statement. — From wire reports

port or one big army crossing a border or squadrons of fighter planes," he said. "This is a very difficult but real and dangerous threat. There is no higher priority for our country than this issue." The Obama administration had until now only released an unclassified overview of cyber operations. National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said in a statement that the directive "provides a wholeof-government approach consistent with the values that we promote domestically and internationally. She said it is aimed at establishing "principlesand processes that can enable more effective planning, development, and use of our capabilities." The top-secret 18-page document "provides a procedure for cyber collection operations that are reasonably likely to result in 'significant consequences,'" also known in the national security world as "Sensitive Offensive Cyber Operations." It also offers glimpses into a burgeoning military a n d i ntelligence world t hat h a s been blanketed by top secrecy. Among other things, the document indicates that the government deploys people who use online personas for intelligence, counterintelligence and law enforcement. The document a c knowledges that cyber operations could come w it h c o llateral damage. Cyber o p erations, "even for subtle and clandestine operations, may generate cyber effects in locations other than the intended target, with potential unintended or collateral consequences that may effect U.S. national interests in many locations."

Iran and North Korea Meanwhile, senior U.S. officials told The New York Times, the Obama administration has begun helping Middle Eastern allies build up their defenses against Iran's growing arsenal of cyberweapons, and will be doing the same in Asia to contain computer-network attacks from North Korea. The officials would not say which countries in the Persian Gulf have signed up for help in countering Iran's computer abilities. But the list, some officials say, includes the nations that have been the most active in tracking Iranian arms shipments, intercepting them in ports and providing intelligence to the United States about Iranian actions. The three most active in that arena are Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. In Asia, the countries most worried about being struck by North K orean computer attacks are South Korea and Japan. The Defense Department's assertive new effort in the Persian Gulf and Asia, coupled with the secret cyber directive, is the latest example of how the Obama administration is increasingly tailoring its national security efforts for a new era of digital conflict, in thiscase assuring the defense of computer networks and, if necessary, striking back against assaults. The presidential directive

included the declaration that the United States reserved the right to take "anticipatory action" a g ainst "imminent threats," a reference,itseemed, to the kind of crippling infrastructure attacks that Iran appears to be working on against U.S. and allied targets. The new help for s trengthening computer-network defenses for allies, which has not been publicly announced, closely parallels earlier efforts by the Obama administration in two volatile parts of the world. In recent years it has helped install advanced missile-defense systems and e a rly-warning radars in Persian Gulf nations to counter Iran's missile ability, and it has done something similar in Asia in response to North Korea's nuclear weapons program. But deterring cyberattacks is a far more complex problem, and American officials concede that this effort, which will include providing computer hardware and software and training to allies, is an experiment. It has been propelled by two high-profile attacks in the past year. One was against Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia's largest, state-run oil producer, and according to A m erican officials it w a s c arried out by Iran. That attack crippled 30,000 computers but did not succeed in halting oil production. The other, an attack on South Korea's banking and media companies this spring, was later attributed to North Korea. It froze the ability of several

banks to operate for days. "The Iranian attack on the Saudis was a real wake-up call in the region," said one senior administration official, who would not speak on the record about U.S. efforts to counter Iran. "It made everyone realize that while the Iranians might think twice about launching a missile attack in the region, they see cyber as a potent way to lash out in response to sanctions." The administration is capitalizing on the fear created by those attacks to build on the de facto alliance against Iran. A senior Defense Department official said the program to develop computer skills among allies would focus solely on defending against disruptive and destructive attacks on networks for the military and critical infrastructure. The United States will not share its growing arsenal of offensive cyberweapons, which, like nuclear arms, can be deployed only on presidential order. In the rankings of computer powers, Iran and North Korea are far lower in ability than the United States, Israel, Britain, Russia and China. China and Russia, however, have strong incentives to limit the destructiveness of their attacks; they are so tied into the global economy that anything truly disruptive to financial or energy markets would backfire. But North Korea and Iran, especially in times of rising tensions, would be less prone to show restraint, U.S. officials say.

Court

with his fellow justices as they considered the case. AcContinued from A1 cording to many accounts, he The justices are weighing made a similar statement in whether to strike down a U.S. frontof a clerk. law that denies federal benPamela Karlan, now a law efits to married gay couples in professor at Stanford, heard states that allow such unions, a bout the c o mment f r o m as well as California's ban on her boss that term, Justice same-sex marriage. The sec- Harry Blackmun. In a recent ond case could establish a na- interview, she also recalled tionwide constitutional right Blackmun's response: "Look to same-sex marriage, though around your chambers." most observers expect a narC. Cabell Chinnis, a gay rower ruling. lawyer who practices law in O ver theyears,the court's Palo Alto, Calif., was one of embrace of gay rights has Powell's clerks as the justice closely tracked changes in was struggling with how to popular attitudes, in the legal vote in the Hardwick case. In cultureand, perhaps especial- an interview, Chinnis said his ly, in the visibility of openly boss must have known about gay people at the court. In his sexual orientation. "He 1986, when Powell made his had met my boyfriend," Chinremark, there had never been nis said. an openly gay law clerk at the Indeed, the justice sought Supreme Court. At the time, him out for advice precisely it was often professionally because he wanted to learn hazardous for gay lawyers to about the mechanics of gay come out. sex, Chinnis said, recalling Although no comprehensive an uncomfortableexchange record of gay Supreme Court on the subject. The converlaw clerks exists, Joyce Mur- sation was also unusual bedoch and Deb Price — authors cause Chinnis was not the of "Courting Justice," a 2001 clerk who had been assigned history of gay rights cases at to work on that case. At one the court — identified 18 gay point, Chinnis recalled, he men and four lesbians who made a plea to his boss based had been clerks. Murdoch and on a comparison to a pending Price also found that the justice case about the right to vote in most likely to hire gay clerks judicial elections. "It's more important to me was the one who said he had never met a homosexual. to make love to the person I "For six consecutive terms love," Chinnis remembered in the 1980s," they wrote, saying, "than to vote for a "one or more of Powell's four judge in a local election." clerks was gay." Chinnis said he had a theDaniel Ortiz, who clerked ory about one of Powell's mofor Powell in 1984 and 1985 tivations in saying something and is now a law professor untrue to the other members at the University of Virginia, of the court: to protect his said the clerks of that era clerk and perhaps others. "Even though he knew one kept their sexual orientations to themselves in professional or more people who were gay, settings. "I certainly wasn't they were young and vulnerout to anyone who worked at able," Chinnis said. "Coming the court," he said. out in a professional setting In the next term, the court could be very dangerous." issued Bowers v. Hardwick, At the justices' conference, the 5-4 decision in w h i ch Powell voted to strike down Powell's vote was cruciaL The the Georgia law before later decision upheld a Georgia law changing his vote. Chinnis, that made sodomy a crime. who had been euphoric when Former clerks and court he learned of the initial vote, historians agree that Powell was "dumbstruck," he said. made theremark about havAn i m passioned dissent ing never met a homosexual from Blackmun correctly preduring a privateconference dicted that the decision would

i

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not last. Other clerks said the dissent was written by Karlan, who is in a committed relationship with a woman. Powell retired the next year and was succeeded by Justice A nthony Kennedy, who i s widely seen as the swing vote in the current gay rights cases. Within just a few years, the climate for gay rights began to change. Powell, in 1990, expressed reservations about his vote in the Hardwick case. "I think I probably made a mistake in that one," he said at New York University's law schooL Paul Smith, a gay lawyer who clerked for Powell in 1980 and 1981, said that by the 1990s, "people started to be out in their clerkship applications." By2003, when Smithargued and won Lawrence v. Texas, which overruled the Hardwick

decision, openly gay clerks were becoming common. These days, justices are more likely to work and socialize with openly gay people than most Americans are. That is partly because 10 percent of adults who live in the District of Columbia say they are gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender, accordingto a February Gallup poll. That is a much higher percentage than in any state. Law schools and the legal profession have, moreover, been particularly w elcoming to gays and lesbians, a trend Justice Antonin Scalia criticized in his dissent in the Lawrence case. "Today's opinion," Scalia wrote, "is the product of a court, which is the product of a law profession culture, that has largely signed on to the so-called homosexual agenda." But John Jeffries, another f ormer Powell clerk, w h o teaches law at the University of Virginia and wrote a 1994 biography of the justice, said the presence of openly gay clerks is but an instance of a societal transformation on gay rights. "The universe has flipped" since 1986, he said. "Everything about the world has changed. The fact of gay clerks is a grain of sand in that beach."

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4

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©

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

CentralOregon'smostunwanted

www.bendbulletin.com/local

YESTERDAY

Some of the invasive weedsthe U.S. Forest Service is trying to remove from woods andgrasslands in Central Oregon.

Buildingof Bend mil 'I

SPOTTED KNAPWEED DIFFUSEKNAPWEED S T. JOHN'S WORT Centaurea biebersteinii Centaurea diffusa Hypericum pen'oratum Found at 531 sites

Found at179 sites

Found at149 sites

on 6,545 acres

on 5,189 acres

on 2,900 acres

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Taeniathetum caput-medusae Cirsium vutgare Found at 73 sites Found at141 sites on 4,783 acres on 1,717 acres

Source: U.S. Forest Serince

Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

over entral Oregon's annual battle against invasive and noxious weeds was Saturday, with dozens of volunteers turning out to yank some of the world's most tenacious plants out by the roots. From its beginnings 10 years ago in Bend's Orchard District neighborhood, "Let's Pull Together" has become one of the largest organized weed-pulling efforts in the country. each dried-out plant carrying and distributing as many as 220,000 seeds as they bounce across the landscape. Bill Padgham, one of the coordinators of Saturday's event, said his volunteers had been primarily finding clusters of Spotted Knapweed and Dalmation Toadflax while picking their way across the grounds at Cascade Middle School. A former board member of the county's weed board — among other things, the

BEND HIGH SCHOOL

group determines which plants should be considered invasive and noxious — Padgham said pulling effortshave largely been confined to public properties in recent years, though many volunteers will pick up bags from the pull sites and head back to their neighborhood to yank up weeds. Absentee property owners have made it difficult for volunteers to gain access to some ofthe area'sweediest private land, he said, and it takes only a few neglected

propertiesfor invasive species to maintain a toehold for years. Holding his hand nearly chest high, Padgham described the knapweed that had taken over the Old Mill District in the years after the closure of the mills, but beforethe development of offices and shops. "They were about that high, with a root as long as the knapweed was tall. It's just extremely vigorous, it will take over everything." SeeWeeds/B5

MADRAS HIGH SCHOOL

m 'V

Scott Hammers/The Bulletin

Bend High School graduates Jenna Mattox, at left, and Jordyn Maxwell chat as members of the class of 2013 file in to their graduation ceremony Saturday at Hooker Creek Event Center at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond.

CULVER HIGH SCHOOL

Compiledby Don Hoiness from archivedcopies ofThe Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.

100 YEARS AGO

By Scott Hammers • The Bulletin

Volunteers spent Saturday morning at seven sites across Bend and one each in Redmond and La Pine, and will be back on the job for a similar effort in Sisters next Saturday. Many ofthe more recognizable plants around Central Oregon are, in fact, nonnative invasive species. The tall plant with soft fuzzy leaves and a corncob-like flowering head is Mullein, while tumbleweeds seen late in the year are largely Russian Thistle,

antic:ipated in1913

Joe Kline /The Bulletin

Stephanie Garcia waits for her name to be called to receive her diploma during the commencement ceremony at Madras High School on Saturday.

SUMMIT HIGH SCHOOL

WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON — Two bills that would keep the interest rate for federal student loans where it is stalled this week in the Senate.

If Congress doesn't act, the rate will double from 3.4 percent to 6.8

percent on July1. One was aDemocratsponsored plan that would keep the rate at

3.4 percent, and pay for it by closing several

For the week ending June 8, 1913

tax loopholes, including one that allows oil and gas companies to treat

Brooks believes mill will be started this summer

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tar-sand oil imported

The results of the annual meeting of The Bend Company, completed here last night, of greatest interest to local peopleare the announcements that Dr. Brooks, representing the Brooks timber interests, hopes to start mill construction this summer. The Bend Company's mill site property has been divided up between the Brooks and Mueller interests, and the Muellers positively state that they will mill here. Dr. D.F. Brooks of Minneapolis, Will Mueller of Davenport, Iowa and D.L. McKay were the out-of-town directors present for the meetings, all leaving this morning. Dr. Brooks spent much of his time, when not in session with the others, in examining the mill sites. "I fully realize that what Bend needs most of all is a substantial payroll," said Dr. Brooks, in an interview last night. "With one good payroll as a starter I believe the town will gain an impetus that will carry forward into a city with a speed that will astonish even your best boosters." After commenting very favorably upon the growth of the town during the year, Dr. Brooks continued: "I have every reason to believe that we shall be able to start mill construction this year. We shall be ready to make definite announcements perhaps in a few weeks, and certainly in a couple of months. Actual construction would start almost immediately after such an announcement. Our plans have been underconsideration for many months, and announcements will be made when they are all lined up. The mill we shall build here will cut at least 50 million feet a year, and employabout 500 men. I would like to tell you now definitely that we shall start construction this summer, and the only reason I do not do so is because there is a possibility of a hitch, and I do not want to raise any false hopes and allow the possibility of future disappointments. SeeYesterday/B2

products. Needing 60

votes to end debateon the bill, setting up a

passage vote next week, the measure failed by a 51-46 margin. All 51 yes

votes came from Democrats, while 44 Republicans one Democrat and Maine lndependent Angus King voted against it.

U.S. SENATEVOTE • Vote to end debate on the Democrat plan to keep the interest rate SeeWeek/B5

STATE NEWS

Albany

• Albany:"BagLady" creates handicrafts

out of grocery bags. • Oregon:Boosting college enrollment. Stories on B3

Well shot! reader photos • We want to seeyour best waterfall photos for

another special version

of Well shot~ that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at www.denddulletin

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we'll pick the best for publication.

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PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Joe Khne/The Bulletin

Culver graduate Stephanie Whiteside sings "My Wish" during the school's commencement ceremony on Saturday at Culver High School.

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Joe Khne /The Bulletin

Graduate Reece Leland looks over at cheering family members while marching in to start Summit High School's commencement ceremony on Saturday at Hooker Creek Event Center.

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Trinity Lutheran graduating seniors, from right, Abegail Carpenter, Tyler Dunn, Kelsey Polk, and Vivian Zhao line up prior to the start of the school's commencement ceremony on Saturday at Trinity Lutheran Church in Bend.

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

E VENT

AL E N D A R

20; 541-549-0121 or www. sistersrodeo.com. SECOND SUNDAY: MONICA BUCKAR00 BREAKFAST: An allDRAKE: A reading by the award you-can-eat pancake breakfast; winning author; free; 2 p.m.; proceeds benefit Sisters Kiwanis Downtown Bend Public Library, in support of local charities; $10 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or adults, $5 children 4 to 12, free www.deschuteslibrary.org. children 3 and under; 7-11 a.m.; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 SUMMER SUNDAYCONCERT: U.S. Highway 20; 541-549-8655 or The Los Angeles-basedLatinact www.SistersKiwanis.org/Events. Tremoloco performs at the early show; Txt L8r performs at the later SISTERSART INTHEPARK: show; free; 2:30 p.m. and 5 p.m., Featuring arts, crafts and a silent doors open at noon; Les Schwab auction benefiting the Make-AAmphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Wish Foundation of Oregon; free; Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-318-5457 or 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Creekside Park, www.bendconcerts.com. U.S. Highway 20 and Jefferson Avenue; 541-420-0279 or www. HOUSE CONCERTSINTHE GLEN: centraloregonshows.com. Chris Beland performs, with Travis Ehrenstrom; bring dish or beverage CHARITYGOLF CLASSIC:A to share; $10-15, reservation shotgun-style golf tournament; requested; 6:30 p.m., doors open includes cart, lunch, silent at 6 p.m., music starts at 7 p.m.; auction and awards ceremony; The Glen at Newport Hills,1019 proceeds benefit United Way of Stannium Dr., Bend; 541-480-8830 Deschutes County; $175, $700 for or ja©prep-profiles.com. a foursome, $50 for nongolfers for BBQ and auction; reservation SUNRIVER MUSICFESTIVAL recommended; noon; Crosswater YOUNG ARTISTSCHOLARSHIP GolfCourse,17600 CanoeCamp CONCERT:A showcase of the top Drive, Sunriver; 541-389-6507 2013 Young Artist Scholarship or www.deschutesunitedway. recipients; proceeds benefit org/golf-classic. scholarship support; donations accepted; 7 p.m.; Holy Trinity OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS: Fiddle music and dancing; donations Church, 18143 Cottonwood Road; 541-593-9310, ticketsO accepted; 1-3:30 p.m.; VFWHall, 1836 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond; sunrivermusic.org or www. sunrivermusic.org. 541-647-4789. BREWFISH:The California SISTERS RODEO: Featuring the alternative rock-reggae-ska PRCA rodeo performance with band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Silver roping, riding, steer wrestling Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 and more; $12-$18, infants must N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; have ticket; 1 p.m.; Sisters Rodeo 541-388-8331. Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at wtvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

TODAY

Andy Tullie/The Bulletin file photo

The Bend FarmersMarket takes place 3-7 p.m. Wednesday in Brooks Alley in downtown Bend.

MONDAY NO EVENTSLISTED

BEND FARMERSMARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m .;Brooks Alley, between Northwest TUESDAY Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, LUNCH AND LECTURE: Learn about bendfarmersmarket©gmail.com or Plateau lndian dressmaking and www.bendfarmersmarket.com. beadwork with Roberta Kirk; bring a sack lunch; included in the price of "SPIRIT OFTHEMARATHON II": A admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 special showing of the documentary about seven runners as they journey and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages to the 2012 Rome Marathon; $12.50; 4 and younger; noon; High Desert 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16& Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. Bend; 541-382-6347. highdesertmuseum.org. TANGOALPHATANGO:ThePortland REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Americana bandperforms; free; 7 Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen p.m.; McMenamins OldSt. Francis Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmond School, 700 N.W.BondSt., Bend; 541382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. farmersmarket1©hotmail.com.

Yesterday

The last division is for floats, bicycles and costumes. In adContinued from B1 dition to the five groups, there So far a s tr a n sportation will be p r i z es a warded t o mattersare concerned, allob- the Indian children from the stacles toward co nstruction Warm Springs reservation. of a mill at Bend have been removed: after we took up the 50 YEARS AGO matter with them, therailroads saw the justice of our requests For the week ending and granted all we asked for in June 8,1963 rates on lumber shipments."

Duncan, wrestling coaches at Marshfield and Klamath Falls, will accompany the wrestlers and manage the tour. Wrestlers will be selected at a tryout camp on the Oregon State University campus. Competitors who placed in an AAU meet here in March, and stated high school champions who competed but did n o t place, have been invited for the tryouts. Tenwill be named after winning berths. They will assemble again in July in Portland for a training camp immediately before the trip. Oregon's athletes will be repaying a visit by a team of Japanese national high school champions to this state last winter. Procedesfrom thattour are financing the return.

Advertisement

75 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 8, 1938

Wow — Free tire service to all ladies!

Les Schwab Will C hange And Repair Your Fl at T i r e Mayor proclaims Anywhere In Central Oregon celebration garb FREE Of Charge. A proclamation calling on It is not safe for you ladies to men of Bend to wear "long try and change your own flat whiskers, loud shirts and big tires. Now all you have to do hats" in advertising the stam- is call the closest Les Schwab pede that is to be held here in Tire Center either in B end, connection wi th t h i s c i t y ' s Redmond, Madras, Prineville, 25 YEARS AGO all-Oregon Fourth of July cel- The Dalles or Hood River and ebration was issued today by your tire will be changed in For the week ending Mayor Fred E. Simpson. just minutes. June 8,1988 The proclamation follows: Dam's light dims, but "Whereas, Bend was a range- Oregon prep wrestlers to memories shine land town long before mills take summer Japanjunket came to Deschutes country, Ten Oregon hi gh sc hool On a cold November mornand whereas, western riders wrestlers scheduled to com- ing in Bend nearly eight dehave long made this city their pete in Japan this summer will cades ago, an eager commuheadquarters, and wh e reas see more of Nippon than most nity waited for a businessman Bend this year is to hold a tourists. to throw the switch on t h e stampede that should be a That much was guaranteed town's first system of deliverhomecoming for ou r r a n ge this week when a nine-match ing electricity. friends of old, and whereas schedule i n v olving n e a rly There were cheers when it is essential that we should 2,000 miles of travel within 375 electric light bulbs sprang make riders of the western Japan was an nounced this to life across town. ranges welcome, therefore I week. That day in 1910 was a culhereby proclaim that big hats, Oregon's school boys will mination of years of work by long whiskers and loud shirts depart from Portland aboard the Bend, Water, Light 8. Powshall be the dress of the day a Pan American jet flight July er Company on the first dam for men of Bend from now un- 9, spend three days in Hawaii to harnessthe power of the uptil July 4." and arrive in Japan July 13. per Deschutes River. Fourth of July committee- Their exhibition schedule will Cement for the project was men, welcoming the procla- open July 15 and close August hauled by horse-drawn wagmation by M ayor Simpson, 3 with matches in Tokyo. ons from Shaniko, about 100 indicated th at pr i z es w i l l In between they will vi sit miles away. The dam it self await the man who grows the many cities. was made from wood cribs finest beard, t he man w h o John Dustin and DeLance filled with lava rock. wears the loudest shirt and the man who di s plays th e largest hat. Setting the pace, Kenneth Moody, general chairman of the river pageant and roundup committee, sprouted chin whiskers this week. Because he beat the gun, he will not be eligible to compete in the long whisker division of the ANNUAL GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MKETING contest. M.P. Cashman, rodeo chairOpen to all residents living in the man, is c o nfident t h at t h e Mountain View neighborhood proclamation and contest will call attention of Oregon people Saturday, June 22"", 2013 to the fact that a rodeo second 3 p m - 5 pm only to the Pendleton roundup will be held here during the Higher Ground Common House Fourth of July celebration. 2582 NE Daggett Ln., Bend OR •

Prizes offered for pet parade Children's entries i n t h e Fourth of July pet parade will be divided into five units this year. Grand prizes forthe best entry, awards for the divisions, and ice cream for all the children are to be given. Horses, cattle, sheep, goats, pigs and other farm animals are in division one. Listed for the second division are cats, rabbits, squirrels and mi ce. Group three is for birds and fowls. The fourth section is given over entirely to do gs.

WEDNESDAY

.

.

THURSDAY

doors open 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend.

JON WAYNE 8THEPAIN: The Midwest psychedelic reggae band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. "THE FOXON THE FAIRWAY": Preview night of Cascades Theatrical Company's presentation of a comedy about the denizens of a private country club; champagne reception; $10 at the door starting at 6:30 p.m; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. "THE ZDOSTORY": A one-actplay by Edward Albee about a chance encounter between a transient and a book publisher in New York City's Central Park; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881, derek@volcanictheatrepub.com or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. "COMPANY":A timeless and brilliant musical comedy by Stephen Sondheim about a single man in a sea of married couples; $21 adults, $18 students and seniors; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626. THE CHANGINGCOLORS:The Colorado folk band performs, with Sam Eliot; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand. JAH SUN:The California hip hopreggae-soul band performs, with DUBTDNIC KRU;$7; 9:30 p.m.,

FRIDAY

Historians say the company's powerhouse and damwhich backed up the river and created what is now known as Mirror Pond — changed the face of the community and brought Bend into the 20th century. The p o w e rhouse c o u l d pass as a museum of early

is on the list of historic places in Deschutes County. An engineer is s t u dying va r ious options for a u tomating the powerhouse. Marion Henderson, superintendent at the site, and the other men who work at the old powerhouse have an obvious affection for the historic dam. day power generation equip- It would be difficult for them ment. Almost all of the origi- to say goodbye if the plant is nal equipment remains in use, automated and they are sent to including the polished brass work elsewhere. switches and ponderous turThe grounds are neat and bines that fill the room. the lawn sloping up to the dam But there are changes in is close-cropped and green. the offing for the dam, which A massive peach-leaf willow

0/

SISTERSWINE & BREW FESTIVAL: A gathering of wineries, breweries, distilleries and more; free admission, tokens required for tastings; 2-9 p.m.; Village Green Park, 335 S. Elm St.; 541-549-6022 ext. 200 or www. sisterswineandbrew.com. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET:3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park,W estCascade Avenue and Ash Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Bend author, Kim McCarrel talks about her book and presents a slideshow on "Riding Northwest Oregon Horse Trails"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Sisters author Jill Stanford talks about her book, "You Might Be aCowgirl If.."; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. HoodAve., Sisters; 54 I-549-0866. "LES MISERABLES":A screening of the 2012 PG-13 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541475-3351 or www.jcld.org. "THE FOXON THE FAIRWAY": CascadesTheatricalCompany's presentation of a comedy about the denizens of a private country club; $24, $18 seniors older than 60, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org.

tree towers over the outflow of the powerhouse. The tree apparently w a s planted after the powerhouse was built becauseit is now shown in old photographs of the site. A researcher recently concluded that the tree's trunk has thelargest circumference of any peach-leaf willow in the United States. Art classesfrom COCC still visit to sketch and paint the historic structure. "We are kind of proud of this little old plant," Henderson said. "It is still an important part of Bend."

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R OBIN LKWI S City of Bend Transportation Engineer Pizza & Beverages will be served! Mission Statement: On behalf of our membership, our goal is to be organized for educational, socialandcharitable purposes;maintain anopenline ofcommunication between MVNAmembers and City management/staff; and maintain, protect and enhance our neighborhood's livability and sense of community.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

Oregon trails the nation for high schoolgrads incollege The Associated Press PORTLAND — Nearly

Photos by David Patton/Albany Democrat-Herald

Shirley Callahan, of Albany, shows how to join strips of plastic bags together while teaching a plastic bag crocheting class last week at the Lebanon Senior Center in Lebanon.

Woman crochetswith plastic bags By Paul Alex Albany Democrat-Herald

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LEBANON — When most people think about local grocery stores, they're concerned with the quality of produce or the price of a gallon of milk. But Shirley Callahan, of Albany, thinks about their plastic bags — the color, texture and stretchability, to be exact. Callahan, whose nickname is the "Bag Lady," recycles

sg k:

year degree and 40 percent an associate's degree or industry certificate. Generally, the number of students who go on to col-

lege from any given Oregon

Shirley Callahan, whose nickname is the "Bag Lady," recycles plas-

from produce bags from a local grocery store. "The little spritzes of color are from the store's logo," Callahan said. Callahan crafted her own

large reusable grocery bags

and she is often asked where they came from. She also made beach bags for towels and other itemsand they're waterproof. ing samples of the types ofbags In Monday's class, Callahan that don't work well. "Some passed out a variety of colored are too noisy, they're scratchy, bags to each of the women and listen. Garbage bags are usu- taught them how to fold the ally too thin and stretchy." bags to cut them into strips Although many grocery about a half-inch wide. She bags are white or clear, Cal- said most bags produce about lahan showed off samples of 18 to 21 strips, eight of which colors including yellow, teal, are then hooked together like black, burgundy, gray and tan. rubber bands to form longer Boutiques often provide the strands. Tying a slip knot into snazziest bags in the widest one end provides a notch for a variety of colors, she said. crochet hook to grab. Callahan showed o f f a Although 83-year-old Pat smartphone cover she made Barth, of Lebanon, has been

crocheting for more than 70 years, she was having a hard time on Monday getting the

hang of hooking the bags together. "I've seen these bags before and I think they're attractive," Barth said of why she signed up for the class. Mary Ann Earls, of Lacomb, teaches crochet classes for Linn-Benton Community College in Lebanon and Albany. She usually has about 60 students in three classes. "I wanted to see if she had any new ideas I haven't picked up," Earls said. Earls,74, said her mother and grandmother taught her to crochet when she was 8 years old. Monday's class stuck to the basics — no giant handbags or beach hats. Instead, each of the students learned to make a doily.

PUBLIc OFFIcIALs For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.

CITY OF BEND 710 N.W. Wall St. Bend,OR 97701 Phone:541-388-5505

Web: www.ci.bend.or.us • City Manager Eric King Phone:541-388-5505 Email: citymanager@ci.bend.or.us

Gity Council • Jodie Barram Phone:541-388-5505 Email: jbarram©ci.bend.or.tts • Mark Capell Phone:541-388-5505 Email:mcapell©ci.bettd.or.us • Jim Clintott Phone:541-388-5505 Email: jclinton@ci.bend.or.us • Victor Chttdowsky Phone:541-749-0085 Email: vchudowsky©ci.bend.or.us. • Doug Knight Phone:541-388-5505 Email: dknight@ci.bend.or.us • Scott Ramsay Phone:541-388-5505

Email: dasson©ci.sisters.or.us • Wendy Holzmatt Phone:541-549-8558 wholzman©ci.sisters.or.us • Brad Boyd Phone:541-549-2471 Email: bboyd©ci.sisters.or.tts • Catherine Childress Phone:541-588-0058 Email: cchildress©ci.sisters.or.us • McKibbenWomack Phone:541-598-4345 Email: mwomack@ci.sisters.or.us

• Ed Onimus Phone:541-604-5403 Email: Ed.0nimus©ci.redmond.or.us

CITY OF SISTERS 520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O.Box 39 Sisters, OR 97759 Phone:541-549-6022 Fax: 541-549-0561

City Council • David Asson Phone:503-913-7342

district closely tracks the number of graduates whose families aren't low-income. The district serving the state's wealthiest neighborhood, the Riverdale School District, sent 86 percent of its 2011 graduates to college. No other district appeared close to meeting the 80 percent mark. That is especially true of rural districts, which have some of the lowest college-

o re. a

.

going rates such as Eagle Point (43 percent), Lebanon

(45 percent) and Scio (47 percent).

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Big data center not an option for Pendleton

• tg 11

Rl8.988

The Associated Press PENDLETON — Pendleton doesn't have the power capacity for a l arge data center like the ones in Prineville or Google's operation in The Dalles. But economic development c o n sultants told city officials Pendleton could host a smaller data center, like one that would store files for businesses. The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation and the city had planned to split the cost of a $60,000 study on the possibility of a data center, but the meeting discouraged them.

5®R D

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play smart

River West Neighborhood Association

General Me e tt l l l

Monday, June 17th, 2013 50 pm to 0 pmo.Bend 7cityoHall,councilchambers

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Email: sramsay©ci.bend.or.us • Sally Russell Phone:541-480-8141 Email: srussell@ci.bend.or.tts

Join ue for an informative meeting with updates on MIRROR POND and OLCCrules

CITY OF REDMOND 716 S.W.EvergreenAve. Redmond,OR 97756 Phone:541-923-7710 Fax: 541-548-0706

City Council • Mayor GeorgeEttdicotl Phone:541-948-3219 Email: George.Ettdicott©ci.redmottd

come studentswhose parents didn't attend college in recognition it needed to do more to propel students into higher education. In the class of 2011, only 60 — Margaret Calvert, principal of percent of Hillsboro grads enJefferson High School tered college, including just 38 percent of Latinos. But bright spots, such as To combat the issue of stu- college partnerships, show dents unprepared for college, promise. s ome districts have or w i l l Portland State University eliminate low-level math and offers arigorous class taken science courses to ensure the by about half o f J e fferson students get appropriately rig- High School seniors that reorous class loads. quires them to spend navigate Counselors say it isn't only the PSU campus, do research academics w h er e s c h ools at the PSU library and pracmust take a strong hand with tice the rigorous thinking and students. Expectations must writing required for a college be set, and the benefits of addi- class, said principal Margaret tional years of education must Calvert. "It's important to make sure be made clear, and tangible steps must be established to that our students understand show students a path to higher how college works and have a education. tangible connection to college "What is a transcript? What before they leave high school," is th e d i f f erence between Calvert said. "We want them a bachelor's degree and an to walk that path with an adult associate's degree? How do they trust, who knows the sysI sign up for the SAT or the tem. You can't underestimate ACT? What is a FAFSA?" said how much support kids need Brooke Nova, college and ca- to do that."

youngpeople to earn a four-

r'

college-going help for low-in-

and have a tangible connection to college before they leave high school."

adopted a formal goal of g etting 40 percent of i t s

knowledge she has picked up tic shopping bags into chocheted handbags, hats and drink covers. over the past 19 years with 11 women at the Lebanon Senior Center.Four card tables held examples of the more than 40 items for which she has designed patterns — at first in her head and now compiled into a book. The tools of her trade are minimal — sharp scissors, a variety of plastic bags and crochet hooks. "There are definitely some no-nos," Callahan said, offer-

how college works

that puts the state behind the national average and far behind the state's goal of getting 80 percent of its young people to earn a college credential. T hose n u mbers w i l l confine a large share of Oregon's future workforce to low-wage jobs, The Oregonian reported. A clearinghouse of nat ional e n r ollment d a t a found that among Oregon's high school class of 2011, just 61 percent enrolled in a college or community college anywhere in the country by fall 2012. The national average is 68 percent.

Two years ago, Oregon

:: gtas„'cttag g

plastic shopping bags into handiworks such as handbags, hats and drink covers. M onday a f ternoon, C a l lahan shared the skills and

reer counselor at Hillsboro's Glencoe High, remembering some of the many questions she's been peppered with. Her district has stepped up

"It's important to 40 percent of Oregon high make sure that our school graduates do not students understand attend college, a number

Y

Come learn the ABC's and D's of Medicare and the often confusing process of the Medicare system. You'll find the information you need to make the right decisions about Medicare health insurance.

Free class open to the public: REDMOND — Tuesday, June 18, 6:30pm St. Charles Hospital, 1253 NW Canal Blvd.

Guest Speakers

.OI.US

• Jay Patrick Phone:541-508-8408 Email: Jay.Patrick©ci.redmond.or.us

Jim Figurski

• Tory Allmatt Phone:541-923-7710

Presentation on Mirror Pond, Followed by Q&A session

• Joe Centanni

Phone:541-923-7710 Joe.Centanni@ci.redmond.or.us • CamdenKing Phone:541-604-5402 Email: Camden.King@ci.redmond

Sponsored by:

5ertd I'arke 5, Vecreation Dietrict

For more information call 541-241-6927

www.Medicare.PacificSource.com PS C l y l C SOLlTCC Medicare

K.atieSiefkes

Oregon Licjuor Control Commission Updates on current OLCC licenses and requirements, followed by Q&A session

This event is only for educational purposes. No plan-specific benefits or details will be shared.

.Or.US

• GinnyMcPherson Phone:to be determined Email: Ginny.McPherson@ci.redmond .Or.US

1

PacificSource Community Health Plans, Inc. is a health plan with a Medicare contract. Y0021 EDU1269 Plan Approved 08172012


B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Robert "Bob" Lee Hilliard, of La Pine

Robert F. Main, Jr., of Bend

Mar.10, 1955- June 6, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are planned at this time.

Sept. 20, 1943 - June 6, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471 Services: A Memorial Service is being planned by the family at a time to be announced. Contributions may be made to: Deschutes River Conservancy 700 NW Hill St., Bend, OR 97701 or Deschutes Land Trust 210 NW Irving Avenue, Suite 102 Bend, OR 97701

Shirlie M. Hess, of Bend Mar. 3, 1931 - June 2, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471. Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date in Cottage Grove. Contributions may be made to:

Central Oregon Junior Golf Association, P.O. Box 6975, Bend, OR 97708 or to the charity of choice.

Betty L. Carter June 3, 1930 - June 5, 2013 Betty L. Carter, age 83, of Christmas V al l e y , O R passed June 5, 2013 at St. Charles Medical Center in B end, OR. She w a s b o r n June 3, 1930 in Payette, ID t o James E. S h earer a n d Mabel Mordhorst. B etty m a r r ied F r an k E . C arter N ov . 1 1 , 1 94 9 i n M edford, OR . B e t t y h a d w orked f or Jack so n C ounty i n t h e C l e r k' s o f fice, and eventually as the s upervisor of Di st r i c t Court in Medford for over 15 years, retiring i n 1 985. She and Frank lived many y ears i n M e d f or d b e f o r e moving to C h r istmas Valley upon retiring. Survivors i n c l u d e her h usband, F r a n k Car t e r ; daughter, Denise Bailey of Bend, O R ( h e r h u s b and, Bob; grandson, Brian, and h is w i f e , M e l a n ie ; a n d great-granddaughters, Camryn an d A u b r e y); g r a n dson, Rob (his c ompanion, Jenn Cox and he r d aught er, M ak a y l a Rud e r ) ; d aughter, Chris C arter o f Fresno, CA ( he r c o m panion, Mik e D a b i ch; g r andson, J a m ie ; g r e at-grandson, Bradley; great- granddaughter, Shaeley); granddaughter, T a mm y ( g r e atg randdaughter, M e l o d y ) ; g randson, B r a d l ey (his companion, K a t h y an d reat- granddaughter Malo rie); an d dau gh t e r , Sandy Fichtner of Eugene, OR (her companion, Dave Collier; grandson, Steven; great-grandson, Gabriel). B etty w a s p r e c eded i n death by he r p a r ents and her son, David. Betty will b e l aid t o r e st in Hillcrest Memorial Park, Medford, OR. N o s e r v i ce will be held. www.hillcrestmortuary.com

Michael L. Mott March12, 1953 - April 5, 2013 I f you've l i ve d i n B e n d for any length of time your l ife ma y v e r y w e l l h a v e been touched by this wond erful m a n . N o mat t e r your p r o f e ssion , M i k e would ask vour name and shake • y our h and. H e s erved a t St. Charles I CU a n d m any of unteer Mike Mott s taft s t i l l remember the home-baked t reats h e' d b r i n g i n . H e v olunteered i n t h e s o u p kitchen at T r i n it y E p i scopal C h u r c h , an d w as k nown to p ul l o ver i n h i s Dodge to ask a h o m eless person t o lu n ch. H i s 2 g randchildren, Em il y a n d Ethan, were his pride and j oy. D a i sy, M i k e ' s b l a c k lab, has found a home at K indred Sp i r i t s D og R anch, a p l a c e h an d picked by M i k e b efore he m oved on t o a p a i n a n d fancy free life w it h Jesus. Mike peacefully passed at Partners In C ar e H o spice H ouse surrounded by h i s t wo f av or i t e l ad i e s : daughter Amanda and sister Becky. A ll wh o k n e w M i k e a r e welcome to celebrate and laugh together at hi s C elebration of L i fe, 4:00 p.m. June 15, Hollinshead Barn (1235 NE Jones Rd., Bend).

Sandra Kay Anderson, of Prineviile May 9, 1949 - June 6, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Redmond, 541-504-9485, www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A graveside service will be held at Juniper Haven Cemetery in Prineville on June 14, 2013 at 10:00 AM, with a pot luck reception to follow at the Prineville Elk's Club.

Ralph Garibay July 23, 1919 • June 6, 2013 Ralph G ar ib a y , a long-time B e n d r e s i dent, p assed away o n J u n e 6 , 2013. Ralph was born July 23, 1919 i n Cu e r a m aro, Guanajauto, Mexico to Antonino and Juana Garibay. He grew up in M a nhattan, Kansas, where h e d e v e lo ped h i s love f or Y,' working wlth wood at a very early age. Ralph worked as a carpent er f or various Ralph Garibay co ntractors in the Manhattan area until he joined the Army in 1942. R alph was p r oud o f h i s military career and shared many stories of his experiences in th e N e w G u i n ea and S o u thern P h i l i p pine theaters during World War II. Assigned to the 3rd Engineers, B Company, 24th I nfantry D i v i s i on , R a l p h w orked pr i m a r il y w i th bomb disposal and b r i dge construction. He took part i n t h e s e c on d w a v e o f M indanao a n d a l s o th e b attle of L ayt e G ul f , among o t h ers, a n d w a s honorably discharged as a Staff Sergeant. R alph m ar r i e d T er r y Steirwalt i n 1948 and moved the family t o B end i n 1 953. R a lp h w e n t t o w ork f or L eo nar d L undgren L u m b e r C o m pany as a carpenter on the G .I. R a nc h a n d hel p e d b uild th e H o us e O n T h e M etolius. D u r in g h i s c a reer as a finish carpenter, R alph w o r ked o n n u m e r ous large construction jobs in Bend, Redmond, Sunriver, F o s si l an d K ah Nee-Ta. Ralph loved to hunt, fish, build furniture and c reate wood carvings in his shop, a nd tell s t ories about h i s e xperiences. H i s ga r a g e door was always open on nice days, an d n e i ghbors a nd f r i ends w o u l d o f t e n stop t o ch a t wh i l e h e worked. R a lph's m e m ory was a m azingly a c c u rate, including m i n ut e d e t a ils, r ight up to the time of h i s death. R alph wa s p r e ceded i n d eath by h i s p a r ents, hi s wife, Terry, and his brothers, Ignacio, Mike and Joe. H e i s s u r v i ved b y s o n s , Larry (Carol) Garibay and G reg G ar i b a y ; th r ee grandsons, and four greatgrandchildren. G raveside s e r vices w i l l b e h el d 1 1 0 0 a m . on Thursday, June 13, at Deschutes Memorial G a rdens with N i s w o nger-Reynolds Funeral Home in charge of a rrangements. M e m o rial may be m ade t o P a rtners I n Care, 2075 N E W y a t t C t., B e n d , OR 9770 1 . Please sign our guestbook at w ww .n i s w o nger-reynolds.com

Food, Home & Garden In

AT HOME PeIPulletm

Marilyn J. 'Marcie' Martin Dec. 24, 1933 - June 4, 2013 M arilyn J . 'Marcie Mar t in, 79 o f L a k e view, O R , (formerly Marcie Johnston o f Bend) passed away o n June 4, 2 0 13 . S he w a s b orn in M a nkato, MN , t o R ex a n d Hazel Brown. H er f a m ily m oved to B end, OR, where her father s tarted a furnace 'Marcie' Martin and s h e et m etal business. M a r i l y n a ttended schools i n B e n d u ntil she w a s m a r r ied a t t he a g e o f 16 to K en Johnston and t h ree y ears later had one son, Randall

'Night Stalker' a chilling figure during mid-1980scrime spree

vowed. "Lucifer dwells in us His nimbleness at t h ievery a11." earned him a nickname in El LOS ANGELES — R ichLos Angeles Superior Court Paso, "Dedos," Spanish for a rd Ramirez, the serial killer Judge Michael Tynan agreed "Fingers." k nown as the Night Stalker withthe husky-voiced Ramirez Shortly before his 17th birthw ho terrorized Los Angeles on one point: His crimes, which day he dropped out of high C ounty and w a s c onvicted i ncluded gouging out a victim's school and within a couple of in 1989 of 13 murders, eyes, were "beyond any years was drifting between El died Friday morning, human understanding." Paso and California. California corrections I n addition t o t h e He spent the summer of 1980 officials said. He was murders, Ramirez was in the San Francisco Bay Area 53. convicted of 30 felonies, and threeyears later moved to Ramirez died of natincluding bur g l aries Los Angeles, where he began ural causes in Marin Ram i rez and sexual assaults. He injecting cocaine and became General Hospital, the was apprehended in more involved in Satanism, d epartment said in a s t ate- I985 by angry East Los Ange- Earl Gregg Jr., who briefly m ent. No other details were l es residents as he attempted to lived with Ramirez in the Bay released. steal a car. Area, told the Times in 1985. S entenced to death , Born Feb. 29, 1960, in El After moving to Los Ange(Randy). R amirez, who was housed at Paso, Texas, he was the fifth les, Ramirez hung out at a bus In the early 1960s, MariS an Quentin, was one of 735 and final child of Santa Fe station and roomed in cheap l yn went to w ork fo r G o r d on R a n dal l A g e n c y i n offenders facing execution R ailway worker Julian Tapia hotels. He also got a tattoo on Bend as an insurance sec- a nd one of 59 who died from Ramirez and his wife, Mer- his elbow, a witch's star — a retary, w h ic h l a u nched a n atural causes since capital ce des. Neighbors said t h e star with a circle around it. c areer i n i n s u r ance u n t i l p unishment in California was boy's parents were strict and His m urderous r a mpage she retired. Sh e was very reinstated in 1978. oId-fashioned, and R i chard ended less than 12 hours after active in th e B end Eagles Ramirez was a chilling fig- g rew up going to church with the Los Angeles Police DepartL odge, where she led t h e u re during his crime spree in his parents. ment issued an all-points bulJ.O.E. girl s g r o up . She "He's really just a poor boy letin for him. Dazed and bloodm oved t o L a k e view, O R , 1984 and 1985 and remained w here i n 1 9 85, sh e m a r - s o throughout his lengthy trial. who was raised to believe in ied after he was chased down W hen he was sentenced on God," his father told a reporter by East L.A. citizens, Ramirez ried Glenn Martin, Sr. and h as lived ever s i nc e a n d N ov. 8, 1989, the devil-worship- i n 1989. The elder Ramirez said to the officer who took was active i n t h e E a g l es ing Ramirez told a judge, jurors s aid drugs had helped lead his him into custody: "Thank God Lodge, VFW, Grange, and a nd a packed courtroom that son astray. you came." church. Mar c i e t o u c hed included some of his victims' As a t e enager R amirez Gun sales spiked the suml ives wherever sh e w e n t . relatives: " You don't under- gained a reputation as a petty mer he committed most of his T he l i s t o f pe o p l e w h o w ould call h e r " M o m " i s s tand me. You are not expected t h ief and became fascinated crimes.After he was captured, t o. You are not capable of it. I with the art of burglary and, then-Mayor Tom Bradley said: probably endless. "California can breathe a sigh later, Satanism, the Los AnS he is s u r v ived b y h e r am beyond your experience." "I will be avenged," Ramirez g eles Times reported in 1985. of relief tonight." h usband, G l e n n M ar t i n , Sr., her sister Shirley BehymerRregon, a nd h er children, Randall (Randy) DEATHS Johnston ( w i f e K a r i ) o f C ashmere, W A , Jame s ELSEWHERE Martin ( Jim), O l y m p i a , WA, Th e r e se (Tammy) Litzey A d a m s , Mi s s i o n, T exas, Glenn M a r t in , J r . Deaths of note from around 63875 N. HIGHWAY97 ' BEND (wife L i l l i a na) , M i s s i on, theworld: Texas, C a n d ic e ( C a n dy) Abigail Heyman, 70: FemiS41.382. S S92 Collins (husband R a ndy), n ist p h otographer k n o w n San Antonio, TX, and P e- f or her s t ar k p o r traits o f ter M a r ti n ( w i f e Y v o n e), women at work and her 1974 Olympia, W A , a nd h er book "Growing Up Female: Deschutes Memorial now displays numerous gr a n d c hildren A Personal Photo- Journal." and great-grandchildren. obituaries on our website. Please go to Died May 28 at her home in A graveside service w i l l www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com b e held at 1 0 :00am M o n - Manhattan. to leave condolence messages for the Richard Doty, 71:Scholar of day, June 10 at W e stside family and to learn about funeral/ C emetery, L akeview, O R . money who helpedhumanize memorial services. There will b e a r e c eption coins and currency by showfollowing at t h e W e stside ing how the objects might reGrange. Arrangements are flect the culture, values and by Ousley Osterman Huffs- history of a society. Died June t utter Fu n e r a l Ch a p e l , 2 in Falls Church, Va. Lakeview. 541-947-3264 By Steve Chawkins

Los Angeles Times

DEscHUTEs MEMQRIAL CHAPEL R GARDENs

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— From wire reports

FUNERALSi BURIALSi CREMATION

LOCALLY FAMILY OWNED6LOPERATED

Obituary policy

We honor all pre-arrangedplans including Neptune Society.

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 maybesubmitted 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.

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 Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.

Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

g'retrrRnx (Sj kcr~aa)-C~c.i l August15, 1943 - June 4, 2013

Greta Ann (Skjersaaj Cecil (69j of Crooked River Ranch and Cozumel Mexico, went to be with The Lord orl June 4, 2013, after a

two-year struggle with cancer. She died at home surrounded by the love of family.

Greta's tenacity in the face of the disease was an inspiration to many. Her unrelenting optimism, faith, spirit and grace continued

to sustain her friends and family even during the darkest days of her disease. A native of Bend, Greta is the daughter of the late Olaf and Grace Skjersaa. Greta met her life partner, Gary Cecil, when she was 14

years old, went on to marry him, and in March celebrated 53 years of loving marriage. Greta was awonderful wife, mother, sister, grandmother and friend who made the world a better place by her presence.

Jennifer ("Jenny") LeeValley Kremers Jennifer ("ienny") Lee Valley Kremers passed away on May 20, 2013, in Indio, CA, at the age of 59. Ienny was born on iuly 20, 1953, in Eugene, OR, but spent almost all of her life as a resident of Bend, OR. She married David Kremers on May 4, 1974, and they had just celebrated their 39th wedding anniversary. David and ienny were partners in Bachelor Beverage Distributors, Inc. and High Desert Beverage Distributors, LLC. Ienny was office manager for both businesses and retired in 1999. She was an active member at the Bend Golf and Country Club and the Indian Wells Country Club in Indian Wells, CA. Jenny was also active at Outdoor Resorts Indio where she recently helped organized a glow • Ju ball golf tournament in conjunction with a major fund raiser for cancer. Ienny enjoyed following the sun by splitting her > living time between Bend, OR and Indio, CA. She also enjoyed cooking, golf, travel, reading, vacationing in Hawaii, spending time with her dog Bandit and was an avid collector of teddy bears. Ienny will be remembered as a sweet, gentle spirit with a heart for serving others and hosting celebrations with family and friends. She left us too early, too young. Jenny was preceded in death by her father, Lawrence M. Valley and her mother, Betty ]effrey Valley. She is survived by her husband, David Kremers of Bend, OR; brother, Jeff Valley of Bend, OR; brother, ]on Valley and family of Bend, OR; nephew, Todd Fletcher of Bend, OR; niece, lodi Wagner and great-niece, Rebekah Wagner of Corvallis, OR. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to the Central Oregon Community College Foundation or the Women's Resource Center of Central Oregon.

Greta was a 27-year employee of JCPennyCo.and retired as office manager from the Yakima, WA store in 1998. Greta enjoyed her association with her Beta Sigma Phi sorority sisters; was a member of the Sons of Norway; a partner with Gary in the Central Oregon Classic Chevy Club; a member of the Assembly of God Church in

Redmond, OR; was an accomplished PADI scuba diver with over 1300 dives and a member of the Yakima Dive Club. She was an

amazing underwater photographer and loved to capture the beauty of God's ocean creatures. Greta is survived by her husband, Gary; daughter, Kristine Cecil and son-in-law, Mike Cureton and their children, Lindsay Melloh

and Tyler (wife, Laurenj Cureton; son, Harold Cecil and daughterin-law, Michelle Hanford and their children, Blake and Maya Cecil. Predeceased by son, Robert Cecil (1968-1992) and son, William

Cecil (1960j. Greta also leavesbehind brother, Terry Skjersaa (Judy); sister, Karen Weeks iMikej; sister, Karol Jarlnsen iRossj; brother-in-

law, Bob Cecil (Sandyj; and many nieces, nephewsand friends. Memorial gifts are encouraged in Greta's name to the following:

Assembly of God Church Youth Programs in Redmond, OR; Partners ln Care Hospice, Bend, OR; Caring Bridge. Read Greta's

complete story on Caring Bridge: http:l/m.caringbridge.org/visit/gretacecil. Visitation will be held from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. on Friday, June 14, 2013, at Deschutes Memorial Chapel. A celebration of Greta's life will be held at 3:00 p.m. on Saturday, June 15, 2013, at Redmond I

Assembly of God.

Deschutes Memorial Chapel is entrusted

with Greta's arrangements.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN B S

NORTHWEST NEWS

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Onion farmers say new E. coli water rules are too strict

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The Associated Press NYSSA — Farmers in the nation's largest onion-growing region who depend on shared public irrigation systems worry that proposed new federalrules governing the cleanliness of water will threaten their livelihood. The Idaho-Eastern Ore-

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Carmen Park, 13, of Bend, pulls up Toadflax during Saturday's weed pull at Cascade Middle School.

Weeds

Adryon Wong, of Bend,

Continued from B1 A veteran of the last several weed pulls, Rachel Kidwell said she's seen progress over time, with endangered native plants returning to areas that had previously been choked with invasive weeds. Destructive as they are to native plant habitat, the story of how invasive weeds made it to Oregon is still fascinating, Kidwell said, with European i m migrants and settlers bringing varieties west, and Chinese railroad workers taking them east. Even now, new kinds of invasive species find their way to Central Oregon regularly. Jon Valley, supervisor of Deschutes County's vegetation division, said Orange Hawkweed is the newest plant on the county's weed hit list. A squat plant with orange flowers, Orange Hawkweed made its first known appearance in Central Oregon five to six years ago, when the new owners of a nursery found it growing on t h eir p r operty,

foreground,

dug it up, and began selling it

hunts for invasive weeds in the Old Mill District on Saturday.

as an ornamental plant. Valley spotted it in landscaping near Sisters and traced it back to the source, but by then, it had

begun spreading across the region. Valley said the county is a few weeks away from launch-

ing a spraying campaign to eradicate Orange Hawkweed, and will b e t argeting more

than 6 0 l o c ations a r ound Bend. State grants will fund the anti-Orange Hawkweed eff ort, Valley s aid, a m u c h needed injection of funds into a program that's been hit hard by budget tightening brought on by the slump in the housing market. Much of the progress the county had made toward

wiping out noxious weeds in the mid-2000s has reversed, Valley said. When spraying was sharply c u rtailed, the weeds quickly and predictably came back. "We had this town cleaned up pretty good at one time," Valley said.

The proposed rules come as part of the Food Safety Modernization Act, passed in December 2010. Theyinclude two numerical standards on the amount of generic E. coli bacteria that can be present in agricultural water. One standard applies to water that d irectly comes gon onion growing region is into contact with p roduce the nation's largest in terms during or after harvest. The of volume, with more than other standard applies to ir20,000 acres of big bulb on- rigation water and requires ions grown annually. The E. coli levels to be under 235 regionsuppliesabout 25 per- "colony forming units" of cent of the nation's total on- generic E. coli per 100 milion consumption. liliters for any single water The rules proposed by the sample. U.S. Food and Drug AdminGrowers who irrigate with istration focus on the amount surface water would be reof E. coli bacteria allowed in quired to test weekly during water that directly contacts the irrigation season under with produce during or after the new rules, at a cost of harvest. about $40 a test. If they fail a Growers say almost none test, the only option is to quit of the surface water w i ll using the water. meet thenew standards. The FDA determined that "Most of the surface water five main commodity groups in this area will never meet carry the risk of food-borne those standards," said Kay illnesses: herbs, leafy greens, Riley, chairman of a Nation- melons, sprouts and tomaal Onion Association ad hoc toes. It c a tegorizes more committee that is studying than 200 other commodities as "other," including onions. the issue. Idaho's two R epublican O nion growers say t h e U.S. Sens., Mike Crapo and "other" designation unjustly Jim Risch, and M i chigan lumps them in with hot pepRep. Dan Benishek, have pers and green onions from introduced legislation that Mexico, tw o c o mmodities seeks to defund the proposed associated with food-borne fresh produce rule, The Capi- illnesses. "We believe that the comtal Press reported. "If (growers) are not con- modity group 'other,' with cerned, they should be," Ore- hot peppers and green ongon onion grower Reid Saito ions excluded, is safe and said. "It's a pretty critical is- should not be regulated," acsue in terms of our ability to cording to a letter to the FDA produce vegetables, in our from the N a tional Onion case onions." Association.

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin/com

the10-year borrowing rate of the

Week Continued from B1

for federal student loans at 3.4 percent. Jeff Merkley (D): ......................Y Ron Wyden(D):.......................Y The Senate also failed to end debate on a Republican plan that would have tied the interest rate on federal student loans to the10-

year borrowing rate of the Trea-

Treasury. Jeff Merkley (D): ...................... N Ron Wyden(D):....................... N

bill, authorizing $38.9 billion of discretionary funds for the Department of Homeland Security for 2014. Among other things, the bill funds

and 20 Democrats forming thema-

add 3 percentage points to the10-

jority. Ten Republicans joined172 Democrats in voting against it.

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"Crazy Beautiful" — a style like no other using biometric cutting and color techniques. Thus implementing his claim to fame, "Re-Distribution of Weight Proportion."

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Department of Homeland Security discretionary spending bill.

rate for federal student loans to

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SERVING ALL OF CENTRAL OREGON

U.S. HOUSEVOTE • Vote to pass a $38.9 billion

Greg Walden(R):..................... Y 39 Republicans in supporting the measure, while 52 Democrats and Earl Blumenauer (D):............... N Suzanne Bonamici (D):.....,...... N five Republicans voted against it. Peter DeFazio(D):.................... N U.S. SENATEVOTE • Vote to end debate on the Kurt Schrader (D):.................... N Republican plan to tie the interest

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border security, counterterrorism efforts and emergencyresponseto

be recalculated once ayear, would

Tom Carper of Delaware joined

Also on Thursday, the House of

sury. The new rate, which would

it would have reset the interest rate to 4.75 percent. Needing 60 votes to end debate, the bill failed by a 40-57 margin. Democrat

bendbulletin.com

Represent ativespassedaspending

disasters. The bill passed by a 245182 margin, with 220 Republicans

year Treasury rate. For this year,

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See Full Range of Services at: www.BendErrandService.com Itt

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US 97 in the nOrth end Of Bend. ODOT iS recommending its preferred alternative, called modified East DS2 Alternative, and WantS to Share it With the COmmunity.

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Bism'a'rck,x ~~~$QB,~

Bi ings 81/52 •

.

.

Rapid City •• 78/52

Cheyenne

Angel Fire, N.M.

~

71/52Xsvsvsssc ssxxxs' •

~

95/59

• 28'

' Haljfax 57/45 ss' ~ ortland

Sg/50-

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• 126'

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(in the 48 contiguous states):

• 2.41"

yoronto

vv ss

'dd/5S,P ' m , 73/56

77/S~H

66/55 '5+ ' 4

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75/60 ewyork

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81/56 y

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Columbus

iladelphia ngton, D.C.

Rockland, Maine

Las egas Lo Angeles

91/68

Denver

08III

'

v~+2 X C.City Kansas +:

9 05

-

Tijuana 73/59

H AW A I I

X X+X A . a w + + W C W 8

86/69

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Houston

Chihuahua 95/75

$

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Honoluluimu,

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rv' «sot.. Louts 81 /69..vgoutsvllte "v++ x+ 63/66 . + wmm ~ ~ A+ .- .m • Charlotte x

Albuquerque OklahomaCity x. 'iii- 4 NashviH' e • ' x «L • 86/ B n • gs/68 85/70 • • • Phoenix Atlanta . • Little Rock Blrmtnghapt, . 107/80 dtg/fj9, Oos • Dallas ' , 8 5 /69 xl + + . . .' + . 89/72 ++wwWQ i++A „

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89/75

91/74

"

.

88/76 •

lando 1/72

0

Miami 88/78

0~

La Paz 81/72

Anchorage

Monterrey 91/68~ Mazatlan 86/74 '

70/51

HIGH LOW

73 40

68 41

Juneau

65/48

OS

FRONTS

CONDITIONS d 4

:. 4++ v 4 4 4 ++++x 3 d d

O 'ALA S K A Cold

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 5:22 a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday.... 8 47 p.m First Full L a st Sunrise tomorrow .. 5:22 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 8:48 p.m Moonrise today.... 6:25 a.m Moonsettoday .... 9:35 p.m June16 June 23 June 29 July 8 •

Yesterday Sunday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W

PLANET WATCH

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....7:03 a.m.....10:37 p.m. Venus......6:42 a.m.....10:17 p.m. Mars.......436 a.m...... 7:44 p.m. Jupiter......5 52 am...... 913 pm. Satum......4:43 p.m...... 3:26 a.m. Uranus.....2:16 a.m...... 2:52 p.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 86/48 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Record high........87 m 2003 Month to date..........0.00" Record low......... 26 in 2002 Average month todate... 0.25" Average high.............. 70 Year to date............ 2.74" Averagelow ..............41 A verageyeartodate..... 5.27" 6arometric pressureat 4 p.m30.05 Record 24 hours ...0.91 in1929 *Melted liquid equivalent

FIRE INDEX

WATER REPORT

M onday Bend,westoiHwy97.. Mod Sisters........................ . Mod The following was compiled by the Central H i /Lo/WBend,eastoiHwy.97....Mod. La Pine.............................Mod. Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as

Astoria ........64/47/0.00....62/49/pc......60/49/c Baker City......81/42/0.00.....88/46/s.....83/46/pc Brookings......97/68/0.00.....68/51/s......67/50/s 6urns..........90/44/0.00.....90/47/s.....84/46/pc Eugene........82/51/0.00.....78/44/s......71/47/s Klamath Falls .. 90/46/0 00 ....90/49/s ...81/44/pc Lakeview...... 90/54/0.00 ...90/56/pc.....81/51/pc La Pine.........89/41/NA.....85/39/s......78/35/s Medford.......96/56/0.01 .....93/56/s......84/52/s Newport.......59/45/0.00....59/47/pc......58/48/c North Bend......66/54/NA....62/50/pc.....62/51/pc Ontario........90/63/0.00.....95/61/s.....93/61/pc Pendleton......88/53/0.00.....86/50/s......81/52/s Portland .......78/51/0.00....75/51/pc.....70/51/pc Prineville....... 84/44/0.00.....85/46/s......79/43/s Redmond.......89/46/0.00.....83/43/s......78/41/s Roseburg.......88/59/0.00.....86/53/s.....76/51/pc Salem ....... 80/51/0 00 ....76/47/s ... 71/48/s Sisters.........91/42/0.00.....84/38/s......76/36/s The DaRes......88/56/0 00.....83/54/s......78/56/s

Redmond/Madras........Low PrineviHe..........................Low Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme

a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 41,275...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 145,302..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 77,977.... . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 26 781......47 000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 134,089..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 407 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,650 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 72 LOW MEDIUM HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 41.5 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 115 Deschutes RiverAt 6enham Falls ..... . . . . 2,116 Crooked RiverAbove Prinevige Res.. .. . . . . . . 18 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 222 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 16.5 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 41.5 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM LOWI or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 9

IPOLLEN COUNT

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

o www m •

HIGH LOW

72 38

Legend Wweather,Pcpprecipitatioa, s sun,pcpartial clouds,c clouds,h haze, shshowers,r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

Partly cloudy with a slight chance of showers.

HIGH LOW

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

05/6i

Partly cloudy with a slight chance of t-storms.

76 44

EAST

Valev 95/62

82/ 4 5

L Crescent

pau linasn43

83/43

Sunriver Bend

• Bandon

RedmOnd

sdas

Eugene •

gs

HIGH LOW

OREGON CITIES

86/48

gs

Mostly sunny.

Mostly sunny and warm today. Mostly sunny and warm today.

Florence•

Mostly sunny.

3

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:5TATE I,

I

IA

++x

++

+

' a x

W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain

Flurries Snow

Ice

Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......90/63/0.00...91/71/t. 95/74/pc Grand Rapids....75/51/0.00..,79/61It...71/57/t RapidCity.......74/54/002..78/52/pc.83/58/pc Savannah.......90/72/000...88/72/t...88/72/t Akron ..........73/56/0.00...80/61/t...75/59/t GreenBay.......71/52/0.00...66/55/t. 70/54/sh Reno...........98/67/0.00 100/63/pc...84/57/t Seattle..........69/55/0.00... 70/51/s. 68/52/pc Albany..........70/54/0.22...80/58/s...77/62/t Greensboro......82/62/0.60...85/68/t...83/68/t Richmond.......82/67/0.44... 89/70/t...86/70/t Sioux Falls.......61/53/1.25... 67/52/t. 76/58/pc Albuquerque.....97/62/000...95/68/s.. 97/68/s Harusburg.......75/64/0.00..85/66/pc. 79/65/sh Rochester, NY....65/55/0.03 .. 77/61/pc...79/61/t Spokane........78/47/0.00... 79/50/s .. 79/49/s Anchorage ......69/45/0.00...70/51/s. 71/48/pc Hartford,CT .....78/53/0.33...80/60/s...76/63/t Sacramento....108/65/trace ..87/59/pc. 83/57/pc Springfield, MO..79/52/000... 81/63/t. 83/64/pc Atlanta .........83/66/0.00... 84/69/t...83/68/t Helena..........79/51/0.00...82/53/s. 82/51/pc St. Louis.........81/59/000...81/63/t...80/64/t Tampa..........88/74/044... 90/74/t...90/75/t Atlantic City.....76/62/022..78/67/pc...77/65/t Honolulu........85/73/000...89/75/s. 89/75/pc Salt Lake City....87/62/000... 91/68/s. 94/64/pc Tucson.........105/71/000 ..105/73/s. 105/74/s Austin..........92/58/000..93/73/pc. 94/72/pc Houston ........92/68/000..91/74pc.92/75/pc SanAntonio.....90/65/000 ..93/74/pc. 93/74pc Tulsa...........84/58/000 ..87/70/pc. 92/74/pc Baltimore .......81/64/0.00... 85/69/t...82/69/t Huntsville.......85/63/0.00... 87/67/t...83/68/t SanDiego.......63/59/000..68/61/pc. 70/63/pc Washington,DC.82/68/000... 87/70/t...83/69/t BBJJ ngs.........79/60/000...81/52/s...81/56/t Indianapolis.....78/60/000... 80/65/t...75/62/1 SanFrancisco....78/56/000..68/53/pc. 65/52/pc Wichita.........84/62/000... 87/66/s.. 91/70/s Birmingham .. 84/64/0.00... 85/69/t. 85/72/t Jackson, MS.... 85/63/0.00. 88/70/t .. 89/72/t 580 Jose........86/62/000..76/55/pc74/54/pc Yakima.........90/56/000 83/50/s .. 78/49/s Bismarck........64/56/043 ..71/52/pc. 78/57/pc Jacksonvile......91/70/000... 86/71/t...88/72/t SantaFe........93/50/000..85/60/pc.89/57/pc Yuma..........104/79/000..103/71/s.105/74s Boise...........87/59/000...95/59/s. 92/57/pc Juneau..........64/41/0.00 ..65/48/sh. 70/49/pc INTERNATIONAL Boston..........79/55/056...75/60/s. 71/61/sh KansasCity......80/53/0 00 ..81/62/pc. 82/65/pc Budgeport,CT....76/55/0.12...77/60/s...73/64/t Lassing.........74/46/0.00... 76/61/t...72/58/t Amsterdam......63/52/000 67/46/pc 61/46/pc Mecca.........117/90/000 111/86/s. 111/84/s Buffalo.........62/55/004...80/63/s...77/60/t LasVegas......112/83/000 ..108/82/s. 101/76/s Athens..........84/75/0.00... 83/66/s .. 84/69/s MexicoCity .....84/54/0.00... 76/56/t .. 70/56/1 Burlington, VT....63/54/006 ..75/53/pc...72/62/t Lexington.......82/61/0 06 ..81/66/pc...79/63/t Auckland........63/48/000 ..59/46/sh.62/47/sh Montreal........61/54/033 ..68/57/sh .. 81/63/s Caribou,ME.....57/50/085..58/46/sh. 71/51/sh Lincoln..........75/58/0.76 ..79/58/pc .. 84/64/s Baghdad........96/75/000 ..105/85/s. 103/84/s Moscow........73/52/002 ..79/58/pc. 78/61/sh Charleston, SC...90/73/0.02...87/72/t...85/73/t Little Rock.......84/640.00..88/70/pc. 92/73/pc Bangkok........95/81/1.53... 95/76/t...92/78/t Nairobi.........79/59/0.00... 75/54/t...7453/t Charlotte........83/66/000...86/69/t...85/68/t LosAngeles......72/62/000..67/61/pc. 68/63/pc Beiyng..........72/66/000..70/61/sh. 73/57/pc Nassau.........88/81/000..85/74/pc...82J77/t Chattauooga.....84/66/000... 85/67/t...82/66/t Louisville........82/67/0 04 ..83/69/pc...81/63/t Beirut..........86/70/000...79/67/s ..79/68/5 New Delh/......104/86/000 ..115/97/s.118/98/s Cheyenne.......72/52/000...81/56/s.. 93/61/s Madison Wl.....72/50/000... 70/57/t. 72/57/pc Berliu...........75/55/000...74/56/c.73/55/pc Osaka..........84/63/000...79/65/c. 82/70/pc Chicago.........74/49/000... 75/61/t...73/60/t Memphis....... 84/61/000 88/71/pc 89/72/pc Bogota.........66/50/003 ..64/46/pc...68/48/t Oslo............64/48/000 ..65/45/pc. 66/43/pc Cincinnati.......78/57/0.00... 82/66/t...78/61/t Miami..........88/76/0.00... 88/78/t. 89/78/pc Budapest........79/61/003 ..87/63/pc.79/55/sh Ottawa.........64/54/010..75/54sh. 73/61/sh Cleveland.......70/57/000 ..76/63/pc...74/61/t Milwaukee......64/49/0 00... 65/56/t. 66/56/pc BuenosAires.....57/36/000..61/51/pc.65/54/pc Paris............77/57/000...72/54/r.71/55/pc ColoradoSpnsgs.81/50/000...83/54/s .. 90/59/s Minseapolis.....72/56/0.00..64/55/sh. 72/57/pc Cabo580Lucas ..81/64/000 ..80/73/pc.. 81/75/s Rio deJaneiro....82/66/000 .. 74/64/pc. 75/62/pc Columbia,MO...78/53/0.00... 79/61/t. 79/62/pc Nashvige........84/64/0.00...86/67/t...84/65/t Cairo..........109/77/000... 91/66/s .. 94/65/s Rome...........77/55/000 ..70/62/pc. 73/60/pc Columbia,SC....87/70/0.00... 89/70/t...87/71/t New Orleans.....88/73/0.00... 88/76/t. 89/76/pc Calgary.........64/46/0.00.. 55/46/sh.61/46/pc Santiago........68/39/0.00... 63/58/s.. 6460/s Columbus, GA....87/66/0.00... 87/68/t...87/71/t NewYork.......77/57/0.49..82/65/pc...78/65/t Cascun.........86/81/0.00... 86/78/t. 86/79/pc SaoPaulo.......73/61/0.00.. 70/55/pc. 72/55/pc Columbus,OH....76/55/0.00...83/67/t...78/62/t Newark, N/......78/59/0.02..83/65/pc...79/65/t Dublin..........66/43/000 ..67/50/pc. 65/52/pc Sapporo ........81/56/000... 78/56/s. 74/55/pc Concord,NH.....75/52/0.79..78/55/pc. 71/59/sh Norfolk, VA......83/71/0.00...87/72/t...86/72/t Edinburgh.......68/39/000 ..62/41/pc. 65/50/sh Seoul...........86/64/000 ..84/63/pc...75/63/r Corpus Christi....94/71/006..95/79/pc. 96/78/pc OklahomaCity...81/61/0 00... 85/70/t. 90/70/pc Geneva.........75/52/003 ..69/52/sh. 62/50/sh Shangha/........73/66/000 ..72/64/sh .. 72/62/c DallasFtWorth...88/65/000..89/72/pc.93/75/pc Omaha.........70/58/042..76/57/pc.82/63/pc Harare..........77/43/000...73/47/s. 65/46/pc Singapore.......90/77/010... 91/82/t...90/81/t Dayton .........74/54/0.00...81/65/t...76/61/t Orlando.........91/72/0.00...91/72/t. 91/73/pc Hong Kong......91/84/006... 84/74/t...86/75/t Stockholm.......73/52/000... 69/47/r.66/49/sh Denver..........77/61/000...87/56/s. 94/62/s PalmSprings....103/77/0.00..104/71/s. 103/74/s Istanbul.........81/64/000..78/60/pc.. 77/66/s Sydney..........63/57/000 ..66/52/pc. 64/53/pc Des Moines......75/54/009..71/58/sh. 77/60/pc Peoria..........78/51/0.00... 76/61/t. 76/61/sh lerusalem.......92/62/0.00... 77/62/s. 78/61/pc Taipei...........97/77/0.00... 90/76/t...84/72/t Detroit..........72/58/000 ..77/63/pc...73/61/t Philadelphia.....78/63/013 ..86/67/pc...83/68/t Johannesburg....68/51/000...71/45/s .. 70/44/5 Tel Aviv........102/68/000..82/68/pc.. 84/65/s Duluth..........71/48/000 ..55/46/sh.65/49/pc Phoeuix........110/83/0.00 ..107/80/s. 108/80/s Lima...........64/61/0.00... 72/63/s.72/62/pc Tokyo...........79/66/0.00.. 79/66/pc. 79/63/pc El Paso.........101/64/000 ..102/76/s. 103/78/s Pittsburgh.......71/56/0 00 ..83/65/pc...75/61/t Lisbon..........61/54/000.. 63/55/c 70/55/c Toronto.........68/57/000 77/59/pc. 68/61/sh Fairhanks........72/52/000...72/51/c .. 69/47/c Portland,ME.....73/53/0 99..73/54/pc. 67/57/sh London.........64/48/000 72/47/pc. .. 70/49/pc Vancouver.......63/50/000 ..68/54/pc .. 66/54/s Fargo...........74/55/0.00..64/51/sh.76/57/pc Providence......79/55/0.89...80/59/s. 74/62/sh Madrid .........68/52/0.00... 72/53/c.80/59/pc Vienna..........77/57/0.00... 79/59/s.. 72/52/c Flagstaff ........91/45/0.00...87/46/s.. 83/46/s Raleigh.........84/66/0.04...88/70/t...85/70/t Manila..........91/81/000 ..91/79/pc...88/78/t Warsaw.........75/59/038 ..81/61/sh. 73/50/sh

2013

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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Milestones, C2

Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6

© www.bendbulletin.com/community

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

SPOTLIGHT

Farmersmarket starts June25 For the secondyear, the BrookswoodMeadow Plaza in southwest Bend will host a farmers

market, staring June25. The market will take

i'c

place from 3 to 7p.m. Tuesdays throughAug. 27 at19530 Amber Meadow Drive.

It will feature more

s!

FJ-' t '.'

than 30 vendors, includ-

ing local farms offering fresh produce aswell as numerous vendors offering preparedfoods. The market will also include arts and crafts vendors

and more. The market will kick off with a special event

featuring a performance from the Hokule'aOhana Hawaiian DanceGroup

-. tillll'

starting at 5:15 p.m.

June 25. Italso plans a special daySept. 15as part of the Brookswood

Big Block Bashfrom 2to 6 p.m. Contact: www.brooks

%%% %

woodmeadowplaza.com and click onTuesday Farmers Market. 1

Tour ofkitchens fundraiserplanned

rst 'df

I

t

The Assistance

s

League ofBendwill host

'u

the Kitchen Kaleidoscope tour of kitchens in Teth-

erow on June22. Local chefs will prepare food and offer it to those on the tour. The

event also includes local vendors and artists who

will sell homeproducts. This year's tour will

Photos by John Gottberg Anderson/ For The Bulletin

An abandoned, circa1930s service station and cafe, beside U.S. Highway 97 in the ghost town of Kent, still advertises Phillips 66 gasoline at 66/s cents per gallon. A handful of residents still live here, although they must travel north to Grass Valley for gas.

also include hangingbaskets for sale bystudents

• Many tiny communities have faded from existence, but not all

in the Bend High School Life Skills Class.

The tour is a

By John Gottberg Anderson

fundraiser for the As-

For The Bulletin

sistance League,which sponsors manychari-

LONEROCK — Time is a concept that we don't understand so much as experience. When my thoughts drift to the not-so-distant past — the last 150 years, back to the Civil War era — I find it easier to grasp historical change by considering the lives of my predecessors than through any particular knowledge of my own. No one here today walked this earth in 1863. Precious few were here a century ago. But grandparents of grandparents were alive recently enough to have shared their experiences with descendants not far removed from the lifetimes of the still-wild West. I met one such person late last month while on a twoday road trip through the socalled "ghost towns" of north Central Oregon. Blanche Burres, 82, was walking her aging horse on her front lawn in isolated Lonerock, on a backcountry road 30 minutes' drive southeast of Condon. As a rope halter steered Snapper away from the Prince Williams that grow in her carefully tended flower

table efforts, such as Operation School Bell.

Kitchen Kaleidoscope

sl

will run from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and will start at

I

61240 Skyline Ranch Road. Cost is $25in advance, $30dayof event. Chefs onhand will include Tim Garling of Jackalope Grill, Steve

Helt of Zydeco,Baltazar Chavez of Baltazar's and Bette Fraser of Well Trav-

eled Fork. Contact: www.assis

tanceleaguebend.com

s/r

j'I„.

*~xg. i;.

t

+

. Kl

Urban planning lecture set

rftft' /

v tJh '

r \

A free lecture at 6:30

s,

'

p.m. June18will explore sustainable landuseand development choicesby cities. Simmons Buntin and Ken Pirie, authors of

"Unsprawl: Remixing Spaces asPlaces," will speak atthe Discovery Park Lodge, at 2868 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend. The book includes Bend

community NorthWest Crossing asacase study in urban planning. According to the nonprofit group Building and Better Bend, which

is sponsoring the lecture, the speakers will "explore the unsustainable ways

Blanche Burres, walking her horse, Snapper, was born 82 years ago in an abandoned hotel next door to her longtime home in Lonerock. Burres stays busy as secretary of the local Methodist church in this isolated Gilliam County community.

Inside

iII I

/~

The Lonerock Methodist Church, built in1898, stands beside a 35-foot boulder that gave the tiny Gilliam County community its name. A half hour's drive southeast of Condon on a backcountry road, Lonerock had a population of 21 in the 2010 census.

NORTHWEST TRAVEL Next M/eelz: Mountains to Sound at Tacoma garden, Burres motioned toward an adjacent, abandoned two-story house, white paint peeling from its outer walls. "I was born and raised in that hotel," she told me. She remains an active citizen of her tiny community, servingas secretary ofthe Lonerock Methodist Church

— built in 1898 when the population soared to nearly 70 people. "If you're here on Sunday, won't you please come to our potluck'?" she beseeched me. I asked how many people live in Lonerock today. She deferred to Mayor Paul O'Dell, 75, who had stopped by the house. O'Dell is a newcomer to town, having retired to Lonerock from the Portland area in the late 1990s. SeeTowns/C4

"Why do people visit ghost towns? Some are history

•Know EasternOregon'sghosttownsand almost-ghost towns? See a map, plus lodging and travel expenses, onC5

ne t

buffs. Others are keen photographers.A few may be searching cemeteries for traces of ancestors. The majority, I'm certain, are merely curious."

in which communities have been built over the last half-century. They'll

cover some ofthe most pressing challengesconfronting planning, design anddevelopmenttoday." Buntin is the founding editor of the quarterly

online magazine"Terrain. org: A Journal of the Built 8 Natural Environ-

ments." Pirie is anassociate with Walker Macy Landscape Architects

in Portland, one ofthe designers for NorthWest

Crossing For more information, visitbuildingabetterbend.

org or email info©build ingabetterbend.org. — From staff reports

w.>

srrrlnpg-

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Group planstours of PoleCreek Fire devastation By Mac McLean The Bulletin

Small forest fires used to be fairly common in the lower altitude pine forests that stretch between Bend and Sisters. Every few years when the conditions were just right, a spark would ignite a blaze that would clear out the fallen trees, pine needles and shrubs that collected under the forest canopy and leave behind loosely packed stands of giant ponderosa pines that would

survive for hundreds of years. But things have changed over the past 100 years, said Pete Caligiuri, a forest ecologist with The Nature Conservancy, and now larger, highintensity fires like the Pole Creek Fire have become more common than routine smaller blazes. For the past four years, Caligiuri and other members of the Deschutes Collaborative Forest Project have been working to restore the forests

between Bend and Sisters to their original condition so large fires like Pole Creek are less common. They plan to showcase these efforts this week with a bus tour through part of the 27,000-acre section of forest the Pole Creek Fire destroyed in September and

October (see "If you go"). "We want to communicate the role of fire," Caligiuri said as he described the tour's

main purpose. SeeFire/C6

Courtesy William Kuhn /The Bulletin file photo

A view of the Pole Creek Fire on Sept. 9, 2012. Members of the Deschutes Collaborative Forest Project will be offering bus tours of the 27,000-acre section of forest the fire destroyed.


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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 20'l3

M II ESTONE~

FarmsfarengagementweddinganniversaryarisirjjsrjayannouncementsareavaijajsjsaiTheBugsiiaj 777s w c j saadjsrAvs.,Bend arby emailing milestones@bendbulletin.com.Forms and photos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.

ANNIVERSARIES

ENGAGEMENT

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Carol and Terry Virgin

osh Sherwood and Brooke Thomas

Virgin

Keith and Jean Clinton

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ester from the USDA Forest Service, Deschutes National Keith and Jean (Engl) Clin- Forest, is the owner/broker of ton, of Bend, will celebrate Keith Clinton Realty. He is a lotheir 40th wedding anniversa- cal actor and a member of the ry with a gathering hosted by Board of Governors for Castheir family and friends. cades Theatrical Company in The couple were married Bend. Mrs. Clinton is a nurse June 22, 1973, in Corvallis. with Deschutes County Public They have t h ree c h ildren, Health. She is involved with loEmily, of P h oenix, A bigail cal women's groups and First and (Jake) Barnes, of Sun- United Methodist Church. The river, and John and (Dana), couple enjoy traveling, RVing, of Vancouver, Wash; and two gardening and the outdoors. grandchildren. They have lived in Central Mr. Clinton, a retired for- Oregon for 33 years.

Thomas —Sherwood

years until hi s r e tirement in 2005. He helped with the Terry and Carol (James) opening of the Lava Lands Virgin, of Bend, will cele- Visitor Center in 1974. Mrs. brate their 50th wedding an- Virgin worked for the U.S. niversary with a gathering OfficeofPersonnel Managehosted by their children dur- ment until her retirement in ing Labor Day weekend. 2005. The couple are memThe couple were married bers of The Church of Jesus June 10, 1963, in Salt Lake Christ of Latter-Day Saints City, Utah. They have four and currently serve as mischildren, Jim and (Robin), s ionaries. They a r e a l s o of Vancouver, Wash., Layne members of t h e K i w anis and (Denise), of E num- C lub and v o lunteer w i t h claw, Wash, Cory, of Provo, the Boy Scouts of America Utah, and Kolby and (An- and Special Olympics. The

studied nursing. She works in Odessa, Wash., as a regisBrooke Thomas and Josh tered nurse at Odessa MemoSherwood, both of Wilbur, rial Healthcare facility. Wash., plan to marry June 29 The future groom is the in Wilbur. son of Ron an d R oxAnn T he future bride is t h e Sherwood, of Wilbur. He is daughter of Dennis and Lau- a 2003 graduate of Wilbur rie Thomas, of Bend. She is a High School and attended 2005 graduate of Redmond Spokane Falls Community High School and a 2012 grad- College and Eastern Washuate of L an e C ommunity ington University. Josh works College in Eugene, where she on his family's wheat farm.

drea), of Salem; and seven couple enjoys traveling, geograndchildren. Mr. Virgin worked for the U.S. Forest Service for 42

Family fun eould erupt at any moment

caching and the outdoors. They have lived in Central

Oregon for 40 years.

By Lynn O'Rourke Hayes

iy

The Dallas Morning News

For an update on ash, lava, steam and smoke, visit a volcano. These destinations provide a multifaceted opportunity to get outside and learn more about planet Earth.

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Joan and Joe Carpenter Barbi and Craig Monson

and Barbi and (Craig) Mons on, of Redmond; and six

Joe and Joan (Harpole) grandchildren. Carpenter, of Redmond, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary with a gathering hosted by their daughters July 13. The couple were married June 1, 1963, at St. Cecilia Catholic Church in B eaverton. They have three children, Tim and (Dru), of Redmond, Tami Endicott, of Redmond,

Mr. Carpenter worked in the banking industry until his retirement in 2001. Mrs. Carpenter worked for Knife River and Central Oregon Redi-Mix until her retirement in 2010.

The couple enjoy golfing, exercising, woodworking, garden-

ing and cruising. They have lived in Central Oregon for 39 years.

Monson

c hildren, Kylee and B e n, both of Redmond. Craig and Barbi (CarpenMr. Monson is the quality ter) Monson, of Redmond, manager for PCC Structurw ill c elebrate their 2 5 t h als. Mrs. Monson is an office wedding anniversary with manager/chiropractic assisa gathering hosted by their tant for Chiropractic Associparents and sister July 13. ates. The couple enjoy huntT he couple w ere m a r - ing, fishing, camping, ATV r ied June 1, 1988, at S t . riding and exercising. Thomas Catholic Church in They have lived in Central Redmond. They have two Oregon for 39 years.

By S. Irene Virbila Los Angeles Times

The coals are hot. The big steak sizzles as you put it on the grill. What are you going to drink with that? A big brawny red from Spain, Alto Moncayo's Campo de Borja Garnacha. The color is a gorgeous deep ruby, the aromas raspberries and sweet, sweet fruit. It's a mouthful all right, intense and ripe, but also

bright and juicy.

And give the wine time to breathe: You might want to open the bottle an hour or so before you plan to drink it. But wait for th e meat, please, and pour something lighter and l ess demanding as an aperitif, maybe an Albarino.

Kenneth and Marian (Castro) Shrader, of B end, celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary. An outdoor celebration is planned for this summer. The couple were married May 8, 1948, in Oakland, Calif. They met in the San Francisco Bay Area during World War II. They have five chil-

dren. Steven and (Peggy), of

couple enjoys gardening and

Ashland, Michael, of Ontario, Dennis and (Susan), of Bend,

keeping in touch with family and friends. They have lived in Central Oregon for 24 years.

Maria and (Susie) Boell, of Bend, and M a rguerite and

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BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend Tim and Erin Bartels, agirl, Fawn Estella Bartels, 8 pounds, 6 ounces, May 27. Jordan and Stephanie Uppendahl, a boy, Layton WardUppendahl, 3 pounds, 9 ounces, May12. Delivered at St. Charles Redmond Michael Donovanand Shandy Smith, a boy, Mikey LawrenceDonovan, 6 pounds, May 23 and aboy, Alex

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Kenneth and Marian Shrader (David), of Shasta Lake, Calif; eight grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Mr. Shrader served in the U.S. Navy in the Pacific theater during World War II. He worked as a civilian employee at the U.S. Naval Air Station in Alameda, Calif., until his retirement in 1983. Mrs. Shrader worked as areal estate agent in Castro Valley, Calif., until her retirement in 1985. The

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Yellowstone National Park. . The landscape that became America's first national park in 1872 experienced the first Mount St. Helens, Wash- of three volcanic eruptions 2.1 .ington. On March 20, million years ago. More than 1980, an earthquake of 4.2 640,000 years have passed magnitude reawakened this since the most recent blowup. volcano, leading to the May Although not currently erupt18 collapse and eruption. To- ing, the molten rock beneath day, families visiting the na- the surface of the park is actional volcanic monument tive. Visit this wonderland to can learn more about the learn more about what bubbles geologic andbiologichistory below and to see the herds of of the area though interpre- bison, elk, grizzly bears and tive talks, walks and theater wolves that make this park so presentations. Hiking, bik- popular. ing and helicopter tours are Contact: nps.gov/yell/index also available. .htm; 1-866-439-7375 Contact: fs. u sda.gov/ detail/mountsthelens/home ?cid=stelprdb5160336 The 2013

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Leland Donovan, 6 pounds, 3 ounces, May 23. Martha Dominguez, a boy,Gionni Daniel Alvino Dominguez, 7 pounds, 12 ounces, May25. Christopher McCormackandNichole Sacco, a boy,RiverJames McCormack, 8 pounds, 2ounces, May28.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT

aca remuseum esa ami — rien ma eover By Hugo Martin

ment complex. Since then, strong tourist deLOS ANGELES — A grue- m a n d has helped spur several some photo gallery of men and o t her high-profile projects on women impaled by arrows, au- H o l lywood Boulevard, includgers and pipes is gone from the i n g t h e $55-million Madame Ripley's Believe It or Not mu- T u ssauds wax statue attraction seum in Hollywood. in 2009, plus the Hard Rock And don't expect to see any C a fe and the $600-million W displays of m e dieval chas- H o t el, both of which opened in tity belts or tongs used to tor- 2 0 10. t ure victims of th e Spanish The Ho l l ywood Wax M u Inquisition. seum completed a renovation These and other macabre l a s t yearandthe TCLChinese oddities have been replaced by T h eater — formerly known as such exhibits as a painting of G r a uman's Chinese — closed Marilyn Monroe made entirely t h i s month to complete a reof candy, a mounted two-head- m o deling project to a ccomed calf and the world's smallest m o date a 94-foot-wide IMAX drivable car. screen. It's all part of a new familyThe n e w s h i mmering fafriendly look at 33 Ripley's Be- c ades and pricey tourist attraclieveltorNotmuseumsaround t i o ns represent a dramatic rethe world. The Hollywood loca- v e rsal for the boulevard, which tion shifted to less-creepy dis- w a s known in the 1970s and plays after a $3.5-million reno- '80s as a haven for runaways, vation that museum operators p r ostitutes and drug dealers. "We've made considerable hope will draw huge crowds this summer. progress in upgrading the " We really wanted to push n e i ghborhood," s ai d L e r o n this as a family place," said G u bler, president and chief exmuseum general ecutive of the Holmanager Andrea w lywood Chamber S ilverman, w h o We really of Commerce. "It's estimates that the I/I/gf7<e6 <p pUStI n'cethatbusiness Los Angeles Times

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Jasmine Diaz, 11, from Guam, stands inside the world's largest tire on display at Ripley's Believe It or Not museum in Hollywood, Calif. Built by the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company of Akron, Ohio, this enormous truck tire stands nearly 12 feet tall and weighs over 6,500 pounds. The tire contains enough rubber to make 395 normal-sized tires.

years,said she agreed with the callfrom her corporate bosses to remove many of the extreme exhibits. The Ripley's museums and aquariums are owned and operated by Florida-based Ripley's Entertainment, a subsidiary of Vancouver, Canadabased Jim Pattison Group. Still, Silverman said s he new exhibits have fpiS gS g fgmj/ es ar e reinvesting cherished many of the maca~ already increased and upgrading." bre exhibits and hated to store attendance about Pi cfCe We thfPed The Ripl e y's them away in a warehouse in 40 percen W e pU t t t7e eiitjre museu m hasbeen Florida, including the skeleton wiped out the enat the corner of of a two-headed baby. "I was literally crying when I t ire museum t o mUSeUm tO yflrI+ Hollywood Boubringinanentirely in a n e n t i r ely levar d a nd High- was packing it away," she said. new show." land Avenue for A few c h illing curiosities new show." The makeover 20 years, display- remain on display, including — AndreaSilverman, ing t he f r eakish a real shrunken human head represents one of the final p i eces genera l manager, and t he m orbid. in the overhaul of Ripley ' s Believe It Regular a d m i s Hollywood B o uor Not museum sion is $16.99 for SOLUTION TO l evard, a lo u d , adults, $8.99 for TODAY'S SUDOKU colorful commerchildren. cial district that has gone from Ove r t he last few years, Sil4 6 8 9 1 7 2 5 3 -' downtroddenandscaryin th e v e r man said, many parents 1970s and 1980s to glitzy and h a d demanded refunds, saying 5 7 2 4 6 3 1 8 9 1 93 5 8 2 4 7 6 crowded today. the exhibits were not appropriThe boulevard, which draws a t e for children. The museum 2 3 7 6 5 1 9 4 8 '; . an estimated 14 million visi- c l o sed for three months late last 8 5 4 2 7 9 3 6 1 tors a year, has benefited from y e ar to install 350 new exhibits, 9 1 6 3 4 8 5 2 7 -': several mu l t i m illion-dollar i n c luding a new collection of 7 21 8 3 5 6 9 4 l projects over the last few years, M a r ilyn Monroe clothes and 345 7 9 6 8 1 2 :starting with the 2001 comple- p h otos. tion of the $650-million HolSilv e r man, who has man6 89 1 2 4 7 3 5 t l ywood 8 Highland entertain- a g e d t h e m useum for f i v e SUDOKU IS ON C6

and a sword used by the Japanese military to execute rebels and insurgents in the 1920s and '30s. Some recent visitors to the museum — parents and children — say they have no problem with gruesome and freakish exhibits. Jocelyn Diaz, a tourist from Guam who visited the museum with her husband, Ramon, and their two daughters, Beatrice, 13, and Jasmine, ll, said she would not demand a refund if her children saw photos of im-

paled people. "They are intelligent enough to understand what is going on," she said of her daughters,

ANSWER TO TODAY'S JUMBLE

3QMLQEX. Answer:

AFRAID EXHALE

DE F AC E ST E N CH S M OOTH D E L UXE

adding that her 11-year-old's favorite display was a mounted one-eyed goat. Other parents said exhibits such as the shrunken skull and the two-headedcalfare appropriate only for kids older than 5or6. "I have a 10-year-old grandson and I think he would love

the large oak tree, he had it-

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pressure medications. My blood sugar has dropped

it," said Bettie Williams, a tourist from Birmingham, Ala. Suchreactions aregoodnews for Silverman, who said she wants to retain a few extreme displays. For example, she was recently offered the remains of

ANSWER TO TODAY'S LAT CROSSWORD

After building a new deck underneath

"After two months my ALL OF MY diabetic, cholesterol and blood

Sally Stead, of Australia, looks at a display case at Ripley's Believe It or Not showing a hand-knit cardigan sweater worn by Marilyn Monroe in a1962 photo shoot on Santa Monica beach, the last photo she ever had taken. At right is a portrait of Monroe by Christian Ramos made entirely from ladies nail polish.

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C4 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

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It doesn't take a lot of imagination to envision children playing outside the Antelope School, built in 1924 and closed since 1984. About 60 people live in Antelope, first settled in 1867; its most prominent surviving building is a handsome1897 church.

Grasslands and wheat fields surround the ghost town of Hardman, located in Morrow County 20 miles southwest of Heppner. Variously known as Dairyville, Raw Dog and Yaller Dog in the1870s, the town still has a few dozen residents in the area.

Towns

open. The largest of them is a wool shed — the largest in Oregon — on theeast side of town. "SHANIKO" is spelled out on its tin roof in letters

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passed on a couple of years ago. Yes, we lost one." Then she turned and asked me: "Have you seen the church yet? And have you seen The Rock?"

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Defining a ghost town "The Rock" is a s o litary, squarish 35-foot boulder on the south side of town, beside Lone Creek, a t r ibutary of the John Day River. Beside it stands the renovated Methodist Church, built in 1898. I would have loved to have seen the inside of the church, but sadly, I missed the potluck. Other buildings also piqued my interest, though. A twos tory schoolhouse, built i n 1903, rises above the east side of town. Its last high-school class graduated in 1932; the s chool closed for g oo d i n 1961. A tiny, wooden jail, built in 1891 as a place for rowdy sheepherders to sleep off nights of revelry, still looks as though it could withstand a prairie tornado. Founded in 1881 to serve surrounding ranches, Lonerock hasn't had a post office since 1963. Townspeople get their mail i n C o n don. But even without postal service, a school ora general store,the community has persisted. Its false-fronted community hall, built around the turn of the lastcentury,has been renovated, and its isolation has actually attracted a few residents like O'Dell. Few of O r e gon's "ghost towns" are devoid of r e sidents. Nearly every hamlet I visited on my road trip had a few hangers-on. Shaniko, well known to Central Oregonians, listed 36 people at the last census — and that was before a family of 12 moved to town

The red-brick Shaniko Hotel, built in1900 as the Columbia Southern Hotel, dominates the ghost town 38 miles northeast of Madras. The entire downtown district of Shaniko, mostly dating from 1901, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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Heppner, Condon, Fossil and Antelope — before heading up U.S. 97 and cutting across spring. the White River Falls road to Dufur, home of an excellent Small-town snippets historical museum. I returned My t w o - day e x c u rsion to Bend via U.S. 197 and 97. covered nearly 500 miles. I En route, I visited the ghost headed out U.S. Highway 26 towns, or near-ghost towns, through Prineville to Mitchell, of R i c h mond, Ha r d man, then circled a series of Oregon Lonerock, Mayville, Kinzua, state highways (207, 206, 19, Shaniko, Kent and Friend. 218, 216) — through Spray, Continued next page

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The three-room Shaniko School, built in1901, features a unique octagonal bell tower. Among many other historical buildings in the Wasco County community is a city hall that incorporates a threecell jail and the Shaniko firehouse.

& Gone. Eachofthese is a real ghost town, although they can be reached only by four-wheeldrive vehicle. Why do people visit ghost towns? Some a r e h i s tory buffs. Others are keen photographers. A few may be searching cemeteriesfor traces of ancestors. The majority, I'm certain, are merely curious, wondering what's beneath the sagging roofs or behind the collapsing walls. One must also wonder what sort of people continue to live in these towns. In Mayville, population 6, I enjoyed a conversation with 66-year-old Bud Laney, who this spring. told me h i s f a m ily m oved I think of a ghost town as there 50 years ago. He's been a community whose soul is away — for school, for work, in another era. It probably no for military service — but he longer has a school or a gen- always returns. He and his eralstore,and often no church wife, Laurel, have a farm just nor surviving post office. Half to the west. "It's real nice and quiet out or more ofits structures may be in ruin. here," Laney told me. "And we Author P h i l i p Var n e y, like it that way." whose "Ghost Towns of the Pacific Northwest," newly re- Shades of Shaniko vised and published by VoyaShaniko, located 38 miles geur Press, was a key source northeast of Madras on U.S. and inspiration for this story, Highway 97, is the nearest has different criteria than me. real ghost town to Bend. It Varney lists several major was named ( an d m i s protowns in his book, including nounced) for e a rl y s e ttler Sherman County seat Moro A ugust Scherneckau, w h o and southern Oregon tour- o wned a stage stop in t h e ism hub Jacksonville. I don't earlier community of Cross regard either as a ghost town. Hollows. But Varney excluded such For just over a decade, besites as Malheur City, Cornu- ginning in 1900, Shaniko was copia, Horse Heaven and Heck the largest wool-shipping de-

pot in the world. As the southern terminus of the Columbia Southern Railroad, a subsidiary of the Union Pacific, it was the hub of a 20,000-squaremile territory that extended through most of Eastern Oregon. Ranchers and farmers brought their sheep, cattle and wheat to be shipped north to Biggs Junction, on the Columbia River. In 1903, more than 1.1 million bushels of wheat were sold. Wool sales topped Q million in 1903 and $5 million in 1904. But when the Oregon T runk R ailroad wa s c o m pleted to Bend in 1911, Shaniko was reduced to being the mere terminus of a dead-end railroad. When Australia and New Zealand began producing less expensive wool for the world market after World War I, Shaniko's importance faded further. The Columbia Southern was finally abandoned in the 1960s. The Shaniko Hotel, originally the Columbia Southern Hotel, has been the town's anchor from the moment it was completed in 1900. Now owned by Portland financier Robert Pamplin Jr., the twostory brick hotel remains in fine repair — although it is presently closed, with no current plans for reopening. But the entire downtown of Shaniko is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and plenty of other century-old buildings remain

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any passing aircraft. The Columbia Southern train station, long since destroyed, stood i mmediately n ort h o f the shed. A row of historic false-front structures — i n cluding the Shaniko post office — stands opposite the hotel on the south side of t h e s t reet. Among them is the 1901 Gold Nugget Saloon, now an antiques store. Across from the h otel to the east is the 1901 city hall, where historical photos are displayed in an anteroom, open even when offices are locked. On the back side of the building is a three-cell jail, which visitors can explore, as well as the Shaniko firehouse. More old structures, including a small museum, are across a secondary lane behind city hall. The town's most prominent building, after the hotel, is the Shaniko School, also built in 1901. Lime green, the threeroom school features a unique octagonal bell tower. As one of itsrooms serves as a wool fabric shop, it is frequently open to the public. Shaniko's imposing 1901 water tower, 70 f eet h i gh, is just west. Built of sturdy

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SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

From previous page I've already introduced you to Lonerock and Shaniko. Let me tell you about the others. • Hardman (20 miles southwest of Heppner on state Highway 207) is exceptionally picturesque,boasting dozens of scattered wooden buildings surrounded by grasslands and wheat fields. Variously known as Dairyville, Raw Dog, Yaller Dog and Dogtown in its early history, it has been known by its current name since 1882, when a post office was moved here from the home of farmer David Hardman. Once a milling center for wheat farms, it declined after it was bypassed by the railroad in favor of Heppner. The last shop closed in 1968, the same year the post office closed its doors. More than a dozen rural mailboxes stand beside the highway, in front of the ruins, a reminder that despite the lack of services, people still live here — perhaps about three dozen in the town itself and within a couple of miles around, by one resident's estimate. T he heart of town i s t h e Hardman Community Center, built in 1870 as the Odd Fellows (IOOF) Hall. The de facto town hall, which at one point attracted preservation funds from the State of Oregon, is used for monthly dinners and other social events. Across the highway i s t h e f o rmer grocerystore and gas station, deserted for 45 years. Nearby is a garage, a jack still sitting beneath a rusted remnant of an antique vehicle. • Richmond (I m i l e e ast of state Highway 207, about 19 miles north of M i tchell) was founded in 1890 when a school, church and store were built. Named for the Confederate capital o f R i chmond, Va., the town had a post office from 1899 to 1952, when the school also closed. But it had been dwindling in importance since the 1920s. The one-room school, which had a stable for students who rode horses to class, had 40 students in i t s h e yday. Its desks are now in the Fossil Museum, 28 miles northwest. Also in that museum are the pews from the former Methodist church, whose belfry still contains its original bell. Numerous other building ruins that remain standing include a long structure at the west end of the sparsely populated hamlet. It was a combination store, post office and residence. • Mayville (7 miles north of Fossil, 12 miles south of Condon, on state Highway 19) was settled in the late 1870s. The post office opened in 1884. Its largest building is the 1895 Odd Fellows Hall, now owned by a California couple contemplating a commercial renovation. Across the highway is the oldgeneral store and service station, now a part-time residence; other deteriorating buildings stand to the south and north. While most ghost towns boast intriguing graveyards, I especially like that of Mayville, established in 1886 about I'/4 miles northwest of the town center on C e metery Road. Look for the headstone of one Henry Beck (1842-99); I must believe that with tongue firmly in cheek, he wrote his own epitaph before he passed away: "Poorly Born / Poorly Lived / Poorly Died. / and no one cried." • There's really nothing left of Kinzua (11 miles east of Fossil on Kinzua Road, off state Highway 19). Built as a company timber town in the early 1930s, it was closed, and its buildings removed, in the late 1970s. Today there's a small local golf course, a tiny RV park,

A A A

+

GhosttownsinOregon

Through the first decade of the 20th century, Shaniko was the world's largest wool-shipping depot, with millions of dollars in sales. Oregon's largest wool shed, its tin roof painted with the town's name, still stands on the east side of the community.

Several ghost towns, marked in red on the map below, spot the eastern

Oregon desert.

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Expenses

rineviue Post

Gas, looptour of north central Oregonfrom Bend: 479 miles © $3.80/gaiion $72.81 Lodging (1night), Condon

Panlina

Bend Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

Motel: $58.30

If yougo

Main St., Condon; 541-255-

5286, www.roundupgriii.com.

Groceries for two lunches:$15

INFORMATION Oregon Tourism Commission.

Lunch and dinner. Budget to

Dinner, Round-up Grill:

670 Hawthorne Ave. S.E., Suite240,Salem; 503-3788850, 800-547-7842, www.

Pastime Saloon 8 Restaurant. 25 Heimrich St., Dufur; 541467-9248. Lunch and dinner. Budget to moderate. RJ's Restaurant. 415 First St., Fossil; 541-763-3335.

traveioregon.com LODGING Baich Hotel. 40 Heimrich St., Dufur; 541-467-2277, www.

moderate.

$22.50

Lunch and dinner. Budget to

baichhotei.com. Rates from $85. Condon Motel. 216 N. Washington St., Condon; 541384-2181. Rates from $55. Hotel Condon. 202 S. Main St., Condon; 541-384-4624, www. hoteicondon.com. Rates from

$125. River Bend Motel. 708 Willow St., Spray; 541-468-2053, www.riverbendmotei.com.

moderate. Willow Creek Diner. 348 N. Main St., Heppner; 541-6765023. Breakfast and lunch. Budget.

ATTRACTIONS Dufur Historical Society Living History Museum.101 Main St., Dufur; 541-467-2205, www. dufurthreshingbee.org

Fossil Museumand PineCreek

Rates from $70.

Schoolhouse. 501 First St., Fossil; 541-763-2213, www.

Wilson Ranches Retreat Bed and Breakfast. 16555 Butte

facebook.com Giiiam County Historical

Creek Lane,Fossil; 541-763-

Museum. State Highway19at Burns Park, Condon; 541-384-

2227, 866-763-2227, www.

wiisonranchesretreat.com. Rates from $99.

4233, www.condonchamber.

DINING Gubby's Drive-In. 433 S. Main

Sherman County Historical

Ol'g

St., Condon; 541-384-3922. Three meals. Budget. The Round-up Grill. 209 S.

Museum. 200 Dewey St., Moro; 541-565-3232, www.

The Dufur Historical Society Living History Museum, which survives on donations, is one of the best of its kind in Oregon. Buildings relocated from other sites include the 1900 Schreiber House, from Friend, and the1894 Endersby School, behind. Friend roads, off U.S. High-

passing" sign posted on its

way 197) was named for early

door, once housed the Antelope Herald newspaper. Nearby areseveral picturesque but abandoned buildings: an old Shell gas station, the Antelope

settler George Friend, who installed the first post office in his homestead in 1903. It was important as the terminus of the Great Southern Railroad, which extended through Dufur to The Dalles from 1913 to 1935. There remain few structures from that era. The former general store, which doubled as a Richfield service station, stands just north of Friend Road beside a private farmstead. The one-room 1909 Friend School, a half-mile west, is still used as a community center with a flagpole and prominent "Ladies" and "Gents" outhouses.

Not dead yet

And then there are the notso-ghost towns, although Antelope (8 miles south of Shaniko on state Highway 218) seems to be heading in that direction. Established in 1867 on a gold seekers' road from Canyon City to The Dalles, named for plentiful herds of pronghorn, it was awarded a post office in 1871 and incorporated in 1901. The community had a boom of sorts in the 1980s, when followers of the Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh took control of town government a n d re n amed Antelope "Rajneesh." That lasted only until 1985, when Rajneesh was deported on charges of immigration fraud. His commune disbanded and Antelope returned to its previPhotos by John Gettberg Anderson/ For The Bulletin ous existence. Spring flowers frame a board-and-batten house in Kent, in SherAntelope still has a post office — operating from a trailer man County south of Grass Valley. Once an important grain-shipping center, Kent has had a post office since it was settled in1887; behind th e o r i ginal b u ilding — and a handsome 1897 it stands east of U.S. Highway 97 near the deserted Smith Store. Methodist church (at Union and College streets). But the a lot of open-range cattle but cafe and service station, its"Or- two-story school, at the north no ruins. ange Crush" sign rising above end of town, closed long ago, • Kent (16 miles north of Phillips 66 tanks offering gas and its only cafe-store (known as "Zorba the Buddha" during Shaniko on U.S. Highway 97) at 66'/ ~centspe rgallon. Across has had a post office since it the street is a curious beehive- Rajneesh days) has recently was settled in 1887. It is still shaped stone structure, built closed its doors. That closure there. As the Columbia South- in the 1930s to house an elec- may or may not be permanent. ern railroad ran through here tric generator. A 1937 school A tiny wooden building in en route from Biggs Junction auditorium, now boarded up, the heart of town, surrounded to Shaniko, Kent was an imstands a block east. A hand- by a field and with a "No Tresportant grain-shipping cenful of other wooden buildings ter. Wheat was stored in two are about a quarter-mile east large grain elevators — one of of Highway 97; they include an concrete,the other of woodold general store and an Odd which remain standing today. Fellows HalL But the most memorable • Friend (11 miles southwest abandoned building is an old of Dufur via Dufur Gap and

shermanmuseum.org

Breakfast, Gubby's Drive-

in:$3 TOTAL:$172.61

Adjacent is t h e s easonal Dufur Historical Society Living History Museum, one of the best of its kind in Oregon. Highlights include the 1900 Schreiber House, a two-story Garage (with a Union 76 logo) log cabin built in Friend, and and the two-story Ancient Or- the 1894 Endersby School, der of United Workmen Hall, formerly in a settlement northbuilt in 1898. west of Dufur. Both buildings The official population of were relocated to this museum Antelope, in the 2010 census, for preservation. was 60. Historical museums in ConDufur, with 655, was much don (the Gilliam County Hisbetter off. It's close enough torical Museum), Moro (the to The Dalles (about 15 miles Sherman County H i storical south on U.S. Highway 197) Museum) and Fossil (the Fosto be a sort of bedroom com- sil Museum and Pine Creek munity. And there's no better Schoolhouse) also have done bedroom in t his l ittle town excellent work preserving remthan the 1907 Balch Hotel, a nants of Oregon ghost towns. handsome, three-story brick As for the towns themselves, building that is listed on the what does the future hold? National Register of Historic Only time will tell. Places. Thoroughly renovated, — Reporter: janderson@ it does a thriving business. bendbttlletirt.com W c

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C6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 20'l3

SU D O K U

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co mpletethegrid

so that every row, column and3x3 box

THA T SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

one letter to each square, to form six ordinary words.

contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

TSA's 'nude' bodyscanning is history

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Wow, honayl Thls looksgreatl

By Hugo Martin

FARDIA

Los Angeles Times

ltwgl be the

perlem place lo Ielaa thill summer.

Oagis TnbuneMedia Senices, Ino Ae Ri hts Reserved

The "nude scanners" are

gone.

LEEHAX CEDAFE

HOTMOS NCETSH

AFTER BLIILPINCT A NETY PECK UNPERNEATH THE LARCTE OAK TREE, HE HAP IT —-

LEXDUE

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

portation Security Administration is still using full-body scanners that employ a different

technology.

The full-body scanners that used X-rays to create what look likenude images ofpassengers have been packed away and removed from airportsacross the country. The 250 or so machines were removed about two weeks ago, before the June 1 deadline set by Congress. But privacy advocates aren't satisfied, noting that the Trans-

"They've never made a case that these scanners are better than using metal detectors or swabs to detect the use of explosives," said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center,a research center that sued the TSA in 2010 over the use of all full-body scanners. The TSA now relies solely

on millimeter-wave scanners, which previously generated similar nude images but have been upgraded to portray a generic figure on which they point out objects concealed on travelers' bodies. The scanner is made by L-3 Communications Holdings Inc. of New York. The X-ray scanners made by Rapiscan Systems in Torrance were removed after Congress required al l a i r p or t s c anners to use privacy-protecting software.

PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW

DIFFICULTY RATING: *** *

*

Fire

JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3

SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB

Resigned to his fate By FRANK STEWART Tribune MediaServices GJ O

"Did you make it to church this His family attends a nearby house of

Instead, declarer takes the queen of trumps and the A-K of diamonds and then the queen, ace and king of

worship.

spades, discarding a diamond. At the

"We had a visiting speaker," Louie said. "They said he was the local bishop, but I doubt it. I watched him c arefully, a n d h e d id n ' t mo v e diagonally a single time." B ridge and chess have little i n common, and onlya few people have e xcelled at b ot h g ames. Skil l a t bridge is more learned than intuitive, and bridge has the desirable elements of partnership and social interaction. I've often wished I could borrow a "resign" — when I chess term f aced an i n t r actable p r oblem i n

12th trick, he checkmates East by leading dummy's last spade. Whether East ruffs or discards, South scores his last trump "en passant" for his 10th trick. North dealer Both sides vulnerable

bidding or play. In fact, bridge has

WEST 4 J 98 7

morning?" I asked Unlucky Louie.

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NORTH 4AK63 9A62 0 A 65 4 J65

stolen bits of chess terminology. At today's four hearts, South ruffs the third round of clubs and takes the

A-K of trumps. If both defenders

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Ea s t Sou t h Pass 3 'Ml All Pass

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again are ways this situation can be reversed. Continued from C1 Since it formed in 2009, the forest project has been working The project on ways it can applythese treatCaligiuri and Phil Chang, ments to a 145,000-acre section the natural r esources proof private and publicly owned gram administrator at Central forest land that stretches from Oregon In t e rgovernmental Bend to Sisters and from CenCouncil, said decades worth tury Drive to Black Butte so it's of logging and modern forest less likely to burn as intensely management practices had a as it did before. The collaborasevere impact on how Central tive project steering committee Oregon's pine forests were includes members from fedstructured and dealt with fire. eral and state agencies, forest W hen loggers felled t h e products industry, fire protecmassivetrees that were spread tion services, environmental out across the forest floor, it groups and more. "Restoration is a race against gave rise to stands of much smaller, l es s f i r e -resistant the next fire," Chang said. trees that were packed together much tighter than the forest The tour had been before. About 40 percent of the area Forest managers added to impacted by the Pole Creek this problem when they set out Fire burned in a manner like to stop forest fires the second the one Chang described, acthey started — leaving behind cording to the Sisters Ranger forest debris and shrubs that Station. Smoke from the blaze would normally be cleared out caused significant air quality if nature had run its course. problems for the city of Sisters Chang said the excess brush during its busy fall tourism and debris that sits on the for- season, while a huge loss of est floor acts as "ladder fuel" trees around Whychus Creek's and helps the fire burn hotter headwatersiscausing erosion and higher so its flames reach problems that are filling the the topof the trees and every- waterway with sediment. thing burns at once. This type Caligiuri said the project's of fire is a lot harder to control members will discuss some of and sends giant plumes of these impacts when they lead smoke into the air, he said. the 50 people who take part Chang s a i d re s t oration in its bus tours through part treatments like the selective of the Pole Creek Fire area on cutting of younger trees to de- Friday and Saturday morning. crease the forest's density, the He hopes they will also create removal of debristo reduce the a forum where the U.S. Forest amount of fuel on its floor and Serviceand the project's memthe use of controlled burns to bers can discuss their forest keep the debris from piling up restoration efforts while view-

Ifyou go What:The Deschutes

Collaborative Forest Restoration Project's Pole Creek Tour When:9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday

Where:Bus tours leave from the Sisters Ranger Station at the intersection of Pine Street and U.S.

Highway 20 Cost:The event is free but registration through the tour's website at https://

goo.gl/mzgma is required in advance. The Friday tour

has filled up, but spaces were still available for

Saturday. Contact:DeschutesCFP@

gmail.com ing the devastation caused by the type of fire they're working to prevent. "We want to have a very positive collaboration," he said. "We want to talk about the role of fire, how fire behaves and how we can continue to accelerate the pace of... forest restoration." Caligiuri also said the tours may provide the first chance many people have had to see the effects of the Pole Creek Fire. Many of the roads and trails leading through the area are still closed as the Forest Serviceremoves any trees that pose a threat to motorists and works to address the effects of erosion caused by the blaze. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulfetin.com

(C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

anyway).

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CROSSW ORD SOLUTION IS ON C3

©2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

34333ilwy.97IIort/I Chilopllilf, Oregon97624

541.783.752~888JQA MO YA

Pa.


SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

eM CMa IVI

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ae own, ou

Ifyou go

Before sitting down toa multicourse showcase of

WHERE TOSTAY • Koornhoop ManorGuest

African cuisine, guests at this

dinner-show spot learnsome djembe drummingbasics. Between courses, performers share dancesand songsfrom

House, Wrench and Nuttal roads, Observatory (011-2721-

rica

448-0595, www.koornhoop. co.za)

across the continent. About $30

for meal andperformance.

A quaint bed-and-breakfast that's a short walk to

• Biesmiellah, 2 Upper Wale St. (011-2721-423-0850, www

Observatory's main street and

By Sadie Dingfelder

.biesmiellah.co.za) This quirky spot in the picturesqueMuslim neighborhood of BoKaap serves flavorful CapeMalay cuisine - CapeTown's unique

a10-minute train ride to central

Special to The Washington Post

Cape Town.Singles about $54, doubles about $36per person.

It was already late afternoon when I arrived in Observatory, but the inner-city neighborhood in Cape Town, South Africa, was only just waking

• Boulders Beach Lodge,4

Boulders Place,Boulders Beach, Simons Town (011-2721-7861758, www

up, it seemed. A single young woman w i t h a bac k p ack skateboarded down the otherwise empty main street, and as the sun began to set over Table Mountain, a few bars played thumping house music through still-locked doors. I wandered into a g u itar shop, interrupting a lively conversationbetween three grayhaired men. "What kind of music do peoplelike around here?"Iasked. "White people tend to go for rock; black guys go for kwaito, rap and jazz," answered store owner Lionel Jordan. Kwaito, he added, is dance music with African vocal samples. JorPhotos by Nadme Hutton I Btoomberg dan and his friends, however, The city skyline of Cape Town is seen from Table Mountain in South Africa. Cape Town is bordered by mostly play classic rock. two oceans and one mountain range and is the rare city that abuts actual wilderness. "There are 14 cultures in South Africa," chimed in Richard Pitcher, Jordan's friend stands as a monument to one and bandmate. "It's hard to be of the most shameful mopart of them all." ments in Cape Town's history: the destruction of District A rare city Six. "I will never forget the day Bordered by t w o o c eans and on e m o untain r a nge, they bulldozed our h ouse," Cape Town is a rare city that said Noor Ebrahim, perched abuts actual wilderness. On on a stool in the museum, one the eastern side of town, the of the few District Six strucwarm Indian Ocean crashes tures that the apartheid govinto the continent, sending a ernment left standing. A trio salty spray across the coastal of young women paid rapt highway. On the western side, attention as Ebrahim told stothe cold Atlantic periodically ries about growing up in the tosses unlucky ships onto the Office workers sit on a public bench in the city center in Cape multiethnic n e i g hborhood. rocky shore. For people on Town, South Africa. The city is still recovering from the scars of Christmas, he said, was his the outskirts of town, baboon apartheid, but has some creative, multiethnic enclaves that have favorite time of year, because break-ins ar e a pe r e nnial led the city's renaissance. he loved tailing the choirs that problem, and in at least one paraded throughthe streets. "We all celebrated Christsouthern suburb, p enguins regularly waddle into hotel isn't as dangerous as it looks. ing out samples of ostrich and mas, not just the Christians," "It's like a small town, "he kudu, which meat was most said Ebrahim, a Muslim. "I lobbies, looking for handouts. But as I ra n t h rough six said. "Everyone knows every- popular. prayed with the Hindu com"The sirloin, which is just for munity, the Jewish commulanes oftraffic to escape an one else." overzealous panhandler one His favorite part about liv- this market," he answered. nity, the African community, "Why's that'?" I asked. day, I realized that the real ing in Observatory, he said, is and there was nothing wrong "I'd rather not say," he said with it. All my friends, they dangers of Cape Town are of the fact that you can go shopthe typical urban variety. "I ping or out to eat without trav- with a wink. put on a fez and went with won't rob you if you just give eling downtown — though the We skipped the steak, in- me to m y m o sque. That's me some money,"the panhantrain takes you there in just 10 stead opting for a d elicious what made District Six such dler yelled as I trotted back to minutes, he said. breakfast of goat-cheese a great place," he said. my hotel. quiche, B e l gia n w af f l e s, That thriving multiculturTrendy neighborhoods I'd been trying to walk a Nutella crepes and rooibos alism spooked the nascent half-mile to th e w aterfront. The next morning,my boy- tea, all collected from vendors But I quickly discovered that friend and I drove to Wood- inside the Victorian-era storin a city with homicide rates stock, a trendy neighborhood age shed. that are about on a par with in the heart of Cape Town. We then sat down on a milk vPur~ 6ttztA 6 Co. Detroit, casual strolls are gen- Once a sparsely populated in- crate and elbowed for space erally inadvisable. dustrial area, Woodstock has at a communal table made I shouldn't have been that become theepicenter of Cape from an antique barn door, surprised.Cape Town is,after Town's emerging design inlistening as people chatted in all, still recovering from the dustry. Foodies soon followed, a dozen different languages. scars of apartheid — includ- starting a popular gourmet Bend District Six ing economic inequality and market and a smattering of Redmond an unemployment rate of al- high-profile restaurants. Our tummies full, we headJohn Day most 50 percent among young As we neared the market, ed to our last stop on our tour Burns adults. In fact, it was only 50 at the Old Biscuit Mill, several of Cape Town neighborhoods Lakeview years ago that the South Afri- young men trotted after our — a small brick church that can government declared the car,offering parking spaces city center to be for "whites and car-guarding service for only" and began forcibly re- the equivalent of a few dolmoving blacks and mixed-race lars. Suckers, we let one flag peoplefrom theirhomes. us down and ended up parkA lthough most o f C a p e ing nearly a mile away from Town quickly succumbed to the market. That, however, segregation, apartheid's en- gave us the chance to appreforcers somehow overlooked ciate the s t r iking c o ntrast at least two inner-city neigh- between the world outside the borhoods: Observatory and mill and the scene inside. Woodstock. In recent years, O utside: A y e l low Y u g o these multicultural enclaves rusted on blocks. Inside: A have led the city's renaissance shiny Mini Cooper displayed — attracting artists and other hip T-shirts. Outside: Barefoot creative types from all over children hustled tourists. Inthe world. Still hoping to do side: Well-heeled teens picked a little urban hiking, and per- through designer clothes. No haps even catch a glimpse of one stood guard at the Biscuit Cape Town's reawakening, I Mill gates, but some invisible resolved to explore these lively barrier stopped these very difneighborhoods on foot. ferent worlds from colliding. A 2 0-something gu y i n Traversing Observatory s kinny jeans an d a s c a r f If music tastes divide along summed it up for me: "Outracial l i n es, O b servatory's side the Biscuit Mil l g ates, residents seem decidedly mul- you're in a third-world countiethnic, not to mention young try," he said. "Inside, you're in and attractive. As I walked the Williamsburg." streets, I saw one mixed-race Indeed, t he Satu r d ay mar k e t couple, arm-in-arm, contem- " Neighbourgoods" plating t heir t e mpera-paint seemed very Brooklyn, with options at an art store, and a a trendy array of artisanal, diverse group of chatty teens organic and pricey foods: debating where to go to eat. sea urchin pasta, goat's milk I found th e s u rrounding cheese, gluten-free bread and, neighborhood, however, to be of course, cupcakes. decidedly less friendly. Many One food stand, however, homes hunkered behind tall struck m e a s p a r t i cularly concrete walls topped with ra- South African — a "biltong" zor wire. Prominently placed stand selling spicy jerky made placards named the security from the country's vast array company that protected each of ungulates and other tasty property, complete with illus- beasts. I asked Mike Mays, a trations of a revolver's busi- cheerful man who was handness end. As I snapped a picture of a Weekly placard for a particularly fesArts & tive-sounding security comEntertainment Inside Mt t LGAZHQE pany (Shock-o-loza), a curlyhaired 20-something stopped Thesultetin to assureme that Observatory

rdo >~ B~

Mediterraneanflavors. Entrees $5-$11.

waddle into the lobby of this

WHAT TODO • Neighbourgoods Market, 373Albert Rd., Woodstock (011-2782-370-4075, www.

a full hour, but the views are breathtaking. Singles about $75,

neighbourgoodsmarket.co.za)

doubles about $55per person.

Saturdays 9a.m. to noon.

WHERE TOEAT

Assemble apicnic of gourmet, local andartisanal foods in this

•The Test Kitchen, Shop104A, the Old Biscuit Mill, 375 Albert Rd., Woodstock (011-2721-4472337, www.thetest

weekly market, or browse the hip shops at the adjacent Biscuit Mill. • District Six Museum, 25A

kitchen.co.za) This 30-seat restaurant began

Buitenkant St., Cape Town (0112721-466-7200, www

as anexperiment bychefLuke Dale-Roberts and quickly

.districtsix.co.za) Former residents staff the

becameafavoriteamongCape

museum and share their

Town foodies for its clever

memories of their lost

flavor combosandvegetarianfriendly tasting menus.Call

neighborhood. Monday 9a.m. to 2 p.m.; Tuesday-Saturday 9a.m. to 4 p.m.;Sundayby appointment. $3 for self-guided tour; $4.50 for guidedtour.

a few months in advance for

reservations. Afive-course dinner runsabout $57. •Gold Restaurant, 15 Bennett St., Green Point (011-2721-4214653, www.gold

School-age children 50 cents.

INFORMATION

restaurant.co.za)

www.capetowntravel.com

apartheid government, which declared the area a slum and razed it in the 1970s, relocating the neighborhood's 60,000 residentsto suburbs or,more o ften, actual slums on t h e outskirts of town. All that remains are a few dozen street

Would the jumble of apartm ents have given wa y t o walled fortresses,like those i n Observatory? Or, a s i n Woodstock, could D i s t rict Six have become a hotbedof creativity and perhaps antigovernment dissent? I could signs, which hang, chande- see why such a p ossibility lier-like, from th e c hurch's wasn't tolerated by the segreceiling. gationist regime. After listening to Ebrahim, Unlike many of his former I walked through the small neighbors who were forced to museum, pausing at a paper move to slums, Ebrahim now map where families had pen- lives in a well-to-do suburb. ciled in their names and for- But if he ever gets the chance, he'll move back. mer addresses. "District Six will always be I wondered: What would District Six look like today? my home," he said.

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

Fi -in ostOiverto ee news a e, unn TV SPOTLIGHT

John Oliver will temporarily replace host Jon Stewart on the popular spoof news show"The Daily Show" while Stewart directs and producesthe film "Rosewater."

By Frazier Moore The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Since 2006, John Oliver has proved his mettle as a phony journalist on "The Daily Show." Serving in numerous "reporting" roles on the spoof newscast, but chiefly as senior British correspondent, the Birmingham, E n g land-born Oliver is schoolboyish, pokerfaced and emphatic in explaining America to itself (whether the topic is Occupy Wall Street, gun control or the N-word), satisfied that his accent from across the pond makes anything he says, however off-kilter, sound authoritative here in the New World. Recently Oliver said a simple "yes" to his boss, Jon Stewart, who means to take the summer off to make a feature film and asked Oliver to fill in for him at the "Daily Show" anchor desk. "I'll say 'yes' to anything he wants me to do," Oliver explains at the "Daily Show" offices in midtown Manhattan. "I owe him so much — he brought me over here (to the U.S.) seven

years ago — so I'll do anything he wants, whether it's hosting his show or operating as a drug mule between here and Bogota. "As it happens," adds Oliver, looking relieved, "what he wanted was just hosting this show." In the coming months, Stewart will be directing and pro-

Martin Crook Comedy Central vla AP

ducing "Rosewater" from his own script based on a book by Iranian journalist Maziar Bahari, who was falsely accused of being a spy and imprisoned by the I r anian government in 2009 while covering Iran's presidential election. And starting Monday, Oliver will preside on "The Daily Show" (which airs at ll p .m. Mondays through Thursdays on Comedy Central). He will s ubstitute-anchor f o r ei g h t weeks of new shows before Stewart's return Sept.3. "He's got all the talents and he's gonna be great," declared Stewart in a separate interview. "And he can handle the speed of it. You want somebody in that position for everybody else on the staff, so they don't feel they have to slow down." But Oliver has his own assessment of the challenge that awaits him: "You're taking this

engine and hoping you can

operate it with a lower skill set than the guy who designed it." In person, Oliver is as witty as he is on camera, but unlike his deadpan TV alter ego, he exhibits a toothy grin, a gener-

ous guffawand a palpable delight in mining ideas for humor. He jokes that he is trying to get a head start on his new responsibilities by writing scripts ahead of time. "I'm going to try and get to August, at least, by just predicting: We'll get a Supreme Court decision on gay marriage; we'll guess what that's going to be. We've got a royal baby coming; we'll guess what that's going to

be." Oliver, 36, says his comic style was forged by early exposure to Monty Python and Armando Iannucci, a Scottish farceur who produced radio comedies, the British political TV satire "The Thick of It" and, currently, HBO's "Veep" (and

will be a "Daily Show" guest next week). Seeking his own comic style, Oliver wanted to apply "classic British comedic lunacy to politics, trying to do something stupid with something serious." B ut starting out, he w a s grateful for any joke that might score him a laugh or two. "When you start standup you are just trying to not leave the stage to the sound of your own footsteps," he says. "You're only thinking, 'How do I get through this with just a soupcon of dignity?'" Whoa! Oliver has left himself wide open to razzing by his interviewer for using a fancy word like "soupcon." He swiftly replaces it with "iota," but it's too late. That's Brits for you: Always sounding like they know more than your average Yank. "They SOUND l ik e t h ey do, and that's the trick," Oliver agrees with a laugh. "But there is nothing more British than simultaneously feeling superior and inferior. You just project one, repress the other." Still, the record shows that Oliver a t t ended h i g hbrow Cambridge University. Just how smart IS Oliver'? "Smart enough to appear smarter than I am," he reasons. "I was smart enough to get into Cambridge, and I guess I was smart enough to realize that I wasn't as clever as everyone else when I got there. I felt kind of out of place there, and spent most of my time doing comedy

Famiyupsetat a 's u etactions Dear Abby: I host all of the holiday parties and dinner parties for my family. Whenever I have my parents over, my father insists on helping himself to the top layer of every casserole. He'll scrape all the c heese off the p o tatoes, the crunchy onion topping off the DEAR green bean casseABBY role, etc., leaving just the bare vegetables for everyone else. I have asked Dad not to do it because it is inconsiderate of the other guests.I can see people are bothered by it, so now they make a beeline to the buffet so they can beat himto it. Dad got offended when I talked to him about it, but he continues to do it. Mom refuses to get involved, and I have said all I can say. What to do? — Burned Up In Illinois Dear Burned Up: A guest who grabs all the goodies at a dinner party is a hog. Because your father refuses to change his behavior, I will offer a few suggestions: The first is to alter your menu to avoid serving casserole dishes. If that's not possible, make your father his own separate casserole with his name

on it, so he can have it all to himself. Or plate the food in the kitchen and stop serving it buffet-style. Dear Abby: Over the past few years,as social media has become more popular, I have noticed a trend

understand my concerns. — Alone In The Real World Dear Alone:People cannot be two places at once. When relationships aren't nurtured, they wither. If this has been going on for an extended among many people. period, then it's time you give your They now favor that girlfriend a wake-up call: You feel form of communica- abandoned. Ask her if she would be tion over p e rsonal willing to work on a compromise so human i n t eraction. that she spends time with you. If she This i s e s p ecially can't do that, and the Internet is givtrue of my girlfriend ing her everything she needs, then of five years. you should find a lady who is willWe have the normal relation- ing to give you more of what YOU ship problems I feel could be ad- need, which is undivided attention. dressed,but from the moment she Dear Abby: If a person compligets home from work she's in front ments me on my hair, am I obliged of the computer playing Facebook to reveal that it isn't my natural color? I am a henna redhead, and games, posting status updates or messaging "friends." She sits there it looks very natural, but my friend for hours, lost in her virtual world. who is a natural redhead says I We rarely talk anymore, and when have to fess up. She will even tell we do it turns into an argument be- people "for me" that my color is "fake." What should I do? cause I'm trying to discuss what I — Henna Redhead In New York see as a serious problem. The Internet and social media Dear Henna Redhead: Start are great tools for bringing worlds spending more time with blondes together, if they are not abused. and brunettes than with a redhead But for many people, I think, so- who doesn't know when to keep her cial media is doing more harm mouth shut. She is jealous of the atthan good. I'm interested in your tention you're getting. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com opinion and any advice you can give me on helping my girlfriend or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013:This yearyou are unusually fortunate, both personally and financially. Play it conservatively with m oneythatiscom ing in,because good luck doesn't lastforever. You could be tempted to be a Stars showthe kind big spender. If of day you'll have yo u are single, ** * * * D ynamic you attract many ** * * P ositive po t ential sweeties. ** * A verage Thi s year presents ** So-so an interesting * Difficult relationship. If you are attached, the two of you get into loving life together, which strengthens the bond that exists between you. CANCER often is emotional.

ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * * You will be experiencing a transition that won't repeat itself for another12 years. Use the positive vibes around you to add to a sense of warmth in the morning. Allow more of your dreams to come to the surface in a conversation. Tonight: A serious one-on-one talk happens.

TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * L ady Luck rides along with you in the morning. If you want to take a risk, take it. You might sense some intense feelings coming from a loved one. Understand that you cannot force others' hands. Let them open up on their own. Tonight: Enjoy visiting with a neighbor.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

to detach and learn from this person. Tonight: Make it an early night.

CANCER (June21-July22)

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * Y our self-confidence comes through loud and clear, especially when dealing with a partner. You could be pushing this person away, whether or not it is intentional. Is this your goal? If it's not, stop. Follow your intuition. Tonight: Let the party begin.

** * * Y our sensitivity emerges from taking on a new perspective. Reach out to someone you careabout.Recognize what is happening with a loved one. This person might not mean to be vague; there is just a lot that he or she doesn't want to share. Tonight: Follow your instincts.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec.21)

LEO (July23-Aug. 22)

CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19)

** * * O thers seek you out, which couldbea pleasantchange.Youoften express your high energy by reaching out to others. One-on-one relating adds to the trust that lies between you and a key person. Tonight: Optfortogetherness.

** * * T ouch base with a family memberwho mightneed an upbeat suggestion or an invitation to a ballgame or get-together. This person often is reclusive, but he or she needs to be drawn out. Make a point to listen to what this individual has to share. Tonight: Not to be found!

** * Getting up usually is an issue of self-discipline. Make it OK to break tradition and do whatyou want. Having a lazy morning gives you some time just for you. A close loved one comes forward and shares a secret or some good news. Tonight: Touch base with a friend.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

** * * Y our playfulness might be particularly appealing to a child or loved one who often is withdrawn and refuses to open up. Allow yourself to be more childlike. By exploring this part of your personality, you'll become re-energized. Tonight: ThinkMonday.

** * * H ave a discussion, even if it feels like it might not help. You have an opportunity to bring many different people together. Make calls to those at a distance in the afternoon. You are getting a sense of what lies ahead. Tonight: Return calls.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed.18)

PISCES (Fed. 19-March20)

** * * M ake a point to take your time for a change. You simply do not need ** * * * U se the morning to assess an to keep extending yourself beyond your issue that you might not have been willing natural energy level. If you feel tired, pull GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * D o not push so hard to achieve to see in its entirety. Do not hesitate to back and take a nap. Meet up with a friend ask for more feedback, even if you feel as for a late brunch. Tonight: A loved one's your desires. Relax, and trust that your choices are correct and things will happen ifsomeone hasa bias.Thatdoesn'tmean suggestion makes you smile. naturally at the right time. An older family that he or she won't have a good idea. member indirectly inspires you. Be willing Tonight: Invite an older relative to dinner. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

TV TODAY 11 a.m. on H f3, "Formula One Racing" —The phrase "Bienvenue auQuebec" will be ubiquitous in the minds of Formula One drivers today in Montreal as they compete in theCanadian Grand Prix. The somewhat ironic greeting adorns the wall near the final chicane of the13-turn, 2.71mile Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, and in the past has signaled the endof the day for more than afew drivers. Lewis Hamilton is the race's defending champion.

rather than academics." Notably, he became part of the Cambridge Footlights comedy troupe, whose luminous alumni include Sasha Baron Cohen, Hugh L aurie, John Cleese and David Frost. "That was where I learnt, through failure, to do comedy, which, initially, is re-LENT-less failure," he says rhapsodically — "un-re-MIT-ting failure!" But that was followed by

Bp.m. onl3, "The 67th Annual TonyAwards" — Neil Patrick Harris returns to host this year's gala honoring Broadway's best. The musical "Kinky Boots" leads the pack with 13 nominations. Familiar faces from the big and small screens who could take home some hardware include Tom Hanks ("Lucky Guy"), Holland Taylor ("Ann"), Cicely Tyson ("The Trip to Bountiful") and Nathan Lane ("The Nance").

successful standup gigs and TV appearances across his homeland. Then Stewart d i scovered him and brought him to these shores. "From theday Icame to 'The Daily Show' I couldn't imagine not being here," says Oliver. "I really love this job! I can't fathom a time that I won't be work-

ing here."

8 p.m. on TRAV,"Xtreme Waterparks" —Ten new episodes explore the wildest, most overthe-top water rides in the world, from America's only slide with a completely horizontal loop in Maine toa homemade backyard slide in Vail, Colo., and more.

And for the next few weeks he is filling in for the man who not only is his boss, but, to hear him talk, a bona fide mentor. "You KNOW Jon Stewart is funny," Oliver says. "What you DON'T see is, he's a pretty incredible manager of production as well. He's spent over 10 years making sure this show operates in a certain way. The

9 p.m. on ANPL, "Call of the Wildman" — Turtleman receives a call from the owner of a feed store who claims that a mysterious varmint has beentearing open bags of feed. Thencatching turtles becomes a family affair when Ernie receives a frantic call from his mother — akaTurtlemom — asking him to relocate his childhood snapping turtles, which have beenoccupying her pond for three decades, in the newepisode "Hook, Line andSnapper."

key thing is to really keep your foot on the throat of this show so that it doesn't just get up and walk away." He laughs appreciatively. "That's the biggest lesson he's taught me." Starting Monday, John Oliver is putting his foot down,

and keeping it funny.

9 p.m. on TNT, "Falling Skies" — Noah Wyle returns to his role as resistance leaderTomMason in the season premiere, "OnThin Ice," which finds him being elected to political office, preparing for his baby's arrival and dealing with the fallout from his decision to have the rebel skitters fight alongside humans. Guest starring this season are Gloria Reuben asanaide to Tom andRobert SeanLeonard as an obsessive but gifted scientist who runs the local power grid.

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9 p.m. on HBO,"Game of Thrones" —In the season finale, Joffrey (Jack Gleeson) issues a challenge to Tywin (Charles Dance). Bran (Isaac Hempstead Wright) shares a ghost story. Daenerys (Emilia Clarke) waits to see whether she'll be seenas a conqueror or a liberator. Mercy comesfrom an unexpected source in "Mhysa." ©Zap2tt

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Scoreboard, D2

NH L , D4 Golf, D5 Motor sports, D3 T r ack 5 field, D5 College baseball, D4 Tennis, D6 MLB, D3

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

O» www.bendbulletin.com/sports

COLLEGE BASEBALL: SUPER REGIONAL

WCL BASEBALL

Elks get victory over Falcons, 6-4 KELOWNA, British Columbia — The

Beavers a inserieso ener

Bend Elks snapped a

• One out from defeat, ICansas State rallies for 6-2win in 10 innings

two-game West Coast

League losing streak Saturday, banging out

By Grant Lucas

11 hits in a 6-4 win over

The Bulletin

the KelownaFalcons. Right fielder Adam Grantham went 3-for-5

and scored two runs and third basemanKyle Giusti knocked in two runs to lead the Elks

(2-2). Tanner Ringand Jo Caroll each finished the game with two hits

for Bend. Kelowna designated hitter Candler Tracy hit 2 for 3 with a double and a home run to lead the Falcons. Joe Robbins also had two hits for Kelowna.

CORVALLIS — Oregon State had the lead and the strength of recent history on its side. The Beavers had won 14 of their past 15 games NCAA Super at Goss Stadium, and on Saturday, they were Regional, one strike away from yet another home win and Kansas State at gaining an early edge in the NCAA baseball SuOregon State, per Regionals against Kansas State. Game2 But the Wildcats stood tall, and after being • When:Today, held to just six hits through eight innings, the 7 p.m. Big 12 Conference champions came alive. Facing two strikes with two outs in the top • TV:ESPNU of the ninth inning, Kansas State junior Ross • Radio: Kivett delivered a double to right-center field and KICE-AM 940 advanced to third base when right fielder Dylan Davis fumbled the ball while trying to pick it up. Two pitches later, Tanner Witt drove in the ty-

Nextup

Clay Gartner earned the win for Bend, allow-

ing run,silencing the record Goss crowd of3,574. In the 10th inning, the Wildcats completed the comeback, exploding for four runs on five hits to jump in front 6-2. Jake Matthys then shut down the Beavers (48-11 overall) in the bottom half of the inning to seal the victory in the first game of the best-of-three series. Game 2 is set for tonight at 7 o'clock. A third game — which the Beavers hope will be necessary — would be played Monday starting at 4

p.m. "We certainly had many opportunities early in the game, or throughout the game," Oregon State coach Pat Casey said. "I thought that we wouldn't have to go to extra innings. It's tough when you get down to the last strike and you don't get it done." SeeBeavers/D4

Greg Wahhstephens/The Associated Press

Kansas State's Ross Kivett celebrates after scoring the tying run during the top of the ninth inning of Saturday's Super Regional in Corvallis.

SISTERS RODEO

ing four hits over the first seven innings of the

NBA

game. Nick Highberger picked up thesavefor

inas

the Elks.

Bend is at Kelowna again today at 6:05 p.m. The Elks will host their

no un or Heat uness

season openeragainst Cowlitz onWednesday at 6:35 p.m. at Vince

Genna Stadium. — Bulletin staff report

RUNNING

Two races hit the high desert A busy schedule of happenings across Central Oregon onSaturday

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Madras and amarathon at Redmond's Eagle Crest Resort. Results for both the Run Baby Run in Madras and the Three Sisters Marathon at Eagle Crest are listed in Scoreboard,D2. — Bulletin staff report

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te win By Brian Mahoney The Associated Press

MIAMI — The NBA Finals. Justbeing here can be memorable — and miserable. And surprise, it's those supposedly stoic Spurs who are having more fun, while the South Beach bunch is a little

grumpy and grouchy.

MOTOR SPORTS

Gastronevesget victory in Texas Driver scores his first IndyCar win of the year in Fort Worth,D3

Courtesy of Mike Copeman / PRCA

Tyler Corrington competes in the sixth round of saddle bronc riding during the 2011 National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas. Corrington, who won the event, is expected to ride today in the final round of the 2013 Sisters Rodeo.

TENNIS

• NO. 2 in the wOrld, a MinneSOta COwbOyiSpart Of

r ingtonsays "Thatg»eme» « « c o n fidence starting this year. I've been on a

an impressivesaddle broncfield at the Sisters Rodeo By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

Serena Williams reacts after she defeats Maria Sharapova in the women's final match of the French Open on Saturday in Paris.

Serena wins French Openfinal

Minnesota cowboy Tyler Corrington did not have the summer he was hoping for last year. After finishing eighth in the 2011 Pro Rodeo Cowboys A ssociation saddle bronc world standings with $98,823 in earnings, Corrington started the 2012 seasonabitslow. Byfallhewas floating around 30th place in the saddle bronc standings, 15 spots out of qualifying for the season-ending National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas. "I knew I had no shot at making the

Having already won four PRCA roNFR, so I started coming up to Canada d e os this season, Corrington, who headquiteabitwiththegoaltomakethe Cana- i n g into this weekend was second in the d i a n Finals (Rodeo)," the 27-year2013 world standings, headlines a o l d saddle bronc rider recalls. strong field of bronc riders set to • Corrington, whose hometown compete today during the final o f Hastings is on the outskirts of m per forma n ce of the Sisters Rodeo. M i n n eapolis-St. Paul, made a late ,. Cor r i n gton, Nebraska cowboy r u n and earned a spot at the CFR ." "' :: Cort Scheer (fourth), two-time i n E dmonton, Alberta, where his Co r rington wo r ld c h a mpion T aos M u n cy s e ason took off. He posted top(fifth), and South Dakota bronc f o u r f i nishesonfourofhissixridesatthe r i d ers Cole Elshere (seventh) and Troy C F R and won the average. By the time C r o wser (ninth) are all among the top t h e six-day event at Rexall Place was 1 0 m oney earners in the saddle bronc over, he had earned more than $46,000. s t a n dings this year. "The Canadian Finals went well," Cor.

~

The American tennis star gets her first victory at Roland Garros since 2002,D6

MLB

Jays, Marlins win marathon games

HORSE RACING

Palace Malice, ridden byjockey Mike Smith, crosses the finish line to win the 145th Belmont Stakes on Saturday in Elmont, N.Y.

Palace Malicescores Belmont Stakes upset

The Toronto and Miami

squads putin overtime before getting victories on Saturday,D3

GOLF

Pressel up two strokes at LPGA Golfers will prepare to play 36 holes today to conclude the LPGA

Championship,D5

By Richard Rosenblatt The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Palace Malice took charge on the turn for home and wonthe Belmont Stakes on Saturday, holding off Preakness winner Oxbow and Kentucky Derby winner Orb. The win gave Todd Pletcher his second Belmont win in six years and vindicated the trainer's support of a 3-yearold who came into the final leg

of the Triple Crown with only one victory. Palace Malice, who finished 12th in the Derby and skipped the Preakness, covered the I t/2miles in a slow 2 minutes, 30.70 seconds on a fast track following a 24hour downpour. The colt won by 3'/4 lengths after passing pacesetter Oxbow. Orb made a late move but came up far short and finished third. See Belmont/D6

Juho Cortez/The Associated Press

The Miami Heat may be on top of the basketball world, but there's no joy unless they stay there. "Playoffs ain't fun, man. I'm sorry to bust anyone on the outside's bubble," Miami's Dwyane Wade said. "As a player in the playoffs, you have no joy until it's over and you won. If you don't win, you have no joy for a while." Down 1-0 after a record regularseason that goes for naught without another title, the Heat can turn their moods around with a victory over San Antonio tonight in Game 2. Back in the finals for a third straight year, the Heat have lost some of the ability to enjoy the ride. With exorbitant expectations, all that matters is the destination. But San Antonio, absent from this stage for six years, is soaking up what could be its last shot for Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili. After all, Duncan is pretty ancient — at least, according to those wise-cracking Spurs. "Older than dirt," coach Gregg Popovich called him this week. Parker listed him at age 50 — Duncan is actually 37 — and the repeated ribbing appears almost out of characterfor a franchise that was often considered the definition of basketball blandness. "My friends and everybody on the team, we get like the funny Instagram doctored-up photos or jokes where they're making fun of how old some of the people on our team are who shall remain nameless," reserve Matt Bonner said. "And we get a kick out of that." SeeFinals /D5

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NBAFinals Game 2SanAntonioSpurs at Miami Heat

• When:Today, 5 p.m. • Tv:ABC


D2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY

COREBOARD

GOLF

European Tour, LyonessOpen PGATour, St. Jude Classic

PGA Tour, St. JudeClassic LPGATour,LPGA Championship Champions Tour, RegionsTradition TENNIS French Open, men's final, Rafael Nadal vs. David Ferrer BASEBALL

6 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon Noon

Golf Golf CBS Golf Golf

4:30 p.m.

6 a.m.

NBC

10 a.m.

ESPN

10 a.m.

ESPNU TBS

College, Super Regional, North Carolina vs. South Carolina

College, Super Regional, Florida State vs. Indiana MLB,LosAngelesAngelsatBoston College, Super Regional, Vanderbilt vs. Louisville

College, Super Regional, Rice vs. North Carolina State MLB, New York Yankees at Seattle

College, Super Regional, LSU vs. Oklahoma College, Super Regional, Virginia vs. Mississippi State MLB, St. Louis at Cincinnati

10:30 a.m.

1 p.m.

ESPN

1 p.m. 1 p.m.

ESPNU Root

4 p.m.

ESPN2

4 p.m.

5 p.m.

ESPNU ESPN

7 p.m.

ESPN2

College, Super Regional, UCLA vs. Cal State Fullerton

College, Super Regional, Oregon State vs. Kansas State MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR, Sprint Cup,

7 p.m. ESPNU, KICE-AM 940

Party in the Poconos400 Formula One,CanadianGrand Prix

10 a.m.

TNT NBC

11 a.m.

CYCLING

Criterium Dauphine Libere (taped)

2 p.m.

NBCSN

NBA, finals, SanAntonio at Miami

5 p.m.

ABC

HOCKEY NHL, playoffs, Boston at Pittsburgh

5 p.m.

NBCSN

BASKETBALL

MONDAY BASEBALL College, SuperRegional, teamsTBD College, Super Regional, teamsTBD College, Super Regional, teamsTBD College, Super Regional, teams TBD MLB, Boston atTamp aBay MLB, Houston at Seattle

1 0 a.m. 1 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m.

ESP N2 ESPN2 ESPN2 ESP N U ESPN Root

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by Nor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOCCER Timders get 2-2 tie with Fire — Substitute Daniel Paladini scored on a 26-yard free kick in the 82nd minute to lift the Chicago Fire into a 2-2 draw with the Portland Timbers on Saturday night in Bridgeview,

III. Chicago (3-7-3, 12 points) also got an open-net goal from

The defending champion didn't look overly troubled in the third bout between them, so there

was somesurprise whenjudge Lahcen Oumghar of the Netherlands scored it114-114. But

Deon Dwarte of SouthAfrica and John Madfis of the United States agreed Huck won, scoring it115-

113 and117-111,respectively.

Mike Magee in the 68th minute

in coming back from a 2-0 second-half deficit to extend its unbeaten run to three games.

Portland (5-1-8, 23 points) stretched its unbeaten streak

to12 games, not having lost since a 2-1 decision to Montreal

on March 9. Timbers forward Diego Valeri scored in the 34th minute when his shot hit the left

post and ricocheted right and past Fire goalkeeper SeanJohnson into the far corner. Portland

also got a goal in the 58th minutewhen Ben Zemanski lined a 25-yard shot past Johnson.

HOCKEY OilerS fire COaCh —Ralph Krueger was fired Saturday as coach of the Edmonton Oilers after leading the team to a12thplace finish in the Western Con-

ference in his lone season.The Oilers have missed the playoffs

MOTOR SPORTS Allmendinger returning 'tO NASCAII —AJ Allmend-

inger will replace NASCAR driv-

er Bobby Labonte next weekat Michigan International Speedway for JTG Daugherty Racing.

Allmendinger could drive even more Cup races for the struggling race team. Labonte, the 2000 Cup champion, is 28th in

the Sprint Cup points standings and hasn't finished better than 15th in a race.

CYCLING Sanchez takes seventh

Stage Of CriteriIIm —Spanish veteran Samuel Sanchez won the seventh stage of the Criterium du Dauphine race

on Saturday in Superdevoluy, France, and British rider Chris

Froome kept the yellow jersey with one stage remaining. The 19-22-7 in the lockout-shortened 35-year-old Sanchez held off season. Danish rider JakobFuglsang to secure his 32nd career win and seven straight years. Theywere

BOXING Maidana stops Lopezin 6th I'OUlld —Argentina's Marcos Maidana stoppedJo-

sesito Lopez late in the sixth round of their welterweight bout Saturday night in Carson, Calif., finishing a tumultuous fight with a furious rally for his third straight victory. Cuba's

Erislandy Lara also survived the first two knockdowns of

his career and stopped Alfredo Angulo in the10th round of a similarly sensational 154-pound bout that thrilled a sellout crowd

outdoors at HomeDepot Center. Maidana (34-3, 31 KOsj absorbed ample punishment from Lopez in a back-and-forth meeting of two willing brawlers, with

Lopez particularly dominating the fourth round.

Huck retainsWBOcruiser beli —German cruiserweight

Marco Huck retained the WBO title, outpointing Britain's Ola Afo-

labi on Saturday night in Berlin.

97th podium place. Sanchezfinished in 5 hours, 26 minutes, 14

secondsoverthemountainous 116 miles from Le Pont-de-Claix

to Superdevoluy. Fuglsang had the same time andAustralian rider Richie Porte was15 seconds back in third.

BASEBALL Yankees' pick sorry for CraCk —A high school pitcher taken by the New York Yankees in the first round of the Major

League Baseball draft is apologizing for comments that barbed the team. Ian Clarkin was picked

Thursday night. Right after being chosen, MLB Network showed a video in which the 18year-old from California said he

"cannot stand"theYankees.On a conference call Friday, Clarkin said he wassorry. Hesaid the remarks were taken out of context and meant to tease his mother, a Yankees fan. — From wire reports

Eastern Conference

RUNNING Run BabyRun Saturday in Madras Men's10K Run

U-40 1, Ben Anderson,46:10 40-over — 1, MarkScholgalla, 47:40. 2, Walt Carter, I:06:58. Women's 10KRun

U-40 — 1, JamieHurd, 46:13. 2 (tie), Cecilia Campos,1:10:52;Kari Campos, 1:10:52. 40-over No entries Men's BKRun U-40 — I, MikeyAlire, 34:50. 2, LincolnDelamarter, 36:54. 3, Scott Delamarter,36:58 4, Ryan Gwigim,46:01. 40-over — 1,Rich Lohman,27:58.2,JoelKent,

Atlanta Chicago Washington NewYork Connecticut Indiana

W 4 3 3 2 1

L 0 1 1 2 3

I

3

W 2 2 2

L 1 I 1

1

2

1 1

3 5

Pct GB 1.000 .750 1

Western Conference

Los Angeles Minnesota SanAntonio Seattle Phoenix Tulsa

.750 1 500 2 .250 3 .250 3

Pct GB 667 .667 .667

.333 1 .250 tr/r ,167 2r/r

Saturday's Games

29:37

Women's 5KRun U-40 — I, RachelSimmons,24:04. 2, Steele Jasa, 32:08.3, JaydenDavis, 32:12. 4, RachelKent, 32:15. 5,SaraJoyVaeth,35:57. 6, BrookeDelamarter, 37:320 .7,RylanDavis,37:43.8,LeslieDavis,37:44. 9, KristineDelamarter,37:48. 40-over — 1,CherieSimmons, 30.10.2, Eugenia Alire, 35:06. 3,PamGwigim,46:00. 4, NancySeyler, 47:56.

Men's 5KWalk U-40 — 1,KevinSemm,57:11. 40-over — 1,WaltChamberlain, 3946 2, Brad Robertson,53:58. 3, VrcDelamarter, 55:03. 4, Ray Gabaldon, 55:09. 5, DeanGertner,1:11:32. Women's BK Walk U-40 — 1,JuanitaMajel,53:57. 2,MandyFessler, 57:09. 3,Molly Semm,(timenotavailable). 40-over — 1, CherylLohman,42:54. 2, Kathy Snyder,51:36.3, TenaJackson, 51:37 4, NylaDelamarter,55:03. 5,NancyHume,55:09. 6,Kristy Gabaldon, 57.09.7,MaryLouGertner, 1:11:31.

Three Sisters Marathon Saturday atEagleCrest Resort, Redmond Individuals I,ChuckEngle,324 01.2,JoshHenle,3 3135.3, NikoleCrafton,3.41.44. 4, Gregory Stevens,3.47:49. 5, ChrisHagen,3:57:12.6, Emily Nemeth, 357:36. 7, JamesCristini,4:07:57.8,Tonya Koopman,4:27:31. 9,Kathyl.ein,427:32.10,John Foley,4:32:39. 11, MichellyFoley,4:32:40.12, Jeff Shaw,4:38:35. 13, AllysonBurk,5:18:29. 14,KathrynBurk,5:18:30. 15, CiaraBelcastro, 5:20:35.16, LeeLarson, 5.20:35. 17, PaulDuffin, 5:4351.18, SonjaNormann,6.24.38. 19, Stephen Hamilton, 6:24:40. 2-RunnerTeams 1, SwiftShopMoms,3:41:32 4-RunnerTeams 1, PYT,3.49:56. 2, Redm ond Veterinary Clinic, 3:58.16. 3,ScreamingEagles,4:18:33.

Phoenix82, Indiana67 Washington85,Minnesota80 Los Angeles76,Tulsa 69,DT

Today's Games AtlantaatNewYork, noon SanAntonioatChicago, 3p.m.

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEYLEAGUE AU Times PDT CONFERENCE FINALS

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERNCONFERENCE Boston 4, Pittsburgh 0

Saturday,June1: Boston3, Pittsburgh0 Monday,June3: Boston6, Pittsburgh1 Wednesday,June5: Boston 2, Pittsburgh1, 2DT Friday June7: Boston1, Pittsburgh0 WESTERNCONFERENCE

Chicago 4,LosAngeles1 Saturday,JuneI: Chicago2, LosAngeles I Sunday,June2: Chicago4, LosAngeles2 Tuesday,June4: LosAngeles3, Chicago1 Thursday,June6: Chicago3, LosAngeles1 Saturday,June8: Chicago4, LosAngeles4, 2DT STANLEY CUPFINALS

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Boston vs. Chicago Wednesd ay,June12:BostonatChicago,5 p.m. Saturday,June15:BostonatChicago,5 p.m. Monday, June17:ChicagoatBoston,5p.m. Wednesd ay,June19:ChicagoatBoston,5p.m. x-Sat urday,June22:BostonatChicago,5p.m. x-Monday ,June24:ChicagoatBoston,5p.m. x-Wedne sday,June26:BostonatChicago,5p.m.

TENNIS

College

Professional

x-if necessary

Host school is Game 1 hometeam; visiting school is Game 2 hometeam; coin flip determinesGame3hometeam At BoshamerStadium Chapel Hill, N.C. Friday,June7: South Carolinavs. NorthCarolina, ppd., rain Saturday, June8. North Carolina6, South Carolina5 Today,June 9: SouthCarolina(42-20) SouthCarolina vs. NorthCarolina(56-9), 10a.m Monday,June10:x-South Caroinavs. North Carolina, TBA At Doak Field Raleigh, N.C. Friday,June7: Ricevs. N.c. State,ppd.,rain Saturday, June8: NC. State4, Rice 3 Today,June9: Rice(44-19) vs. N.C.State(48-14), 1 p.m. Monday,June10 Ricevs. N.CStateTBA At Alex BoxStadium Baton Rouge,La. Frid ay,June7:LSU2,Oklahoma0 Saturday, June8: LSU11, Dklahoma1 At Goodwin Field Fuuerton, Calif. Friday,June7: UCLA5, CalState-Fugerton3, 10in-

I.K. Kim

Sue Kim AlisonWalshe Ai Miyazato Mo Martin KathleenEkey PaigeMackenzie MelissaReid MariajoUribe LaurenDoughtie CandieKung Jeong Jang

Champions Tour

BASEBALL NCAADivision I Super Regional All Times PDT Best-of-3

70-74 — 144 70-74 144 74-71—145 73-72—145 73-72 — 145 73-72 — 145 72-73 — 145 71-74 — I45 71-74 — 145 71-74 — 145 75-71 146 75-71—146 75-71—146 75-71—146 75-71 146 74-72—146 74-72 — I46 72-74 — 146 72-74 — 146 77-70 — 147 76-71—147 76-71—147 75-72 — 147 75-72 147 75-72—147 73-74—147 78-70—148 78-70—148 77-71—148 77-71—148 77-71—148 76-72 — 148 76-72 148 75-73—148 74-74—148 74-74—148 74-74 —148 74-74 —148 74-74 — I48 78-71 — 149 78-71 — 149 77-72 149 76-73—149 75-74—149 75-74—149 75-74—149 75-74—149 75-74 — I49 74-75 — 149 77-73 — 150 76 74 150 76-74 — 150 76-74—150 76-74 — 150 75-75 150 75-75—150 72-78—150

JessicaKorda Se RiPak BeatrizRecari NicoleCastrale VickyHurst KristyMcPhe rson SuzannPetersen Mi JungHur RheeLee AnnaNordqvist CarlotaCiganda MoiraDunn BrittanyLang Mi HyangLee HeeYoungPark StacyLewis Lisa Mccloskey Pornanong Phatlum YaniTseng a-l.ydiaKo PaulaCreamer JenniferRosales DaniegeKang CristieKerr Ji YoungDh HaejiKang JacquiConcolino JennyShin CarolineHedwaI Mika Miyazato BelenMozo Giulia Sergas KarrieWebb LauraDiaz MoriyaJutanugarn LorieKane AmeliaLewis PaolaMoreno JanePark Lisa Ferrero MarcyHart TiffanyJoh AyakoUehara Breanna Egiott MinaHarigae

FrenchOpen Saturday At Stade RolandGarros Paris Purse: $28.4million (GrandSlam) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Women Championship SerenaWilliams (1), United States, def. Maria Sharapova (2), Russia, 6-4, 6-4.

GOLF PGA Tou

St Jude Classic Saturday At TPCSouthwin Memphis, Tenn Purse: $5.7 mill1oll Yardage: 7,230; P ar: 70 Third Round 67-65-66—198 ShawnStefani 66-64-69—199 HarrisEnglish 69-69-64—202 PatrickReed 67-69-66—202 NicholasThompson 67-68-67—202 Scott Stagings Phil Mickelson 71-67-65—203 68-69-66—203 Eric Meierdierks 69-70-65—204 nings PadraigHarrington 72-67-65—204 Saturday, June8: UCLA3, CalStateFugerton 0 RyanPalmer At Dick HowserStadium RobertoCastro 68-69-67 204 Tallahassee, Fla. JonathanByrd 70-69-66—205 Saturday, June8: Indiana10, FloridaState9 John Rogins 67-71-67—205 Today,June9: Indiana(47-14) vs. FloridaState(47- lan Poulter 69-68-68—205 BenCrane 69-68 68—205 16), 10a.m. Monday,June10:x-Indianavs. Florida State, 10a.m. DustinJohnson 67-70-68—205 At Davenport Field Justin Hicks 67-69-69—205 Charlottesville, Va. PaulHaley0 67-68-70—205 Saturday, June8: Mississippi State11,Virginia 6 BrandtJobe 69-71-66—206 Today, June9. Mississippi State(47-18) vs.Virginia Brendon Todd 69-71-66—206 (47-11), 4p.m. John Merrick 69-71-66—206 Monday, June10: x-Mississippi Statevs. Virginia,1 Justin Leonard 69-71-66—206 KevinStadler 69-70-67—206 p.m. At Hawkins Field Nick 0'Hern 68-71-67—206 Nashville, Tenn. Jim Herma n 69-69-68—206 Saturday, June8: Louisville 5, Vanderbilt 3 CharlesHowell 01 71-67-68—206 Today, June9: Louisville (50-12) vs.Vanderbilt (54Billy Mayfair 68-70-68—206 11),1 p.m. PeterHanson 67-71-68—206 Monday, June10:x-l.ouisvigevs. Vanderbilt, 7p.m. RorySabba tini 69-69-68—206 At GossStadium CamiloVigegas 69-68-69—206 Corvauis Martin Flores 66-72-68—206 Saturday,June8: Kansas State 6, OregonState2,10 Bob Estes 68-69-69—206 innings ChezReavie 69-68-69—206 Today,June9: KansasState (45-7) vs.OregonState DougLaBege0 70-66-70—206 (48-11),7 pm. GlenDay 66-70-70—206 Monday, June10:x-KansasStatevs.OregonState, MarkWilson 70-71-66—207 4 p.m. DavidHearn 69-71-67—207 Vaughn Taylor 72-67-68—207 Corvauis SuperRegional, Game1 BrendondeJonge 70-69-68—207 (10 innings) BooWeekley 68-69-70—207 Kansas St. 0 0 0 001 001 4 — 6 131DavisLoveIII 66-70-71—207 Oregon St. 0 0 0 200 000 0 — 2 7 2 RobertAgenby 71-70-67—208 TagRidings 70-71-67—208 Jerry Kelly 69-71-68—208 WCL Billy Horschel 71-69 68—208 Robert Karl s son 69-69-70—208 WESTCOASTLEAGUE DavidToms 67-71-70—208 69-69-70—208 League standings Scott Brown 67-70-71 208 North Division JasonBohn 68-73-68—209 BradFritsch 69-71-69—209 VictoriaHarbourcats BrianDavis 74-66-69—209 Be lingham Bells W 0 2 3 ScottVerplank 68-71-70—209 WenatcheeAppleSox Joe Affrunti 66-71-72—209 WallaWallaSweets StuartAppleby 69-72-69—210 KelownaFalcons J.J. Henry 72-69-69—210 South Division TomGigis 69-72-69—210 W L SteveFlesch 70-67-73—210 CowlitzBlackBears 3 1 LukeGuthrie 71-70-70—211 MedfordRogues 2 2 CameronTringale 68-73-70—211 BendElks 2 2 RussellHenley 71-68-72—211 KitsapBlueJackets 1 2 AndresGonzales 67 72-72 211 CorvagisKnights 1 3 Tim Petrovic 72-67-72—211 KlamathFalls Gems 0 2 RobertStreb 70-68-73—211 Saturday'sGames StephenAmes 69-72-71—212 Begingham 5, KlamathFalls 4 GaryWoodland 70-71-71 212 Cowlitz 3,Corvagis1 BrianGay 69-72-71—212 MedfordatKitsap, lategame Jeff Dverton 69-71-72—212 Bend 6,Kelowna4 Jeff Maggert 71-68-73—212 Today'sGames Arjun Atwal 72-69-72—213 MedfordatKitsap,1:35 p.m. Lee Wiliams CorvagisatCowlitz, 5:05p.m. BenKohles 71-70-72—213 Begingham atKlamath Falls, 5:05p.m. GeorgeCoetzee 71-67-75—213 69-69-75—213 Bendat Kelowna,6.05p.m. D.J. Trahan ChadCampbell 70-71-73—214 Saturday's Linescore KevinSutherland 70-71-73—214 RussellKnox 70-68-76—214 NathanGreen 66-75-74—215 Elks 6, Falcons 4 John Daly 71-69-76—216 Bend 103 100 010 — 6 11 1 Kelowna 021 000 100 — 4 7 2 LPGA Tour Gartner,Huckins(7), Highberger(7) andWildung, Wegmans Championship Mouton,Rice(4), Dunnington(8)andJohnson. WSaturday Gartner. L Mouton 2B Bend: Dixon;Kelowna At Locust Hill Country Club Tracy.HR—Kelowna: Tracy. Pittsford, N.Y. Purse: 2.25 million Yardage: 6,534; Par72 BASKETBALL SecondRoundqualifiers a-denotes amateur NBA MorganPressel 68-70 — 138 NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION InbeePark 72 68—140 All Times PDT ChellaChoi 67-73 — I40 SarahJaneSmith 72-69—141 NBA FINALS AmyYang 71-70 — 141 San Antonio1, Miami 0 Jiyai Shin 68-73—141 Thursad y,June6:SanAntonio92,Mi ami88 SunYoungYoo 73-69—142 Today,June9 SanAntonio atMiami,5 p.m Na YeonChoi 72-70 — I42 Tuesday,June11:Miami atSanAntonio6 p.m. CatrionaMatthew 71-71 — 142 Thursday, June13: Miamiat SanAntonio, 6p.m. AngelaStanford 71-71 — 142 x Sunday, June16: MiamiatSanAntonio,5p m. BrittanyLincicome 69-73 — 142 x-Tuesday, June18. SanAntonio atMiami, 6p.m. CarolineMasson 74-69 — I43 x-Thursday,June20:SanAntonio atMiami, 6p.m. Chie Arimura 71-72 — 143 Michege Wie 76-68—144 ShanshanFeng 74-70—144 WNBA DanahBordner 73-71—144 WOMEN'SNATIONAL PernigaLindberg 73-71—144 BASKETBALLASSOCIATION Eun-Hee Ji 72-72 — 144 AU Times PDT 71-73 144 LauraDavies 71-73 — 144 Lexi Thomp son

The Tradition Saturday At Shoal Cree k Birmingham, A la. Purse: $2.2 million Yardage: 7,231; P ar72 Third Round David Frost 68-70 66 204 66-71-68—205 FredCouples Morris Hatalsky 71-68-67—206 MichaelAllen 68-69-69—206 DuffyWaldorf 67-68-71—206 70-69-69—208 EstebanToledo 72-67-69—208 Scott Hoch 69-69-70—208 Bart Bryant 69-69-70—208 LorenRoberts 65-71-72 208 Jeff Sluman 69-73-67—209 KennyPerry 69-71-69—209 TomLehman 71-68-70—209 RussCochran 69-70-70—209 DavidEger 70-68-71—209 John Cook 70-68-71—209 Mike Goodes 68-74-68—210 CoreyPavin 71-70-69—210 Kirk Triplett 68-69-73 210 Mark Calcavecchia 71-66-73—210 Rod Spittle 72-70-69—211 Larry Mize 72-69-70—211 GeneSauers 72-67-72—211 Fred Funk 67-71-73—211 PeterSenior 73-69-70—212 Jeff Hart 70-71-71—212 Barry Lane 69-72-71—212 TomJenkins 72-68-72 212 Jim Thorpe 71-71-71—213 Jay DonBlake 71-71-71—213 Jay Haas 75-67-71—213 Neal Lancaster 71-70-72 213 SteveElkington Bob Tway 69-71-73—213 Bill Glasson 72-73-69—214 70-73-71—214 Mark Brooks 72-71-71—214 RoccoMediate Mark 0'Meara 73-70-71—214 Mark McNulty 69-74-71—214 Willie Wood 71-70-73—214 Chip Beck 72-75-68—215 RogerChapman 70-76 69 215 BernhardLanger 71-73-71—215 BruceVaughan 71-72-72—215 Mark Mouland 70-73-72—215 Jim Gallagher, Jr. 70-73-72—215 Craig Stadler 71-75-70—216 Hal Sutton 73-72-71—216 TomPerniceJr. 70-75-71—216 ChienSoonLu 70-74-72—216 AndrewMagee 73-74-70 217 TomKite 74-72-71—217 StevePate 72-71-74—217 Hale Irwin 71-76-71—218 DanForsman 71-73-74—218 Mike Reid 72-71-75—218 Gary Hallberg 80-70-69—219 Larry Nelson 78-71-70—219 BruceFleisher 73-73-73—219 Jerry Pate 74-71-74 219 BaineMccallister 72-73-74—219 Scott Simpson 71-72-76—219

Joe Daley Jim Rutledge Mark Wiebe Dick Mast Don Pooley Wayne Levi Joel Edwards GeneJones BradFaxon Bob Gilder BobbyClampet Gil Morgan SandyLyle BobbyWadkins TomPurtzer DanaQuigley Jeff Freemna PeterJacobsen

71-72-76—219 75-73-72 220 69-77-74—220 69-76-75—220 73-71-76—220 73-71-76—220 74-75-72 221 71-76-74—221 77-74-71—222 69-81-73—223 74-75-74 223 74-78-72—224 78-72-74—224 71-77-76—224 74-77-75—226 74-80-75—229 79-81-75—235 73-71 — WD

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Party in the Poconos400Lineup After Friday qualifying; racetoday At PoconoRaceway Long Pond,Pa. Lap length: 2.5 miles (Car number inparentheses) 1 (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 2 (99) CarlEdwardsFordownerpoints 3. (15)ClintBowyer,Toyota, ownerpoints. 4. (20)MattKenseth, Toyota, ownerpoints. 5 (29) KevinHarvick,Chevrolet, ownerpoints 6. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 7. (5) Kasey Kahne,Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 8. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota, ownerpoints. 9. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 10 (2) Brad Keseowski, Ford, ownerpoints. 11. (24)Jeff Gordon,Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 12. (43)Aric Almirola, Ford,ownerpoints. 13. (16)GregBiffle, Ford,ownerpoints. 14 (55) MarkMartin, Toyota,owner points. 15. (56)MartinTruexJr., Toyota, ownerpoints. 16. (17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,ownerpoints. 17. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota,ownerpoints. 18. (51) AJAgmendinger, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 19 (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 20. (78)KurtBusch,Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 21. (22)JoeyLogano,Ford,ownerpoints. 22. (1)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 23 (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 24. (31)Jeft Burton,Chevrolet, ownerpornts. 25. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya,Chevrolet, owner points. 26 (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford,ownerpoints. 27 (13) Casey Mears, Ford, owner points. 28.(34) DavidRagan, Ford,ownerpoints. 29.(47) Bobby Labonte,Toyota,ownerpoints. 30. (10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet,ownerpoints. 31 (38) DavidGigiland, Ford,ownerpoints. 32. (7)DaveBlaney, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 33. (30)DavidStremme,Toyota, ownerpoints. 34. (83)DavidReutimann, Toyota, ownerpoints. 35 (36) J.J.Yeley,Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 36 (35) Josh Wise, Ford,owner points.

37. (33)LandonCassig, Chevrolet, attempts. 38 (32) TimmyHil, Ford,attempts 39. (93)TravisKvapil,Toyota,attempts. 40. (87)JoeNemechek, Toyota, attempts. 41. (98)MichaelMcDoweg, Ford, attempts. 42 (19) JasonLeffler,Toyota,attempts. 43. (44)ScottRiggs,Ford,attempts.

IndyCar Firestone 550 Saturday At TexasMotorSpeedway Fort Worth, Texas Lap length: 1.5 miles (Starting position in parentheses) 1. (6) Helio Castroneves,Dagara-chevrolet, 228, Running. 2.(3) RyanHunter-Reay, Dagara-chevrolet,228 Running. 3.(13) Tony Kanaan, Dagara-chevrolet,228, Running. 4.(9) EdCarpenter, Dagara-chevrolet,228, Running. 5. (2) MarcoAndretti, Dagara-chevrolet, 228,Running. 6.(4) DarioFranchitti, Dagara-Honda,227,Running. 7. (1)Wil Power,Dalara-chevrolet,227, Running. 8. (7) JosefNew garden, Dagara-Honda, 227, Runnrng. 9 (12) JamesHinchclifte Dagara-Chevrolet 227 Running. 10.(5) E.J.Viso, Dagara-chevrolet, 227,Running. 11. (21)TakumaSato, Dalara-Honda, 227,Running. 12. (10)JamesJakes, Dagara-Honda227, Running. 13. (23)SimonPagenaud, Dagara-Honda,226, Running. 14. (18)SebastianSaavedra, Dalara-Chevro et, 226, Running. 15.(20)JustinWilson,Dagara-l-londa,226,Running. 16. (22)SimonadeSilvestro, Dagara-chevrolet, 226, Running. I7.(8) CharlieKimbag,Dagara-Honda,226,Running. 18.(24) Tristan Vautier, Dagara-Honda,225, Running. 19. (16) Driol ServiaDagara-chevrol , et,225, Running. 20.(15) SebastienBourdais, Dallara-chevrolet, 224, Running. 21.(17)GrahamRahal, Dagara-Honda,223,Running. 22.(14) AlexTagliani, Dagara-Honda,223,Running. 23.(11)ScottDixon,Dalara-Honda,61, Mechanical. 24.(19) Pippa Mann, Dagara-Honda,2, Mechanical.

Race Statistics Winners averagespeed: 177257. Time of Race: I:52:17.4594 Margin of Victory: 4.6919 seconds.

Formula 1 CanadianGrandPrix Lineup After Saturdayqualifying; racetoday At Circuit GigesViueneuve Montreal, Canada Lap length: 2.71 miles Third Session 1. SebastianVettel, Germany, RedBul, 1 minute, 25.425seconds. 2. LewisHamilton, England,Mercedes,1:25.512. 3. Valtteri Bottas,Finland,Wiliams,1:25.897. 4. NicoRosberg,Germany, Mercedes,1:26.008. 5. MarkWebber, Austraia, RedBull,1:26.208 6. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari,1:26.504.

7. Jean-EricVergne,France,Toro Rosso,1:26.543. 8. AdrianSutil, Germ any, ForceIndia,1:27.348. Eliminated after secondsession 9. NicoHulkenberg,Germany, Sauber, I:29.435.

10. KimiRaikkonen,Finland, Lotus,1:27.432. 11. DanieRi l cciardo,Australia, ToroRosso,1:27.946. 12. SergioPerez,Mexico, McLaren,1:29.761. 13. Pastor Maldonado, Venezuela, Williams, 1.29.91 7.

14. Jenson Buton, England, McLaren,1:30.068. 15. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber,1:30315. 16. FelipeMassa, Brazrl, Ferrari,1:30.354. Eliminated after first session 17. Pauldi Resta, Scotland, ForceIndia,124.908. 18. CharlePi s c, France,Caterham,1:25.626. 19. JulesBianchi, France,Marussia,1:26.508. 20. MaxChilton, England,Marussia,1:27.062. 21. Giedovander Garde, Netherlands,Caterham , 1'27.110.

22. RomainGrosjean, France,l.otus,1:25.716.

SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT

Eastern Conference

W L T P t sGF GA Montreal 8 2 2 26 22 15 NewYork 7 5 4 25 23 19 Philadelphia 6 5 4 22 22 24 6 4 4 22 19 14 Houston S porting KansasCity 6 5 4 2 2 18 13 NewEngland 5 4 5 20 15 9 4 5 5 17 16 16 Columbus 3 7 3 12 11 19 Chicago TorontoFC 1 7 5 8 12 19 D.C. I 10 3 6 6 24 Western Conference W L T P t sGF GA FC Dallas 8 2 4 28 23 17 RealSaltLake 8 5 3 27 24 16 Portland 5 1 8 23 24 16 Seattle 6 4 3 21 19 15 l.os Angele s 6 6 2 20 22 18 Colorado 5 4 5 20 15 12 Vancouver 4 5 4 16 18 20 SanJose 3 6 6 1 5 13 23 ChivasUSA 3 8 2 11 13 26 NOTE: Threepoints tor victory, onepoint for tie.

Saturday's Games

NewEngland0, D.C.United 0, tie Chicago 2, Portland2, tie RealSaltLake3,LosAngeles1 Seattle FC 3, Vancouver2 Saturday, June16 FC Dallas at Portland,2 p.m. TorontoFCat D.C. United, 4p.m. Montreal at Columbus 430p m

SanJoseatColorado, 6p.m. NewEnglandat Vancouver, 7pm.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

American League

BALTIMOREDRIDLES—Reinstated RHPPedro Strop fromthe15-dayDL. DptionedLHPMike Bel-

frore toNorfolk (II.) BOSTON REDSDX—ActivatedDFShaneVictorino from the 15-daydisabled list. DptionedDFJackie Bradley Jr. to Pawtucket (IL). CLEVELANDINDIANS— Placed RHP Zach McAllister on the15-day DL,retroactive to June3 Recalled RHPCarlosCarrasco. National League CINCINNATI REDS RecalledRHPCurtis Partch

from Louisvil e(IL). DptionedRHPLogan Dndrusek to Louisville. COLOR ADOROCKIES—ActivatedLHPJeff Francis from the15dayDL.Designated RHPJonGarland for assignment. HOUSTONASTRDS— ClaimedLHP WadeLeBlanc off waiversfromMiami. NEWYORKMETS— CalledupRHPDavidAardsma from Las Vegas(PCI.) DptionedRHPColin McHugh to LasVegas. Recalled DFKirk Nieuwenhuis fromLas Vegas.DesignatedDFRick Ankiel forassignment. PITTSBURGH PIRA TES— Placed RHP Jared Hugheson the15-dayDL, retroactiveto June6. Recalled DF AlexPresley fromIndianapolis (IL). SAN DIEGO PADRES—Recalled RHPBurch Smith

from Tucson(PCL). DptionedRHPBrad Boxbergerto Tucson. HOCKEY

NationalHockeyLeague EDMON TONOILERS—Firedcoach Ralph Krueger. COLLEGE

SOUTHER NCALIFORNIA—Announced the retrrement otRonAgicemen'sandwomen'strackcoach.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelheadandwi d steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 2,744 6 9 9 67 6 The DaUes 2,335 5 4 3 27 6 McNary 91 2 260 11 0 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected Columbia Riverdamslast updatedonFriday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd B onneville 95,605 37,530 3,815 9 9 1 T he DaUes 75,598 33,915 97 4 38 0 J ohn Day 58,053 29,348 1,044 5 0 4 M cNary 51,338 22,033 1,578 7 2 5


SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings All Times PDT

Boston NewYork TampaBay Baltimore Toronto Detroit Cleveland

Minnesota Kansas City Chicago

AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 38 25 .603 36 26 581 1r/t 34 27 .557 3 34 28 548 3'/z 27 34 .443 10

Central Division W 34 30 27

L 26 31 31

Pct GB

.567

.492 4'/t

.466 6 458 6'/~ 433 8

B rkmn1b 5 0 0 0 Bautistrf 8 0 1 0 Beltredh 8 0 1 0 Encrnc1b-3b 6 1 1 0 N cruzrf 6 0 0 0 Linddh 7 1 4 0 J eBakrlf-3b 7 I 2 I Arenciic 8 0 2 0 G.Sotoc 3 0 0 0 CIRsmscf 8 I 3 2 LMartnph-cf 4 1 1 0 Mlzturs 3b-ss 7 0 0 0 Gentrycf 3 0 1 0 Bonifac2b 8 1 2 0 DvMrp ph-If 4 1 1 0 Kawskss 3 0 0 0 LGarci3b 3 0 0 0 DeRosaph-3b2 0 0 0 Przynsph-c 4 0 2 I Tholeph-lb 2 0 0 0 Totals 6 0 3 103 Totals 6 84 153 Texas 000 000 102 000 000 000 — 3 Toronto 003 000 000 000 000 001 — 4 Twooutswhenwinningrunscored

E—Wolf (I), L.Garcia (2), Profar(3), DeRosa (2).

DP — Texas 1, Toronto2. LOB —Texas 17, Toronto 16. 28—Je.Baker (4), Gentry(4), Dav.Murphy(10).

game. Houston

Giaitts10, Diamonddacks 5 ab r bbi

KansasCity ab r bbi

B Barnscf 3 1 1 0 Loughlf 5 1 2 0 Pareds rf 1 0 0 0 AEscorss 5 0 0 0 A ltuve2b 4 0 I I SPerezc 4 2 I I Jcastroc 4 0 1 0 BButlerdh 4 0 I 0 JMrtnzlf 4 0 1 0 Hosmer1b 2 2 2 1

C.Penadh 3 0 0 0 L.caincf 3 1 1 2 CarterIb 3 1 1 1 MTejad3b 4 1 2 1 C rowe rf-cf 3 0 0 0 Francrrf 4 0 I I Dmngz3b 3 0 I 0 EJhnsn2b 3 0 0 0

MGnzlzss 3 0 0 0 Totals 3 1 2 6 2 Totals 3 47 106 Houston 0 00 001 100 — 2

PHOENIX — Buster Posey

capped a six-run fourth inning with a homer and had three RBls, Madison Bumgarner pitched

five effective innings andSan Francisco poundedArizona. Bumgarner (5-4) was sharp early to end a four-game losing streak and added an RBI with a sacrifice bunt in San Francisco's big inning.

Y Molinc 3 1 1 0 Brucerf 4 1 2 1 Freese3b 4 0 1 0 Frazier3b 2 0 0 0 J aycf 3 0 I I M esorcc 4 I 2 2 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Cozartss 4 0 0 0 S iegristp 0 0 0 0 Latosp 2 0 0 0 KButlrp 0 0 0 0 HRdrgzph I 0 0 0 W ggntnph I 0 0 0 Broxtnp 0 0 0 0 Kozmass 4 0 2 0 Chpmnp 0 0 0 0 Lyonsp 2 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 SRonsn cf 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 2 9 2 Totals 3 24 104 St. Louis 0 11 000 000 — 2 C incinnati 010 0 1 2 0 0 x - 4 E—Kozma(2). DP—St. Louis 2 LOB —St. Louis 9, Cincinnati 7. 28 —Beltran (6), YMolina(18), Koz-

ma (10),D.Robinson2 (2), Votto 2(12). HR —Bruce 38 —Col.Rasmus(1). HR —Je.Baker(8). SB—Andrus Kansas 7 (I0), Mesoraco (3). City 2 0 0 3 1 0 10x Arizona San Francisco (15), R.Da vis (9), Bonifacio(7). CS DavMurphy(4). E—Bedard (I), B.Barnes (I), Dominguez (6). St. Louis IP H R E R BB SO West Division S—Profar.SF—Andrus. ab r hbi ab r hbi 51-3 6 4 4 I 2 DP — Houston 1, KansasCity 1. LOB —Houston 3, LyonsL,2-2 W L Pct GB GBlanccf 5 1 2 1 Bimqst2b 4 1 1 1 Texas IP H R E R BB SO Kansas Choate 0 1 0 0 0 0 Ci t y 8. 28 — B.B ar ne s ( 7), Ho sm e r (10), L.cai n Oakland 38 26 .594 Scutaro 2b 4 1 1 1 Pollock cf 5 1 1 I Darvish 7 5 3 2 3 7 (14), Francoeur Maness 1 3 0 0 1 1 (8). HR—Carter (13). Texas 36 25 590 I/2 Cotts 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 Houston M achip 0 0 0 0 Gldschlb 4 0 0 I IP H R E R BB SO Siegrist 2-3 0 0 0 I 2 Los Angeles 27 35 .435 10 Mijaresp 0 0 0 0 C.Rosslf 3 1 1 0 Frasor 1 1 0 0 0 1 BedardL,1-3 KButler 1 0 0 0 0 2 42- 3 8 6 6 3 2 Seattle 27 36 .429 10'/z R.Ross 1231 0 0 1 2 31-3 2 1 1 I 2 P oseyc 4 1 2 3 MMntrc 3 0 2 1 Cincinnati Peacock Houston 22 41 .349 15'/t Wolf L,1-1 62-3 7 1 0 I I Sandovl 3b 2 0 1 0 Prado 3b 3 0 0 0 LatosW,60 7 8 2 2 0 5 KansasCity Toronto BroxtonH,11 1 0 0 0 I I E.SantanaW,4-5 7 5 2 2 0 6 A rias3b 3 0 0 0 GParrarf 2 0 1 0 Saturday'sGames 7 4 1 1 2 3 J.Gutierrez Pence rf 5 3 2 1 Pnngtn ph 1 1 1 0 Buehrle Chapman S, 1 6-18 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 L.A. Angel9, s Boston5, 1stgame Belt 1b 5 1 3 0 Gregrs ss 3 0 0 0 Choatepitchedto1batter in the6th. DelabarH,2 1 1 0 0 1 1 HBP —byPeacock(S.Perez), byE.Santana(C.Pena). Toronto4,Texas3, 18innings AnTrrslf 3 1 0 1 Nieves ph 1 0 0 0 JanssenBS,1-13 1 2 2 2 1 0 T—2:51.A—28,055(37,903). HBP by Chapma n(M.carpenter). WP Latos. Minnesota 4, Washington 3, 11innings B crwfrss 5 1 4 1 Cahigp 0 0 0 0 McGowan 13 0 0 0 1 1 T—2:56.A—40,740(42,319). Detroit 6,Cleveland4 B mgrnp 1 1 0 1 Cgmntrp 0 0 0 0 J.Perez 2 1 0 0 I I Tampa Bay8, Baltimore 0 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 Tigers 6, indians 4 RRmrzp 0 0 0 0 JoWilsnph 1 1 1 0 Wagner Brewers 4, Phillies 3 N.Y.Yankees3, Seattle I J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 WHarrsp 0 0 0 0 Cecil 1 0 0 0 0 1 Chicago WhiteSox4, Oakland1 Abreuph-2b 2 0 0 0 Hinskeph 1 0 0 0 Lincoln 4 1 0 0 1 3 DETROIT — Prince Fielder hit Kansas City 7, Houston2 DHrndzp 0 0 0 0 LoupW,3-3 1 1 0 0 0 0 MILWAUKEE — Jean Segura Boston 7,LA Angels 2 2ndgame HBP —by McGowan (N.cruz), byLincoln (L.Martin, a bases-clearing double in the Sippp 00 0 0 homered andJonathan Lucroy Today's Games Kubelph 1 0 0 0 Je.Baker), byLoup(Pierzynski). WP —Buehrle, Delasecond inning and Detroit held on Texas (Grimm5-4) atToronto(Jo.Johnson0-2), 10:07 bar. Bal— T otals 3 9 10159 Totals 3 2 5 8 4 hit a tiebreaking RBI double in the k Wagner. to beat Cleveland. The AL Centrala.m. T—5:28. A—44,079(49,282). San Francisco 020 601 100 — 10 sixth inning, lifting Milwaukee to Cleveland(Masterson8-4) at Detroit (Alvarez0-0), leading Tigers have won the first Arizona 0 00 004 001 — 5 10:08a.m. E—MMontero (1). DP Arizona 1. LOB—San a win over Philadelphia. Domonic two games of the series to build a LA. Angels(Banton1-9) at Boston(Dempster 3-6), White Sox 4, Athietics1 Francisco 9,Arizona6. 28 G Blanco2 (8), Pence Brown hit his NL-leading 19th 10:35a.m. season-high 4/a-game leadover (17), B.crawford(13), Bloomquist (3), Pollock(17), home run, and had a two-run Minnesota(Diamond4-4) at Washington(ZimmerM.Montero(7). HR —Posey (8), Pence(10). SBCHICAGO — John Danks pitched the Indians. mann8-3), 10:35a.m.,1stgame Pence 2 (12). S — B um g arn er, C a hi g . SF — An .T orr es, double in the eighth to account for three-hit ball over eight innings Baltimore (Tilman5-2) atTampaBay (M.Moore8-1), M.Montero Cleveland Detroit all of the Phillies' runs. 10:40a.m. for his first victory in more than a San Francisco I P H R E R BB SO ab r hbi ab r hbi Houston(Harreg4-7) at KansasCity (Mendoza1-3), year, and Chicago Bumgamer W ,5-4 5 5 3 3 1 4 won for just the B ourncf 4 1 1 0 Dirks f 5 1 2 2 R.Ramirez 11:10a.m. 2-3 0 I 0 2 0 Philadelphia Milwaukee Kipnis2b 3 0 I I TrHntrrf 4 I I 0 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Oakland(Griffin5-4)atChicagoWhite Sox(H Santiago second time in12 games, beating J.Lopez Swisher1b 4 0 0 0 Micarr3b 3 1 I 0 M Yong 3b 4 1 3 0 Aokirf 3010 1-4),11:10a.m. Machi 2 1 0 0 0 2 surgingOakland.Adam Dunn and Brantlylf 4 0 0 0 Fielder1b 5 0 2 3 Frndsn 1b 4 1 2 0 Segura ss 4 2 2 1 N.Y.Yankees(D.Phelps 4-3) at Seattle(FHernandez Mijares 1 2 1 1 0 2 MrRynl3b 4 0 0 0 VMrtnzdh 4 0 1 0 Paul Konerko homered. Alex Rios R ogins ss 4 0 2 0 BraunIf 4 I 31 7-4),1:10p.m. Arizona CSantndh 3 1 1 0 JhPerltss 4 1 2 0 Minnesota(Deduno 2-1) at Washington (Karns0-1), drove in the go-ahead run, andthe 3 2-3 9 8 8 1 3 DYongrf 4 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 4 1 2 0 Cahili L,3-7 Y Gomsc 3 1 1 0 Avilac 2 1 0 0 2 1-3 I 1 I 2 3 D Brwnlf 4 1 2 3 Lucroyc 3 0 1 1 4:05 p.m.,2ndgame Cogmenter White Sox handed the Athletics Raburnrf 4 I I 3 Intante2b 4 I 2 0 W.Harris Monday's Games I 3 1 1 1 0 Mayrrycf 3 0 0 0 CGomzcf 4 0 1 1 Aviles ss 4 0 0 0 AGarci cf 4 0 1 0 L.A. Angelsat Baltimore,4:05 p.m. just their fourth loss in 22 games. Totals 3 3 4 5 4 Totals 3 56 125 D.Hernandez 1 0 0 0 0 1 Howardph 1 0 0 0 Weeks2b 4 0 1 0 Boston atTampaBay,4.10p.m. Sipp 1 2 0 0 0 1 Saveryp 0 0 0 0 JFrncs1b 4 0 0 0 C leveland 100 0 1 0 2 00 — 4 K ratzc 4 0 0 0 Grzlnyp 1 0 0 0 Cleve landatTexas,5:05p.m. Bumgamerpitchedto 3baters inthe6th. Oakland Chicago Detroit 042 000 00x — 6 HBP —by Cahig (Posey). WP—R.Ramirez, Cahig. C Hmdz2b 4 0 1 0 Thrnrgp 1 0 0 0 Detroit atKansasCity, 5:10 p.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi E — Jh . P e ral t a (4), Mi . cabrera (5). DP — C lev elan d PB — P os ey . Kndrckp 2 0 0 0 YBtncrph 1 0 0 0 TorontoatChrcagoWhrte Sox, 5:10p.m. Crispcf 4 1 2 0 DeAzacf-If 3 1 1 0 1. LOB —Cleveland 5, Detroit 10. 28—Bourn (8), L .Nixph 1 0 0 0 Axfordp 0 0 0 0 Houston at Seatle, 7:10p.m. Reddckrf 3 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 3 0 0 0 Fielder(15), Jh.Peralta(16), Infante(10),A.Garcia (2). T—3.33. A—44,574(48,633). S tutesp 0 0 0 0 Kintzlrp 0 0 0 0 Cespdslf 4 0 0 0 Riosrf 411 HR — R ab urn (6). SB — K ipni s 2 (13). NATIONALLEAGUE Reverecf I 0 0 0 Bianchi ph 1 0 0 0 D nldsn3b 4 0 I I Konerkdh 4 I 2 2 IP H R E R BB SO Braves 2, Dodgers 1 Cleveland East Division FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 Lowrie2b 3 0 0 0 A.Dunn1b 3 I 2 I CarrascoL,0-2 4 10 6 6 3 I Totals 3 6 3 103 Totals 3 4 4 114 W L Pct GB Freimn1b 3 0 1 0 Viciedolf 4 0 0 0 Langweg 2 0 0 0 0 3 P hiladelphia 0 1 0 0 0 0 020 — 3 Atlanta 38 24 .613 LOS ANGELES — Kris Medlen S.Smithdh 3 0 0 0 JrDnkspr-cf 0 0 0 0 Allen I 1 0 0 1 1 Philadelphia 31 32 .492 7'/t 001 0 0 2 1 0x — 4 DNorrsc 3 0 0 0 Kppngr3b 4 0 1 0 pitched 6/s scoreless innings and Milwaukee J.Smith 1 1 0 0 1 1 DP — Milwaukee 1. LOB—Philadelphia 6, MilWashington 29 31 .483 8 Rosalesss 3 0 0 0 Bckhm2b 3 0 0 0 Detroit hit his first major league home NewYork 23 34 .404 12r/t waukee 8. 28 — F r and sen (4), D.Brown(9), Lucroy F lowrsc 3 0 0 0 PorcegoW,3-3 6 3 2 1 2 7 Miami 17 44 .279 20'/z T otals 3 0 1 4 1 Totals (5). 38 Aoki (1) HR D.Brown (19), Segura(9). 3 14 7 4 run, Dan Uggla also went deep, Putkonen 2 3 1 2 I 0 0 SB — Segura(17). Central Division Oakland 1 00 000 000 — 1 I 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 and Atlanta continued its recent Coke H,2 W L Pct GB Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO Chicago 010 000 OSx - 4 alverdeS,8-10 1 1 0 0 1 2 St. Louis 40 22 .645 K.KendrickL,6-4 6 8 3 3 1 6 E—Milone (1), De Aza(6). DP—Chicago 1. V stretch of dominant starting Carrascopitchedto 1baterin the5th. Cincinnati 37 25 .597 3 Stutes 1 3 1 1 1 1 LOB— Oakland 3,Chicago 6.HR— Konerko (6), WP Carrasco,Allen,Putkonen. pitching in a victory over Los Pittsburgh 37 25 .597 3 Savery 1 0 0 0 0 0 A.Dunn(14). SB—Crisp(13). S—AI.Ramirez. T—3'34 A—41,691(41,255) Chicago 24 35 .407 14'/z Oakland Angeles. Milwaukee IP H R E R BB SO Milwaukee 24 37 .393 15'/t Gorzel a nny 4 5 1 1 0 3 Milone 7 4 1 1 1 7 West Division ThornburgW,1-0 2 2 0 0 0 2 Doolittle L,3-1 1 3- 3 3 3 1 0 Rays 8, Orioies 0 Los Angeles Atlanta W L Pct GB Neshek AxfordH,9 1 0 0 0 0 2 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Arizona 35 27 .565 KintzlerH,10 I 3 2 2 0 2 Chicago ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Jeremy Smmnsss 5 0 3 0Puigrf 4 0 2 0 SanFrancisco 32 29 .525 2'/t F r.Rodri g uez S, 4 -4 1 0 0 0 0 1 Joh.Danks W,1-2 8 3 1 1 1 6 Heywrdrf 3 0 1 0 Puntoss 4 1 1 0 WP—Stutes. Colorado 33 30 524 2t/t A.Reed S,18-19 1 1 0 0 0 0 Hellickson pitched six scoreless J.uptonlf 2 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 3 0 0 0 T—3'00.A—38,267(41,900). SanDiego 29 33 .468 6 T—2:27. A—23,735(40,615). F Frmn1b 4 0 1 0 Ethiercf 3 0 0 0 innings and six different Tampa Los Angeles 27 34 443 7 1/2 4 0 0 0 HRmrzph 1 0 1 1 Bay players drove in runs to lead Mccnnc CJhnsn3b 4 0 I 0 Kershwpr 0 0 0 0 Pirates 6, Cubs2 Angels 9, RedSox5 Saturday's Games the surging Rays to avictory over R.Pena3b 0 0 0 0 Moylanp 0 0 0 0 Miami 2,N.Y.Mets1, 20innings u ggla2b 4 1 1 1 VnSlyklf 3 0 0 0 (First Game) Baltimore. Minnesota 4, Washington 3, 11innings CHICAGO — A.J. Burnett pitched Buptoncf 3 0 1 0 Howegp 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh6, ChicagoCubs2 M edlenp 2 1 1 1 Guerrirp 0 0 0 0 into the ninth inning and Pedro BOSTON — David Ortiz Baltimore TampaBay Milwaukee 4,Philadelphia 3 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 HrstnJrph-lf 1 0 0 0 ab r bbi ab r hbi SanDiego4, Colorado2 rebounded from a rough first Avilanp 0 0 0 0 Schmkr2b-If-cf4 0 3 0 Alvarez and Russell Martin M cLothlf 4 0 0 0 Joycerf 5 0 0 0 Cincinnati 4, StLouis2 Waldenp 0 0 0 0 Fdrwczc 4 0 1 0 homered to lead Pittsburgh to a game with a long two-run homer Machd3b 4 0 1 0 Zobrist2b 5 2 3 1 Atlanta2, L.A Dodgers1 JSchafrph 1 0 0 0 L.cruz3b 3 0 0 0 win over Chicago. M arkksrf 4 0 0 0 KJhnsnlf 5 0 0 0 San Francisco10,Arizona5 and drove in three runs to help Kimre p 0 0 0 0 RHrndzph 1 0 0 0 Today's Games A.Jonescf 3 0 1 0 Longori3b 2 1 I I Fifep 20 0 0 Clay Buchholz improve to 9-0, Pearceph 1 0 0 0 RRortsph-3b I 0 I 0 Miami (Koehle0-4) r at N.Y.Mets(Niese3-5), 10:10 Pittsburgh Chicago M,ERis2b 2 0 0 0 earning Boston a split of a dayC.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 Loney1b 5 1 1 1 am. ab r hbi ab r hbi T otals 3 2 2 9 2 Totals 3 51 8 1 Wietersc 3 0 1 0 DJnngscf 3 1 0 0 Minnesota(Diamond4-4) at Washington(ZimmerSMartelf 4 1 2 0 DeJesscf 40 1 0 night doubleheader with a 7-2 win T egrdnc 0 0 0 0 Fuldcf 0 0 0 0 Atlanta 0 00 020 000 — 2 mann8-3), 10:35a.m.,1stgame L os Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 0 010 — 1 Sniderrf 4 0 1 1 Valuen3b 3 0 0 0 over Los Angeles. The victory H ardyss 3 0 1 0 Scottdh 3 2 1 3 Philadelphia(Pettibone3-1) at Milwaukee(Lohse13I I 0 E—Simmons (4). LOB —Atianta 8, LosAngeles Mcctchct 3 1 I 0 Rizzolb A casil2b 0 0 0 0 Loatonc 4 1 3 I 6),11:10a.m. 8. 28 — Simmons (11), C.Johnson(14), Punto(6). G JonesIb 4 1 1 0 ASorinlf 4 1 1 2 snapped Boston's nine-game Pittsburgh(Locke5-1) at ChicagoCubs(E.Jackson losing streak against Los Angeles. Dickrsndh 3 0 0 0 YEscorss 4 0 3 I HR — uggla (11), Medlen(1). CS—Simmons (2). G Snchz1b 0 0 0 0 Schrhltrf 4 0 1 0 Flahrty2b-ss 3 0 0 0 1-8), 11:20a.m. RMartnc 3 2 1 2 Castigoc 4 0 0 0 S—J.upton, Medlen. Totals 3 1 0 4 0 Totals 3 78 138 Atlanta Atlanta(Minor2) 7 at LA.Dodgers(Magig0-1),110 Ortiz went zero for 5, struck out IP H R E R BB SO PAlvrz3b 4 1 2 3 Scastross 3 0 0 0 B altimore 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 p.m. MedlenW,3-6 6 2 - 3 5 0 0 1 6 Walker2b 4 0 1 0 Barney2b 2 0 0 0 Tampa Bay 1 2 0 0 5 0 00x — 8 San Diego(Richard 1-5) at Colorado(Nicasio 4-2), twice and stranded six runners 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Barmesss 4 0 0 0 Smrdzjp 0 0 0 0 Varvaro H, 3 in the Red Sox' 9-5 loss in the LOB —Baltimore 4, TampaBay 9. 28—Zobrist 2 AvilanH,9 I:10 p.m. 2-3 I I 0 0 0 AJBmtp 4 0 0 0 Borbonph I 0 0 0 San Francisco (Gaudin 1-1) atArizona(Skaggs 1-0), (14), Lobaton (8). 38—Scott (1). 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0Putnmp 0 0 0 0 WaldenH,2 opener. Baltimore IP H R E R BB SO KimbrelS,18-21 1 I:10 p.m. HRndnp 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 Minnesota(Deduno 2-1) at Washington (Karns0-1), Los Angeles GausmanL,0-3 4 1 -3 8 7 7 3 6 Los Angeles Sweeny ph I 0 0 0 Boston 22-3 4 1 I 1 2 Fife L,1-1 4.05 p.m.,2ndgame McFarland BParkrp 0 0 0 0 6 2-3 9 2 2 1 7 ab r hbi ab r hbi St. I.ouis(Lynn8-1) at Cincinnati (Arroyo6-5), 5:10 T routcf 5 2 3 1 Egsurycf 4 I I 0 Strop I 1 0 0 0 2 Howell T otals 3 4 6 9 6 Totals 2 92 4 2 I 0 0 0 I I TampaBay 011 2 0 0 0 2 0 — 6 p.m. 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 P ittsburgh Guerrier H amltnrf 5 1 1 0 Navarf 5 0 3 1 HegicksonW4-2 6 4 0 0 0 5 Moylan Monday's Games Chicago 0 00 000 002 — 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 Pujols dh 4 1 1 1 Pedroia 2b 4 0 2 0 AI.Torres 1 0 0 0 0 2 WP Kimbrel. Milwaukee atMiami, 4.10p.m. DP Pittsburgh 1, Chicago1. LOB Pittsburgh Trumo1b 5 1 1 2 D.Ortizdh 5 0 0 0 J Wright Cincinnati atChicagoCubs,5:05 p.m. 1 0 0 0 0 1 T 3'06. A 52,716(56,000). 3, Chicago4. 2B—G.Jones (13), Schierholtz(16). H Kndrc2b 4 2 2 0 Napoli1b 5 1 I 0 Arrzona atL.A.Dodgers,7:10 p.m. Farnsworth 1 0 0 0 0 1 HR — R.Martin (7), PAlvarez(13),A.Soriano(7). SBC agasp3b 4 I 2 I Sltimchc 4 I I 0 T—2:51.A—21,834(34,078). Atlanta at SanDiego,7:10p.m. SMarte(16). CS—S.Marte(8). S—Samardzija. l annettc 4 0 0 1 Carplf 5232 Padres 4, Rockies 2 Pittsburgh IP H R E R BB SO A ybarss 4 1 2 2 Drewss 4 0 1 2 A.J.BurnettW4-6 81-3 4 2 2 3 5 Shucklf 4 0 0 0 Iglesias3b 4 0 2 0 National League American League Watson 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 DENVER — Kyle Blanks hit a twoTotals 3 9 9 128 Totals 4 05 145 Chicago L os Angeles 0 1 2 0 0 0 402 — 9 Yankees 3, Mariners1 run homer and Eric Stults tossed amardzijaL,3-7 6 8 4 4 1 7 Boston 0 00 200 003 — 5 Marlins 2, Mets1 (20 innings) seven solid innings, helping San SPutnam 1 0 0 0 0 3 E — H a m i l t on (3), l a nnetta (1), Na p ol i (4). DP — L os H.Rondon 1 1 2 2 I 0 SEATTLE — Andy Pettitte allowed Angeles1. LOB —LosAngeles12, Boston14. 28Diego to a win over Colorado. NEW YORK — In the longest B.Parker 1 0 0 0 0 1 three hits over 7/s innings to Trout 2 (18),Hamilton(10), Trumbo(16), Cagaspo Everth Cabrera had three hits and T—2:53.A—38,405 (41,019). major league game in more than (9), Pedroi (19), a Drew (9). HR — C arp ( 5). SB — T rou t earn his 250th career victory, stole two more bases, running his (14), Hamilton(2), Egsbury2(23). SF—Pujols. three years, Adeiny Hechavarria leading New Yorkto a win over Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO season total to a major leagueInterleague HansonW,3-2 5 7 2 2 4 4 hit an RBI single in the 20th inning Seattle. It was Pettitte's 213th leading 28. KohnH,3 1 1 0 0 1 0 and Miami outlasted New York, victory as aYankee,putting him S.Downs 1 0 0 0 0 1 Twins 4, Nationais 3 (11innings) well after Matt Harvey left with Colorado I 2-3 6 3 3 0 I San Diego third on the franchise's career list Richards ab r hbi ab r hbi Frieri S,14-15 13- 0 0 0 0 I lower back tightness following behind Whitey Ford (236) and Red Boston WASHINGTON — Ryan Doumit enorfirf-If 4 0 0 0 Fowlercf 5 1 2 0 another stingy start. Steve Cishek D Ruffing (231). DoubrontL,4-3 6 6 3 3 2 4 Evcarrss 4 1 3 1 EYongrf 3 0 2 0 singled in the go-ahead run, Joe FMorales 2-3 2 4 4 4 0 retired Daniel Murphy on a fly ball Headly3b 4 0 1 1 CGnzlz I 4 0 0 0 Mauer homered, doubled and Mortensen 1 2-3 4 2 1 0 0 Q uentinlf 4 0 2 0 Tlwtzkss 4 0 I 0 New York Seattle to the left-field warning track for V enalepr-rf 0 0 0 0 WRosrc 4 0 0 0 A.Miger 2-3 0 0 0 2 0 singled, and Minnesota defeated ab r hbi ab r hbi the final out of a game that took 6 Gyorko2b 5 1 1 0 Pachec 1b 3 0 1 0 WP—Hanson. Gardnrcf 5 1 3 0 Bayrf 4110 Washington. Josh Roenicke (2-T) Blanks 1b 4 1 2 2 Corpas p 0 0 0 0 T — 4:00. A — 34,499 (37,071). J.Nixss-3b 4 0 2 2 Seager3b 4 0 2 0 hours, 25 minutes. pitched a scoreless10th inning for Maybin cf 4 1 0 0 Brothrs p 0 0 0 0 Teixeirdh 5 I I 0 KMorlslb 2 0 0 0 G randlc 4 0 I 0 JHerrrph 1 0 I 0 C ano2b 4 0 1 1 Liddi1b 2 0 0 0 the win and Glen Perkins retired Miami New York Red Sox 7, Angels 2 Stultsp 2 0 0 0 Arenad3b 3 0 1 0 VWegslf 4 0 2 0 Morsedh 3 0 0 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Washington in the11th for his Kotsayph 1 0 0 0 LeMahi2b 3 1 1 0 Y oukils1b 3 0 0 0 Ibanezlf 3 0 0 0 (Second Game) Pierrelf 5 0 1 0 Quntngss 9 0 1 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 Francisp 1 0 0 0 13th save. I Suzukirf 3 1 0 0 Frnkn2b 4 0 I 0 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 9 0 1 0 Grgrsnp 0 0 0 0 Ottavinp 1 0 0 0 Los Angeles Boston DAdms3b 4 0 0 0 MSndrscf 3 0 0 0 Olivoph 1 0 0 0 DWrght3b 8 0 3 0 Colvin1b 2 0 0 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi B rigncss 0 0 0 0 Ryanss 2 0 0 0 S loweyp 2 0 0 0 Duda f 7 0 1 0 Minnesota Washington T otals 3 6 4 104 Totals 3 42 9 1 C Stwrtc 4 0 1 0 Bantzc 2 0 0 0 T routcf 4 0 1 1 Victorncf 5 1 I 0 C ishekp 0 0 0 0 Byrdrf 4000 ab r hbi ab r hbi S an Diego 100 3 0 0 000 — 4 H amltnrf 4 I I 0 JGomslf 5 2 2 I Enchvzph 1 0 0 0 Lucas1b-If 8 0 1 0 Marcmp 2 0 0 0 C arrog3b 4 0 0 0 Spancf 5 1 3 0 C olorado 001 0 0 0 1 00 — 2 Pujols dh 3 0 0 0 Pedroia 2b 4 1 2 2 Shppch c 0 0 0 0 Dietrch2b 8 1 1 0 I.Davis1b 2 1 0 0 auerc 5 1 3 1 Werthrf 5 1 1 2 E Stults(1), EvCabrera(4),Grandal(1), Brothers M Trumo1b 3 0 0 1 D.Ortizdh 5 1 2 3 T otals 3 6 3 103 Totals 3 0 1 4 1 Ozunarf 8 0 3 0 JuTrnrph-1b 5 0 2 0 5 0 2 1 Zmrmn3b 5 0 0 0 —SanDiego12, Colorado8.2B—Ev.Cabrera Doumitrf New York 1 00 010 100 — 3 HKndrc2b 4 0 3 0 Napoli1b 5 1 1 0 C oghlncf 3 0 0 1 Buckc 8 0 2 0 (I). LOB Wlnghlf 6 1 1 0 AdLRc1b 5 0 1 0 (10), Quenti n (12), Gyorko(I7), Bl a nks(7),Tul o wi t zki H awpelf 4 0 0 0 Navarf 3 0 1 0 Seattle 0 00 100 000 — 1 DJnngsp 0 0 0 0 Lagarscf 8 0 2 1 5010 Pacheco(9). 38—Arenado (I), LeMahieu (1). Perkinsp 0301 01 00 Dsmndss C allasp3b 4 0 0 0 D.Rossc 2 0 I I DP —Seattle1. LOB —NewYork9,Seattle5. 2BK tchmlb 4 0 0 0 Harveyp 3 0 I 0 (15), Rendon2b 5 1 2 0 HR — Blanks (6). SB—Ev.cabrera2(28), Maybin (4), Mornea1b Gardner2(13), Teixeira (I). SB—J.Nix(7), Cano(3). C ongerc 4 I 2 0 Drewss 4 0 I 0 P olanc3b 8 1 1 0 Lyonp 0000 E Escorpr-2b 2 0 1 0 Berndnlf 3 0 1 0 E.Young(7). S—Stults, E.Young,LeMahieu. Aybarss 3 0 0 0 Iglesias3b 4 1 2 0 SF — Morse. Brantlyc 8 0 4 0 Parnegp 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BB SO Hrckscf 2 0 1 0 KSuzukc 4 0 1 1 San Diego 3 77 137 Hchvrrss 7 0 3 1 Baxterph 0 0 0 0 New York IP H R E R BBSO Totals 3 3 2 7 2 Totals Dozier2b 3 0 1 1 GGnzlzp 2 0 0 0 Stults W,5-5 7 7 2 I 0 4 Pettitte W5-3 71- 3 3 1 1 0 6 L os Angeles 0 0 1 0 0 1 000 — 2 Frnndzp 2 0 0 0 Reckerph 1 0 0 0 P armelph-1b2 0 0 0 Abadp 0 0 0 0 ThayerH,11 1 1 0 0 0 I 210 013 00x - 7 D.RobertsonH,14 2-3 0 0 0 I 0 Boston Q uagsp 0 0 0 0 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 F lormnss 4 0 0 0 Storenp 0 0 0 0 GregersonS,2-3 1 1 0 0 1 1 Correiap 3 0 0 0 Lmrdzzph 1 0 0 0 E—Hawpe(I), Callaspo(6), Trumbo(3). LOB RiveraS,22-23 I I 0 0 I 3 D obbsph 0 0 0 0 Ricep 0000 Colorado Los Angeles 6, Boston 10. 28 — H a mil t on (11), Seattle M Dunnp 0 0 0 0 Burkep 0 0 0 0 Dunsngp 0 0 0 0 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 FrancisL,24 4 6 4 4 3 2 s (6), Pedroia (20), D.Ortiz(13). J.SaundersL,4-6 61-3 7 3 3 2 4 Conger(4),J.Gome F ienp 0 0 0 0 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Vldspnph 1 0 0 0 Ottavino 2 3 0 0 0 I D.Ortiz (12). SB —Iglesias (1). S —D.Ross. Webbp Farquhar 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 HR — R uggincf 5 0 1 0 Ardsmp 0 0 0 0 T homsph 1 0 1 0 EDavisp 0 0 0 0 2 I 0 0 0 3 O.Perez 2 2 0 0 0 3 SF Trumbo A nkierf 4 0 0 0 Corpas B urtonp 0 0 0 0 Kro p 0000 1 0 0 0 3 1 R oenckp 0 0 0 0 Tracyph 1 0 0 0 Capps 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO T otals 6 9 2 152 Totals 7 1 I 1 3 1 Brothers C.WilsonL,4-5 5 8 4 3 3 5 Miami 000100000 000 000 000 01 — 2 T—3.21. A—34,590(50,398). T—2:47.A—38,252(47,476). CHrmnph-If 0 1 0 0 Stmmnp 0 0 0 0 27 32 26 34

Blue Jays 4, Rangers3 (18 innings) TORONTO — Rajai Davis hit a

Williams 3 5 3 Boston BuchholzW,9-0 6 2-3 6 2 11-3 0 0 Breslow Tazawa I 1 0

PB — Conger. T—3:25. A—36,518(37,499).

3 0

3

2 1

4

0 0 0 0

0 I

winning single in the18th inning and TorontobeatTexas in a gam e that matched the longest in club

history for both teams. Emilio Bonifacio hit a one-out single in the 18th and took third with two outs on a wild pickoff throw by

Royals 7, Astros 2 KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Ervin

Santana pitched sevensnappy

Ross Wolf (T-T j. Davis followed

innings and Kansas City finally backed him up with some offense in a victory over Houston.

with a bouncing single down the third base line.

with the worst run support

Texas

Toronto

ab r hbi ab r hbi A ndrusss 6 0 1 1 Mecarrlf 4 0 0 0 P rofar2b 7 0 1 0 RDavislf 5 0 2 I

Santana (4-5) entered the game among qualifying pitchers in the American League, abig reason why he already had six fruitless

tries to win his100th career

New York 010000000 000 000 00000 — 1 DP Miami 2,NewYork1. LOB Miami10, New

Reds 4, Cardinals 2

York 22 28 —Ju.Turner (6), Lagares(3). SB—Hechavarria(3), DWright(12). CS—Ozuna(1), Hechavarria CINCINNATI — Mat Latos turned in (3). S —Lagares.SF—Coghlan. Miami IP H R E R BB SO seven solid innings andCincinnati Fernandez 6 3 1 I 3 7 broke out of its slump with a win 1 1 0 0 0 0 Quags M.Dunn 2-3 0 0 0 2 1 over St. Louis. Devin Mesoraco Webb

Da.Jennings A.Ramos SloweyW,2-5 7

2-3 I 11-3 0 21-3 0 8 1 0

Harvey Lyon Parnell Hawkins Rice Burke Aardsma

7 1 1 2-3 2-3 2-3 1 8

CishekS,6-8 New York

MarcumL,0-7

0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

6 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 5

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

HBP —byQuags(Buck), bySlowey(Marcum). TW:25. A 20,338(41,922).

0 2 0 8 1

homered anddrove intwo runs and Jay Brucealso homeredas the Redssnapped athree-game losing streak andscored morethan

6 0 1 0 0 I 1 7

two runs against St. Louis for the first time in the past seven games between the teams. St. Louis

Mcrpnt2b Beltranrf HogidyIf Craig1b

D3

Cincinnati

ab r hbi ab r hbi 4 0 1 0 Choocf 4 0 2 0 5 1 1 0 DRonsnlf 4 1 2 0 4 0 1 0 Votto1b 4 1 2 1 4 0 1 1 Phigips2b 3 0 0 0

Totals 4 0 4 113 Totals 4 1 3 103 Minnesota 0 0 0 210 000 01 — 4 W ashington 002 000 100 00 — 3 E—Ad.LaRoche (5). DP—Minnesota 1, Washington 2.LOB Minnesota13, Washington6. 28

Mauer(19),Morneau(14), Rendon(3), Bernadrna(3), K.Suzuki(7).HR—M auer(6), Werth(5). S—Carroll, Hicks 2,Bernadina. Minnesota IP H R E R BB SO Correia

Duensing Fien

613 8 3 2-3 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0

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Helio Castroneves holds up the trophy in Victory Lane after winning the IndyCar race Saturday at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas.

Castroneves

pulls away in Texasfor first win of season The Associated Press FORT WORTH, TexasHelio Castroneves raced to his first IndyCar victory of the season, leading the final 132 laps Saturday night for his fourth career victory at Texas Motor Speedway. Castroneves also won at the lt/a-mile, high-banked track in 2004, 2006 and 2009. "Texas is a wesome. I love this place," Castroneves said after celebrating by climbing up the frontstretch fence. Former series champion Sam Hornish Jr. was the only other three-time IndyCar winner at Texas, and his last came for Roger Penske, who now has eight victories at the track which hosted its 25th IndyCar race. Ryan H u nter-Reay of Andretti Motorsports finished second, more than 5 seconds back. He led 35 of the 228 iaps. With six o t her t o p-10 finishes in the first seven races, Castroneves entered the night tied with Marco Andretti fo r t h e s eason points lead. A ndretti, who le d t h e first 53 l aps after starting on the front row, finished fifth. He dropped to second, 22 points behind Castroneves. C astroneves took t h e lead from Andretti, going around him in Turn 3 on lap 96, and stayed there. He is the seventh driver to win in eight races this season. Before OriolServia spun out right in front of him on iap 113, Castroneves had built a 14-second lead over defending race winner Justin W i l son. Castroneves was able to get around Servia's car without any issue. That ended a sequence when Castroneves went 61 laps without a stop before going into the pit during that caution. The top f iv e f i nishers were Chevroiets, with Ind ianapolis 5 0 0 w in n e r Tony Kanaan third, f ollowed by Ed Carpenter and Andretti. Also on Saturday: NASCAR Nationwide race p ostponed: NEW T O N , Iowa — Th e N A S CAR Nationwide Series race at Iowa Speedway was postponed until 8 a .m. PDT today because of rain. The race was set to begin at 5 p.TTL on Saturday, but rain began falling about 40 minutes before the scheduled s tart. Austin D i llon w i l l start first after winning the pole for the third week in a row, followed by Sam Hornish Jr., Brian Scott and Brian Vickers. Vettel takes pole for Canadian GP: MONTREAL — Sebastian Vettel earned pole position for Formula O ne's Canadian G r a nd Prix for the third consecutive year. The championship points leader drove the fastest lap in the final qualifying session with a time of 1 minute, 25.425 seconds. Lewis Hamilton also will be in the front row for today's race on the 2.71-mile course located on the Ile Notre Dame in Montreal.


D4 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

Roughstock rolls at Sisters Rodeo SISTERS — Roughstock

riders stole the show Saturday night at the Sisters

Rodeo asRedmond's Steven Peeblestook

the lead in the bareback standings with an 87-point

ride andCodyWright, of Milford, Utah, posted an 87 to grab the lead in the

saddle bronc competition. Wright, a two-time world champion, tied the Sisters

Rodeo Arenasaddle bronc record with his 87-point

nde. Other highlights Saturday night included Clint

Robinson, of Spanish Fork, Utah, recording a tie-down roping time of 9.8 seconds, which so far is the second-

best mark in the second go-round. Redmond bulldogger Michael Reger

is tied for second in the second go-round ofthe steer wrestling competition after a 3.8-second effort Saturday night. And former Culver resident Bobby

Mote turned in an82-point bareback ride, which has him tied for third. The final performance

begins today at1 p.m. — Bulletin staff report

Rider Continued from D1 "Every rodeo we enter, at the least the bigger ones, you compete against th e s a me guys," says Corrington, who is looking for his first Oregon pro rodeo win t oday. "You know how well they all ride. You've got to bring your game if you want to win." Having earned his PRCA card as a 20-year-old in 2006, Corrington finished in the top 50 three times between 2007 and 2010 — but never higher than 26th — before making it to his first NFR in 2011, when he won one of the 10 rounds and placed in four others. "That first NFR, you prove to yourself you can do it," Corrington says. "You know you can compete with the best. You're not s econd-guessing yourself anymore. It r e ally

helped." While today's saddle bronc field in Sisters is loaded with 2013 NFR hopefuls, it is just one of several competitions full of star power. Ryan Gray, of Cheney, Wash., headlines the day's bareback cowboys. Eighth in the world standings before this weekend, Gray is a seven-time NFR contestant who has won more than $1 million since joining the PRCA in 2002. Local favorite Brandon Beers, of Powell Butte, and partner Justin Davis, of Cottonwood, Calif., are scheduled to compete in their second goround in team roping today, as is Prineville's Sean Santucci in the steer wrestling competition. "You can be dang sure, the goal this year is to get back to the NFR," says Corrington, who trailed current saddle b ronc w o rl d l e ader C o dy Wright, of Milford, Utah, by about $8,000 before the start of the Sisters Rodeo. "You can't be worried about getting bucked off.... If you go down, you're still giving it your all,

trying to get that 90 (score), going for first every time." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@bendbutletin.com.

Beavers

Kansas State put runners on first and third with backto-back hits in the top of the Continued from D1 A two-run home run by fifth, but B oyd r ebounded, the Pac-12 player of the year, inducing consecutive infield OSU sophomore Mi c h ael pop-ups. Two straight hit batters — both with two-strike Conforto, was the difference for much of the game. But c ounts — scored a ru n t o lOregon State could not pull bring the Wildcats to within one, but Boyd got Blair away, and Kansas State made / the Beavers pay. DeBord on a ground ball to "We didn't do some things end the inning. tonight that we needed to do," King opened the top of the Casey said. "We did some 10th with a looping hit to shalthings that we shouldn't have low left field. Conforto lost the ball in the sun and it dropped done. We had a chance to win the game even in spite of between him and the shortthat. We just weren't able to stop Smith, and King hustled finish." it into a double. Two batters OSU starting pitcher Matt later, Davis drove a 1-1 pitch Boyd lasted seven innings, back up the middle, scoring King and giving Kansas State scattering five hits and striking out three while allowing its first lead of the game. The ie just one run — a performance Wildcats would ad d t h r ee more runs to put themselves Casey said was good enough rn c for a victory. He threw 123 one win away from their firstpitches and was in line for his ever trip to the College World 11th win of the season. The Series. Greg Wahpstephens/The Associated Press Beavers were one strike away The Beavers' backs are now from giving it to him, but it Oregon State's Andy Peterson bunts his way on base against Kansas State in the bottom of the against the wall, facing elimisixth inning of Saturday night's Super Regional in Corvallis. Oregon State lost 6-2 in10 innings. would not come. nation on their home field. "This is a t e a m g a me," But coming back after dropBoyd said of the frustration of ping the first game, Conforto Hill mentioned that, while not getting the win despite a gional in school history, it was Peterson ledoff the OSU pointed out, is nothing new to strong pitching effort. "That's Witt leading the way, going 3- it was difficult to get to Boyd half of the fourth inning with Oregon State. for-6 with three RBIs. Jon Da- early, his team's fight wore "We take it like we always about it." a single up the middle, setting Conforto finished I-for-4 vis singled and drove in two the starter down. the table for Conforto. After have," Conforto said. "We've "I think of R.J. Santigate finding himself in a q u i ck done this before. ... We've with the two-run homer. Ty- runs, and Kivett and Jared ler Smith added a 2-for-4 per- King finished with two hits ... Austin Fisher ... just foul- two-strike hole against Wildbeen in this position before. formance for Oregon State, apiece. ing pitch after pitch off," Hill cat starter Joe Flattery, Con- Maybe thestakes are higher, and Andy Peterson, Ryan "Obviously, I think B oyd said. "Those were the at-bats forto teed off on a fastball and but I really think this team, Barnes, Kavin K eyes and was really tough on us today," t hat wear you down. If w e sent a drive that towered over in front of our fans, I think Jake Rodriguez each picked Wildcat coach Brad Hill said. are up there not competing the right-field wall, cleared we will respond the way we "We looked really tight, con- very hard, he (Boyd) cruises the bleachers and landed in up a single. know we can." — Reporter: 541-383-0307; For Kansas State (45-17), fused. We just didn't get any through nine innings today in the middle of W a shington which is in its first Super Re- good swings off him at all." 120 pitches." Way. glucaslbendbutletin.com.

/

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COLLEGE BASEBALL ROUNDUP

Victory sends UCLAback to College World Series The Associated Press FULLERTON, Ca li f. — Nick Vander Tuig pitched and three UCLA r elievers c ombined t o s h utout C a l S tate Fullerton 3-0 to w i n the Fullerton Super Regional Saturday night and advance to the College World Series.

ams as the all-time Bruins leader. A nthony H u t t in g h a d three hits for Fullerton. In other Saturday games: Louisville 5, Vanderbilt 3: NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Matt Helms delivered a two-out, t wo-run p i n ch-hit s i n g le Vander Tuig (12-4) gave up to lead Louisville to a vicseven hits in 6 1-3 innings. tory over No. 2 overall seed He struck out four and did Vanderbilt in a NCAA Super not walk a b a t ter. David Regional opener. Helms had Berg closed out the ninth driven in only three runs all and earned his 21st save of season. But with the bases the season. The Bruins (44- loaded in the seventh, the 17) swept the series and will senior stepped in and hit a make their second consecu- 1-2 pitch f rom V a nderbilt tive trip to Omaha. c loser Brian M i l ler d o w n UCLA took advantage of the third-base line. The Cartwo Titans errors in the first dinals (50-12) tied the game inning to score three unjust three batters earlier. North Carolina 6, South earned runs. Pat Gallagher had a two-run single with Carolina 5: CHAPEL HILL, the bases loaded and Shane N.C. — Freshman Skye Bolt Zeile added an RBI hit to give h it a g a m e-winning R B I the Bruins a 3-0 after one in- single through the right side ning off Thomas Eshelman i n the ninth inning to l i f t (12-3). He pitched a complete North Carolina past South game for Fullerton. Carolina in the opener of the The Titans (51-10) dropped NCAA Super Regional bestback-to-back games for only of-3 series. Bolt's two-out hit the second time this season. scored Parks Jordan from Fullerton had two runners second for th e Ta r H e els on in both the second and (56-9), putting them within a fourth innings but Vander win of reaching the College Tuig retired Jake Jefferies to World Series for the sixth time in eight seasons. It was end both rallies. In the sixth JD Davis led off with a dou- y et another close win f o r ble but Vander Tuig got the the No. I overall seed in the next three Titans batters to NCAA tournament as North end the threat. Carolina shook off a shaky B ruins r e l iever J a m es start from top pitcher Kent Kaprielian got Matt Chap- Emanuel and an early twoman to fly out with two on run deficit. N.C. State 4, Rice 3: RAto end the seventh inning. Fullerton left 12 runners on LEIGH, N.C. — Jake Finche r's two-out single in t h e base. UCLA coach John Savage bottom of the ninth capped a earned his 27th postseason rally and lifted N.C. State to victory to surpass Gary Ada victory over Rice in Game

Blackhawks headed to Stanley Cup finals By Jay Cohen

I of the Raleigh Super Regional. Rice (44-19) had taken a 3-2 lead in the top of the ninth, but N.C. State (48-14) tied it when Brett Williams slid under a tag after a bunt b y Logan R atledge. Wi l liams singled to start the inning, stole second, and went to third on an error by pitcher Zech Lemond. Two batters later, Fincher's single to left scored Jake Armstrong with the winning run.

Mississippi State11, Virginia 6: CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Adam Frazier went 6-for-6, Hunter Renfroe was 4-for-5 and they each drove in three runs to help Mississippi State beat Virginia in the first game of the Charlottesville Super Regional.

T he Hoosiers' bi g i n n i n g en its only lead of the series, came againstrelievers Gage 1-0, in the bottom of the first

Smith (4-2) and Billy Strode, inning. Will LaMarche (3who gave up just three hits in 0) got the win for the Tigers, the inning but the Seminoles who improved to 5-0 in the c ommitted t w o t hr o w i n g NCAA tournament. errors. LSU 11, Oklahoma 1: BATON ROUGE, La. — JaCoby Jones had four hits, including a homer, and drove in tw o runs to help LSU beat Oklahoma to advance to the College World Series for the 16th time. LSU (57-9), which tied a single-season school record for victories, used four pitch, • • Je t clean® Plus Steam cycle Indust 's Most Powerful Motor ers, who combined to limit the Sooners (43-21) to five hits and prevented Oklahoma from scoring after it had takTV.APPLIANCE

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The Bulldogs (47-18) pounde d Virginia's pitching f or 20 hits and benefited from uncharachteristic sloppiness by the Cavaliers, who made four errors that led to six

unearned runs. Virginia (5011) had 11 hits, but also hit into four rally-killing double

plays. Indiana 10, Florida State 9 : T A L L A H A SSEE, F l a . — Kyle Schwarber had a go-ahead two-run single in a four-run seventh inning and Indiana went on to beat F lorida State i n t h e f i r s t game of t h e T a l l ahassee Super Regional. Schwarber, who also ha d a t w o - r un homer in the fourth, put Indiana up 7-6 with his hit in the seventh. Indiana (47-14) can advance to its first Coll ege World Series with a win today. If the Seminoles

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(47-16) win, a deciding game would be played Monday.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DS

GOLF ROUNDUP

resse u o s ro es a The Associated Press PITTSFORD, N.Y. — Morgan Pressel slogged through rain and muck to take the lead Saturday after two rounds in the LPGA Championship. Next up is a 36-hole marathon today. "I run a lot," Pressel said, laughing. "I'm

in plenty good of enough shape to get through 36 holes tomorrow." She shot a 2-under 70 on Saturday at Locust Hill to reach 6-under 138 — two shots ahead of the top-ranked Park and Chella Choi in the second LPGA Tour major of the season. Park had a68 to give herself an opportunity to add to her three wins already this season, including the Kraft Nabisco Championship in April. Choi struggled with a 73 to relinquish her first-round lead. JiyaiShin, Amy Yang and Sarah Jane Smith were tied for fourth at 3 under. And there wereseven more players at I under or better after two rounds, which should make for a long and topsy-turvy final day. The change in schedule came after nearly five inches of rain fell Thursday, forcing officials to postpone the first round.

"It's going to be very tough physically,

I mean, especially walking on these wet fairways," Park said. "There's going to be many holes, but yeah, just try not to lose my focus." The forecast for today is promising, calling for sunny conditions and temperatures in the high 70s. A light and i ntermittent drizzle fell through most of Saturday morning further drenching the 6,500-yard course. Then there were two brief but heavy downpours in the mid-afternoon before the rain finally relented after about 2:30 p.m. That led to soppy fairways. It made the slick, overgrown rough even more difficult to hit out of. And even hitting the greens

didn't guarantee relief. Pressel's tee shot on the par-3 seventh plugged 20 feet below the hole, from where she two-putted. That was actually fine with her. With a laugh, she was thankful the ball stuck where it did because it was a better place than above the hole. From Boca Raton, Fla., Pressel is attempting to end a string of eight straight

majors won by Asian-born players. Pressel also hasn't won since claiming the Kapalua LPGA Classic in 2008. A year earlier, at the age of 18, she won the Kraft Nabisco to become the youngest LPGA player to win a major. "It was a long time ago. I've been through a lot since then," Pressel said. "A lot has happened in golf and life. But that being said, I've done it before. So I just need to go out there and remember that I can do it, and just get it done." Last year, Pressel struggled in dealing with injuries to her thumb and left wrist. This year, she has missed three of the past four cuts of tournaments entered. Her best finish of the season is a tie for 10th at Singapore in March. Starting on No. 9 Saturday, Pressel birdied three of her first six holes to get to 7 under, before faltering. She bogeyed Nos. 16 and 18. Pressel nearly gave up another stroke on the short par-4 second, but saved par by sinking a 10-foot putt. Pressel then padded her lead with a 4foot birdie putt on the par-5 eighth. "The tournament is only halfway finished, but I feel good about my approach to playing," Pressel said. "It'll be a long day, but I need to stay mentally focused." Park joined Michelle Wie in shooting the second-round's lowest score in carding five birdies and a bogey-5 on No. 14. With three wins already this season, including a major, the 25-year-old is carrying

am ions i

plenty of confidence into today. "I would be less nervous than at the Kraft," she said. "That kind of experience

really helps going into major championships like this where you get the situation and you've experienced it before. You feel a lot more comfortable." In other events on Saturday: Rookie takes lead at St. Jude: MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Rookie Shawn Stefani overcame a quadruple bogey and shot a 4-under 66 to take the third-round lead in the St. Jude Classic. The 31-year-old Texan blew a two-stroke lead with the quadruple bogey on No. 11, but rebounded with four birdies over his final five holes to move back atop the leaderboard. He had eight birdies to go with that quadruple bogey to reach 12-under 198 at TPC Southwind. Harris English was a stroke back after a 69, finishing out of the lead for the first time this week. Frost up one stroke at Tradition: BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — David Frost birdied the 16th and 17th holes en route to a 6under 66 and a one-stroke lead over Fred Couples after the third round of the Regions Tradition. Frost, the South African who won the Toshiba Classic in March for his fourth Champions Tour title, had four birdies on the final eight holes to move to 12-under 205 in the major championship. Couples, the Presidents Cup captain and World Golf Hall of Famer, shot a bogeyfree 68. Dutchman on top after shooting 67 in Austria: AT ZENBRUGG, A u s tria Dutchman Joost Luiten shot a 5-under 67 to extend his lead to three strokes after the third round of the Lyoness Open. Luiten had a 16-under 200 total. Spain's Jorge Campillo and Eduardo de la Riva were tied for second. Campillo shot 66, and de la Riva had a 69.

Gary Wiepert/The Associated Press

Morgan Pressel watches her tee shot on the ninth hole during the second round of the LPGA Championship at Locust Hill Country Club in Pittsford, N.Y., on Saturday. Pressel has a two-stroke lead. i/

NCAA TRACK & FIELD

Don Ryan /The Associated Press

Oregon's Mac Fleet, front right, raises his hand as he crosses the finish line to win the 1,500-meter race during the NCAA outdoor track and field championships in Eugene on Saturday.

Texas A&M,Florida share men'stitle By Anne M. Peterson

California's Ginnie Powell at the 2006 NCAA outdoor EUGENE — A d r opped championships i n S a c r abaton cost the Texas A8M mento, Calif. men an outright NCAA outIt was the best overall time door track and field team in the world this season and title. the fastest ever in the event The Aggies' finished last at Hayward Field. Earlier in the 1,600-meter relay af- this year, the 21-year old set a ter mishandling the baton championship meet mark in before the firstexchange, the 60 hurdles with a 7.79 for p ropelling e v en t wi n n e r the NCAA indoor title. Florida into a tie for the title LSU senior K i m berlyn Saturday. Duncan won the women's Each team finished with 200 in a wind-aided 22.04, tying her for the fastest col53 points for the first cochampions since 1978. It legiate 200 in an y c ondiwas the second consecutive tions. Last year's Bowerman team title for the Gators after Award winner is the f irst a string of three straight for woman to win the event in the Aggies. three consecutive years. "I'm very satisfied," she Florida won the relay in 3 minutes, 1.34 seconds. said about the final race of "I just told the guys let's go her college career. "I'm trywin the relay," coach Mike ing to hold back tears right Holloway said. "We don't see now." it as Texas A&M dropping Texas A8 M senior Ameer the baton, we see it as we Webb won the men's200 in didn't drop it." a wind-aided 20.10. He was On the women's side, top- runner-up in the event last ranked Kansas wrapped up year and won it at this year's its first women's team title indoor championships, but earlier in the day and fin- wasn't considered the favorished with 60 points, thwart- ite for the final. ing Oregon's "triple crown" Oklahoma State's Natalja attempt to sweep team titles Piliusina won the women's this year in the sport's three 1,500 in 4:13.25. The junior NCAA championships. The from Lithuania had twice Ducks wound up third be- b een a r u n ner-up i n t h e hind Texas AgcM. 800. "We came in as a team toWith 100 t o g o , P i l i uday," Jayhawks coach Stan- sina said she figured she ley Redwine said. "We didn't was probably going to finhave a concern of needing ish fifth or sixth, but then one person to do well. It's all something changed in her. "I thought, 'Not this time,' " about teamwork." Clemson junior Brianna she said. Rollins broke her own colOregon's Mac Fleet thrilled legiate record in the 100 hur- the Hayward crowd as an dles, finishing in 12:39 to top upset winner of the men's her mark of 12.47 set in the 1,500. He surged the final semifinals Thursday. That 300 meters and pointed to time bested the previous re- cheering fans as he crossed cord of 12.48 set by Southern the finish line in 3:50.25. The Associated Press

Finals Continued from D1 Despite the notion they're old, the Spurs are actually overall the younger, less-experienced team in these finals. Miami has nine players in their 30s to the six on the Spurs, and their Big Three a nd Bonner ar e t h e o n l y Spurs to have played in the NBA Finals. That makes it easier for the Spurs to enjoy this trip more than when they were the team expected to be here every year. "We definitely are having fun," Parker said. "I think we appreciate every moment. We don't take anything for granted, because it's been a long time. It's been six years. Felt like forever. After the Memphis series, there was a lot of emotion." Heat veteran Shane Battier wasn't exactly sold on the notion of this Spurs transfor-

mation into a happy-go-lucky group.

"Don't believe them, first of all," he said. "They are e xtreme c o mpetitors a n d they have a level of self-deprecation I think that is part of them, but don't buy it for one second. Those guys are killers. T h ey're c u t -throat and they will stomp on you if need be, and we're the same

way. "We appreciate the opportunity to play in the finals. Difficult to get here. Hardest thing you'll do in this game is to try and win a championship, so we appreciate the opportunity and we want to make the most of it," he said. But he agreed with Wade that the playoffs aren't fun. "No, they're not," he said. "They're s timulating. Y o u feel alive. I wouldn't say fun, but there's no other place I'd rather be. It's kind of a misery you enjoy. You're cranky, especially after a loss. You don't like t h e o t her t eam. You're just a general grouch, but it's the time you feel most alive as a basketball player a nd there's nothing like it . Once you taste it, you don't want to live without it." It's a grind, though, for a team that will be playing its 100th game of the season today. Wade has battled a painful right knee for a w h i l e, Chris Bosh is in a shooting slump, and the minutes are adding up for LeBron James, who has played deep into June the past three years and then competed in the Olympics last year. " It's a t oll fo r m y self t o go through what I've been through the last 2 t/2 years. But I've been blessed, I've been blessed to be able to be in three finals, I've been blessed to be a part of a great Olympic team and to play basketball, the game that I l ove,"

James said. "I'm not going to be able to do it forever. The opportunities that the game has given me for the last couple of years, I wouldn't substitute that for rest," he said. James and the Heat at least got some with two days off following the Spurs' 92-88 victory in Game 1. Both James and Wade had mentioned fatigue when talking about Miami's poor fourth-quarter performance, just three nights after the end of a difficult, sevengame series against Indiana to decide the Eastern Conference championship. The break gave the Heat more time to examine ways their own Big Three can be successful on offense, as well as get some more defensive pressure on the Spurs, who c ommitted just f ou r t u r n overs — none by Parker — in the opener. "I think it's been great for us, these last I don't know how many hours it's been since Game I," James said. "But we've used the time, I think, wisely in this case." They showed up in better spirits Saturday, James and

/

cit, just as they did last year in the finals. The Heat haven't lost consecutive games in five months, and they know this is no time to start. "We're not a team that really says too much this is a must-win game, but this is a must-win game for us," Wade said. " We have to win t h i s game at home."

P

Wade among several players taking part in a post-practice shooting contest, the kind of fun it seemed they would always have from the moment they debuted as Miami teammates three years ago in a welcoming party that rivaled a rock concert. There will be time for partying if they rally to win the series after a one-game defi-

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

Serena Williams holds the winner's cup after defeating Maria Sharapova in the women's final match of the French Open on Saturday in Paris. Williams won 6-4, 6-4.

TENNIS: FRENCH OPEN

erenata es omesecon tite By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press oll! '

I

PARIS — Serena Williams knew, of course, that 11 years had passed since her only French Open championship. She also knew, of course, what happened a year ago in Paris: the only firstround Grand Slam loss of her career, to a woman ranked outside the top 100, no less. Eager to repeat the elation of 2002, and motivated by the disappointment of 2012, Williams used terrific defense and her usual powerful hitting in Saturday's final, closing with a crescendo of aces — three in the last game — for a 6-4, 6-4 victory over defendingchampion Maria Sharapova to collect a second Roland Garros title and 16th major trophy overall. "I'm still a little bit upset about that loss last year," the No. I-ranked Williams said

Michel Euler/ rhe Associated Press

Belmont Continued from D1 Palace Malice, ridden by Mike Smith and sent off at odds of D-l, returned $29.60, $11.20 and $6.70. The colt was one of a record five entries by Pletcher. Incognito was fourth, followed by Revolutionary, the filly Unlimited Budget, Overanalyze, Vyjack, Golden Soul, Will Take Charge, Giant Finish, Midnight Taboo, Freedom Child and Frac Daddy. Oxbow, t r a ined b y D. Wayne Lukas, returned $9.90 and $6.10, and Orb, trained by When Palace Malice moved past Oxbow, Smith said fellow Hall of Famer Gary Stevens looked over at him "like a big brother telling his little brother, I You go on with it bigboy, you're moving better than me.' " Last Sunday, Palace Malice put in his final workout before t he Belmont, blazing 4 f u rlongs in 47.40 seconds. Pletcher called it one of the most impressive works he'd ever seen. And Palace Malice came through in

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whether anyone was going to catch him. Unlike the Derby, Orb was unable to come through with a winning kick. He couldn't even reel in the tiring Oxbow. "It's huge. It's huge," said Pletcher, who t w ice b efore s ent out five horses in t h e Kentucky Derby and came up empty. "We always felt like he had a big one in him. We were just waiting for it to finally develop. I told Mr. Campbell this horse is training unbelievable. I know he's got a big run, we just need to put it all together." Pletcher sounded more optimistic i n P a l ace M a lice's chances asthe Belmont drew closer. "His work two works (before the race) were as good as I've seen a horse work," he said. "We were quietly confident coming in." McGaughey said Orb made a good run around the turn, "but we had given up so much ground. The s peed h orses held all up front and we just couldn't catch them." Stevens was happy Oxbow hung on for second. "Going into the far turn, I didn't think he w ould have hit the board," Stevens said. "To finish second, I am really surprised. I'm really proud of him."

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a big way, earning $600,000 of the $1 million purse and giving Pletcher his third win in a Triple Crown race. The nation's leading trainer also won the 2007 Belmont with the filly Rags to Riches and the 2010 Derby with Super Saver. Smith won his second Belmont, having won aboard Drosselmeyer in 2010. Pletcher's other four Belmont runners were Revolutionary, U n l imited B u dget, Overanalyze and M i d night Taboo. T he 14-horse field — t h e largest since 1996 — got off to an even start on a warm, sunny day after Tropical Storm Andrea moved out of the area. Frac Daddy and Freedom Child set out for the lead from their inside posts, with Oxbow not far behind. As the field came out of the turn, Stevens put Oxbow on the lead into the long backstretch run. But unlike the Preakness, he had company up front. By the time Oxbow moved into the f ar turn,Palace Malice had moved into contention and Orb was beginning to make a run from • way back in the pack. With a quarter-mile to the finish, Palace Malice seized the lead. The question was

Saturday's victory was her 31st in a row, the longest single-season streak in 13 years. Williams is 43-2 with six titles this season.

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Sharapova said. "She's a competitor." Sharapova is known for her grit on a court, too. She entered Saturday ranked No. 2, the winner of her past 13 French Open matches, and t h e o n l y a c tive woman other than the Williams sisters with more than two Grand Slam titles. But she doesn't seem to stand a chance against Serena, who has won their past 13 encounters. This was the first major final between women ranked 1-2 in more than nine years — the first at Roland Garros in 18 — and yet it really was not all that close. Sharapova observed that W i l l iams serves "harder than David Ferrer," referring to the man who will face seven-time champion Rafael Nadal in the men's final today.

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with a chuckle, her shiny new hardware an arm's length away. "But it's all about, for me, how you recover," she continued. "I think I've always said a champion isn't about how much they win, but it's about how they recover from their downs, whether it's an injury or whether it's a loss." As she spoke those last few words, her voice choked and her eyes welled with tears. There have been low moments for the 31-year-old American — none worse, perhaps, than a 10-month stretch ending in 2011 that included two foot operations and treatment for blood clots in her lungs — but

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© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

e rinta e i e • 3-D production predicted to mold our tomorrows By Eric Adler The Kansas City Star

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Tim Middleton lives and breathes now, but the mind of the 42-year-old Eudora, Kan., man often floats to the future, to what one might call the printable life. It is a time — with tan-

• Owner builds new runway, improvesaccessdrives and addsaviation fueling By Rachael Rees The Bulletin

rebuilt runway and new fuel station have brought new life to the Sisters Airport, which city officials hope will d r ive economic development in the community. "It's a good improvement to a community asset that was failing in all manners of the word before it was taken over by (its new owners)," said Hobbs Magaret, airport manager. For decades,SistersAirport was a oneman operation,owned and operated by Clifton Clemens, who continued to mow the grass and maintain the runway at age 95, according to The Bulletin's archives. Clemens died in 2008 at age 101. In the late 1990s, Deschutes County officials fought to keep local control over Sisters Airport so it would not be subject to state land use rules. See Airport /E5

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On Wednesday, Doug Nelson disassembles framing during installation of the new 12,000-gaUon fuel tank for the Sisters Airport.

with increasing frequency around the globe — when nearly any product one needs is created by simply pushing a button and printing it out in usable three dimensions. A pair of glasses? Print it. A knee joint? Print it. Red taillight lens for a '65 Mustang? Print it. A birthday cake, a prom dress, a full-size house for a family of four? Print away. "I have attempted printing my own shoes," Middleton said, laughing. He is a graphic designer who in the past two years has instructed more than 60 people on the art and

Courtesy Olaf Diegel via Kansas City Star

One of the 3-D printed guitar bodies made by Olaf Diegel. science of 3-D printing in Saturday classes at Hammerspace, a community workshop in Kansas City for builders, hobbyists and inventors. "They're kind of hard," Middleton said of his shoes. "The material is a little uncomfortable. But it is absolutely a possibility." More than possible: Such specialty 3-D-printed shoes already exist, produced and sold along with 3-D-printed nylon bathing suits, jewelry and dresses by Continuum Fashion of New York. See3-D /E3

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Rich Sugg / Kansas City Star

With a computer tethered to his printing device, Tim Middleton watches intently as a dimmer switch he designed begins to build from the ground up in Kansas City, Mo.

Photos by Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

Benny Benson, co-owner of the Sisters Airport, stands on the new tarmac Wednesday. Construction on the airstrip finished about two weeks ago. A new fuel tank was installed Wednesday, and more improvements are expected.

Forecosuresarecheap, but pitfa s mayawait By Jim Gallagher

Jenkins said.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

en -area wor ers earnin ess • Feds say average hourly wageabout 10 percentbelow national average

Employm ent, wagesintheBendMetropolitan Statistical Area2012 The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics has released data estimating the average hourly wages in 22

major occupational groups in the Bend MSA, which covers all of Deschutes County, and how they compare nationally. Estimates also included the percentage of the total workforce each of the 22 groups represent. MAJOR OCCUPATIONAI. GROUP

From staff reports Workers in the Bend area, as a whole, earned an average hourly wage last year about 10 percent below their peers nationwide, according to recently released data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Within the 22 occupational groups surveyed by

the agency, average hourly wages varied, compared to the national average. Five occupational groups in the Bend Metropolitan Statistical Area had what the bureau called significantly higher average hourly wages than the national average, while 12 groups earned significantly lower wagers. The Bend MSA covers all of Deschutes County. For example, those in the health-care practitioner and technical occupations — which includes doctors, pharmacists, dentists, nurses — in the Bend MSA earned an average hourly wage of $39.32, or $4.47 an hour more than the national average. SeeWages /E3

PERCENTOF TOTAL EMPLOYMENT U.S.

Total, all occupations Management Business andfinancial operations Computer andmathematical

BE N D

100.00% 100.00% 4.9 4.1 4.9 3.3 2.7 1.6 Architecture and engineering 1.8 1.3 0.8 1.2 Life, physical andsocial science 1.4 1.9 Community and social services Legal 0.8 0.6 Education, training and library 6.4 6.0 Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media 1.3 1.3 Health care practitioner andtechnical 5.9 6.3 Health care support 3.0 2.8 Protective service 2.5 1.8 Food preparation andserving related 8.9 12.1 Building and grounds cleaning andmaintenance 3.3 4.1 Personal care andservice 2.9 4.4 Sales and related 10.6 12.3 Office and administrative support 1 6.4 16.9 Farming, fishing and forestry 0.4 0.3 Construction andextraction 3.8 4.0 Installation, maintenanceand repair 3.9 3.7 Production 6.6 4.4 Transportation andmaterial moving 6.7 5.6

M EA N HOURLY WAGE U.S.

PERCENT BEN D DiFFERENCE "

$22.01 $19.78 52.20 33.44 38.55 37.98 32.87 21.27 47.39 24.62 26.20 35.35 13.36 20.70 10.28 12.34 11.80 18.26 16.54 11.65 21.61 21.09 16.59 16.15

39 . 75 28 . 21 31 . 35 32 . 90 26 . 85 2 0 .15 36 . 21 22 . 56 19 . 13 39 . 82 16 . 05 2 2 .81 11 . 17 14.26 1 1.66 16 . 57 15 . 86 13 . 08 2 1.45 2 1.67 15 . 25 15 .29

-10 -24 -16 -i9 -13 -18 -5 -24 -8 -27 13 20 10 9 16 -9 -4 12 -1 3 -8 -5

The frogs may have ripped-

Back in 2011, Christina and Brian Jenkins decided to take up a sideline as landlords. Since then, they've acquired three rental houses in the St. Louis area. Two of them were foreclosures. They have advice for those who want to pick up a foreclosed house on the cheap, and it comes from a fairy tale. "You have to go through a lot of frogs before you find a prince," Christina

out plumbing, or a crumbling roof or an air conditioner that disappeared. The princes sit in nice neighborhoods and need some paint, carpeting and other minor fixes. The princes and frogs have one thing in common. They're usually cheap compared with houses of similar size in the neighborhood. That's what attracts landlords as well as would-be homeowners. To a buyer, a foreclosure is a mystery house. SeeForeclosures/E2

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Boldtext indicates significant difference from the national average * A positive percent difference measures how much the mean wage in the Bend MSA is above the national mean wage, while a negative difference reflects a lower wage Source: t/.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

Greg Cross /The Bulletin

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E2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

Foreclosures

BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 daysbefore publication date tobusiness©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323. District Office, 1055 S.W. Lake Court, Redmond; 541-548-6047 or www.cold.org. No Business events listed. OPEN COMPUTERLAB:3-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. MONDAY Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. SMALL BUSINESSCOUNSELING: MASTER GMAIL TOMAXIMIZE SCORE business counselors will PRODUCTIVITY: Online webinar; be available for free one-on-one learn strategies and solutions to small business counseling; no boost productivity and efficiency with not only Gmail, but also Google appointment necessary; free; 5:30tasks, contacts and calendar; hosted 7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public by SIMPLIFY; registration required; Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; www. $65; 8:30-10 a.m.; Camp Sherman; scorecentraloregon.org. 503-260-8714 or info@simplifynw. SPANISH COMPUTERCLASSES: com. Computacion Para Principiantes: Esta clase identificara partes de CENTRAL OREGONREAL ESTATE la computadora.Como empezar y INVESTMENTCLUB: Free; 11a.m.; parar programas y desrrollar las ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 habilidades con el raton; free; 6 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. or bobbleile©windermere.com. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. LIBERATINGTHESPEAKER WITHIN, EMPOWERINGWOMEN TO SPEAK,ACT 5 LIVE WITH WEDNESDAY CONFIDENCE:The seminar incorporates lecture, group No Business events listed. discussion, individual cognitive activities and experiential activities; registration requires; continues June 8; $197; 7-9 p.m.; The Old THURSDAY Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-617-0340, diane© No Business events listed. eloquentexpression.com or www. eloquentexpression.com.

TODAY

FRIDAY

TUESDAY CENTRAL OREGONIRRIGATION DISTRICT BOARDMEETING: Free; 9 a.m.; Central Oregon Irrigation

CENTRAL OREGON REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB: Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile©windermere.com.

DEEDS Deschutes County • Michelle A. Ruberto Bryant S. Green, Kenwood, Lot15, Block5, $257,500 • Hayden HomesLLCto Marietta Bajer, Aspen Rim,Lot 82, $195,221 • Dunlap FineHomesInc. to Andrew M. Passarelli, DiamondBarRanch, Phase 3, Lot 96, $197,900 •GeorgeW .andSandraM.Goddard to Richard L.Williams II and Jennifer Williams, Tanglewood,Phase5, Lot 7, $319,000 •Vickie A. Vesseyto ReedStoops, Homes atRiverpointe ACondominium, Stage A,Unit107, $405,000 •Vicki J. Anast, formerly known asVicki J. Smith, to Robert W.Sizoo andSusan D. Turner, IndianFord Meadows, Lot1, Block 6, $489,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Gregory E. Miller, Obsidian Ridge,Phases1and 2, Lot 25, $191,940 • Richard S. andGinaT. Smith to Ralph E. and Shelly A.Kelley, DiamondA, First Addition, Lot10, Block1, $275,000 • Ronald P.Powers to Alfred P.and Carolyn A.Hainisch, BrokenTop, Phase 2L, Lot 233, $499,000 • Edward E.and HazelI. Vitcovich to Deanna J.Elsom, NorthWest Crossing, Phase14, Lot610,$384,900 •Joel and TabreeJudson to Karl and Brenda Scronce,Partition Plat1994-40, Parcel1, $680,000 •Thomas A.andM.Jennifer Gardner to Alice A.DeWittie, KingsForest, Third Addition, Lot9, Block4, $290,000 • Robertand Michelle R. Churchill toJohnA.WilsonandSuzannaL. Vermeul-Wilson, Brierwood, Lot6, $202,000 • Gordon G.and Betty J. Kuk, trustees for Kuk FamilyTrust, toJamesS. Scofield andLaurenC. Davis, McKenzie Estates, Lot1, Block 2, $198,000 •James SeamanSr. and Sandra Seaman to Russell B.Holmberg,Ridgeat Eagle Crest18, Lot 45, $345,000 • M. Jewett, trustee for Michael R. Jewett Trust, to Aaron M. Goddard, Forest Park, Lots 3and4, Block 2, $399,999 • David N. Youmans,trustee for David Neal YoumansRevocable Living Trust, to Richard A.and Kathryn A. Look, Deer Park 4, Lot 4, Block 23, $310,000 • Linda Rothbard to Brian M. Lippy, CascadePeaks, Phase2, Lot1, $175,000 • George andRobinV.Young to Darrin M. and Jennifer L. Podeschi, Villas at PronghornTownhomes,Lot 4, $365,000 • Bentley Holdings LLC to Blazin Chicken LLC, CrossroadsCenter, Lot4, $567,000 •StevenJ.andRobinA.Mayto Gage P. andLianaC.Holland, TamarackPark East, Phase 2,Lot34, Block1, $215,000 • Ryan J. andChristine A. Thomas to Michael L.Larson,OregonWater Wonderland, Unit 2,Lot10, Block44, $245,000 •Andrew S.MacMilan to Larry T. and Barbara K.Gahr,River Rim P.U.D.,Phase 4, Lot 308, $330,000 •Jeremy D.and Kindra K.Maestas to Waldemar J.andDeniseT. Bak, River Rim P U.D.,Phase1, Lot 22, $218,000 •Timothy H. Holtto Phong X.and Gail L. Ngo,Oakview, Phase6, Lot11, $225,000 • Oregon Joy LLCto Hayden Homes LLC, Antler Ridge,Phase2, Lots19 and 22-24, $304,800 • Gary and Jennifer Henkel, trustees for Gary andJennifer Henkel Trust, to Aaron and SusanHenry, Bridges at Shadow Glen, Phase1, Lot 71,$472,000 • Dan F. and Sally A. Brown, trustees for Dan andSally Brown 2001 Family Trust, to Eli andKelly Pyke,Tollgate, Eighth Addition, Lot 442, $324,625 • Hayden HomesLLCto Brian S.and Elle M. Spaulding, ObsidianRidge,Phases1 and2, Lot21,$158,147 •PWD Associa tesLLC toStephenB. Kirby and Lucida L.Siebenthall, Points West, Lot 53, $434,900 • Daniel P.andShawnaMilerto SGP LLC, FairwayPoint Village1, Lot3, Block 5, $775,000 Jefferson County •WD Enterprises, Inc. to D.B.Home

Solutions LLC,Palmain, Lot13, Block 45, $ I75,000 • Bank of the Westto Wilmer R.Sandau Jr., Juniper Crest, Phase2, Lots11 and 12, $160,000 • Monet F. Sheffield, Bernideen Perkins and U.S.Bank,co-trustees ofthe BernideenPerkinsTrust, to TonyL., Debbie C. and Jason C. Lawrence, Township10, Range14,Section 4, $685,000 • Jeremy W.and Patricia L. McCrearyto BernideenPerkins, Monet F.Sheffield and U.S.Bank,co-trustees of the BernideenPerkinsTrust, CanyonView Subdivision, Lot 25,$265,000 • David L. Shaffer and KimL.T.Do to Deanand NancyLaney,Madras Ranchos, Subdivision No.1, Lot3, Block 1, $210,000 • Stann Dmytryk, trustee of the Judy M. DmytrykTrust, to Jacob J. Struck, Madras Ranchos,Subdivision No.2,Lot 2, Block2, $175,000 • Stephen L. Lindell, astrustee of the Lindell Family Trust, to Robert A.and Wanda L.Wright, Crooked River Ranch, No.14, Lot5, $339,900 • Ray D. andLinda R.Gilett, trustees, ortheir successors in trust, underthe Ray and LindaGilett Revocable Living Trust, to Bruce M.and Janice M.Hoyt, Silverado Estates, Lot 2,$235,000 • Mary Sharp to RobertW.Farmerand Patricia A. Kirk, CrookedRiverRanch, No. 7, Lot129, $164,500 • Dave D.and Shirley L. Smith to Dr. Steven J. BarkerandSusanL. Bilard, Crooked RiverRanch,No.3, Lot 63, $172,900 • Gregory J. andKarenSteen, trustees of the SteenFamily Trust, to Jeffrey C. Scheetz, trustee, orhis successors in trust, underTheScheetz Living Trust, Crooked RiverRanch,No.3, Lot119, $262,500 • Brian C. andPatricia L. Streeter to Steven A.Ray,Threee Rivers Recreational Area,FourthAddition, Lot 10, Block11, $ l53,000 • Paul E. andCarmel B. Knight to Robert W. and KathleenG.Durkee, Crooked River Ranch,No.10, Lot 95, $199,900

Continued from E1 The old homeowner is long gone, so there's no one to fill out disclosure forms listing problems with the house. H omeowners fac i n g foreclosure do little maintenance, and the process can drag on for more than a year.Even with the homeowner gone, the house can sit vacant for months before the bank puts it on the market — time for roofs to start leaking, thieves to rip out the copper pipes, basements to fill up with water and mold to climb the walls. T hat's w h y buyers should make purchase offers contingent on a professional building inspection. The banks an d g overnment agencies that ow n foreclosedhomes generally won't make repairs. But at least the buyers will know what they're getting into. In the Jenkinses' last foreclosure pur c h a se, the carpet smelled and the house needed "elbow grease," Christina Jenkins said. But t h e h a rdwood floors were pretty and the Jenkinses thought renters would like it. They found themselves in a bidding war. "There w er e m u l tiple offers. We went back and forth two or t h ree times — once afterwe gave them our 'best and highest' offer," she said. Bidding wars are becoming more common on the best foreclosures,real estate agents say. "Usually, they're priced pretty r e asonably," said Dennis Norman, who has negotiated many foreclosure sales at MORE Realtors in Chesterfield, Mo. "The buyer has to get there immediately. People flock to them." The bidding process can put off b uyers, Norman said. Instead of replying to an offer quickly, the bank may sit back and collect several, then they ask bidders for their best and final bid. To sweeten the pot, the Jenkinses took a chance

J.B. Forbes/St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Brian, right, and Christina Jenkins look over the work they still have to do in the kitchen on a home they purchased in the St. Louis area before they can rent out the home. and waived the building inspection on their last house. By that time, the couple figured they knew what they

Sunset Hills, Mo., and it drew 12 offers the first day it was on the market. "Lowball offers are not going to work," he said. "The price they're listed for is were doing. "We can look past the ugly," what they go for." said Christina Jenkins. InTo get a leg up on other stead, she looks for structural buyers on the best homes, he soundness. "Is it eaten by ter- won't demand ahome inspecmites'? Is there a flood prob- tion contingency, and somelem? Is there mold?" times offers all-cash. Banks Then they calculate how will sometimes take an ofmuch it will take to make it at- fer $10,000 to $20,000 lower tractive to a renter. "It's not just t han the competition for a the value. It's what we'll have buyer offering cash and no to put into it. Is it in the right contingencies. neighborhood?" L a n d l ords On the other hand, some check ads for rentals in the foreclosed propertiesare so neighborhood to get an idea of bad that th e b ank d oesn't what rent to charge. try to sell them. "They reThe Jenkinses got the idea lease the deed," said Roberts, to become landlords while who also works in St. Louis helping a relative shop for a County's housing rehabilitarental home. They saw the tion program. In effect, the rents landlords were getting; bank abandons the property. compared it to prices of homes "They become a liability of the and saw a profit to be made. county or the municipality," How much? The l ong-term Roberts said. return of the stock market is 8 The presence of landlords percent, notes Christina, who flush with cash is a problem is an accountant. Anything for families who want to buy a over that is gravy for an inves- foreclosure to live in. So, Fantor with a long horizon, and nie Mae and Freddie Mac give she's anticipating gravy. such families a head start. The Adam Roberts is a rehabber. twobig government-controlled He looksforforeclosed houses mortgage companies own lots he can buy for $100,000 to of foreclosedhouses. For the $D0,000, fix up, then sell for first two weeks a house is on $170,000 to $200,000. the market, only would-be ocCompetition is f i erce, he cupants can bid. said. His last purchase was in For people with good credit

and a substantial down payment, getting a mortgage for a foreclosed home is usually no problem, said Jeff Griege of Paramount Mortgage in St. Louis. They'll get a conventional loan. "The home has to be habitable. It can't be in poor condition. It must have a functional bathroom. The kitchen has to be there," he said. Problems come when a buyer with only a small down payment wants to go FHA. The Federal Housing Administration will back a loan with only a 3.5 percent down payment, but it has tougher standards for the home'scondition. Delayscaused by going FHA can prompt the bank to reject the offer. Fannie Mae and F reddie Mac have loan programs for people who buy t heir forec losures. They r e quire n o appraisal, which ca n s a ve the homeowner about $450, and no mortgage insurance. Freddie's requires as little as 5 percent down payment, and Fannie will take 3 percent. The FHA offers a 203k loan which will cover some rehab costs for homes needing lots of work. "It's cumbersome. It won't be a 30-day closing," said Griege. The buyer must hire qualified contractors, and the FHA will check the reasonablenessof the bid.

Average rate on 'l5-yearmortgageabove 3percent By Marcy Gordon

from 2.98 percent. That's the highest since last May. WASHINGTON — The Concerns that the Federal average U.S. rate on a 15- Reserve may scale back its year fixed mortgage rose bond purchases have pushed above 3 percent this week rates higher over t h e l a st for the first time in a year, month. Still, mortgage rates while the rate on the 30- remain low by historical stanyear fixed loan approached dards. The 30-year loan hit 4 percent. a record 3.31 percent rate in Mortgage buyer Fred- November. The 15-year loan die Mac s aid T h ursday fell to its low of 2.56 percent a that the rate on the 30-year month ago. loan jumped to 3.91 perMortgage rates are riscent from 3.81 percent last ing because they tend to folweek. That's the highest low the yield on the 10-year since March 2012. Treasury note. The yield on The rate on the 15-year the 10-year note climbed as loan rose to 3.03 percent high as 2.2 percent last week, The Associated Press

its highest level in more than two years. It has since slipped to 2.1 percent in early trading Thursday. That compares with 1.63 percent at the begin-

slow those purchases, interest rates have ticked up. That has decreased the value of bonds with lower yields.

ning of May. The F ed's $ 8 5-billion-amonth in Treasury and mortgage bond purchases have pushed down long-term interest rates. As speculation has grown that the Fed will

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SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN E 3

3-D Continued from E1 Cakes, cookies, sailboats, toys, architectural m o dels, musical instruments, weapons, prosthetic hands and legs: All are items in recent years proved to be producible by 3-D printers. Interest is high enough that the federal government last year earmarked $30 million to help support a new publicprivate in sti t ut e in Youngstown, Ohio, dedicated to promoting and funding 3-D printing research. It is atechnology — although already considered overhyped in some circles — that many manufacturing experts say is even now only in its infancy, at a place similar to where personal and business computing was in the 1970s. Like computing, they said, 3-D printing not only is likely to change the things we make and how we make and sell them, but also change how we live in good, bad and inconceivable ways. "It is a bit tricky to predict," said Hod Lipson, a professor of mechanical engineering at Cornell University and co-author with Melba Kurman of "Fabricated: The New World of 3D Printing," a 2013 book on the promises and perils of

an emerging technology. "It is a little like trying to sit down in the 1970s and predict how computers were going to be used. Everyone could predict it would automate payrolls, but no one ever predicted social media."

Life-changing technology? Given that caveat, Lipson predicted of 3-D printing: "It is

going to change everything." Exactly when, how and how much, of course, is hard to say. A May article in The New England Journal of Medicine described how two Michigan doctors used a 3-D printer to save an infant's life by printing a custom tracheal splint to support the baby's airway. In the last year, meanwhile, one young man's mission to use a 3-D printer to produce a workable handgun sparked i mmediate outcry f rom t h e public and concerned government officials who envision the technology being used to put caches of cheap and untraceable guns into the hands of criminals or terrorists. In May, Cody Rutledge Wilson, a Texas law student who describeshimself as a cryptoa narchist, test-fired a r u d i mentary handgun he created on a 3-D printer he bought on eBay. He released his gun design online, prompting the U.S. State Department to demand that he remove it. Business ethicist Kirk Hanson, of Santa Clara University, said that improved technologies frequently usher in fresh fears. Better 2 - D p r i n ting fostered high-grade counterfeiting. The Internet's role in money laundering continues to reveal itself. Hanson said of 3-D printing: "This is simply the latest technological breakthrough that has great potential for good and great potential for harm."

How it works Understanding 3-D printing and the future requires understanding how most products are made now. The range is broad, from printing to stamping, casting to injection molding. Many manufacturing processes involve tooling or m a chining parts — asubtractive process that produces a part by cutting

or chipping or shaving away. "You start with a block of material and subtract things until you get what you want," said Robert Landers, a profes-

sor of mechanical engineering at Missouri University of Science andTechnology inRolla. But the first word in 3-D printing's alternative name, additive manufacturing, tells how it is different. Instead of chipping or cutting away at some material, a 3-D printer's nozzle runs back

Wages

three students recently won a $100,000 prize as part of the national 3 D 4 D C h a l lenge. They took plastic milk bottles of the type that normally pile up in landfills and, after shredding them into something that looked like snowflakes, used the plastic in their 3-D printer to create a rowboat. The winners, students Bethany Weeks, Matthew Rogge and Brandon Bowman, are using their idea and prize money to work w it h a U . S.-based organization to help address sanitation issues in Oaxaca, Mexico. "If you k new y o u c o uld 3-D-print a boat out of garbage and knew it meant that trees wouldn't have to get cut down, isn't that worth doing'?" Ganter said. Although current use of the technology is booming, GanPhotos by Rich Sugg / Kansas City Star ter said, it still is not as userIt took five hours and10 minutes to "print" this coffee mug at the Prototype Studio at Hallmark in Kansas City, Mo. The technology that friendly as it might be in years makes this possible is becoming omnipresent and companies and ideas are booming — ranging from printable body parts and foods to to come. Using a 3-D printer, musical instruments and houses. he said, is no different than becoming proficient at using a router or jigsaw or movie think i t w i l l e ver c ompete produced every day in cobalt camera. "Why d oesn't everybody with the t r uly h i gh-volume chrome. I could go on." stuff. It is very good for small Lipson of Cornell said that it make their own movies? Bevolume." is this personalized, individual cause it's a lot of work someFor many companies, that market, the creation of what he times," Ganter said. "There is a means using the printers to called"arbitrary shapes on de- certain amount of skill that is work out kinks in prototypes mand," that makes 3-D print- required." before sending a product into ing appealing and powerful. Except not too long ago, it + ~( + ', 'kiik~ "Chances are you are walk- was unthinkable that people mass production. In Kansas City, Garmin uses several 3-D ing around people with 3-D would be shooting, viewing or printers for prototypes. Likeprinted parts on them, but they editing video on their phones. y' w ise, Hallmark C ards h a s are just hidden," he said, using These days, said Landers of seven 3-D printers to test ideas the example of "invisible" den- Missouri University of Science and create small volumes of talbraces. and Technology,the common "They are 3-D-printed," Lip- vision of 3-D printing goes ornaments and keepsakes. "We've had them for at least son said. "Fifty thousand of something like this: Three-dimensional printers at Prototype Studio at Hallmark created "Instead of going to the store this and bicycle chain. six years," Hallmark's Scott these every day, not per year. Browning said of the printers. That is something that is small to buy a set of silverware, you "Ours are running every day, and custom-shaped, and you would have the metal at home. can't mass-produce something You go online and look for a gies had improved to the point most of the day." where they could make a real, What is new is the growth like that. The same thing with design you like. You purchase working electric guitar. Not in the industry, particularly hearing aid casings and (den- that design," and the design just a prototype, but the real in personal 3-D printers protal) crowns." company would send it to the thing, that could be sold as-is. duced by c o mpanies w i th Technophiles can use the home printer. "You press 'go' and come It worked incredibly well, and names like 3D Systems Corp., machines at home to squeeze I started blogging about it, and MakerBot, Stratasys, Maker- out tchotchkes and gewgaws, down the next morning to a the business spun off f r om Gear, FlashForgve and Zen from dimmer switch knobs full set of silverware. It changthere. Toolworks. to unique toys for the k i ds es the whole consumer market In Boise, Idaho, engineer In May, Staples became the t o prototypes of t heir ow n scheme." Nate Calvin took his daugh- first major U.S. retailer to an- inventions. One might call ideas like ter to an aviary show where nounce it would soon be sellthis pie in the sky, except that Good for the planet In about 20 minutes, Tim they saw a bald eagle named ing 3D Systems' Cube 3-D in May, NASA a w arded a Middleton 3-D printed a new Beauty with an injured and printer at its stores, beginning At the University of Wash- $125,000 grant to an Austin, dimmer switch, just like the one misshapen beak. in Europe, and also online ington, mechanical engineer- Texas-based company to hone he designed and installed in his He took pictures and a den- starting at $1,299. ing professor Mark G anter a 3-D food printer. The idea house. tal impression. Using a printer, Additivemanufacturingand speaks o f env i r o nmental is to use shelf-stable powders he fashioned a new beak, al- 3-D printing is a $2.2 billion in- benefits. and oils to print, among other though, he said, "it will never dustry, according to a 2013 reAt his school, a team of dishes,a pizza in outerspace. and forth, over and over again, replace what nature can do." port prepared by Wohlers As"She can use it for picking sociates, an industry consultoozing out layer after layer of whatever material is inside. It up things, but not for ripping ing group in Fort Collins, Colo. could be spools of plastic, met- or tearing," said Calvin, 45. It is barely a speck compared al, ceramic or cookie dough. "That is something we want to with the $1.8 trillion generated These printers have already do in the next version — make by U.S. manufacturing last been used to create a heart it a little more compliant." year. valve. Some predict the printIn Italy, i nventor Enrico But in 2010, 2011 and 2012, ers will use biological tissue Dini, chairman of M onolite the global market for 3-D or to create entire replacement UK Ltd., has created a mas- additive manufactured prodorgans. sive printer he calls D-Shape ucts grew 24.1 percent, 29.4 I nstructions for w h a t t o to create tall, sturdy and inpercent and 28.6 percent rebuild are guided by software, tricate stonelike sculptures, s pectively, according to t h e much of which is free online. o rganically s h a pe d wi t h report. Sales last year of inThe 3-D printer builds a whole many large curves and holes dustrial 3-D p r inters (those object in place, as if it were that would be difficult to cre- costing $5,000 or more) grew growing from the bottom up. ate using traditional building 19.3 percent, which is nothing Or it creates parts of an object techniques. compared with the personal M E R RIL L 0 S U L L I v A N L L P that can be assembled. Made of a combination of 3-D printer market: up more Printers canbesmallenough magnesium powder, sand and than 300 percent each year on welcomes William A. Van Vactor as its newest to fit on a desk, using spools of adhesives, one such wall is be- average since 2008. team member. Will focuses his law practice on thermoplastic filament t h at ing used as an artificial reef. In Responding by email from civil litigation, land use matters, and business looks like weed trimmer line. principal, the technique could China, Terry W ohlers said and real estate transactions. Or they can be huge, with be adapted to create walls to that in industries ranging from nozzles pouring out stonelike build homes. Another vision: dental to medical to aerospace, material to create walls or astronauts using 3-D printers "significant investments are 10-foot-tall sculptures. loaded with moon dust and being made." M E R RIL L 0 S U L L I v A N L L P In Kansas City last year, other material to build housWohlers w r ote: "Boeing Attorneys at law Hammerspace founder Dave ing on the lunar surface. is flying more than 100,000 Dalton and others toyed with A rocket part goes bad'? 3-D-printed parts. Lima Corthe idea of building a printer No more "Houston, we have porate (Italy) has manufacProviding exceptional legal services to large enough to create a couch a problem." Problem solved. tured morethan40,000 acetabCentral Oregonians since 1974 out of foam, until they realized A p r inter p r oduces what's ular (hip) cups in solid titaniit might be too squishy to hold needed. um for patients. About 15,000 wytrw.merrill-osullivan.com anyone. 3-D printing technology is dental copings (the main body A few quick clicks online re- not new. It first came to public of a crown or bridge) are being veal the range — from military notice in the early 1980s, and drones to crazy motorcycle industries and scientists began frames to specialty cookies to, toying and experimentingwith in Canada, a three-wheeled, it soon after. The airplane, auegg-shaped hybrid car proto- tomotive and other industries type called Urbee. A YouTube have used industrial 3-D printvideo from the MIT Media Lab ers for years to design and test shows a quick-motion video of specialty parts. a 3-D printer creating a playFew people, at this point, able flute. envision 3-D printing replacIn New Zealand, engineer ing the cost-effective injection Olaf D i egel's e x periments molding or other mass prowith 3-D printing spurred for duction techniques in the near him a new market in intricate future, if ever. "When you make partsfor electric guitars with hollow, lacelike bodies. the automotive industry, for "I used to be a wannabe rock example, you have thousands on OLYMPIC-' Exterior MAXIMUH Stains & Sealants star," Diegel said by email. "So and hundreds of thousands of two yearsago,Idecided to see components," said L anders, if the 3-D printing technolo- the Missouri professor. "I don't

The survey also showed job categories in the Bend MSA, Continued from E1 their percentage of the total O n the other end of t h e workforce and how they comscale, jobs in the management pare nationally. group — c h i e f e x ecutives, Food-preparation and serveducational a d m i nistrators, ing-related jobs — chefs, waitmarketing, sales, and finan- ers and waitresses, bartendcial managers and similar po- ers and others — made up sitions — earned an average 12.1 percent of total employhourly wage of $39.75 an hour, ment last year in the Bend or $12.45 an hour less, on aver- MSA, while for the nation as a age, than their counterparts whole, it was 8.9 percent. across the nation. — Tim Doran, The Bulletin

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Wages inBend To find more information on the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment Statistics surveyforthe Bend Metropolitan Statistical Area, visit www.bls.gov/ ro9/oesbend.htm

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SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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ONSUMER

Batman {the city} wins condomcontest, thanks to the Internet By Matthew Boyle Btoomberg News

LONDON — Holy prophylactics, Batman! In a recent online marketing campaign, Durex asked Facebook fans to vote on what city should get SOS Condoms, a service meant to allow amorous — but unprepared — couples to click on a smartphone app for a rush delivery. The voters chose Batman, the capital of an oil-rich and conservative-Muslim province in southeastern Turkey, and social media experts say the contest was almost certainly decided by Internet pranksters. Batman received 1,577 votes, besting Paris and London, according to the contest's Facebook page, which has been dormant since the two-month promotion finished in April. The snafu for Durex, owned by Reckitt Benckiser Group, illustrates the risks for brands that embrace social media. Marketers expect to devote 22 percent of their budgets to such campaigns over the next five years, compared with 8 percent today, according to a survey from Duke University's Fuqua School of Business. "Any brand that wants to remain engaged with its audience has to have a social media presence," says Debra Aho Williamson, an analyst at researcher EMarketer. "But any time a brand engages consumers in social media, there is the opportunity for abuse." Just a s k McDo n a ld's, which in January 2012 paid to sponsor the Twitter hashtag

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said the improvements, ranging from the addition of fuel to eliminating th e l a nding For more information fee, have made the airport about Sisters Airport or safer, more user friendly and its grand opening, visit functional. www.sistersairport.com Pilots used to land in neighboring airports in Redmond or Bend, instead of Sisters, bein the future. He also hopes to cause there wasn't the ability provide pilot and hangar fa- to refuel, he said. "Flying a plane is not like cilities at the airport. H is goal: t o h e l p d r a w driving a car. If you run out of people to Sisters through an- gas you are coming out of the other mode of transportation sky," he said. — aviation. Overall, he said the airport Many pilots are business reflects where the community owners, he said. The ability of Sisters is going and what it to accessan airport could be wants to be. "It's going to be a little gem a major consideration in their decisions to relocate their busi- for us, that airport," he said. nessesto Sisters,Benson said, "Look at Bend's airport. It noting he flies frequently for doesn't get the commercial his business. flights like Redmond does, "We want people to come to but it's been a huge economic Sisters to live, work and play," driver for Bend." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, he said. Sisters Mayor Brad Boyd rrees@bendbultetin.com

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s uch as A i r L ink a n d L i f e Flight, were improved. The airport also has a new helicopter landing pad, and on Wednesday, a ne w 1 2,000gallon fuel tank was installed. On July 4, Sisters Airport will hold its grand re-opening. The improvements, starting withthe runway, have definitely put Sisters back on the map for small aircraft, said Erin Borla, executive director of the Sisters Chamber of Commerce. People will be able to make Sisters their home base. "There are so many new ideas and things that are happening there. It only means positive things for the Sisters' community," she said. "Not only will it increase tourism it wil l i n c rease (access for) people who want to live here, and their ability to enjoy their hobby or mode of transportation." More improvements are on the way, Benson said. The airport i s c u r r ently being annexed into the city, which will clean up zoning issues and allow the city to further support airport improvement, he said. Benson plans to improve the business park for his engineer-

Continued from E1 B y 2007, much of t h e pavement on the apron, the area where planes park, was cracked and deteriorating, according to a state A viation Department r eport. The runway width did not meet minimum requirements; the airport had no fuel availability, and to top it off pilots had to pay a fee to land. In S e p tember 20 1 1, B enny Benson an d h i s wife, Julie, bought the airport, where his company, Energyneering S o lutions, had been located since 2008. "The pilot c o mmunity would tend to avoid this (airport) because of the failing runway," he said. With the about $600,000 from ConnectOregon — a state program for nonhighway transportation projects that p r o mote e c onomic development — and about $150,000 in private funding, the runway was rebuilt, its width expanded from 30 feet to 60. It opened to the public May 24. A dditionally, acce s s driveways for emer - ing company, and potentially gency medical services, other associated businesses

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E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

UNDAY DRIVER

Jaguarsetsbarhighfor '14 F-Type By David Undercoffler Los Angeles Times

In a 1961 debut that reverberated worldwide, Jaguar pulled the covers off its E-Type coupe at the Geneva Motor Show and redefined beauty in automobiles. In the era of audacious tail fins and u n checked mass, the sensual 1961 E-Type, also known as the XKE, offered a simple elegance.The coupe's designer was chasing aerodyn amics, but i n

REVIEW

'14Jaguar F-Type Base price:$69,000 As tested:$91,965 Type:Two-door, two-

passenger convertible Engine:3.0-liter

supercharged V-6 engine; rear-wheel drive; 8-speed automatic with manual shifting transmission

Mileage:19 mpgcity, 27 mpg highway

th e J ag's sleek

profile he c r eated art. Quite literally: The Museum of Modern Art in New York has had an E-Type in its permanent collection since 1996. E nzo Ferrari i s s a i d t o have wept upon viewing the E-Type, calling it t h e m o st beautiful car ever made. The Italian sports cars bearing his name would soon incorporate the Jag's design elements. Fifty-two years later, the ripples from that Geneva debut are bringing to our shores a nother all-new c a r f r o m Jaguar. In May, the venerable British brand put the 2014 FType convertible on sale. The t w o -seater f e t ches $70,000 to $100,000, and a coupe variant is all but confirmed for 2014. Both versions will occupy a market niche that overlaps with the Porsche Boxster S and the 911. The car was designed by Ian Callum, whose pen has also given us Jaguar's midsized XF and full-sized XJ sedans, along with the Aston Martin DB7 and DB9. Although Callum started working on the F-Type before Jaguar had decided what to call it, the automaker is billing the F-Type as the spiritual successor to the

have the recognition." But the F-Type can certainly make an impact on the brand's image, drawing more attention to other offerings in the lineup and helping to define Jaguar's design language for future models. Going fast helps, too. The F-Type is available with one of three direct-injected, supercharged engine variants. The base offering is a direct-injected 3.0-liter supercharged V-6 that makes 340 horsepower and 332 poundfeet of t orque. This model starts at $69,000, and Jaguar says it will do zero to 60 mph in 5.1 seconds. Then there's the F-Type S, which we tested because Jaguar expects it to be its volume seller of the trio. This model starts at $81,000 and comes with a more powerful version of the same engine, with 380 horsepower and 339 poundfeet of torque. Acceleration to 60 mph drops to 4.8 seconds. At the top of the heap is the F-Type V8 S. For $92,000, buyers get an all-aluminum 5.0-liter V-8 that makes 495 horsepower and 460 pound-feet of torque. All the cars come with an E-Type. eight-speed automatic transForcing the F-Type to follow mission with manual paddle such a legendary act presents shifters and a sport mode. Jaga big risk. The new F-Type uar may offera manual vermay not find itself in art mu- sion later, but the automaker s eums decades from n o w , knows most drivers are likely but Jaguar has clearly scored to select the automatic option with a gorgeous machine that — and it's a good one. is capable of shouldering the In full manual mode, the brand's heritage of perfor- transmission is easily one of mance and sex appeal. the fastest-shifting automatThe company could use the ics available. Adding to the joy help. are enthusiastic throttle blips The flip side of Jaguar's on downshifts, mixed with the heritage involves large pools aggressive popping and crackof oil in driveways and even ling of the sport-tuned exhaust. larger repair bills, with the In any d r i ving situation, predictable effect on r esale the transmission and engine values for most models. (The work together in a r emarkE-Type remains the exception, ably silken performance. The a prized and expensive collec- duo acceleratesas smoothly tor car.) Although Jaguar is as you'd hope from a car this midway through a dramatic handsome, and throws out aesthetic makeover, reliability a robust exhaust note that's ratings and sales figures have worthy of a car costing twice yet to catch up. this much. J.D. Power & A s sociates At 3,558pounds, the car isn't ranked Jaguar fifth from the exactly light, but it never feels bottom in dependability for cumbersome. Its horsepower2012. Consumer Reports rated to-weight ratio puts it between both the 2012 Jaguar full-sized the Porsche Boxster S and 911. XJ and midsized XF sedans Helping keep weight down is as having "much worse than an all-aluminum chassis and average" predicted reliability. body panels. Meanwhile, the automaker's In terms o f r a w p e r forsales lag far behind those of mance, the F-Type feels less competitors. Last year,Jaguar visceral and immediate than — now owned by India's Tata the Boxster S or 911, and it Motors — reported that it sold p robably would lose to e i just 55,675 vehicles in the U.S. ther on a track. But this is an That's in contrast to luxury everyday sports ca r t h at's leaders BMW and Mercedes- comfortable, smooth and efBenz, which each sold about fortlessly quick; it's as much five times that many cars. car as 90 percent of buyers in Yet even if this F-Type turns this segment will ever need or out to be a marked success want. — and there's no reason it And they'll never get tired of shouldn't — it won't move the looking at it. The front bears sales needle in a meaningful a passing resemblance to Jagway for Jaguar. Tom Libby, a uar's larger XK, with a large, senior forecasting analyst at oval-shaped grille flanked by a auto research firm R.L. Polk pair of air inlets on either side. 8 Co., predicts that Jaguar The car is smaller than picprobably will sell about 6,000 tures suggest — 3 inches shortF-Types in 2014. er than a Honda Civic — and "In terms of competing with hugs the ground with a wide, the Germans, it doesn't help low stance. A subtle shoulder much," Libby said. "Obvious- line, which recalls the E-Type, ly, it's a terrific car in terms of arcs over the rear wheels and image and performance, but draws your eyes to the F-Type's they're not going to sell them stunning rear end. on a large scale." The taillamps also recall the What will help is a much-ru- F-Type's ancestor. Ultra-thin mored yet unconfirmed com- horizontal LED lights wrap pact sedan — think BMW 3- around the rear corners from Series rival — and a crossover each side, converging in the SUV. Those two segments sell silhouette of two round tailvehicles at the highest volume lights near the license plate. in the luxury world. Jaguar is At the bottom of the bumper well aware of these conspicu- is an aggressive yet tasteful ous holes, Callum said. fascia that serves as the only "We've been f airly o p en distinction between the V-6 about that, that we are going and V-8 models. The F-Type to increase our car lineup," and F-Type S feature a pair of Callum said. "We have to. We center-mounted chrome exhave tobecome a big player. haust pipes that look as good We're just not big enough at as they sound. V-8 models the moment to have the gravi- have two sets of dual tips on tas on the average street, to either side of the fascia.

The 2014 Jaguar F-Type is a brandnew model billed as the spiritual successor to the famed E-Type, which was introduced in 1961.

The genius of the F-Type's design, especially the rear, is it looks unlike anything else on the road while giving a subtle nod to Jaguar's past glory. A week of driving in car-saturated Los Angeles yielded numerous cheers, furtive photos at stoplights, and shouted inquiries on the freeway. "Overall, from the back of this car, it's something that's very exciting," Callum said. "And incidentally, that's the view most people are going to see."

Jaguar via Mcclatchy-Tribune News Service

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INSIDE: BOOICSW Editorials, F2

Commentary, F3 O» www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

DAVID BROOKS

The way to produce a person ylan Matthews recently had a fascinating piece about a young man named Jason Trigg in The Washington Post. Trigg is a25-year-old computer science graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who has hit upon what he thinks is the way he can do maximum good for the world. He goes to work each day at a highfrequency trading hedge fund. But, instead of spending his ample salary, he lives the life of a graduate student and gives a large chunk of his money

away.

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Trigg has seized upon the statistic that a $2,500 donation can prevent one death from malaria, and he figures that, over the course of a lucrative Wall Street career, he can save many lives. He was motivated to think this way by the utilitarian philosopher, Peter Singer. From the article, Trigg seems like an earnest, morally serious man, who, if he lives out his plan, could indeed help save many lives. But if you are thinking of following his example, I would really urge caution. First, you might start down this course seeing finance as a convenient means to realize your deepest commitment: fighting malaria. But the brain is a malleable organ. Every hour you spend with others, you become morelikethe people around you.Gradually,you become a different person. If there is a large gap between your daily conduct and your core commitment, you will become more like your daily activities and less attached to your original commitment. You will become more hedge fund, less malaria. Second, I would be wary of inverting the natural order of affections. If you see the world on a strictly intellectual level, then a child in Pakistan or Zambia is just as valuable as your own child. But not many people actually think this way. Not many people value abstract life perceived as a statistic as much as the actual child being fed, hugged, nurtured and played with. If you choose a profession that doesn't arouse your everyday passion for the sake of serving instead some abstract faraway good, you might end up as a person who values the far over the near. You might become one of those people who loves humanity in general but not the particular humans immediately around. You might end up enlarging the faculties we use to perceive the far — rationality — and eclipsing the faculties we use to interact with those closest around — affection, the capacity for vulnerability and dependence. Third, and most important, I would worry about turning yourself into a means rather than an end. If you go to Wall Street mostly to make money for charity, you may turn yourself into a machine for the redistribution of wealth. You may turn yourself into a fiscal policy. But a human life is not just a means to produce outcomes, it is an end in itself. When we evaluate our friends, we don't just measure the consequences of their lives. We measure who they intrinsically are. We don't merely want to know if they have donegood. We want to know if

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Photos by Tony Demin / New York Times News Service

Attendees gather for food at Journey Church, in Bozeman, Mont., in April. The church is part of a fast-growing Christian movement that has revived debate about ethical practices in international adoptions.

By Erik Eckholm • New Yorfz Times News Service BOZEMAN, Mont.

-

s a girl, Danna Hopkins dreamed of having 20 children. Today, she and her husband, Brian, the pastor of an evangelical church here, are building a large family, but not in the way she had imagined. Hopkins gave birth to four children, now ages 7 to 11. A few

lic of Congo, they started adop-

years ago, inspired by compas-

sisters whose parents, an agency said, had died of malaria and typhus. "I believe it's what God called us to do," said Danna Hopkins, 34. She and her husband, and the Journey Church where he is lead pastor, are part of a fastgrowing evangelical Christian

sion and a biblical mandate to aid "widows and orphans," the couple adopted two teenage boys and a young girl from Ethiopia. Then in 2012, they adopted another girl from Ethiopia. Last year, when they read about the dismal orphanages in the war-torn Democratic Repub-

tion proceedings for four young

Danna and Brian Hopkins with their eight children, four of whom were adopted from Ethiopia, in Bozeman, Mont. From left: Dylon, Mahlea, Josh, Danna, Jazmyn, Preston, Brian, Bailey, Silas and Kenzie.

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they are good. That's why when most people pick a vocation, they don't only want one that will be externally useful. They want one that they will enjoy, and that will make them a better person. They want to find that place, as the novelist Frederick Buechner put it, "where your deep gladness and the world's deep hunger meet." Taking a job just to make money is probably going to be corrosive, even if you use the money for charity rather than sports cars. Making yourself is different than producing a product or an external outcome, requiring different logic and different means. If your profoundest interest is dying children in Africa or Bangladesh, it's probably best to go to Africa or Bangladesh, not to Wall Street. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times. John Costa's column will return.

movement that promotes adoption as a religious and moral calling. The movement has also revived debate about ethical practices in international adoptions, with fears that some parents and churches, in their zeal, have na't'vely entered terrain long filled with pitfalls, especially in countries susceptible to corruption. See Adoption /F6

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 20'I3

The Bulletin

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t's hard to see a happy end to the budget problems that have Josephine and Curry counties on the brink of financial disaster. Every solution offered has serious drawbacks. Both counties relied h eavily on timber revenues from the federal government to fill coffers from 1937 until the early 1990s. Since then, they've relied nearly as heavily on funds from the federal Secure Rural Schools Act. That money dried up this year. Meanwhile, the counties have other problems. Per capita income in both is at or below $32,000 annually, about 75 percent of the national average. Meanwhile, Curry County has the second largest percentage of retirement-age residents in Oregon, trailing only Wheeler. All of which may help explain — but not justify — why voters in the two counties rejected bond measures last month that would have kept sheriff's department patrols and jails running. The situation is particularly dire in Curry County, which must try to pay for all its county government, including public safety, elections, veterans affairs and the like, on slightly more than $2 million in the coming year. It cannot be done. Among the proposals to correct the situation: • Residents in both counties have talked about establishing citizen law enforcement patrols in rural areas. Of all the ideas put forth, the one of county-sanctioned vigilante patrols is downright scary and illegal to boot. • Josephine County officials have hinted they'd like to take a chunk of property taxes that now go toschools and other services. We can't imagine voters taking

E.

this one lying down. • There's also talk of letting the counties keep some of the lottery revenue generated within them, thereby cheating other Oregonians by diverting the funds. • A bill in the Legislature, HB 3453, would allow the governor to impose an income tax on the two counties, matched by state funds, to keep public safety agencies running. Political leaders in the counties would have to agree, and we suspect that doing so would be political suicide. A companion bill would turn some county functions over to the secretary of state's office. • Gov. John Kitzhaber has talked of activating the National Guard to supply law enforcement in the two counties, while some county residents have suggested that the state contract with sheriff's departments to pay to keep deputies employed. Of all the suggestions, these two may actually make the most sense because they're simple and address the counties'most critical need. In the end, however, residents of the counties are going to have to come to grips with a hard truth. Despite earlier promises from Uncle Sam, their counties' ability to provide jail space, sheriff's deputies, district attorneys and all the other services that counties provide lies in their hands. They may get another temporary fix or two, but no permanent solution will ever befound in Salem or Washington, D.C.

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Veterans TriCare insurance

considered 'out of network' By Anne Graham

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am a veteran and a healthy senior. As such, I rarely need to see specialists. So when the need finally arose, I was stunned to find that the specialist's business practices required me to pay $150 in advance to have my first consult. Well, OK, it's a first visit and they don't know me, I said to myself, and so I paid. A second visit produced the same requirement. This time I asked why I was being subjected to this? To her credit, the administration person uncomfortably explained the charge was likely to be $90, but that this was "policy" due to my being covered by nout-of-network Veterans TriCare" insurance. She was embarrassed. I reiterate that I was stunned. Veterans as a class — and the Tri-

Care program in general — are

Bill would limit electronic tracking of students

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n some schools in Texas and California, radio-frequency devices have been installed in student ID cards or clothing, allowing the schools to track students' locations and t ake a ttendance automatically. No one has proposed doing this in Oregon, but legislators are working on a bill that would set limits. We prefer the original HB 2386, which flatly prohibited using the technology to track children, but the amended version goes a long way toward addressing potential problems. It instructs the state Board of Education to establish policies that protect student privacy and security, require notification of students and parents, and allow students to opt out. In legislative testimony, the

American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon spoke in favor of the bill, citing privacy and security risks of the tracking technology. The group's written statement said security breaches could allow an unknown person to copy information and track the child, or even fool the system by making a copy of the chip that would report the child is still on campus when, in fact, he or she has left. Representatives of companies developing and selling the technology oppose the bill, and told legislators the law could damage their businesses and destroy jobs. Radio-frequency tracking surely has many appropriate uses, and we value development of the industry.That doesn't mean, however, that it's appropriate in our schools, tracking our children. Legislators are wise to get ahead of this issue.

unreliable risks? Further, I have learned that almost no specialists in Central Oregon are willing to be "in-network" providers to TriCare — but that is a concern and a letter for a different day. Never in my l i f e have I b een asked to pay more than the expected doctor visit cost as insurance against me (or my insurance!) being a deadbeat. Actually it has been decades since I w a s even asked to pay anything in advance. My care providers bill me and I pay. Isn't that how it works for you, dear reader? Now with $300 pre-paid into this

IN MY VIEW I must share my view that this is an unreasonable class discrimination and not based on an individual's credit worthiness or performance. Like the vast majority

of veterans,I am a responsible citizen who pays my bills, has little or no debt and highly values my reputation for honesty and integrity. specialist's coffers, and a planned minor surgery, I get a phone call requiring that I must now prepay ALL of the expected patient portion they d etermined after checking w i t h TriCare or the doctor won't do the surgery. I am told this is due to TriCare changing providers and the business office not knowing how the payment system will work in the future. Excuse me'? What does this have to do with my reliability? So now I must pay this significant new charge because I need the service, but I must share my view that this is an unreasonable class discrimination and not based on an individual's credit worthiness

or performance. Like the vast majority of veterans, I am a responsible citizen who pays my bills, has little or no debt and highly values my reputation for honesty and integrity. This business practice is an affront to me and veterans in general. It is what used to be called a "sharp and grasping" business practice and rightly angers most patients it is imposed upon. Doctors genuinely care about their patients, I believe, but have abdicated the money side t o p r ofessional money raisers. So I say, doctors, look into what your business managers are doing and decide if you agree with this kind of discriminatory policy that suggestsveterans are deadbeats. I suggest you challenge them in your next business meeting to come up with a method to deal with people as individuals regardless of what insurance they have. You might even consider joining the TriCare network as a recognition of the service of our country's veterans. And, on the rare occasion that some veteran fails to pay his or her bill, ask your manager to deal with it as any other business does, post-facto. It is the way of the rest of the world of business and would reflect your humanity and your appreciation of the fact that we veterans once put our lives on the line for you and yours, without thought of payment in advance. — Anne Graham lives in Redmond.

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| MO foods should be labeled so consumers can decide By DIana Hopson n the May 26 Bulletin on page B3, "Around the State," the article on the GMO protests states "Genetically modified plants are grown from seeds engineered to resist insecticides and herbicides, add nutritional benefits ..." Only the second notation "resist herbicides" is true. GMOs are engineered to resist herbicides; they do not resist insecticides, nor do they add nutritional benefit (if you mean nutritional value). One of the main problems with GMOs is they contain a systemic insecticide, possibly the main cause of bee hive collapse. If the insecticide within the GMOs is killing the bees and other pollinators, can anyone believe there is any added nutritional benefits in the product being grown? The root purpose of the protest was

t

to wake people up. I believe chemical companies' ultimate goal is to own a patent on the seed of life. It already owns it on wheat, corn, soybeans and more. Chemical companies are, in my opinion, responsible for a host of products that are not beneficial to any of us. For example, DDT (now banned from use),saccharine and Sweet 'N Low (both suspected of causing cancer), dioxin (another high powered insecticide that also kills people),

enhanced Agent Orange (which resulted in k i l l ing a nd/or maiming many thousands of U.S. military and hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese), petroleum-based fertilizers (sterilize the soil resulting in the need for ever more of their synthetic fertilizers to grow plants), bovine growth hormone (who knows what that's doing to our children?) and, last but not

IN MY VIEW

of our food, without labeling, have no choice but to eat the GMOs that least, weed killers and the neonics contain not only a systemic aversion just to name a few. to weed killers but also the systemic Before GMOs, farmers saved their insecticides now present in the foods best seed to plant the next harvest. being grown. Those insecticides are Seed was traded among farmers so suspectedofbeing the main cause of they could improve their harvests death of Monarch butterflies and the and improve the plants. Almost ev- honey bees that pollinate our crops. ery country had its own seed bank. If If they're killing butterflies and bees, astorm (ofany sort)destroyed acrop, what do you suppose they are doing not all the crop would die out. Some to us'? would survive because thefarmer Like the overuse of a ntibiotics would replant with the seed he had now producing "super bugs" we do saved, and the cycle would start over not have the means to combat, the again. overuse of weed killers is producWith chemical companies own- ing "super weeds" resulting in use of ing patents on many kinds of seeds, m ore and more weed kill er.Just as farmers can't do that anymore. If petroleum-based fertilizers sterilize his orher crop fails,a farmer has no the soil, resulting in using more and choice but to go back to the chemical more petroleum-based fertilizers, a company and buy more seed. And we never-ending circle of cause and efconsumers who must purchase most fect is established.

The government should not protect and should not allow the ownership of patents on the seeds of life nor keep that information from consumers. Farmers whochoose touse genetically modified seeds should be required to so state. Consumers should be allowed to decide what to eat and feed our children. We should not be forced into buying GMO foods just because chemical companies and "big agri business" are greedy and want to make more money. Bats, bees, and amphibians are disappearing at an alarming rate. Whatever other cause "they" try to sell us, poisoning by chemicals loosed into the environment has got to be at the top of the list. The chemical companies know this and know if something is labeled GMO, most people won't buy it. — Diana Hopson lives in Bend.


SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

nan

e i erranean

GIBRALTARrom the heights of Gibraltar you can see Africa about nine miles away to the south — and gaze eastward on the seemingly endless Mediterranean that stretches 1,500 miles to Asia beyond. Mare Nostrum, "our sea," the Romans called the deep blue waters that allowed Rome to unite Asia, Africa and Europe for half a millennium

an increasingly fed-up Northern Europe. New gas and oil finds in VICTOR North America, China and Africa DAVIS may soon make both Mediterranean supplies and Suez passage to HANSON the Persian Gulf irrelevant for a billion energy consumers. routes around Africa. The discovery A shrinking and aging Europe of the New World further shifted keeps drawing in y oung Muslim wealth and cultural dynamism out immigrants from the Middle East of the Mediterranean. and North Africa. They want out of under a single prosperous, globalFor a while the Mediterranean their impoverished Islamic homeized civilization. seemed to roar back after World lands but are being consumed by, Yet the Mediterranean has not War II. Huge deposits of petroleum rather than enriching, the wealthier always proved history's incubator and natural gas were found in North European societiesthey are drawn of great civilizations — Greek, Ro- Africa. The Suez Canal was a short- to like moths to a flame. The reman, Byzantine, Ottoman, Floren- cut to the newly opulent and strate- cent rioting in Sweden, the gruetine and Venetian. Sometimes the gically vital Persian Gulf. With the some near-beheading of a soldier in ancient "Pillars of Hercules" at the unification of Europe, and ongoing London and periodic unrest in the narrow mouth of t h e M editerra- decolonization of A f r ica and the French suburbs all remind us that nean here at Gibraltar marked not Middle East, there was the promise the Mediterranean is not a shared so much a gateway to progress and of anew, resource-rich, democratic postmodern vacation getaway. Inprosperity as a cultural and com- and commercially interconnected stead it is increasingly a stagnant mercial cul-de-sac. Mediterranean. premodern pond of religious, politiWith the rise of the Ottoman EmNot now. The Arab Spring has cal and economic tensions. pire, and before the construction b rought chaos to a l most al l o f Unrest in the West Bank, Gaza, of the Suez Canal, the old classi- North A f r ica. The b loodbath in Cyprus, Syria, Libya and Egypt cal city-state powerhouses in Italy Syria threatens to escalate into could at any moment spark violence and Greece faded from history,as something like the Spanish Civil that cuts across religious, racial and the Mediterranean became more a War — sucking in Lebanese milipolitical fault lines. Yet otherwise, museum than a catalyst of global tias, Iranian mercenaries, Turkey, these tired hotspots are immatechange. In contrast, the Reforma- the Sunni sheikdoms, Israel and the rial to a world that from Shanghai, tion and Enlightenment energized Palestinians, along with surrogate Mumbai and Seoul to Palo Alto, Northern European culture, safely arms suppliers like China, Europe, Houston, London and Frankfurt is distant from the exhausting front- Russia and the United States. creating vast new wealth, technolol ine M e diterranean w a r s w i t h The economies of th e I slamic gies and consumer goods — withIslam. rim of the Mediterranean are in out much of a nod to Mediterranean By the early 17th century, Northshambles. But then so is the south- science or innovation. ern Europeans more easily and ern flank of the European Union, The old strategic fortresses at safelyreached the rich eastern maras Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain Cyprus, Crete, Sicily, Malta and kets of China and India by maritime haggle for subsidies and loans from Gibraltar are becoming inconse-

quential, as the United States pivots to Asia. The Cold War is long over. Europe has all but disarmed. Meanwhile, the societies on the southern and easternshores of the Mediterr anean are coming apart at t h e seams. It is hard to find a robust freemarket economy anywhere inthe Mediterranean these days. Instead, European socialism, Arab statism and Islamic terrorism in v arious ways are retardingcommerce and growth. Mediterranean tourismwith visitors gazing at ancient rather than modern wonders — is more profitable than manufacturing. Will th e M e diterranean world rebound again? History is cyclical, not linear, and the region's favorable climate and opportune geography suggest that it could. Before we see another Mediterranean renaissance, constitutional government would have to sweep the Muslim world. The fossilized bureaucracy of the European Union would have to radically reform or disappear. A new generation of Michelangelos and da Vincis would have to believe that they could think, say and write whatever they wished — in a climate of economic confidence,prosperity and security. Unfortunately, the culture of the M editerranean is reverting to it s stagnant 18th-century past rather than leading the 21st century. — Victor Davis Hansonis a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution,

Stanford University.

They're mming or your DNA By Emily Bazelon

of booking and bail with a few obvious and unchallenged facts: It took WASHINGTON — DNA analysis weeks to test the DNA of Alonzo is the major crime-solving advance King, the arrested man who chalof our time. It's the science behind lenged Maryland's DNA collection many exonerations, and many more law, and months for the samples to guilty pleas. It's far more accurate come back from testing. By then, than fingerprinting or eyewitness booking, arraignment, and bail were identification. So the more DNA col- long over. "Does the Court really belection, the better, right'? lieve that Maryland did not know Federalprosecutors and 28 states whom it was arraigning?" Scalia have answered yes to that ques- asks. "The truth, known to Marytion by routinely collecting DNA land and increasingly to the reader: samples from arrestees. On Mon- this search had nothing to do with day, the Supreme Court approved establishing King's identity." Nor is Maryland's DNA law, ushering in a Maryland particularly slow relative new era of massive double-helix col- to the other states — in fact, it's perlection. There are two oddities about haps a bit faster. the court's 5-to-4 ruling. The first is Why did Kennedy write his opinthat the majority pretended that this ion in a way that makes him sound decision had little to do with solv- like the last guy on Earth to dising crimes. The second is the lineup: cover "Law 8 Order"? Because the The dissent is a smoking Scalia spe- Supreme Court has never held that cial — and he's joined by Justices if the police have probable cause to Elena Kagan, Ruth Bader Ginsburg make an arrest, they can also search and Sonia Sotomayor ratherthan a suspect for evidence of past or the court's conservatives. Anthony future crimes. Think about it for a Kennedy picked off Stephen Breyer second: Should getting arrested be(along with Clarence Thomas, Sam- cause you're the suspect in one buruel Alito, and John Roberts) to eke glary mean the police can go search out a majority. But it's Scalia who your house, without a w a r r ant, wins the argument. on the theory that you might have Here are the background facts: All s tolen additional property? If t h e 50 states collect DNA from people real purpose of taking DNA from who have been convicted of crimes, someone who has been arrested is and that's not what's at issue here. to match his profile against the naInstead, we're talking about whether tional database of unsolved crimes, the states can widen their databases then the court would have to admit of genetic material to include people to making a big and unprecedented who have been arrested and not yet move — one that allows the governfound guilty. Kennedy presents this ment to ensnare more and more of as merely a basic booking proce- us in a thickening web of our own dure. It's like fingerprinting, he says, data. Law enforcement over liberty, and "the legitimate government in- by a wide margin. terest" is "the need for law enforceScalia doesn't belabor the privacy ment officers in a safe and accurate costs, though he could. It's disingenway to process and identify the per- uous to compare DNA collection to sons and possessions they must take fingerprinting, given the additional into custody." It's a simple matter information it conveys about sex, age of allowing the police to make sure and details of physical appearance. they know whom they'vegot,and Scalia, though, is largely offended as alerting judges about whether the a believer in originalism — the theoperson who has been arrested has a ry that the founders' understanding record, so they can take that into ac- of the Constitution should be our count in deciding whether to release understanding. Scalia speaks for him on bail. them, and he is sure this is not what Kennedy is a l s o u n concerned they had in mind. "Today's judgment about the level of intrusion. Cheek will, to be sure, have the beneficial swabs count as a search under the effect of solving more crimes; then Fourth Amendment, which protects again, so would the taking of DNA us allfrom unreasonable searches samples from anyone who flies on and seizures. But since swabbing is an airplane (surely the Transportaminimally intrusive, it's no big deal. tion Security Administration needs The majority also dismisses the pri- to know the 'identity' of the flying vacy concerns that come with DNA public), applies for a driver's license, collection: "The argument that the or attends a public school," Scalia testing at issue in this case reveals writes. "Perhaps the construction of any private medical i nformation such a genetic panopticon is wise. at all is open to dispute," Kennedy But I doubt that the proud men who says. wrote the charter of our liberties Has Kennedy never watched a TV would have been so eager to open crime show? That is basically Scal- their mouths for royal inspection." ia's opening question, in an opinion This argument apparently didn't he felt strongly enough about to read convinceClarence Thomas, who offrom the bench — not the standard ten shares Scalia's originalist bent, practice. "The Court's assertion that or Samuel Alito or Chief Justice John DNA is being taken, not to solve Roberts, who do more rarely. As for crimes, but to identify those in the Breyer, he has generally counseled State's custody, taxes the credulity judges to be cautious about striking of the credulous,"he writes. Then down state laws relating to privacy, he decimatesKennedy's discussion plus he has been all over the map Slate

about the Fourth Amendment. What if you care less about the history and more about the present'? That's probably the case for the liberal-moderate justices who joined Scalia, and here's what should worry them, from University of Virginia law professor Brandon Garrett and New York University law professor Erin Murphy. First off, at least 12 million people are arrested each year in this country. Garrett and Murphy write that "according to one study, by age 23, nearly one-third of Americans have been arrested for an offense, not including minor traffic violations." Maryland's law restricts DNA collection to people charged with committing or attempting a violent crime, or with burglary. But as Scalia points out, the majority's opinion doesn't really require other states to stay within those limits. "Make no mistake about it: As an entirely predictable consequence of today's decision, your DNA can be taken and entered into a national DNA database if you are ever arrested, rightly or wrongly, and for whatever reason," the dissent warns. Maybe five members of the court won't actually be willing to go this far, but it's hard to say why based on Monday's ruling. Garrett and Murphy also argue that building a Giant Genetic Panopticon is not the path to solving more crimes. What would help the police most is more DNA evidence from crime scenes,they argue, not from peoplewho are arrested. Here'stheir evidence: "States like C a lifornia, w hich vastly expanded DNA databanks to include arrestees, do not generate dramatically more matches between offenders and crime scenes than do states with much smaller databases, like New York or Illinois. That is because New York and Illinois, despite the smallernumbers of offenders in their databases, enter crime scene samples at rates comparable to California. Indeed, from 2010 to 2012, California halved the average number of offender profiles uploaded per month, but kept the number of samplesfrom crime scenes constant.The result was an increase in database

hits. The same dynamic played out in the United Kingdom. The lesson is clear: The police solve more crimes not by taking DNA from suspects who have never been convicted, but by collecting more evidence at crime scenes." Why is this? Because you can't solve a crime without physical evidence pertaining to that crime, and that's not what you get when someone isarrested somewhere else for doing something different. The police are good about collecting physical evidencein cases of murder and rape. But for other serious crimes, including robbery and assault, they're doing this kind of collection in only two cases out of 10. To suggest that the state laws the court approved Monday will help catch certain villains who are arrested for unrelated reasons, Kennedy cites Timothy McVeigh, who was pulled over for driving without a license plate after the Oklahoma City bombings. In theory, in a world in which DNA results come back from the lab much faster than the one we live in, upon arrest McVeigh's DNA could have been matched with DNA collected at t h e s cene, connecting him to the crime. In practice, McVeigh was found through good old-fashioned legwork: The police discovered the axle of the truck he'd driven to the bombings, which they traced to a Kansas body shop, where employees helped them put together a sketch that hotel clerks identified as McVeigh. The cops didn't need DNA to tell them that was the same guy who'd been pulled over — they already had his name. Surely the wave of DNA collection that the court unleashed Monday will catch some future McVeigh. But processing all that information may gum up the works, proving overall to be a big and misguided distraction. This is the kind of cumulative cost that's harder to see. But you might expect the Supreme Court to take it into account before letting the government file away the genetic coding of millions of people it hasn't proved have done anything wrong. — Emily Bazelonis a Slate senior editor and writes about law, family, and kids.

THOMAS FRIEDMAN

Israel can

offer model ow would you like to be an Israeli strategist today? Now even Turkey is in turmoil as its people push back on their increasingly autocratic leader. I mean, there goes the neighborhood. The good news for Israel is that in the near term its near neighbors aretoo internally consumed to think about threatening it. In the long run, though, Israel faces two serious challenges that I'd dub the Stephen Hawking Story and the Joseph Story. In case you missed it, Hawking, the British physicist, cosmologist and author of "A Brief History of Time," canceled a planned trip to Israel this month to attend the fifth annual Israeli Presidential Conference. Cambridge University, where Hawking is a professor, said Hawking had told Israelis that he would not be attending "based on advice from Palestinian academics that he should respect the boycott" of Israel because of the West Bank occupation. "Never has a scientist of this stature boycotted Israel," Yigal Palmor, of Israel's Foreign Ministry, declared. I strongly disagree with w h at Hawking did. Israelis should be engaged, not boycotted. Nevertheless, his action found wide resonance. The Boston Globe said Hawking's decision was "a reasonable way to express one's political views. Observers need not agree with Hawking's position in order to understand and even respect his choice. The movement that Hawking has signed on to aims to placepressure on Israel through peaceful means." "International public opinion matters more not less," notes the Israeli political theorist Yaron Ezrahi, the author of "Imagined Democracies." And, in Israel's case, it is creating a powerful surge of international opinion, particularly in Europe and on college campuses, that Israel is a pariah state because of its West Bank occupation. It is not a good trend for Israel. It makes it that much more dependent on America alone for support. Israel today is living a version of the Biblical "Joseph Story,"where Joseph endeared himself to the Pharaoh by interpreting his dreams as a warning that seven fat years would be followed by seven lean years and, therefore, Egypt needed to stock up on grain. In Israel's case, it has enjoyed, relatively speaking, 40 fat years of stable governments around it. Over the last 40 years, a class of Arab leaders took power andmanagedto combine direct or indirect oil money, with multiple intelligence services, with support from either America or Russia, to ensconce themselves in office for multiple decades. All of these leaders used their iron fists to keep their sectarian conflicts — Sunnis versus Shiites, Christians versus Muslims, and Kurds and Palestinian refugees versus everyone else — in check. They also kept their Islamists underground. With these iron-fisted leaders being toppled — and true, multisectarian democracies with effective governments yet to emerge in their place — Israel is potentially facing decades of unstable or no governments surrounding it. Only Jordan offers Israel a normal border. Therefore,the overarching theme for Israeli strategy in the coming years must be "resiliency" — how to maintain a relatively secure environment and thriving economy in a collapsing region. In my view, that makes resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict more important than ever forthree reasons: I) to reverse the trend of international delegitimization closing in on Israel; 2) to disconnect Israel as much as possible from the regional conflicts around it; and 3) to offer a modeL There is no successfulmodel of democratic governance in the Arab world at present — the Islamists are all failing. But Israel, if it partnered with the current moderate Palestinian leadership in the West Bank, has a chance to create a modern, economicallythriving, democratic, secular state where Christians and Muslims would live side by side — next to Jews. That would be a hugely valuable example. And the world for the most part would not begrudge Israel keeping its forces on the Jordan River if it ceded most of the West Bank and Arab neighborhoods of East Jerusalem. Together, Israelis and Palestinians actually have the power to model what a d ecent, postauthoritarian, multireligious Arab state could look like. Too bad their leaders today are not as farsighted as Joseph. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for

H

The New York Times.


F4 © www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

ROMANCE

Cynsters tale mixes

in suspense

Author: Obama re-election Daughter takesdark

was never really in doubt journey into her past "We Are All Completely "The CenterHolds:Obama and His Enemies" by Jonathan Alter; Simon k

Schuster (448 pgs.,$40) "And Then She Fell" by Stephanie Laurens

By David Lauter

(Avon, 344 pgs., $7.99)

Los Angeles Times

By Lezlie Patterson McC1atchy-Tribune News Service

For many years, Stephanie Laurens fans have devoured anything tied to the Cynsters, and this t i me, they will enjoy every bite of this delicious romantic suspense. The r o m a nce, and glimpse at characters from p ast beloved stories, i s much stronger than the intrigue. Chances are, readers will solve the case much sooner than the characters. Of course, the Cynsters and their assorted friends and in-laws didn't have the benefit of "Law and Order" and "CSI" to draw t heir expertise from. But even if you figure out the identity of the villain, the intrigue is still suspenseful enough to keep you riveted. If not, the antics of James and Henrietta, and their burgeoning relationship, will keep you

engrossed. James needs a wife. Not unusual for a member of the peerage in 1837 England, but his reasons are a bit different, and abit more urgent. A dear relative made him his heir, but with the stipulation that he must marry within a year of his death. Henrietta Cynster foils his first attempt at securing a bride. Once she hears James' tale,she agrees to help him find a bride. Guess what they discover'? Yep, it doesn't take long at all for each to f i gure out the other is their fated soul mate. Delightfully, it doesn't take all that long for each to figure out the other feels the same way.

Roughly

Among several persistently wrongheaded beliefs about the 2012 election, none beats the claim, heard even in the

campaign's closing weeks, that P r esident Obama faced a desperately bad situation and had a high probability of losing. That zombie idea kept walking even a fter m u l tiple a t tempts by p o litical s cience experts t o kill it. Republican operatives had the most straightforward excuse to keep it alive — no one wants to give potential donors, volunteersand voters a message of pessimism; candidates usually inflate their chances of success. Many other people got a false impression of a close contest because of badly done surveys by some prominent polling organizations, most notably Gallup. Misunderstanding of the economy blinded many political writers and talking heads, who routinely seemed to mistake a slow-growing economy for a recessionary one. As Jonathan Alter w rites in his new book on the 2012 campaign, "The Center Holds: Obama and His Enemies," the president's campaign manager, Jim Messina, vowed Obama would win and that he would get the president to sign a copy of a New York Times Magazine cover predicting his loss and then frame it and hang it as a campaign trophy. In November, he achieved both goals. A lter's book a bounds i n such peeks inside the campaigns. But for all his excellent reporting, he cannot pro-

vide what the campaign itself lacked — actual suspense. Yes, he reports that Bi ll Clinton told R omney a fter the election that until Superstorm Sandy he thought the Republican would win. I trust that Clinton said it. Maybe he even meant it. If so, however, the former president's analytical ability had suffered a rare lapse; the election's outcome had not truly been in doubt for months. W riting a boo k about an intensively covered c a m paign that e n ded p r e tty much the way it began challenges any author. The absence of a surprise ending to explain robs insider accounts of most of their power. To fill that void, Alter seeks to impose a different kind of thematic unity on his book'sdisparate chapters, one reflected in his book's title. The "center" in Alter's portrayal is the administration itself, which he depicts as besieged by a radical right-wing cabal determined to repeal not just Obamacare but the entire structure of post-New Deal government. That analysis frames the contest largelythe way Obama and his aides saw it — no surprise, since Alter admires the president, whose first year in office formed the subject of his previous book, "The Promise." Indeed, Alter, a former Newsweek reporter raised in Chicago, played a role in Obama's rapid rise, having written a 2004 coverstory for the magazine which helped bring thenstate Sen. Obama to national attention. The 2012 election, he declares, formed nothing less than "a hinge of history." Perhaps so. Copious evidence shows that the GOP has moved rightward. That has allowed space for Obama,

a fairly conventional liberal, to control the political center. Romney, whether "severely c onservative" or a "Massachusetts moderate," w o uld have faced huge demands for change from a newly empowered Republican Congress. But a book that truly sought to mine the election's historical context would need to get beyond the campaign. Above all, it would have to examine the phenomenon of h eightened partisanship that since Clinton's tenure has come to define the nation's politics. That's not the book Alter set out to report or write. Instead, Alter has focused on "detailing the backstory of the big events of 2011 and 2012." Unfortunately, most of those events appeared small even at the time — polling blips whipped into a

souffle of pseudo-significance to fill cable news airtime. To defeat a president who seeks reelection, a challenger needs circumstances far larger than a blown debate performance. Ronald Reagan needed a recession, a long-drawn and humiliating international crisis and a rising political tide to beat the hapless Jimmy Carter. Clinton required a recession, a divided Republican Party, a strong third-party candidate and extraordinary p olitical skills to unseat George H.W. Bush. Despite t h e gr u m blings on the r i ght t hat R omney lost a campaign he "should have won," he had no such advantages. Obama won for the simplest of reasons: In p r esidential election years, the country now has m or e D e mocrats than Republicans. Romney needed to give a significant number of those Democrats reason to defect. He didn't. For all the campaign virtuosity that Alter carefully chronicles, in the end, nothing else really mattered.

half - w ay

through the story, James and Henrietta have found romantic bliss. But the fate of their happily-ever-after depends on whether they can foil the villain. What is awesome is that they enlist the assistance of the Cynster clan — and they embark on their investigation as a betrothed couple.

Publishers Weekly ranks thebestsellers for the weekending June 2. Hardcover fiction

1. "Inferno" by DanBrown (Doubleday) 2."And theMountainsEchoed"by Khaled Hosseini (Riverhead) 3. "Zero Hour" by Cussler/Brown (Putnam) 4. "Deeply Odd" byDeanKoontz (Bantam) 5. "12th of Never" by Pattersonl Paetro (Little, Brown) 6. "Dead EverAfter" by Charlaine Harris iAce) 7."The Hit" by David Baldacci (Grand Central) 8."Silken Prey" by JohnSandford (Putnam) 9. "Gone Girl" by Gillian Flynn (Crown) 10. "Whiskey Beach" byNora Roberts iPutnam) Hardcover nonfiction

1. "Happy, Happy,Happy" by Phil Robertson (Howard Books) 2. "Lean In" by Sheryl Sandberg (Knopf) 3."ElevenRings"by PhilJackson iPenguinj 4. "Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls" by David Sedaris (Little, Brown) 5. "The DuckCommander Family" by Willie & Korie Robertson (Howard Books) 6. "Keep It Pithy" by Bill O'Reilly iCrown Archetype) 7. "The Guns at Last Light" by Rick Atkinson (Henry Holt) 8. "The100" by Jorge Cruise (William Morrow) 9. "Life Code" by Dr. Phil McGraw iBird Street Books) 10."MyGreek Drama"byGianna Angelopoulos (Greenleaf) — McClatchy-TribuneNewsService

The Miami Heraid

Rosemary joins in. Crossing

by Karen Joy Fowler (Marian Wood Book/

Putnam,310 pgs., g6.95)

The Cooke family at the a campus cop lands both girls heart of Karen Joy Fowler's in jaiL The experience sets off amazing new novel isn't a chain ofevents that forces so much dysfuncRosemary back to her tional as it is broken. past. She goes home We Some mem b e rs to Bloomington, Ind., are all are present. Others where her parents still completely are missing. All of live. An NIH grant is beside them are struggling. keepingher father busy ourselves Why? "(W)here you KAmc Jov Powr.ER with research; a secret succeed will never drinker, he keeps her mom "on high alert," matter so much as where you fail," says daugh- says Rosemary. Rosemary's ter Rosemary. The Cookes' brother Lowell and sister Fern failures — as parents, as aren't there; she hasn't seen siblings, as human beings either in years. But she remem— have left them strangers bers clearly how things were: "In most families, there is a to each other, incomplete and unhappy. favorite child. Parents deny it Author of five other novels and maybe they truly don't see and three story collections, it, but it's obvious to the chilFowler is best known for dren. Unfairnessbothers chilthe pleasant but lightweight dren greatly. It's always hard to "The Jane Austen Book come in second ..." Club," a romantic comedy Now Rosemary has to face that qualifies as a good can- her fearsabout the disappeardidate for summer reading. ances of Fern and Lowell, the Fowler's sixth novel is a dif- complicity of her parents and ferentsortofbeast,dark and her own guilt in what happened devastating and ambitious, to herfamily.Rosemary's voice asking hard questions about is achingly memorable, and science, communication and Fowler's intelligent discourse psychology and evaluating on science vs. compassion rethe nature of responsibility shapes the traditional family and our flawed selves. novel into something more uniThe novel opens in 1996, versally relevant. when Rosemary is 22, a student at the University of California, Davis. "(S)tart in the middle," she decides, an easy choice for someone HOME INTERIORS whose childhood memories 70 SW Century Dr. Sate145 Bend, QR 97702 are unreliable. There are e 541 322 7337

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(Doubleday,291 pgs., $25.95) By Dan DeLuca The Philadelphia inquirer

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also troubling gaps in what Rosemary knows about her past. So she starts breezily with an amusing incident in the school cafeteria: A girl starts a loud, aggressive fight with her boyfriend, and i m petuously

Beside Ourselves"

A t the conclusion of h i s 2007 novel "Blonde Faith," W alter M o sley d i d a w a y with Ezekiel "Easy" Rawlins. After 11 volumes featuring t h e A fr ic a n - A m e r i c a n W orld War I I v e t eran and t h i n king man's det e c tive, through whose eyes the social history of postwar Los Angeles unfolded, Mosley decided he had had enough. "I'm f i nished wit h t h at," Mosley, who's written more than 40 books, told CNN in 2009, when he was promoting a new series with a New Yorkbased private dick n a m ed Leonid McGill. "I'm moving on." Not so fast, Mosley. Like Arthur Conan Doyle after he sent Sherlock Holmes tumbling off Reichenbach Falls, or more recently Ian Rankin attempting to put John Rebus out to pasture, the author has found that icing Easy — who debuted in "Devil in a Blue Dress" in 1990 and was indelibly played by Denzel Washington in the 1995 film of the same name — w a s e asier

(sorry) said than done. So, at the start of " L ittle Green," there's Easy, rising out of a coma. "I came half awake, dead and dreaming," a re the f irst w ords of t h e book. It turns out that after the detective ( an d s m a l l-time real estate mogul) drove his car off a cliff on the Pacific Coast Highway, his murderous friend, Raymond "Mouse" Alexander — played by Don

Cheadle in "Devil in a Blue Dress" — found Easy among the hillside bushes and saved his friend's life. Still, as "Little Green" gets going, our protagonist is all but dead. As he comes to consciousness in 1967, he agrees to doa job to pay back Mouse, w ho i s k e enly i n terested in f i n ding a teenage boy gone missing somewhere in the neighborhood of the Sunset Strip. To Mouse, the boy is known as L i t t le Green, a sobriquet that will tie this book back to "Devil," as it turns out. And though he'd be better off staying in bed, Rawlins takes the job. He immediately comes into contact with racist cops in an evolving post-Watts Los Angeles where blacks are beginning to feel empowered. "Little Green "also drops the middle-aged sleuth into t h e h i p pie-sexand-drugs co u n terculture, only the former of which he is willing to participate in. The story sends Easy to see Mama Jo, a voodoo-potion priestess who predicted that he would rise, Lazarus-like, from the cliffside grave. She fixes him up with a supply of an elixir k nown as Gator's Blood that is sort of a black magic 5-Hour Energy drink. " Little Green" is a b o o k about resurrection, and little by little, as he interacts with his family, friends, close associates and sworn enemies in various social strata of L.A., Easy Rawlins comes alive. As Rawlins finds himself "back in t h e w o rl d w h ere nothing ever turned out right but it kept right on turning anyway," the author is rejuvenated right along with him. "Little Green" is a p ageturner, but not a perfectly taut

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favor by bringing Easy Rawlins back. Mosley would have been foolish to kill him off: Characters as rich as Easy Rawlins are hard to come by.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN F S

O A88 S B

BSB O O S ~

By Tlsh Wells

tants and visits to a fantastic number of planets and time Obsessive " Doctor W h o" periods, both in the past and fans, your w i s h h a s b e en in potential futures. The latest fulfilled. Doctor, Matt Smith, has just In honor of the golden an- announced he's leaving as of niversary of the show's first the 20D Christmas Special, broadcast comes a new vol- so the search is on for the 12th ume from BBC Books,"WhoDoctor. "Who-ology" covers all of ology: The O f f icial D octor Who Miscellany" by Cavan the current ones. The chronolScott & Mark Wright. ogy goes through the Doctors The BBC television series in exhaustive detail, down in "Doctor Who" started on Nov. such details as the music used 23, 1963, with the venerable in various episodes. IncredWilliam Hartnell as the first ibly, the only thing it neglects Doctor. to include is an index. The Doctor, an alien with But if you need to know two hearts, regenerates into about the "Edwardian roada new body when the show ster" the third Doctor drove in needs a new actor in the part. 1973, check page 289. Over 50 years, there have been Need for a gateway book 11 Doctors, numerous assis- into the world of science fiction

McClatchy Washington Bureau

J

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0 BAS

an d m o r e r o bust of the Eleventh Doctor, Matt i QCIQIQQ Q lfgl younger Third Doctor who stars in the Smith. The Ponds, wife and

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"Last of the Gaderene," origin ally written by M ar k G a tiss in 2000. Here, the Doctor nearly gets minced by a large fan — something that the First Doctor would never survive. G atiss went o n t o w r i t e episodes of " D octor W ho," do audio an d d o cumentaries, and later star in the very popular modern BBC adaptation of "Sherlock" as Mycroft Holmes. Finally, for the devoted fan — as separatefrom the obsessed fan — there is "Summer Falls," a young adult novel written by Amelia Williams. Doctor Who devotees know that this is the married name of Amy Pond, a companion

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for a young fan who enjoys September 2001. The plot was "Doctor Who"'? The BBC has also delved into its archives for the printed word. It has reprinted 11 novels, one for each Doctor. Of note with these books is that they reflect the time of the Doctor (sometime in the last 50 years), and the period that the writers were writing in. For example,Stephen Cole wrote "Ten Little Aliens" in 2001, starting his writing in

formulated earlier when he was an editor of a "partwork magazine" dedicated to Agatha Christie. Thus, as he explains in his introduction, the pitch was "'Starship Troopers' (Heinlein) meets Agatha Christie." He ended up using the First Doctor, played by Hartnell. Hartnell's elderly Doctor is much more physically fragile than, say, Jon Pertwee's

husband, were lost to one of the Doctor's great enemies, the Weeping Angels. But in the latest season, one of the characters is reading "Summer Falls." That's the way it is in the world of " D octor W ho": A c haracter reads a b ook b y another former character in which the Doctor is thinly disguised as a museum curator. Despite the incestuous intertwining of different aspects of the television series, "Summer Falls" is an entertaining fantasy novel with a female protagonist, a talking cat and exciting finale. One could easily see it as a "Doctor Who" episode.

First-time novelist cra ts thriller rom experiencewith the CIA "Red Sparrow" by Jason Matthews

(Scribner, $26.99) By Davld Martlndale Fort Worth Star-Telegram

FORT WORTH, Texas After more than three decades of conducting secret CIA missions overseas, it stands to reason that Jason Matthews would have some stories to tell. Instead of p r oducing hi s memoirs, however, he decided to write espionage fiction — and what a fine job he has done. "Red Sparrow," his debut novel, which came out Tuesday, is a winning combination of imaginative plotting, insider detail and, of all things, a recipe after every chapter. Matthews explains his storytelling formula this w ay: "It's the three S's: spying, sex and sauces." "Red Sparrow" introduces N athaniel N ash, a yo u n g CIA officer handling a highranking Russian mole. When the Russians sic an alluring

"sparrow" (a female operative trained as an espionage courtesan) on Nate, the two spies fall in and out of bed — and love. -

The globetrotting thriller (Moscow,

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' t ' Helsinki, A th e n s, Rome and Washington,D.C.)hasalready , '= landed a seven-figure movie deal with 20th Century Fox. Matthews is now working on a follow-up novel. We chatted with him about his two careers. .

What compelled you to • switch from real espionage to writing spy fiction? I retired after 33 years . in the agency, most of which was spent in overseas locations with my wife, also a 34-year veteran of CIA, and two daughters. With ourworldwide experience, I t h ought it would be fun to write a spy novel with real tradecraft and terminology and gadgets and locales.

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~ , How d o es the world of ~. Na t e Nash differ from t h e work you were in as an officer in the CIA's . ->.«.='- former Operations Directorate (now I k nown as th e N a ' I tional C l a n destine ":- Service)? ," P . The real world - M. o f i n t e lligence work is a lot of waiti ng, a n alysis, r e search, so I had to ins e r t some excitement into the f i c t ionalplot. All of the characters in "Red Sparrow" are fictional — and, truthfully, none of it is really autobiographical. That said, everyone in the CIA at one time had a mentor like Gable. Or saw a genius like Benford at work. Or suffered theexcesses of an ambitious supervisor like Uncle Vanya. And I met Russians in my career, but no one like Dominika Egorova. "

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Which matters more: • making every last detail ring true or simply writing a

good story? Does firsthand k nowledge trump a viv i d imagination? Or vice versa'? • S tory c omes f i r st, i n • my view. Of course, details that are authentic, that are evocative, make any plot stronger. As a reader, I can appreciate, for example, medical dialogue that is authentic, even if I don't have experience in that life. And I think that equal parts of experience and imagination fuel the same fire: Having met outlandish characters in my career enabled me to concoct the fictional ones.

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"The real world of intelligence workis a lot of waiting, analysis, research, so I had to insert some excitement into the fictional plot. AII of the characters in 'Red Sparrow' are fictional." — Jason Matthews

there always have been delicious, seemingly attainable secrets. And there will always be human nature, base motivations, vulnerabilities, inescapable greed, overarching fear. Espionage boils down to undetectably stealing secrets. When the Berlin Wall T he history of s pying i s • went down and the Cold full of episodes of UnassailWar ended, peopletheorized able Good battling Pure Evil. that spy fiction would go the Compelling stuff. In a utopian way of the dodo bird. It didn't w orld of complete peace, love happen, b e cause g o v ern- and understanding, maybe ments still keep secrets and readers would still thirst for a want to know secrets. Would good story of midnight meetthe genre be as popular in ings, desperate surveillance, a world of peace, love and mole hunts and sleeping on understanding? satin sheets. • It's been said that espio• nage is the second oldW hy does th e b o ok est profession.Why? Because • have a recipe after ev-

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ery chapter? • I like to cook, and our . family c e r t ainly e n joyed the v a rious cuisines of the countries we lived in. I've always admired novels which took time to describe food — e.g., William F. Buckley's Blackford Oakes books — and I thought that a serious spy novel with recipes at the end of each chapter would be different an d p r o vocative. The recipes are elliptical and abbreviated. They're more like clues than formal recipes.

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Q . What's next for Nate?

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• More t r eachery, more • moles, more drama.

Make your selections from Anthony's special early dinner menu Choicesin.clude fresh fish and featuredentrees,appetizer,chowder or salad, and dessert All for 519.9.5. Monday through Friday until 6 PM

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013

Adoption Continued from F1 These pitfalls include the risk of falsified documents for children who have relatives able to care for them, middlemen out to profit and perhaps bribe officials, and even the willingness of poor parents to send a child to a promised I land without understanding the permanence of adoption. Itssupporters say a surge in adoptions by Christians has offered hope and middle-class lives to thousands of parentless or abandoned children from abroad and, increasingly, to foster children in the United States as well. Hundreds of churches have e s tablished "orphan ministries" that send aid abroad and help prospective parents raise the tens of thousands of dollars needed to Tony Demin /The New York Times adopt. Worshippers attend a Sunday service April 28 at Journey Church in Bozeman, Mont. Supporters say a surge in adoptions by Christians has offered hope to thousands of abandoned children.

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Congo warning

In March, sending shudders through adoption agencies and would-be parents, the State Department issued an alert about Congo. It warned that several children whose adoptions had already been

kinses, who a l r eady h a ve children. "The orphan crisis is the greatest humanitarian issue in moderntimes," said Jodi Jackson Tucker, 51, of Durham, approved by the Congolese N.C. government had been "taken As their children left home, from orphanages by a birth she and her husband adopted parent or relative," indicating four children from Uganda that those children were not over the past three years. orphans eligible for American The presence of evangeliadoption in the first place. cal Christians is especially The U.S. Embassy in the evident in international adopCongolese capital, Kinshasa, tions, which have declined s aid last month that it h a d overallas more countries restepped up its own investiga- strict or ban them because of tions of prospective adoptions, scandals or politics. In 2012 resulting in delays of up to six some 8,668 adoptees entered months. The Hopkinses are the United States, down from now waiting for the embassy a peak of 22,991 in 2004. to approve visas for the four Couples encouraged by the Congolese girls, whose adop- new Christian movement actions have been approved by count for "a significant and the Congolese government. growing minority of internaThe movement has been tional adoptions," in the words promoted by theologians, and, of Adam Pertman, executive in one milestone, it was en- director of the Evan B. Dondorsed in 2009 by the South- aldson Adoption Institute, a ern Baptist Convention, which research group. calledon churches to create an Critics of the movement in"adoption culture" in response clude Kathryn Joyce, the auto "thehorrors of a divorcecul- thor of a new book, "The Child ture, an abortion industry, and Catchers: Rescue, Trafficking, the global plagues of disease, and the New Gospel of Adoption" (Public A ffairs, 2013), starvation, and warfare." Many of the adoptions in- which charges that a "sense volve couples, like the Hop- of mission has frequently ob-

scured the harm." David Smolin, director of Samford University's Center for Children, Law and Ethics, in Alabama, and an evangelical, said the new movement had often fallen into the same traps that led a succession of countries, including Guatemala, Cambodia, V i etnam and Nepal, to halt all foreign adoptions after baby-selling scandals. "Now people are repeating the same mistakes in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo," he said. Amanda Bennett, an evangelical Christian and a lawyer in Chicago, and her husband, had a h eart-wrenching encounter with fraud in Congo l ast year. Through a U . S . agency, they signed up to take three young siblings from an

orphanage. As they started the process, they began to see red flags: contradictory accounts about the family, indications that the mother was alive, the sudden firing of the orphanage director.

In August they flew to Kinshasa to investigate for themselves and discovered that the fired director was the aunt of the children, whose mother and father in eastern Congo had other children at home. In a bizarre clash of cult ures, the Bennetts met i n Kinshasa with relatives who said they were hoping that the three children would be taken to America, get educated and eventually send cash home or sponsor other family members to emigrate. The Bennetts withdrew, losing $28,000 they had already paid the agency, and have joined with other misled parents to promote more intense scrutiny of African adoptions. "It's the biggest fear of adoptive parents — that there is family out there looking for the child," Bennett said. "I think people go into this with good hearts, but like many who go into the developing world and want to help, they don't know how easy it is to hurt." Leaders of t h e a d option movement respond that such

lapses are uncommon. Jedd Medefind, president of the 9-year-old Christian Alliance for Orphans, said that the maturing movement was acting to prevent abuses and help orphans in their home countries.

Increased support Manypanels at the alliance's latest "summit," held in May in a Baptist megachurch outside Nashville, Tenn., and attended by 2,500 people, focused on the need for churches to provide post-adoption support, particularly as more families adopt older children with physical or emotional problems. In their work abroad, he said, more churches are supporting family p r eservation efforts and indigenous adoption. Rick Warren's Saddleback Church in Southern California, for example, has won praise in Rwanda, a country hoping to close down orphanages, for working to keep children with their relatives and aiding poor families. At t h e N a s hville m eeting, Susan Jacobs, the State Department's special adviser for c h ildren's i ssues, said some problems have been eased by the Hague Convention on adoption. A number of countries, including Congo, have not signed it, though. Bill Blacquiere, president of Bethany Christian Services, condemned a d o ption-agen-

cy payments to orphanages that are tied to the number of children they refer, which he said "opens the door to

trafficking." Done properly, an adoption can seem like the advertised godsend. Silas Hopkins, now 18, arrived in Montana from Ethiopia after b eing abandoned, shining shoes in the streets. When he first spotted Brian Hopkins, who was on a mission trip, through a window at the orphanage in Ethiopia, he told a friend, "Dude, that's my Dad." The feeling proved mutual. Four years later, Silas is doing well i n h i g h s c hool and says he hopes one day to go back to Ethiopia and "do something cool" such as help-

ing children find schooling and work. Brian and Danna Hopkins beamed — but they are worried about the four Congolese girls they have not yet met. E mbassy officials in K i n shasa said they would be making a visit in late June to eastern Congo, the unstable region where thegirls'orphanage is. The Hopkinses are flying to Kinshasa this weekend to urge the officials to investigate their daughters as soon as possible. "We don't know the next time they will have permission to travel there," Danna Hopkins said of the officials. "It could be months."

~A ' uoiouMY & HEARING AID CUNK

www,centraloregonaudiology.com Bend• Redmond• P-ville • Burns 541.647.2884

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Author inspired byjournals of real-life nurses inININI "The Daughters of Mars" by Thomas Keneally (Atria,

are sent off to the Dardanelles, where Australian troops face 544 pgs.,$28, August) the Turks at Gallipoli. We see not the battle but its aftermath By Hector Tobar on the bodies of the men who Los Angeles Times come under the sisters' care. "On a cotbefore them now LOS ANGELES — Thomas K eneally has always been a l a y a man whose wound once novelist who w r ites unbandaged showed and lives in the big a face that was half Awolsrwl lt 'se sweep of epic history. steak, and no eyes," u', He took on the end Keneally writes. of the First World War Next, the w omen in "Gossip From the orLiAiis witness the carnage Forest," the U.S. Civil on the Western Front, W ar i n "Confederwherethousands upon ates," and the Eritrean thousands of young War of Independence men were swaiiowed "To Asmara." in up i n b a t tles t h at H e won the Booker Prize for s eemed to go on without end. "Schindler's List," his account "They had no idea the war o f one good German saving would end in 1918, and they l ives during the Holocaust. In t hought everyone they knew " The Chant of Jimmie Black- w ould b e o b l iterated," Kes mith," he told a story of racism n e ally says. "They had seen so and violence set amid his native m uch damage,they didn'tbeA ustralia's founding as an in- l i eve anyone could ultimately dependent nation in 1901. survive." At the same time, Keneally, Returning from the war, the a s a leader of the Australian Re- n u rses, stretcher-bearers and publican Movement,has been do ctors — and th e soldiers w orking for decades to cut ties t h emselves — were expected t o the British Commonwealth t o carry on without complaint. a nd reestablish his country as I t was a half century before the a completely independent state. t e rm "post-traumatic stress" S o it comes as little surprise b ecame part of the popular as Keneally knows all t o find Keneally taking up the l e x'con, t t hemes of history and national t oo welL "Even at the end of World identity again in "The Daught ers of Mars," his new novel War II, when I saw blokes come a bout two nurses who join the b ack, they were expected to Australian military in World j ust pick up their lives," KeWar I. neally says, recalling his youth " Since World War I is such i n Australia. "Including fellows a fountain of national myths, I who had been POWs with the d ecided to focus on the physi- J apanese for years." caldamage and the people who By now, Keneally has spent a d ealt with it," Keneally said by h aIf century writing about war telephone from Sydney. and violence and its effect on T he novel is based, in large o rdinary people. Asked what m easure, on real-life journals h e'd learned from his previous K eneally tracked down in Aus- 2 8 novels and applied to this t ralian libraries: "A lot of the o ne, Keneally answered: "When you start a novel you nurses, especially, were good keepers of diaries." tend not to pay attention to your " The Daughters of Mars" is p revious books," he said. "To a n epic, sweeping book and in a n extent, you hope your book B ritain (where it was published w I I' I be both the child of your l ast fall) the 77-year-old Ke- p revious work, and a better n eally received the kind of rave c h ild. You hope that this will be r eviews that would launch the t he child that will validate your career of an author half his age. p a renthood." The novel tells the story of With l i t tl e d o ubt, "The s isters Sally and Naomi Dur- Daughters of Mars" does prer ance. As volunteernurses,they c i sely that.

Craig Cox,MD St. Charles Immediate Care ce St. Charles Medical Groupwelcomes Dr, Craig Cox to its team of physicians.

Dr. Cox received his medical degree from Medical College of Georgia and completed his residency at Mountain Area Health Education Family Medicine Residency Program in North Carolina. Bend first made its impression onDr.Cox 25 years ago.While his career pulled him elsewhere for a time, the outdoor lifestyle kept calling to him andnow he'shappy to callBend home. Dr.Cox is passionate about helping his patients take responsibility for their health through

exercise and healthy eating habits. When not Seeing PatientS at St. CharleS

Immediate Care, you'll find Dr. Coxcycling on the backroads of Central Oregon.

St. Charles

Immediate Care 541-706-3700 2600 NE NEFFRD. BEND, OR I StCharleslmmediateCare.org SQ


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BOXER AKC puppies, German Shepherds AKC Queen memory foam w/ Elliptical 18 e stride 16 reat litter, 1st shots, www.sherman-ranch.us c o ver 2 " f oam. $8 5 pr o gs $150 loc deliv CASH!! Ruger 22 pistol, stain541-281-6829 700. 541-325-3376 obo, 541-480-7024 $20 c a ll 541-639-9026 For Guns, Ammo 8 less NIB 1980s limITEMS FORSALE 264-Snow RemovalEquipment Reloading Supplies. i ted e d i tion, r a r e . 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GARAGESALES AKC reg., house-bro211 - Children's Items www.bendbulletin.com Super Blackhawk 44; 541.241.4914 ken, cratet r ained, 275 - Auction Sales • Go l f Equipment 1's i n 6 mm , 2 7 0 , 212 - Antiques & Collectibles The Bulletin shots an d w o rmingManx/Desert Lynx mix recommends 280 - Estate Sales extra 7mm. 541-389-1392 215- Coins & Stamps 541-385-5809 current 541-382-7614 kittens. 1 f e male, 2 I ce to 281 - Fundraiser Sales ne p 240- Crafts and Hobbies males. One long tail Custom-made beautiful chasing products or • 282Sales Northwest Bend Ruger M77 MKII 223 241 - Bicycles and Accessories Largest 3 Day $75; short tails $100. services from out of I matching rifle r acks, 284- Sales Southwest Bend Lam s tk , 6 x 1 8x50 242 - Exercise Equipment GUN & KNIFE Kelly 541-604-0716 (2), each holds 6 the area. Sending y scope, $725; Brown286- Sales Northeast Bend L • 243 - Ski Equipment rifles/shotguns, both for SHOW cash, checks, or ing 325 WSM Abolt II 244 - Snowboards 288- Sales Southeast Bend $150 541-410-1312 I credit i n f ormation June 7th, 8th, 9th Weaver scope, ammo, 290- Sales RedmondArea 245 - Golf Equipment may be subjected to Portland Expo Ruger M77 300 Factory Remington .223 $625; 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 292- Sales Other Areas Chihuahuas, awesome I FRAUD. For more Center ma g s c o pe, 55 gr, 12 boxes © $14 Win. asst'd colors, all meds, away are advised to 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. information about an s 1-5 exit ¹306B $425; Mossberg 338 FARM MARKET ea. 541-410-2225 be selective about the advertiser, you may I $250. 541-362-1977 248- Health and Beauty Items Admission $10 m od. 1 50 0 s c o pe 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery new owners. For the the O r egon $ Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs Glock 17 9mm, top con- 4x12, $425; Sav. 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Paul, 541-241-0532 ing rig, everything works, Ruger .204; Winchesa ppt. 6 5480 7 8 t h, ormed. $300. Mandy checks, or credit inter .22-250. Call 541radialsi $2000. Per- 447-4101 for prices Bend. Photos, map at 541.306.7784 Shih Poo puppies! Toy f ormation may b e 240 rnds of 30-30 ammo, new sonal fishing cataraft, www.craftcats.org. hypo-allergenic family subjected to fraud. $250. 600 rnds of 9mm $400 OBO, with 2 oars. / Want to Buy or Rent 541-389-8420, or like dogs, 2 males, 1 female, Wanted: Collector For more i nformaDO YOU HAVE $250. 541-647-8931 Mazda pickup, g reat us on Facebook. $400. seeks high quality SOMETHING TO Wanted: $Cash paid for tion about an advermileage, with gear/wood Kelly, 541-604-0716 fishing items. 750 rnds 40 S8 W, $340. Aussie/Maltese-cross SELL vintage costume jew- tiser, you may call rack, new studded snow Call 541-678-5753, or 300 rnds of 38spl, $150. Toy puppies (they look FOR $500 OR elry. Top dollar paid for the O r egon State Wolf-Husky-Malamute tires, 1993 4 c ylinder, 503-351-2746 Beautiful hand541-647-8931 Aussie) 1 male $250, 1 LESS? Gold/Silver.l buy by the Attorney General's pups, only 2 left! $300! $2500. Couch with 2 recarved coffee table Office Co n s umer female $300. CASH. Non-commercial 541-977-7019 Estate, Honest Artist n n n Bend local pays CASH!! cliners built-in, plus free WWI 8 WWII - Bayo(44 x 19'tg x 17t/g ) 541-546-7909 advertisers may Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Protection hotline at for all firearms & TV, 541-516-8985 (mes- nets, Bolo's & Knives. Yorkie pups, AKC, big and 2 matching endn 1-877-877-9392. place an ad with Call 541-447-4101. ammo. 541-526-0617 sage) or 541-610-3578. A ussie Mix, (2), 1 st eyes, short-nosed, health tables (shown) 24% oui shots, dew o rmed, n x 24tA". Built in guar. Potty training; ready x 15 "QUICK CASH gen ng Cern al 0 egon s nce tgi8 $150. 541-771-2606 6/28. 541-777-7743 Taiwan between I Ite m s for Free SPECIAL" 1940-1950, all glass 1 week 3 lines 1 2 210 covered, in excelBike, women's, FREE, or e~ eeke get Furniture & Appliances lent condition. $1600 you haul; needs some USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! AUSSIES - mini pups, Ad must include OBO. 541-382-6731 repair. 541-617-9447 price of single item Door-to-door selling with toy-sized Merles, $300 42" round dining table of $500 or less, or cash. 541-678-7599 w alnut/black leg s multiple items Just bought a new boat? fast results! It's the easiest $40. 541-504-9078 way in the world to sell. Australian Sh e pherd whose total does Sell your old one in the Mini pups, registered, classifieds! Ask about our not exceed $500. A Cottclgn „Ctsricttttt The Bulletin Classified family raised, bred for Super Seller rates! A1 Washersa Dryers Dtt vitzri temperament and Call Classifieds at $150 ea. Full war541-385-5809 541-385-5809 Visit our HUGE agility. 541-389-7499 ranty. Free Del. Also 541-385-5809 ,ggt home decor wanted, used W/D's www.bendbulletin.com consignment store. 541-280-7355 New items arrive daily! English Bulldog, beauti- Bed, twin, off-white, like i 930 SE Textron, i ful white, female, 4 yrs g Jl new with mattresses, Bend 541-318-1501 old. spayed. Needs $75. 541-548-7080 www.redeuxbend.com bulldog-knowledgable or family, air conditioned C omputer desk w i t h xh home, no small chil- pull-out shelf, $ 2 0. The Bulletin reserves dren. V er y a c t ive. 541-504-9078 the right to publish all $500. 541-350-1965. ads from The Bulletin 286 290 Dryer, Whirlpool, large newspaper onto The capacity, $150. I Esta t e Sales Sales Northeast Bend Sales Redmond Area Bulletin Internet web541-815-8658 site. Look What I Found! M ulti F a m il y Sa l e , GENERATE S OM E You'll find a little bit of ** FREE ** this Fri. 8-4, Sat. 9-4, EXCITEMENT in your Sening Cenfral Oregon ence tgp3 4311 S W W i c kiup. everything in r Garage Sale Kit neighborhood! Plan a The Bulletin's daily Follow pin k s i g ns. Place an ad in The E nglish Mastiff A K C garage sale and don't Vintage Japanese glass garage and yard sale Home/office furniture, Bulletin for your gadam & sire forget to advertise in floats, asst. sizes $5+ section. From clothes rage sale and rehh items, collectables. puppies, fully OFA tested, litter ea. 5 4 1 -388-9270 Credit cards welcome. is champion sired with classified! to collectibles, from ceive a Garage Sale 541-385-5809. Micro-chipped. housewares to hardincredible pedigrees! Kit FREE! ware, classified is NEED TO CANCEL S mall litter, only 5 White with dark always the first stop for KIT INCLUDES: YOUR AD? pups avail. $ 2000. brown markings cost-conscious • 4 Garage Sale Signs The Bulletin Chris, 503-577-7185. consumers. And if • $2.00 Off Coupon To • Sales Other Areas• Classifieds has an N~ you're planning your Use Toward Your Frenchie Faux puppies, "After Hours" Line Next Ad own garage or yard Multi-Family Yard Sale! very coby, 8 wks, 1st Western Wear tooth. Call 541-383-2371 • 10 Tips For "Garage June 8-9, 9am. Unique shots/dewormed, $600. -Gently Usedsale, look to the clas24 hrs. to cancel Sale Success!" 541-447-0210 * Double D Ranch He EscApED from sifieds to bring in the antiques, ol d t r u nks, your ad! crafts, fabric, yarn, jew* Patricia Wolf buyers. You won't find Kindred Spirit Pet elry, furniture, electric * Boots a better place PICK UP YOUR Care between Bend 8 Redmond on May 7th.(He may stove, golf cart, white Dog Food Monthly Specials * Turquoise for bargains! GARAGE SALE KIT at water raft, tools, garden 541-549-6950 still have a collar on from Kindred Spirit). He will only Call Classifieds: Taste of the Wild Do Food 1777 SW Chandler 8 building supplies 8 lots 541-385-5809 or come to "Bacon", "Cheese" or "Cookie" when 30lbs. = $41 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 more. Hwy 126 to Goo241 email drich Rd, 69150 Butcher called. He is our disabled daughter's Service Dog. classifiedObendbulletin.com Diamond Do Food Lamb 8 Rice Bicycles & Block Blvd, in Sisters. PLEASE HELP BRING CHESTER HOME!!! 40 lbs. - $26.99

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Hel us find 'Chester'

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The Bulletin

Just bought anewboat? Sell youroldoneinthe

ClaSSifiedS!ASkabout O(jr

SuperSellerrates! 541-385-5809

Accessories

Huge Sale- 64215 Hunnell Rd. - Sat 6/8 8 Sun 6/9 8-4. Furniture,Tools, Collectibles, TVs, Beds, Fish/crab equip.

ROCK COLLECTION! Rock lover's paradise,

family's nightmare! 69580 Holmes Road, Sisters. 541-504-4193

Canidae Do Food All Life Sta es (Buy 12 get 1 FREE) 44 lbs. - $46. Quarry Ave. Hay & Feed 4626 SW Quarry Ave., Redmond 541-923-2400 www.quarryfeed.com

(2) Yakima LockJaw rooftop bike mounts, $75 each. Delta Stableloader pickup bed bicycle mount for 2 bikes, $85. Call 541-639-4048

If seen or found PLEASE CALL any of these numbers, day or night!

831-241-6458 • 831-241-4817 831-277-3918 • 619-871-7279


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

G2 SUNDAY JUNE 9 2013 • THE BULLETIN

T HE NE W Y O R K T I M E S C R O S S W O R D STIR CRAZY By Elizabeth C. Gorski / Edited by Will Shortz

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I "You Send Me" singer 9 Adams wit h th e 1 9 9 1 h it " Ge t H e r e "

14 Hippie's wear 1 9 Evergreen w i t h a romatic b l o o m s

2 0 Jazz club hi g h l i g h t s 21 Tailored sleeve detail 22 Chattered on and on and on

4 6 Blazers, e.g., i n brief

9 5 Coal uni t

6 Quirky

97 In the past

7 Mauna

48 Young cow

9 8 Works over t i me , sa y

8 Fl ub b e d i t

50 You can believe it

1 02 One of f o u r i t e m s w orn by a b r i d e , t raditi o n a l l y

9 Seven-foot r u n n e r

1 05 Having t h e necessary work c redenti a l s 1 06 -I G o t " (silly

12 Just so

5 3 One of th e l i t t l e t hings in l i f e ?

55 Title song of a 1970 V an Mor r i s o n album 5 8 K- 12, i n e d u cat i o n

children' s song w ith the l i n e " W h y is everyone laughing at me?")

59 A guitar may be c onnected to i t

61 Final exam handout

2 4 One wh o w o r k s a t home?

6 2 Formal m i l i t a r y

25 Thought

65 Phase associated w ith Picasso's " T h e O ld Gu i t a r i s t "

108 Sugary ending

28 Early secondm illenniu m y e ar

6 9 Substi t ut e c u r r e n c y

111 Calls to B o Peep

71 Best

29 Harriet B e echer Stowe's " T h e Pearl of I sl and "

72 Board, as a carousel 7 3 "Yo u ' r e one, M r. Gri n c h "

1 14 Navy p i l o t p u t t i n g on a show

3 2 Like man y

7 5 Fluff y n e c k w e ar 7 6 "Wh a t' s g o i n g

26 Upright 2 7 Ruler d i v s .

t h r ones

33 Theme of m any a country song

107 Hardly f a ncy ?

attir e

there?"

35 Extremely exasperated

77 Imagined series of events

38 1990 Steve M artin/ R i c k Moranis comedy

8 1 Final no n - A . D . y e a r

3 9 According t o 4 0 Part of a w e d d i n g celebratio n 41

her s

4 3 Its l ast w o r d i s " zyx t" : A b b r .

44 Aqua

For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.

85 Sleuth, in slang 8 6 Brutal c a s t l e d weller i n f o l k

1 16 Alice Wal ker n o v e l . .. or a h i n t t o 1 2 s quares in t h i s puzzle

90 1929 Ethel Water s h it w h ose t i t l e i s a question 91 Author Santha Rama

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34 Knic k ers wearer 114

1 24 Mi n or , i n l a w

39 Smokey the Bear s pot, e.g., fo r s h o r t

1 25 Wrap o n e' s b r a i n

4 2 More if f y

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3 7 Lik el y t o w i n 38 Faucet brand

58 Dali' s h o m e l a nd, to Dal I 6 0 Amo un t at s t a k e

45 Snoopy's archenemy 4 7 Cries a r i v e r

7 8 Social d i v i s i o n

I One going [ h ic! I

5 2 Pageant t i t l e

2 Kyrgy z stan range

5 4 Forest W h i t a k e r ' s O scar-wi n n in g r o l e

66 Corn bread 6 7 "The Far Pav i l i o n s , " for one

5 6 "Fuggedabout i t ! "

6 8 One tablet, may be

57 Puccin i ' s " N e s sun

70 Matched (up) 7 4 Magnani m o u s

5 Terrestr i a l

t he m

hi l ls! "

9 6 Re l e n t l e ss f i g h t e r

112 Mil . ad d resses

82 Web periodical

98 Strengthened

1 13 Chair pi e c e

8 3 Nickname fo r Secretari at

9 9 Herbal br ew

115 "... the gr ace of God

80 Go

6 4 Suffi x w i t h s m a c k 65 Super-popular

5 1 Tatt e r s

1 10 "There's gold i n

93 Features

79 One-named designer 94 Skating move

63 Barbecue a pplicati o n

49 A.T.F. agents, e.g. 5 0 "Casablanca" r o l e

3 Blend

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1 5 Medium ab i l i t y , f o r short 1 6 "Puzzles of t h e B lack Wi d o w e r s" author

1 22 Alvar w h o d esigned Fi n l a n d i a H aI I

4 Encrust, as mud might

9 2 Brown er m i n e

14 Crummy advice

3 6 "Di e s

workers

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around

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121 Reverses

1 26 Wall S t r e e t

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1 8 Tyler of r o c k

1 10 Infectio n f i g h t e r

tales

88 Thomas Gainsborough m asterpiece, w i t h "The"

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84 Belief sy stem 86 Visibl y e m b a r r assed

1 00 Hannah who w r o t e " Men in D a r k Times"

116 There may be a h igh price on i t

8 7 Songbirds in " T h e Rubaiyat"

1 01 Priestly r o b e

117 She bear: Sp.

103 Promenade

118 Oversaw

8 9 Jewish males' or g .

104 Close

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9 1 Pastrami go - w i t h

1 06 Amtrak b u l l e t t r a i n

120 U.F.O. crew

ma ter

PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . Tuesday .. . . . . . . . . Wednesday.. . . . . . . Thursday.. . . . . . . . . Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Saturday Real Estate .. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . Sunday.. . . . . . . . . .

Starting at 3 lines "UNDER'500in total merchandise

... 5:00 pm Fri ... . Noon Mon Noon Tues .. . Noon Wed ... Noon Thurs ... 11:00 am Fri ... 3:00 pm Fri ... 5:00 pm Fri

or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com

Place a photoin your private party ad for only $t5.00 per week.

OVER'500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1.50

Garage Sale Special

A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

C©X

4 lines for 4 days... . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

PLEASE NOTE; Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 ormoredays will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday.

I TV, Stereo & Video

260

341

Misc. Items

Horses & Equipment

QB~I~ I i)QA Can be found on these pages: •

YOUR All Year Dependable SAVE on Cable TV-In- *REDUCE ! ternet-Digital Phone- CABLE BILL! Get an Firewood: Seasoned All-Digital Sat e llite Lodgepole, Split, Del. Satellite. You've Got A C hoice! O ptions system installed for Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 O EMPLOYMENT FINANCEAND BUSINESS from ALL major ser- FREE and program- for $335. Cash, Check 0 410 - Private Instruction 507 - Real Estate Contracts vice providers. Call us ming s t a rting at or Credit Card OK. 421 - Schools and Training 514 -Insurance to learn more! CALL $24.99/mo. FREE 541-420-3484. 454- Looking for Employment 528 - Loans and Mortgages Today. 888-757-5943. HD/DVR upgrade for TACK & SADDLE 42t 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 543 - Stocks and Bonds (PNDC) new callers, SO CALL AUCTION Schools & Training (877)366-4508 Gardening Supplfesl 476 - Employment Opportunities 558 - Business Investments Sat. June t5,7 p.m. Stereo cabinet, hi-end NOW (PNDC) 573 - Business Opportunities • & Eq u i pment • Preview 5:30 p.m. A IRLINES ARE H I R- 486 - Independent Positions steel comp., must sell. Liquidating 70 The Bulletin Offers ING - Train for hands $250. 541-410-1312 476 476 476 Saddles + an entire Free Private Party Ads on Aviation MainteBarkTurISoil.com store's worth of in• 3 lines - 3 days nance Career. FAA Employment Employment Employment ventory at public • Private Party Only approved p r ogram. Computers Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities auction, regardless • Total of items adver- PROMPT D E LIVERY Financial aid if quali542-389-9663 of loss or cost. Top fied - Housing availT HE B U L LETIN r e - tised must equal $200 brand and custom able CALL Aviation CAUTION READERS: quires computer ad- or Less Fresh strawberries! Human Resources Consultant t (HRCt) made Saddles, vertisers with multiple FOR DETAILS or to Institute o f M a i ntePicked daily 7 days For newspaper Bridles, Blankets, PLACE AN AD, nance 877-804-5293 ad schedules or those week. Open Mon. Ads published in "Em- Oregon State University — Cascades in Bend delivery, call the too much to list. selling multiple sysCall 541-385-5809 (PNDC) Sat., 9-7, Sun. 10-6 ployment Opportuni- is seeking applicants for a 12-month, full-time Circulation Dept. at Everything used on temsl software, to disFax 541-385-5802 Wholesale avail. Adt ies" i n c lude e m - (1.0 FTE) professional faculty position as a 541-385-5800 8 around a horse! close the name of the Wanted- paying cash vance orders. Just too many ployee and Human Resources Consultant 1 (HRC1). The To place an ad, call Cash, Cards, NO business or the term for Hi-fi audio 8 stuWe pick or U-Pick i ndependent pos i - Human Resources Consultant 1 performs a collectibles? 541-385-5809 CHECKS 10% Buy"dealer" in their ads. dio equip. Mclntosh, K Family Farm tions. Ads for posibroad range of professional human resources or email ers Premium Private party advertis- J BL, Marantz, D y 33427 Seven Mile tions that require a fee management and administration responsibiliclassified@tsendbulletw.com Elks Lodge ¹. 1371 Sell them in ers are defined as Lane SE, Albany, OR. or upfront investment ties including, but not limited to, recruitment naco, Heathkit, San63120 Boyd Acres those who sell one 541-286-2164. The Bulletin Classifieds must be stated. With and selection duties including job candidates sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Serving Central Oregon s<nre fetB Rd., Bend, OR computer. any independent job travel arrangements and managing time and Call 541-261-1 B08 (541) 362-1150 316 opportunity, p l ease reporting/payroll functions @ OSU-Cascades. Auctioneer 541-385-5809 Mower, 21" Snapper, gas Irrigation Equipment 262 investigate thorMike Murphy rotary rear bagger, push Misc. Items oughly. Preferred qualifications include experience in Commercial/Office type, $50. 541-388-1737 For Sale 0.4B acre of irAttend College Online performing duties in human resources manEquipment & Fixtures Tennessee Walker reg. *Medical, 100%. Advertise V A CATION Prompt Delivery Use extra caution when agement in an institution of higher education, rigation right in T u*Criminal gelding stable-mates: *Business, SPECIALS to 3 m i lRock, Sand 8 Gravel malo Irrigation District. black, $3500; Sorrel Justice, *Hospitality, applying for jobs on- or comparable environment. lion P acific N o rth- Canon Fax/Phone, Multiple Colors, Sizes $2200. 206-673-7876. w ith b l a z e nos e * Web. J o b Pla c e - line and never prowesterners! 29 daily new, neverused, $40. Instant Landscaping Co. vide personal infor- To see complete position description w/addi541-504-9078 $2500. 541-317-8991. ment Ass i stance. mation to any source tional required qualifications and to apply newspapers, six 541-389-9663 Find exactly what Computer and Finanstates. 25-word clas263 you may not have re- on-line go to http:I/oregonstate.edu/jobs and 345 SUPER TOP SOIL cial Aid If Qualified. searched and deemed review posting ¹ 0010766. The closing date is sified $525 for a 3-day you are looking for in the www.herehe soilandbatk.com Tools Livestock & Equipment Schev Au t h orized. to be reputable. Use 6/14/13. OSU is an AA/EOE. a d. Cal l (916) Screened, soil 8 comCLASStFIEDS Call 86 6 - 688-7078 extreme caution when 2 88-6019 o r vis i t post m i x ed , no Sears Elite Series GenReplacement-quality www.Centuraonline.C www.pnna.com for the erator, 7000 watts, new rocks/clods. High hur esponding to A N Y purebred y e a r ling om (PNDC) Pacific Nort h west box, $895 new; sell m us level, exc. f o r online e m p loyment Angus heifers, Final Daily Con n ection.in ad from out-of-state. flower beds, lawns, Hay, Grain 8 Feedg $725. 541-306-0166. Answer and Danny 470 (PNDC) gardens, straight People Look for Information s creened to p s o i l . 1st quality grass hay, Irg Boy bloodlines. Good Domestic & We suggest you call Barbecue, Ducane Afdisposition. Raised in 3'x3'xs' bales, approx About Products and the State of Oregon Bark. Clean fill. Definity, like new, $200 long-established herd. In-Home Positions Services Every Day through 750lbs ea. $240/ton, barn Consumer Hotline at liver/you haul. obo. 541-408-0846 $1000 ea. Del. avail. stored. Patterson Ranch, 541-4BO-B096 541-548-3949. The Bulletin tltassifieds Madras Live-in, full time care for 1-503-378-4320 Sisters, 541-549-3831 Bug zapper Coleman elderly woman in LaPine WeedEater gas t rimstill in box. $35 obo 265 358 area. Help with mobility, For Equal Opportunity mer 22" used 2x $60. 541-38B-9270 Baler Twine grooming, meal prepara- L aws: Oregon B u Building Materials Farmers Column 541-388-9270 Most Common Sizes tion, tran s portation, reau of Labor & InBuying Diamonds Quarry Ave. Hay & Feed medications, some light dustry, C i vil Rights Bend Habitat 10X20 STORAGE /Gotd for Cash 541-923-2400 'j housekeeping, house- Division, RESTORE BUILDINGS Saxon's Fine Jewelers • Los t & Found • www.quarryfeed.com hold errands and com- 971-673-0764 c Building Supply Resale for protecting hay, 541-389-6655 panionship. Wages neQuality at LOW Found iPOD on Reed BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS firewood, livestock otiable and will include If you have any quesBUYING PRICES etc. $1496 Installed. Iree rent. Market Road by DesR e ferences tions, concerns or Lionel/American Flyer 740 NE 1st 541-617-1133. c hutes R iver. C a l l Search the area's most required. For interview comments, contact: trains, accessories. 541-312-6709 comprehensive listing of CCB ¹173684. 541-740-5775. call 91 6-216-0162. Classified Department 541-408-2191. Open to the public. classified advertising... LOST KEYS around SE real estate to automotive, kfjbuilders@ykwc.net The Bulletin BUYING & S E L LING 267 541-385-5B09 Tempest in Bend, Thurs. merchandise to sporting All gold jewelry, silver For Sale, Lowline 6/6. 541-848-7525 goods. Bulletin Classifieds Fuel 8 Wood and gold coins, bars, Angus and Dexter's Lost men's w e dding appear every day in the rounds, wedding sets, The Bulletin Heifers. (pregnant or print or on line. band, large, hand-made, class rings, sterling silwith calf) NO steers WHEN BUYING area of P r o C a l iber Call 541-385-5809 ver, coin collect, vinavailable except for FIREWOOD... and/or Deschutes County www.bendbulletin.com tage watches, dental cow/calf pairs. Sheriff Dept., 5/30. Regold. Bill Fl e ming, To avoid fraud, Grass fed/raised. GJ ward! 541-408-5594 541-382-9419. Looking for your next Immediate job opportunity for The Bulletin Seneg Central nregan rere ftaa Reasonable prices. employee? recommends payLost wedding ring MeMust sell as Coffeemaker Melitta, in Qualified and Trained Person Place a Bulletin help ment for Firewood morial weekend pos- Wanted: Irrigated farm box + 2-16oz. mugs 8 I am retiring. wanted ad today and only upon delivery sibly at Sugarloaf Mtn. ground, under pivot irLeo 541-306-0357 carafe $50 54t -480-7024 reach over 60,000 Motel, High D e sert rigation, i n C e n tral Service Technician: Must have and inspection. readers each week. GENERATE SOME • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Middle School, Pilot OR. 541-419-2713 Irrigated pasture avail pervious experience in Ag Equipment. EXCITEMENT 4' x 4' x 8' Your classified ad Butte o r Bo r d en's for 2 steers or 2 will also appear on IN YOUR • Receipts should Corner. Cash reward. Want to b u y A l falfa, immed. Resume with references required. (no horses); posNEIGBORHOOD. bendbulletin.com include name, 253-653-5296 grass and grain hay, heifers sible cow/calf pair. See at which currently Plan a garage sale and standing, in C entral 20989 Tumalo Rd, W of Call Ron Weatherby, for appointment. phone, price and REMEMBER: If you don't forget to adverreceives over 1.5 kind of wood Ore. 541-419-2713 Hwy 97. 541-389-8782 have lost an animal, million page views tise in classified! purchased. don't forget to check 541-3B5-5809. every month at HOLLINGSWORTHS' INC. • Firewood ads Wanted: Irrigated farm The Humane Society no extra cost. MUST include ground, under pivot irPoultry, Rabbits, GET FREE OF CREDIT in Bend 541-382-3537 Bulletin Classifieds rigation, i n C e n tral Thousands of ads daily species & cost per Burns, Oregon CARD DEBT N OW! Redmond, & Supplies Get Results! OR. 541-419-2713 cord to better serve Cut payments by up 541-923-0882 in print and online. (541-573-7254) Call 385-5809 our customers. to half. Stop creditors Prineville, Baby Serama Chicks! Want to b u y A l falfa, or place from calling. 541-447-71 78; Great for 4H or FFA grass and grain hay, your ad on-line at 866-775-9621. OR Craft Cats, projects. $5 each. standing, in C entral Serving Central Oregon since 1903 bendbulletin.com ' 3 t l » 541-389-8420. 541-433-21 t 2. Ore. 541-419-2713 (PNDC)

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THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9 2013 G3

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER S A M C O O O L E A N D T A L K E D I D E A O R R B/R I N T H P E R H O S E A 6/R S A M E B A AMP 6/R P E R I 0 H O P O N T 0 N I N T E C B/R B R A U S T A Y S L H I R E A B O S E B U 6/R A N G E L U N D O E S P E T I T

K E O L E R S O A 6/ RS T R E R E S G I L E F A C E R A H I U V S M O O N D B/R B 0 0 D S C R O A M S C E N A E A R D S T O A A T E S L E A P B T C E T H E C A A L T G R A S

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T A B O S G U A K U M T C M S L O S T M Y 6/R H E O R O E E I F E R N C E D R E P S U R A N B O I 0 S 0 B/R B O Y L U M P M E T H I A H A T L B L 0 R P U S A I L A N A L

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E A D S S S E T Housekeeping Receptionist Security See our website for our P I R E Seasonal Housekeep- - Full Time ers Needed. M ust Long established famavailable Security poM I V work weekends and ily practice seeks sitions, along with the full-time Receptionholidays. M i n imum 42 reasons to join our L O V E wage while training ist. Help us provide team! www.securItyprosbend.com A V E N then to p iece rate. the best care posMust have r e liable sible by adding your D transportation, ODL, bi-lingual skills and current Ins, over 18 prior exp with comI S M years of age. Please puterized appointE L H I call Car o l @ ment s c h eduling. Service Tech Immediate Job op541-749-1296; Pick up job packet S S B/R S portunity for qualiVillage Properties at office. fied and trained perP A S S Sunriver MadrasMedical son. See the display Group A ad in our classified Materials Manager 76 NE 12th St., s ection today f o r yVeiser, ID Madras, OR. N E B C more information. Materia's Man a g er A M I B/R n eeded for a fa s t Registered NurseHollingsworths'lnc. Burns, OR PACU paced manufactured A G O 541-573-7254 h ousing plant. J o b N G B/R duties include but not BatiDSURGear limited to: managing C • F. • N • T • rz • TR E hkr Crrr ' Tkrrrrkr Crrrkrr Garage Sales purchasing staff, maA A S t erial h andlers, i n - F ull-Time, 4 -1 0 h r . ventory c o n trol,and shifts, Mon. - F ri. Garage Sales R P L E t he ordering of a l l Critical Care or ASC Garage Sales production m aterial. experience B O A T preBachelor's De g r ee ferred, e n doscopy Find them Y S T S preferred with 5 years experience a plus. in

PUZZLE IS ON PAGE GZ

STAFF ACCOUNTANT

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experience. in materials management. Respond if interested to pclark©championhomes.com

Remember.... A dd your we b a d dress to your ad and readers on The Bulletin' s web site will be able to click through automatically to your site.

CLERICAL

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Check out the classifieds online WARNING www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin recomUpdated daily mends you use caution when you pro- Extreme Value Advervide personal 29 Daily newsinformation to compa- tising! papers $525/25-word nies offering loans or classified 3-d a y s. credit, especially Reach 3 million Pathose asking for adcific Northwesterners. vance loan fees or For more information companies from out of call (916) 288-6019 or state. If you have email: concerns or queselizabeth@cnpa.com tions, we suggest you for the Pacific Northconsult your attorney west Daily Connecor call CONSUMER tion. (PNDC) HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392. FIGARO'S PIZZA Franchise and a t tached BANK TURNED YOU Video Store for sale in DOWN? Pnvate party Burns, Oregon. This will loan on real es- turn key business is tate equity. Credit, no available immediately. problem, good equity Successful business is all you need. Call for 16+ years. SeriOregon Land M ort- ous inquiries only. gage 541-388-4200. 541-589-1550.

Loans & Mortgages

TRUCK DRIVERS Knight Transportation is hiring! 48, 11W, NW regional or dedicated Canada Runs! FT/ PT for drivers living in WA about chasing products or I and OR. Ask services from out of • $1000 bonus*! Contact Daisy or f the area. Sending submit application at c ash, c hecks, o r www.driveKnight.com f credit i n f o rmation 503-405-1800 ~ may be subjected to ~ FRAUD. Truck Drivers with For more i nformaneeded. tion about an adver- ~ experience Seeking dump truck, f tiser, you may call belly dump, flatbed, the Oregon State lowboy & c o ntainer I Attorney General's d rivers. Local a n d Mental Health Office Co n s umert over the road posiProtection hotline at I tions. Must have 2 I 1-877-877-9392.

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needed, full-time, for Bend location. Title & Medcor has an Central Or e gon's Registration e x p eri- exciting opportunity premier commercial COMMUNITT CR TDIT U • ION ence a must; RV/Auto for a Wellness real estate company, Industry & Accounting Coordinator in Bend. is looking to add a is now hiring for experience preferred. This is a Full Time staff accountant to the following C ompetitive pa y & opportunity working join our commercial positionin BEND! benefits. Please send 32 hours a week. property m a nageGet your resume' to Apply at ment team. responmail.com business www.medcor.com sible for AR/AP, an- • Teller Coordlnator bcrvhireO Fax: 541-330-2496, or swering q uestions apply in person, 63500 on accounts w ith N. Hwy 97, Bend, OR. To view the full/ob R OWIN G property owners and description and fo Cowboy needed to pump vendors, assist with app/y, please visit w ater for c attle o n with an ad in GL. Strong financial Wallowa Memorial our websife af: range for the summer. analysis skills a re www.on Hospital years experience and The Bulletin's ointcareers.com Must have own RV. e ssential. We r e ie Bpllctig valid Class A C D L. "Call A Service LTl Call 541-576-2237 quire 2 years of preLocated in Wages based on exProfessional" vious e x p erience, BUILDING PROGRAM CUSTOMER SERVICE Enterprise, OR perience. Benefits inAA in A c counting; MANAGER / BUILD- Attn: Students - Summer Good classified ads tell clude health i nsurDirectory solid Q u i ckbooks, ING the essential facts in an work openings, all ages Full Time Nights ance, 401(k) p lan, OFFICIAL: exp. in Yardi a plus. ($60,819 - $91,250 / 17+. $13.25 base/appt. Two positions interesting Manner. Write paid vacation, inspecRN Attention to d e tail ear). L a n e County Entry-level s a l es/cusavailable. from the readers view - not tion bonus program. Pre/Post -Op and org a nization Call Kenny, ublic Works / L and tomer svc. Flex sched- Variable shifts - Shift the seller's. Convert the skills are required. Management seeks a ules, conditions apply. differential applies to Western Heavy Haul, facts into benefits. Show B~ S URGmv P lease email r e - Building Program Man- Scholarships p ossible. nights & weekends 541-447-5643 the reader how the item will C • F. • N • T • rz • R sume and cover letager / Building Official. 541-678-5137 or apply at Prior OB & ER help them in someway. hlor Crrr llomrkr Crrrkrr ter t o ce n tralore- For information 8 to ap- workforstudents.com Warehouse po s ition, experience This On-call, 10 hr. shifts, gonjobs@bbsihq.co ply, visit part-time, clean ODL, preferred. Excellent advertising tip Mon.-Fri. Critical Care m o r f a x it to www.lanecount .or /'obs heavy lifting, responDO YOU NEED benefit package. brought to youby or ASC e x perience 541.388.1984 sible 8 h a rdworking. or contact HR, 125 E A GREAT Visit our website at preferred; endoscopy 8th Ave., Eugene, OR Apply in person, 1735 EMPLOYEE www.wchcd.org experience a p l u s. The Bulletin 97401. 541-682-3665. NE Hwy 20. Contact RIGHT NOW? C loses 07/01/13 @ Wage premium paid Linda Childers at Call The Bulletin 5:00pm. EOE/ADA for on call status, and I Rrrrrrr Rrrrrrrr rr rrrrrh Corrrrrrrr 541-426-5313 before 11 a.m. and eligible for Bonus proEOE get an ad in to pubgram. Interested perlish the next day! sons s hould e m ail 541-385-5809. > Home Delivery Advisor > Plumbers, Journeymen resume to: VIEW the needed for jobs0bendsurgery.com The Bulletin Circulation Department is Classifieds at: new construction. Central Oregon Community College www.bendbulletin.com seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a Startimmediately! has o p enings l i s te d b e l ow . Go to Take care of full time position and consists of managing a Call Gary, 541-410-1655 https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply delivery area and working with an adult car- Food Service - Bruno's your investments online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, rier force to ensure our customers receive su- Grocery/U-bake is taking 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; with the help from Call a Pro apps for Cashier & Pizza perior service. Must be able to create and (541)383-7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Maker. Apply: 1709 NE Whether you need a The Bulletin's perform strategic plans to meet department Oregon Relay Services number is 7 -1-1. objectives such as increasing market share 6th, Bend. No phone calls COCC is an AA/EO employer. fence fixed, hedges "Call A Service and route by route penetration. Ideal candi- Food Service-Server trimmed or a house Professional" Directory date will be a self-starter who can work both in instructional Technical Systems Specialist W hispering Wi n d s the office and in their assigned territory with built, you'll find / Trainer Retirement is hiring a minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are Provide a d ministration o f ins t ructionalfull time server for our professional help in Sales part-time position, necessary with company vehicle provided. technical systems in vendor-hosted environexp. helpful but not dining room. Position The Bulletin's "Call a Strong customer service skills and manager equired, clean r e - ments, provide training in virtual environments, includes evenings & ment skills are necessary. Computer experisponsible person. Ap- and troubleshoot issues. Requires Master's weekends. B e nefits Service Professional" ence is helpful. We offer benefits including ply in person, Furni- degree + online web-based course developafter 90 days. Must be Directory medical, dental, 401(k), paid vacation and sick ment exp.$3,558-$4.235/mo. Closes June ture Outlet, 1735 NE friendly & enjoy se541-385-5809 time. We believe in promoting from within so 16. Hwy 20, Bend.. niors. Please apply in advancement within the company is available. p erson at 2920 N E If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse Assistant Professor,Culinary Arts Conners Ave., Bend. Operations Coordinator Provide instruction for C ulinary Arts a nd backgrounds, and you are energetic, have Pre-employment drug restaurant operations, both in lecture and great organizational skills and interpersonal test required. Central Oregon's premier commercial real lab mediums. Bachelor's req. + 3-yr. field communication skills, please fill out an appliestate f ir m i s se e k ing a n Op e rations exp. Start F al l T e r m S e ptember 2013. cation at The Bulletin or send your resume to: Where can you find a Coordinator to provide administrative support Closes June 24. Job Opening-Circulation helping hand? to the property management department. The c/o The Bulletin From contractors to position is a key member of the team and will Part Time instructors PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 to be the first point of contact for landlords, yard care, it's all here New: Manufacturing Technology OI' tenants, and vendors. The ideal candidate is Looking for t alented individuals to t each kfoutz©bendbulletin.com in The Bulletin's self motivated and possess strong communipart-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our "Call A Service cation skills to support the needs of the team. No phone calls, please. Web site https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay The position directs the work flow of the office The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace, EOE. Professional" Directory $500 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with (routing calls, sorting mail, answering phones, additional perks. Housekeeper private maintaining record systems, ordering supplies, and record keeping) identifying areas for inhomes cleaning team member needed, week creased efficiency and working with the team Web Developer SOCIAL WORKER (MSW) days only. No week- to implement system improvements. 2 Yrs exp. ends, eves or holidays. in an office administrator/management posiEstablished hospice, serving the commuAre you a technical star who can also commu541-815-0015 tion required; Quickbooks & Yardi Property nity of Klamath Falls for over 30 years, is nicate effectively with non-technical execuManagement Software exp. Preferred; Data recruiting for a full- time MSW to join our tives and employees? Would you like to work FIND YOUR FUTURE entry and knowledge of Microsoft Outlook, interdisciplinary team. Competitive wages hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, the recWord, and Excel required. Starting @ $15/hr. HOME INTHE BULLETIN and excellent benefits package! reation capital of the state? Then we'd like to DOE + Benefits. talk to you. Your future is just a page For more information, visit our website at Please email a cover letter and resume to: away. Whetheryou're looking centraloregonjobs O bbsihq.com EOE www.klamathhospice.org/employment or Our busy media company that publishes nufor a hat or a place to hangit, contact Trebor at 541-882-2902. merous web and mobile sites seeks an experiThe Bulletin Classified is enced developer who is also a forward thinker, Accounting Manager yourbestsource. creative problem solver, excellent communiEvery day thousandsof cator, and self-motivated professional. We are buyers andsellers of goods K LAMATH H O S P I C E redesigning all of our websites within the next and services dobusiness in couple of years and want you in on the ground PaCi f iCSourCe these pages.Theyknow floor. HEALTH PLANS you can't beat The Bulletin Nursing Classified Section for Fluencywith PHP, HTML5, CSS3, jQuery and PacificSource Health Plans is s eeking an selection andconvenience JavaScript is a must. Experience integrating Accounting Manager to lead our accounting STAFF NURSE (RN) - every item is just a phone third-party solutions and social media applicateam. Manage and coordinate accounting Established hospice, serving the commucall away. tions required. Desired experience includes: activities to ensure that accurate, relevant and nity of Klamath Falls for over 30 years, is XML/JSON, MySQL, Joomla, Java, respontimely information is provided to management. The Classified Section is recruiting for a part time or full-time RN to sive web design, Rails, WordPress. Top-notch Gather and prepare data to report financial easy to use. Every item join our interdisciplinary team. Competitive skills with user interface and graphic design an information to internal and external customers is categorized andevery wages and excellent benefits package! added plus. including regulatory agencies, as required. cartegory is indexed onthe Direct, prepare and ensure accuracy of For more information, visit our website at section's front page. Background in the media industry desired but financial reports, audits statements, and www.klamathhospice.org/employment or Whether you are looking for investment recording, on a monthly, quarterly, not required. This is a full-time position with contact Trebor at 541-882-2902. a home orneed aservice, benefits. If you've got what it takes, e-mail a and annual basis. Five years of f inancial your future is in thepagesof cover letter, resume, and portfolio/work sample accounting experience. Strong familiarity with The Bulletin Classified. links a n d/o r re p ository ( GitHub) t o regulatory procedures preferred. Supervisory resume O wescompapers.com. experience required. KLAMATH HOSP I CE

OnPD!nt

Loans & Mortgages

secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money Truck driver: Home loans. Call Pat Kelley w eekends, mos t 541-382-3099 ext.13. weekdays. Flatbed, doubles, ta r p ing. 573 COT experience will get you in, but not a Business Opportunities 514 must. Based out of Insurance Prineville. Make no A Classified ad is an mistake this is hard EASY W A Y TO work! 8-14 hrs day. SAVE $$$ on AUTO REACH over 3 million INSURANCE from the Only serious should Pacific Northwesterna pply. F ul l t i m e, m ajor names y o u ers. $52 5 /25-word know and trust. No possible part- time. c lassified ad i n 2 9 forms. No hassle. No daily newspapers for Medical card, DMV obligation. Call 3-days. Call the Paprintout. I'll pay for READY F O R MY drug screen. Concific Northwest Daily QUOTE now! CALL tact Earl Peterson Connection (916) 1-888-706-8256. 541-410-7811. 2 88-6019 o r e m a il (PNDC) elizabethOcnpa.com for more info (PNDC)

Job offers excellent The Bulletin benefit pac k age. Interested persons Classifieds s hould e m ai l r e sume to: 541-385-5809

jobs@bendsurgery.com

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Employment Opportunities

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Please visit us online at www.pacificsource.com/careers to complete the online application process.

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EOE/Drug Free Workplace

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Nurse Manager: Pre-Op/Post-Opicall Room

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Ic takes a special person co become a Home Instead CAREGiverr" noc a special degree. Working with senIors in their homes can be challengingbuc,ac che same time, tremendously rewarding. Enjoy training, support,flexible shifts thatfi c your life,and a job that nurcures che soul.

• No medical degree necessary • Training and support provided Flexible shifts

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Job Summary: We are looking for a strong leader to fill the Nurse Manager role for the Pre-op / Post-Op / Call Room. This position requires an individual capable of providing direct oversight of Pre-Op, Post-Op and the call room whilemanaging 20-25 FTE's. The position reports directly to the Clinical Director. Duties will include, but not be limited to, performance evaluations and performance management as well as new staff orientation. This position is a member of multiple committees. Qualifications: Must be able to demonstrate strong leadership and communication skills. Must be a licensed RN in the state of Oregon, or able to obtain licensure upon hire. 3-5 years of Peri-Operative experience, preferably in an ASC setting. The ideal candidate will have management experience in an ASC setting. Position details:This is a full time exempt position; Monday through Friday. Competitive salary, benefit package, retirement and bonus plan Positioncloses June 15, 2013.

Email resume to jobs O bendsurgery.com

The Bulletin Advertising Account Executive The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of m edia sales experience is preferable, but we will train the right candidate. The p o sition in c ludes a com p etitive compensation package including benefits, and rewards an aggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Email your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Jay Brandt, Advertising Director jbrandt@bendbulletin.com or drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Or mailto PO 8ox 6020, Bend, OR 97708; No phone inquiries please. EOE / Drug Free Workplace

JACKSON COUNTY - Jobs Available NOMrRelocate to Southern Oregon and join our HHS-Mental Health Team. Mental health positions currently available with Jackson County in adult, children's and crisis services: • Psychiatrist • Mental Health Nurse Practitioner • Mental Health Nurse • Program Manager II • MHS III (Therapist and Care Coordinator)

• MHS I (case Manager) Visit our website for details and to apply, www.jacksoncounty.org. oT'ES o

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DESCHUTES COUNTY CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

ASSOCIATE PLANNER — LONG RANGE PLANNING, Community Development Dept. Full-time position. Deadline: SUNDAY, 06/23/1 3. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II, Older Adult. Full-time position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. CORRECTIONS NURSE,Adult Jail. Full-time position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRSTREVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON 06/1 7/1 3. HUMAN RESOURCES DIRECTOR,Personnel Dept. Full-time position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON 06/30/13. MEDICAL DIRECTOR, Behavioral Health Division. Will consider full-time, part-time or

Personal Services Contract. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE P RACTITIONER, Behavioral Health Division. One full-time and one part-time position, will also consider 8 Personal Services Contract. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER or NURSE PRACTITIONER,Adult Jail. Full-time position. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE II, CaCoon with Maternal Child Health, Public Health Division. Position will start as half-time position but will become full-time jn the future. Bilingual Spanish/English required. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON 06/17/13. PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE II, Nurse Family Partnership with Maternal Child Health, Public Health Division. Full-time position, bilingual Spanish/English required. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. RESERVE DEPUTY SHERIFF,Sherjff's Office. On-call positions. Deadline: THIS IS AN ONGOING RECRUITMENT. DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONSONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS,PLEASE VISIT

OUR WEBSITEAT www.deschutes.org/jobs. All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the

recruitment has closed and applications have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent vja email only. If you need assistance,

please contact the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541 ) 617-4722.

Deschutes County provides reasonable accommodations for p e rsons w i th disabilities. This material will be furnished jn alternative format jf needed. For hearing impaired, please call TTY/TDD 711. EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

G4 SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space

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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719- Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land

14' 1982 Valco River Sled, 70 h.p., FishFinder. Older boat but

price includes trailer, 3 wheels and tires. All f or $1 5 00 ! Cal l

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Boats & Accessories •

Motorhomes

Motorhomes •

Motorh o mes

21' Crownline 215 hp 198830' Class A 4000 in/outboard e n g i ne W gen., new fridge, 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin wheelchair lift. Good sleeps 2/ 3 p e ople, cond. $18,000 obo portable toilet, exc. 541-447-5504 cond. Asking $8,000.

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Monaco Windsor, 2001, Southwind 35.5' Triton, loaded! (was $234,000 2008,V10, 2 slides, DuAds published in the pont UV coat, 7500 mi. new) Solid-surface 541-416-8811 "Boats" classification Snowmobiles counters, convection/ Bought new at include: Speed, fishmicro, 4-dr, fridge, $132 913 ing, drift, canoe, (2) 2000 A rctic C at washer/dryer, ceramic asking $91,000, Z L580's EFI with n e w house and sail boats. D odge 2 2' 19 7 8 , tile 8 carpet TV DVD Call 503-982-4745 covers, electric start w/ For all other types of class C, 67K mi., satellite dish, leveling, reverse, low miles, both watercraft, please see good cond.$3500. 8-airbags, power cord Check out the excellent; with new 2009 541-389-4873 Class 875. reel, 2 full pass-thru classifieds online Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, 14' a luminum 541-385-5809 trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 bo a t People Look for Information 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 www.bendbulletin.cem drive off/on w/double tilt, w/trailer, 2009 Mercury Updated daily About Products and lots of accys. Selling due 15hp motor, fish finder, Diesel gen set. $85,000 Sererng Central Oregon since t903 to m edical r e asons.$2700. 541-815-8797 Services Every Daythrough obo. 541-233-7963 $6000 all. 541-536-8130 •If ef I ~ g The Bulletin Classifieds Need to get an Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, 15' older Seaswirl, Fleetwood 31' T i o ga I ad in ASAP? short track, variable 35HP motor, cover, Class C 1997, 25.000 You can place it exhaust valves, elec- d epth f inder, a s mi. V-10, Onan 4000 Winnebago Suncruiser34' tric s t art, r e v erse, sorted live v e sts, online at: g enerator 275 h r s . OBO. 2004, only 34K, loaded, manuals, rec o rds, $1400. No leaks. Excellent www.bendbulletin.com much to list, ext'd or new spare belt, cover, 541-548-7645 tires. $25.000 NATIONAL DOLPHIN too 541-408-3811. heated hand g rips, 37' 1997, loaded! 1 warr. thru 2014, $54,900 541-447-3425 541-385-5809 nice, fast, $999. Call slide, Corian surfaces, Dennis, 541-589-3243 Just bought a new boat? wood floors (kitchen), Tom, 541-385-7932, 15' older Seaswirl, Sell your old one in the 2-dr fridge, convection "c classifieds! Ask about our microwave, Vizio TV & • Yamaha 750 1999 35HP motor, cover, Travel Trailers Super Seller rates! Mountain Max, $1400 d epth f inder, a s roof satellite, walk-in 541-385-5809 • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 sorted live v e sts, shower, new queen bed. EXT, $1000. $1400. OBO. White leather hide-a• Zieman 4-place 541-548-7645 or bed & chair, all records, Beautiful h o u seboat, trailer, SOLD! 541-408-3811. no pets or smoking. $85,000. 541-390-4693 All in good condition. $28,450. www.centraloregon Located in La Pine. Call 541-771-4800 houseboat.com. Call 541-408-6149. L Fleetwood 31' WilderGENERATE SOME ex- Fleetwood D i scovery n ess Gl 1 9 99, 1 2 ' Find exactly what 654 746 860 aw n ing, citement in your neig- 40' 2003, diesel mo- you are looking for in the slide, 2 4 ' Houses for Rent Northwest Bend Homes Motorcycles & Accessories 16' O ld T o w n borhood. Plan a ga- torhome queen bed, FSC, outw/all CLASSIFIEDS side shower, E-Z lift Camper C a n oe, rage sale and don't options-3 slide outs, SE Bend stabilizer hitch, l i ke Beautiful NW cottage, forget to advertise in satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, exc. cond, $900. CRAMPED FOR c lose to C OCC & new, been stored. 541-312-8740 classified! 385-5809. 3 bdrm, 1 bath w/gaCASH? etc. 3 2,000 m i les. RV $10,950. 707-688-4253 rage on fenced .75 shops Master bdrm w/ Use classified to sell Wintered i n h e ated CONSIGNMENTS large walk-in closet. acre. Detached 24 x those items you n shop. $89,900 O.B.O. Servrng Central Oregon trnce 1903 WANTED 17.5' Glastron 2002, 36 shop, greenhouse, Upstairs perfect for 9 • longer need. 541-447-8664 I t We Do The Work ... family room, 2nd bdrm close to High Desert Chevy eng., Volvo Call 541-385-5809 • 875 You Keep The Cash! or office. Large attic outdrive, open bow, school. Pet friendly. Watercraft On-site credit 1st, last 8 c l eaning for storage or easy stereo, sink/live well, Meet singles right now! 630 approval team, deposit. $980/mo. conversion to l i ving w/glastron tr a i ler, 2 Sea-Doo Waverunners: No paid o p erators, Rooms for Rent web site presence. For address, call space. Oversized gaincl. boat c o v er, 1998 GSX Limited Edijust real people like 541-410-9064. We Take Trade-Ins! rage w/ space for your Like new, $ 8 500. tion w/new pump; and you. Browse greetStudios & Kitchenettes Free Advertising. car, skis 8 k a y a k. 541-447-4876 ings, exchange mesFurnished room, TV w/ 2005 3D version. Also 659 Jayco Seneca 34', 2007. BIG COUNTRY RV Comes with all appli. sages and c o nnect cable, micro & fridge. 2008 2-place Zimmer- 28K miles, 2 slides, Du- Bend: 541-330-2495 Houses for Rent i ncluding W/D. A p live. Try it free. Call Utils & linens. New man trailer with new ramax diesel, 1 owner, Redmond: pointments on weeknow: 8 7 7-955-5505. owners. $145-$165/wk Sunriver tires all for $4500. excellent cond, $84,995; 541-548-5254 ends only. $218,000 541-382-1885 (PNDC) Harley Davidson HeriCall 541-408-6579 Trade? 541-546-6920 John 503-804-4681. VILLAGE PROPERTIES tage Softail 2002, Fl, 634 Sunriver, Three Rivers, emerald green 8 black, 750 lots of chrome 8 extras, La Pine. Great Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Redmond Homes Selection. Prices range 9K, perfect cond. $9995 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 u • 503-999-7356 (cell) Volvo Penta, 270HP, **No Application Fee** $425 - $2000/mo. hrs n must see, View our full 2 bdrm, 1 bath, Looking for your next Harley Davidson Soft- low $15,000, 541-330-3939 inventory online at $530 8 $540 w/lease. emp/oyee? Tail De luxe 2 0 0 7, Call 54I-385-5809 to promote your service Advertise for 28 doys starting at '(40 Iritis speciapgckoge l it not available onoor websgel Carports included! Viiiage-Properties.com Place a Bulletin help white/cobalt, w / pas1 -866-931 -1061 wanted ad today and senger kit, Vance & FOX HOLLOW APTS. reach over 60,000 Hines muffler system Need to get an (541) 383-3152 readers each week. 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. Cascade Rental Building/Contracting • Handyman LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care] ad in ASAP? Your classified ad cond, $16,9 9 9, Management. Co. will also appear on 541-389-9188. You can place it 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L NOTICE: Oregon state bendbulletin.com Call for Specials! MAVERICK online at: Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 law requires anyone which currently reHarley Heritage Limited numbers avail. www.bendbulletin.com hp Bowrider w/depth who contracts for ceives over Softail, 2003 ANDSCAPING 1, 2 & 3 bdrms finder, radio/ CD player, construction work to LCB g!671 1.5 million page $5,000+ in extras, w/d hookups, rod holders, full canvas, be licensed with the 4 Licensed 4 Bonded 4 Insured views every month $2000 paint job, 541-385-5809 patios or decks. EZ Loader trailer, exclnt Construction Contrac30K mi. 1 owner, Specializing in at no extra cost. Mountain Glen cond, $11,500. tors Board (CCB). An For more information Fire Perimeter Clearing Bulletin Classifieds 671 707-484-3518 (Bend) 541-383-9313 active license please call Mowing/Yard Detailing Services Get Results! Professionally managed by Mobile/Mfd. 541-385-8090 Weedeating/ChainsawWork 18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, means the contractor Handyman/Remodeling SERVING CENTRAL OREGON Call 385-5809 or Norris 8 Stevens, Inc. is bonded & insured. Landscape, Construction/Installs or 209-605-5537 for Rent place your ad on-line 1984, 185hp, V6 Mersince 2003 the contractor's Residential/Commercial Residential Fencing& More! & Commercial at Cruiser, full canvas, life Verify 648 CCB l i c ense at Slnall JObSio Bend/Redmond/Powell Butte bumpers, water www.hirealicensed3 bdrm, 2 bath dbl. wide bendbuffetin.com HDFatBo 1996 vests, Houses for Enu> 0 Roottt Remodels skis, swim float, extra IANDSCAPING Terrebonne/CrookedRiver Ranch m fd in DRW o n 1 Gnrnge Organizttrion prop & more. EZ Loader contractor.com Rent General acre., pets ok. $1200 4 Landscape Construction Senior & Veteran Discounts Check out the or call 503-378-4621. Home Iltspecuon Repairs trailer, never in saltwater, mo. Call after 10 a.m. ir Water Feature The Bulletin recomclassifieds online Bret Stormer always garaged, very PUBLISHER'S 541-617-0179 Qnoliry, Honesr Work IOStallation/Maint. a www.bendbulletin.com i clean, all maint. records. mends checking with Cell:(503) 302-2445 NOTICE ir Pavers the CCB prior to conoennis 541.3t 7.9768 $5500. 541-389-7329 All real estate adverUpdated daily Office:(54 I) 923-4324 tracting with anyone. cc339 39 3993 rrorlder/33ilslrred e Renovations tising in this newspaSome other t r ades Completely e Irrigations Installation 773 per is subject to the also req u ire addiRebuilt/Customized ce 'I o F air H o using A c t Acreages tional licenses a nd Sprinkler 2012/2013 Award COLLINS which makes it illegal certifications. ERIC REEVE Activation/Repair Winner to a d vertise "any 2 acres w/well, borders Showroom Condition Back Flow Testing Just bought a new boat? HANDY BLM, great views, power preference, limitation Many Extras at prop line, end of road 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, Sell your old one in the or disc r imination Call Now to Schedule MAINTENANCE Low Miles. Ask about our n ear P r ineville R e s. inboard motor, g reat classifieds! based on race, color, Spring Cleanup Super Seller rates! iir Thatch & Aerate $77,000 $129,000. 541-350-6173 religion, sex, handicond, well maintained, Au Home /rc and Aerate/Thatch, 541-385-5809 541-548-4807 ir spring clean up 705 $8995obo. 541-350-7755 cap, familial status, Commercial Repairs Weekly or one time e weekly Mowing & Edging marital status or na- Real Estate Services Find exactly what Concrete Construction Carpentry-Painting Grounds Keeping Service tional origin, or an ine Bi-Montttly & you are looking for in the HD Screaming Eagle HOneyDO'S. • Mowing • Edging tention to make any Boise, ID Real Estate Monthly Maintenance Electra Glide 2005, CLASSIFIEDS Small or large jobs, n • Hedge Trimming such pre f e rence, For relocation info, tr Bark, Rock, Etc. 103 motor, two tone 1 8' Seaswirl 1984 no problem. • Pruning ' Weedeating limitation or discrimicandy teal, new tires, open bow, V6, en call Mike Conklin, Senior Discount nation." Familial staSenior Discounts • Fertilizing • Hauling 23K miles, CD player 208-941-8458 gine 8 outdrive re Au work guaranteed. CHECK YOUR AD tus includes children hydraulic clutch, ex• De-thatching Silvercreek Realty Bonded and Insured built, extras, $2495 under the age of 18 Please check your ad 541-389-3361 cellent condition. 541-546-6920 (o e (giimi(R) Q iig on the first day it runs 541-815-4458 living with parents or 745 Highest offer takes it. 541-771-4463 Lce¹ 8759 legal cus t o dians, Homes for Sale to make sure it is corOver 30 Years Experience 541-480-8080. Bonded - Insured BONDED &.INSURED rect. Sometimes in• Sidewalks pregnant women, and CCB¹149468 NOTICE: Oregon Land• Rv pads people securing cus- 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, s tructions over t h e scape Contractors Law USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! • Driveways tody of children under 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, phone are misunder(ORS 671) requires all • Color & Stamp 18. This newspaper view. By owner, ideal for stood and an e rror LandscapingNard Care businesses that ad- Dccr-to-dcor selling with can occurin your ad. Work Available will not knowingly ac- extended family. vertise t o pe r f ormfast results! It's the easiest Also — Hardwood tfoorine cept any advertising $590,000. 541-390-0886 If this happens to your Landscape Construc- way in the world to sell. 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, at affordable prices! for real estate which is ad, please contact us tion which includes: new upholstery, new elecin violation of the law. People Look for Information the first day your ad CCB ¹190612 Victory TC 2002, tronics, winch, much more. p lanting, deck s , The Bulletin Classified appears and we will O ur r e aders ar e About Products and Z~r/t'dz runs great, many $9500. 541-306-0280 Quabip fences, arbors, Call Grant hereby informed that Services Every Day through be happy to fix it as 541-385-5809 water-features, and inZau/rr du.e /,', s oon as w e c a n . accessories, new 20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish all dwellings adverstallation, repair of irMore Than Service tised in this newspa- The Bulletin Ciassifieds Deadlines are: Week- tires, under 40K & Ski, 50 hrs on new rigation systems to be Painting/Wall Coveringl miles, well kept. engine, fish finder, chart Just bought a new boat? days 11:00 noon for Peace of Mind per are available on licensed w i t h t he NOTICE an equal opportunity All real next day, Sat. 11:00 $6500 OBO. For plotter 8 VHF radio with Sell your old one in the Landscape Contracestate adver- a.m. for Sunday and antenna. Good shape, classifieds! Ask about our basis. To complain of tised here m ore i nfo. c a l l Spring Clean Up tors Board. This 4-digit is sub- Monday. full cover, heavy duty Super Seller rates! discrimination cal l ject to t hin •Leaves 541-647-4232 number is to be i ne F e deral trailer, kicker and electric 541-385-5809 541 -385-5809 HUD t o l l-free at F air H o using A c t , •Cones cluded in all advermotors. 1-800-877-0246. The Thank you! •Needles tisements which indiwhich makes it illegal $7500 or best offer. Debris Removal The Bulletin Classified toll f re e t e l ephone to advertise any pref•Debris Hauling cate the business has 541-292-1834 number for the hear- erence, limitation or a bond, insurance and ing im p aired is discrimination based Weed Free Bark workers c o mpensaWestern 1-800-927-9275. tion for their employ& Flower Beds (Ion race, color, reli- USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! OBO. 541-388-8339

The Bulletin

00~0~

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

I DO THAT!

5'ID~

4 sERvlcEs ~

NON!

541-219-3183

BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise tc sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin tenmg Cenrrai or egon rmce f903

Rented your Property? The Bulletin Classifieds has an "After Hours" Line. Call 541-383-2371 24 Hours to

e.

Rent /Own 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $2500 down, $750 mo. OAC. J and M Homes 541-548-5511

gion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r eal 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

FOR SALE When buying a home, 83% of Central Oregonians turn to

The Bulletin Call 541-385-5809 to

place your Real Estate ad.

9-wQ-44-

Door-to-docr selling with Yamaha Classic 1973 fast results! It's the easiest 250 Eunduro. All original, way in the world tc sell. street legal, 11K miles, $1195. 541-382-7515 The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 ATVs •

775

Suzuki Ei er 2004 Quadrunner ATV, auto-

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

matic, new tires, 2215 miles, covered dog carrier platform, nylon dust cover, set of 4 snow chains. $2899. Contact Larry at

FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes

971-678-3196 or

541-548-5511

nortonjackocomcast.net

LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon

20.5' 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond with very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini 8 custom trailer, $17,950. 541-389-1413

OOO

20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530

21' Bluewater Mirage

MUST SELL. Yamaha Banshee 2001, custom built 350 motor, race-ready, lots of extras,

541-548-5511

$4999/obo 541-647-8931

JandMHomes.com

Worth $8315Will sacrifice for $4,900 for quick sell. To see video, go to: www.u2pro.com/95 541-815-9981

Painting Co.

ees. For your protec-

Will Haul Away

+•

• FREE

For Salvage

Any Location 9LRemoval Also Cleanups lBc Cteanouts l

INl I

Domestic Services

Want a sparkling clean house? Give CJ's Housecleaning a call, 541-604-1908. Over

25 years experience!

or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing lan d scape maintenance do n ot r equire an L C B cense.

Aeration - Dethatching Overseed Compost

Top Dressing

Landscape Maintenance

Full or Partial Service • Mowing eEdging • Pruning «Weeding Sprinkler Adjustments

Commercial & Residential

Senior Discounts

541-390-1 466 Same Day Response

541-388-6910 Fax: 541C8$6737 CCB¹5184

MARTIN JAMES

:0

Fertilizer included with monthly program

Just bought a new boat? Weekly, monthly Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our or one time service. Super Seller rates! EXPERIENCED 541-385-5809

— Richard Haymana semi-retired painting contractor of 45 years. Small jobs welcome. Interior & Exterior

tion call 503-378-5909

Lawn Renovation

AllEN REINSCH

European Professional

— Providing-

Painter

Yard Maintenance & Clean-up, Thatching, Plugging & much more!

Repaint Specialist! Oregon License

ContactAllen

¹186 147 LLC

541-536-1294 541-81 5-2888 I

I '

I

SUNDAY A

1PM - 4PM

A •

Quality s i n gle-level private townhome w/

Cascade views. Designer touches & upgrades. *e 3 bdrm, 2.5 ba. Knotty Alder hardwood doors & 362 NW Phils Loop, Bend cahinerry. Great room w/ Directions: Mt. Washington to/VIV natural broken iop stone fireplace, Travertine & Flag Line. Righ/ at Sandalwood. ttut phifs Loop. slate flonring. Many more Left /o / design features! '

Hosted c: Listed by: GREGG HAYDEN PrinciPal Broker

541-390-6139

$524,900

9ohn fLfucofr REAL ESTATE SOUTHERN ANDCENTRAL OREGON


THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2013 G5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Travel Trailers

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

0 0

Terry 27' 2004 like new,

I

908

929

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Automotive Wanted

rarely used, newer tires 8 awning, A/C, solar panels, 4-6volt batteries, large slideo ut, $ 1 0,750 o b o .

Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000 Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat

8 air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003

541-504-0049,

• II +

gsi

Komfort 2003 6' Slideout, 13' awning, A/C, large stor-

IS

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

age tanks, gas/ electric water heater, LED TV, DVD, frig/ freezer, microwave, pantry, extra counter

space, tub/ shower bathroom, Queen bed, 2 skylights, ceiling fan, Clean, Good Condition. $9500 541-325-2220

Ia~

<'-

1/3 interest in Columbia

400, $150,000 (located I Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, I $400/mo. 541-948-2963

FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT!

Keystone Sprinter 31', 2008 King size walkaround bed, electric awning, (4) 6-volt

One Half Interest in RV-9A for SALE 2005 Vans RV-9A, 0-320, Dynon, GPS, ICOM's, KT-76C, Oxygen. Flies great, no damage history. 300 plus Hours tach, kept in Redmond C Hangar. Reduced to $35K, OBOr Dick Hansen, 541-923-2318

dkhansen@bendbroadband.com or

Tod, 541-350-6462

DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE B LIND. Free 3 D ay V acation, Ta x D e ductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. 877-213-9145.

(PNDC) 932

Antique & Classic Autos

1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963

lk, I- i~i. I-

R U T T

Canopy for long bed great cond., w h ite

You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

w/tinted windows 8 slider window. $500. 541-580-7334

Keystone Montana 2955 RL 2008,

2 slides, arctic insulation, loaded, excellent never used condition. $33,500 541-923-4707

541-548-5254

In Madras, cail 541-475-6302

Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' d eep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great Lance Camper 1994, visibility for aviation busifits long bed crew cab, ness. Financing availtv, a/c, loaded. $6200 able. 541-948-2126 or email 1jetjock@q.com OBO. 541-580-7334

1987 Trail-Eze tilt trailer, 25', 26,000-lb cap, new deck & paint, air brakes, in excellent cond., $6995. 541-408-6579

FAST'66 Ranchero! $7500 invested, sell for $4500! Call 541.382.9835

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, door panels w/flowers & hummingbirds, white soft top & hard

top. Just reduced to

$3,750. 541-317-9319 or 541-647-8483

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

engine, power every- Plymouth B a r racuda thing, new paint, 54K 1966, original car! 300 original m i les, runs hp, 360 V8, centergreat, excellent condi- lines, 541-593-2597 tion in 8 out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179 PROJECT CARS: Chevy 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & Chevy Coupe 1950 rolling chassis's $1750 ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, complete car, $ 1949; Cadillac Series 61 1950, 2 dr. hard top, complete Ford T h underbird w/spare f r on t cl i p ., 1955, new white soft top, tonneau cover

$3950, 541-382-7391

and upholstery. New chrome. B e a utiful Car. $25, 0 0 0. T-BIRD 1988 S p ort coupe, 34,400 orig. mi., A/C, PW, PL, new

tires/brakes/hoses/ belts & exhausts. Tan w/tan interior. Immaculate! $4,995. Days 5 4 1-322-4843, Eves 541-383- 5043

Need to get an GMC rxI ton 1971,Only ad in ASAP? $19,700! Original low You can place it mile, exceptional, 3rd online at: owner. 951-699-7171 MOVING - NO ROOM! www.bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809

I

Ford Galaxie 500 1963, 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & radio (orig),541-419-4989 Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO.

AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

Door-to-door selling with 541-548-1422 fast results! It's the easiest bought a new boat? way in the world to sell. Just Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our The Bulletin Classified Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 541-385-5809

530-515-8199

Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, 2011 Interstate Load $7,000 OBO / trades. Runner custom utility Please call trailer, 6x12, enclosed, 541-389-6998 rear ramp, c ustom wheels, silver 8 black, been stored, towed Find It in only 150 miles. Excel- The Bulletin Classifieds! lent! $3195 obo. 541-385-5809 541-408-7908

BOATS & RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycies And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorbomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890 - RVs for Rent

300 C o upe Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0,1952 Ford Customline Chrysler 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, based in Madras, al- Coupe, project car, flat- auto. ps, air, ways hangared since head V-8, 3 spd extra frame trans, on rebuild, renew. New annual, auto parts, 8 materials, $2000 painted original blue, pilot, IFR, one piece obo. 541-410-7473 original blue interior, windshield. Fastest Aroriginal hub caps, exc. cher around. 1750 tochrome, asking $9000 tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. or make offer. 541-475-6947, ask for 541-385-9350 Rob Berg.

WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. MONTANA 3585 2008, 24' with 21' interior. exc. cond., 3 slides, The Bulletin Classifieds Sleeps 6. Self-conking bed, Irg LR, tained. Systems/ Arctic insulation, all batteries, plus many appearancein good options $35,000. more extras, never condition. Smoke-free. 541-420-3250 smoked in, first Tow with ~/~-ton. Strong owners, $19,900. NuWa 297LK Hi t c hsuspension; can haul Hiker 20 07, All sea916 ATVs snowmobiles, Buick Riviera 1991, clasCall 541-410-5415 even a small car! Great sons, 3 s l ides, 32' 1 /3 interest i n w e l l Trucks & sic low-mile car, driven perfect for snow birds, equipped IFR Beech Boprice - $8900. about 5K/year. Always Heavy Equipment l eft k i t chen, re a r nanza A36, new 10-550/ Call 541-593-6266 garaged & p ampered, lounge, extras, must prop, located K BDN. non-smoker, exclnt cond, see. $25,999 Prineville $65,000. 541-419-9510 $4300 obo 541-389-0049 The Bulletin's 541-447-5502 days 8 541-447-1641 eves. "Call A Service Chev Cheyenne 20 1972 Custom Camper, new TarProfessional" Directory etMaster eng., 1 owner, Orbit 21'2007, used is all about meeting 1350 obo. 541-350-6235 only 8 times, A/C, yourneeds. Diamond Reo Du mp oven, tub s hower, i~ Truck 19 7 4, 1 2 -14 Chevrolet Cameo micro, load leveler Call on one of the yard box, runs good, Pickup, 1957, hitch, awning, dual 1/5th interest in 1973 professionals today! Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th $6900, 541-548-6812 disassembled, frame batteries, sleeps 4-5, Cessna 150 LLC wheel, 1 s lide, AC, powder coated, new EXCELLENT CONconversion, low 882 TV,full awning, excel- 150hp front sheet metal, cab DITION. All accestime on air frame and G R X A T restored. $9995 firm. lent shape, $23,900. sories are included. Fifth Wheels engine, hangared in Call for more info, 541-350-8629 $16,000 OBO. Bend. Excellent per541-306-9958 (cell) 541-382-9441 & CHECK YOURAD Hyster H25E, runs formance & affordRV well, 2982 Hours, able flying! $6,500. CONSIGNMENTS $3500, call 541-382-6752 r WANTED hWRL 541-749-0724 We Do The Work ... The Bulletin I- ~Lavr,N You Keep The Cash! To Subscribe call Advertise your car! On-site credit Add A Picture! Please check yoffP ad 541-385-5800 or go to approval team, Reach of readers! on the first day it runs Chevy C-20 Pickup www.bendbulletin.com Call thousands web site presence. 541-385-5809 to make sure it is cor1969, all orig. Turbo 44; Outdoors RV 29' We Take Trade-Ins! The Bulletin Classifieds rect. Sometimes inauto 4-spd, 396, model Wind River 250 Free Advertising. structions over the CST /all options, orig. BIG COUNTRY RV RLSVV 2011 owner, $19,950, phone are misBend: 541-330-2495 541-923-6049 understood and an error One owner Redmond: can occur in your ad. 541-548-5254 Lightly used Chevy 1955 PROJECT If this happens to your „«p car. 2 door wgn, 350 Perfect condiad, please contact us Peterbilt 359 p o table small block w/Weiand 1974 Beiianca tion Sleeps 6 the first day your ad water t ruck, 1 9 90, dual quad tunnel ram 1730A Canopies & CampersI appears and we will 3200 gal. tank, 5hp with 450 Holleys. T-10 $23,900 be happy to fix it pump, 4-3" h oses, 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 541-317-3991 as soon as we can. camlocks, $ 2 5,000. Weld Prostar wheels, If we can assist you, 180 mph, excellent 541-820-3724 extra rolling chassis + please call us: condition, always P ioneer 23 ' 19 0 F Q extras. $6500 for all. 541-385-5809 hangared, 1 owner 925 2006, EZ Lift, $9750. 541-389-7669. The Bulletin Classified 541-548-1 096 for 35 years. $60K. Utility Trailers RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

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GMC 1977 Sierra Classic 4x4 Original owner, a show truck. Never restored or VW BUG 1972 rebuilt eng, new paint, tires, off-road. AT, 400 V8, many extras, plus free chrome whls, 30 mpg, $3800. 541-233-7272 custom 8' matching utililty trailer, and Alpine canopy. Collectors welPickups come! Sorry, no trades. Firm, cash. $6995. 503-880-5020

Ford Ranchero 1979

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$2500 obo.

541-420-4677

C hevy 1998 '/ 4 t o n , Mercedes 450SL, 1977, 168k mi., one owner, exc. cond., numerous 113K, 2nd owner, gaAsk i n g r aged, b o t h top s . u pgrades. $5900. 541-317-3991 $10,900. 541-389-7596

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Ranger District, 3160 tice, June 16, 2013. NE T h ir d St r e et, Call (503) 986-0883 to Prineville, OR 97754 obtain additional inor at (541) 416-6436. formation or a protest F or q u estions r e - form. I f n o protests

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P R O P E R TY CASE ¹: 11-445761, a fter the d at e o f SEIZED: Jeremy M. Address: 255 Capitol June 2, 2013, the Foust St. NE, 4th Floor, first publication of For further informa- Salem, OR 9 7 3 10, t his notice, or t h e tion concerning the Phone: claims m a y be barred. A d ditional garding the p roject are filed, the Depart- seizure and forfeiture 503-378-3720 proposal, con t act ment will issue a final of the property de- SUMMARY S T ATEinformation may be scribed in this notice M ENT O F BA S I S o btained from t h e p roject leader D e b order consistent with M afera a t (541) the preliminary deter- contact: FOR CRIM I N AL records of the court, 416-6500. mination Oregon State PoliceFORFEITURE the Administrator, or Drug E n f orcement On the 7th day of De- the lawyer for the Section, Asset Forc ember, 2011, t h e Administrator, The Paulina Ranger LEGAL NOTICE District has prepared LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE feiture U n i t , 255 above-described James Ham e r s, C apitol St. NE, 4 t h a p reliminary DeciCOLES BUDGET FOR FORFEITURE property was seized 1431 Liberty St. SE, s ion Memo for t h e HEARING Notice to Potential F loor; S a lem, O R by the Oregon State Salem, OR. 97310 Phone: Police. The property Bridge Creek Inva- Central Oregon Law Claimantsive Plant Prevention E nforcement Ser - Read Carefully!! (503) 934-0161. is subject to forfeiture LEGAL NOTICE under ORS TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Project. The purpose vices (COLES) will If you have any interLEGAL NOTICE o f the project is t o hold a public meeting est i n t h e s e i zed 1 31.550-131.600 a s OF SALE NOTICE TO p rotect c r itical e l k on June 20, 2013 at property described in proceeds and/or inThe Trustee under the INTERESTED habitat in the head- 12:00 pm at the Bend this notice, you must strumentalities used in terms of t h e T r ust PERSONS the following prohib- Deed waters of the Bridge Police D e partment, claim that interest or desc r i bed Creek watershed by 555 NE 15th St, Bend, you will automatically ited conduct, and/or herein, at the direcN EOLA ROSS M c - t he s o licitation, a t controlling and pre- Oregon for the purl ose that interest. If tion of the Beneficiary, has been ap- tempt, or conspiracy hereby elects to sell venting the spread of pose of oral and writ- you do not file a claim CLAIN pointed pers o nal to commit the follow- t he p r o perty de i nvasive p lants. A ten comments to the for the property, the representative of the copy of the prelimi- proposed 20 1 3 -14 property may be foring prohibited con- scribed in the Trust of VIRGIL LEE duct: X possession of nary Decision Memo budget. Copies of the feited even if you are Estate Deed to satisfy the ROSS, Deceased, by c an b e f o un d a t : proposed budget may not convicted of any a c o n trolled s u b - obligations s e cured the C i r cuit C o u rt, stance, d e l ivery of http://data.ecosystem- b e o b tained f r o m crime. T o c laim an State of Oregon, Desthereby. Pursuant to management.org/neCaptain Tim Edwards interest, you must file chutes County, Pro- a c o ntrolled s u b - ORS 86.745, the folstance, manufacpaweb/nepa project at t h e Des c hutes a written claim with lowing information is No. 13 PB 0064. exp.php?project=4220 County Sheriff's Ofthe forfeiture counsel bate ture of a c o ntrolled provided: 1. PARTIES: All persons having 3 fice. n amed below. T h e c laims against t h e substance. Grantor:MARY K. Deschutes Co u n ty written claim must be Forfeiture means that CHURCHILL. Trustee: estate are required to Written com m ents c onducts publi c signed by you, sworn p resent t he m w i t h the property will be CHICAGO TITLE INmust be submitted to: meetings in locations to under penalty of transferred t o the S URANCE CO Mproper vouchers atwhich are wheelchair Sandra Henn i ng, perjury before a noPANY OF OREGON. ached, to t h e p e r- government and perP aulina Dist r i c t accessible and protary public, and state: tsonal sons with an interest Successor T r ustee: representative in the property will be N ANCY K . C A R Y. Ranger, Ochoco Na- vides reasonable ac- (a) Your true name; c/o Ri c h ar d E. deprived of that inter- Beneficiary: WASHtional Forest, at 3160 commodations for (b) The address at Forcum, Attorney at NE T h i r d St r e et, persons with disabili- which you will accept Law, 141 NW Green- est without compenINGTON F EDERAL Prineville, Or e gon, ties. For persons who future mailings from sation because of the FKA W A SHINGTON wood Ave. Ste. 101, use or acquisition of 97754. Co m ments are deaf, or who have the court and forfeiFEDERAL SAVINGS. end, O R 977 0 1 , can be submitted via hearing or speech im- ture counsel; and (3) B t he property i n o r 2.DESCRIPTION OF within four m o nths through pro h ibited f acsimile a t (541) pairments, dial 7-1-1 A statement that you from the date of first PROPERTY: The 416-6695. The office to access the State have an interest in the as defined in real property is deof this no- conduct ORS b usiness hours f o r transfer relay service seized property. Your publication scribed as f o llows: tice as stated below, 131.550-131.600. those submitting for TTY. The County deadline for filing the L ots Six ( 6 ) a n d or the claims may be will provide an inter- claim document with hand-delivered comSeven (7) in B lock barred. All p e rsons LEGAL NOTICE ments are 8:00 am to preter for hearing im- the forfeiture counsel whose rights may be The regular meeting Two (2) o f E L 4:30 p m Mo n d ay paired persons who n amed below is 2 1 LINGERS ADDITION by this pro- of the Board of Dithrough Friday, exgive at least 48 hours days from the l ast affected TO THE TOWNSITE ceeding may obtain rectors of th e D escluding holidays. Oral notice of the request. publication date of this additional information chutes County Rural OF REDMOND, rec omments must b e Written i n f ormation notice. T h i s n otice from c orded A u gust 1 , the cour t Fire Protection Disprovided at the Rewill be made avail- will be published on 1918 in Cabinet A, records, the personal trict ¹2 will be held on sponsible Official's of- able in large print or four successive representative, or the T uesday, June 1 1 , Page 66, Deschutes fice d uring n o rmal audio format. To re- weeks, beginning May attorney for the per- 2013 at 11:30 a.m. at County, Oregon. TOb usiness hours v i a quest these services, 19, 2013 and ending sonal representative. the North Fire Station GETHER WITH that telephone (541) June 9, 2013. If you of the vacated (541) p lease c a ll and first pub- c onference ro o m , portion 416-6500 or in per388-6656. have any questions, DATED alley abutting thereon lished: June 9, 2013. 63377 Jamison St., son. Electronic comy ou should see a n RICHARD E. Bend, OR. Items on which inured to said ments must be subattorney immediately. lots by vacation of alFORCUM, OS B the agenda include: mitted in a fo r mat LEGAL NOTICE FORFEITURE ley as shown on the ¹640340, Attorney for the fire d e partment s uch as a n e m a il Notice of Preliminary C OUNSEL: Ass e t Personal Representa- report, a d i scussion official plat filed Febmessage, plain text Determination for Forfeiture C o u nsel, ruary 5, 1912. 3.RE141 NW Green- on a coordinator for Oregon Department of tive, CORDING. The Trust (.Ixt), rich text format Water Right Transfers wood Ave., Ste. 101, Project Wildfire, ap(.rtf), portable docu- T-11380 and T-11381 J ustice, 610 Haw OR 97701, Tel: proval of IGA with De- Deed was recorded thorne Avenue, S.E., Bend, as follows: Date Rement (.pdf) or Word 5 41-389-6964, F a x : schutes County, an (.doc) to T-11380 and 1 1381 Suite 210, Salem, OR 541-389-6969, E-mail: update on approved corded: November 1, comments-pacificfiled by Black Butte 97301, Phone: (503) Recording No. info © forcumlaw.com training pi'ops 2006. northwest-ochoco©fs Ranch A s s ociation 378-6347. 2006-72784 O f f icial projects, a presenta. fed.us. In ca s e s a nd B l a c k Bu t t e S EIZING AG E N C Y : LEGAL NOTICE R ecords o f Des tion on funding by the chutes where no identifiable Ranch C o rporation, Oregon State Police STATE vs. $4407 County, Orfire chief, a resolution name is attached to a P.O. Box 8000, Black CASE ¹: 1 3-003397, PERSON FROM egon. 4.DEFAULT. to transfer funds to comment, a verifica- B utte R a nch, O R Address: 255 Capitol WHOM PROPERTY The Grantor or any capital improvement tion of identity will be 97759, propose addi- St. NE, 4th floor, SaSEIZED: other person o b liand accrued l eave required for a ppeal tional points of appro- I em, O R 9731 0 , James William Vasil on th e T rust funds, approval of the gated eligibility. If using an priation under CertifiPhone: NOTICE OF SEIZURE Deed and Promissory 2 013/2014 bud g e t electronic message, a c ates 8 6 70 9 an d 503-378-3720. FOR FORFEITURE Note secured thereby and a discussion of scanned signature is 85315. Cer t ificate N OTICE O F R E A - You must "claim" an is in default and the the managers conone way to p rovide 86709 allows the use SON FOR SEIZURE interest in the tract. The meeting lo- Beneficiary seeks to verification. of 0.27 cubic foot per FOR FORFEITURE: above-described the T r ust is accessible to foreclose second from Wells 1 T he p r operty d e - seized property or you cation Deed for f ailure to persons with disabiliThis decision is sub- and 2 in Sects. 9 and scribed in this notice will automatically lose ties. A request for in- pay: M o nthly payject to appeal pursu- 1 6, T 14 S, R 9 E , was seized for forfei- any interest you may terpreter for the hear- ments in the amount ant to Forest Service W M. for group do- t ure because it: ( 1 ) have. Th e deadline i ng impaired or f or of $1,281.00 each, regulations at 36 CFR m estic use fo r 1 5 5 Constitutes the profor filing is 21 days the first of each a c c ommoda- due 215. Appeals must families in Sec. 21, T ceeds of the violation from the date of the other month, for the months tions for person with meet the content re14 S , R 9 E, W M. of, solicitation to violast publication of this disabilities should be o f J a n uary 2 0 1 3 notice. To "claim" you April 2013; quirements of 36 CFR Certificate 85315 allate, attempt to vioat least 48 hrs. through 215.14. Only individu- lows the use of 4.8 late, or conspiracy to m ust file w i t h t h e made plus late charges and before the meeting to: als or o rganizations cubic feet per second violate, the c riminal "forfeiture c o u nsel" Tom Fay advances; plus any who submitted com- from Wells 2 and 4 in laws of the State of listed below, a legal 41-318-0459. T T Y unpaid real property ments or expressed Sects. 9 and 16, T 14 Oregon regarding the paper called a "claim". 5 taxes or liens, plus 800-735-2900. a n interest i n t h e S , R 9 E, W M. fo r manufacture, distribu- The claim must be interest. 5.AMOUNT LEGAL NOTICE DUE. T h e a m ount p roject during t h e quasi-municipal use in tion, or possession of signed by the claimcomment period may Sects. 9, 10, 15, 16, controlled substances ant and sworn to un- TO INTERESTED due on the Note which appeal. C o m ments 21, 22, and 23, T 14 PERSONS i s secured b y t h e (ORS Chapter 475); der penalty of perjury s ubmitted ano n y - S , R9 E , WM . T h e and/or (2) Was used before a notary public. Terri Lynn P olley Trust Deed referred to m ously will b e a c - applicant proposes an or intended for use in The claim shall set has been appointed herein is: P r i ncipal cepted and c o nsid- additional point of ap- committing or f a ciliforth all of the follow- Administrator of the balance in the amount tating the violation of, e state o f Ja m e s ered; however, those propriation to Sec. 16, ing: a ) Y o u r t r ue of $185,135.74; plus who o n l y sub m it T 14 S , R 9 E, W M. solicitation to violate, n ame; b) Th e a d - Lawson Polley, deinterest at the rate of a nonymous com - The Wa t e r Re- attempt to violate, or dress at which you will ceased, by the Cir6.25% pe r a n n um ments will not have sources Department conspiracy to violate accept future m ail- cuit Court, State of f rom December 1 , standing to appeal the proposes to approve the criminal laws of ings from the court or Oregon, Deschutes 2012; pl u s lat e subsequent decision the transfer, based on the State of Oregon forfeiture counsel; and County, Case No. charges of $256.20; under 36 CFR Part the requirements of regarding the manu- c) A statement that 13PB0050. All perplus advances and 215. ORS Chapter 540 and facture, distribution or you have an interest sons having claims foreclosure a ttorney OAR 690-380-5000. in the seized property. against the estate f ees and c osts. 6 . p ossession of c o nFor additional infortrolled su b stances FORFEITURE a re r e quired t o S ALE O F PR O P mation c o n cerning Any person may file, COUNSEL: Des- present them, with ERTY. The Trustee (ORS Chapter 475). this decision or t he jointly or severally, a PROPERTY SEIZED chutes County Disvouchers attached, hereby states that the F orest Service a p to the undersigned protest or s t a nding FOR FORFEITURE: trict Attorney, 1164 property will be sold to peal process, contact s tatement within 3 0 $5010.00. DATE NW B on d S t r eet, Administrator at satisfy the obligations Jeffrey Marszal, En- days after the l ast PROPERTY SEIZED: Bend, OR 97701. 1431 Liberty St. SE, secured by the Trust vironmental C o ordi- date o f n e w spaper 02/13/2013. SEIZING AGENCY: Salem, OR 97302, Deed. A Tr u stee's nator, at the Paulina publication of this no- PERSON FROM Oregon State Police within four months Notice of Default and

LEGAL NOTICE Bridge Creek Invasive Plant Prevention Project USDA - Forest Service Ochoco National Forest Wheeler County, OR 30-day Comment Period

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G MC Sierra S L T 2006 - 1500 Crew Chevrolet Trailblazer Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. 2006, 4 X 4, 3 r d cond., 82 k m i les, LS row, power window, $19,900. tow pkg, 541-408-0763 Vin¹149659 $9888

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Le g al Notices

Legal Notices •

Election to Sell Under erty to satisfy the obli Terms of Trust Deed gations secured by has been recorded in the trust deed and a the Official Records of notice of default has Deschutes C o u nty, been recorded pursu Oregon. 7. TIME OF a nt to O r egon R e SALE. Date:August vlsed Statutes 22, 2013. Time:11:00 86.735(3); the default a.m. Place: Desfor which the foreclo chutes County Court- sure i s ma d e is house, 1 1 6 4 NW grantor's failure to pay Bond Street, Bend, when due the follow Oregon. 8.RIGHT TO ing sums: m onthly REINSTATE. Any payments of person named in ORS $1,314.00 beginning 86.753 has the right, 0 5/01/12; plus l a t e at any time that is not charges of $0.00 each later than five days month begi n ning before the T r ustee 05/01/12; plus p rior conducts the sale, to accrued late charges have this foreclosure of $244.90; plus ad d ismissed and t h e vances of $6,238.75; Trust Deed reinstated together with title ex b y payment to t h e pense, costs, trustee's Beneficiary of the en- fees and a ttorney's tire amount then due, fees incurred herein other than such por- by reason of said de tion of the principal as fault; any further sums would not then be due advanced by the ben had no default oceficiary for the protec curred, by curing any tion of the above de other default that is scribed real property c apable o f bei n g and i st inte r est cured by tendering the therein; and p repay performance required ment penalties/premi under the obligation or ums, if applicable. By T rust Deed and b y reason of said default paying all costs and the beneficiary has expenses actually in- declared all sums ow curred in enforcing the ing on the obligation obligation and Trust secured by the trust Deed, together with deed immediately due t he t r ustee's a n d and payable, s a id a ttorney's fees n o t sums being the follow exceedingthe amount wit: ing, to provided i n ORS $109,123.97 with in 8 6.753. Y o u ma y terest thereon at the reach th e O r e gon rate of 5 percent per State Bar's L awyer annum beg i nning Referral Service at 04/01/12; plus p rior 503-684-3763 or accrued late charges toll-free in Oregon at of $244.90; plus ad 800-452-7636 or you vances of $6,238.75; may visit its website together with title ex at: w w w .osbar.org. pense, costs, trustee's Legal assist ance may fees and a t torneys b e available if y o u fees incurred herein have a low income by reason of said de and meet federal pov- fault; any further sums e rty guidelines. F o r advanced by the ben more information and eficiary for the protec a directory of legal aid tion of the above de programs, g o to scribed real property http://www.oregonand i st inte r est lawhelp.org. Any therein; and prepay questions regarding ment penalties/premi this matter should be ums, i f a p p licable. directed to Lisa Sum- WHEREFORE, no mers, Paralegal, (541) tice hereby is given 686-0344 (TS that the undersigned ¹15148.30862). trustee will on August DATED: Apr i l 9 , 16, 2013 at the hour 2 013. /s/ Nancy K . of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. Cary. Nancy K. Cary, i n accord w ith t h e Successor T r ustee, standard of time es H ershner Hun t e r, t ablished b y OR S LLP, P.O. Box 1475, 187.110, at the follow Eugene, OR 97440. ing place: inside the main lobby of the De LEGAL NOTICE s chutes Coun t y TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Courthouse, 1164 NW O F SALE File N o . Bond, in the City of 7 670.20081 Ref e r Bend, County of Des ence is made to that c hutes, State of O r c ertain t r ust d e e d egon, sell at public m ade by K e vin W auction to the highest Lusby and Karla D bidder for cash the in Lusby, as grantor, to terest i n the de Amerititle, as trustee, scribed real property in favor of S ecurity which the grantor had Bank, its successors or had power to con and/or assigns, as vey at the time of the b eneficiary, da t e d execution by grantor 02/06/98, r e c orded of the trust deed, to 02/13/98, in the mort gether with any inter gage records of Des est which the grantor c hutes County, O r or grantor's succes egon, as 4 8 0-0642 sors in i n terest ac and subsequently as quired after the execu signed to U m pqua tion of the trust deed Bank by Assignment to satisfy the forego recorded a s 2 0 1 1- ing obligations 06913, covering the thereby secured and following d e scribed t he costs a n d e x real property situated penses of sale, includ in said county and ing a rea s onable state, to wit: Lot five charge by the trustee. Notice is further given (5) in block two (2) replat of a part of the that for reinstatement original plat of Bitter or payoff quotes re brush Su b d ivision, quested pursuant to Deschutes C o unty, O RS 8 6 .757 a n d Oregon. PROPERTY 86.759 must be timely ADDRESS: 16715 Bit c ommunicated in a terbrush Lane Sisters, written request that OR 97759 Both the c omplies wit h t h a t b eneficiary and t he statute addressed to trustee have elected the trustee's "Urgent to sell the real prop Request Desk" either

Legal Notices

by personal delivery to the trustee's physi cal offices (call for ad

d ress) or b y fi r st class, certified mail, return r e c eipt re quested, addressed to the trustee's post of fice box address set forth in t hi s n otice. Due to potential con flicts with federal law,

p ersons having n o record legal or equi table interest in t he subject property will only receive informa tion concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available at t he trustee's webs i te, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the s ale, to h a v e t h i s foreclosure proceed ing dismissed and the trust deed reinstated b y payment to t h e beneficiary of the en tire amount then due (other than such por tion of the principal as would not then be due h ad no d e fault o c curred) and by curing any o t he r d e f ault complained of herein that is capable of be ing cured by tender ing the performance required under the ob ligation or trust deed, and in addition to pay ing said sums or ten dering t h e pe r f or mance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually in curred in enforcing the obligation and t r ust deed, together with trustee's and a ttorney's fees n o t exceeding the amounts provided by said O R S 8 6 . 753. R equests from p e r sons named in ORS 86.753 for r einstate ment quotes received less than si x d a ys prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the b eneficiary or i f r e quired by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this no tice, the singular in cludes the plural, the word " grantor" i n cludes any successor in i nterest t o t he grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the perfor mance of which is se cured by said trust deed, and the Uwords "trustee" and benefi ciary" include their re spective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auc tion may be accessed at www . n orthwest trustee.com and are incorporated by t his reference. You may also access sale sta tus at www.northwest trustee.com and www. USA-Foreclosure.com. For further information p l e a se contact: Nanci Lam bert Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Belle vue, WA 98009-0997 5 86-1900 Lusb y , Kevin W. and Karla D. (TS¹ 767 0 .20081) 1002.247346-File No.


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