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TUESDAY July9,2013
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
Funding for pub ic
LEGISLATURE ADjOURNS
FraCking —A vast shale deposit is triggering a boom in California, though farmers
transit
and environmentalists are worried.A3 •
up for taks
•
Cycling —Stung by doping, now weighing changes.C1
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
Detroit —As officials negotiate to prevent the largest municipal bankruptcy in the
By Lauren Dake
nation's history, residents say
SALEM — Shortly before 3 p.m. Monday, the double doors to both the Senate and House opened and legislative leaders slammed their gavels, marking the end of the 2013 session. Lawmakers worked through the weekend, and at times tensions were high and tempers short. But on Monday the mood was calmer, with most eager to leave the Capitol.
the city has worse problems than its $18 billion debt.A6
Picnic chow —Ideasfor inspired side dishes.D1
Plus: 'Poptails' —Forhot weather, grown-up popsicles with a splash of booze.D3
The Bulletin
Inside • Some of the highlights from the 2013 session,AS Democrats controlled both chambers of the Legislature this session, with Democratic Gov. John Kitzhaber at the helm. That set a very different tone from the previous session, when the House was historically split 30-30 and the two parties co-governed. From the start, Democrats said sending a robust budget to
the state's public schools was a priority. They saw raising taxes as the key to getting there, while Republicans thought the same could be accomplished by making steeper cuts to the state's pension system. The phrase "grand bargain" was coined to describe the debate and search for a solution. In the end, partisan gridlock won: Lawmakers could not strike a deal. "I think we put together good budgets; I think we could
Ul SB
Ergonomicgardening
— New tools that promise to keep you toiling in the sun.D5
have put together great budgets," said Senate President Peter Courtney, D-Salem. House Republican Leader Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte, said the session ended "not with a bang, but a whimper." But the state's public schools will still see a boost of nearly $1 billion from the previous two-year budget cycle, and for most local school districts, including Bend-La Pine Schools, it will be a no-cuts budget. See Legislature/A4
en
In world news —Obama considers full troop withdrawal
from Afghanistan.A2
And a Wed exclusiveOne family's mission to find a pilot lost in the Korean War.
bendbulletin.com/extras
Central Oregon's public transit agency will kick off a discussion this week on how to pay for bus service in the future. Cascades East Transit has been on a bumpy financial ride in the last year. The agency eliminated door-to-door bus service in many rural areas in fall 2012 after it lost some of its federal, state and other grant funding. The city of Bend planned to stop its $1 million annual payments to the agency m the summer of 2015, but city officials have said that might not be enough time for Cascades East Transit to adopt a new funding model. Andrew Spreadborough, interim executive director of the Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council, said the new transit funding committee that will meet this week is supposed to expedite the process. The Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council operates Cascades East Transit, and the COIC board has begun to discuss funding options over the last year. SeeTransit/A4
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Advances boost odds to survive a plane crash
Aworry at hosp ital s:
alarmfatigue By Lena H. Sun The Washington Post
By Scott Mayerowitz The Associated Press
Passengers in plane crashes today, such as the one in San Francisco involving Asiana Airlines Flight 214, are more likely to survive than in past disasters. Saturday's crash was the latest where a big commercial airliner was destroyed but most passengers escaped with their lives. There were plenty of cuts, bruises and broken bones — and some more severeinjuries • The latest — but only from two of the 307 the San pa s sengers Francisco and crew oncrash,A2 board died. Planes now are structurally sounder. In the cabin, stronger seats are less likely to move and crush passengers. Seat cushions and carpeting are fireretardant and doors are easierto open.Those improvements allow people to exit the plane more quickly. The nature of crashes has also changed. Improvements in cockpit technology mean that planes rarely crash into mountains or each other — accidents that are much more deadly. "Crashes are definitely more survivable today than they were a few decades ago," said Kevin Hiatt, president and CEO of the Flight Safety Foundation, an industry-backed nonprofit group aimed at improving air safety. SeeCrashes/A5
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Cherie Moncrief, right, of Kailua, Hawaii, discusses color combinations for her quilt, back right, with Peggy Kelly of Salem during a Quilter's Affair Dots 8 Diamonds workshop Monday afternoon at Sisters High SchooL The 38th annual Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show will take place Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in downtown Sisters. Visit www.sistersoutdoorquiltshow.org for a schedule of events. The Oregon Summer Quilt Expo 20D will also be taking place Thursday to Sunday at the Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center. The expo will feature quilting exhibits, classes and a variety of nationally known quilting-related vendors. For more information, visit www. oregonsummerquiltexpo.com.
WASHINGTON — Walk into a hospital intensive-care unit and hear the din: A ventilator honks loudly. An infusion pump emits a highpitched beep-beep every six seconds. A bloodpressure monitor pushes out one long tone after another. This particular racket, at MedStar Washington Hospital Center, comes from medical devices and equipment that scans for potentially dangerous changes in patients' heart rhythm, blood pressure and other vital signs. But most of the noises are falsealarms or don't require action. The ventilator sounds a warning because a patient coughs. SeeAlarms/A5
Goal of protectingchimpsunites land and laboratory By James Gorman New York Times News Service
Jane Goodall says it was a "Damascus moment" that turned her from the groundbreaking studies of chimpanzees in the wild that revealed their complex social
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 91, Low 51
Page B6
Inside
that together may come close to halting such research. "There's a lot of problems in the world, this is a problem we can all solve," said Laura Bonar, the program director of Animal Protection of New Mexico, where the
most recent chapter in the campaign for chimp protection began. "The very least that the chimps deserve is for usto work together to see them have some peace and
INDEX
The Bulletin
+ .4 We userecycled newsprint
At Home D1 - 6 C lassified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries B 5 C1-4 Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Sports D6 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies
Vol. 110, No. 190, 30 pages,
• How C.J. is settling in at Chimps
Inc. in Tumalo,B1 and emotional lives, to a life of nomadic global activism on their behalf. That moment, at a confer-
ence on chimps nearly 27 years ago, was the start ofher pivotal role in a long and difficult quest to end biomedical experiments on humans' closest primate relatives — a quest that last month resulted in two federal agencies' taking steps
AnIndependent Newspaper
5 sections
dignity." SeeChimps/A4
:: IIIII o
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ami ea By Sarah El Deeb
and Maggie Michael CAIRO — Egypt was rocked Monday by the deadliest day since its Islamist president was toppled by the military, with more than 50 ofhis supporters killed by security forces as the country's top Muslim cleric raised the specter of civil war. The military found itself on the defensive after the bloodshed, but the interim president drove ahead with the army's political plan. He issued a swift timetable for the process of amending the Islamist-backed constitution and set parliamentary and presidential elections for early 2014. T he k i llings f u rther e n trenched the battle lines bet ween supporters an d o p ponents of ousted President Mohammed Morsi, who was removed by the military July 3 after a year in office following mass demonstrations by mil-
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ZimmermaiI trial —Trayvon Martin's father testified Monday that he never denied it was his son's voice screaming for help on a911
e ionSSe in The Associated Press
N EW S R O O M
NATION 4% ORLD
Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood called for an uprising, accusing troops of gunningdownprotesters, while the military blamed armed Islamists for provoking its forces. The shootingsbegan duringa protest by about 1,000 Islamists outside the Republican Guard headquarters where M o r si,
call, contradicting police officers' earlier testimony at George Zimmerman's second-degree murder trial. Tracy Martin was the latest in
c a s es
Egypt's first f r eely e lected leader, was detained last week. Demonstrators and members of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood said troops descended on them and opened fire unprovoked as they finished dawn prayers. "I was in the last row praying. They were firing from the left and right," said Nashat Mohammed, who had come from southern Egypt to join the sit-in and was wounded in the knee. "We said, 'Stop, we're your brothers.' They shot at us from every direction." After a battle lasting about three hours, at least 51 protesters were killed and 435 wounded, most from live ammunition and birdshot, emergency services chief Mohammed Sultan told to the state news agency. At anationallytelevised news conference, Army Col. Ahmed Mohammed Ali said police and troops came under "heavy gunfire" at around 4 a.m. and attackerson rooftops opened fire with guns and Molotov cocktails. A soldier and two policemen were killed, and 42 in the security forces were wounded, eight critically, he said. While he said troops had a right to defendthe facility, Ali did not directly explain how the protester deaths occurred. He expressedcondolences but offered no apologies for the deaths.
a series of witnesses called by lawyers on both sides asthey seekto convince jurors of who was the aggressor in the nighttime confrontation that left Trayvon Martin, an unarmed black teenager, dead in
February 2012. Later in the day,the Florida judge ruled that defense attorneys may present evidence to the jury that Trayvon Martin had marijuana in his system when he died.
Canada trail derailment —Traumatized survivors of an oil train
A collection of video of the clashes provided bythe military to Egyptian TV showed protesters on rooftops lobbing projectiles at troops below, including firebombs and toilet seats. It also showed some armed protestersfiring at close range at the troops, but it did not show what the military did. It was also not clear at what time in the fighting the videos were shot. It included aerial views of the clashes. Several witnesses from outside the protest said the gunfire started when troops appeared to move onthe camp. University student Mirna elHelbawi told The Associated Press that she watched from her 14th floor apartment overlooking the scene, after she heard protesters banging on metal barricades, a common battle cry. El-Helbawi,21, said she saw troops and police approaching the protesters, who were lined up on the street behind a makeshift wall. The troops fired tear gas, the protesters responded with rocks, she said. Soon after, she heard the first gunshots and saw the troops initially retreat backward which she said led her to believe the shots came from the protester side. She saw Morsi supporters firing from rooftops, while the troops were also shooting.
derailment that wiped out the heart of a small town braced for more
bad news as inspectors were finally cleared to enter the charred site's epicenter and look for remains late Monday, more than two days after the disaster that killed at least13 people. A total of 50 were missing and the death toll was sure to rise. All but one of the train's 73 tanker
cars were carrying oil when theycameloose early Saturday, sped downhill nearly seven miles into the town of Lac-Megantic, near the
Maine border, andderailed. At least five of the cars exploded. Bin Laden rePOrt —Al-Qaida founder Osamabin Ladenwas able to live in Pakistan undetected for nineyears because of abreathtaking scale of negligenceand incompetence at practically all levels of the Pakistani government, according to an official government report
published by a TV channel on Monday. The336-page report was written by a commission tasked with investigating the circumstances surrounding the covert U.S. raid that killed bin Laden in Pakistan in May
2011. Thepan-Arab Al-Jazeerasatellite channel published the report on its website after it was leaked to the station by unknown sources.
TIirkeg preieStS —The public park at the center of last month's anti-government protests in Turkey, sealed off for weeks to keep
demonstrators at bay, quickly became the scene of more unrest after reopening Monday, offering a volatile reminder of how divided the government and its opponents remain. Dozens of peoplewere injured and at least 32 were detained after scores of them streamed back to
Gezi Park after the governor announced its reopening around noon, news reports said. BIilger trial —The former right-hand man of James"Whitey" Bulger testified Monday that he saw the alleged mobster open fire on a car and kill two men in1982. Kevin Weeks took the witness stand
at Bulger's racketeering trial and said hesawBulger extort multiple businessmen and drug dealers for a cut of their profits. He also testified about the death of Edward "Brian" Halloran, a man who Bulger
had heard wascooperating with authorities and who Weekssaid Bulger killed in May1982.
CleVelalld abdIICtlOIIS —Three women held captive in a Cleveland home fora decade issued a YouTube video Monday nightin which they thanked the public for the encouragement and financial
support that is allowing them to restart their lives. AmandaBerry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight broke their public silence in the 3-
minute, 30-second video. Theysaid the support and prayers of family, friends and the public is allowing them rebuild their lives after what
PLANE CRASH INQUIRY CONTINUES
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Berry called "this entire ordeal." Cleveland resident Ariel Castro has pleaded not guilty to a 329-count indictment alleging he kidnapped
,;,'o
them off the streets and held themcaptive in his two-story home. NSA IeakS —TheBrazilian government beganan investigation Monday into whether telecommunications firms operating in thecountry cooperated with the U.S. as part of a spying program that has collected data on billions of telephone and email conversations. The 0 Globo
newspaper reported this weekendthat information released bythe National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden showed Brazil is the top target in Latin America for the NSA's massive intelligence-gathering
effort aimed atmonitoring communications aroundtheworld.
REDMOND BUREAU
MeXICO eleCtieilS —President Enrique PenaNieto sought to calm tensions Mondayover thestill-undecided election for governor of the
r I • Jl l • • Ia ~
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key Mexican border state of Baja California after both sides claimed victory and authorities said mistakes were made in preliminary vote
counts. Complaints over theelection in Baja andother states haveled the conservative National Action Party to suggest it could pull out of an agreement known as the Pact for Mexico that has become a center-
piece of PenaNieto's administration. — From wire reports
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If yoo know ofan error in a story, call us at 541-383-0356.
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Jeff Cmu /The Assoaated press
The wreckage of Asiana Airlines Flight 214 sits on the tarmac Monday at San Francisco International Airport.
Investigators trying to understand the crash-landing from Saturday focused Monday on the actions of
an experienced pilot learning his wayaround anew aircraft, fellow pilots who weresupposed to bemonitoring him and why no one noticed that the plane was coming in too slow.
Authorities also reviewedtheinitial rescue efforts
The students had been in the rear of the aircraft,
where many of the most seriously injured passengers were seated, Hersmansaid.
HIGH DESERT BANK
nificantly below" its target speedduring approach the plane smashedonto the runway. Authorities do not know yet whether the pilot's inexperience with the
only fatalities. National Transportation Safety Board Chairman
Boeing 777 and landing it at San Francisco's airport
not reached anyfirm conclusions. A coroner said he
TheBulletin
played a role. The airline acknowledged Monday inSeoul that the pilot at the controls had flown that type of plane for only a short time and had never before landed one at that airport. — The Associated Press
• •
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indicating the plane hit the seawall on its approach. Investigators have said Flight 214 was flying "sigwhen the crew tried to abort the landing just before
would need at least two weeks to rule in the matter.
••
wall was carried several hundredfeet downthe runway,
may have runover oneof the two Chineseteenagers killed in the crash.Thestudents were theaccident's
surveillance video to determine whether an emergency vehicle hit one of the students. But they have
t
The NTSB also said part of the jet's tail section was found in San Francisco Bay, and debris from the sea-
after fire officials acknowledged that one of their trucks
Deborah Hersmansaid investigators watched airport
Weekly Arts & Entertainment Inside 59 L G AEINE
6'<~C -: e -
h. C . I
I
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Obama, frustratedwith I(arzai, considers full troop withdrawal fromAfghanistan By Mark Mazzetti and Matthew Rosenberg
peace talks with the Taliban in Qatar. New York Times News Service Karzai p r omptly r e pudiWASHINGTON — Increas- ated the talks and ended negoingly frustrated by his deal- tiations with the United States ings with P resident Hamid over the long-term security Karzai, P r e sident B a r ack deal that is needed to keep Obama is giving serious con- U.S. forces in Afghanistan afsideration to speeding up the ter 2014. withdrawal of U.S. forces from A videoconference between Afghanistan and to a "zero op- Obama and Karzai designedto tion" that would leave no U.S. defusethe tensions ended badtroops there after next year, ly, according to both U.S. and according to U.S. and Euro- Afghan officials with knowlpean officials. edge ofthe conversation. O bama is c o m mitted t o The option of leaving no ending America's military in- troops in Afghanistan after volvement in Afghanistan by 2014 was gaining momentum the end of2014, and Obama before a June 27 videoconferadministration officials have ence, according to the offib een negotiating w it h A f - cials. But since then, the idea ghan officials about leaving of a complete military exit a small "residual force." But has gone from being considhis relationship with Karzai ered the worst-case scenario has been slowly unraveling, — and a useful negotiating and reached a new low after a tool with Karzai — to an alU.S. effort last month to begin ternative under serious con-
sideration in Washington and Kabul. The officials cautioned that no decisions had been made on the pace of the pullout and exactly how many U.S. troops to leave behind in Afghanistan. The goal remains negotiating a l ong-term security deal, they said. "There's always been a zero option, but it was not seen as the main option," said a senior Western official in Kabul. "It is now becoming one of them, and if you listen to some people in Washington, it is maybe now being seen as a realistic path." The official, however, said he hoped some in the Karzai government were beginning to understand that the zero option was now a distinct possibility, and that "they're learning now, not later, when it's going to be too late."
No shells or growth, just birds All the seedCentral Oregonbirds love, but with no shells. Noshells meansnomessbeneath the feeder,andthe shelled seedswill not grow! Stop paying for messy birdseedthat grows!
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TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Tuesday, July 9, the190th day of 2013. There are175 days left in the year.
NEED TO KNOW HAPPENINGS FBI —The U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee holds a hearing on the nomination ofJames Comey tobe FBI
director. Trial —Jury selection begins in the trial of Maj. Nidal Hasan, charged in the 2009 Fort Hood
shooting rampage.
HISTORY Highlight:In 1943, during World War II, the Allies
launched Operation Husky, their invasion of Sicily, with nighttime landings of Ameri-
can and British troops; a fullscale incursion by seabegan in the small hours of July10.
(More than amonth later, the Allies secured the island from
the Axis.) In1540, England's King Henry VIII had his 6-month-old marriage to his fourth wife, Anne
of Cleves, annulled. In1776, the Declaration of
Independencewas readaloud to Gen. GeorgeWashington's troops in New York. In1816, Argentina declared
independence from Spain. In 1850, the 12th president of the United States, Zachary
Taylor, died after serving only 16 months of his term. (He was succeeded by Millard
Fillmore.) In1896, William Jennings
Bryan delivered his famous "cross of gold" speech at the Democratic national convention in Chicago.
In1918, 101 people were killed in a train collision in Nashville, Tenn. The Distin-
guished Service Cross was established by an Act of Con-
gress. In1938, SupremeCourt Justice Benjamin Cardozo died in Port Chester, N.Y., atage 68. In1953, the MGM movie musical"The Band Wagon," starring Fred Astaire and Cyd
Charisse, had its world premiere at New York's Radio City Music Hall. In1962, pop artist Andy Warhol's exhibit of 32 paint-
ings of Campbell's soup cans opened at the Ferus Gallery in
Los Angeles. In1974, former U.S. Chief
Justice Earl Warren died in W ashington, D.C.,atage 83. In1992, Democrat Bill Clinton
tapped TennesseeSen. Al Gore to be his running mate. Former CBS News commentator Eric Sevareid died in Washington at age 79.
Tenyearsago:TheBushadministration defended thewar against Iraq, saying information on SaddamHussein's alleged illicit weapons programs was solid even though one of President George W. Bush's
claims — that lraq hadsought uranium from Africa — was
based on faulty evidence. Five yearsago:Citing new DNA tests, prosecutors cleared JonBenet Ramsey's parents and brother in the1996 killing
of the 6-year-old beauty queen in Boulder, Colo.
One year ago:The remains of six U.S. airmen lost over Laos in1965 were laid to rest
in a single casket at Arlington National Cemetery. Detroit's
Prince Fielder becameonly the second player, after Ken Griffey Jr., to win multiple titles in the All-Star Home Run
Derby.
BIRTHDAYS Actor-singer Ed Ames is 86.
Former DefenseSecretary Donald Rumsfeld is 81. Neurologist and author Oliver
Sacks is 80. Author Dean Koontz is 68. Football Hall-
of-Famer O.J. Simpson is 66. Actor Chris Cooper is 62. TV personality John Tesh is 61. Country singer David Ball is
60. Actor TomHanks is 57. Actress Kelly McGillis is 56.
Actress-rock singer Courtney Loveis49.Rockmusician Dan Estrin (Hoobastank) is 37. Actor-director Fred Savage is 37. Actor Mitchel Musso is 22. Actress Georgie Henley is18. — From wire reports
The controversial drilling method has
day,there is enough to replace everything we import for about experienced a boom on the West Coast — thanks 50 years." Such a boom would deliver "huge benefits to California," to a vast shale deposit beneath the state — but Hull said, including tens of farmers and environmentalists are worried. thousands of jobs and billions in tax revenue. By Tom Knudson and disclose all chemicals used But many wonder at what The Sacramento Bee cost'? High on the list of conin the process. SHAFTER, Calif. — One State lawmakers are scramcernsarethe chemicals compaafternoon last fall, Tom Frantz bling to fill the void. This year, nies inject into the shale, along cradled a videocamera in his they introduced 10 fracking-rewith large volumes of water hand and pointed it at an oil lated bills. Only one — focusing and sand, to free up its oil. They well on the edge of this San on public notice, disclosure and include compounds ranging ia, ~ from "generally harmless to exJoaquin Valley farm town. better monitoring — remains W orkers s h uffled a m i d alive. The others died for a mix Photos by Jose Luis Villegas I Sacramento Bee / MCT tremely toxic," the UC Berkeley tanks and trucks, preparing of reasons, including opposi- A fracking facility with working wells are the backdrop to fieldwork- study reported, including some the site for hydraulic fractur- tion from both the industry and ers picking up potatoes at a potato field in Shafter, Calif. known or suspected of causing ing — fracking, for short — the environmentalists. cancer. controversial drilling method For some, including DesaThe industry's Hull said the that has the potential to spark toff,change can't come soon neath California is an oil shale risk of contamination is low an economic boom in Califor- enough. A r etired businesswhale, a 1 , 7 50-square-mile because fracking typically ocnia and perhaps even free the man, he moved to rural Shafter river of rock estimated to hold curs more than a mile beneath state from foreign oil. in the early 1990s for its quiet more than 15 billion barrels of the surface, far below the waBut Frantz recorded some- pace of life. Now, he can smell oil — four times more than the ter table. What's more, he said, thing less promising: oily- the gassy odors and hear the Bakken formation in N o r th fracking has a good environbrown waste spilled from a million-mosquito drone of dieDakota, which has ignited a fre- mental track record in the state. "The technology has been in pipe into an unlined pit near sel equipment from his front netic drilling boom and helped an almond grove, followed by a porch. reduce the nation's import of use in California for 60-some "I'm not opposed to it," he stream of soapy-looking liquid. foreign oil to 45 percent in 2011. odd years," he said. "There "That was kind of shocking," said. "We just need more con- Tom Frantzhas documented California's reliance on for- has never been an assertion or said Frantz, 63, a fourth-gen- trol. Let's do it right. Let's do it waste contamination from the eign oil, though, continues to claim that we are aware of that erationfarmer. "We can't live safe. Let's do where it's moni- unregulated fracking near his climb. Last year, a record 51 hydraulic fracturing has posed without fresh groundwater. It tored and (companies) are not farm. "We can't live without percent of crude oil delivered a risk or harmed the environdoesn't take much to ruin that." just given carte blanche to do fresh groundwater. It doesn't to California refineries — about ment in any way." This is not the first time oil whatever they want." take much to ruin that," he said. 314,000 barrels a day — came Environmentalists say the companies havefracked wells In response to growing nafrom Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Ec- industry's clean slate comes in California. tional controversy, Occidental uador and other countries, ac- with a caveat: Before reporting Today, though, they are do- Petroleum Corp. and o t her mostly in Kern County, more cording to California Energy on "fracfocus" began in 2011, ing it more often and in more companies began posting some than double the same period in Commission figures. no one knew where wells were places to try to tap an enor- details about fracking on an in- 2012. Hull said tapping the Mon- being fracked. "Folks are looking eagerly at terey shale not o nly c ould "Theydidthis for five decades mous buried treasure called dustry website, www.fracfocus. Monterey shale. org, in 2011. That site, which is that resource," Hull said. reverse that trend but actu- with basically no oversight," Stretching from Los Ange- voluntary, shows Kern County Whether the shale can be ful- ally make California energy said Bill Allayaud, California les north along the coast and is the epicenter of fracking in ly tapped is uncertain because independent. director of government affairs "The numbers are q u ite for the Environmental Working into the San Joaquin Valley, the California and the pace of ac- its geology is complex. But if so, formation is not just another tivity is accelerating. In the first fracking's boom-time promise straightforward," he said. "If Group. "People could have polpotential new source of do- three months this year, more could spread more widely. you take 15 billion barrels and lution in their groundwater and That's because what lies be- produce it mestic oiL It is the grand prize, than 170 wells were fracked, at 600,000 barrels a we would have no idea." the richest oil shale formation in America. If it can be fully s I I • I I i ' ' s. II exploited — and that is not yet clear — it is estimated to hold enough oil to create hundreds of thousands of jobs, flood the state with tax revenue and halt oil imports to California for a half-century. But here in the manicured, m int-green f a r m cou n t r y around Shafter — a modernday Sutter's mill on California's new fracking frontier — that promise is already being clouded by conflict, pollution and fear. A long o n c e-quiet r u r a l roads, residents complain about dust and noise from trucks and drilling equipment. Large metallic flares dot the countryside, burning off methane and other gases into one of the most polluted air basins in America. Last year, one flare roared for months close to Walt Desatoff's home outside Shafter. "I called it my loud, expensive porch light," he said. "We'd have to get away for a few days just to get to quiet. It was very unfortunate." The biggest concern is what can't be seen: the high-pressure injection of fluids, some toxic, under aquifers and some of the richest farmland on earth. "If you ruin the water, who's going to buy the crops?" asked Frantz. The industry says there's no reason for worry. "We can say — and say it confidently — that we're not aware of any risk to California from this technol-
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ogy," said Tupper Hull, spokesman for the Western States Petroleum Association. Others, though, advise caution. "There is tremendous (scientific) uncertainty," said Michael Kiparsky, associate director of UC Berkeley's Wheeler Institute for Water Law and Policy and co-author of a recent report that found gaping holes in California's regulation of fracking. "California has historically been a leader in the governance of environmental issues" — but not fracking, Kiparsky said. "There is the opportunity to learn from other states and try not repeat their learning experiences." The report cited many possibleremedies, such as banning the underground injection of liquid drilling wastes near risky earthquake faults and requiring that companies give advance noticebefore fracking
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
Ifyou go Cascades EastTransit Funding Committee When:3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Wednesday Where:Penhollow Room,
Oeschutes County offices, 1300 N.W. Wall St, Bend.
Othercities How other communities in
Oregon pay for transit: Property tax measures: Hood River, Tillamook, Klamath Falls
Payroll tax measures: Eugene, Salem Transit fee chargedon utility bills:Corvallis Local sales tax:Ashland Source: Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council
Transit Continued from A1 "I think we just recognize we need tofocus their work, so we formed a smaller committee that w il l b e p u tting a little more time and effort into recommendations that will go to the full board in the fall," S preadborough s a id. "We have a lot of the primary research done, soit's a matter of working through the options and coming up with recommendations." T he first meeting of t h e transit funding subcommittee is Wednesday afternoon. Potential f u n d in g o p t i ons range from keeping the current model of local city and county government contributions to asking voters to
approve a new payroll or property tax. Cascades East Transit has not proposed any specific funding sources, but these options were listed in a recent presentation to the board on how other Oregon transit agencies raise money. The committee will also discuss whether to maintain the current regionalbus system or switch to a different model, S preadborough said. If t h e committee suggests a tax to support transit services, it must decide whether to seek approval on a regional level or by i n dividual cities and counties. Bend City Councilor Victor Chudowsky is a member of the COIC board and the funding subcommittee. "The idea is to do an overall assessment of this whole system and see if there is a way to put it on more sound f ooting," C h udowsky s a i d Monday. "My own personal take on it is since we handed the bus system over from the city to COIC, they'vebeen doing a really good job r u nning it . ... For what (Bend gets) for the $1 million, it's a bargain. We were spending more than that when we ran it." Previously, bus fares covered approximately 11 percent of the cost of the bus system. Since the city handed the system over to COIC, the portion ofcosts covered by faresrose to 19 percent,much closer to the norm in many public transit systems, Chudowsky said. However, Cascades East T ransit still n eeds a m o r e reliable funding model, Chudowsky said. At t h e s a me time the service lost some o f it s s t at e f u n d ing, g a s prices and personnel costs increased. Public transit is important to Central Oregonians who lack other reliable transportation because many m ust travel to Bend for work, medical care or o t her r easons, said Deschutes County Commissioner Alan Unger, who lives in Redmond. Unger is also a member of the COIC board and the transit funding subcommittee. "A lot of things happen in the Bend area that we all need access to, so it's important to the region that we have a functioning transit system," Unger said. Some of the funding strategies that pay for transit services in the Willamette Valley would be difficult to achieve in Central O r egon, Unger said. "There's not the industry to pay for an employmenttype tax, and we don't have a sales tax," Unger said. That could drive local officials toward a property tax, Unger said. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin,com
Legislature
victory when money to help Oregon State University-CasContinued from A1 cades Campus was included "All the PERS (public emin the c apital construction ployees retirement system) budget. Other local priorities and revenue discussion, even were also realized, from helpthough we didn't have a final ing La Pine free up money for package, none of that is going a new stoplight on U.S. Highto waste. Good conversations way 97 to passing a measure will help us build the next that could help the Young Life discussion we have," House Camp in Antelope expand. Speaker Tina Kotek said. Many localswere also pleased The governor said he will when the growler bill passed, continue to work on the issues, allowing wine and ciders to be calling the session "produc- sold in growlers. tive" but noting he wants the Each session, t h ousands work on how to raise taxes of measures are introduced. and cut pensions to continue. Some successfulmeasures that "We have one very imporgarnered headlines this session tant piece of unfinished busi- ranged from a bill increasing to ness," he said in a statement. $500 the fine for drivers caught From the start, Kitzhaber t alking o r t e x ting o n c e l l also pushed overhauling the phones to another that banned state's public safety system. A teenagers from tanning beds. package was passed that will On the final day, lawmakers halt the growth of the inmate approved a$800 million bondpopulation and stop the state ing package, which included from having to build a new the money for OSU-Cascades. prison in the next five years. They also voted to give the It does so, in part, by reduc- University of Oregon and Porting some sentencesfor certain land State University the abiliproperty and drug crimes. But ty to have independent governthe measure was drastically ing boards. And they pushed scaled back when lawmakers through a measure to help could not get support to make cash-starved timber counties. changes to Measure 11, a votLawmakers adjourned after er-approved mandatory-mini- working 155 days. Although mum sentencing structure. they originally expected to fin"When you take on those ish at the end of June, constitubig challenges, you have to be tionally they have 160 days to a lot more incrementalist so complete work. you can get good policy done. The next l egislative sesSo you can move the ball for- sion is scheduled for February ward, and I think we did that," 2014. Kotek said. — Reporter, 541-554-1162, Local lawmakers declared IdakeCbendbulletin.com
Chimps Continued from A1 Back in 1986, what moved Goodall were presentations, on dangers to wild chimp populations and the treatment of captive chimps in research. She went into the meeting a contented field scientist, and, she says, "I left as an activist." Until that time, "I always felt that I d i dn't have the credentials to stand up to some of these white-coated
lab people," she said, speaking recently in an interview from herhome in Tanzania. "But by this time I had done the book" — "The Chimpanzees of Gombe: Patterns of Behavior" — "and therefore I had more self-confidence." Over the past few years, as animal welfare groups have mounted a strong but
pragmaticcampaignagainst invasive experiments like subjecting chimps to vaccines and treatments for human diseases, Goodall has been having the occasional conversation with arguably the ultimate w h ite-coated lab person, Dr. Francis S. Collins, the director of the National Institutes of Health and former head of the Human Genome Project. "I was impressed from the very beginning," Goodall said of Collins. "He agreed something should be done and went ahead and did it." Collins, who invited her to speak to the NIH staff, said, "I found her to be remarkably realistic and practical, but also idealistic in terms of her views." And on June 26, Collins announced that more than 300 of the360 or so chimpanzees owned by the NIH would be retired to sanctuaries over the next few years. That followed a proposal t wo weeks earlier by t h e U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to list all chimpanzees, including those in captivity, as endangered. The pl an w ould r a ise b a r riers f o r experimenting on c h i mps even higher, by requiring a permit for almost all medical research on the animals unless it involved only observation or tests that are part of normal veterinary v isits. Permits w o uld b e granted only if the research w as judged to be for t h e benefit of chimpanzees. Goodall said the decisions were not the end of efforts to protect chimps in captivity, a campaign prompted b y A n imal P r otection of New Mexico and expanded by groups like the Goodall Institute, the Humane Society of the United States and others. "There a re still c h i m panzees in p r i vate labs," she said, as well as in other countries, though G abon is the only other country known t o a l l o w m e d ical experimentation on the animals. It is, however, "a very,
very i mportant m i lestone along the way," she said.
Impetus to change The path to the decisions began in June 2010, when the NIH s t arted to m o ve 186 chimps, held in semiret irement at H olloman A i r Force Base in Alamogordo, N.M., back into the research s tream. The plan wa s t o move them to the Southwest National Primate Research Center at the Texas Biomedical Research Institute in San Antonio. The animals had b een u sed in r e search by t h e Coulston Foundation, at the Alamogordo facility, which closed after many a llegations of mistreatment of the chimps. Save the Chimps brought some of the Coulston animals to Florida, where the group has the largest North American chimpanzee sanctuary. Others were still being held at the facility but were not used in research. "That's what triggered all of this," said Sarah Baeckler Davis, now head of the North A m erican P r i mate Sanctuary Alliance. One of the leaders of the movement, she has both a Ph.D. and a law degree. Davis had run a sanctuary and has worked with the Goodall Institute in the past. ("I read about her in fourth grade," she said of Goodall, "and I wanted to be
her.")
"That's when we all yelled a nd screamed about t h e move," she said, "because they were supposed to be a holding colony." Bonar of Animal Protection of Ne w M e xico said the NIH move was so egregious that "the public was outraged." " We reached out to t h e public and to all of our elected leaders," she said. Bill Richardson, then the governor of Ne w M e xico, objected to the move, and that December, Sens. Jeff Bingaman and Tom Udall, both of New Mexico, and Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa, all Democrats, called for a highlevel review of the need for chimpanzees in research. Other a n i ma l we l f are groups — like the Humane Society and it s p r esident, Wayne Pacelle; the J a ne Goodall Institute; and the New England Anti-Vivisection Society — rallied to the cause. The NIH relented, and Collins asked the Institute of Medicine to perform the requested study. Collins said recently that he did not know what the institute's study would conclude. "It was entirely possible that group might have said, 'My goodness, there are so many things that we need to know for human health that we can only figure out by studying c h impanzees and if you care about yourselves and your families and your children, this is j ust something that we should continue, albeit with great at-
Items ofnotefor the2013 session
• Immunizations:Parents whodon't want their children vaccinated must now watch an
Here, a lookat some highlights from the session. Not all of these bills have been signed
educational video orget adoctor's signature before they areableto opt out for nonmedical reasons.
budget contained the state moneyOregon State Univers ity-CascadesCampus needstoexpand
• Timber counties:More than one bill passed this session aimed at helping cash-starved timber counties, which have long relied on federal timber subsidies. One measure, House Bill 3453, allows the governor and legislative leaders to declare a state of public safety fiscal
into a four-year university. The $800 million in bonding authority for construction projects
The measure gives counties the ability to
by the governor: • Capital construction:Unveiled on the eveof adjournment, the state's capital construction
also includes $80 million to build a newstate
emergency andhelp the counties financially. raise money through an imposed incometax.
hospital in Junction City, money for upgrades to various state buildings and money to other
The state would also chip in funds. Another bill would allow the counties to declare an
public universities. • Foreclosure:A measure aimedat giving homeowners facing foreclosure achanceto
election-related and tax-collection duties.
speak face-to-face with their lenders passed this session. Senate Bill 558 expanded the state's foreclosure mediation program, ensuring that no matter the type of foreclosure, homeowners
have a chance tocommunicate to their lender before being foreclosed upon. • Immigration:Oregon high school graduates who don't have legal documentation but meet
certain criteria, such ashaving graduated from an Oregon high school, will receive in-state tuition at state universities under the tuition-
equity measure passedthis session. Another bill for people whocan't prove their legal status in the state will give them the ability to obtain
emergency andthe state could take over • Waldo Lake:Motorboats and seaplanes will no longer be allowed onthe pristine Waldo Lake with the passage of Senate Bill 602. The
measure prohibits motorboats and seaplanes but carves out anexemption for electric motors going less than10 mph. • Medical marijuana:House Bill 3460 will legalize and regulate establishments that sell medical marijuana. Those with medical
marijuana cards will be able to buycannabis from the retail outlets. • Tax credits:Lawmakers extended a handful of tax credits, including the political contribution
and OregonCultural Trust credit. The measure, House Bill 3367, also expands the film and TV production credit and the earned income tax
driver's licenses. • Public employeepension:Thecontroversial
credit, which is geared toward helping low-
measure, Senate Bill 822, makes graduated cuts to retirees' annual cost-of-living adjustments to save $400 million and eliminates a tax credit for those retirees living out of state, to the tune of another $55 million. In addition, it delays the
income families. In addition, it narrows the senior medical tax deduction.
payment of $350 million in employer increases
governing boards passedboth chambers this
in the upcoming biennium. Republicans lobbied hard for steeper cuts to the state's pension
session. Senate Bill 270 would also give the state's other public universities the option to do the same in the future.
system without success.
tention to ethical principles.'" "But," he said, "that's not what they said." Instead, the report, released in December 2011, concluded, despite vigorous arguments from some s cientists, that almost no research on chimpanzees was necessary, with the possible exception of some work on preventive vaccines for hepatitis C, still in m i dstream. Thereport said other techniques, including using cultured cell lines, and other animals, as well as human testing, were just as good. Chimpanzees, the r eport said, should be used only in cases necessary for human health, and even then, the animals should be housed in social groups, with plenty of space and enrichment. Collins set up a w o rking g roup to a d vise hi m h o w to implement th e I n stitute of Medicine findings. Last month, he accepted the working committee's recommendations, released in January, almost in their entirety. "Much of chimpanzee research could no l onger be j ustified b ecause w e h a d other ways to get the same answers," Collins said of his decision. "Then you factor into that that chimpanzees are special creatures," he added. "That they are biologically possessing of similarities to ourselves that are quite breathtaking." Bonar said Collins deserved credit for his actions. "When you look back at the history of work w i t h c h imps, you could call the agency almost intractable." Change was long overdue, she said, "but someone had to have the courage to start it." Katie Conlee of the Humane Society of the United States said, "I'll always think of Dr. Collins as having a l egacy
• Independentboards:Themeasure allowing the University of Oregon and Portland State University to create their own independent
of doing what's right by the
chimps." Collins said he was interested in assessing the value
of using chimps in research even before the Alamogordo conflict, after some scientists had raised questions "about whether, in fact, the scientific needs were sufficient to justify maintaining this colony of so many chimpanzees." Of the pressure from senators and others, he said: "Did that hasten the efforts to get the science looked at by the Institute of Medicine? I suspect it might have sped it up a little bit, but we would have gotten there anyway."
Disagreements remain
Research Center in Louisiana, have already arrived at Chimp Haven in L o uisiana, others face an uncertainfuture. Not allresearch chimps are owned by NIH, and as such, may not be retired. Even for the NIH chimps, there are challenges ahead. Sanctuaries must find room. Money must be found. And the NIH is planning to keep a colony of about 50 chimps available should itneed research that is not possible any other way — for i nstance, on an emerging disease that strikes humans. " I want the public to b e aware," said Jennifer Whitaker, the executive director of C h impanzee Sanctuary Northwest, " that there a r e reasons to celebrate, but not all of the chimpanzees will be retired." Nor will the animal welfare movement stop at chimpanzees,as allparties are aware. "What the chimpanzee has done is to prove there is no hard and fast line dividing us from the rest of the animal kingdom," Goodall said. "Once you admit that we're not the only beings with personalities, minds, capable of thought and emotions, it raises ethical issues about the ways we use and abuse so many other sentient, sapient beings — animal
Collins cautioned that there were still areas of disagreement between the NIH and the animal welfare movement. "Now obviously if we moved from talking about chimpanzees to talking about mice and rats, we'd be in a different place," he said. For now, the goal of the NIH and animal welfare groups is the same: to find homes for the retiring chimps. At the time, in the mid to late 1980s, Goodall began to work against experimentation on chimpanzees, they were no longer being imported into the United States, but they were routinely being bred. The NIH beings — every day." was increasing breeding to produce more of the animals to study A I DS, a p r ogram that was not successful. Many chimpanzees now in research institutions o r sa n c tuaries were born during that period. Chimpanzees in captivity can live up to 60 years, so many of their parents are also still alive. Elevation Capital Strategies W hile some of t h e N I H 400 SW BluA Drive Suite 101 Bend chimpanzees that are being Main: 541-728-0321 retired, including a number of www.elevationcapital.biz babies bred at the New Iberia
E LEVATIO N
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Crashes Continued from A1 "We've learnedfrom the past incidents about what can be improved." I nvestigators ar e s t i l l trying t o d etermine the cause of the Asiana crash. 8,$ But whatever the reason, it reflects the trend of fewI.
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Clinical Nurse Elise Ross stands in front of a nurses' station in the Neuro Intensive Care Unit at the MedStar Washington Hospital Center in Washington, D.C. The Neuro ICU has14 beds that are often full, with an almost constant ringing of alarms throughout the day.
Alarms Continued from A1 The infusion pump beeps after running out of a medication the patient no longer needs. The blood-pressure monitor goes off after a nurse adjusts a catheter in the patient's artery. The sheer number of alarms — severalhundred per patient per day — can cause alarm fatigue. Nurses and other workers, overwhelmed or desensitized by the constant barrage, sometimes respond by turning down the volume on the devices, shutting them off or simply ignoring them — actions that can have serious, potentially fatal consequences.
A past issue, magnifiednow Clinicians and patient-safety advocates have warned of alarm fatigue for years, but the issue istakingongreater urgency as hospitals invest in more complex, oftennoisy devices meant to save lives. Last month, the Joint Commission, which accredits hospitals, directed facilities to make alarm safety a top priority or risk losing their accreditation. The commission is requiring hospitals, starting in January, to identify the alarms that pose the biggest safety risks by unnecessarily
m embers customize device settings for individual patients. A heart monitor for a newborn, for example, would probably be set to alarm more often than that for an 18-year-old. Because each manufacturer's device alarms are different, the hospital also standardizes equipment as much as possible; one vendor supplies all the heart monitors, for instance. Technicians i n no n - critical-care areas keep track of flashing lights and other visual alarms on a central monitor and text the urgent alerts to nurses' mobile phones. Patient-safety experts and health officials have known of the potential harm for years. At Johns Hopkins Hospital, "it took a few adverse patient events to focus attention on the problem," according to a medi-
cal technology group's report
about Hopkins' safety efforts. The incidents took place in 2006, but officials declined repeatedly to say how many there were and w h ether patients died. And Maryland health officials warned all hospitals in the state in August 2006 about "alarm complacency" after receiving reports of eight cases involving alarms — including four deaths — in the previous adding noise or being ignored. two years. None of the hospiBy 2016, hospitals must decide tals were named. "It is sobering that critical who has the authority to turn off alarms. care units, to which a gravely "We are saying, 'Here's an is- ill patient is sent for intensive sue that hurts and kills people,'" monitoring, may fail to provide said Ron Wyatt, medical direc- a safe environment," the health tor of the commission's health- department note said. care improvement division. The parents of Mariah Ed- Fatalcases wards won a $6 million malIn onecase,an elderly wompractice settlement after their an'sheart-rate monitor beeped 17-year-old daughter died last unnoticed by staff for several year following a tonsillectomy minutes. Her nurse was preparat a Pennsylvania surgery cen- ing medication in another room ter. After the surgery, the high where she could not hear or school junior was given a po- see the patient or the monitortent painkiller that slowed her ing system. (The hospital had breathing. By the time nurses cut the position of the technichecked on her 25 m inutes cian whose job was to monitor later, she had suffered profound alarms at a central station.) By and irreversible brain injury. the time the nurse responded, She died 15 days later. the patient had suffered irreA nurse said in her deposi- versible damage, and she died tion that the alarm on the respi- shortly afterward. ratory monitor was muted, said In anothercase,cardiac elecJoel Feller, an attorney for the trodes became disconnected family. After Edwards's death, from a patient who fell getting the center announced several out of bed, triggering a specific changes, including that alarms alarm that usually indicates would no longer be muted. that the wires are not conThe Joint Commission re- nected. Medical workers disceived 98reports of alarm-re- counted it because it was conlated incidents — including 80 sidered a low priority. No one deaths — in the 3'/~-year period responded until housekeeping that ended in June 2012. In more staff discovered the patient on than 60 percent of the cases, the floor 30 minutes later. Clinialarms either were inappro- cians were unable to resuscitate priately turned off or were not the patient. audible in all areas. Those volHopkins created an alarms untary reports are a gross un- task force, analyzed data and dercount, says the commission, found that the average number which estimates that there were of alarms that sounded per bed close to 1,000 alarm incidents in per day in one ICU was 771. "That was just astounding which patients died or were inwhen we saw those numbers," jured, or faced those risks. The ECRI Institute, a Penn- said Maria Cvach, Hopkins's sylvania-based patient-safety assistant director of nursing, organization, listed alarm haz- who co-chairs the task force. ards as the No. 1 issue on its About 80 percent of the alarms annual list of the top 10 health- were for l ow-priority conditechnology dangers for 2012 tions, she said. Yet "those are and2013. the ones that ring continuously "I think the main reason and people tend to just ignore." is the large growth in the use Working with each unit's of monitors that have alarm- medical directors, the t a sk based features and the number force turned off the sound for of alarms that clinicians are low-priority alarms. It also inneeding to deal with," said Jim structed nurses to adjust device Keller, ECRI's vice president for settings for all patients during health-technology evaluation every shift. Heart-monitor elecand safety. trodes that are placed on paAt Children's National Medi- tients' chests were also changed cal Center, a late response to a daily to keep them from drying heart monitor played a role in out. Noise and false alarms fell the death of a patient 10 years dramatically. ago. That prompted changes, The quieter e nvironment according to Linda Talley, vice also built better relations with president of nursing for critical patients and t h eir f a milies, care, who along with other offi- who lost trust in staff memcials declined repeated requests bers when they didn't respond for details about the patient's quickly to a one-beep alarm. death. Most patients don't know that A special team at Children's one-beep alarms are typically Hospital determined that clini- not as urgent as those with cians heard an alarm every 66 three tones, Cvach said. "But sustaining this stuff seconds, on average, in the hospital's neonatal ICU. The team over time — it's a battle," said now scrutinizes monthly data Andrew Currie, Hopkins's dito look at the number of alarms rector of clinical engineering and theresponse times. To re- and another leader of the alarm duce noncritical alerts, staff task force.
accidents. The odds weren't always in passengers' favor. From 1962 to 1981, 54 percent of people in p l ane crashes were killed. From 1982 to 2009, that figure improved to 39 percent, according to an Associated Press analysis of National Transportation Safety Board data. Those figures only include crashes with at least one fatality. There have been other serious crashes where everybody survived. The most famous was a US A i r ways f l ight i n January 2009 that lost engine power after striking a flock ofgeese after taking off from New York's LaGuardia Airport. Capt. Chesley "Sully" S u l lenberger ditched the Airbus A320 in the Hudson River and all 155 people onboard survived. The crash was dubbed the "Miracle on the Hudson." A British Airways flight in January 2008 crashed short of the runway at London's Heathrow A i r port. All 152 p assengers and crew onboard the Boeing 777 — the same jet type as Saturday's Asiana f l ight — survived. This April, a Boeing 737 flown by Indonesian airline Lion Air crashed into water short of a runway in Bali. The plane's fuselage split into two sections but all 108 people on board survived. "What's really important is for people to understand that airplane crashes, the majority of them, are survivable," Deborah H ersman, chairwoman of the National T r a n sportation Safety Board, said Sunday on the CBS News show, "Face the Nation."
Better planes Several advances in aviation technology have made these feats of survival possible. They include: • Stronger seats. Today's airplane seats — and the b olts holding them i n t o the floor — are designed to withstand forces up to 16 times that of g r avity. That prevents rows of seats from pancaking together during a crash, crushing
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The Associated Press file photo
A plane carrying 108 passengers and crew overshot a runway on the Indonesian resort island of Bali and crashed into the sea in April. Roughly two dozen people were injured, but all survived. University's Prescott, A r iz.,
ing happen while planes are flying at lower speeds of 130 to Saturday's A siana c r ash 150 mph. "You've changed the nature may have benefited from those changes. The Boeing 777 inof accidents," said Capt. Alan volved was manufactured in Price, the former chief pilot for 2005 and contained all of the the Atlanta base of Delta Air advances in safety. Lines and founder of consult"It may have been worse ing firm Falcon Leadership. Today's planes come with if that fuselage had been designed with p r actices that ground proximity warning were common 20 or 30 years systems, which alert pilots if prior," said Todd Curtis, a for- they are too low. An alarm mer safety engineer with Boe- sounds and a computer shouts ing and now a director of the "terrain, pull up." Airsafe.com Foundation. That technology didn't exist in 1974, when a Trans World Better responses Airlines plane heading for The emergency response Washington Dulles Internaalso played a part i n l i m it- tional Airport c rashed into ing the number of fatalities. 1,754-foot-tall Mount Weather Airport fi r e de p a r tments in Virginia. All 92 people on frequently hold drills where board died. crews simulate a crash and M odern c o c k pi t rad a r p ractice coordinating w i t h systems alert pilots to other area hospitals on how to care planes nearby. Such a system for the injured. would have probably prevent"Had this happened in a de- ed the 1960 midair collision of veloping world country with a TWA jet with a United plane no (advanced) trauma center, over New York, killing all 128 there might have been more people on the two planes and fatalities," Curtis said. six people on the ground. New technology helps toBetter radar systems on day's pilots avoid the deadliest the ground have also helped. types of crashes. Accidents They've p r evented p l a nes with planes hitting mountains from going down the wrong or each other in midair, typitaxiway or onto active runcally at speeds up to 500 mph, ways. The deadliest aviation are rare in North America and disaster in history remains the Europe. Crashes during land- collision of Pan Am and KLM
campus.
jets on the runway of Tenerife in Spain's Canary Islands in 1977. In foggy conditions, amid confusion over air traffic controller instructions, the KLM plane took off while the Pan Am jet was taxiing down the same runway. The crash k illed 583 people on b o t h planes; 61 survived. Had such radar existed at the time, the KLM pilots would have probably seen the Pan Am jet in its way. Today, thanks to these advances there are about two deaths worldwide for every 100 million p assengers on commercial flights, according to an Associated Press analysis of g overnment accident data. Just a decade ago, passengers were 10 times as likely to die when flying on an American plane. The risk of death was even greater during the start of the jet age, with 1,696 people dying — 133 out of every 100 million passengersfrom 1962 to 1971. The figures exclude acts of terrorism. Those in the airline industry often say that a person is more likely to die driving to the airport than on a flight. There are more than 30,000 motor-vehicledeaths each year,a mortality rate eight times greater than that in planes.
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passengers. • Fire retardant materials. Carpeting and seat cushions are now made of materials that burn slower, spread flames slower and don't give off noxious and D
dangerous gases. • Improved exits. Doors on planes are much simpler to open and easily swing out of the way, allowing passengers to quickly exit. A nd p lanes no w c o m e with rows of lights on the f loor that c h ange f r om white to red when an exit is reached. • Better training. Flight a ttendants at m any a i r lines now train in full-size models of planes that fill with smoke during crash simulations. • Stronger planes. Aircraftengineers have looked at structural weaknesses from pastcrashes and reinforced those sections of the plane. Regulators started mandating such cabin improvements after two deadly aircraft fires in the 1980s. First, an A i r C a n ada flight made an emergency landing a t Cin c i nnati's airport in 1983 after a fire broke out in the bathroom. The plane landed safely but half of the 46 passengers and crew died because they couldn't quickly escape the smoke and fire. Two years later, a British Airtours aborted a takeoff in Manchester, England, after an engine fire. Passengers evacuated but not fast enough. Of th e 137 people onboard, 54 died after inhaling toxic smoke. "Those tw o a c cidents together were the two-byfour to the head" that led the U.S. and British governments to impose new fire-safety standards, said Bill Waldock, a professor of safety science at Embry-Riddle A e r onautical
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
TODAY'S READ: ACITY FACING BANKRUPTCY •
• f
•
By Monica Davey
•
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president, ha d h i s s a l a ry port by Orr. "Whatever the s o lution stopped and power stripped by Orr after the councilman is — a negotiated plan or a
New York Times News Service
DETROIT — A question unimaginable in most major American cities is utterly commonplace in this abruptly stopped showing up bankruptcy proceeding — the
for meetings and disappeared end result is going to be better from public view. services," Bill Nowling, Orr's "Where Is Charles Pugh'?" a spokesman, said. "This is all Many people here say the answer is no. Some laugh at the odds of an ambulance appearing promptly, headline at the top of the front about getting Detroit strong, page ofThe Detroit Free Press viable and solvent." if ever. In Detroit, people map out alternative plans instead, enlisting a relative or a friend. asked. F rank P onder, 45 , w h o "For a lo t o f works at a h o sAs officials negotiate urpital h ere, s a id people, I think city g ently w it h c r e ditors a n d g overnment h a s "I guess I'll major c h anges unions in a l ast-ditch effort become a nonentiin the city, even be glad if to spare Detroit from plungty here," said Kurt bankruptcy, now ing into the largest municipal Metzger, the direc- someone else seem all but cerbankruptcy i n t h e n a tion's tor of Data Driven takes over and tain. "Everybody history, residents say the city D etroit, w hic h h ad a l l th e s e has worse problems than its tracks demograph- other people ideas about savrun this thing. estimated $18 billion debt. ic, economic and ing Detroit, and "The city is past being a city zlls housing trends in n obody's i d e a s The way I now; it's gone," said Kendrick the region. "People actually worked," Benguche, whose family lives a lmost feel l i k e look atit, the he said. "At a ceron a block with a single streetthe city goes on in city is already t ain p o int, y o u light, just down from a vacant spite of city gov- bankrupt." have to stop foolfirehouse that sits beside a e rnment — t h a t ing yourself." — Kendrick burned-out home. The Detroit city government in The East Side police's average response time this case certainly Benguche h ouse in w h i ch to calls for the highest-priority doesn't define the Ponder lives, once city — and that afcrimes this year was 58 minowned b y hi s utes, officials now overseeing fects how they're feeling about grandmother, is the only one the city say. The department's what comes next." on his block that appears to recent rate ofsolving cases Recently, O r r in d i c ated be occupied. He has been savwas 8.7 percent, far lower, the that Detroit was getting out ing money for years in hopes officials acknowledge, than Fabrizio Costantini / New York Times News Service of the business of electricity of moving this fall to a suburb, clearance rates in cities like A portable toilet sits outside a locked restroom facility at Belle Isle Park in Detroit. While the notion distribution. An independent Warren — and he expects to Pittsburgh, Mi lwaukee and that selling city of Detroit assets like the Coleman A. Young International Airport, Belle Isle Park and authority is already planning just walk away. "What can you do'?" he said. St. Louis. the collections of the Detroit Institute of Arts has fueled outrage, some residents say the city has to take control of the city's "I guess I'll be glad if some- worse problems, like police and ambulance response times. s treetlights, 40 p e rcent o f "Sell it? On that block?" one else takes over and other which, Orr's office said, were W hile c o r porations a n people run this thing," Bengunot working in recent months. nounced this year that they che said. "The way I look at it, that has never happened to an outside of the court system ing a fanny pack that at times Similar handoffs are being would donate money to the the city is already bankrupt." American city as populous as — has fueled outrage. contains a gun — "Do you see weighed for the w ater and city in part to lease new emer"Bankruptcy scares me," any city police here?" — and Kevyn Orr, th e s tate-ap- Detroit, with about 700,000 sewer services, and possibly gency vehicles, there have pointed emergency financial people — worriessome resi- said LaTanya Boyce, a nurse bemoaning severallocked re- more. been times in 2013, the aumanager for Detroit, has said dents. They say they fear that practiti oner. She urges her pa- strooms that have portable toiWhile many who havebeen thorities acknowledge, when that the chances of filing for bankruptcy would add more tients to treat health concerns lets planted in front of them. through municipal bankrupt- only 10 to 14 of Detroit's 36 "I would love to see it leased cies say such moves often ambulances have a c t ually bankruptcy, a possibility that stigma to a city that has con- beforethey become acute becould be decided as early as tracted alarmingly in the de- cause, she said, "if they find to the state," she said of the mean more budget cuts to been in service. Some of the this month, stand at 50-50. On cades since it was the nation's themselves calling 911, it's park. "They'd t ak e b e tter city services, Orr has called city'semergency medical serWednesday, Orr is expected f ourth l a rgest, starting i n probably too late." care." for spending about $1.25 bil- vice vehicles have as many as to lead 40 representatives of the 1920s, and that it might But as with many who have Recent dev elopments lion over the next 10 years on 300,000 miles on them, so they D etroit's creditors on a bus worsen already bare-bones wrestled with th e p r actical among Detroit's elected lead- improving city infrastructure tend to break down. tour of the city and its blight to services. realities of living in this city, ers have only added to the and services, including the poAll this helps explain why let the bleak images of empty The notion that assets like Boyce said she w ould n ot sense that significant changes lice. Last week, James Craig, Ponder said he, as so many lots and shuttered firehouses Coleman A. Young Interna- mind if some entity other than in the city are perhaps even Orr's choice for police chief, here, would try to get himself make the argument that cred- tional Airport, Belle Isle Park the city took over the man- preferable. Two of the nine arrived to face a city that had to a hospital before seeking itors should accept pennies on and the collections of the De- agement of Belle Isle, a park City Council members have seen five chiefs in as many help from Detroit. "If you have a heart attack, the dollars owed. troit Institute of Arts might whose plan was conceived in resigned. (One said he was years and had the highest rate The prospect of a bankrupt- be sold — either in a formal the early 1880s by Frederick leaving to work for the emer- of violent crime in 2012 of any you're dead," he said. "There cy filing — a move that is ex- bankruptcy proceeding or in Law Olmsted. Boyce goes to gency manager's office.) Then, city with more than 200,000 is no such thing around here tremely rare for cities and one a huge city r e organization the park for exercise, wear- Charles Pugh, the C ouncil residents, according to a re- as 'in case of emergency.'"
one: If you suddenly found yourself gravely ill, injured or even shot, would you call 911?
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
CHURCH FIRE
BRIEFING
swa in ai s en o ice Arson
Cigarette butts spark house fire The BendFire Departmentsays cigarette butts sparked a blazethat
destroyed ahomenorth of CooleyRoadbetween U.S. Highway 20 and U.S.
Highway 97early Monday morning. Firefighters from Bend
and Redmond, aswell as deputies from the Deschutes County Sheriff's
Office, responded tothe home. They found the building, on Crooked
Rocks Road,"fully involved in fire." The roof
collapsed overthe living room andkitchenandthe
• Growing DNA databasesat local, state and federal levelsgiveofficers anextra tool By Branden Andersen The Bulletin
Bend Police Officer Crea Lancaster recalls scanning a crime scene around five years ago, where someone stole a $30,000 power cable that connected to an industrial rock crusher. Police grabbed all the evidence they could from the crime scene, even taking plaster casts of tire marks and boot prints left at the scene.
"It was a really large crime scene," Lancaster said. "It involved a ton of different evidence from a lot of places." But in the end, it wasn't the boot prints, tire marks or fingerprints that led to arresting the suspect, but a small piece of DNA-laden evidence left at the crime scene. "It felt awesome," Lancaster said. "We're all in this business to catch the bad guy, so when we get a lead off of
something small like that, it's a great feeling." In early June, the Supreme Court of the United States upheld a Maryland statute allowing authorities to collect DNA samples from arrested suspects for major crimes, whether the arrestee has been found guilty or not. On the local level, Bend Police only take DNA swabs from convicted felons; nonetheless, the Supreme Court decision has validated local police to use DNA testing, Bend Police Lt. Chris Carney said. "It helps our information-
led policing, which makes the process less intensive as far as personnel hours involved in cases," Carney said. "If nothing else, it's huge savings on the tax side of things." Bend Police believe an increase in DNA swabbing is a boost to other forms of information gathering, such as fingerprinting and mug shots. "They're all unique," Lancaster said, adding that there are more fingerprints on record than DNA swabs. See DNA/B5
home was a total loss,
according toa pressrelease from theBendFire Department.
All occupants escaped thefire, and firefighters
Following up on Central Oregon's most interesting stories, evenif they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbufletitLcom. O» To follow the series, visit www.bendbulletin.com/updates.
WHATEVER
saved a cat that was in a bedroom of the home.
•
An investigation revealed smokers who lived
in the homewere placing
CHIMPS INC.'S NEWEST RESIDENT
their cigarette butts into a plastic container on the back deck. The fire
• • asa use wees ie unn — asin 00
started in this container and spread to the deck,
then into thegarage through anopendoor, according to thepress release. "Alarge amount of combustible materials in the garage, aswell as a cylinder of acetylenegas, allowed thefire to spread quickly into the attic
space," according to the fire department. The Bend Fire Department wants to remind
smokers to disposeof cigarette butts and used
Ti s :'
matchesinanoncombustible container, on anoncombustible surfacesuch as soil or concrete.Smokers should placewateror
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t
sand inside the container to provent the contents
from catching fire. — Bulletin staff report
More briefing, B2
Underpass detour The Third Street
underpass will be closed
- 'l
II'
and Wilson Avenue.
Ryan BrenneckeiThe Bulletin
Marla O'Donnell, sanctuary director at Chimps Inc., feeds C.J. pieces of watermelon on Wednesday. C.J. was rescued last year after making national headlines when she and another chimp escaped their backyard enclosure in Las Vegas.
I
Gre Mood Ave I Clj
• The 14-year-old chimpwas movedto Tumalo after escapingfrom herprevious homein LasVegas
Franklin Av .
ED
IZl
Detour
By Shelby R. King
-Thir Stre
The Bulletin
Unde as ilson Ave.
s I
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R d MarketItd. Greg Cross/The Bulletin
FIRE UPDATE
case still 'very active' By Branden Andersen The Bulletin
The Trinity Episcopal Church has nearly finished building a new roof on its annex, St. Helens Hall, after the church complex was badly damaged by fire in March. Church administrator Jan Stalkersaid the church needs permits to complete the last layers of the roof, but she's optimistic about the chances of finishing the construction by the proposed finishing timeline in the fall. "I don't think that it's going any worse than anticipated," Stalker said. "But, we're looking forward to September." Trinity Episcopal and its annex building, along with a nearby woodpile, two garages and two cars were burned on March 6 in what authorities believe was a case of arson. The church was partially demolished before it could begin reconstruction. Investigators believe an arsonist or arsonists broke a window of the church, lighting the church from the inside, said Bend Police Lt. Chris C arney. Bend Police offered a $10,000 reward within the first week for information on the case. After little response, they upped the reward to $20,000, where it currently stands. "The case is still very active," Carney said. Carney said Bend Police have received fewer than 20 tips over the past three months. "You worry you might run out of options," Carney said. "But the investigators feel good about the leads and tips that they have received." Stalker said the church isn't necessarily worried about who committed the crime, although it would help if someone was
caught.
< l1Ã I
until 7 a.m. today as city crews work to correct frequent flooding. A signed detour will lead commuters to Franklin Avenue, Ninth Street
CL
www.bendbulletin.com/local
TUMALO — C.J. the chimpanzee has been at the Chimps Inc. sanctuary in Tumalo for nearly a year, and sanctuary director Marla O'Donnell said she's adjusted well to her new home. "The first thing we had to do was get her used to a whole-food diet," O'Donnell said. "When she first arrived, she'd look at the food we served like, 'Why would I want to eat that?'" Last August O'Donnell flew to
Las Vegas to rescue C.J. after she escaped threetimes from her cage at her prior owner's home. A chimp who escaped with C.J. in mid-July was shot and killed by Las Vegas Police after the two animals jumped on cars and made aggressive moves toward offi cers. "Her former owners meant well, they really did," O'Donnell said. "They said she escaped because of a broken weld on the cage. When chimps are full grown, they're eight times stronger than th e average man."
C.J.,who recently celebrated her 14th birthday, journeyed from Las Vegas to Tumalo in a weeklong van ride with O'Donnell. Most of that time was spent in a tiger transport
cage — loaned by a Las Vegas magician — in the rental van, which was donated by Enterprise Rent-A-Car, O'Donnell said. Chimps Inc. is one of eight chimpanzee sanctuaries in the United States and is the closest to Las Vegas. Chimps Inc. President Lesley Day did not return calls for comment. "We got her partially because of our proximity, but also because we were a preference tothe previous owners," O'Donnell said. SeeChimp/B5
Reported for Central
"It's not critical to the rebuilding process, which is what we're worried about," Stalker said. "But it would be nice if the person were caught. Maybe it would stop them from doing it again." In the meantime, Stalker said the church is still active and lively. She said it is holding its services at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in Northeast Bend, except for the occasional outside service like one on Sunday outside the Des Chutes Historical Center. Stalker said the church is below its standard 190-member congregation. But she believes the members will return in the fall when the church is rebuilt. And, overall, members are very supportive of the church. "Everybody understands that it's a big time of change," said Stalker. "But it's positive overalL Everyone is working together." — Reporter: 541-383-0348, bandersenC<bendbulletin.com
and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit www.nwccweb .us/information/
firemap.aspx. Bend ('
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By Dylan J. Darling -
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%: Madras
MILES
I
:h M~.::' 1. Owyhee • Area: 72.75 square miles, 46,559 acres • Containment: 100%
• Cause: Lightning
Lawn-chair balloonist is hit with 4,500 FAAfine The Bulletin
A Bend man famous for taking his lawn chair to the skies faces a fine from the Federal Aviation Administration for his flight last summer. The FAA is fining 53-yearold Kent Couch $4,500 for his July 14, 2012, flight from Bend to a field near Post, Elizabeth Cory, a spokeswoman with the agency, confirmed Monday. Fareed Lafta, a 35year-old Iraqi adventurer, joined Couch for the shorterthan-expected ride and also
faces a similar FAA fine, but he is out of the country and the agency has not heard back from him. The agency contends the men acted as pilots without valid certificates or authorization, operated an unregistered aircraft without an airworthiness certificate and "operated an aircraft in a careless or reckless manner so as to endanger the life or property of another." Cory said the FAA would like Couch to pay the fine "as soon as possible." Couch, reached by phone
Monday, said he is contesting the FAA fine, although the agency doesn't have any documents indicating a formal appeal. A Freedom of Information Act request by The Bulletin prompted the FAA to release 83 pages of documents regarding its investigation into last year's lawn-chair balloon launch in Bend. Last July, Couch and Lafta launched from the Stop & Go Station, which Couch owns, at the corner of U.S. Highway 20 and 27th Street. The two sat in lawn chairs clamped to
an aluminum frame and were carried aloft by 400 large helium-filled party balloons. They wanted to fly 360 miles to Montana ina day-and-ahalf, and carried extra clothes
and sleeping bags to keep them warm throughout the night. But the threat of thunderstorms cut the flight short. Hundreds of people were there for the launch, including volunteers who filled the balloons with helium and tied them to the lawn chairs. The balloons were red, white, blue and black — combining the colors of the American and
Iraqi flags. After taking off from Bend around 10:20 a.m. that day, Couch and Lafta floated north for about 40 miles before winds shifted and sent them south, then east. As thunderclouds gathered, they popped some of the balloons to force a landing about 30 miles east from where they had started. During the flight, the balloons reached an altitude of 14,060feet,as measured by an altimeter carried aboard, according to FAA documents. SeeBalloonist/B5
B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
E VENT
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvvffw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
AL E N D A R
601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7099 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. "WE'RENOT BROKE": A screening GENDERBENDER: Asix-day of the 2012 documentary that celebration of gender variance premiered at the Sundance Film including discussions, parties, a Festival about tax breaks for makeover, a balland a movie;see website for activities, locations and multinational corporations; free; 7-9 p.m.; Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W. Tin times; $10 donation; downtown Pan Alley, Bend; 541-241-2271 or Bend; 774-253-1538 or www. www.tinpantheater.com. bendfest.com. ALBERT LEE:The English guitarist REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial performs; $19-24 plus fees; 8 p.m., Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen doors open at 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmondfarmersmarket1©hotmail. 0700 or www.towertheatre.org. com. TUESDAYFARMERSMARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brookswood WEDNESDAY Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541GENDERBENDER: Asix-day 323-3370 or farmersmarket@ celebration of gender variance brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. including discussions, parties, a makeover, a balland a movie;see "STITCHED":A screening of a website for activities, locations and documentary about three quilters times; $10 donation; downtown preparing for the 2010 Houston International Quilt Festival; $20, $10 Bend; 774-253-1538 or www. bendfest.com. for12 and younger; 6 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Butte Road; 541-549-0989 or www. admission; sistersoutdoorquiltshow.org. Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest PICNIC INTHEPAST: Features live music, historical games and hands- Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or on activities; bring a picnic dinner www.bendfarmersmarket.com. and blanket; $3 for members, $10 family; $5 nonmembers, $20 family; AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Sisters reservation requested; 6-8 p.m.; musician, artist and author Dennis HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. McGregor will present his new book, Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or "Dream Again"; free; 4 p.m.; Paulina www.highdesertmuseum.org. Springs Books, 252 W. HoodAve., Sisters; 541-549-0866. STORIES AT SUNSET: Features author and storyteller, Heather AUTHORPRESENTATION:Author McNeil, telling about Anansi and and pilot CarolAnn Garratt will speak Bre'r Rabbit; free; 6:30 p.m.; about her book"Upon Silver Wings" Downtown Bend Public Library, and her world flights raising funds
TODAY
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Andy Tullie/The Bulletin file photo
Sisters musician, artist and author will present his new book, "Dream Again," atPaulina Springs Books on Wednesday. for ALS research; free; 6-8:30 p.m.; Bend Municipal Airport, 63132 Powell Butte Highway; 541-3061500 or http://alsworldflight.als.net. MUSIC ONTHE GREEN: Asummer concert series featuring the bluegrass band The Pitchtones, food, crafts, retail and more; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; Sam Johnson Park, Southwest15th Street, Redmond; 541-923-5191 or http:// visitredmondoregon.com. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: ARMIDA": An encore presentation of Rossini's version of the mythical story of a sorceress who enthralls men in her island prison; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. WANDERLUSTCIRCUS: The Portland circus performs with
acrobats, jugglers, dancers and aerialists; $16.50-$22 plus fees; 7-8 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. CROOKED RIVERROUNDUP HORSE RACES:Features the annual equestrian event with gambling; $5; 7:15 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-4479 or www.crookedriverroundup.com.
THURSDAY GENDERBENDER: Asix-day celebration of gender variance including discussions, parties, a makeover, aballand am ovie;see website for activities, locations and times; $10 donation; downtown Bend; 774-253-1538 or www.
bendfest.com. SISTERSHOME & GARDEN TOUR: The Sisters Garden Club presents a tour of homes in and around Sisters; quilts will be on display; $15; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Sisters location; 541595-6389, leweyluv©yahoo.com or www.sistersgardenclub.com. STREAM STEWARDSHIPDAY: Featuring hands-on stewardship activities to enhance the health of the Deschutes River; learn about water quality, fish habitat and more; free; 10 a.m.-1 p.m.; Riverbend Park, Southwest Columbia Street and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-382-6103 or www. restorethedeschutes.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jane Kirkpatrick will present her newest historical novel "One Glorious Ambition"; free; 4 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. HoodAve., Sisters; 541-549-0866. HISTORY PUB: Loren Irving presents a talk on Fremont's Expedition through Central Oregon; hosted by the Jefferson County Historical Society; free; 5-7 p.m.; Great Earth Natural Foods, 46 S.W. D St., Madras; 541-475-5390 or www.greatearth.biz. MUNCH & MUSIC: The Motet kicks off the music series; with food, arts and crafts booths, children's area and more; dogs prohibited; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; www. munchandmusic.com. FREAK MOUNTAINRAMBLERS: The Portland rock and bluegrass band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. Bond St., Bend;
541-382-5174. CROOKED RIVERROUNDUP HORSE RACES:Features the annual equestrian event with gambling; $5; 7:15 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds,1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-4479 or www.crookedriverroundup.com. "AIN'TIN IT FOR MY HEALTH": A screening of director Jacob Hatley's documentary aboutLevon Helm after his comeback album, Dirt Farmer; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. JUNO WHAT?!:The electro-funk band from Denver performs, featuring members of The Motet; $7 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 10 p.m., doors open at 9 p.m.; The Annex, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www. p44p.biz.
of Northeast Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 4:11 p.m. July 5, in the area of Northeast Laughlin Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:21 p.m. July 5, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:09 p.m. July 5, in the area of Northwest Second Street.
Green Drive in Culver. DUII — Darin Lane Nelson, 46, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:39 p.m. July 6, in the area of state Highway 361 and Highland Lane in Culver.
FRIDAY CRAWFEST:A two-day camping music festival featuring 20 bands, food, fun stuff for kids and more; $20 for two-day pass; July12-13, starts 5 p.m. on July12 through midnight on July13, gates open at 3 p.m.; 16065 S.W. Alfalfa Road, Powell Butte; www.j.mp/crawfest12. GENDERBENDER: Asix-day celebration of gender variance including discussions, parties, a makeover, a balland am ovie;see website for activities, locations and times; $10 donation; downtown Bend; 774-253-1538 or www. bendfest.com.
NEWS OF RECORD and North U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported at3:49p.m. June 30,in the The Bulletin will update items 1900 block of Northeast in the Police Log when such Bear Creek Road. a request is received. Any new information, such as the Theft — A theft was reported at dismissal of charges or acquittal, 4:42 p.m. June 30, in the 1800 must be verifiable. For more block of Northeast Wichita Way. information, call 541-383-0358. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 8:56 p.m. June BEND POLICE 30, in the 3300 block of Northeast Palmer Drive. DEPARTMENT DUII — Norma Marie Macarthur, DUII — Dustin Lio McCord,36, was 32, was arrested on suspicion arrested on suspicion of driving of driving under the influence of under the influence of intoxicants intoxicants at10:58a.m. July1, in at 3:05 p.m. July 2, in the 300 the 62900 block of O.B. Riley Road. block of Southeast Silvis Lane. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 4:56 Theft — A theft was reported at 4:42 p.m. July 2, in the 61500 p.m. July1, in the 20500 block of Whitehaven Circle. block of American Loop. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 7:01 p.m. reported entered with items stolen and an arrest made at July 1, in the 1700 block of Northeast Pheasant Lane. 9:54 p.m. July 2, in the 200 block of Northeast Second Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at10:23 a.m. Theft — A theft was reported at July 2, in the 2100 block of 7:35 a.m. July 3, in the 61000 Northeast Studio Road. block of Brosterhous Road. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was Theft — A theft was reported reported entered at12:02 p.m. at 9:53 a.m. July 3, in the 2000 July 2, in the1000 block of block of Northeast Linnea Drive. Northwest Roanoke Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of Theft — A theft was reported criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at1:42 at 11:33 a.m. July 4, in the 63400 p.m. June 28, in the 3100 block block of Ledgestone Court. of North U.S. Highway 97. Criminal mischief — An act of Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported criminal mischief was reported at11:40 a.m. July 4, in the and an arrest made at1:17 63300 block of Majestic Loop. p.m. July 3, in the1000 block Criminal mischief — An act of of Southeast Division Street. criminal mischief was reported DUII —Donnie Earl Washington at 12:05 p.m. July 4, in the Jr., 35, was arrested on suspicion 20700 block of Patriot Lane. of driving under the influence of Criminal mischief — An act of intoxicants at10:08 p.m. July 4, in criminal mischief was reported at the area of Northwest Bond Street 4:27 p.m. July2, in the1700 block and Northwest Franklin Avenue. of Southeast Tempest Drive. DUII — Casey Thomas O'Neill, Theft — A theft was reported at 32, was arrested on suspicion 1:47 p.m. June 21, in the 20500 of driving under the influence block of Whitehaven Lane. of intoxicants at10:30 p.m. July 4, in the area of Northeast DUII — Seth O'Bryan David, 21, Medical Center Drive and was arrested on suspicion of Northeast Neff Road. driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:44 a.m. June Theft — A theft was reported 30, in the area of Cooley Road and an arrest made at 3:27
POLICE LOG
BRIEFING Continued from B1
River shuttle service won't run this weekend Cascades East Transit's Ride the River service will not operate
Saturday andSunday due tothe Deschutes Dash Weekend Sports Festival.
p.m. July 2, in the 700 block of Northeast Greenwood Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:50 a.m. July 3, in the 200 block of Northwest Riverfront Street. Unauthorizeduse — A vehicle was reported stolen at1:40 p.m. June 19, in the 2700 block of Northeast Second Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:13 p.m. July 3, in the 1300 block of Southeast Armour Road. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:06p.m.July 3,in the20600 block of Over Under Court. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:56 a.m. July 4, in the 63200 block of Wishing Well Lane. Unauthorizeduse — A vehicle was reported stolen at 8:48 p.m. July 4, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. DUII — Mark Steven Capps, 54, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:49 p.m. July 4, in the area of Northwest 14th Street and Northwest Jacksonville Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:27 a.m. July 5, in the 2000 block of Northeast11th Place. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:46 p.m. July 5, in the 2600 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:08 p.m. July 5, in the area of Northwest Bond Street and Northwest Greenwood Avenue. DUII — Kevin Jeffery Gomber, 57, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 6:29 p.m. July 5, in the 100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 6:29 p.m. July 5, in the 100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue.
Theft — A theft was reported at 7:56 p.m. July 5, in the area of Northeast Holliday Avenue and Northeast Purcell Boulevard. DUII —Russell Patrick Campbell, 34, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:28 a.m. July 6, in the 100 block of Southwest Allen Road. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 3:28 a.m. July 6, in the 100 block of Southwest Allen Road. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:29 a.m. July 6, in the 300 block of Northeast Second Street. Burglary— A burglary was reported at 9:19 a.m. July 6, in the1200 block of Northeast First Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 9:20 a.m. July 6, in the 3300 block of Northwest Starview Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 1:36 p.m. July 6, in the 600 block of Northeast Third Street. DUII —Shelley Elizabeth Malone, 51, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 4:06 p.m. July 6, in the area of Northeast Sixth Street and Northeast Revere Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5:50 p.m. July 6, in the 500 block of Northwest Flagline Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:28 a.m. July 7, in the 1200 block of Northeast Hollinshead Drive. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at11:05 p.m. July 5, in the 61100 block of South U.S. Highway 97.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — A theft was reported at1:13 p.m. July 5, in the area
SIST ERSOUTDOOR QUILTSHOW
being held in Riverbend Park, will
cause road closures on the river bus service route. — Bulletin staffreport
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TUESDAY, JULY9 • DOORSOPEN 6 PNI SISTERS HIGH SCHOOL•$20 Tickets: 541-549-0989 or infoCesoqs.org
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Tuesdays&Fridays7-10pm July 9th
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"Modern Quilt Design" Special Guest Speakers
Alissa Haight Carlton Elizabeth Hartman
(EZHE~ Cgg?iil Q KiDIK3) Dine In, Take Out I 541-389-9888 61247 S. Hwy 97 • Bend • Next to Bend Wal Mart www.reddragonchineserestaurant.com
Sunday, July 14 Lecture at 11am • $20 FivePine Conference Center
The Deschutes Dash Weekend SportsFestival is in need of volunteers July 10th-14th. If you would like to volunteer please visit www.deschutesdash.com/volunteers/
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Over 200 Quilts on display downtown and in Sisters businesses
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for more information www.SistersDutdoorQuiltShow.org
Th e B ulletin
Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 6:37 a.m. July 2, in the 600 block of East D Street in Culver. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:45 a.m. July 2, in the 1000 block of Northwest Elm Lane in Madras. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:55 p.m. July 2, in the area of Cove Palisades in Culver. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:55 a.m. July 3, in the 400 block of Butte Avenue in Metolius. Unauthorizeduse — A vehicle was reported stolen at12:32 p.m. July 4, in the 400 block of Fifth Street in Metolius. DUII — William Clayton Simmons, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8 p.m. July 4, in the area of Cove Palisades Marina in Culver. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at11:03 p.m. July 4, in the area of Northwest Belmont Lane and Dry Canyon in Madras. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:55 a.m. July 5, in the area of Link Creek Campground in Camp Sherman. Theft —A theft was reported at10:51 a.m. July 6, in the 7700 block of Southwest
DUII — James Jessie Crawford, 43, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 6:48 p.m. July 5, in the area of North Cascade Lakes Highway. DUII — Stewart Edward Kreefer, 40, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:07 a.m. July 6, in the area of Northeast Greenwood Avenue and Northeast Third Street in Bend. DUII —Michael Stephen Bollmeyer, 37, and Kamerin Toshiko Omori, 24, were arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:19 p.m. July 6, in the 600 block of North Arrow Leaf Trail in Sisters. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at1:59 p.m. July 7, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost166. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 7:53 p.m. July 7, in the area of East U.S. Highway 20. DUII —Melissa Jane Ensor, 57, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:42 a.m. July 8, in the area of Northwest Portland Avenue and Northwest Wall Street in Bend. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at10:24 a.m. July 6, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost 202. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 6:58 a.m. July 8, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost156.
Szechuan•t-lunan Cantonese Cuisine
"Stitched - The Film"Annual Fundraiser
Food. Home & Garden
JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE
C(1ll1lse P>esfclLtl c014 c4LoLll1j>e
SATURDAY, JULY 13 - 9AM-4PM
The sports festival, which is
OREGON STATE POLICE
photos; osarahLimphotographg
Tickets available at sistersoutdoorquiltshow.org/events.htm¹saveit or at the door
PLUS — Award-winning quilts from the first annual "QulltCon" on displa amon the pines on FivePine rounds • 10am - 3pm
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TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
Solar plant
plans layo s
o Lie ae iin Li wit vine ai s By Janet Eastman
The Oregonian
MEDFORD — V i n eyards are lining more land in the Rogue Valley, and not all of the plantings are being done by viticulture pros. Hobby growers dreaming of picturesque vines in their backyards are installing plants to grow pinotnoir,cabernet and char-
SolarWorld notified state officials Monday that it will lay off 100, or 14 percent of its Hillsboro workforce, and suspend silicon crystal and wafer manufacturing at the Washington County plant. The company b l ames price declines caused by Chinese competitors selling solar products in the United States a t b e l ow manufacturing costs. "Prices have continued to collapse as a result of the C h inese d u mping," said Ben Santarris, a SolarWorld spokesman. "We need to be decisive in navigating this artificial crisis." In response, SolarWorldwill stop making crystals and wafers in Hillsboro, instead securingthem from its parent company in Germany or the open market. The company will continue making cells and panels at the Hillsboro plant. S olarWorld emp l o y s about 700 at the factory, w hich opened i n 2 0 0 8 in a converted semiconductor plant. More t h an 1,000 worked at the plant — backed by Oregon tax credits — at its peak. The job cuts affect both regular and temporary workers and will be completed by the end of August. In Germany, the parent company has been struggling to restructure after massive losses. Under a debt restructuring d e al, Qatar Solar would invest 35 million euros in SolarWorld, becoming a 29 percent shareholder. Frank Asbeck, SolarWorld chief executive, would invest 10 million euros, securing a 19.5 percent stake, according to Reuters. The E uropean U n i on commission is phasing in t ariffs after f i n ding t h e same subsidies and dumping that U.S. officials cited. Those duties will rise to 40 percent on Aug. 6, in the absence of a settlement. Oregon taxpayers have a stake in SolarWorld, having invested $41.9 million so far in tax credits and more in local tax abatements. From those state credits, SolarWorld netted $28.1 million, or less than 5 percent of its H illsboro i n vestment o f more than $600 million. S olarWorld shar e s , which traded at above 35 euros in 2008, fell 3.2 percent Monday on the Frankfurt stock exchange, closing at 0.42 euros.
At the same time, local realestate agents are touting undeveloped land for its vineyard potential, marketing the area to well-heeled hobbyists who toy with the idea of someday owning a commercial winery. And more f armers fr om California who make a living on olive trees or tomatoes in their home state are buying established vineyards here to enter the wine industry. Last week, Sheri Wytcherley of Oregon Ranch and Home sold a 90-acre property in the Applegate Valley to a central Californian who is moving to Oregon to start
Smoke inplane cadin
— A plane carrying 75 passengers from Southern Oregonto Salt Lake City reported smoke in the cabin a few minutes after takeoff and returned to the airport, where it landed safely.
Medford Mail Tribune
The manager of the Rogue Valley International-Medford Airport, Bern Case, said a
h <'if,
couple of passengers onthe Delta Air Lines flight operated by Sky West were affected
temporarily by smokebefore they got off the plane. Hesays
donnay grapes. Richard Read
AROUND THE STATE
Flight 4674 took off at about
6:15 a.m. Mondayandwas back at the airport within about 10 minutes. Sky West spokes-
woman Marissa Snowsays mechanics weregoing over the CRJ 900 jet to determine
thecauseofthesmoke,and passengers werebooking new flights. Snow adds that smoke in the cabin can sometimes be
caused by air conditioner units. Julia Moore/The Medford MailTribune
Doug Rowley, 77, is looking for someone to take over his Gold Hill vineyard, which in a good year can produce 100 cases of wine.
asking price.
growing grapes.
It took Chris Hubert, who Last year, Wytcherley sold manages vineyards through 90 acres inGrants Pass to a Results Partners of OVS, more Californian wh o h a s s i nce than ayear to resurrect the 30 pulled up an existing vineyard acres ofvines on the property to replant different varietals before it changed hands. closer together for efficiency. Paschal-Tenuta Winery's 13She also sold a large parcel acre propertyon the east side in Grants Pass and a smaller of Interstate 5 near Talent was one in Cave Junction to alon the market for two years mond growers from the Gold- before it was handed back to en State. the original owners. Californians, she says, are Wytcherley and other realcontinuing t o f i n d O r egon estateagents say they're hopevineyards appealing because ful t h e d i s tressed-vineyard of farmland tax breaks and property trend has ended. the lowercostper acre to buy Full of possibilities land. And, she says, although her Scott Ralston of Cascade current clients are new to the Sotheby's International Realty wine business, they are edu- envisions wine grapes cascadcated about what it takes to ing down southwestern-facing succeed with finicky grapes. slopesof an 80-acre slice ofan Before the economic down- Ashland hillside. He also sees turn, newcomers bought into the barn transformed into a vineyard p r operties. Some tasting room and winery. failed, leaving v ines abanS tanding on th e $ 4 m i l doned or the land repossessed lion property, Ralston can see by the lender. nearby thriving wine operaA b a n k-owned, 8 7-acre tions run by couples who envineyard property o n E a st tered the business while edgHills Drive in Ashland recent- ing toward retirement. ly sold to a neighbor for about From his v a ntage point, $750,000, 40 percent below the he can gesture toward Dana
Campbell Vineyards, with 15 acres of grapes, 12 more acres prepared for additional plantings and a new tasting room. Owners Patrick Flannery and Paula Brown had no farming experience when they shifted to vines in 2006. Ralston can also talk about Grizzly Peak Winery. In 1998, owners Al and Virginia Silbowitz were enticed into starting a small vineyard by Galaxy wine representative Ron Stringfield of Ashland. Now, they manage 15 acres and a tasting room. Stringfield, who has lived in the Rogue Valley since the 1970s, has noticed that the people who seem h appiest around vines are those who are not financially dependent on them. "A gentleman farmer with money can set up a vineyard with a relatively small commitment," he says. "But 40 acres is serious, and it might take 20 years of hard work to get recognition, if at all."
On the market Doug Rowley pictured himself as a hobby grape grower.
hip-hop group Livesavas, and Matt Sheehy of bands Lost Lander and Ramona Falls. There will be print and online ads, as well. The campaign avoids words like federal health reforms, insurance or the Affordable Care Act. tures snappy jingles, simple Instead, the ads describe messages and feel-good artCover Oregon as "our healthwork at a cost of $2.9 milcare marketplace." "We didn't want to interject lion, The Oregonian reported Monday. ourselves into the national deTV and radio spots feature bate," said Rocky King, executhe slogan "Long Live Orego- tivedirectorof Cover Oregon. "It's about Oregon, it's not nians" and performances by Oregon artists such as folk about Washington, D.C." singer Laura Gibson, mariachi King said his agency has folk singer Edna Vazquez, the only a few months to get peoPORTLAND — An advertising campaign featuring Oregon musicians begins today to introduce hundreds of thousands of people to the health insurance marketplace that goes into operation this fall. The first wave of ads fea-
ple up to speed, and surveys show that many don't know much about the 2014 changes or Cover Oregon. Oregon's per-enrollee ad spending is comparable with counterparts in other states, he said. Cover O r egon's s t artup funding comes from about $300 million in federal grants, and will later be financed by an insurance tax. The marketplace goes live
County sheriff's officers say
The owner of the Rogue River Guest House in Gold Hill takes
a17-year-old girl is dead after she was hit by an Amtrak train north of Salem. KATU-TV reports the train was bound from Portland to Klamath Falls
pride in pouring guests his
on Monday afternoon when
homemade 2007 B ordeaux blend. But at 77, he's looking for s omeone to t ak e o ver h i s bushy vineyard, which in a good year can produce 100 cases of wine. "Someone with an interest
the crew spotted the young woman on the tracks. Deputies
in grapes could really care for
passengers wasdelayed a little
it," says Rowley, who is willing to sell his whole operation, including the bed and breakfast an d h i s w i n e making equipment. A real-estate flier listing the selling points of the $495,000 property notes it includes a historic Victorian home, commercial kitchen and " f u l ly landscaped grounds, which include active grapevines." For those thinking of some-
more than an hour.
thing b i gger, W y tcherley has dropped the price from $5 million to $3.5 million for the 61-acre O'Neill Vineyard, which abuts Troon Vineyard in Grants Pass. She says she's advertising i n w i n e pu b l ications that target, you guessed it, Californians.
State ad campaigntouts health marketplace The Associated Press
Train death —Marion
in October, when tax credits will be available to small businesses, as well as individuals
earning up to $45,900 a year or a family of four earning as much as $94,000.
say the engineer soundedthe train whistle and rang emergency bells. The victim was not
immediately identified pending notification of relatives. The train carrying more than 350
Guilty plea in darista murder —A neighbor and fellow church-goer has pleaded guilty to aggravated murder and related charges in the
October slaying of a 21-yearold Gresham barista. Jonathan Holt entered his pleas Monday in Circuit Court in Oregon City
and was sentenced to life in prison without parole in the death of Whitney Heichel. Police say Holt waited outside the young woman's apartment the morning of Oct. 16, 2012, then
talked her into giving him a ride on the way to her job at Star-
bucks. Investigators say he then ordered her at gunpoint to drive him to Rosyln Lake
in ClackamasCounty, where he sexually assaulted her and shot her. Holt addressed the court, saying, in his words, "I want to say that I'm sorry, but at the same time I know that doesn't mean anything." — From wire reports
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Hearingsplanned onproposed Columbia River coal terminal The Associated Press PORTLAND — Thousands of comments are expected to be received as Oregon regulators consider permits for a proposed terminal along the Columbia River to t r ansfer coal from trainsto barges for eventual shipment to Asia. The state Department of Environmental Quality plans hearings today on the proposed coal transfer terminal at the Port of Morrow near B oardman, w h e r e tr a i n s from Montana and Wyoming would t r a nsfer s h i pments to barges that would be sent downriver and loaded onto vessels bound for Asia, the East Oregonian reports. The agency plans hearings at Blue Mountain Community College in Hermiston and the Oregon Convention Center in Portland, from 8 a.m. to 8
p.m.
State Department of Environmental Quality s p okesman Greg Svelund said he expects at least 600 comments during the hearings and written comments numbering in thethousands. "As much work as it is, it's really good to see this many people coming out," he said. "It's something that's not been done before in Oregon on this scale." A mbre Energy, an A u s t ralian coal an d o i l s h a le company, hopes to ship 8.8 million metric tons of coal a
Kitzhaber had asked. The other projects are in Washingtonstate, at Longview and near Bellingham. Proponents such as Gary N eal, general m anager o f the Port of Morrow, say that project would create 25 to 30 high-paying full-time jobs at the port. Environmentalists and others said they're concerned about effects on public health, rural economies and the environment. "As Americans, we don't want to see absurdly cheap year. coal giving our competitors The state agency has issued an unfair advantage," said three draft permits. The U.S. Tova Woyciechowicz, an orArmy Corps of Engineers ganizer with t h e n o nprofit said last month it will review Oregon Rural Action, based the Boardman project and in La Grande. "As commutwo other proposed Northnity members, we don't want west coal export proposals in to breathe the 3 percent coal separateprocesses, instead of dust lost and cause problems jointly, as Oregon Gov. John to our lungs and more."
Attend one of our free seminars to learn about Medicare Advantage Plans starting as low as $19. Redmond Tuesday, Ju/y 23, 2:30pm at Black Bear Diner, 429 NW Cedar Avenue, Suite 107 541-241-6926 www. Medicare. PacificSource.com
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p
acjf jc$0urce Medicare
For accommodation of persons with special needs at sales meetings call 541-241-6926 or 800-735-2900 TTY.PacificSource Community Health Plans, Inc. is a health plan with a Medicare contract. A sales person will be present with information and applications. Youmust continue to pay your Medicare Part B premium. Limitations, copays and restrictions may apply. Premiummay change onJanuary 1of eachyear. Seating is limited so call todayto learnmore about our Medicare Advantage andMedicare Advantage Prescription DrugPlans, including HMOand PPOtypes of plans. YOOZ1 MRK1466 CMSFie landUse0909Z01Z
B4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 9, 20I3
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
AN IiYDEPENDENT NEwsPAPER
Beware uninten e conse uences o 'Pa it Forwar '
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ition. The idea is that students would go to college for
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the next 20-25 years.
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Here's one: Pity the programs that don't lead to high-paying jobs. If the fund gets repaid based on the graduate'sincome, you can be sure that programs such as literature and social-worker training will struggle for support from cash-strapped university administrations. Engineering and high finance, on the other hand, would be in l ine for d isproportionate investments. In takes only a cursory look at history to see a prime related example. When thefederal government made student and parent loans easy to get, it freed colleges and universities from normal market forces. Many analysts believe that's a major factor in the surge of college costs. It was a well-intentioned move to level the economic playing field, but it had unanticipated and severely damaging effects. Pay it Forward ducks the fundamental questions about whether higher education should cost what it does, and also which students benefit from going to college.
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free, and then pay for it with a percentage of their income for
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Oregon'shealth care liability may soon dwarf PERS debt
Another way to get kids into summerreading
K
Fditur in-Clnrf Editor ofE tetorials
RICHAHD CoE
dooI
explore the "Pay it Forward" concept for college tu-
Capstone's collection of electronic books on anything with Internet access, from a desktop or laptop computer to a tablet or a smartphone. It costs nothing, because the publishing company is allowing the Oregon Department of Education to use it free this summer. If local school districts pick up the program in the fall, they can expect to pay roughly $12 per student, according to The Oregonian newspaper. If your child lacks a library card and the way to get to the nearest librarytopick one up,MyON may be just the ticket. The Internet address for the program is www.myon.com. Click on Login, then use "Oregon Readers, Oregon Department of Education" as your school name, and the word "read" for both username and password. The site has more than 5,000 ebooks available, about 500 more than on the Deschutes Library System's website. The library's print collections for teens and young readers, meanwhile, tops160,600. In the end, it's the reading, not where books come from, that's important to kids in the summer. MyON adds a new source of books for kids to explore. Parents should encourage them to do so.
JHHH CosYA
•V
II
eeping kids reading over the summer months can be critical, educators say. It helps them go back to school in the fall ready to take up their studies close to where they left off. In fact, the average child falls back about 2.6 months in knowledge over the summer. That means that when school begins in the fall, many teachers must go back and reteach what kids learned the previous year from April until June. One proven way to cut information drain is to get kids reading over the summer. Thus the Deschutes Library System, as well as libraries in Crook and Jefferson counties, take part in the state's summer reading program, this year called Dig Into Reading. It is directed at children through age 11. In addition, the Deschutes system has a summer program aimed specifically at teens. Youngsters across the state have a new tool this year, as well. Called MyON, it's the creation of Capstone Publishing, which publishes books for schoolchildren and provideseducational services for teachers. MyON allows children to use
Chairaomnn PalllSIlter
I'()LITICJIC LHIIgI,
he Oregon Legislature has unanimously decided to
The costs and risks of the concept are so massive that the move can only be understood as a sign of our widespread desperation about college costs and debt. In Oregon, we also have the pressures of the governor's 40-40-20 plan, which sets the highest value on awarding more degrees, assuming that 80 percent of high school graduates need some sort of advanced degree or certificate. House Bill 3472, which the governor is expected to sign, instructs the state's Higher Education Coordinating Commission to design a pilot project to test the Pay it Forward idea, which originated at a Seattle nonprofit and was brought to the Legislature by Portland State University students. Although the approach is supposed to be self-sustaining eventually, the cost to get there is estimated to exceed $9 billion. That's shocking enough by itself, but the bigger danger is unintended consequences, about which we can make only limited guesses.
BETSYMccooc Goaoott BIAEE
health care transformation plan. The Oregon plan establishes Coordinating C a r e O r g a nizations (CCO), a network of providers that Gov. John Kitzhaber's will be paid a lump sum to overOregon Healthcare see carefor a set of the Medicaid Transformation, passed population. The Obama administration gave Oregon $2 billion to by the 2011 Legislature, implement the CCO plan. Some will add 325,000 to Oregon health care professionals 650,000 people to are concerned about the ability of the CCOs to keep costs down Medicaid and spend an and about Medicaid's long-term additional $438 million solvency. in state dollars by 2020. Lack of tort reform and less federal funding may also hurt costs In the end, about one of containment. Health care cost will every four Oregonians increase, and Kitzhaber's plan will be on the $2 billion hopes to contain those cost increases. However,to get his plan passed Oregon Health Plan. last session, Kitzhaber stated he would provide tort reform, which many believe is essential to hold i ng the M e dicaid program. H e down health care costs. A commitstates the real problem is that Med- tee worked during the interim, and icaid is already approaching finan- in 2013 produced SB 483-A, which cial insolvency. Perry wants the calls for "voluntary mediation" as White House to give states block the tort reform promise. I was the lone "Non vote in the House on SB grants and the states will expand coverage. Arkansas, with a Repub- 483-A because I do not believe "vollican Legislature and a Democratic untary mediation" is tort reform. governor, is d i v ided o n a cceptThe taxpayers' liability to maining Obamacare. Gov. Mike Beebe tain the expanded Medicaid costwants to accept the mandate, but without tort reform and if the Fedthe Legislature has not committed. eral financial support of Medicaid They have requested the ability to fails or is reduced — will increase lower the mandate to 100 percent of significantly. The $16 billion PERS the poverty level. liability may be dwarfed by the OrOregon is the leader of states ac- egon Health Plan liability. cepting the Obamacare mandate — State Rep. Gene Whisnant, and wil l i m p lement K i tzhaber's R-Sunriver, represents District 53.
By Gene Whisnant regon's Public E m ployees Retirement System reform and its financial impact were a major focus of the 2013 legislative session. However, Oregon faces a larger financial crisis than the unfunded liability of PERS. Gov. John Kitzhaber's Oregon Healthcare Transformation, passed by the 2011 Legislature, will add 325,000 to650,000 people to Medicaid and spend an additional $438 million in state dollars by 2020. In the end, about one of every four Oregonians will be on the $2 billion Oregon Health Plan. To understand this pending crisis, one needs tounderstand President Obama's Affordable Care Act and the Supreme Court's 2012 ruling on Obamacare. Dylan Scott reported in the December 2012 issue of Governing m a g azine, "Obamacare mandates states to increase eligibility for their Medicaid programs to 138 percent of the federal poverty level (a little less than $32,000 for family of four). If states do not increasecoverage, the federal government could withhold its matching funds to the state, which is at least 50 percent of the states' Medicaid funding." The Supreme Court ruled that federal funding cannot be withheld if a state opts out of the Obama expansion. Scott's article d iscussed how three states are moving forward on the Obamacare mandate.Texas Gov. Rick Perry is against expand-
IN MY VIEW
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limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.
ATBIT cell tower would ruin Alfalfa subdivision's views By DavId Warren
H
our r ecent e d itorial One monopole won't ruin the view in Alfalfa" completely missed the point. Contrary to your inference that Alfalfa is full of N I MBY l uddites solely concerned with preserving their views, the issue is not anti-cell towers but responsible placement of cell towers and responsible corporate citizenship. Had you taken the time to visit Alfalfa and the proposed site or actually read through the information gathered by your reporter Shelby King, you would know that there exists a residential subdivision in Alfalfa. That is w h ere American Tower/AT&T are t r y ing t o l o cate the tower — not in the "wide-open spaces ofAlfalfa." The proposed location is virtually in the f r ont yard, next door to two of our neighbors. Our resi-
Y
dential subdivision i s p r o t ected by the same rules and regulations as those in Bend, which prevent use of property for commercial or industrial purposes and ban any structure taller than 30 feet. Your disclosure that The Bulletin site is also the home of an AT&T tower is also misleading. Your site is zoned for commercial or i n dustrial use — not residential. AT8ET is seeking a conditionaluse permit to locate its tower in our residentially zoned neighborhood because it is the cheapest route possible, not because "the proposed site is the only one available to address it." At the initial hearing, AT8ET's own engineer stated, "they could have widened the coverage zone, but they had to tr y t h e cheapest location first." AT8 T s u pposedly wants to be a good neighbor, but it has continued to ignore other appropriately zoned sites in the area
IN MY VIEW in which a 100-foot monopole is allowed. Those include BLM and state land, a utilities substation and commercially zoned properties. The only significant service gap in the area is AT8ET's. Verizon and other providershave more than adequate coverage in the area without resorting to placing 100-foot monopole towers in residential subdivisions in the area. AT&T contends that it has the right to compete with other providers based upon the 1996 Telecommunications Act. If that is so, then they should have to follow the same rules and regulations as the other providers in the design and placement of its towers. If its technology is more limited than its competitors, it's up to them to engineer solutions that meet the requirements of the
county code and respect residential subdivision regulations and screening criteria. Y our assertion t hat " a s i n g le monopole — more like a flagpole than a tower — will all but disappear into the vista. It won't ru in the view" is myopic and false. It will certainly ruin the view for the residents who live next door to it, around it and the neighbors who drive by it every day — because it will be in a r e sidential neighborhood. It's also myopic because there is no such thing as a single monopole (your oxymoron) because once you allow one tower you are setting a precedent for more towers in similar circumstances. You are correct that "mountain views and open vistas are important to us in Central Oregon," and there are areas in Deschutes County like Alfalfa that are more challenging at p r o viding v egetation,
topography, etc. for screening. But those conditions are m ade even more challenging by trying to place a 100-foot cell tower in a residential subdivision. Our n e ighbors next to the proposed tower are not just concerned about their view; they are concerned about their property values, the health and safety of themselves, their children and their neighborhood. Commissioner Tammy Baney is a bsolutely correct about how i m portant it is to interpret the code's language about the v i stas, especially when it applies to areas like Alfalfa, because it's not about none monopole." I sincerely think t h a t i f y o u r neighbor was going to allow AT&T to locate a 100-foot cell tower in a front yard in your residential neighborhood, you too would cry f o ul and suddenly turn into a NIMBY. — David Warren lives in Bend
TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BITUARIES
"DNA, especially Rapid DNA once it evolves to where it needs to be, is
going to be very
RaymondRodriguez documented 1930s mass deportations sealed off the small public park and herded 400terrified men LOS ANGELES — R ay - a n d women into waiting vans. mond Rodriguez was 10 years T h e success of the raid galvaold in 1936 when his immi- n i z e d authorities in other logrant father walked out of the c a l ities across the country. family's farmhouse in Lon g By 194 0 , R o driguez and Beach, Calif., and returned to B a l derrama found, more than Mexico, never to see his wife I mi l l ion people of Mexican and children again. descent had been de-
important to law enforcement and crime solving. Once it fully develops,
it's going to be as monumentalas when we started using fingerprints."
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Snoo Wilson, 64: Br i tish playwright and director whose surreal work slyly critiqued social injustices and conventions. Died Wednesday. F.D. Reeve, 84:The father of actor Christopher Reeve. Pub-
lished more than 30 books, including translations of Russian authors. One book chronicled a trip to the Soviet Union in 1962 with Robert Frost on a good-will mission requested by President John F. Kennedy. Died June 28 in Lebanon, N.H. — From wire reports
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will
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guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They maybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information
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Phone: 541-617-7825 Mail:Obituaries Email: obits©bendbulletin.com P.O. Box 6020 Fax: 541-322-7254 Bend, OR 97708
State's adjutant general to retire For the Democrat-Herald and Gazette-Times SALEM — Maj. Gen. Raymond F. Rees, the adjutant general of Oregon, has notified Gov. John Kitzhaber of his plan to retire on July 31, following a 47-year career in the military. His career included 17 years as Oregon's
adjutant general under four differentOregon governors. A retirement ceremony for Rees is scheduled for noon Saturday at the Oregon State Capitol in Salem. The event w ill i n clude m i l itary d i s plays, booths and a Howitzer salute. As Oregon's adjutant gen-
eral, Rees directed, managed, and supervised the administration, d i s c ipline, o rganization, training a n d mobilization of the Oregon National Guard, the Oregon State Defense Force, Joint Force Headquarters, and the
Office of Oregon Emergency Management.
Chimp
Los Angeles Times
" repatriation" to d e forcesthat had driven his father away, an efscribe their a ctions, fort that reached fruition i n bu tt h e r esearchersfoundthat "Decade ofBetrayal," a social 60 percent ofthe expelledwere history of the 1930s focusing U . S .citizens. onanestimated I millionMexMost o f the deportees were icans and Mexican Americans n o t w e l comed i n Me x i co. unjustly deported or scared T h e y were criticized for their into leaving their homes in the A m e rican ways, for not fightUnited States by federal and lo- i n g to remain in the U.S., and cal officials seeking remedies f o r being a burden on Mexico's forthe Great Depression. economy. "Americans, reeling f ro m The a u thors included in their the economic disorientation of e s t imate thousands of legal the depression,sought a con- residents and U.S. citizens who venient scapegoat. They found l e ft the U.S. on their own. it in the Mexican community," Rodr i g uez considered his faRodriguez and co-author Fran- t h er one of them. "He figured: 'If they don't c isco Balderrama wrote i n the 1995 book, which sparked w a n t me, I'm going back,'" the legislative hearings and for- s c h olar told the Los Angeles mal apologies from the state T i m es in 2001. of California and Los Angeles Hi s p a rents had immigrated County officials. around 1918 and became tenRodriguez,87,aformerLong a n t f a rmers in Long Beach. Beach City College administra- "We had no money, but we had tor and columnist for the Long f o od, so we always had guests Beach Press-Telegram, who for dinner," Rodriguez recalled believed "the greatest tragedy i n 2003 in the Sacramento Bee. of all" was public ignorance W he nh is father announced of the deportations, died June h e was leaving, his mother re24 at his Long Beach home. f u sed to go, saying, "I have five The cause was believed to be a k i ds born here — we're not goheart attack, said his daughter, i n g to Mexico." C.J.Crockett. The older children plowed "It is no exaggeration to say t h e fields, but hard times worsthat without the scholarly work e n ed and the family depended by Ray and Francisco, no one o n w elfare for awhile. Rodribut a handful of individuals g u ez, who was born in Long would everknow about the il- Beach on March 26, 1926, legal deportations of Mexican d r o pped out of h igh school Americans in the 1930s," said h i s senior year and joined the former California state Sen. N a vy, serving in the Pacific Joseph Dunn, who sponsored d u r i ngthewar. 2005legislationthatapologized L ate r , he went to college on for the state's part in "funda- t h e GI Bill, earning a general mental violations" of the de- e d ucation degree from Long portees' constitutional rights. Bea c h City College in 1951 beLast year the Los Angeles f o r eenteringLongBeachState, County Board of Supervisors w h ere he received a bachelor's apologized for the county's role i n e l ementary education in in the roundups. 1953 and a master's in educaThe deportations began a ti o n a d ministrationin 1957. In decade beforethe World War 1962 he earned a master's in II internment of 110,000 Japa- U .S. history from the Univernese and Japanese Americans s i t y of Southern California. onthe West Coast. Federal and He ta u ght elementary and local authorities rounded up s e condary students in the Long Mexican immigrants and their B e ach Unified School District families at dance halls, mar- f o r almost a dozen years, until kets, hospitals, theaters and 1 9 69. Over the next two deparks, loading them onto vans c a des he taught history and and trains that dumped them p o l itical science at Long Beach on Mexican soil. City College and also served One of the most notorious a s its affirmative action officer raids occurred in 1931 at La a n d d eanofpersonnel,retiring Placita, a popular gathering i n 1 988. spot for immigrants outside In ad d i tiontohisdaughter,he Olvera Street in Los Angeles. i s s urvivedbyhiswife,Almira; A team of Immigration and s o n C r aig Smith;sistersAngeNaturalization Service agents l i n a Ayala and Mary Johnston; armed with guns and batons a n d f i vegrandchildren.
OREGON NEWS
— Jeff Sale, Bend police chief
By Elaine Woo
The sonwouldspend FFATUREP po rted. G overnment decadespondering the pg p UARy of f i cials used the term
BS
DNA Continued from B1 "It's not an a dvantage per se, but it's definitely an additional tool for us to find out who's responsible." With Lancaster'srock crusher case, a prior crime by the perpetrator led to his DNA b e ing e ntered into the local, state and federal DN A d a t abases. A fter p u lling t h e D N A from the evidence found at the scene and entering it into the databases, he said he was able to open an investigation with probable cause. "It turned out that he had no business being around the c o n struction s i t e," Lancaster said. "It gave us a reason to go back and talk to the person to find out why they were there, which led to his arrest." Bend Police Chief Jeff Sale is excited about the future of DNA testing in Bend. Rapid DNA, a private company attempting to create a DNA analysis machine for on-siteuse, could offer law e nforcement the option of a nalyzing DNA in as little as 90 minutes. Although still w orking t h r o ugh l e g al h urdles associated w i t h privacy issues, Sale believes Rapid DNA c ould strongly impact the l aw enforcement field. "It would be an absolute
game-changer," Sale said. Sale said Bend police are collaborating with Oregon State Police in a pi-
Continued from B1 As the newest member of the chimp sanctuary, C.J. spent about the first week in
a single-occupancy cage near theothersevenchimps already residing on the property. This allowed her time to acclimate to her new surroundings. "She did really well the first time she was around the other chimps," O'Donnell said. "She met Emma first, and they just ran together and hugged immediately. She and Jackson also became instant friends." C.J. spent most of her life in captivity, performing at swap meets for her former owners. Even so, O'Donnell said she often displays more "chimplike" traits than the other chimps at the sanctuary. "She hadn't been socialized at all, so it was odd to see her display behaviors very much
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
C.J. sits in the shade in her outdoor enclosure Wednesday afternoon at Chimps lnc. C.J. "has definitely found her place within the group," said sanctuary director Marla O'Donnell. like chimps in the wild," she said. " Immediately w h e n she met Topo (a male chimp in his mid-40s) she let him know she submitted to him.
She can be a diva at times, too, but has definitely found her place within the group."
Balloonist
it was unclear if it occurred during the first or second
Continued from B1 After landing in the field near Post, a remote unincorporated Crook County community, a system designed to release 100 of the balloons and keep the lawn chairs on the ground malfunctioned. Unmanned, the lawn chairs took off again. They were in the air for about an hour and traveled about five miles before coming back down. Inspectors with the FAA noted that one of the lawn chairs suffered a bent leg, although
landing.
lina. The flights have earned Couch national and international media coverage, and he has made appearances on "Good Morning America" and "The Tonight Show." Last year Couch talked about the possibility of doing a flight in Iraq, but for now his l awn-chair b a llooning plans are on hold because of the costs involved. He said he does want to fly again. "We are waiting for t he price of helium to come down a bit," he said.
Couch said FAA officials i nterviewed him a f ter t h e flight, as they have during his past adventures in the air. "They've interviewed me every year," he said. "(They) want to make sure I'm legal." The flight last year was the fifthsince 2006 for Couch as a lawn-chair balloonist, he said. The first time he made it to near Brothers, the second to near Baker City, the third to near Cambridge, Idaho, and the fourth to near Pau-
— Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletin.com
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
lot program called "High T hroughput Pr op e r t y DNA Testing," which will process DN A o b t a ined at property crime scenes in 30 days. The t y pical DNA sample, Sale said, takes several months to a year depending on a lab's workload. "It streamlines the process of getting DNA samplesfrom property cases to the Portland lab," he said. Oregon S t at e P o l i ce forensics division supervisor Brian Ostrom said Bend Police are one of the three agencies to pilot the system, along with Salem Police and the Washington County Sheriff's O f f ice. Bend was picked after recommendations by the Oregon District Attorneys Association and Oregon Chief of Police Association. "It's going to be exciting to see the impact that this program has on property crime in B end," Ostrom said. He added that the p rogram t y p ically g e t s a "hit" 50 percent of the time, connecting the DNA to either an unsolved case or an offender. The process is sped up, he said, because the state policeforensicsdepartment is training police officers in the field to streamline the process. Ostrom said officers will be trained to swab evidence for DNA, a task traditionally performed by the forensics team. Also, the samples will be preorganized into standardized collection kits and will be analyzed by robots, running 80 swabs at a time. The program is still in the beta-testing phase, Ostrom said. State Police have worked on it for the past year and expect to continue working on it for the next six months to a year before it goes statewide. "DNA, especially Rapid DNA once it e volves to where it needs to be, is going to be very important to law enforcement and crime solving," Sale said. "Once it fully develops, it's going to be as monumental as when we started using fingerprints." — Reporter: 541-383-0348, bandersen@bendbulleti n.com
E nroll toda y VYi thout Regret!
Top 6 Reasons Why Families Choose Morning Star Christian School 1. Students develop a love for learning through small class sizes and one-on-one instruction. 2. We engage our students in digital classrooms from 5th through 8th grade with e-curriculum and a I to I laptop initiative. 3. An enriched education is provided with Spanish, German, music, art and electives including snowboarding, xc skiing, kayaking, rock climbing, mountain biking, archery, swim team, skateboarding, cooking, finance, and farming. 4. Students learn to engage their community through relevant field trips and impactful service projects, such as orphans in Rwanda, seniors at Aspen Ridge, and the homeless at The Bethlehem Inn. 5. We teach to the whole child through an innovative approach of instruction in academics, spirituality and creativity. 6. We are at the forefront of implementing innovative STEM curriculum in our classroom from Kindergarten through Middle School. We provide Bus Service, Early drop Off — 7:30, Late Pick Up - 5:30 • We use current research based best practices to instruct students according to their many different learning styles. • We use efficient interactive SMART boards to keep our instruction relevant, flexible and excellent. • Teachers partner with parents to develop passionate learners in a safe and friendly classroom environment.
Itf STAIR p ORMSL WWW.mSCSbend.Org• 541.382.5091 • 19741 Baker ROad
B6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
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Cold
Sunsettoday.... 8 49 p.m First Full L a st Sunrise tomorrow .. 5:32 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 8:49 p.m Moonrise today.... 7:06 a.m Moonsettoday .... 9:24 p.m July15 July22 July29 •
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:48 a.m...... 8:14 p.m. Venus......7:49 a.m.....10:20 p.m. Mars.......3:56 a.m...... 7:27 p.m. Jupiter......4 23 a.m...... 7:45 p.m. Satum......2:42 p.m...... 1:26 a.m. Uranus....12:19 a.m.....12:57 p.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 86/50 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........94m1970 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Record low......... 29 in 1981 Average month todate... 0.1 5"
Average high.............. 80 Year to date............ 3.1 9" Averagelow ..............46 A verageyeartodate..... 5.87" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.06 Record 24 hours ...0.35 in1933 *Melted liquid equivalent
FIRE INDEX
Yesterday Tuesday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W
WATER REPORT
W e d. Bend,westof Hwy97....High sisters......................... Mod The following was compiled by the Central H i /Lo/WBend,eastofHwy.97....Mod. LaPine..............................High Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as Redmond/Madras....Mod.
Prinevine........................Mod
Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme
Astoria ...... MM/MM/NA.....71/57/s.....69/55/pc Baker City......83/53/0.00.....91/56/s......92/53/s Brookings......62/49/0.00.....66/56/s.....64/54lpc Burns..........90/53/0.00.....93/53/s......92/52/s Eugene...... MM/MM/NA.....88/54/s......88/52/s Klamath Falls .. 88/50/0 00 ....91/51/s ... 90/50/s Lakeview...... 90/43/0.00 ....90/55/s..... 89/54/s La Pine.........88/41/NA.....90/45/s......88/45/s Medford.......96/59/0.00.....98/63/s......96/61/s Newport..... MM/MM/NA.....67/53/s.....66/52/pc North Bend......75/55/NA.....69/57/s.....68/56/pc Ontario........85/64/0.00.....97/66/s.....101/69/s Pendleton......90/61/0.00.....96/59/s......95/59/s Portland ..... MM/MM/NA.....85/59/s......83/56/s Prineville.......86/49/0.00.....93/53/s......91/52/s Redmond.......88/44/0.00.....93/49/s......92/52/s Roseburg.......90/56/0.00.....92/58/s.....89/56lpc Salem ...... MM/MM/NA ....87/56/s ... 86/53/s Sisters.........90/43/0.00.....88/45/s......86/48/s The DaRes......88/60/0.00.....93/62/s......90/61/s
a service to irrigators and sportsmen.
Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 31,509...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 114,201..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 74,902.... . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 22,177......47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 121,544.....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 ...... . 390 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,720 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ...... . 108 LOW MEDIUM HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 82.4 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 131 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 2,151 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res..... . . . . . 10 Crooked RiverBelow Prinevige Res..... . . . . 218 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 17.9 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 82.4 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 LOWI or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
To report a wildfire, call 911
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 9
IPOLLEN COUNT
Qy MED Qi IU
g% g
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
o www m Yesterday's extremes
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 5:32 a.m Moon phases
PLANET WATCH
Legend Wweather,Pcpprecipitation, s sun,pcpartial clouds,c clouds,h haze, shshowers,r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
• 3.03
HIGH LOW
80 49
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
9V56
Florence•
HIGH LOW
OREGON CITIES
Baker Ci
Mostly sunny.
90 54
Sunny and hot,
84/52
Mostly sunny.
HIGH LOW
•
EAST
91/54
94/56
Aibany~
0'eP
La Grande• 9olse Union
CamP 15/51
87/56•
rt
•
Dal l ee 93160 &xkrlingtun 93/62 • 91/60 • oWasco
• 85/56
Salem
•
98/59
The Biggs
59 '
HillsboroPOrt and ~~ 85/59 McMinnville I
UmatiHa
Hood
Seasideo Cannon Beach
75/55
Mostly sunny.
BEND ALMANAC
As t oria
Tigamook•
Mostly sunny.
3
•g4
ge
4 +4
4o 44 4
! 4 4 4
36
er xy xv
x 4
W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain
Flurries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. 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 ......97/75/0.00..98/76/pc. 98/76/pc GrandRapids....80/72/0.00..,90/69/t...85/62/t RapidCity.......86/64/018..83/62/pc.82/65/pc Savannah.......89/73/0 00..90I75/pc...90I74/t Akron ..........84/64/0.00...86/70/t...88/68/t GreenBay.......82/70/1.07...82/67/t. 81/60/pc Reno...........96/62/0.00...95/63/s.. 93/65/s Seattle..........75/57/0.00...82/60/s.. 75/57/s Albany..........85/73/000...87/69/t...88/71/t Greensboro......86/70/046...88/71/t. 88/71/pc Richmond.......87/73/0.18... 92/73/t...93/73/t Sioux Falls.......86/64/0.00... 88/64/t .. 80/61/s Albuquerque.....96/73/000..96/72/pc. 94/71/pc Harusburg.......84/68/0.32...87/72/t. 89/72/pc Rochester, NY....85/70/0.18... 83/72/t...87/68/t Spokane........81/63/0.00... 92/58/s .. 90/59/s Anchorage ......59/50/0 00..65/52/sh. 67/52/pc Hartford,CT.....90/74/0.00...88/69/t. 88/73/pc Sacramento......94/56/0.00..100/61/s .. 93/63/s Springfield, MO ..92/72/0.00..95/73/pc...92J71/t Atlanta .........79/70/0.14... 86/73/t...87/72/t Helena..........80/61/0.00...85/56/s.. 92/61/s St. Louis.........93/77/000.. 94/76/pc...92/70/t Tampa..........93/77/0 00... 90/76/t...90/76/t Atlantic City.....88/70/0.38...86/73/t...88/74/t Honolulu........86/74/0.00...90/78/s. 90/77/pcSalt Lake City L ..M/70/000...98/70/s. 101/75/s Tucson.........103/84/000 101/78/pc101l77/pc Austin..........91/75/002..97/75/pc. 99/76lpc Houston ........89/73/0.52..95/78/pc...96/76/t SanAntonio.....89/77/000..93/74lpc.95775/pc Tulsa...........94/73/000100/78/pclcg/74lpc Baltimore .......86/71/0.01 ... 91/70/t...92/76/t Huntsville .......87/73/0.00...88/73/t...91/72/t SanDiego.......77/67/000 ..78/68/pc. 76/68/pc Washington, DC..87/73/004... 90/73/t...92/76/t Bigings .........90/61/0.38...84/SIs.. 95/64/s Indianapolis.....85/69/0.00...88/73/t...86/69/t SanFrancisco....70/56/000... 71/55/s.. 70/55/s Wichita........100/76/000..103/77/t. 97/74/pc Birmingham .. 86/72/035... 8I74/t. 89/74/t Jackson, MS.... 93/72/0.01 . 92/74/t .. 93/73/t SanJose........78I55/000 .. 84/58/s 80/58/s Yakima.........93/66/000 94/58/s .. 94/59/s Bismarck........87/61/000 ..77/54/pc. 81/62/pc Jacksonvile......89/71/000..90/70/pc...92/71/t SantaFe........89/64/000..89/65/pc. 86/63/pc Yuma..........110/83/000 106/82/pcI06/82/pc Boise...........84/66/000...98/63/s .. 99/60/s Juneau..........58/54/0.56 ..60/49lsh. 59/50/sh INTERNATIONAL Boston..........85/68/000... 80/69/t...86/73/t Kansas City......92/74/0 00 ..96/75/pc. 89/68/pc Budgeport,CT....89/74/0.00... 85/71/t...87/73/t Lansing.........80/70/0.14...88/70/t...85/62/t Amsterdam......75/59/000 .. 78/55/s 64/52/pc Mecca.........115/91/000 ..113/88/c. 109/84/c Buffalo.........80/71/000... 76/73/t...81/67/t Las Vegas......107/83/000 ..108/87/s109/88/pc Athens..........96/77/000...96/74/s .. 86/72/s Mexico City .....73/55/015... 75/55/t...71/54/1 BurlingtonVT....81/68/005... 84/67/t...88/70/t Lexington.......86/65/0 00..87/72/pc...86/71/t Auckland........57/50/000..58/48/sh.57/47lsh Montreal........77/63/037..84I72/pc. 81/68/sh Caribou,ME.....77/58/0.00...76/60/c...76/65/t Lincoln..........90/75/0.00...97/70lt. 86/66/pc Baghdad........87/77/0.00 ..115/90/s. 115/91/s Moscow........77/61/0.00... 80/58/c. 75/59/pc CharlestonSC...88/72/000..88/75/pc...88/75/t LittleRock.......93/74/000..96/75/pc.95/75/pc Bangkok........88/79/0.00... 88/76/t...88/77/t Nairobi.........77/48/0.00 ..74/52/pc.. 75/50/s Charlotte........84/72/007... 88/72/t...88/72/t LosAngeles......75/64/0 00... 81/66/s .. 77/63/s Beiyng..........81/73/317..81/68/pc.81/72/sh Nassau.........88/79/000..87/78/pc...84/79/t Chattanooga.....87/72/000 ..87/72/pc...86/69/t Louisville........89/69/0 00..91/75/pc...89/73/t Beirut..........82/77/000...84/70/s .. 84/72/s New Delhi.......95/81/000 ..105/87/t. 104/85/t Cheyenne.......89/56/0.00 ..90/59/pc. 86/60/pc Madison,Wl.....87/72/0.53... 83/69/t .. 79/60/s Berlin...........79/55/000...86/58/s. 79/57/pc Osaka..........93/81/000..87/77/pc.89/74lpc Chicago...... 85/70/0 50... 90/75/t. 85/67/pc Memphis....... 90/74/0 00 93/75/pc. 94/75/pc Bogota .........68/46/0.00... 70/50/t...70/50/t Oslo............70/52/0.00...76/50lr.72/51/pc Cincinnati.......87/64/0.00... 88/73/t...88/71/t Miami..........89/80/0.00... 88/78/t...90/79/t Budapest........84/64/000 ..89/64/pc. 92770/pc Ottawa.........79/63/048 ..86768/sh...79/61/t Cleveland.......86/66/001 ... 84/71/t...86/66/t Milwaukee......87/73/016... 79/68/t. 77/64/pc BuenosAires.....55/34l000 ..56/51/sh.. 62/59/c Paris............82/63/000... 89/60/s.. 80/52/s ColoradoSpnngs.94/61/001 ..91/62/pc. 86/63/pc Miuneapolis.....89/66/000...89/64/t. 80/62/pc Cabo580Lucas ..79/75/000..91/77lpc. 90/75/pc Riode Janeiro....81/59/000 ..69/62/sh.72/60/pc Columbia,MO...90/75/000..94/73/pc...90/68/t Nashvige........89/71/0 00..91/73/pc...91/72/t Cairo...........90/72/0.00...97/70/s .. 99/69/s Rome...........84/64/0.00..84/70/pc.. 85/70/s Columbia,SC....88/74/024... 90/72/t...91/73/t New Orleans.....88/75/045 ..90/78/pc...91/77/t Calgary.........59I54/0.11... 77/57/s.. 75/57/s Santiago........48/39/0.00... 55/52/c.. 53/49/c Columbus, GA....87/71/0.25... 90/74/t. 90/73/pc New York.......89/73/0.00... 88/72/t...90/76/t Cancun.........86I77/0.00... 88I78/t...86/78/t Sao Paulo.......64/59/0.00... 64/56/c. 70/55/pc Columbus, OH....81/64/085...87/72/t...86/70/t Newark, Nl......91/73/000...89/71/t...91/75lt Dublin..........73/50/000..75/56/pc..69/58/c Sapporo ........92/68/000..81/64/sh.81/67/sh Concord, NH.....83/66/0.31... 83/65/t...83/69/t Norfolk, VA......87/76/0.00... 9U74lt...91/74/t Edinburgh.......70/54/000 ..80/54/pc .. 69/53/c Seoul...........79/73/000 .. 82/71/sh. 81/74/sh CorpusChristi....94/78/000..91/78/pc...89/78/t OklahomaCity...96/72/000..97/76/pc. lgll75/s Geneva.........82/59/000..83/62/pc. 75/58/sh Shanghai........99/82/000...89/78/c. 89/77/pc DagasFtWorth...96/78/0.00..98/78/pc.99/78/pc Omaha.........91/76/0.00...95/70/t. 84/65/pc Harare..........70/41/000... 66/44/5. 64/46/pc Singapore.......90/82/000... 90/79/t...90/79/t Dayton .........84/70/005... 87/72/t...86/70/t Orlando.........91/76/0 00 ..92/72/pc...92/74/t HongKong......88/82/008... 85/78/t. 85/80/pc Stockholm.......70/54/000 ..81/58/pc. 66/52/sh Denver....... 95/64/000 ..92/67/pc.88/66/pc PalmSprings....114/81/0.00..111/84/s110/84/pc Istanbul.........90/73/000 ..90/74/pc. 82772/pc Sydney..........64/45/000...65/45/c. 58/49/pc DesMoines......88/77/0.00... 93/71/t. 84/62/pc Peoria..........86/73/0.37... 89/72/t...86/65/t lerusalem.......94/70/0.00...83/65/s ..82/67ls Taipei...........95/77/0.00 ..89/79/pc. 88/78/pc Detroit..........83/69/0.36... 85/75/t...88/66/t Philadelphia.....87/74/0.03... 88/73/t...92/76/t Johannesburg....69/45/0.00... 66/40/s ..65/44ls Tel Aviv.........86/75/0.00... 88/70/s .. 89772ls Duluth..........78/53/000...73/58/t. 75/57/pc Phoeuix........113/91/0.00110/88/pc110/89/pc Lima...........63/59/0.00...72/60/s ..70/60ls Tokyo...........93/75/0.00...8I75/c. 88/75/sh El Paso..........97/79/0.00 ..100/76/s .. 99/77/s Pittsburgh.......83/64/0.00... 84/70/t...86/68/t Lisbon..........95/77/000.. 95/65/s 83/59/s Toronto.........82/68/075 84/70/t.. 82/61/t Fairbanks........64/51/000 ..67/51/sh. 69/50/sh Portland,ME.....74/66/0.15... 77/63/t...76/68/t London.........79I59/0.00... 83/54/s.77/48/pc Vancouver.......70/59/0.00.. 73/61/pc. 73/55/sh Fargo...........88/58/000 ..82/58/pc .. 82/59/s Providence......91/75/0 00... 86/70/t...88/73/t Madrid ........100/68/000 102/66/sh. 97/66/pc Vienna..........79/61/000 ..82/63/pc.84/61/pc Flagstaff........88/51/000...85/57/s.84/59/pc Raleigh.........90/73/0.00... 90/72/t...90/73/t Manila..........91/79/000... 93I79/t. 91/76/pc Warsaw.........79/59/000...84/58/s.. 83/59/s
OREGON NEWS
I(eywil li e re uge ishit har in I(lamath Basin'swater wars Scott Learn The Oregonian
STATE LINE ROAD — Normally, the honks and calls of thousands of ducks, grebes and egrets clustering at the Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge make it hard to talk over the racket. But conversation is easy this summer. The only sounds at the bird-watching deck come from trucks on the distant highway and a few twittering songbirds. The 54,000-acre refuge at the Oregon-California border hasn't had water delivered since March. The canals that supply it are empty. And the marshes for waterfowl traveling the Pacific Flyway have largely dried up, marking the earliest dry date in 70 years. In the Klamath Basin, the drought-year casualty reports typically focus o n f a r mers, ranchers, tribes or salmon and suckers on the endangered species list. uYou have absolutely carved out the heart of the Pacific Flyway when you dry up the Klamath refuge," says Cole, who stresses that he's speaking as an individual, not for the Fish and Wildlife Service. The basin once teemed with wetlands. But the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation's 1905 project built canals and dams, draining lakes, ponds and marshes to produce 210,000 acres of farmland. Today, about a fifth of the original wetlands remain. The Lower K l amath, the nation's first waterfowl refuge and one of six in the basin, is a powerhouse for mating and migration in good years. In 2003 and 2004, it hosted the most surviving duck hatchlings in the basin, by far, and a third of its non-game waterbirds. It's also the most challenged for waterin dry years — the statedeclared a "drought emergencyn for Klamath County in ApriL The refuge stands behind endangered fish and agriculture for water from Up-
Governor, legislators create task force The governor and members ofOregon'scongressional delegation have created a task force to find solutions to the water problems of the Klamath Basin.
Democratic Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley,
Republican Rep.Greg Walden andDemocratic Gov. John Kitzhaber an-
nouncedit Monday. They say it will have more than 20people representing Oregonand California state agencies, Indian tribes, farmers and ranch-
ers, conservation groups, salmon fishermenandelectric power producers. — The Associated Press
per Klamath Lake. As a result, its water supply varies widely. In 2010, it got 3,700 acre-feet; in 2012, 24,000. Cole figures it needs 95,000 a year to run at full capacity. Adding to the problem: Rising electricity costs have cut off much of the water pumped from the nearby Tule Lake
NAPA HfroH DESERTAUTO SUPPLY
0
would provide far more water for the refuges, particularly in dry years like this one. It would put the refuges on par with agriculture for water, and give them 20 percent of farm leaserevenues forconservation work. B ut authorization of d am removal and of the restoration agreement, with a $500 federal million price tag, has gone nowhere in Congress. Some environmental groups want water diverted from the thousands of acresof leased farmland in the refuges. Cole sees hope in recent water rights decisions bythe state of Oregon. The refuges hold low-priority water rights, but the decisions put The Klamath Tribes first in line, giving them more power to push for a balanced approach. Jeff Mitchell, lead negotiator for the Oregon-based tribes, says the restoration agreement, while imperfect, offers the best
xlox oo o ' ' ll
approach.
"We're certainly attached to that land, and we always will be,u he says. "We want to make sure the resources down there are protected." This year, the refuges are Unlikely to receive much water, if any, Oregon officials say. Calirefuge. fornia-based Klamath River The refuge doesn't have any tribes are worried about having endangered species. Federal enough water for salmon. Reclaw, Cole says, forces the gov- lamation project farmers are ernment to concentrate on the also taking a hit. basin's listed species, coastal The project'sfederal mancoho and shortnose and Lost agers expect to deliver about River suckers. 340,000 acre-feet o f w a t er On the viewing deck, he — about 110 billion gallons points to dry marshes that run — from Upper Klamath Lake to the horizon. uWe focused to farms this irrigation season, all our conservation activities 20 percent below the long-term in the basin in a very narrow, average. Cole's hoping for water this single-species sort of way,u he says. "This is an example of fall to support migrating birds what happens." — 45,000-acre feet beginning The Klamath Basin Restora- in September would do it. As tion Agreement, signed in 2008 summer wears on, he's worby irrigators, tribes, federal and ried disease and die-offs could state officials, and environmen- spread as too many birds crowd tal groups, tried to strike a bet- into too few wetlands. ter balance. With the current water split, Combined with removal of Cole says, "this refuge is just four Klamath River dams, it going to be collateral damage."
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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 NB A , C2 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
GOLF
Local pulls upset at NW Amateur
TENNIS COMMENTARY
YOUTH BASEBALL AND SOFTBALL
At Wimbledon,
Area teams reach
championMonday inthe first round of the Pacific
sexism ondisplay
Northwest Men's Ama-
state tournaments
By Jim Litke
BANDON — Bend
golfer Jesse Heinly upset the reigning
teur Championship. Heinly, a 21-year-old Summit High School
graduate, downedShotaro Ban, of SanJose, Calif., with a bogey on the18th hole at the flag-
ship course at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort to win, 1 up. Seeded No. 57 in the field of 64 for the match-
play tournament, Heinly fought backfrom a twohole deficit by winning four of the final eight
The Associated Press
By Emily Oller
k
lance at the list of men's singles champions at Wimbledon the past dozen years reveals plenty of pleasant-enough looking chaps, though not a single male model in the bunch. No matter. Each one was instantly fawned over the moment he held the trophy aloft, celebrated for toughness, smarts and the kind of devotion that knows no quit. Marion Bartoli displayed all of those qualities — and more — on the way to winning Wimbledon in this most tumultuous of years. But because she's a woman, at least one man behind a microphone couldn't stop there. See Wimbledon/C3
The Bulletin
The last of the 2013 District 5 Little League All-Star tournaments concluded over the weekend. But for four Central Oregon teams, the season continues this week at their respective state tournaments. JeffersonCounty's 50/70 (Intermediate, ages 11-13) baseball team, managed by Phil Fine, beat South Central 11-1 in the championship final of the dis-
Ag
Anla Niednnghaus l The Associated Press
Marion Bartoli holds the trophy after winning the women's final at Wimbledon on Saturday. A BBC commentator has created a controversy over his remarks about Bartoli's looks.
trict tournament last Tuesday to qualify for the state tournament, which got underway Saturday in Gold Hill, near Medford. Jefferson County lost its first game at the state tourney, falling 13-1 on Saturday to District 2's Portland, Powell and Taborvilla team. The District 5 champs came back on Sunday to win 155 over District 8's Central Point during the three-team, doubleelimination tournament. See State /C4
holes against No. 8seeded Ban, a standout golfer for the University
WEST COAST LEAGUE BASEBALL
of California who rolled to victory in the 2012 edition of this event.
Elks set to
Heinly, a junior-to-be at Concordia University in Portland, will play Da-
play two
vid Snyder, of McAllen, Texas, in today's round of 32. The winner will
on $2
advance to play in the afternoon's round of16. In another match in-
Tuesday
volving a Central Oregon player, Bend'sTaylor Garbutt, a 23-year-old caddie at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend, was edged
by Gresham's Nicholas Chianello, 1 up. — Bulletin staff report
NBA
Gavs latest to court Bynum
k•
is ~
CLEVELAND — Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert wondered what other
~
moves general manager Chris Grant had in mind
to improve Cleveland this summer. He knows now. The Cavs hosted free
Joe Kline i The Bulletin
Bend Elks catcher Tyler Servais receives a pitch during a game last month against Kitsap at Vince Genna Stadium in Bend.
agent center Andrew Bynum on Monday, a person familiar with the visit told The Associated Press. The 7-foot Bynum, who
didn't play onegamefor Philadelphia last season
because of a kneeinjury, met with team officials at Cleveland Clinic Courts, the club's sub-
urban facility, said the person who spokeon condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of negotiations. On Sunday, Gilbert went on Twitter to applaud the team's
acquisition of free agent forward Earl Clark and guard Jarrett Jack, who
both agreed to terms on deals with Cleveland last week. Grant is hoping to land a big man, and with
• Bend Elks catcher Tyler Servais is the son of former major leaguerScott Servais By Grant Lucas
Inside
The Bulletin
•A lo ok around the W estCoastLeague,C4
Tyler Servais' bloodline is rich with major league talent. It is abundant with baseball knowledge, and it is one of the most notable blessings in his young baseball career. Now, the 20-year-old Servais, son of former MajorLeague Baseball catcher Scott Servais, suits up for the Bend Elks, bringing a wealth of baseball know-how and a rare perspective to Central Oregon's entry in the summer collegiate West Coast League. "He understands how to play the
game," says Joe Dominiak, head coach of the Elks. That understanding comes from being raised by an 11-year MLB veteran who was acareer .245 hitterwi th the Houston Astros, Chicago Cubs, San Francisco Giants and Colorado Rockies, and who helped Team USA to a gold medal at the 1988 Summer Olympics. Scott Servais now serves as an as-
sistant general manager for the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, overseeing scouting and player development.
And he is highly regarded among big league executives for his earlier work as the Texas Rangers' director of player development. Tyler Servais acknowledges that his dad being a former big league catcher probably influenced his choice to play the same position. But his father is a much bigger influence than that, Tyler says, and his impact reaches beyond the baseball diamond. See Elks/C4
Bulletin staff report The division-leading Bend Elks enjoyed a rare night off Monday following a 2-2 road trip and return to action with nonleague home games today and tonight at Vince Genna Stadium. This afternoon the Elks who lead the West Coast League's South Division with a record of 19-11, take on a club from Perth, Australia, in a game set to start at 3:35 p.m. Later, the Elks will face Northern California-based Top Speed Baseball in a game scheduled to start at 6:35. Good news for Elks fans: The popular $2 Tuesday promotion — featuring $2 admission and including $2 hot dogs and beer — will be in effect for both of today's games. A single ticket is good for admission to both games. The Australian team will stay in Bend to play
a day game Wednesday against the Elks' developmental squad, the Bend Bucks. First pitch for that game, also at Genna Stadium, is set for 12:35 p.m. Admission to the BucksPerth contest is free. On Wednesday evening, the Elks return to WCL action with a home game against the Medford Rogues. Start time for the opener of the three-game series is 6:35 p.m.
Dwight Howard signing with Houston, the 25year-old Bynum is the
most attractive center las Mavericks are also reportedly interested in Bynum after not getting Howard. — The Associated Press
Blazers welcome rookie McCollum Portland's top pick has a busy first day on the job,C2
CORRECTION
Stung by doping,sport weighs changes to its business model By Jon Brand New York Times News Service i
k
CONT'ROLE = ==::= ANTI.DOPAGE l= : — =
A story headlined "Diamonds in the Desert" that ran in The Bulletin
on Wednesday,July 3, on Page C1included incorrect information. Vince Genna Stadium
was previously known as Municipal Field. Also, the glove historian Van-
essa Ivey is holding in an accompanying photo is Jim Crowell's. The Bulletin regrets the errors.
l kl
CYCLING
on the market. The Dal-
Laurent Cipnani iThe Associated Press
Mark Cavendish leaves the doping control area at the Tour de France after winning the fifth stage on Wednesday.
Next up attheTourdeFrance Riders got the day off Monday before embarking today on a mostly flat stage that should favor sprinters. Britain's Chris Froome holds the yellow
jersey ahead of Spain's Alejandro Valverde.
NICE, France — When cycling was still a provincial affair in which riders changed clothes behind middle schools before races, the news that its most recognizable star had doped to win the Tour de France would probably not have mattered. And it would have been unthinkable to imagine an investigation — undertaken in the United States, no lessrevealing the sport to be in structural disarray, ruled by dysfunctional leadership and a code of silence. But the stakes have clearly increased and the geography broadened. Riders in the 100th edition of the Tour de France, which ends July 21 in Paris, are now transported in plush buses and housed in luxury hotels. Participating teams are backed by major sponsors like British Sky Broadcasting, whose Team Sky has a budget of more than $24 million. The Tour's television feed is being broadcast in 190 countries. See Cycling /C4
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C2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
SPORTS ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY CYCLING
Time
TV / Radio
Tour de France,Stage10
5 a.m.
NBCS N
4 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLB Root
BASEBALL
MLB, Texas atBaltimore MLB, Boston at Seattle BASKETBALL WNBA, Atlanta at Minnesota
6 p.m.
ESPN2
WEDNESDAY Time
Tour de France,Stage11
5 a.m. 9:30 a.m.
4 p.m. 7 p.m. 5:30 p.m.
TV/Radio NBCSN MLB ESPN Root E S P N2
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by N or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL
Barrett Green, a linebacker who
played for the Detroit Lions and
Dodgers' Kempto DL-
the New York Giants between
The Los Angeles Dodgers have placed center fielder Matt
2000 and 2005, says acareerending knee injury during a
Kemp on the15-day disabled list with joint inflammation in
game on Dec. 5, 2004 vvas the
his troublesome left shoulder.
result of a bounty program and a "unusual, outrageous, andan
Manager Don Mattingly says Kemp tried to take early batting
obvious cheap shot." Prior to joining the Redskins, Williams
practice before Monday night's
was the defensive coordinator
game at Arizona but experi-
for the New Orleans Saints and vvas considered the mastermind behind the bounty scandal that led to unprecedented sanctions from the NFL. He vvas suspend-
enced more soreness and, with the All-Star break coming up, it didn't make sense to play shorthanded while Kemp heals. The
move is retroactive to Saturday.
ed for one year bythe leagueand is now a senior defensive assis-
Mattingly says the team doesn't think the problem is related to
tant with the Tennessee Titans.
the shoulder surgery Kemphad
The lawsuit also namesformer
in the offseason. The Dodgers recalled outfielder Scott Van
Redskins player Robert Royal, the tight end vvho hit Green.
Slyke from Triple-A Albuquerque to take Kemp's roster spot. Los Angeles also placed right-hand-
negatiate —A federal judge has ordered the NFL and former
DL with right shoulder bursitis
players to negotiate over vvheth-
and added newly acquired right-hander Ricky Nolasco to
er claims of concussion-related injuries will move forward in
the roster. Nolasco, obtained in a trade with Miami, will start tonight.
court or in arbitration. U.S. District Judge Anita B. Brody of
Philadelphia had planned to rule July 22 in a legal fight involving about 4,200 former players and
the league. However, in anorder
slugger Ryan Braun from the disabled list and placed third
Monday, she told the two sides to try and resolve hovv the case
baseman Aramis Ramirez on
will proceed bygoing through
the DL with a nagging left knee
mediation with retired U.S. District Judge Layn Phillips of
injury. Braun hasbeenout for a month with a bruised right thumb. He was not in the lineup
for the opener of a three-game series against Cincinnati, but he planned to test his hand again in batting practice. The 2011 NL MVP is batting .304 with nine homers and 36 RBls in 57
games this season.
Phils' Howardneeds Surgery —Philadelphia Phillies slugger RyanHoward needs surgery to repair a torn
(After nine stages) 1. Chris Froome,England, SkyProcycling, 36 hours, 59 minutes,18seconds. 2. AlejandroValverde,Spain, Movistar,1:25. 3. BaukeMogema, Netherlands, Belkin ProCycling, 4. Laurens ten Dam, Netherlands, BelkinProCycling, 1.50. 5. Roman Kreuziger, CzechRepublic, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff,1:51. 6. AlbertoContador,Spain, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, same time. 7. Nairo AlexanderQuintana,Colombia, Movistar, 2:02. 8. DanielMartin,Ireland,Garmin-Sharp, 2:28. 9. Joaquin Rodriguez, Spain,Katusha,2:31. 10. RuiCosta,Portugal, Movistar,2:45. I1. MikelNieve,Spain,Euskaltel-Euskadi,2:55. 12.JakobFuglsang,Denmark,Astana,3.07. 13. Michal Kwiatkowski, Poland,OmegaPharmaQuickStep,3:25. 14.Jean-ChristophePeraud,France,AG2R La Mondiale, 3:29. 15. AndySchleck,Luxembourg, RadioShackLeopard, 4:00. 16. CadelEvans, Australia, BMCRacing,4.36. 17. DanieMoreno, l Spain, Katusha, sametime. 18. MichaelRogers,Australia, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, 6:14. 19. IgorAntonHernandez, Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi, 6 40. 20.Romain Bardet,France,AG2R La Mondiale,7:09. Also 22. Andrew Talansky, United States, Garmin-Sharp, 9'35. 51. TejayVanGarderen, UnitedStates,BMCRacing, 35:01. 56. Thomas Danielson, UnitedStates, Garmin-Sharp, 40:24. 85. Brent Bookwalter,United States, BMCRacing, 55:29.
TENNIS Professional Hall of FameTennis Championships Monday At The International TennisHall of Fame Newporl, R.l. Purse: $519,775(WT258)
Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles First Round Michal Przysiezny,Poland, def. Stefan Kozlov, UnitedStates,6-3,6-7(9), 6-4. John Isner(2), UnitedStates, def. RyanHarrison, UnitedStates,7-0(0), 6-2. Adrian Mannarino, France,def. JamesBlake, UnitedStates,6-4,5-7,6-1. Yuichi Sugita,Japan,def.Jesse Levine,Canada
Oklahoma. Theretirees want the right to sue the league, while the NFL insists the claims fall under
the collective bargaining agreement, and should be resolved in arbitration.
LSU RB charged in fight
— LSU running back Jeremy Hill and another manwerefor-
mally charged in Baton Rouge on Monday with misdemeanor
simple battery in connection
Swedish Open Monday At BastadTennisStadiun Bastad, Sweden Purse: $504,000(WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round GrigorDimitrov(5), Bulgaria,def. EliasYmer, Swe-
den,5-7, 6-2,6-4. Martin Alund, Argentina,def. MarkusEriksson,
Sweden, 7-5,6-7(5), 7-6 (8). Carlos Berlocq,Argentina, def. HoracioZebagos (7), Argentina,6-4,6-3.
MercedesCup Monday At TCWeissenhof Stuttgart, Germany Purse: $880,800(WT258) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Michael Berrer,Germ any, def. Daniel GimenoTraver,Spain, 6-4,3-6, 6-1. RobertoBautista Agut,Spain, def.TobiasKamke, Germany6-3,7-6(4). Martin Klizan (8), Slovakia,def. Albert Montanes, Spain,6-2, 6-3.
wwwigocomics.comnnthebleachers
Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Silvia Soler-Espinosa (7), Spain,def MathildeJohansson,France,6-4, 1-6,7-5. CorinnaDentoni,ltaly,def. CarolineGarcia, France, 5-7, 6-4,6-4.
meniscus in his left knee and will
miss at least six to eight weeks.
Bayardo, who is not an LSUstu-
Howard, the 2006 NL MVP, went on the disabled list Saturday. An
dent, will be arraigned on Friday, East Baton Rouge Parish Dis-
MRI Monday confirmed the tear
trict Attorney Hillar Moore said.
in his knee. A date for surgery hasn't been set. The three-time All-Star was hitting .266 vvith11 homers and 43 RBls.
The matter has put Hill's 2013
Boston LHP Miller to have
misdemeanor carnal knowledge
Hungarian GrandPrix Monday At Romai TennisAcademy Budapest, Hungary Purse: $235,000(Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Johanna Larsson(5), Sweden,def. LaraArruabarrena,Spain,6-2, 7-5. Annika Beck(4), Germany, def. TadejaMajeric, Slovenia,6-1,6-2. Maria-Teresa Torro-Flor(7), Spain,def. NinaBratchikova, Russia,6-1,7-5.
already on probation stemming from his January 2012 plea of
/r
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It
i
///
31. RyanPalmer 32. MichaelThompson 33. ChrisStroud 34. BrianGa y 35. CharlSchwartzel 36. RickieFowler 37. AngelCabrera 38.CharleyHoff man 39. JonasBlixt 40. BubbaWatson 41. BrendondeJonge 42. KevinChappeff 43. JohnRoffins 44. RobertoCastro 45. DavidLynn 46. JoshTeater 47. RoryMcffroy 48 FreddieJacobson 49. TimClark 50. ScottPiercy 51. LukeDonald 52.LeeWestwood 53. HenrikStenson 53. Came ronTringale 55. MattJones
744 $ 1 ,455,731 733 $ 1,51 6,253 732 $ 1,402,809 729 $ 1,266,129 726 $ 1,543,853 723 $ 1,401,608 71 9 $1,544,023 71 2 $1,384,853 709 $ 1,484,863 708 $ 1,347,845 692 $ 1,161,770 686 $ 1,342,381 668 $ 1,127,849
667 $ 1,186,895 652 $ 1,332,578 651 650 636 634 632 632 632 629
$ 1,257,470 $ 1,390,586 $ 1,175,281 $ 1,275,351 $ 1,271,822 $ 1,250,696 $ 1 ,424,654 $ 1,371,397 629 $ 9 19,804 623 $ 1,083,690
DEALS
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Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague KANSAS CITYROYALS— Recalled RHP Louis
Colemanfrom Omaha (PCL). OptionedLHPWil Smith toDmaha NEWYORKYANKEES—Added 18Travis Ishikawa to theroster.AssignedINFDavid Adams toScranton/ Wilkes-Barre (IL). OAKLANDATHLETICS— Recalled28 GrantGreen from Sacram ento (PCL).Designated INFAdamRosalesforassignment. SEATTLEMARINERS—Designated RHPJeremy Bonderman for assignment. Recalled I.HPLucasl.uetge from Tacoma(PCL).
National League
Agnes Bukta,Hungary,def. SandraZahlavova, CzechRepublic, 6-1, 4-6,7-6(4). Simona Halep (3), Romania, def. Sesil Karatantcheva,Kazakhstan, 6-3,6-0.
BASEBALL WCL WESTCOAST LEAGUE
Leaguestandings North Division Wenatchee AppleSox WallaWallaSweets
W 17 17
Begingham Begs 15 VictoriaHarbourcats 13 KelownaFalcons 7 South Division W 19 15 13 14 11 11
BendElks CorvagisKnights CowlitzBlackBears KlamathFals Gems MedfordRogues
KitsapBlueJackets Monday'sGames KlamathFaffs14,Medford2 Cowlitz 7,Kelowna4 Corvagis8 Wenatchee5 Kitsap6,Begingham0 WallaWalla6,Victoria1 Today'sGames x-Perth,AustraliaatBend,3.35p.m. x-TopSpeedat Bend,6:35p.m. Medfordat KlamathFags635 pm CowlitzatKelowna 635pm Wenatchee at Corvagis, 6:40p.m. KitsapatBeffingham,7:05p.m. WallaWalaatVictoria, 705p.m Wednesday'sGames Medfor datBend,6:35 p.m. CowlitzatKelowna 635pm Wenatchee at Corvagis, 6:40p.m. KitsapatBeffingham,7:05p.m. Wal aWalaatVictoria, 7:05p.m x-nonleague
L 11 11 12
11 21
L 11 13 12
15 15
20
BASKETBALL
Monday
At ASDCountry Time Club Palermo, Sicily Purse: $235,000(Intl.)
Sara Errani (1), Italy, def. Julia Cohen,United States,6-0,6-1.
seasonin doubt because LSU's leading rusherlast season is
Rof, NDE -Ls
Italiacom Open
with a late-April scuffle in a bar parking lot. Hill and Robert
Surgery —Boston RedSox
In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist by Universal Uclrck
Today's10thstageis a122.4-mile, mostlyflat ride in Brittany fromSaint-Gildas-des-Bois to Saint-Malo.
7-5, 7-5.
NFL, retired players to
er Stephen Fife on the15-day
BraIin returnS —The Milvvaukee Brewers have activated
Tour deFrance
Standings Rest day Monday
IN THE BLEACHERS
1 44.
CYCLING BASEBALL MLB, Atlanta at Miami MLB, Oakland at Pittsburgh MLB, Boston at Seattle SOCCER Chicago Fire vs. Club America
CYCLING
WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION All Times PDT
EasternConference W 10 8 6 5
Atlanta Chicago Washington NewYork Indiana
Connecticut
L 1 4 6 7 4 7 3 8
Pct GB .909
W L 8 3 8 4 8 5 5 7 3 8 3 11
Pct GB .727 t .667 a 615 1 41 7 3ta .273 5 .214 6'/z
Western Conference
Minnesota Los Angeles Phoenix Seattle SanAntonio Tulsa
Monday'sGames No games scheduled Today'sGames Seattle atNewYork, 4p.m. Atlanta atMinnesota,6p.m.
.667 2 ta .500 4'/z
.417 5ta 364 6 273 7
CHICAGO CUBS—AcquiredRHPIvanPineyro and a player to benamed fromWashington for OFScott Hairston COLORADOROCKIES— Placed RHP Roy Oswalt on the15-dayDL.Recalled OFCharlie Blackmonfrom SOCCER Colorado Springs LOSANGELES DODGERS— PlacedOFMattKemp MLS and RHP Stephen Fife onthe15-day DL,Kem p retroactive toJuly 6. RecalledOFScott VanSlykefrom MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER Albuquerque(PCL). AddedRHPRicky Nolasco to the All Times PDT roster. MILWAUKEE BREWERS— ActivatedOFRyanBraun EasternConference from the15-day DL.Placed38AramisRamirezonthe W L T Pts GF GA 15-dayDL, retroactiveto July 7. Montreal 9 4 4 31 31 25 SAN DI EGO PADRES— Recalled RHP Brad Brach S porting KansasCity 8 5 6 30 26 19 from Tucson(PCL). OptionedLHPRobbie Erlin to NewYork 8 7 4 28 25 24 Tucson. Philadelphia 7 6 6 27 29 29 SAN FRANCI SCO GIANTS— Placed INF Joaquin Houston 7 6 5 26 20 18 Arias onthe15-dayDL RecalledINFNick Noonan NewEngland 6 5 6 24 21 14 from Fresno (PC L). Columbus 6 8 5 23 23 23 WASHINGTONNATIONALS— Activated RHP Dan Chicago 6 8 3 21 19 25 Haren fromthe 15-dayDL. Optioned1B-OFTyler TorontoFC 2 8 7 13 17 24 Moore to Syracuse(IL). D.C. 2 13 4 10 8 29 BASKETBALL WesternConference National Basketball Association W L T Pts GF GA LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS— Named Alvin Gentry R eal SaltLake 1 0 5 4 34 2 9 1 8 iateheadcoachandArmondHiI,KevinEastman Fc Dallas 8 4 7 31 2 7 2 4 assoc LosAngeles 9 7 3 3 0 2 9 2 2 and TyronnLueassistant coaches. N EW YORKKNICKS Si gnedG Tim HardawayJr. Portland 7 2 9 3 0 28 17 J.Leslie. Vancouver 8 5 5 2 9 2 9 2 5 and F C PHILADE LPHIA76ER S—Announced the resignaColorado 7 7 6 2 7 23 22 Seattle 7 6 3 2 4 2 1 1 9 tion ofchiefexecutiveofficer AdamAron.NamedScott O' N eil chief executi v e offi c er. SanJose 5 9 6 21 2 0 3 2 WASHING TONWIZARDS—Signed F Otto Porter ChivasUSA 3 10 5 1 4 1 6 3 2 and GGen Rice,Jr. NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint fortie. FOOTBALL National Football League Friday's Game NEW YORK G IA NTS—Signed WRVictor Cruz ChivasIJSAat Philadelphia, 4:30p.m. to a multiyearcontract extensionthroughthe2018 Saturday's Games season. MontrealatNewYork,4 p.m. HOCKEY Housto natNewEngland,4:30p.m. NationalHockeyLeague TorontoFCat Sporting KansasCity, 5:30 p.m. COLUMBUSBLUE JACKETS— Signed D Frederic RealSaltLakeatFCDallas,6 p.m. St. DenisandFJackSkiffe to one-year contracts. Seattle FC atSanJose 7:30p.m DALLAS STARS Signed CChris Mueffer to a Los Angeleat s Portland 8p.m one-yearcontract. Ssnday'sGame FLORIDA PANTHERS—Agreedtotermswith 0 Jon Chicagoat Vancouver, 4p.m. Matsumoto andDMatt Gilroy onone-yearcontracts. MONTREAL CANADIENS— SignedFStephen MaGOLF cAulay toaone-year minorleaguecontract. NEW YORKISLANDERS—Agreedto termswith G KevinPoulinonaone-yearcontract. PGA Tour NEWYOR KRANGERS Agreedto terms with D FedEx up C Leaders RyanMcDonaghonasix-yearcontract. Through July7 OTTAW A S ENATORS—Signed D Joe Corvo to a Rank. Player Points YTD Money one-yearcontract 1. TigerWoods 2,380 $5,909,742 WASHING TONCAPITALS—Signed DTyson Stra2. MattKuchar 1,964 $4,393,265 chan, RW Matt Watkins andGDavid Leggio to one3. BrandtSnedeker 1,603 $3,679,155 year contracts. 4. Phil Mickelson 1,518 $3,417,984 WINNIPEG JETS—Announced 0 AlexanderBur5. Billy Horschel 1,459 $3,048,787 mistrovsignedatwo-yearcontract withAkBarsKazan 6. JustinRose 1,358 $3,032,310 7. Biff Haas 1,320 $2,902,296 (KHL). COLLEGE 8. Kewn Streelman 1,234 $2,572,989 SAN FRANC ISCO—Announced men's junior 9. BooWeekley 1,154 $2,307,509 10.JasonDay 1,148 $2,628,887 basketball C DerreffRoberston hastransferred from 11. Keegan Bradley 1,044 $2,246,059 DePaul. 12. Webb Simpson 1,018 $2,058,182 13 Adam Scott 1,012 $2,371,071 FISH COUNT 14. RusseIHeney 1,005 $1,866,742 Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook, jack 15. HunterMahan 1,003 $2,164,115 16. D.A.Points 1,000 $2,165,537 chinook,steelheadandwild steeheadat selected Co996 $1,923,250 lumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. 17.JimmyWalker Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd 18. HarrisEnglish 958 $1,843,047 3 9 0 57 3 312 19 CharlesHowell ffl 940 $1,739,000 Bonnevi le 1,412 4 1 9 245 102 20. SteveStricker 918 $2,187,146 The Daffes 1,461 2 4 2 208 84 21. DustinJohnson 887 $1,889,743 John Day 1,680 22. Ken Duke 861 $1,615,515 McNary 2 ,022 3 7 2 162 62 23. Graham DeLaet 856 $1,560,505 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, 24. Graeme McDoweff 838 $1,910,654 jack chinook, steelheadandwild steeheadat seected 25. ScottStagings 801 $1,551,047 ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. 26. Sang-Moon Bae 770 $1,604,762 Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd 27. MartinLaird 766 $1,662,232 Bonnevi le 156,429 55,793 10,330 3,566 28. ChrisKirk 756 $1,332,198 The Daffes 135,262 49,130 4,147 1,528 747 29. DavidLingmerth $1,634,709 John Day 114,030 44,324 4,035 1,566 30. JohnMerrick 745 $1,532,105 McNary I06,982 33,406 3,652 1,239
of a juvenile.
left-hander Andrew Miller will
have surgery on his injured left foot and will likely miss the rest
BASKETBALL
of the season. RedSox manager John Farrell said Mondaythat
Kaman ta i.akerS —Chris
Miller has damage to the ligament in the foot, which he hurt
Kaman is headed back to Los Angeles, this time with the Lak-
while backing up aplay at home n plate Saturday at Anaheim. lt's unlikely he'll be back this year,"
Farrell said. Miller, in his second full season as a reliever for the Red Sox, had a 2.64 ERA while striking out 48 in 30/s innings.
FOOTBALL Giants, Gruzagree to
deal —New York Giants star
ers. The 7-foot free agent center vvho spent the first eight years of his career with the Clippers said Monday on Twitter that he had agreed to join the Lakers. The
deal is reportedly for oneyearat $3.2 million. It will be Kaman's second straight season ona one-year contract. He hadan $8 million deal to bethe starter in Dallas last season but spent
more than half of every gameon coach Rick Carlisle's bench. The
receiver Victor Cruz has signed a 31-year-old Kaman started 52 five-year contract extension that of his 66 games with the Mav-
runs through the 2018season. The deal is worth $43 million
ericks, but averaged thefewest minutes of his career becausehe
according to media reports. Cruz vvas arestricted free agent
struggled on the defensive end
with three years in the NFL. Last
10.5 points per game.
month, he signed aone-year,
in Carlisle's system. Hescored
$2.879 million tender with the Giants, but a long-term deal vvas already in the works. Over the
Warriors to signSpeights
past two seasons, Cruzhas168 receptions for1,628 yards and 19touchdovvns.
Warriors and MarreeseSpeights have reached an agreement on a free agent contract. Speights
Player SIIeS RedSkiiIS
should help fill the void left by power forward Carl Landry, vvho
— A former NFL player is suing
theWashingtonRedskinsand former assistant coach Gregg Williams, saying acareer-ending knee injury is the result of a bounty program whereRedskins coaches encouraged players to intentionally injure opponents.
— A person with knowledge of the deal says the Golden State
agreed to a four-year, $26 million deal with the Sacramento Kings on Sunday. Speights averaged 10.2 points and 5.1 rebounds in
the final 39 gameswith Cleveland after coming over in a trade
from Memphis last season. — From wire reports
NBA
Blazers' top pick McCollumgoes to work By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press
PORTLAND — It wasn't even lunch time and Trail Blazers rookie C.J. McCollum was already exhausted. Monday was McCollum's first full day in Portland after he was selected 10th overall in the NBA draft some 11 days before. He was up at 5 a.m., had a workout an hour later and then headed to the Rose Garden for an introductory news conference. Along the way, his necktie was misplaced. Welcome to the NBA. "This is what I've lived for, this is what I want to do for a living," he said, smiling despite the whirlwind. "It feels good that it's finally here." M cCollum averaged 23.9 points and 5.0 rebounds per game last season as a senior at Lehigh. While his year was cut short by a broken left foot, the 6-foot-3 guard said he's fully healed and he was cleared to play in April. McCollum was targeted on draft night by the Blazers, who were looking to shore up a backcourt led by reigning Rookie of the Year Damian Lillard.
"It's always good to get the guy you
want," coach Terry Stotts said. McCollum, the Patriot League's all-time leading scorer, said he worked to hone his reputation as a versatile shooter to make up for his smaller stature.
"I knew being a 5-foot-11 spot-up shooter wasn't going to get me anywhere, being a 5-foot-11 true point guard wasn't going to get me anywhere in high school so I developed a different arsenal of moves and the ability to create a shot," he said. "That was what was going to get me to this moment right here." But McCollum realizes he's going to have to develop in new ways now that he's in the NBA. "Coach will tell you, he doesn't care too much if you're knocking down 3s if you're
giving up 3s and lay-ups," he said. Stotts interrupted: "I like making 3s though." Over hisfour-year Lehigh career,McCollum averaged 2L3 points and 6.3 rebounds, and he shot 38 percent from 3point range. He'll sport the No. 3 jersey for the Blazers.He's worn the number since middle school because he was a big fan of Allen Iverson, who also overcame his size by being an electric shooter. On the Blazers' roster for the upcoming NBA Summer League, McCollum will start practicing with the team today, joining Lillard and fellow draft pick Allen Crabbe, a guard out of CaL The group's first game will be on Saturday in Las
Vegas. McCollum's introduction follows a busy freeagency period forthe Blazers.
Portland agreed to contracts this weekend with free agents Dorell Wright, a small forward who played last for the Philadelphia 76ers, and Earl Watkins, a veteran guard from the Utah Jazz. The Blazers also were involved in a three-team trade with New Orleans and Sacramento that sent guard Tyreke Evans to the Pelicans, center Robin Lopez to the Trail Blazers and guard Greivis Vasquez to the Kings. Portland also sent second-round draft pick Jeff Withey to New Orleans and a future draft pick to Sacramento as part of the deaL When free agency opened lastweekend, Portland acquired 6-foot-10 forward Thomas Robinson from th e H ouston Rockets inexchange for a pair of future draft picks, and the draft rights to Kostas Papanikolau and Marko Todorovic. People close to the negotiations confirmed the deals, but spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because contracts cannot be formalized until the end of the free agency moratorium on Wednesday. With the exception of L opez, who will likely start, the moves were generally lauded as adding depth to Portland's bench.The Blazers lacked depth last season when they lost their last 13 games to finish 33-49 and out of the playoffs for the second straight season.
TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C3
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings
Boston TampaBay Baltimore NewYork Toronto
Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 Forsyth2b 2 1 0 0 Segura had three hits off Homer Blckmn ph I 0 0 0 Venale rf-cf 4 0 1 0 Bailey (5-7) in the right-hander's B elislep 0 0 0 0 RRiverc 2 0 0 0 RBtncrp 0 0 0 0 Denorfiph-rf 2 0 1 0 first start since his second noVolquezp 2 0 0 0 hitter in 10 months. B rach p 0 0 0 0 Hundly ph-c 2 0 1 0 Cincinnati Milwaukee T otals 3 4 4 9 4 Totals 3 42 7 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi Colorado 2 00 002 000 — 4 C hoocf 5 0 1 0 Aokirf 40 10 S an Diego 000 0 0 0 200 — 2 DP San Diego2. LOB Colorado8, SanDiego Cozartss 3 0 1 0 Segurass 3 1 3 1 9. 28 — W.Rosario (13), Headley (16), Denorfia (14). Paulph 1 0 1 1 CGomzcf 4 0 0 0 H ooverp 0 0 0 0 Lucroyc 4 1 I 2 SB — J.Herrera(2). SF—Co.Dickerson. Colorado IP H R E R BB SO DRonsnph 0 0 0 0 JFrncs3b 3 1 2 0 ChatwoodW,5-2 62-3 5 2 2 3 4 V ottolb 4 1 1 0 Hndrsnp 0 0 0 0 P hillips2b 4 0 1 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 BrothersH,7 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Brucerf 4 0 1 1 Weeks2b 3 0 2 1 BeliseH,II 1 0 0 0 0 1 Frazier3b 4 0 1 0 Halton1b 4 0 0 0 R.BetancourtS,12-13 1 1 0 0 1 I San Diego H eiseylf 3 1 2 1 LSchfrlf 4 0 1 0 VolquezL,6-7 51 - 3 8 4 4 4 3 M esorcc 4 0 0 0 Lohsep 2 1 1 0 Brach 12-3 0 0 0 0 3 H Bailyp 2 0 1 0 Axfordp 0 0 0 0 Thayer I I 0 0 0 I Dndrskp 0 0 0 0 YBtncr3b 0 0 0 0 Street 1 0 0 0 0 1 Clzturs ph-ss 2 1 1 0 WP — Volquez. Totals 3 6 3 113 Totals 3 1 4 114 T 3:03 A 20,400(42,524). C incinnati 100 10 0 1 0 0 — 3 Milwaukee 211 0 0 0 0 0x — 4 E — M e sor aco (4). DP Cincinnati 2,Milwaukee2. Braves 7, Marlins1 (14 innings) LOB—Cincinnati 9, Milw—aukee 9. 28—Segura(10), Weeks(12), L.Schafer(11). HR Heisey(4), Lucroy
UP HIGH,DOWN LOW
All Times POT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 54 37 .593 50 40 .556 3'/z 49 41 544 4 1/2 48 41 .539 5 43 45
.489 9'/t
Central Division
W L 49 39 46 43
Detroit
Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota Chicago
Pct GB .557 .517 3t/t
42 44
.488 6 .430 11 .395 14
37 49 34 52 West Division W L 53 37 52 37 43 45 40 49 32 57
Oakland Texas Los Angeles Seattle Houston
Pct GB .589 .584 '/z 489 9 .449 12t/t ,360 20r/t
Monday's Games Detroit 4,Cleveland2,10 innings Kansas City5, N.Y.Yankees1 Oakland 2, Pittsburgh1 Texas 8, Baltimore5 Tampa Bay7, Minnesota4 Chicago Cubs8, ChicagoWhite Sox2 Seattle11,Boston4
Today's Games KansasCity (Shields3-6) at N.Y.Yankees(Sabathia 9-6),4:05p.m. Oakland(Straily 5-2) at Pittsburgh(Cole4-1), 4:05 p.m. Texas(M.Perez2-1) at Baltimore(Britton 2-2), 4:05 p.m. Toronto (Jo.Johnson1-3) at Cleveland (U.Jimenez 6-4), 4:05p.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Quintana3-2) at Detroit (Verlander9-5),4:08p.m. Minnesota(Gibson1-1) at Tampa Bay (Archer 2-3), 4:10 p.m. L.A. Angels(Blanton2-10) at ChicagoCubs(TWood 5-6), 5:05p.m. Houston (B.Norris 6-7)atSt.Louis (Wainwright I1-5), 5:15 p.m. Boston(Webster 1-2) at Seattle (Iwakuma7-4), 7:10 p.m.
Atlanta Washington Philadelphia NewYork Miami
NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L
St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago Milwaukee
Arizona Los Angeles Colorado SanFrancisco San Diego
Pct GB .573 .517 5
51 38 46 43 44 46
489 7'/z .435 12 .364 18'/~
37 48 32 56 Central Division W L 53 34 53 35 50 39 39 48 36 52 West Division W L 47 43 43 40 40
Pct GB 609 602
t/t
.562 4 448 14 .409 17'/z
Pct GB 528 489 3'/z
42 45 47 47 50
.478 4 t/t
.460 6
444 71/2
Monday's Games Oakland 2, Pittsburgh1 Philadelphia 3, Washington 2 Atlanta 7,Miami1,14 innings Chicago Cubs8, ChicagoWhite Sox2 Milwaukee 4,Cincinnati 3 L.A. Dodgers 6,Arizona1 Colorado 4, SanDiego2 N.Y.MetsatSanFrancisco,late Today's Games Oakland(Straily 5-2) at Pittsburgh(Cole4-1), 4:05 p.m. Washington(Jordan0-1) at Philadelphia(Hamels 311), 4:05p.m. Atlanta(Teheran6-4) at Miami(H.Alvarez0-0), 4:10
p.m.
L.A. Angels(Blanton2-10) at ChicagoCubs(TWood 5-6), 5:05p.m. Cincinnati(Cingrani3-0)at Milwaukee(W.Peralta 59), 5.10p.m. Houston (B.Norris 6-7)atSt.Louis (Wainwright11-5), 5:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Nolasco5-8) atArizona(Kennedy3-4), 6:40 p.m.
Colorado (Chacin 8-3) atSanDiego(Stults 6-7), 7:10 p.m. N.Y.Mets(Gee6-7) at SanFrancisco (Zito 4-6), 7:15 p.m.
American League
Mariners11, RedSox4 SEATTLE — Felix Hernandez held the Red Sox to two runs
and six hits over seven innings and Raul Ibanez hit his 22nd home run in leading Seattle to a victory over Boston. Hernandez
(9-4) walked two andstruck out six, maintaining his 2.69 ERA, second lowest in the American League behind teammate Hisashi
Iwakuma's 2.60. Hernandez allowed two or fewer runs for the 13th time in 19 starts. Ibanez's
home run — on an0-2 pitch from Boston starter Jon Lester (8-5) — broke a 2-2 tie in the fifth. It
was the 41-year-old's seventh goahead home runand extended his hitting streakto13 games. Boston
ab Nava cf 5 JGomsrf 5 Pedroia 2b 4 BSnydr pr-3b 0 D.Ortiz dh 2 Lvrnwyph-dh2 Napoli1b 4 Carp If 4 Sltlmch c 4 Iglesias ss 3
Seattle
r hbi 0 2 I BMillerss 0 1 0 Frnkln2b 0 1 0 Ibanezlf 1 0 0 KMorlsdh 0 2 0 Seager3b 0 0 0 Bayrf 1 1 1 Smoak1b 0 1 0 Zunino c 0 1 1 MSndrscf 100
ab r hbi 512 1 5011 5122 422 0
3210 5000 423 2 412 1 4223
MIAMI — Justin Upton broke a tie by driving in two runs when he
(11). SB —Segura(27), LSchafer (3). S—Aoki. Cincinnati IP H R E R BB SO
doubled in a six-run14th inning
Dndrusek 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Hoover 2 1 0 0 1 2 Milwaukee LohseW,5-6 62 - 3 9 3 3 1 0 AxfordH,14 1-3 I 0 0 0 1 HendersonH,4 1 1 0 0 0 1 Fr.RodriguezS,9-9 I 0 0 0 I I HBP—by H.Bailey (Segura), by Henderson(Heisey). WP — Ondrusek. Balk—H.Bailey. T 3:12. A 25,341(41,900).
for Atlanta's first hit since the sixth against Miami. Five Miami relievers combined to retire 24
consecutive batters before Reed Matt Srocum /The Associated Press
The Philadelphia Phillies' Ben Revere, left, steals third base as Washington Nationals third baseman Ryan Zimmerman leaps for the throw during the first inning of Monday's game in Philadelphia. H olt3b-2b 3 I I 0 Totals 3 6 4 103 Totals 3 9111510 Boston 0 00 020 020 — 4 Seattle 000 213 41x — 11
4 I 2 I AIGnzlz3b 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 ISuzukiph 1 0 1 0 C Stwrtc 1 0 1 0 AuRmnc 2 0 0 0 Nunez ph-ss 2 0 0 0 T otals 3 7 5 105 Totals 3 5 1 9 1
Mornealb 3 I I I Longori3b 4 0 I I Plouffe3b 4 I 1 0 Loney1b 4 0 2 0 A rcialf 4 0 1 0 WMyrsrf 3 2 0 0 P armelrf 3 0 0 1 Joycelf 30 10 H ickscf 4 2 4 0 JMolinc 4 0 2 1 F lormnss 4 0 2 1 YEscorss 3 I 1 2 Totals 3 3 4 104 Totals 3 3 7 127 M innesota 001 2 0 0 0 01 — 4 Tampa Bay 1 1 0 0 1 0 31x - 7 E—Parmelee(2). DP—Minnesota2, TampaBay1. LOB—Minnesota7, Tampa Bay 6. 28—Dozier (11), Hicks 2(9), Zobrist (21), Loney(21). 38—Hicks(3), De.Jennings (5). HR Morneau(7), Scott (6), Zobrist
Johnson walked to start the 14th
against Chris Hatcher (0-1). Jason Heyward walked with oneout, and Upton's double scored both
(52-37) for the first time since May 25. Kinsler had four RBls, including three in the sixth against former teammate Scott Feldman
(0-1) when theRangers turned a 3-2 deficit into an 8-3 lead. Texas
Baltimore
ab r hbi ab r hbi K insler2b 5 0 2 4 Markksrf 5 0 1 0 DvMrplf 5 1 2 0 Machd3b 5 0 3 1 N.cruzdh 4 1 1 0 A.Jonescf 5 1 2 0 ABeltre3b 3 I 2 0 C.Davis1b 4 0 0 0 Przynsc 3 1 1 1 Wietersc 5 1 1 2 Morlndlb 3 0 1 1 Hardyss 4 1 2 0 Andrusss 4 2 2 1 McLothlf 3 1 1 0 EBetrecf 4 1 1 1 BRortsdh 3 1 0 1 LMartnrf 4 1 0 0 Acasill2b 2 0 0 0 Flahrtyph-2b 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 5 8 128 Totals 3 75 104 Texas 0 01 106 000 — 8 B altimore 000 30 0 2 0 0 — 5 E—Moreland (4). DP—Baltimore 3. LOB—Texas
remained unbeaten and Victor Martinez hit a two-run double in the10th inning as Detroit extended its lead in the AL Central with a win over second-place Cleveland. Martinez doubled off
Matt Albers (2-1) as theTigers won three of four in the series and moved 3t/a games ahead in the dlvlslon.
National League
Dodgers 6, Diamondbacks1 PHOENIX — ZackGreinke gave
up two hits in sevenscoreless innings in his first game against Arizona since last month's bench-
clearing brawl, and LosAngeles snapped the Diamondbacks'
five-game winning streak. Greinke Cleveland ab r hbi ab r hbi (7-2) struck out sevenandwalked A Jcksncf 5 0 1 0 Bourncf 5 0 1 0 two in his fourth straight win. He TrHntrrf 5 0 0 0 Acarerdh 4 0 0 0 Micarr3b 3 1 0 0 Kipnis2b 5 0 1 0 also had acareer-high three hits. Fielder1b 3 1 0 0 Swisherrf-1b 5 0 2 0 V Mrtnzdh 4 1 2 2 Brantlylf 3 1 2 0 Los Angeles Arizona JhPerlt ss 5 0 1 1 Aviles ss 5 1 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Tuiassplf 2 I 1 1 MrRynl1b 4 0 2 0 Crwfrdlf 5 0 0 0 GParracf 4 0 0 0 Dirksph-lf 2 0 1 0 Stubbspr-rf 0 0 0 0 Puigrf 5 1 2 0 A.Hill2b 4 0 0 0 B.Penac 4 0 1 0 Chsnhll3b 4 0 1 2 AdGnzl1b 4 2 2 1 Gldsch1b 4 1 2 0 RSantg2b 3 0 0 0 YGomsc 4 0 0 0 HRmrzss 5 1 3 I Erchvz3b 4 0 1 1 4, Baltimore10. 28—Kinsler (13), Dav.Murphy(16), Totals 3 6 4 7 4 Totals 3 92 I 0 2 JDmngp 0 0 0 0 Pradolf 4010 A.Beltre(22),Pierzynski (12),McLouth(19). HR —Wi- Detroit 010 100 000 2 — 4 Ethier cf 5 1 3 1 MMntr c 3 0 0 0 eters(12).CS—Kinser (6). S—McLouth, A.casila. Cleveland 020 000 000 0 — 2 A.Ellisc 5 0 1 2 Kubelrf 2 0 0 0 Texas IP H R E R BBSO DP — Cleveland 1. LOB —Detroit 8, Cleveland10. 5 0 2 1 Gregrsss 2 0 0 0 A.Jackson (13), VMartinez 2 (17), JhPerata Uribe3b D.HollandW7-4 62-3 10 5 3 3 7 28 — M.Ellis2b 5 0 1 0 Delgadp 1 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 (24). HR Wolf H,1 —Tuiasosopo (4). SB—Brantley (9), Aviles Greinkp 3 1 3 0 Pollockph 1 0 0 0 Soria H,2 1 0 0 0 0 1 (7). CS Boum (6). PRdrgz p 0 0 0 0 Brewer p 0 0 0 0 NathanS,30-31 I 0 0 0 0 2 Detroit IP H R E R BB SO Punto ss 0 0 0 0 Sipp p 000 0 Baltimore Scherzer 7 7 2 2 3 7 C.Rossph 1 0 0 0 FeldmanL,D-I 5 1-3 9 7 7 I 2 B.Rondon I I 0 0 0 0 WHarrsp 0 0 0 0 Patton 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 SmylyW,4-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 4 2 6 176 Totals 3 014 1 Tom.Hunter 1 0 0 0 I 0 Benoit S,7-7 1 2 0 0 0 2 L os Angeles 0 0 0 1 2 0 201 — 6 Matusz 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cleveland Arizona 000 000 001 — 1 McFarland 1 1 0 0 0 0 Kazmir 52-3 4 2 2 3 5 E—Kubel(3). DP—LosAngeles1. LOB —LosAnHBP—by Feldman(A.Beltre, Pierzynski). PB —Pier- Shaw 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 geles11,Arizona4. 28—Ethier (18), Er.chavez(10), zynski. Allen 1 0 0 0 1 Prado(15). S Greinke. T—3:05. A—24,619(45,971). J.Smith 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO CPerez 1 0 0 0 0 1 GreinkeW7-2 7 2 0 0 2 7 AlbersL,2-1 I I 2 2 2 I PRodriguez 1 0 0 0 0 2 Royals 5, yankees1 B.Rondon pitchedto 1baterinthe 9th. J.Dominguez 1 2 1 1 0 0 WP —Scherzer. PB—B.Pena. Arizona T—3.40(Raindelay.0:20). A—23,640(42 241). NEW YORK — Jeremy Guthrie DelgadoL,1-3 6 11 3 3 0 3 1 1-3 3 2 2 I 0 Brewer neatly handled theYankees and 2 -3 0 0 Sipp 0 0 2 Rays 7, Twins 4 a long rain delay to pitch into W.Harris 1 3 1 1 0 2 T—2:53. A—22,614(48,633). the seventh inning, Billy Butler
homeredand KansasCitybeat New York. All-Star Alex Gordon, David Lough andJohnny Giavotella each had RBI doubles,
and Alcides Escobaradded arunscoring triple to help the Royals end a five-game skid against New York. Kansas City ab r hbi AGordnlf 4 1 1 1 AEscorss 5 0 1 1 Hosmer1b 4 0 2 0 BButler dh 4 1 1 1 S.Perezc 5 0 0 0 Mostks 3b 4 2 2 0 Giavtll2b 4 0 1 1 EJhnsn 2b 0 0 0 0
Wimbledon Continued from C1 His name is John Inverdale, and even as Bartoli headed toward the spectator's box w here th e f ather who taught her to play tennis sat, Inverdale's listeners on BBC Radio were treated to some musings about how she came to possess a champion's ability. "Do you think Bartoli's dad told her when she was little, 'You're never going to be a looker? You'll never be a Sharapova, so you have to be scrappy and fight.' " I nverdale ha s a p o logized, o f course, though that hardly came off better than his original remark. The BBC did, too, before reporting that nearly 700 viewers called in as of Monday night to complain. It's kicked up a row in print, on the airwaves and across social media over in Britain similar to the one that buzzed briefly over here when Brent
New York
ab r hbi Gardnr cf 4 0 0 0 A lmontlf 5 0 1 0 Cano2b 3 0 1 0 Hafner dh 4 0 0 0 V .Wellsrf 4 0 2 0 lshikawlb 2 0 0 0 Overayph-1b 1 1 1 1 L.cruzss-3b 4 0 2 0
Detroit
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Yunel Escobar and Ben Zobrist homered
during a three-run seventh inning and surging TampaBay beat
Rockies 4, Padres 2
Minnesota. Escobar had a leadoff tiebreaking homer in the seventh
SAN DIEGO — Tyler Chatwood took a shutout into the seventh inning and Colorado beat skidding
off Samuel Deduno(4-4), who departed after DesmondJennings
their10th consecutive defeat.
followed with a triple. Caleb
Thielbar entered andgot oneout before Zobrist gaveTampaBaya 6-3 lead with a two-run shot. TampaBay ab r hbi ab r hbi Dozier 2b 4 0 1 1 DJnngscf 4 2 2 0 Mauerc 3 0 0 0 Scottdh 4 1 1 1 Minnesota
Doumit dh 4 0 0 0 Zobrist2b 4 I 2 2
Musburger awkwardly rambled on about Alabama quarterback A.J. M cCarron's girlfriend during t h e broadcast of the college football national championship. The principals who f ind t hemselves the subjects of such remarks rarely make it out of the ensuing media circus gracefully, but the Bartolis are proving themselves rare exceptions. For her part, Bartoli showed up for the champion's dinner looking like a model — "her dark hair down in a
loose wave ... figure-hugging black dress ... sky-high ankle boots," as one British newspaper breathlessly reported — and then said, "I invite this journalist to come and see me this evening in ball gown and heels,
and inmy opinion he could change his mind." When her father, Dr. Walter Bartoli, was asked about Inverdale's comments, he simply said, "I am not angry. She is my beautiful daughter.
San Diego, handing the Padres Colorado CDckrsIf LeMahi2b Cuddyrrf WRosrc Helton1b Arenad3b Colvin cf JHerrrss Chatwdp
San Diego ab r hbi
ab r hbi 3 1 1 1 Evcarrss 5 0 0 0 Amarstcf 5 1 2 0 Blanksph 4 0 2 2 Thayerp 2 0 0 0 Streetp 4 1 0 0 Kotsayph 4 1 1 0 Headly3b 4 0 2 1 QuentinIf 2 0 1 0 Guzmnlb
The relationship between Marion and me has always been unbelievable, so I don't know what this reporter is talking about." Neither did Inverdale at the time — and that's the real shame in this whole mess. There actually is a long, very tender and very complicated backstory behind the latest Wimbledon champion and her father that has nothing to do with her "looks." Walter Bartoli was Marion's first coach, largely responsible for her jarring style. She plays aggressively, but isn't very fast. She hits two-handed off both sides, a strategy Walter Bartoli insisted she master after watching Monica Seles rise to the top of the heap nearly 20 years ago. His guidance was important enough that only last summer, Bartoli reportedly turned down a chance to represent France at the London Olympics because of national federation rules about having private coaching at a previous event.
300 1 300 0
1 01 1
000 0 000 0 100 0 4010 4010 4110
52 - 3 10 4 4 3
3
Interleague
runners. Miami ab r hbi ab r hbi S mmnsss 7 0 0 0 Rugginlf 6 0 1 1 Heywrdrf 5 2 1 0 Lucas3b 5 0 1 0 Atlanta
E Nava (2). DP—Seattle1 LOB —Boston9, Seattle10. 28 —Napoli (23),Saltalamacchia (23),FrankJ.Uptonlf 5 1 2 3 Stantonrf 4 0 1 0 lin (10), KMorales (21), Smoak2 (11), MSaunders2 K ansas City 0 2 0 0 0 0 102 — 5 F Frmn1b 4 1 1 0 Ozunacf 5 0 0 0 New York 0 00 000 100 — 1 (9). HR —Ibanez(22). Mccnnc 5 0 0 0 Morrsn1b 5 0 0 0 IP H R E R BB SO E—L.cruz(2).DP—K ansasCity 1.LOB—Kansas Boston Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 LesterL,8-5 5 9 5 5 2 6 City 9, NewYork 10. 28—A.Gordon (16), Hosmer P strnckph I I 1 0 Hchvrrss 6 I 2 0 A.Wilson 1 1-3 3 3 3 1 1 (15), Moustakas(13), Giavotella (2), Lough(11). A.Woodp 0 0 0 0 Dietrch2b 6 0 1 0 I 2-3 3 3 3 2 4 38 — A.Escobar (3). HR —B.Butler (7), Overbay (10). De LaTorre U ggla2b 6 0 1 0 Mathisc 5 0 0 0 S—Dyson. Seattle BUptoncf 3 0 0 0 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 FHernandez W9-4 7 6 2 2 2 6 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO (6), Y.Escobar (7). SB—Florimon(8). SF—Parmelee, Waldenp 0 0 0 0 Dobbs1b 1 0 1 0 Y.Escobar. O.Perez 1 3 2 2 0 0 GuthrieWB-6 62 - 36 1 1 1 3 A vilanp 0 0 0 0 Sloweyp I 0 0 0 IP H R E R BB SO Trdslvcph 1 0 0 0 Polancph 1 0 1 0 Medina 1 1 0 0 0 1 Collins H,11 1 1 0 0 1 1 Minnesota 6 10 5 5 2 3 Lesterpitchedto 2baters in the6th. CrowH,13 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 DedunoL,4-4 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 DJnngsp 0 0 0 0 1-3 1 1 1 0 1 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0Webbp 0 0 0 0 HBP by De LaTorre (K.Morales) by FHernandez Hochevar 0 1 0 0 1 0 Thielbar Burton 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 (Iglesias), by Medina(B.Snyder). WP—A.Wilson, G.HollandS,21-23 I I 0 0 0 3 G .Lairdc 2 1 1 2 Pierreph I 0 0 0 Pressly 1 1 1 1 1 1 CJhnsn FHernande z. New York 3b 6 0 2 I Quallsp 0 0 0 0 T—3:21. A—21,830(47,476). P.HughesL,4-8 4 4 2 2 0 2 TampaBay Minorp 2 0 0 0 DSolanph 1 0 0 0 8 3 3 3 3 RJhnsncf 3 1 0 0 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 Warren 32-3 3 1 1 2 3 Ro.Hemandez 6 W,3-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Claiborne 11-3 3 2 2 1 0 A.Torres B rantlyc 2 0 0 0 Rangers 8, Orioles 5 Jo.PeraltaH,22 1 0 0 0 0 I Hochevarpitchedto 2baters in the9th. Totals 5 0 7 9 6 Totals 4 91 8 1 JWright 13 2 1 1 0 0 T—304(Rain delay 0:59). A—35,057(50291). Atlanta 000 001 000 000 00 — 7 RodneyS,20-25 2- 3 0 0 0 0 0 Miami 000 010 000 000 00 — 1 BALTIMORE — lan Kinsler capped Dedunopitchedto 2baters in the7th. E—Ruggiano (3), Hechavarria (5). DP—AtlantaI, a six-run sixth inning with a Tigers 4, Indians 2 (10 innings) HBP—by Ro.Hernandez (Dozier). WP—Deduno, Miami1. LOB Atlanta 6,Miami12. 2B J.Upton2 J.Wright. bases-loaded double, andTexas (13), Uggla(7), Lucas(3). 3B—Heyward (1). SBT—2:55. A—11,516(34,078). CLEVELAND — Max Scherzer R uggi a no 2 (11), Lucas(1). SF—JUpton. beat Baltimore. The victory thrust
the Rangers15 gamesover.500
H.BaileyL,5-7
Athletics 2, Pirates 1 PITTSBURGH — Bartolo Colon
allowed one runoverseven innings and Oakland won for the ninth time in its past12 games, beating Pittsburgh. The 40-
year-old Colon (12-3) shook off a tough-luck 3-1 defeat in his previous start to win for the ninth time in his past10 outings. He outdueled JeffLocke,wh o had
a personal eight-game winning streak snapped.
Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi C rispcf 4 0 0 0 SMartelf 5 0 0 0 L owriess 4 1 2 0 Tabatarf 4 0 2 1 Dnldsn3b 3 1 1 1 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Cespdslf 3 0 0 0 McKnrph I 0 0 0 Freimn1b 4 0 0 0 Mcctchcf 4 0 1 0 Moss1b 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz3b 4 0 2 0 Atlanta IP H R E R BB SO CYoungrf 2 0 0 0 RMartnc 4 0 0 0 DNorrsc 2 0 0 1 GJones1b 3 0 1 0 Minor 6136 1 1 2 4 Walden 2-3 0 0 0 2 1 GGreen2b 3 0 0 0 Mercerpr-2b 0 0 0 0 Avilan 2 0 0 0 0 1 S ogard2b 0 0 0 0 Inge2b 3 0 0 0 Coonp 2 0 0 0 GSnchzph-1b1 0 0 0 Varvaro 1 0 0 0 0 0 Kimbrel 1 0 0 0 0 1 S.Smithph 1 0 0 0 Barmesss 4 1 2 0 D.carpenterW,2-0 2 1 0 0 0 2 C ookp 0 0 0 0 Lockep 2 0 0 0 Balfourp 0 0 0 0 Sniderph-rf 2 0 1 0 AWood 1 1 0 0 0 1 Totals 2 8 2 3 2 Totals 3 71 9 1 Miami Oakland 0 00 100 100 — 2 Slowey 5 4 0 0 1 3 P ittsburgh 000 0 0 0 1 00 — 1 Da.JenningsBS,1-1 1 1 1 1 0 0 E—Lowrie (13). DP—Pittsburgh 1. LOB —OakWebb 1 0 0 0 0 0 land 3,Pittsburgh10.28—Lowrie (23), Barmes(7). Qualls 2 0 0 0 0 0 SF Donal d son. Cishek 2 0 0 0 0 2 Oakland IP H R E R BB SO M.Dunn 2 0 0 0 0 3 CoonW12-3 7 7 1 1 1 5 HatcherL,0-1 1 4 6 5 3 1 CookH,13 1 2 0 0 0 1 HBP by D.carpenter(Ozuna), byAvilan (Morrison). B alfour S,23-23 1 0 0 0 0 0 WP —D.carpenter. Pittsburgh T—4:14.A—15,745 (37,442). LockeL,8-2 7 3 2 2 3 4 Ju.Wilson 2 0 0 0 0 1 Phillies 3, Natinnals 2 WP — Locke.PB—D.Norris. T—2:46. A—23,743(38,362).
PHILADELPHIA—John Lannan tossed four-hit ball over eight innings against his former team, Ben Revere had three hits and
Philadelphia beatWashington. Lannan (2-3) had four strikeouts in his longest outing in four years. Washington Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi Spancf 4 0 0 0 Reverecf 5 2 3 0 Dsmnd ss 4 0 0 0 Rollins ss 4 1 2 1 H arperlf 3 1 2 0 Utley2b 4 0 0 0 Z mrmn3b 4 1 2 0 DBrwnlf 3 0 1 1 Werthrf 2 0 1 1 MYong3b-1b 3 0 2 0 A dLRc1b 3 0 0 1 DYongrf 4 0 1 0 Rendon2b 3 0 0 0 Mayrryrf 0 0 0 0 O hlndrfp 0 0 0 0 Ruf1b 3011 Tracyph 1 0 0 0 JMcDnlpr-3b 0 0 0 0 W Ramsc 3 0 0 0 Ruizc 4000 Harenp 2 0 0 0 l.annanp 3 0 0 0 Abad p 0 0 0 0 Frndsn ph 1 0 0 0 Lmrdzz2b I 0 1 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 0 2 6 2 Totals 3 43 103 W ashington 0 0 0 0 0 0 002 — 2 Philadelphia 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0x — 3 E—W.Ramos (4). LOB —Washington 5, Philadeiphia10. 28 —Zimmerman (18), Revere (9). SB—Re-
Oakland
Cubs 8, White Sox2 CHICAGO — Matt Garza pitched
seven strong innings, Alfonso Soriano homeredandscored four runs, and theChicago Cubspulled away late to beat the White Sox.
Dave Sappelt had a career-high four hits, while Soriano hadthree. Luis Valbuena drove in three runs, hitting the tiebreaking two-run
double and scoring during a fiverun eighth. Chicago (N)
Chi cago (A)
ab r hbi ab r hbi S tcastrss 5 0 1 0 DeAzalf 4 0 0 0 Ransm3b 5 0 2 2 Bckhm2b 4 1 1 0 R izzo1b 5 0 0 0 Riosrf 40 10 ASorinlf 4 4 3 1 A.Dunn1b 4 0 1 0 DNavrrc 4 1 I 0 Kppngrdh 4 0 0 0 Valuendh 3 1 1 3 Gillaspi3b 3 0 0 0 Barney2b 5 0 1 0 AIRmrzss 3 0 1 0 S appelt rf 5 1 4 2 Phegly c 3 1 1 1 vere (21),Rollins (9). CS—Harper (3). SF —Werth, B orboncf 2 1 0 0 Tekottecf 3 0 0 0 T otals 3 8 8 138 Totals 3 22 5 1 Ad LaRoche 0 1 0 0 0 1 051 — 8 Washington IP H R ER BB SO C hicago (N) C hicago (A) 0 0 1 0 0 1 000 —2 HarenL,4-10 5 7 2 2 3 7 E—Barney(2). DP—Chicago (A)2. LOB —Chicago Abad 1 2 1 1 0 1 Ohlendorf 2 1 0 0 0 3 (N) 10,Chicago(A) 3. 28—Ransom(6), A.Soriano Philadelphia (22), Valbuena (12), AI.Ramirez(20). HR —A.Soriano Lannan W,2-3 8 4 0 0 2 4 (13), Phegle(2). y SB—A.Soriano2 (10), Beckham PapelbonS,l9-23 I 2 2 2 0 0 (4), Rios(17). SF—Valbuena. WP—Haren. Chicago(N) IP H R ER BB SO T—2:40.A—33,061(43,651). GarzaW,5-1 7 5 2 1 0 6 B.Parker I 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Russell 2-3 0 0 0 0 0
Brewers 4, Reds3
Chicago(A)
MILWAUKEE — Center fielder Carlos Gomez robbed Joey Votto
of a potential go-ahead homer with a spectacular catch in the
ninth inning, saving Milwaukee's victory over Cincinnati. Jean
But this past February, Bartoli arrived at the same crossroad that a number of great athletes and their parents-as-coaches often do. She and her father parted ways, and after some shopping around Bartoli wound up settling on former Wimbeldon champion and countrywoman Amelie Mauresmo. And indeed, she got fitter and more mobile. Bartoli didn't drop a set throughout the past fortnight, an impressive feat when you consider how all the top seeds stumbled, including Maria Sharapova, who actually works in her sparetime as a model. Bartoli was beset by plenty of the same nerves that felled the rest. Watching her hop back and forth a waiting serves ca n m a k e y o u twitchy, but it's one of those things Bartoli relied on since she was young to help cope with the pressure. Old habits are hard t o b r eak, which also explains why she looked often in her father's direction dur-
H.Santiago Lindstrom ThorntonI.,0-3
5 1-3 5 2 12-3 0 0 0 1-32 3 13 3 2 1-3 0 0 1 3 1
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3 2 0 0 1 1
NJones Troncoso A.Reed HBP—by H.Santiago (Valbuena). WP—H.Santrago, N.Jones. T—3:34. A—31,552(40,615).
ing her win over Sabine Lisicki in what was a m i s take-filled finaL Bartoli had been in Lisicki's sneakers in 2007, when she lost the title match to Venus Williams. No one likely understood better the d i stance she had traveled since that day than Walter. No doubt he told her, from the time Bartoli was small, that she'd have to "be scrappy and fight." Inverdale got that part right. Plenty of athletes have heard the same thing from one parent or another over and over throughouttheircareers. But the other part, the part about how she was "never going to be a looker" is not just cruel, it's stupid. Because if it were true, we'd have precious few champions to f awn over — man or woman — in the first
place. — Jim Litfzeis a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him atjlitfze®ap.org and follow him at Twitter comlJimLitfze.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
Elks Continued from C1 "I'm definitely proud of what he's done in his life and that I get to observe and watch him, learn things from him," says Tyler Servais, a sophomore-to-be at Princeton University in New Jersey. "Some of the greatest experiences that I've had came when traveling with my dad. The most educational things aren't necessarily the baseball stuff but the work-related stuff — how he interacts with people that he's working with.... I recognize that, and I'm sure that translates to other areas of the business world as well." While neither Servais believes he looks much like the other, some see a resemblance, including members of the Elks' coaching staff. Dominiak, for one, admits to having called Tyler by his father's name. "He just kind of looks at me and goes, 'No, I'm Tyler,'" says Dominiak. "Alan Embree (an Elks assistant and a former big league teammate of Scott Servais) even goes, 'Scotty.' Tyler and Scott are very similar characteristicwise." Tyler S e rvais, f r o m L a r k spur, Colo., played in th e M i dwest-based Northwoods League last summer and planned this summer to make the short trip from Princeton to New England to compete inthe Cape Cod League, generally regarded as the top collegiate summer league in the country. He signed a temporary contract to join the Cape Cod League's Chatham Anglers i n M a ssachusetts, Servais says. But a rough spring season at Princeton, and a look at a Chatham roster that he believed might be too talented to afford him much opportunity, led to Servais searching for alternative
leagues. After doing some research and mak-
ing some phone calls — and perhaps with some help from Scott Servais, who contacted Embree, his former teammate with the Giants — Tyler was offered a spot with the Elks. Tyler Servais says he ha s been blessed. He has had opportunities to travel with his father to visit various minor league clubs — such as the Frisco RoughRiders in Texas, the Texas Rangers' AA affiliate — and to work out with some of the players and coaches. That exposure to the professional level has provided Servais valuable insights from sources other than his father. "I know a lot of people don't have those opportunities, so I just try to take advantage of them and learn everything I can from being around those guys," Servais says. "I feel like I have a much better idea of what the minor leagues are like than a lot of other col-
Cycling
State
WCl roundup
Continued from C1 J efferson Count y ' s next game is tonight at 5
STANDINGS W-i. 17-11 17-11 15-12 13-11 7-21
North Division
WenatcheeAppleSox Walla Walla Sweets
P,' 13
Bellingham Bells Victoria HarbourCats
Tlets
Kelowna Falcons
o'clock (opponent to be
determined). The 50/70 state champions will advance to reg ional play, which r u n s July 19-26 in Irvine, Calif. T he Bend N o rt h I I U
South Division
Cowlitz Black Bears Klamath Falls Gems
Medford Rogues Kitsap BlueJackets Joe Kline /The Bulletin
Bend Elks catcher Tyler Servais talks with pitcher Cam Booser during a game in June. Servais is hitting.256 in 26 games played.
baseball squad, managed
19-11 15-13 13-12 14-15 11-15 11-20
Bend Elks Corvallis Knights
by Dan Ruhl, advanced to state after defeating The Dalles 13-2 in the district final on Saturday. The IIU state tournament begins t his Saturday an d c o n tinues through July 16 in Pendleton. Bend North's first game will be Saturd ay against Di strict 8 's Grants Pass American. The J efferson C o u n-
Elks standingout Player of the week:Seth Spivey went 7-for-19 during the Elks'
four-game road trip, including two
"I think he'll get a shot (with
a big league organization). He's developing.... He's a switch-hitter, and he has power on both sides." — Bend Elksmanager Joe Dominiak, on catcher Tyler Servais lege players that I'm around and guys going into it." Servais' baseball lineage has helped him develop as a player, but Dominiak says his switch-hitting catcher is "still trying to find himself." Servais concedes to trying to "overanalyze everything," and now he is attempting to turn things around offensively after struggling to a .140 batting average at Princeton this past spring. Coaches can be intimidated by a player because of his father's reputation, according to Dominiak. But Scott Servais made it clear to the Elks' coach: " 'Tell him to do something,' " Dominiak recalls the elder Servais saying. " 'Make him do it. He will listen.' " Elks coaches have tinkered with T yler's hitting mechanics, and t h e changes have helped, Dominiak says. In 26 games played, Servais is batting a modest .256 for the Elks with five doubles and 16 runs batted in (tied for fifth-most RBIs in the WCL). He credits his improvement to Elks teammate Curtis Wildung, who fills in at catcher occasionally to allow Servais to focus on hitting. He also credits his lifelong coach, his father, with whom Tyler speaks by phone nearly every night. Scott's coaching continues during those phone calls, Tyler says. He pays
little mind to Tyler's statistics (other than strikeout-to-walk ratio), but he offers bits of wisdom. "Part of it is we try to talk less mechanics now than we have in the past," Tyler Servais says. "What we're working on now is just being aggressive in the box. I've gotten off to a pretty good start here, and I'd like to just keep it going and keep getting better." After finishing his high school career in 2011, Servais was selected in the 36th round of the draft that spring by the Colorado Rockies, one of four teams Scott Servais played for during his career. Tyler did not sign with the Rockies, opting instead to pursue his collegiate career as well as a degree at Princeton. The younger Servais says he expects to be drafted again following either his junior or senior year at Princeton, but he also hopes to earn a degree in economics. "I think he'll get a shot (with a big league organization)," Dominiak says. "He's developing. ... He's a switch-hitter, and he has power on both sides. Professional baseball, you just don't know what's going to happen. But an organization will give him a shot, and then it's up to that individual to see how
ty Juniors (ages 12-14)
doubles to give the infielder eight for the WCL. Pitcher of the week:Adam Grantham shut down Klamath Falls in the eighth and ninth innings on
Thursday, limiting the Gemsto no hits while striking out three. Bend tallied three runs in the top of the ninth to give Grantham his first win
of the season. Game of theweek: Trailing Klamath Falls 4-3 heading into the top of the ninth inning on Thursday, the Elks scored three times with two outs thanks to run-scoring singles by Turner Gill, Grant Newton and Keach
Ballard, as Bendsealed a 6-4 victory.
Lookingahead MedfordatBend,WednesdayFriday:The Elks dropped two of
three games to the Roguesthis past week, capped by an8-4 loss on Sunday. Derek Dixon and his
W CL-leadin g24RBlslead Bend against Medford's pitching staff that currently limits opponents to a.250
batting average. Klamath Falls at Bend, July16:The
far he goes."
Gems currently boast the WCL'top s
Dominiak adds, "Everything's in his favor right now." T yler S e rvais' p r i m ar y c o a c h throughout his life has been his father, who passed his passion for baseball on to Tyler. Scott Servais no longer holds the official title, but to Tyler, he will always be his coach. "From what I understand, most people who do get drafted and go into the minor leagues, they always have a guy," Tyler Servais says. "Either it's their dad
team batting average (.290), but their
as draconian, even turning to The UCI W o rldTour, cylegal action to try to silence cling's top level of r a cing, Continued from C1 critics. which includes all the Grand And after the investigation M cQuaid d e f ended h i s Tours and l ess prestigious last year by th e U.S. Anti- leadership style. "You don't events like Paris-Nice, does Doping Agency into L ance make omelets without break- not have the structural staArmstrong's use of p erfor- ing a few eggs," he said. "I b ility offered by o t her p r o m ance-enhancing dr ug s , don't profess to be soft and sports. which le d s o m e s p onsors easygoing." The teams that compete in to rethink their support for That attitude may l e ave the WorldTour are not permacycling, many in t h e sport him without a job. The UCI nent members but face an annow see a need to change presidential election is in Sep- nual review by the UCI. It is the way cycling operates as a tember, and McQuaid, who is often a formality, but admisbusiness. Irish, had been running unop- sion is not guaranteed. That call t o c h ange the posed for a third term until And riders are not guaranbusiness side of the sport is a Brian Cookson, the president teed tobe atevery major race. topic that nearly a decade ago of British Cycling, announced The racing calendar — this seemed as taboo as singling his candidacy in early June. year, it includes 29 events over "His bullying and haranguout dopers. Now it is almost 10 months — has become a de rigueur. ing style seems designed to game of choice for many ridNumerous plans for secur- a ntagonize e v eryone w h o ers and teams. Vincenzo Niing the sport's future have does not share his approach bali, the winner of the Giro d'Italia in May and the thirdemerged in the past year. to the governance of world The ideas include the devel- cycling," Cookson said of Mc- place finisher in the Tour de opment of r evenue sharing Quaid recently. France last year, is skipping between teams and race orCookson, also a UCI board France this month in favor of ganizers, the implementation member, oversaw a revival of the Spanish Vuelta, which beof a Formula One-like racing cycling in Britain. His credits gins in August. "For a really sort of lightcalendar and the overhaul of includedeveloping Team Sky, the sport's governing body, with whom Bradley Wiggins weight fan, learning about the I n t ernational C y c l i ng last year became the first Brit- the sport is complicated," said Union, known by its initials in on to win the Tour de France. Jonathan Vaughters, the genFrench, UCI. In a news conference June eral manager of the GarminR epairing th e U C I's i m - 24 in Paris, Cookson unveiled Sharp team. "It's like, 'Is this age is perhaps the biggest a campaign plan aimed at the cool race'? Or is it this one?' challenge that cycling faces "restoring trust" in the UCI, It has got to be simplified." in t h e i m m e diate f u t ure. highlighted by a r e form of Organizers of World Series anti-doping measures. McUSADA's investigation, the Cycling think so, too. Last nearly 1 , 000-page d o ssier Quaid said last w eek t h at year, the group was in talks that supported its ruling to cycling's drug testing was as with UCI to apply a makebar Armstrong for life from independent as possible. over to the sport, developing a cycling and strip him of his The UCI still finances and season of 10 four-day "Grand seven Tour de France titles, supervises its anti-doping ef- Prix" events, the three Grand included details of question- forts, however. And although Tours and a handful of spring a ble d e c ision-making b y m easures appear t o h a v e classics. After traditionalists UCI officials in the past two become more effectivesince scoffed and others wondered decades. In one instance, of- a "biological passport" was what would happen to smaller ficials accepted tw o d o na- implemented in 2008 — stars but traditional races like the tions totaling $125,000 from like Alberto Contador have Tour of the Basque Country, Armstrong, which his former been suspended for doping, McQuaid now says the UCI teammates Tyler H a m ilton an unlikely proposition dur- will "not have anything to and Floyd Landis said were to ing the Armstrong era — the do" with the proposed format. cover up a positive test for the cycling union's proximity to Like Cookson, however, he is banned blood booster EPO testing remains problematic. in favor of changing cycling's "At the moment, the antiat the 2001 Tour of Switzercalendar. "Everyone wants one main land. The UCI president, Pat doping service within the UCI McQuaid, agreed to form an headquarters is just down the Tour, with t h e b est t eams independent commission last corridorof the president's of- and best riders where there's fall to investigate the claims, fice, so that can't be right," a narrative that takes place but that has still not occurred. Cookson said in Paris, add- over the course of a whole McQuaid, who was in ofing on his blog the next day: season," McQuaid said. "No fice at the time of the second "There is a fundamental con- clashes of schedule, no races Armstrong donation, said in flict of interest for an interna- overlapping." an interview last week that tional federation if it is prohe was "still committed to the moting its sport on one hand, Consensus is elusive process." McQuaid has not but policing it on the other." These structuraloverhauls been known for self-reflecw ill a l most c ertainly t a k e tion in his eight-year tenure at Issues beyond doping time. If anyone knows this, the helm of UCI; he has used Yet doping is not the only it is Vaughters. Before Luuc leadership tactics criticized issue giving sponsors pause. Eisenga led the teams associ-
s ecured th e D i s t rict 5 championship with a 125 victory over Columbia last Thursday. Jefferson County, managed by Jason T h omas, a d vances to the state tournament, which b egins S a turday and runs through July 19 in Klamath Falls. The winner of the Juniors softball state tourney will advance to regional play Aug. 1-9 in Tucson, Ariz. Also advancing to state from Central Oregon is the Bend South 11/12 softball team, m anaged by Jud Nelson. The state tournament will take place in Scappoose, near Portland, beginning this Friday. The tournament runs through July 16. The 11/12 softball state champions advance to the regional tournament, set for July 19-26 in San Bernardino, Calif. Later this month, Bend North Little League will host tw o s t ate c hampionship baseball t ournaments: the Junior (ages 12-14) tournament, which runs July 20-25 at Skyview Middle School, and
the season, tied for second-most in
pitchers havegiven upthe secondmost runs in the league(154). or some high school coach they really liked, some kind of baseball guy that's going to be with them throughout their
the Senior (ages 13-16) t ournament, which r u n s July 20-23 at M o u ntain View High School.
career. Obviously, my dad's always going to be that guy for me."
ation, Vaughters was its president, advocating for teams to have more bargaining power in the sport. Teams have long had little influence in cycling, save for an occasional in-race demonstration over drug testing or dangerous road conditions. Vaughters, a Colorado native who raced professionallyfor a decade and was a member of Armstrong's U.S. Postal squad, worked hard to change this, in part by repairing vital relationships in a teams association that had fallen apart. During his two terms spanning the past several years, he met frequently with other WorldTour team officials, often in airport lounges across Europe, to build a coalition that would s t and t ogether on long-term goals such as seeking television revenuesharing deals and, eventu-
ally, developing permanent franchises. Although their ranks have grown to more than a dozen, finding consensus has been often difficult — a potentially
— Reporter: 541-383-0307; glucasCbendbufletin.com.
groundbreaking t e l evisionrevenue-sharing negotiation last year with Giro d'Italia organizers collapsed at the last minute. " It didn't h appen at t h e end, but not because the Giro didn't offer it, but b ecause some teams dragged their feet," Vaughters said. "There was a lack of understanding over what this means, and there still is a lack of understanding to what this means a lot of times." T his July, t h e T ou r d e France organizer A m a ury Sports Organization, or ASO, will haul in at least 20 million euros (about $26 million) from its French TV contract alone; the rider wearing yellow on the Champs-Elysees will make 450,000 euros, about $580,000, which he will divide among his eight-man team. Although the ASO is reluctant to disclose its revenues, a glance at the French
— Reporter: 541-383-0375, eofler@bendbulletinicom.
certainly the sport's biggest power player. Any changes that will be made to cycling will have to be done with the cooperation of the ASO. "They e ffectively h a v e control of t h e d i rection of the sport," Vaughters said. "They think, 'Oh, if the teams and athletes get together, we w ould lose a lot of our T V rights revenue, and it might devalue our business model.' They have the biggest piece of the pie right now, so why change anything? But my argument would be: How about we make the pie bigger?"
company's cycling holdings — Paris-Nice, Criterium du Dauphine and, since 2008, the Vuelta — shows that it is
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
+
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15,224.69
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3,484.83
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Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Stepped up sales?
1,620 "
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company is due to report secondquarter earnings today. Investors will have their eye on how Wolverine managed its expenses for the April-June period. Higher costs and a one-time charge cut into the company's earnings in the previous quarter.
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DOW DOW Trans. DOW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
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HIGH LOW CLOSE 15262.72 15137.22 15224.69 6331.24 6284.43 6298.36 484.17 477.41 483.22 9290.07 9248.67 9266.30 3495.51 3475.39 3484.83 1644.68 1634.20 1640.46 1193.44 1186.11 1188.30 17408.01 17280.03 17365.64 1011.10 1007.17 1009.25
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CHG. +88.85 +8.40 +6.28
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$-52J2
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NorthwestStocks NAME
Home and beauty Helen of Troy, which markets personal care products and housewares, has enjoyed strong sales growth this past year. The company's revenue for the fiscal year ended in February grew 9 percent versus a year earlier, while its earnings rose nearly 5 percent. Helen of Troy reports its fiscal first-quarter earnings today. Will its latest financial report card show continued improvement? $45
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ALK 32.69 ~ A VA 22.78 ~ BAC 6 . 90 BBSI 19.99 BA 6 9 .03 CascadeBancorp CACB 4.50 Columbia Bnkg COLB 16.18 Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 Costco Wholesale COST 93.11 Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 Home Federal BncpID HOME 9.64 Intel Corp INTC 19.23 Keycorp K EY 7 . 46 — Kroger Co KR 2 0 98 — Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 LA Pacific L PX 9 . 87 MDU Resources MDU 19.59 — Mentor Graphics MENT 13.21 — Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 ~ Nike Inc 8 NKE 4 4.83 ~ Nordstrom Inc JWN 49.40 — Nwst Net Gas NWN 41.01 ~ OfficeMax Inc OMX 3 . 71 ~ PeccarInc PCAR 35,21 — Planar Systms P LNR 1.12 ~ Plum Creek PCL 39.17 ~
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CRUDEOIL $103.14
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StoryStocks The Standard & Poors 500 index rose Monday for the third straight day, led by utilities and sellers of consumer staples. Aluminum producer Alcoa marked the start of another earnings reporting season after trading halted for the day. It became the first company in the Dow Jones industrial average to report its results for the April-through June quarter. Financial analysts expect companies across the S&P 500 index to report earnings per share that are 2.9 percent above their levels from a year ago. That would be a slowdown from the 5.2 percent growth that S&P 500 companies reported for the first quarter, according to S8 P Capital ICL GPS Dell DELL Close:$43.65L0.50 or 1.2% Close:$13.44L0.41 or 3.1% Shares of the clothing company hit a A top proxy advisory firm recom52-weekhigh Monday.Analysts exmended that the computer maker's pect the company to post a rise in shareholders vote in favor of the monthly sales later this week. company's founder taking it private. $45 $14.5 14.0
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A
$26.57
M J J 52-week range $43.83
A
M J 52-week range
$8.69 ~
J
$14.64
Vol32.3m (0.6x avg.) P E: 17 . 1 Vold49.9m (2.3x avg.) PE: 1 2 .7 Mkt. Cap:$20.42 b Yiel d : 1 .4% Mkt. Cap:$23.59 b Yiel d : 2 .4%
Zumiez
-.33 -0.6 w w +. 3 2 +1.2 L L
+.12 -.24 + . 13 +. 3 9 + . 33
+
$1 9.02
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52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co
SILVER
Dow jones industrials Change: 88.85 (0.6%)
1,700
J
.
15,280.
Close: 1,640.46
.
+
$1 234.90
S&P 500 Change: 8.57 (0.5%)
1,560 '
- 10
ZUMZ Close:$29.84 %0.53 or 1.8% A Wedbush analyst reiterated her "Outperform" rating on the teen retailer, saying that she expects sales rose last month. $35 30
Natus Medical BABY Close: $12.40 %-1.89 or -13.2% The maker of medical devices for newborn care said that its revenue fell late in the second quarter and will be lower than it expected. $16
25
A
M J J 52-week range 52-week range $17.93~ $38.76 $9.65 ~ $15.18 Vold254.5k(0.6x avg.) PE: 2 3 . 1 Vold992.7k(6.1xavg.) PE: 5 6 .4 Mkt. Cap:$900.42 m Yield :... Mkt. Cap:$376.8 m Yield: ...
ClickSoftware Tech.
C KS W
Close:$7.56 V-0.85 or -10.1% The business software maker issued a disappointing outlook for the second-quarter and cut its revenue prediction for the full year.
Lululemon LULU Close:$65.93 %2.38 or 3.7% A Canaccord analyst reiterated his "Buy" rating on the yoga-wear maker saying that the company's troubles may be behind it. $90
$9
80 70
M J J 52-week range $6.81 ~ $9.14 A
A
M J 52-week range
$53.36 ~
J
$83.56
Vold726.3k(6.8x avg.) P E: ... Vol3 2.4m (0.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$240.23 m Yi eld: 4.2% Mkt. Cap:$7.48 b
P E: 41 . 0 Yield:...
Prec Castperts Luna Innovations LUNA Flir Systems FLIR Sefeway Inc Close:$1.83 %0.53 or 40.8% Close:$28.48 %0.57 or 2.0% Schnitzer Steel The molecular and sensing technolShares of the thermal imaging combased on past 12 months' results Sherwin Wms ogies maker announced a new suppany hit a 52-week high as a Sterne ply contract with robotic surgery sys- Agee analyst raised his price target Source. Factset Stancorp Fncl tem maker Intuitive Surgical. on the stock $7 to $37. Sterbucks Cp $2.0 $30 Triquint Semi UmpqueHoldings 1.5 25 US Bancorp Washington Fedl Retail monitor Wells Fargo & Co A M J J A M J J 52-week range 52-week range The latest Johnson Redbook Retail Weyerheeuser $1.69~ $3.411 $17.99 $28.49 Sales Index is due out today. The index tracks data on sales Dividend Footnotes: 3 Extra - dividends were paid, i7ut are not included. i7- Annual rate pius stock 5 - Liquidating dividend. 6 - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current Vol33.0m (52.4x avg.) P E: .. Vold1.3m (0.9x avg.) P E: 18 . 9 annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. 1 -Sumof dividends paid this year. Most recent Mkt. Cap:$25.73 m Yield: .. Mkt. Cap:$4.04 b Yiel d : 1. 3 % at stores open at least a year. daaend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pad tas year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend That's a key indicator of retailer announcement. p - Imtiai dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. 7 - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, appro76matecash AP SOURCE: Sungard value on exsustrii7ution date. PEFootnotes: q - Stock is 8 closed-end fund - no 8/6 ratio shown. cc - 8/6 exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months performance since it measures growth at existing stores rather than AOL hasexpanded it s plans COmpany market conditions, AOL InterestRates NET 1YR from newly opened ones. to buy back stock. The Spetllght said. TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO The Redbook index declined Internet company said Investors like buybacks every week in June after posting 3-month T-bill . 0 4 .04 .07 Monday that its board approved the because they suggest companies mostly weekly gains in May. purchase of an additional $150 thin k their stock is cheap. They also 6-month T-bill . 07 .07 ... W W .14 million of its own stock. help reduce the number of shares 52-wk T-bill .12 .13 -0.01 V .18 So far this year, the company out s tanding, which automatically Redbook Index 2-year T-note . 3 6 .40 -0.04 L L L .27 has bought back 1.4 million shares increases earnings per share. The yield on the seasonally adjusted 5-year T-note 1 .50 1 .61 -0.11 L L L .65 at an average price of $35.65, or a H igher earnings per share often, 10-year Treaweek-to-week change 10-year T-note 2.64 2.74 -0.10 L L L 1.55 total of $50 million. That brings its t h o ugh not always, lead to rising sury note fell to 0.6% 0.6 30-year T-bond 3.63 3.71 -0.08 L L L 2.66 2.64 percent total current available authorization stock prices Monday. Yields to $200 million. AOL stockclosed at $37.00 NET 1YR The shares will be repurchased M o nday, and is up 25 percent since affect interest rates on conBONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO over the next 12 months based on t he start of the year. sumer loans. Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.40 3.45 -0.05 L L L 2.37 Price-to-earnings ratio:
11
~
AOL (AOL) -0.5 ~ V~7 24 3 1
-0.4
-0.5 -0.5
Total return this year:25%
39.8
7
14
21
28
Source. Factaet
Monday's close: $37.00
AP
1- YR*: 51%
FundFocus
LAST 20.97 3.69 U niPixel 14.28 Alcobra n 7.90 PMC CT 9.70 OwensRM n 10.59 MS CrOil31 34.24 Epizyme 9 34.73 PrmEgy 42.53 DotHillSys 2.46
13.28 +.22 163.95 + . 93 A merican Cent Selectlnv TWC I X 23.19 —.88 11.52 —.08 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH 37.39 + . 05 -.28 14.03 cC 0 18.21 —.85 53 3.48 + . 10 $s $L 19.97 $-.1 4
CHG %CHG +3.76 +.61 +1.98 +1.06 +1.26 +1.34 +4.29 +4.34 +4.93 +.28
+ 2 1 .8 + 1 9.8 «C + 1 6.1 53 + 1 5 .5 «C + 1 4 .9 473 + 1 4 .5 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ + 1 4.3 + 1 4 .3 O o Fund target represents weighted + 1 3 .1 average of stock holdings + 1 2.8 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings
Losers NAME
LAST
DaqoNE rs 8.35 RedhllBio n 8.31 Taomee 4.02 NatusMed 12.40 USEC rs 2.96
CHG %CHG -2.12 -20.2 -2.08 -20.0 -.75 -15.7 -1.89 -13.2 -.45 -13.2
Foreign Markets
CATEGORY Large Growth MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * * * A A ASSETS $1,916 million EXP RATIO 1.00% MANAGER Michael Li SINCE 2003-07-31 RETURNS3-MO +3.9
YTD +9.8 LAST CHG %CHG 1- YR +14.1 +69.98 +1.86 3,823.83 3-YR ANNL +16.0 London 6,450.07 $-74.55 $-1 J 7 5-YR-ANNL +6.3 Frankfurt 7,968.54 +162.54 +2.08 Hong Kong 20,582.19 -272.48 -1.31 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico 40,071.64 -551.45 -1.36 Apple Inc Milan 15,799.62 $265.93 $-1.71 Google, Inc. Class A Tokyo 14,109.34 -200.63 -1.40 Stockholm 1,182.64 $-15.12 $-1.30 Gilead Sciences Inc Sydney -28.80 -.60 Monsanto Company 4,797.60 Zurich 7,863.48 +81.50 +1.05 Costco Wholesale Corporation
~
~
44
SelectedMutualFunds
Gainers Trovag un NBGrce rs
~
Source: FactSet
companies with accelerating Marketsummary growth rates and prefer to hold Most Active on to stocks, rather than trade NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG rapidly. Morningstar assigns the —.09 fund a three-star rating. SprintNex 3898387 7.07
NAME
$27 ~
3-Y R*: 28%
*annualized
A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP The fund's managers look for
BkofAm 1043449 S&P500ETF 939119 Intel 637801 iShJap4m 621920 iShEMkts 611893 MicronT 521017 BariPVix rs 497648 SiriusXM 483225 SPDR Fncl 469507
52-WEEK RANGE
Price-earnings ratio (Based on past 12 months' results):3
NAME Paris
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 22.34 +.11 +10.5 +17.6 +14.2 +7.7 A A A BondA m 12.40 +.06 -3.2 -1.3 +3.6 $3.7 D C E CaplncBuA m 54.81 +.31 $.5.7 +11.5 $.10.7 $.4.2 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 39.68 +.19 $8.2 +21.1 $-11.4 $3.5 C C C EurPacGrA m 41.99 -.05 $ t.9 +1 6.4 +7.2 $ t.7 D D A FnlnvA m 46.47 +.16 $-14.6 +25.7 $-15.9 $5.9 8 C D GrthAmA m 39.22 +.09 $-14.2 +25.9 $-15.5 $-5.7 A C D IncAmerA m 19.19 +.07 +8.1 +14.9 +13.0 +7.0 8 A A InvCoAmA m 34.23 +.15 +14.4 +22.5 +14.8 +6.3 D D C NewPerspA m34.29 +.13 $9.7 +22.5 $-13.4 $5.7 8 8 8 WAMutlnvA m36.10 +.22 +16.8 +23.3 +18.1 +7.7 D A 8 Dodge & Cox Income 13.43 +.04 - 1.7 +1.2 +4.6 +6.6 A B A IntlStk 3 6.80 +.14 +6.2 +26.2 +9.2 +2.3 A B A Stock 1 45.45 +.45 $.20.4 +35.4 $.18.7 $.7.2 A A 8 Fidelity Contra 87.76 +.37 + 14.2 +19.5 +16.5 +7.0 C B 8 GrowCo 107. 96 +.10+ 15.8 +21.0 +19.7 +8.2 8 A B LowPriStk d 46 .48 +.24+ 17.7 +29.7 +19.0+10.8 8 B A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 58 .16 +.32+16.3 +23.8 +17.7 +7.5 C A 8 500ldxlnstl 58. 16 +.32+ 1 6.3 +23.8 N A N A 0 FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 2 9 +.01+ 4.4 +11.9 +10.1 +6.3 A A 8 IncomeA m 2.2 7 + .01 + 4.8 +12.6 +10.8 +6.8 A A A FrankTemp-TempletonGIBondAdv 12 . 93 -.01 -1.2 + 7 .8 + 6 .5 +9.7 A A A Oppenheimer SmMidValA m39.01 +.09 + 20.4 +33.8 +14.7 +4.5 A E E SmMidValB m32.80 +.09+19.8 +32.6+13.7 +3.7 A E E PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 68 +.06 -3.9 -0.6 +4.0 +6.6 C C 8 T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 30.52 + . 17+16.4 +26.9 +16.8 +7.8 C B 8 GrowStk 43.1 5 + .18+ 14.2 +19.9 +18.0 +8.0 C A 8 HealthSci 50.9 5 + .10+23.6 +29.5 +29.4+16.4 D A A Newlncome 9. 3 8 +.03-3.5 -1.2 +3.4 +5.4 D D C Vanguard 500Adml 151.30 +.84 +16.3 +23.8 +17.8 +7.6 C A B 500lnv 151.30 +.84 +16.2 +23.7 +17.6 +7.5 C 8 8 41.48 -.08 $-23.4 +37.9 +18.4 +8.6 A A A CapOp Eqlnc 27.96 +.17 $-17.4 +24.6 +19.8 +9.4 D A A StratgcEq 25.79 +.10 +20.2 +31.8 +21.2 +8.6 A A C TgtRe2015 14.01 +.05 +4.7 +10.5 +10.0 +5.8 8 A A TgtRe2020 25.27 +.10 +6.0 +12.6 +10.8 +5.8 8 A A Tgtet2025 14.56 +.06 +7.1 +14.4 +11.6 +5.8 8 8 A TotBdAdml 10.60 +.04 -3.1 -1.9 +3.2 +5.0 D D D Totlntl 14.76 +.05 +0.1 +15.0 +6.4 -0.1 E E C TotStlAdm 41.23 +.21 +16.7 +24.6 +18.2 +8.1 8 A A TotStldx 41.22 +.21 $-16.7 +24.4 +18.1 +8.0 C A A USGro 24.18 +.09 +13.7 +21.6 +17.3 +7.0 8 8 8 Welltn 36.78 +.23 $-10.1 +16.9 +12.9 +7.6 A A A FAMILY
PCT 6.96 4.87 3.3 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs 1$paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 2.87 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 2.7
redemption fee. Source: Mornngstar.
Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.84 4.83 +0.01 Barclays USAggregate 2.55 2.39 +0.16 PRIME FED Barclay s US High Yield 6.68 6.60 +0.08 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.28 4.28 ... YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.67 1.70 -0.03 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 3 .49 3.35 +0.14 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
Commodities The price of crude oil inched lower, dipping from the 14-month high that it set on Friday amid worries about violence in Egypt. Prices for gold, silver and other metals rose.
Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against the euro,Japanese yen and other major currencies, but it gave up only a fraction of the
strong gains that it has made since the middle of June.
h5N4 QG
L L L L L L W L L L L L
~
L 4.43 L 1.94 L 7 .22 L 3.61 L .90 L 3 21 .
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 103.14 103.22 -0.08 + 12.3 Ethanol (gal) 2.42 2.38 +0.42 +10.5 Heating Oil (gal) 2.98 2.99 -0.32 -2.1 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.74 3.62 +3.43 +11.6 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.88 2.90 - 0.45 + 2 . 6 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1234.90 1212.90 19.02 18.73 1360.50 1324.90 3.11 3.08 693.80 675.95
%CH. %YTD +1.81 -26.3 +1.60 -37.0 +2.69 -11.6 +1.02 -14.5 +2.64 -1.3
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -6.0 1.22 1.22 +0.10 1.23 1.21 +1.90 -14.3 -0.9 Corn (bu) 6.92 6.85 +1.02 Cotton (Ib) 0.84 0.84 +0.18 +11.6 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 300.00 304.80 -1.57 -19.8 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.37 1.36 +0.70 +18.1 Soybeans (bu) 16.09 15.88 +1.34 +13.4 Wheat(bu) 6.60 6.56 +0.61 -15.2 AGRICULTURE
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.4954 +.0052 +.35% 1 .5475 C anadian Dollar 1.0 5 59 —.0017 —.16% 1.0203 USD per Euro 1.2875 +.0042 +.33% 1 . 2271 —.22 —.22% 79.65 Japanese Yen 100.96 Mexican Peso 12. 8 663 —.2255 -1.75% 13.4630 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6605 +.0030 +.08% 3.9476 Norwegian Krone 6 . 1 438 —.1033 -1.68% 6.1285 South African Rand 10.1564 —.0288 —.28% 8.2621 98 —.29% 7.0335 S wedish Krona 6.7 7 8 1 —.01 0000 —. 00% Swiss Franc . 9634 —. .9787 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0937 -.0093 -.85% . 9 814 Chinese Yuan 6.1385 +.0013 +.02% 6 .3658 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7556 +.0009 +.01% 7 .7544 Indian Rupee 60.695 +.450 +.74% 5 5.465 Singapore Dollar 1.2792 -.0007 -.05% 1.2722 South Korean Won 1148.40 -4.57 -.40% 1138.10 -.07 -.23% 2 9 .90 Taiwan Dollar 30.09
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
BRIEFING
BOTC toenter Klamath Falls Bank of theCascades plans to expand into Klamath Falls by buying
the branch ofAmericanWest Bank located in the
city, CascadeBancorp, the parent company,announced Monday. The Bend-based bank
also plans to takeover
EXECUTIVE FILE What: Ginger's Kitchenware What it does:Sells home kitchen
Barnes
& Noble chief resigns
r-.
equipment and culinary decor, and offers cooking class Pictured:Jaime andGinger Aguirre, owners
)Y~'/'
Where:375 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite120, Bend Employees:Eight Phone:541-617-0312
Website:gingerskitchenware.com
the accounts of Amer-
icanWest's branches in Bendand Redmond, according to aCascade Bancorp newsrelease. The dealwould give Bank of theCascadesa
I
L
il
branch in Klamath Falls,
Joe Kline /The Bulletin
where it currently has none. The accounts at
AmericanWest branches in Bend andRedmond will be transferred to existing Bank of the
Cascadesoffices: the Bend Forum Branch at 2630 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, and the branch at154 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond,
according to therelease. The deal must beapproved by regulators.
eri in e iens
Proxy firm dacks Dell buyout bid Top proxy advisory firm Institutional
Shareholder Services is recommending that Dell shareholders vote in favor of a deal that would
is the Q •. What best part
about operating Ginger's? . Jaime Agu• irre: Dur favorite part is that it
serves as aconduit to our community. Ginger and I decided that it's important to give back to the community that we live in. We do that through hosting fundraiser
By RaChaej ReeS •The Bulletin
After spending more than 30 years in the
dinners andsupporting the efforts
telecommunication industry, Jaime Aguirre and his
of nonprofits by auctioning off
wife, Ginger, traded their management positions at
culinary journeys,
allow the company's founder and aninvest-
GTE for cutlery, cookbooks and ownership of Ginger's
ment firm to buy the
Kitchenware.
computer maker and take it private. Michael
Dell and Silver Lake Partners have offered to buy Round Rock,
Texas-based Dell Inc. for $13.65 per share, or a total of $24.4 billion. — Staffandwire reports
DEEDS Deschutes County • Kelly A. Larkin, trustee for Susan L.Lovelace Revocable Living Trust, to Otto G.andLoisT. Powell, Mountain High, Lot 7,Block 6, $365,000 •Jeffrey L. Paynedba Panterra Homesto Herbert M. and Myra M.Foster, Pettigrew Highlands, Lot 9, $219,500 • Federal National Mortgage Association to Scott E. and Heather A.Clark, Tumalo Rim, Lot4, Block1, $277,000 •JohnandJustineGibb to Brian D.and Deanna L. Marcum,Tetherow Crossing, Phase 2, Lot4, Block 4,$380,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Lee Davis, Newport Landing, Lot 3, $270,150 •MFIGroupLLCtoJames and SusanPetsche, Township16, Range12, Section 7, $525,000 • Richard L. andAnneC. Walters, trustees for Richard and AnneWalters Family Trust, to Robert andArlene Ullman, Ridgeat Eagle Crest 19, Lot 81, $415,000 • Resource Specialists Inc. to Joel andJulia C.Gisler, trustees for GislerFamily Trust, Partition Plat 200667, Parcel1, $320,000 • Robert W. andCynthia L. Welch to BenjaminLewellen andTara Engals, Starwood, Lot 33, Block 6,$260,000 •Thomas J. andRhonda D. Weaver toDaniel J. and Lila L. Christiansen, Metts Subdivision, Block3, $164,500 • Daniel J. andJason D. Christiansen toRobert A. and Jill A. Passalacqua, Howells Hill TopAcres, Lot1, Block 2, $249,900 • Laura A. Boehmto Clark M. LimogesandJennifer M. Raven, EaglesLanding, Lot 47, $290,000 •Ali F. Momeni, trustee forthe Ali. F.Momeni Revocable Trust, andRuth G. Momeni, trusteefor Ruth G. Momeni Living Trust, to Gary L.andSandraG. Ragsdale, Wildflower/ Sunriver 2, Stage 3,Unit 54, $220,000 • Fred andJeanee McCaulou to Matthew A.Greenlawto Marion J. Darling, Ridgeat Indian Ford,Lot 6, $615,000 • Mark A. andKimberly P. Eberhard toRonald L.and Deah J. Hofeldt, Awbrey Village, Phase 3, Lot 79, $449,000 •August Bradento Nathan C.
"We discoveredthe business quite by accident," said Jaime Aguirre. "However, we were excited to share our love of food and entertaining, and confident our previous professionalexperience would transfer well to retail." The couple had just moved to Bend and were searching for single-serving teapots when they stumbled across Millette's Kitchen Store and More on Bend's west side. And while the Aguirres were discussing plans for their new lives in Bend, the Millettes mentioned their store was up for sale. "Ginger tugged on my shirt," Jaime Aguirre said. "She didn't sleep for three days, and a week later we began negotiations to purchase Millette's Kitchen Store." Jaime Aguirre said he had a longtime dream of quitting his corporate telecommunications job and going to culinary school to build a career in the food industry. The couple purchased Millette's, which was originally started in Sunriver during the 1980s, in 2007,
and two years later changed the name to Ginger's Kitchenware to personalize the business. In May 2011, they relocated the store to a 2,000-square-foot space in the Old Mill District. The move more than doubled their sales. Ginger's Kitchenware sells home kitchenequipment and decor including cutlery, cookware, stoneware and linens from around the world. It specializes in gadgets
for almost every purpose ranging from $2.99 potato peelers to $100 thermocouple thermometers used to check the temperature of foods and cooking surfaces. The couple also offers cooking classes with chefs from as far away as Florence, Italy, who have been published in cookbooks and featured on TV. "We're the kind of place cooks love," Jaime Aguirre said, "a boutique kitchenware store with topquality lines and great decor. We hand select every item in the store." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rreesC<bendbulfetinicom
to building com-
munity gardens in NorthWest Crossing and financially contributing to
education. . Wheredo
• you see Ginger's in the next five years?
• Jaime Agu. irre:Wewill collaborate with
like-minded businesses to draw attention to the
food and culinary activities available
in our community. Clearly Central Dregon's national
recognition has grown in the areas of tourism, recreation and beer production. With the efforts of
(other) organizations, ... we hope to build an even broader interest in
our community.
Web relic AltaVista is shut down By Barbara Ortutay The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Once up on a time, there was a popular search engine called AltaVista. It lives no more. On Monday, its owner Yahoo Inc. sent Altavista.com to the Internet graveyard to rest alongside order-almost-anything venture Kozmo.com and the butler from Ask Jeeves. Palo Alto, Calif.-based AltaVista was introduced in 1995, threeyears before Google Inc. was founded. Eclipsed by Google in the early 2000s, AltaVista's star had already faded by the time Yahoo acquired it as part of its $1.7 billion
and Mallory J. Witherspoon, Winchester, Lot 21, Block1, $157,250 •JamesG.andJoyceColley to Charles A.MonicaJ. DenHerder,LazyRiver South, SecondAddition, Lot 9, Block 20, $170,000 •Andrejs J. Auskapsto Joesph G. Zielinski, trustee for Joesph G. Zielinski Revocable Living Trust, Partition Plat1995-46, Parcel 2, $325,000 • Dennis E. Sprando to William C.Colley, Homestead,Fourth Phase, Lot 2, Block 9,$235,000 • DZ Properties LLC to Andrea J.Buerger, RanchwayAcres, First Addition, Lot 3, Block5, $205,000
purchaseofOverture Services Inc.in July 2003.Overture had bought AltaVista earlier that year from CMGI Inc. Yahoo announced Altavista's fate on its Tumblr page late last month. Search industry expert Danny Sullivan likened Altavista to a bright child neglected by its parents. "You were loved. You really were," Sullivan wrote in a blog post eulogizing the site. "People did not want to leave you. But despite adding new features, some of which Google copied, you couldn't keep up with the pace and innovation of that company, which decided against becoming a portal
• Isabel Ybarra, trustee for Alejo G.and Isabel Ybarra RevocableTrust, to Philip W. White andKathleen J. Lippitt, Tri Peaks3, Lot4, $240,000 • Wayne R.andAmandaM. Guthrieto JamesE.Lucas III and Carrie L.Lucas, Township14, Range13, Section 26,$175,500 • Charles T. andSusan M. Goolsbee toSusanC. Gonzalez, SundanceEast, Phase2, Lot8, Block1, $460,000 • Robert L. andCatherine E. Jorden, trusteesfor Jorden Family Living Trust, to Michelle L. Helling, Awbrey Village, Phase2, Lot31, $427,000 • Robin V.Johnston, trustee
for Bill and RobinJohnston RevocableTrust,to Deane and Stephanie J.Cooper, Crooked RiverRanch,No.4, Lot12, $239,000 •Michael P.Flanagan,who acquired title asMichael Flanagan, toFrankie T. Gaskins Jr.andPatricia Gaskins, Justin Glen,Phase 1, Lot14, $191,700 • Amanda G.Greening to Kenneth R.and KathleenA. Allen, Tillicum Village,Third Addition, Lot7, Block13, $240,000 • Hendrickson Homes of Oregon LLCtoMarc R. Braiverman, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase9, Lot 298, $350,000 • Melvin L. McDougalto Debrah L.Croom,Vilage
The Associated Press NEW YORK — Barnes & Noble Inc. said Monday that William Lynch has stepped down as CEO, effective immediately, as the book retailer continues to struggle with weak sales, big losses and the declining popularity of its Nook e-readers. Lynch's resignation comes after just three years in the role. No successor was named, but the New York company said it is reviewing its strategic plan and will provide an update "when appropriate." Shares fell 4 percent in after-hours trading on the news. In the wake of his departure, Chief Financial Officer Michael Huseby will become president of the company and CEO of its Nook Media unit. Controller Allen Lindstrom will succeed Huseby as CFO. The news didn't surprise some analysts. "The board lost confidence in Lynch. Investors lost confidence," Belus Capital Markets analyst Brian Sozzi said Monday. He said that Lynch didn't have a definitive plan at the last earnings call, after Barnes 8r Noble posted a larger quarterly loss and said sales plunged in the three months ended April 30.
like your corporate masters ordered for you." Indeed, Altavista's decline began after it expanded to become more like Yahoo, offering abevy ofonline services instead of sticking solely with search. By the time the site reversed course, it was too late. Its finances were sinking and Google was on the rise. Yahoo's June 28 announcement of Altavista's end is brief. It's buried on a list of other services the company is shutting down. Along with the mention of Altavista's July 8 expiration date, the post says only: "PleasevisitYahoo Search for allofyour searching needs."
at Oaktree, Phase2, Lot12, $234,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Ronald J.Sharbaugh, Newport Landing, Lot14, $336,00 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to James M.YozampSr.and Shirley A.Yozamp,Bridges at ShadowGlen,Phase1, Lot 62, $235,600 • Pacwest II LLC to Jeremiah D.and AmyN. Minton, Madison Park, Lot 1, $209,947 • Jeffrey B. andJudy A. Fields, trusteesfor Jeffrey B. and JudyAnnFields RevocableTrust, to Joesph K. andTheresaS. Frilot, Township18, Range13, Section17, $320,000 • Troy T. andValerie C.
Borrowing jumped
in May By Martin Crutsinger The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Americans increased their borrowing in May at the fastest pace in a year. Borrowing in the category that includes credit cards reached its highest point since the fall of 2010. Increased borrowing typically means that consumers are feeling more confident. Americans stepped up their borrowing by $19.6 billion in May compared with April, the Federal Reserve said Monday in its monthly report on consumer credit. That was the
biggest jump since a $19.9 billion rise in May 2012. Total borrowing reached a record $2.84 trillion. The category that includes credit card use rose $6.6 billion, also the largest gain in a year. Credit card debt reached $847.1 billion, the most since September 2010. Credit card debt remains about 16 percent below its high of $1.02 trillion in July 2008 — just before the financial crisis erupted. Borrowing for autos and student loans rose $13 billion in May. That was the sharpest increase since February.
Samuel to Gilbert L. and Jean C.Thompson, Silver Sage, Phase1, Lot12, $199,900 • Cheryl A. Ruud,who acquired title asCheryl A. Hunt, to David N.Pyle, Lavacrest East,Phase1,Lot 2, $246,000 • Gregory D. andTanya M. Murren toPensco Trust CompanyCustodian fbo BonnieWilson IRA, Starwood, Lot1'I, Block4, $179,000 • Jeffrey L. Valadezand Adriana Guzman-Valadez to BradleyA. Reed,Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase22, Lot2, Block22, $395,000 • Gary D. Yanceyto Richard P.and Brandee M. Kaloke, Deschutes RiverWoods,
Lot 2, Block EE,$168,300 • Kenneth M. Reading, Carolyn R.WoodandGwen M. Reading, trusteesfor Reading RevocableLiving Trust, to CreggLarge, WiestoriaAddition, Lots1 and 2, Block16, $185,900 • James H. andGloria M. Coon to DebraA. and Daniel J. Hempy, RiverRimP.U.D., Phase 6,Lot180, $605,000 • Andrew V.Fitzpatrick and Linda P.Kunwar to Michael D. and AndreaG.Anderson, Cedar Village,Phases1-3, Lots 26 and27,$573,500 • Jeanette M. Pescettito Matthew Woinarowiczand Jessica Clark-Woinarowicz, Oakview, Phase9, Lot30, $225,000 • Barbara J. Donovan to
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • ProfessionalEnrichment Series, search engine marketingand optimization:Covers keyword research, on-page SEO elements, social media missed opportunities and local searchoptimization; register at www. bendchamber.org; $20 for members, $35for nonmembers; 7:30a.m.; Volcanic TheatrePub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1 88 I. • Membership101 — DrivingYour Membership:TheBend Chamber ofCommerce wants to connect newand current members with the opportunities andbenefits available; RSVPrequired; contact Shelley Junkerat 541-382-3221 or email shelley©bendchamber. org; 10 a.m.; BendChamber of Commerce, 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 200; 54 I-382-322 I. • BusinessAfter Hours: Hosted by HighLakes Health Care ofRedmond; 4:40-5:30 p.m.; HighLakes Health Care-Redmond, 1001 N.W.Canal Blvd. THURSDAY • July AdFedMixer: RSVP by July 8; contact, Linda Orcelletto, 541-385-1992; free; 4:30-6:30 p.m.; The Point at Shevlin Corporate Park, 929 S.W.Simpson Ave., Bend. FRIDAY • WorkzoneFlagger: Learn the basics of flaggingand traffic safety; open-book test given attheend of class; upon successful completion, receive OregonDepartment of Transportation credential for flaggers; registration required; $79; 9a.m.-2 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend;541-383-7270. • Howto Starta Business: Registration required; $15; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.;Central Oregon Community College ,Redmond campus, 2030 S.E.CollegeLoop, Redmond; 541-383-7290. MONDAY • Allergy SafeTraining, Spot Check: Training and certification program for front and back of thehouse personnel whoprovidefood service to the public; fee includes required textbook andexam;classcontinues July16; registration required; $169; 9a.m.-2 p m CascadeCulinary Institute, 2555 N.W. CampusVillageW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270. JULY16 • Project Management Professionalcertification meeting:Informational discussion on theProject Management Professional certification; coffee, pastries and networking start at 7:15 a.m.; to RSVP, email Jeff Busch at Busch@ teleport.com; to learn more, visit www.pmi.org; free; 7:30-8:30 a.m.; The Environmental Center,16 N.W. KansasAve., Bend; 541-385-6908. • CrookedRiverRanchTerrebonneChamberof Commerce Networking Social:Seethe newfire hall; refreshmentsand networking opportunities; call 541-923-2679; free; 5:30 p.m.; CrookedRiverRanch Fire & Rescue,6971S.W. Shad Road;541-923-6776. JULY17 • Online SalesTechniques: Business ownersand managers learn to use company websites and social mediatools to generate income; registration required; call 541-383-7290; $49; 9 a.m.4 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend.
For the complete calendar, pickup Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal
Michael J. andKristen M. Polich, TetherowCrossing, Phase 7,Lot 7,Block5, $175,000 • Daren andPamCurry to Richard G.and E.M. Anderson, trusteesfor Anderson FamilyTrust, Heritage Ranch,Lot20, $182,200 • Hayden HomesLLCto George D.and Karen L. Garner, AspenRim, Lot49, $199,279 • Paul A. Hutter and Emilie M. Hart-Hutterto Matthew S. Cook, BoulevardAddition to Bend, Lot9, Block15, $331,000 • Philip M. andPolly B. Johnson toAmandaG. Greening,AwbreyVillage, Phase 3,Lot173, $450,000
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome
FOOD
AT THE MARKET
GARDEN
A weekly look at produce
Perkup your
at local farmers markets.
PIClllC Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
By Alison Highberger For The Bulletin
W
One of summer's simple pleasures is eating outside. Venturing out into nature, beyond the backyard, is what makes picnicking fun. To encourage you to spread out a quilt in the backcountry or find a picnic table in a nearby park, we went in search of some delicious picnic side dishes that will travel well (on
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t
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tt ta
Today, uLibby's Garden," next to the Allen-Rademacher home on Riverfront Plaza, is overseen by the Hardy Plant Garden Club of Bend as a teaching and demonstration garden.
I
variety of this com-
monly found pea.The thick-walled purple peas
offer the samecrisp snap and sweet flavor of their green coun-
terparts. The only real difference is the color. Sugar snap peasare a fun summertime treat.
The sugar in their name denotes the sweetness
of the peas. Youcan eat the entire pea, pod and all. The sugar snap pea is in betweenan English pea, which must
ice), and bring more flavor to your next outdoor meal. There's nothing wrong with good old potato or pasta salad, but it's nice to try something new, and our emphasis is on vegetables that are in season right now. You'll impress your fellow picnickers if you whip up Jacques Pepin's Tomato and Mozzarella Fans or Tate & Tate Catering's Radish and Fennel Salad with homemade Green Goddess
be hulled before eating,
and a snowpea,which has a very thin pod that can be eaten. Look for peas with bright color
(be it purple or green) and look for a plump, crisp-looking pod. "The New Food Lover's Companion" recommends refrigerating in a plastic bag for up to three days.
By Marielle Gallagher Photos by Rob Kerr The Bulletin
Preparation:The Editor's note:The At Home sectionfeatures a garden profile each month during the gardening season. To suggest a garden to profile, email athome@ bendbulletin.com.
In the
Dressing (see recipes, Page D2). Pepin's Zucchini and Tomato Salad uses long, thin strips of zucchini that have been lightly salted to draw out some moisture. This gives the zucchini a nice crunchy texture. Barbara Tate, of Tate & Tate Catering in Bend and Redmond, shared Tate & Tate's Asian Pasta Salad with us, too. It's full of fresh vegetables and herbs, and tossed with a peanut-soyginger dressing that will make you feel as if you had a chef, like her husband and business partner George Tate,
What:Sugar snap peas Season:Now About:These purple specimens are a tasty
See additional photos
on The Bulletin's website: O henddulletin.com/athometour
• How Libby's Garden
cametodowntown Bend 0 1t A
Purple jackamanii clematis
CL
bag and munchaway (or better yet, pick a pod straight from your gar-
den). Theendthat was attached to the plant isn't edible, but you can just use that as a handle to facilitate eating. To
my mind, sugar snap peas should overtake baby carrots as the go-to veggie to put on a peas will also addsweet crunch to anysalad. You can keep themwhole or chop (but note that
ituated between parking lots and sidewalks on Riverfront Plaza is Libby's Garden, a 30-by-30-foot refuge of lush plant life. Inside, every inch is abundant with emerald foliage, big punches of color, climbing vines and tall stalks of flowers. One side is lined with hot pink Betty prior roses. Mixed in are spiky blue thistle, pink dianthus and a purple jackamanii clematis growing into the canopy of a vine maple. A stone path circles the interior of the garden,and an iron fence delineates the edge ofthe garden from the street. A ceramic sign bears the name "Libby's Garden." The garden is one of the ways longtime Bend resident Elizabeth "Libby" McGeary contributed to the Bend landscape before she died in August of 2002. SeeLibby/D4
chopping will lead to
some of the peas falling out of the pod). Sugar snap peascanalso take the heat — just not too
much. I recently added purple snap peas toa simple stir fry with rice,
egg, toasted sesameoil and garlic. Thekeywas to notcookthe peastoo long. The purple peas retain their color while
cooking, but they may also bleed their color onto other items (my
meal. "It's so good. It's almost like pad Thai without the chicken. It's so peanuty and crunchy with all of the vegetables," Barbara Tate said. SeePicnics/D2
rice gained anice purple hue).
Hen and chicks
— Aiandra Johnson, The Bulletin Produce purchased from Agncultural Connections, which distributes goods from regional farms (www. agriculturalconnections.com).
Dianthus
oly prniect: drywall patching
TODAY'S RECIPES Tate 8 Tate Radish and
Fennel Saladwith Green GoddessDressing: Thestrong
that hole in the wall Editor's note:Check back every other week for do-it-
ing. Grab one out of the
crudite platter. Raw snap
supply your picnic
Ol: cj C
beauty of sugar snap peas is in their easyeat-
flavors in this salad are in
season right now,D2
Spread a thin layer of joint compound smoothly over the crack in the wall.
yourselfprojects.
Cover the crack with a piece of Apply another layer of
More picnic recipes:Tate 8 Tate Asian Pasta Salad, Zucchini and TomatoSalad,Tomatoand MozzarellaFans,D2
drywall tape and smooth it into compound and smooth. Let it the compound with your putty dr y for several hours or knife. overnight.
Popsiclas, all grownup:English SummerCup,TheJaliscito, Gin Zing, Pomegranate, Vanilla andVodka, Bee's Knees, D3
By Alison Highberger For The Bulletin
It's easy to damage awall. A
Wttt
piece of furniture being moved
can graze awall, HOMF le aving an eyecatching scar. Dogs scratch claw marks on walls, especially near doors. Someone tripping and falling into
a wall (like my teenageson did when he slipped on our stairs) can result in a dent or crack (his shoulder and elboware fine — the
wall, not so much). See Patch/D4
o Lightly sand the patch. If there
are small holes after sanding, spread a thin coat of
If you want a smooth wall,
you're ready to paint. If your wall is textured, use spray-on
Prime and paint the patched
area of the wall.
compound, let it dry and sand. wall texture to simulate the
Plum GhutneyCrumbPie: Timeto make use of summer fruits, D3
existing pattern. Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Dear Abby'sFavorite GompanyChicken: Recipefor a beginner, D3
D2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
Fooo Picnics
Next week: Food to pair with beer
for a picnic by yourself. But Barbara Tate h opes you'll try making the radish and fennel salad. "The radish and fennel sal-
Continued from D1 Tate & Tate Catering has r etail shops i n B e n d a n d R edmond where y o u c a n ad is particularly enjoyed by pick up "grab and go" salads, more adventurous palates that wraps, sandwiches, desserts appreciate the crisp spiciness and wine, in case you don't of the radish and the subtle want to prepare everything anise undertones of the fennel.
The combination is flavorful and exciting," Tate said. She noted that this is the time of year when radishes and fennel are at their freshest and best. As you plan your next picnic, remember to always pack and transport your food safely, so bacteria doesn't grow and make people sick.
Follow the U.S. Food and Drug Administration guidelines, and you won't have any worries. The basic rule is to keep cold food cold and hot food hot. Put food in zip-top bags or other airtight containers and surround them with ice or frozen gel packs in a cooler. "Cold
food should be stored at 40 degrees or below to prevent bacterial growth," notes the FDA website. Don't let your food be in the danger zone: between 40 and 140 degrees Fahrenheit, for more than one hour, if the temperatureoutside isabove 90,or for more than two hours if it's
cooler outside. "This is when bacteria in food can multiply rapidly, and lead to foodborne illness," writes the FDA.
Happy picnicking this summer with friends and family and fresh flavors in the great outdoors! — Reporter: ahighberger@mac. com.
Tate Sc Tate Radish
and Fennel Salad with Green Goddess Dressing Makes 4 to 6 servings. VEGETABLES: 1 carrot, shredded 1 bulb fennel, sliced thinly on a mandolin slicer 1 bunch radishes, sliced thinly
2 C chopped parsley 1 heart of celery or inner stalk, sliced Mixed greens, for serving Mix together in a large bowl and salt lightly. Set aside. GARNISH: Dried cranberries, toasted sunflower seeds and crumbled feta cheese
Green Goddess Dressing Makes1 quart. 1 C white wine vinegar /2 C mayonnaise 1 tsp garlic, chopped /2 C honey or sugar, to taste 1 C light olive oil /2 bunch parsley 1 bunch green onion, cleaned 1 green bell pepper, seeded /2 yellow or white onion 2 cucumbers, peeled and seeded
San White pepper To make dressing:In a blender
Photos by Andy Tulhs/ rhe Bulletin
or food processor, puree all of the Tate & Tate Catering's Radish and Fennel Salad with Green Goddess Dressing makes use of flavorful, in-season vegetables. vegetables together, except the garlic, until they are very finely chopped. Add t/e cup water to sugar and blend. Add the olive oil and blend until smooth. Adjust consistency with small amounts of water. Adjust the seasoning
Zucchini and Tomato Salad
Tate Sc Tate Asian Pasta Salad
thin, if necessary. Add the vinegar, mayonnaise, garlic and honey or Makes 4 servings.
Makes 4 servings.
Note:The dressing recipe is doubled. You will use half to mix with the noodles and have 1 cup for extra dressing
For this recipe, I salt long, thin strips of zucchini and serve them raw. The
for those who would like more.
salt flavors the zucchini and draws out its moisture, giving it a deliciously crunchy texture. Sometimes I serve the zucchini on its own with just a dash of olive oil, but it's also wonderful with this tomato, mozzarella and
PASTA: with salt, white pepper and sugar 1 Ib angel hair pasta to taste. 2 TBS yellow Madras curry
cilantro salad, which can beserved on its own. — Jacques Pepin,"Fast Food MyWay"
Forthe salad:Tossthevegetapowder ble mixture with a small amount 6 qts of water
2 sm firm zucchini (each about
5 oz)
of the dressing, and then place a
serving of the vegetables over a VEGETABLES: small mound of mixed greens. 1 green pepper, cored and Garnish with dried cranberries,
1 tspsalt 2 C diced ('/4-inch) tomatoes /3 C diced t(/s-inch) mozzarella cheese, preferably buffalo mozzarella
seeded
toasted sunflower seeds and 1 red pepper, cored andseeded crumbled feta cheese. Drizzle with /2 red onion a bit more dressing on top, if de-
sn'ed.
— From Tate8 TateCatering, www. tateandtatecatering.com, grabandgo, and catering by reservation: Bend: 2755 N.W. Crossing, Suite 109; MondayFriday,10a.m.to6p.m.; Redmond: 1205S.W.IndianAve.;Monday-Friday, 9a.m.to530p.m.andSaturday 9a.m. to 4 p.m.
/2 stalk bok choy /2 stalk celery
Where Buyers
Using a vegetable peeler, cut down the length of each zucchini to
DRESSING: 2 C peanut butter 2 TBS soy sauce OR a pinch of salt — your preference 2 tsp freshly grated ginger 4 TBS cider or rice wine vinegar
ter, pivot the zucchini, and repeat on the other three sides. Discard the seedy centers and put the zucchini strips in a nonreactive bowl. Sprinkle witht/~teaspoon of the salt, mix well, and set aside until serving time. In another bowl, mix together the tomatoes, mozzarella, cilantro, lem-
on juice, oil, the remaining /2 teaspoon salt and the pepper. At serving time, arrange the zucchini strips on four plates to create a border around the edge. Spoon some of the tomato salad into the center
,/
of each plate andserve immediately. Make ahead:Both the zucchini and the tomato salad can be prepared up to 2 hours ahead of serving; if done any further ahead, they both tend
®
For the pasta:Add the yellow
1000's Of Ads Every Day
pepper
remove long, thin strips. Stop when you reach the seeds in the cen-
GARNISH: Sesame seedsand a chiffonade of fresh cilantro or basil
And Sellers Meet
About t/2 C(loosely packed) fresh cilantro leaves 2 TBS fresh lemon juice t/4 C extra-virgin olive oil /2 tsp freshly ground black
Madras curry powder to the water, and bring it to a boil. Add the pound
to get mushy. — From JacquesPepin, "FastFoodMy Way,"Copyright2004JacquesPepin. Vsed by permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcou/t Publishing Company.AIIrights reserved.
of angel hair pasta and cook just a touch past al dente (see package directions). Drain and rinse with
Thc Bultctin
cold water and thenrefrigerate.
Tomato and Mozzarella Fans
For the vegetables:Slice all of the vegetables thinly and reserve.
Makes 4 servings. A tomato salad with mozzarella andbasil is certainly one of the highlights of summer at our house, especially when our own tomatoes are ripe and
For the dressing: Blend the dressing ingredients until smooth.
lES SCHNAB
You mayneed toadd some water to get the desired consistency. To assemble: Removethepasta
BiST TIili VAi.IIi PROMISE
from the refrigerator, toss it with the
stem end, but stop short of cutting them all the way through and leave them still attached at the base of the tomato. Then I insert slices of moz-
sliced vegetables, and toss it with
zarella between the tomato slices so that each tomato resembles abeau-
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the basil in our garden is abundant. My recipe differs from the standard
only in its presentation: I cut the tomatoes into slices from the top to the
up to1 cup of the dressing. Garnish
with sesameseedsanda chiffonade of fresh cilantro or basil. — From Tate8 TateCatering, www. tateandtatecatering.comin Redmond and Bend
Weekly Arts Sr Entertainment
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4 Ig ripe tomatoes (6-7 oz each) About s/4 Ib piece mozzarella
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/3 C diced ('/4-inch) red onion About12 fresh basil leaves
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DRESSING: t/4 C extra-virgin olive oil 1 /2 TBS sherry vinegar or red wine vinegar s/4 tsp salt '/4 tsp freshly ground black
pepper
Th e Bulleti M A G A Z I NE
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Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties, I
— Jacques Pepin,"Fast Food MyWay"
cheese A Free Public Service
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with olive oil and sherry vinegar.
— Barbara Tate, Tate & Tate Catering
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OtttpA Orepon Newspapcv Publishars Association $ IQ~~~
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tiful red and white fan when spread open. The tomatoes are best served at room temperature, garnished with red onion and basil leaves and drizzled
"(The Asian Pasta Salad is) almost like pad Thai without the chicken. It's so peanuty and crunchy with a/I of the vegetables."
-
Remove the core from each tomato. Place the tomatoes stem sides down on a cutting board and cut them vertically into '/4-inch-thick slices (6 to 8 slices per tomato), stopping about /2-inch from the base of each tomato, so that the slices are still attached at the stem end. Cut the mozzarella in half lengthwise, then into '/4-inch-thick slices, and insert a slice of mozzarella between the slices of tomato, creating a fan effect.
For the dressing:Mix all the ingredients together in a small bowl. Arrange the tomatoes on a serving plate. Sprinkle with the diced
onion and spoon some of the dressing on top so that it runs between the slices of tomato and mozzarella. Tear the basil leaves into pieces and scatter them around and on top of the tomatoes. Serve at room
temperature. — From JacquesPepin, "FastFoodMy Way,"Copyright2004 JacquesPepin. Vsed by permission of Houghton M/Ttiin Harcourt Publishing Company. AIIrights reserved.
FOO D
• Make your own grown-up popsicles
Makes 6 pops.
By Jill Wendholt Silva The Kansas City Star
~F
In the wake of th e craft cocktail movement, could poptails be far behind?
' jjj s
"Poptails" (Octopus, $12.99)
"Wooden sticks are much better," Fyfe told me, "because they hold and offer a bit more friction." She also advises dipping the molds in hot water to help get just enough melt to loosen the
By Linda Cicero
Place the cucumber and elderflower cordial in a food processor
been learning to cook since his wife passed away. He Marzetti's had a vinasked if I knew how to make . aigrette type dressing what his w i fe called orange called "Dear CppK'SCpRN ER splash that was Abby Chicken." delicious on I had not heard mixed greens of this, but knew you'd track with mandarin orange piecit down. I'd love to make it for es and sweet onion. It dishim. appeared from the shelves. . The recipe is so simple ANY suggestions for a reci. even a beginning cook pe I can make at home? • Don't you just hate it can make it. I have to admit I was skeptical about the • when a favorite goes ingredient combination the out of production? Happily, first time I made this. But it I think the recipe here will does turn out moist and deli- come close.
The Miami Herald
An older man in my Q . .condo building h a s
or blender and blitz until smooth. Pass the mixture through a fine
mesh strainer into a bowl and stir
jigger of booze. The cookbook
year.)
2t/s C chopped cucumber 1 C elderflower cordial '/2 C gin ~A l
siil
is the clever name for tipsy adult ice pops infused with a
half of the pulp in the sieve back into the cucumber and elderflow-
er juice. Mix in the gin until well combined, then pour into six fro-
zen ice pop molds. Place the molds in the freezer. Let set for 3 hours, give it a good stir, insert the sticks and allow to
IP,'"
n
freeze solid (about 4 more hours) or leave overnight.
Pomegranate, Vanilla and Vodka
A
Dear Abby'sFavorite Company Chicken Makes 4 servings.
/2 vanilla bean '/4 C super-fine sugar 1/2 C pomegranate juice 4 TBS vodka
2'/2 to 3 Ibs chicken pieces 16-oz bottle Italian salad
English Summer Cup Makes 6 pops. t/4 C superfine sugar 4 TBS Pimm's gin-based liquor 1 C ginger beer (or lemonade)
t/4 C sliced strawberries t/4 C sliced apples 1 8sm mint leaves
Place the sugar and/2 cup water in a saucepan and slowly bring to a
vanill a bean and place pod and seeds in a saucepan with the
overnight in refrigerator.
sugar and t/2 cup water. Slowly bring to a boil, allowing the sugar
bowl, combine1 cup marinade with preserves; mixwell. Brush chicken with mixture; place skin-side up in 9-by-13-inch
to dissolve. Let simmer gently for
baking dish. Pour remaining marinade over chicken. Cover with foil
5 minutes, then remove from the heat. Allow to infuse for 30 minutes. Remove the vanilla pod from the syrup and mix in the pome-
and bake 1 hour. Remove foil. Continue baking for 30 to 40 minutes, or until chicken is tender.
granate juice and vodka. Pour
Orange Sunshine Salad Dressing
Heat oven to 325degrees. Removechicken from marinade. In small
into four frozen ice pop molds. Place the molds in the freezer.
Makes about1/~ cups.
Let set for 2 hours, insert the
boil, allowing the sugar to dissolve. Let simmer gently for 5 minutes, then sticks and allow to freeze until remove from the heat. completely solid (about 4 more
Add the Pimm's andginger beer or lemonade. Let cool completely. Divide the strawberries, apple slices and mint leaves among six frozen ice pop molds. Pour over the Pimm's mixture and insert the sticks.
Place molds in the freezer for 6 hours, until frozen solid. The Jaliscito Makes 6 slushes. This is one of LauraFyfe's favorite recipes. /2 C super-fine sugar Grated zest of 1 lime /3 C lime juice (3 to 4 limes)
2 C chopped watermelon 6 TBS tequila 2 TBS Grand Marnier
Put the sugar and lime zest in a saucepan with 1 cup water. Place over
hours).
1'/2 C fresh orange juice 2 tsp grated orange zest 1 garlic clove, peeled 2 TBS balsamic vinegar
Bee's Knees
In a blender, combine the orange juice, zest, garlic, vinegar, honey, salt and pepper. Blend until smooth. With the blender running, add the olive oil in a steady stream until combined. Transfer to a container and
2 TBS honey 4 TBS whiskey 2 C ginger beer
store in the refrigerator.
Put the honey and whiskey into a bowl and, using a small whisk,
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet
mix together until well combined. Gradually whisk in the ginger beer, making sure that everything
is thoroughly blended.
ble gently for 5 minutes, remove from the heat and pour in the lime juice.
Pour into six ice pop molds and place in the freezer. After 2 hours,
•I I
give each one a good stir. Freeze
Pour into a freezer-safe container, cover, and place in the freezer for up for another 2 hours, stir and insert to 6 hours, giving it a good stir every 2 hours. Remove from the freezer, the sticks. Return to the freezer
beat the summer heat. Food ice pop. & Wine Magazine's July issue Like Fyfe, plenty of folks features M o j ito-Watermelon are getting o n t h e p o ptail Pops. Lindsay Laricks of Little bandwagon as a novel way to Freshie, a Kansas City, Mo.,
area business that sells handcrafted sodas and all-natural snow cones, says she sees the trend. "I get requests for it all the time," she says. "It's my
Because while in theory one could put a crumbly brownS ummer isn't j u s t f r u i t- sugar topping on any kind of pie season in m y k i t chen. pie, tangy, high-acid summer It's crumb-pie season, too. fruit pies work best. New Yorh Times News Service
Think about it. Haveyou ever seen a crumb topping on a wintry pecan orchocolate cream pie? The one-two sugar punch could actually floor you (or at
•
• • Classifieds
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until completely solid.
TheBulletin
number one question." And remember: If your poptail fails, there's no reason not to slurp it up as a snow cone instead.
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Summer ruit means time or crum ie By Melissa Clark
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blitz in a food processor or blender, andpour into glasses. Allow to thaw a and freeze for another 2 hours, little (approximately 10 minutes), then serve.
1 TBS honey 1 tsp salt /2 tsp freshly ground pepper t/4 C olive oil
Makes 6 pops.
low heat. Gently bring to a simmer,allowing the sugar to dissolve. Let bubPlace thechoppedwatermelon in afood processor or blender,addthe lime syrup, tequila, GrandMarnier andagavenectar andblitz until well combined.
dressing 12-oz jar apricot preserves
Rinse chicken pieces and pat dry. Marinate chicken in dressing
Scrape the seeds from the Poptails is the clever name for tipsy adult ice pops infused with a jigger of booze. To ensure freezing, be careful with the ratio of alcohol to other ingredients.
cious. I found the recipe in a booklet titled "Dear Abby's Favorite Recipes," published in 1987.
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Makes 4 pops.
Tammy Ljungbiad / Kansas City Star
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'Dear AbbyChicken' is easy,andturns out moist anddelicious
Gin Zing ;/'.- p„-..-
thatrecently crossed my desk is the brainchild of Londonbased food stylist Laura Fyfe. I was initially intrigued by the idea of freezing alcohol, something that can be difficult to do. "You have to go easy," Fyfe told me in a telephone interview regarding the amount used tospike each recipe, "but they still have quite a kick." Indeed, it's a delicate ratio. Still, Fyfe's ice pops are saucy even though they have only 4 tablespoons ofalcohol per recipe. "Freezing dulls the flavors of the ingredient so the alcohol tastes stronger than if you mixed it in a glass," she said. I made three flavors: the super-green cucumber Gin Zing, a tasty Pomegranate, Vanilla and Vodka and an English Summer Cup with slices of apple, strawberry and mint. The recipes are simple, delicious and complex, just the sort of layering of flavors we demand from our favorite cocktails. But I must admit that during our photo shoot, more than half of the ice pops refused to unmold when pulled by the handle. When life gives you lemons, make slush instead. When I a s ked F yfe a bout my dilemma, she said she always uses traditional wooden sticks. On closer inspection I realized every frosty photo in Fyfe's book was styled with traditional wooden sticks. A quick Googlesearch revealed all kinds of poptails out there — check out endlesssimmer. com and Pinterest — and all of them on wooden sticks. (And I thought that was strictly an aesthetic choice, since none of therecipes specify wooden sticks over the plastic sticks that typically come with the molds sold at nearly every department store this time of
TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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least make your teeth hurt). Berries, sour cherries, apricots, peaches and plums, however,make an ideal bed for a blanket of crumbles.
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Plum Chutney Crumb Pie Makes one 9-inch pie. CRUST: 170 g all-purpose flour (about 1t/4 C), more as needed for rolling out dough 1 g fine sea salt (about /4 tsp) 10 TBS unsalted butter, preferably a high-fat, European-style butter, chilled and cut into /s-inch pieces FILLING: 2 TBS cider vinegar 70 g light brown sugar (about /s C)
1 star anise pod 1 cinnamon stick (2 inches long) 1 sm sprig fresh rosemary 1 tsp grated fresh ginger
1 tsp freshly grated orange zest 25 g instant tapioca (about 2 TBS)
1 g black pepper (about'/s tsp)
90 g all-purpose flour (about
2 g ground cardamom (about /s tsp) 1 g fine sea salt (about '/4 tsp) 3 Ibs ripe plums, pitted and sliced (about 6 C) 100 g granulated sugar (about /2 C), more to taste
'/4C) 100 g dark brown sugar (about t/s C) 5 g cinnamon (about1 tsp) Pinch ground cloves 1 g fine sea salt (about /4 tsp) 5 TBS unsalted butter, cut into pieces
Make the crust:In afood processor, briefly pulse together flour andsalt. Add butter and pulse until mixture forms chickpea-size pieces (3 to 5one-second pulses). Addice water1 tablespoon at atime, up to 6tablespoons, pulsing occasionally until mixture is just moist enough to hold together. Form dough into a ball, wrap with plastic and flatten
into a disk. Refrigerate atleast1 hour. Make the chutney:In amedium saucepan over medium heat, bring vinegar, 2 tablespoons water, brown sugar, star anise, cinnamon stick, rosemary sprig, ginger root, pepper, cardamomand salt to a simmer, stirring to help dissolve sugar. Add athird of the plums and let mixture simmer until thickened, stirring frequently, 20 to 30 min-
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Lightly flour a work surface and rolling pin. Roll out dough to fit a 9-inch pie pan. Fold dough in half and transfer to pie pan. Carefully press crust into pan. Return pie to fridge for 20 minutes. While crust chills, heat oven to 400 degrees.
Gently press foil into pie crust and fill with pie weights or dried beans.Transfer to oven and bakefor18 minutes.
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Meanwhile, prepare the crumb topping: In a small bowl, combine flour, brown sugar, cinnamon, cloves and
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Remove the foil and pie weights and bake for another 5 to 10 minutes, or until crust is a light golden brown. Transfer to a rack to cool slightly.
350 degrees and place pie on a baking sheet on middle rack in oven. Bake pie for1 to1/e hours or until fruit is bubbling and top is golden brown. Serve warm or at room temperature, with vanilla ice cream if you like.
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Meanwhile, toss remaining plums, granulated sugar, orangezest andtapioca in a bowl and let sit for 20 minutes. (If your plumsaretart, add moresugar to taste.)
Mix chutney into uncooked plums. Pour filling into crust and cover with crumb topping. Turn oven down to
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utes. Let cool, then discard star anise, cinnamon stick and rosemary.
salt. Using your hands, work in butter until the dry ingredients are completely incorporated into butter and large, marble-size clumps form when pinched. Let sit in refrigerator while assembling pie.
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
H OME 4
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Next week: Getting kids into gardening
Fine-grit sandpaper ($1) A hairline crack should be wid- that"orange peel" look), texturize Spray can of wall texture ($13- ened a little bit with a screwdriver your finished repair before you much higher skill level, so we'll $17) for "popcorn" or "orange or utility blade to make clean paint with a spray can ofwall Continued from D1 peel" surfaces leave that to the professionals.) edges and provide more room texture to match the wall surface. Drywall or sheetrock (the OI' for the spackling paste or drywall (Practice first by spraying a piece words are interchangeable) Time:About two hours (beWall Repair Patch Kit (about joint compound. of cardboard with the texture — the panels that make up most cause you mayneedtime to alA small hole of about one inch spray. Experiment by spraying $10) includes spackling, selfwalls — can tear or crackat the low your patching material to dry adhesive patch, putty knife and i n diameter may be repai r ed easthe wall texture from different seam where panelmeetspanel. between applications) sandpaper ily and economically with a patch distances to get the right look.) The good news is that patching Difficulty: Easy Primer and paint (Weassume kit sold in hardware and home a wall is an easyand inexpensive Cost:$10to$40 you have someleftover paint. If improvement stores. Follow the Step 2: Tapeandsand job for an amateur handymanor not, it's a good time to pick anew instructions on the kit that generLarge cracks benefit by rewoman. So here's Drywall PatchSupplies: color and freshen upthe room ally include spreading spackling inforcement with self-adhesive ing 101. Let's repair those small Spackling paste ($4-$6) or after you've doneyour repair.) fiberglass drywall tape. (There is paste or joint compoundaround cracks, dents and holes that premixed joint compound ($8the hole; cutting a mesh patch to also less expensive paper drywall make the house look run-down. Step1: Fill 'er up cover the hole with some overlap tape, but experts usually recom(Note: Big hole repair is a com- $10) Putty knife ($4-$10) If you have asmall crack or and spackling over themesh. mend the fiberglass tape for a plicated project, requiring cutting
Patch
around damaged drywall with
involved, requiring different
and smooth it into the paste or
materials and techniquesand a
compound with your knife. Apply another layer of spackling or compound over the tape,and
Self-adhesive fiberglass dry-
a saw, screwing in wood supports and a newdrywall patch,
wall tape ($3-$6) Mesh repair patches ($3-$5)
followed by taping and several
for small holes Utility knife or scissors (which
coats of drywall joint compound. Plaster wall repair is evenmore you probably already own)
dent, simply fill it with spackling paste, smooth it with a putty knife, and allow it to dry. Sand it lightly, and then repeat the process if the blemish hasn't filled in
Smooth it with a putty knife, and then allow it to dry. Sand it lightly,
better result.) After applying spackling paste
and then, if necessary, repeat the process.
or joint compound to the crack,
and disappeared.
a popcorn ceiling, or walls with
If your wall has texture (like
and smoothing it with a putty knife, cover the crack with a
piece of drywall tape andpress
smooth it with the putty knife.
After it dries for several hours or overnight, lightly sand the area to make it match the rest of the wall. Step 3: Prime and paint Congratulations on repairing
your small crack, dent or hole. Patyourself on the back. Now it's time to prime and paint. Wel-
come back, smooth walls! Sources: "Home Improvement 1-2-3," by The Home Depot, Meredith Publishing Group, copyright 2008 by Homer TLC, Inc., and "What's a Homeowner to D o?" by Stephen Fanuka and Edward Lewine pubhshed by Artisan, a division of Workman Publishing Company, Inc., 2011, and Ace Hardware Corp. brand self adhesive fiberglass wall repair patches.
— Reporter :ahighberger@mac.com.
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Each year someone from the Hardy Plant Garden Club of Bend selects the perennials, annuals and bulbs to shape the look of Libby's Garden.
Libby Continued from D1
Early days McGeary, born May21, 1923, and her husband, Dr. George McGeary, moved to Bend from Portland in 1957 to a house on Northwest Roanoke Avenue. McGeary, who was already a prolific gardener, transformed the surrounding land into an English-style country garden that garnered national press and regular visits from people who wanted to learn how to grow perennials in C entral Oregon. Her garden was even featured in a Time Life Complete Gardener book.
She also operated Mint Hill Garden nursery at her home, where she s old p erennials and herbs for more than 20 years. She grew things from seed under a grow light in her kitchen, and she also traveled weekly to Rokey's wholesale nursery near Springfield to buy plants to sell in the nursery. She earned thenickname Vinegar %s Lady because she liked to clip fresh herbs and flavor bottles of vinegar. An iron fence separates Libby's Garden from the bustle of Brooks Street and Riverfront Plaza. McGeary recognized the oung s QOde sandy quality of the soil in Central Oregon and heavily amended her garden beds. "I have thrown in many bales of peat moss and cubic yards of barnyard manure (readily available) plus all of the compost that I can get, into my garden, and I am still working at it," McGeary wrote in a spring 1987 edition of the Hardy Plant Society of Oregon publication. FREE Alyce Sommerfeldt, of Bend, AOMIS SIO met McGeary at a master gardener class and became a close
Photos by Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
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garden three times a week, working in her nursery and traveling with McGeary to visit gardens elsewhere. "She needed a little bit of help in her garden because she was in her 60s, and it was about a half acre." Sommerfeldt fondly recalls the garden around her home and the diversity of plants she was able to grow. "She had an art degree, so everything was amazing when you walkedin. She had plants in there that she'd had for 35 years. She had trellises, hundreds of day lilies, hostasthat were huge, treepeonies. She had roses that were up in the trees. She also had a road that went through the
Libby McGeary is shown in The Bulletin newspaper published Wednesday, Feb. 1, 1984, in a photograph by Karen Willard. "Bend gardener Libby McGeary displayed the variety of herbs she's kept from her summer's harvest." property with alpine boxes and 45 kinds of chicks and hens.... She tried new things.... She did the structure (of the garden) first, so in each season there was always something different to see." McGeary's mantra was to plant everything in mushroom compost and water year-round. "Even in November there will be two weeks that are warm.
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A sign marks the garden. Passers-by often assume whoever is working in the garden is Libby, which "is probably causing Libby to giggle a bit," says Maureen Klecker, president of the Hardy Plant Garden Club of Bend.
drench the garden. Additionally, Sommerfeldt, Because oursoilis sandy, the McGeary and a fe w o thers roots get desiccated," said Som- started a garden study group. merfeldt. To prevent the roots For the fist meeting they refrom drying o ut, M cGeary served a room in the library, would drench the soil around and 85 people showed up, said the plants and shrubs to help Sommerfeldt. "Libby's big bethem get through the winter. lief was, 'I give you the knowlSommerfeldt says she and edge and you pass it on.' So that's what we wanted to do McGeary amended the soil with mushroom compost so with our garden club." much that "we probably raised Sommerfeldt and McGeary her land about 4 inches with tended the garden for 10 years. it." Mushroom compost is five "She planted the plants and types of manure used to grow designed the garden and kept mushrooms. After the mush- it going. When she was diagrooms are harvested, the com- nosed with ALS it was just way post is scraped up and sold. too much for her." McGeary used to have it delivMaureen Klecker, an Oregon ered by the truckload. "Now licensed landscaper, profesit's like buying solid gold," said sional gardener and president Sommerfeldt. of the Hardy Plant Garden Club of Bend, was a friend of Libby's Garden McGeary's and worked on her In 1992, the historical Allen- home garden.The community Rademacher craftsman style organized a celebration at the bungalow home on Riverfront Rademacher house in honor of Plaza was saved from demo- McGeary's art and gardening lition, and Arts Central was contributions. "On that day (of slated to take over and renovate the celebration), she took me the house. McGeary, who was a out to her garden at the Rademmember of Arts Central, drew acher House, and she asked me up plans for a garden with a to keep this garden going and small group of people, includ- use it as a teaching opportunity. ing Sommerfeldt. "The original I told her I would," said Klecker intent was that it be a teaching in an email. garden, to show people you could grow things here," said Transition Sommerfeldt. The garden was dedicated to In order to prepare the gar- McGeary and named Libby's den, they hauled carloads of Garden in April of 2002, and mushroom compost to the gar- the Hardy Plant Garden Club den site in five-gallon buckets. of Bend officially took over "We dug up plants from Libby's care of the garden, keeping it yard and brought them down," as a teaching and demonstrasaid Sommerfeldt. The plot was tion garden. Klecker and others equipped with one spigot, and began improving the garden. McGeary would visit daily in With a grant from the Hardy the growing season and run Plant Society of Oregon they back and forth with a hose to installed an irrigation system.
"Linda (Williams) and I decided thatthe garden needed to evolve, and we dismantled it, storing all the precious plants at myhome over thewinter and we tilled the soil, and added a good foot of amendments. ... After the irrigation was installed, the garden was planted out in the spring of 2003," said Klecker.
The gardener Each yearsomeone from the Hardy Plant Garden Club of Bend is designated as the head gardener, and that person's selection of perennials, annuals and bulbs shape the look of the garden. Volunteers maintain
the garden's upkeep. This year Lucinda Packard is the head gardener, and she says the planting scheme was all about succession. "We started with daffodils, then tulips, then the alliums came and now that it's hot, the perennials are com-
ing on." The Betty prior roses are "a single layer rose that's extremely hardy and blooms all summer," said Packard. The garden also includes aster monch, delphinium and hollyhock. Filling in around the flowers are ornamental grasses andhostas. Additions over the y ears have included a metal sculpture by Oscar Spliid, a sitting b ench and a t r ellis for t h e clematis. Klecker says that whoever happens to be in the garden working is assumed
to be Libby by people passing by. "(It's) a comment that humbles us and is probably
causing Libby to giggle a bit," said Klecker. — Reporter: 541-383-0361or mgaltagher@bendbulletin.com
TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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ASK MARTHA
ve ea es some imes ma es ar sin e microwave MARTHA STEWART
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• Why do some veg• etables, s u c h as cooked d i c e d ca r r o ts, spark when I reheat them in the microwave? . Microwaves w o r k
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e lectromagnetic wav e s that vibrate the water, fat and sugar molecules in food, creating heat. The START ~ microwave generates an electric field, but the intensity of t h e e lectricity varies throughout the microwave. When you c ut a carrot into small pieces and heat them in the electric field, or when you put multiple pieces of almost any dense, mineral-rich Tony Cenicola/ New York Times News Service food in the electric field, The electric field created inside a microwave can cause sparks between pieces of food as they cook. the pieces will develop different individual charges, and that wil l sometimes tachment to draw out the polIf the fabric is vintage or cause s park s b e t w een len. Take care not to brush it, delicate, pretreat the stain as or you'll rub it in, making it the pieces — like a static above, and then wash it by charge when you t ouch harder to remove. Next, apply hand or in a machine on the y our do o r k nob , sa y s a combination solvent, such gentle cycle. If the stain reMark Morgan, a profesas Resolve Spray 'n Wash. mains, bring the tablecloth to sor of food engineering at For a D I Y a p p roach, mix a professionaldry cleaner. Purdue University. Some your own tannin solution to — Questions of general interest evidence a ls o s u g gests pretreat: a half teaspoon of can be emaiied to msiletters@ that minerals imparted to liquid laundry detergent with marthastewart.com. For more vegetables from soil create a quarter cup each of white information on this column, visit a more favorable environvinegar and cool water, says www.marthastewart.com. ment for charges to occur. Wayne Edelman, president Chopping vegetables into of Meurice Garment Care, in small pieces and heating New York City. After sprayt hem close together i n New York Times News Service ing the stain, gently brush creases the likelihood of A tablet can be a great place to it with a t o othbrush. Then I I sparks. The sparks don't store recipes — just be sure to launder the tablecloth as you harm the food, but they keep it away from liquids when normally would. A long cycle PROMPT DELIVERY do prevent it from heating you're cooking. and hot water work best. 541-389-9663 thoroughly and may leave a burned taste or b lack mark. If a sparking food is and milk,can be removed by 2oth Annual very dry, it can catch fire l aundering. So-called d r y in the microwave, so turn side stains, such a s t h ose it off as soon as you notice caused by olive oil, need a a problem. solvent to help lift the stain. Pollen creates a combination Organizing recipes wet-side and dry-side stain, . What i s t h e b e st so a simple water solution 9 a.m.— 3 p.m. . way t o or g a n i ze won't do the trick. That said, 7 beautiful gardens in Bend - Self-guided my recipes — a binder, a you probably already have recipe box or a computer everything you need to treat Thank you to our generous sponsors! program? it at home. • There is more than For f a b r i c t ab l ecloths, Aspen Ridge Tree Farm Des c hutes Recyciing • one right way to or- whether cotton, linen, polyganize your recipes, and ester or a n o ther m aterial, High Desert Farms He ar t S p r ings Nursery the "best" way i s d eter- first use adhesive tape or a Redmond Greenhouse mined by your personal vacuum fitted with a hose atpreference. The key to organizing recipes is to first Tickets Available at the following sponsor Find Your Dream Home decide on a system that locations -szo each/x6 and Under free In Real Estate m akes it easy for you to retrieve them, such as a box Moonfire and Sun Garden Center Sh o e lnn TheBulletin or binder. More tech-savvy recipe collectors might OSU Extension Service Sch u i t z Farm and Garden scan recipe cards and clipStrictly Organic Coffee Company pings into a computer and then create a d a tabase. You could use free proPresented by: grams such as Dropbox For ticket information call y,~-sz,8-6o88 or go to -
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Tony Cenicola/ New York Times News Service
A variety of tools can help ease garden aches: 1) Radius Garden 200 Pro transplanter, about $50; 2) Gardener's Supply Co. pushbutton nozzle, about $16, and 50-foot Super Slim hose, about $53; 3) Fiskars PowerGear lopper, about $45; 4) Miracle-Gro ergonomic hand tool, about $55 for a five-piece set.
Iunin aWa
a r enin a i n By Bob Tedeschi New Yorh Times News Service
A decade ago, my wife and I built an absurdly ambitious garden that involved homemade fencing,a bamboo-andstring trellis for the beans and, for me,about 10 backbreaking hours behind a tiller. As we planted, a neighbor strolled by, grinning. "Growing some deer food?" Hilarious! Weeks later, our little farm verging on a big harvest, we awoke to find the fence trampled, the trellises flattened and the vegetables gone. It was farmageddon. Or armagardden. Or hell. I have since avoided gardening, and not just because of the deer. Knee and elbow surgeries killed what little enthusiasm I
had for digging and kneeling, so I limit my harvesting activities to the produce aisle. In recent years, though, I heard enough about the virtues of ergonomic gardening tools that I thought it might be worth another shot. But first, I queried a trio of gardening specialists: Barbara Pleasant, a gardening author and contributing editor to Mother Earth News; Pam Ruch, who managed the testgardens for Organic Gardening magazine; and Bruce Butterfield, the research director for the National Gardening Association. My question: Is the buzz surrounding ergonomic gardening tools just noise, or have there been legitimate innovations lately'? Their answers could put some fresh veggies on my family's table this summer (if the deer don't get to my new garden first). "When I started gardening 30 years ago," Pleasant said, "hand tools had wooden handles that rotted and splintered, and the only hoes we had were designed to chop cotton. Are today's lightweight tools with easy-to-grip handles better? Yes, they are." The first such tool that bears mentioning is the only one that all three panelists went out of their way to rave about: the Cobrahead weeder and cultivator, manufactured in Cambridge, Wis. The business end of the tool looks like a longshoreman's hook but with a flare resembling a cobra's hood. It comes in two versions, for close work and for standing work. Pleasant said she's "gotten kind of dependent on it." Butterfield said it's the most efficient tool for t aking out weeds, "and it's built like a Russian dump truck so it won't break." Ruch acknowledged that the conventional handle doesn't exactly scream "ergonomic" in the era of molded, rubbercoated instruments. "But it's the best all-around tool for the
garden, because you don't use a twisting motion," she said. Ruch favors bypass pruners, as opposed to anvil pruners, fortheirease of use. "And everybody loves Felco pruners," she said. "You can buy spare parts for them, which is great. But Bahco pruners seem to stay sharper longer, and I've never lost a part on them. I may be switching my allegiance." Bahco and Fiskars sell pruners with f ront handles that rotate toward you when you squeeze them, further reducing hand and wrist strain. g tried Bahco's Professional PXR-M2 and the Fiskars PowerGear pruner.) Fiskars last year added a gel pad to the PowerGear prunerforfurther comfort, and it still weighs less than the Bahco PXR-M2. The Corona ComfortGel '/~inch bypass pruner, meant for smaller jobs than the Fiskars and Bahco models I tested, felt lighter than both, and although its ComfortGel handle didn't rotate, it was quite nice to hold.
For planting and digging jobs that are easy on the joints, curved tools ar e b ecoming more common. They allow users to align their wrists to suit their preferences. Pleasant and Ruch recommended the Transplanter Pro, by Radius, which is akin to a shoveland features a circular handle and a narrower blade. Radius alsobuilds aline ofhand tools for the garden, including a scooper, weeder, transplanter, cultivator and trowel, each with a curved handle. Until this year, Radius sold its tools exclusively through specialty garden retailers, but this spring the hand tools be-
gan appearing in mainstream hardwarestores under the Miracle-Gro brand. Perhaps no tool epitomizes the old o n e-size-fits-all approach to gardening tools as much as the shovel. Ruch said she had heard good things about, but had not yet tested, the HERShovel designed for women. HERShovel was developed by Green Heron Tools, a Pennsylvania-based start-up led by two women who enlisted the help ofergonomic researchers and female farmers.The result is a shovel with a D-shape handle, a shorter shaft and an angled blade that features oversize areasfor foot placement. The makers say the design accounts for the fact that women rely more on lower body strength when shoveling. The shovel weighs about four pounds and comes in three sizes. I'm 6-foot-2, and the large version worked fine for me; I liked the handle as much as the one on the Transplanter Pro, and both were considerably better than my old dinosaur shovel.
BarkTurISoil.com
High Desert Garden Tour July 20th, z0~3
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(dropbox.com) or Google Docs (docs.google.com),
which let you save and access your datefrom most gadgets with an Internet connection. Regardless of the system you decide to use, it helps to divide the recipes into categories that make the most sense to you. For example, you might have a collection of the basics, such as h ors d 'oeuvres, soups, vegetables, poultry and desserts, along with other categoriesof recipes that you make the most: sandwiches, kids' meals, great buffet dishes. For physicalsystems such as recipe cards or b i nders, it might also be helpful to color-code the categories. Be sure to keep your recipe c o llection c l e an and protected from food spatters and grease. It's a good idea to laminate your recipe cards or keep clippings in sheet protectors so you can easily wipe away messes. And keep tablets and laptops away from liquids to avoid costly accidents.
Removing pollen stains
Q.
HowdoIremoveor. ange pollen stains from my tablecloth? . The two most common types of stains are wet-side, or w a t erbased, and d r y-side, or p lastic-, grease- or o i l based. Wet-side s t ains, such as ones from juice
Find It All Online
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i Central Oregon
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Master Gardener Association
Extension Scrvrce
Backyard Gardens and Sanctuaries Be SmePt A14tay with our offerings of exciting summer colors and intriguing fragrances. Immerse yourself in our unique selection of whimsical vines, blooming annuals and perennials, plus listen to our
collection of bronze wind bells and copper chimes. Make plans to visit our delightful garden center... What you find will help transpose your backyard and garden into your private retreat and peaceful sanctuary... We await your smile and summertime visit.
We'll help you create a garden that will renew your senses!
e-ma|l your gardening questions to: info@redmondgreenhouse.com
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
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The Dark Hedges are not easy to find. You must follow a serpentine road along a bucolic stretch of Northern Ireland, past sheep and glens and yellow fields of rapeseed until somewhere between the sleepy towns of Ballycastle and Bally-
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money — if you keep your eyes peeled and your foot off the gas
pedal — you spot a shadowy
Hazel Thompson / New York Times News Service
lane flanked by centuries-old beech trees. These are the Dark Hedges. Their sinewy branches twist toward the sky like the many arms of the Indian
In the Dark Hedges, where parts of the HBO series "Game of Thrones" is filmed, a shadowy lane is flanked by centuries-old trees in County Antrim, Northern Ireland.
goddess Durga. The highest
Ireland a magnet for fans who want to visit places like the Dark Hedges, which appear in the premiere ofSeason 2 when Arya Stark, a noble girl
boughs stretchacross the lane to the trees on the opposite side, their leaves overlapping, eclipsing the sun. Locals say this place is haunted by a solitary ghost known as the Grey Lady. But lately she's had company. "No one ever used to come here," said David M cAnirn, a tour guide,on a rare balmy June morning. "Now hundreds come each day." The reason for the deluge? It was written on the T-shirts of a handful of tourists snapping photos amid the Hedges: "Game of Thrones." Chronicling a war among dynasties for an Iron Throne in the imaginary land of Westeros, the HBO fantasy series is a cult hit suffused with intrigue, sex and moody landscapes. The latter is making Northern
Rings." Sweden has "Wallander" and "Millennium." But the success of "Game of Thrones," which begins filming Season 4 this month in Northern Ireland, masquerading as a boy, flees is particularly welcome and in a cart from her enemies. Or poignant in the capital, Belfast, Cushendun, the rocky beach which for decades had been where, later in t hat season, synonymous with strife. the priestess Melisandre gives More than 3,500 people were birth in a cave to a supernatural killed in the sectarian fightassassin. ing between British loyalists The Northern Ireland Tourist (mainly Protestants) and Irish Board has been enticing view- nationalists (mostly R oman ers tovisit these and other splen- Catholics) between 1969 and dors with a "Game of Thrones" the Good Friday peace agreefilming locations guide on its ment in 1998. The rest of the blog ("Explore the real world of world, including people in other Westeros") and promotions for parts of Ireland, stayed away. "Game of Thrones" exhibitions In the mid-1990s, tourism last spring at the Ulster Muse- industry pioneers like Caroline um and at Titanic Belfast. After McComb, who along with her all, a film or television series husband operates McComb's can raise a country's profile. t ours a n d c o a ches, w e r e New Zealand has "Lord of the scratching their heads trying
to figure out how to convince tourists that there was more to Belfast than the Troubles, as the 30-year period of fighting is known. "New York has its skyline," McComb said. "Sydney has its opera house. Everybody was deflated and was l ike, 'What do we have here?'" These days, a lot. There's the year-old Titanic Belfast museum, which tells the story of how Belfast once built the biggest ship in the world; the recently restored S.S. Nomadic, an original tender ship to the Titanic that transported the likes of Charlie Chaplin and Elizabeth Taylor; and the new visitor center at the Giant's Causeway, a UNESCO world heritage site. Belfast has also been courting the world with high-profile events like the MTV Europe Music Awards in 2011, the summit of Group of Eight industrial nations this year and, in 2014, the Giro d'Italia, one of professional cycling's three Grand Tourraces. "It's a real breath of fresh air to be able to look forward instead of back," said McComb, who recently began proffering a private nine-hour "Game of Thrones" locations tour
planning a "surprise" wedding for m e and myfiance.We have been together for eight years and have lived together for seven. We put off the wedding for many reasons, chiefly the c os t b e c ause those things are expensive. We do not DEAR want to just elope. ABBY The idea of having a theme party and inviting all our friends and family occurred to me the other day. Then, in the middle of it, we could bring in a priest and tie the knot! I have figured out the cost, and it shouldn't be more than a grand. We could swing that. But my question is, do we tell anyone about it beforehand'? I told one of my girlfriends and my fiance, and they think it's a great idea. It would take a lot of stress off. Should I tell my parents? They sometimes blab (Dad is worse than Mom) when they're excited about something. — Stealth Bride-To-Be Dear Stealth Bride-To-Be:One person you should definitely discuss this with would be the priest. Ask if he would be willing to marry a couple who has been living together because some aren't, and also if he'd
through Viator.com. "People in Northern Ireland are all so eager to make tourism work for us. That's not to say the past is buried. This is a country of ghosts. Crumlin Road Gaol sits like a mausoleum across
prefer the solemn vows be taken in a house of worship rather than a theme-party atmosphere. If that's the case, you may haveto settle for an officiant of another faith or a justice of the peaceto perform the ceremony.
tween these holidays and tell them what activities the grandkids are involved in, and any new interests they may have. A stronger hint than that would be offensive, and I don't recommend it. Also, I suggest you As to what to do with the unused rethink your idea of items — donate them. keeping this happy Dear Abby: When my daughter news from your folks, calls her mother-in-law "Mom," it who may have been hurts my feelings. I gave birth to her, praying for this for sev- worked hard to put a roof over her en years. They might head andfood in hermouth. She has feel veryhurt atbeingkept inthe dark. only one mother during her lifetime Dear Abby: My husband's step- — ME. I never called my mother-inmother and father send religious- law "Mom." The name meant somethemed gifts for e very h oliday. thing to me, and it was reserved for We have an abundance of unused the woman who gave me life! — Disappointed in Idaho books, DVDs, stickers, coloring books, dolls, bookmarks, etc., purDearDisappointed:Many women chased from local Christian stores besides your daughter call their for a hefty price. mothers-in-law "Mom." Rather than We believe grandparents should be jealous and territorial, you should be interested in learning about what be happy that your daughter has each child is drawn to, and not so such a warm relationship with her much about preaching their own re- mother-in-law. ligious beliefs to us. It makes us unH owever, because you feelslightcomfortable and resentful at times. ed, ask if she would be willing to call Howdoes one politelytell in-laws to her MIL "Mama Smith" — somestop sending religious-themed gifts'? thing other than her name for you — Overloadedin South Carolina when you are all together in order to Dear Overloaded: One doesn't. avoid "confusion." — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com A better way to handle it would be to communicate with them in beor P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORTUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013:This yearyouare unusually expressive, and youappear to havedynamic moneymaking skills.Do not take what anyone elsesays for fact, especially regarding your finances. You are in the first Stars showthe kind year of a new luck of day you'll have cy cle. If you are ** * * * D ynamic single, forming a ** * * P ositive re l ationship could ** * A verage see m difficult; ** S o-so however, once it * Difficult happens,you might find that's it's just as difficult to get out of it. Be sureyou really want to relateto this person. Ifyou are attached, the two ofyou could decide to make a deepercommitment to each other. LEO knowshow to spend money!
ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * Do not hold back. You could come up with an evenbetter idea than what is being worked with. Shareyourthoughts, but be readyfor a brainstorming session to evolve. At some point, you might feel frustrated, butyou will need to moveon. Tonight: Dinner out with a loved one.
TAURUS (April20-May20) ** You see many possibilities, especially involving your home. Youlike many of theseideas,butwhenyousharesome of them with a roommate or partner, his or her immediate reaction might be far from positive. Give this person some time to think. Tonight: Make favorite a treat.
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
make sure that the person you aredealing with has all the facts. Think before you react. Tonight: Hang out with friends.
** * * Your attitude could be preventing you from knowing what choices to make. You might even misread aboss, parent or key person in your life. Detach, and try to remove all of the judgments you havemade here. Then lookagain,andyoum ightbe surprised. Tonight: Up late.
CANCER (June 21-July22)
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
** * Verify that all bills are paid andyour finances are in order before making any more purchases. If you feel as if you are about to enter a risky situation, be smart and walk away. Playing it conservatively is not a bad thing. Tonight: Relax to amovie or hop on the Web.
** * * A s difficult as it might be, you might want to break precedent and do something very different. Understanding evolves if you are ready to detach and honor your inner voice. Build on anew friendship, perhaps with someonewho is quite offbeat. Tonight: Think positively.
LEO (July23-Aug.22)
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19)
** * * You have the ability to beam in anything you want; the problem is figuring it out. A complication involving your personal life could put a damper onyour day, if you allow it to. Move through the day with an eye to positive changes. Tonight: Jump over an obstacle.
** * You might want to rethink a decision involving a partner and money.Youmight not see eye toeye. Honor who you are, and initiate a conversation. You both could have missed the obvious solution. Find an unbiased friend to brainstorm with. Tonight: Meet someonehalfway.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18j
** * You might want to write down some ofyour thoughts instead of sharing them right now. Youcould be confused asto which way to head.Whether you realize it or not, you might be causing yourself a problem wherethere neednot be one. Tonight: Chat the night away.
** * * A f ter you listen to a loved one, partner or dear friend, you could be convinced that he or she is right. You have little to lose by going along with this person's ideas. Visit with an older friend or loved one at adistance. Tonight: So many invitations for you to choose from!
LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22)
PISCES (Feb.19-March20)
** * * M e etings might be more important than you realize. Someone younger than you will step up andtell you GEMINI (May21-June20) his or her thoughts. On onelevel, you ** * * You might want to grasp what is might not like what you hear. Onanother happening before you evenrespond. You level, you'll discover what you need in could get a lot of calls, but one request order to move forward. Tonight: Where the seems quite significant. Ask questions to crowds are.
the street from a derelict courthouse not far from Shankill Road, the main artery through a loyalist, predominantly Protestant working-class neighborhood that was at the center of the Troubles. Flash forward to June 2013. Women in stilettos are gabbing in front of the former parcel office where prisoners usedto collect their mail. There are men in suit jackets where a "movement officer" once logged the whereabouts of prisoners.Waiters weave through the crowd offering finger food with names designed to make a "Game of Thrones" fan grin ("Ned Stark's venison burgers," "Joffrey's cheese and onion tarts"). This smorgasbord, for journalists and die-hard fans of the series, was arranged by the Northern Ireland Tourist Board and Northern Ireland Screen, a government-backed agency for the film and television industry. It was a celebration of the opening of the final leg of a t raveling exhibition of "Game of Thrones" props: swords, crowns, costumes and a severed head (sorry, Stark devotees). Standing before the crowdincluding "Game of Thrones" actors like M aisie Williams
(about $516 a person), available
Surprisewe ing may nee thought Dear Abby: I am thinking about
TV TODAY
** * * S t ay mellow, and understand the limitations of your present path. Youcould be out of sorts and wondering what to do next. Stay levelheaded, havediscussions and getfeedback. Someonemight rain on your parade. Ignorethis person. Tonight: Do something foryou. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate
(who plays Arya Stark), Isaac Hempstead W r i ght (Bran Stark) and John Bradley (Samwell Tarly) — Peter Robinson, the province's unionist first minister, said of Northern Ireland: "This is Westeros!"
MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may beanadditional feefor 3-0 andIMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
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8 p.m. on H A, "Extreme Weight Loss" — Chris takes a different approach with Jami, who at 28 years old and292 pounds is an emotional wreck. Instead of measuring her progress in pounds lost, he wants her to focus on her accomplishments on the road to fitness. That road takes her to Chile, whereshe was born, to reunite with her birth mother andcompetein aswimming and running challenge. 8 p.m. on ANPL, "Swamplands USA" —Two newepisodes profile two of the most fascinating swamps in the U.S.South, starting with "Okefenokee:Blackwater Swamp." This Georgia landmark is a refuge for animals both common — black bears andwhite-tailed deer — and unique — fishing spiders and giant salamanders — and alligators. Lots of alligators. 9p.m. on TNT, "Rizzoli 8 Isles" — A body is discovered in the church during TJ's christening in this newepisode. Lydia's (Alexandra Holden) fiance, Stuart !Jareb Dauplaisej, threatens to takecustodyofTJ,causingJane !Angie Harmon) to comedangerously close to committing an abuse of power to protect Tommy !Colin Egglesfieldj. Budget cuts have everyone in thedepartment on edge in "But I Am aGood Girl." Sasha Alexanderalso stars. 10 p.m. on H C), "Body of Proof" — After an inmatestages a violent escapefrom a prison transport van, awitness in his murder trial is found dead.Then the convict shows up to tell Megan (Dana Delany) that he's innocent and pleads with her to help him clear his name in "Breakout." Richard Burgi, Kenneth Mitchell and Alan Daleguest star. 10 p.m. onH, "Frontline" — The new episode"Two American Families" profiles the Neumannsandthe Stanleys,two hard-working families in Milwaukee struggling to keeptheir homes, jobs and health insurance,avoid sliding into poverty, andgive their children a goodstart. The report raises sometough questions about the economy andthe future of the American middle class. 10p.m. on TNT, "Perception" — Pierce (Eric McCormackj realizes that a killer is trying to makea point about inattentional blindness by committing a series of bizarre public murders. Donnie (Scott Wolf) has his doubts, but Pierce has a way to prove his point in the new epi sode"Blindness."Rachael Leigh Cookalso stars. ©Zap2it
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ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013
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Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
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Furniture & Appliances
Golf Equipment
Computers
Building Materials
Fuel & Wood
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
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Titleist carry bag, $50. T HE B U LLETIN r e - Sisters Habitat ReStore WHEN BUYING Taylor RBZ irons, 4-P, quires computer ad- Building Supply Resale $295. Taylor R11S vertisers with multiple Quality items. For newspaper FIREWOOD... loato na p delivery, call the ITEMS FORSALE 264-Snow RemovalEquipment driver, $195. Ping i15 ad schedules or those LOW PRICES! To avoid fraud, chasing products or • irons, 3-W plus 52, 56' selling multiple sys150 N. Fir. Circulation Dept. at 201 - NewToday 265 - Building Materials The Bulletin services from out of I &60', $365. Cleveland tems/ software, to dis541-549-1821 541-385-5800 202- Want to buy or rent 266- Heating and Stoves recommends payy the area. Sending y 588 wedges, 50', 54' & close the name of the Open to the public. To place an ad, call 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood ment for Firewood I cash, checks, or ' 58', 541-385-5809 $200. business or the term 204- Santa's Gift Basket only upon delivery 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers I credit i n f o rmation 541-480-1014 "dealer" in their ads. or email 205- Free ltems and inspection. claeeifiedtNbendbolletin com 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment may be subjected to Private party advertis• A cord is 128 cu. ft. 208- Pets and Supplies I FRAUD. For more 246 270 - Lost and Found ers are d efined as • Heating & Stoves 4' x 4' x 8' The Bulletin information about an s 210- Furniture & Appliances those who sell one gerrrng Central Oregon trnte t903 Guns, Hunting GARAGESALES • Receipts should advertiser, you may 211 - Children's Items computer. 8 Fishing NOTICE TO 275 - Auction Sales include name, / call t h e Or e gon / 212 - Antiques & Collectibles ADVERTISER phone, price and 257 Where can you find a 280 - Estate Sales ' State Attor ney ' 215- Coins & Stamps Since September 29, .22 cal Beretta Bobcat, kind of wood I General's O f f i ce 281 Fundraiser Sales Musical Instruments helping hand? 240- Crafts and Hobbies 21A, 3 c lips, in b ox, 1991, advertising for purchased. Consumer P rotec- • 282- Sales Northwest Bend 241 - Bicycles and Accessories From contractors to $300. 541-788-4928 or • Firewood ads used woodstoves has t ion ho t l in e at I 541-480-1123 Cornet / Trumpet by F.E. been limited to mod284- Sales Southwest Bend 242 - Exercise Equipment MUST include yard care, it's all here I 1-877-877-9392. Olds 8 Son, 1940's, rare, 286- Sales Northeast Bend els which have been 243 - Ski Equipment species & cost per in The Bulletin's Bend local pays CASH!! in original case. $495 c ertified by th e O r cord to better serve 244 - Snowboards 288- Sales Southeast Bend obo. 541-388-9270 for all firearms 8 "Call A Service egon Department of our customers. 290- Sales RedmondArea 245 - Golf Equipment ammo. 541-526-0617 Yamaha Baby Grand Environmental QualProfessional" Directory 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 292- Sales Other Areas GH1B, polished ity (DEQ) and the fed- The Bulletin BNIB WALTHER 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. FARM MARKET ebony, w/humidifier, eral En v ironmental SUPER TOP SOIL P99. QA, compact 9mm, Antiques & 248- Health and Beauty Items www.herehe eotlendberk.com 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery pristine. $4500 OBO. Protection A g e ncy box, paper work, and 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs Collectibles Screened, soil 8 com541-322-6281 316 - Irrigation Equipment extra clip. bought brand (EPA) as having met Check out the post m i x ed , no 251 - Hot TubsandSpas smoke emission stannew, didn't like it. $500 325Hay, Grain and Feed 260 Antiques wanted: tools, rocks/clods. High hu253- TV, Stereo andVideo dards. A cer t ified classifieds online 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies furniture, marbles, beer obo. 541-977-1438. Misc. Items www.bendbullefln.com mus level, exc. for 255 - Computers w oodstove may b e 341 - Horses and Equipment cans, early B/W phoflower beds, lawns, CASH!! identified by its certifi256- Photography Updated daily tography, radios & gardens, straight 345-Livestockand Equipment For Guns, Ammo 8 Bug Zapper, new Cole- cation label, which is 257- Musical Instruments lighting. 541-389-1578 Reloading Supplies. man, rechargable battery, permanently attached s creened to p s o i l . 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 258 - Travel/Tickets All Year Dependable 541-408-8900. Bark. Clean fill. De$30 obo. 541-388-9270 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers to the stove. The Bul- Firewood: Seasoned 259- Memberships liver/you haul. letin will no t k n ow358Farmer's Column Buying Diamonds 260- Misc. Items Split, Del. 541-548-3949. ingly accept advertis- Lodgepole, DON'T MISS IHIS 375- Meat and Animal Processing /Gofd for Cash Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 261 - MedicalEquipment ing for the sale of Saxon's Fine Jewelers 383 - Produce andFood for $335. Cash, Check 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. uncertified 541-389-6655 or Credit Card OK. Lost & Found 263- Tools woodstoves. DO YOU HAVE 541-420-3484. BUYING SOMETHING TO 208 Beautiful handFound: Black lab male, Lionel/American Flyer SELL carved coffee table 7/4, SE Bend. Call to Pets 8 Supplies trains, accessories. n a FOR $500 OR Need to get an (44 x 19'/g x 17 t/gn) identify: 541-480-0031 541-408-2191. LESS? Gardening Supplieq g and 2 matching end ad in ASAP? Donate deposit bottles/ M ini lo n g Hai r e d Non-commercial ddn BUYING & SE L LING 8 Equipment Lost: Eyeglasses, laven(shown) 24 cans to local all volDachshund p u p py. tables n advertisers may You can place it All gold jewelry, silver der frames, 6/29, area unteer, non-profit res- Male, had first shots, x 15 x 24 t/4". Built in place an ad and gold coins, bars, 15th/Columbia Park in online at: Taiwan between cue, to h elp w /cat dewormed, k e n nel 1940-1950, with our BarkTurfSoil.com rounds, wedding sets, www.bendbulletin.com Bend. 541-383-2161 all glass spay/neuter vet bills. trained, potty trained, "QUICK CASH class rings, sterling silcovered, in excelCans for Cats trailer is great with other dogs Lost: Girls pink & white SPECIAL" ver, coin collect, vinlent condition. $1600 PROMPT D E LIVERY a t Jake's Diner o n and kids, 11 weeks Trek mountain bike, 1 week 3 lines 12 tage watches, dental 541-385-5809 541-389-9663 OBO. 541-382-6731 west side roundabout. Hwy. 20 at P urcell. old. $200.00 call or OI' gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-280-1421 D onate Mon-Fri a t text 541-306-7784 541-382-9419. ~aa eaa aat I I t e ms for Free Smith Sign, 1515 NE Ad must POODLE Toypups & COWGIRL CASH include price of N BA G r aphic S l a m 2nd; or at CRAFT in teens. Also,POMAPOOS We buy Jewelry, Boots, anytime. 541a~la ta ot gaoo backboard, hoop, net, Tumalo Call 541-475-3889 Vintage Dresses & neslg" Info/map at or less, or multiple post. Sisters a rea. 389-8420. More. 924 Brooks St. Visit our HUGE www.craftcats.org Porkie-Pom 7 - w k-old items whose total 541-549-0935. 541-678-5162 home decor female, needing a does not exceed www.getcowgirlcash.com consignment store. h ome. N o sho t s . $500. DO YOU HAVE New items $250. 541-408-9838 I P ets & Supplies SOMETHING TO arrive daily! Call a Pro Call Classifieds at SELL Queensland Heelers 930 SE Textron, 541-385-5809 Whether you need a FOR $500 OR Standard 8, Mini, $150 Bend 541-318-1501 www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin recomLESS? fence fixed, hedges & up. 541-280-1537 www.redeuxbend.com mends extra caution Non-commercial www.rightwayranch.wor trimmed or a house when purc h asadvertisers may ESTATE SALE: Pre-64 dpress.com ing products or serbuilt, you'll find place an ad with 30-30 Winchester rifle; Original Colliers vices from out of the Rodent control experts 1909 Remington oui' Winchester shotgun; .22 professional help in area. Sending cash, "QUICK CASH (barn cats) seek work Prints. Set of 8 rifles; custom sporter- The Bulletin's "Call a checks, or credit inin exchange for safe prints in 4 frames ized Mauser. Plus lots of SPECIAL" f ormation may b e shelter, basic care. ammo, huntingknives, & Service Professional" 1 week 3 lines 12 with original portfosubjected to fraud. Fixed, shots. Will de2" gas water pump for ~ a a ao! lio case. $500. Directory For more i nformaliver! 541-389-8420 mining. 503-830-6564 Ad must include 541-504-7711 541-385-5809 tion about an adverprice of single item Scottish Terrier AKC tiser, you may call Glock 30, .45 cal auto, of $500 or less, or pups, born 4/2. Shots Pre-70's vintage yellow like new, fired twice. Nurse or Vet Tech the O r egon State multiple items & wormed, parents on Steelcase 4-dr file cabi- Original box/paperwork; Scrubs, size 2x 8 3x, Attorney General's whose total does site, Ready now! Office Co n s umer net, $595. 541-388-9270 2 clips 8 holster, 50-rnd $4 each. 541-516-8225 not exceed $500. 541-31 7-5824. box of ammo. Best offer Protection hotline at The Bulletin reserves VER $1000. Call n o Wanted- paying cash 1-877-877-9392. Call Classifieds at Yorkie pups AKC, cute, the right to publish all O for Hi-fi audio 8 stu541-385-5809 big eyes, short nosed, so- ads from The Bulletin texts: 541-318-3321 Bend dio equip. Mclntosh, The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com cialized, health g uar., newspaper onto The Ruger GP100, .357 mag, J BL, Marantz, D y Serving Central Oregon since tgpg $650 8 up. 541-777-7743 Bulletin Internet web- 4" bbl, double action, naco, Heathkit, San$475. 541-788-4928 or sui, Carver, NAD, etc. site. Adopt a nice cat from Easy, flexible, cind affordable ad packages 541-480-1123 Call 541-261-1808 Petco, PetSmart or Maltese male PuPPy Furniture & Appliances The Bulletin Tumalo s a n ctuary! 541-233-3534 Ser ng Cenratcregonante lgte W eber Genesis 3 1 0 are also available on our Web site. Fixed, shots, ID chip, Find exactly what bbq grill, hardly used, tested, more! Sanc242 A1 Washers&Dryers you are looking for in the like new with cover and German Shepherds, tuary open Sat/Sun $150 ea. Full warAKC, 10 yr. research tank. $350. Exercise Equipment CLASSIFIEDS 1-5, other days by ranty. Free Del. Also breeding program, 541-923-5845. To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, a ppt. 6 5 48 0 7 8 t h , wanted, used W/D's $1500-$2800. Richard Simmons Wanted: Collector Bend. Photos, map at 541-280-7355 WHEN YOU SEE THIS visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on 541-430-1026 Dream Stepper $45 www.craftcats.org. seeks high quality www.trained-dogs.com obo. 541-388-9270 "Place an ad" clnd follow these easy steps: 00 541-389-8420, or like fishing items. ~ China cabinet 70" high, us on Facebook. Airdyne exer- Call 541-678-5753, or More HEELER Female, walnut finish, 7 shelves Schwinn PixatBendbuletilj,com 503-351-2746 bi k e $12 5 . Choose a category, choose a classification, and 7 years old, nicei $135 541 548 5677 c ise On a classified ad BOXER AKC puppies, currently 541-389-4587 in foster care then select your ad package. reat litter, 1st shots, go to 248 Entertainment stand with Well trained, loving. 700. 541-325-3376 www.bendbulletin.com fireplace in center, Health & Needs to be only to view additional Write your ad and upload your digital photo. dark wood. $250. Golf Equipment • dog in household. Beauty Items Boxer Puppies - $700 photos of the item. 541-330-4344 541-317-1463 http://bit.ly/1b99PRI Create your account with any major credit card. 541-595-8773 Sunvision Pro 28LX tan263 F uton, e x c . con d . , CHECK YOUR AD Japanese Chin 2 pure- brown, ning bed, very little use! Tools bred females; Japa- 541-390-1478. $75. $1200/cbo. 541-385-9318 nese Chin mix pups All ads appear in both print and online 5' cross-cut saw, recently 251 also. $250 to $400. GENERATE SOME filed, w/handles sharp 541-447-0210 EXCITEMENT in your Hot Tubs & Spas $100. 541-815-7330 Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before neighborhood! Plan a on the first day it runs your ad appears in print and online. 265 People Look for Information garage sale and don't S outh Seas h o t t u b to make sure it isn corChihuahuas! 1 blue 8 1 forget to advertise in w/cover & steps, seats 6, About Products and nSpellcheck rect. and Building Materials black & tan, $250 Services Every Daythrough classified! human errors do oc- 44 jets, e x lnt c o nd, each. 541-362-1977 541-385-5809. $3800. 970-629-1690 cur. If this happens to Bend Habitat TheBulletin Classifieds To place your photo ad, Desert Lynx/Manx cross your ad, please conRESTORE Sofa, 96" x 42", dark visit us online at 255 kitten. Only one fe- Lab Pups AKC, black & green, perfect, 2 yrs old, tact us ASAP so that Building Supply Resale www.bendbulletin.com male left. F i rst shot yellow, Master Hunter corrections and any Quality at LOW Computers $250. 541-330-4344 www.taenttbuuctio.com or call with questions and worming. Ready sired, performance pediadjustments can be PRICES now. $100.00 Kelly at gree, OFA cert hips 8 el- WANTED: Chelsea Pine made to your ad. 740 NE 1st 541-385-5809 HP Computer, almost 541-804-0716 or bows, 541-771-2330 541-385-5809 541-312-8709 sideboard and/or table new, owner is dinosaur! 541-489-3237 www.kinnamanretrievers.com 8 chairs. 541-447-5562 The Bulletin Classified Open to the public. $195. 541-647-2621 The Bulletin recommends extra
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Advertise with a full-color photo in The Bulletin Classifieds and online.
Classiffeds
E2 TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541 -385-5809
Iljgj-.-: i,gi~ ~4jj'LhttjI l~
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
Can be found on these pages:
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mone Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tuese
476 Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Employment Opportunities Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Auto Internet Sales Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Experienced with proven track record a Great pay plan Saturday • • • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. plus. and benefits. Call for confidential interview. • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • 541-420-9670. Sunday. • • • •
Cabinet maker/Installer Exp. only need apply. Send resume to cabinets@qwestoffice.net or fax to 541-330-3958
Place a photoin your private party ad for only$15.00 per week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
"UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
*Must state prices in ed
Caregiver —All Shifts avail. Apply in person. Interviews this week. Apply in person at 1099 NE Watt Way, Bend.
Wildland Firefighters
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KOIIOII
Seekingexperienced
EMPLOYMENT 410- Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking forEmployment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - IndependentPositions
Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5e00 pm Fri •
a
Employment Opportunities
To fight forest fires. Must be 18 years old
& drug free. Apply between 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Mon. thru Thurs. Bring two forms of ID fill out Federal 1-9 form. I No ID =No Application.
FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans andMortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
beodbulletimcom
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is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
I P ATR l c K
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 on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
1199 NE Hemlock, Redmond, OR (541) 923-0703
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~Mcethexer re roduction weldin xenence. e~ Contact Buck at:
476
476
Newhouse Manufacturing
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
1048 N. 6th St. Redmond, OR
Ranch Hand R anch Hand w i t h background in ranching needed in Paisley area. Must have experience in working cattle (vaccination, processing, and feeding), building fence and maint enance. M ust be a ble to f ee d a n d care for l ivestock. Need t o be a self-starter, flexible, h onest, an d h a r d working. F ull time position with b e nefits, mail resume to ZX Ranch, PO Box 7, P a i sley, OR 97636 o r c a l l f or application
97756
Truck Drivers Seeking 9-10-11 axle big lowboy driver for m oving heavy m a chinery. L o cal and over the road posit ions. Must have 2 years lowboy experience and valid Class A CDL. Wages based on experience. Benefits include health in-
Or call 541-548-1055
528
Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recom-
mends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad HOTLINE, will also appear on 1-877-877-9392. surance, 401(k) plan, bendbulletin.com paid vacation, inspecwhich currently tion bonus program. receives over 1.5 Get your Call Kenny, million page views business every month at Western Heavy Haul, 541-447-5643 no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds G ROW I N G Get Results! WASTEWATER Call 385-5809 with an ad in Apollo, Inc. is seeking or place an experienced Assisyour ad on-line at The Bulletin's tant Project Manager bendbulletin.com "Call A Service 541-943-31 05. with 5-10 years' water/ wastewater experience. Professional" 486 Job opportunity is l oDirectory The Bulletin cated in Bend, Oregon, Independent Positions Recommends extra 2-3 years with long-term caution when pur- opportunity with c o m- Choose your hours, BANK TURNED YOU chasing products or I pany. Salary plus comincome & rewardDOWN? Private party services from out of petitiye benefit pkg. Choose Avon. Patty, will loan on real esthe area. Sending Send resume "Attn. As- 541-330-1836, Avon tate equity. Credit, no c ash, c hecks, o r sistant Project Manager independent sales rep. problem, good equity credit i n f o rmation Position" to: is all you need. Call bids@a olloc.com n may be subjected to Oregon Land MortSay ngoodbuy or to PO Box 7305, FRAUD. gage 541-388-4200. Kennewick WA 99336. to that unused For more i nformaEqual Opportunity tion about an adveritem by placing it in LOCAL MONEY:We buy Employer tiser, you may call secured trustdeeds & The Bulletin Classifieds the Oregon State note,some hard money Attorney General's loans. Call Pat Kelley Office C o n sumer c Call The Bulletin At 541-382-3099 ext.13. 541 -385-5809 541-385-5809 Protection hotline at I 1-877-877-9392. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com ie Bitllctig
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The Bulletin
WELDER
I I I I I I I I
Fuel Truck Driver Cascade Petroleum I Transportation Fuel Truck Drivers: I Full time-November • Lo s t & Found Tues-Sat 4am — 4pm iTl One year of recent Class A driving Combination veREMEMBER: If you to be the best! hicles, requires an X C all 54 /-385-580 9 have lost an animal, COLUMBIA STATEBANK endorsement. Sertrtng Central Oregon since 1903 to romote our service don't forget to check Must have a TransIf you are searching for a company where The Humane Society Advertising Account Executive portation Workers customers and employees are highly Bend Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Identification Cre541-382-3537 476 valued, Columbia Bank is the place to The Bulletin is looking for a professional and dential (TWIC) card Redmond work! We are always looking for high enEmployment driven Sales and Marketing person to help our NOTICE: Oregon state Clean MVR. Nelson 541-923-0882 ergy and fantastic employees to join our customers grow their businesses with an law r equires anyone Opportunities To apply call Mike Landscaping & nt customer-focused Bank! expanding list of broad-reach and targeted who con t racts for Knight 54t-447-rtre; Maintenance construction work to products. This full time position requires a 800-513-9669 Serving Central or Craft Cats CAUTION: background in consultative sales, territory We are currently seeking a be licensed with the Oregon Since 2003 541-389-8420. Ads published in management and a ggressive prospecting Construction Contrac- Residental/Commercial Branch Manager "Employment Optors Board (CCB). An skills. Two years of media sales experience is 286 MILLWRIGHT for our Bend Wall Street location. portunities" in clude active license preferable, but w e w i l l t r ai n t h e r i g ht Sprinkler We are looking for a Sales Northeast Bend employee and indemeans the contractor In c l udes a compe t itive Activation/Repair fully s k illed m i l l- candidate. If you are interested in applying for this is bonded & insured. Back pendent positions. compensation package including benefits, and wright t o p e r form Flow Testing position, or seeing what else may be Ads fo r p o s itions preventative Verify the contractor's rewards an aggressive, customer focused an d ** FREE ** that require a fee or available in your area, please visit our CCB l i c ense at salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Maintenance breakdown maintewww.hirealicensedGarage Sale Klt upfront i nvestment website and apply online at .Thatch & Aerate nance at our Headcontractor.com Place an ad in The must be stated. With Email your resume, cover letter www.columbiabank.com • Spring Clean up quarters location in or call 503-378-4621. •Weekly Mowing Bulletin for your gaany independentjob and salary history to: M adras. W e a r e The Bulletin recom- & Edging rage sale and reopportunity, please Jay Brandt, Advertising Director Columbia Bankis proud to be an l ooking for a t a l mends checking with • Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly ceive a Garage Sale i nvestigate tho r jbrandt©bendbulletin.com Equal Opportunity Employer. ented individual who the CCB prior to con- Maintenance oughly. Use extra Kit FREE! or drop off your resume in person at c an develop t h e tracting with anyone. •Bark, Rock, Etc. c aution when a p 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; skills to become a Some other t rades KIT INCLUDES: plying for jobs onOr mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; standard work set up also req u ire addi• 4 Garage Sale Signs line and never proLendece in No phone inquiries please. ~ auditor t o a s s ure • $2.00 Off Coupon To tional licenses and •Landscape vide personal inforEOE / Drug Free Workplace Use Toward Your quality of machine certifications. mation to any source Construction The Bulletin Circulation department is looking for Next Ad set up and to de•Water Feature you may not have a District Representative to join our Single Copy • 10 Tips For "Garage velop actual set up Concrete Construction Installation/Maint. researched and team. Overall focus is the representation, sales Sale Success!" skills to perform the •Pavers deemed to be repuand presentation of The Bulletin newspaper. duties of an operatable. Use extreme JJ & B Construction, •Renovations These apply to news rack locations, hotels, spetor in the event an c aution when r e quality concrete work. •Irrigations Installation PICK UP YOUR cial events and news dealer outlets. Daily reoperator is absent. Digital Imaging Specialist Over 30 Years Exp. s ponding to A N Y GARAGE SAIE KIT at sponsibilities include driving a company vehicle Part-time Position Available You should be able Senior Discounts online employment Sidewalks; RV pads; 1777 SW Chandler to service a defined district, ensuring newspato work well indeBonded & Insured Driveways; Color & ad from out-of-state. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 per locations are serviced and supplied, manpendently as well as The Bulletin is seeking an individual to work 541-815-4458 We suggest you call Stamp wor k a v a il. aging newspaper counts for the district, building in a t e a m a t mo- with the news and advertising departments to LCB¹8759 Also Hardwood floorthe State of Oregon relationships with our current news dealer locas phere. M u s t b e tone and process digital photos and scan ing a t aff o r dableNOTICE: Oregon LandConsumer H otline tions and growing those locations with new outwilling to work any images for use in print and on the web. This is at 1-503-378-4320 prices. 541-279-3183 scape Contractors Law lets. Position requires total ownership of and acshift. W age DOE. a deadline-oriented position requiring detailed For Equal OpportuCCB¹190612 countability of all single copy elements within (ORS 671) requires all W e offer a s o l i d work. Responsibilities also include uploading nity Laws c o ntact benefits that district. This full time position will become businesses that adpa c kage photo and text content to The Bulletin web Oregon Bureau of available late July as a long time employee will Debris Removal vertise t o pe r form including m e dical, s ite. Expert l evel P hotoshop skills a n d Labor 8 I n d ustry, be retiring. Work schedule will be Thursday Landscape Construcdental, l i f e and proficiency in color correction and toning images Civil Rights Division, through Monday withTuesday and Wednesday tion which includes: JUNK BE GONE vision insurance as are a must; knowledge of Adobe InDesign and 971-6730764. p lanting, decks , w ell a s a pro f i t lllustrator is a p l us. Pre-employment drug off. Requires good communication skills, a I Haul Away FREE strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 fences, arbors, sharing plan. To screen. The Bulletin is an equal opportunity For Salvage. Also The Bulletin pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to water-features, and inbe considered for employer that provides competitive wages and Cleanups 8 Cleanouts stallation, repair of irmulti task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong 541-385-5809 this position please benefits. Send a resume with qualifications, Mel, 541-389-8107 rigation systems to be service/team orientation, sales and problem apply in person in skills, experience and a past employment 316 licensed w i t h t he solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: the Pers o nnel history to: Handyman Add your web address Landscape Contrac- Irrigation Equipment circulation Obendbulletin.com Department at 335 to your ad and readtors Board. This 4-digit NW H e s s St., The Bulletin I DO THAT! number is to be in- FOR SALE 0.48 acre ers on The Bulletin's Applications are available at the front desk. Madras OR 97741. Attn: James Baisinger Home/Rental repairs cluded in all adverweb site, www.bendDrop off your resume in person at IRRIGATION RIGHT; Pre em p l oyment 1777 SW Chandler Ave. Small jobs to remodels tisements which indi- Tumalo Irrigation Disbulletin.com, will be 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; drug test required. PO Box 6020 Honest, guaranteed cate the business has t rict, $1500; I p a y able to click through No phone inquiries please. Equal O p portunity Bend, OR 97708-6020 work. CCB¹151573 a bond,insurance and fees. 206-673-7876 automatically to your Pre-employment drug testing required. Employer. EOE / Drug-Free Workplace workers c ompensaDennis 541-317-9768 website. EOE/Drug Free Workplace tion for their employJust bought a new boat? ees. For your protec- • Hay, Grain & Feed • Sell your old one in the tion call 503-378-5909 classifieds! Ask about our or use our website: 1st quality grass hay, Irg Super Seller rates! www.lcb.state.or.us to 3'x3'x8' bales, approx 541-385-5809 check license status 750lbs ea. $240/ton, barn before contracting with stored. Patterson Ranch, ERIC REEVE HANDY the business. Persons Sisters, 541-549-3831 SERVICES. Home & doing land s cape Commercial Repairs, maintenance do not Wanted: Irrigated farm Carpentry-Painting, ground, under pivot irr equire an L C B Pressure-washing, rigation, i n C e n tral cense. Honey Do's. On-time OR. 541-419-2713 promise. Senior Discount. Work guar- USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Looking for your anteed. 541-389-3361 Door-to-door selling with next employee?
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Columbia
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
The Bullctin
or 541-771-4463
Bonded & Insured CCB¹181595
Landscaping/Yard Care
fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
ALLEN REINSCH
Zor/tfz gua8iip Zareg gttr e /',A More ThanService Peace 01 Mind
Yard maintenance 8 clean-up, thatching, plugging & much more! Call 541-536-1 294
BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most Flre Protection comprehensive listing of Fuels Reduction classified advertising... eTall Grass real estate to automotive, •Low Limbs merchandise to sporting •Brush and Debris goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the Protect your home print or on line. with defensible space Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com Landscape
Maintenance
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also
appear on
bendbuHetin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809
or place your ad
on-line at bendbuHetin.com
Sernnr Central Oregcntrnre 1903 Full or Partial Service Just too many • Mowing eEdging collectibles? Maverick Landscaping • Pruning eWeeding M owing, weedeating, y d Sprinkler Adjustments Sell them in detail., chain saw work, bobcat excv., etc! LCB The Bulletin Classifieds Fertilizer included ¹8671 541-923-4324 with monthly program
Its not too late for a beautiful landscape
•Lawn Restoration •Weed Free beds • Bark Installation EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential Free Estimates Senior Discounts
541-390-1466 Same Day Response
30BSI REAL ESTAT E I CLAciSIFIEDci edS.OregOn.COm u iS a neW SuppOrtedby OregOn neWSpaperS, "CLaSSifi
website dedicated to bringing classified Listings from around thestateofOregon togetheron one easy-to-use website. From jobsto homes and investment properties,you'llfi nd the fastest u
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The Bulletin
Villanueva Lawn Care. Maintenance,clean-up, thatching + more! Free estimates.
your web source for STATEWIDE classifieds
541-385-5809
541-981-8386
Carl Elmer 16e Slick Fork,
Painting/Wall Covering bucking rolls, excellent! $2500. 541-350-0214
WESTERN PAINTING CO. Richard Hayman,
a semi-retired painting contractor of 45 years. S m a l l J obs Wanted: Irrigated farm Welcome. Interior & ground, under pivot irExterior. c c b ¹ 5184. rigation, i n C e n tral 541-388-6910 OR. 541-419-2713
BROWSE THE ENTIRE
STATE OFOREGON
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
DAILY BRI DQ E C LU B
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Will Sh ortZ
2013 T uesday,Juty9,
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36 Accustoms es Drain feature 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 1 12 13 3e Diamond Head es Comb-over's setting locale 14 15 16 39 Of s7 Bird feeder fill Tranquillity ee Malaria 17 18 19 4i Mathematician symptom 20 21 22 23 John who was se Checked out the subject of 7o Critical times of "A Beautiful 24 25 26 attack Mind" 7i Count in a 27 28 29 30 31 42 Marcos of the weight room Philippines 32 33 34 35 36 37 4s Britain's Arthur DOWN Wellesley, with i Cantankerous 38 40 41 39 "the" folks 4e Band with the 2"HowAre 42 43 44 45 46 47 multiplatinum Things in albums "Out G locca ? " 48 49 50 51 of Time" and (1947 hit song) "Monster" 52 53 54 5 5 56 3 Most populous 4eP,to of the United Pythagoras 57 58 59 60 61 Arab Emirates si K.G.B. concern 4 Like Cain, 62 63 65 s21ndianpipe toward Abel player, maybe s Actor Stephen 66 67 68 s7 Uno+ cuatro s Strange birds so Santa 7 Lavatory fixture 69 70 71 wlncls s Bewhiskered ei Butcher's string frolickers s2 Eastern nurse 9 However, briefly PUZZLE BY KRISTIAN HOUSE e3 Jeff of the io Capital of 37 Drawers in ss Polite words Approved Electric Light Belarus after "if" Orchestra ii Simon of Simon drawers Timetable: 4o Companion & Garfunkel Abbr. se "Great" who's a ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE i2 Actress Stone detective of 53 Nine: Prefix knockout of "The Help" children's C ED A R Z I O N P H I L 23 Chews the fat 43 Early Bond foe s4 No-see-um literature A M O R E IR A E R O N A 2i Double 44 "Gotcha!" Turn out to be Oreos P I G I NA P O K E E G G Y 4e Word before It may be Spanish kings s3 dropped "That's gotta EL I E EO N D A S H E S 23A browser has when one hurt!" 57 South Africa one trips S E ET H R U O S O L E 47 GPS above-thehas a famous T O O T A T K E A N U 2s Mideast grp. Equator fig. one s4 Hook shape 2e Red-hot feeling J I H A D S T OW Y V E S 29 Herr's honey For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit U SA S OW S E A R E R E 3o Information card, 1-800-814-5554. DE M I L I E S O U N D S 3i 1980s U.S. Annual subscrlptlons are available for the best of Sunday D E F O E C A RH O P Davis Cup crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. I N I N K A T T A CH E captain AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit 32 Evening in Paris nylimes.com/mobilexword for more information. A SS I S I G N U T A I L Online subscrlptlons: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past 33 Checked in, say R I TZ P O R KB A R R E L puzzles, nytlmes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). A L E E A RA L D E E R E 34 [May I have your attention?] Share tips: nytlmes.com/wordplay. B O D S T O B E S E W O N Crosswords for young solvers: nytlmes.com/learnlng/xwords. 3s Opus
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
When Unlucky Louie plays in the penny game at my club, his approach seems to be that the sooner he falls behind, the more time he has to catch up. Louie, South, was slightly in the hole when I watched today's deal, but making a vulnerable slam would have put him way ahead. West led a trump against six spades, and Louie won, leda club to dummy's ace and returned a club to his king. Alas, West ruffed and led his last trump, leaving dummy with only one trump. East was sure to get a club trick for down one, and Louie slipped a little further behind — and with a little less time to catch up.
spades, and he tries 2NT. What do you say? ANSWER: Your partner has about eight points with a five-card spade suit and will u sually have fairly balanced distribution. It's up to you to place the contract. Since you have a sound hand, three cards in spades and a possible ruffing feature in clubs, bid four spades. South dealer Both sides vulnerable
NORTH 4Q87 QAJ63 O A J52 4A2
UNLUCKY
WEST 4654 Q K9 8 4 0 K 8743 A6
"Unlucky as usual," Louie sighed. "Forget you weren't at a grand slam?" North asked sourly. To play safe for 12 tricks, Louie should play low from his hand on the second club.If Eastreturns a second trump, Louie can win, ruff a club in dummy, takethe ace ofdiamonds and ruff a diamond. He can then draw the last missing trump and run the clubs to land the slam.
EAST 432 6 Q 1072 0 Q 1 09 4I Q J 109
SOUTH 41 AK J 109 Q5 06 4IK 8 7 5 4 3 S outh 14 14 4 4I
DAILY QUESTION
No. 0604
We s t Pass Pass P ass
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Youhold: 4 Q 8 7 9 A J 6 3 0 A J 5 2 4 A2. You open 1NT, and Opening lead — 4 6 your partner bids tw o h e arts, a "transfer" response. You duly bid two (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
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07/09/1 3
THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 9 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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860
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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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870
Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories
Honda Shadow/Aero 750, 2007 Black, 11K mi, 60 mpg, new detachable windshield, Mustang seat & tires; detachable Paladin backrest & luggage rack w/keylock.Vance-
Hines pipes, great
sound. Cruise control, audible turn signals for safety. $4495 obo. Jack, 541-549-4949
Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $6000 or P artial Trade/firearms 541-647-4232 ATVs
18'Maxum skiboat,2000, Fleetwood D i s covery inboard motor, g r eat 40' 2003, diesel moJayco Eagle cond, well maintained, torhome w/all 26.6 ft long, 2000 $8995obo. 541-350-7755 options-3 slide outs, Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. awning, Eaz-Lift Wintered in h e ated stabilizer bars, heat 1 8' Seaswirl 1984, shop. $89,900 O.B.O. & air, queen 541-447-8664 walk-around bed, open bow, V6, en-
WOIN
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes
705
very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003
gine & outdrive rebuilt, extras, $2495. 541-546-6920
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1988 ne w f r i dge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelc hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W g enerator, Goo d condition! $18,000 obo 541-447-5504
19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, new upholstery, new electronics, winch, much more. $9500. 541-306-0280 20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish Look at: & Ski, 50 hrs on new Bendhomes.com engine, fish finder, chart for Complete Listings of plotter & VHF radio with antenna. Good shape, Area Real Estate for Sale full cover, heavy duty trailer, kicker and electric motors. $7500 or best offer.
Keystone Sprinter 31', 2008 King size walkaround bed, electric awning, (4) 6-volt batteries, plus many more extras, never smoked in, first owners, $19,900.
Call 541-410-5415
=q=wC®@ Honda TRX 450R sport quad 2008, low hrs, new wheels 8 DNC perf. pipe $4250. 541-647-8931 870
Boats & Accessories
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KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
20.5' 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond with very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini & custom trailer, $17,950. 541-389-1413
$25,000.
541-548-0318 (photo aboveis of a
similar model & not the actual vehicle)
Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CON-
DITION. All accessories are included. 12' SeaKing. great alum Monaco m o t orhome $1 6,000 OBO. fishing boat, 3 seats CHECK YOUR AD Boise, ID Real Estate 2005, 2 s l ides, 30', 541-382-9441 V-Hull l i ght w e i ght For relocation info, too many options to $400. 541-388-2159 20.5' Seaswirl Spycall Mike Conklin, list, 8355 mi. $45,000. 208-941-8458 der 1989 H.O. 302, 541-815-9808. RV 285 hrs., exc. cond., Silvercreek Realty CONSIGNMENTS stored indoors for WANTED 541-548-5511 740 life $11,900 OBO. We Do The Work ... on the first day it runs JandMHomes.com 541-379-3530 You Keep The Cash! to make sure it is cor- Condo/Townhomes Perfect C.O. fishing boat! On-site credit rect. "Spellcheck" and for Sale 14' Glastron tri-hull. 25hp approval team, human errors do ocMerc. Almost new elec 21' 2001 Skiers Choice O u t back, web site presence. cur. If this happens to 3 B EDROOM s ingle :e. trolling motor. Newer full Moomba Q Windsor, 2001, We Take Trade-Ins! your ad, please concanvas top. Many extras. 383 stroker engine, Monaco story condo, 841 sq', loaded! (was $234,000 $9500 o r c o n sider Free Advertising. tact us ASAP so that $2700. 541-504-8645 remodeled, $81,500, new) Solid-surface trade for good vehicle counters, BIG COUNTRY RV corrections and any 5 41-815-7707 1 7 0 0 convection/ with low mileage. Bend: 541-330-2495 adjustments can be NE WELLS ACRES micro, 4-dr, fridge, Call 541-604-1475 or Redmond: made to your ad. ¹54, Bend washer/dryer, ceramic 541-604-1203 (leave 541-548-5254 541 -385-5809 tile & carpet, TV, DVD, msg if no answer) 745 The Bulletin Classified satellite dish, leveling, 8-airbags, power cord Homes for Sale 14'8" boat, 40hp Mer- Ads published in the 634 reel, 2 full pass-thru "Boats" classification Snowmobiles cury outboard (4-stroke, Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, include: Speed, fish- trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 electric trim, EFI, less 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, ing, drift, canoe, **No Application Fee ** view. By owner, ideal for (2) 2000 A rctic C at than 10 hrs) + electric Diesel gen set. $85,000 Z L580's EFI with n e w trolling motor, fish finder, house and sail boats. obo. 541-233-7963 2 bdrm, 1 bath, extended family. For all other types of covers, electric start w/ WEEKEND WARRIOR $530 & $540 w/lease. $590,000. 541-390-0886 reverse, low miles, both $5000 obo. 541-548-2173 watercraft, please go euR Toy hauler/travel trailer. Carports included! excellent; with new 2009 to Class 875. 24' with 21' interior. •5 )r I NOTICE Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, 541-385-5809 Sleeps 6. Self-conFOX HOLLOW APTS. All real estate adver- drive off/on w/double tilt, tained. Systems/ (541) 383-3152 tised here in is sub- lots of accys. Selling due appearancein good Cascade Rental Serving Central Oregon s nce 1903 ject to t h e F e deralto m edical r e asons. condition. Smoke-free. Management. Co. F air Housing A c t , $6000 all. 541-536-8130 14' a luminum NATIONAL DOLPHIN Tow with ~/2-ton. Strong b o at which makes it illegal Call for Speciais! 37' suspension; can haul 1997, loaded! 1 Cat ZL800, 2001, w/trailer, 2009 Mercury to advertise any pref- Arctic Limited numbers avail. slide, Corian surfaces, ATVs snowmobiles, short track, variable 15hp motor, fish finder, erence, limitation or 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. wood floors (kitchen), even a small car! Great valves, elec- $2500. 541-815-8797 discrimination based exhaust W/D hookups, patios 2-dr fridge, convection price - $8900. on race, color, reli- tric s t art, r e v erse, or decks. microwave, Vizio TV & Call 541-593-6266 re c o rds, Beautiful h o u seboat,roof satellite, walk-in gion, sex, handicap, manuals, MOUNTAIN GLEN, $85,000. 541-390-4693 shower, new queen bed. familial status or na- new spare belt, cover, 541 -383-93f 3 www.centraloregon tional origin, or inten- heated hand g r ips, Professionally White leather hide-anice, fast, $999. Call houseboat.com tion to make any such bed & chair, all records, managed by Norris & Tom, 541-385-7932, preferences, l i m itapets or s moking. Stevens, Inc. 14' Seadoo 1997 boat GENERATE SOME ex- no tions or discrimination. • Yamaha 750 1999 modified engines citement in your neig- $28,450. Weekend Warrior Toy Good classified ads tell We will not knowingly Mountain Max, $1400. twin Call 541-771-4800 borhood. Plan a ga210hp/1200lbs, fast Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, the essentialfacts in an accept any advertis- • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 rage sale and don't $5500. 541-390-7035 fuel station, exc cond. interesting Manner. Write ing for r ea l e s tate EXT, $1000. forget to advertise in RV sleeps 8, black/gray from the readers view - not which is in violation of • Zieman 4-place classified! 385-5809. CONSIGNMENTS TURN THE PAGE i nterior, u se d 3X , this law. All persons trailer, SOLD! the seller's. Convert the WANTED $19,999 firm. are hereby informed All in good condition. For More Ads facts into benefits. Show We Do The Work ... 541-389-9188 Serving Central Oregon smce 1903 that all dwellings adthereaderhow the item will Located in La Pine. The Bulletin You Keep The Cash! vertised are available Call 541-408-6149. help them in someway. 875 On-site credit Take care of on an equal opportuThis approval team, Watercraft 15' older Seaswirl, nity basis. The Bulleyour investments advertising tip web site presence. Garage Sales tri-hull, 35HP motor, tin Classified We Take Trade-Ins! brought to you by with the help from cover, depth finder, Ads published in "WaFree Advertising. Garage Sales 750 tercraft" include: Kayassorted live vests, The Bulletin's The Bulletin BIG COUNTRY RV aks, rafts and motor$1200. OBO. Redmond Homes Garage Sales "Call A Service ized personal Bend: 541-330-2495 541-548-7645 or Redmond: 648 watercrafts. For 541-408-3811. Professional" Directory 541-548-5254 Find them " boats" please s e e Looking for your next Houses for Class 870. emp/oyee? in Rent General Place a Bulletin help Looking for your 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Suncrest 28' 1 989 wanted ad today and next employee? PUBLISHER'S with gene r ator, Place reach over 60,000 Classifieds a Bulletin help NOTICE Serwng Central Oregon since l903 needs ne w e n t ry wanted ad today and 16' readers each week. O ld T o w n All real estate adverdoor and minor reYour classified ad 541-385-5809 reach over 60,000 C amper ca n o e, Aluminum canoe, tising in this newspapair, 30,485 original will also appear on readers each week. exc. cond, $ 750. good condition, $325. per is subject to the miles, runs g o od, bendbulletin.com Your classified ad 860 541-312-8740 541-382-1838 F air H o using A c t $3000 firm - CASHi which currently rewill also appear on Motorcycles & Accessories which makes it illegal 541-548-5452 ceives over 880 bendbulletin.com to a d vertise "any which currently re1.5 million page Motorhomes Harley Davidson 2009 17.5' Glastron 2002, preference, limitation views every month Winnebago Outlook ceives over 1.5 milDyna Super Glide, Stage Chevy eng., Volvo or disc r imination at no extra cost. Class C, 30', 2007, lion page views evoutdrive, open bow, 1 Screamin' Eagle perbased on race, color, Bulletin Classifieds 37,000 mi, extras, excelery month at no formance kit + many op- stereo, sink/live well, religion, sex, handilent cond, must see. Get Results! extra cost. Bulletin tions, 11,720 mi, asking w/glastron tr a i ler, cap, familial status, Located at Western Rec- Classifieds Get ReCall 385-5809 or incl. b oa t c o v er, $10,900. 541-388-8939 marital status or nareation, top of grade sults! Call 385-5809 new, $ 8 500. tional origin, or an in- place youratad on-line Hariey Davidson Soft- Like leaving Prineville; or or place your ad 541-447-4876 tention to make any call 541-447-9268. Tail De l uxe 2 0 0 7 , on-line at Brougham 1978 motor such pre f e rence, bendbulletin.com white/cobalt, w / pasbendbulletin.com home, Dodge chassis, limitation or discrimisenger kit, Vance & 17' coach, sleeps 4, nation." Familial sta753 Hines muffler system rear dining. $4500. tus includes children Sisters Homes & kit, 1045 mi., exc. 541-602-8652. under the age of 18 • Fif t h W heels $16,9 9 9, living with parents or Squaw Creek Canyon cond, 541-389-9188. Winnebago Suncruiser34' legal cus t o dians, Estates 70075 Sorrel CHECK YOUR AD 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 2004, only 34K, loaded, pregnant women, and Dr. (corner of Sorrel & Volvo Penta, 270HP, < ~i « ~ ~ , HDFaf Bo 1996 too much to list, ext'd people securing cus- Mt. View) completely low hrs., must see, warr. thru 2014, $54,900 tody of children under renovated over 3000 $15,000, 541-330-3939 ra Dennis, 541-589-3243 18. This newspaper sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 full Alfa See Ya 200540' will not knowingly ac- bath home, new en881 excellent cond, 1 owner, cept any advertising ergy eff. furnace & on the first day it runs 4-dr frig w/icemaker, gas for real estate which is heat pump, wide plank Travel Trailers to make sure it is corstove/oven, convection in violation of the law. wood floors, walk-in rect. "Spellcheck" and oven, washer/dryer O ur r e aders ar e closets and p a ntry, Completely human errors do occombo, flatscreen TV, all hereby informed that stone fireplace w i th Rebuilt/Customized cur. If this happens to 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L electronics, new tires, all dwellings adver- woodstove insert, 1~/~ 2012/2013 Award your ad, please conMercruiser, low hrs, 190 many extras. 7.5 diesel tised in this newspa- acres, fenced, covWinner gen, lots of storage, tact us ASAP so that hp Bowrider w/depth per are available on ered decks, 2-car ga- Showroom Condition finder, basement freezer, 350 corrections and any radio/ CD player, an equal opportunity rage, mtn. views. Just Many Extras adjustments can be rod holders, full canvas, Cat Freiqhtliner chassis. basis. To complain of reduced! $ 3 8 5,000. Low Miles. made to your ad. EZ Loader trailer, exclnt Asking $86,500. See at Cougar 33 ft. 2006, discrimination cal l Call (503) 786-7835 $17,000 Crook County RV Park, 541 -385-5809 cond, $11,500. 14 ft. slide, awning, HUD t o l l-free at (recording) 541-548-4807 ¹43. 520-609-6372 707-484-3518 (Bend) easy lift, stability bar, The Bulletin Classified 1-800-877-0246. The bumper extends for 763 toll f re e t e l ephone Sea Ray Monaco, HD Screaming Eagle 18.7' extra cargo, all acnumber for the hear- Recreational Homes 1984, 185hp, V6 MerElectra Glide 2005, cess. incl., like new ing im p aired is Cruiser, full canvas, life & Property 103" motor, two tone vests, bumpers, water condition, stored in 1-800-927-9275. candy teal, new tires, skis, swim float, extra RV barn, used less 637 Acres with recre23K miles, CD player prop & more. EZ Loader Rent /Own t han 10 t i mes l o ation cabin and 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes hydraulic clutch, ex- trailer, never in saltwater, D odge 22' 19 7 8 c ally, no p et s o r Fleetwood Prowler 32' stream. in forest, west cellent condition. $2500 down, $750 mo. smoking. $20,000 always garaged, very class C, 67K mi., 2001, many upgrade of Silver Lake, OR OAC. J and M Homes Highest offer takes it. clean, all maint. records. good cond.$3500. obo. 541-536-2709. options, $14,500 obo. .541-480-7215 541-480-8080. 541-548-5511 541-389-4873 541-480-1687, Dick. $5500. 541-389-7329
LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon
•
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Keystone Montana 2955 RL 2008, 2 slides, arctic insulation, loaded, excellent never used condition. $33,500
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1974 Bellanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
541-923-4707
r-
-
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Montana 2006 3400
RL, 37', 4 slides, Ar-
I tic options, K/bed, I
In Madras,
w/d combo. M ust call 541-475-6302 ~ sell $22,990.OBO. ~ Call f o r det a i ls Executive Hangar 805-844-3094 at Bend Airport (KBDN) La Pine Address 60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent =to Frontage Rd; great ~ m l visibility for aviation busiJ' ness. Financing availI able. 541-948-2126 or MONTANA 3585 2008, email 1jetjock©q.com exc. cond., 3 slides, Piper A rcher 1 9 80, king bed, Irg LR, based in Madras, alArctic insulation, all ways hangared since options $35,000 obo. new. New annual, auto 541-420-3250 pilot, IFR, one piece NuWa 29 7LK Hi t c h- windshield. Fastest ArHiker 2007, All sea- cher around. 1750 tosons, 3 s l ides, 32' tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. erfect for snow birds, 541-475-6947, ask for e ft k i t chen, re a r Rob Berg. lounge, extras, must see $25999 Prineville 541-447-5502 days & 541-447-1641 eves.
L
541-292-1834
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
541-548-5511
Real Estate Services
Tra v el Trailers
Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A
775
632
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II
Apt./Multiplex General
908
Motorhomes
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719- Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
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Superhawk Ownership Share Available!
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Economical flying Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th in your own wheel, 1 s lide, AC, IFR equipped TV,full awning, excel172/180 HP for lent shape, $23,900. Cessna only $13,500! New 541-350-8629 Garmin Touchscreen
avionics center stack! Exceptionally clean! Hangared at BDN. Call 541-728-0773 T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport.
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
Call 541-382-8998.
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Redmond: 541-548-5254
886
Canopies & Campers 1987 Freightliner COE 3axle truck, Cummins engine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 obo. 541-419-2713
Lance Camper 1994, fits long bed crew cab, tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 OBO. 541-580-7334
Backhoe 2007 John Deere 310SG, cab 4x4, 4-in-1 bucket Extendahoe, hydraulic thumb, loaded, like new, 500 hours. New $105,000. Sell $75,000.
Lance Squirelite 8'6" short bed, exc. cond. stored inside all but one year. s elf-contained, TV with built in DVD, queen bed runs lengthwise. $ 5 0 00. (503) 351- 9 621. 541-548-4632
541-350-3393
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I%%.JY X Hysfer H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call 541-749-0724
Aircraft, Parts & Service
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located
ie Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, @ $400/mo 541-948-2963
TiCk, TOCk TiCk, TOCk... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Mitsubishi Fuso 1995 14' box truck with lift gate, 184,000 miles, needs turbo seal. $3500 or best offer. 541-420-2323 Want to impress the relativeso Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp
pump, 4-3" h oses, camlocks, $ 2 5,000. 541-820-3724
Automotive Parts, Service 8 Accessories BMW 1800 t ransmis-
sion for sale, $100. 1/3 interest i n w e l l- 541-389-0447 equipped IFR Beech Bo932 nanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. Antique & $65,000. 541-419-9510 Classic Autos
1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored 8 Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541 -41 0-6007
1952 Ford Customline Coupe, project car, flathead V-8, 3 spd extra parts, & materials, $2000 obo. 541-410-7473
IMPROVIIVG YOUR HEALTH AND WELL-BEING r g
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E6 TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 975
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Subaru Outback 2012 2 15i P r emium. 5 k
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BOATS & RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890- RVsfor Rent
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 933
Vans
Pickups
Oregon
and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Rec e ntly factory serviced. Garaged. Beautiful car, Perfect cond. $32,500
Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model CST /all options, orig. owner, $19,950, 541-923-6049
Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350
SLT 2500 HD Ext. Cab 8.1 V8 with Alli-
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son Trans. 33,000 miles. Always garaged. $18 , 000. 541-504-7711.
1000
Aglngnlrce
CORVETTE Convertible 2005 Automatic LS2 high performance motor, only 29k miles, Sterling S ilver, b l ack leather interior, Bose premium sound stereo, new quality tires
541-589-4047
2003 GMC S ierra
$2 3 , 995
541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com
Toyota Avalon LX 2003, V6, 90K, exc cond, fully loaded, 1 owner, Michelin tires, new brakes. $8500. 541-475-3647
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LEGAL NOTICE FORECLOSURE SALE BY THE GOVERNMENT The U.S. Marshal will be conducting a sale of the property de-
scribed below on July 16, 2013, at 1:00 PM on the steps of the J efferson Cou n t y Find It in C ourthouse in M a The Bulletin Classifieds! d ras, Oregon. T h e property will be sold to 541-385-5809 the highest and best b id for cash. T h e Toyota Camry 2011 xle Farm Service Agency moonroof, leather, ¹ 139680 $20, 9 9 5 will enter one bid only, of appr o ximately $74,200. This is a foreclosure Oregon sale by the U.S. GovAutngnurce ernment in the case of 541-598-3750 USA v Cas c a de aaaoregonautosource.com Greenhouses, LLC et al, Civ li No.
14 Mercury Mo n terey 2004 mini van, 4.2 L • I V-6 automatic, 7 pas- CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 senger, front & rear climate control, f u ll Grand Sport - 4 LT power includes driver's loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. seat, sound system includes radio, cassette/ New Michelin Super CD player and seperToyota Camrysr Sports, G.S. floor ately controlled rear mats, 17,000 miles, 1984, SOLD; speakers, incl. trailer Crystal red. 1985 SOLD; hitch. Asking $3,900. $45,000. 1986 parts car 541-350-4779. 503-358-1164. only one left! $500 The Bulletin Call for details, To Subscribe call Ford Taurus 2003 SSE 54 I -548-6592 s edan, e xc . co n d 541-385-5800 or go to 63,000 miles. $5,000 www.bendbulletin.com Toyota Yaris 2010 541-389-9569 wonderful little car, 40 mpg on hwy, $8,500. 541-410-1078
3:12-cv-02170-AC.
Leg a l Notices chutes County. The Successor Trustee is Patrick L . S t e vens and the mailing address of the Successor Trustee is: Patrick L. Stevens, Successor Trustee, Hutchinson, Cox, Coons, Orr & Sherlock, P.C., PO Box 10886, Eugene, OR 97440. The Trust Deed covers the following described real property in the County o f D eschutes a n d State of Oregon, ("the Property"): Lot Nine, Block Two, SUMMIT ACRES, D eschutes C ounty, Oreg o n. Commonly known as: 16486 Sprague Loop, LaPine, OR 9 7739. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy th e o b ligations secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3). The default for which forec losure is made i s G rantor's failure t o p ay when due t h e following sums: The monthly i n s tallment payments of $1,062.29 beginning J une 1, 2 0 1 2 a n d continuing through the installment due April 1, 2013; plus interest and late charges; real property taxes, plus interest and penalties; and other liens and penalties. Total default as o f A p ril 2013 is $ 11,685.19. The sum owing on the o bligation t ha t t h e Trust Deed secures (the "Obligation") is:
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Legal Notices
from you, signs a new r esidential rent a l agreement with you or does not notify you in writing within 30 days after the date of the foreclosure sale that you must move out, the new owner bec omes y ou r ne w l andlord an d m u s t maintain the property. Otherwise: • You do not owe rent; • Th e new owner is not your landlord and is not responsible for m aintaining the property on your behalf; and • You must move out by the date the new owner specifies in a notice to you. The new owner may offer to pay your ING AND RENTING moving expenses and THIS P ROP E RTY AS a ny other costs o r A RESI D ENTIAL amounts you and the DWELLING, YOU new owner agree on HAVE TH E R I G HT in exchange for your TO CONTINUE LIV- agreement to l e ave ING IN THIS PROPthe premises in less E RTY AFTER T H E than 90 days or beFORECLOSURE fore your fixed term SALE FOR: • TH E l ease expires. Y o u REMAINDER OF should speak with a YOUR FIXED TERM lawyer to fully underLEASE, IF YOU stand your rights beHAVE A FIX ED fore making any deciTERM LEASE; OR • sions regarding your AT LEAST 90 DAYS t enancy. IT IS U Nthrough, t h e new owner will have the right to require you to move out. Before the new owner can require you to move, the new owner must provide you with written notice that specifies the date by which you must move out. If you do not leave before the move-out date, the new owner can have the sheriff remove you from the property after a court hearing. You will rec eive notice of t h e court hearing. PROTECTION FROM E VICTION: IF Y O U ARE A BONA FIDE TENANT OCCUPY-
As such, this is very different from a norm al a u ction s a l e . Prospective purchasers are encouraged to contact their own legal counsel for guidance on bidding or 541-389-7669. purchasing property under these conditions. The 16.59-acre propF ROM TH E D A T E L AWFUL FOR A N Y erty, located at 5140 YOU ARE GIVEN A PERSON TO TRY TO 3!gL B MW 5 S e r ies 5 5 0i BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS SW Bear Drive, MaWRITTEN TERMINA- FORCE Y O U TO Ford F250 S uperCab 2 007 4 9k mile s dras, OR 9 7741, is Search the area's most TION NOTICE. If the LEAVE YOUR mostly irrigated and Chevy Nova - 1976, 2001, Triton V8, May '15 ¹P07078 $ 2 6,995 comprehensive listing of new owner wants to D WELLING UN I T tags, ONLY 89K miles, has a large general $3,400. Ford Taurus Wagon 2004, classified advertising... move in and use this W ITHOUT FI R S T $6495 obo 541-610-6150 Rebuilt 327 engine. 120K miles, loaded, in real estate to automotive, p urpose building. I t property as a primary GIVING YOU WRITw as last u se d f o r Call Matt 541-280-9463. Autogource nice shape, $3,900. merchandise tc sporting r esidence, the n e w TEN NOTICE AND o p era541-815-9939 541-598-3750 goods. Bulletin Classifieds greenhouse owner can give you G OING TO C O U R T tions. The sale of the appear every day in the www.aaaoregonautowritten notice and re- TO EVICT YOU. FOR property is subject to FIND IT! I nternational Fla t source.com print or on line. IN F O RMAquire you to move out MORE outstanding taxes and Bed Pickup 1963, 1 BUY ITS Call 541-385-5809 after 90 days, even TION ABOUT YOUR Buick LeSabre Cusassessments. There ton dually, 4 s p d. SELL IT! www.bendbulletin.com though you have a RIGHTS, YOU tom 2004, rare 75k, may be a redemption trans., great MPG, The Bulletin Classifieds fixed term lease with SHOULD CONSULT $6000, worth way period associated with could be exc. wood Chevy Wagon 1957, The Bulletin more than 90 d ays A LAWYER. If y o u more. leather, Servtng Cenrral Oregons<nce 19N this sale. If you have hauler, runs great, 4-dr., complete, left. You must be pro- believe you need leany questions, please heated seats, nice = new brakes, $1950. $7,000 OBO / trades. vided with at least 90 gal assistance, concontact the Farm Ser541-419-5480. wheels. Good tires, g~ ~ Please call days w ntten n otice tact the Oregon State vice A g e nc y at 30 mpg, white. 541-389-6998 after the foreclosure Bar and ask for the $ 157,760.02, t o541-573-6446. Need help fixing stuff? Convinced? Call Bob ether with the sum of sale before you can lawyer referral ser541-318-9999 I Call A Service Professional 6,008.09, which rep- be required to move. vice. Contact informaNeed to get an ad Volkswagen Karmann LEGAL NOTICE find the help you need. Buick Century Limited Nissan Sentra 2012 resents unpaid conA bona fide tenant is a tion for the Oregon Full warranty, 35mpg, Ghia 1970 convertible, NOTICE OF SEIZURE tractual interest, fees residential tenant who State Bar is included in ASAP? www.bendbulletin.com 2000, r u n s gr e a t, 520 per tank, all power. FOR CIVIL and l a t e c h a rges is not the borrower with this notice. If you beautiful car. $3400. $13,500. 541-788-0427 very rare, new top & inte935 rior upholstery, $9000. FORFEITURE TO ALL through and including (property owner) or a do not have enough 541-312-3085 Fax it to 541-322-7253 Sport Utility Vehicles 541-389-2636 POTENTIAL A pril 15, 2 0 13, t o - child, spouse or parmoney to pay a lawDON'I NI S S I HI S CLAIMANTS AND TO gether with interest on ent of the borrower, yer and are otherwise Buick LeSabre 1996. WHEN YOU SEE THIS The Bulletin Classifieds ALL UNKNOWN the principal sum of and w hose r e ntal eligible, you may be Good condition, PERSONS READ THIS $ 157,760.02 at t h e agreement: • Is t h e able to receive legal Olds Aurora 1999, white 121,000 miles. 4-dr, 134K miles, front CAREFULLY rate of 4.00% per an- result of a n a r m's- assistance for f r ee. Non-smoker Chrysler 300 C o upe wheel drive, leather, M orePixatBendbulletin,corn num from April 16, length transaction; I nformation abo u t 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, $2200 OBO. air, CD/radio, excelOn a classified ad If you have any inter- 2013 until paid, toR equires the p a y - whom to contact for auto. trans, ps, air, 541-954-5193. est i n t h e s e i zed lent condition. $4000 go to gether with insurance ment of rent that is not free legal assistance frame on rebuild, reor best offer. www.bendbulletin.com property d e s cribed paid by the Benefi- substantially less than is included with this painted original blue, Chevy Equinox LT Buick Lucerne CXS 541-548-5886 below, you must claim to view additional ciary on the property, fair market rent for the n otice. R IGHT T O original blue interior, Sport A W D 2 010. 2006 sedan, V8, that interest or you will late charges and pen- property, unless the CURE: The right exphotos of the item. original hub caps, exc. Auto, 6-Spd w/OverNorthstar 4.6L enautomatically lose that alties, trustee fees, rent is r educed or ists u n d e r ORS chrome, asking $9000 drive, 29 Hwy mpg, gine, silver, black Porsche 911 The Bulletin's interest. If you do not attorney fees, foreclo- subsidized due to a 86.753 to have this or make offer. 41K miles, traction leather, new $36,000; Carrera 993cou e file a c laim for t he "Call A Service sure costs and any federal, state or local foreclosure proceed541-385-9350 control, keyless en92K miles, 18" wheels the property sums advanced by subsidy; and • Wa s ing dismissed and the Professional" Directory property, try, moonroof, air, & much more, best may be forfeited even Ford Mustang Coupe power e v erything, the Beneficiary pursu- entered into prior to Trust Deed reinstated offer over $7900. is all about meeting 1966, original owner, X M S a tellite e n if you are not con- ant to the trust deed. the date of the foreby doing all of the folBob, 541-318-9999 yourneeds. victed of any crime. By reason of the de- closure sale. ABOUT lowing at any time that V8, automatic, great gaged, OnStar avail. shape, $9000 OBO. MP3. $21,500. Call To claim an interest, fault, the Beneficiary YOUR TEN A NCY is not later than five Call on one of the 530-515-8199 you must file a written and the Trustee elect BETWEEN NOW days before the date 541-419-0736. professionals today! 1996, 73k miles, claim with the forfei- to sell the Property to A ND T H E FO R E - last set for the sale: Tiptronic auto. ture counsel named satisfy the Obligation C LOSURE What are you SA L E : (1)Paying to the Bentransmission. Silver, below, Th e w r i tten and to foreclose the RENT YOU eficiary th e en t i re Chevy Suburban Looking for your looking for? blue leather interior, claim must be signed Trust Deed by adver- SHOULD CONTINUE a mount t he n du e 2003 ~/~ ton 4WD, next employee? moon/sunroof, new Chevrolet Corvette by you, sworn to unt isement an d s a l e TO PAY RENT TO (other than such porYou'll find it in white, 135k miles, Place a Bulletin help quality tires and der penalty of perjury pursuant t o Coupe 2007, 20,700 ORS YOUR L A N DLORD tion as would not then immaculate. Have wanted ad today and The Bulletin Classifieds battery, car and seat before a notary public, mi., beautiful cond. 86.705 to 86.795. At UNTIL THE PROPbe due, had no demaint. records. reach over 60,000 covers, many extras. and state: (a) Your 3LT loaded, victory ERTY IS SOLD OR fault occurred); (2) p ublic auction, t h e $6,500. readers each week. Recently fully sertwo-tone true name; (b) The Trustee shall sell to red, U NTIL A COU R T Curing any other de541-280-7299. Your classified ad viced, garaged, 541-385-5809 address at which you the highest bidder for T ELLS YO U O T H - fault complained of leather, powerseats, will also appear on looks and runs like will a c cept f u t ure cash the interest in with logos, memory, ERWISE. IF YOU DO herein that is capable bendbulletin.com new. Excellent conm ailings f ro m th e the Property which the N OT P A Y REN T , of being cured by tenheadsupdisplay, Ford Bronco 1981 Ford Ranchero which currently redition. $31,500 court and f o rfeiture nav., XM, Bose, tilt, Grantor had, or had YOU CAN BE dering t h e pe r for4 speed 4x4, 302 ceives over 1.5 mil1979 541-589-4047 counsel; and (3) A chrome wheels, upthe power to convey, EVICTED. BE SURE mance required unengine, low miles, with 351 Cleveland lion page views s tatement that y o u graded drilled slotat the time of the exTO KEEP PROOF OF der the Trust Deed; h eaders, roll b a r , every month at modified engine. have an interest in the ecution by Grantor of ANY ted b rake r o tors, PAY M E NTS and (3) Paying hitch kit, good tires, all no extra cost. BulleBody is in seized property. Your the Trust Deed, toextra insulation, alPorsche 911 Turbo YOU MAKE. SECU- costs and expenses straight body, runs tin Classifieds excellent condition, deadline for filing the gether with any inter- RITY DEPOSIT: You ways garaged, seria ctually incurred i n great, $950. Get Results! Call $2500 obo. claim document with ous only $36,500. est Gra n to r or may apply your secu- enforcing the Obliga541-350-7176 385-5809 or place 541-420-4677 forfeiture cou n s el 541-771-2852. Grantor's successors rity deposit and any tion and Trust Deed, your ad on-line at n amed below is 2 1 in interest acquired rent you paid in adtogether with bendbulletin.com days from the last day after the execution of vance against the cur- Trustee's and Ford Excursion of publication of this the Trust Deed, to rent rent you owe your a ttorney's fees not 2004 Advertise your car! 2003 6 speed, X50 notice. Where to file satisfy the Obligation. landlord as provided exceeding the Add A Picture! added power pkg., Reach thousands of readers! a claim and for more The date, time and in ORS 90.367. To do amounts provided by 530 HP! Under 10k i nformation: Da i n a place of the sale is: this, you must notify ORS 86.753. In conCall 541-385-5809 Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 Vitolins, Crook County D ate: September 4 , Chrysler Newport miles, Arctic silver, The BulletinCtassifieds your landlord in writ- struing this notice, the engine, power everyDistrict Attorney Of2013. Time: 11:00 ing that you want to singular includes the gray leather interior, (2) 1962 4 door sedans thing, new paint, 54K o'clock a.m. P l ace: new quality t i res, I The Bulletin recoml fice, 300 N E T h i rd subtract the amount of plural, t h e word $2500 and $5500. original m i les, runs and battery, Bose Street, Prineville, OR Deschutes Co u n ty La Pine, 541-602-8652 your security deposit "Grantor" includes any One owner, Turbo great, excellent condimends extra caution I 97754. premium sound steCourthouse, 1100 NW or prepaid rent from successor in interest Diesel, tion in & out. Asking when p u r chasing ~ reo, moon/sunroof, Notice o f r e a sons Bond St., Bend, OR your rent p ayment. to the Grantor as well $8,500. 541-480-3179 Eddie Bauer 4WD, "My little red or services car and seat covers. f products for F o r feiture: The 97701. NOTICE TO You may do this only as any other person 46,400 miles, from out of the area. Corvette" Coupe Many extras. Gaproperty d e s cribed RESIDENTIAL TEN- for the rent you owe owing an obligation, $26,500 J Sending cas h , raged, perfect conbelow was seized for ANTS: The property in your current landlord. the performance of Call (206) 849-4513 checks, or credit indition $ 63,500. forfeiture because it: which you are living is If you do this, you which is secured by in Bend. formation may be I 541-589-4047 (1) Constitutes t he in foreclosure. A fore- must do so before the the Trust Deed, and / subject to FRAUD. closure sale is schedforeclosure sale. The the words "Trustee" proceeds of the violaFor more i nforma940 tion of, solicitation to uled for September 4, business or individual and "Beneficiary" inabout an adverv iolate, a t tempt t o 2013. The date of this who buys this prop- clude their respective Ford T h underbird Vans Porsche Carrera 911 f tion tiser, you may call 1996, 350 auto, 1955, new white soft 2003 convertible with I the Oregon State I violate, or conspiracy sale may b e p o st- erty at the foreclosure successors in interest, 132,000 miles. to violates, the crimi- p oned. Unless t h e sale is no t r espon- ifany. We are a debt top, tonneau cover hardtop. 50K miles, Ford Aerostar 1994 Attorney General's I Non-ethanol fuel & and upholstery. New nal laws of the State lender that i s f o re- sible to you for any collector attempting to new factory Porsche Eddie Bauer Edition Office C o nsumer synthetic oil only, motor 6 mos ago with of Oregon regarding closing on this prop- deposit o r p r e paid collect a debt and any chrome. B e a utiful Fully Loaded, f Protection hotline at garaged, premium 18 mo factory warthe manufacture, dis- erty is paid before the rent you paid to your information we obtain Car. $25, 0 0 0. Mint Condition! 1-877-877-9392. Bose stereo, ranty remaining. tribution, or posses- sale date, the foreclo- l andlord. ABOU T will be used to collect 541-548-1422 Runs Excellent! $37,500. sion of controlled subsure will go through YOUR TEN A NCY the debt. Cashier's $77,000. $3000. 541-322-6928 Serving Central Oregon srnce 19IB stances 54 I -923-1781 (ORS and someone new will AFTER THE FORE- checks for the fore541-350-1201 Chapter475); and/or own this property. Af- CLOSURE SALE: The closure sale must be new owner that buys (2) Was used or in- ter the sale, the new payable to M i dOret ended for u s e i n owner is required to this property at the gon Federal Credit committing or f aciliprovide you with con- foreclosure sale may Union. Dated: April tating the violation of, tact information and be willing to allow you 23, 2013. /s/ Patrick solicitation to violate, notice that the sale to stay as a tenant in- L. Stevens. Patrick L. GMC Vzton 1971, Only attempt to violate, or took place. The folstead of requiring you Stevens, Successor $1 9,700! Original low conspiracy to violate lowing inf o rmation to move out after 90 Trustee, Hutchinson, mile, exceptional, 3rd the criminal laws of applies to you only if days or at the end of C ox, Coons, Orr & owner. 951-699-7171 the State of Oregon you are a bona fide your fixed term lease. Sherlock, P.C. AttorMerc Convertible 1948 regarding the manu- tenant occupying and After the sale, you neys at Law, PO Box 350 Chev crate motor, facture, distribution or renting this property should receive a writ- 10886, Eugene, OR $31,000. Call for dep ossession of c o n- as a resi d ential ten notice informing 97440, Phone: (541) tails. 925-998-5552 trolled su b stances dwelling under a leyou that the sale took 686-9160, Fax: (541) (ORS Chapter 475). gitimate rental agree- place and giving you 3 43-8693. Date o f ment. The i nforma- the n e w own e r's First Publication: June IN THE MATTER OF: tion does not apply to name and contact in- 25, 2013. Date of Last formation. You should Publication: July 16, you if you own this (1)US Currency in the property or if you are contact t h e new 2013. amount of 29,470.00, not a bona fide resi- owner if you would Plymouth B a r racuda Case No 13000282, dential tenant. If the like to stay. If the new s eized January 4 , foreclosure sale goes owner accepts rent 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, center~//7e 'Y-r/'4'6 2013 from David and 50 Oe trucl/on Miriam Tyson. lines, 541-593-2597 s Incl 055 LEGAL NOTICE A RE P U B LIC Cgl/Ir 5-g/+ tr0„ Have an item to TRUSTEE'S NOTICE NOTICES OF SALE sell quick? " 'y/e+< " O p / 7 The Trust Deed to be If it's under I M P O R TA N T ep00 Q/f/ fgrhl, foreclosed pursuant to O regon law i s r e '500 you can place it in 5088O5 ferred to as f ollows 0 rr An important premise upon which the principle of The Bulletin (the "Trust Deed"): 55pp opet// EQ democracy is based is that information about G rantor: Steven W . Classifieds for: -7pr ety Cameron and Nancy tree~ o 6'/, government activities must be accessible in order ree Cameron, as tenants '10 - 3 lines, 7 days for the electorate fo make well-informed decisions. by t he enti r ety. '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo Trustee: Deschutes C ounty Title C o m(Private Party ads only) citizens who want fo know more about government pany. Beneficiary: Miactivities. PROJECT CARS: Chevy dOregon Fed e r al 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & Credit Union, PO Box Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin Chevy Coupe 1950 6749, B e nd , OR rolling chassis's $1750 97708. Date: June 12, classifieds or go fo www.bendbullefin.com and www.bendbulletin.com 2007. Reco r ding ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, click on "Classified Ads" complete car, $ 1949; Date: June 18, 2007. Cadillac Series 61 1950, Recording Reference: 2 dr. hard top, complete 2007-33909. County w/spare f r ont cl i p ., The Bulletin o f Recording: D e s $3950, 541-382-7391 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all.
F ord F - 15 0 XL T 1992 4WD, s u per cab, long bed, 5.0 litre, 138k mi., power seats, $3,200. Call for more info, Rick. 541-633-7017
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BEEF NEWYORK STEAK
GOLDEN RIPE
CANTALO UPE
BANANAS
California Grown
58c
$8 LB
BEEFBOTTOM ROUND STEAK
'S $8 LB
PORK SIRLOIN CHOPS Boneless
LB
JUMBO YELLOW ONIONS
MIISHROOMS Snow White
'1'8
Washington Grown
FRESH EXPRESS GARDENSALAD
LB
12 Oz
78C
NECTARINES California Grown Sweet & Juicy
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8 88 LB
CHICKEN LEG
QUARTERS r
Southern Grown Frozen
LB
BEEF TOP SIRLOIN STEAK Boneless
BROCCO LI CROWNS
$3$8
California Grown
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LB
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$2$8
RED RIPE Aier
WHOLE
ROMA
TILAPIA
TOMATOE S
Frozen
LB
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8 18
BEEF CHIICK STEAK
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FOSTER FARMS i SPLIT CHICKEN Northwest Grown
II"
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PRICES EFFECTIVE: I
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$3455 Hwy. 97 N., Bend • 541-388-2100
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750 ML Selected Varieties
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